The Hungry World

Cold War America’s aid projects in Asia.

Books & Culture December 28, 2010

A few hours after the December 1966 premiere of How the Grinch Stole Christmas, CBS ran an hour-long special report called “Harvest of Mercy.” After learning, courtesy of Dr. Seuss, that the spirit of Christmas could not be stifled by an empty table, television viewers now watched relief convoys ship surplus wheat from Nebraska to famine-stricken India. The bounty of America’s farmers was saving, in Charles Kuralt’s words, “an estimated 70 million Indians from starvation.”

The Hungry World: America's Cold War Battle against Poverty in Asia

The Hungry World: America's Cold War Battle against Poverty in Asia

Harvard University Press

368 pages

$49.20

In The Hungry World, Nick Cullather explores the Cold War history of large-scale American aid projects in Asia, from dams in Afghanistan to dwarf rice to Vietnam. It is an utterly fascinating story—partially about the economics of famine, but mostly about the irrepressible postwar generation who genuinely believed American technology could win the battle for Asian hearts and minds, and stop communism in its tracks. To American donors like the Ford and the Rockefeller Foundations, to the State Department and the military, and to big agricultural research universities across the Midwest, hunger and poverty were more than moral problems: they were the geopolitical ground zero, next to which the Berlin Wall was inconsequential.

Cullather’s biting sarcasm in his comment about CBS’ Christmas programming should not be confused with cynicism: he is cautious and responsible, and manages to maintain an urgently moral voice through his entire book without ever growing shrill or melancholy. If the Green Revolution was actually a factor in saving Indians—either from starvation or from communism—Cullather, a history professor at Indiana University, would like to know. Instead he finds reason to doubt whether there was a famine in India at all.

There were indeed hungry Indians weathering a failed harvest that year. But famine is not the same as hunger. And in 1966 famine was an administrative category imposed on incredulous Indian officials by USDA analysts in Washington, D.C. Looking at estimates of birthrates, calorie production from Indian farmers, and similar mathematical abstractions, the USDA was able to read famine right off of their spreadsheets. The famine came as news to officials on the ground. No one was dying. They were certainly having a bad year. But the root of the problem lay with urban unemployment in India. To American observers in the mid-sixties, however, hungry Asian industrial workers were of paramount Cold War significance.

The American failure to properly interpret poverty in India lay in part in technocratic myopia, but also in domestic politics. In December 1966, President Johnson was digesting unpleasant mid-term elections that had seen a shift in political power away from the farm lobby and toward the cities and suburbs. Johnson was committed to a two-pronged strategy that made American farmers Cold Warriors: crop subsidies, which transferred taxpayer wealth from the cities to the farms, had resulted in spectacular overproduction; America’s bursting granaries could be given to India, to allow Indian farms to grow industrial crops (like cotton and jute) instead of food. Indian industrial growth, in turn, would bring a kind of prosperity that is intolerant of communism. This tight logic hinged on Congress’ willingness to continue to fund overproduction—a willingness at risk after the 1966 midterms. Fortunately, India was suffering a famine.

From the late 1940s on, the Soviet Union, the United States, China, Britain, West Germany, and other countries had taken their struggle for world dominance into the backwaters of Asia. Development, Cullather tells us, was the third and most important race, alongside the arms race and the space race. Rural Asia was a battleground, upon which the superiority of communism or capitalism might be proven.

And indeed, it was capitalism—not freedom, however conceived—that was meant to counter communism. More specifically, it was consumerism, a belief in televisions and motorbikes, which had become the ultimate moral category for U.S. policies. Cullather’s book is filled with depressing quotes from senators, philanthropists, and scientists who conflated American freedom and American consumerism. To take one example: “In 1957, Clement Johnson, head of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, suggested that communism might lose its appeal if ‘one-tenth of the People of Asia had ever seen a Sears, Roebuck catalog,’ and the Kennedy administration later consulted, unfruitfully, with Sears executives about putting the plan into action.”

Somewhat astonishingly, among dozens of dreamers and doers, American Christian missionaries are nowhere to be found in The Hungry World—weren’t there thousands of them, working in every field from Bible translation (and smuggling) to dentistry? Many of them, like Arthur Glasser, had been expelled from Mao’s China and were much more principled of anti-communists than the botanists behind the Green Revolution. And yet, American Christianity makes no appearance here. This omission seems methodologically significant, almost as if the data did not fit Cullather’s conclusions. More likely, it is because religion hardly features at all in the specialized field of Cold War History: it is not relevant to the professional discourse.

On the other hand, the Sears and Roebuck Catalog quote seems uncannily evangelistic in spirit—not at all unlike a centuries-old Christian confidence (shared, in our own times, by decidedly non-Christian philosophers like Slavoj iek and Alain Badiou) in the revolutionary potential of Bible reading. The Sears catalog, along with the television, was a witness of another way of life. Television sets, placed “in the thatch huts of the world,” as Walt Rostow of Kennedy’s National Security Council put it, would “defeat both tradition and communism with the spectacle of consumption.”

Cullather brilliantly identifies the religious accent to the development race. Peasants viewing test plots of dwarf rice were expected to undergo conversion experiences. Robert McNamara insisted that “irrigation, fertilizer, and peasant education can produce miracles.” Cullather comments: “McNamara and other observers used religious terminology to describe such conversions, appropriately perhaps, for development has been described as a ‘global faith,’ a belief—often in the face of contrary evidence—in the redemptive power of science and economic growth.”

The mythology of development has indeed survived over a half century of contrary evidence. In his conclusion, Cullather looks at the amazingly simple translation of Green Revolution logic from the Cold War to the War on Terror. We are still battling for hearts and minds with the weapons of American material culture. The fundamental problem is less a cheery optimism about consumer society than “a search for technical fixes … as a substitute for serious engagement. Political structures attuned to the twenty-four-hour news cycle are impatient with problems that require sacrifices and investments over an indefinite but undoubtedly long term.” We might easily add American churches’ unwillingness to hear missionary experiences of unresolvable problems and unending suffering.

Nick Cullather thus leaves us with an urgently moral plea for the American people to grow muscles of stamina. This is no anti-American message. Cullather clearly finds great potential in the American can-do spirit. Some problems can indeed be solved. But some problems can only be solved slowly and perhaps even painfully, if at all.

Paul Grant is pursuing a PhD in history at the University of Wisconsin.

Copyright © 2010 Books & Culture. Click for reprint information.

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