From: New Worker Online <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [New-Worker-News] Make 2002 a year of resistance

Make 2002 a year of resistance

by Andy Brooks

Normally the marking of the New Year is taken as an opportunity for
bourgeois politicians to trot out their pious phrases of hope and peace and
goodwill to all. This year the optimism has been a bit more muted and the
calls for peace even more transparent as it becomes clear that the
capitalist world is plunging into economic and political crisis.

 The recession that began with the Asia crisis a few years ago and hit the
United States in 2000 is now biting in Europe. All the three major centres
of capitalism, the United States, European Union and Japan are in the grip
of escalating recession. The growth rate in the economies of the advanced
capitalist countries is predicted to grow by just one per cent.

 The crisis of overproduction has led to the classic response of the
imperialist world - intensified exploitation of the developing countries to
try to make the workers and peasants of the Third World pay for it coupled
with increasing attacks on the living standards of the working class in the
capitalist heart-lands. They call it "globalisation" or the "new world
order" and try to pass it off as a progressive or at least inevitable
development in human society.

 But as always, wherever there is oppression there is always resistance.

 We see it in the developed world from Seattle to Genoa in the growing
numbers drawn to the "anticapitalist" demonstrations. We see it in the
anarchic attacks on New York and Washington by Islamic nationalists. We see
it in the mass protests that have brought down the Argentinian government
and forced its successors to devalue the peso and listen at least for the
moment, to the demands of organised labour.

 The ruling circles in the United States, Britain and Western Europe have
long prepared for civil unrest at home and resistance abroad to their
manoeuvres. Prior to 1990 the imperialists focused their efforts on the
destruction of the socialist world. They partially succeeded. The
counter-revolutions in the Soviet Union and the socialist blee in Europe in
1990 were a major triumph for US-led imperialism and they followed through
by moving to partition Yugoslavia through civil strife and finally open
warfare while stepping up their efforts to isolate the remaining socialist
countries.

 With the Soviet Union gone US-led imperialism then moved for the economic
recolonisation of the world, calling it globalisation and the new world
order, and now in the name of the "anti-terrorist" crusade. The most
reactionary circles in America dream of world domination. Others only
differ in that they accept that US imperialist domination of the globe has
to be done in partnership with the European Union and to a much lesser
degree with Japan. All believe that they can achieve their aims through
economic blackmail, war and the threat of war.

 At the moment the greatest challenge to communists and progressives
throughout the globe is the threat of war. Fighting continues in
Afghanistan. The United States threatens Somalia, Iraq, Syria, Iran and the
Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea. India and Pakistan are on the brink
of war themselves.

 But the experience of the last decade shows the limitations on imperialist
might and the potential strength of popular resistance even when
confronting technically superior, professional armies especially when
linked to the peace movements in the imperialist heartlands.

 Though the United States is the sole super-power with a nuclear arsenal
which can destroy the entire world many times over and armed forces
equipped with the latest in technological advance it still cannot give them
victory.

 We need to remember this because this wasn't the case in the 19th century
when the capitalist world - essentially Britain and the Great Powers of
Europe - enslaved the entire continent of Africa and most of Asia.

 There was resistance - the Indian "mutiny", the Afghan wars, the Mahdi of
the Sudan and the Boxer uprising in China are some of the many examples we
could list. But the colonial powers ultimately succeeded because the
resistance was always led by feudal nationalists who could not mobilise all
the oppressed classes in their lands to face the superior forces of the
colonisers. Nor was there any peace movement in the imperialist countries
allied to the struggles against imperialism overseas.

 The Russian Revolution in 1917 electrified the entire colonial world. For
the first time in the history of humanity the masses had overthrown
feudalism and capitalism and were beginning to build a workers' and
peasants' state. The oppressed peoples of Africa, Asia and the Americas saw
the fledgling Soviet state defeat the reactionary White Guards and beat off
the combined might of the imperialist interventionist armies.

 The struggle for independence, the fight to break the chains of colonial
slavery began anew based on the new class forces throughout the colonial
empires. And within a few years of the defeat of Nazi Germany and the
Japanese Empire in 1945 - largely through the efforts of the Soviet Union -
the old European empires began to face a new resistance which they could
not withstand.

 In more recent times we saw that popular resistance together with the
strength of the peace movement led to the defeat of US imperialism in
Vietnam and the rest of Indo-China. People's war defeated superior US
armies and the mounting US deaths fired the peace movement in the United
States and Europe to demand an end to the fighting. If it wasn't for the
peace movement in the United States the ruling class, which is indifferent
to casualties (the two world wars are proof of this), would not have
eventually withdrawn from Indo-China.

 Fear of the peace movement restrains imperialism today. It has forced the
US ruling class to wage war almost exclusively from the skies and through
special elite forces to limit casualties. But at the same time it has
limited imperialism's reach even after the end of the Soviet Union.

 Though they bombed Iraq into the ground the imperialists were unable to
march on Baghdad because they feared the casualties they would suffer. The
Americans were driven out of Somalia through just one day of fierce
fighting which led to the downing of a few helicopters and some GI deaths.
Even in Afghanistan the Americans have failed to achieve even their prime
objectives.

 Let's look at Afghanistan. The proclaimed aim was the death or capture of
Osama bin Laden, the Saudi Arabian rebel accused of masterminding the
September 11 attacks on the United States. That hasn't happened. The
secondary objective was the replacement of the Taleban regime in Kabul with
a puppet government headed by the ex-king of Afghanistan. That hasn't
occurred either.

 American bombing was decisive in bringing the Taleban down but the winners
on the ground were the Northern Alliance and their allies Russia, Iran and
India. Those three regional powers now have as much influence as Britain
and America, if not more, on the new government in Kabul.

 A major aspect of the "new world order" has been the marginalisation of
the United Nations and the UN Security Council by the United States and the
European Union as an international body for the resolution of disputes
since 1990. They have preferred to elevate the secret but well-publicised
Group of Seven conferences while limiting the UN to simply rubber-stamping
whatever Washington and the other imperialist powers have already agreed to
do.

 But this has its limitations, demonstrated vividly in the current crisis
over Kashmir. The Kashmir crisis goes back to the shambles of the partition
of Britain's Indian Empire in 1947. Britain, who believed a weakened and
divided sub-continent would preserve British imperialist interests,
inspired partition of India. Millions upon millions died in communal
rioting and the first Indo-Pakistan war that followed.

 Kashmir's decision to join the Indian Union was made by their feudal
prince without consultation with the people - a fact recognised by one of
the first decisions of the fledgling United Nations which agreed on a call
for a plebiscite or referendum to allow the population to vote on whether
they wanted to be in India, Pakistan or for independence.

 Successive Pakistani governments - mainly pro-imperialist military cliques
- have tried to resolve the issue largely through alliance with the United
States. That has never helped the people of Kashmir.

 A cease-fire line divides Kashmir - a third remains under Pakistani
control and India administers the rest. The vast majority of the population
are Muslims with close ties to Pakistan. There can be no doubt that any
popular vote would lead either to union with Pakistan or independence.
India has never accepted this, arguing dubiously that the religious issue
is irrelevant - India has an immense Muslim population in central India
that has no interest in Pakistani politics. The real reason is that Kashmir
is important strategically and economically to both countries.

 Today India and Pakistan are once again on the brink of war. India is led
by the reactionary BJP a front led by the secret Hindu-nationalist RSS, a
fascist reactionary nationalist blee led by high-castes, landlords and
industrialists. One of their followers killed Gandhi and more recently they
have been responsible for mosque-burnings and other antiIslamic
provocations in India.

 India has always defeated Pakistan in war and this is almost certainly the
case now and the BJP government is spoiling for a fight, partly to distract
the people from the woeful failing of their years of misrule but mainly
because they want to establish themselves as the biggest power in the
region - in alliance with the United States.

 India, under past Congress governments of Nehru and Indira Gandhi,
followed the path of independence,andindeedthose two leaders were pillars
of the non-aligned movement. The BJP leaders, who have been cosying up to
Washington since they came to power some years ago, have replaced India's
traditional policy with one of partnership with imperialism, chauvinism,
communalism and aggression. Some of them even talk of joining Nato now.

 Pakistan's military and civilian leaders have traditionally always looked
to the United States for help. Though it must be noted that they have
developed friendly ties with People's China and Democratic Korea while
popular leaders like Benazir Bhutto and her late father did try to
introduce some popular reforms in the past.

 The current Pakistani military regime is in deep trouble. Forced by Bush
to act as a willing tool in America's adventure in Afghanistan the
Pakistanis were rewarded with nothing at all for their loyalty. If
anything, the Americans would like Pakistan to cool its relations with
China and north Korea but they will do nothing to solve the Kashmir problem.

 Because of the danger of war and a nuclear one at that -- and because of
the large Asian minority in Britain our Party needs to make our position
clear on this issue.

 It is important to support the demand for a referendum for the Kashmiri
people to let them decide if they wish to be part of the Indian Union,
Pakistan or in an independent state of Kashmir. We need to uphold the UN
resolution regarding Kashmir.

 The problem cannot be resolved by war or victory by one side or another
and we must support all efforts to ensure that a war does not occur. The
only beneficiary of such an outcome would be imperialism itself that would
welcome a weakened India and Pakistan into their military network of
alliances after such a bloodletting, as part of their ambition to dominate
Central Asia and encircle Russia and People's China.

 At home we can be heartened at the semi-spontaneous resurrection of the
peace movement. The first anti-war demonstration in November brought 50.000
to London, the second topped 100,000 - this compares with the few thousand
in the Malvinas/Falklands war and the Gulf and the 20,000 plus peak during
the Yugoslav war during the last week of the bombing.

 This reflects the growing disillusionment amongst young people and a broad
spectrum of the public and it is a heartening symptom of quantitative
change. This is also shown in the resurgent militancy in some sections of
the trade union movement. The civil service strikes, which have involved
thousands, have been followed by RMT actions against rail companies over
pay which look like spreading across the entire privatised network.

 These are important first signs of resistance at rank-and-file level to
the continuing offensive against the working class by successive Tory and
Labour governments particularly now that the slump is beginning to impact
on British society.

 Our main Congress resolution looked at British capitalism's endemic
problems in depth and last week's New Worker highlighted the steep decline
in manufacturing output reflected in more redundancies and closures
throughout the country.

 We have to express clearly - that the short-term answer is to put the
burden of the crisis back onto those who can well afford it - the rich.
They've got plenty and they must be forced to disgorge a fraction of their
wealth through progressive taxation to the levels that existed in the
1970s. This would provide decent lives for working people through the
maintenance of public services and utilities, the restoration of the public
sector through renationalisation and the improvement of the National Health
Service.

 All of it could all be funded through progressive taxation, the slashing
of the defence budget and the scrapping of the so-called nuclear deterrent.

 We have to also say that the only long-term answer is socialism
revolutionary change led by a mass-based communist party.

 Our critics and enemies say this is far-fetched and unrealistic. But our
stand is both realistic and practical. Our support for the Labour Party in
elections - with the provisos spelt out once again at the 13th Congress for
support of independent Labour candidates like Livingstone who have mass
support within the movement - is one which complies with the demands of the
class as a whole. The only alternative to a Labour government in bourgeois
elections is a Conservative government. It is as simple as that.

 The 13th Congress of our Party was a triumph for our determination to
build a genuine communist movement in Britain.

 We demonstrated our commitment to genuine communist unity by strengthening
our ties with the Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain
(Marxist-Leninist) along lines which should be the model for relations with
any other Marxist groups that want to march together with us. And our
commitment to proletarian internationalism was reflected by the number of
delegations from overseas who came to our 13th Congress and the fraternal
messages that we received from communist and workers parties all over the
world.

 At the Marx House Congress we charted our programme for the next two years
towards the class and towards building the Party. We declared that we are
going to build a monolith party - one that speaks as on throughout the land.

 Building the monolith requires commitment, understanding and acceptance of
democratic centralism as spelt out at the Marx House Congress and the
determination to ensure that all decisions are carried out. it will mean
that the Party's voicewill be heard much louder in the months to come.




New Communist Party of Britain Homepage

http://www.geocities.com/capitolhill/2853

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