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Che the revolutionary hero? Ruthless serial killer more like

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Published Date: 30 January 2009
HOLLYWOOD history is often nonsensical, but film-makers usually have the good sense not to whitewash killers and sadists. Steven Soderbergh's new film about Che Guevara, however, does that, and more.
Che the revolutionary romantic, as depicted by Benecio del Toro in Soderbergh's film, never existed. That hero of the Left, with his hippie hair and beard, an image now iconic on T-shirts and coffee mugs around the world, is a myth concocted by Fidel
Castro's propagandists – something of a cross between Don Quixote and Robin Hood.

Like those tall tales, Fidel's myth of Che bears a superficial resemblance to historical facts, but the real story is far darker. Some Robin Hood probably did brutalise the rich and, to cover his tracks, give some of his loot to the poor. In medieval Spain, Quixote-like knights probably did roam the countryside, ridding it not of dragons but of the land's few remaining Muslims.

The same goes for the legendary Che. No teenager in rebellion against the world or his parents seems able to resist Che's alluring image. Just wearing a Che T-shirt is the shortest and cheapest way to appear to be on the right side of history.

What works for teenagers also seems to work with forever-young movie directors. In the 1960s, the Che look, with beard and beret, was at least a glib political statement. Today, it is little more than a fashion accoutrement that inspires a big-budget Hollywood epic. Are Che theme parks next?

But once there was a real Che Guevara: he is less well known than the fictional puppet that has replaced reality. The true Che was a more significant figure than his fictional clone – he was the incarnation of what revolution and Marxism really meant in the 20th century.

Che was no humanist. No Communist leader, indeed, ever held humanist values. Karl Marx certainly was not one. True to their movement's founding prophet, Stalin, Mao, Castro and Che held no respect for life. Blood needed to be shed if a better world was to be baptised. When criticised by one of his early companions for the death of millions during the Chinese revolution, Mao observed that countless Chinese die everyday, so what did it matter?

Likewise, Che could kill with a shrug. Trained as a medical doctor in Argentina, he chose not to save lives but to suppress them.

After he seized power, Che put to death 500 "enemies" of the revolution without trial, or even much discrimination.

Castro, no humanist himself, did his best to neutralise Guevara by appointing him minister for industry. As could be expected, Che applied Soviet policies to the Cubans: agriculture was destroyed and ghost factories dotted the landscape.

He did not care about Cuba's economy or its people. His purpose was to pursue revolution for its own sake, whatever it meant, like art for art's sake.

Indeed, without his ideology, Che would have been nothing more than another serial killer. Ideological sloganeering allowed him to kill in larger numbers than any serial killer could imagine, and all in the name of justice.

Five centuries ago, Che probably would have been one of those priest/soldiers exterminating Latin America's natives in the name of God.

In the name of history, Che, too, saw murder as a necessary tool of a noble cause.

But suppose we judge this Marxist hero by his own criterion: did he actually transform the world? The answer is yes – but for the worse.

The communist Cuba he helped to forge is an undisputed and unmitigated failure, much more impoverished and much less free than it was before its "liberation".

Despite the social reforms the Left likes to trumpet about Cuba, its literacy rate was higher before Castro came to power, and racism against the black population was less pervasive. Indeed, Cuba's leaders today are far more likely to be white than they were in Batista's day.

Beyond Cuba, the Che myth has inspired thousands of students and activists across Latin America to lose their lives in foolhardy guerrilla struggles. The Left, inspired by the siren call of Che, chose armed struggle instead of elections. By doing so, it opened the way to military dictatorship.

Latin America is not yet cured of these unintended consequences of Guevarism.

Indeed, 50 years after Cuba's revolution, Latin America remains divided. Those nations that rejected Che's mythology and chose the path of democracy and the free market, such as Brazil, Peru and Chile, are better off than they ever were: equality, freedom and economic progress have advanced in unity.

By contrast, those nations that remain nostalgic for the cause of Che, such as Venezuela, Ecuador, and Bolivia, are at this very moment poised on the brink of civil war.

The real Che, who spent most of his time as Castro's central banker supervising executions, deserves to be better known.

Perhaps if Soderbergh's two-part Che epic succeeds at the box office, his financial backers will want to film a more truthful sequel. There is no certainly shortage of material for "Che, The Untold Story."

• Guy Sorman is a French philosopher and economist, and is the author of Empire of Lies.



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  • Last Updated: 29 January 2009 9:16 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

30/01/2009 03:33:18
I think it's pretty bizarre to blame the problems in Latin America on Guevara. the (mainly right wing) dictatorships might have had a lot to do with it as well. Cuba itself was run by a ruthless dictator before the revolution, not the cuddly stable democracy some would like to pretend.

The funny thing about Mr Sorman's perception of Che as a 'ruthless serial killer' however is this: Take any famous military figure in history- William Wallace, The Duke of Wellington, your Grandad from world war 2 etc etc and pretend that their actions were carried out in normal civilian life rather than in the context of war-suddenly they all seem like ruthless killers!
I'm sorry, but telling us that a soldier killed lots of people is not something I feel shocked by.
2

Sierra Foothills Scot,

Diamond Springs 30/01/2009 04:22:28
The problems of Latin America were certainly not principally the fault of Che Guevara, but his "solutions" were not improvements. How many political prisoners are there still in Cuba, more than half a century after the great socialist revolution?
3

catgut,

pomona 30/01/2009 08:24:31
good point foothills.
afraid we dont know just how many prisoners there are in cuba.
most of them are in the US run part and have orange boilersuits.
The article has some points to make Guevara does not deserve the status he now has.
The blame for south americas problems are probably not his.
Cubans have a better life style than most of her neighbours. This is not to say that its great just better than most of the other islands in the area if you exclude the tax havens for the rich.

ps was bravheart any better for historical fact, Hollywood is only a factory for films, the need to make a profit is more important to the film maker than fact.
4

Itchy,

30/01/2009 10:38:19
#2 Spot on.

Che Guevara was a supporter of totalitarian rule and was even less liberal than the military Junta he helped to overthrow.

#3 "most of them are in the US run part and have orange boilersuits."

Cuba is a giant prison under a communist dictatorship.
5

Thrawn,

UK 30/01/2009 11:54:34
And many Russians still venerate Stalin despite the tens of millions that died in his gulags or through starvation. Some in Russia even wish to rehabilitate him.

So odd. Now, imagine if anyone on the Right were to try and put a positive spin on Hitler.

Why are there so many "useful idiots" who condone the excesses of the Left as being failed experiments?

6

Observer,,

Glasgow 30/01/2009 14:42:27
Ah the looney right. Always good for a laugh.
7

Stuart_100,

Aberdeen or Ecuador 30/01/2009 15:12:38
It's very easy to jump on a bandwagon like this and slag off some famous historical figure without really knowing what you're talking about. How about using some evidence the next time you write an article? Or actually do some research that within a minute would show some of your claims to be utterly wrong.

The first mistake I came across was the claim that 'Che was no humanist'. And to try and say that he was not a humanist because 'Karl Marx was certainly not one'. Che was the opposite of a dogmatic theorist who followed Marxist theory with no human values. In his writings he repeatedly criticises those politicians and leaders who do so. Che while fighting in the Sierra Maestra and travelling in South America developed very humanistic theories and his actions showed this.
To claim 'he chose not to save lives but to suppress them' is ridiculous. Enemy soldiers captured during the Cuban revolutionary war were given medical treatment that compared very favourably to the conditions captured guerrilas found themselves in.

As already pointed out you can hardly claim that he was a ruthless murderer because he killed people in a war? Should we destory our image of William Wallace because he killed enemy soldiers? Was Winston Churchill a 'ruthless serial killer' because he refused to give up a war against a cruel dictator? No.

'Castro, no humanist himself'. Any evidence for this? Castro ordered that all enemy soldiers during the revolutionary war were to be treated with the best of medicines that the guerrilas possessed. Again a lot better treatment than they themselves could expect when captured.

And as for your incredible claims for the state of Cuba. ''it's literacy rate was higher before Castro came to power'.

This is one of the most amazing and stupid lie's I have ever seen written in print. Before the revolution '45% of the rural population was illiterate; 44% had never attended a school.' Now according to 'Jo Ritzen', the World Bank’s Vice Preside
8

Stuart_100,

Aberdeen or Ecuador 30/01/2009 15:13:45
Now according to 'Jo Ritzen', the World Bank’s Vice President for Development Policy. 'Cuba managed to reduce illiteracy from 40% to zero within ten years,” said Ritzen.

Net primary enrolment for both girls and boys reached 100% in 1997, up from 92% in 1990. That was as high as most developed nations - higher even than the US rate. Again, according to the World Bank. If you're going to write in a newspaper, atleast get your facts right.

I spent eight months in Ecuador last year, and I'm leaving tommorow to spend another four months working with charity there. Your claim that Ecuador is a country 'poised on the brink of civil war' is completely un-true as well and I'd like to see some evidence of this if you could provide it? President Rafeal Correa, an outspoken admirer of Che last year won an election for a new assembly and consitution with an overwhelming majority. It seems the Ecuadorian people would disagree with you.

Likewise in Venezuela, another country you so stupidly lambast because they remain 'nostalgic for the cause of Che'. In this country as well the people have decided to follow Che's example and reject the free market economy which you misguidedly seem to think has brought prosperity to Latin America. Poverty levels have dropped over 10% from 42.8 percent in 1999, when Chávez took office, to 33.9 percent in early 2006 and there has been a massive extension in healthcare and edcuational programmes.

Education rates according to Ritzen are in Cuba 'very much in tune with the developed world, and much higher than schools in, say, Argentina, Brazil, or Chile'. Some of the country's you claim have chosen the path of the free market.

Perhaps the worst part your article is claiming thousands of activists and students who were murdered in struggles were 'foolhardy'. This is a despicable denunciation of the hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Latin Americans who fought and died or were simply murdered in struggles against corrupt and
9

Stuart_100,

Aberdeen or Ecuador 30/01/2009 15:15:10
This is a despicable denunciation of the hundreds of thousands, if not millions of Latin Americans who fought and died or were simply murdered in struggles against corrupt and brutal military regimes. They did not 'choose armed struggle instead of elections' as you so stupidly claim. The struggle was chosen FOR them. I believe many people who died while struggling in Cuba, Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia or Bolivia against military dictatorships such as Pinochet's would have welcomed elections as a chance to bring freedom. However they didn't have this choice!

Military dictatorships usually preceded armed guerilla struggles, not the other way around. You seem to claim that 'military dictatorship' was a fair response to left wing politics. It is hardly Che's fault that so many people were killed by brutal right-wing regimes that were so often supported by the USA. Maybe the blame lie's with them.

I suggest next time you write an article to follow some simple guidelines. Write about something you know about, do some actual research and try and prevent your obvious bias showing.
10

Banal Sojourner,

San Francisco 30/01/2009 17:14:19
It is inhuman to murder political prisoners in furtherance of a totalitarian creed, as Che did. The mere attempt by his admirers to explain away his atrocities is itself a moral crime.

There is no difference between “right wing” dictators and “left wing” dictators except to those caught up in the politics of gang affiliation. The bunting about Castro’s reviewing stand was red, while Pinochet’s was tri-colored. The differences are aesthetic and rhetorical. We higher primates are easily beguiled by oratory, pageantry and imagery. We experience the ephemeral and suppose it existential. Murder is murder; braying about the proletariat doesn’t mitigate it. The only means by which a Martian could distinguish between Pol Pot and Che Guevara is body count.

The relationship of Che’s admirers to his iconic image is that of a pre-teen girl to the Tiger Beat posters on her bedroom wall. Whenever I meet somebody sporting the image, I assume I’m dealing with a moron. I’ve not been disappointed yet.
11

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

30/01/2009 18:20:31
#10
As it happens, I'm not a communist, so I disagree with Che's politics. However I laugh when people criticise Guevara because he killed people. Very rarely do you find that they have a universal aversion to people being killed-no just when it suits them.
Lets get real: in wartimes people get killed. Having read about Guevara he doesn't seem to have been particularly brutal-certainly not more than many that the right regard as heroes.
12

ThePeter,

Glasgae 30/01/2009 18:32:53
Observer, you want to get rid of foreign workers and you apparently support Castro, You laugh at the looney right

Nazism was another form of socialism

So, you a racist Nazi?
13

Banal Sojourner,

San Francisco 30/01/2009 18:56:56

I argue for condemnation of murder regardless of politics. Newton argues (I think) for a pseudo-sophisticated indifference to political murder. “Hey, everybody does it.”

Yes, rightists too have stocked their pantheon with cold-blooded killers. But at least they spare us the intellectual insult of asking to be taken for “liberals.”
14

ThePeter,

Glasgae 30/01/2009 19:07:31
#13 - With your permission I want to copy and paste what you have said for use when I am next in an argument with Lefties who extol these murderers. (or even the rightists for that matter)
15

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

30/01/2009 19:07:48
#13 not sure what your point is. You seem to be saying that it's ok for conservatives to idolize 'Cold blooded killers', because er..they're not liberals.

My position, I hope is clear. Human beings kill each other, it's what we tend to do. I've not met many who think killing is wrong across the board in every circumstance. Yes, they'll condemn their enemies for doing it, but they'll just as easily condone it in their heroes. I'm no so much supporting Guevara here as pointing out the hypocrisy of conservatives who criticize him.
16

ThePeter,

Glasgae 30/01/2009 19:11:27
# 15 - stop smoking whatever you have been smoking.

If you can not understand #13's argument then you really are one of the "foot-soldiers" of the likes of Pol-Pot, Stalin, Mao and Hitler....
17

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

30/01/2009 19:14:03
#16 beat it moron.
18

ThePeter,

Glasgae 30/01/2009 19:16:34
Newton actually did not invent gravity, he came up with the principles that explained it.

So being called a Moron from the likes of you (i enjoy lefty baiting) is quite amusing....
19

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

30/01/2009 19:17:57
ok moron.
20

ThePeter,

Glasgae 30/01/2009 19:18:17
:-)
21

Banal Sojourner,

San Francisco 30/01/2009 19:52:03
Newton - I’m not saying that conservatives may be forgiven for their support of, say, Nixon’s bombing of Cambodia. I’m simply saying that their support of such atrocities does not entail the terminological and conceptual perversions that are operative when somebody professing to be a “liberal” also professes admiration of Che Guevara. Being a true liberal means leaving others alone. It does not mean shooting unarmed prisoners in the back of the head, as Che did at La Cabana prison.
22

Itchy,

30/01/2009 20:15:03
#8
"Now according to 'Jo Ritzen', the World Bank’s Vice President for Development Policy. 'Cuba managed to reduce illiteracy from 40% to zero within ten years,” said Ritzen. "

Well worth enduring a totalitarian state, secret police, forced labour camps, no free speech and appalling poverty for, then.
23

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

30/01/2009 20:36:24
#21 For a start, a 'liberal' and a 'socialist' or not necessarily the same thing. Secondly, many of Che's actions can be understood in the context of a warzone. Shooting people in the back of the head (or anywhere else for that matter) would be unacceptable in peace time, but is not out of place in times of war.
Guevara wasn't up against cuddly bunny democracies, but ruthless dicatorships.
I wouldn't necessarily say that what he put in their place was better but at least he believed in something and was willing to to put his life on the line to try and achieve it. I think it his spirit rather than his politics that people admire in Che.
24

Itchy,

30/01/2009 22:20:30
#23 "Guevara wasn't up against cuddly bunny democracies, but ruthless dicatorships"

He was even less liberal than the Military Junta he helped to overthrow and his 'cause' was a genocidal ideology.
25

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

30/01/2009 23:03:57
#24 Neither Guevara nor Castro has committed Genocide in Cuba.
26

Banal Sojourner,

San Francisco 30/01/2009 23:37:30

Hey Newton - My remarks in no way imply a equation of socialism with liberalism. While Che was a socialist, most of his admirers in the U.S. consider themselves liberals. What I’m objecting to the undeserved liberal self-image of his U.S. admirers. Anyone who thinks that admiration for Che and concern for humanity can coexist in the same value system is pitifully deluded.

If you’re simply making the pedestrian observation that summary executions are more common in wartime, then who could disagree with you? But as a libertarian, I regard war as an aggravating rather than a mitigating circumstance to the extent that the war in question is being prosecuted toward totalitarian ends. (Actually, I’m not sure your point is good even insofar as it goes. Are you suggesting that Che earned his nickname, “The Butcher of La Cabana” while hostilities were still ongoing? You may be right, but I doubt it. In any event, how much of a “war” was it? Che himself described the decisive “battle” of Santa Clara as publicity exercise for U.S. journalistic consumption.)


27

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

30/01/2009 23:58:10
#26
'Anyone who thinks that admiration for Che and concern for humanity can coexist in the same value system is pitifully deluded.'

There are doubtless the very pure of heart who think that it's wrong to kill in any circumstances, but these people are very rare. I don't think Guevara was doing anything particularly out of the ordinary as far as military leaders are concerned, so if you're going to condemn him for brutality, you'll have to condemn a whole lot of others.
When you talk about communism, I think you have to make a distinction between the ideal and the reality. Many communists are good people who genuinely want to see a better world. No doubt many of Che's admirers see him as someone of that mold who was actually prepared to do something about it rather than just talk about it.
28

Banal Sojourner,

31/01/2009 01:16:52

Newton - When I qualify my comments by saying “As a libertarian,” I’m trying to tell you that I am speaking on behalf of my own philosophy, and do not purport to represent common opinion. I do, in fact, condemn “a whole lot of others.” (I thought my Nixon remark would have established my credibility in that respect.)

It’s no big trick to be a “good” person while advocating voluntary communism. That much is clear. Holding onto your “goodness” while advocating communism of the involuntary variety, however, is a bit more problematic. Involuntary communism is an inherently invasive and violent ideology, regardless of whether blood is actually shed in its administration or not. You can not deny property rights except by brute force or the threat of brute force. A great deal of unselfawareness, naiveté, and just plain-old ignorance would be required to retain one’s “goodness” while advocating a violence-based social order. Humanity has been bled half-to-death by that kind of idealism.
29

Newton_Invented_Gravity,

31/01/2009 03:34:51
#28 Well you don't have to persuade me that communism is a bad idea.

But you could just as well argue that any concept of society is invasive and -since it must be enforced in some way-inherently violent; Why should anyone, for example, have the right to own a piece of land which they didn't create? Why should a body of people calling themselves a 'government' have the right to send another group of people off to kill other people in another country?

No doubt the communists thought they were right and that any hardships caused were for the greater good-and who doesn't argue this for their ideology?

Given recent events in the economy, I don't believe that we capitalists can be quite as smug in assuming that WE necessarily have all the answers either.
30

greenhill,

01/02/2009 09:46:13
RE Newton_Invented_Gravity,31/01/2009 03:34:51

You are nothing more than an intellectual accomplice and appologist for evil.
31

necerbed,

04/02/2009 18:19:15
RE Newton_Invented_Gravity. You said: "I'm sorry, but telling us that a soldier killed lots of people is not something I feel shocked by."
Yo need to learn the facts before you open your mouth. We are talking here about people that were killed by Che AFTER Castro took power. He was not a soldier fighting in the mountains anymore, he was representing a government. Illigal govermment but still a government. His killing game in the mountains had ended in his favor, he should have stopped killing people right there and start building the sociaty they promised the cuban people. He was a real disease, thanks god for the bolivians who took care of him.

 

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