1. Jiang Qing, the widow of Mao Zedong
had been locked away
Copy !req
2. in solitary confinement
for ten years.
Copy !req
3. Over that time, she had hoarded
socks and handkerchiefs
Copy !req
4. until she had enough to make a rope.
Copy !req
5. And, in 1991, she hanged herself.
Copy !req
6. She left a note.
Copy !req
7. It said, "Today the revolution
has been stolen by a clique
Copy !req
8. "led by Deng Xiaoping.
Copy !req
9. "The result is that unending
evils have been
Copy !req
10. "unleashed on the Chinese people.
Copy !req
11. "Chairman, your student and fighter
is coming to see you."
Copy !req
12. Jiang Qing's great enemy, Deng
Xiaoping, was now all-powerful.
Copy !req
13. The new China he had created
was growing rapidly,
Copy !req
14. building vast factories
to send goods to the West.
Copy !req
15. He had got rid of all Jiang Qing's
revolutionary dreams,
Copy !req
16. but he had also smashed all
visions of democracy,
Copy !req
17. by sending troops
into Tiananmen Square.
Copy !req
18. But Tiananmen Square had been
a disaster for the regime.
Copy !req
19. And it also raised
a terrible question.
Copy !req
20. If China no longer believed
in revolutionary communism
Copy !req
21. or in democracy, what did
it believe in...
Copy !req
22. .. apart from money?
Copy !req
23. Deng Xiaoping's solution was
to go back into the past
Copy !req
24. and reawaken an old, powerful fear.
Copy !req
25. That what had happened in
Tiananmen Square had really been
Copy !req
26. part of a giant conspiracy
by the West to destroy China.
Copy !req
27. It was a conspiracy, he said, that
had been going on for 150 years.
Copy !req
28. It had begun back
in the 19th century
Copy !req
29. when the British had invaded China
Copy !req
30. and forced opium onto
the Chinese people.
Copy !req
31. Deng now ordered a vast
propaganda campaign to begin.
Copy !req
32. Its aim was to spread
the idea of a conspiracy.
Copy !req
33. At the centre of the campaign was
a multimillion dollar film,
Copy !req
34. including British actors.
Copy !req
35. It told the story of how
the British had brought
Copy !req
36. hundreds of tonnes of opium
into the Port of Canton...
Copy !req
37. .. and how the Chinese
had tried to stop them.
Copy !req
38. But the British,
led by Queen Victoria,
Copy !req
39. were determined to
smash their resistance
Copy !req
40. and use the opium to reduce
the Chinese people to zombies
Copy !req
41. and so control the whole world.
Copy !req
42. Fire!
Copy !req
43. The Chinese propaganda even created
an early computer game,
Copy !req
44. where you could fight against
the British as they invaded.
Copy !req
45. Now, the campaign said, the West
were trying to do the same again.
Copy !req
46. What the Chinese were alleging
in their campaign
Copy !req
47. was historically accurate.
Copy !req
48. But what they didn't know was
that the opium trade had also had
Copy !req
49. powerful consequences
inside Britain itself.
Copy !req
50. It had started to undermine
the self-confidence
Copy !req
51. of the British Empire...
Copy !req
52. .. and introduce a dark
and corrosive fear
Copy !req
53. into the heart of British society.
Copy !req
54. By the middle of the 19th century,
those who ran Britain were
Copy !req
55. already aware of the horrors
created by the slave trade.
Copy !req
56. For 200 years, the British had
transported millions of Africans
Copy !req
57. to become slaves in their colonies
in the Caribbean
Copy !req
58. and in the Americas.
Copy !req
59. It had been one of the main forces
behind the rise
Copy !req
60. of the British Empire.
Copy !req
61. Now they began to realise that they
had also done something
Copy !req
62. terrible to China.
Copy !req
63. That by forcing opium onto
the country,
Copy !req
64. they had poisoned and corrupted
millions of people.
Copy !req
65. They hadn't enslaved
them physically,
Copy !req
66. they had enslaved their minds.
Copy !req
67. And, in return, Britain had received
a vast wave of money - in silver -
Copy !req
68. that made it the richest and most
powerful country in the world.
Copy !req
69. One historian wrote...
Copy !req
70. "Deeply involved as it was
in one of the most pernicious,
Copy !req
71. "yet well-organised and profitable
drug trades that has ever
Copy !req
72. "existed, the British Empire
was rotten at its heart."
Copy !req
73. And that knowledge led to guilt.
Copy !req
74. In the 1870s, a mass movement
was formed.
Copy !req
75. It was called the Society for the
Suppression of the Opium Trade.
Copy !req
76. It published pamphlets and books
about the horrors
Copy !req
77. that were happening in China.
Copy !req
78. They caused a sensation and hundreds
of thousands joined the movement.
Copy !req
79. But as the campaign grew,
a strange thing happened -
Copy !req
80. the guilt over what Britain had
done to China began to mutate.
Copy !req
81. It changed into fear.
Copy !req
82. And at the end of the 19th century,
a hysteria swept Britain -
Copy !req
83. that the Chinese were preparing
to take their revenge.
Copy !req
84. There was a panic about Chinese-run
opium dens in all the major cities.
Copy !req
85. The truth was that there were less
than 1,000 Chinese in Britain
Copy !req
86. at that time, but the hysteria
ran out of control.
Copy !req
87. It was called the Yellow Peril.
Copy !req
88. The panic also spread
through America,
Copy !req
89. especially the west coast where
there were Chinese migrant workers.
Copy !req
90. Novel after novel was published
in both Britain and America,
Copy !req
91. with Chinese villains who were
trying to destroy
Copy !req
92. Western civilisation.
Copy !req
93. It culminated with the invention
of a global villain -
Copy !req
94. Dr Fu Manchu.
Copy !req
95. Fu Manchu is described
by his creator,
Copy !req
96. a novelist called Sax Rohmer,
as a yellow Satan,
Copy !req
97. an archangel of evil who wants
to take over the whole world
Copy !req
98. and revenge himself
on the white race.
Copy !req
99. The injection of the serum will
make his brain mine.
Copy !req
100. In other words, he becomes
a reflection of my will.
Copy !req
101. He will do as I command,
exactly as though I were doing it.
Copy !req
102. In the name of
the British government,
Copy !req
103. I demand the release of this boy.
British government?
Copy !req
104. I'll wipe them and the whole
accursed white race
Copy !req
105. off the face of the Earth when I get
the sword and mask that will call
Copy !req
106. the teeming millions of Asia
to the uprising.
Copy !req
107. This is only the beginning.
Copy !req
108. I will wipe out your whole
accursed white race.
Copy !req
109. In the early 1990s, the Western
democracies seemed to be the future.
Copy !req
110. The collapse of the Soviet Union
meant that their ideas
Copy !req
111. were now going to spread
all across the world.
Copy !req
112. But at home, in both Britain
and America,
Copy !req
113. there were still forces deep in the
heart of both societies that
Copy !req
114. had little to do with democracy.
Copy !req
115. Man with a gun.
Copy !req
116. 12 Georgia 30, I need
additional units,
Copy !req
117. 6-7 and Dacre, I've got
a 4-50 male with a gun...
Copy !req
118. It seemed that despite all
the changes of the past 30 years,
Copy !req
119. that underneath,
Copy !req
120. the old structures
of power and the corruption
Copy !req
121. and the anger that created
was still there.
Copy !req
122. In Los Angeles in March 1991,
Rodney King was chased
Copy !req
123. and stopped by police
for drunken driving.
Copy !req
124. Despite offering no resistance,
he was beaten repeatedly
Copy !req
125. by four officers.
Copy !req
126. It was videoed by a man
watching from a balcony.
Copy !req
127. He took it to the police,
but no-one was interested.
Copy !req
128. So he gave the tape to
a local TV station.
Copy !req
129. When it was shown, there was
an outburst of anger
Copy !req
130. against the police violence.
Copy !req
131. Four of the officers
were put on trial.
Copy !req
132. But they were all acquitted by an
overwhelmingly white jury.
Copy !req
133. Due to the escalation
of the situation,
Copy !req
134. and seriousness of the problems
that are occurring,
Copy !req
135. the sheriff has mobilised all
department personnel.
Copy !req
136. For six days, thousands
of people rose up
Copy !req
137. and rioted across Los Angeles.
Copy !req
138. It was only stopped when
the National Guard and soldiers
Copy !req
139. and Marines were brought
onto the streets.
Copy !req
140. It was an outpouring of the anger
that had been simmering
Copy !req
141. throughout the 1980s
in the black community.
Copy !req
142. But despite all the reforms
and the changes in attitudes
Copy !req
143. since the 1960s, nothing
had really changed.
Copy !req
144. It seemed that those in power
in America were still deeply racist,
Copy !req
145. and would use violence
against blacks in America
Copy !req
146. to maintain that power.
Copy !req
147. All of it needs to stop
but I'm going to tell you...
Copy !req
148. Get down on our knees
and pray to God...
Copy !req
149. One at a time.
Copy !req
150. That the violence... Let me talk.
Copy !req
151. I know that the government,
whatever, can't stand
Copy !req
152. us black people.
Copy !req
153. He's doing everything in the world
to make black man be extinct.
Copy !req
154. But I'm going to tell you one thing,
us black people
Copy !req
155. are going to survive.
Copy !req
156. And that's wrong about the black
people tearing up the, you know,
Copy !req
157. burning down buildings,
that's wrong.
Copy !req
158. But still, through it all,
we're going to survive.
Copy !req
159. So fuck everybody, I'm off.
Copy !req
160. All right, that's just an example
of the frustration
Copy !req
161. that's being felt here.
Copy !req
162. In Britain, a series of scandals
revealed that dozens
Copy !req
163. of innocent people had been
held in jail...
Copy !req
164. .. some for over 15 years.
Copy !req
165. They included the Guildford Four
and the Birmingham Six.
Copy !req
166. Most of them were Irishmen who'd
been accused of being
Copy !req
167. members of the IRA and planting
bombs in English cities.
Copy !req
168. Every time they had tried to
prove their innocence,
Copy !req
169. they had been blocked by some
of the most senior figures
Copy !req
170. in the British establishment,
Copy !req
171. despite overwhelming
evidence of false confessions
Copy !req
172. and faked evidence.
Copy !req
173. Eminent men at the very
centre of power,
Copy !req
174. from the most senior law lord
to the Attorney General
Copy !req
175. and to the Commissioner
of the Metropolitan Police,
Copy !req
176. all of them, it was alleged, knew
that the prisoners were innocent.
Copy !req
177. But they had done nothing,
Copy !req
178. and the evidence remained
locked away...
Copy !req
179. .. because they had an unshakeable
conviction that the establishment
Copy !req
180. must never be shown to be wrong.
Copy !req
181. Finally, in March 1991,
Copy !req
182. the Birmingham Six were
freed at the Old Bailey.
Copy !req
183. Ladies and gentlemen.
Copy !req
184. For 16 and a half years,
we have been used as political
Copy !req
185. scapegoats for people
in there at the highest.
Copy !req
186. The police told us from the start
that they knew we hadn't done it.
Copy !req
187. They told us they didn't care
who'd done it.
Copy !req
188. They told us that we were selected
and that they were going to
Copy !req
189. frame us just to keep
the people in there happy.
Copy !req
190. That's what it's all about.
Copy !req
191. To save face.
Copy !req
192. Justice? I don't think them people
in there have got the intelligence
Copy !req
193. nor the honesty to spell the word,
never mind dispense it.
Copy !req
194. They're rotten.
Copy !req
195. But there were others, also
at the heart of power in Britain,
Copy !req
196. who seemed to have lost all
contact with reality.
Copy !req
197. The intelligence agencies,
from MI6 to GCHQ,
Copy !req
198. whose job was to watch and monitor
what was happening in the world,
Copy !req
199. had completely failed to predict
the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Copy !req
200. Mrs Thatcher, who had supported
the spies throughout the 1980s,
Copy !req
201. was shocked.
Copy !req
202. Her foreign policy adviser wrote...
Copy !req
203. "All that intelligence that they
gave us didn't tell us
Copy !req
204. "the one thing we needed to know.
Copy !req
205. "That the Soviet Union
was about to collapse."
Copy !req
206. It was a colossal failure
Copy !req
207. of the whole Western system
of intelligence.
Copy !req
208. But some of the spies still didn't
believe what was happening.
Copy !req
209. Sir Percy Cradock was head of
the Joint Intelligence Committee.
Copy !req
210. Despite everything, he was convinced
the Soviets were just
Copy !req
211. faking the collapse.
Copy !req
212. They were just up
to their usual tricks.
Copy !req
213. They were still planning
to take over the world.
Copy !req
214. Both Britain and America were
societies that had been
Copy !req
215. built on empire and conquest through
violence and the exercise of power.
Copy !req
216. But neither of them
had ever faced up to this.
Copy !req
217. And instead, they had both built
dreamlike myths
Copy !req
218. about their exceptionalism,
to shield and protect themselves.
Copy !req
219. But in both cases, those myths
were rooted in fear.
Copy !req
220. In Britain at the start
of the 20th century,
Copy !req
221. not only were those in charge
frightened by what
Copy !req
222. they had done abroad,
with the slave trade and in China,
Copy !req
223. they now had a feeling
that it was coming closer,
Copy !req
224. that something dangerous might also
be happening inside England itself.
Copy !req
225. The Empire had led to giant
industrial cities
Copy !req
226. rising up all across England.
Copy !req
227. They were dark, frightening places
where millions of people
Copy !req
228. lived in appalling conditions.
Copy !req
229. What alarmed those in charge was
the violence and the anger that
Copy !req
230. was building up there among what
was called the masses.
Copy !req
231. But the danger also seemed to come
from the top of society as well.
Copy !req
232. From the new industrialists and
bankers, who ran the global empire.
Copy !req
233. They also seemed to be
out of control.
Copy !req
234. There was a wave
of financial scandals
Copy !req
235. and no-one seemed to be
able to stop them.
Copy !req
236. The novelist EM Forster wrote...
Copy !req
237. "England is being menaced by the
inner darkness in high places
Copy !req
238. "that has come with this
commercial age."
Copy !req
239. Trapped by what they saw
as a danger below
Copy !req
240. and corruption above,
the middle classes retreated.
Copy !req
241. They turned away into another
imaginary version of England,
Copy !req
242. where there were none
of these threats.
Copy !req
243. It was invented for them by a whole
generation of writers,
Copy !req
244. artists and musicians who,
Copy !req
245. in an act of
collective imagination,
Copy !req
246. created a complete dream
image of England's past...
Copy !req
247. ..one that still haunts
the country today.
Copy !req
248. At its heart was a vision of a
natural order in the countryside,
Copy !req
249. outside the cities.
Copy !req
250. One of the key figures was a man
called Cecil Sharp.
Copy !req
251. He travelled through England
recording old songs,
Copy !req
252. and he filmed himself and his
friends learning old rural dances.
Copy !req
253. Sharp made it absolutely clear
that this was a political project.
Copy !req
254. His aim was to create a new
kind of English nationalism
Copy !req
255. which had, at its heart,
the idea of the folk.
Copy !req
256. It was a concept that he had
taken from German nationalism -
Copy !req
257. the innocent rural people
and their culture.
Copy !req
258. Now, is the sort of dancing he does
the dancing that would have been
Copy !req
259. done around here...? Yeah, there's
a lot of that done in the pubs.
Copy !req
260. Do-do, do-do, do-diddly-do...
Copy !req
261. What was implicit in Sharp's
vision was that it was
Copy !req
262. an England before
mass democracy had come.
Copy !req
263. An England where villagers
lived in harmony and safety,
Copy !req
264. taken care of by
the lord of the manor.
Copy !req
265. I've never seen a thing like this
before in my life.
Copy !req
266. What do you call him?
I call it Dancing Doll.
Copy !req
267. Sharp was not alone.
Copy !req
268. In 1914, a festival was started
in Glastonbury.
Copy !req
269. It ran every year until 1927.
Copy !req
270. It was organised
by Rutland Boughton,
Copy !req
271. who wanted it to be the centre
of this new English culture.
Copy !req
272. He composed an opera
for the festival,
Copy !req
273. which became a national sensation.
Copy !req
274. It was called The Immortal Hour.
Copy !req
275. It is set in a dark,
mysterious wood,
Copy !req
276. where there are powerful,
ancient forces.
Copy !req
277. They can be frightening, but
they are also a way of connecting
Copy !req
278. with a forgotten
natural order of power in England.
Copy !req
279. They are the lordly ones.
Copy !req
280. This is a story that begins
in any part of America,
Copy !req
281. wherever you may be.
Copy !req
282. It's a story that begins at your
front door, on the street
Copy !req
283. where you live, in your town
or village or city,
Copy !req
284. somewhere in America.
Copy !req
285. And paths enchanted that lead
to the wonderful pages
Copy !req
286. of a storybook, that tell the story
of America, the beautiful.
Copy !req
287. Unlike Britain, America had
emerged from the First World War
Copy !req
288. as the most powerful
country in the world.
Copy !req
289. Its president, Woodrow Wilson,
had a vision that America should
Copy !req
290. now use that power to spread
democracy all around the globe.
Copy !req
291. Behind this was a belief in what was
called American exceptionalism...
Copy !req
292. .. that the country was special,
Copy !req
293. not like the old
corrupt empires of Europe.
Copy !req
294. And it could use that specialness
to remake the world.
Copy !req
295. But the Republicans who controlled
Congress refused to back Wilson.
Copy !req
296. They thought that such a crusade
would end up corrupting America...
Copy !req
297. .. and Wilson's dream of a globalised
democracy collapsed.
Copy !req
298. Instead, the American economy
went into a severe depression.
Copy !req
299. In a growing mood of fear,
there were race riots,
Copy !req
300. as whites turned on the
black communities in the cities.
Copy !req
301. In 1921, a white mob attacked the
black areas in the city of Tulsa...
Copy !req
302. .. and destroyed them.
Copy !req
303. They even used aircraft
to drop bombs.
Copy !req
304. Out of this fear came
an organisation
Copy !req
305. called the Ku Klux Klan.
Copy !req
306. The Klan had first been formed
after the American Civil War...
Copy !req
307. .. but now it re-emerged.
Copy !req
308. The Klan also believed in the idea
of America's exceptionalism.
Copy !req
309. They took that myth and turned
it into something frightening
Copy !req
310. and violent,
Copy !req
311. and they used it to protect
themselves against
Copy !req
312. the perceived threat
of a growing black population.
Copy !req
313. The model for this dark and hateful
version came from a feature film
Copy !req
314. made in 1915 called
The Birth Of A Nation.
Copy !req
315. It was an epic that caused
a sensation,
Copy !req
316. reaching a wider audience
than any film had ever done.
Copy !req
317. The director, DW Griffith,
had based the film
Copy !req
318. on a novel called The Clansman.
Copy !req
319. The image of the clansman
in both the book
Copy !req
320. and in the film was of white-robed
figures with burning crosses.
Copy !req
321. These had nothing to do with
anything real in America's past.
Copy !req
322. Instead, the novelist
had invented them
Copy !req
323. from a romantic vision of an old
Scotland and Scottish clans
Copy !req
324. that were portrayed in the novels
of Sir Walter Scott...
Copy !req
325. .. which Scott himself
had just made up.
Copy !req
326. Again, like in England, it was
a vision of a stable society
Copy !req
327. watched over and protected
by benevolent leaders.
Copy !req
328. Figures from a feudal time,
Copy !req
329. a time before mass democracy and
all its dangers and uncertainties.
Copy !req
330. In real life, the new Klan
then copied the costumes
Copy !req
331. and imitated the rituals
from the film...
Copy !req
332. .. and it quickly became
a mass organisation.
Copy !req
333. By 1925, the Klan had
five million members...
Copy !req
334. .. and the political power to mount
a mass march on Washington.
Copy !req
335. They called themselves
the Invisible Empire.
Copy !req
336. The Klan had a powerful
appeal to whites,
Copy !req
337. frightened of the blacks
in the ever-expanding cities.
Copy !req
338. And they also revived fears
of the Chinese, the Yellow Peril.
Copy !req
339. What the clansmen were doing
was retreating
Copy !req
340. into a mythical version of the past.
Copy !req
341. It gave them a sense of power...
Copy !req
342. .. and of being part
of a natural order.
Copy !req
343. And in Britain, the belief
in the idea of a natural order
Copy !req
344. of power continued to grow, even
as the real power was declining.
Copy !req
345. And this deluded confidence was
going to have very strange
Copy !req
346. consequences for the whole world.
Copy !req
347. After the First World War, a group
of upper-class English men
Copy !req
348. and women were sent to Baghdad
to create a new country
Copy !req
349. out of the ruins of what had been
the Ottoman Empire.
Copy !req
350. The most famous was Gertrude Bell.
Copy !req
351. She was the daughter of a baronet
and had been a famous explorer.
Copy !req
352. Almost immediately, hundreds
of thousands of Arabs rose up,
Copy !req
353. demanding independence.
Copy !req
354. The British had been financially
broken by the war,
Copy !req
355. so they invented a new and cheap
way of suppressing the insurgency.
Copy !req
356. They used aircraft to bomb
the rebels.
Copy !req
357. They called it aerial policing...
Copy !req
358. .. and they took back control and set
about creating the new country,
Copy !req
359. called Iraq.
Copy !req
360. But because there was no money,
Copy !req
361. the group could also not afford
to survey the country.
Copy !req
362. Instead, with no information,
Bell and the others
Copy !req
363. simply projected onto the Arabs
that powerful, romantic dream
Copy !req
364. of an old England.
Copy !req
365. They decided that the middle classes
in the cities, who had run
Copy !req
366. the country under
the Ottoman Empire,
Copy !req
367. were corrupt and untrustworthy...
Copy !req
368. .. which meant that they had
to be excluded from power.
Copy !req
369. Instead, power should be given
to the sheiks who ruled
Copy !req
370. the tribes out in the countryside.
Copy !req
371. To the British, the sheiks
represented the true Iraq,
Copy !req
372. because they hadn't been infected by
the corruption of the modern world.
Copy !req
373. Their system was
one of a natural order,
Copy !req
374. just like in the England
of the past.
Copy !req
375. "The sheiks," said Gertrude
Bell, "are like great aristocrats.
Copy !req
376. "They will run a system that will
maintain a natural equilibrium."
Copy !req
377. The truth was that this
picture of Iraq
Copy !req
378. was completely detached
from reality.
Copy !req
379. The sheiks were really
marginal figures,
Copy !req
380. while the Ottomans had begun
to create a modern,
Copy !req
381. progressive society in the cities.
Copy !req
382. The British now tore that apart,
Copy !req
383. and replaced it with a strange
dream that had nothing to do with
Copy !req
384. the complex, multilayered society
in front of their eyes...
Copy !req
385. .. but was really rooted in the
strange, dark fears that were rising
Copy !req
386. up in Britain itself as its
power declined.
Copy !req
387. Then, in 1932, the British, facing
an economic crisis at home,
Copy !req
388. packed up and went...
Copy !req
389. .. leaving behind them a completely
unreal and unstable society.
Copy !req
390. We have
located the Doctor.
Copy !req
391. At the same time as large numbers
of factories began to
Copy !req
392. close across America,
a new drug was created.
Copy !req
393. It was made by a company that had
been founded by Arthur Sackler.
Copy !req
394. In the 1970s, Sackler had marketed
the drug Valium to deal with
Copy !req
395. the feelings of anxiety
and loneliness in the suburbs.
Copy !req
396. He had died in the 1980s,
but in the mid-'90s
Copy !req
397. his company released a new drug
called OxyContin.
Copy !req
398. It was a synthetic form of opium,
and it was sold as a painkiller.
Copy !req
399. But then, workers who were being
laid off as the factories closed
Copy !req
400. found that they got more benefits
if they were disabled...
Copy !req
401. Oh, shit!
Copy !req
402. ..so they went to their doctors
and said they were injured.
Copy !req
403. And the doctors gave them OxyContin.
Copy !req
404. They got their benefits,
Copy !req
405. but they also discovered
that OxyContin made them feel safe,
Copy !req
406. in a bubble, protected from the
anxieties and fears
Copy !req
407. of the new post-industrial world.
Copy !req
408. In the 1950s,
as the Empire collapsed around them,
Copy !req
409. the British Government saw the
intelligence agencies as one of
Copy !req
410. the few ways in which Britain could
still remain powerful
Copy !req
411. around the world.
Copy !req
412. In the public's eyes, the spies
were powerful, glamorous figures,
Copy !req
413. epitomised by James Bond,
Copy !req
414. who proved that Britain
still had global power.
Copy !req
415. In reality, MI6 was full of
communists who kept defecting
Copy !req
416. to the Soviet Union...
Copy !req
417. .. while MI5, whose job was
to catch such traitors,
Copy !req
418. hadn't caught one for years.
Copy !req
419. A tough police chief from Glasgow
was sent in to reform MI5,
Copy !req
420. but the agents would only talk
to him in Latin,
Copy !req
421. which he didn't understand.
Copy !req
422. He gave up, and told his wife that
it was like working in a madhouse.
Copy !req
423. Then MI5 was told by the Americans
that one of its own agents
Copy !req
424. was also a traitor.
Copy !req
425. Surveyor of the Queen's pictures,
Sir Anthony Blunt.
Copy !req
426. He, of course, is here. Sir Anthony,
if we are going to...
Copy !req
427. MI5 asked Blunt
if he was spying for the Russians.
Copy !req
428. He said yes, he was,
Copy !req
429. so to avoid embarrassing the Queen,
they gave him total immunity
Copy !req
430. from prosecution and let him carry
on working at Buckingham Palace.
Copy !req
431. The negro is ticking
under the picture.
Copy !req
432. I've been listening to him while you
were talking.
Copy !req
433. And it is indeed a clock.
Yes.
Copy !req
434. And the mechanism is peculiar
because the actual time,
Copy !req
435. if you want to know the time, you
have to look into the eyes.
Copy !req
436. John le Carre had worked as a spy
for MI6,
Copy !req
437. and the experience made him
understand what this secret world
Copy !req
438. was really about -
Copy !req
439. that, in a country whose power
had collapsed,
Copy !req
440. leaving only a drab,
decaying reality all around,
Copy !req
441. the spies had managed to recreate
a magical world
Copy !req
442. where they could go
anywhere they wanted,
Copy !req
443. bug, burgle,
and even assassinate people
Copy !req
444. without any fear of judgment
or control,
Copy !req
445. just like in the Empire.
Copy !req
446. There is something delicious
about being told,
Copy !req
447. "Now, we're going to have to burgle
that house tonight,
Copy !req
448. "and what we'll do is
we'll have a policeman outside,
Copy !req
449. "and while the owners of the house
are away, in case they come back,
Copy !req
450. "the policeman will say,
'I'm sorry, you can't come in.
Copy !req
451. "'We've had a burglary report
on your premises.'"
Copy !req
452. And these larcenous instincts
which are put to the service
Copy !req
453. of the Crown had a voluptuous
quality in the sense
Copy !req
454. that this was a necessary sacrifice
of morality.
Copy !req
455. I really believed at last that I had
found a cause I could serve.
Copy !req
456. I also longed for the dignity which
great secrecy confers upon you.
Copy !req
457. In America, the spies and their
secret operations
Copy !req
458. were also being used
to maintain a fiction.
Copy !req
459. Ever since the Second World War,
Copy !req
460. the American Government
had been using the CIA to manipulate
Copy !req
461. and overthrow the governments
of many other countries.
Copy !req
462. One of the most senior members
of the US State Department,
Copy !req
463. Hans Morgenthau, had given this
hidden system of power a name.
Copy !req
464. He called it the dual state.
Copy !req
465. America had to do this,
Morgenthau said,
Copy !req
466. because of the harsh realities
of power in the world.
Copy !req
467. But it had to be kept secret
from the people,
Copy !req
468. because revealing it would undermine
their belief in democracy
Copy !req
469. and in their exceptionalism,
Copy !req
470. a belief that was essential
in the Cold War.
Copy !req
471. From the 1950s onwards, the CIA
rigged elections,
Copy !req
472. destabilised governments
through fake information,
Copy !req
473. and organised violent coups
in Italy, Greece, Syria, Iran,
Copy !req
474. Guatemala, South Vietnam,
Indonesia, and Chile.
Copy !req
475. In all, the United States ran
covert operations to overthrow
Copy !req
476. 66 foreign governments,
and in 26 cases, they succeeded.
Copy !req
477. Morgenthau believed that this
secrecy was creating a dangerous
Copy !req
478. time bomb at the heart of America,
Copy !req
479. and in the mid-1960s,
details started to leak out.
Copy !req
480. One of the senior members
of the CIA, Miles Copeland,
Copy !req
481. revealed that he had been involved
in organising coups
Copy !req
482. throughout the world,
starting in Syria in 1951.
Copy !req
483. It seems to confirm from the inside,
many of the people's fears,
Copy !req
484. worst fears, about the way in which
American policy is conducted,
Copy !req
485. for example, plotting to overthrow
the Syrian Government and others.
Copy !req
486. Do you think that's a useful way
of conducting foreign policy?
Copy !req
487. Keith, I'm not going to
make a moral judgment.
Copy !req
488. I've simply described the way
things are done.
Copy !req
489. It is true.
Now, let me finish.
Copy !req
490. It is true that in many cases,
we would sit around, in our attics
Copy !req
491. of the State Department,
and we would have long discussions.
Copy !req
492. "Our government does not interfere
in the internal affairs
Copy !req
493. "of a sovereign nation."
Copy !req
494. And we meant that from the bottom
of our hearts, and then we'd say,
Copy !req
495. "But this is one case
where we have to,"
Copy !req
496. and so we had to try to decide
Copy !req
497. how to do what it was we said
was against our policy to do.
Copy !req
498. And we did, in fact,
interfere in internal affairs
Copy !req
499. of many sovereign nations.
Copy !req
500. Wherever he walked,
all hell broke loose.
Copy !req
501. Across all the Orient,
the flames of violence leaped.
Copy !req
502. Was the quiet stranger the torch?
Copy !req
503. 10,000 mysteries swirled about him.
Copy !req
504. Wherever danger exploded,
they found the quiet American.
Copy !req
505. And in 1961, the CIA decided to
overthrow a government
Copy !req
506. in the heart of Africa,
in the Congo.
Copy !req
507. 200 years before, the Congo had been
at the centre of the slave trade.
Copy !req
508. Millions of Africans had been
forcibly taken down the river
Copy !req
509. and shipped to America,
Copy !req
510. where their forced labour fuelled
America's rise to economic power.
Copy !req
511. Now the country had been given
independence by its old
Copy !req
512. colonial rulers, the Belgians,
but it was completely unprepared,
Copy !req
513. and had collapsed into violence.
Copy !req
514. The CIA were frightened
that the new Prime Minister,
Copy !req
515. Patrice Lumumba, was about to turn
for help to the Soviet Union.
Copy !req
516. It meant that the Russians might
take control of the
Copy !req
517. giant copper mines
in the south of the country.
Copy !req
518. The copper was crucial
to the new electronic systems
Copy !req
519. and computers that the Americans
were building.
Copy !req
520. They were the foundations
of America's new wealth and power...
Copy !req
521. .. and the CIA helped Lumumba's
opponents capture and kill him.
Copy !req
522. And they helped install a dictator
in his place.
Copy !req
523. He was called Colonel Mobutu,
Copy !req
524. whose brutal regime the Americans
would support for the next 30 years.
Copy !req
525. Rather than establishing
a democracy,
Copy !req
526. what the Americans had found
themselves doing was continuing
Copy !req
527. the instability that had been
created by the old European empires,
Copy !req
528. and then they did the same in Iraq.
Copy !req
529. In 1963, agents from the CIA came
to Baghdad to plan another coup.
Copy !req
530. One idea was to secretly poison
the communists in the government...
Copy !req
531. .. but the country the British
had created was by now so unstable
Copy !req
532. that before the Americans could act,
Copy !req
533. the Ba'ath Party mounted
their own coup.
Copy !req
534. The streets of ancient Baghdad
become the scene of a short
Copy !req
535. but decisive revolution that topples
the pro-communist government
Copy !req
536. of Premier Abd al-Karim Qasim,
shown here on the right.
Copy !req
537. A six-man military junta
seizes power on a holy day,
Copy !req
538. and within hours, the premier,
who reportedly had executed
Copy !req
539. 10,000 people, is himself shot.
Copy !req
540. But the American agents supported
and helped the overthrow.
Copy !req
541. They even gave one of the young
Ba'ath Party members,
Saddam Hussein,
Copy !req
542. a list of communists in Iraq.
Copy !req
543. Saddam Hussein used it
to execute thousands,
Copy !req
544. and it began his rise to power.
Copy !req
545. He later ordered a feature film
to be made about his heroic role
Copy !req
546. in the coup.
Copy !req
547. It was made by the British director
Terence Young,
Copy !req
548. who had also made the
James Bond film Dr No.
Copy !req
549. When Deng Xiaoping died, the country
he had created was growing fast,
Copy !req
550. becoming more and more powerful.
Copy !req
551. But those who took over
knew there were threats.
Copy !req
552. They were frightened
of their people,
Copy !req
553. because they knew that, having
got rid of the communist ideals,
Copy !req
554. they were now totally dependent
on the economic system
Copy !req
555. that Deng had created, but that had
brought with it the growing force
Copy !req
556. of individualism, a force
that had the power to eat away
Copy !req
557. at all the collective ideals
that had held the society together.
Copy !req
558. And outside China,
they were increasingly frightened
Copy !req
559. by the global financial system
run by the Western bankers.
Copy !req
560. The paranoia and suspicion
about the West
Copy !req
561. had gone very deep into the minds
of the new rulers.
Copy !req
562. But for the moment, the money
from the West continued to pour in,
Copy !req
563. and their power grew further.
Copy !req
564. At the end of 1997,
Copy !req
565. Britain had agreed to hand Hong Kong
back to China.
Copy !req
566. During the negotiations, the British
had insisted that Hong Kong
Copy !req
567. should remain democratic.
Copy !req
568. The Chinese were shocked by this.
Copy !req
569. They said it was
completely hypocritical,
Copy !req
570. because the British had never
allowed democracy in Hong Kong.
Copy !req
571. It had always been
an authoritarian system,
Copy !req
572. controlled by a brutal
and racist police force.
Copy !req
573. Who's got the mace? Chemical mace?
Sergeant, mace!
Copy !req
574. Get the fuck out of it,
you little gobshite.
Copy !req
575. Get out of it.
Copy !req
576. He's got to be subdued, man.
Copy !req
577. Get him! Hold him down!
Copy !req
578. Get him down! On the floor!
Copy !req
579. Come on, come on. Get him down.
Copy !req
580. The British Government sent an envoy
to negotiate with the Chinese.
Copy !req
581. He was Sir Percy Cradock,
Copy !req
582. who had finally accepted
that the Cold War was over.
Copy !req
583. But after the talks,
Copy !req
584. Sir Percy announced that he agreed
with the Chinese.
Copy !req
585. The demand for democracy,
he said, was difficult
Copy !req
586. because when the British ruled
Hong Kong,
Copy !req
587. there had never been any democracy.
Copy !req
588. Sir Percy was not invited
to the handover.
Copy !req
589. And in the pouring rain, Prince
Charles watched as the Chinese
Copy !req
590. said goodbye to the British
by singing them a Rod Stewart song,
Copy !req
591. Rhythm Of My Heart.
Copy !req
592. And despite the
Chinese triumphalism,
Copy !req
593. the BBC continued the fantasy of the
special virtues of Britain's Empire.
Copy !req
594. China is certainly
jubilant about the return of this
Copy !req
595. 412 square miles of territory,
and that jubilation is everywhere
Copy !req
596. in Hong Kong,
but as we've seen tonight,
Copy !req
597. it isn't quite as simple as that.
Copy !req
598. There's a genuine fondness for
Britain's decent contribution here,
Copy !req
599. a genuine fondness
for the last governor, too.
Copy !req
600. "He's family," as one Chinese
Hong Kong-er described it to me.
Copy !req
601. In 1998, the very thing the Chinese
leaders were frightened of happened.
Copy !req
602. The global financial system
went out of control.
Copy !req
603. It began in Thailand, where Western
banks had been pouring
Copy !req
604. millions of dollars into
a property boom.
Copy !req
605. Suddenly, the bubble burst,
Copy !req
606. and developers defaulted
on their loans.
Copy !req
607. Western investors panicked,
and rushed to get their money out.
Copy !req
608. The crisis then spread all across
East Asia to Korea and Indonesia.
Copy !req
609. In every case,
the country's exchange rate crashed,
Copy !req
610. causing economic chaos.
Copy !req
611. Indonesia's currency has collapsed,
losing 80% of its value,
Copy !req
612. and the economy is in ruins.
Copy !req
613. With riots and looting breaking out
across the country,
Copy !req
614. there are fears that it's now
on the brink of anarchy.
Copy !req
615. The IMF gave huge loans to try
and stabilise the countries.
Copy !req
616. For a moment, it worked, but then
the currencies crashed again
Copy !req
617. as those dollars were used
by Western banks
Copy !req
618. to get the rest of their money
out of the countries.
Copy !req
619. It left the Asian societies
in ruins.
Copy !req
620. To the countries' leaders,
this was the old corrupt imperialism
Copy !req
621. returning in a modern form.
Copy !req
622. Power corrupts, as much as
government can become corrupt
Copy !req
623. when invested with absolute power,
Copy !req
624. markets also can become corrupt
when equally absolutely powerful.
Copy !req
625. We are seeing the effect
of that absolute power today,
Copy !req
626. the impoverishment and misery
of millions of people
Copy !req
627. and their eventual slavery.
Copy !req
628. China managed to escape the crisis,
Copy !req
629. but it seemed to confirm to the
country's leaders
Copy !req
630. that their paranoia about the
Western conspiracy was right,
Copy !req
631. that the West was prepared
to use its economic power to loot
Copy !req
632. and wreck the Asian countries,
just as it had in the past.
Copy !req
633. They decided that the only way
to make China safe
Copy !req
634. was to take control.
Copy !req
635. The chairman, Jiang Zemin,
instructed that all the dollars
Copy !req
636. that China got from exporting
their goods should be sent back
Copy !req
637. to America and used to buy up the
United States' Government debt.
Copy !req
638. This would make the dollar rise
in value,
Copy !req
639. which meant that Chinese
goods would be even cheaper,
Copy !req
640. but it would also make
interest rates in America low,
Copy !req
641. which meant that people would borrow
even more money from the banks,
Copy !req
642. and buy even more Chinese goods.
Copy !req
643. It was a virtuous circle.
Copy !req
644. What the Chinese were doing
was using the money
Copy !req
645. to create a safe bubble, wrapped
around the United States,
Copy !req
646. that would stabilise the system,
and so keep China safe.
Copy !req
647. But in the process, the Chinese
money would create the biggest
Copy !req
648. consumer and property boom
ever in history,
Copy !req
649. and lead America into a
protected dream world
Copy !req
650. that was increasingly detached
from the reality outside.
Copy !req
651. And that dreamlike state was going
to have extraordinary consequences,
Copy !req
652. not just for America and China,
but for the whole world.
Copy !req
653. The city is going through its worst
sandstorms in living memory.
Copy !req
654. It's swathed the city in this...
Copy !req
655. .. ochre colour, this blanket of
red dust, it's raining now...
Copy !req
656. It's literally raining mud.
Copy !req
657. Just look at it. I mean, this used
to be just completely full
Copy !req
658. of the international press.
Copy !req
659. I mean, there's still a lot a lot
of foreign journalists here,
Copy !req
660. but it's just blown apart
by the worst sandstorms
Copy !req
661. that people say is
in living memory.
Copy !req
662. Watch the cable.
Copy !req
663. In 2003, America and Britain
were preparing to invade Iraq.
Copy !req
664. For George Bush and the Americans,
Copy !req
665. the aim was to bring stability
to the Middle East,
Copy !req
666. but Tony Blair saw it
in wider terms.
Copy !req
667. It was part of a new kind of
global intervention
Copy !req
668. that was not like
the empires of the past.
Copy !req
669. Instead, it was a way of liberating
millions of people from a brutal
Copy !req
670. dictator, which would then allow
them to become free democratic
Copy !req
671. individuals, but there were people
in Britain who knew the
Copy !req
672. strange origins of Iraq, how 80
years before, English administrators
Copy !req
673. had gone there and created
a highly unstable society
Copy !req
674. rooted in false dreams
of England's past.
Copy !req
675. A group of six historians
came to see Tony Blair.
Copy !req
676. They explained to him the complex
reality of the different groups
Copy !req
677. in Iraq, and how they could easily
turn on the Western intervention.
Copy !req
678. There was silence in the room.
Copy !req
679. Tony Blair said,
Copy !req
680. "Saddam Hussein is an evil man
who needs to be removed,"
Copy !req
681. and the historians left.
Copy !req
682. Then the spies came
to see Tony Blair.
Copy !req
683. They told him that there were hidden
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq,
Copy !req
684. which justified the invasion.
Copy !req
685. But yet again, they were inventing
a magical world of hidden threats...
Copy !req
686. .. and the invasion began.
Copy !req
687. By 2007, the war in Iraq
had become a nightmare.
Copy !req
688. The Americans were pouring
nearly $1 billion in every day
Copy !req
689. to keep a conflict going
that no-one knew how to win.
Copy !req
690. In the past, the Vietnam War
had caused chaos at home in America,
Copy !req
691. not just in the mass protests,
Copy !req
692. but the cost of such a gigantic war
had wrecked the American economy,
Copy !req
693. with growing inflation
and unemployment.
Copy !req
694. The politicians had no idea
how to deal with the economic chaos,
Copy !req
695. and it, as much as the protests,
had forced them to admit defeat
Copy !req
696. and flee from Saigon.
Copy !req
697. But now with the Iraq war,
there was no effect on the economy,
Copy !req
698. and there were no protests.
Copy !req
699. The reason was the Chinese money.
Copy !req
700. The Chinese continued to buy up
more and more of the American
Copy !req
701. Government debt, which meant
that the consumer boom continued,
Copy !req
702. and, safe in their protected bubble,
Copy !req
703. few of the American people
protested.
Copy !req
704. The war was far away,
and had no effect on their lives,
Copy !req
705. which meant there was no pressure
on the politicians to admit defeat,
Copy !req
706. and that led them to try
ever more desperate measures
Copy !req
707. to achieve victory.
Copy !req
708. But that desperation was going to
awaken ghosts from the past
Copy !req
709. that would return in a distorted
and frightening form.
Copy !req
710. Sheikh Abdul Sattar Abu Risha
was the leader of one of the largest
Copy !req
711. Sunni tribes in Anbar Province
outside Baghdad.
Copy !req
712. He came to the Americans
and offered to help them.
Copy !req
713. In return for large amounts
of money, he said,
Copy !req
714. his tribe would ally with the
Americans and create a militia
Copy !req
715. to fight against the insurgents,
above all, against al-Qaida in Iraq.
Copy !req
716. In desperation,
the Americans agreed...
Copy !req
717. Which tribe?
Copy !req
718. .. and the idea quickly spread
across the country -
Copy !req
719. the Americans giving out millions
of dollars to Sunni tribal leaders
Copy !req
720. to create private armies.
Copy !req
721. It was called the Awakening,
Copy !req
722. and Sheikh Abu Risha
became a heroic figure.
Copy !req
723. When President Bush came to Iraq,
Copy !req
724. he met the sheikh to thank him
personally for saving the Americans.
Copy !req
725. But what the Americans had found
themselves doing
Copy !req
726. was exactly the same as the British
had done 80 years before.
Copy !req
727. Faced by a complex society
that they did not understand,
Copy !req
728. they were turning to the tribes
outside the cities
Copy !req
729. and giving them power.
Copy !req
730. They called the militias
the Sons of Iraq,
Copy !req
731. and it seemed to work,
Copy !req
732. but in reality, it was going to
lead to something even worse.
Copy !req
733. Three years later, as the American
troops prepared to leave Iraq,
Copy !req
734. the money stopped, and the tribal
leaders saw their power disappear.
Copy !req
735. So they made a tactical decision -
Copy !req
736. they turned and allied instead
with the very people
Copy !req
737. they had been fighting -
the al-Qaida in Iraq jihadists.
Copy !req
738. And out of that alliance came
Copy !req
739. the Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant.
Copy !req
740. ISIS was far more than just another
version of al-Qaida in Iraq.
Copy !req
741. Its public face were the jihadists,
Copy !req
742. but it was organised and guided
by men from the Sunni tribes,
Copy !req
743. many of whom had been experienced
soldiers in Saddam Hussein's army.
Copy !req
744. As a result, they swept through
Iraq and on into Syria.
Copy !req
745. What had begun a long time ago as a
make-believe version of England
Copy !req
746. created in the deserts of
Mesopotamia as the British Empire
Copy !req
747. fell apart, had now turned
into a terrifying nightmare.
Copy !req
748. And that mythical romantic view
of the past was also about to return
Copy !req
749. at home in both America and Britain,
Copy !req
750. and it was going to have powerful
consequences there too.
Copy !req
751. In his campaign, Donald Trump
promised to recreate a lost America.
Copy !req
752. We will make America proud again.
Copy !req
753. We will make America safe again.
Copy !req
754. And we will make America
great again.
Copy !req
755. God bless you and goodnight.
Copy !req
756. I love you.
Copy !req
757. But with the exceptionalism
also came the fear,
Copy !req
758. and the violence.
Copy !req
759. And in Britain, thousands
of those who had been marginalised
Copy !req
760. by the new global economy also came
to believe in that romantic idea
Copy !req
761. of England as a special place.
Copy !req
762. A picture of a lost greatness
that had been invented by
Copy !req
763. the upper classes in the 1920s.
Copy !req
764. Now, hundreds and thousands
of frightened and angry people
Copy !req
765. demanded that Britain
leave Europe...
Copy !req
766. .. and the old ruling class come back
and turn that dream into a reality.
Copy !req
767. With Tomorrow
by This Mortal Coil
Copy !req