Class
Struggle 46 August/September 2002
Contents:
Elections and socialism
How Red are the Greens?
Terrorising workers
Stop the new war on Iraq
Iraqi history:Saddam and
revolution
Global economy falters
Argentina:lies and
provocations
Trotskyism’s origins in
China.
Election outcome
Replace
Labour with a Socialist Alliance
Shit
that was quick. Clark and Labour are back. Catholic grey power guru Jim
Anderton got back in coalition with his ex-socialist progressive Matt Robson to
prop up Labour.(1) The ‘worm’, United Future, the creation of the media now
holds the balance of power.(2) This means that Paul Holmes is really running
the country. He can prime Peter Dunne on TV each week on all the top rating
causes, child cancer, crime, himself, and put the ‘common sense’ spin on them
all.(3)
What
do we conclude? A defeat for the left
and a definite swing to the populist centre. Turnout was down from around 86% to 79%. National bombed down to
21%. Labour’s share of the vote
went up slightly and to the right.
While some Labour loyalists didn’t vote, Labour won the party votes in all but
three of the National seats. So Labour’s vote probably went up because National
voters voted for them to give Labour a working majority to keep out the Greens.
We don’t yet know how many Labour voters stayed at home or voted for NZ
First, United Future, or even Act. So
by voting or staying away many workers pushed Labour towards the centre. This
centre is a swamp in which workers will drown.
The
far right also lost out. ACT ran a hard right economic line but also headed
towards the populist centre with its zero tolerance of crime policy.(4) Boxer
Bill English tried to get heavy on crime too but he was fighting above his
weight.(5) Neither got up after Winston Peters’ three-fingered knock out for
the NZ First team. Winston, who smacks of a budding brown Pym Fortuyn but with
hetero panache, bounced from 4% to 10% by baiting the racist redneck vote on
immigration, Maori and crime. (6)
The
Greens vote went up by 2%. Why? The 7% share of the vote probably reflects the
hardcore Green vote that is totally committed to banning commercial use of GE.
Anything else that the Greens stand for on social and economic issues is pretty
minority report stuff (see article on Greens). Nicky Hager’s revelations about
Labour’s clumsy handling of a GE scare two years ago – ‘corngate’ – saw Labour
drop 6% in the polls.(7) But it seems
that the Greens also suffered. Labour’s decline in popularity probably resulted
from people being turned off Helen
Clark’s display of arrogance in the media when questioned on ‘corngate’ and
‘paintergate’.(8) The Greens may have slumped because some people saw that they
really were fundamentalists. ‘Corngate’ served to remind some swinging voters
of the instability of the centre-left so they opted for centre parties to
moderate ‘left’ wackiness.
So
the ‘left of Labour’ vote was redistributed to the right to put Labour in
office. But Labour is now dependent upon United Future to stay in power. United
Future is really the ‘common sense’ party, a collection of raw ring-ins, racing
truck car drivers, chefs, social workers united by a bottom line belief that
“the family is central to life”.(9) We put their hang-up down to parental
neglect.
This
means that Labour’s rightward trajectory will continue. Last time it relied on
the Greens on matters of confidence and the budget. Though the Greens are a
petty bourgeois party they didn’t hold Labour’s minimalist social democratic
program back. But this time, a formal agreement with the worm in the centre
will commit Labour to right-centrist policies to stay in power. This is a classic popular front, where the social
democrats (even right wing) are able to blame the centre party for its
rightward shift. Now it can use the excuse that it had to swing right with the
worm when it doesn’t deliver to workers.
So
we predict that Labour will have to move further right. As a self-styled
Blairite party its attempt to find a Third Way between left and right will
become clearer. NZ Labour still has social democratic elements on the left
based on the unions. But during its first term it developed stronger links to
the newer breed of business leaders. This time the move right to the centre
will see it try to redefine itself along the lines of Steve Maharey’s ‘Third
Way’ lectures in the National Business
Review. In the name of the centre it will try to distance itself from
direct links to the unions and to business. It will preside over the ‘smart
wired’ state that presents profits as a universal benefit.
CWG
got criticised by Maoists, ultra-lefts and Spartacists for its critical support
of Labour and the Alliance. We were called
‘auto-labourites’ (revolution)
‘labour loyalists’ (IBT) and ‘degenerate cronies’ (Spartacists).(10) We think that the tactic
of critical support to get Labour elected was justified. We called for a vote
for Labour candidates to get it into office to expose it. As Lenin said, this sort of ‘support’ is
like the support a rope offers a hanged person. We think that most most workers
voted for Labour expecting more social benefits and union rights. The main
unions affiliated to Labour called for a vote to defend the Employment
Relations Act and prevent any return to the Employment Contracts Act.(11)
Labour encouraged these expectations with campaign slogans like ‘people before
profits’.
The
tactic of critical support aims to activate the contradiction between workers’
expectations and the failure of the government to deliver. The expectations
were there in the unions on the one side, and on the other the new government
will not be able to deliver to the unions. Why? Because profits come first and
profits are in trouble. The poor performance of the world economy and NZ’s
declining semi-colonial status will prevent any more real concessions.(12) The
popular front character of the government will push it further right. Dunne
voted against the ERA, so we expect Margaret Wilson’s plans to strengthen union
rights will be dropped.
Labour
will find itself unable to deliver on its residual social democratic programme.
But why this is so has to be rammed home to workers. We have to give Labour
arseholes to convince workers that Labour has really left workers behind. We
have to work within the unions affiliated to Labour to make their support
conditional on Labour strengthening of the ERA. When this doesn’t happen we
have to push the rank and file to put up their own candidates on a program that
is designed to meets workers’ needs.
Our
critical support for the Alliance was also justified. We called for a party
vote. The Alliance only got 1.3% (Anderton’s Progressive Coalition that split
off the Alliance got about 1.8%), or rather more than the British Socialist
Alliance. Laila Harre was only 2000 votes short of winning Waitakere. This
showed that when they had nothing to lose (the Labour Candidate Lyn Pillay, an
EPMU - Engineers union - organiser, was high on the Labour list) workers voted
for the Alliance in large numbers. This suggests that the overall drop in the
Alliance vote was almost totally tactical.
We
predict that the Alliance will try to rebuild as a Social Democratic party in
the vacuum left by Labour. It will try to gain a footing in the labour
movement. We have to push for rank and file control of the unions to prevent
the Alliance from creating a left union bureaucracy. Our objective is to expose
Labour completely but also to prevent the Alliance from becoming a new force
for reformism. We can do this by
building a Socialist Alliance to compete with the dregs of social democracy.
Now
is the time to begin to plan for a Socialist Alliance to unite the forces on
the left around a transitional program for socialist revolution. This has to
begin with work in the unions. There should be a Socialist Alliance branch in
every workplace. We are for the rebuilding of unions based on rank and file
control. This means that ordinary workers will elect delegates and officials,
subject to instant recall if they fail to represent the wishes of the
membership. Pay and conditions for
union officials should be no more than the average of the workers they
represent to prevent them being bought off by the bosses.
The
question of affiliation to political parties should be debated and decided by
the rank and file membership. Workers in the unions affiliated to Labour should
make this support conditional on Labour delivering on a number of policies such
as a shorter working week to eliminate unemployment; the restoration of penal
rates for overtime; labour legislation that brings casual and part-time workers
under the unions; democratic rights for all; opening the borders to economic
and political refugees; renationalisation under workers control of all
privatised state assets; and NZ breaking from military ties with imperialist
states such as the EU and USA. As workers lose any hope in Labour or the
Alliance to represent their interests, they will put up their own candidates
based on the revived unions.
Now
that the world economy has entered a period of recession (see Brian Green’s
article), the NZ economy will face a slowdown in growth. The Labour government
will be forced to move right to defend profits at the expense of working
people. This will bring about a renewal of working class struggle over jobs,
pay, conditions and basic rights. Against the rightward move in Parliament, we
have to rally the left around a socialist banner that begins to rebuild a
strong labour movement and a genuine workers’ party dedicated to replacing
clapped-out capitalist regimes with a workers’ government that can plan the
economy for the needs of people rather than the profits of the capitalists.
(1) Anderton and Robson, respectively leader and deputy of
the New Labour Party that split from Labour in 1989 to the left and which later
formed the Alliance. Anderton (who at the time was deputy Prime Minister),
Robson and several other MPs split from the Alliance in mid 2002 refusing to
oppose the Government's support of Bush's war against Afghanistan. They formed
the Progressive Coalition just before the recent election and gained 1.8% of
the vote.
(2) The worm is a moving line on a graph which rises and falls in response to preferences of a studio audience of ‘undecided’ voters. Peter Dunne's rise in popularity as leader of the United Future (a fusion of two 'parties' led by Dunne who entered parliament as a Labour MP in 1984) is almost completely the result of one TV studio performance in which the worm rose to new heights in response to the most bland, middle of the road, common sense statements.
(3) Paul Holmes is NZ's foremost 'tabloid' TV host who
specialises in promoting popular causes to boost his ratings.
(4) ACT, short for Association of Consumers and Taxpayers,
formed by Roger Douglas, former Minister of Finance responsible for the
neo-liberal agenda of the 4th Labour Government until 1988 when he
was sacked by the then Prime Minister David Lange, for continuing to press for
neo-liberal reforms. He formed ACT to continue the neo-liberal agenda. ACT is
on the extreme ‘new right’ and has never got more than 8% of the vote.
(5) Bill English became leader of the National Party in
2002. He took part in a boxing match for charity and referred to his ‘fight’
for ‘the NZ you deserve’ during the campaign.
Obviously 79% of the voters didn’t think they deserved Bill English’s
NZ.
(6) Winston Peters, maverick politician, former National
Minister of Maori Affairs, and leader of NZ First, formed a short-lived
coalition with National after the 1996 elections. Peters is a rabid populist
who rallies ‘middle NZ’ on racist issues. During the election campaign he
appeared with 3 fingers raised in the image of Bob the Builder who could “fix”
the three issues of immigration, crime and Treaty settlements. Unlike Fortuyn
he’s heavily hetero.
(7) Hager’s book was written to expose the failure of the
Labour government to prevent the release of GE-contaminated seeds. Hager’s
publisher was no 3 on the Greens party list. In the debate that followed it was
disclosed that the scare resulted from a ‘false positive’ probably caused by
contamination of the seeds tested by soil and talcum powder. The most damning
revelation was that hardcore Greens demanded a 100% confidence level that seeds
were not contaminated. This, said a scientist employed by Otago University but
contracted to Novatis and Heinz Wattie, would require every seed to be tested
and therefore destroyed.
(8) ‘Paintergate’ refers to a painting painted for Helen
Clark to sell for charity, but signed by her. Clark was baited constantly by
the opposition and media until she refused to talk about the episode, and
walked out of an Australian TV interview.
(9) Paul Adams, a prominent United Future candidate, called
in 1993 for HIV sufferers to by ‘locked up’, and still believes they should be
publicly identified.
(10) ‘Revolution’ is a small group of leftists based at
Canterbury University in Christchurch. The IBT (International Bolshevik
Tendency) is a split from the Spartacists. Its NZ section is the Permanent
Revolution Group based in Wellington, NZ. The Spartacists (International
Communist League) have one member in the Anti-Imperialist Coalition in Auckland
NZ.
(11) Three unions are still affiliated to the Labour Party:
the EPMU (Engineers, Printing and Manufacturing Union) which is the biggest and
most influential union in NZ; the SFWU (Service and Food Workers Union) a more
‘leftish’ union the organises many low-paid hospital and hospitality workers;
RMTU (Rail, Maritime and Transport Union) that organises rail workers and has
branched out into call centres. The overwhelming reason given for a union vote
for Labour was to prevent any return to the Employment Contracts Act, which was
passed by National in 1991 and designed to replace collective agreements with
individual contracts. The ECA saw union membership slump from around 50% of the
workforce to around 17%. Labour’s
Employment Relations Act restored some influence to unions and has seen the
membership of unions creep back up to around 22%. The unions wanted to see
Labour returned to give more teeth to the ERA – in particular, they wanted
legislation to help workers made redundant when companies close and to remedy
the casualisation of workers re-employed on contract.
(12) CWG characterises NZ as a semi-colony on the grounds
that NZ does not have a significant export of capital or income from
surplus-profits abroad. On the other hand NZ is the location for investment of
international capital and source of exports of super profits.
Polemic
How
Red are the Greens?
"We may be, as Chris Trotter said on the recent Assignment programme, the most RED Green Party in the world, but we value the individual as much as society. We are communitarian, internationalist and libertarian all at the same time!", said Rod Donald, Green Party MP, in his Co-Leader’s address to the Green Party Annual General Meeting on the 1st of June 2002. In fact, Donald’s words said more about a certain political commentator's lack of left-wing credentials than they did about the inherent contradictions that are a feature of social democratic politics. Like Labour and the Alliance, the Greens are no revolutionaries – they do not want to overthrow capitalism and free workers from the bonds of wage slavery. Unlike Labour and the Alliance, though, the Greens make no claim to represent workers. In this article we look at the class roots of the Greens and show that for workers they are part of the problem not the solution.
Green policy
is anti-worker and pro-business, despite the fact that it substitutes the small
business for the large company or corporation. The Green Charter on social
responsibility calls for "just distribution of social and natural
resources", but calling an economy green, non-big business or communal
doesn't hide the fact that resources are going to be utilised according to
market demand, not human need. Competition always lurks beneath the
co-operative façade the Greens like to give themselves. The Green social vision
of eco-Nirvana is the ideology of the petty bourgeois that rejects the reality
of its historic class position between capitalists and workers and tries to
create policy of classless social harmony.
The Greens’
"Thinking Beyond Tomorrow" economic policy is saturated with trendy
phrases like ‘eco nation’, but all it offers is a ‘middle class’ ideology
generated in a vacuum away from the forces that touch the daily lives of the
vast majority of workers who are urbanised and under the clutches of bosses no
different from the petit-bourgeois small business persons of the sort of
economy the Greens favour. Talk of "employer-employee partnerships",
just about sums up the Greens industrial relations policy in three words. Like
the Employment Contracts Act of old, the Greens’ industrial relations policy
makes no mention of unions or workers’ organisations. For the Greens we are all
members of a ‘community’, not a class, and ‘Partnership’ is the magic word for
work relations. A worrying sign,
considering that their demand for "doing more with less for longer"
sounds like the antidote to a progressive workers demand for a shorter working
week.
As part of their policy, the
Greens want to encourage small businesses to show ‘social responsibility’ by
providing unpaid and voluntary work to the ‘community’. They don’t seem to
think about the workers who would remain tied to their employers outside of
normal working time so that the boss could earn good social PR and a healthy
eco-tax rebate at the same time. The Universal Basic Income, which was adopted
by the Values Party before it evolved into the Greens, has not become official
Green policy simply because the low level of productivity expected from an
eco-economy is unable to sustain its viability. It is for this reason alone
that the Greens with their euphemistic terms push the importance of unpaid
work.
Green
capitalism is also ‘New Zealand First’
capitalism. The Greens call on the state to protect NZ business from
overseas business. Not that the Greens are opposed to exports – they want a
‘clean green’ niche ‘brand’ capitalism in NZ which can get its products into
the global marketplace. Clean and green
is best for people, as well as profits, because it means capitalism puts on its
human, GE-free face, showing an economy that is sustainable and people-oriented.
But does it really?
"Re-nationalisation" of public
assets sold to private companies fails to get a satisfactory mention from the
Greens. All they would renationalise are components of the rail network, and
they would do this principally for environmental freight /cost reasons. With the
demand for fast door to door transfer of goods, which is favourable to road
transport, it is difficult to see the cost benefits to consumers if handling
from road to rail to road is undertaken without a fully socialised,
renationalised economy.
The Greens
like to condemn the 1989 bargain $660million sell off of Air NZ, but they have
never called for the re-nationalisation of the airline, only for the keeping of
an equity stake majority share. When
Brierley investments 30% share holding in Air NZ came up for sale in 2001, the
response by the Greens was to push the government to buy out those shares to
stop them going overseas, instead of taking over the remaining shares and thus
nationalising the airline for the benefit of all New Zealanders. Later in 2001,
after years of private mismanagement brought the airline close to collapse, the
Labour government rescued the airline resulting in an equity stake of 80%
ownership. Pleasing to the Greens, but
not the same as 100% nationalisation. It's not good enough to take the economic
nationalist line that New Zealanders should own Air NZ if that relationship is
not spelled out clearly. Private NZ ownership is no different to overseas
ownership with profits going to the few and not those who produce the wealth.
In the electricity
market the Greens have shown a similar attitude toward privatisation. In 1999,
Green co-leader Jeanette Fitzsimons criticised the National government’s
decision to introduce regulations to prevent electricity companies speculating
on inflated values, the purchase and selling of lines to one another. She
justified her stand on the grounds that the consumer would suffer price
increases because lines companies would need to re-coup their expected losses
before regulations were enforced. That was scare-mongering at the least, and a
sell out to the deregulated market where price rises have become the norm
anyway. No criticism was made by the Greens of the sell off and fragmentation
of the taxpayer owned electricity network. The Greens do not support a return
to nationalised electricity - they see competition as being the best regulator
of pricing.
The Greens’
only input into any form of electricity market regulation is their demand that
the market be made to be more transparent by the introduction of variable
charges on lines and by the ending of the practice of including lines and
retail charges on the same bill. Though not a socialist demand,
re-nationalising of the power network would bring more transparency and
accountability than anything being demanded by the Greens. Pricing would be
directly a function of the ability to supply [production] and distribute and
not retail.
Renationalisation
of course goes against the Green philosophy of fragmented and localised
services, which it regards as essential to re-empowering communities.
Communities are valued over the wider society, which is perceived as being
centralised and impersonal. The "communitarian" and kowtowing to
individualism that Rod Donald speaks of is clear, and clearly opposed to the
natural justice that would see public assets built by workers run by workers.
Opposition to
‘free trade’ has the same petty bourgeois class roots as other Green policies.
The obsession with protecting the local market to the exclusion of others
weakens any pretence of being internationalist by denying efficiencies that
could be achieved by other producers in other countries. Rod Donald’s
condemnation of the Singapore/NZ Free Trade Agreement is based on the belief
that Indonesian workers should stay in their villages rather than work in ‘free
trade’ zones. Donald ignores that the history of class struggle is one of
workers forced out of rural poverty into jobs where they fight to get better
wages and conditions. Local protection also hits the NZ worker, who is forced
to spend beyond what is necessary to preserve the profits of local bosses.
The inference
is quite clear. Green internationalism only exists in paying lip service to
international agencies coming to the rescue of ‘exploited’ Third World workers.
It refuses to back the workers’ solidarity uniting workers of all countries
that expresses true internationalism. Socialist economics requires centralised
planning totally under workers control and ownership on all levels between
local and international. Green co-op economics goes nowhere near that basic
demand. Indeed it strives to maintain a state of exchange differential between
communities so that profit still remains a basis by which commodities are
converted to capital.
If the Green
objective is to present capitalism with a human face by turning the
"class" issue into an ecological one, by which humanity is seen as a
subordinate component of nature, similar to its subjugation by a ruling class,
then it raises an interesting question about the boundaries of human
intellectual potential and creativity. Whilst we are mere specks of dust in the
cosmos and understanding our place in it is important, it should not be used as
an argument to justify the need to defend capitalism in order to express our
relationship to nature. Labour, the measure of value, is after all part of
nature. But capitalism has gone well beyond its use-by date and is busy
destroying nature. The Greens’ apology for capitalism hides the reality that
capitalism has already prepared the conditions for socialism where ‘value’ is
created directly from nature and does not have to be turned into capital. The
task for us as workers, is to selflessly share that value out to all in all of
its manifestations. This is the basic socialist demand.
The issue of
GE more than any other has shown how closely the Greens’ environmentalism is
tied to their pro-capitalist economic agenda. In opposing GE, the Greens focus
almost exclusively on the threat it poses to the organics industry, without
ever noticing the fact that "organic" means expensive and out of
reach for ordinary workers and the poor. Like luxury yachts, organics is the
domain of the elite who can afford it, a high value commodity targeted at a
particular niche market.
The Greens may
have no confidence in commercial exploitation of GE, but they rely on the
capitalist state (with a Green party in government of course) to regulate GE.
There is no understanding that only under workers’ control (initially
scientists and technicians who are knowledge workers) does GE become
subordinated to the needs of society and not profits. It should be up to
workers not green capitalists to decide whether GE is safe.
When the
Values Party was launched in 1972, it became the worlds first Green Party, and
was composed of people who cut their political teeth during the anti-Vietnam
war demonstrations of the 60's. Unfortunately, anti-imperialism did not
manifest itself in Values Party policy - the Values Party never thought of
itself as a workers’ party and never opposed capitalism. Tony Kunowsky, who led
Values between 1975-1979, even went on to become a financial high flyer in the
New Zealand corporate scene.
Many prominent
members of today’s Green Party are wealthy, with many like Jeneatte Fitzsimmons
having holdings in large properties. Bankers and entrepreneurs seem more common
than trade unionists. Figures such as Keith Locke and Sue Bradford, who are a
part of the Green front-line, bring with them experiences and views that are
common to many on the NZ left, but come from backgrounds more associated with
union bureaucracy and semi-reformist rather than revolutionary politics.
Locke's long
association with the Socialist Action League (a forerunner of today’s Communist
League) is loudly omitted from his Green Party official profile, as if to make
himself more acceptable to his new comrades. His initiatives in Parliament
against repressive anti-terrorism legislation (see our article War, Terror and Democratic Rights) have
endeared him to many who perceive the Greens as being more representative of
the left than the corpse-like Alliance.
Locke’s
credibility rates high among many who know his long years of involvement in
anti-war and human rights issues. Unfortunately, Locke’s support for the United
Nations and phony international courts as an instrument for global peace and
justice too often puts him on the wrong side of the class divide. In the last
decade the UN has been the world’s deadliest killing machine, taking millions
of lives with its sanctions on Iraq and its bombing of small nations like
Yugoslavia. Locke knows full well that the UN is a mere tool of the US and
other imperialist powers, so his capitulation to Green acceptance of the UN as
a benevolent force destroys his credibility among true anti-imperialists.
The left
should be concerned that progressive workers who have become for good reasons
disillusioned with Labour and the Alliance might turn to the Greens, when the
Greens offer no positive alternative.
The
opportunistic call by the Socialist Workers Organisation for a vote for the
Greens during the recent snap elections is indicative of the marked
deterioration of supposedly left elements in NZ. How can a party that stands
for workers’ power support a party that neither has nor wants a working class
base? As unpalatable as it was, critical support for Labour during the elections only was necessary
because many workers still felt that Labour best represented their interests.
Such illusions will be smashed only by putting Labour into power and proving
that Labour is against their interests. Throwing a vote away to the Greens
merely fragmented any potential Labour support by reducing its ability to carry
out its full neo-liberal agenda unimpeded and thus expose itself.
The important question to be asked is, does the Green agenda support the re-empowerment of workers without the spectre of bosses hanging over them? The short and unequivocal answer is, no! The challenge for the Left is not to allow itself to be sucked in by Green rhetoric about a "co-operative". Such a future is actively opposed to "workers collective solidarity."
NGAWHA PROTEST
PRISON SITE
Actions continue in response to the
Department of Corrections plan to build a prison in the geothermal region of Ngawha, Northland. On August the 9th around 15
people got their message
across in New Plymouth, while 30 people picketed
the Head Office of the Department of Corrections in Wellington the day before.
200 people occupied the prison site in May, staking their claim of land
ownership by driving a pouwhenua (pole) into the ground. "We have tried to
do things the right way, through
the courts, but, when we hear the bulldozers coming, we can't just sit
around and do nothing. We have to take action". 37 people, including 20
elders, were arrested while trying to prevent the land works
taking place illegally at the site. When the protesters appeared in court on
July 5th 50 baton-wielding cops came with them, and two of their
supporter were beaten up. One of them said afterwards “to
those of you who vote for more police, I ask, what traumatic impressions must
the tamariki who witnessed this violent aggression by police come away with? We
were peaceably supporting our elders and those young freedom fighters who were
forcibly removed from our sacred ancestral lands last month, for taking a stand
against this desecration of our sacred and traditional tribal resources”.
Solidarity actions were held in New Plymouth, Wellington and Auckland in the
second week of August. From a Ngawha protester.
Visit their website at http://www.ngawha.org.nz/
Domestic War on Terror
War, Terror and democratic rights
What is the future of our civil liberties? Election
candidates will be asked probing questions on their views about the state of
liberties in New Zealand, either by the media or by members of the public.
People can be forgiven for not asking these questions, given that there has
been little coverage of the issues in the media. This, at a time when two of
the most insidious pieces of legislation to encroach on New Zealanders’ civil
rights are currently going through Parliament. These two laws are the Terrorism
Suppression Bill and Paul Swain’s anti-hacking legislation.
The anti
terrorism legislation takes a broad brush approach to the word “terrorist”
which could even include such groups as Greenpeace. Further, it promises severe penalties for ‘supporting’ terrorist
groups. Again, the sweep of the
legislation potentially means left groups in New Zealand with links to overseas
national liberation and revolutionary groups could be in trouble. As an aside, one wonders if any of the
thousands of dollars raised annually in NZ for state of Israel will lead to
charges of supporting terrorism! It is
highly unlikely since the term terrorism means what the US defines as terrorism.
At a Select
Committee hearing in Auckland, MP Graham Kelly told leftist groups appearing
that all would be well and harked back to his anti-Vietnam days of protesting,
saying he had no interest in targeting New Zealand’s left. In essence his message was “just trust us”.
The legislation
also provides for secret trials and suppression of information where it is
deemed in the interests of national security.
The Prime Minister will be one of the few people in this “inner circle”
of secrecy. Once again, the message
from the Government is “trust us, we know what we’re doing.”
The
anti-hacking legislation started life as (supposedly) a completely different
piece of legislation all together. For
a couple of years now there have been complaints (mainly from businesses) that
there are no (or insufficient) penalties to stop people hacking into other
people’s computers. Businesses lamented
the damage that could be done by such people by using viruses or Trojans. [A Trojan is a form of virus that once in your computer can give
outsiders assess to your computer and the ability to delete or modify your
files.]
The need for
such legislation is questionable, given that up-to-date virus protection and
judicious use of a firewall can prevent computers being compromised.
But the
legislation has now mutated into something much more dangerous. At the 11th hour, amendments were
added to the legislation to exempt
police and security intelligence services from the legislation. On application to a High Court Judge, they will
be able to hack into people’s computers to get information on them.
Internet
Service Providers (ISPs) will be drawn into this snooping campaign, because
they will have equipment that monitors e mail.
The FBI and CIA already use tools such as Echelon to check for key words which may indicate suspicious
activity. Next time you send an email
to a friend in the US, use such words as “bomb” “President Bush” and “kill” if
you want to get observed by the intelligence communities. This is not fantasy: it has actually
happened to at least one New Zealander who used a few words (in a completely
harmless way) and found out she was the target of the US government as a
possible terrorist threat.
The justification for this gross invasion of privacy is the supposed need to combat so-called “cyber crime.” When asked what and how widespread this “cyber crime” actually is the proponents of the legislation become defensive and will not give any details.
The fact is
that “cyber crime” is largely a myth.
What little takes place can and is detected through existing
methods. Further, anyone who wants to
get around the new legislation will be able to do so by using encrypted email
and anonymous surfing. What the
legislation does is give the authorities the right to have unparalleled assess
to the personal correspondence of anyone who owns a computer. It would be like giving the state the
ability to randomly open mail for a vast majority of New Zealanders. The email snooping part of legislation is
little more than a fishing expedition of the worst and most invasive kind. No wonder civil libertarians are
concerned. Some Internet Service
Providers such as Alan Marsden of “Planet Internet” have voiced concern as
well. And yet again, the Government’s
retort has been “trust us, we won’t use such legislation lightly.”
From previous
experience in matters both economic and social, New Zealand workers should take
such assurances for what they are: worthless.
If the
official reasons for the ‘anti-terrorist’ and ‘anti-hacking’ legislation don’t
stack up, we have to ask what’s really driving Labour’s attack on civil
liberties. It is clear that both pieces
of legislation follow hot on the heels of similar action by the United States
and British governments. We know that
the United States, in particular, urged other countries to follow its lead in
legislating against civil liberties after S 11. The pushing through of these
laws says more about our desire to suck up to the US and buy back into their
good books than it does about any desire to tackle crime and terrorism. These laws are part of an ongoing campaign
by this Government to appease its large capitalist masters. The eagerness with which New Zealand was
willing to commit troops to the Imperialist war in Afghanistan was sickening,
and now it seems we are becoming more and more a part of the US spying network.
We know that
US and New Zealand police and intelligence officials have been meeting to
discuss ‘anti-terrorism’ but we don’t know any details of the discussions: a
disturbing shroud of secrecy surrounds them.
Attempts by activists such as Nicky Hager to find out what was discussed
have met with a wall of silence and denial.
The open society is closed for business, it would seem.
Criminalising Workers
We need only
look at the US to see the effects of ‘anti-terrorist’ legislation. Longshoreman are being threatened with
losing their jobs under the Maritime
Security Act if they have been
convicted of felonies and Trade
Unionists could lose their legal protection under the new Patriot Act.
In the latest
move Bush is threatening to callout the National Guard if the Longshore workers
go on strike. An international
solidarity campaign is building (info on http://www.ilwu.org)
A recent
article circulated on the left-wing Internet discussion group OCPPR highlighted
this and other attacks on workers that are taking place, and included the
comment:
The comments
about the prison system are something New Zealand should take note of as
well. Despite calls from the right
(particularly ACT and National) for tougher and longer sentences, it is worth
noting that we are second only to the US in rates of imprisonment already. Interestingly, both the US and New Zealand
have some of the highest rates of violent crime in the OECD. So much for the belief that longer sentences
are a deterrent to such activity. US activists and unionists are to the fore in
fighting for the release of Black activists like Mumia, framed and jailed for
their politics. We have to be in the fore here too.
Our proposed
legislation is closely related to that of the US and the UK. Contrary to popular belief, the US and UK
laws are not a direct result of September 11 - they were well in train before
the events of that day. However what
did result from September 11 was an added impetus to push through such laws
with an even wider brief. It has also
meant many people who might otherwise oppose the laws, have fallen in behind
their masters. Middle of the road
social democrats in England, Europe and so-called liberal democrats in the US
suddenly showed their true colours in clambering to support such legislation. The only opposition to this legislation has
come from Marxists, some Greens and some civil libertarians.
The Observer newspaper in England has reported that the Government there is now driving a move to increase email snooping across the European Union. If the plans go ahead millions of emails, other Internet information and telephone records would be made available to police and intelligence services. It reports that the law changes would mean Companies that run internet sites will be required to retain passwords used by individuals, record which website addresses are visited, and keep details of webpages looked at and any credit card or bank details used for subscriptions. The information retained about emails will include who sent the message, where the email went, the contents of the email, and the time and date the email was sent.
'It
is typical that such a significant change in the control over private
information is being worked out in secret,' said Dr Ian Brown, a leading expert
on data privacy and director of the Foundation for Information Policy Research.
'It does seem to have been Britain that has put pressure on other member states to put in place this type of legislation. In 99 per cent of cases it will be used properly, but what about the other one per cent? There is not enough scrutiny of what is going on.' [The Observer, Kamal Ahmed, political editor, Sunday June 9, 2002]
There
are recent reports that one of the Ministers pushing these sorts of policies,
David Blunkett, is having a rethink, in
the light of sustained criticism of the open ended process being proposed. But even if these ideas do not become law,
substantial in-roads have already been made into individual freedoms in the
European Union.
Stuff
capitalists’ spies and snoops!
The
scope and nature of these laws shows that
they are more about an attempt to control workers and dissent than
anything to do with terrorism or so-called “cyber crime.” They are part of an increasing tendency
towards stripping away democratic rights won by workers over the decades. It is of little surprise that unionists and
leftists in the United States have become one of the first targets of the new
legislation.
The
on-going crisis ridden nature of capitalism has lead to the capitalists locking
up and spying on more people than ever.
Workers
must see these types of laws for what they are. Not only are they attacks and retrenchments of hard-won rights,
they represent an ongoing and increasingly vicious attack on workers. They have little or nothing to do with
terrorism and cyber crime and everything to do with repression! We must oppose
such laws vigorously and highlight what are they are really about, what they
really mean to workers and who is behind them at every opportunity. We must
rebuild our unions as fighting, democratic organisations capable of defending
not only our workplace gains but of our democratic rights!
Demand
that the CTU takes a stand against the Terrorism Suppression Bill and the
anti-hacking bill!
For
an Independent Inquiry into the killing of Steven Wallace!
For
trade union support of the Palestinian unions!
Strike
against the Anti-Terrorism Bill! Strike
against the Anti-Hacker Bill!
AMERICA AND THE ART OF WAR
Nine months after the attacks of 11
September, leading American political cartoonists say they are under intense
pressure to conform to a patriotic stereotype and not criticise the actions of
Mr Bush and his 'war on terror'. Those who refuse to bend to such pressure face
having their work rejected, being fired or even publicly humiliated by the
President's press secretary. “Political cartooning has been on a steady decline
generally, but that decline has become a sheer slope since Sept. 11", say Asa Pittman and Emma Ruby-Sachs in an
article for The Nation. “Political
cartoonists are dependent on the mainstream media for their livelihood, but the
papers that previously relished a provocative cartoon no longer want to see a
satirical critique of a government the people are desperate to rally around.”
Read more at http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=13555
Meanwhile, the video for George
Michael's new single ‘Shoot the Dog’ portrays Tony Blair as a poodle to US president George Bush, and features a
scene in which the singer, dressed
in a leopard-print thong, apparently tries
to seduce Cherie Blair. Michael said that ‘Shoot The Dog’ was motivated by
his concern about the lack of public consultation over Bush's War oF Terror.
"On an issue as enormous as the possible bombing of Iraq, how can you
represent us when you haven't asked us what we think? And let's be honest, we
haven't even begun to discuss it as a society," said Michael. ‘Shoot the
Dog’ lampoons the two leaders by depicting them dancing the tango, with Mr Blair in a flowing dress. "I
have strong opinions on Britain's current situation and I feel that in a time
when public debate is being suppressed, even something as trivial as a pop song
can be a good thing," George added. “Don't get me wrong, I am definitely not anti-American, how
could I be, I have been in love with a Texan for six years and we are still
going strong," he said. "My feelings about George Bush, however,
are a little different. And I know I'm not alone in fearing his politics”. Tony Blair has declined to comment on the video.
For more about the war on
art vist the anti-war artists website at
(http://www.artistsnetwork.org)
Class War in the Classroom
In
our last issue we covered the strikes by New Zealand teachers and students,
strikes which have been put off the agenda here for the moment by the teachers’
acceptance of arbitration. In Africa and Pakistan, teachers have also been
struggling…
Uganda: teachers end
sit-down strike
Primary
school teachers in several parts of Uganda went on strike at the end of July to
demand an improvement in their USh4,000 ($US2.2) salary increment. Teachers in
Bunyole County in Tororo district staged a sit-down strike on July 26 to
protest at the unfair salary increases announced by the Ministry of Education
and Sports. The teachers complain that it is unfair for the government to
increase head teacher’s salaries to over sh600,000 per month when class
teachers are paid less than USh150,000. The strike was later called off when
Tororo district officials, led by Resident District Commissioner James
Rwebembera, addressed the teachers.
Kenya: teachers demand nationwide strike
Teachers
in Mombasa are demanding that national chairman of the Kenya National Union of
Teachers (KNUT) John Katumanga call a countrywide strike. Katumanga’s response
was to deny that he had the power to do so. “I have got no powers to call a
strike. It is the national executive council which has got the mandate to call
a strike or determine the way forward over the issue,” he said. Kenyan teachers
complain that negotiations between KNUT and the government have taken too long,
and that they are fully prepared to strike as a means of pressuring the
government for the implementation of the remaining phases of their promised
salary increment. Source: World Socialist
Website http://www.wsws.org/
Pakistan: 200 Teachers Arrested
Over two hundreds teachers were arrested by Lahore police today on 29th July. They were arrested outside Government Islamia Girls College Cooper Road where a protest meeting was to be held against privatization. Hundreds of policemen were deployed since early morning to stop this rally. Women and male professors and teachers were dragged to the police van while they tried to enter the college premises. It is estimated that the police has picked up over 200 teachers this morning. In a unique show of strength, all the teachers from the colleges and schools are united in Joint Action Committee Teachers Punjab to launch a protest movement against the handing over the nationalized educational institutions to the former owners. The notification to denationalize these institutions sparked an immediate movement of the teachers across Punjab who are organizing protest meetings at various educational intuitions. Protest meetings have been attended by thousands of teachers across Punjab during the last one-week. On 26th July, Labor Party Pakistan organized a one day All Parties Conference at Lahore Press Club against this anti education move. Several political parties, Trade unions and social organizations attended the APC and vowed to fight the privatization of the educational institutions. This an emergency appeals to all the teachers unions and other union movement internationally to take up this issue and send strong protest against these brutal actions of the government. From Farooq Tariq General secretaryLabour Party Pakistan http://www.lpp.org)
As the dark clouds of Desert Storm Mk 2 loom over Iraq and
the entire Middle East, clouds are appearing on the horizons of many of the
Western governments directly or indirectly backing George Bush jnr’s war. From
Britain to Australia to Auckland, a storm of protest is building at the West’s
plans for yet another Third World War against a poor and desperate people. In
Britain dozens of MPs, nine trade unions representing millions of workers, and
two thousand religious leaders have all written to Tony ‘Tory’ Blair demanding
that war plans be abandoned, and a huge rally is being planned to coincide with
the beginning of an important Labour Party conference at the end of September.
In Sydney, 200 groups responded to a call circulated recently to set up an
anti-war campaign. In Auckland, where the left is very small and weak, about 70
people recently turned up to an anti-war planning meeting. The CWG has been protesting imperialist
aggression against Iraq for well over a decade now, taking part in marches and
pickets and running numerous articles in Class
Struggle. For us, the sight of an emerging international movement against a
new all-out war is a great encouragement. The emerging movement is also however
also a great challenge, because many of its members have very different ideas from
us about what the war drive means and how it can be stopped.
The arguments
of the foes of the new war on Iraq are often peppered with references to
‘international law’, to the UN, and to ‘Christian morality’. As Marxists, we
have no faith in any of these forces to stop a new war on Iraq. The United
Nations and international law are part of our problem, not part of its solution
– the UN, after all, gave its blessing to Desert Storm Mk 1, and continues to
enforce the trade sanctions that have killed well over a million Iraqis. And appeals to morality are unlikely to do
have much effect on imperialism, a system that worships only the accumulation
of capital.
The fact is
that the emergent anti-war movement bears all the hallmarks of a Popular Front. A Popular Front is an
alliance between the working class and a section of the capitalist class. In
Britain, many anti-war workers are joining forces with religious leaders,
pro-peace business leaders, and right-wing politicians of the Liberal and even
Conservative parties. In Britain and elsewhere, many business leaders and
politicians are opposed to war not out of concern for the Iraqi people but
because they support the European Union, which is the US’s imperialist rival in
the Middle East.
The pro-Europe
forces think that countries like Britain would benefit from other Europeans
states’ bids for trade and oil extraction deals with the Middle East, and that
an occupation of Iraq by the US will ruin these bids. Because it is militarily much weaker than the US, the EU likes to
work through the UN and ‘international law’, and this makes it seem to some,
including many in New Zealand, like a ‘nice’ imperialist power compared to the
‘nasty’ US. Let’s not forget, though, that this ‘nice’ imperialist power was an
enthusiastic player for the wrong side in Desert Storm Mk 1, and has since
dropped tens of thousands of bombs on Yugoslavia in two different wars!
Marxists
oppose Popular Fronts because they agree with Marx that ‘the emancipation of
the working class must be the task of the working class itself’. Big Bill
Haywood made the same point another way when he said that ‘the employer class
and the working class have nothing in common’. Historically, the Popular Front
has been better at starting wars than ending them: the First World War, which
was also the first great inter-imperialist war, was started when the leaders of
the workers’ parties in different European countries abandoned Marxist
principles and supported the war plans of their opposing ruling classes. Today,
workers are in a Popular Front to stop war, not start it, but they nevertheless
risk being used as pawns in another power game between rival imperialists. In
calling for a ‘UN solution’ and for ‘the rule of international law’ they play into
the hands of the Euro-imperialists.
If politicians
and the United Nations can’t stop the war on Iraq, who can? We can answer this
question by looking at two imperialist wars that were brought grinding to a
halt – the First World War, which was stopped on the Eastern Front by the
Russian Revolution of 1917, and the Vietnam War, which Vietnamese
anti-imperialists eventually ended in 1975. In both 1917 and 1975, it was
anti-war action by a particular group, the working class, which secured
victories for peace. We should not be surprised that the same social force was
responsible for stopping wars so separated in time and space, because the
working class is the universal opposition that capitalism and imperialism
create in very country on every continent. It is workers, after all, who suffer
the most from war. They are the ones dying in understaffed hospitals, when
million-dollar bombs fall on their brothers and sisters in ‘enemy’ cities. They
are the ones who are told to ‘tighten their belts’, as war is used as an excuse
to cut wages. They are the ones who travel home from the front in body bags.
The
international working class is not only the group most affected by war – it is
the group most able to stop war. The entire imperialist war machine would grind
to a halt in days, if workers in the arms and transport industries simply
folded their arms and refused to work. No imperialist army can capture or hold
ground if the uniformed workers in its ranks refuse to shoot the workers on the
other side. The movement that ended the Vietnam War proved the common interests
and power of the international working class, by getting millions out on the
street and out on strike around the world, and sparking endless mutinies in the
US-led armies in South Vietnam.
An
international movement against the war on Iraq can only succeed if it
acknowledges that it is supporting the direct resistance of the Iraqi people.
When US planes are bombing Iraqi schools and hospitals, how can we not support
the Iraqis trying to shoot them down? As the Interview with an Iraqi Communist published in this issue of Class Struggle shows, Saddam is a
creature of imperialism. The US has decided it wants to replace Saddam with a
friendlier dictator, but a defeat for Iraq will only strengthen the force that
creates Saddams all over the world. A defeat for the US, on the other hand,
might give the Iraqi people the strength and confidence to get rid of Saddam.
Iraqis are the first line of defence against imperialist war, but they must be
backed up by workers internationally, if they are to defeat the US and its
allies.
Because only a
small minority of the emerging movement against war on Iraq currently agrees
with our working class, internationalist answer to war, we on the revolutionary
left face some tough choices. We must decide, and quickly, how we are going to
deal with the majority of the movement which has illusions in the UN and in
‘good’ imperialists. One way of dealing with the situation would be to decide
not to work with the majority who have taken views that don’t fit the
revolutionary mould, and to focus on building a ‘pure’ movement of anti-war
activists with the correct, anti-imperialist ideas. At the other extreme,
revolutionaries could decide to put their independent politics aside, and work
within the broad movement for reformist aims like a ‘UN solution’.
The CWG
believes that both of these approaches are wrong. We call the first approach sectarianism, and we call the second
approach opportunism. Sectarianism is
wrong because a ‘pure’ politics is no use without large force to put it into
action, and opportunism is wrong because a large force is no use without the
right politics. We think that revolutionaries must try and avoid the extremes
of sectarianism and opportunism, by working with the emerging anti-war movement
while also promoting their independent politics wherever possible. If the
revolutionary left can get support for its politics and practice in the broad
Popular Front, then the pro-imperialist components of the front will expose
themselves for what they are, and be booted out by workers.
In Auckland,
the CWG has a number of members and supporters active in the Anti Imperialist
Coalition. The AIC is a United Front,
or a collection of groups and individuals with politics in the working class
alone, and it aims to intervene in the emerging broad movement against a new
war on Iraq using a ‘two-track’ strategy. The AIC argues that a successful
anti-war movement must be broad, must be democratic, and must have a strong
anti-imperialist current. In other words, the AIC is committed to building the
movement as a whole and to building an anti-imperialist current inside it.
During the
movement against the invasion of Afghanistan last year, the AIC worked inside
the broad Popular Front Anti-War Coalition, arguing successfully for an anti-UN
line and a ban on pro-war speakers at rallies. At the same time, the AIC
organised its own independent meetings and protests outside the AWC, in order to
further promote its politics. For instance, the AIC sometimes publicised
upcoming AWC-organised marches by holding street corner ‘speak in’ meetings
in working class areas which it also used to promote its own agenda and
politics.
We think that
the AIC’s approach to anti-war work offers a positive alternative to the
dead-ends of sectarianism, on the one hand, and opportunism, on the other.
Get involved with the AIC! Visit the coalition’s website and
read its anti-war bulletin at http://www.antiimperialist.org.nz/
The AIC meets every Wednesday at 7.30 pm at Trades Hall, 147
Great North Rd, Grey Lynn Auckland. Phone 025 280 0080 Email: [email protected]
Trade union leaders oppose war with Iraq The British trade unions have taken a step forward towards action to stop any British participation in a US organised attack on Iraq, with the publication of a letter signed by nine trade union leaders in Tuesday's Guardian newspaper. The nine union leaders, representing millions of workers, urged Blair to stay out of any US invasion of Iraq. They pointed out that the majority of people in Britain were opposed to any war against Iraq. The signed letter comes after the Fire Brigades Union invited a delegation of Iraqi trade unionists to its national conference in Bridlington last May. That conference not only welcomed the Iraqi delegation, but overwhelmingly passed a resolution calling for the Trade Union Congress to organise a delegation from all TUC trade unions to Iraq, to bring solidarity from the British to the Iraqi workers, and to see for itself what the real situation is inside the country which has been ravaged by UN death dealing sanctions for the last 11 years. The Trade Union Congress general council must act on the Fire Brigades Union conference decision, and the British trade unions must call a series of national demonstrations to mobilise the working class against the war in defence of the Iraqi people and also urge the world trade union movement, and the different international trade union federations that it sits on, to also take action to stop the war. Blair’s government must be told that if it joins in any attack on Iraq it will be met with political strikes that will lead to a general strike to bring the Blair government down as a puppet of American imperialism. There has always been massive support for the Iraqi people, and huge anger at their sufferings at the hands of the imperialist powers, amongst British workers. Up till now that anger has been given no way forward to express itself with a view to making a major change in the situation. Now the way is beginning to open up. Source: News Line Editorial: Thursday August 1, 2002For news on the anti-war movement see www.antiwar.com
Iraq History 1
Interview with an Iraqi Communist
Recently a
Class Struggle supporter spoke to an
Iraqi communist about the history of Saddam Hussein’s rise to power in Iraq.
The interview makes it clear that Saddam Hussein has been used by both the US
and the former USSR as a tool in the cold war. But Saddam has also built his
regime by playing off one against the other. While Class Struggle defends Iraq against imperialist war and sanctions
this is not to support Saddam’s regime in any way. Quite the reverse it is to
create the conditions for an uprising of Iraqi workers and the creation of a
Workers’ and Peasants’ government.
Tell us a little about Saddam’s background.
Saddam Hussein was
born to a very poor family in a village called Al
Awja, which is next to the town of Tikrit. As a young boy he stole eggs, and he
stole chickens, things like that, so that his family could eat. He was a
typical victim of poverty and backwardness.
He became a gun man, a thug for the Ba'ath Party. In 1959 he
participated in the failed assassination attempt on Iraqi leader General
Kassem. Then he went into exile in Cairo. Saddam went back to Iraq after the
Ba'ath took power.
What can you tell us about the CIA’s role in bringing Saddam and
the Baath to power?
The Ba'ath Party and the United
States were afraid that Iraq was going communist. The visits to the American embassy by Saddam Hussein and other
members of the Ba'ath Party had one purpose, and one purpose only: to
co-operate with the Americans towards the overthrow of General Kassem in Iraq.
Kassem was slightly pro-communist. Kassem was dependant on the Iraqi Communist
Party. A popular communist slogan of the time was “there is no leader but
Kareem”, an adaptation of an Islamic oath “there is no god but Allah”. The US wanted to get rid of that danger.
Allen Dulles, then CIA chief, described Iraq as the most dangerous part of the
earth in front of a congressional committee. The Ba'ath thought Kassem was their
enemy, so there was a mutuality there.
The U.S. involvement in the coup
against Kassem in Iraq in 1963 was substantial. CIA agents were in touch with
army officers who were involved in the coup. An electronic command center was
set up in Kuwait to guide the Baathist forces. They supplied the conspirators
with lists of people who had to be eliminated immediately in order to ensure
success. The relationship between the Americans and the Ba'ath Party at that
moment in time was very close, and that continued for some time after the coup.
There was an exchange of information between the two sides: it was one of the
first times that the United States was able to get certain models of Mig
fighters and certain tanks made in the Soviet Union. That was the bribe. That
was what the Ba'ath had to offer the United States in return for their help in
eliminating Kassem.
Not long after the coup the Soviet Union
turns to Saddam. He personally leads a delegation to Moscow. What game is the
Soviet Union playing?
What game? The game
is unnamed, but the Iraqi workers were the ones being played. Alliances of
convenience don't last very long. The Ba'ath Party was committed to certain
things which American foreign policy could not tolerate.
Why? The
things they needed, the Baathis couldn't get from the United States. They
needed help economically and they needed arms. And the United States was not in
the business of openly supplying arms to Arab countries to re-equip themselves
for another round of fighting against Israel. The marriage of convenience was
over. Saddam knew he could get the arms from Russia and he journeyed to
Russia--this was his first trip outside Iraq apart from his exile. And he got
what he wanted.
In 1972, Iraq
and the Soviet Union signed a treaty of friendship and co-operation. They
wanted to seal the co-operation taking place between them in a formal alliance.
The reason Saddam signed that treaty of friendship and co-operation was because
that obligated the local communist party, which was still very strong, to
co-operate with the Ba'ath Party, which was still not strong. Of course the
Russians loved an opportunity to have a hold on Iraq and they signed the treaty
and told the local communist party to join the Iraqi government. That alliance
internally did not last very long. But the external one was on and off for a
very long time. The Soviet Union at one point thought Iraq was a more important
ally than Egypt. Its army always acquitted itself in battle better than the
Egyptian army. Unlike Egypt, Iraq was a
wealthy country. It was the gateway to the Gulf. It represented a more
immediate threat to the West's lifeline than Egypt did.
Do we know whether or not Saddam has actually studied
Stalin's tactics?
There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that Saddam studied
Stalin. Stalin is his hero. Stalin came from a humble background. Stalin was
brought up by a mother. Stalin used thugs. Stalin used the security service.
Stalin hated his army. And so does Saddam Hussein. Saddam Hussein models
himself after Stalin more than any other man in history. He has a full library
of books about Stalin. He reads about him, and when he was a young man--even
before he attained any measure of power--he used to prowl around the offices of
the Ba'ath Party telling people 'wait until I take over this country. I will
make a Stalin state out of it yet.' People used to laugh him off. They
shouldn't have. It was a very serious proposition indeed.
Saddam Hussein
borrowed from Stalinism. He had his security people trained in Eastern Europe,
particularly East Germany. Then he brought them back to Iraq and he taught them
how to use the tribal linkage to eliminate people. They used Stalinist methods
to discover people who were opposed to the regime, after that came the tribal
methods, when Saddam said 'don't get rid of Abdullah, get rid of his whole
family. Don’t leave a single member of his family that might one day
assassinate us.' And that made it a perfect system for Iraq. It is practically
fool-proof.
In the early
seventies, Saddam started out controlling one small department called the
Peasants Department. At that time the Ba'ath regime, for a very brief period of
time, paid lip service to bringing democracy to Iraq. Came the time for them to
assign the job of head of the security system, no one from the inner circle
wanted the job. Everybody said 'this is a dirty job. I don't want it.' Saddam
Hussein raised his hand and said 'I want the job. I'll take over the security
system.'
He took over
the security system, called it the Department of General Relations and
proceeded to expand it. This was his first step towards attaining power. In no
time at all, Saddam was head of Security, he was head of the Peasants
Department, he was head of Relations with the Kurds, he was head of the committee
that controlled the oil. He was head of the committee that controlled relations
with the Arab countries. He was head of the Workers Syndicate. In everything
but name, he was head of government.
There was a
conflict between all these departments that Saddam controlled so tightly and
the armed forces. The armed forces is the one organization capable of
overthrowing the government. Saddam proceeded to emasculate the army and place
his professional soldier relations from Tikrit in key positions. For example,
his brother-in-law became Chief of Staff of the Army. And of course soon
enough, like all people who are dictators, who are jealous of the army, he
appointed himself General and eventually like Stalin he became Field Marshal. Saddam’s hatred for the army as a rival
culminates in his starting vicious wars against his neighbours, wars where the
high number of casualties in the army was not only accepted, but welcomed.
In July of 1979, after the Iranian
revolution, Saddam, still officially only vice-president, makes a visit to
Amman, capital of Jordan. And, at the same time, he meets with CIA agents
there. What is he doing? And what are the consequences of this trip?
Before starting the war with Iran, Saddam Hussein went on a
tour of several Arab countries. His first stop was Amman in Jordan. And there
he had two things he did not have in other places: an indirect line to the
Americans through King Hussein, who has always been a “friend” of America, and,
the possibility of meeting three senior CIA agents who were there, not to spy
on Jordan, but to use Jordan as a listening post for the rest of the Middle
East.
There is absolutely no doubt that Saddam discussed his plans
to invade Iran with King Hussein. There is considerable evidence that he
discussed his plans to invade Iran with the CIA agents that King Hussein
prevailed on him to meet with. After that he flew to Saudi Arabia and there is
a record of him telling King Fahd that he is going to invade Iran, and then
after that, I think he had a stop-over in Kuwait and he did the same thing.
What the trips did was to guarantee him American support in invading Iran.
Financial support from the oil producing countries after their invasion and a
channel to buy arms.
So you can
look at this picture as having begun with this tour that Saddam took
immediately before he invaded Iran. He was protecting his back with
conservative regimes. With pro-West regimes. He was not protecting his back
with the USSR. As a matter of fact the USSR cut off the flow of arms to Iraq once
it invaded Iran. And Saddam had to rely exclusively on Western armament for
three years until the USSR changed its mind and start selling to him again.
They saw that they were losing out in Iraq because the West was willing to give
him everything he wanted.
You have told us about the links of the Baath to the CIA, to the
USSR, yet you remain a communist, despite the collapse of the Soviet Union?
There will be future
generations, future battles. The defeat and the deformed nature of the Soviet
Union does not legitimize imperialism. It simply means that we have to do
better next time, be more vigilant. The world communist movement cannot survive
another betrayal of the scale of the 3rd International’s.
There is no
doubt that Stalinism played a huge role in bringing the Baath to power. The
Communist movement needs to understand this fact, and learn from it. There will
be future generations of fighters such as yourself, who will succeed. What you
told me earlier about resistance in Iraq is testament to the strength of the
Iraqi movement. After thirty years of repression, the Baathists still have to
contend with an Iraqi proletarian revolt. How do you defeat a movement like
ours?
Iraq History 2
The Fire Last Time:
Workers Revolution in Iraq, 1991
Here are some excerpts from an article
that details the workers’ uprising that swept much of Iraq at the beginning of
1991. These details will surprise many
readers, because a deliberate policy of disinformation has led many people to
identify the 1991 rebellion with Kurdish nationalism and Shiite fundamentalist
Islamism, not working class revolution.
The
background to the events of 1991 was the widespread violent resistance to the
Iran-Iraq war by worker in both countries. Demonstrations and mass desertions,
sabotage and strikes, widespread killings of cops and army officers, and even
attacks on forces loyal to the state by battalion-sized groups of armed
deserters all occurred in Iraq in the 1980s. Indeed, the resistance to the
Iran-Iraq War was perhaps the most extensive opposition to a war effort
anywhere in the world since the wave of
revolutions that ended World War I.
Before
the launching of the US-UN invasion in early 1991, the general situation in
Iraq was very explosive. From the moment that the Coalition warplanes started
dropping their tons of bombs on the South of Iraq at first, workers started
moving up to Baghdad, fleeing famine and desolation. They were immediately
joined by thousands of starving deserters. In the face of this situation, the
Iraqi State had no other solution but to move more reliable troops from the
North into the area to prevent these thousands of proletarians from fleeing to
Baghdad. But by moving these more loyal troops to the South, the Iraqi State
destabilized even more the situation in the North. Uprisings took place nearly
everywhere, as soon as the war stopped. Basra, in the South, and Mossoul,
Arbil, Kirkuk, and Sulaimania, in the North, were all in a state of
insurrection by March.
Thousands
of militants from various regions converged in the North - Turks from Kirkuk,
Iranians who had fled the war and repression at the time in Iran, and so on.
Because cities such as Halabja and Qal'at Dizah had been decimated by Saddam a
few years before, they took refuge around Sulaimania, where more than 70,000
militants organised themselves for revolution. Despite the media's insistence
on the entirely spontaneous nature of the uprising in Sulaimania, it is now
clear that it was the result of intense organization undertaken by vanguard minorities.
Their militant activity was intense in the six months before the uprising. A
group called Communist Perspective was formed and their publication, The Worker, was distributed amongst
militants. When riots broke out during the occupation of Kuwait, comrades from
Communist Perspective organized debates with other militant minorities.
The
militants decided to seize Sulaimania on the 8th of March at 1300 hours. Groups
were formed and given specific targets - barracks, police stations, secret
police and information headquarters, the "United Nations Hotel", and
main entrances to the city... The army could sense the growing hatred and
tension and was forecasting that something would blow. Nevertheless, the
offensive on Sulaimania took them by surprise - the city was attacked from all
sides simultaneously. In the course of the attack in the city, more and more
workers joined the fighting.
When
the barracks were taken over, arms were distributed to proletarians prepared to
fight. They were given orders to attack milk stores (milk had been rationed),
and to attack prisons and release prisoners. Like every significant proletarian
insurrection, the struggle was against the State itself, and aimed to attack
all its manifestations: military, police, public buildings, parties, and
security and property documents. On hearing that the Baathists had hidden in a
park outside the town, proletarians descended on it, shouting: "Long live
the Shura - abolish the State!" "We want soviets!"
Soon
the Shuras ("Shura" means "workers' council" in Persian and
Kurdish) movement was born. Workers wanted to use the Shuras to organise a new
society in place of the state and the capitalists they had seized power from.
There were 56 Shuras in Sulaimania in the beginning, including the Refuse
Collectors, Cement, Cloth, Cigarette, and Sugar factory workers' Shuras. Existing Shuras would call for people to set
up further ones in their own areas. However, many of them had widely
conflicting viewpoints and so people would tend to join the Shura most closely
representing their own ideas. The "exploited" organized themselves
into Shuras in most camps, villages, and towns in liberated areas of Kurdistan.
Slogans used by the Shuras included ‘The only alternative to the Baathist regime
is the Shuras’, ‘Freedom of speech,
opinion, and organization’, ‘For a 35 hour working week’, ‘Equal rights for men
and women’ ‘We demand Workers' Councils, not parliamentary democracy’, and ‘We
should be armed to safeguard the Shuras' rule’.
The
insurgent workers refused to let Kurdish nationalists enter the cities. The
latter then tried to encircle the cities, meeting this way many soldiers on
their way home from the front. The encircling of the cities by the nationalist
parties allowed them to make the world believe that they were "in
control" of these cities; but the only control that they actually assumed
was the control of the repression of proletarians returning home from the
front.
In
the South of Iraq, uprisings started as the allies' land offensive began. The
workers' situation became increasingly unbearable due to massive bombings of
Basra, Ammarah, Naseriyah, Najaf, and Karbala. Organised minorities centralized
their activities and struggles took place around all these cities.
Contrary
to everything that has been said about the religious nature of the movement,
religion played no part in the proletarians' struggle. Najaf and Karbala are
sacred cities for Shiites but the uprising had nothing to do with Islam,
despite what the bourgeois press try to make us believe. Workers used sacred
sites to hang Baathists. Mausoleums were riddled with bullets and angry workers
pissed in the mosques. Difficult, therefore, to talk of "religious
fanaticism!" The Allies had reached the gates of Najaf and Karbala at the
time of the uprisings there.
Neither
the government, the nationalists, nor the Allied forces managed to control the
situation in Iraq in March 1991. This is why they had to form an alliance. In
the South, it was clear that the US-led force halted its land offensive to
permit the Iraqi Army to carry out an attack on the insurgents. As the Iraqi
Army descended on the cities, chaos ensued and deserters fled in all
directions. Some asked for asylum and aid from the Allied troops but were told,
"we'll give you something to drink if you're thirsty, but only in exchange
for your weapons." They were then sent back, unarmed, to the city to be
massacred, in what was just one example of collaboration between Saddam and the
Allies against the uprising.
The
army and the nationalists retook Sulaimania in mid-April. Now, following the
reinvasion of towns by the Barbaric Baathist regime, social and political
perspectives are as before with famine, misery, poverty, unemployment
threatening the lives of workers more than ever. However, the dissatisfaction
that sprung up well before the uprising will continue to spur on a battle
against this world, carrying the memories of the uprising with it.
The
above excerpts come from a much longer article published in Communism #7, the
April 1992 issue of the central review in English of the Internationalist
Communist Group, under the title The Unknown Insurrection: Armed Uprising and Workers'
Councils in Iraq, 1991. The ICG, which
had supporters and contacts in Iraq during the March 1991 rebellion, has a
website
at http://www.geocities.com/Paris/6368/
Global crisis
The
World Economy: Heading for the Rocks
THE RECENT beheading of Thatcher’s
statue was more than symbolic. At the heart of the Thatcher/Reagan agenda was
“popular capitalism”, a “share-owning democracy”. Their aim was to replace the
welfare state, and even “society”, by offering the promise of individual
enrichment. Popular capitalism has now collapsed and in time millions of
pauperised investors will be seeking Thatcher’s real head (or those of her
successors).
A recurrent theme in the articles I
have written for this journal has been the remarkable ideological vulnerability
the capitalist class to this recession. Not only do they find it impossible to
blame workers and unions for their malaise, but their entrepreneurial champions
have embarrassingly turned out to be crooks. During the last ten years, local
heroes built huge empires on the shifting sands of debt, only to see them
collapse, burying with them the hopes and savings of their workers and
investors. Capitalism stands naked, but the working class has not yet pointed
its collective finger.
Though Thatcherism is dead, her ghost
still barks orders to the Labour Party. Gordon Brown continues his refrain that
it is possible to smooth the boom-bust cycle at a time when the markets have
fallen for three years – the longest sustained fall since 1941 – and the end is
not in sight. He pushes the privatisation of pensions when he is forced to
admit that the pension industry is
bust, with over £45 billion debts. He projects economic growth figures that are
simply fanciful.
The Labour Party may have defied
history by being elected twice in a row, but it will not escape the other more
important historical lesson, that Labour is incapable of surviving a serious
recession – and that is what lies ahead, not behind. In many ways we have passed
through 1928; what faces us is a variation of 1929.
History repeats itself, but always in a modified form. In
1929 the car drove over the cliff. Now it is more like one wheel falling off,
then another, while all the time the big guy inside throws himself to the
opposite side of the car to rebalance it. So it is today with the state seeking
to support the economy with low interest rates and consumer debt.
It is worth repeating yet again that
this recession has unfolded in ways distinctly different from the other
post-war recessions. Then the state helped speed up recessions by tightening up
on credit. Now the opposite is the case.
The consumer has been targeted with a
wave of credit. The banks, having lost other investment opportunities and
attracted by the value locked into private housing, have engaged in an orgy of
lending to consumers. The middle class and the more skilled sections of the
working class have paid for the consumer boom by draining the equity of their
properties.
In addition, as the sharp rise in US
productivity figures shows, the balance of class forces has enabled the
capitalists to impose harsher working conditions with little resistance from
workers.
As a result of these factors, the
recession has unfolded more gradually than expected.
The key question has always been, and
remains, what happens if consumer debt
combines with corporate debt and with government debt to amplify the recession into a decade-long period of
grinding stagflation, that is, deflation combined with faltering production.
This scenario looks increasingly likely.
Firstly, the Enrons of this world teach
us that high levels of corporate debt and misstatement of profits are more
pervasive and fundamental that has been admitted. We are not talking here of
the odd bad apple, but of the systemic
revision of profits by corporations in the hothouse environment of the bubble
economy, a practice made possible by the foolish view of governments that
companies do best when they are unregulated.
It may be asked why we have not had a
financial crisis yet. After all, a three-year bear market should have
precipitated one already. Here we have to look at the final concrete element of
this recession that makes it unique and unparalleled. Alongside the willingness
of the state to ease credit, and the home ownership that underpinned consumer
credit, we have the farming out of debt.
Over the last decade, the banks and the
finance markets have become adept at bundling out debt, and therefore sharing
it out over the investment community. In a way, they have increasingly
socialised debt, but on the basis of private property.
Traditionally, a financial crisis was
sparked by a number of large bankruptcies. The sharing out of risk has
prevented this from happening up to
now. For example, the default of Enron has not hit one bank hard, but many
institutions less hard. This is on the positive side. On the negative side,
capitalism is now bleeding from a thousand small cuts. This bloodletting is
much more difficult to stem than, say, losing a hand where the arm can have a
tourniquet applied. It means that in the long run it will take longer, not
shorter, for the credit machine to repair itself.
In the past, a minority of financial
collapses has allowed more liquid capitalists to buy the assets at rock bottom
prices, thus enabling credit expansion to commence once profitability had been
restored. Now, with losses so widespread, there is developing a real liquidity
crisis covering entire industries, pensions, stock markets and insurance. Only the
large banks remain exempt for the time being.
Given the shallowness of the recession
so far, questions continue to be asked as to whether we have experienced a
correction or a real recession. In an earlier article, written late last year
(“The World Economy After 11 September”, What Next? No.21), I indicated that
if by June the markets and the world
economy had stabilised themselves, the recession of 2000 could be seen as a
correction, rather than as the first
episode of a slump. In fact June heralded a period of growing instability and a
reversal of growth trends in the USA and Europe. What we are experiencing
therefore is something qualitatively more significant than a mere correction.
Above all, consumer spending is
beginning to falter, particularly in the USA. Consumer credit is more or less
exhausted and consumers have woken up to the fact that not only is the roof
over their head important, but so too is the floor under their feet, in the
form of savings and pensions.
The spectre of consumer debt
intersecting with corporate debt is growing. Time has run out. Profits are
still sliding, making it more difficult for companies to rebuild their
investments, and as demand cools this will become impractical. Within the space
of two years governments have seen surpluses turn into deficits. Bush Laden’s
foolish tax policies will in the end do more damage to the United States than
the Arab militant ever could.
In many ways, what we have passed
through will set the tone for the future. What lies before us is not a
double-dip recession but a triple and
even a quadruple recession, a series of shallow recessions followed by only
partial recoveries – until workers start to fight back. In the meantime,
society’s productive capacity erodes.
All around, stagnation and growing
poverty. In the 1990s Japan appeared to be the exception. In fact it was the
forerunner, an anticipation of what will happen to a world economy built on
debt, illusory profits and inflated assets. Before Enron, observers said it
could not happen in the USA, as corporate governance and transparency was so
much better. Now these voices are
muted.
As has been said before, it is going to
take years to get over all the debt piled up. Debt is never an absolute
question, but is always relative to profits. Debt can only be eradicated by the
increase in the rate of profit, for it alone pays interest and repays debt.
Productivity growth, though overstated, may raise profitability to the point
where it can rise above debt. However, it is more likely that this will be
sufficient only to prevent the world economy falling into a huge 1929 hole,
instead of grinding forward over a number of recessionary rocks.
Bush spoke of an axis of evil. We know
of only one axis – capitalism. It has blighted three continents, and now it is
about to blight the only remaining economic bright spot on the planet, the
industrialised continents of Europe and North America. Bush has declared war on
an invisible external enemy. Our enemy is clearly visible, and it is at home –
our respective capitalist classes.
International
appeal
As the crisis in
Argentina intensifies, differences on the left over the correct strategy and
tactics for revolution are reaching a point where accusations of police spy and
provacateur are being made to justify the use of physical violence against the
revolutionary ideas of Workers’
Democracy a small Trotskyist group. We reprint the appeal by Workers’
Demoracy for international support to expose and put a stop to these methods
that are alien to the workers movement.
Urgent Communiqué to all the revolutionary and workers’
organizations of the world, especially to all the Trotskyist parties, and to
all left-wing currents in Argentina.
The Workers Party (Partido
Obrero) of Argentina calls for physical attacks on the
revolutionaries of
Democracia Obrera (Workers Democracy).
In the last
issue of its paper Prensa Obrera (Workers Press), and in various popular
assemblies, the Workers Party (PO) has begun to call on the PTS to wage joint
physical attacks on the militants of Workers Democracy. The PO applauds the fact that a group of
thugs and punteros (1) of the MPN, (2) paid by Sapag and company, have done in
Neuquen what thugs and punteros of Otaeché (3) did to the workers in Merlo.
Twenty days ago they attacked and beat with sticks a construction worker of
Workers Democracy who is a known and long respected militant leader in Neuquen.
They make a
call to take arms against those that are criticizing their positions, revealing
the same methods of Lorenzo Miguel (4) and the union bureaucrats who are used
to murder workers.
We quote here the Workers
Press release put out after this aggression which says that the PTS was
involved in this serious attack in Neuquen, carried out by thugs of the same
type as those of Otaeché at Merlo:
"The PTS and the MCO were involved against the provocation of
the group called "Workers Democracy", who were not convenors and were
only interested in destroying the (February 16-17 Piquetero’s) Assembly.(5) The
Assembly voted that those militants without representation should not abuse the
rights of those organizations that had worked to build the Assembly and come
with mandates.(6) Regrettably, those motives were not taken in account by the
PTS, which obstinately maintained that it was anti-democratic to oust them.
However, life is sometimes
taunting: in the mobilization we carried out in Neuquen against the murder of
the companions in the Pueyrredón Bridge,(7) activists of the MTD(8) and of the
PTS used their fists against these provocateurs and tossed them out of the
rally because they had criticized the delegates of the MTD and Godoy(9) of the
Union Ceramista in "Workers Democracy" newspaper.
After experiencing on its own skin (DO’s) provocations, the PTS should also recognize that the Piquetera Assembly was right, but could not do that for the simple reason that it is convening its own block, giving a dime to the fact that such a move could cause divisions in the working movement. .." (Workers Press N° 763, July 18, 2002).
We call on all people's and workers organizations to condemn this method of physical aggression and the call of the PO to destroy literally a current in the Argentinean workers movement. The different positions in the working-class movement should be settled by the movement of the masses, and not with the methods of Otaeché and of the MPN thugs of Neuquén. We announce publicly that from now on our current will not accept being accused as "provocateurs" by this group of degenerates, nor their calls to physically attack our militants, who have been at the front line of fire in the fights of the Argentinean working class, in Mosconi, in the battles of December 20 and in the Avellaneda Bridge. Comrades of Workers Democracy have been crippled by the shots of the gendarmes while confronting them in Mosconi, and others have been beaten up side by side with the workers that tried for some months to organize an (Popular) assembly in Merlo. Adherents and sympathizers of our organization have been imprisoned for more than one year for leading the first uprising of the unemployed movement in Argentina in 1995 in Neuquén, as is the case of Basilio Estrada, or persecuted because of it, as Guillermina Sandoval.
The PO calls to exert physical attacks on the militants of Workers Democracy for the "crime" of criticism. Take special notice: "(it’s a crime) to criticize", the same as with Videla and the genocidal dictatorship.
For the PO, (criticism) amounts to "provocation" and one must break the heads of those that criticize and think differently. They want to use physical force so nobody can listen to our criticizing their politics of raising the Constituent Assembly which means tailing the sector of corrupt politicians headed by Carrio in their attempt to save the rotten (Pacto de Olivos’) regime, nor hear our demand to boycott the fraudulent and framed elections called by the murderous government of Duhalde and its accomplices.
It worries them that we call for a great national electoral boycott with a general strike, road blocks, committees of self-defence, and a great Congress of employed and unemployed workers, and popular assemblies to organize the decisive struggle to remove the regime. Our current has condemned harshly D’Elía's(10) charges of "provocateur" and "paramilitary spy/thug" against all those with political differences as he did some times before with the Bloque Piquetero Nacional(11) day. The MP Altamira acts in the same way. They are akin.
They want to suppress, by using physical attacks against our worker militants, our position that the parties calling themselves left-wing should be subordinated to the organs of the fighting masses, and not contrariwise, those organs to the apparatuses of the parties.
It hurts them when we call the unemployed workers to raise the workers program of the 21 points of the piqueteros of the north of Salta, who demand that all decisions be made in democratic assemblies, that the leaders and delegates must rotate to stop them being bought by the state, and that we must oust and replace the treacherous leaders.
It hurts them that we fight for the self-determination of the workers that can only be realized by the most extensive workers democracy in the popular assemblies, in the movement of the unemployed and in all the workers organizations, and when we tell them that they must trust only in their own strength, because "the liberation of the workers will be work of the workers themselves". We are not going to permit any fifth column shooting the workers and people’s fighters from behind, for the "crime" of thinking differently, whether these fighters are in our current or any other, no matter the differences that divide us.
We expect the leaders of PO to withdraw immediately and publicly their call for a "pogrom" -like those carried on by the state officials and their thugs. We ask them to discuss political differences in front of the masses. We hold the leaders of the PO responsible as accomplices in the aggression of the hired MPN thugs of Neuquén.
We hold them responsible for the physical safety of our militants, and declare in front of the workers vanguard and all the left currents in Argentina, that the revolutionary fighters of our current, who were not silent against the military dictatorship nor the union bureaucrats, neither will be silenced by the MP Altamira, notwithstanding his post .
In the same way that we call for the creation of committees of self defense to defend us from the murderous police and gendarmes and from the bosses’ thugs that have already killed scores of workers in the streets, we make it clear that we will exercise the legitimate right to defend ourselves against similar physical aggression and lies, not only from the thugs of the bosses parties, but in this case, from Altamira and the main leaders of the PO, because the right to express ourselves democratically in the organizations of the masses –ourselves, and all the workers currents whatever their differences- is inalienable.
Already
on February 16 and 17, in the "Piquetera Assembly", the same Workers
Party threatened the physical integrity of the comrades of Workers Democracy
who were delegates of education workers, pottery workers, and piqueteros from
the north of Salta, and used a guard of thugs of the PO and stalinism to throw
them out of the assembly. Then, they greet the attack suffered by our companion
in Neuquen by congratulating the aggressors. Today, in the popular assemblies
and publicly (in several instances, including their press) the activists of PO
call on the PTS to join them in beating us as 'provocateurs'.
The Popular Assembly of the Cid Campeador(12) has already voted its repudiation of the aggression suffered by Workers Democracy in Neuquen and against these methods alien to the workers movement.
We want to make quite clear that our militants have precise instructions not to permit similar slanders and to defend themselves by any means they feel necessary and have at their disposition against anyone who attack them and call them "cops" or police spies as surely any militant of the MAS, of the MST, of the PTS, of the FOS, etc would do. Because to call a worker militant "policeman", is to leave the militant to the mercy of the bourgeois state. He or she may be killed because in any moment when he/she is isolated from the popular assembly or his/her own organization, either the police or thugs in the pay of the political bosses may attack, imprison, or kill that militant, as having been accused of being a "police" spy no one will defend him/her. We call for the denunciation of those that cry "police" against worker militants and revolutionaries that every day expose their lives against the bosses’ state in the service of the cause of liberation of the world and Argentine proletariat.
Again, we repeat, we hold the leaders of the PO responsible for the physical safety of all our militants. Already there remains absolutely clear that the only organization that is acting as provocateurs is the PO that works for the bourgeois state.
Juan Pico, Walter Montoya and Marcelo Miranda
For Democracia
Obrera (Workers Democracy) of Argentina. (http://www.geocities.com/democraciaobrera)
Footnotes:
(1) “puntero”. In a bourgeois or counterrevolutionary party, they are party officials in charge of conducting the “dirty work” (threats, embezzlements, gifts, beatings, etc.) in order to “convince” people in a given neighbourhood or shantytown, to vote or support their party candidates.
(2) Movimiento Popular Neuquino (Popular Movement of Neuquen) is a bourgeois populist conservative party, based on regional bourgeois interests and clientelist practices combined to mafia-like threats to rally some support from paupers. This party is currently running Neuquen province. It has been many times at the head of neuquino municipalities, and the provincial executive and legislative branches from some decades ago. Sapag is a strongman behind the scenes. He is a member of the Sapag family, “owners” of the MPN.
(3) Otaeché is the mayor of a district of the Great Buenos Aires area where the working-class town of Merlo is located. He is a right-wing peronist, and very fond of mafia-like operations to control his constituency.
(4) Lorenzo Miguel is a union bureaucrat, the decades-long head of the UOM, (Metallurgical Workers Union), known for his links to the murderous, paramilitary thugs of the AAA, who massacred union militants and left-wing activists in the 70’s.
(5) Here PO refers to the Piqueteros’ Assembly convened by the Bloque Piquetero on February 16-17, 2002.
(6) That is not true. The assembly voted to let them speak, as the letter delivered by Causa Socialista and others to DO after the events (and which has been publicly circulated) show. Besides, DO activists in the Assembly had been mandated by their fellow-workers, and among the ousted workers were many mandated deputies not belonging to DO but critics of the behind-the-scenes methods of the Bloque.
(7) Santillan and Costeki, who were murdered by the police on June 26 in Avellaneda train station, near Pueyrredon Bridge.
(8) MTD, Movimiento de Trabajadores Desocupados, a movement of unemployed workers.
(9) Godoy, from the PTS, is one of Ceramica Zanon’s workers and member of the union board.
(10) D’Elia is a pro-bourgeois piquetero leader next to the union bureaucrat De Genaro of the CTA
(11) National Piquetero Bloc of PO’s Polo Obrero, PTS, FOS, PRS, IU-MST, the Castroites of Martino, etc.
(12) Cid Campeador is a neighborhood in Buenos Aires City, near Parque Centenario.
1925-27
- A revolution betrayed?
One of the most common
slanders directed at Trotskyism by Stalinists and their fellow travellers
(which have included at various times social democrats, anarchists and
nationalists) is that Trotskyists have not played any signficant part in
revolutions, or worse, have been counter-revolutionaries. Leaving aside
Trotsky's leading role in the Bolshevik Revolution after July 1917, especially
as the Commissar for War and Commander of the Red Army, and his subsequent
prominent role in the Left Opposition, all of which are exhaustively documented
for those who want to know, the best place to begin investigating whether or
not this charge is true is China in the 1920’s
China was the first major
test of the ability of Comintern (The Communist International of parties set up after the Bolshevik
Revolution) to lead a revolution in
another backward country after the Russian revolution. Here we can clearly
compare the role played by the Stalinists and that played by the Oppositionists
and Trotskyists. We may even find that the historic record reverses the charges
and that it is the Stalinists who are charged with counter-revolution.
We draw heavily on
quotes and fraternally plagiarise passages from Revolutionary History 2, (4) Spring 1990. We have adopted the
English spellings of Chinese names used in that Journal. Leon Trotsky on China (Monad, 1976) is also an invaluable source
for the Opposition Documents of this period written by Trotsky and has an
important introduction by Peng Shuzi (Shu-tse), the outstanding original
Chinese Trotskyist. The Platform of the
Joint Opposition of 1927 has a section headed "The Defeat of the
Chinese Revolution and its Causes" which presents the view of all the
oppositionists, and not only that of Trotskyists.
The place to start
is the years 1925-27. Despite the Left Opposition's attempts to overturn it,
the Comintern under Stalin forced the armed workers and peasants into a
military alliance with the Guomintang under the leadership of General Chiang
Kai-shek. (1)[1] The
bourgeois nationalist Guomintang (KMT) organisation was even made a
'sympathising’ section of the Comintern. This policy was known as the 'bloc of
four classes'. That is the workers and peasants had to unite with the petty
bourgeois and the national bourgeoisie against the landords and the Japanese.
Practically this class collaborationist bloc of four classes meant that the
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) militia was put under the command of the
bourgeois leader of the KMT, General Chiang Kai-shek. (2)
When the CCP began
to pose a threat to the KMT Chiang Kai-shek turned on the party and massacred
thousands of communist militants in these years. (3) The Comintern looked
for more 'left’ bourgeois leaders and blocked with two left bourgeois
politicans, Wang Jingwei and his Wuhan government, and then Feng Yuxiang the
'Christian General'. This disarmed the CCP and in particular its militant
leadership. (4)
Then the Comintern
took a sudden lurch to the left and proclaimed a workers’ insurrection. The
resulting uprising is known as the "autumn harvest", and was a
disastrous defeat. The Guomintang’s massacre of the Canton Commune alone left
5700 dead in a few days. The Stalinists talked about these uprisings as a
"new revolutionary wave". In fact this was an adventurist policy that
sealed the defeat of the Second Chinese revolution. Thousands of peasants were
massacred in the countryside, and the workers movement in the cities was
smashed. (5)
So here we have a
zig-zag in tactics that led to the massacre of many peasants and workers. Who
was responsible? Counter-revolutionary Trotskyists? No!
"The Russian
opposition and Trotsky battled against the policy of the Communist
International and Stalin. They battled against the zig-zags, denounced the
policy of class collaboration which handed over the Chinese Communist Party and
the Chinese workers to the hangman Chiang Kai-shek, put forward the slogan of
'soviets' when Stalin was busy applying the brake to the peasant movement, and
condemned the adventurist, putschist line which followed. At each stage the
Russian Opposition denounced the mistakes and dangers in Stalin's policy. The
documents of the Opposition tried to warn the party of the dangers to which
this policy was exposing the Chinese Revolution, as well as the inevitable
repercussions on the USSR and the world revolution" (RH p.7). (6)
These criticisms
did not reach the rank and file of the CCP because there was as yet no Chinese
Left Opposition and the Opposition’s views on China were suppressed in the
USSR. Had these criticisms been known then the independent resistance put up by
Peng Shuzi and Cheng Duxiu who both became leading Oppositionists after 1929
would have been strengthened. So Stalin and his henchmen must bear total
responsibility for the counter-revolution. Had Stalin fought for an
independent, armed proletariat and poor peasantry, then even if these forces
had been defeated he could not be accused of responsiblity for that
defeat. But he did not and he can be so charged.
The Left Opposition arrived in China as the result of Chinese students being
exposed to the LO in Russia while attending universities and military colleges.
Before 1925 Chinese students were not warm supporters of Stalin, but neither
were they oppositionists. Most went to two universities, the University of the
People of the East under its Stalinist director Boris Choumiatsky, and Sun
Yat-sen University under Karl Radek and Adolf Joffe, two leading Trotskyists.
After Chiang
Kai-shek turned on the CCP and massacred its best militants, the CCP sent
between 600 and 800 students mainly to Sun Yat-sen University in Moscow. These
students had learned the hard way that they had to become proficient in the
military arts and not place their hopes in bourgeois generals. By 1927
many of the Chinese students were participating in LO activities in Russia.
Radek was sacked and a number of students were expelled to China. A
faction adopting the name "Our Word" was to become the first Chinese
opposition group.
Amember of ‘Our
Word’ called Wang Wenyuan recounted his comrades’ rapid education in the
realities of Stalinism:
"We knew very
little about the internal struggles that were going on in the Communist Party of
the Soviet Union. In Wuhan we had been told that Lenin had been succeeded by
Stalin, who was now the leader of the Communist movement both in Russia and the
world, whereas Trotsky was consumed by personal ambition, was a romantic, and
was a militarist man of the Chiang Kai-shek type" (RH, 8)
Despite their
desire to understand why the revolution in China had failed the students were
wary of expressing their support for the opposition:
"None of us dared or
wanted to express support for the Opposition, which had, after all, been
denounced as counter-revolutionary...We were very careful about what we said in
the course of these discussions...We behaved in this way only because words
like "party", "central committee" and "majority"
had such a sacred and authoritative ring about them that none of us dared or
was equipped to challenge them." (RH, 8)
Participating in
an opposition counter-demonstration on the occasion of the 10th anniversary of
the October Revolution, and seeing a film on the October Revolution allowed
these students for the first time to glimpse the real role of Trotsky in making
and defending the revolution.
Wang Wenyuan
describes how he spend the time between October and December 1927 studying the
important documents of the period, in particular those which related to three
important issues, the Anglo-Russian Trade Union Committee, Socialist
Construction in the Soviet Union, and the strategy and tactics employed in the
Chinese Revolution.
On the issue of
the Chinese Revolution he realised that the blame that Stalin placed on the
Chinese CCP leaders for the defeat of the revolution was an attempt to evade
responsibility for originating the strategy and tactics himself. It was Stalin
who had to be judged as to the correctness of entering the Guomindang and
subjecting the party to Chiang Kai-shek and the tactic of the 'bloc of
four classes'. But Wang had yet to read the Opposition documents or make direct
contact with Oppositionists.
When Wang met Luo
Han, a student who had contacts with the Oppositionists at Sun Yat-sen
University, he was introduced to other Oppositionists and and able to discuss
some of their documents with him. Meanwhile the Oppositionists were now being
driven out of the party, harassed by the police and sacked from their jobs.
Wang arrived at a conclusion about the Chinese Revolution:
"The depth of
defeat...was becoming more and more apparent, and we soon realised that it was
an illusion to think that after a few months' military training we could return
to China and turn back the wheel of history. We were upset by the arbitrary
and bureaucratic way in which the Stalinists conducted the inner-party
struggle, and the suffocating atmosphere which this created - the gulf between
what we thought and what we were allowed to say, between our sympathies and the
demand of discipline, grew wider and wider - all 600 of us had just left behind
a revolution, and we were restless and full of energy. For young rebels like
us, a life of peace and quiet was worse than death." (RH, 9)
A struggle
followed between Stalinists and Oppositionists for control of the Moscow Branch
of the CCP. The Stalinists won. Meanwhile Wang and Fan Jinpiao read more of the
documents of the Opposition. Wang found:
"The
arguments and warnings of the Opposition, especially those concerned with the
Chinese Revolution, were so obviously true and have so often been confirmed in
practice, that I could not help nodding vigorously in agreement as I pored
eagerly over them...I now realised that...the ill-conceived policies which had
led to the defeat of the Chinese Revolution...had been warned against in
advance and could have been avoided." (RH, 9)
He found himself
in agreement also on the other key questions. He copied the documents of the
Opposition into a series of small notebooks that were to become invaluable in
spreading the word.
"From then on
I became a "Bolshevik-Leninist" (as the Oppositionists were called at
that time)."
During 1928
growing numbers of Chinese students became Oppositionists and a Chinese
Opposition was formed in Moscow. About 150 out of the 400 students at Sun
Yat-sen University were members or sympathisers. Increasingly, Russian
Oppositionists were being arrested and imprisoned. Before long the Chinese
students were also under attack. In early 1929 the GPU arrested and removed
more than 200 'Trotskyists' from the University. Their leader Chao Yenching
hanged himself the next day. Sun Yat-sen University was closed as a
"Trotskyist lair". None of those arrested and imprisoned in Russia
ever saw China again.
The Chinese
Opposition could not be silenced so quickly and easily however. A group of
about 10 students who had returned and were expelled from the CCP in 1928
formed 'Our Word' in 1929. They formed opposition groups in Hong Kong, Shanghai
and Beijing. A second group of students which included Wang got back to China
via Korea in September 1929. They reentered the CCP as a secret "October'
faction. Wang became a close associate of Chou En-lai in Shanghai.
Liu Renjing
returned after having met Rosmer in Paris and Trotsky in Prinkipo. He rejected
the idea of joining the CCP and fighting for the Opposition policies in the
rank and file. He openly declared himself a Trotskyist and set about forming a
separate party, the Militant.
Thus in 1929 three
Oppositionist groups existed, two outside the CCP and one a secret faction
inside it. Around the same time some of the old leaders of the CCP began moving
towards the Opposition. Chen Duxiu, who had been removed from his post as General
Secretary of the Party as part of the Stalinist witchhunt after 1927, came out
against the Guomingtang leadership. He won over some older members such as Peng
Shuzi, Zheng Chaolin, Ho Tzuchen, Yin Kuan, Chaolin, Hotzuchen, Yin Kuan and Ma
Yufu and rapidly gained support in the rank and file. Chen and his supporters
studied the Opposition documents brought back by the students and now
understood the role they had played as Stalin's instruments in the years 1925-
27.
Chen Duxiu was a
major acquisition to the Opposition. He was born in 1879, the same year as
Trotsky, and was a member of a prominent Mandarin family. He became
politically active in 1904 and was influential in the leadership of the
nationalist movement that culminated in the first Chinese Revolution, the
movement of May 4 1919, for which he was imprisoned. He became a professor at
the University of Beijing and by June 1920 he had been won to Marxism. He
became General Secretary of the Party in 1921 and led it through the period
1925-27. Because he refused to take responsibility for his role in the defeat
of the revolution and allow Stalin to shift the blame away from himself, he was
removed as General Secretary.
Chen's conversion
to the Opposition created a crisis in the CCP. Stalin and the Stalinist
leadership of the CCP conspired to expel Chen's supporters and on 15 November
1929 Chen was himself expelled. He responded with An Open Letter to All the Comrades of the Party. Five days
later, 81 old Communists who had had or still had responsibilities in the party
made public a text entitled Our Political
Position. This declaration came out openly in favour of Trotsky: 'If we had
had the political leadership of Trotsky before 1927, we would perhaps have been
able to lead the Chinese Revolution on the road to victory." (RH,
12)
These older
Communists, who were mainly intellectuals from Shanghai who had joined the
party in May 1919, formed the Proletarian Faction. They included Peng
Shuzi, a former propaganda chief and editor of the party paper, and Kao Yuhan
and Wang Tuching who also held similar positions. The Proletarian Faction
spread to most of the other cities including Hong Kong and Macao and reached
several hundred in numbers.
Uniting the four
opposition groups was a difficult task given the difference in age and
experience and the fact that the younger Trotskyists were not at all forgiving
of the Proletarian Faction members' role in the defeat of the revolution. Yet
they had documents that explained the causes of this defeat and the 'young
guard ' and the 'old guard' could now look to the future. Here too they had
problems as Chen was convinced that the Third Chinese Revolution would only
complete the national democratic revolution, and would not be a socialist
revolution. In other words he thought that the national bourgeoisie could
complete the national revolution, while almost everybody else argued that they
were compradors in the pay of imperialism. He was characterised by Lui Renjing
as 'right-wing'. All the factions vied to get Trotsky's support.
Trotsky conducted
a extensive correspondence. He welcomed Chen's move towards the Opposition in
1929, writing that 'It goes without saying we can only rejoice in
this". When he got Chen's Open
Letter Trotsky wrote (22 August 1930):
"I think that
this letter is an excellent document. Perfectly clear, correct positions are
put forward in reply to every important question; particularly in relation to the "democratic
dictatorship", comrade Duxiu adopts an absolutely correct position. At the
same time you are writing to me that, if you cannot unite with Chen Duxiu, it
is because he still seems to favour the "democratic dictatorship". I
think that this is a decisive problem...There can be no compromise on this
question. But it is clear that comrade Chen has a correct position in his
letter...In the past he has made mistakes, but now he is aware of this. To
understand one's past mistakes is profitable for revolutionaries and for
cadres." (RH, 14) (7)
It was Trotsky's
endorsement that won over the youth to Chen. On 8 January 1931 Trotsky wrote a
long and urgent plea calling upon the various fractions to form a 'negotiating
committee' in preparation for unity.
Trotsky's sense of
urgency was tragically shown to be correct by the 'Jiangsu Affair'. A number of
other influential cadre in the party were moving away from Stalinism. They were
comrades associated with Li Lisan who was expelled in January 1931, including
He Mengxiong, head of the party in Jiangsu, and his associates Liu Weihan, a
trade unionist, and Li Juiji, a leader of the Communist Youth section of the
CCP. Luo Zhanglong, a leader of the General Union of All-Chinese Labour, was
also expelled. These new oppositionists were called 'conciliators',
'rightists', 'opportunists' and 'liquidationists' because they believed that
the party had to re-establish its base in the trade unions in the cities
instead of relying upon the Red Army and its bloc with the KMT. In this they were clearly moving in the
direction of the Left Opposition (RH, 14).
He Mengxiong won
over the provincial committee in Jiangsu. But He and 24 of his comrades were
arrested by the British police in Shanghai and handed over to the party
authorities. The "Jiangsu 25" refused to capitulate and were all
executed at Lungwha, near Shanghai on 7 February 1931. This tragedy was to mark
the end of the period of relative tolerance towards oppositionists and the
beginning of the ruthless Stalinist measures to crush the Left Opposition in
China at all costs.
On May 1 1931 the
four groups of oppositionists, Our Word, October, Militant and Proletarian
Faction, met for three days in Shanghai and united as the "Left Opposition
of the Chinese Communist Party”. It took as the name for its journal 'The
Spark'. The delegates represented 483 members all up. Chen's view that
the bourgeoisie was capable of resolving the democratic tasks was
overwhelmingly defeated and he accepted the majority view that "only the
Dictatorship of the Proletariat could solve the democratic tasks."
Unanimity was also achieved on the Constituent Assembly, the nature of the
Chinese Revolution, and the soviets. The leadership of the United Opposition
was drawn from all sides of the old divisions: Chen Duxiu, Peng Shuzi, Song
Fengchon, Chen Yimou, Wang Wenyuan, Zhao Qi, Luo Han and Zhen Chaolin (RH, 14).
Revolutionary Conclusions
In looking at this
vital period of history what conclusions can we draw? First, the true nature of
the causes of the defeat of the Chinese Revolution were understood at the time
by a number of exceptional comrades of differing ages, differing experience and
differing class origins. Some like Chen and Peng were intellectual Bolsheviks
who were in the leadership of the CCP during the Revolution. Peng was exemplary
in his fight to reverse the Comintern line after his return to China in 1924.
Chen buckled in 1923 but recovered to fight alongside Peng to get the CCP out
of the KMT from 1925 onwards. Others were students like Wang, who, burning to
understand what went wrong, arrived at
the truth by finding the documents in Russia. Others again, like the 'Jiangsu
25' who were mainly unionists and local party officials, arrived at the
truth by virtue of their immersion in the rank and file of the labour movement
and party apparatus. They were snuffed out before they could fuse with the
Oppositionists.
Second, all,
without exception, had to fight the secrecy and repression of the Stalinist
party apparatus to find this truth. When they found it, they became a threat to
the Stalinist leadership and many paid with their lives. The hundreds of
students arrested and imprisoned in Moscow; the expulsions and executions after
1929, and finally the persecution of the Party in league with the KMT led to
many arrests of the Opposition leaders in 1931 and drove the membership further
underground. Despite this systematic Stalinist and nationalist repression, the
Opposition survived. But that is another story. (8)
All in all,
following the tragic events of
1925-1927, the years between 1927 and 1931 saw a remarkable convergence,
with the best communists from all sides being drawn towards the Left Opposition
by a desire to fight inside and outside the party to create a new leadership
that would not repeat the mistakes of the Second Revolution in making the
Third. This was evident in the unanimity of the resolutions at the founding
conference of the United Opposition.
Returning to the
question raised at the beginning, as to whether Trotskyists have made or
betrayed revolutions, what can be said about China? In the Soviet Union the Trotskyists
warned of the causes of the defeat of the Second Chinese Revolution and
attacked the Stalinist ‘bloc of four classes’. In China, some of Trotskyism’s
future leaders independently fought for Bolshevik positions on the national
question. They subsequently recognised that had they overturned the Comintern’s
veto the revolution could have succeeded. They went on to form the Left
Opposition and fought for the re-arming of the party, and for the uniting the
poor peasantry with the urban working classes. If they failed to win the Third
Revolution it was because the Stalinists and the Guomintang conspired to
eliminate them as a force for revolution.
Without the
Trotskyists in the leadership the Stalinists succeeded in bringing about an
incomplete socialist revolution only in 1949. That revolution led to the
formation of a degenerate workers' state in which workers never held power. The
consequence of that is that today, the Stalinist bureaucracy that came to power
in 1949 has converted itself into a new bourgeoisie and has restored capitalism
in China. (9)
As Trotsky said many times, an incomplete
socialist revolution is prey to capitalist counter-revolution unless the
workers rise up and overthrow the Stalinist bureaucracy. Without a Trotskyist
leadership this was never going to happen. The responsibility for the
capitalist counter-revolution therefore goes back to the Stalinist betrayal of
1925-27.
Visit the Revolutionary History website at (http://www.revolutionary-history.co.uk)
NOTES
(1) In August 1922 Maring (Sneevliet) arrived in Shanghai with instruction from the Comintern. These were: CCP members were to join the Guomintang as individuals so as to inflluence the national democratic revolution from inside that organisation. Shuzi reports that all the CCP Central Committee opposed this liquidation of the party into the Guomintang. Maring threatened the CCP with Comintern ‘discipline’ and the CCP buckled with the facesaver that the question would be decided at the CCP’s Third Congress. Zinoviev raised the question at the Russian CP Politburo meeting in January 1923. “Except for Trotsky, all the others, such as Stalin, Zinoviev and Bukharin, approved having CCP members join the KMT (Guomintang). The Executive Committee of the Comintern passed a formal resolution along the same lines on January 12 1923. (LTOC, 38). There followed a joint resolution between the Comintern (Joffe) and the KMT (Sun Yat-sen) on January 26. The CCP Third Congress of June 1923 voted for the change of line after a sharp debate. Thus the Menshevik turn was complete.
(2) The ‘bloc of four classes’ was against the existing CCP program adopted at its second national Congress in July 1922 which laid down the method for the proletariat to form a united front of workers, poor peasants and petty bourgeois in support of the democratic revolution, maintaining its armed independence from these other classes. As Peng Shuzi writes, this approach was in line with Lenin’s “Draft Theses on the National and Colonial Questions” of July 1920, in particular the section “…the Communist International should support bourgeois-democratic national movements in colonial and backward countries only on condition that, in these countries, the elements of future proletarian parties, which will be communist only in name, are brought together and trained to understand their special tasks. i.e. those of the struggle against the bourgeois-democratic movements within their own nations. The Communist International must enter into temporary alliances with bourgeois democracy in the colonial and backward countries, but should not merge with it, and should under all circumstances uphold the independence of the proletarian movement even if it is in its most embryonic form… (LTOC, 36)
(3) Chiang Kai-shek’s coups were the bourgeoisies’ reaction to the Second Chinese revolution that started in 1925 with the ‘May 30 Incident’ when British police killed seven workers during a mass protest in Shanghai. This was rapidly followed by anti-imperialist uprisings and strikes which were met with more repression. The bourgeoisie reacted in fear to this powerful expression of working class struggle understanding that if it did not suppress it, it too would be overthrown. Because of the Comintern’s policy of collaboration many CCP militants were killed. By October of that year Peng and Chen moved on the CCP Central Committee that the “CCP quit the KMT and only cooperate with it outside the party”. This motion was vetoed by the Comintern representative who argued that the CCP should use the upcoming Second Congress of the KMT “to push the whole party into the hands of the left wing, and thus take over the leadership of the national revolutionary movement”. (LTOC, 52). This move failed, and two months later Chiang Kai-shek launched his bloody coup on March 20, 1926.
(4) Not only militarily but ideologically. Peng Shuzi writes how some of the CCP leadership quickly joined the KMT and exaggerated the revolutionary potential of the bourgeoisie. Leading this type of work was Mao Tse-tung. Mao published an article at the time in which he stated that the bourgeois-democratic revolution was the task of the “people as a whole. Bourgeoisie, workers, peasants, students and teachers…but because of historical necessity… the work of the bourgeoisie…in the national revolution is both more urgent and more important than the work that the rest of the people should take upon themselves.” (LTOC, 41). General Secretary Chen Duxiu and other leaders also backtracked and began to sing the Guomintang’s praises. However, the Bolshevik core of the leadership did not surrender and an internal party struggle continued. Peng Shuzi writes that when he returned to China in 1924 he challenged the Menshevik turn. He was made editor of the party theoretical journal and wrote articles arguing that China’s revolution must follow the same path as the October revolution. He wrote that: “…the bourgeoisie due to its close ties with the warlords and imperialists, could never lead the national revolution …Moreover, because of its fear of the proletariat, the bourgeoisie would inevitably become reactionary…only the working class can become the leader of the national revolution.” (LTOC,47).
(5) Peng Shuzi warned of the reactionary
Chiang Kai-shek’s
counter-revolution through 1925,
1926 and 1927. Under the Comintern’s ‘collaboration’ policy the CCP militants
were sitting ducks. By 1927 the revolutionary workers and peasants had formed semi-autonomous organsisations
while still tied to the KMT.Chiang turned on the workers and peasants who had
been his battle fodder in the Northern Expedition; he closed the unions and
peasant associations and assassinated the leaders. He prepared his second coup,
a massive massacre of thousands of the best young revolutionary fighters in
Shanghai in April 12 1927 with the blessing of the Comintern. “This, then, was
Stalin’s final reward for his policy of KMT-CCP collaboration, his
unconditional support of the Chiang-led Northern Expedition, his concealment
and defense of all of Chiang’s counter-revolutionary activity, and his hopes
for Chiang’s success in destroying imperialism and the warlords and completing
the struggle for national independence.” (LTOC, 63).
(6) The Editor’s Preface to Leon Trotsky on China [and the documents reproduced in that book]
makes it clear that Deutscher is wrong when he states that the Trotskyists’
claim that the “Opposition had from the beginning unremittingly resisted
Stalin’s and Bukharin’s ‘betrayal of the Chinese Revolution’ was a legend” since between April 1926 and
March 1927 neither Trotsky nor any other Opposition leader “ took up the
issue”(The Prophet Unarmed,p 321). On
the contrary, “in April 1926 he [Trotsky] demanded in the Soviet Politburo the
CCP’s immediate withdrawal from the Kuomintang and its independent struggle for
the leadership of the Chinese workers and peasants.”. Also on September 27
1926, Trotsky put a formal resolution [“The Chinese Communist Party and the
Kuomintang”] to the Politburo demanding a change in the CCP’s course in China
and calling for “its immediate withdrawal from the Kuomintang. These were followed by two other formal
resolutions BEFORE Chiang Kai-shek’s coup, March 31, 1927 [“To the Politburo of
the AUCP(B) Central Committee” , and April 3, 1927 [“Class Relations in the
Chinese Revolution”]. (LTOC, 23).
(7) In referring to the ‘democratic dictatorship’ Trotsky means the ‘democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry’ which was Lenin’s formulation for a bourgeois democratic stage of the Russian revolution led by the proletariat and the poor peasants. Lenin changed this conception to the ‘dictatorship of the proletariat’ in April 1917 in line with Trotsky’s theory of permanent revolution to signify that the democratic stage of the revolution in Russia would be completed only by means of a socilialist revolution. In China after 1925 it became clear that the national bourgeoisie was reactionary, and that the completion of the democratic tasks of land reform and national unity would require a socialist revolution i.e. permanent revolution. This also made the demand for a ‘democratic dictatorship’ of the workers and peasants reactionary since it did not pose the overthrow of the bourgeoise state forces now mobilised in the form of the Guanmintang, In September 1927 Trotsky wrote: “For us it is no longer a question of the democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry, but of the dictatorship of the proletariat supported by the inexhaustible masses of the urban and rural poor – a dictatorship that poses for itself the objective of solving the most urgent and vital problems of the country and its working masses and in the process inevitably passes over to the path of making socialist inroads on property relations” (LTOC, 266).
(8) We plan to continue this
series ‘On Trotskyists in China’ in future issues of Class Struggle
(9)
For our analysis of the restoration of capitalism in China see Class Struggle #40 August/September 2001