زبان تخصصی: THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT
زبان تخصصی: THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT

The NAM was officially formed in 1961, when the first gathering of the heads of state and movernment of 25 Third World countries was held in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. The NAM came into existence with the main purpose of preserving the independence and freedom of its members. From the early stages of the emergence of the idea of Non-Alignment, the countries which participated in the foundation of the NAM had different reasons for joining it. (Non-attachment to the super powers has always been one of the main ideas of the NAM.) One of the principle aims of the NAM has always been to avoid the complete division of the world into military and political alliances and spheres of influence of the great powers.
NON-ALIGNMENT; NON-ALIGNED COUNTRIES; GROUP 77; BANDUNG; AFRO-ASIAN CONFERENCE; THIRD WORLD; REGIONAL CONFLICTS; NEW INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC ORDER;
The NAM was officially formed in 1961, when the first gathering of the heads of state and movernment of 25 Third World countries was held in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. The NAM came into existence with the main purpose of preserving the independence and freedom of its members. From the early stages of the emergence of the idea of Non-Alignment, the countries which participated in the foundation of the NAM had different reasons for joining it. (Non-attachment to the super powers has always been one of the main ideas of the NAM.) One of the principle aims of the NAM has always been to avoid the complete division of the world into military and political alliances and spheres of influence of the great powers. However, as a result of the present international economic system, most of the Non-Aligned Countries have become not only dependent on the big powers but also economic allies of one or the other of the big powers. During the process of detente, the NAM felt a need for a new policy towards the super powers and mainly for a change in its hostility against the West. This change was referred to in `The Modernization Plan' forwarded to the ninth NAM summit in Belgrade. The end of the Cold War, the disintegration of the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union and finally the emergence of the New World Order have different effects on the course of Non-Alignment.
PREFACE . When the Non-Aligned Movement came into existence in 1961 the Western countries took it as a `new bloc' of the newly independent states. However, during the first decade of its life, all its activities, gatherings and statements were closely observed in the Western societies. During this period the Non-Aligned Movement became a topic for many Western researchers and resulted in a good number of books under this title.
Although in the 1960s it had been imagined that the NAM was a real threat against the Western interests, during the second decade of its life, the Non-Aligned Movement proved not to be such a threat . Repeated assurances from the leaders of the Non-Aligned Countries satisfied the Western circles that this movement would not become a parallel `bloc' to the Soviet bloc. This satisfaction reduced the importance of the Non-Aligned Movement in the opinion of Western political observers and reduced the number of books and articles about the Non-Aligned Movement in this part of the world.
Finally during the third decade of the Non-Aligned Movement's life the observance of the movement has been limited to a few current-affairs articles in Western newspapers and a few scattered commentaries and longer articles on the occasion of the Non-Aligned summits which were held every three years.
The Western public were so little enthusiastic about the Non-Aligned Movement that the few Western experts in this field had to travel to Non-Aligned Countries to present their papers in seminars and conferences on the Non-Aligned
Movement held in these countries. This is why in the second half of the 1980s very few genuine articles can be found expressing the Western viewpoint of the Non-Aligned Movement.
By contrast, the Soviet Union and its allies have always considered the Non-Aligned Movement a potential parallel bloc to the Socialist bloc with anti-Western possibilities to be taken advantage of by the Soviet Union in its hostile policies towards the Western countries generally, and the
United States of America particularly. Therefore, the Soviet Union has always taken the Non-Aligned Movement seriously and has allocated more attention to this movement. As a result of
this keen attention many books, commentaries and research papers have been written about the Non-Aligned Movement in the Socialist world.
Since the Socialist countries always looked at the Non-Aligned Movement from their Socialist viewpoint, most of these written materials are not a reliable source of research.
In September 1989, in the midst of the crucial changes in Eastern Europe, some of the Non-Aligned Countries asked for `modernization' of the Non-Aligned aims and policies. It was a continuation of the discussions on the reforms in the Movement which had started in the 1970s. According to these countries the changes in the structure of the socialist systems and in the form of relationship between the two super powers necessitated a new approach to Non-Alignment.
At this juncture, when such `modernization' may or may not occur, a general review of the past experience of Non-Alignment may reveal the meaning of the `modernization' idea.
Does `modernization' mean the end of the idea of Non-Alignment which came into existence in 1961, at the peak of the Cold War? Does it mean that the Non-Aligned Movement could achieve what it was formed for, or does it mean that it needs a change of strategy and policy in order to be able to carry on the unfulfilled task? If this change is
necessary, is it not overdue? Is Non-Alignment an aborted idea, or is it still an evolving one? Such questions may be answered if the history of Non-Alignment is evaluated from several angles.
The Non-Aligned Movement was originally formed to preserve the independence of the Third World countries. To preserve this independence, according to the basic principles
of Non-Alignment, the Third World countries had to avoid joining the military blocs and to discourage other newly independent countries to remain or to become members of such military blocs. The Non-Aligned Movement believed that the military independence from the great powers could guarantee the total and overall independence of the Third World countries.
But at the end of three decades of the NAM's existence, with more than 100 members and a large portion of the world's population, some of the Non-Aligned Countries are less independent than they were at the beginning of their post-colonial independence.
Although some of the Third World countries refrained from joining military blocs, there are many other Third World countries, most of them Non-Aligned, who are hosting great powers' military bases and supporting the military policies of great powers not only against each other, but also against Third World countries, many of them Non-Aligned.
In 1990, many Third World countries, most of them Non-Aligned, were heavily dependent on the economic aid and support from the Western powers. Without these supports, many such countries could not survive. Many people in such countries are starving because of the indebtedness, unemployment, poverty, agricultural under-production and bankruptcy. Economic aid has given a powerful leverage to the rich countries to undermine the political independence of such Third World countries.
During the era of Non-Alignment, more wars occurred among the Third World nations than ever before; in the same period, many Third World people died because of wars, hunger and disease. About 20 million people died in Third World wars since 1945, compared to 60 million in World War II. Most of the Non-Aligned Countries have taken part in the arms race, many of them are producing the internationally forbidden chemical and biological weapons and dozens of them have either tested, produced or have the potential of making the nuclear weapon. In 1990 many Non-Aligned Countries were military aligned to each other, if not to great powers. New military powers have emerged out of Non-Aligned Countries who could form new regional military blocs . Although great powers are not necessarily members of these new military blocs, these blocs can play the same role as a source of tensions and can threaten the independence of many Third World countries.
Because of the new detente governing the relationship between the great powers, many Non-Aligned Countries will loose the strategic importance they used to exercise during the Cold War. Therefore, the great powers will find less motives to continue their economic aid and political support for such countries, by means of which the great powers used to keep these Third World countries away from rival powers. It is possible that many Non-Aligned Countries will suffer more, as a result of this new era.
Seemingly the Non-Aligned Movement has failed to mobilize the potentials of its members, and to make a united forum to guarantee the economic as well as political independence to avoid such destiny. It may hardly be possible for such a movement to fulfil this duty in future. The Non-Aligned Countries are less united and more hostile to each other than before so that they can not find a common ground to create unity among them.
THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT
Introduction
The Non-Aligned Movement officially came into existence in 1961. But its real birth date goes back deep into the early years of the twentieth century .The roots of Non-Alignment lie in the great social and international changes which took place during the first decades of the 20th
century and, particularly , during the course of and after the Second World War. In the several decades of its life, the movement has passed through a difficult and dangerous road. The Non-Aligned Movement took its basic aspiration from several anti-colonialist movements in Asia and Africa during the decolonization era. But its identity is that of a twentieth century movement of the Third World newly-independent countries.
The Non-Aligned Movement evolved from another movement which was firstly an Asian anti-colonial movement. It was later joined by African independent `strugglers' who, hands in hands, formed an `Afro-Asian' union. Later on, the unity benefited from the deep ideological differences between a few European countries, i.e., Yugoslavia (Malta, Cyprus) and the USSR. When Latin American countries joined the movement it became obvious that the movement was a Third World bloc.
Although some of the Third World countries, such as China, were soon refused to join the movement, the Non-Aligned Movement has been widely called a Third World alliance. The founders of the Non-Aligned Movement were among those countries who intended to break with their colonial past and as newly-freed countries tended to chose a political course that would ensure real independence from the former colonial and even new imperialist powers.
The NAM's life can be divided into several phases. So far, researchers in the field of Non-Alignment have used ideological, historical and structural categories, but in the present author's view these phases are as follows:
1-Formation period ,
2-Consolidation period,
3-Institutionalization period ,
4- Disintegration period, and
5- Modernization period.
The first phase is mainly the `Formation period' which extends from the beginning of the twentieth century until the early 1960s. This period followed the first and the Second World War and characterised the movement as being mainly a non-military movement against any sort of military alignment.
The second phase extends from 1960 to the early 1970s, a period called `The consolidation period'. During this period, which coincided with the Cold War era, the movement could express its existence on the international stage and attract the attention of tens of the former colonies. Such
newly-liberated and independent countries soon found a tribune to join , as a way to distance themselves from the former dominating colonial powers.
The third phase is the `Institutionalization period' during which the movement formed its structure and set up its organs. This period starts with the fifth summit of the Non-Aligned Countries in Colombo in 1976. During the institutionalization period of the Non-Aligned Movement, imperialism was trying to regenerate itself , from a mainly military power , into a new shape of political , economic and technological dominant power.
The Non-Aligned Movement ignored this transformation and remained loyal to its military non-alignment policy, instead of preparing itself for developing into other forms of political , economic and technological non-alignment. During this period the big powers could take advantage of this "vacuum" and could find footholds inside the movement and infiltrate their political , economic and technological allies into the movement (as the next chapters will illustrate). The new members started an ideological battle inside the movement to define Non-Alignment as they wished it to be, and as could please the big power they were allied to.
The fourth phase witnessed the `Disintegration period' . During this time the ideological differences of the members became so severe that the movement started to disintegrate into , at least , two opposing, pro-West and pro-East, blocs.
The revolutionary developments in Eastern Europe since 1989 are bringing a new period into the life of the Non-Aligned Movement. This period can be called the `Modernization period'. This is not the first time that the tension in the relations of East and West changes and develops into relaxation of relations.
In the 1970s the process of Detente created an optimism that the international tension would ease and the Third World countries would benefit from the friendship and non-hostilities of the big powers. The failure in the Detente process was not something not to be repeated. Even today, when East-West relations are developing into a post-Cold-War era, nobody can be sure that such new peaceful coexistence is permanent. In fact, soon after the developments in Eastern Europe in 1990 (as will be illustrated in chapter 6), both the USSR and the USA managed to continue their suppression activities against Third World countries. They both showed that the peaceful coexistence of the two super powers does not necessarily mean any easing of the tension between the Third World countries and the super powers. Therefore, the end of the Cold War did not end the intentions of the super powers vis-a-vis the Third World countries.
It is obvious that the rivalries of the super powers, regarding their spheres of influence in the Third World are more harmful to the third world countries , than to other parts of the world. It will also be less dangerous for the interests of either super power if the super powers co-ordinate their activities against the Third World countries. In case the super powers' bilateral relations continue to be hostile, as it was during the forty years of the Cold War, the Third World countries can play one of them against the other one , or can secure one's support while confronting the other super power. Moreover each super power can neutralize the other one's efforts to secure benefits out of the Third World. But if they move to a more peaceful coexistence, as they are doing in the 1990s , they can co-ordinate their policies and efforts against the Third World countries without crossing each other.
In such case , the super powers' military interventions in the Third World countries will be easier and more successful (as it was in Panama in 1990). The usage of economic, propaganda and technological leverages against the Third World countries will be more effective as well .
The question which remains to be answered is whether the bi-polar system of the super power rivalries of the 1950s later is changing into another form of bi-polar system, a new multi-polar or a mono-polar system.
If the present bi-polar system remains , it must be discovered who will lead the two blocs: Whether the present East-West bilateral relations will continue to dominate the international relations or other powers replace either the Soviet Union or the United States of America. Undoubtedly the Western Alliance is changing from inside with new powers emerging and former powers fading. A united Germany or a stronger Japan can very easily change the combination and the shares of power in the Western Alliance. The future of the American military presence in Europe is also to be considered in relation to the future of the Western Alliance.
On the other hand there is mounting evidence that the (former) Eastern bloc is disintegrating from a united military power into bankrupt scattered members who are becoming dependent on the economic and technological assistance of the Western countries. So it must be seen which two countries or blocs will occupy the position of super powers in the future bi-polar system of international relations.
In case the future international relations would be based upon a mono-polar system , the West led by the United States of America would determine the future of such a system of international relations . The ideal system is a multi-polar or a multilateral system in which the Third World countries can have a right to say and a vote to cast in deciding the form of such relations. It is very unlikely that the Third World countries are given such equal stance as the big powers, let alone as that of the super powers .
The most likely development is that the Third World countries become more cornered in an international system in which the strong economies and the holders of the most advanced technologies can decide about the world in future.
There is no doubt that the Third World countries, tens of which are the greatest debtors in history , and some of them the least developed ones , can not be in a position to decide about the future nature of international relations. Their affairs will continue to be decided in the foreseeable future by the super powers.
CHAPTER 1 . THE EMERGENCE OF THE NAM
Summary
In this chapter the Non-Aligned Movement will be historically reviewed. In this review the series of political developments prior to the formation of the NAM in Asia and Africa including the Bandung Conference will be followed. Also, the causes of the establishment of the NAM and the Movement's aims, policies, schools of thought and different phases of its life will be approached.
Important countries and personalities who influenced the idea of Non-Alignment and their contribution to this idea will be studied. Also the kind of relations between the NAM and the super powers through the last three decades will be observed. The question of the reasons for the NAM's hostilities towards the West will be analysed. Different theories of the NAM in Western and other writings will also be discussed. The United Nations Organization and its links and relations with the NAM is another element in the process of the NAM's life. Also the geographical distribution of the NAM's membership will be among the subjects discussed.
1. 1. THE ORIGINS
The Non-Aligned Movement was officially formed in 1961 when the first gathering of the heads of state and government of 25 Third World countries was held in Belgrade, Yugoslavia. This gathering was preceded by a series of developments, contacts, meetings and efforts in and by the former colonies and the newly-independent movements in the Third World. Undoubtedly the origin of the Non-Aligned Movement must be searched in these developments. But where is the beginning ? To this question different members of the Non-Aligned Movement have different answer. These answers determine the tendencies of the movement and define the meaning of Non-Alignment.
Today, there are several schools of Non-Alignment thought, from the radical extremists to the moderates and even the right extremists. Each of the advocates of these schools of thought point to a different beginning in the long series of developments in the aftermath of the decolonization era.
Certainly, Non-Alignment can be defined as an idea of independence from any sort of attachments to the former and the new colonialists .In this regard the ideas of unity and political independence can be traced back to the 1920s , when an anti-colonialist Pan-African Movement emerged and the Indian National Congress Party was considering the possibility of setting up a federation of Indo-Asian states.
The Yugoslavs trace the birth date of the Non-Aligned Movement to the beginning of the Cold War . Obviously the Yugoslavs used to justify their foreign policy towards the super powers in the context of their ideological issues with the Soviet Union during Stalin's time in the 1950s , and also in the light of the super powers' rivalries in central Europe and in the framework of the Cold War.
The Indians, on the other hand, credit their independence movement to be the source of inspiration for the creation of the Non-Aligned Movement. They search for the roots of the Non-Aligned Movement in Asia or at least in both Asia and Africa. Other Non-Aligned Countries have their own version of how the Non-Aligned Movement emerged. Africans credit Ghana's independence leaders whereas Arabs do not intend to forget the historical role the Egyptian leaders played in the formation of the Non-Aligned Movement .
According to the Yugoslavians, the victory of the revolution in China, revolutionary changes and the establishment of "Popular rule" in a number of East European countries, the collapse of the system of the Fascist rule brought fundamental changes in the entire structure of international relations. According to the Yugoslavs one of these changes brought a new form of unity among the Third World countries ,later called `NON-ALIGNMENT'.
The question whether the Cold War has been the main reason for the movement to come into existence can only be answered in the context of the controversy of differences of opinion between these groups of members. The importance of finding a proper answer for this question becomes crucial when the changes in international relations , such as those in Eastern Europe in the 1990s are studied in relation to the Non-Aligned Movement. If one accepts the Yugoslavian logic that the Cold War forced the Third World countries to unite into the Non-Aligned Movement , then one could very easily believe that when the Cold War is over (as it presumably is in the early 1990s) , the legitimacy of the Non-Aligned Movement fades away. But if the Indians are right to believe that the Non-Aligned Movement has been founded to achieve other goals rather than merely an end to the Cold War, such other aims of Non-Alignment are to be secured even after the official end of the Cold War.
The first non-violent anti-colonial step in the present century goes back to 1927. In February 1927 `The Congress Against Colonial Oppression and Imperialism' was held in Brussels. Perhaps this is the first ever recorded gathering of the representatives of the colonies who tried to start an anti-colonial campaign. Taking part in this congress were representatives of Indonesia, India, China, Syria, Palestine,
Egypt, Korea, Indochina, Japan, some Central and South American countries (including Mexico). Delegates represented 136 organizations from 37 colonised countries. The attending African and Asian leaders included Jawaharlal Nehru, Ho Chi Minh and Leopold Sedar Senghore. This was the first time in history that freedom fighters of Asia, Africa and Latin America had met to exchange views on the need to fight for liberation of oppressed peoples and to embark, in organized fashion, on an open clash with oppressors. This meeting enabled all participants to gain a deeper insight into the problems of colonial peoples and their struggle which was gradually assuming universal proportions.
Looking into the list of the countries, organizations and leaders participating in this gathering, one can easily find how most countries of the same group continued to gather together in the next decades to form the core of the movement later called `The Non-Aligned Movement'. Jawaharlal Nehru, who represented the Indian National Congress at the Brussels meeting, later recalled that:
"It was felt more and more that the struggle for freedom was a common one against the thing that was imperialism".
Although Nehru was present at the Brussels meeting, the Indians put the birth date of the NAM in the following year,1928, to find the first clues for the birth of the Non-Aligned ideas. According to the Indian researcher, Govind Narain Srivastava , during India's independence struggle in 1928, it was the Indian National Congress that declared:
India must promote its relations with other countries and nations suffering from imperialism and wishing to fight it. According to the same researcher, the first Indian post-independence prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru, was one of the first who showed the direct relationship between national liberation and preservation of world peace.
Contents
Page
PREFACE ..................................................1
Introduction .............................................7
Chapter 1. The Emergence of the Non-Aligned Movement.....13
1.1. The Origins......................................14
1.2. The Name of the Movement ....................... 33
1.3. The Aims and the Policies ...................... 36
1.4. The Schools of Thought ........................ 51
1.5. The Institutionalization of the NAM ............ 61
1.6. Non-Alignment and Super Powers ................. 72
1.7. Hostility Against Western Powers ............... 84
1.8. The NAM and the UN..............................104
Chapter 2 . Cold War , a Source of Tension .............113
2.1. Cold War , a Third World Version ...............117
2.2. Concept of the Third World .................... 133
2.3. Threats Against the Non-Aligned Movement ...... 139
2.4. Real Threat , Military Intervention ........... 149
2.5. "Third World War" ............................. 162
2.6. Increasing Cost of Military Intervention ...... 165
Chapter 3 . Cold War Becomes Regional ................. 168
3.1. Nixon Doctrine Vis-a-Vis the NAM .............. 169
3.2. Brezhnev Doctrine ............................. 177
3.3. Regional Conflicts............................. 180
3.4. Regional Organizations......................... 186
3.5. Blocs In the Non-Aligned Movement ............. 193
3.6. Foreign Military Bases In Non-Aligned Countries.199
3.7. Rapid Deployment Forces , Carter Doctrine.......209
3.8. The Arms Race In the Non-Aligned Movement.......216
3.9. Outlook ....................................... 225
Chapter 4 . Economic Alignment ........................ 227
4.1. The Economic Factor in Polito-Military
Interventions ................................. 234
4.2. Present International Economic Order........... 242
4.3. External Debts ................................ 245
4.4. Roots of the Crisis ........................... 249
4.5. Solutions for the Economic Crisis ............. 269
4.6. The New International Economic Order .......... 276
4.7. OPEC, a Failed Experience ..................... 280
4.8. The Group of 77 ............................... 292
4.9. Outlook ....................................... 297
Chapter 5 . Detente and the NAM ....................... 299
5.1. Strong Economies and Superior Technologies......308
5.2. Ninth Summit, Modernization Plan ...............315
5.3.1. Cold War Ends ............................... 328
5.3.2. Eastern Europe Revolution & the Third World...330
5.4.1. Immediate Polito-Military Effects on the NAM..334
5.4.2. Panama Episode ...............................336
5.4.3. Kuwait Episode ...............................340
5.4.4. Regional Security Arrangement ................349
5.5.1. Yugoslavia Episode............................351
5.5.2. Immediate Economic Effects on the NAM ........354
5.5.3. Cuba's Economic Situation in 1990 ............357
Chapter 6. Future Outlook ............................ 359
6.1. Achievements of the NAM ....................... 362
6.2. Failures of the NAM ........................... 364
6.3. Political Future of the NAM ................... 379
6.4. Economic Future of the NAM .................... 384