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Weekly Worker 313 Thursday November 18 1999
Undermining the struggle
Statement on British-Irish
As readers of and/or regular contributors to the Weekly Worker, we
have been following and taking part in the discussion on the national question.
We would like to take a further opportunity to persuade the comrades to drop
the demand for the right of the pro-British Irish to build their own state,
for the following reasons:
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Lenin only fought for the right of self-determination of oppressed
nations - in opposition to oppressor nations. Lenin did not defend the
right to secede of oppressor non-nations in opposition to oppressed
nations.
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Northern Ireland or the loyalist community is not a nation, but part of the
Irish nation. Supporting the right of self-determination of the Irish nation
as a whole is incompatible with supporting the right of secession of its
pro-UK population.
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Marx and Engels were against the 'self-determination' of the pro-slavery
southern states in the North American civil war. Communists did not defend
the right of self-determination for South Korea, South Vietnam, anti-communist
China, monarchist unionists, or West Germany in opposition to revolutionary
unification with the rest of their respective countries. Leninism does not
recognise self-determination rights for privileged communities interested
in maintaining imperialist settlements.
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The demand for self-determination for Ulster unionists does not have any
real support and it is wrong to try to impose it on Ireland. The best way
of winning unionist workers to our side is through a programme of revolutionary
socialist transformation.
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It is ridiculous to expect a republic to allow a part of its own nation to
be ruled by a foreign monarchy under a segregationist regime that oppressed,
harassed and ghettoised the oppressed people, those who favour a one-nation
republic.
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Lenin advocated self-determination as the best way to remove national obstacles
preventing working class unity. If the workers of the oppressor nation defended
the right of the oppressed nation to secede, it would build bridges with
the workers of the oppressed nation. The new CPGB position would mean asking
Irish republicans and anti-imperialist fighters to become the champions of
the loyalist right to have their own state.
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The goal of working class unity would be pushed even further into the distant
future if the anti-republican community exercised the right to separate from
a republic. A new repartition would create massive pogroms and ethnic cleansing.
Nobody would be happy because the republicans would not see the achievement
of national unity and sovereignty, and the unionists would lose territory.
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The new position on the Irish question has two further implications. The
CPGB always unconditionally (albeit critically) defended republican fighters
against British imperialists and unionists. With the new position there would
be a danger and a tendency to be concerned with the rights of the unionists
to defend themselves and to impose their 'legitimate' self-determination
rights. In a similar way, comrade Conrad is saying that the 2,000 Kelpers
from the Malvinas islands and other settlers implanted by Britain against
nations that they colonised should have the right to choose which should
be their state. This could lead to siding with British loyalists against
Irish republicans and Argentinean nationalists.
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Comrade Conrad is extending the right of self-determination to non-nations
and to non-oppressed nations. In doing so he is undermining the legitimate
democratic and national rights of the oppressed majority.
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The new position also undermines the struggle for revolutionary democracy
because it assumes that the Irish question can be resolved without a proletarian
revolution. The CPGB is not proposing to achieve Irish national
self-determination through a socialist revolution and a workers' republic.
They seek a pure bourgeois democratic solution without fundamentally challenging
capitalism in a futile attempt to convince unionists that they would be better
off in a bourgeois 'binational' federal Irish republic.
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We hope the CPGB will re-examine its position. Transforming the right of
self-determination into a universal panacea has led to unconditional support
for the pro-Nato KLA. After the KLA-Nato military victory Kosovo is an
imperialist undemocratic enclave in which ethnic minorities are being persecuted
or expelled. The imperialist triumph is leading to Nato expansionism, encouraging
Russia to imitate the west and bomb Chechnya and Dagestan with imperialist
complicity. This in turn will led to more worldwide attacks against workers
and oppressed peoples.
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The only solution to the national question in the British-Irish islands is
a socialist federation of workers' republics. Bourgeois federal republics
exist in Germany, France, the USA, Argentina, and Brazil and all of them
are exploitative capitalist regimes. In Ireland the workers of all communities
should unite against their bosses, the segregationists, and for an all-Irish
secular, democratic workers' republic.
Gerry Downing, Chris Edwards, John Stone, Dave
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