The Rest is History Episode 649 The Fall of the Incas: The Last Emperor (Part 6) By now Manco had fled, Almagro was in the highlands of Cusco and Francisco Pizarro was still in Lima. Almagro left Cusco to meet with Pizarro and to set up his own coastal town. Almagro released Hernando Pizarro who had been taken hostage, and Hernando began gathering his forces for the Battle of Las Salinas, where Spaniard fought Spaniard. Almagro was defeated and executed, leaving Pizarro triumphant and now free to go after Manco. But it wasn’t the end of Almagro because his son vowed vengeance and went to kill Francisco Pizarro in Lima, leaving Gonzalo Pizarro to defend the family honour against the second generation Almagro. By now Charles V back in Spain was becoming uncomfortable with all the killing, and sent out de Castro to sort it out and take power in his own right if necessary. Almagro Jnr. was killed by Spanish forces, and his supporters slunk off to find refuge with Manco. But as might be expected, these Almagro supporters turned on Manco and killed him, and were in turn killed by Manco’s soldiers. Meanwhile Gonzalo Pizarro was executed by the King’s representatives. This left just Hernando Pizarro back in Spain, who was imprisoned for years and died of old age. Meanwhile, Phillip II in Spain offered Manco’s descendants a sort of autonomous Neo-Inca state, but that wasn’t going to last and finally in 1572 the last emperor Túpac Amaru was executed. Was it a genocide? Not completely unexpectedly, Dominic Sandbrook and Tom Holland say ‘no’ arguing that disease killed many people in a country that had already ravaged by the Civil War between competing Inca emperors. There was a collapse in the birthrate, and a cultural collapse in the face of colonialization.
The History Bureau Putin and the Apartment Bombs: 4 The Poisoning We then jump forward to 2002 and a press conference held by Russian oligarch and former Putin ally Boris Berezovsky. At this press conference Berezovsky asserted that the bombings were an inside job. Amongst the audience was Alexander Litvinenko, whose own investigation into the bombings set him on a perilous collision course with the Kremlin. A former FSB member, he was charged with surveilling Berezovsky but when ordered to kill him, he told both Berezovsky and Putin about the order to kill him, hoping that Putin would clean up the FSB but Putin did nothing. Litvinenko was now a marked man, and was imprisoned on various charges before escaping to England, where he published a book. In 2006 Litvinenko was poisoned, dying a very public death in an English hospital. Later Berezovsky was killed too, found dead with injuries consistent with hanging but no visible signs of struggle. The episode features Jeremy Vine and Gordon Corera, two journalists who followed the story from the UK – and Gordon Corera is now one of the presenters of ‘The Rest is Classified’.
The Wargame. Another podcast that warns of the dangers of Russia. Hack and Leak: The Grey Zone Episode 3 This episode looks at the grey zone weapon of hacking information – like private emails or documents – and then leaking it online to try to influence people or damage reputations. It is a tactic Russia’s military intelligence agency, the GRU, is accused of using to target the US presidential election in 2016 and the French election in 2017. Moscow has denied involvement. The episode interviews Chris Donnelly, the founder of the Institute for Statecraft, an organization established to investigate Russian hacks, which found itself under a hack attack. Both United Kingdom and Crimea have experienced the Grey Zone mixture of hacking, disinformation and hard military power. The episode raises questions about journalistic ethics when material is gained through hacking.
The History of Singapore. I was recently in Singapore and curious about the hiatus I noted between the end of WW2 and the ‘Asian Tiger’ era in the museum displays I saw. I found this podcast series presented by P.J. Thum a Singaporean historian, journalist, podcaster, activist and former swimmer who has fallen foul of the Singaporean government- so perhaps something to bear in mind. This podcast series was released in 2015, the 50-year anniversary of Singapore’s separation from Malaysia.
In Episode 1: Introduction and Origins he starts in 1946 with the partition of Malaysia in 1946, at a time of heightened anti-Communist feeling. Compared with the experience in India with partition, this was seen more as a union of Malaysian states, rather than a separation, with the union of 11 of the 12 Malaysian states into one central state under British rule. Under the legislation, all Malaysian-born people were counted as Malaysian, but the Malays were very uneasy that if multi-cultural Singapore was included, the Malays would be outnumbered. In Episode 2: Government of the People and by the People Thum asks where ideas of ‘democracy’ came from, arguing that they were much older than the 1965 Independence of Singapore. He traces it back to 1819 when Raffles, as representative of the East India Company, signed a treaty with the muslim rulers to make Singapore a trading post. (Actually it never occurred to me before that the East India Company would even be involved in Singapore. Wrong.) Raffles had a fairly radical vision, wanting to make Singapore an educational and cultural centre prized for intellectual achievement and moral probity. However Farquhar, the first Resident realized that the colony had to make money, and so the moral probity went out the window when he allowed prostitution and gambling to boost the colony’s income. He was happy to acquiesce in the traditional feudal model, rather than Raffles’ modernization. When Raffles returned, he formally banned slavery, although it was poorly enforced and largely replaced by debt bondage, and he introduced magistrates and trial by jury. Crawfurd was the 2nd Resident, and he got rid of trial by jury and took a laissez-faire approach. Between 1826 – 1867 Singapore was ruled by the East India Company from Calcutta, which governed as cheaply as possible while demanding reports and statistics. The quality of governors varied: when they were incompetent, the demands for self-determination increased amongst the merchants, but if the governor was good, the merchants were happy to go along with things. Legislation passed from Calcutta applied to the whole of their territories, e.g. a ban on a tax on pork, or the rumours that jails would be cleared in all EIC territories to house the Indian Mutineers. By 1867 Singapore wanted to be a Crown Colony. Its population was 65% Chinese, with Dutch East Indies, Bugis and Indian minorities as well as a small Arab, Armenian and Jewish population. As a Crown Colony, it was light touch government, with an emphasis on self-help and independent organizations.


