The
1952 Revolution: How the 4th International and the POR betrayed the revolution
which could have carried Trotskyism to Power.
When the February revolution
occurred in 1917, the Bolsheviks had been in existence for fifteen years. When
the revolution of April 1952 happened the POR had been in existence for
seventeen years. Both movements operated in countries with a peasant and petty
bourgeois majority but with a modern, geographically concentrated, proletariat.
Both parties had the benefit of working with the introducers of `Marxism' into
their respective countries (Plekhanov and Marof) and their cadres had taken
part in forming the first working class organisations. While Bolshevism had
been formed by its confrontation with other Marxist currents (economists,
Mensheviks, etc.), petty bourgeois socialists (SRs) and bourgeois democrats
(Cadets), the POR had had to fight against the `Marxists' of Marof and
Stalinism, the different wings of the MNR and `socialism' of both bourgeois and
military varieties.
Bolshevism was tempered during the
working class upsurge which culminated in the 1905 revolution, in the
reactionary phase which followed it, in the new wave of strikes and the
struggle against World War 1. The POR was born in the fight against the Chaco
War and was forged during two great mass insurgencies, which brought down the
governments in 1936 and 1946, in great strikes and massacres, in constant
changes of government, coups and a short civil war. While the `general
rehearsal' of 1905 was smashed, both of the two rehearsals of revolutionary
crises experienced by the POR ended with toppling the governments. Bolivian
`Trotskyism' had its programme endorsed by the university students and the
miners and could pride itself on having had within its ranks the main leaders
of the FSTMB and the CON[1].
The role of the POR in the April
events was such that even one of the founders of the Stalinist party recognised
that of the five main leaders of the insurrection, one was of the MNR right,
another was of the pro-POR wing of the MNR, and three were POR: "This
armed uprising was led and guided to victory by the leading personnel of the
MNR, Hernán Siles Zuazo, Juan Lechín Oquendo, Edwin Moller, Alandia Pantojas,
Villegas and others". [2](Memorias
del primer ministro obrero, Waldo Alvarez, La Paz, 1986 p.188).
In Lucha Obrera, the POR
boasted that "when top MNR leaders thought about flight, it was our
comrades who lead the people and proletariat of Oruro to victory (...) our
militants were the real leaders in the defence of Villa Pavon and Miraflores
that in practice saved the difficult situation for the revolutionaries when the
enemy already appeared to be triumphant within the city".[3]
(LO 12.6.52, p.3).
Within the COB, the dominant power
in the country, the POR was the most important and influential party. The
historian Alexander states that: "The POR which had in large part been
able to determine the ideological orientation and dynamism of the Workers
Center", "For the first six months the COB was practically in the
hands of the Trotskyists".[4]
Lora admits that "Immediately
after the 9th April 1952, the MNR operated as a inactive minority within the
trade union organisations. It had little success because mass radicalisation
had reached its highest point."[5](Sindicatos
y revolución, G Lora, La Paz, 1960, p.31).
"The whole of the opening
struggle for the formation of the Trade Union Centre was in the hands of POR
militants and a large part of the full-time Staff and the whole orientation of
the brand new COB was Trotskyist. Lechín did no more than operate under the
powerful pressure of the masses and the POR. In the speeches of the workers'
leaders of this period and in the plans presented to the Paz Estenssoro Cabinet
can be found the imprint of the POR".[6]
(La Revolución boliviana: Análisis crítico, Guillermo Lora, La Paz,
1963, p.254).
While the MNR was weak for several
months after the uprising of April, the POR CC continued boasting to itself
about its majority in the COB. "Our unchallenged present majority is a
clear proof of our slow but solid and sure work, undertaken by the party in
this sense".[7] (Boletin
Interno, no 13, POR, 1953, p.11).
The COB was born brandishing the Theses
of Pulacayo, and with a POR programme and orientation. When it was founded
the POR displayed its total identification with its conduct. "The COB was
born then with a clear conception of its independent class position, faithfully
interpreting in its transitional programme the broad mass movement"[8]
(LO, 18.4.52., p.2).
The historian Dunkerley maintains
that "much of the preparatory work (of founding the COB) was undertaken by
the POR representatives, Edwin Moller, Miguel Alandia and José Zegada".[9]
(Rebelión en las venas, James Dunkerley, Ed Quipus, 1982, La Paz p.50
-Verso edition p.45). "The POR allegeedly controlled at least half the
COB's 13 man central committee.[10]
(ibid, p.67, Verso Edition p.64. The editor of the English text omitted
`allegedly' before `controlled').
In October 1952 a journalist,
claiming to be a Trotskyist critical of the POR, admitted that within the COB
"the largest fraction is that of the POR; next comes the group of Lechín
and Torres, that is the nationalist wing of the unions while the Stalinists are
in third place with scarcely five votes".[11]
It took the Russian Bolsheviks from
February to October to obtain a majority in the Soviets and when they had got
it they moved to insurrection. The POR however controlled the COB from its
first moments. While the Bolsheviks were a minority within the Russian
working class for these eight months the POR led the COB for the first crucial
six months after the insurrection which dispersed the bourgeois army. The
programme, the leadership and the Press of the COB were the work of the POR.
The main leader of the COB functioned by reading out speeches written by the
POR.
However, there was a huge difference
between the POR and Bolsheviks. The Bolsheviks demanded of the Soviets that
they should give no class support to the bourgeois-democratic, reformist
coalition government and that instead they should break with the bourgeoisie
and take all power in their own hands. The POR, in contrast, gave `critical
support' to the bourgeois government and asked to be given ministerial posts.
While the Bolsheviks attacked the Mensheviks and the SRs without pity, seeking
to remove them from leadership positions, the POR identified itself with the
labour bureaucracy (for whom they drafted speeches and ministerial plans) and
sought to transform the bourgeois party and its government. The Bolshevik
strategy was to make a new revolution while that of the POR was to reform
the MNR and its government. In short, while Bolshevism was Leninist, the
POR was Lechínist.
The
Menshevik Positions Of The POR And Of Lora In April.
Trying to explain the behaviour of
the POR as objectively as possible, Dunkerley maintains that those from the
section of the 4th International "were from an early stage highly critical
of the MNR regime, they made no call for an immediate workers government, demanding
instead a radicalisation of proposed reforms, the defence of the regime against
imperialism and the revolutionary education of the masses".[12]
(Rebelión en las venas, p.52 - Verso Edition, p.46).
Just before the April events the POR
had published "an open letter to the government, demanding that power be
handed over to the Nationalist MNR without a new election".[13]
The strategy of the POR was limited to pressurising the government periodically
so as to change the leadership of the bourgeois state with the aim of allowing
the MNR to take over the presidency by constitutional means. In that way, a
legitimate government could be restored, which, through pressure, would be
forced to adopt radical measures and would also have to appoint worker
ministers.
During the April events Lora had
been in France where he gave statements to La Verité which The
Militant then reproduced. They were the main weeklies of the 4th
International. In his history of the POR, Lora says that "Up to now not
enough importance has been given to the call for the Trotskyist programme made
by Lora in Paris a few days after the arrival of the MNR in power". With
great cynicism he states that there he said that the working class "in
order to triumph had no other way than by going over the political corpse of
the MNR and also over that of Lechínism".[14]
(Contribución..., G Lora, Vol 2, pp.237-238). As far as we are
concerned, we do not want to give `enough importance' to such statements
exactly the opposite was said. Let us see:
"The central slogans put
forward by our party were: 1) Restore the constitution of the country through
the formation of an MNR government which obtained a majority in the 1951
election. 2) The struggle for the improvement of wages and working conditions
3) Struggle for democratic rights 4) Mobilisation of the masses against
imperialism, for the nationalisation of the mines, and for the abrogation of
the UN agreement".[15](The
Militant 12.5.52, Lora interview Part 1, SWP, New York.)
Of all these demands only the last
one is really radical and even that did not go beyond the limits of bourgeois
democracy, or what the anti-communist Paz would do a few months later. The
first seeks a constitutional bourgeois state with a populist government.
Instead of seeking to differentiate itself from the latter by raising
anti-capitalist and class-based slogans, the whole of the POR platform was
exactly the same as that raised by the bourgeois MNR. Lora did not put forward
as his dominant idea any proletarian slogan (expropriation without compensation
of the bourgeoisie, workers control, disarming the bourgeois armed forces and
their replacement by worker and peasant militias, occupation mines, factories
and land, etc.). Instead of wanting to make the COB into a soviet, break with
the bourgeoisie and take all power, Lora called for the MNR bourgeois
government to change direction and limited himself to asking for some reforms
which did not go beyond the framework of the capitalist state.
"The subversive movement of the
ninth of April was no surprise for our party and occurred as we had foreseen in
our theoretical analysis".[16]
If a party was aware that it was approaching the main revolution of its history
it ought to have done all it could to have kept its most important individual
in the country, or at least, not far away. However, Lora stayed in Paris for
more than half a year after the end of the 3rd World Congress of the 4th
International which was why he was in Europe. By boasting that his party had
predicted what was going to happen and with his view that he should stay
outside in the imperialist world, Lora was either blustering, or worse, he did
not place much importance on his own endeavours to get rid of the MNR but
instead agreed with trying to put pressure on it.
"The struggle which immediately
began is a struggle of the masses to impose their demands on the April 9th
government".[17]
If the POR was in the forefront of
the struggle its objective should have been to put itself forward as an
alternative leadership which called on the COB to kick out Paz. However, Lora
called for support of the bourgeois government and its `left-wing' ministers.
Instead of opposing the trap of inviting labour ministers into the capitalist
cabinet, so attempting to improve the regime's disguise preparatory to
disarming and then counter-attacking the workers, Lora identified himself with
the tactic. "The textile workers decided to impose their conditions on the
right wing of the MNR, they obliged it to accept the working class elements in
the new cabinet who constitute its left faction".[18]
(The Militant, 12.5.52, Lora Interview Part 1).
"In this connection, the
essential mission of the POR is to assume the role of the vigilant guide to
prevent the aspirations of the workers from being diluted by vague promises or
by manoeuvres of right wing elements".[19]
For the POR, the enemy was not the
bourgeois government but only the ministers who were to the right of the
anti-communist Paz. As far as Paz was concerned, `the government was to be
defended to the utmost'.
Lora wanted to uphold this reformist
position by characterising the regime as petty bourgeois. The petty bourgeoisie
is incapable of installing its own mode of production and regime. Small
property engenders large property. A society of small owners is impossible and
cannot avoid competition so forcing some to enrich themselves to accumulate
while others become poor and are turned into proletarians. When the petty
bourgeoisie is not allied to the proletariat it is marching behind the
bourgeoisie aiming to reform its state.
A government that is not subordinate
to the Soviets and workers militias is one that is against the proletariat. A
petty bourgeois government which oscillates between the proletariat and the
bourgeoisie cannot exist. By upholding such a possibility, Lora put forward the
view that these `petty bourgeois' governments, should have pressure put on them
to try to fill them with extra labour ministers, with the aim of gradually
achieving a workers and peasants government. This is a gradualist and reformist
conception that led the POR to prop up the military socialist dictatorship, and
it would later lead them to ask for ministers in the cabinet of General Torres.
Whenever you try to put `red' ministers in the populist governments of the
bourgeoisie and sow further illusions, the more the ruling class is helped make
use of these demagogues so as to confuse and disorientate the masses and to
prepare a reactionary coup.
Neither the MNR government nor the
party were petty bourgeois. The MNR, like every party with popular support,
reflects the composition of the society in which it operates. A populist party,
even though it has a majority of members from the most oppressed strata, just
as elsewhere within capitalism, is run from the top down. Almost all the top
leadership of the MNR were people who came from the oligarchic families, who
had collaborated with German imperialism, propped up the bloody nationalist
dictatorship of Villarroel and who were socially, ideologically and
organically, an expression of a sector of the national bourgeoisie. The MNR,
like Bolivian society, might have a majority of members and voters in the petty
bourgeoisie, but it was led by politicians of and for the bourgeoisie.
International
Repercussions Of The Interview With Lora.
These scandalous declarations were
published in the mouth-piece of those who called themselves bastions of
`anti-pabloism': the SWP (USA) and PCI (France). From `Pabloists' to
`anti-Pabloists' all fully supported these positions. In all of the factional
struggles which were to split the 4th International in 1953, nobody ever
objected to this criminal Menshevik policy which betrayed the Bolivian
Revolution.
The only discordant voice known
within the 4th International at that time was that of a small tendency in
California, headed by Vern and Ryan. This had the great merit of severely
questioning the Menshevik declarations of Lora.
"The POR has been presented the
opportunity of leading a revolution and thereby rendering a great service to
our international movement". "The MNR is a bourgeois party, which
politically exploits the masses". "... it is incontestable that the
present Bolivian government is a bourgeois government, whose task and aim is to
defend by all means available to it the interests of the bourgeoisie and of
imperialism (....) This government is therefore the deadly enemy of the workers
and peasants, and especially of the Marxist party".
"A united front with a
bourgeois party with the aim of establishing a bourgeois constitution and
placing the bourgeois party in power is not a united front but a people's
front.
"The united front that the
Marxists advocate aims to unite the workers and peasants on a minimum programme
embodying a stage of the revolutionary transitional program. This united front,
in a revolutionary situation, turns into workers' and peasants' soviets. And
even in the soviets the struggle goes on. Far from accepting the
conciliationist programme which may be imposed on the soviets, the Marxists
advocate their own programme, calling on the soviets to break with the
bourgeoisie, their parties and their government, and take the complete power,
establishing a workers' and peasants' government.
"But comrade Lora does not
raise the question of a break with the bourgeois government. The workers' and
peasants' government he advocates appears as some ultimate conclusion to a
gradual reshuffling of the personnel of the bourgeois government, whereby the
right wingers will be forced out and the cabinet take on a more and more left
tinge".[20]
The Vern-Ryan tendency received no
reply to its criticism against the Menshevik line in Bolivia. From then until
today, all the currents which derive from the `anti-Pabloist' International
Committee continue to ignore these questionings of a policy which they,
opportunistically, totally endorsed.
In spite of the progressive nature
of its criticism this tendency soon dissolved itself. Its positions, although
on the left of the deformed 4th International, contained a series of
ambiguities. The most important of them was its conception that a government
directed by a Stalinist military apparatus would be enough (regardless of
whether capitalist social relations had been expropriated or not) to recognise
the creation of a new deformed workers state.
Rebellion
Against The Permanent Revolution.
The POR was proud that it edited the
mouthpiece of the COB bureaucracy. "Our points of view were imposed by a
crushing majority and the newspaper Rebelión of the COB presented our
own political position in the workers camp".[21]
(Boletin Interno, No. 13, POR, undated, p.10) "The three first
issues of Rebelión, the last of which was published on the occasion of
the First Congress of the COB (31st October 1954), appeared under the direction
of M Alandia P and wholly expressed the programme of the Centre at that time.
The first issue contained a hearty greeting to the General Secretary of the
POR".[22] (La
revolución boliviana: Análisis crítico, G Lora, La Paz, 1963, p.254).
But what did this mouthpiece have to
say? Did it put forward a revolutionary policy whose basic principles could
only be a demand for the COB to break with Paz and call for the occupation of
the mines, factories and the land, and to take power? On the contrary, Rebelión
identified itself with the bourgeois regime. It stated that the MNR government
was its own and that it had to be propped up. In its first issue under POR
direction it said:
"The defeat of the oligarchy
and the birth of the MNR government is the work of the working masses; it is
our creation (...) in order to survive the present government requires from
the workers that the workers supporting it, being vigilant will be able to
attain great achievements".[23]
(Rebelión, 1.5.52, pp.8-9)
They not only mortgaged themselves
to the MNR but paid homage to the memory of a military man, Gualberto
Villarroel, who was involved in the Catavi massacre of 1942, and who was a
pro-imperialist dictator overthrown by a popular uprising.[24]
"Our proletarian homage to the memory of the martyr president" (ibid,
p.9).
How could that be the position of a
revolutionary? This was an orientation which could only help to disarm and
demobilise the COB, asking it, in spite of having the real power, to continue
helping a bourgeois government that was destined to line up behind imperialism
and massacre the workers.
In June, Lucha Obrera
maintained that the MNR should thank the POR for helping it achieve power and
for its support. Its task would now be to put pressure on the MNR to carry out
reforms which would benefit the working and middle classes.
"If the MNR has to give
thanks to anyone, and greatly for our help, it is without doubt, to the POR
(...) The POR will continue in carrying out its task of guiding the proletariat
and of ensuring that the actions which deposed one government and raised up
another, which enjoys the support of all the people, are carried out in a way
beneficial to the proletariat and the oppressed sectors of the middle
class".[25] (LO,
12.6.52, p.3).
"Never before had a party like
the MNR, that can count on uniform backing from an armed people and
proletariat, achieved power; and never, therefore, did anyone have the
opportunity of adopting measures with a real revolutionary content. The
government has closed its eyes, or has not wanted to see the magnificent
opportunity, and has preferred to deceive the proletariat which supported
it unconditionally".[26]
(LO, 29.6.52, p.4)
Never before had the party had such
an opportunity to make a social revolution, but the MNR hesitated. The POR
opposed the view that the deficiency was because of the bourgeois class
character of the MNR, but said it was due to its lack of tactical ability. The
task was to open its eyes and make it see the magnificent opportunity.
The whole policy of the POR was completely Menshevik. Instead of calling on the
workers to reject the MNR and to struggle to put the COB into power, the POR
boasted of having served the MNR and of wanting it to mull over things and see
reality - an orientation that was simply limited to seeking to serve as an
adviser to the MNR in order to reform it.
The
POR Supports The Bourgeois Government
Nine days after the uprising of 9th
April, the mouthpiece of the POR declared that "to the extent that it
carries out the promised programme, it supports the Government which
arose out of the popular insurrection of 9th April, (...) It had two worker
ministers in the petty bourgeois cabinet, but was entirely controlled and tied
to the decisions of the COB".[27]
(LO, 18.4.52, p.2).
Under no circumstances can the
proletariat support the government of a section of its exploiters. On the
contrary, the aim of a Marxist party should be to undermine it and to struggle
for its revolutionary overthrow. Supporters of it would be compromised with a
policy of maintaining backward and semi-colonial capitalism. In the case of an
attempt at a reactionary coup the Trotskyists should have followed the same
policy as Russian Bolshevism in the face of the Kornilov revolt. Without giving
an ounce of support to the Kerensky government the Leninists joined its
supporters in the streets to fight with arms in order to crush ultra-reaction.
At all times they called on the workers to have no confidence in, or to give
support to, the government, and to prepare to depose it in a revolutionary way,
once the monarchist coup attempt had been crushed.
However, in Bolivia at the time
imperialism had no intention of carrying out a coup. It much preferred to help
Paz and Siles, who knew how to use demagogy together with reformists like
Lechín and their agents in the POR, in order to exhaust the masses, so that
they could free themselves from working class pressure and succeed in
rebuilding the bourgeois armed forces and so maintaining semi-colonial
capitalism. The rightist coups (such as the adventure of the MNR right-wing in
January 1953) could not count on the patronage of the USA. The Yanks had no
wish to provoke a popular counter-reaction. They knew that the MNR was led by
bourgeois and they knew how to use such people against the workers.
The USA never armed a
counter-revolutionary guerrilla force as it did later in Nicaragua, Angola or
Afghanistan. Nor did it encourage bellicose sentiments among the reactionary
governments of the region for an invasion. The imperialist trump card was Paz.
They knew that the latter would be made to nationalise the larger mines and to
carry out some social reforms. But they also knew that he did it under pressure
of the armed masses and that he would try to moderate those reforms when he
could. As soon as populist demagogy had helped the rebuilding of the repressive
bourgeois military machine and the workers activity had ebbed, that would be
the time for a policy of destabilisation. The Eder and Triangular plans applied
later by Paz, Siles or Lechín would seek to follow the designs of imperialism
against the exploited of Bolivia.
To believe that ministers in a
cabinet could have a policy contrary to that of the government was shown to be
a reactionary illusion. Rather, those `red' ministers were obliged to implement
the decisions of an anti-working class government. It was not the COB that
controlled its ministers, but it was the government, through its trade unionist
ministers, which controlled the COB.
During the April events, the
"Central Committee issued a resolution in the form of adhering to the
revolution, advancing a programme of immediate demands. The fundamental points
demanded a struggle for (...) A Bolivian government that would obey the will of
the Bolivians".[28]
(Boletin Interno, No 13, 1953, p.7). In May, Lucha Obrera called
for a struggle to change the direction of the Victor Paz government. It
demanded "A Bolivian government which will obey the will of the
Bolivians and not of the Yanks". "The petty bourgeois government,
owing to the force of political circumstances, has the possibility of being
transformed and changed into a phase of the Workers and Peasants government".[29]
(LO, 25.5.52, p.3).
The Bolivians living in that country
are from every class. A government `of the Bolivians' can only be that of the
ruling class of the said republic. The POR, instead of struggling to overthrow
the bourgeois government in order to create one of the workers and peasants,
suggested that the MNR should rather take up the aim of developing a sovereign
national bourgeoisie and that it should stop conciliating the USA to such an
extent. If it did the latter it would be able to turn itself into a workers'
and peasants' government.
For Marxism, the proletariat can
come into power only on the basis of the destruction of the existing state
machinery and the removal of the bourgeoisie from power. For the POR, the
workers could attain power by Bolivianising and improving the regime of the
bourgeois MNR. The POR faithfully followed the teachings of Aguirre and Marof,
of trying to serve nationalist governments with the aim of changing their
direction.
Co-Government.
After the success of the April
revolution a quarrel began between the different wings of the MNR about sharing
out the quotas of power. When Lechín withdrew, protesting at the few posts
given to him for his followers, the leader of the right-wing gave way.
According to Lechín's story, Siles followed him as far as the palace staircase:
`Juan, come back and we will talk. Put your points of view, and so that they
can be carried out, name four ministers'. Lechín went back, named four minsters
almost at random, and thus co-government was born".[30]
(ibid. p.301).
"The top layer of the left-wing
supported by some union leaders, were content to impose two worker ministers
and three centrists in the cabinet and to challenging the right to posts and
positions in the administrative bureaucracy".[31]
(Boletin Interno, No 13, of the POR, undated, p.8). As far as the POR
was concerned Lechín should have fought for more portfolios and perhaps some
for the POR.
Supported by all the POR votes the
newly born COB resolved "To grant comrades Juan Lechín O and Germán Butrón
the absolute confidence of the working class and to reaffirm its solidarity and
support in the ministerial posts they hold at present".[32]
(Movimiento obrero y procesos politicos en Bolivia: Historia de la COB
1952-1987 Jorge Lazarte, EDOBOL, La Paz, 1989, p.280).
The POR, after identifying itself
with the Lechínist ministers, did ask them to resign in protest about the delay
in nationalising the mines. But, on other occasions, later, the POR was once
more to demand the capture of ministries on behalf of Lechínism.
In July, the POR said: "When
the COB was organised the situation of the worker ministers in the cabinet was
defined as spokesmen of the working class in the government and agents of the
government in the workers' camp. The action of the workers ministers, as a
minority, is difficult. Faced with that fact, there was undoubtedly no other
alternative but to resign".[33]
(LO, 15.7.52, p.1).
In November, the POR issued a
`self-criticism': "In spite of all their bold statements, these workers
representatives, instead of proletarianising the cabinet as had been proposed,
only succeeded in ministerialising the Central Obrera Boliviana".[34]
(LO, 29.11.52, p.2)
Towards the end of 1953, the POR
leadership presented a Report in which it stated that: "The new upsurge
comes from the demand to Lechín to leave the cabinet put forward by the mining
unions, backed by the COB and curbed by Lechín. Our union fraction then took up
a neutral and vacillating position". "We have no doubt that this new
period of upsurge will culminate with the adoption of our political
theses".[35] (Boletin
Interno, No 13, POR, p.11).
The POR admitted that its trade
unionists adapted to the pressures from Lechín. The policy of demanding the
resignation of the labour ministers was an opportunist manoeuvre. It did not
accompany the call for the COB to take power. Some weeks later, during the key
events which frustrated the rightist January coup, the POR was to demand that
`the comrade President' Bolivianise his government and allow them to join it.
For those reasons, the `new period of upsurge' did not end with the victory of
the POR theses but in the victory of the MNR, which was to succeed by absorbing
most of the membership and periphery of the POR.
The
POR Seeks To Enter The Bourgeois Government.
During the 1952 revolution it was vitally
important that any party, in the slightest way Marxist, had to have a
policy of total independence from and opposition to the new bourgeois
government of the MNR. The POR not only did the opposite, supported this new
regime and identified itself fully with its `Leftist' ministers, but even tried
to enter it. At its 3rd World Congress in 1951, the 4th International,
unanimously adopted a line favouring the POR joining a future MNR government,
and the POR had already previously joined the military `socialist' government.
A journalist, claiming to be
Trotskyist, related how "One of the old militants of the POR told us
likewise with pride, that the MNR offered two ministries to the
POR."[36]
"The Executive Power invited
the revolutionary painter Alandia to take up the post of Minister of Culture
(...) The POR authorised its member to accept the invitation".[37]
(LO, 1.6.52, p.2). Alandia, who until the end of his life was a well
known leader of Lora's POR, succeeded in being the Editor of the trade union
organ of the MNR bureaucracy, and he joined the government in the capacity of
Minister of Culture.
The Californian Trotskyist Ryan sent
a letter to the leadership of the SWP and the 4th International, demanding that
it give an answer with information on the details of POR participation in the
government. Up until now we are not aware of any explanation or denial of such
facts, just as we are unaware of any source which can ascertain their
reliability or otherwise. "According to these reports received from
non-Trotskyist sources, the POR is accepting posts in the government machinery:
Guillermo Lora, former secretary of the party, has been appointed [to] the
Stabilization office; Comrade Moller, present Secretary of the POR, is director
of the Workers Savings Bank, which is controlled by Juan Lechín, a member of
the Cabinet; Ayala Mercado, another POR leader, is a member of the Agrarian
Commission."[38]
Bolshevism emerged in the struggle
against ministerialism. The followers of Lenin were opposed to socialists
entering bourgeois-democratic governments in western Europe and equally that of
Kerensky in the Russia of 1917. The only governments in which the Bolsheviks
would have participated critically, would be those based on workers militias
and councils which could attack and disarm the capitalist class. The 4th
International was founded in the struggle against the POUM of Nin which joined
the anti-fascist bourgeois government of Barcelona in 1937. Taking part in a
non-working class government only serves the enemies of the proletariat by
confusing it and preparing the conditions for a later offensive against it.
In 1952, the POR had a
ministerialist attitude. If it did not succeed in getting portfolios in the
government but only managed secretarial posts in ministries or departments, it
is because the MNR did not consider it to have any weight independent of the
Lechínist faction, and it could point to its presence as a way of calming the
masses. It preferred to keep the POR outside the cabinet but subordinate to it
through the union bureaucracy.
The
Collaborationist Programme Of The POR
In every issue of Lucha Obrera
after April 1952, a new version of The Programme of the Exploited, was
reproduced, which we reprint in its entirety:
"1. To prevent the revolution
that begun on 9th April being strangled within the bourgeois and democratic
framework. 2. The Strengthening of the working class, and consolidating the
COB. 3. The mobilisation of the peasants behind the slogan of nationalisation
of land and expropriation of the large estates without compensation, in order
to allow the revolutionary process to end in victory. 4. The gaining of
democratic guarantees for the exploited. The development of union democracy
within the unions. Freedom of propaganda for revolutionary parties. The
cancelling of all privileges for the rosca[39]
counter-revolution. 5. Armed workers militias as a substitute for the regular
army. 6. Better conditions of living and work. A basic living wage and sliding
scale of wages. Collective contracts. 7. Nationalisation of mines and railways
without compensation and under workers control. 8. The expulsion of
imperialism. The cancelling of the international treaties which bind the
country to imperialism. The rejection of the agreement on technical aid with
the UN".[40] (LO,
25.5.52).
We are not questioning those slogans,
but the absence of key and essential slogans. That
programme is limited and is adapted to the tastes of the Lechín wing of the
MNR. The union bureaucracy could accommodate itself to all these slogans.
The central demands which were
completely ignored in the POR press during those months were those of the
occupation of the Mines, factories and large estates; no support for the new
bourgeois government nor for the Lechín union bureaucracy; no to Co-government;
that workers ministers should resign from the capitalist cabinet; All Power to
the COB.
The POR talked about
"preventing the revolution being strangled" when they themselves were
strangling it with `critical' support to the capitalist government. They
demanded the "consolidation of the COB" but they opposed struggling
for the most elementary tasks of achieving such an aim: an open struggle
against the bureaucracy of Lechín and the MNR for the election and recall of
all leaders by rank-and-file mass meetings and for an immediate conference of
the COB in order to equip it with a soviet-type structure and for it to take
complete power. The POR did not struggle to transform the COB into a Supreme
Soviet in order to seize power, but wanted to put pressure on its summit so
that it would recite its speeches and improve governmental decrees.
It called for the nationalisation of
the land, mines and railways but did not demand its imposition by the workers
and peasants with their own hands through occupations. Its position was limited
to requesting and putting pressure on the government to carry out such
measures, which created dangerous illusions in the masses, helping to
demobilise them and keeping them in a state of dependency (instead of calling
on them to do things themselves). At no time did it call for the bourgeoisie to
be expropriated. Workers' control was only demanded for state enterprises. The
factories (Said, Soligno, etc.), shopping chains (Casa Grace, etc.) and other
private companies continued operating as before. There was no demand for their nationalisation
(not even with compensation), for workers, control, or the payment of higher
taxes.
They wanted "freedom of
propaganda for revolutionary parties". By this the POR acknowledged that,
apart from itself, other `revolutionaries' existed, among them the MNR and
Stalinism. What was correct was to call for the broadest democratic liberties.
At the same time there had to be a struggle for the expropriation of the mass
media and its handing over to organisations of workers and ordinary people. "The
cancellation of all privileges of the rosca counter-revolution" was
demanded. But what does the cancellation of privileges mean? What was needed
was the demand for its total expropriation along with the creation of people's
courts to try the executioners and butchers of the oligarchic regime.
The slogan about expelling
imperialism was very vague. It was not tied to demands to expropriate all its
enterprises or to repudiate the foreign debt. Anyway, the POR itself said
repeatedly that, if it got into power, it would try to force the USA to
recognise it and establish diplomatic relations.
Neither did the POR raise the main
slogan for a thorough-going bourgeois democracy: the sovereign Constituent
Assembly, where all those over the age of 18 (or 16) would have the right to
vote and to be elected. New elections on as democratic and as broad a basis as
possible, and the creation of a new Constituent Assembly where the main
national problems could be debated, would have let the revolutionary party more
easily unmask the nature of the MNR and of parliamentarianism. The POR
envisaged something else which flung dust in the workers' eyes: to restore the
reactionary constitution which put Paz into the Presidential Palace.
This programme lacked the slightest
internationalist slogans. It did not call for solidarity with the other workers
of the world and with anti-imperialist struggles, the defence of the workers'
states against imperialism, support for revolutions against the bourgeoisie and
the bureaucracies, the internationalisation of the revolution; and for the
building of the United Socialist States of Latin America and of the world, not
to mention the struggle for the worker-peasant government or for the socialist
republic. The POR merely wanted to pressurise the bourgeois government behind
whose `left' wing it was always searching for a compromise to carry out the
programme further.
The POR action programme was that of
a party which had repudiated the strategy of permanent revolution and which
only wanted a bourgeois-democratic transformation within the segregated
framework of one, isolated, landlocked and backward country.
The
POR Did Not Struggle For The Occupation Of The Enterprises.
After the April events, the
bourgeois armed forces were virtually destroyed. All power was in the hands of
the peoples' and workers' militias and the COB. In those circumstances the next
step on the agenda was to call on the COB to cease to support a non-working
class government and to take all power in its own hands.
According to Lora: "From the
9th of April on, the unions of the most important districts simply took over
the solution of the vital problems, and the authorities, thus replaced, had no
other course than to accept their decisions. It was these unions which operated
as organs of workers power and raised the issue of the duality of local and
national authority. Controlling the daily life of the masses, they took on
legislative and executive attributes (they had the power of compulsion to
execute their decisions), and even succeeded in administrating justice. The
union assembly was turned into the ultimate arbiter and the supreme authority.
This phenomenon was almost general in the mines and, on occasion, could be seen
in the factories. Unfortunately, this reality was not fully understood by the
vanguard of the proletariat and a favourable moment for carrying out the demand
for the immediate occupation of the mines, which would have made the
proletariat fight a battle to determine the question of dual power in its favour,
was thrown away. In this first period the union leadership and assembly
operated as organs of workers' power".[41]
(ibid. p.277).
"One of the POR slogans which
most gripped the workers was that of the occupation of the mines (...) Why was
this demand not carried through by workers action, at the time of their
greatest mobilisation and radicalisation? If the mines had been occupied, and
it was possible that this could have occurred, it is clear that the course of
the revolution would have undergone a radical change (..) The occupation of the
mines would have raised, sooner or later, the question of power, and created
the basis for the rapid supersession of the nationalist positions adopted by
the working class; at the same time, the POR would have been able, quite
quickly, to recover its control".[42]
(Contribución... G Lora, Vol 2, p.231-232).
If the issues of Lucha Obrera
and the POR programme for 1952 are examined, the slogan of immediate occupation
of the mines, factories and land will be found. The only time an enterprise is
was taken over was to prevent the closure of the Corocoro mine.
The reason the POR did not raise
that slogan is connected to its refusal to call for workers' control for the
private businesses, to nationalise the factories and to formulate
anti-capitalist demands. The POR was tailing Lechín and pressuring the Paz
government.
All
Power To The COB!
"Through the COB, the working
class left-wing was a government within the government and, in a certain sense,
more powerful than the government itself. The COB had a basis of support
greater than that of the party of which it officially formed a part. It
proposed that the MNR assume the power and responsibility of government and of
governing the state officially, but the COB set itself up as a centre without
rival capable of initiative and veto in relation to the central power. That is
to say it had the power of government but not the responsibility".[43]
(Bolivia: la revolución inconclusa, James M Malloy, Ceres, La Paz, 1989,
p.243).
"In reality, the COB was the
real government of the Bolivian workers and, hence, of the national economy. In
fact, it possessed the symbolic and functional characteristics of a sovereign
entity, including executive, deliberative and judicial organs, a defined area
of authority, electors and, what is more important, armed forces".[44]
(ibid, p.243-244).
"The COB was the master of the
country, and indeed for a certain period it was the only centre of power worthy
of the name".[45]
(A History..., Lora, p.281). "For the majority of the masses, the
COB was their only leader and their only government."[46]
(ibid p.284).
The situation in Bolivia after
9-11th April 1952, was similar to that in Russia after the February 1917
revolution. Two powers existed in the country, but the strongest, the one with
mass character, was that of the peoples' and workers' organisations, which,
owing to their conciliatory leaderships, handed over power to a weak bourgeois
government. The governments of Kerensky and Paz had to flirt with the upsurge
and demands of the masses at the same time as they tried to spin out time to
exhaust them, and then, by rebuilding the armed forces and their authority, to
open the way to a situation of bourgeois stabilisation.
In order to face up to such a
situation, the Bolsheviks demanded that the Soviets break with the leftist
provisional government of the bourgeoisie and take all power themselves. In the
Bolivian case, the demand should have been to struggle for all power to the
COB. The COB, just as with the Russian Soviets, had the arms and the power but,
because of its conciliatory leadership, gave away the latter to the
bourgeoisie. The seizure of power by the Soviets and the COB could have been
done peacefully. The old military apparatus had already collapsed through a
violent revolution. The road was open for workers power, which had its own arms
and the people behind it, and could have had total power. The only obstacle to
the COB and the Russian Soviets carrying out that task was that their
leadership was so insistent on rescuing the bourgeoisie.
In spite of the COB being the real
power in the country and the POR being its main directing force, the section of
the 4th international opposed the slogan of All Power to the COB. On the
contrary, it called on the COB to join the bourgeois government, thus weakening
its alternative power and so becoming a body more and more subordinate to the
bourgeois government. The slogan of the POR was that of shifting the Paz
administration leftwards via ministerial changes. With that treacherous line it
helped Paz and Lechín to dilute the power of the COB and go on to reconstitute
the bourgeois state and the army.
In his `self-criticism' Lora
recognised that: "The POR brigade used these events to launch the slogan
of `total control of the cabinet by the left' (...) The slogan, however,
contained the signs of an enormous ideological error: to believe that the
workers could attain power via Lechín - behind the slogan of `All Power to the
COB'".[47] (La
revolución boliviana: Análisis crítico, Lora, La Paz, 1963, p.267).
"The watch-word of `All Power
to the COB' could have lead to the victory of the workers on two exceptionally
favourable occasions. The first was when the agitation around the immediate
nationalisation of the mines without compensation and under workers' control
reached its high point (first half of 1952). The second arose with the defeat
of the coup d'etat on 6th January 1953. Not taking due advantage of these
opportunities and adapting to marching behind and mouthing the slogans of the
MNR left, were the greatest errors of the POR".[48]
(ibid, p.270).
As we have seen, on the first
occasion the POR did not call for the seizure of the enterprises but for
support to the MNR government. On the second occasion, the POR insisted on the
treacherous line of support for, and pushing for a change of policy by, Paz.
"On the morning of the 6th
January 1953, the Minister of Peasant Affairs was kidnapped, as a preliminary
to a coup d'etat (...) But towards evening the failure of the coup attempt was
already evident (...) The COB called the workers and peasants militias to a
mass mobilisation on a national scale. On the morning of 7th January, a massive
demonstration, sponsored by the COB, took place. The demonstrators demanded immediate
and unrestricted agrarian reform (..) Paz took measures against the rightists
but in a moderate way (...) The government dissolved the Grupos de Honor and
demoted and exiled many of the key conspirators. There was no bloodletting
(...) Among the measures included were wage increases, vouchers, protection
against dismissal, rent control, price control, subsidies to food stores and a
series of measures on social security and other aspects of `consumption' (...)
sacked workers were re-employed".[49]
(ibid, p.298-299).
In the massive demonstration of 7th
January, Edwin Moller, secretary of the POR at the time, spoke for the COB in
the Plaza San Francisco. In his speech, instead of calling on the workers to
have no confidence in the bourgeois government of Paz and to make its own Trade
Union Centre take power, he ended his intervention saying "We want,
comrade Paz Estenssoro, a government of Bolivians for the Bolivians".[50]
(LO, 23.1.53).
On that occasion, when Lora himself
recognised that it would have been enough to have agitated around the slogan
`All Power to the COB', in order to have gained victory for the proletarian
revolution, the POR put forward exactly the opposite. The POR called upon its
`comrade' president to set up a bourgeois nationalist government. In the
crucial moments of the revolution, the POR showed that its strategy was limited
to correcting the bourgeois government and not to overthrow it with a workers
uprising.
"The counter-revolutionary
forced obliged the MNR to base itself more and more firmly upon the left. In an
attempt literally to frighten the opposition in order to obtain its agreement,
the centrist tendency of the MNR and the leftist axis of the COB called
demonstration after demonstration of their armed might. Militias of miners and
peasants were brought permanently to the city in lorries and marched there in
front of the population, crazily discharging their rifles".
In spite of those extraordinary
conditions, the POR delayed almost a year before launching the slogan for a COB
government. In March 1953, Lucha Obrera argued: "That the
culmination of the Altiplano Revolution cannot be anything else or occur in any
other way than by a government formed by the COB embodied as the organ of
power".[51] (LO,
March 1953, p.1).
However, it must be said that there
are distinct ways and methods of launching such a slogan. The position of `All
Power to the COB', which was launched too late by the POR, was a variant of its
idea of `all power to the left of the MNR'. For the POR, the launching of that
slogan was not in order to unmask the Lechín leadership, but was more bothered
to govern jointly with it. Instead of trying to oppose the COB to the MNR
government, the position of the POR consisted in continually replacing the Paz
cabinet with ministers from the COB until finally there would be a government
of the COB bureaucracy of the MNR. The slogan of `All Power to the COB' should
have gone hand in hand with the raising of anti-capitalist slogans with an
impeccable denunciation of the `left' of the MNR.
Lechín has often said that his great
mistake was not taking power in April 1952.[52]
(see interview in Facetas, 5.7.87.) If Lechín had been anointed
president based on the COB, it would not have created a revolutionary workers'
government. Villarroel's ex-prefect would have done everything possible to
maintain capitalism and to co-exist with the national and world bourgeoisie. A
revolutionary party would only have been able to participate critically in that
government if it had broken with the bourgeois MNR, based itself directly on
the working class organisations and their militias and attacked and disarmed
the bourgeoisie. Such an eventuality was highly unlikely. A Lechín government
would have been a government of the Kerensky type or a bourgeois labour
government. In the exceptional circumstances of the revolutionaries
participating in a COB government as a minority, it would necessarily
have required conditions of a considerable differentiation with
Lechínism and the unmasking its counter-revolutionary character.
They would have had to have persisted in brandishing the Trotskyist
programme in opposition to its waverings and would have to seek to displace it
from power so that it could give way to a Trotskyist dictatorship.[53]
(Nahuel Moreno always claimed that
he called for `All Power to the COB', as opposed to the POR policy of
adaptation to the MNR left-wing. But Moreno's slogan was only a variant of the
popular-frontist resolutions of the 3rd congress of the 4th International and
the `government of the MNR left-wing' position. In May, his paper put forward
the "Demand that the worker ministers elected and controlled by the Miners
Federation and the new Workers Centre are taken into the Paz Estenssoro
government". (Frente Proletario, 29.5.52. Quoted in Prensa
Obrera 131, 3.5.86 - presumably `PO' Argentine - eds). Moreno's position
was akin to Lora's. In reality, co-government was a cabinet of all the wings of
the MNR. The worker ministers constantly reported back in detail to the COB,
but that, instead of modifying the government and changing it into a
proletarian one (an impossibility) simply confused the class. Moreno's paper
said that "the two wings which now exist within the MNR express the
interests of the proletariat and the bourgeoisie". (ibid.). Presumably
Lechín represented the proletariat. But a sector that stays within a bourgeois
party cannot represent the interests of the proletariat. By 1953 Moreno was
proposing the "development, support and strengthening of a left wing
inside the MNR". (Estrategia, April 1966, quoted in ibid.). One
proposed a government of Lechín's faction of the MNR, while the other preferred
a government of Lechín's bureaucracy of the COB - the same jam but in different
jars. Anyway the slogan `All Power to the COB is invalid once a dual power
situation no longer exists (that is since 1952.) It only generates illusions in
its bureaucracy.)
Turn
The COB Into A Soviet!
For Lenin and Trotsky, the
revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat could be based only on bodies
like the Russian Soviets of 1917. In every revolution it is vital to struggle
to give Soviet features to the mass organs and organs of power created by the
exploited. A Soviet is an organ of struggle of the proletariat whose delegates
are directly elected and revocable in rank-and-file assemblies, which include
all workers, small-holders, peasants, soldiers, housewives, unemployed and
other oppressed sectors of the area. While the unions are bodies which unite
workers in an enterprise or branch of production, Soviets are territorial
organisms which encompass the broadest masses, both non-unionised and
unionised.
In the eyes of the POR, the COB,
like a mass meeting or an open town council meeting, was a Soviet. Not every
Soviet has dual or alternative power, Not every dual power is a Soviet. A
parallel power could be a parliament, an army or another institution which
possesses an armed force and governmental authority over a significant part of
a country.
The COB, although it had Soviet
tendencies, was an organism with trade union, vertical and bureaucratic
features. "One of the gravest errors in the organisation of the COB
consisted in its originating from the top summit leaders, who would soon end up
completely tied to the petty bourgeois government, and it crystallised through
the middle layers of leadership (...) The correct thing would have been to
proceed in the opposite way, that is to say, from the bottom up. The workers
adhered to the COB through their trade union leaders (...) The founders of the
COB called upon the old leaders and not on the democratically elected
rank-and-file delegates. This organisational defect already contained the cause
of its infirmity, which eased its bureacratisation, its isolation from the
masses and the skilful control of it by the government".[54]
(La Revolución Boliviana, G Lora, p.262-263).
The COB delegates were neither
elected nor controlled and subject to recall through rank-and-file mass
meetings. The first congress of the COB took place two and a half years
after its foundation. The bureaucracy did everything possible to run the
union with boss' type bureaucratic criteria. A revolutionary party should have
struggled for the immediate organisation of a congress a few days or
weeks after it was founded. Only in this way could the COB have been
democratised and have acquired soviet-type features. However, the POR was in
the top leadership of the COB and did not object to a bureaucratic structure
which allowed it to get along better with Lechín, in order accommodate to him.
The COB was founded at a meeting
called by the Miners' Federation on 17th April 1952. The leaderships of the
confederations of factory workers, railway workers and peasants, the federation
of bank employees and allied branches, commercial and industrial employees, and
graphical, construction, bricklayers and bakers unions took part in that
assembly.[55] (Movimento
obrero y processos politícos en Bolivia, Jorge Lazarte, p.6). Note that
fact that the squatters, the unemployed and rank-and-file soldiers were not
organised within it. The COB aimed to be a union centre based on leaderships
elected at labour congresses every `X' years. A Soviet should be based on all
the oppressed sectors and directly elected at rank and file assemblies. In this
way, the organisation can grow and be de-bureaucratised. This meeting elected
an executive committee which held office until the congress in October 1954. It
was headed by Lechín (Executive Secretary), Germán Butrón (General secretary)
and Mario Torres (Secretary of Relations). As the two key figures in the COB
had to be ministers, the job of day-to-day leadership at the centre fell on
PORists like Edwin Moller (Organisation Secretary), José Zegada (Minuting
Secretary) or Miguel Alandia Pantoja (Director of the Press). "This first
Management Committee was declared provisional until the election of a proper
committee by a national congress which would meet shortly.[56]
(ibid. p.7). However, that congress took place with extreme delay, after the
COB had ceased to be an alternative dual power and had surrendered to the
official bourgeois power.
The COB developed in the same way
like all organs of `popular power' that bourgeois nationalists governments
create. The `Committees in Defence of the Revolution' in Nicaragua, the
`Shoras' in Iran or the `Popular Assemblies' in various nationalist processes
are organisations which unite union leaders and those of mass bodies, to ensure
that they support nationalist regimes or projects. Instead of structuring
themselves as alternative workers' power which fight to overthrow the
bourgeoisie and to consolidate all power, these organisms are committed to
building a popular basis for nationalism. They use `anti-imperialism' in order
to discipline the masses and to maintain themselves against their enemies.
Dual power cannot last for long. One
power must rule over the other. If a workers' power does not crush that of the
bourgeoisie then the latter will be imposed (whether via bloody liquidation or
by regimentation and domestication).[57](As
Stuart King so rightly says: "Is not Workers Power absolutely right
when it describes the COB as an `embryo' or `proto-Soviet' which could have
developed into a full Soviet only through political struggle against the
bonapartist project of the MNR? This would have involved concentrating on
building Soviets both in and outside La Paz, drawing in and organising peasant
syndicates in the localities, calling for the construction of rank and file
soldiers committees in the army, drawing their delegates into the Soviets,
strengthening and placing under Soviet discipline the militias, and ensuring
that all delegates were elected by rank and file factory and workplace
committees subject to immediate recall". Permanent Revolution No 2,
p.36).
The POR did not fight to make the
COB soviet. To do so required a constant daily battle against the MNR and the
Lechínist bureaucracy. On the contrary, the POR, was one of the main causes of
the COB being limited, bureaucratised and tied to officialdom.
The
MNR-POR Government.
At its 1952 congress, the 4th
International, with no votes against, adopted the slogan of an MNR-POR
government. After April 1952, the POR tried to apply this recipe with a small
difference. It demanded the removal of the MNR right wing.
"The
worker-peasant government is not the dictatorship of the proletariat: it is in
transition toward it, an inevitable period in the sense that, as a political
party of the working class, we do not yet constitute a majority of it (...) The
Worker-Peasant government will surely emerge before the dictatorship of the
proletariat in Bolivia, on the fundamental basis of two important political
forces: the POR and the MNR left-wing, to which we should try to give the
essential organisational consciousness, security and firmness, so that the way
to political power is opened to us, which the militant working masses will
offer us in the future".[58]
(Boletin Interno, No 13, POR, p.12).
This worker-peasant government
notion is more like that of Stalinism than of Leninist Trotskyism. In its
earlier period, Stalinism also spoke of the worker-peasant government, but in a
stagist sense. It proposed a dictatorship together with class collaboration in
which the proletariat had to give up its own objectives and subordinate itself to
the bourgeois-democratic programme of the rural and urban petty bourgeoisie.
For that same reason, Trotsky objected to using the slogan for a time, and only
did so after explaining that his strategy was that of a government of workers
and poor peasants led by the proletariat and aiming to apply a socialist
programme.
The idea of the centrist 4th
International and the POR was that of a joint government where the so-called
workers party was led by a party of another class. But the MNR did not
represent the peasantry (and even less the poor or landless sectors), and
neither did the MNR bother to organise this class or to place in its top
leadership some leader from the national majority. The MNR was an unmistakably
bourgeois party. Its members came from various capitalist and cacique parties
that had presided over anti-working class government. Paz had been the governor
of the Central Bank and Finance Minister in two bosses governments. The MNR had
sympathised with the German Fuhrer who massacred the biggest labour movement of
the world. When they were in the government they repressed the left and put in
power a pro-imperialist dictatorship which was thrown out by a popular
insurrection.
"For the solution of the basic
national tasks, not only the big bourgeoisie but also the petty bourgeoisie was
incapable of producing a political force, a party, or a faction, in conjunction
with which the party of the proletariat might be able to solve the tasks of the
democratic bourgeois revolution".[59]
The Third International After Lenin, Trotsky, Pathfinder, New York,
1970, p.181." Stalin, el gran organizador de derrotas. La III
Internacional despues de Lenin, Trotski, El Yunque, Bs As., 1974, p.241).
The proletariat should not dilute its programme and accept the democratic one
of the bourgeoisie, whether petty, medium or big. Under this programme it is
impossible to break with imperialism and backwardness. The only manner of
resolving the outstanding bourgeois democratic tasks is through a Socialist
revolution which, in passing, completes the unfinished democratic tasks within
a framework of the expropriation of the bourgeoisie, of a socialised and
planned economy established by popular and workers councils, and by the
internationalisation of the revolution.
In its more than 55 years of
existence the POR has never put forward the strategy of the internationalist
socialist revolution. It was born calling for an anti-imperialist and agrarian
revolution in order to establish a multi-class and capitalist government which
could be achieved by a military coup or the metamorphosis of a bourgeois
government. Later, in the Theses of Pulacayo, it put forward the idea of a
bourgeois democratic revolution led by the proletariat. That position held
similarities with that of Parvus, which meant, according to Trotsky's argument
"the conquest of power by the proletariat was seen as the path towards
democracy and not to socialism".[60]
Through the strategy of opposing a socialist revolution in order to limit
itself to a bourgeois-democratic and national one, the POR was subservient to
strategic blocks with and behind Lechínism, and then with the whole MNR and
Stalinism.
An MNR-POR government would be a
bourgeois one with `Trotskyist' ministers, good at helping Paz and Lechín to
confuse the workers and at compromising themselves by defending the capitalist
regime.
In the 4th Congress of the Communist
International Lenin and Trotsky clearly differentiated five types of workers'
government. Liberal and Social Democratic workers governments can never be
supported by communist ministers. In certain circumstances a workers'
government or worker-peasant government could emerge in which the communists
would be able to join the cabinet as a minority.
"The two types (of workers
government) in which the communists may take part, do not represent the
dictatorship of the proletariat, they are not even a historically inevitable
transition stage towards the dictatorship. But where they are formed they may
become an important starting point for the fight for the dictatorship. The
complete dictatorship is represented only by the real workers' government which
consists of communists".[61]
(The Communist International 1919-43; Documents, Ed Jane Degras, Vol 1,
Cass, 1971, p.427. The author is wrong, Zinoviev drafted the theses which
represented a compromise between the lefts and the right. In `Dialogue with
Heinrich Brandler' (Marxism, Wars and Revolutions, Deutscher, Verso,
1985) the latter says "Radek was accused by Moscow of being the author of
my definition of the five forms of workers government. In reality he tried to
prevent this definition from being adopted; not because he thought it incorrect
but, as I learned years later, because it irritated Zinoviev, and Radek found
this inconvenient for his factional struggle in Moscow." pp.158-159.
Brandler advanced it at the 8th Congress of the KPD in January 1923 just after
the 4th Congress of the Communist International in Nov-Dec 1922.) See Revolutionary
History Vol.2 no.3 pp.1-20.)
The conditions advanced by the CI
were very clear. "The overriding tasks of the workers' government must be
to arm the proletariat, to disarm bourgeois and counter-revolutionary
organisations, to introduce the control of production, to transfer the main
burden of taxation to the rich, and to break the resistance of the
counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie".[62]
(ibid. p.426).
"In certain circumstances
communists must declare themselves ready to form a workers' government with
non-communist workers' parties and workers organisations. But they can do so
only if there are guarantees that the workers government will really conduct a
struggle against the bourgeoisie in the sense mentioned above".[63]
(ibid. p.426).
However, whichever wing of the MNR
was in government it would not have fulfilled these conditions. The MNR was a
party representing an emerging bourgeoisie. Far from wishing to disarm and
expropriate itself, that is to say, to commit suicide as a class, the MNR
bourgeoisie aspired to strengthen the state through reforms which would extend
the internal market. A government of one or more wings of the MNR would have
been a government for the defence of the bourgeois state.
To sum up: an MNR-POR government of
whatever variant would have been the opposite of a worker-peasant government.
It would have been a bourgeois government with a decoration of workers.
All
Power To The MNR Left Wing!
"When the struggle within the
cabinet between the right and left tendencies of the MNR broke out (within the
latter tendency were numbered the "worker" ministers who were the
base of Lechínism), the POR launched the slogan of more workers' ministers and,
thereby, the expulsion from the government of the right, a demand which turned
out to be far too ambitious for Lechín and Co.". [64](Contribución
a la historia politica de Boliviana, Lora, Vol 2, La Paz, 1978, p.253).
At its 9th national conference, the
POR ratified the line of identifying with the national-reformist wing of Lechín
and Ñuflo Chavez. "The national political report fixed the position of the
POR before the government in the following points: 1) Support to the
government in face of the attacks by imperialism and the rosca, (2)
Support for all the progressive measures it enacts, always indicating their
scope and limitations (...) 3) In the struggle of the MNR wings, the POR
supports the left (...) The POR will support the MNR left in its
struggle against the right of the party, in all its activity that tends to
destroy the structures on which the feudal bourgeoisie and imperialist
exploitation rest, every attempt to deepen the revolution and to carry out the
workers programme, such as the complete control of the government so replacing
the right wing".[65]
(LO, 11.11.52, p.3).
In that same newspaper it also says:
"The working class must actively intervene in the formation of the new
Cabinet. It is the workers who must run the state with a revolutionary
programme that will start to destroy the capitalist structure. The COB,
representing the worker-peasant forces, must join in the new cabinet with a majority
of ministers who come from it, representing the different sectors of
workers".[66] (LO,
11.11.52, p.2).
The MNR is clearly a bourgeois
party. Within every populist bourgeois party which tries to discipline the
unions there is always a labourist wing that tries to mediate between the
pressures of the workers and the needs of following a bourgeois policy. A party
of various classes cannot be. The one which commands is the one that owns the
capital. A horse and its rider are not in an equal alliance. One rides the
other. The union bureaucracy and the reformist wings are like a saddle.
They lie on the proletariat to relieve the weight and rule of the capitalist
boss in order to help him to continue giving orders.
The `left' wing of the MNR is not a
proletarian or revolutionary wing. The fact is that it claims the bourgeois
programme as its own and its insertion in such a conglomerate of capital makes
it a counter-revolutionary sector. It is always possible that youth and worker
sections in the nationalist movement will shift to the left towards centrism,
and, if so, everything possibly must be done to conquer their prejudices and
win them to Trotskyist politics. However, known bureaucrats, with a long career
of betrayals, who have served a dictatorship such as Villarroel's and have
brought forth an anti-communist party that did not at first disguise its
flirtation with racism and nazi-fascism, cannot evolve in a revolutionary
direction.
The Lechín and Chavez `left' wing
defended capitalism and so only wanted to reform it. The MNR needed them in
order to be able to control the masses. With the right hand it initiated the
reorganisation of the armed forces, set up the para-military commandoes and the
secret-police (the `Commando Politico'), stirred up anti-communist hysteria to
mobilise the petty bourgeoisie against the proletarian `excesses' and pressed
for approaches to imperialism. With its left hand it tried to flirt with
working class radicalism while aiming to tame it. MNR trade unionists, while
they uttered the most incendiary speeches, did everything possible to use that
authority hold back the COB's mobilisation and demands, tried to empty it of
its dual power content and turn it into a force that would be subordinated to,
and would collaborate with, the bourgeois regime.
Faced with a struggle between two
wings of a bourgeois party, the proletariat should try to assert its own class
independence and its opposition to both wings. Of course we must undertake very
limited practical actions of a mass direct action character with the MNR `left'
when it undertakes the defence of popular and working class demands. But
preferably, we should take the initiative and try to unmask those `leftists'
with a policy that constantly asks them to fight and break with the bourgeois
party.
However, the POR did more than serve
Lechínism. They edited its union paper, they wrote its speeches and totally
supported it. While Paz wanted to line up behind imperialism, Lechín lined
up behind Paz and the POR behind Lechín.
From the first weeks of the 1952
revolution until at least the end of 1953, the POR "works so that the
masses and the left-wing sector of the governing party will proceed to their
logical conclusion, that is to say, evolve towards a worker-peasant government".
"The evolution towards the left of the government and its consequent
transformation will be determined by the exploited. Owing to the pressure to
political circumstances, the petty bourgeois government may possibly be
superseded and be turned into a stage of worker-peasant government. It is the
most probable tendency of that unstable moment and only in this sense do we
speak of the only outcome. The aforementioned involves the political defeat of
the right and the active participation in the state of the proletariat and the
peasants".[67] (LO,
25.5.52, p.3).
According to the POR, a month after
the creation of the COB, it was probable that the exploited would put pressure
on the MNR to the point that it had to shift leftwards and be transformed into
a worker-peasant government. Paz and the MNR were not `neutral' forces or
`wild-cards' flitting between the various classes. The MNR was an unswervingly
bourgeois force and incapable of changing its class content. However much a
monkey wants to learn to fly it is impossible. Paz's MNR had absolutely no
possibility of evolving into a worker-peasant government. The only ones who
could evolve were the PORists .... but towards a greater conciliation with the
bourgeois MNR. Revolutionaries do not call upon the workers to have a more
`active participation' within the state but to overturn it.
In the second half of 1953, they
still persisted. The 10th POR conference stated that: "The total
predominance of this sector (MNR `left') would profoundly modify the nature of
the MNR and would enable it to come significantly closer to the POR (...) Only
in such conditions could one speak of a possible coalition government of the
POR and the MNR, which would be a form of creating the formula of the
`worker-peasant government', which, in its turn, would constitute the
transitory stage towards the dictatorship of the proletariat". The
Political Bureau of the POR, on 23rd of June, 1953, raised the call, "The
whole of this struggle must revolve around the slogan: Total Control of the
State by the Left Wing of the MNR."
Liborio Justo correctly made the
following observation: "The POR would support the left in its struggle
against the right, it would help it to position itself ideologically, it would
push it forward towards the most advanced positions and simultaneously it would
mobilise the MNR rank-and-file so that it called on the leftist leadership to
adopt the programme of proletarian revolution. That is to say, that the
revolution would be carried out by the MNR left wing, which the POR
`instructed' to cease being petty bourgeois and an agent of the reaction and
this would help its rank-and-file push it to adopt the programme of the
proletarian revolution'".[68]
(Bolivia: la revolución derrotada, Liborio Justo, Cochabamba, 1967,
p.224). This was just a utopia to disarm the class.
In August, after a ministerial
crisis had occurred, Lucha Obrera opined: "The only political
outcome of the present situation: the displacement of the MNR right-wing from
power by the left-wing.
"All power to the left"!
is a suitable slogan in the case of a cabinet crisis. Such a new kind of MNR
government would carry out the new tasks of the revolution. Total control
of the state by the left (...) the POR will help the left in this job, it
will guide it politically and support it critically".[69]
(LO 2.8.53, p.1)
Instead of fighting to unmask and
politically destroy the `left-wing', the POR offered itself as a prop and
adviser to the left of the official bourgeois party. Instead of struggling for
a worker-peasant government it asked for a `new kind of MNR government'.
Instead of wanting to overthrow a social class, the POR was limited to asking
for a new cabinet to which it would lend itself and offer its services. Instead
of calling for the overthrow of the bourgeois state, the POR called for its
regeneration under the control of the left of bourgeois officialdom.
Even though the `left' wing of the
MNR would have had the majority and even every ministry, the state that they
would have controlled and defended would been bourgeois.
When the Bolsheviks agitated for
`All Power to the Soviets' they knew that the government could end up falling
into the hands of the reformists. Lenin thought that a collaborationist
government without capitalist ministers was preferable. But he always said that
even if an entirely Menshevik-Socialist Revolutionary government emerged, the
Bolsheviks would not support or enter it. The only compromise that he would
adopt was that of struggling together with them against any reactionary coup
and of renouncing any attempt to take power as they had not won a majority
among the workers and in the soviets.
The MNR `left' wing was in no way a
reformist workers party (as was Menshevism) with a certain degree of
independence with respect to other capitalist paries. It was part of the same
bourgeois MNR party. While Lechín did break with the MNR some 11 or 12 years
after 1952 (and with quite a pro-United States orientation) other `leftists'
carried on working with the MNR longer.
When an independent and mass
organisation of workers exists, it is feasible for Communists to call for a
critical vote for it or to help it get into power "as a noose supports a
hanging man" said Lenin, with the aim of better unmasking its leaders.
However that policy cannot be applied to a section of a party that includes a
sector of the bourgeoisie from which it has not broken, that does not represent
a step towards class independence, even in embryonic form. Stalinism, ignoring
Leninism, always put forward the line of tailing this or that "progressive
" sector of the bourgeoisie. To follow the MNR `left', or that of APRA or
Peronism, is only helping to reinforce bourgeois nationalism and prevents the
workers from breaking with it.
Calling on the labour leaders to break
with the bourgeoisie and to struggle for an independent workers' party is a
very different tactic. In this case it encourages the class struggle and helps
to unmask collaborators. Choosing which of the bosses executioners it is better
or worse to follow, is an old Stalinist strategy that has always meant the
disarmament of the exploited to benefit reaction. In any case it is a vicious
circle that cannot be broken. Within the left there will always be another
left, and within the latter yet another one. At the end of the this pursuit of
left wings of the bourgeois parties the route to the proletarian revolution is
lost and we are changed into vulgar followers of the bourgeois nationalists.
Not one leader of the MNR `left'
wing evolved towards forming a reformist workers party or even centrism let
alone Marxism. In 1963 when Lechín split the MNR in order to form his own
`leftist` party, the POR characterised it as reactionary and anti-working
class. If the POR made a grave error in capitulating to Lechín in 1952, it
adopted a sectarian policy when Lechín split from the MNR in 1963. It had
then been necessary to attack Lechín implacably for having been Paz's
Vice-President and for having gone to China to abase himself before the
Guomindang but at the same time, by putting forward the demand an independent
working class candidate, the tactic of the workers United Front should have
been used.
Ryan was correct when he maintained
that "The POR occupies, on all the major questions, the positions occupied
by Menshevism in the Russian Revolution, and by Stalinism in the Second Chinese
Revolution of 1925-27."[70]
In China Stalinism would first support the Guomindang and then its `left-wing'.
Both ended up using the Chinese Communists to get more power and once they felt
secure the Communists were massacred. It is worth pointing out that the
Guomindang was, both in its origins and programme, more radical than the MNR.
So while the MNR was born with a declaration of principles influenced by racism
and Nazi ideas the Guomindang was at first a sympathising section of the
Communist International.
The
POR Adapts Itself To The MNR Left.
The least that a party which called
itself revolutionary should have done was to have constantly denounced the
counter revolutionary and turncoat role of Lechín, the dictatorship's
ex-prefect and now the appointed union leader. But the POR went on tail-ending
the corrupt old bureaucrat.
"There can be no doubt that
with the creation of a political organisation of a left -wing, independent of
the right that controls the MNR and government, the imminent split will
ensure the vanquishing of all vacillating and centrist positions, ensuring
that, faced with this situation, all the leftists in the MNR will turn to the
Party initially with no other aim than to win positions from the right and so
deepen the revolutionary process.[71]
According to the POR Lechín had to
be helped to create an independent faction and this would guarantee the defeat
of the "vacillators and centrists" and would "deepen the
revolutionary process". The POR believed that the revolutionary party
would be Lechín's with which it could then unite.
"A group of intellectuals
within the leading layer of the POR had got the COB started with the full
agreement of the Executive Secretary of the FSTMB with whom they were old
friends through bonds forged in old struggles going back to the Theses of
Pulacayo. The relationship was so close that they believed that they could
control the Labour movement through him while he used them for his own aims.
"The POR could not hide its
servile attitude to the Executive Secretary on every question which came up in
the COB. For example all the members of the POR voted with the majority to
reject the credentials of the delegates of the university students; but when
their leader asked them to reconsider the matter they all changed their minds
without hesitation.
"Many cases could be cited but
the most serious, which is almost a betrayal of the proletariat, was to give
way to the requests of the top leaders about the launching of a manifesto to
nationalise the mines. On this the workers demanded workers control because
they thought workers point of view to be absolutely revolutionary. But when the
Executive Secretary intervened asking for the amendment to be withdrawn in
accordance with government policy only one POR member stood firm and supported
the workers, the rest softened their position and, docilely attacked the
government directive, and in order to disguise things asked for the amendment
to be sent to the government in a separate note.
"So on a number of occasions,
the POR's slavish attitude to the main COB leader, led it to making concessions
prejudicial to the real revolutionary mood of the working class".[72]
(Memorias del primer ministro obrero, Waldo Alvarez, La Paz, 1986,
pp.283-84.)
According to Catoira, when Lechín
was "put in charge of the COB by the government, as soon as he became
Minister of HydroCarbons and Mining, he shed the Trotskyist clothing in which
the POR had clad him and put himself forward as simply a loyal MNR supporter.[73]
(El Sindicalismo Boliviano, Ricardo Catoira Marín, La Paz, p.43.)
Whereas according to Lora, "Lechín who went back to Trotskyist posturing
immediately after 9th April could be found at Paz's side, but not in advance of
him and thus accommodated himself to the radicalisation of the masses. He
surrounded himself with POR members and, where he could, recited speeches
written by the latter.[74](Contribución
.. Vol 2 Lora, La Paz, 1978, p.228)
Notice that Lora recognises that the
COB's great traitor had the same ideology in 1952. Some people thought Lechín
had evolved from the MNR to the POR in 1952 whereas others thought the
opposite. What is certain is that nobody knew for whom that crafty individual
was working. Lechín made use of everyone. The MNR let him have a certain
independence and verbal radicalism so that he could consolidate his position in
the labour movement and tame it. The POR thought that by writing his theses,
speeches and programmes it was using him to reach out to the class. But it was
the clever bureaucrat who used the POR to gain authority over the most militant
workers and thus negotiate for a share of power within his party and his
government. In exchange for mouthing the POR's incendiary slogans Lechín got
mild criticism and even support from the POR.
During the revolutionary euphoria of
the 1950's Lechín lived in the Hotel Crillon, the most luxurious hotel in La
Paz. In contrast the workers who had made him their irreplaceable leader have
always lived in the most degraded conditions of squalor, a situation which
remains the same today".[75]
(El Sindicalismo Boliviano .... p.48.) This was never denounced by his
POR hacks who made such efforts serving as his secretaries.
The POR went as far as to claim the
line of the Lechínist newspaper Vanguardia as its own: "Its
orientation is defined and determined by the route that the proletariat boldly
opened up during the April events (...) Take care! The people are not the
servants of the government. The government are the servants of the people'. A
revolutionary fluency can be seen incarnated in its editors, interpreters of
the majority views of the rank and file of its party formed by proletarians,
peasants and office workers (...) if Vanguardia maintains its line, the
path on which it is set will bring these bold lads the object of their desires
when the working masses judge that feudal exploitation in the countryside must
be liquidated. With them we will be firm in principles and consistent in revolutionary
practice".[76] (LO.
3.5.52, p.3.)
The POR identified itself with the
Lechínist slogan of making the government the servant of the people. Within the
capitalist state it is impossible to imagine that any government can defend the
proletariat's aims. The POR bet on the MNR left being able to enlighten the
popular and working class majority in the MNR so as to reorient it and enable
it to put the MNR government "at the service of the people".[77]
(LO. 25.5.52, p.1.)
The
POR Believed That Paz Would Be Able To Create an Anti-Capitalist Government.
The nationalisation of the mines was
the main demand which the working class talked about. Paz did everything
possible to delay and moderate the measure but finally he carried it out in
August 1952. When the government delayed carrying out the measure the POR said,
"We cannot understand how a government that has the proletariat on a
war-footing and prepared to defend it against any counter-revolutionary,
retreats after taking a step forward.[78](LO,
12.6.52, p.1)
A marxist on the other hand could
clearly explain why the government oscillated. It was a bourgeois government
under pressure from the masses trying to do everything possible to hold back
the latter and, though making concessions, at the same sought time to maintain
semi-colonial capitalism. The POR could not explain the tremendous shifts of
the regime because of the tremendous illusions that it had.
Like gullible petit-bourgeois the
POR believed that the government was a product of the `revolutionary will of
the masses' and therefore they should be subordinated to it. "With arms in
hand, the working class will know how to consolidate and carry forward any step
in this sense made by the present government thrown up by the revolutionary
will of the masses."[79]
(LO, 12.6.52, p.2.) Instead of seeing the MNR government as its own,
which only needed a push, the party of the proletariat should have denounced it
as a usurper which had to be deposed.
The illusions of the POR went to the
extreme of believing that Paz himself could initiate a turn to revolution.
"It is possible that the President could have made some good proposals
for achieving a real economic transformation of the country. But the
reactionary element in the cabinet and its brigade of technicians are all
openly right wing and therefore make it impossible to improve conditions for
the proletariat (..) The left wing will not be able to stand up to the crushing
majority which constitutes the MNR right wing unless it is based on the
mobilisation of the masses. Meanwhile the present President of the Republic has
his hands tied in front of his party comrades and, faced with creating of
government of the people or staying President, seems to have chosen the
latter".[80] (LO
12.6.52, p.3.)
The job of a revolutionary party
should have been to do everything possible to make the workers distrust Paz and
to propose his removal by a new insurrection. For the POR on the other hand he
had to be convinced to create a `government for the people'. In order to help
the President `achieve a true economic transformation' his most right wing
ministers had to be removed.
While the POR's aim was attempting
to build up and influence the left of the bourgeois MNR, the latter in its turn
was to influence the President to shift his position. The POR abandoned the
promotion of class struggle. It replaced it by class persuasion. All
revolutionary politics were replaced by a series of pressures on the leadership
with the aim of reforming the official bourgeois bureaucracy and thus the
President himself.
Every time that President started a
speech to ingratiate himself with the radicalised masses, a Marxist should have
denounced it as a trick to disorient the masses and an attempt to dress the
wolf in sheep's clothing.
"The bourgeoisie will make you
any promises you want! It will even send its delegates to Moscow, enter the
Peasants' International, adhere as a `sympathising' party to the Comintern,
peek into the Red International of Red Trade Unions. In short, it will promise
anything that will give it the opportunity (with our assistance) to dupe the
workers and peasants, more efficiently, more easily, and the more completely to
throw sand in their eyes - until the first opportunity, such as was offered in
Shanghai"[81] (The
Third International after Lenin, LD Trotsky, Pathfinder, New York,
p.169-170.)
However the POR always ended up
saluting every demagogic outburst by Paz. "His speech of the 21st July
(1952) is quite clear. He not only offered to `nationalise the mines and
carry the revolution to the countryside regardless of the consequences' but
promised `to arm the miners and factory workers' so that they could defend the
revolution in their own way."[82]
(LO, 3.8.52, p.3.)
This policy of sowing illusions in
the revolutionary and even anti-bourgeois potential of Paz was to continue
until after the first year of the revolution: "The President, revising
the whole of his past political attitude, points to anti-capitalist and not
merely anti-imperialist and anti-feudal aims for the revolution. This
speech can very easily be regarded as Trotskyist (....) With these words Victor
Paz has gone further than all his leftist collaborators who are so determined
to hold back and obstruct the liquidation of the latifundia (...) in order that
the left turns its victory into effective governmental influence (...) its only
solution to the situation created was for the left to impose the total
domination of the left in the cabinet".[83]
(LO, 5.8.53, p.1.)
Its complete adaptation to Paz was
such that it believed that he was capable of breaking with and expropriating
his own social class!
The origins of this individual whom
the POR believed would open the road to an anti-capitalist government must be
remembered. Víctor Paz came from a family of aristocrats and generals from
Tarija. He had been a lawyer for the Patiño concern. He made his debut in
politics supporting the bonapartist dictatorships which tried to imitate
certain features of fascism (Toro, Busch and Villarroel). He was the President
of the Central Bank and Finance Minister in the anti-working class governments
of Peñaranda and Villarroel. He founded the MNR with a clearly anti-semitic,
racist, ferociously anti-communist platform inspired by nazism and sympathetic
to the imperialist axis of Hitler, Mussolini and the Mikado. When his party was
in power from 1943 to 1946 it did not touch even one big mining concern or
ranch. On the contrary the MNR aimed its repression at union leaders and at
peasants who occupied land. Its symbol was a dictator who was lynched,[84]
it massacred the oppressed and took part in the butchery at Catavi. In 1947 it
supported Hertzog for the Presidency. Then it spent the whole six years of
reactionary rule conspiring with whatever butcher and rosca minister it could.
In power it became the best weapon that imperialism had for holding back and
reversing the revolution. Once he reorganised and revived the bourgeois state
and armed forces Paz accentuated the turn to the right. Víctor Paz was directly
responsible for the carnage at Sora-Sora (1964) as well as the atrocities
during the period of Banzer's dictatorship. When he returned to the government
in 1985 he was the author of the worst attack on the social gains of the
Bolivian workers in history. In just one month he raised prices by fifteen
times and then sacked three-quarters of the mining proletariat.
It was a serious crime for a party
claiming to be working class to disseminate even the faintest illusion that it
was possible that such a reactionary could have ever installed an
anti-capitalist government. All wings and sections of the post-Trotsky 4th
International are besmirched with that significant historical betrayal since
they always supported this policy and never questioned it.
The
Nationalisation Of The Mines.
In order to make sure that the
President carried out the tasks of the proletarian dictatorship, a cabinet of
the union bureaucracy had to be imposed. In a manifesto aimed at the February
1953 Convention of the MNR, the POR suggested to Paz that he alter his cabinet
to achieve "the overcoming of the present bonapartist government by
another anti-imperialist and anti-feudal one which would be sustained by a
front of revolutionaries and workers"[85]
(LO. 6.2.53, p.1.)
While Paz, supported by Lechín, did
everything possible to ensure that the workers did not occupy the mines and
instead waited for a solution from above, the POR, far from denouncing these
manoeuvres, took pains to idealise Lechín:
"The Minister of Mines and
Petroleum, supported by those round him, quite clearly advocated expropriation
without compensation".[86](LO,
29.6.52, p.4.). A revolutionary party should have done the opposite. It should
have drawn attention to the fact that while Lechín spouted radical phrases he
was, as events showed, preparing nationalisation with compensation for
enterprises in a poor state. " We agree with comrade Lechín when he states
that the decree nationalising the mines is just the start of the economic and
social transformation of the country.[87]
(LO, 11.11.52, p.1.)
Just prior to the nationalisation of
the mines the POR said: "The balance of forces favours the interests of
the workers, who, with certainty and firmness, have been winning ground inch by
inch in spite of the vacillations of the MNR left-wing which has yet to put
itself at the head of events (....) the nationalisation of the mines which will
be announced shortly will be the starting point that will make the continuation
of the capitalist system on the basis of the classical forms of exploitation
impossible."[88] (Boletin
Interno, No.13. POR, p.9.)
Nationalisation is not an
anti-capitalist measure in itself. It can just as well be a mechanism used by
the bourgeoisie to help its development. The nationalisation of large scale
mining allowed the state to obtain more resources to invest within the country,
the small and medium mining sectors of the bourgeoisie could grow without
having to face the competition of the big private monopolies while the other
bourgeois sectors could develop by commerce and the production of goods, tied
to, or derived from, large scale mining.
The nationalisation of large scale
mining was not the start of the open destruction of capitalism, it strengthened
it. The POR helped that process by limiting itself to raising the bourgeois
democratic programme and by tailing the MNR and its `left'.
The MNR adopted the demand for
nationalisation without compensation under workers control. However it ended by
paying up so as to keep in with imperialism. `Workers Control' was applied in
the following way: the directorate of the Corporación Minera de Bolivia
(COMIBOL) was run by Carbajal (the first General Secretary of the FSTMB) and
two of its seven directors were nominated by the FSTMB. The latter were not
elected with a mandate and they were not recallable by rank and file
assemblies. In actual fact this sort of `workers control' was getting the
participation of the workers in the business in order to stop them striking and
so get them to break their backs for `their' company. Workers control means the
workers supervising the administration of the business with the aim of creating
a dual power there that will gradually be extended. Of necessity it should
culminate in workers control of every enterprise with a national committee of
workers control and a struggle for power. But when exercised by bureaucrats,
with no control by the rank and file, it turns into the integration of a layer
of workers, who had sold out, into the directorate of the business. "The
worker leader Torres admitted that he earned 90,000 bolivianos per month for
running COMIBOL (...) when a skilled worker earned 4,000 bs per month.[89]
(Revolution Bolivienne 1952-1954, Pierre Scali, La Verité,
sup.333, 22.4.54, p.20.)
The POR limited itself to asking for
workers control only in state enterprises while it did not question the
prevailing regime in the private sector. It adapted to the bureaucracy
controlling COMIBOL. Later on it raised the reformist alternative of getting a
majority on the COMIBOL board. Faced with this position it should have tried to
ask for the opening of the accounts of all enterprises and of the government so
that they could be controlled and inspected by the workers through rank and
file meetings and by delegates supervised by them with the aim eventually the
forming soviets and struggling to seize power.
At the international level the POR
said: "We demand a free market for tin".[90]
(LO, May 1953, p.2). What was really required was a producers' cartel
instead.
The
Disintegration And Reorganisation Of The Armed Forces.
After the April events in the armed
forces "All the units had to face a serious problem: the troops recruited
a few weeks previously had very little combat training and instruction. A large
part of their working hours in the previous weeks had been used for practice
drills for the military parade planned to coincide with the repatriation of the
remains of Eduardo Avaroa. The soldiers were able to parade very well but they
did not know how to fight".[91](Poder
y Fuerzas Armadas 1949-1982, General Gary Prado Salmón, Cochabamba, 1984,
p.33.)
"In the first months of the
revolution, only the COB possessed an armed force, the armed worker and peasant
militias. The arming of the workers began with union militias when conditions
did not exist for the formation of a similar force linked to the MNR. The
meetings were impressive parades of armed workers and peasants (...) The COB
assembly and the rank and file organisations, unlike the Executive Committee,
were serious about the task of consolidating these militias, improving their
armament, disciplining them and creating a unified command. Paz Estenssoro and
Lechín instructed their followers to obstruct the efforts being made to
strengthen the armed workers nuclei as they represented the greatest threat to
the government. Taking advantage of the resources available because of their
monopoly of power they began to organise militias in the zonal commands of the
MNR, independent of the trade union militias and gave them the job of
overseeing the main centres; the moviemento leaders, closely helped by
Stalinism were given the means to sabotage the consolidation of the COB
militias.[92] (La
revolución boliviana, G. Lora, p.271.)
A key problem in every revolution is
the armed forces. A revolutionary party should have opposed the reorganisation
of the bourgeois army in any form and put forward the demand to replace it by
the armed people organised in militias. As the revolution deepens the repulse
of any external or internal aggression should be based on the latter so as to move
towards an internationalist and proletarian Red Army.
But this was not the policy of
Lechín and his followers in the POR. While the MNR did everything possible to
reorganise the traditional armed forces, Lechín tricked the workers with the
fable that he only wanted a peaceful, technical and construction brigade type
of bourgeois army. An armed force like that does not stop being guard dogs of
capital, and its benign postures tend to give it popular support in order to
justify its armed defence of the capitalist state. Costa Rica does not possess
an army but a national guard that serves capital very well in terms of making
the exploited work. Yankee imperialism has now sought to dismantle the
Panamanian army in order to replace it by Civil Guards.
In July the POR identified with
Lechín: "The position of the miners' leader is well known as it has been
put forward many times on workers demonstrations locally and elsewhere: he
opposes the army which existed before the insurrection of the 9th April and favours
instead the creation of a new technical army with industrial and farming
functions."[93] (LO,
15.7.52, p.1.)
Immediately after the April
insurrection, the Bolivian armed forces were disintegrating. The well-known
anti-communist general Gary Prado tells us what it was like at that time:
"In
the barracks the situation was tense as the officers were split between those
who supported and those who condemned the revolution. Nobody did anything
except stand guard so that as much military equipment was preserved from the
revolutionary host. A sense of defeat however was made worse when we learned
the details of what had occurred in the three days of fighting confirming that
the army had been beaten on every hand. The flight of the High Command made the
officers feel even more abandoned. A number, fearing repression, deserted their
units without delay and sought asylum in foreign embassies or voluntarily went
into exile. Others, forgetting their duty, went home to await developments. A
few stayed in the barracks trying to regroup their units, control the soldiers
and keep an appearance of order and discipline."[94]
(Poder y Fuerzas Armadas 1949-1982, p.40.)
While this was happening (the 17th
June 1952) the COB adopted (....) the draft presented by the mining representatives
that said:
"The
National Corps of Armed Militias of the Central Obrera de Bolivia will be
organised in the following way 1. The National Command 2. Departmental and
Special Commands. The National Command will consist (of) the National Leader,
Comrade Víctor Paz Estenssoro. Commander-in-Chief, Comrade Juan Lechín Oquendo
(...) The commanders of the cells will be elected by the departmental
militiamen, by the Departmental Centres and the National Command of the COB.
Gary Prado continues with his analysis.
"The analysis of the military commands is different. They thought that
resolution was an attack on the institution of the Armed Forces and furthermore
it was humiliating. However, faced with the impossibility of putting forward
arguments at the time good enough to prevent the formation of militias in
the prevailing political situation and by the precarious balance occurring then
and in order to enable the army to survive it was decided to try to maintain
some degree of control over the militias in some way."
"With that aim by means of
deceit, the Chief of the General Staff Germán Armando Fortún, offered to supply
the COB with all the advice needed to improve the organisation of the Armed
Militias such as the appointment of enough instructors to instil into the
militiamen disciplined attitudes, basic military training and responsibility on
the understanding that the militias will be, in the final analysis, the reserve
of the Armed Forces of the Nation".
"The General Staff offer was
warmly accepted by the COB (...) In this way it succeeded to a certain extent
in dealing with the problem of the militias, at least inasmuch as it
prevented them from becoming a structure that would turn them into a parallel
army. The National Command of the militias never functioned properly".[95]
Poder y Fuerzas Armadas 1949-1982, pp.52-54.)
Instead of struggling to make the
workers militias independent and opposed to the previous bourgeois armed forces
which carried out the massacres of Uncia, Catavi, Villa Victoria and others,
the COB leadership of Lechín and the POR "warmly accepted" the
proposal of the high command of the defeated genocidal army which had as its
aim the castration of the militias to make sure that they did not transcend the
boundaries of the bourgeois state and to subordinate them to the control of the
armed spinal column of the class dictatorship of capital. They also accepted,
as the national leader of the militias, a class enemy, Víctor Paz.
Lechín tried to avoid the
construction of an independent force of armed workers the whole time. He wanted
to transform them into the MNR's armed guards or the militia reserves of the
regular bourgeois army.
In his memoirs Lechín always boasts
of having defended the `fatherland' and `army' in the slaughter of the Chaco
War. He also boasts that in April 1952 he handed over to the police the arms
thrown down by the soldiers. "I calculate that there were about 3,000
deaths. In Corioco Street many women and children and men died. Eventually we
were able to take the Caiconi arsenal and all the arms captured we handed
over to the Carabineros.[96]
(Historia de una leyenda: Vida y palabra de Juan Lechín Oquendo, Lupe
Cajias, La Paz 1989, p.148.) However Lechín does not want to say that he
was one of the authors of the military reorganisation and that he failed to
establish people's courts to punish the perpetrators of the massacres.
In mid-1952 there was a drunken
brawl between militiamen and soldiers. This was used as a pretext for weakening
the militias and encouraging the further re-establishment of the armed forces.
The POR dealt with Lechín in a very fawning manner, "The immediate
re-organisation and `goose-stepping' of the army that the said gentlemen tried
to carry out, taking advantage of a bloody incident between drunks in the
`Ciros' night-club, instigated by falangists in the pay of the rosca, was soon
stopped with singular energy by Minister Lechín. The above mentioned incident
led to a triumph of the MNR left wing over the rightist, conciliatory and
opportunist bureaucracy.
"We revolutionary workers see
this with sympathy and, relying on our own forces, we fraternally salute all
the triumphs of the MNR left-wing, represented by Lechín and the newspaper Vanguardia."[97]
(LO, 3.8.52, p.3.)
The
Desire To Transform The MNR
The huge adaptation of the POR to
the MNR is seen not only in its attempts to shift the cabinet leftwards but in
wanting to transform the bourgeois MNR so that it would be turned into an
anti-capitalist revolutionary party. The POR went so far as to write an open
letter to the MNR convention where it put forward the position that, if the MNR
moved leftward, it could absorb the POR.
"The convention should be
worker-peasant and not bureaucratic (...) The left wing should impose
revolutionary demands without fear of reaction and imperialism".[98](LO,
supplement, 3.2.53, p.4.) The POR held the suicidal belief that Lechínism could
declare and impose a revolutionary programme to turn the MNR in a revolutionary
direction.
"The MNR is certainly a
party in transition from traditional or reformist politics to the new politics
of the revolutionary transformation of the proletariat as the leader of the
whole oppressed society.[99]
(LO 11.11.52, p.3.)
"The main essential doctrinal
foundation required to play a decisive role in the present period can only be
obtained by modifying, in its turn, the social composition of the party. Its
uniform social nature could be achieved around the main social force of
anti-imperialist struggle. The most powerful and decisive social force is made
up of exploited workers and peasants. It is around these social forces that the
unity of the party must be attained."
According to the POR a struggle had
to continue so that "the workers and peasants of the MNR impose a
programme that reflects their own interests, and likewise impose a leadership
that reflects the interests of the exploited. The present task is to ensure
that the MNR must be controlled by the exploited masses". The
exploited will never be able to control a party created by and for the
bourgeoisie.
"Only on condition that it
takes the consistent progressive step of adopting a programme of principles in
accord with the upsurge of the masses then carrying it out, will the MNR be
able to play the role imposed on it by circumstances."
"Solid worker cadres in the
MNR, elimination of counter-revolutionary tendencies, a political programme
which represents the interests of the exploited classes, in brief the absolute
pre-eminence of the working class within the MNR ranks is the only thing that
can give the MNR an important role in the revolutionary course towards the
Worker-Peasant government.[100]
(LO, 11.11.52, p.3.) The POR distinguishes counter revolutionary wings
from another, or others, supposedly revolutionary ones. The one certain thing
is that all wings of the MNR were and are counter-revolutionary.
"If the MNR wants to maintain
its status as a mass party it will have to be more sensitive to their
aspirations; it will have to integrate the demands for which they fought and
which they will never renounce, into its programme. That will not be done
unless the representatives of caciquism and imperialism are expelled from the
party (...) This is the only possibility of survival remaining open to the MNR:
to stop keeping the workers and peasants out of its ranks but, on the contrary,
to give them the greatest influence over the party leadership."[101]
(LO, 29.11.52, p.2.)
"If the MNR does not
organically change itself, expelling the rightists, freemasons, adventurers,
businessmen and carpetbaggers from its ranks, it will become the gravedigger of
the revolution (...) If the left wing succeeds in taking charge and having a
working class face, the POR is ready to work with it and even to fuse
with it. This new party form ought to be reflected in the forms of
government which can only be a worker-peasant government."[102](LO,
Supplement, 3.2.53, p.3.)
No matter how many workers a
bourgeois party has it does not change its class character. While the POR
struggled to get more workers into the MNR Trotskyists should have
struggled for more workers to leave it. The POR's line had been much
more serious than simply seeking to reform the government and so advance
towards a worker-peasant government. The POR based its whole strategy on trying
to reform the solidly bourgeois MNR. This demanded greater participation of the
labour bureaucrats in the leadership, greater `sensitivity' from the top chiefs
and more verbiage. All the problems of Bolivia could have been dealt with if
more workers had been in the MNR and they had strengthened the left wing which
would have been the most demagogic of them.
It proposed that the same party
which only four years before it had labelled `nazi-fascist' should now turn
itself in the party of the social revolution. Furthermore if the rightist
elements had been purged and the Chávez and Lechín left wing had taken charge
the POR would have agreed to fuse with the MNR. A revolutionary party can never
fuse with a counter-revolutionary one, even less so when it is leading the
class enemy.
The positions of the POR were worse
than those of Stalinism when it betrayed the Chinese revolution in 1927. In the
latter, thanks to the policy of the Chinese CP which wanted to support and
transform the Guomindang, bourgeois nationalism, once it had used the
Communists to gain power, massacred them in the slaughter of Shanghai. Trotsky
attacked the Stalinist Comintern for "consider(ing) the Kuomintang not as
a bourgeois party, but as a neutral area of struggle for the masses
(...) to assist the (summit) to convert ever broader masses into `cattle', and
under conditions most favourable to it to prepare the Shanghai coup d'etat
(...) they imagined that by means of ordinary elections at Kuomintang
Congresses power would pass from the hands of the bourgeoisie to the
proletariat."[103]
(The Third International After Lenin, Pathfinder, New York, 1970,
p.218.)
The left wing was no more than a
demagogic tribune used by that bourgeois party in order to distract the masses
and to get them to accept a solution of complete capitulation to imperialism.
Chávez ended up as vice president to the leader of the MNR right-wing. Lechín
ended up supporting all the imperialists' plans totally, such as the triangular
one and by visiting Nationalist China with the object of getting US endorsement
for his management of their semi-colony.
As a consequence of that line, in
1954, the whole of the POR old guard (Warqui, Ayala etc) all the POR leaders of
the COB, (Moller, Zegada) and the great majority of Lora's Leninist Workers
Faction dissolved themselves and went into the MNR.
The
Peasant Uprising
The insurrections of 1936, 1946 and
1952 as well as the civil war and the great struggles undertaken between the
end of the Chaco War and 1952, had the cities and mines of Bolivia as their
arena. At that time at least 70% of the population lived in the country. The
peasants lived on the margins of the national economy, did not vote and had
little direct part in politics.
The peasant masses spoke Amerindian
languages and the great majority were illiterate. Their main relations of
production were still based on serfdom. The Indians had to pay the cacique in
labour, products or money.
Villarroel had been demagogic in his
calling of the congress of the indigenous peoples. The peasant masses were
gradually awakening. When the army of the rosca collapsed the Indian tenants
organised themselves and a few months after April 1952, a strong movement of
land occupations broke out - mainly in the valleys of Cochabamba and Titicaca
which had trading links with the cities. These movements were not guided by
Marxist ideology. The MNR immediately took them over.
"The only substantial incident
of `communist' influence involved the POR, which under the direction of its
erstwhile leader Warqui had established something of a presence among the
peasants of Ucureña. This was soon to prove ephemeral and had only been made
possible by supporting a faction in conflict with the leader of the regional
confederation over financial questions."[104]
(Rebellion in the Veins, Dunkerley, Verso, pp.70-71.)
Once the peasant mobilisations for
land began to get under way the POR succeeded in attaining great influence in
the convulsed valley of Cochabamba. In 1953 it correctly launched the slogan of
occupation of the land and expropriation of the latifundiae. However its
agrarian programme did not go beyond the limits of the bourgeois democratic
revolution.
When a peasant receivers a plot of
land he becomes a petit-bourgeois. Competition and the operation of the market
results in some small proprietors becoming rich and turning into bourgeois
farmers, buying lorries or tractors, acquiring new land and hiring labourers
while others lose their plots and sink into the proletariat. Land does not deal
with all the peasantry's problems and neither dos it mean that there will be a
great increase in the supply of farming produce to the country. There must be
electricity, mechanisation and modernisation of the agricultural sector as well
as an improvement in communications and means of exchange.
In order to achieve the latter
industry and the banks must be expropriated and placed under the control of the
workers and small peasants. Thereby the peasants can more easily get credit and
urban products. The expropriation of the rich and the nationalisation of large
scale transport will mean investment in agriculture, lower transport costs and
lower prices for goods traded between town and country. By eliminating the
private distributors and middlemen and being in direct contact with their
markets, the peasants will get better terms for their trade. The state monopoly
of foreign trade will allow the agricultural sector to be protected and
provided with goods at subsidised prices.
In order to do this it is vital that
the revolution spreads internationally and it must try to control the main
cities, banks and factories in the region. A workers state should try to
encourage the peasants to develop associated forms of large scale production
voluntarily. But such collective farms will inevitably fail if the revolution
remains isolated in one country and a backward one at that.
Three more important problems for
the peasant are education, culture and political democracy. Plans for literacy
campaigns and education could only be carried out on the basis of substantial
sums obtained by confiscation from the rich and by a general mobilisation of
educational volunteers (something that the MNR did not want to do.)
Even now in Bolivia the majority of
the population not only still live in the countryside but still speak Quechua,
Aymara and other Amerindian languages. In order to try to integrate them into
modern society and the struggle for socialism, the proletariat must
unconditionally defend the right to national self-determination for these
nationalities before the bourgeoisie. That should entail a struggle for the
official recognition of the Amerindian languages so that the great majority of
Bolivians can develop their own culture or be educated or examined in their own
mother tongue. If a strong feeling for autonomy or separation emerges, the
proletariat should struggle for the right of these nationalities to opt for
that course but also to persuade them that the best course is that of a soviet
region or republic in the framework of a socialist federation. The POR did not
raise any slogan favouring self-determination of the Indian nationalities.
When, decades later, it did so, it clothed itself in populism and idealised the
obscurantist pre-Columbian religion.
The MNR introduced adult suffrage.
The illiterate Bolivian peasants were able to vote for the first time. The POR
did not make either that demand or the one for an Constituent Assembly. Later
it demanded that illiterates be eligible for election and that the proletariat
have a preferential vote.
The POR did not demand the
expropriation of industry and credit in order to put them under workers
control. It programme was limited to a bourgeois and national framework. The
way to realise it was to put pressure on the `comrade President', Paz.
"While we all waited for the
government to make its position clear on the problem of the latifundia while
taking up the hopes of the exploited masses, President Paz Estenssoro answered
our worries with the needs of the Indian, of labour and sacrifices."[105]
(LO, 29.6.52, p.4.) Once more the POR pinned its hopes on Paz. What was
needed was to alert the masses constantly that the entire MNR was not
interested in carrying out an agrarian revolution.
One of the personalities most
supported by the POR was Ñuflo Chavez, one of the leaders of the MNR left wing,
who had worked very closely with the POR and, in spite of being a rancher's
son, had been put in charge of peasant matters by the COB and was peasant'
minister. "The Minister of Peasant Affairs has forbidden the Federation to
collect dues. Is this the way to encourage organisation in the countryside?[106](LO.6.2.53,
p.1) Once more the POR was surprised that its friend was inconsistent and
pleaded with him to be consistent. The minister should have been denounced for
wanting to disorganise the peasantry in order to moderate and regiment
it.
Eventually the MNR adopted an
agrarian reform that failed to pull the agricultural sector out of its
backwardness. "between 1954 and 1968 only about eight million of some 36
million hectares of cultivated land changed hands. After two years 51% of the
latifundia in La Paz, 49% in Chuquisaca and 76% in Oruro had been affected, but
in Tarija the figure was 33% in Santa Cruz 36% and in Cochabamba only 16%, the
national total being 28.5%."[107]
(Dunkerley, Verso, p.73.)
The
Opportunist International Orientation Of The POR
The Bolivian revolution could never
have overcome its impoverished capitalist semi-colonial condition by remaining
isolated in a backward and landlocked country. The internationalisation of the
revolution was vital in order to ward off counter-revolution and to establish
the material basis for socialist construction.
The MNR did everything possible to
isolate the revolution within its own boundaries. It did not even dare to
organise or encourage insurgent movements in other countries of the continent
however moderate the programmes of these insurgents were. Víctor Paz took great
pains to be imperialism's trump card. Lechín and his POR scribes took great
pains to promote him.
If the POR press and its programme
of action is examined no serious fight for the international expansion of the
revolution will be found. It did not even call for a struggle for the Socialist
United States of Latin America. Even the most pro-nationalist wing of the Latin
American `Trotskyist movement', the Ramos current criticised the section of the
4th International for its provincialism. "the POR, far from basing its
policy on the development of the struggle in Latin America, limits itself only
to Bolivia. This is a suicidal but neither a working class nor revolutionary
policy (...) A Workers Government is only conceivable on the plane of a
revolutionary struggle in all Latin America, not in one of its isolated
`provinces'."[108](Trotsky
ante la revolución Latinoamericana, Juan Ramon Peñaloza, Bs As, 1953,
pp.152-154)
The POR has never been renowned for
regarding international politics as important. However in the few articles
written by the POR about other countries a line of colossal capitulation to
counter-revolution can be seen.
A report from the POR CC said:
"First Peron and Vargas in Argentina and Brazil, then Paz Estenssoro in
Bolivia and later Velasco Ibarra in Ecuador and finally Ibañez in Chile,
unifying the revolutionary and anti-imperialist aspirations of their own
peoples, express in their broad electoral victories, not only the discontent of
the working masses for the system of capitalist exploitation, but the
fundamental defeat of imperialism's subjection of our semi-colonial countries
through the traditional methods of economic slavery. Such mass movements fully
identify themselves with the revolutionary actions that are liberating China,
Korea, Indonesia and Indo-China and which enable these markets to escape the influence
and exploitation of imperialism (...)"[109](Boletin
Interno, no.13, POR, p.3)
The POR maintained that the
bourgeois governments of Peron Vargas, Paz and Ibañez had defeated imperialism
and "fully identified themselves" with the revolutions that were overthrowing
the bourgeoisie in Asia. In Indonesia the bourgeoisie was never deposed and,
furthermore, thanks to the popular frontist policy of the CP, it demobilised
the workers and paved the way for a coup that would assassinate a million
opponents. The nationalist Latin American governments did not question the
backward capitalist semi-colonial nature of the countries that they ran. They
simply sought to generate better conditions for the development of a national
bourgeoisie. The aim of their social reforms was to widen the internal market
and control the organisations of labour. All these regimes were anti-communist
and ended up supporting imperialism and repressing the workers.
The POR openly showed its sympathy
for the PSP of Chile. Instead of denouncing its reformist politics of entering
a capitalist government, the POR promoted it and presented it as an
anti-Stalinist party derived from Trotskyism and with a semi-trotskyist
orientation.
"The Partido Socialista Popular
is a centrist party which recently shifted to the left and, for some time, gave
the Ibañez government a socialist tinge. As to be expected, the policy of the
PSP could not be achieved by the cabinet and its leadership, energetically
pressured by its rank and file, had no other remedy than of giving expression
to the popular discontent by the ministerial crisis (....) it should be noted
that the PSP is anti-Stalinist and it is derived from the Left
Opposition."[110]
(LO, 27.9.53, p.4.)
The POR's most scandalous position
was its open support for Zionism. In an article called `Israel Gives A
Lesson To Imperialism' the POR called for support to the main bastion of
imperialism in the Middle East against Jordan. It is the duty of any Marxist to
defend any Arab semi-colony (no matter how reactionary it regime) in face of
the racist aircraft-carrier of imperialism.
"The tiny republic of Israel,
also apparently received `free aid from the USA'. The conflict with Jordan had
the virtue of showing the game played by imperialism. The yankee chancellery
told Israel to stop engineering works on the river Jordan under threat of a
suspension of US aid to this tiny state. The reply of this young country with a
population of less than two million was a hard lesson for yankee imperialism.
The Israeli Chancellor Moshe Sherrett declared that `Israel does not sell
its sovereignty or independence for any type of help.'
"This lesson of not
compromising national sovereignty to imperialism for a few tons of food should
be learnt by every ruler.'"[111](LO,
3.11.53, p.1.)
By that time Israel had destroyed
the Palestinian state and had expelled hundreds of thousands of Arabs from its
territory. The USA did not want its `guard-dog' to continue carrying our
further `excesses'. The POR saw in this even more reactionary attitude of
Israel a dignified gesture for the MNR government to imitate. It is as if
anyone today could be proud of a South African government which defied the USA
by refusing to repeal racist laws.
The
Leadership Of the 4th International Identifies Itself With This Menshevik
Policy
The whole of the treacherous policy
of the POR was given total support by the 4th International. Furthermore the
latter admitted to being its guide.
The resolution adopted by the IEC of
the 4th International at its 12th Plenum (November 1952) said:
"The way in which the POR has
opertaed so far is, in general correct, and corresponds both to the
objective reality and to the real stength of the party.
"Ideologically preparing since
before the events of 9th April, the POR was not surprised by them and,
above, all it did not fail to correctly interpret them and to adequately adjust
its policy (...) This double support was concretised in the critical
support given to the MNR government"[112]
(Contribución ... p.241)
Early in 1953 the journal Fourth
International asserted: "The POR began by justifying granting critical
support to the MNR government (....) it gave the government critical support
against attacks of imperialism and reaction and it supported all progressive
measures."[113](Fourth
International, January-February 1953, p.16.)
"Ideologically prepared in
advance for the events of April 9, the POR was not surprised by them and above
all did not fail to interpret them correctly and to adequately adjust its own
policy."[114](International
Information Bulletin, January 1953, SWP, New York, p.24.)
In 1953 the factional break-up of
the 4th International began between the International Secretariat of Michel
Pablo, Ernest Mandel and Posadas and the International Committee of the SWP
(USA), the French PCI of Bleibtreu-Favre and Lambert and the groups of Gerry
Healy and Nahuel Moreno. The split was the result of the latter grouping's
rejection of the tactic of deep entrism within Stalinism. Nevertheless the IC
carried out, or would later, deep entrism into social democracy or bourgeois
nationalism.
During the split the Bolivian
revolution was not discussed. All had supported the POR line. The split was not
between `orthodox' and revisionist' forces but between two wings which had
already supported the centrist orientation of seeking to reform dissident
Stalinists (such as Tito) or nationalists (such as the MNR).
Much later in the search to find
arguments for their factional battles, the anti-pabloists discovered the
betrayal of 1952 which they had endorsed at the time.
The International Committee of Healy
published a vast collection of seven books entitled Trotskyism versus
Revisionism which contained hundreds of letters and documents which were
supposed to show its struggle against revisionism. However in none of those
volumes is the 1952 revolution mentioned. The extensive first volume is
dedicated to the split with Pabloism. More than fifty texts of that polemic are
reproduced. Nevertheless in all those documents Bolivia is only mentioned in
two brief and passing references of a purely administrative nature. The Vern
and Ryan texts are totally ignored. All this merely confirms that the
`anti-Pabloists' never questioned the Menshevik strategy at all which was
unanimously adopted by the 4th International and that the latter had already
shifted towards centrism between 1948 and 1951.
At the beginning of the 70s the
Healy current was to develop a particular interest in Bolivia arising from its
wish to engage in a factional manoeuvre against the PCI of Lambert, at that
time linked to Lora and because it had begun to form its first very active
South American section in Peru. In 1971-72 it launched a massive political
offensive against the POR, accusing it, correctly, of having conciliated the
nationalist Torres government. But these criticisms were made from a sectarian
angle as it denounced Lora for having dared to engage in joint anti-gorilla
actions with Torres and for not having dared to agitate for the slogan `Down
With Torres!' which would have been a blunder at the time as only reaction
would have replaced him. Later the journal Clave, in its first number,
published an analysis of the crisis of the Trotskyist movement in which many of
the criticisms made at the time by the anti-defencists Shachtman and Robles
were repeated.
However all these criticism were
made under pressure. Healyism supported the pro-nationalist line of the POR in
1952. Its sectarian orientation in the Andes ran counter to its total
capitulation to the bourgeois movements of Khomeini, Arafat, Qaddafi and Ortega
at the same time. Healyism went so far as to justify the massacres by the
theocratic dictatorship of Iran of the Kurds, women refusing to wear the
oppressive veil and `Trotskyists'.
In 1980 the currents of Moreno and
Lambert fused to give birth to the Parity Committee and then the `4th
International-International Committee. In the programme that it adopted it
said:
"The
synthesis of Pabloist betrayal occurred in Bolivia. In this country the POR
(Partido Obrero Revolucionario), Bolivian section of the international, led by
the hand of Pablo, committed one of the greatest betrayals against the
revolution so far this century, equal to, or greater than, that of the
Mensheviks during the Russian revolution, than that of the social democrats
during and after the First World War, than that of the Stalinists in China, in
Germany, in Spain etc. In Bolivia the working class, educated by Trotskyism,
carried out -at the start of 1952 - one of the most perfect working class revolutions
known: it destroyed the bourgeois army, built up workers and peasants militias
as the only real power in the country, and organised the Central Obrera
Boliviana in order to centralise the workers movement and the militias. The
bureaucracy that led the COB handed over power - which it had in its hands - to
the bourgeois nationalist party the MNR (Movimiento Nacionalista
Revolucionario). Bolivian Trotskyism was a power, it had great influence in the
labour and mass movement, it had participated as co-leadership of the working
class and popular insurrection that destroyed the army. The International
Secretariat, (IS) led by Pablo, laid down the treacherous and reformist line of
critically supporting the bourgeois government. The present crisis of Bolivian
Trotskyism, the present crisis of the whole of the 4th International, the
strengthening of Stalinism in Bolivia and of all the petty bourgeois
nationalist movements in Latin America, derives from that criminal policy of
class collaboration which Pablo obliged the whole of the International to carry
out in Bolivia. The Pabloite revisionist principle was always the same; the MNR
pressured by the mass movement would see itself obliged to make a socialist
revolution".[115]
(Actualización del programa de transición, Nahuel Moreno, Caracteres Ed,
Bogota, 1990, pp.40-41.)
What this demonstrated was the
greatest cynicism. Lambertism had worked very closely with Lora before
subscribing to that position. It was the international current that showed the
greatest eagerness to demonstrate that Lora's POR had always advanced a
revolutionary orientation. Pierre Broué, its great historian, wrote a small
book in which he defended the official line of the POR in 1952.
The Moreno current never questioned
the right-centrist policy of the POR in 1952. In fact it made it its own. While
the POR capitulated to the MNR, Moreno was engaged in total adaptation to
Peronism. For a decade he was to be dissolved inside it giving allegiance to
the leadership and economic programme of the bourgeois Peron. When the POR
began to break up in the mid-1950s, the SLATO (American Secretariat of Orthodox
Trotskyism), headed by Moreno and Vitale, had a greater affinity with the
majority of the Fracción Obrera Leninista of Moller which was dissolved into
the MNR. In his major work Moreno admits that Vitale took great pains to win
the Moller group to SLATO. Those who went over to the MNR did so under the
powerful influence of the pro-Peronist PSRN, within which Moreno, Ramos and
pro-Peronist social democrats worked together.
Another current that has just
`discovered' that Lora committed serious errors in 1952, is the Partido Obrero
of Argentina. This current was one which had unconditionally defended the whole
pro-nationalist line of the POR. Its historian Coggiola based the whole of his
analysis of the history of Trotskyism in his country and continent, on the
basis of total adherence to the conceptions and actions of the POR-MASAS. In
its daily practice it has struggled to impose worker ministers onto Peronism
and for a front with bourgeois sectors behind a bourgeois democratic programme
and a joint presidential candidate. Now it has decided to break with Lora
because he supported a dissident faction. Without drawing up any balance sheet
of its co-habitation with Lora, Pablo Rieznik published a brief and deficient
article in which he belatedly initiates an attack on Lora in 1952.
All the currents that claim to come
from the 4th International since 1951-52 are compromised with the historic
betrayal of the Bolivian revolution. The lack of a radical balance sheet of the
lessons of that crime has meant that all those currents continue to
practice different varieties of adaptation to forces foreign to the proletarian
revolution. The heirs of Pablo's IS capitulated before the FLN in Algeria, to
Mao, Castro and Ho Chi Minh's Stalinism, to Sandinism, to Khomeini, to
Euro-Communism and bourgeois pacifism and ecology. The Latin American Bureau
would end up following Posadas until its transformation into a puppet of the
conservative Stalinists. The different variants of the IC would capitulate to
the MNA in Algeria, Peronism & Belaundism in the 50s, where its sections
ensconced themselves) Social Democracy and Sandinism. Healy would die converted
into an emulator of Arafat, Gaddafi, Khomeini and Gorbachev. The SWP(USA) has
ended up openly reneging on Trotskyism and unconditionally hailing Castro, the
FSLN and the FMLN. Lambertism survives wishing to form a new international and
reformist parties like that of Lula in Brazil and based on the strategy of
forming bourgeois democratic governments. Morenoism was always characterised by
its embrace of whatever was in fashion among left currents (at different times
it was Peronist, Castroist, Maoist, standard bearers of the formation of
sections of the Social-Democrat Socialist International, apologists of Walesa's
`Solidarity' and for the immediate capitalist unification of Germany.)
José
Villa (Poder Obrero - Bolivia) from Bases no.5 Autumn 1992
translated
by Mike Jones
23,088
words
[1]. The CON was the predecessor of the COB.
[2]. Memorias del primer ministro obrero, Waldo Alvarez, La Paz, 1986, p.188.
[3]. Lucha Obrera, 12.6.52, p.3.
[4]. Trotskyism in Latin America, Robert J Alexander, Hoover Institution Press, California, 1973, p.134.
[5]. Sindicatos y revolución, G. Lora, La Paz, 1960.
[6]. La Revolución Boliviana: Análisis crítico, Guillermo Lora, La Paz, 1963, p.254.
[7]. Boletin Interno, no 13, POR, 1953, p.11.
[8]. Lucha Obrera, 18.4.52, p.2.
[9]. Rebelión en las venas, James Dunkerley, Ed Quipus, 1982, La Paz, p.50 - Verso edition p.45.
[10]. Rebellion in the Veins, Verso, London, 1984, p.64. (The editor of the English text omitted `allegedly' before `controlled'. Note by Eds of RH.)
[11]. Labor Action, 27.10.52. Shachtman's paper.
[12]. Rebelión en las venas, p.52, Verso Edition, p.46.
[13]. Labor Action, 7.4.52.
[14]. Contribución a la historia politica de Boliviana, G Lora, Vol 2, pp.237-238.
[15]. The Militant, 12.5.52, (Lora interview Part 1, SWP New York.
[16]. The Militant, 12.5.52, Lora interview Part 1, SWP New York.
[17]. The Militant, 19.5.52, Lora interview Part 2, SWP, New York.
[18]. The Militant, 12.5.52, Lora interview Part 1, SWP, New York.
[19]. The Militant, 19.5.52, Lora interview Part 2, SWP, New York.
[20]. "A Letter on the Bolivian Revolution", S Ryan, 1.6.52, SWP Internal Bulletin.
[21]. Boletin Interno, no.13, POR, undated, p.10.
[22]. La revolución boliviana: Análisis crítico, G Lora, La Paz, 1963, p.254.
[23]. Rebelión, 1.5.52, p.8-9.
[24]. "Gualberty Villarroel (...) Our proletarian homage to the memory of the martyr president", ibid, p.9.
[25]. Lucha Obrera, 12.6.52, p.3.
[26]. Lucha Obrera, 29.6.52, p.4.
[27]. Lucha Obrera, 18.4.52, p.2.
[28]. Boletin Interno, no.13, 1953, p.7.
[29]. Lucha Obrera, 25.5.52, p.3.
[30]. ibid, p.301.
[31]. Boletin Interno, no.13, POR, undated, p.8.
[32]. Movimiento obrero y procesos politicos en Bolivia: Historia de la COB 1952-1957, Jorge Lazarte, EDOBOL, La Paz, 1989, p.280.
[33]. Lucha Obrera, 15.7.52, p.1.
[34]. Lucha Obrera, 29.1.52, p.2.
[35]. Boletin Interno, no.13, POR, p.11.
[36]. Trotskyism in Latin America, Robert J Alexander, p.125.
[37]. Lucha Obrera, 1.6.52, p.2.
[38]. Internal Bulletin, no.17, August 1953, SWP, New York, p.40. The second Ryan letter, dated 4.8.53.
[39]. ROSCA was the mining oligarchy - Eds note.
[40]. Lucha Obrera, 25.5.52.
[41]. ibid, p.277.
[42]. Contribución a la historia politica de Boliviana, G Lora, Vol 2, p.231-232.
[43]. Bolivia: la revolución inconclusa, James M Malloy, Ceres, La Paz, 1989, p.243.
[44]. ibid, p.243-244.
[45]. A History of the Bolivian Labour Movement, Lora, Cambridge, p.281.
[46]. ibid, p.284.
[47]. La revolución Boliviana: Análisis crítico, Lora, La Paz, 1963, p.267.
[48]. ibid, p.270.
[49]. ibid, p.298-299.
[50]. Lucha Obrera, 23.1.53.
[51]. Lucha Obrera, March 1953, p.1.
[52]. See interview in Facetas 5.7.87.
[53]. Nahuel Moreno always claimed .......in its bureaucracy.
[54]. La Revolución Boliviana, G Lora, p.262-263.
[55]. Movimento obrero y processos politícos en Bolivia, Jorge Lazarte, p.6.
[56]. ibid, p.7.
[57]. As Stuart King so .... Permanent Revolution, no.2, p.36
[58]. Boletin Interno, no.13, POR, p.12.
[59]. The Third International after Lenin, Trotsky, Pathfinder, New York, 1970, p.181. Stalin, el gran organizador de derrotas. La III Internacional despues de Lenin, Trotski, El Yunque, Bs As, 1974, p.241.
[60]. The author may be incorrect in assuming that
[61]. The Communist International 1919-1943: Documents, ed Jane Degras, Vol 1 Cass, 1971, p.427. (The author is wrong. Zinoviev drafted the theses which represented a compromise between the lefts and right. In `Dialogue with Heinrich Brandler' (Marxism, Wars and Revolutions, Deutscher, Verso, 1984) the latter says: "Radek was accused by Moscow of being the author of my definition of the five forms of workers' government. In reality, he tried to prevent this definition from being adopted; not because he thought it incorrect but, as I learned years later, because it irritated Zinoviev, and Radek found this inconvenient for his factional struggle in Moscow." pp.158-159. Brandler advanced it at the 8th Congress of the KPD in January 1923, just after the 4th Congress of the Communist International which took place in Nov-Dec 1922. See Revolutionary History Vol 2, no.3 pp.1-20. Eds note.)
[62]. ibid, p.426.
[63]. ibid, p.426.
[64]. Contribución a la historia politica de Boliviana, Lora, Vol.2, La Paz, 1978, p.253.
[65]. Lucha Obrera, 11.11.52, p.3.
[66]. Lucha Obrera, 11.11.52, p.2.
[67]. Lucha Obrera, 25.5.52, p.3.
[68]. Bolivia: la revolución derrotada, Liberio Justo, Cochabamba, 1967, p.224.
[69]. Lucha Obrera, 2.8.53, p.1.
[70]. Internal Bulletin, no 17, August 1953, SWP New York, p.50.
[71]. ibid p.10.
[72]. Memorias del primer ministro obrero, Waldo Alvarez, La Paz, 1986, pp.283-84.
[73]. El Sindicalismo Boliviano, Ricardo Catoira Marín, La Paz, 1987, p.43.
[74]. Contribución ... Vol 2, Lora, La Paz, 1978, p.228.
[75]. El Sindicalismo Boliviano ... p.48.
[76]. LO, 3.5.52, p.3.
[77]. LO, 25.5.52. p.1.
[78]. LO, 12.6.52, p.1
[79]. LO, 12.6.52, p.2.
[80]. LO 12.6.52, p.3.
[81]. The Third International After Lenin, LD Trotsky, Pathfinder, New York, pp.169-170.
[82]. LO, 3.8.52, p.3.
[83]. LO, 5.8.53, p.1.
[84]. Villarroel was lynched in 1946. Eds note.
[85]. LO, 6.2.53, p.1.
[86]. LO, 29.6.52.p.4.
[87]. LO, 11.11.52, p.1.
[88]. Boletin Interno, no.13, POR, p.9.
[89]. Revolution Bolivienne 1952-1954, Pierre Scali, La Verité, supp. no.333, 22.4.54, p.20.
[90]. LO, May 1953, p.2.
[91]. Poder y Fuerzas Armadas 1949-1982, General Gary Prado Salmón, Cochabamba, 1984, p.33.
[92]. La revolución boliviana, G. Lora, p.271.
[93]. LO, 15.7.52, p.1.
[94]. Poder y Fuerzas Armadas 1949-1982, p.40.
[95]. Poder y Fuerzas Armadas 1949-1982, pp.52-54.
[96]. Historia de una leyenda: Vida y palabra de Juan Lechín Oquendo, Lupe Cajias, La Paz, 1989, p.148.
[97]. LO, 3.8.52, p.3.
[98]. LO, Supplement 3.2.53, p.4.
[99]. LO, 11.11.52, p.3.
[100]. LO, 11.11.52, p.3.
[101]. LO, 29.11.52, p.2.
[102]. LO, Supplement 3.2.53, p.3.
[103]. The Third International After Lenin, Pathfinder, New York, 1970, p.218.
[104]. Rebellion in the Veins, Dunkerley, Verso, pp.70-71.
[105]. LO, 29.6.52, p.4.
[106]. LO, 6.2.53, p.1.
[107]. Rebellion in the Veins, Dunkerley, Verso, p.73.
[108]. Trotsky ante la revolución nacional latinoamericana, Juan Ramon Peñaloza, Bs. As., 1953, pp.152-154.
[109]. Boletin Interno, no.13, POR, p.3.
[110]. LO, 27.9.53, p.4.
[111]. LO, 3.11.53, p.1.
[112]. Contribución a la historia política de Bolivia, G Lora, Vol.2, La Paz, 1978, p.241.
[113]. Fourth International, January- February 1953, p.16.
[114]. International Information Bulletin, January 1953, SWP New York, p.24.
[115]. Actualización del programa de transición, Nahuel Moreno, Caracteres Ed, Bogota, 1990, pp.40-41.