Much of the reformist left rants on about the breaking of the Geneva
conventions concerning the recent brutal events at the fort at
Mazar-i-Sharif. It suggests that the blame for the brutal atrocity lies
with the US and Northern Alliance forces. These protestations are
nothing less than the rantings of an ideologically and politically
bankrupt reformist left that has significantly failed to mount an
effective opposition to the Afghan war.

It is clear that in a war of this nature, the war in Afghanistan, the
conditions for atrocities of one sort or another exist. Indeed the
entire war is an atrocity. The only way to prevent such atrocity is by
abolishing the conditions responsible for all atrocity --capitalism. The
slaughter at  Mazar-i-Sharif is no more nor less significant than any of
the other killings by US and Northern Alliance forces. It is the
character of the war that must be highlighted --its imperialist
character-- not this or that slaughter. In a war, such as this one, one
kind of slaughter is not any more atrocious than another. To suggest
otherwise is to promote reformism and thereby imperialism. Such
bourgeois politics suggests that imperialism has a progressive
character. It logically follows, then, that its wars can be fought in a
clean, rational and humane way. It  suggests that wars for which
imperialism is responsible are more acceptable, even progressive (the
Hitchens and Halliday thesis),  if they fulfil certain conditions.

The left that expresses outrage at particular brutality is the left that
is using the very same hypocritical humanitarianism that has been used
by the imperialist bourgeoisie. The commission of brutality has been
exploited by imperialism as a pretext for attacking regimes such as the
Iraqi and Serbian ones. Imperialist wars, by their very class nature,
contain an inherently brutality. This inherent brutality assumes
different forms under different circumstances. The inherent brutality is
a characteristic of the inherent brutality of imperialist capitalism
whether in the form of exploitation, famine, war etc. All these forms of
brutality are inherently interrelated.

The communist position, then, is opposition to the imperialist war in
Afghanistan by promoting popular opposition to the capitalism that is
responsible for it. In the Afghan war communists cannot consider victory
by either side as  a victory or defeat for imperialism. Is not the
concern of communists as to who wins the war  since any victory is
essentially a victory for imperialism. The only real defeat is success
in opposing the war that culminates in the abolition of capitalism. The
only real victory is the degree to which communism succeeds in mounting
principled opposition to the war  that leads to the emergence class
consciousness among the working class that culminates in social
revolution.

There is a false view among sections of reformism that a victory for US
and Northern Alliance forces against the Taliban will further strengthen
the self confidence of US imperialism. Such a view misunderstands the
entire nature of capitalism and lends support to the view that some
capitalist wars are more progressive than others. Whether the Taliban or
the Northern Alliance wins the war is essentially irrelevant since only
capitalism can win the war. US forces can only be defeated in the Afghan
war  when the working class forces an end to such wars by overthrowing
American capitalism. Revolution, then, is the only condition for the
defeat of US forces.

The Taliban regime is essentially no more nor less reactionary than the
Northern Alliance. Both sides are reactionary anti-working class
products of imperialism. They are forces than lack any real
independence. As verified by events they can only exist on the basis of
imperialist support.

Karl Carlile
Be free to visit the web site of the Communist Global Group at
http://homepage.eircom.net/~beprepared/




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