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Louis Proyect submitted and Sasan Fayazmanesh wrote:

 

I think this is a valuable article. I don't want to go into details but I
think the comparison with 1848, and can lead to unduly pessimistic
conclusions. 

 

The author makes a small mistake, I believe, about when the Manifesto was
first made public. It first appeared in 1847, not 1848. 

 

 

There are similarities between this situation and 1848, but I think they get
overstated and the conclusions drawn tend to be unnecessarily pessimistic.
Of course, the aggressive US and European intervention has distorted the
process, and to some extent contained it, but that was to be expected in
what seems to me more like an initial upsurge rather than a final conflict.

 

I note for instance how a "democratic revolution," as it tends to be
presented today, tends to boil down to elections with a multi-party system
(with only minor differences to ensure stability and continuity) and some
respect for some civil liberties.  

 

As Lenin, Trotsky, and Castro have pointed out, democratic revolution means
a profound change in social not just parliamentary conditions, and this
character creates the bridge between what begins as a democratic revolution
and the democratic and socialist revolution. This reflects the effect that
decades of neoliberal training have had among some of the educated and
mis-educated layers.

 

I don't think this process is going to disappear into a giant capitalist
upswing as happened in the 1850s, and all the bourgeois classes (including
the working class) have developed vastly further than they had in 1848.

 

And, of course, there is going to be differentiation among the processes.
Contrary to what sometimes seems to be implied, imperialist takeover of air
space and widespread bombing creates a pretty radical difference in the
challenges facing those who fight for a "democratic revolution." 

 

And imperialist ground troops, in the form of CIA and other advisers, or in
the form of actually landing of official armed forces, which I think is
growing much more likely, and not only in  terms of getting rid of Gadhafi,
who has turned out to be more firmly rooted in the society than the
imperialists expected. (They expected he could quickly be ousted by an air
war-- but then they always think you can do anything with an air war.
"Victory through air power" is one of the basic slogans of modern
imperialism.

 

Of course, breaking up Gadhafi's base is a political challenge that faces
those in Libya who want a real democratic revolution, rather than just a
picnic for electoral cretins. The challenge they face is not just military,
but fundamentally political. The basic strategic reliance on imperialism to
"save" them by getting rid of Gadhafi has not solved this problem at all.

 

The most important task of the overtly imperialist or UN Security Council
"boots on the ground" will probably be to contain and roll back the
expectations and  aspirations of the unemployed youth and other plebeian
anti-Gadhafi militants who form the base of the movement, and of the much
broader masses who have supported them or considered supporting them. 

 

I don't see how either task can be carried out without "boots on the ground-
- US or otherwise.  Those among the rebels who have to be fought by "the
boots on the ground" will be labeled "Al Qaeda," whatever that means. (I am
assuming here that the imperialists will be able to oust Gadhafi, although
he has proved a hard nut to crush.) Fred Feldman

 

 

Counterpunch April 8 - 10, 2011

Ending Tyranny in the Middle East

Revolutions and Exorcisms

 

By SASAN FAYAZMANESH

 

“A specter is haunting Europe–the specter of communism. All the powers of
old Europe have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise this specter: Pope
and Tsar, Metternich and Guizot, French Radicals and German police-spies.” 

 

Karl Marx, 1848, The Communist Manifesto

 

When the current upheavals in the Middle East started, a number of essays
appeared with titles that substituted the “Middle East” for “Europe” in the
first sentence of the above passage. Most of the essays, however, failed to
analyze the nature of the specter. More importantly, they failed to note who
will try to exorcise the specter. 

 

The Communist Manifesto was, of course, written shortly before the 1848
Revolutions that swept European cities, from Sicily to Paris, Vienna,
Berlin, Budapest and Prague. These revolutions were varied and, depending on
their locations, represented somewhat different aspirations. Yet, for the
most part they had an underlying economic dimension that was reflected in
the demands of the working class as sketched out in The Communist Manifesto.
Many of these demands—such as heavy progressive income tax, centralization
of credit in the hands of government, and free education for all children in
public schools—were quite mild by today’s standards. 

 

The revolutions also had a common political dimension that was perhaps more
important than the economic dimension: an attempt by ordinary people to end
tyrannical rules of the European monarchs and imperial governments. For
example, in Sicily, where the revolution first broke out, the main point of
contention was the autocratic rule of King Ferdinand II who, fearing the end
of his rule, promised to dismiss his ministers and establish a constitution.
In France, where in February 1848 workers set up street barricades, the
subjects of scorn were Louis Philippe and his prime minster Guizot, who both
escaped revolutionary Paris. France was once again proclaimed a republic on
February 24. Similar events in Vienna in March forced Metternich to escape.
Budapest and Prague followed suit and the Austrian Empire was in a state of
revolutionary turmoil. In Prussia, and particularly in Berlin, the working
class challenged the rule of King Friedrich Wilhelm IV and forced him to
draw up a constitution. Elsewhere, in what eventually became a unified
Germany, comparable events took place that led to the abdication of this or
that tyrant, dismissal of ministers, or attempts to draw up constitutions. 

 

Yet the revolutions of 1848 did not succeed. In Italy, Belgium, Spain and
Switzerland the revolutionary forces were all crushed. In France, the
revolution was led astray by inexperienced leaders who were too willing to
compromise with the forces of reaction. The June insurrection of 1848 by
Paris workers was brutally put down. In December of 1848, Louis Bonaparte,
the nephew of Napoleon I, became President of the Second Republic, and in
1851 he staged a coup d'état and declared himself Emperor. As Marx famously
recounted the event in his 1852 The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte,
“world-historic facts and personages appear” twice, “the first time as
tragedy, the second time as farce.” It was not until the Paris Commune of
1871 that the working class rose in Paris, challenged the bourgeoisie and
took over the government for 72 days. 

 

In Prussia, King Friedrich Wilhelm IV mustered his forces and, with the help
of Tsar Nicholas I of Russia, put down the insurrection. In Austria, too,
Emperor Franz Joseph called on the Russian Tsar to help put down the
Hungarian Revolution for independence. In sum, the 1848 Revolutions in
Europe were exorcised by some of the same forces who had exorcised the
“specter of communism,” mostly the old reactionary European monarchs and
imperial governments. 

 

When the 2011 revolutions in the Middle East and North Africa started, a
number of observers, including this writer, saw similarities between these
revolutions and those in 1848. For example, the spread of uprisings from one
country to another was comparable. So was the speed by which these
revolutions spread. Actually, given modern technology, the speed of the
revolutionary spread in 2011 was faster than in 1848. In the mid 19th
century one could only rely on word of mouth, newspaper articles and steam
railroads to carry the news. In 2011 electronic gadgets and media, such as
cell phones, live television reporting, and websites, spread the news
instantly. It is interesting to note that the use of modern technology in
2011 to broadcast the news and gain revolutionary momentum caused some
people to confuse the instrument with the cause, and hence the meaningless
expression “Twitter Revolution.” 

 

Besides the speed and spread of revolutions, there were more fundamental
similarities between the events in 2011 and 1848. As stated earlier, the
1848 Revolutions had primarily two dimensions: economic and political. It
was the wretched conditions of the working class combined with the despotic
rule of this or that monarch that created the revolutionary momentum. The
same is true of the revolutions in 2011. All countries in the Middle East
and North Africa that have been going through a revolutionary phase faced
dictatorial rules, either by a king, a president or an emir. Also, almost
all of them faced, among other economic malice, high rates of inflation and
unemployment. While this economic hardship does not appear to be the driving
force behind the revolutionary zeal, it is definitely a contributing factor.


 

So far the events of 2011 are also similar to those of 1848 in that they
seem to be failing to achieve anything of substance. In Tunisia, where the
revolutionary upheaval first started, the despised President Zine el Abidine
Ben Ali, who had been in office for nearly 24 years, was deposed and exiled.
The speaker of the parliament, Fouad Mebazaa, who was part of the same
ruling establishment as the president, took over the interim presidency and
promised free elections within 45 and 60 days. To this day no election has
materialized and, besides some reshuffling of the cabinet, nothing much has
come out of that revolution. 

 

In Egypt, the detested President Muhammad Hosni Mubarak resigned after being
in office for 30 years and left for his villa in Sharm el-Sheikh. Mubarak’s
old hand, Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi Soliman, commander-in-chief
of the Egyptian Armed Forces, took his place in the name of the military.
Tantawi had a reputation, even according to the US officials, for being
“resistant to political and economic reform” (Reuters, February 11, 2011).
Further demonstrations were discouraged, a number of demonstrators were
arrested, and some were reported to have been tortured (BBC, March 24,
2010). The military proposed constitutional amendments, which a reformist
leader, Mohamed ElBaradei, called “superficial.” The interim constitution
was put to the vote and became law, even though many reformist leaders
objected to it. The ruling “Supreme Council of the Armed Forces” has now
promised legislative election in September of 2011, followed by presidential
election in November. Whether these promises will materialize or, even if
they materialize, whether they will bring about any substantial change,
remain to be seen. It is hard to imagine fundamental changes in political
institutions of a country when the economic structure remains intact and one
of the most oppressive instruments of the state—namely, the military
apparatus—remains untouched. 

 

In Yemen, the reviled President Ali Abdullah Saleh, who has ruled that
country for 33 years, continues to reign in spite of months of massive
protests. At the beginning of February 2011 he promised not to seek
reelection in 2013. He then reshuffled his government and promised a
referendum on a new constitution. Since none of these quelled the street
protests, he killed a number of protestors and declared a state of
emergency. Yet, none of these actions stopped the protests and,
subsequently, Saleh fired his entire cabinet and promised to quit even
sooner. Yet the protest goes on and there is no end in sight. But even if
Saleh joins his colleagues, Ben Ali and Mubarak, in retirement, it is not
all clear if the future of Yemen will be any brighter than Tunisia’s or
Egypt’s. 

 

In Bahrain, the former Emir and now the King, Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa, who
has ruled that country for 11 years after his father, Amir Isa bin Salman Al
Khalifa, continues to reign despite widespread protests. As soon as mass
protests in Bahrain started, the news media reported that the king’s “police
tore down protesters’ tents, beating men and women inside and blasting some
with shotgun sprays of birdshot” (AP, February 17, 2011). Ever since, the
king has continued to use brute force to quell the uprising. He has even
tried to remove the symbol of the uprising by tearing down Pearl Square,
where people gathered to protest. Moreover, he has welcomed mercenary forces
from Saudi Arabia to enter his country to subdue his own people. After this
invasion by Saudi Arabia, one of the most backward countries in the world
that is equipped with the most modern military machine, not much can be
expected to happen in Bahrain. 

 

In sum, similar to the revolutions in 1848, the events of 2011 seem to be
failing to produce any substantive results. All the old and reactionary
forces in the region are exorcizing the revolutions that have swept the
region. This holds not only for the countries mentioned above, but also for
other countries in the region that are in a state of revolutionary turmoil. 

 

There is, of course, much that separates the events of 2011 and 1848. For
example, the upheavals in 1848 came after the Industrial Revolution and the
rapid growth of capitalism in Europe. They came at a time when Europe was
facing rising unemployment, falling wages, unbearable working conditions and
increasing poverty. The revolutionary fervent heralded the birth of a new
and conscious working class that was vying for political power. These were
the first serious attempts to change the economic foundation of the society,
to end capitalism and establish socialism. In other words, they were
Revolutions with a capital “R.” Nothing of the sort seems to have happened
in 2011. The current revolutions in the Middle East and North Africa are
revolutions with a small “r.” They seem to be directed not against changing
the economic structure, but against certain political practices and
institutions. In these revolutions there is hardly any independent and
politically conscious working class that is trying to tear down the old
economic order. 

 

Moreover, almost all the countries in the Middle East and North Africa that
are in a state of revolutionary turmoil today have a colonial past. Even if
some were not direct colonies, they were at some point within the “sphere of
influence” of the colonialists. As such these countries are still dependent
on the European and American imperial powers, if not politically, at least
economically. This long-term dependency has thwarted the economic
development of the region and held back the development of viable and
progressive political institutions. The dependency is also hindering the
revolutionary attempt to reform political institutions in the Middle East
and North Africa. The revolutions in the region are being exorcised not just
by the reactionary governments that rule these countries, but by the West,
that is, the US and European governments. The West does not like to see any
change in the capitalist world order, where reactionary regimes in the
Middle East and North Africa have had a symbiotic relation with the US and
Europe. Anything that upsets this world order is undesirable by the West,
even if it continuously pays lip service to the glory of the “Arab Spring.” 

 

So far, the West, particularly the US, has been quite successful in
exorcising the 2011 revolutions. The old relations with Tunisia and Egypt
appear to have been restored after the fall of the disposable strongmen of
the US, Ben Ali and Mubarak. Continuous communication between the new
leaders of these countries and the US officials, as well as numerous visits
by the leaders of the West to these countries, will insure that the old
order will be maintained. In Yemen, the situation is still fluid, but even
if the US’s strongman, Ali Abdullah Saleh, does fall, one can be sure that
old relations with the US will be maintained. In Bahrain, where King Hamad
bin Isa Al Khalifa provides, in exchange for his survival, all kinds of
services to the US, including providing a home for the US Navy’s Fifth
Fleet, the US and the medieval Saudi family will insure that no revolution
succeeds. The same should be expected in other countries in the region. This
includes Libya, where the West has decided that the unruly and flaky Muammar
Qaddafi—even though he has behaved obediently since 2003— must be replaced
by somebody less flaky and more obedient. 

 

Yes, a specter is haunting the Middle East and North Africa—the specter of
ending tyranny. All the powers of the old Middle East and North Africa, as
well as the US and Europe, have entered into a holy alliance to exorcise
this specter: King Abdullah bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud and Netanyahu, Obama and
Clinton, Sarkozy and Cameron, European and American liberals, and the CIA
spies. 

 

Sasan Fayazmanesh is Professor Emeritus of Economics at California State
University, Fresno. He can be reached at: sasan.fayazman...@gmail.com 

 

 

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