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BobKKKindle$
14th January 2009, 18:39
The Israeli assault on Gaza has exposed deep divisions between Arab ruling classes, their Western allies and the people of the region, argues Simon Assaf

In April 2008 Egypt’s interior ministry was faced with a dilemma. Should it send state security forces to Mahalla al-Kubra, the restive industrial town in the Nile Delta, or to Egypt’s border with Gaza, where it feared hungry Palestinians would attempt another breakout.

Arab rulers fear anger over Palestine will fuse with domestic discontent and lead to growing struggle. Their dilemma is bound up with the question of “permanent revolution” in the Middle East.

The notion of permanent revolution was first put forward by Karl Marx and developed by the Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky.

Trotsky sought to understand how revolutions could develop in countries where the working class was still relatively small compared to the peasantry and other groups.

If workers take the lead in the fight for democratic change, land reform and against imperialist powers, the theory goes, then they could develop this fight into a challenge to capitalism itself.

If this revolutionary process spreads to other, more developed countries, where workers are more numerous, it can become “permanent”.

In the region with the biggest reserves of easily accessible good quality oil, workers often have to fight regimes backed by imperial powers. For imperialism, the stakes are high.

All the major Middle East states, with the exception of Syria and Iran, are firm allies of Western, and specifically US, imperialism. The US and its allies supply Israel with all the arms it requires to keep these states in line. It also picks up the wages bill for Egypt’s security forces – to ensure that its population of 75 million remains firmly under the boot.

But although Western leaders and multinational oil companies have benefited massively from the resources of the Middle East, the region is dramatically different today from when oil was first discovered there.

Humiliating

In 1933 the US paid a humiliatingly small sum of £30,000 to the founder of Saudi Arabia to allow US companies to pump crude oil.

Aramco was the US company originally set up for such a purpose. Today it has become Saudi Aramco and is owned by Saudi Arabia. It is the biggest oil firm in the world with the largest proven reserves and greatest productive capacity.

The oil dollars have transformed organisations such as the Kuwait Investment Authority, which manages local and global investments for the Kuwaiti state, and its equivalents in Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.

They are now major financial players and the Arab ruling classes are firmly integrated into global capitalism.

With this comes the fear that all could be lost if the growing anger and frustration that exists inside all Arab countries explodes. This fear is well grounded.

When Gamal Abdul Nasser took power during Egypt’s revolution in 1952, he nationalised the Suez Canal, all the major banks and insurance companies, *shipping firms and 600 major industrial and commercial companies – including Shell Oil, BP and Lever Brothers (part of Unilever).

Nasser implemented major land reforms and seized the assets of 600 of the wealthiest families.

His example inspired a wave of similar revolutions that at one point even menaced Saudi Arabia – at the time an overwhelmingly rural country with a tiny working class.

The threat of Nasser and the Arab nationalist revolutions galvanised France, Britain, the US and Israel to launch a series of wars.

The first attempt to crush the Arab nationalists during the Suez Crisis in 1956 ended in humiliating failure for the imperialists. At the time it seemed anything was possible.

But Nasser and other nationalist leaders attempted to limit the scope of the revolutions. The workers that had been instrumental in toppling the old order found themselves losing out in a strategy that put “Arab unity” above all else.

The process of permanent revolution was derailed as nationalists sought to use the power of the masses, but also prevent workers taking control themselves and overthrowing capitalism in the region.

But any blow to imperialism was a threat to the Western powers.

In 1967 Israel launched its Six Day War and crushed the Arab armies.

Following the defeat it became “pragmatic” for the Arab regimes to end their hostility to imperialism.

Countries like Egypt embraced the US and made peace with Israel, while Syria, which refused to do the same, faced isolation and military attack.
The war of 1967, and the subsequent war in 1973, served their purpose. The “Arab front”, as the US called it, was broken. Now came heavy repression and the transformation of the region into dictatorships.

The regimes adopted neoliberalism, and along with the concentration of oil wealth in the hands of a few families, this has left Arab societies more polarised than at any other time in their history.

A vast gulf separates the small layer of rich rulers from the mass of workers, urban poor and peasantry, whose income barely covers the basics of life.
Just a glance at the Arab rich list illustrates this. Despite losing some £16 billion in the credit crunch, the richest 50 Arab families – excluding royals and wealth from oil – have amassed a fortune of £127 billion between them.

Adding the wealth of the royal families makes the figure stratospheric. Here is just a sprinkling of royal fortunes: the Saudi king has an estimated £18 billion, the emir of the United Arab Emirates some £6.5 billion, that of Kuwait £11 billion, and Qatar’s ruler £3 billion.

Meanwhile, the size of Jordan’s entire economy, with its six million people, was a pitiful £18 billion in 2007.

But the region has undergone another transformation. Today Arab societies are overwhelmingly urban. In 1970, for example, only one in four Lebanese lived in cities. Today the ratio is reversed. The same is true of countries such as Saudi Arabia.

And although the oil industry remains fantastically profitable, it employs a tiny minority of workers across the region. The vast majority work in construction or the textile factories, or they drive trains, or sweep the roads or till the land.

The fact that workers are beginning to smart against poverty and repression, is rattling the nerves of the regimes and their Western backers.

The struggles against Israel in Palestine, and in Lebanon in 2006, cross the thin line between “politics” and “economics”. Mass struggle made its first tangible breakthrough in the fight against imperialism.

When tens of thousands of Egyptians faced down regime thugs to oppose the invasion of Iraq, and Israel’s wars on Palestine and Lebanon, they inspired workers in places such as Mahalla el-Kubra to launch their strikes.

It is a simple step to draw parallels between Mahalla citizens battling riot police and the Palestinians facing Israeli border guards in the West Bank. This parallel can be heard in the chants of the demonstrators themselves.

These demonstrations are growing in scale and intensity. Some 100,000 people took to the streets of the Mediterranean city of Alexandria on Friday of last week in an unprecedented show of force.

Riot police quietly gave way despite a ban on any protest by Egyptian authorities.

Imperialism

The Middle East has never lost its status as the “greatest material prize in history”. For this reason the West’s reliance on Israel has not diminished, as some thought it would following the US invasion of Iraq.

One of the aims of the Iraq war was to forcibly assert US hegemony. It has instead exposed its limits.

The lesson of the US debacle in Iraq is that the West needs Israel now more than ever. Oil remains the obsession of global capitalism – and it needs to keep a strong guard over it. This can be measured by the size of Israel’s armed forces – imperialism’s “facts on the ground”.

Even though Israel’s economy is half the size of Egypt’s, it can call on its arsenal of western supplied modern tanks, the most up to date warplanes, attack helicopters, warships, submarines, missiles and nuclear warheads.

This exposes as a lie any notion that Palestinian fighters, with their light arms and crude homemade rockets, are a military threat to Israel.

But if Hamas’s rockets, or those of Lebanon’s Hizbollah, have little military value, they pack a powerful political punch. They are a testament to continuing resistance in the face of a formidable military foe.

It is for this reason that these resistance organisations have such a high status among ordinary people. They have succeeded in resisting Israel’s occupation where all the Arab armies failed.

This fact was not lost on Egypt’s beleaguered foreign minister.

In response to Hizbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah’s call for mass demonstrations in Egypt, the minister declared, “Let me tell you that the Egyptian armed forces are tasked with defending Egypt. If need be, they will also protect Egypt against people like you.”

The West is looking nervously at what Israel’s short-term military goals in Gaza can mean for the long term survival of the Arab regimes.

Hanging over all of them are the memories of the 1950s and 1960s. Then regimes that were seen as complicit with imperialism were swept aside by waves of revolution.

The intertwining of the struggle against imperialism and the Arab regimes makes the likelihood of permanent revolution stronger.

Many people may still have their doubts about the prospect of Arab workers making such a revolution. But the Arab regimes and their allies in the West do not share them.



http://www.socialistworker.co.uk/art.php?id=16835

This article does a good job of explaining how anti-imperialist struggles can lead to working-class struggles in other countries. The working classes of Egypt and other Arab states have made it clear that they see their own governments as complicit in the oppression of the Palestinian people and tools of the imperialist powers, especially in the case of Egypt, which is now the second-biggest recipient of American aid in the entire world, after Israel, and this raises the possibility of these workers overthrowing their governments and establishing genuine workers state in their place in order to provide Palestinians with the regional solidarity they need to cast off the yoke of Zionism.

Mather
14th January 2009, 21:19
Of all the Arab countries in North Africa and the Middle East, Egypt will be the first country to have a rebellion/uprising against the government.

There had been a great deal of social and political tension there for a few years.

Yehuda Stern
14th January 2009, 22:05
Treating the rockets as an integral part of the resistance shows blatant naivety on the one hand and the SWP's cynical attitude towards the lives of anyone it doesn't think it can recruit on the other.

The article also shows that at bottom, the SWP is not an internationalist organization and does not wish to challenge the leadership of the Islamists over the anti-imperialist movement, but simply accept, as usual for this opportunist tendency. There's no criticism of Hamas or Nasser's attempts to make a deal with imperialism at the expense of the Arab masses, nor any word about Hamas' reactionary program, let alone a call for a revolutionary workers' party in Palestine (or Egypt, for that matter).

BobKKKindle$
14th January 2009, 22:35
Actually, Yehuda, the article makes it clear that, from a military perspective, the missiles are irrelevant and ineffective in comparison to the technological resources at Israel's disposal, and instead their real importance lies in the fact that they signify an unwillingness on the part of Hamas and the Palestinian population to accept Israeli aggression, especially when we consider that the stated objective of the current invasion is to eliminate these attacks by destroying what Israel sees as a "terrorist" infrastructure. The previous issue of Socialist Worker included an article on Israel's media strategy and pointed out that the number of rocket attacks being launched into Israel decreased dramatically following the ceasefire agreement and only returned to the previous level when Israel broke the agreement by attacking militants who were suspected of digging tunnels in order to transport weapons across the Gaza-Egypt border without the knowledge of the authorities. The article also notes the capitulation of Sadat and other leaders of Arab states during the 1970s.

As for the issue of Islamism, and the leadership of the anti-imperialist movement, the SWP explains its position in this (http://www.marxists.de/religion/harman/pt09.htm) article, entitled 'Prophet and Proletariat', as follows:

"Socialists can take advantage of these contradictions [within Islamism, between different sections of the movement, different age groups, etc] to begin to make some of the more radical Islamists question their allegiance to its ideas and organisations – but only if we can establish independent organisations of our own, which are not identified with either the Islamists or the state"

The same article investigates the reactionary features of Islamism such as a refusal to address the concerns of women, attitudes towards homosexuality, a lack of emphasis on class divisions within Muslim countries, and so on. This shows that the SWP does not passively accept the leading role of Islamism and is committed to creating new parties which would combine the struggle against occupation with a broader struggle against the capitalist system and all other forms of social oppression as part of a progressive movement rooted in the working class and other oppressed groups. You may feel that these points should have been made explicit in Socialist Worker, and I might agree with you, as other comrades have made the same kind of complaint when discussing other issues, but you can't accuse us of not understanding the issue, or not putting across the right arguments, because we clearly do - although perhaps not in the right places.

Pogue
14th January 2009, 22:47
Actually, Yehuda, the article makes it clear that, from a military perspective, the missiles are irrelevant and ineffective in comparison to the technological resources at Israel's disposal, and instead their real importance lies in the fact that they signify an unwillingness on the part of Hamas and the Palestinian population to accept Israeli aggression, especially when we consider that the state objective of the current invasion is to eliminate these attacks by destroying what Israel sees as a "terrorist" infrastructure. The previous issue of Socialist Worker included an article on Israel's media strategy and pointed out that the number of rocket attacks being launched into Israel decreased dramatically following the ceasefire agreement and only returned to the previous level when Israel broke the agreement by attacking militants who were suspected of digging tunnels in order to transport weapons across the Gaza-Egypt border without the knowledge of the authorities. The article also notes the capitulation of Sadat and other leaders of Arab states during the 1970s.

As for the issue of Islamism, and the leadership of the anti-imperialist movement, the SWP explains its position in this (http://www.marxists.de/religion/harman/pt09.htm) article, entitled 'Prophet and Proletariat', as follows:

"Socialists can take advantage of these contradictions [within Islamism, between different sections of the movement, different age groups, etc] to begin to make some of the more radical Islamists question their allegiance to its ideas and organisations – but only if we can establish independent organisations of our own, which are not identified with either the Islamists or the state"

The same article investigates the reactionary features of Islamism such as a refusal to address the concerns of women, attitudes towards homosexuality, a lack of emphasis on class divisions within Muslim countries, and so on. This shows that the SWP does not passively accept the leading role of Islamism and is committed to creating new parties which would combine the struggle against occupation with a broader struggle against the capitalist system and all other forms of social oppression as part of a progressive movement rooted in the working class and other oppressed groups. You may feel that these points should have been made explicit in Socialist Worker, and I might agree with you, as other comrades have made the same kind of complaint when discussing other issues, but you can't accuse us of not understanding the issue, or not putting across the right arguments, because we clearly do - although perhaps not in the right places.

I think the problem with the SWP is that it seems that their theories in defense of their actions seem to be post-hoc justifications for opputunism or general cluelessness. They make these bold claims about being in a group to influence its members, do this do that, but then don't appear to do it.

BobKKKindle$
14th January 2009, 22:55
I think the problem with the SWP is that it seems that their theories in defense of their actions seem to be post-hoc justifications for opputunism or general cluelessness. They make these bold claims about being in a group to influence its members, do this do that, but then don't appear to do it.

Could you perhaps give an example of this, HLVS? In my experience the SWP is the exact opposite of opportunistic - we raise exactly the right slogans when other groups are afraid to be as radical as they should be when confronted with a case of national oppression. At the demonstration on the 10th, for example, we were the only party calling for the victory of Hamas, and supporting a unitary state solution. Other groups such as the CWI and AWL were ambiguous about whether socialists should take the side of the oppressed, and both support a two-state solution.

Magdalen
14th January 2009, 23:05
At the demonstration on the 10th, for example, we were the only party calling for the victory of Hamas, and supporting a unitary state solution. Other groups such as the CWI and AWL were ambiguous about whether socialists should take the side of the oppressed, and both support a two-state solution.

What about the RCG? :p

Pogue
14th January 2009, 23:22
Could you perhaps give an example of this, HLVS? In my experience the SWP is the exact opposite of opportunistic - we raise exactly the right slogans when other groups are afraid to be as radical as they should be when confronted with a case of national oppression. At the demonstration on the 10th, for example, we were the only party calling for the victory of Hamas, and supporting a unitary state solution. Other groups such as the CWI and AWL were ambiguous about whether socialists should take the side of the oppressed, and both support a two-state solution.

Well, for example, getting involved in the Palestinian campaign is fine, but taking a distinctly pro-Hamas line seems wrong to me. When I participate in that protest I do it in solidarity with fellow human beings and workers in a nation being attacked by a particularly brutal and murderous section of the bourgeoisie, Israel. But I don't support Hamas themselves in any victory because if they gain a victory, things will only be slightly better for the Palestinians. Yes, things will still be better, and a Hamas victory is preferable to an Israeli one if viewed purely in terms of less evils, but Hamas will still implement a state, and one that will be anything but left wing. I instead support the Palestinian people and hope they should have a victory.

This is more of a far off goal because the chances of them creating a worker run society is less likely than Hamas winning and implementing whatever they want, but its my desire. As I said Hamas is preferable but that does not mean I support them and what they desire, and as revolutionary socialists I think the SWP should only support revolutionary socialism, i.e. a solution or victory in Palestine as being the working class taking control of their own lives, living in peace, as opposed to a victory of a reactionary anti-worker group such as Hamas whose victory, although preferable to an Israeli one, would not give many benefits to those working class in a Hamas dominated society (although it will be better than an Israeli dominated society). I know that the SWP justifies its support for Hamas according to a revolutionary theory to do with national liberation and with some doses of entryism or some sorts, but I think this argument is hard to understand even for me, and has holes in that the SWP isn't actually winning people over from Hamas because by giving them its support, it only seems to be praising them, rather than criticising their ideologies and practice (union bashing and their general ideology which I believe is described as Islamism, some sort of political rule based upon Islam? Naturally we oppose this as another bourgeois ideology).

Basically I think the SWPs idea of critical support and working within these groups/national liberation as the first step in class sturggle fail because they cannot follow through with winning over the Palestinian/British Muslim/British Palestinian proletariat becuase they're too busy supporting Hamas and don't build upon this. They just can't do what they say they are doing (the reaosn they're active in these campaigns is to win people over to socialism but they just don't do this, basically).

BobKKKindle$
14th January 2009, 23:34
The SWP is not trying to enter Hamas, and we do not identify with the ideology that Hamas promotes. However, in the event of a conflict between Israel and the Palestinian people, we would take the side of the latter. This position unfortunately requires us to offer military support to Hamas even though we do not share the same political views or objectives, simply because Hamas currently dominates the resistance struggle, and there is no other option for Palestinian workers in terms of how they can go about resisting Israel aggression. This does not mean we celebrate the fact that Hamas has been able to establish itself as the dominant force or that we want Hamas to retain this position, but recognizing the right of the Palestinian people to resist in the future, and supporting them however they choose to do so, even if the resistance is conducted through a reactionary movement, is the first step towards Hamas being displaced by a socialist organization which, as noted above, would combine the struggle against imperialism with other struggles, including the anti-capitalist struggle.

I understand that this distinction (between military support and political solidarity) can be difficult to express, and that the SWP may not always express it as clearly as we should, but we stand by the Palestinian people, and only support Hamas in their capacity as anti-imperialists. If, at some point in the future, possibly following a peace agreement with Israel, Hamas rejected the struggle and became complicit in the oppression of the Palestinian people in the same way as Fatah has done in the West Bank, by carrying out attacks against genuine anti-imperialist militants, and passing on information to Israel intelligence, we would immediately abandon our support and oppose Hamas as a tool of the Israeli bourgeoisie. In other words, we would never allow ourselves to become cheerleaders or apologists for Hamas - our concern for anti-imperialism would always remain central.

Pogue
14th January 2009, 23:36
The SWP is not trying to enter Hamas, and we do not identify with the ideology that Hamas promotes. However, in the event of a conflict between Israel and the Palestinian people, we would take the side of the latter. This position unfortuantely requires us to offer military support to Hamas even though we do not share the same political views or objectives, simply because Hamas curently dominates the resistance struggle, and there is no other option for Palestinian workers in terms of how they can go about resisitng Israel aggression. This does not mean we celebrate the fact that Hamas has been able to establish itself as the dominant force or that we want Hamas to retain this position, but recognizing the right of the Palestinian people to resist in the future, and supporting them however they choose to do so, even if the resistance is conducted through a reactionary movement, is the first step towards Hamas being displaced by a socialist organization which, as noted above, would combine the struggle against imperialism with other struggles, including the anti-capitalist struggle.

Yes of course I understand this justification. I appreciate Hamas is the only option. But I think this justifies the Palestinian people supporting it, and us supporting them regardless of what Hamas may think and do, but not supporting Hamas itself. I support the struggle of Palestinian people, not Hamas, and I think there is a difference.