Stalin was a great admirer of Ivan the Terrible (Ivan Grozny), whom he considered
as his great historical role model. According to Simon Sebag Montefiore, “[H]e regarded
Ivan the Terrible as his true
35.
An example of this imperial inequality was the fact that even when, in 1946, the Algerians obtained civil rights, they did not get the same voting rights as French colonists. They got these only in 1956 after the war of liberation had already started.
36.
Jan Nederveen Pieterse,
37.
Nederveen Pieterse,
38.
Rousseau, “Considérations,” 1039.
39.
Rousseau, “Considérations,” 970.
40.
Voltaire,
41.
Adam Ferguson,
42.
Ferguson,
43.
Sir John Rober Seeley,
44.
Seeley,
45.
Seeley,
46.
The young and democratic United States had an important flaw, which was the status
of black slaves who were not considered citizens. However, in its territorial expansion
the United States did not act as an empire (at least not until 1898, when it took
the Philippines from Spain). Neither did it incorporate the native American tribes.
Their land was “bought,” and they were driven from their lands, finally ending up
in extraterritorial reservations. Alexis de Tocqueville, a profound admirer of American
democracy, who, in December 1831, witnessed the deportation of the Chactas Indians,
denounced the silent extermination that went on behind a juridical façade, writing
that “the Americans of the United States, more humane, more moderate, more respectful
of the law and legality [than the Spaniards in South America], never bloodthirsty,
are more profoundly destructive of their race [Chactas tribe] and it is beyond doubt
that in one hundred years there will remain in North America not one single tribe,
nor even one single man, belonging to the most remarkable of the Indian races.” (Alexis
de Tocqueville, “Contre le génocide des Indiens d’Amérique,” in
Comparing Western and Russian Legitimation Theories for Empire
Imperial rule needs legitimation. But it would be an exaggeration to state that imperialist
rule always needs legitimation. In the first phases of modern imperialism territorial
expansion
Imperialist Legitimation Theories: Christianity, a Superior Civilization, and the White Man’s Burden