Lee Kuan Yew, Founding Father and First Premier of Singapore,
Dies at 91
SINGAPORE — Lee Kuan Yew,
the founding father and first prime minister of Singapore who transformed that
tiny island outpost into one of the wealthiest and least corrupt countries in
Asia, died on Monday morning. He was 91.
“The
prime minister is deeply grieved to announce the passing of Mr. Lee Kuan Yew,
the founding prime minister of Singapore,” a statement
posted on the prime minister’s official website said. “Mr. Lee passed away
peacefully at the Singapore General Hospital today at 3:18 am.”
Mr.
Lee was prime minister from 1959, when Singapore gained full self-government from the
British, until 1990, when he stepped
down. Late into his life he remained the dominant personality and driving force
in what he called a First World oasis in a Third World region.
The
nation, reflected the man: efficient, unsentimental, incorrupt, inventive,
forward-looking and pragmatic.
“We
are ideology-free,” Mr. Lee said in an interview with The New York Times in 2007, stating what had become, in
effect, Singapore’s ideology. “Does it work? If it works, let’s try it. If it’s
fine, let’s continue it. If it doesn’t work, toss it out, try another
one.”
His
leadership was sometimes criticized for suppressing freedom, but the formula
succeeded. Singapore became an international business and financial center
admired for its efficiency and low level of corruption.
An
election in 2011 marked the end of the Lee Kuan Yew era, with a voter revolt
against the ruling People’s Action Party. Mr. Lee resigned from the specially
created post of minister mentor and stepped into the background as the nation
began exploring the possibilities of a more engaged and less autocratic
government.
Since Singapore separated from Malaysia in
1965 — an event Mr. Lee called his
“moment of anguish” — he had seen himself in a never-ending struggle to overcome
the nation’s lack of natural resources, a potentially hostile international
environment and a volatile ethnic mix of Chinese, Malays and Indians.
“To
understand Singapore and why it is what it is, you’ve got to start off with the
fact that it’s not supposed to exist and cannot exist,” he said in the 2007
interview. “To begin with, we don’t have the ingredients of a nation, the
elementary factors: a homogeneous population, common language, common culture
and common destiny. So, history is a long time. I’ve done my bit.”
His “Singapore model,” sometimes criticized as soft
authoritarianism, included centralized power, clean government and economic
liberalism along with suppression of political opposition and strict limits on free speech and public assembly, which created a climate of caution and
self-censorship. The model has been admired and studied by leaders in Asia,
including in China, and
beyond as well as being the subject of countless academic case
studies.
Photo
Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew addresses a crowd in Singapore in
1964. He was the nation’s dominant personality for many years.Credit Associated Press
The
commentator Cherian George described Mr. Lee’s leadership as “a unique
combination of charisma and fear.”
As
Mr. Lee’s influence waned, the questions were how much and how fast his model
might change in the hands of a new, possibly more liberal generation. Some even
asked, as he often had, whether Singapore, a nation of 5.6 million, could
survive in a turbulent future.
Mr. Lee was a master of “Asian values,” a concept in
which the good of society took precedence over the rights of the individual and
citizens ceded some autonomy in return for paternalistic rule.
Generally passive in political affairs, Singaporeans sometimes
chide themselves as being overly preoccupied with a comfortable lifestyle, which
they sum up as the “Five C’s” — cash, condo, car, credit card, country
club.
In
recent years, though, a confrontational world of political websites and blogs
has given new voice to critics of Mr. Lee and his system.
Even
among people who knew little of Singapore,
Mr. Lee was famous for his national self-improvement campaigns, which urged
people to do such things as smile, speak good English and flush the toilet, but
never to spit, chew gum or throw garbage off balconies.
“They laughed, at us,” he said in the second volume of his memoirs,
“From Third World to First: The Singapore Story 1965-2000.” “But I was confident
that we would have the last laugh. We would have been a grosser, ruder, cruder
society had we not made these efforts.”
Mr.
Lee developed a distinctive Singaporean mechanism of political control, filing
libel suits that sometimes drove his opponents into bankruptcy and doing battle
with critics in the foreign press. Several foreign publications, including The
International Herald Tribune, which is now called The International New York
Times, have apologized and paid fines to settle libel
suits.
The
lawsuits challenged accusations of nepotism — members of Mr. Lee’s family hold
influential positions in Singapore — and questions about the independence of the
judiciary, which critics have said follows the lead of the executive
branch.
Mr.
Lee denied that the suits had a political purpose, saying they were essential to
clearing his name of false accusations.
He
seemed to genuinely believe that criticisms would gain currency if they were not
vigorously disputed. But the lawsuits themselves did as much as anything to
diminish his reputation.
He
was proud to describe himself as a political street fighter more feared than
loved.
“Nobody doubts that if you take me on, I will put on
knuckle-dusters and catch you in a cul-de-sac,” he said in 1994. “If you think
you can hurt me more than I can hurt you, try. There is no other way you can
govern a Chinese society.”
A
jittery public avoided openly criticizing Mr. Lee and his government and
generally obeyed its dictates.
“Singaporeans are like a flea,” said Mr. Lee’s political
tormentor, J.B. Jeyaretnam, who was financially broken by libel suits but
persisted in opposition until his death in 2008. “They are trained to jump so
high and no farther. once they go higher they’re slapped down.”
In
an interview in 2005, Mr. Jeyaretnam added: “There’s a climate of fear in
Singapore. People are just simply afraid. They feel it everywhere. And because
they’re afraid they feel they can’t do anything.”
Mr.
Lee’s vehicle of power was the People’s Action Party, or P.A.P., which exercised
the advantages of office to overwhelm and intimidate opponents. It embraced into
its ranks the nation’s brightest young stars, creating what was, in effect, a
one-party state.
In a policy intended to remove the temptation for
corruption, Singapore linked the salaries of ministers, judges and top civil
servants to those of leading professionals in the private sector, making them
some of the highest-paid government officials in the world.
It was only in 1981, 16 years after independence, that
Mr. Jeyaretnam won the first opposition seat in Parliament, infuriating Mr. Lee.
Two decades later, after the 2006 election, just two of the Parliament’s 84
elected seats were held by members of opposition parties.
But
in 2011, the opposition won an unprecedented six seats, along with an unusually
high popular vote of close to 40 percent, in what was seen as a demand by voters
for more accountability and responsiveness in its leaders. Pragmatic as always,
the P.A.P. reacted by modifying its peremptory style and acknowledging that
times were changing.
Photo
Mr. Lee met with President Obama at the White House in
October 2009, when he held the special post of minister mentor.Credit Gerald Herbert/Associated Press
But
the new approach still fell short of true multiparty democracy, and Singaporeans
continued to question whether the party intended to change itself or would even
be able to do so.
“Many people say, ‘Why don’t we open up, then you have two big
parties and one party always ready to take over?’ “ Mr. Lee said in a speech in
2008. “I do not believe that for a single moment.”
He
added: “We do not have the numbers to ensure that we’ll always have an A Team
and an alternative A Team. I’ve tried it; it’s just not possible.”
What
Singapore got was centralized, efficient policy making unencumbered by what Mr.
Lee called the “heat and dust” of political clashes, and social
campaigns.
In one, the government tried vigorously to combat a
falling birthrate, organizing what was in effect an official matchmaking agency
aimed particularly at affluent ethnic Chinese.
Mr. Lee also promoted the use of English as the language
of business and the common tongue among the ethnic groups, while recognizing
Malay, Chinese and Tamil as other official languages.
With
tourists and investors in mind, Singapore sought to become a cultural and
recreational hub, with a sprawling performing arts center, museums, galleries,
Western and Chinese orchestras and not one but two casinos.
Despite his success, Mr. Lee said that he sometimes had trouble
sleeping and that he calmed himself each night with 20 minutes of meditation,
reciting a mantra: “Ma-Ra-Na-Tha.”
“The
problem is to keep the monkey mind from running off into all kinds of thoughts,”
he said in an interview with The Times in 2010. “A certain tranquillity settles over you. The day’s
pressures and worries are pushed out. Then there’s less problem
sleeping.”
Lee
Kuan Yew, who was sometimes known by his English name, Harry Lee, was born in
Singapore on Sept. 16, 1923, to a fourth-generation, middle-class Chinese
family.
He
worked as a translator and engaged in black market trading during the Japanese
occupation in World War II, then went to Britain, where he earned a law degree
in 1949 from Cambridge University. In 1950 he married Kwa Geok Choo, a fellow
law student from Singapore. She died in 2010.
After serving as prime minister from 1959 to 1990, Mr.
Lee was followed by two handpicked successors, Goh Chok Tong
and Mr. Lee’s eldest son, Lee Hsien Loong, who, groomed for the job, has been prime minister
since 2004.
Besides the prime minister, Mr. Lee is survived by his younger
son, Lee Hsien Yang, who is the chairman of the Civil Aviation Authority of
Singapore; a daughter, Dr. Lee Wei Ling, who runs the National Neuroscience
Institute; a younger brother, Suan Yew; and a younger sister, Monica.
Ho
Ching, the wife of the prime minister, is executive director and chief executive
of Temasek Holdings, a government holding company.
“His stature is immense,” Catherine Lim, a novelist and
frequent critic of Mr. Lee, said in an interview. “This man is a statesman. He
is probably too big for Singapore, on a level with Tito and de Gaulle. If they
had three Lee Kuan Yews in Africa, that continent wouldn’t be in such a bad
state.”
The
cost of his success, she said, was a lack of emotional connection.
“Everything goes tick-tock, tick-tock,” she said. “He is an
admirable man, but, oh, people like a little bit of heart as well as head. He is
all hard-wired.”
In
the 2010 interview with The Times, though, he took a reflective, valedictory
tone.
“I’m not saying that everything I did was right, but everything
I did was for an honorable purpose,” he said. “I had to do some nasty things,
locking fellows up without trial.”
He said he was not a religious man and that he dealt
with setbacks by simply telling himself, “Well, life is just like
that.”
Mr.
Lee maintained a careful diet and exercised for most of his life, but he
admitted to feeling the signs of age and to a touch of weariness at the
self-imposed rigor of his life.
“I’m reaching 87, trying to keep fit, presenting a vigorous
figure, and it’s an effort, and is it worth the effort?” he said. “I laugh at
myself trying to keep a bold front. It’s become my habit. So I just carry
on.”
Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew, 'a true giant of
history', dies aged 91
Barack Obama leads tributes to country’s first
prime minister, who is credited with building Singapore into one of the world’s
wealthiest nations
Lee Kuan Yew co-founded the People’s
Action party (PAP), which has ruled Singapore since 1959. Photograph: Wong
Maye-E/AP
Singapore’s founding father, Lee Kuan Yew, who
led the city-state for more than three decades, has died aged 91.
Lee’s son and current prime minister, Lee Hsien
Loong, announced the news in the early hours of Monday morning local time,
prompting a flurry of tributes from world leaders.
US president Barack Obama called Lee a “true
giant of history” while UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon called him a “legendary
figure in Asia” and China’s president Xi Jinping praised Lee as an “old friend
of the Chinese people”.
His son struggled to hold back tears when he
made a televised address to the nation, saying Lee had built a nation and given
Singaporeans a proud national identity.
Speaking in Malay, Mandarin and English, the
prime minister said: “We won’t see another man like him. To many Singaporeans,
and indeed others too, Lee Kuan Yew was Singapore,” he
said.
Lee said that his father would lie in state
from 25-28 March at Parliament House so the public could pay their respects,
with the state funeral on 29 March.
A man pays his
respects at the tribute area at Singapore general hospital where former leader
Lee Kuan Yew died on Monday 23 March. Photograph: Mohd Fyrol/AFP/Getty Images
He has declared a period of national mourning
from 23-29 March, with state flags on government buildings at half mast until
Sunday.
The People’s Action party (PAP) – the party
that Lee led to electoral victory in 1959 and which has governed Singapore ever
since – set up a tribute website tributetolky.org.
Lee, a Cambridge-educated lawyer, is widely
credited with building Singapore into one of the world’s wealthiest nations on a
per capita basis with a strong, pervasive role for the state and little patience
for dissent.
He co-founded the PAP and led the newly born
country when it was separated from Malaysia in 1965.
Lee Kuan Yew
with Barack Obama in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington in 2009.
Photograph: Gerald Herbert/AP
He stepped down as prime minister in 1990,
handing power to Goh Chok Tong, but remained influential as senior minister in
Goh’s cabinet and subsequently as “minister mentor” when Lee Hsien Loong became
prime minister in 2004.
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The older Lee left the cabinet in 2011 and had
cut down his public appearances in recent months due to his age and declining
health. Lee was admitted to Singapore general hospital on 5 February for severe
pneumonia and was later put on life support.
Lee was feared for his authoritarian tactics
but insisted that strict limits on speech and public protest were necessary to
maintain stability in the multi-ethnic and multi-religious country.
Maligah Thangavello, 55, and Dorai Josephine,
57, who are both healthcare assistants at Singapore general hospital, heard the
news when they got on the bus on their way to work.
“We treat him like our father,” said
Maligah in tears. “When I was 10, he came to my school and shook hands with all
of us.”
“He is far away from us now,”
said Dorai Josephine. “He was like a king, the king of Singapore. He did the
best for Singapore.”
Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director at New
York-based Human Rights Watch, said Lee’s “tremendous” role in Singapore’s
economic development was beyond doubt. “But it also came at a significant cost
for human rights, and today’s restricted freedom of expression, self-censorship
and stunted multi-party democracy,” he said.
There were also dissenting voices in Singapore.
“This man has put in certain structures which are certainly illiberal,
anti-democratic, and his passing does not mean that they no longer survive,”
said blogger Alex Au. “Effort is still needed to dismantle them.”
In a White House statement, Obama said that he
appreciated Lee’s wisdom, including during discussions they held on his trip to
Singapore in 2009 when he was formulating his Asia-Pacific policy.
“He was a true giant of history who will be
remembered for generations to come as the father of modern Singapore and as one
the great strategists of Asian affairs,” Obama said.
Xi said Lee, who was ethnically Chinese, was
“widely respected by the international community as a strategist and a
statesman” and expressed “sincere condolences” to his relatives.
Lee met China’s leaders multiple times and his
model of political control allied to economic growth was seen as an example to
China’s Communist party as it embarked on reforms.
Margaret
Thatcher was a great admirer of Lee Kuan Yew, said British prime minister David
Cameron. Photograph: Tan Ah Soon/AP
The British prime minister, David Cameron,
said: “Lady Thatcher once said that there was no prime minister she admired more
than Mr Lee for ‘the strength of his convictions, the clarity of his views, the
directness of his speech and his vision of the way ahead’. His place in history
is assured, as a leader and as one of the modern world’s foremost
statesmen.”
The Australian foreign minister, Julie Bishop,
also paid tribute to Lee, calling him a political giant.
“The passing of a giant like Lee Kuan Yew is
the end of an era,” Bishop told Sky News.
Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe called Lee
“a great Asian leader who laid the foundation for the prosperity of Singapore
today”.
In a letter of condolence
to Lee’s son, Singapore’s president Tony Tan said: “Mr Lee dedicated his entire
life to Singapore from his first position as a legal advisor to the labour
unions in the 1950s after his graduation from Cambridge University to his
undisputed role as the architect of our modern Republic. Few have demonstrated
such complete commitment to a cause greater than themselves.”
This article was amended on Monday 23 March
2015 to correct a misspelling of Lee Kuan Yew’s name and to correct the time of
the announcement of his death.
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THERE was no vainglory in the title of the
first volume of Lee Kuan Yew’s memoirs: “The Singapore Story”. Few leaders have
so embodied and dominated their countries: Fidel Castro, perhaps, and Kim Il
Sung, in their day. But both of those signally failed to match Mr Lee’s
achievement in propelling Singapore “From Third World to First” (as the second
volume is called). Moreover, he managed it against far worse odds: no space,
beyond a crowded little island; no natural resources; and, as an island of
polyglot immigrants, not much shared history. The search for a common heritage
may have been why, in the 1990s, Mr Lee’s Singapore championed “Asian values”.
By then, Singapore was the most Westernised place in Asia.
Mr Lee himself, whose anglophile grandfather
had added “Harry” to his Chinese name, was once called by George Brown, a
British foreign secretary, “the best bloody Englishman east of Suez”. He was
proud of his success in colonial society. He was a star student in pre-war
Singapore, and, after an interlude during the Japanese occupation of Singapore
from 1942-45, again at the London School of Economics (LSE) and Cambridge. He
and his wife, Kwa Geok Choo, both got firsts in law.
When Geok Choo first appears in “The Singapore
Story” it is as a student who, horror of horrors, beats young Harry in economics
and English exams. Mr Lee always excelled at co-option as well as coercion. When
he returned to Singapore in 1950, he was confident in the knowledge that she
“could be a sole breadwinner and bring up the children”, giving him an
“insurance policy” that would let him enter politics. He remained devoted to
her. Before her death, when she lay bedridden and mute for two years, he
maintained a spreadsheet listing the books he read to her: Lewis Carroll, Jane
Austen, Shakespeare’s sonnets.
In his political life he gave few hints of such
inner tenderness. Influenced by Harold Laski, whom he had encountered at the
LSE, he was in the anti-colonial movement of the 1950s, and in Britain had
campaigned for the Labour Party. But for him ideology always took second place
to a pragmatic appreciation of how power works. In later life he would rail
against the welfare state as the root of Britain’s malaise. He also boasted of
his street-fighting prowess: “Nobody doubts that if you take me on, I will put
on knuckle-dusters and catch you in a cul-de-sac.” He was a ruthless operator,
manoeuvring himself into a position at the head of the People’s Action Party
(PAP) to become Singapore’s first prime minister when self-governance arrived in
1959. He remained so for 31 years.
Just once in that time the steely mask slipped.
Having led Singapore into a federation with Malaysia in 1963, Mr Lee led it out
again when it was expelled in August 1965, with Malaysia’s prime minister
accusing him of leading a state government “that showed no measure of loyalty to
its central government”. For his part, he had become convinced that
Chinese-majority Singapore would always be at a disadvantage in a
Malay-dominated polity. Still, he had, he confessed, believed in and worked for
the merger all his life. Announcing its dissolution, he wept. Perhaps, besides
lamenting the wasted effort and dashed hopes, he foresaw that, with Singapore
deprived of its natural hinterland, he would never command a political stage big
enough for his talents.
In compensation, he turned Singapore into a
hugely admired economic success story. As he and his government would often
note, this seemed far from the likeliest outcome in the dark days of the 1960s.
Among the many resources that Singapore lacked was an adequate water supply,
which left it alarmingly dependent on a pipeline from peninsular Malaysia, from
which it had just divorced. It was beholden to America’s goodwill and the
crumbling might of the former colonial power, Britain, for its defence. The
regional giant, Indonesia, had been engaged in a policy of
Konfrontasi—hostility to the Malaysian federation just short of open
warfare—to make the point that it was only an accident of colonial history that
had left British-ruled Malaya and its offshoots separate from the Dutch-ruled
East Indies, which became Indonesia.
Singapore as a nation did not exist. “How were
we to create a nation out of a polyglot collection of migrants from China,
India, Malaysia, Indonesia and several other parts of Asia?” asked Mr Lee in
retrospect. Race riots in the 1960s in Singapore itself as well as Malaysia
coloured Mr Lee’s thinking for the rest of his life. Even when Singapore
appeared to outsiders a peaceful, harmonious, indeed rather boringly stable
place, its government often behaved as if it were dancing on the edge of an
abyss of ethnic animosity. Public housing, one of the government’s greatest
successes, remains subject to a system of ethnic quotas, so that the minority
Malays and Indians could not coalesce into ghettoes.
A dot on the map
That sense of external weakness and
internal fragility was central to Mr Lee’s policies for the young country.
Abandoned by Britain in 1971 when it withdrew from “east of Suez”, Singapore has
always made national defence a high priority, although direct threats to its
security have eased. Relations with Malaysia have frequently been fraught, but
never to the point when a military conflict seemed likely. And Indonesia ended
Konfrontasi in the mid-1960s. The formation in 1967 of the Association
of South-East Asian Nations, with Mr Lee as one of the founding fathers, helped
draw the region together. Yet Singaporean men still perform nearly two years of
national service in the armed forces. Defence spending, in a country of 5.5m, is
more than in Indonesia, with nearly 250m; in 2014 it soaked up over one-fifth of
the national budget.
Singapore’s vulnerability also justified, for
Mr Lee, some curtailment of its people’s democratic freedoms. In the early days
this involved strong-arm methods—locking up suspected communists, for example.
But it evolved into something more subtle: a combination of economic success,
gerrymandering, stifling press controls and the legal hounding of opposition
politicians and critics, including the foreign press. Singapore has had regular,
free and fair elections. Indeed, voting is compulsory, though Mr Lee said in
1994 that he was “not intellectually convinced that one-man, one-vote is the
best”. He said Singapore practised it because that is what the British had
bequeathed. So he designed a system where clean elections are held but it has
been almost inconceivable for the PAP to lose power. The biggest reason for that
has been its economic success: growth has averaged nearly 7% a year for four
decades.
But Mr Lee’s party has left nothing to chance.
The traditional media are toothless; opposition politicians have been hounded
into bankruptcy by the fierce application of defamation laws inherited from
Britain; voters have face the threat that, if they elect opposition candidates,
their constituencies will suffer in the allocation of public funds; constituency
boundaries have been manipulated by the government. The advantage of Mr Lee’s
system, its proponents say, is that it introduced just enough electoral
competition to keep the government honest, but not so much that it actually
risks losing power. So it can look around corners on behalf of its people, plan
for the long term and resist the temptation to pander to populist
pressures.
Mr Lee was a firm believer in meritocracy. “We
decide what is right. Never mind what the people think,” as he put it bluntly in
1987. His government’s ministers were the world’s best-paid, to attract talent
from the private sector and curb corruption. Corruption did indeed become rare
in Singapore. Like other crime, it was deterred in part by harsh punishments
ranging from brutal caning for vandalism to hanging for murder or
drug-smuggling. As Mr Lee also said: “Between being loved and feared, I have
always believed Machiavelli was right. If nobody is afraid of me, I’m
meaningless.” As a police state, however, Singapore was such a success that you
rarely see a cop.
A cool guy
In some ways, Mr Lee was a bit of a crank.
Among a number of 20th-century luminaries asked by the Wall Street
Journal in 1999 to pick the most influential invention of the millennium,
he alone shunned the printing press, electricity, the internal combustion engine
and the internet and chose the air-conditioner. He explained that, before
air-con, people living in the tropics were at a disadvantage because the heat
and humidity damaged the quality of their work.
Now, they “need no longer lag behind”. Cherian
George, a journalist and scholar, spotted in this a metaphor for Mr Lee’s style
of government, and wrote one of the best books about it: “The air-conditioned
nation: Essays on the politics of comfort and control”. Mr Lee made Singapore
comfortable, but was careful to keep control of the thermostat. Singaporeans,
seeing their island transform itself and modernise, seemed to accept this. But
in 2011 the PAP did worse than ever in a general election (just 60% of the vote
and 93% of the seats!). Many thought change would have to come, and that the
structure Mr Lee had built was unsuitable for the age of Facebook and the
burgeoning of networks which it can no longer control. They began to chafe at
the restrictions on their lives, seemingly no longer so convinced of Singapore’s
fragility, and less afraid of the consequences of criticising the
government.
They resented above all that many people,
despite a much-vaunted compulsory savings scheme, did not have enough money for
their retirement. And they blamed high levels of immigration for keeping their
wages down and living costs up. This was a consequence of a unique failure among
Mr Lee’s many campaigns to make Singaporeans change their ways. He succeeded in
creating a nation of Mandarin speakers who are politer than they used to be and
neither jaywalk nor chew gum; but he could not make them have more children. In
the early 1980s, he dropped his “stop at two” policy, and started to encourage
larger families among the better-educated. But, three decades later, Singaporean
women have as low a fertility rate as any in the world.
The hereditary principle
The “setback” of the 2011 election led Mr
Lee into the final stage of retirement. In 1990 he had moved from prime minister
to “senior minister”, and in 2004 to “minister mentor”. Now he left the cabinet,
but remained in parliament. By then, Singapore’s prime minister for seven years
had been Lee Hsien Loong, his son. The Lee family would sue anyone who hinted at
nepotism. And, for Mr Lee, that talent is hereditary was an obvious fact.
“Occasionally two grey horses produce a white horse, but very few. If you have
two white horses, the chances are you breed white horses.”
Such ideas, applied ethnically, veer close to
racism. The stream of distinguished Western visitors who trooped to see him in
Singapore would steer clear of such touchy areas. They preferred to seek his
views on the rise of China or America’s decline. They also admired the comfort
and the economic success of Mr Lee’s Singapore, and sought his advice on how to
replicate it. Meanwhile, the control and good “social order” there attracted
admirers, too, including Chinese leaders, notably Deng Xiaoping, who was, like
Mr Lee, a member of the Hakka Chinese minority. Thus Mr Lee, famous as both a
scourge of communists at home and a critic of Western decadence and its
wishy-washy idealism, revelled in the role of geopolitical thinker. What, he
must have wondered, if fate had allotted him a superpower instead of a city
state?