The Agents Are Coming: Four Phases Of A 'Colour Revolution' According To The ANC

The party has invoked the language of regime change, colour revolutions and imperial threats to its revolutionary project.
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Wits University students march in Braamfontein during the #FeesMustFall protest on September 21 2016 in Johannesburg, South Africa.
Getty Images / Alon Skuy / The Times

ANALYSIS

The ANC has said it faces the threat of regime change through what it calls a "colour revolution" and sinister forces at work in the body politic.

Minister of State Security David Mahlobo said the commission on peace and stability had discussed "forces seeking to undermine our advances" during the party's fifth national policy conference. It was concerned about espionage and attempts at regime change in the country by mostly unnamed enemies of the ANC's revolutionary project.

"We don't want to create the view that South Africa is loved by everyone," he said. "We know our enemies."

He said those wanting to do business in the country and build friendships were welcome, but the party wanted "everyone to come through the right door".

"Don't strong-arm us," he said.

'The agents of counter-revolutionary change are here and hard at work'

The ANC has invoked the concept of a "colour revolution" as a description of a mounting "offensive from external forces with the regime change agenda at its core", elements of which have been evident in recent protests, including at Marikana and during the #FeesMustFall and #ZumaMustFall movements.

Colour revolution, ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe said, seeks to "guarantee the West access to the natural resources the developing countries are endowed with, and also have those countries as their markets". Examples of revolutionary waves allegedly co-opted by nongovernmental organisations or other "foreign forces", include the Arab Spring across parts of the Mahgreb in north Africa, the Orange Revolution in Ukraine, Tulip Revolution in Kyrgyzstan and the hybrid revolution in Yemen and Syria.

Burgeoning talk of regime change, listed as a major external threat to the ANC in its diagnostic organisational report, is a "reality facing all progressive governments in developing countries", according to the document.

"The Russians and the Chinese characterise regime change as "the increasingly widespread Western practice of overthrowing legitimate political authorities by provoking internal instability and conflict against governments that are considered inconvenient and insubordinate to their interests, replacing them with pliant puppet regimes that then pander to their interests", the report said.

What exactly is a "colour revolution" and how will it manifest here? Mahlobo on Tuesday said it is "doctrine intelligence" that there are "normally four things that make colour revolutions work":

  1. Entities such as non-government organisations are established (ostensibly by foreign influencers) as vehicles of influence. "On record, we have said certain NGOs play that game," Mahlobo said.
  2. These entities use particular terminology to promote and permeate their ideologies in society. They augment issues around poor and visionless leadership and corruption.
  3. They then create and cultivate "alternative" and "celebrity" leaders that gain in popularity.
  4. Government failures, then, are used to drive colour revolutions. "If we don't respond on issues of government, we create conducive environments for others to exploit us. So what we need to do is clear," he said.

In response to a question by an ANN7 reporter on whether delegates had discussed the role of media in encouraging colour revolutions, Mahlobo said the media was not discussed. Instead, he said, talks included discussion on the tools that can be used to "do an agitation" of which media is "the most powerful".

"It [media] can be used for peace, justice and development; but you can also have a situation where media can be exploited for other things. This happens in many countries," he said. The question needs to be asked if media are actually reporting objectively, he added.

"This is why I have given you the four phases of colour revolution. If you don't analyse properly, you'll see regime change agents all over where they may not exist," he said.

What is the president so scared of?

Tight security and restrictions on the movement of journalists at the ANC's policy conference, meanwhile, suggest the party's paranoia isn't restricted to its relations with foreign powers or university students capable of bringing the higher education system to a standstill.

President Jacob Zuma moved around the highly secured Nasrec showgrounds on the final day of the conference with a phalanx of 18 bodyguards. While he walked, a motor cavalcade of black BMW, Mercedes-Benz and SUV vehicles followed him for a short tour of three satellite television studios.

Journalists throughout the conference were largely held in a designated media area, behind fences and far from delegates. If policy recommendations from the conference suggest more continuity than radical change in the ANC's policy palette, heightened and (in part) impatient security and the introduction of a media "chicken run" are certainly newer features that speak volumes.

Over the past two years, analysts have noted how Zuma's security detail alone has grown with regards to the length of his cavalcade and the number of his guards. He now moves with 11 cars.

This suggests that the president feels threatened. And paranoia at the top has filtered through the ranks, evidenced by frequent remarks detailing regime change, colour revolutions and other external threats to the ANC's revolutionary project.

The party knows it is in trouble. It has made this clear repeatedly over the past few days, acknowledging the growing "trust deficit", or chasm, between the party (or government) and society. Despite this, its decision to invoke the language of regime change, underhanded "elements" in domestic protests and threats of imperial powers - or perhaps imperial poltergeists? - suggests the party has not fully grasped the genesis or source of growing distrust.

Communities in protest around the country, in Coligny, Hout Bay, Eldorado Park and countless more, surely won't take kindly to allegations of foreign influence through NGOs or other agents of regime change in demonstrations that (many are at pains to point out) are in fact action of the last resort.

On paper and in press briefings, the ANC has stressed the need for renewal and said "it is never too late" to reverse its self-described decline. If the party becomes easily inclined to dismiss action against the state as the work of "regime change" or NGO-led foreign interference, it may find regaining the trust of society but a revolutionary pipe dream.

IN PICTURES: 'Colour Revolutions' Around The World
EGYPT: Face-off between demonstrators in Tahrir Square(01 of15)
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Egyptian anti-government demonstrators (top) face pro-regime opponents (bottom) in Cairo's Tahrir Square where crowds have gathered for a protest calling for the ouster of President Hosni Mubarak on February 2, 2011. (credit:Getty Images / AFP / Stringer)
ARAB SPRING: Egyptians gather in Tahrir Square(02 of15)
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Thousands of Egyptians gather in Cairo's Tahrir Square heeding a call by the opposition for a 'march of a million' to mark a week of protests calling for the ouster of Hosni Mubarak's long term regime, on February 1, 2011. (credit:Gettu Images / AFP / Miguel Medina)
UKRAINE: Day 12 of the 'orange revolution'(03 of15)
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Supporters of opposition leader Viktor Yushchenko demosntrate in Kiev 03 December 2004, during the twelfth day of the 'orange revolution' in Ukraine. The verdict of Ukraine's supreme court expected Friday will not resolve the crisis over contested presidential elections gripping this ex-Soviet republic since November 21. (credit:Getty Images / AFP / Sergei Supinsky)
UKRAINE: One year after the 'orange revolution'(04 of15)
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Flags of the opposition with logo 'Yes!' wave above people during mass pre-election rally of the Yushchenko supporters at Independence square in Kiev 06 November, 2004. Controversy has enveloped the son of Ukraine President Viktor Yushchenko for a second time in a week, amid reports that the 19-year-old owned the copyright to the lucrative trademarks of last year's 'orange revolution.' (credit:Getty Images / AFP / Sergei Supinsky)
KYRGYZSTAN: Anniversary of the Tulip Revolution(05 of15)
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Kyrgyz army soldiers parade, 24 March 2006, marking the first anniversary of its so-called tulip revolution in Bishkek. Kyrgyzstan marked the first anniversary of its so-called tulip revolution, which saw off a 15-year-old regime, with a military parade not unlike those held in the old Soviet Union. Celebrations on the first anniversary of a chaotic popular revolt that toppled the regime in this Central Asian state passed off in calm Soviet style -- a contrast to the tumultuous events a year ago. (credit:Getty Images / AFP / Vyacheslav Oseledko)
KYRGYZSTAN: Soldiers during the Tulip Revolution(06 of15)
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Kyrgyz soldiers conduct an anti-riot drill in Bishkek July 10, 2005. Kyrgyzstan voted for a new president on Sunday and acting leader Kurmanbek Bakiyev, almost certain to win, pledged the polls would help stabilise a country still reeling after a March revolution. (credit:Reuters / Shamil Zhumatov)
LEBANON: Activists in Lebanon in support of Syrian anti-government protests(07 of15)
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Activists carry banners and wave a Syrian national flag during a protest in solidarity with Syria's anti-government protesters, in front of the U.N. headquarters and the government palace in Beirut August 15, 2011. The banner on right reads: " Yes to the Syrian people's revolution". (credit:Reuters / Sharif Karim)
RALLY: Syrians in the diaspora rally in solidarity with the revolution(08 of15)
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Syrians living in Malaysia shout slogans during a rally called 'Global Day of Solidarity with the Syrian Revolution' outside the Iran embassy in Kuala Lumpur on May 31, 2013. Demonstrators, including Syrian nationals living in Malaysia, gathered outside the Iran embassy in support to stop killing in Syria. (credit:Getty Images / AFP / Mohn Rasfan)
YEMEN: Anti-government protestors in Sana'a(09 of15)
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Anti-government protesters shout slogans during a demonstration in Sana'a on September 6, 2011 to demand the ouster of President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who is recovering in the Saudi capital from bomb blast wounds sustained in an attack on his compound in the Yemeni capital in June. Portrait (L) in the back shows Egypt's late president Gamal Abdel Nasser who came to power after the 1952 free officers revolution against the royalty. (credit:Getty Images / AFP)
YEMEN: Defected Soldier(10 of15)
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A defected Yemeni soldier holds up his weapon as he joins anti-government protestors demanding the resignation of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in Sanaa, on March 21, 2011, while tanks were deployed in the Yemeni capital as top generals pledged allegiance to the 'revolution' and the country's main tribal leader demanded President Ali Abdullah Saleh's exit from power. (credit:Getty Images /AFP / Ahmad Gharabli)
SYRIA: "Freedom!"(11 of15)
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Syrians shout "freedom" during a protest at Dael region, near the city of Deraa, southern Syria March 25, 2011. (credit:Reuters / Khaled al-Hariri)
TUNISIA: Outside the Prime Minister's office(12 of15)
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Protesters from Tunisia's marginalised rural heartlands chant slogans as they prepare to spend their second night outside the Prime Minister's office in Tunis January 24, 2011. Protesters demonstrated in the capital on Sunday to demand that the revolution they started should now sweep the remnants of the fallen president's old guard from power. (credit:Reuters / Zohra Bensemra )
TUNISIA: Uprising in the rural heartlands(13 of15)
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Protesters from Tunisia's poor rural heartlands chant slogans during a demonstration by the Prime Minister's office in Tunis January 23, 2011. Protesters from Tunisia's poor rural heartlands demonstrated in the capital on Sunday to demand that the revolution they started should now sweep the remnants of the fallen president's old guard from power. (credit:Reuters / Zohra Bensemra)
LIBYA: Revel celebrate revolution(14 of15)
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Libyan rebels celebrate their revolution in a square outside the de facto headquarters for the Libyan Revolutionary Council on March 15, 2011 in Benghazi, Libya. (credit:Getty Images / Benjamin Lowy )
LIBYA: Mocking Muammar Gaddafi(15 of15)
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Two elderly Libyans sit in front of graffit mocking Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi on March 14, 2011, in Benghazi, Libya. (credit:Getty Images / AFP / Benjamin Lowy)