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Weekly Worker 595 Thursday October 6 2005
Politics of despair and reactionary anti-imperialism
Eddie Ford discusses the Bali bombing and the communist approach to
those fighting imperialism
Communists utterly condemn the Bali bombings which killed 27 people last
weekend.
We do so for two main reasons. First, and foremost, because such acts
by their very nature are barbaric and inhuman, bringing totally unnecessary
suffering, they can never further the cause of human emancipation - means
are not unconnected with ends. Secondly, the bombers who commit these
atrocities give ideological succour to the forces of reaction, inviting
state repression and a general crackdown on democratic rights - not to
mention opening up the possibility of further imperialist intervention
in Indonesia and elsewhere. Frankly, anyone who attempted to justify or
provide apologias for this heinous crime would fully deserve to be branded
with infamy - or worse - by the workers’ movement.
By all accounts, the perpetrators of this latest terrorist outrage were
Jemaah Islamiah (JI), the organisation responsible for the October 12
2002 bomb blasts in two Balinese night clubs, which killed over 200 people
and seriously wounded scores of others. Just like the attacks on the Egyptian
tourist town of Luxor, the Bali bombs were aimed not just at ‘decadent’
tourists, but also at the local workers employed in the tourist-based
section of the economy - with many thousands of jobs put at risk. Unsurprisingly,
if only for this reason alone, the terrorist actions in Indonesia have
inspired mass revulsion and feelings of incomprehension.
It is a little disturbing, then - though not in the least bit surprising
- that the latest issue of Socialist Worker does not feel that
the Bali bombing merits even a mention (October 8). Talk about a significant
silence. We have been here before, of course. After September 11 2001,
the Socialist Workers Party refused to condemn that terrorist atrocity,
and it continues to evade or fudge the whole issue of reactionary anti-imperialism
- though, to be fair, it is not alone in this practice. For many on the
left, the islamists are basically supportable simply by virtue of their
anti-imperialism - however backward-looking and retrogressive.
With regards to JI, there does not appear to be any credible evidence
that it is in any way the ‘south-east Asian wing’ of al Qa’eda - it seems
to be operationally and organisationally distinct. But equally there seems
little doubt that there is considerable ‘cross-fertilisation’ between
senior JI and al Qa’eda operatives - even if only at the ideological and
propaganda level. This hardly makes JI unique in south-east Asia, of course
- the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, which fights for a separate muslim
homeland or statelet in southern Philippines, draws from the same ideological
well as al Qa’eda. There are several other islamist groups in Indonesia,
Malaysia, Thailand, etc, that to one degree or another share similar aims
and objectives to the likes of the bin Laden and al-Zarqawi. So, clearly,
it is impossible to disconnect the question of how we view groups like
JI from the broader - and more contentious - issue of the Iraqi islamists.
Naturally, the Bali massacre raises the question of how communists in
general view terrorist operations carried out by groups that purport to
be conducting an ‘anti-imperialist’ struggle. And that brings us directly
to the pressing issue of how communists view, and relate to, the continued
imperialist occupation of Iraq and, in turn, to the actions and stated
programme of the resistance - in particular, those of the various islamist
groupings: al-Qa’eda, al-Zarqawi, Muqtada al-Sadr, etc.
Most readers of this paper will be aware that there is an ongoing debate
on the left about what attitude to adopt to what is often called the Iraqi
‘resistance’. As if there existed a political and military singularity.
Unconditional support? Unconditional but critical support? No support?
Some comrades begin with one or another of these answers, rather than
go to the bother of concretely analysing the various and often bitterly
opposed elements that in fact operate in Iraq.
This leads to all manner of errors, if not total incoherence. So, for
example, we have been loftily told that communists have a duty to publicly
campaign in support of the ‘Iraqi resistance’. And yet when al Qa’eda
follower Abu Musab al-Zarqawi calls for “all-out war on the rafidha
[a pejorative term for shias - EF], wherever they are in Iraq”, this is
brushed aside by the very same comrades as an example of ‘false’ anti-imperialism
(http://english.aljazeera.net). Others from the same ‘unconditional’ school
implied, or even denounced, the Zarqawists as agents or assets of the
CIA, George Bush, Zionism, etc - which, very conveniently, means that
there can be no question of offering them support, obviously.
However, when these very same ‘imperialist agents’ strike out against
military or ‘hard’ targets, they suddenly become part of the ‘resistance’.
To put this schizophrenic approach at its crudest, ‘genuine’ anti-imperialist
actions are those which lead to the sending home of United States or British
troops in body bags - irrespective of who is responsible or, more pertinently,
in the furtherance of whose programme.
Translated into practical terms, the support for or solidarity with the
‘resistance’ envisaged by such comrades must take highly unusual, or novel,
forms. We can only assume - if they want to be consistent - that if and
when it comes to raising a collection for the islamist fighters, the comrades
sternly stipulate beforehand that all or any arms purchased from the proceeds
must only be used against ‘hard’ military targets.
Following on from this perspective, it is proclaimed - with a certain
warped logic - that organisations like the CPGB are guilty of a gross
betrayal of socialism by their refusal to support, or embrace, those real
or purported forces that are doing the fighting ‘on the ground’. To make
amends, and become a principled organisation again, the CPGB has to proclaim
- ‘Victory to the Iraqi resistance!’
But of course the CPGB has no intention of adopting such a position,
or muting our opposition to the political islamists and other reactionary
anti-imperialists. If tomorrow JI pulled off a ‘spectacular’, resulting
in the deaths of hundreds of Australian troops - undoubtedly imperialist
though the latter are - that would not mean that they suddenly became
our comrades or allies. JI, like al-Qa’eda, Zarqawi, etc, is and will
always remain an elitist and thoroughgoing counterrevolutionary
organisation, which seeks to kill, enslave and subjugate the working class
and all those whom it deems to be enemies of its islamic ideal.
We do, however, recognise that an imperialist defeat would objectively
open up possibilities for the working class, and we would therefore welcome
it even if it came at the hands of reactionary anti-imperialists. But
that is not an outcome we seek. Communists do all in their power to support,
defend and advance all progressive and working class organisations and
movements that promote secularism, democracy and socialism.
In the case of Iraq, we certainly call for the immediate and unconditional
withdrawal of all US-UK forces. The occupation is feeding the fires of
communalist and sectarian fanaticism and social disintegration. Imperialism
cannot bring democracy and civilisation to Iraq - quite the opposite -
a fact that must only bring joy to the rotten hearts of people like Osama
bin Laden, al-Zarqawi, etc.
So what does Socialist Worker have to say about the rival Iraqi
forces? On the front page is an essentially non-contentious article entitled,
“Occupation fuels Iraq’s civil war - United Nations report exposes murderous
‘shadow war’” (October 8). Nowhere does this article by comrade Simon
Assaf take a concrete stand on the “civil war”, and tell us what it thinks
will happen to the Iraqi working class if the islamists (Iran-style) assume
state power. For our SWP comrades, there is only one enemy: imperialism.
There are no secondary or tertiary enemies. If so, then maybe the Bali
bombers were ‘unconscious’ or ‘deflected’ anti-imperialist revolutionaries
- like the 7/7 suicide bombers in London?
But for genuine communists this programmatic perspective is hopelessly
muddled, and in reality represents just another version of the politics
of despair - not the politics of the working class. Self-evidently, political
islam is a near textbook case of reactionary anti-imperialism, which leads
its followers to look back to an imaginary idyll of pre-capitalist contentment.
Any cooperation with such forces would be temporary and episodic. Reactionary
anti-imperialists may be fighting imperialism. But theirs is a combined
war. Against imperialism, against the working class. As enemies of the
working class, we want them defeated as well as imperialism.
Our position is hardly a new one. For example, in his ‘Preliminary draft
theses on national and colonial questions’ (June 5 1920), prepared for
the 2nd Congress of the Third International, Lenin was quite clear in
his opposition to reactionary anti-imperialism. Having emphasised that
“the duty of rendering the most active assistance [to those resisting
imperialism] rests primarily with the workers of the country the backward
nation is colonially or financially dependent on”, Lenin immediately went
on to stress “the need for a struggle against the clergy and other influential
reactionary and medieval elements in backward countries”. He specified
“the need to combat pan-islamism and similar trends, which strive to combine
the liberation movement against European and American imperialism with
an attempt to strengthen the positions of the khans, landowners, mullahs,
etc” (www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1920/jun/05.htm).
Thus, for Lenin, it “follows” from these “fundamental premises” that
the communists’ “entire policy on the national and the colonial questions
should rest primarily on a closer union of the proletarians and the working
masses of all nations and countries for a joint revolutionary struggle
to overthrow the landowners and the bourgeoisie”. It is “this union alone”,
Lenin concluded, that “will guarantee victory over capitalism, without
which the abolition of national oppression and inequality is impossible”.
In other words, if communists today want to defeat the imperialist occupation
of Iraq, we must look to “a closer union” between the international workers’
movement and those in Iraq who are committed to a struggle against medieval
reaction: ie, primarily the forces of democracy and socialism.
So, yes, the CPGB would prefer the victory of the islamists and
Ba’athists to that of imperialism - the occupation is, after all, overwhelmingly
responsible for the brutalisation of Iraq. We are for the defeat of the
US war drive. However, the islamists are also vicious enemies of the workers’
movement and of socialism in general. History has told us nothing else.
The victory of either the salafi jihadis or the Sadrist movement would
in all likelihood lead to the ‘Talibanisation’ of Iraq. Nor would a restored
Ba’athist tyranny - even if such a thing was possible - prove to be any
better for the working class.
For communists, the islamist enemy of our imperialist enemy is not our
friend. Only an independent working class path can bring real freedom
and democracy to the Iraqi masses.
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