this post was submitted on 23 Mar 2025
41 points (100.0% liked)
GenZedong
4481 readers
79 users here now
This is a Dengist community in favor of Bashar al-Assad with no information that can lead to the arrest of Hillary Clinton, our fellow liberal and queen. This community is not ironic. We are Marxists-Leninists.
This community is for posts about Marxism and geopolitics (including shitposts to some extent). Serious posts can be posted here or in /c/GenZhou. Reactionary or ultra-leftist cringe posts belong in /c/shitreactionariessay or /c/shitultrassay respectively.
We have a Matrix homeserver and a Matrix space. See this thread for more information. If you believe the server may be down, check the status on status.elara.ws.
Rules:
- No bigotry, anti-communism, pro-imperialism or ultra-leftism (anti-AES)
- We support indigenous liberation as the primary contradiction in settler colonies like the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and Israel
- If you post an archived link (excluding archive.org), include the URL of the original article as well
- Unless it's an obvious shitpost, include relevant sources
- For articles behind paywalls, try to include the text in the post
- Mark all posts containing NSFW images as NSFW (including things like Nazi imagery)
founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Thank you for the clarification. I think I understand now.
My understanding is that when a color revolution fails, which is becoming increasingly common as imperialism develops, along with the Global South's understanding of imperialism, the US increasingly turns to sowing chaos and destruction through protracted terror campaigns rather then parasitically yanking organic movements in whatever direction they want.
Essentially the color coup is a development from the color revolution because movements in the global south have gotten wise to Washington's tactics. Therefore, since the US can no longer attain their goals by latching onto these movements, they do there best to anhilate all functioning of governments they target.
The west is also on the decline meaning they have to resort to these more desperate tactics compared to before.
I'm now interested in the way things develop from here.
As we can see with Gaza, the western myth of humanitarian concern is shattered. This along with the increasingly aggressive sentiment of the US, even towards their vassels, makes it obvious to all of the global south that the US has no concern for people's conditions of life and only carew about furthering its political goals.
The increased use of these color coups over color revolutions, though concering, potentially opens some doors, or more accurately, closes a large amount of looping paths.
With the increase of these color coups and terror campaigns, the more likely that the global south gains wider awareness of such simple tactics. It forces these movements and countries to burn the bridge of western compliance. More over, it makes obvious that the answer to this issue is through unity with other members of the global south. A chain is broken by its weakest link, therefore pressure from the rest of the global south to not be that weakest link will mount.
In a way this increased brutality will isolate the west further and create an enemy in their victims who is increasingly united.
I expect that initially this strategy will he successful, a shock of sorts, however I think it will quickly burn out its effectiveness as globalized brutality is unsustainable. We may then see countries begin taking measures similar to the Sahel revolutions in order to combat this new development, leading to the west fully committing to these campaigns.
Eventually sparse interconnected regional alliances who turned to "authoritarianism", as the west will call it, will cooperate with another to cover there weaknesses against the western terror plots.
Perhaps my view is too hopeful or I am missing a key factor but, I honestly think these color coups may be, though initially more brutal, significantly less compotent then the former color revolutions.
I think there's a lot of emergent theories that can come out of this new development, which is why I ended publishing the piece (it had been in my drafts 90% finished for over a month lol). So yeah, I can't say you're wrong or that I'm also absolutely right. I think it's definitely a development to keep an eye on, and it might not be entirely new (we have a book that makes a case about Shining Path operating like a CIA operation, and then of course I think of the Iran-Contra affair), but we may see more of it from now on. It also lends credence to the color coup as something that can happen with imperial involvement. Many people are not aware the US created ISIS (through Al Qaida) and funded them too.
One thing I'd like to add is these terror cells build their own governance aside from the government's and therefore fund themselves, which is not the case with the color revolution. We see in Ukraine that they had to restart the maidan protests after they started fizzling out come Jan. 2014. It also gives an excuse for the US to intervene militarily. France was doing Operation Serval in West Africa for a few years against the ISIS cells established in the Sahel, and this gave the impetus to form the AES because French troops were more concerned with looting Africa than actually doing something about the terrorists.