Augusto Nicolás Calderón Sandino was born in Niquinohomo, Masaya Township
May 18, 1895.

*Sandino, the general of free men*[image: Augusto Cesar Sandino]*Augusto
Cesar Sandino*

Like the whole of Latin America and the Caribbean, Nicaragua was looted,
exploited and invaded by imperialism. The US bourgeoisie in particular,
needed to control the country because Nicaragua was very important from a
strategic and commercial point of view, as it connected the Atlantic and
Pacific Oceans. Augusto Cesar Sandino, the son of a poor peasant family,
was the first to organise a struggle against imperialism in Nicaragua and
he was to lead a six-year guerrilla war, between 1927 and 1932.

Sandino began the struggle with just 29 fighters recruited among the miners
and eventually built this up into a fighting force of 3000 guerrillas who
came from among the peasantry, the urban poor and the continent's
internationalist youth. His struggle had the support of revolutionaries all
over the world. According to some reports placards that read "Viva
Sandino!" appeared as far away as Beijing and Shanghai in 1927.

Sandino's guerrillas faced the might of the US marines and the regular
army. The regime could not smash the movement directly and responded by
using terror against the peasants, carrying out mass executions and
systematic torture against the civilian population organised by the
National Guard that had been trained by the US. Seventy military aircraft
were used, anticipating what we were to witness in Vietnam 40 years later.

Unfortunately in 1932 Sandino agreed to surrender in exchange for the
withdrawal of US troops and the promise that the lives of his guerrillas
would be spared. Augusto Cesar Sandino paid a heavy price for his naivety.
He lost his own life and that of his whole army. On February 21, 1934 he
was assassinated after a dinner with President Bautista Sacasa, the
"liberal" and puppet of Washington. Anastacio Somoza Garcia was later to
say: "I went to the US embassy where I had a chat with Ambassador Arthur
Bliss who confirmed that the Washington government recommended the
elimination of Augusto Sandino because they considered him a threat to
peace in the country".

Sandino conducted a heroic struggle but it was not enough to win outright
victory. In his thinking there was a fundamental flaw that was to reappear
also in the thinking of the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN)
fifty years later. Sandino's idea was that it was possible to free the
country from foreign military domination with the collaboration of the
"national-colonial bourgeoisie", with no need for Revolution whatsoever. In
his own words: "Neither far-right nor far-left; our slogan is the united
front. In this sense it is not at all illogical that our struggle accepts
the collaboration of all social classes with no labels or 'isms'."

Had the Nicaraguan Socialist Party, PSN, [the name of the Stalinists in
Nicaragua at the time] adopted a correct approach to Sandino's movement,
things may have turned out differently. But the sectarian policy of the
Nicaraguan Stalinists helped to push Sandino into the arms of the
bourgeoisie. And his assassination then prepared the way for the coup
d'etat staged by the National Guard and the ensuing 42-year dictatorship of
the Somoza family that lasted until 1973. All this took place with the
approval of Moscow and the "communists" of the PSN. However, in spite of
the repression, not all the opposition was smashed. In Managua for
instance, the Managuan Workers' Confederation (CTM) continued to organise
3,000 workers in underground conditions.



 <http://www.marxist.com/lessons-nicaragua-part-one.htm>
Nicaragua: Lessons of a country that did not finish its revolution
*...*<http://www.marxist.com/lessons-nicaragua-part-one.htm>
Jan 17, 2008 *...* Augusto Cesar *Sandino*, the son of a poor peasant
family, was the first to *...* *Sandino's* guerrillas faced the might of
the US marines and the *...*
www.marxist.com/lessons-nicaragua-part-one.htm
  <http://www.marxist.com/lessons-nicaragua-part-two.htm>
Nicaragua: Lessons of a country that did not finish its revolution
*...*<http://www.marxist.com/lessons-nicaragua-part-two.htm>
Jan 18, 2008 *...* The struggle of Augusto César *Sandino* and of all the
revolutionary martyrs of Nicaragua are a tradition that cannot be buried.
The seeds of *...*
www.marxist.com/lessons-nicaragua-part-two.htm



Nicaragua: Lessons of a country that did not finish its revolution - Part
Two <http://www.marxist.com/lessons-nicaragua-part-two.htm>
Written by Claudio VillasFriday, 18 January 2008
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The Sandinistas carried out many progressive reforms after they came to
power, but they never seriously tackled the question of ownership of the
means of production. By leaving the bulk of the economy in private hands
they gave the local oligarchy and imperialism the instruments by which
these were able to undermine the revolution and eventually defeat it.*Reform
or Revolution: The nature of the state*

Thousands of working class men and women took advantage of the victory of
the Nicaraguan revolution in 1979 to immediately demand better pay and
conditions and also payment of wages lost during the revolutionary strike.
The bourgeoisie were preparing to take advantage of the new political era
inaugurated by the Sandinistas for their own ends, when it had in fact been
the people who had kicked Somoza out of the country.

The problem was that, unlike in Russia during the 1905 and 1917
revolutions, in Nicaragua during these revolutionary months no independent
organs of workers' power were set up in the cities. Therefore the power
vacuum after the revolutionary victory was filled by the FSLN guerrillas
and the representatives of the urban bourgeoisie.

Instead of basing the new power on assemblies and workers' and peasants'
committees (genuine workers' democracy), the new state structure was based
on the hierarchical model of the guerrilla army - like in the Cuban
revolution. From a Marxist point of view the problem with this
organisational model is that it does not allow the participation of the
masses in the decision-making process, in the election and recall of the
leaders and so on. In other words, it does not allow for genuine control of
the state and the state apparatus. The strong point of workers' democracy
compared to other kinds of regimes thrown up by different revolutions is
the democratic mechanisms to counteract bureaucratisation.

Lenin explained that some conditions had to exist in a revolution in order
to have power held by the people. Lenin never talked about "popular power"
in general. In his writings such as *State and Revolution*, *April Thesis*
 and *The impending catastrophe and how to fight it*, the Bolshevik leader
developed Karl Marx's theory under the light of revolutionary experience.

The working class cannot use the bourgeois state apparatus to rule. The
bourgeois military, parliamentary, legal and ideological institutions are
tailor-made for the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie - it is the main
instrument used by the bourgeois class to rule over the working class and
other oppressed layers of society. The bourgeois state is not fit for
"popular power" because it is designed precisely to stop any genuine
popular participation.

What is needed to overcome the bourgeoisie and end their economic,
political and military rule is to establish new and genuinely popular
structures based on the natural forms of organisation of the working class
in struggle:

1) All the power in the cities must be in the hands of revolutionary
committees elected by all the revolutionary population mobilised in the
wards, and districts...

   - All the power in the factories, companies, media and so on must be
   under the control of committees elected by revolutionary workers'
   assemblies in each sector.
   - All the power of the state must rest under the general command of the
   revolution which should be elected, accountable and recallable by
   committees of workers and peasants in order to exclude the bourgeoisie from
   political power. No to the bourgeois parliament, no to the bourgeois
   government, no to the bourgeois courts.
   - All delegates or representatives must be elected and recallable at any
   moment by the rank and file that voted them. Not a single official in the
   new state must get wages superior to the average earnings of a worker. This
   is the way to fight bureaucracy.

2) There must be popular militias based on the working class and the poor
peasantry to replace the traditional army that is kept isolated from the
population by the walls of the barracks.

   - The officers must be elected and recallable by the ranks of the
   militias and controlled by peasants' and workers' revolutionary committees
   in the countryside and the wards in the cities.
   - Arms must be under the control of the revolutionary committees elected
   in the wards, villages and factories. Soldiers must coordinate their
   committees with them.

3) Nationalisation of the most important industries and the multinational
companies under workers' control. There must be no compensation to the
former owners. Only the small shareholders that genuinely need it, should
be compensated.

   - Nationalisation of the banks, insurance companies and construction
   companies. Private and foreign banks must be merged into a single
   revolutionary central bank under the control of the workers' state.
   - Control of foreign trade and collectivisation of the big landowners'
   estates.

What was the situation in Nicaragua after the revolution? Both the
Sandinista and non-Sandinista civil servants began to earn 6 and 7 times
more than ordinary workers in a situation where 50% of the labour force was
unemployed. The managers of private industry carried on earning an average
of 20 to 25 times more than the workers. Banks with no currency reserves
and that were bankrupt were nationalised. The government assumed the debt
of private companies. The private banks suffered losses of 1800 million
dollars caused by the debts of such companies. Only companies that belonged
to the Somoza family were nationalised (these represented 25% of the
Nicaraguan economy). These companies had been completely abandoned and
ruined by the Somoza family. Payments of interest on the foreign debt were
not suspended, nor was the Somozista foreign debt repudiated. The workers
were excluded from any possibility of controlling the major economic
decisions.

The Somozista state machinery and its armed body (the National Guard) were
swept away by the revolution. The leadership of the FSLN stepped into this
vacuum. These same leaders months before taking power had brokered the
creation of a National Reconstruction Junta (JNR) with the national and
international bourgeoisie from Costa Rica and Venezuela. Months before
there were frenetic activities that involved agreements, meetings and
negotiations abroad between the FSLN leaders, representatives of the
Nicaraguan bourgeoisie and the bourgeois governments of Costa Rica, Panama,
Venezuela and Mexico.
 [image: General Omar Torrijos] *General Omar Torrijos*

The main goal pursued by everybody (including the FSLN) was to negotiate
the nature of the new state after the overthrow of Somoza and avoid a
situation where the Nicaraguan masses could cast off the chains of
capitalism. General Omar Torrijos from Panama sent his National Guard to
coordinate the FSLN actions. The aim was to ensure a bourgeois and
bureaucratic structure of the new army and give logistical support and
troops to the final offensive of the Sandinistas. The popular militias
formed during the struggle were disbanded by the Sandinista central
command. The Sandinistas bent under the pressure of the national and
international bourgeoisie.

The setting up of revolutionary popular militias always terrifies the
ruling class because these can be sued to destroy the repressive apparatus
of the bourgeois state. This happened then and will happen in all
revolutions. The disarming of the people appeared to be a priority to
establish "bourgeois democratic credibility" of the National Reconstruction
government led by the Sandinistas.

On July 27, a week after the taking of Managua the Sandinista army chief
Humberto Ortega announced the integration of the popular militias into the
new regular army following the advice of the Panama National Guard. Years
earlier this body had been trained by US officers and the CIA. He also
created the Sandinista Police (PNS) in order to remove public order tasks
from the Sandinista Defence Committees (CDS).

The distribution of land is key to the success of all revolutions. The
revolution had initially encouraged the poor peasants and rural workers to
take over the land. The JNR stopped them and they even used the newly
created Sandinista Police to persuade the peasants not to occupy the land.

To make things crystal clear: the Minister for Agrarian Reform intervened
and ordered that nobody could take over landed estates even if they were
misused, because the Ministry of Agrarian Reform would provide land at the
appropriate time.

On July 31, Sandinista Wheelock stated, "We do not want to allow
radicalism, we are realists". In 1981 the Minister for Planning, Xavier
Gorostiaga, recognised that "very few people are aware of the fact that 80%
of agricultural production is in the hands of the private sector, as is as
75% of the industrial sector". The private sector controlled 72% of cotton
production, 53% of coffee, 58% of cattle production, 51% of sugar, while
the 200,000 peasants owned only 14% of the land. It would be true to say
that by this stage many peasants and agricultural labourers realised that
the FSLN leadership was acting as a brake on the revolution.

The Sandinista leadership ruled the country *together with the treacherous
national bourgeoisie during the first months of the revolution*. However,
the economic crisis continued to get worse. But the bourgeoisie, by now
reassured that the FSLN leadership had halted the revolution, left the
economic problems for the Sandinistas to sort out. The first move of the
FSLN in the National Reconstruction government (made up of just 5 people)
was to install a State Council. This was a bourgeois-democratic body made
up of 33 members in which all the social, political and trade union forces
that accepted the Sandinista leadership were represented. In 1984, this
parliament was transformed into the Nicaraguan National Assembly, by now a
bourgeois parliament with a leftwing majority.

In this manner, the FSLN leadership preserved the traditional parliament
and government structures of the capitalist state. Executive power was
concentrated in the hands of the National Directorate which was chaired by
the President of the Republic. In 1984 in a few days more than 80% of the
population over the age of 16 registered on the electoral register. The
election results revealed the huge support of the masses for the FSLN.

The hypocrisy of US imperialists had no limits even from a
bourgeois-democratic point of view. They used the same old method of
denouncing "repression in Nicaragua".
*Nicaragua was the most democratic state in Central America*

CDN (National Democratic Coordination) leader Arturo Cruz participated
alongside other people in the first phases of the Sandinista government. A
few months later he went over to the side of the Contra and denounced the
1984 elections as anti-democratic. (Have we not seen such examples also
today in Venezuela?). The bourgeoisie never completely accepted the
Sandinista government because it was not "theirs" and they could not rely
on it to rule the country as they wished. The Sandinistas tried to reach an
agreement with the bourgeoisie, to no avail. Believing in the myth of the
"progressive bourgeoisie", the Sandinistas gave these elements a lot of
room to manoeuvre, above all in the economic field.

After the victory of the 1979 revolution, the FSLN led the development of
the new trade unions in the Sandinista CST (confederation of unions), which
was the result of the merger of the two trade union federations controlled
by the Stalinists. These "communist" trade union leaders enthusiastically
accepted the task of holding back workers' struggles and the social
pressure of the unemployed workers. The Agricultural Workers' Associations
(ATC), the Youth Movement (MJS) and the CDS, which were established at ward
level like the Cuban Committees in Defence of the Revolution (CDR), were
also centralised. The problem was that none of these organisations held
real power and all were transformed into mechanisms to implement the
decisions from the top down.
*"The mixed economy" - a death trap (and a warning to Venezuela)*

The FSLN immediately decided that the economy had to remain mixed. They
gave no room for any debate among peasants and workers on major affairs of
the revolution. The Sandinista leader and Government minister Jaime
Wheelock stated on August 21 1979 to the French newspaper *Le Monde* that
he boldly opposed "...all of those that want to accelerate the evolution of
the regime in Nicaragua". Another Sandinista leader, and Home Affairs
Minister, Tomas Borge, behaved in a similar manner.

Commander Humberto Ortega stated that, "national reconstruction must serve
to reach a superior phase of political and social development. If we did
not have this phase we could not have in Nicaragua a future liberal
democratic society or any other kind of society [...] We state that
[national reconstruction] is a phase of the popular-democratic revolution" (
*Granma*, September 2 1979).

Imperialism could breath a sigh of relief as the immediate danger seemed to
have been removed. And in order to make sure that the revolution did not
divert from the bourgeois path a lot of well-respected social-democratic
leaders landed in Managua Airport. Felipe Gonzalez from the Spanish PSOE,
the French "socialists", Mario Soares from the Portuguese Socialist Party,
the Swedish and Belgian social democracy, the German SPD, the reformist
leaders of the Italian PCI all went to Nicaragua to offer their services.

The international social-democracy organised the raising of loans in Europe
to help Nicaragua to service its foreign debt. This was a great example of
"reformist internationalism" at the services of the big capitalists. Very
soon the OAS (Organisation of American States) recognised the regime and
after this came money from Venezuela, Costa Rica, Panama and Europe. Food
and drugs were shipped from the US.

Weeks after Somoza had fled the country, imperialism had clearly understood
what was behind the business-friendly messages issued by the FSLN
recognising that this was a weakness they could exploit. Jimmy Carter said
on September 11, 1979: "I am satisfied with the Nicaraguan government",
while the Deputy Secretary of State Warren Christopher announced the very
next day to the newspaper *El Espectador de Bogota*: "The Jimmy Carter
government asked the Congress for a grant of 11 million for Nicaragua to
reinforce the pluralist and moderate policies of its new revolutionary
government. The outlook of the government, as has been revealed in its
initial policies, has been moderate and pluralist and neither Marxist nor
Cuban." And on October 29 1979 the ghost of the UN showed up with a
resolution appealing for economic solidarity with Nicaragua.

As we explained at the beginning of this document, the revolution achieved
great successes in the social fields. However, unlike the Cuban Revolution,
a large part of the economy was left in the hands of the multinational
companies (like the American colossus General Mills and Exxon, at that time
the second biggest in the world) and the Nicaraguan bourgeoisie.

The economic plan of the Sandinistas known as "Fight Plan" stated: "We
opposed the policy of regulation of the participation in the development of
our country by foreign capital, other states and private companies, in the
context of a mixed economy which offers room for the work of both sectors
of popular and private property that will be interested in the national
development". In other words, the "Fight Plan" accepted imperialist control
of very important sectors of the economy.

The Sandinistas did not hand back full political power to the bourgeoisie,
but they did leave in their hands a crucial weapon to undermine the
conquests of the Nicaraguan Revolution. While the government was
subsidising the private sector through tax cuts to get its support and
collaboration, the capitalists boycotted the economy and supported the
Contras!

The public sector represented 14% of GNP in 1977 but it had grown to 41% by
1980 after some expropriations had been carried out, mainly property of the
Somoza family. Nonetheless, six years after the revolution (in 1985) the
country was only using 60% of its productive capacity. In 1981 the interest
on the foreign debt was consuming 40% of the country's revenues from
exports. The narrowness of the productive base of a country as small as
Nicaragua, which had fewer inhabitants than Caracas or Havana, meant that
to stimulate genuine development what was required was a truly
revolutionary initiative such as the expulsion of the bourgeoisie, and the
establishment of a Socialist Federation with Cuba. Unfortunately, Moscow
played a negative role in all this. It considered the Nicaraguan revolution
an internal affair of the Sandinistas and approved with no reservations the
economic policies of the FSLN. Havana, still heavily dependent on Moscow,
went along with this policy.
*The role of Moscow and Havana*

Central to the defeat of the Nicaraguan revolution was the lack of
understanding of the nature of the bourgeoisie on the part of the
Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN). The Moscow bureaucracy, that
was responsible for the tragic decline, and eventual fall, of the USSR was
happy to leave things as they were. They made no real effort to stop the
process of defeat in Nicaragua. Even trade between Moscow and Managua was
very limited. Moscow did not want problems with US imperialists in Central
and Latin America and was following a policy of diplomatic "peaceful
coexistence" with the US, something which Che Guevara had criticised
bitterly in the past. They did nothing to help the revolutionary movements
in Latin America.

Why? Because the Soviet bureaucracy feared revolution in any part of the
world. Successful revolutions would have upset the international balance of
forces. It would have upset their idea of peaceful coexistence between
their sphere of influence and that of imperialism. The Moscow bureaucracy
claimed to be communist, socialist, etc. but in reality it did not want to
see genuine socialism at home or abroad. The Moscow government in reality
detested Che Guevara and even in the case of Cuba had not supported the
radicalisation of the revolution. In 1960, two years after Castro's coming
to power, the Soviet bureaucracy was forced to accept the eradication of
capitalism in Cuba as a fait accompli. However, what they did do was to do
their best to stop the revolution from expanding to the rest of the
continent.

In 1979 and 1980, to their credit, the Cuban government called for a
campaign of solidarity with Nicaragua. They addressed all capitalist
countries of Latin America and the world, even the US, but strangely enough
not China or the USSR. Cuba even discouraged Nicaragua from associating
economically with the Soviet bloc. This was in reality a form of pressure
on the Sandinistas to maintain their alliance with the democratic bourgeois
governments in Central America and the Caribbean instead of with the USSR.
On January 11, 1985 Fidel Castro declared in *Barricada*, the central organ
of the FSLN:

"Yesterday we had the chance to listen to the speech of comrade Daniel
Ortega and I have to congratulate him. He has been serious and responsible.
He has explained the aims of the Sandinista Front in every sector: a mixed
economy, political pluralism and legislated foreign investment [...] I know
that in your conception there is room for a mixed economy. You can have a
capitalist economy. What you are not, without any doubt, going to have is a
government serving the interests of the capitalists."

What Comandante Fidel Castro then did not say was that a government cannot
serve the interests of the working class and at the same time grant
imperialism a free hand in the national economy. Meanwhile, as all those
speeches were taking place, the youth and militant workers of Nicaragua
were marching through the streets of Managua to strengthen the
anti-imperialist resistance shouting: *They shall not pass!*
*The new international scenario and the defeat of the revolution*

Despite their treacherous role, it was not the fascist Contra
paramilitaries that defeated the revolution. Popular resistance had
demoralised the Contra and they had been cornered by the mid-1980s. The
real reason the revolution was defeated was to be found in a combination of
factors. There was the fall in the price of oil and raw materials under the
absolute control of the dictatorship of the multinationals, combined with
internal and external sabotage by the Nicaraguan bourgeoisie who had sold
their country out.

Living conditions started to fall shortly after the coming to power of the
Sandinistas. Inflation reached 400% in 1987 resulting in a black market
that fed 130,000 people - about 5% of the population. This explains why
workers started to come out on strike and why a desperate population looted
shops in Managua. The government replied by banning the right to strike and
declaring a state of emergency as a response to the constant menace of the
US government headed by Ronald Reagan. The state was forced to spend 40% of
Nicaragua's GNP on weapons to defend the country while the private sector
carried on its boycott campaign.

In addition, the election of Reagan coincided with a new international
situation. Big capital in the United States had changed its view about the
Latin American situation. They saw that although the dictatorships they had
previously supported had been overthrown, the capitalist domination of
these countries had been preserved. This was due of course to the lack of
revolutionary leadership. Towards the end of the 1980s, the puppet regimes
in El Salvador and Colombia understood that their bloody regimes had to put
on a democratic mask, behind which the massacre of the working class and
peasants could continue. Added to this was the fact that the Stalinist
regimes were in deep crisis, as was their international influence.

In Europe there was a temporary lull in the struggles of the working class
and youth and also in the US there was a relative calm on the home front.
In Asia, the dictatorship in the Philippines had been defeated by the mass
mobilisations but the Maoist and Stalinist two-stage theory meant a clear
revolutionary opportunity had been lost. The new democratic bourgeois
government of Cory Aquino was on very good terms with Reagan. Reactionary
guerrillas in Afghanistan, financed and backed by the US through Pakistan,
were harassing the Russian Army. The world economy had recovered from
recession and the Reagan administration felt strong enough to take on the
Sandinistas with the paramilitary Contras and their propaganda campaign.

Morale among the Nicaraguan people started to fall rapidly and scepticism
towards the Sandinista government began to creep in. It was only the
imperialist threat that prevented the development of an open left-wing
opposition within the ranks of the Sandinista movement. In 1989 inflation
peaked at an incredible 36,000% and the average person's income was half of
what it had been in 1977. The situation was becoming desperate and the
government was hanging from a thread. Social spending had been cut and it
hit rock bottom in 1990, a crucial election year.

The collapse of the USSR and the Eastern Bloc at the end of the 1980s
contributed to a further demoralisation of the Sandinista leadership and it
started to look for solutions by shifting to the right, economically and
politically. As a result, the timid land reforms were suspended and they
buckled under the pressure of private business. Corruption among civil
servants started to become widespread.
 [image: Daniel Ortega] *Daniel Ortega*

Daniel Ortega, president of the Sandinista Front, had lost complete touch
with reality when he declared to*L'Unità,* the daily newspaper of the
Italian Communist Party (PCI) that, "We have kept our promises, we have
kept a mixed economy as well as economic pluralism. The Swedish model is
the model that we Nicaraguans look to with interest." (interview with
Daniel Ortega 5.5.1989). The problem was that Sweden had a much more
powerful state sector than Nicaragua and the Swedish bourgeoisie had come
onto the scene of history 300 years earlier. Once again we see that *there
is no room for more rich people*. The Sandinistas lost power in the 1990
elections. It was a vote against hunger and misery, a protest vote against
a government of the FSLN that lost the elections that day.

The political shortsightedness of the Sandinista leaders today stands fully
exposed, as we can see in a speech in 2004 by Daniel Ortega, the General
Secretary of the FSLN. In referring to the 1990 elections in which the USA
poured a mountain of dollars into funding anti-Sandinista propaganda,
Ortega stated:

"We were entering the most corrupt game with total honesty [...] Apart from
the good intentions [!] that the people in power [right wing politicians]
may have had in 1990, or in 1996, or the ones we have right now, apart from
their intentions of trying to do the best for Nicaragua [!!], the truth is
that they lacked a firm stand in the face of the Nicaraguan people, with
the Sandinista Front and with which to fight a dignified struggle to save
our interests as a nation, to save our sovereignty, our political and
social sovereignty.

"But to do this we need a government that operates with flexibility, with
an open mind and above all, with a sense of dignity and a sense of
sovereignty; because so far the last thing the governments that we have
had, has been a sense of dignity and sovereignty. It is painful to say
this. It is a shame for us to have to say this, but it is the truth. We
would like the current government to gain prestige by immediately tackling
the problems of production, food, health, the education of our country;
then they can say that they are doing this for the good of
Nicaragua."* *(meeting
in Managua, July 19, 2004).

After such a bitter experience and lacking the compass of Marxist theory,
the top leaders of the Sandinista movement still dream of a "national
progressive bourgeoisie" in a country where half of the population is
unemployed and more than half of the national budget is spent on paying the
foreign debt. However, the one thing that the right wing politicians did
not manage to erase was the important tradition of struggle of the
Nicaraguan working class. The struggle of Augusto César Sandino and of all
the revolutionary martyrs of Nicaragua are a tradition that cannot be
buried. The seeds of revolution will grow again. This time the revolution
will separate the reformists from the revolutionary leaders win the
Sandinista movement.
*The revolution returns, on a global scale*

The Venezuelan revolution that we are currently experiencing is the fruit
of a changed international situation. The whole world situation is
rebelling against imperialism. Today on a world scale we have present at
the same time revolutionary factors that occurred separately in different
historical periods over the last century:

1) The transition from an epoch of protracted development of the productive
forces on a world scale to a new epoch of global crisis of imperialism that
has already started (similar to the impasse at the beginnings of the
20th Century).
This is provoking a very unstable situation in world relations with the
perspective of wars, revolutions and counter-revolutions.

2) The aggressive nature of US imperialism combined with a weakening of its
power base. The US is both socially and economically fragile and is having
to open too many international fronts (similar to the period of defeat
during the Vietnam War and the oil crisis of 1973-75).

3) Extreme polarisation of society and the resurgence of revolutionary
struggles throughout Latin America as well as the end of peace and
stability in the most developed capitalist countries. There is also a
heightened international anti-imperialist awareness.

In this equation there are also new elements that contribute to a
heightened level of class struggle:

1) The numerical strength of the working class on a global scale and the
huge increase of the abyss between a privileged minority and the exploited
majority of society.

2) The confidence of the exploited peoples in their own ruling classes in
Asia, Africa and Latin America is diminishing rapidly. These "national
bourgeoisies" have had between 50 and 100 years of so-called independence
to develop "their" countries and they have failed.

We have entered a decisive epoch of world revolution. Venezuela is in the
vanguard of this process. As in Nicaragua in the past many reformist
"advisers" are seeking to hold the revolution back. They say we must have a
mixed economy, i.e. a capitalist economy. They say we must slow down the
pace of the revolution; we must involve the "progressive" bourgeoisie. All
this is very similar to the reformist policies that led to the defeat of
the Nicaraguan revolution. With the help of revolutionary Marxism, the
working class will learn from the lessons of the past. They will learn to
avoid the mistakes that were made in Nicaragua and in other failed
revolutions. On this basis they can achieve victories. They will repeat the
victory of the Russian revolution and base themselves on the best
traditions of genuine revolutionary Marxism. Our task is to bury capitalism
starting with a Socialist Federation of Venezuela and Cuba and then
spreading this to the whole of Latin America and beyond.
------------------------------

*Note 1:* The following resources were most useful in preparing this
text:*Nicaragua:
Reforma o Revolución *by Carlos Vig* *(Bogotá 1980), the document*Nicaragua*
: *due secoli di rivoluzione *published in 1987 by the Italian Marxists of *
FalceMartello* <http://www.marxismo.net/>; the pamphlet *Cuba: pasado,
presente y futuro* published in 2004 by the Spanish Marxists of *El
Militante* <http://www.elmilitante.org/> and the official Website of the
FSLN

*Note 2:* This article is a slightly edited version of a text written in
2004 before the Sandinistas came back into office.
------------------------------
See also:

   - Nicaragua: Lessons of a country that did not finish its revolution -
   Part One <http://www.marxist.com/lessons-nicaragua-part-one.htm>by
   Claudio Villas (January 17, 2008)


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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