The World since Seattle and September 11:
A War to Defeat, A World to Win

[Address of Dipankar Bhattacharya, General Secretary, CPI(ML), at the first
plenary session of the Asia Phacific Solidarity 2nd International
Conference, between March 28 to April 1, 2002 in Sydney, Australia]

>
> American political scientists who are fond of designing new theories of
world order at the slightest possible provocation have understandably been
quite busy over the last few years. The unfolding post-Cold War world
however continues to surprise and refute them and defy even the best of
bourgeois trajectories of analysis. Ironically, while bourgeois thinkers and
propagandists prefer to dismiss Marxist analyses of the contemporary world
as idle exercises in conspiracy theory, every Seattle and September 11 sends
them back to the mother of all excuses: 'intelligence failure'! Seattle of
course did not happen overnight. The signal from Chiapas came early in the
1990s. It was quite evident that the working people and revolutionary and
progressive forces the world over had a more ambitious and active agenda
than merely lamenting and analysing why the Soviet Union had finally
collapsed. Even before the World Trade Organisation was formally launched,
the Uruguay Round negotiations of the GATT had been greeted with bitter
protests in large parts of the developing world. Powerful militant
demonstrations of tens of thousands of people against the neo-liberal
dictates of the IMF, World Bank and WTO were being routinely reported from
almost all corners of Asia, Africa and Latin America. Seattle marked a new
high. It also set a new trend. One could say it produced a huge
demonstration effect.

For those of us who were understandably worried about the future of the
Seattle spirit after the trauma of September 11 and more importantly in the
wake of the war that followed, let me say at the outset that we have good
reasons to believe that the Seattle spirit has not only survived, but it is
also getting stronger. Only the other day we heard this roaring resolve at
the second World Social Forum meet in Porto Alegre: "WTO, IMF and World Bank
will meet somewhere, sometime. And we will be there." And now Barcelona has
shown that it need not be only WTO, IMF or World Bank.

The collapse of the Soviet Union and the larger Soviet bloc and the onset of
pro-market reforms in China obviously marked a major opportunity for
capitalist expansion, extensive as well as intensive. But this expansion
could only be achieved by aggravating the internal contradictions of an
increasingly globalised capitalism. Even as the contradiction between
socialism and capitalism was relegated for the time being from the domain of
practical politics to the realm of ideology, the heroic Cuban resistance
notwithstanding, and inter-imperialist rivalry remained somewhat muted, the
contradiction between imperialism and the third world grew sharper and the
rift between capital and labour in advanced capitalist countries wider. For
the cronies of capitalism, Seattle was a rude reminder of the growing
intensity and unmanageability of global capitalism's own internal
contradictions. For the soldiers of socialism, it signified the beginning of
an exciting and challenging new phase for pressing ahead.

One could not however miss a rather pronounced streak of American
conservatism in the Seattle showdown. But as the theatre of action travelled
from Seattle to Melbourne, Prague and Genoa, the tone became increasingly
anti-imperialist, the US imperialism was squarely named as the number one
global enemy and issues like third world debt began to figure much more
prominently alongside the other issues that are of immediate concern for the
youth and the working class. I am happy to tell you that Carlo Giuliani is
popularly acknowledged among Left circles in India, and I hope the same must
be true of many other countries, as the first martyr of the
anti-globalisation resistance. Rudy Giuliani may be the hero of New York
after September 11, but Carlo Giuliani remains the hero of the worldwide
campaign against globalisation.

>From Seattle to Genoa, the context of anti-globalisation resistance however
remained predominantly economic. In a way this was probably inescapable. For
if we are thinking and talking in terms of mass resistance to globalisation,
it cannot be based merely on the premise that globalisation is bad. The
> point is, globalisation is not just bad but it hurts and it hurts so many
millions the world over and in such a massive way. For the broadest majority
of the people cutting across communities and cultures, countries and
continents, the hurt is probably felt most acutely in the realm of economy.
It is quite understandable that the recent anti-globalisation protests have
grown in a climate of global economic slowdown or recession that refreshed
and refuelled memories of the Great Depression in all major capitalist
centres.

But then as Lenin showed so brilliantly and categorically a century ago in
his classic What Is To be Done, transition from the economic to the
political does not happen spontaneously. And this is precisely where he
located the most crucial role of revolutionary ideology and vanguard
organisation. One is inclined to remember this teaching of Lenin not just as
a basic principle of class struggle and proletarian or communist politics.
In the face of a revolutionary crisis, when the question of power cries to
be clinched, it is politics which becomes decisive, which makes or mars a
revolution. Look at what is happening in Argentina now. Blossoming in full
glory right in the American backyard is a mighty movement of millions of
Argentinians, a veritable festival of mass resistance against the
neo-liberal offensive of globalisation. Understandably, parallels are being
drawn in Left circles to the great Paris Commune of 1871. After all, it's
not everyday that one gets to see a popular movement assume such gigantic
proportions and come so close to even wresting power. Yet another teaching
of Lenin, of the imperialist chain snapping at its weakest link, appears in
striking distance of being vindicated once again. But the question that
remains to be answered: Is the movement in Argentina politically and
organisationally prepared for such a possibility?

To return to Seattle and September 11and the world defined by these markers,
one is tempted to see it in terms of an ongoing transition from the economic
to the political. The surface reality of globalisation does not always
reveal the underlying imperialist content and dynamics with the kind of
clarity and precision that the aftermath of September 11 has provided. Even
though many Marxists insist on using the term imperialist globalisation in
place of the widely used 'corporate globalisation', and some would like to
give up the word globalisation altogether and stick to imperialism, no
amount of theoretical debate and discussion could possibly have brought
imperialism back on the practical agenda in a way that September 11 and its
aftermath has done.

Ironically, even as protesters fought pitched battles on the streets from
Seattle to Genoa, a book that began making waves even in the
anti-globalisation camp declared imperialism to be a thing of the past. And
this book, Empire has been compared to the Communist Manifesto and its
authors have been described as Marx and Engels of the Internet age! The book
was of course written long before Seattle, it was possibly only marketed
with an eye on the Seattle effect. The authors in fact tell us that it was
written during the interregnum between the Gulf War and the war in Kosovo
and that makes it look all the more strange and silly.

It is difficult and perhaps not necessary to try and explain September 11
directly in terms of the logic of globalisation. In fact, it is the
proponents and apologists of globalisation who would like us to believe that
September 11 marked a desperate revivalist backlash of the old and the
outdated against the grand vision of a technology-driven future. They are
however appalled that the perpetrators of September 11 had the audacity to
use the same sophisticated technology to such brutal precision and lethal
ends, a prerogative that Washington considers to be exclusively America's
own. Promotion and export of terror has always been a core element of the
American drive for political hegemony and this was probably the first major
occasion when part of this terror took the reverse route.

Washington knew only one way to respond to the 'opportunity' provided by
September 11. An American author has rightly said, "for America, there are
only two kinds of years, the war years and the interwar years". When
imperialism does not actually wage war it prepares for one. War is where the
economics and politics of imperialism attain the closest convergence just as
revolution marks the ultimate fusion of the economics and politics of
socialism, and what better and surer way could there be for recession-hit
> America to spend its way out of recession! We need not elaborate here the
strategic objectives prompting America's war in and on Afghanistan. The
crucial geo-political significance of Afghanistan from Washington's point of
view is now common knowledge.

Along with war we have also got a whole set of freebies, the usual war
accessories and adjuncts: racist attacks, theorised as the clash of
civilisations; massive layoffs and redundancies; globalisation of repressive
legislation or should we say competitive and compulsive cloning of the USA
PATRIOT Act; and media censorship or self-censorship, if you will. This
catalogue is of course only indicative and not exhaustive. Meanwhile, the
Afghan war itself is by no means over as one overt operation merges into
another, not to speak of the clandestine war that never stops. Operation
Enduring Freedom gave way to Operation Anaconda and the praxis of devil has
now once again invoked the axis of evil argument so that the war machine can
roll on without gathering much of a moss.

As we have already noted, in the wake of September 11 there was widespread
apprehension that the fledgling anti-globalisation campaign might get
derailed. Colonialism and imperialist wars have indeed an alarming record of
disrupting and distorting the international working class movement and there
> can be no underestimating the damage potential of September 11. But for
once the apprehensions do not seem to be coming true, if anything, the war
seems to have only helped further politicise and galvanise the
anti-globalisation movement. It was heartening to note that the organisers
of the September 29 New York demonstration against IMF and World Bank did
not give up their planned programme, instead they went ahead with a bold
call against Bush's war plans. In fact, for once the anti-war movement did
not wait for the bombings to start and large sections of the
anti-globalisation camp had
> little difficulty in making opposition to the war and racism a key agenda
of the anti-globalisation campaign.

American and Western propaganda managers tried all possible tricks to sell
the war. There were shrill cries of a crusade against Islam, thoroughly
demonised and equated to fundamentalism and terrorism as were clever chants
of freedom and democracy. There were images of humanitarian intervention and
> most crucially there was this thoroughly reprehensible attempt to project
the war as liberation of Afghan women from the bondage of the Talibans. But
nothing really worked. In fact, women's organisations in different parts of
the world have been among the most active and vocal against the war. We must
especially salute the courage and determination of the fighting women of
Afghanistan who continued to call the American bluff and boldly demarcated
their agenda from America's war campaign.

The anti-war movement continued with undiminished energy and resolve even
after the calls of Jihad died down following the fall of Kabul. In fact, one
of the biggest demonstrations against the war was held in London on November
18, shortly after the Talibans had fled Kabul. And from Barcelona to Rome,
we continue to hear anti-war slogans echoed by million voices all over
Europe. It is quite encouraging that the second World Social Forum at Porto
Alegre has called for a resistance to not just neo-liberalism, but war and
militarism as well, stating clearly that "opposition to the war is at the
heart of our movement." And while Bush goes on expanding his agenda, the
anti-war movement has also begun to identify increasingly with the
inalienable rights of the Palestinian people for their land, and for peace
with dignity.

The wild hope of seeing Vietnam being repeated in Afghanistan has turned out
to be wishful thinking. The retreat of the ragtag band of Taliban fighters
without virtually a fight has once again established the fact that guerrilla
warfare is not a question of mere terrain or technique, its success or
failure depends primarily on the extent of popular support and mobilisation.
Having said this we must also recognise that with every passing day the
balance in Afghanistan is bound to turn increasingly against the American
troops. Reports of significant casualties of US troops have begun to reach
from the inhospitable interiors of Afghanistan. Mr. Karzai's imported regime
remains as rootless and clueless as ever. He may be making waves in the
world of fashion, but back home his government's writ does not run beyond
Kabul. The shock of September 11 followed by the speedy overthrow of the
Taliban regime in Afghanistan and the apparent retreat of Osama bin Laden
has of course expanded the hitherto narrow domestic support base of the Bush
presidency. Bush's rating and diplomatic manoeuvreability have also gone up
in the international arena. Washington made full use of this conjuncture to
effectively clinch the issue of opening a new trade round at the Doha summit
of WTO in November. And by all accounts, the US is now really desperate to
do an Afghanistan in Iraq.

But it is equally certain that the US will not be able to muster the kind of
global support it enjoyed at the time of the Gulf War or early in the war
against Afghanistan. Most apologists of US foreign policy agree that the
unipolar moment of the US is over and Bush would have to shed his unilateral
stance and rely more on multilateralism. In fact, Samuel Huntington
describes the present world as a uni-multipolar one, a state of transition
from a brief unipolar moment at the end of Gulf War towards a really
multipolar arrangement.

On the economic front, officially, the US economy is now out of recession
even as the global economic outlook continues to be gloomy especially with
the recession in Japan showing no signs of abating. But following Enrongate,
corporate confidence and credibility have hit a rock bottom in the US. It
has now been exposed quite conclusively that the fountainhead of crony
capitalism is located not in East and South-east Asia, but right in the US.

Politically, consensus around Bush's anti-terrorism campaign remains
confined to the US, elsewhere it is being seen increasingly as America's own
agenda in spite of a visible world-wide consolidation of the right and the
hard right at that. Even in countries like India and Pakistan, both of which
are vying for closer strategic partnership with the US, the ruling classes
are not completely united on going the whole hog with the US on the entire
agenda. In India, the ruling party of the hard Right, the BJP suffered a
humiliating defeat in recent elections held in four provinces including
Uttar Pradesh, the biggest and politically most crucial of Indian provinces.
Terrorism, let me tell you, was the principal poll plank of the party. And
now it has had to resort to an unconventional joint session of the two
houses of the Parliament to get the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act
passed.

Where do we go now from here? The anti-globalisation campaign has taken the
first steps towards a sustained and powerful anti-imperialist movement with
a clear opposition to the war and racism. We must step up international
political cooperation and coordination among broad sections of
anti-imperialist , anti-globalisation forces to accelerate the tempo of
resistance. While exploring and utilising every possible opportunity to
broaden the frontiers of this movement and get more shades of people on
board of the growing coalition for peace, democracy and progress, I think
the crying need of the hour is to deepen it in every available national and
even local context. The deeper we go, the stronger we grow. And with strong
roots among the masses, there can be no fixed limits for revolutionary
imagination and initiative. Argentina shows the way.

Just as it is important to name and target the global enemy, it is no less
important to identify and target the numerous local linkages of the global
enemy. Let us remember that the imperialist war machine moves on several
wheels and every wheel has numerous cogs. It is therefore crucial to resist
every local linkage and stop every real and potential and aspiring ally of
the US from aiding the war campaign in particular and the neoliberal
economic offensive in general. The best way, for example, we in India can
oppose imperialist globalisation and the war and racism is by defeating the
Indian collaborators of US imperialism who are unleashing a rein of what we
call communal fascism in India. And even in this struggle, let me tell you,
we derive our greatest strength from the anti-feudal struggles of the
landless and poor peasants, from the growing awakening and assertion of the
rural poor for basic freedom and human dignity. I say this not to belittle
the unquestionable importance of more direct forms and avenues of
anti-imperialist struggle, especially struggles of urban organised and
unorganised workers, but only to highlight the great reserves of
revolutionary strength and energy that are still waiting to be tapped in the
Indian countryside and I am sure, the same must be true of many other third
world countries.

In this context let me also add that to resist the neo-liberal offensive of
imperialist globalisation, it is absolutely important to scotch the rumour
of the so-called retreat of nation-states. This talk of nation-states
beating a retreat may be music to our ears schooled in proletarian
internationalism and eyes dedicated to the ultimate communist dream of a
classless and hence stateless society, but the point is it is just a rumour
and a dangerous rumour at that. Bourgeois nation-states are perhaps more
active than ever before, they have only reshaped their policies and
reordered their priorities. If the proletariat of each country, as called
upon by the Communist Manifesto, must first of all settle matters with its
own bourgeoisie; if, to quote the Manifesto again, the proletariat must
first of all acquire political supremacy, must rise to be the leading class
of the nation, must constitute itself the nation, the practitioners of
proletarian politics and proletarian internationalism cannot afford to
suffer from any confusion on this score. The importance of nation-state as
an arena of class struggle has only grown and not diminished in the present
era of globalisation. And in third world countries where the bourgeois
rulers are fast capitulating to imperialist dictates and are busy selling
off key and scarce national resources, the renewed relevance of economic
nationalism can hardly be overemphasised. Just as parliamentary treachery
and the historical obsolescence of parliament has not made parliament
practically and politically irrelevant to communists and socialists the
world over, the crimes committed in the name of bourgeois nationalism and
the technological marvels that are purportedly shrinking the world into a
village cannot render nation and nationalism superfluous in the
international struggle against global capitalism. After all,
internationalism as opposed to globalism can only become more meaningful
when it strikes strong national roots.

To conclude, the world since Seattle and September 11 is an immensely
exciting and challenging world. The times are testing but full of promises.
With imperialism on the offensive and the war machine rolling on with all
its force, many a former voice in the left and liberal camp has fallen
silent. Worse still, many are singing different tunes. This is how bourgeois
liberalism has always exposed its limits. And this is why it is called
bourgeois liberalism. But for every voice that is falling silent there are
dozens more that are turning vocal. And there are millions more that are
waiting to be heard. As Lenin said almost a century ago while surveying what
he called Inflammable Material in World Politics, "Less illusions about the
liberalism of the counter-revolutionary bourgeoisie. More attention to the
growth of the international revolutionary proletariat."
We have a war to defeat, and a world to win!


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