Authoritarian and totalitarian regimes Communist regimes Rummel applied the concept of democide to
Communist regimes. In 1987,
Rudolph Rummel's book
Death by Government Rummel estimated that 148 million were killed by
Communist governments from 1917 to 1987. The list of Communist countries with more than 1 million estimated victims included: •
China at 76,702,000 (1949–1987), • the
Soviet Union at 61,911,000 (1917–1987), •
Democratic Kampuchea (1975–1979) at 2,035,000, •
Vietnam (1945–1987) at 1,670,000, •
Poland (1945–1987) at 1,585,000, •
North Korea (1948–1987) at 1,563,000, •
Yugoslavia (1945–1987) at 1,072,000. Due to additional information about
Mao Zedong's culpability in the
Great Chinese Famine according to
Mao: The Unknown Story, a 2005 book authored by
Jon Halliday and
Jung Chang, Rummel revised upward his total for Communist democide to about 148 million, using their estimate of 38 million famine deaths. Rummel's figures for Communist governments have been criticized for the methodology which he used to arrive at them, and they have also been criticized for being higher than the figures which have been given by most scholars
Right-wing authoritarian, fascist, and feudal regimes Estimates by Rummel for
fascist or
right-wing authoritarian regimes include: •
Nazi Germany at 20,946,000 (1933–1945), •
Nationalist China (1925–1949) and later
Taiwan (1949–1987) at 10,214,000, •
Empire of Japan at 5,964,000 (1900–1945). Estimates for other regime-types include: • the
Ottoman Empire at 1,883,000 (
Armenian genocide and
Greek genocide), •
Pakistan at 1,503,000 (
1971 Bangladesh genocide), •
Porfiriato in Mexico at somewhere between 600,000 and 3,000,000 and closer to 1,417,000 (1900–1920), Democide in Communist and Nationalist China, Nazi Germany, and the Soviet Union are characterized by Rummel as deka-megamurderers (128,168,000), while those in Cambodia, Japan, Pakistan, Poland, Turkey, Vietnam, and Yugoslavia are characterized as the lesser megamurderers (19,178,000), and cases in Mexico, North Korea, and feudal Russia are characterized as suspected megamurderers (4,145,000).
Colonial regimes In response to
David Stannard's figures about what he terms "the
American Holocaust", Rummel estimated that over the centuries of
European colonization about 2 million to 15 million
American indigenous people were victims of democide, excluding military battles and unintentional deaths in Rummel's definition. Rummel wrote that "[e]ven if these figures are remotely true, then this still make this subjugation of the Americas one of the bloodier, centuries long, democides in world history." • Rummel stated that his estimate for those killed by colonialism is 50,000,000 persons in the 20th century (this was revised upwards from his initial estimate of 815,000 dead).
Democratic regimes While democratic regimes are considered by Rummel to be the least likely to commit democide and engage in wars per the
democratic peace theory, Rummel wrote that • "democracies themselves are responsible for some of this democide. Detailed estimates have yet to be made, but preliminarily work suggests that some 2,000,000 foreigners have been killed in cold blood by democracies."
Foreign policy and
secret services of democratic regimes "may also carry on subversive activities in other states, support deadly
coups, and actually encourage or support rebel or military forces that are involved in democidal activities. Such was done, for example, by the American
CIA in
the 1952 coup against Iran Prime Minister
Mossadeq and
the 1973 coup against Chile's democratically elected President
Allende by General
Pinochet. Then there was the secret support given the military in
El Salvador and
Guatemala although they were slaughtering thousands of presumed
communist supporters, and that of the
Contras in their war against the
Sandinista government of
Nicaragua in spite of their atrocities. Particularly reprehensible was the covert support given to the Generals in Indonesia as
they murdered hundreds of thousands of communists and others after
the alleged attempted communist coup in 1965, and the continued secret support given to General
Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan of Pakistan even as he was involved in
murdering over a million Bengalis in East Pakistan (now Bangladesh)." According to Rummel, examples of democratic democide would include "those killed in indiscriminate or civilian targeted
city bombing, as of
Germany and
Japan in
World War II. It would include the
large scale massacres of Filipinos during the bloody
American colonization of the Philippines at the beginning of this century, deaths in
British concentration camps in
South Africa during the
Boer War, civilian deaths due to
starvation during the British
blockade of Germany in and after World War I, the
rape and murder of helpless Chinese in and around Peking in 1900, the
atrocities committed by Americans in
Vietnam, the murder of helpless
Algerians during the
Algerian War by the
French, and the
unnatural deaths of German
prisoners of war in
French and
American POW camps after World War II." == See also ==