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View Full Version : Opposition to imperialism does not mean support for Ahmadinejad



Benjamin Hill
3rd April 2010, 19:51
In Weekly Worker 810 (http://www.cpgb.org.uk/worker2/index.php?action=viewarticle&article_id=1003858) a lengthy interview was published with Mohammad Reza Shalgouni. I do not agree with all the aspects he's raising here, but do think the overall message is a positive contribution to the debate on the Iranian developments.


Opposition to imperialism does not mean support for Ahmadinejad

Mohammad Reza Shalgouni is a founder-member of the Organisation of Revolutionary Workers of Iran (Rahe Kargar) and has been elected as a member of its central committee on a number of occasions. He spent nine years as a political prisoner in Iran under the shah and today is an active supporter of Hands Off the People of Iran. Yassamine Mather interviewed him for the Weekly Worker

Could you explain the origins of your organisation and the space it occupies on the Iranian left?

Before answering your questions, I see it as my duty to thank your party, and especially the comrades involved with the Weekly Worker, for your coverage of issues concerning the movement of the Iranian people and working class. I hope your efforts can help eradicate the obvious misunderstandings of large sections of the western left.

Rahe Kargar started its activities in the early summer of 1979 and those who founded the organisation were mostly ex-activists of the guerrilla movement, who during their incarceration in the shah’s prisons had come to the conclusion that armed struggle had not only failed to weaken the dictatorship, but that it harmed the relationship between the left and the working class.

Rahe Kargar was one of the first organisations of the left that pointed out the reactionary nature of the Islamic Republic and more importantly deduced from this that the Iranian revolution was defeated once the clergy took power. The clergy was a force that would undoubtedly suppress the movement and independent workers’ organisations, as well as all aspects of modern culture (without which socialism would have no significance). It was with this analysis that, in the midst of widespread general optimism stemming from those who considered the ‘massive popular presence on the streets’ as a definite sign of the victory of the revolution, we drew attention to the threat of fascism and the need to confront its formation.

From our point of view, it was important to pay attention to the characteristics of the new dictatorship and to confront the forthcoming threat. Unlike a substantial section of the left, we considered the clergy and their influence and government as the main threat and, inspired by Marx’s analysis of the ruling classes in England and France in the 1850s, we said that, although the clergy in power is defending the interests of the bourgeoisie against workers and toilers, it has its own interests when it acts as a governing caste. And that this is a result of a Bonapartist equilibrium resulting from the simultaneous weakness of both the bourgeoisie and the working class, the two main classes in society, at a time when neither can take political power.

Rahe Kargar started its existence in opposition to the Islamic Republic and has continued to struggle against this regime. But we have always had clear and firm anti-imperialist positions and we categorically oppose any imperialist intervention in Iran or anywhere in the Middle East. We have always been against the dependence of opposition forces on foreign powers.

From the beginning we opposed the dominant traditional position of the Iranian left, concerning the ‘stage of the revolution’ or defence of the bourgeois democratic revolution, and we have always insisted that a durable democracy in the specific conditions of Iran is impossible without the working class coming to power. That requires independent mass organisation of the class in the political, economic and social arena and this cannot be achieved solely through party organisations. That is why non-party, mass organisations of the workers and toilers can also play an important role. In addition, party organisation might take the form of a number of socialist and workers’ parties, which can form a united workers’ front.

Two other issues that distinguish Rahe Kargar from other leftwing organisations in Iran are:

1. the attention we pay to the issue of nationalities in Iran (a multinational country); we defend the right of the country’s nationalities to self-determination, while emphasising the need for voluntary, democratic unity;

2. the destructive confrontation between tradition and modernity (a form of schizophrenia in our country) and putting an emphasis on the importance of keeping in touch with leftwing religious forces, which maintain a democratic and class understanding of religion and strive for a class alliance of workers and toilers.

In our opinion these are essential conditions for the class unity of the proletariat.

Can you give us an overview of the current situation, including the role of the reformists, the process by which sections of the movement became radicalised and the role of the working class?

In order to understand the dynamics of the current anti-dictatorship movement we must pay attention to a number of issues:
First, although this movement expressed itself in protests against rigged elections, its origins predate June 2009. In other words, in order to understand the situation we must remember that the gatherings in June in support of the reformists had nothing to do with people’s illusions about the elections or the reformists’ programme, but were mainly due to opposition to the institution of the vali faghih (Shia supreme religious leader). In fact these elections were similar to 1997, when people voted for Khatami mainly to confront that institution (the supreme leader wanted Ali Akbar Nategh-Nouri to be elected at that time) and it should be said that at least during the last 10-12 years, the majority of Iranians have either participated in or boycotted elections as means of expressing opposition to the ruling dictatorship.

Second, the Islamic Republic has major differences with other dictatorships in the third world. We are dealing with a regime that came out of a mass revolution and for a while it did have considerable influence amongst the masses. The Iran-Iraq war (one of the longest of the 20th century) and political pressure by the United States and its allies throughout most of the last three decades have added to the regime’s need to mobilise its mass base.

However, the Islamic regime is also a rare entity amongst world governments in that the clergy has imposed religion as the dominant force in the state apparatus, denying people’s sovereignty even on a theoretical level and in its constitution. In addition, the Islamic Republic is a plural or multi-centred dictatorship, which so far has not succeeded in destroying its own factions and has not become a dictatorship run by a single individual.

Given the above, elections play a different and a more important role in this system compared to most third world dictatorships. Here the principal organs of power are not electable and elections are limited to the lower echelons within the power structure, which are controlled by the structures nominated by the supreme leader. Elections are above all a means to hide the absolute dictatorship foreseen in the constitution and to mobilise the masses, convincing them of a defining role in state policies. Elections are also a means by which the state organises relations between its own factions (its inner circles) and as a result of this the regime has no alternative but to take its elections seriously. So, once candidates have been screened by the Council of Guardians, there is less vote-rigging, compared with other dictatorships. That is why open electoral fraud disturbs the balance of forces in the regime, not only exposing its absolute despotism, but creating difficulties for regulating relationships between its factions.

Third, the Islamic Republic is a religious dictatorship. In this regime civil repression complements political repression. The regime considers daily and constant control over people’s lives as its raison d’être and this repression creates widespread popular resistance. Throughout the last three decades we have seen a weary, direct and indirect mass resistance to the regime’s efforts to impose sharia law and this has played an important role in the erosion of the regime’s support base. In this confrontation, middle layers of society have played an active role, especially in the major cities. That is why some foreign observers (erroneously) refer to the current protests as the revolt of the middle classes.

Fourth, although at the time of the revolution the religious leadership benefited from considerable influence and this was reflected in the support for the governments stemming from the revolution, the imposition of velayat faghih (guardianship by the supreme leader) created many contradictions, which not only forced the government into constant confrontation with society’s daily life and therefore confrontation with large sections of the population, but also created problems within the clerical hierarchy and the religious establishment.

These factors led to a situation where the legitimacy of the Islamic Republic was seriously challenged (in both the political and religious spheres) especially after Khomeini’s death and this precipitated the loss of it support base. In fact the appearance of the reformists (who mainly came from the ‘left’ faction of the regime, or the ‘imam’s line’ group in the first decade of the existence of the Islamic regime) and their victory in the 1987 presidential elections, has no other significance but a sharpening of this crisis of legitimacy. Efforts over the last 12 years by the office of the supreme leader to control the influence of government reformists were mainly attempted through the strengthening of organs under the direct control of the leader and rendering meaningless elected bodies. All this broke down the equilibrium that had previously existed, and it is no coincidence that the crises of the political and religious legitimacy of the regime have coincided.

The office of Iran’s supreme leader is not only in total confrontation with the people, but at the same time most of the Shia ayatollahs who are accepted as sources of religious guidance are trying to distance themselves from him. The truth is that the traditional Shia religious governance is a form of republic (in the way Engels refers to the Protestant church as the ‘republican church’ and the Catholic church as the ‘Royalist church’), but now vali faghih is trying to change it into a royalist system, making the independence of centres of guidance impossible.

Fifth, the vali faghih system is keeping all the real levers of power directly under the control of the supreme leader. In fact under the current constitution his absolute authority is unprecedented even in comparison to absolute kings. As far as religious matters were concerned, even the kings had to accept religious authority, whilst in Iran all the power of both religious and state authorities is concentrated in the hands of one leader. Given the needs of the revolutionary period and later the requirements of war, the first supreme leader, Ruhollah Khomeini, tried to present himself as the embodiment of popular will, but during the last two decades, as the crisis surrounding the legitimacy of the regime increased, Ali Khamenei has been forced to use levers of power under his control to neutralise the general and inevitable inclinations of the people and work actively to destroy them.

As a result of this absolute ‘royalist’ power embedded in the constitution, the regime has been recognised as a naked dictatorship by ordinary Iranians. Nowadays all its armed forces are under the direct control of the supreme leader and the president cannot even send a policeman to someone’s door without his permission. The Revolutionary Guards are not only in charge of national security: they also control many of the country’s major economic activities. Today, Iran’s economy is not just divided between the private and the public sector: there is a third, very powerful sector controlled by foundations under the direct influence of the supreme leader - even the parliamentary accounts committee has no control over it. According to some estimates, the resources under the control of these ‘foundations’ account for a quarter of the country’s internal gross production. The broadcasting authority is a state monopoly under the direct control of the vali faghih. The supreme leader is in charge of one fifth of the country’s oil income.

The coincidence of the economic crisis with the anti-dictatorship movement is a sign of the explosive potential of the current situation in Iran. During Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s presidency, despite all the talk of ‘protecting the disinherited’, Iran’s economy has reached a more critical stage.

Unemployment is increasing at a frightening rate and, according to some estimates, amongst youth it has reached 70%. It should be noted that the 15-30 age group constitutes about 35% of the population. Before the elections, inflation was above 25%, according to figure released by Iran’s Central Bank (even after the manipulation of statistics), and despite the government’s denials it has gone up in recent months. In the first three months of Ahmadinejad’s presidency the cost of housing in most major Iranian cities rose by 1,500% and the cost of housing took up around 75% of the income of an average working class family.

Contrary to the illusions of some left groups outside Iran, Ahmadinejad’s so-called ‘pro-disinherited’ policies played an important role in worsening the structural crisis of Iran’s economy. The first term of the Ahmadinejad presidency coincided with an unprecedented rise in the price of oil and he spent a substantial part of the country’s oil income, as well as the country’s foreign exchange reserves, strengthening the social position of vali faghih. By injecting most of these resources into projects that had no economic value and only benefited the regime’s inner circles, the government created unprecedented inflation, the main burden of which fell on the shoulders of workers and toilers. It is enough to remember that, according to Ahmad Tavakoli (head of the research centre of the Islamic Majles, and one of the most hard-line Principlist-conservative factions of MPs), 46% of all the the ‘quick turnaround’ policies claimed by Ahmadinejad to confront unemployment never existed. In other words, all these claims were a cover for giving credit and low-interest loans (at times no-interest loans) to close associates of the vali faghih. Of course, had it been any different, it would have been surprising, because corruption is endemic in Iran’s Islamic Republic. In fact this regime has all the preconditions for relentless, institutional corruption. It is a rentier oil state and a brutal religious dictatorship, depriving non-believers of any rights.

Right now, according to figures released by the Central Bank, the country’s banking system is facing total bankruptcy, because the banks have provided 50,000 billion tomans (around $50 billion) in non-returnable credit, lost in handouts to the regime’s inner circles. Now, the banking system cannot even provide loans to small production units desperate for credit.

According to some evaluations, around 35% of the population live below the absolute poverty line. This means they face hunger and constant malnutrition. In addition to all this, as a result of the shortage of resources and considerable drop in oil income, the government has been forced to implement sudden measures to abolish subsides for all essential commodities, starting with the energy sector. The implementation of this policy will lead to a jump in the rate of inflation and increase poverty and destitution, making the lives of workers and toilers unbearable.

In view of all this, in my opinion the conditions are not suitable for reform. In general, reforms can only be achieved when the state is reasonably stable and the population is relatively calm and accepts the existing conditions. However, not only do people consider their situation unbearable, not only is there a lively protest movement, but the state is also at breaking point. In such conditions any retreat by the government will only encourage the people. That is why the reformists have little chance of gaining from the situation.

In reality, the electoral fraud, the removal of many reformists from power and the arrest of many of their leading figures was no more than a manifestation of the open bankruptcy of the reformist discourse in our country. It was not the reformists who rebelled against the vali faghih: it was the supreme leader who practically threw them out of the inner circles of the religious state.

In the midst of all this, the emergence of a self-instigated movement against electoral fraud propelled the reformists to the leadership of mass protests. That is the contradictory situation created by the rigged elections - reformists managed to lead the protest at the very time when the bankruptcy of the reform programme had become obvious. Clearly this situation cannot last long. We are now in the post-reformist era and the best proof of this is the growing gap between the slogans of the protest movement and the reformist discourse. The demonstrations that started with slogans like ‘Where is my vote?’ have now moved on to slogans such as ‘Death to the dictator’, ‘Death to Khamenei’, and even ‘Death to the principle of velayat faghih’.

The people’s protest movement started under reformist leadership for two obvious reasons:

1. the first protests were against election fraud and it was inevitable that candidates who lost should take pole position within them;

2. in periods of severe repression, protesters usually rely on some sort of cover to protect them - a cover that can reduce a little bit the cost of protest.

In any case, although the reformist programme was clearly bankrupt, the fact that reformists flocked to the ranks of the protest demonstrates the crisis within the regime. A phenomenon which is a necessary precondition for a revolutionary situation. Today, the presence of reformists on the side of the popular movement is a sign that the ruling order’s position is untenable. At a time when the regime cannot even tolerate reformists who abide by the velayat faghih constitution, we can see a sign of absolute dictatorship and despotism, reducing the regime’s chances of survival. Clearly this situation cannot last for a long time. However the reformists themselves have reached the end of the road - caught between the velayat faghih system and the anti-dictatorship movement of the masses, they are so hemmed in, they have lost the ability to take any initiative.

The brutal, repressive reaction of the regime in confronting the protests was one of the most important factors in the radicalisation of the protest movement over the last eight months. As I mentioned before, the protests against rigged elections (which was indirectly a protest against velayat faghih) disrupted the calculations of the regime. They had not expected mass popular interest in the elections and had even organised TV debates between candidates (a rare event in the Islamic Republic) to try and inject some enthusiasm and show the elections to be a real contest.

In the three weeks before the elections support for reformists candidates became so widespread that Ahmadinejad’s defeat was obvious to everyone. It was in this atmosphere that the vali faghih system, seeing a repetition of the 1997 elections, declared two days before the elections, via the Revolutionary Guards, that a ‘velvet revolution’ was being planned by western powers. On the day of the election itself the Revolutionary Guards staged a military manoeuvre in Tehran to stop this alleged attempt. The election headquarters of reformist presidential candidate Mir-Hossein Moussavi was ransacked by plain-clothed security forces.

When the authorities saw the angry reaction of the masses after the announcement of the unbelievable results, they attacked Tehran University on the night of the election, killing a number of people and injuring more than a hundred. And again on June 15, when three million people were marching peacefully against the rigged results, they opened fire on defenceless protesters, killing more people and arresting hundreds. After that came the torture and rape of young boys and girls in prisons, and the death of more than a hundred political prisoners in detention. Illusions in reformism rapidly evaporated and slogans now clearly proclaimed opposition to all the main organs of the current order.

Throughout the last eight months, the shameless Goebbels-like lies of the regime has aggravated the situation. For example, they shamelessly claimed that Neda Agha Soltan, the young girl killed by the security forces, had died through a plot by a BBC reporter, even though witnesses to the attack arrested her killer and confiscated his security ID. When Massoud Ali Agha, a physics professor and supporter of Moussavi, was killed, they claimed he was a nuclear scientist and so Mossad had targeted him. All this, plus the escalating repression, has played a crucial role in reducing the reformists to a forgotten phenomenon and radicalising the youth (the main force behind the anti-dictatorship movement).

Contrary to the opinion of those who consider the movement ‘middle class’, there can be no doubt that workers and toilers have played a very important role in the current protests. For example, how can one say that the June 15 demonstration was only middle class, when Tehran’s mayor admits three million people joined the protest (in a city with a maximum of 12 million inhabitants). Of course, the workers were not raising their own slogans in this demonstration, but the same is true of other sections, such as women and the youth, whose participation in the protests is not in doubt.

We should not forget that we are currently dealing with an anti-despotic movement which is facing brutal repression. In such movements, political protests take the form of sporadic demonstrations, fighting here, fleeing there, and under such conditions workers cannot get involved in independent political struggle at their workplace or in the districts where they live. This is a point made by Rosa Luxembourg in her summation of the Russian uprising of 1905. The experience of the February revolution in Iran against the shah confirms this. In that uprising there was no sign of independent workers’ protests until the massacre of September 1978. It was only after that event (the police opened fire on demonstrators, killing large numbers), when street actions became more difficult and dangerous, that protests moved from the street to workplaces and gradually we witnessed important workers’ strikes. And, of course, at that time, until very close to February 1979, most of the workers’ strikes only raised economic and trade union demands.

At present too, despite all the arrests and repression of labour activists, workers’ protests in support of their demands has manifestly increased. A review of workers’ protests over the last eight months and a comparison of these with the same period last year leaves no doubt that the workers’ movement is on the rise. The least one can say is that without a movement based on workers, toilers and the poor (who constitute the overwhelming majority of the population of the country) the current anti-dictatorship movement will get nowhere and in fact it is even difficult to envisage its continuation. Of course, the elimination of subsidies on essential goods (which is due to start in the first weeks of the new Iranian year, beginning on March 21) will no doubt lead to major workers’ protests and this can create suitable conditions for the development of class-consciousness.

We must also remember that under dictatorships people do not believe any of the government’s propaganda and in general do not consider the enemy of the government as their enemy (they are more likely to consider them as friends). In other words, that famous saying, ‘The enemy of my enemy is my friend’, gains legitimacy. In today’s Iran, where the regime’s entire propaganda is geared towards opposition to the United States, public opinion against the US is weaker than in most Islamic countries. A couple of months ago when Obama was discussing the nuclear issue with the regime, in one of the demonstrations people were shouting, “Obama, Obama, you are either with them or with us!”

However, this does not mean people are oblivious to the dangers of military action or economic sanctions. One can say with certainty that the majority of Iranians are opposed to economic sanctions and any military action against their country. In particular, the US military invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan and the general massacre and destruction it has created in our two neighbouring countries has had a profound effect on public opinion in Iran. There are even signs (unfortunately) that Iranians support the regime’s nuclear programme and would not even mind if their country possessed nuclear weapons. In fact the painful experience of the bombing of cities during the Iran-Iraq war and especially the indifference of western states towards the use of chemical weapons by Saddam’s regime during that war created a sense of nationalist impotence which the regime tries to use. It is no coincidence that at present the state raises the nuclear issue in order to divide the masses.

How optimistic are you regarding the future of this movement? What are the prospects of the working class putting its stamp on any regime that follows the defeat of the theocracy?

There are many reasons to be optimistic about the prospects for this movement. In fact, even if this movement dies down today and its continuation becomes impossible, what it has achieved so far will have historic consequences.

The events of the last eight to nine months have left the Islamic regime with no future. Even if it survives for a while, it will never recover from the fatal blows it has suffered at the hands of this mass uprising. The young generation, the main motor of these protests, did not witness the 1979 revolution or the bloody repression of the first decade of this regime and until recently it was preoccupied with minor changes and certainly not thinking about social revolution. This generation is now irreversibly against the very existence of the Islamic regime.

There is no doubt that during the last three decades Iran’s economy has fared worse than other countries in the region. For example, in 1977 (a year before the revolution), Iran’s gross national product per capita was 60% more than Turkey and five times more than Egypt’s. Now Iran’s GNP, despite its oil income, is only 14% ahead of Turkey, and just twice that of Egypt.

The civil repression imposed by the regime will have consequences that will be with us for a long time. It is enough to remember that Iranian girls have been deprived of participation in sport for three decades and have not taken part in any major international sporting competition. The damage resulting from this is a tragedy that is occasionally referred to even within the pages of the regime’s own educational journals. The reason is that, according to the clerics, girls’ sporting activity must not be seen from people in neighbouring buildings, for example, and this makes any form of sport in girls’ schools impossible. The absence of any rights for women has turned half of the society into second-class citizens, as far as law is concerned.

Around 15% of the country’s population - the Sunnis, who are mainly Kurds, Baluchis and Turkmens - face double deprivation because of their religious beliefs and this endangers the country’s territorial unity. It is a weapon in the hands of the US and its allies.

For all its claims of supporting the ‘disinherited’, Iran’s Islamic regime is thoroughly corrupt, it is a parasitic state, pursuing brutal, anti-worker policies. According to many estimates, the current line of poverty in Iran stands at 800,000 tomans ($800), while the official minimum wage (which is often ignored and workers are paid less) is 300,000 tomans ($300). More than 80% of workers have temporary jobs and those in workplaces of less than 10 employees (ie, the majority of Iranian workers) are officially exempt from any labour legislation. For them it is the law of the jungle. Even those activists who demand the establishment of independent workers’ organisations or workers who fight for payment of unpaid wages are arrested and tortured.

It is revealing to compare the government’s attitude towards capitalists and managers compared to its attitude to workers. Last year when the government announced a two percent rise in tax for bazaar merchants, it faced a strike by shop owners in the Tehran bazaar and the state retreated immediately.

All this shows that the current anti-dictatorship movement is the only hope for improving the plight of the working class and ordinary people in Iran. The continuation of this movement and expansion of its scope has created a suitable atmosphere for raising class-consciousness and the formation of independent workers’ organisations and no doubt will improve political conditions in favour of workers to such an extent that it will, in the words of the Persian proverb, learn in one night what usually takes a century. Of course, if the regime creates such an atmosphere of fear where workers’ participation in political and economic protests becomes more difficult and costly, there is a danger that the struggle will take a violent form, when the role of organisations associated with foreign powers would increase, initiatives from below by the working class would fade away and reactionary, anti-democratic forces would gain the upper hand.

Let us not forget that, unlike the shah’s regime, Iran’s Islamic Republic has many powerful enemies throughout the world who seek to find allies amongst the forces opposed to the regime. No doubt such a scenario will harm democratic and socialist forces within the movement and it will give the regime an excuse to link the people’s legitimate struggles with foreign powers. In my opinion the worst scenario in the current situation would arise if groups associated with foreign powers gained more influence within the opposition, because even if they do not manage to stifle the protests they will divert it from its democratic direction.

However, given the current awareness amongst social movements inside Iran, especially amongst the youth over the last 10-12 years, one can be hopeful that the anti-dictatorship movement will not be diverted from such a path. Of course, liberal discourse still dominates Iran’s political scene and the left has a steep hill to climb to overcome this problem. But if the protest continues and takes a revolutionary path, as the role of the working class increases, the conditions for the dominance of socialist thought will develop.

How do you see radical change in Iran linking in with political developments in the region as a whole?

The coming to power of the clergy in the February 1979 uprising in Iran undoubtedly played a significant role in the development of Islamic movements in the region. In my opinion, the overthrow of the Islamic Republic in Iran can play an important part in weakening the influence of Islamic movements.

The reality is that Iran’s Islamic experience is about 10 years older than other countries and so disillusionment with Islamism came much earlier than in other Muslim countries. The overthrow of the Iranian regime could increase that process in other countries, even though it might not necessarily lead to the coming to power of defenders of socialism in our country. Given the current situation in Iran and the region, such a perspective is possible.

It should be pointed out that, although liberal discourse is still powerful in Iran, the economic crisis engulfing world capitalism, the destructive effects of US military intervention, the bankruptcy of corrupt, pro-western regimes in the region and the fact that they are not tolerated - all this has created suitable conditions where, with the demise of Islamism, toilers in the region might turn towards more enlightened horizons. We are now witnessing the Islamic movements subsiding and if US military interventions stopped this decline would be faster. In none of these countries would liberalism be capable of responding to the stacked up problems of poverty, dictatorship and obscurantism, nor can it benefit from mass support amongst workers and toilers.

Right now in two key countries of the region, Egypt and Turkey, a powerful working class movement is rising and if in Iran the anti-dictatorship movement succeeds in strengthening the working class left (and in my opinion there is a strong possibility of that happening) it may be that a ‘strategic bloc’ would be created in these three key countries. A strong left in Iran, Egypt and Turkey would be in a good position to oppose not only the swagger about the ‘free market’ and neoliberalism, but also the obscurantist slogans of Islamism. In reality both currents are not as attractive as they used to be in the Middle East and if the left can learn from past mistakes and take up a democratic, radical, mass-orientated discourse, our region can move in a direction similar to Latin America.

The principal danger for the formation of such a perspective in our region is the destructive policies of the US. For example, Nato’s plans in Afghanistan and Pakistan might lead to the disintegration of both countries - a phenomenon that will be as destructive as an earthquake for the whole region, and especially Iran. Countries in the region have strong religious, tribal and cultural links and Iran has more than 2,500 kilometres of common borders with these Afghanistan and Pakistan. Tribal strife in Kirkuk could heat up dangerous nationalist strife in Iraq, strengthening such arguments in the region and producing disastrous consequences.

What are the role and tasks of the international solidarity movement with those fighting the Iranian regime?

Undoubtedly the solidarity of western organisations and parties with the Iranian people has an important subjective effect on political and social activists inside the country.

Of course, we must have a realistic understanding of this influence. The truth is that the Islamic regime has a monopoly when it come to the radio and television that is available to all and especially the lower classes. These media present everything in a distorted manner, with Goebbels-like lies, and constantly make use of the support of some western left groups who praise the regime’s anti-imperialism! This creates a certain hatred of the ‘international’ left amongst the population. Let there be no doubt: any support for the regime is met with nothing but animosity from the people it suppresses. Satellite radio and television, available to around 20% of the population, is mainly controlled by the US, UK or sections of the opposition directly or indirectly connected to foreign powers and most of them are anti-left and combine opposition to the regime with propaganda for the stance of the US and its allies.

Expressions of support for the working class movement in Iran from international progressive, leftwing organisations is mainly possible through the internet. However, although it is the most important means of communication for the majority of anti-dictatorship activists, inevitably it has a limited number of users - an optimistic estimate would be that 10% of the population has access to the internet.

Despite these limitations, though, support for the anti-despotic movement and, of course, for worker struggles plays an important role in strengthening the left and attracting the country’s youth towards socialist ideas. Let us not forget that there are already favourable conditions for the re-establishment of a strong worker-socialist movement and clear positions taken by socialist forces in the west help bring neoliberalism as well as Islamist ideas into disrepute. In my opinion the anti-war, anti-sanctions movement abroad undoubtedly has a positive influence on the Iranian people, because, as I said before, the overwhelming majority of Iranians do not want to see a repetition of the Iraqi or Afghan experience in their own country, and they have seen how it is ordinary people who suffer the burden of sanctions (Iran has already had three decades of sanctions).
But the important issue is that opposition to the imperialist policies of the US and its allies must not lead to support for the Iranian government. Unfortunately the position of certain ‘anti-imperialist’ forces in the west is as damaging as the stance of those who support military intervention and sanctions. It is vital to oppose war and sanctions, but it must never take the form of supporting the dictatorial, bloodthirsty and obscurantist Islamic Republic. We must not forget that any support for the Islamic regime discredits leftwing and socialist ideas and in practice strengthens the hand of the US and its allies. Whether they like it or not, leftwing apologists for the regime actually help strengthen the imperialist, pro-capitalist camp in our country.

Our readers have followed Rahe Kargar’s stance on many issues for over two decades. Could you explain the reasons for last year’s split in your organisation?

The reason for the split was that for quite a while a group of people had tended towards a kind of reformist anarchism and latterly they wanted to impose their anti-organisation model on the rest of us.

Of course, they were only a minority, but others who did not necessarily agree with them politically ended up supporting them organisationally, creating conditions which would have meant nothing but dissolution. This made coexistence in the same organisation impossible. Amongst the comrades who had more formulated ideas were those who followed an interpretation of John Holloway’s ‘change the world without taking power’. But they propagate a caricature version of this, portraying any organisation as stifling and they are opposed not only to the notions of a working class party and state, but even to trade unions and other workers’ organisations.

The conflict started around an article written by one of the comrades regarding the establishment of independent trade unions in Iran. This comrade warned workers that such an organisation would lead to hierarchical structures and claimed that unions, which limit their politics to economic issues, would benefit the liberals and pave the way for conciliation with capitalists. Those responsible for the website and the organisation’s paper, followed our internal rules and put this article in the ‘point of view’ section of the website and some comrades considered this discriminatory. The reality is that the Iranian working class is actually fighting to establish independent organisations and it is not our policy to leave the working class defenceless.

Another difference arose around Palestine, starting with Israel’s attack on Gaza. They thought the condemnation of Israel’s crimes must be expressed in such a way that it would not strengthen Hamas and, although this was not clearly expressed, they wanted us to condemn both sides (Israel and Hamas) equally. Our position was that Israel’s crimes must be condemned unconditionally and firmly.

ProgressiveThinker90
4th April 2010, 14:12
The International Communist League calls for the military defense of Iran if Iran was attacked by America or Israel while giving no political support to the Islamic theocracy.

Benjamin Hill
4th April 2010, 14:44
The International Communist League calls for the military defense of Iran if Iran was attacked by America or Israel while giving no political support to the Islamic theocracy.
Sorry, but what on Earth does that mean? Does the ICL have some spare regiments for Tehran defense?

Why not place your call of support specifically and concretely to the working class in Iran, the middle-east and beyond?

ProgressiveThinker90
4th April 2010, 14:54
Sorry, but what on Earth does that mean? Does the ICL have some spare regiments for Tehran defense?

Why not place your call of support specifically and concretely to the working class in Iran, the middle-east and beyond?
It means we want the Iranian people to defend their country against imperialist attacks by America or Israel but we give no political support to the Islamic theocracy, which means we want the Iranian working class to overthrow the theocracy and build a socialist government. Similarly we call for the defense of Gaza and Lebanon without giving any political support to Hamas or Hezbollah. We would not call on the Iranian theocracy to send weapons to Hamas or Hezbollah because that would make us partially responsible for any crimes they might commit but there is a difference between asking other Islamic governments to supply Hamas and Hezbollah and not protesting if they do because every defeat of America's and Israel's military is a benefit to the working class internationally and every victory of American and Israeli imperialism further emboldens them for more conquests.

vyborg
4th April 2010, 15:01
It means we want the Iranian people to defend their country against imperialist attacks by America or Israel but we give no political support to the Islamic theocracy, which means we want the Iranian working class to overthrow the theocracy and build a socialist government. Similarly we call for the defense of Gaza and Lebanon without giving any political support to Hamas or Hezbollah. We would not call on the Iranian theocracy to send weapons to Hamas or Hezbollah because that would make us partially responsible for any crimes they might commit but there is a difference between asking other Islamic governments to supply Hamas and Hezbollah and not protesting if they do because every defeat of America's and Israel's military is a benefit to the working class internationally and every victory of American and Israeli imperialism further emboldens them for more conquests.

May I ask if you do have some group in Iran? I've already seen this idea of military defense applied to taliban regime by many trotskist group and I found that no one of them had a single comrade in the area. So it is easier to declare a military union with the taliban from Buenos Aires or Paris or Canberra, a bit more complicated if you actually have comrades there.

The same applies in Iran. You cannot fight US imperialism without fighting in the same time the Iranian regime. Just try to go there and apply your tactic...

ProgressiveThinker90
4th April 2010, 15:14
May I ask if you do have some group in Iran? I've already seen this idea of military defense applied to taliban regime by many trotskist group and I found that no one of them had a single comrade in the area. So it is easier to declare a military union with the taliban from Buenos Aires or Paris or Canberra, a bit more complicated if you actually have comrades there.

The same applies in Iran. You cannot fight US imperialism without fighting in the same time the Iranian regime. Just try to go there and apply your tactic...
We do want to fight the Iranian regime. I do not think any Marxist group is in Iran. All the ICL is saying is that if America or Israel actually attacks Iran the people should not just lay down and take it. We would never give any material aid to the Taliban or any other Islamic fundamentalists. In fact the ICL was unique on the left for saying "Hail the Red Army in Afghanistan" while much of the fake left cheered for the mujaheddin. The fake socialists like the ISO supported the Islamic theocracy in 1979 and so did the Soviet backed Tudeh party. This was a huge mistake. The ICL calls a vanguard workers party to oust the Islamic theocracy. It will, however, take all the military resources in Iran to repel a military attack by America or Israel. I wish I could post a link to some of the ICL's articles on Iran but I do not have enough posts yet.

vyborg
4th April 2010, 15:22
Of course it was a mistake to sustain mujaheddin in Iran or in Afganistan and any group that did it should say sorry to the workers of every country.
The point is what concretely means fight imperialism in Iran. Israel cannot invade Iran for sure as Iran is 10 times bigger. They will send some aircraft maybe as they did with other countries in the area.

Anyway what we say to workers in Iran? Let's fight against Israel? This is an excuse used by the regime to repress the workers. We must start with the need to overtrowh the regime. This is the fundamental task.

fredbergen
4th April 2010, 15:36
But what the post-Trotskyist ICL does not do is call for the defeat of its own imperialist ruling class in a war, or call for international workers action, such as strikes against the war, to effect this defeat.

I recall that when the Internationalist Group called for the defeat of U.S. imperialism in Afghanistan in 2001, Workers Vanguard no. 767 (26 October 2001) denounced this slogan as "Playing the Counterfeit Card of Anti-Americanism": "[The IG] is playing to a different audience, one of 'Third World' nationalists, for whom 'the only good American is a dead American.'"

fredbergen
4th April 2010, 15:50
http://www.internationalist.org/theint3_ns3.gif
November 2001

While WV Again Hails Democrat Barbara Lee


ICL Refuses to Call for Defeat of U.S. Imperialism, “Anti-American” Baits the Internationalist Group (http://www.internationalist.org/iclantiamericanbaits.html)


It is common when once-revolutionary organizations turn toward opportunism that they seek to cover their tracks by smearing and slandering those who continue to uphold the Marxist banner. In the five years since leading cadres of the Spartacist League and other sections of the International Communist League were bureaucratically expelled, the SL/ICL has heaped one lie and invention upon another in its frantic attempts to discredit the Internationalist Group and the League for the Fourth International.

Now it is wartime, and the ICL is worried. So it lashes out at the IG/LFI with a new and sinister smear. In the article published below, “SL Flinches on Afghanistan War” (25 October), we reported how the Spartacist League refused to call for defense of Afghanistan against imperialist attack right up to the moment bombs started falling, and how the SL had an internal discussion which decided not to call for the defeat of U.S. imperialism in this war. This had been a subject of heated discussion between IG and SL members in numerous marches, protests and meetings against the war in previous weeks.

Now the SL has responded. An article in Workers Vanguard (No. 767, 26 October), titled “The Internationalist Group: Centrist Pathology,” confirms that the ICL does not call for defeat of U.S. imperialism in this war. Instead, it accuses the IG of “Playing the Counterfeit Card of Anti-Americanism” and being soft on Islamic fundamentalism. Indeed, WV accuses us of playing to an audience of “‘Third World’ nationalists for whom the ‘only good American is a dead American’.” What a monstrous lie!

Think about that for a moment. What does it mean to accuse Trotskyists of “anti-Americanism” in wartime? The Stalinists did it at the outbreak of World War II, and as the hammer of capitalist state repression came down, 18 leaders of the then-Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party were jailed for their courageous opposition to the imperialist war. Today, amid the war hysteria against Islamic fundamentalism, the American bourgeois press is filled with articles denouncing “anti-Americanism” in Europe. A generous interpretation of the SL’s latest frenzied smear is that it is desperate to get out of the line of fire, saying to the bourgeoisie, “It’s not us.”

Certainly not. Using supposedly “left” arguments, the SL pounds on the same themes as the imperialist warmongers. And it’s not the first time. In recent years the ICL has echoed the bourgeois press on China, Tibet, Kosovo, Puerto Rico and other issues. But as U.S. bombs fall on Kabul, the glare of the blasts sharply reveals this opportunism for what it is: capitulation to the ruling class. WV argues:
“The IG’s call to ‘defeat’ a particular imperialist drive toward war partakes of the view – which the reformists like the WWP and the ISO are pushing for all they are worth – that imperialism is a ‘policy’ which can be altered by means of pressure, presumably by some ‘movement’ on the streets.” This exercise in sophistry “partakes of” sophomoric debaters’ tricks. The IG repeatedly denounces the idea that imperialism is a policy or that the war can be defeated by a “peace movement.” Moreover, anyone can see there is a world of difference between calling to defeat the U.S. and calling to change Bush’s foreign policy.

The WV article continues: “From a Marxist perspective, however, there is no way to ‘defeat’ the inevitable drive toward war by the capitalists short of their being expelled from power through victorious workers revolution….” So since it will take nothing less than socialist revolution to defeat the general capitalist drive toward war, the Spartacist League does not call for the defeat of “its own” bourgeoisie in this imperialist war of depredation!

As Leninists, we call to defeat imperialism in this war as part of the fight “For International Socialist Revolution!” as we proclaim in red on the front page of the Internationalist special supplement (27 September). As opportunists, the ICL cynically uses this subterfuge to abandon the Bolshevik program to fight against imperialist wars.

As if to underscore the point, WV continues to praise black Democrat Barbara Lee, the Congresswoman from the California East Bay area, for casting “the sole vote against the resolution giving Bush a blank check for war” (WV No. 765, 28 September). They have yet to inform their readers that this same capitalist Representative voted for the $40 billion emergency war budget that literally gave a blank check to the CIA to step up its spying and dirty tricks.

Now the SL holds that Lee’s action represents “cracks in the bourgeois edifice,” and that it “reflected the lack of enthusiasm for this war from many black workers and youth.” So here we have a bourgeois politician acting as the voice of discontent among black working people! This is the self-same line presented by the Communist Party and Workers World Party reformists. This alone shows the emptiness of the SL’s pretensions of building a revolutionary workers party.

http://www.internationalist.org/wwbarbaralee.jpg
Workers World (here), SL and CP all hail Democratic “dove” Barbara Lee.

In fact, Lee has been fêted by the entire “antiwar” popular front in Berkeley-Oakland for her vote, as the New York Times (22 October) reports in an article titled “Bastion of Dissent Offers Tribute to One of Its Heros.” The Times article noted that “nowhere has that one vote been more popular than in her own district, a bastion of left-liberal politics where the two-party system means Democrats and Greens.”

We have challenged the SL to explain why it was correct to call to defend Iraq, as the then-Trotskyist Spartacist League did in 1990 even before the bombs started falling on Baghdad, and why it is supposedly wrong to call to defeat the U.S. imperialist war today even after the bombs are falling on Kabul. In 1991, Workers Vanguard repeatedly headlined “Defeat U.S. Imperialism! Defend Iraq!”

Or maybe they are rethinking that one, too. If so, they might read the article in WV No. 510 (21 September 1990), titled “The Left and the Persian Gulf: Desperately Seeking Imperialist Doves,” which takes the WWP et al. to task for seeking to “avoid defending Iraq in a war with the U.S.” A caption sums it up: “Reform vs. Revolution: Reformist left seeks bloc with Democratic ‘doves’ to cut losses for U.S. imperialism. Spartacists call for defeat of American bourgeoisie, oppose imperialist blockade.”

Or look at WV No. 512 with the front-page headline, “Defeat U.S. Imperialism!” And there it is again in WV No. 513, this time on a Spartacist banner, “Break the Blockade of Iraq! Defeat U.S. Imperialism!” So what changed? What changed is, first, the Persian Gulf War was hotly contested before the shooting began, whereas this time around U.S. rulers have whipped up a real war frenzy; and second, today the Spartacist League capitulates to and even buys into the hysteria.

The SL accuses the LFI of...insufficient fervor against Islamic fundamentalism. Unlike the ICL, the LFI has intervened in actual struggle fighting against both Islamic fundamentalism and bourgeois nationalism (see “Algeria: Kabylia in Revolt,” The Internationalist No. 12, Summer 2001). The ICL line that Islamic fundamentalism is ascendant throughout the historically Muslim world, in contrast, means it has nothing to say to anti-fundamentalist youth and workers in Algeria who are confronting a bloody army-based regime locked in a civil war against Islamic fundamentalists.

The ICL’s latest sharp turn to the right is a dramatic development: renouncing a cornerstone of Leninist politics in the midst of a war. But it is a part of a pattern of its recent capitulations. Calling for an independent soviet Tibet when “free Tibet” becomes all the rage in rad-lib circles (dropping it a year later when Clinton invites the Dalai Lama to the White House). Renouncing its long-standing call for independence for Puerto Rico even as U.S. imperialism escalates its use of its Caribbean colony as a bombing range and launching pad for invasions. “Barbara Lee, yes – colonial independence, no” might as well be the ICL’s slogan today.

Now on Afghanistan, the ICL’s main emphasis is that it was the first to fight against Islamic fundamentalists like the Taliban, while it refuses to defend Afghanistan until the shooting starts. This reflects trends within a certain liberal bourgeois milieu. A recent book by Pakistani journalist Ahmed Rashid, Taliban (Yale University Press, 2000), quoted an article from the Washington Post about a 1999 Hollywood Oscar party by the Feminist Majority to honor Afghan women: “The Taliban’s war on women has become the latest cause célèbre in Hollywood. Tibet is out. Afghanistan is in.”

Today, while the IG/LFI call for class war against the imperialist war, the SL/ICL calls only for “Class Struggle Against Capitalist Rulers At Home.” This could mean just about anything, including simple wage strikes, and in the context of the SL’s new line, the emphasis on “at home” is counterposed to the call to defeat the imperialists abroad. Yet the history of proletarian struggles around the world underlines that defeats for the imperialists in their aggression abroad foster class struggle within the imperialist heartland, and it is when workers in the imperialist countries come to understand the need to defeat their rapacious imperialist rulers that they can achieve genuinely internationalist class consciousness. The SL line amounts to nationalist, economist social-pacifism.

While we’re at it, we challenge the SL/ICL to name one colony in the world today where they call for independence. We’ve asked several SL cadres, and their response was, “I don’t know.” They obviously don’t care much either.

Sasha
4th April 2010, 16:16
cant people include an [warning: trotskyte sect shit fest flame war] tag in the thread title?

ProgressiveThinker90
4th April 2010, 16:38
Fredbergen, you will not slander the Spartacist League unopposed.

Reprinted from Workers Vanguard No. 767, 26 October 2001.
“Great conflicts sweep away all that is halfway and artificial and, on the other hand, give strength to all that is viable. War leaves room only for two tendencies in the ranks of the working class movement: social patriotism, which does not stop at any betrayal, and revolutionary internationalism, which is bold and capable of going to the end. It is precisely for this reason that centrists, fearful of impending events, are waging a rabid struggle against the Fourth International.”
— Leon Trotsky, “Sectarianism, Centrism, and the Fourth International” (22 October 1935)
In the immediate aftermath of September 11, every section of the International Communist League (Fourth Internationalist) published the statement of the Spartacist League/U.S. Political Bureau titled “Oppose Domestic Repression, Imperialist ‘Retaliation’—The World Trade Center Attack” (see Workers Vanguard No. 764, 14 September) with an introduction taking up the crimes of their “own” bourgeois ruling classes, seeking to galvanize the workers movement to defend the besieged Arab and Asian minorities and to punch through reactionary “national fronts” pushed in their respective countries. In the next issue of WV (No. 765, 28 September), newspaper of the ICL section operating within the “belly of the beast” of murderous U.S. imperialism, we wrote: “‘National Unity’ Jingoism: Bosses Profit, Workers Pay—Repression, Recession and War” and prominently called for, among other things, “U.S. Hands Off Afghanistan, Iraq!” When Washington commenced its war against Afghanistan, we headlined: “War-Crazed Imperialists Stalk the World: For Class Struggle Against U.S. Capitalist Rulers—Defend Afghanistan Against Imperialist Attack!” (WV No. 766, 12 October).
The reformist “left” in the U.S. is meanwhile engaged in crass, faith-based appeals to U.S. imperialism along the lines of the call raised by the International Socialist Organization (ISO) for “No Blank Check for War” (as opposed to a specified check for war?) or of the ISO-influenced “San Francisco Town Hall Committee to Stop War and Hate,” which called on the U.S. rulers to “work with the international community to identify & locate all those responsible & bring them before a court of law.” Reformists such as the Workers World Party (WWP) have their tactical differences with, and varying appetites from, the ISO. But they are equally looking to build an “antiwar movement” that is hospitable to a wing of capitalist (read: Democratic Party) politicians “critical” of the Bush White House’s rampage at home and abroad, when and if such a wing should emerge. Thus the classless, “pacifist” bleat by WWP’s ANSWER coalition that “war is not the answer” (see “Spartacus Youth Clubs Say: Only Workers Revolution Can End Imperialist War!” WV No. 766, 12 October).
Between the overt social-patriotism of the fake left and our revolutionary, proletarian, internationalist program stands the Internationalist Group (IG), a small outfit composed of defectors from the revolutionary Trotskyism of the ICL. Despite some orthodox-sounding criticisms of the reformists on paper, the IG has lent its services, such as they are, to playing the role of a left-sounding “loyal opposition” to the reformist-led “antiwar movement”—a service fulfilled not least of all by attacking the ICL. A special issue of the IG’s Internationalist (27 September) contains its 14 September statement titled “After Indiscriminate World Trade Center Attack—U.S. Whips Up Imperialist War Frenzy, Drives Toward Police State” and its 27 September article, “Capitalism = War, Racism, Economic Crisis—For Workers Revolution!” The latter charges us with opportunism akin to that of the renegade German ex-Marxist Karl Kautsky, who provided a left prop for the chauvinist Social Democrats during World War I.
Charging us with being “defeatist” and “abstentionist” and the like has been the stock in trade for the IG. At the time of its defection from the ICL in 1996, we were supposedly “passive propagandists” because we opposed a bogus “regroupment” perspective pushed by Jan Norden—until then a leading member of the ICL and now IG supremo—toward the Communist Platform of the German Party of Democratic Socialism, the very forces that had sold out the East German deformed workers state. Denying the retrogression of consciousness that accompanied the counterrevolutionary destruction of the Soviet Union, the IG prettifies the existing consciousness of the working masses in order to embrace alien class forces.
While the objects of its political coquetry vary from place to place, the IG’s specialty has been aggrandizement of a “hardline” wing of the Stalinist bureaucracies in Cuba and China, as well as genuflection before petty-bourgeois nationalists (and worse) in the colonial and semicolonial world. Shortly after departing the ICL, the IG consummated a fusion with a Brazilian organization with whom we had broken relations because they proved to be garden variety trade-union opportunists. The IG’s Brazilian comrades ran an ex-cop for president of a cop-infested public employees union, and then wielded lawsuits to drag the union through the bourgeois courts in order to hold on to their positions in the union (see “Lies, Damned Lies and Anti-Union Lawsuits: IG’s Brazil Fraud Exposed,” WV No. 669, 30 May 1997). Elsewhere, such as in Puerto Rico and Mexico, they rushed out to flatter petty-bourgeois nationalist forces.
Playing the Counterfeit Card of Anti-Americanism
In its 27 September statement, the IG writes of the Spartacist League: “Thus the SL put out a statement dated September 12 with the innocuous title, ‘The World Trade Center Attack.’ While a superhead called to ‘Oppose Domestic Repression, Imperialist Retaliation,’ the beginning of the statement focuses on denouncing the terrorists, as does most of the end of the statement. Nowhere does the SL statement call to defend the countries (notably Afghanistan and Iraq) which were already targeted by Washington in the first hours after the WTC/Pentagon attack.”
As for the IG’s fulminations that we have failed in our internationalist duty to defend Afghanistan and Iraq: a glance at the headlines of our newspaper repudiates such absurd slander. It is all the more ridiculous for those who know something about the record of our international tendency, including our forthright statement in the ICL’s “Declaration of Principles and Some Elements of Program”: “In wars of imperialist depredation against colonial, semicolonial or dependent nations, the duty of the proletariat in every country is to aid the oppressed nations against the imperialists, while maintaining complete political independence from bourgeois and petty-bourgeois nationalist forces” (Spartacist [English-language edition] No. 54, Spring 1998). Indeed, as soon as the U.S. imperialists started raining down bombs on Afghanistan, we raised the call to “Defend Afghanistan against imperialist attack!” not only on our front page but also on our banners and signs at demonstrations and in our interventions at “antiwar” meetings.
We noted in our 12 September statement on the World Trade Center attack: “Those who perpetrated this horrific attack (and there is no evidence at all as to who that was) embrace the same mentality as the racist rulers of America—identifying the working masses with their capitalist exploiters and oppressors!” Indeed, the hideous massacre of thousands of working people who perished in the attack on the World Trade Center was an enormous tragedy. Around the world, millions of people watched in gut-wrenching horror as live television showed people jumping to their deaths from the burning twin towers moments before they collapsed. This attack was a gift to the American rulers, who seek to manipulate widespread and justifiable outrage in the interests of forging “national unity” and pushing U.S. imperialist war aims.
Why then does the IG berate us for our straightforward denunciation of an act that was a crime from the standpoint of the working masses? In fact, the IG talks out of both sides of its mouth, reflecting the effort to capitulate simultaneously to different audiences. In the third paragraph of their 14 September statement, the IG themselves stated that they “categorically oppose the indiscriminate terror used by the hijackers, who in grotesquely taking the lives of several thousand ordinary working people thereby equate them with the American government that oppresses workers and minorities in the U.S. along with peoples around the world.” But by the time of their next statement, the IG is denouncing us for telling the Marxist truth. Typical of centrists, their occasional use of orthodox formulations is meant only for the unwary. Certainly the IG doesn’t believe its own rhetoric. As we have stressed in our propaganda, American imperialism must be shattered from within, by mobilizing the proletariat against the capitalist order. Anyone seeking to win the American proletariat to this perspective would have to face reality squarely and acknowledge the wave of chauvinism and jingoism that the ruling class is manipulating.
But the IG’s purpose is otherwise; it is playing to a different audience, one of “Third World” nationalists for whom the “only good American is a dead American.” One can search their two statements in vain for anything of substance dealing with how the fake left in Europe and Latin America manipulates the counterfeit currency of anti-Americanism to reconcile itself to its own bourgeoisie, or any sober assessment of the increasing role of political Islam in large parts of the world.
One will find at most a bare, passing reference in the IG material to the escalation of interimperialist rivalries in the wake of the destruction of the USSR, which is the context for the machinations in Afghanistan and Central Asia by the U.S. and other imperialists. In such countries as France and Germany, where the IG (dubiously) claims to have supporters, reformist and centrist forces have accepted the war aims of U.S. imperialism, such as driving out the Taliban, while making much ado about not following U.S. diktats and arguing instead for more powers for their own capitalist rulers, or for a war directly administered by the giant condom for U.S. imperialism, the United Nations. In Berlin, the Nazis have tried to outflank the social-chauvinist “leftists” by denouncing the war in Afghanistan because it is in the interests of American—not German—imperialism. Burning an American flag in Berlin—or for that matter in Peshawar—does not make one a proletarian revolutionary.
In the economically backward world, where mass poverty prevails as a result of the economic and military depredations of U.S. imperialism over the years, it is hardly surprising that many people would feel satisfaction over the attack on the World Trade Center. In such countries, nationalists and sometimes even “leftists” play to their audience by seeking to paint the slaughter of thousands of innocent people as an act of “anti-imperialism.” This is a gift to the venal and brutal rulers of their own countries for whom nationalism—the lie that all Americans or all Mexicans have the same fundamental interests—is key to keeping the oppressed masses in line. The statement issued by the ICL’s Mexican section, the Grupo Espartaquista de México (GEM), sharply polemicized with a local nationalist organization that hailed the attack on the World Trade Center, falsely claiming that it weakened imperialism. The GEM stressed that in contrast to all variants of nationalism, Trotskyist internationalists draw a class line: against the capitalist rulers at home and in solidarity with the American proletariat in the fight for world socialist revolution.
Nothing better captures the bankruptcy of the IG’s fraudulent “international” than the fact that for weeks its Mexican co-thinkers handed out the IG’s U.S. statement without a single word against the Mexican ruling class. Meanwhile, the right-wing government of Vicente Fox had been using the World Trade Center atrocity to jack up its attacks on Near Eastern immigrants, indigenous peoples and rebellious peasants like the Zapatistas, as well as its witchhunt against activist students at Mexico City’s National Autonomous University. But the performance of the Mexican IG here is quite logical coming from a group that denies that the main obstacle in Mexico to revolutionary proletarian consciousness is bourgeois nationalism.
Afghanistan and Religious Fundamentalism
The woeful performance of the IG’s “international” did not fall from the sky. Even before his flight from the ICL, the IG’s founder-leader (and former WV editor) Norden had a strong tendency toward impressionism and vicarious adventurism, animated by an often fatuous optimism about the capacity of forces very distant from Trotskyism, or from the proletariat for that matter, to “struggle” in some successful measure against the depredations of the imperialist bourgeoisie. At the time of the 1991 Persian Gulf War, these tendencies began to find expression in the pages of the party press. Following the defection of Norden and a handful of others, we wrote in “A Shamefaced Defection from Trotskyism” (WV No. 648, 5 July 1996):
“From the question of the survival of Sandinista Nicaragua against U.S. imperialism in the 1980s, to the capacities of the army of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq to inflict serious damage against the imperialists during the Persian Gulf War, Norden always stood at the extreme end of a tendency to impressionistically overdraw (and often fantastically so) the military factor. Correspondingly, this meant conjuring up an anticipated flood of anti-imperialist struggle while seriously downplaying the crucial and related factors of political consciousness and material economic reality.”
In the mouths of opportunists, “military support” is often the cover used to express political confidence in anti-working-class regimes and parties. In contrast, we called to defend Iraq while giving no quarter politically to the Ba’athist regime of Saddam Hussein, the nationalist butcher of millions of workers, Communist militants and Kurds. Norden took as good coin Hussein’s vows to wage “the mother of all battles” against the U.S. because, having despaired of the prospect of defeating U.S. imperialism by workers revolution from within, he was desperate to find some other agency to whom he could subcontract the task. Norden’s inflation of Hussein’s military capacities presumed that the Gulf War was akin to the Vietnam War two decades earlier. But the Vietnamese workers and peasants were fighting for a social revolution, which gave the military struggle a huge impetus. At that time, the SL called for “Victory to the Vietnamese Revolution!” while calling for proletarian political revolution to oust the Stalinist bureaucracies in Moscow, Hanoi and Beijing. During the Gulf War, uncritical enthusing over Hussein’s armies could only serve to embellish bourgeois Arab nationalism.
Over the last two decades, disappointment in bourgeois nationalism has fueled the growth of Islamic fundamentalism. In turn, Norden & Co. have lurched very far in the direction of chasing such alien class forces. A case in point is the IG’s article “Algeria: Kabylia in Revolt—For a Workers and Peasants Government!” (Internationalist No. 11, Summer 2001), which denounces the ICL as “defeatist” because of the statement in our international Declaration of Principles that “the 1979 ‘Iranian Revolution’ opened up a period of ascendant political Islam in the historically Muslim world.” In a recent polemic over Algeria (“Algeria Rocked by Mass Protests,” WV No. 761, 6 July), we noted:
“The IG obscures the danger of religious reaction the better to capitulate to the ‘mass movement’ under its existing leadership. Denying the enormous impact capitalist counterrevolution in the Soviet Union had in setting back the consciousness of the proletariat internationally, the IG adapted to that lower level of consciousness, willfully misidentifying the will of the workers to struggle with the revolutionary consciousness needed to triumph over the bourgeoisie. In practice, this leads to prettifying and pursuing alien class forces.”
Proving the truth of this statement, at a recent public event we held at New York University, Norden scoffed at the Spartacists as “the biggest fighters against Islamic reaction”! That’s right! Just like the atheistic Bolsheviks who led the 1917 October Revolution in Russia, we Trotskyists are in the vanguard of the struggle against all forms of religious reaction and obscurantism, whether Christian, Jewish, Islamic or anything else. We militantly stand for the liberating goals of the Enlightenment (see our 1998 pamphlet Enlightenment Rationalism and the Origins of Marxism). That Norden considers this anything other than a badge of honor is a devastating self-indictment. Those with no perspective of a proletarian revolution are left with the ersatz “anti-imperialism” of nationalists of every sort, and even Islamic fundamentalists. This applies not only to the “state capitalist” ISO but to the IG as well.
Today, of course, it is fashionable on the left to point out that the likes of Osama bin Laden were subsidized and groomed by the American government. But what the fake left seeks to avoid at all cost is any discussion of where they stood when the Afghan mujahedin, and their allies like bin Laden, were being financed by the CIA in an attempt to bring down the Soviet degenerated workers state. Trotskyists then said: “Hail Red Army in Afghanistan!” while calling to extend the social gains of the October Revolution to that country. In contrast, anti-communists like the ISO stood with the imperialists and the counterrevolutionary mujahedin against the USSR.
When we bring this unpalatable truth to members of the left and workers movement (many of whom are too young to remember the Red Army intervention in Afghanistan), the fake left goes into a frenzy, howling that “that’s over the limit” and trying to shout us down. On paper, the IG may well include a paragraph or two claiming to be in agreement with what our tendency fought for in Afghanistan, but that is not what they push on the ground. At a large September 20 teach-in at New York University featuring the ISO, the IG speaker oh-so-politely avoided confronting the fake left’s shameful history on the question of Afghanistan.
In raising the call to defend Afghanistan against imperialist attack, the ICL makes clear that this does not involve an iota of political support for the thoroughly reactionary Taliban, or any version of “Third World” nationalism. Not so with the IG, which rushed to call to “defend Afghanistan” even before the bombs started falling. “Genuine communists,” writes the IG, “defend semi-colonial countries against imperialist attack as we fight for socialist revolution against their bourgeois and, in the case of Afghanistan, feudalistic leaders” (“The Left and the War Drive,” 27 September). To put it mildly, this is totally demented. Socialist revolution is made by an insurgent proletariat that seizes the means of production, expropriates the capitalist class and establishes the dictatorship of the proletariat. Afghanistan is a devastated and backward country with no industry, no working class and not even much agriculture.
Not least of our reasons for hailing the Soviet military intervention in 1979 was that only the victory of the Red Army and a prolonged military occupation by Soviet forces gave the Afghan peoples the possibility of leaping over centuries into the modern world. The IG’s dimwitted formulation obliterates any class distinction between the proletariat and the oppressed peasant masses, as is typical of petty-bourgeois nationalists. One might note that the call for “socialist revolution in Afghanistan” was used in the 1980s by various “third campists” (like Workers Power) who wanted to avoid a clear choice between the Red Army and the CIA-backed mujahedin.
“Radical” Renegades from Trotskyism
At demonstrations in New York City, IG supporters have ranted about our statement that “to her credit, black Oakland Congresswoman Barbara Lee, a protégé of former liberal Congressman Ron Dellums, registered the sole vote against the resolution giving Bush a blank check for war” (WV No. 765, 28 September). They claim that this statement amounts to a political capitulation to the Democratic Party, akin to the role played by the U.S. Socialist Workers Party during the Vietnam War when it tailored the politics of its “National Peace Action Coalition” to curry favor with the Democratic “doves” who called for stopping that losing war in order to stop the damage it was causing U.S. imperialism. In its propaganda, the IG wisely refrains from such absurdities, restricting its attacks on this matter to the CP and Workers World—both past masters at promoting “peace” Democrats. Our party has an unbroken record—not simply on paper—of struggle to break the working class, the black masses and all the oppressed from illusions in the Democratic Party of war and racism.
Perhaps the oh-so-radical IG would prefer no cracks in the bourgeois edifice and for there to be total—as opposed to near-unanimous—support for Bush’s war measures. We are not so flippant. For taking even a partial step against the prevailing jingoism, Lee received several death threats. The IG makes noises about the “drives toward a police state,” but their dismissal of Lee’s dissenting vote, which reflected the lack of enthusiasm for this war from many black workers and youth, gives the lie to this. Marxists are not indifferent to bourgeois-democratic rights, which provide some room for the working class and the population generally to dissent, organize and struggle. Moreover, we know that if reactionary forces are given free rein to muzzle even a capitalist politician, moves to repress revolutionary Marxists will not be far behind.
In its 27 September statement, the IG sneers at the SL/U.S. statement on the attack on the World Trade Center:
“For that matter, it doesn’t even call to defeat the mounting war drive, only to ‘oppose’ it. This is no minor difference: as Lenin emphasized against ‘social pacifists’ like Karl Kautsky in World War I, at issue is whether you are calling for a different policy for the imperialists or taking a stand for their defeat.”
The IG’s charge against us contains, unwittingly, a kernel of truth about what divides these centrists from the program of Trotskyism. The IG’s call to “defeat” a particular imperialist drive toward war partakes of the view—which the reformists like the WWP and the ISO are pushing for all they are worth—that imperialism is a “policy” which can be altered by means of pressure, presumably by some “movement” on the streets. From a Marxist perspective, however, there is no way to “defeat” the inevitable drive toward war by the capitalists short of their being expelled from power through victorious workers revolution, such as the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 which ended Russia’s participation in World War I by expropriating the capitalists and landlords and establishing the dictatorship of the proletariat. The entire thrust of our propaganda has been to imbue the proletariat and subjectively anti-imperialist youth with a clear understanding of how to defeat imperialism through class struggle at home. As Trotsky taught us, it’s the revolutionary party which is the necessary instrument to lead the proletariat against all obstacles, not least the centrists who direct their fire against the Bolsheviks and peddle their wares in the shadow of the reformists.
We have noted before a certain symmetry between the Bolshevik Tendency (BT) and the IG, which are decomposition products that fled from revolutionary Trotskyism at the beginning and the end of the period of Cold War II. Both resort to extremist rhetoric and “chicken”-baiting of the ICL, but this is but a mask for their impulse to be at one with the fake-left swamp. For years after departing our organization, the BT’s line on the Russian question on paper represented a blurred caricature of our own. Of course, we understood and pointed out that this posture was a total fraud, as demonstrated by the fact that the BT was welcome at meetings organized by every variety of virulently Soviet-hating “left” organization and their “peace” front groups, while the SL was excluded. And the BT knew the rules—the reformists who called on the cops to keep us out had no problem with the BT, which voiced “constructive criticisms” in keeping with the “unity” of the “movement.” Eventually the BT proved our point, formally retrospectively repudiating the call to “Hail Red Army in Afghanistan” in order to be palatable to the reformist milieu. The IG similarly feels quite comfortable with today’s red-white-and-blue, pro-Democratic Party “peace” swamp.
In his September 1935 polemic against the British centrists of the Independent Labour Party (“The ILP and the Fourth International—In the Middle of the Road”), Leon Trotsky wrote that Marxism and Leninism “are absolutely irreconcilable both with an inclination to radical phraseology, and with the dread of radical decisions.” Comrade Trotsky’s polemic captures the essence of the IG today: a pseudo-radical outfit that flinches when and where it counts.

Die Neue Zeit
4th April 2010, 16:56
The title is wrong. The Iranian president is a figurehead.

Opposition to imperialism does not mean support for Khamenei. [Except on the question of nukes, assuming an existent weapons program. ;) ]

Devrim
4th April 2010, 19:52
The International Communist League calls for the military defense of Iran if Iran was attacked by America or Israel while giving no political support to the Islamic theocracy. Sorry, but what on Earth does that mean? Does the ICL have some spare regiments for Tehran defense?

I can understand your confusion. 'Military defence' is a peculiar Trotskyist term, which doesn't mean what it sounds like at all. It is of course, completely political and not military in any way. I don't quite understand at all how they claim it gives no political support.

Devrim

fredbergen
5th April 2010, 16:16
Fredbergen, you will not slander the Spartacist League unopposed.

ProgressiveThinker, in order for something to be slander, it has to be false.

In response you have reprinted the infamous article from WV no. 767 in its entirety. Readers can see that, indeed, the SL does not call for the defeat of its own imperialist ruling class in this war, and that, at the height of the post-9/11 war frenzy, WV accuses the Trotskyists of the Internationalist Group of "Playing the Counterfeit Card of Anti-Americanism" to an an audience of "'Third-World' nationalists for whom 'the only good American is a dead American'" precisely because we do uphold the principles of revolutionary internationalism.

So, you said it yourself. The SL does not call for the defeat of its own imperialist ruling class in a war. And it accuses those who do of "Anti-Americanism." Is Workers Vanguard slandering the Spartacist League?

fredbergen
5th April 2010, 17:57
'Military defence' is a peculiar Trotskyist term, which doesn't mean what it sounds like at all. It is of course, completely political and not military in any way. I don't quite understand at all how they claim it gives no political support.

What it means is that in the case of a U.S./Israeli attack on Iran or some other semi-colonial country, we would not be militarily neutral. To the extent they are able, Trotskyists would aim their weapons at the imperialists and organize the workers, independently of Iranian state control, to fight against the imperialists.

The example we look to is the Bolshevik-organized defense that thwarted Kornilov's reactionary coup attempt in 1917. The Bolsheviks insisted that the workers must take arms and defend Petrograd against Kornilov. They would shoot in the same direction as Kerensky's government troops (such as they existed) for the time being. But Lenin insisted that they were not doing this to defend Kerensky's bourgeois government, only to defend themselves and their class. And when Kerensky wanted the workers to give back their arms after Kornilov's coup attempt collapsed, the Bolsheviks said no.

This strategy was crucial to the victory of the October revolution a few months later. If the Bolsheviks had not taken part in the fighting, they would have lost the support of the working class (and surely would have been slaughtered by Kornilov's white terror.) If the Bolsheviks had subordinated themselves to Kerensky's command and politically defended the "lesser evil" bourgeois government of the Mensheviks and liberals, they would have given this government an authority with the masses and a lease on life that it did not deserve.

It is true that most pseudo-Trotskyist opportunists do give political support to all sorts of bourgeois governments and forces in the name of "anti-imperialism." For example, nearly the entire "Trotskyist" left supported Khomeini and the mullah "revolution" in Iran 1978-80, which led to the wholesale decapitation of the Iranian left and workers movement by their "anti-imperialist" hero. Trotskyists said "Down with the Shah, No to Khomenei!" and sought to organize independent resistance to the Shah based on the emerging organs of workers power that would be criminally subordinated to the theocrats by the opportunist left.

For a recent example of an application of the policy of military defense against imperialist attack, see "Throw the Imperialists Out of Haiti! (http://www.internationalist.org/haitiusfranceout010304.html)" in The Internationalist no. 18 (http://www.internationalist.org/int18toc.html) (May-June 2004).

Devrim
5th April 2010, 22:20
What it means is that in the case of a U.S./Israeli attack on Iran or some other semi-colonial country, we would not be militarily neutral. To the extent they are able, Trotskyists would aim their weapons at the imperialists and organize the workers, independently of Iranian state control, to fight against the imperialists.

And which weapons are these exactly?

It has nothing whatsoever to do with anything military. You don't have a section in Iran, and you therefore don't have any one to 'aim weapons at the imperialists there'. At least you are honest enough to use a second conditional.

What is does have to do with is telling workers in the West to support the Iranian regime, and despite all of your protestations the only support this can be is political support.

Devrim

IslamicMarxist
30th June 2010, 20:38
You can disagree with the Iranian regime's Ideas, but more than half of Iran's population does not. We must not judge men because of there Religion or Ideas. A good man is a good man. Shariati was no communist but he was a good man. Lenin was no muslim but he was a good man. Good men, revolutionarys all have different Ideas and beliefs. Resistance has many colors, many beliefs, many religions, many Ideas, many people.

Crux
30th June 2010, 20:55
You can disagree with the Iranian regime's Ideas, but more than half of Iran's population does not.
George Bush won two elections in a row. Does that mean the american working class supports him and that we should support him? The islamist regime in Iran murdered the left and continues to do so. I can't rermember the name off-hand but one more leftist of the mullahs was also imprisoned and killed by the regime.

KC
1st July 2010, 02:09
The Workers' World Party was notoriously one of the few that actually opposed the recent pro-democracy uprisings so it is quite silly for them to attempt to claim to "oppose imperialism" when they so recently and conclusively came out in support of (http://www.workers.org/2009/editorials/iran_0625/) the bourgeois/petit-bourgeois "anti-imperialists".

Here's a list (http://riseoftheiranianpeople.com/support-opposition/), for the record, that we kept of parties supporting or opposing the uprising. The only three parties that we saw that actually supported the theocracy were WWP, PSL and FRSO. WWP and PSL are theoretically identical and their views stem from Marcy's Global Class War theory, so that was not surprising at all. FRSO are a fringe pseudo-Maoist group filled with white middle class westerners (we all know the type) that have essentially the same viewpoint, albeit arriving at it out of emotional reaction as opposed to an actual theoretical discourse.

No other parties opposed the uprisings, as far as I know. Especially none in Iran.