Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Leopold II as most successful European Dictator *Do not copy*


            Leopold II was the most successful dictator in relation to his goals. Although he was subject to limited outrage of the European community, he furthered Belgium and increased his own wealth, the goal of any monarch. The other dictators had more obstacles in their way, and had more extravagant goals.
 Leopold II was born into power, and had few vocal opponents in his country, allowing him to do essentially whatever he wanted. He was able to hide things from his country, as nobody was looking for the bad things in their king. He was able to create the International African Association under the pretense of spreading civility and Christianity throughout Africa. He was able to declare that the Congo Free State (CFS) was being helped by the Belgian government, not so that they could exploit the CFS, but to help establish order and good morals in the Congo. Leopold was also able to act in the way he did because everyone else was doing it. If the other European monarchs had scolded him, and chastised his way of dealing with the native Congolese, they would have been seen as hypocrites, and would have been forced to revise their own treatment of the native Africans. Some, like Irish MP Roger Casement, did speak out, but they did not have the support base Leopold did.
            By using the CFS to gain natural resources, Leopold was able to accumulate a massive amount of wealth, and put some of it in a trust for his descendants. The rest of this wealth was then used to fund Leopold’s immense public and private works buildings. Leopold built lavish palaces for himself, and also built buildings for public use with the money he received form the lucrative CFS. He did not waste his time attempting to exploit anything other than rubber for more than a few years once he realized the demand for rubber. Leopold’s buildings earned him the title “Builder King,” and garnered him the respect and love of his subjects.  
The other dictators were not as successful in their endeavors because they did not have the international support-or blackmail-that Leopold had. The fascist leaders, Franco and Petain, had the Allies against them during and post-World War II, while the communist leaders, Ceausescu, Hoxha and Tito, had Western Europe and the United states against them in the Cold War era.  Although the communists had some support from the USSR, the lack of support from inside their own countries caused their downfall. Romania executed Ceausescu after his “Fascist Agitators” speech, Yugoslavia fell apart less than twenty years after Tito died because of economic, religious and social tensions, and Albania lasted less than ten years after Hoxha died, becoming a democracy. Spain was transitioned into a constitutional monarchy in the reign of Franco’s hand-picked successor, and The French people turned against Petain once he was put on trial.
The other European dictators also had goals of fundamentally changing the political structure that they were governing in, from monarchies or republics into fascist and communist utopias. All of the communist leaders had a falling-out with one or another of the leaders of the USSR, and attempted to embark on their own brand of socialism, be it “Socialism in One Family,” “Titoism,” or simply a continuation of Stalinism. The fascists were fighting against the tide of liberalism, attempting to bring back the status quo from wherever the republics that had preceded them had hidden it. Leopold simply continued an already established monarchy, and did not fight the tide of liberalization, but redirected it to fit his brand of dictatorship. He established universal male suffrage in Belgium, and he made secular primary school mandatory.
All in all, Leopold had better resources, better allies, and a better country to impose his dictatorial views upon. He did not attempt to revolutionize his country, just to do what his people wanted in order to distract them from the atrocities in the CFS. He was not openly opposed by any Western European nation, and he participated in the Berlin Conference to make sure he got what he wanted. The other European dictators tried to achieve too much without giving their people reason to support them other than “ideals.” Leopold made Belgium richer, more beautiful, better educated, and kept the CFS out of the limelight long enough to make a substantial profit off of it.

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