This is a useful contribution, not simply because I agree with the text,
but because it doesn't resort to simplistic characterizations of the
AFL-CIO as a monolothic entity, with all troops goosestepping to the same
tune. Note the discussion of the Asian desk if you are wondering what I
mean. Any "analysis" of policies/strategies pursued by the AFL-CIO are
useless if they talk about "The AFL-CIO this, the AFL-CIO that".  

Steve

Subject: L.A.LaborNews - The China Syndrome - meltdown in the movement

THE CHINA SYNDROME - OR, HOW TO HIJACK A MOVEMENT

by Jim Smith

April 2 - When tens of thousands converged on Seattle last November to
protest the unrestrained corporate power reflected in the World Trade
Organization, they had little idea that forces were at work to hijack
their new movement.

We were in Seattle to protest transnational corporations, including Nike,
The Gap, McDonalds and Starbucks and all the others, and the oppressive
economic order they have set up which is becoming commonly known as
neoliberal globalism. To borrow an analogy from the war on drugs, in this
economic arrangement, the corporations are the pushers and the third
world workers and their governments are the users, greedy for an income
they can wrest from the wealthy and the powerful. In Seattle, we went
after the pushers.

Yet only four months after Seattle, a powerful effort is underway to
shift the focus away from corporate power to a chauvinistic attack on the
Peoples Republic of China. Instead of a democratic discussion and debate
within the new movement, a few officials of the AFL-CIO and some
non-governmental organizations (NGOs) decided on their own to subvert the
growing internationalist movement with a China-bashing litany of
accusations of human rights violations and sweatshop conditions that just
as easily could have been laid against many of the 131 countries in the
WTO.

Not even the United States has clean hands. It has the largest prison
population in the world, the most state-sponsored executions of
prisoners, by far the largest military in the world, seemingly constant
murders and frame-ups of African-Americans and Latinos by police
officers, hundreds of thousands of homeless, millions without health care
and one of the worst income distributions in the world. Critics of China
would do well to look to their own backyard.

Why is the AFL-CIO attacking China?

The motivation of the AFL-CIO leaders to attack China is two-fold. Many
union leaders have pandered to protectionist sentiments of their members
instead of educating them on the need for international solidarity
against corporate rule. With a few notable exceptions, most union and
federation leaders do not base their policies and actions on furthering
class solidarity but instead follow the path of least resistance with
short-term goals that qualify them for dubious distinction as "special
interests." This failure of leadership not only makes blaming China
palatable but is opening the door to demagogues like Patrick Buchanan and
his "fortress American" siren song with its anti-immigrant hysteria.

Their second motivation for moving the fight against China to the top of
the agenda is ideological. In 1995, John Sweeney and his "New Voices"
slate replaced Lane Kirkland, Tom Donahue and a dynasty that could trace
its roots back 100 years to Sam Gompers. Sweeney vowed to shake up the
federation's international department which for years had worked
hand-in-glove with the U.S. State Department and the CIA in fighting the
cold war.

In fact, Sweeney did eliminate most of the cold warriors and changed the
name of the international operation to the Solidarity Center. But there
was one exception - the Asia desk. It is from here, under the direction
of Kirkland holdover, Mark Hankin, that the barrage of anti-China
propaganda emanates. The unreconstructed cold warriors of the Asia desk
enthusiastically promote China dissidents in cooperation with the
National Endowment for Democracy (NED), the Hoover Institute, the CIA or
a combination of all of them.

Strange Bedfellows

The fight against granting China permanent most favored nation status and
entry into the WTO has created strange bedfellows. When Chiang Kai-shek
and the Nationalist Chinese were driven out of mainland China in 1949 by
the Peoples Liberation Army, the cry "Who lost China?" went up in
right-wing circles in the U.S. A rabidly anti-union wing of the
Republican Party led by Senators Robert Taft and Joe McCarthy led the hue
and cry which didn't abate until after two bloody wars on China's borders
- Korea and Vietnam. Meanwhile, they passed the Taft-Hartley Act which
still hobbles labor 50 years later.

Notwithstanding this new labor-far right alliance against China, liberal
opponents of the Chinese would argue that its bad human-rights record
speaks for itself. However, this argument breaks down when China is
compared to other developing countries, such as, Indonesia, Thailand,
Burma, Malaysia, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and other countries of Asia and
the Middle East.

In addition, many would argue that China is still based on a socialist
model and should not be evaluated only by criteria from advanced
capitalist societies. For example, it could be argued that in China the
multiplicity of local organizations and societies is more profoundly
democratic than the two-party political system in the U.S. In addition,
an argument could be made that economic rights, such as housing, health
care and education are more respected in China than in the U.S. The
relative value of these competing paradigms is largely in the eyes of the
beholder.

However, there can be no argument that with 100 million members, China
has the largest trade union organization in the world. The All China
Confederation of Trade Unions has approximately eight times as many
members as does the AFL-CIO. Yet, Sweeney and others refuse to deal with
it on the grounds that it is part of the state apparatus. The Chinese
political structure is modeled on the pattern developed after 1917
revolution in Russia where the Communist Party, the government, the labor
movement and agrarian organizations are closely linked and
interconnected. Cuba, which is a WTO member, also has this structure.

However, it is not just in Communist countries that such a structure is
found. The South African labor movement proudly proclaims its alliance
with the Communist Party and the African National Congress on its website
<www.cosatu.org.za>. Is Sweeney planning to go on a tirade against South
Africa next? Not likely. Just south of the border, Mexico has "enjoyed" a
similar system since 1910. The labor movement, the CTM, and the ruling
party, the PRI, are like two peas in a pod, yet no sanctions are demanded
against Mexico.

Even the AFL-CIO is not immune from charges of governmental coziness.
Lane Kirkland graduated from the State Department to become George
Meany's understudy and successor (see "The Last Cold Warrior," Z
Magazine, July 1995). AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland did the bidding of
his former State Department - and some say, CIA - colleagues for many
years. It's taken a long time for the federation to live down its
nickname, AFL-CIA.

If Nixon could go to China, why not Sweeney

More than 30 years after Richard Nixon went to China to meet his
arch-enemy, Mao Zedong and more than two years after Pope John Paul II
met with Fidel Castro, John Sweeney has yet to meet with his opposite
number in the All China Confederation of Trade Unions, or even visit a
union hall in Shanghai. Perhaps he will find Chinese trade unionists to
be poor representatives of workers' rights, in spite of the strong labor
laws in the dominate public sector. But at least it would be worth the
trip before continuing with the jingoistic campaign against China.

We would do better to work for U.S. withdrawal from the WTO than to fight
Chinašs admission. One more country, even one as large as China, will not
change the basic nature of the WTO. It is a tool of the rich and powerful
and should be dismantled.

In the final analysis, those who would turn our newly emerging movement
into an anti-China campaign are doing a disservice to workers and
consumers in this country. At the very moment when the first mass
movement since Vietnam is being born, any deviation from its focus on
corporate power and their international bodies, including the WTO, the
IMF and World Bank, can be deadly. It can lead to demoralization and
confusion about who is the real enemy of the vast majority of people in
the U.S. and around the world.

We must recognize that China is the most populous - and potentially most
powerful - country in the world. More than a billion Chinese want a
decent standard of living within their lifetimes. Instead of playing into
the hands of the right wing and the military we should welcome their
participation in a world based on mutual respect and non-interference in
each other affairs. We are all blessed or doomed to live together on this
planet. How we interact with China and other emerging nations will
determine if the world can avoid a fatal "melt down" in which we destroy
each other and the environment.

Jim Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> is a Los Angeles labor activist and editor
of L.A. Labor News, <www.LAlabor.org>. This article may be forwarded
without changes. Print publications please contact <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> for
republication rights.

Reply via email to