Showing posts with label Khrushchev. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Khrushchev. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 16, 2024

October 2024 issue of Revolutionary Democracy published (and a new US Marxist-Leninist periodical)

The October issue of the English-language Indian Marxist-Leninist theoretical and political journal Revolutionary Democracy ( revolutionarydemocracy.org) came out on the 15th and can be ordered from Red Star Publishers ( redstarpublishers.org ) for $7 dollars, which covers the shipping cost within the US.  For more information about ordering see the website or contact them at:  


Red Star Publishers
PO Box 1641
Manhattanville Station
New York, New York 10027
USA

[Actually, this mailbox has been closed and payments to Red Star must be made through PayPal or through a special arrangement.]


An email is requested if payment is being sent by mail. 

Phone:  212 864 7595

Brick and mortar bookstores, organizations, and individuals selling copies in Canada, India, the UK, and the USA are listed at revolutionarydemocracy.org on the current issue page, linked at the top of the menu on the left.  Many of the articles are also posted there for free.  Unity and Struggle and Revolutionary Democracy issues are sometimes also available from:  www.americanpartyoflabor.com/shop .





[A new multi-lingual US Marxist-Leninist periodical, Class Struggle, has been started, for now hosted at:  redstarpublishers.org/ClassStruggle/Vol1/index.html  They say "We encourage all contributions, comments and criticisms."
 


In issue one:  


Presidential Election: No to Harris! No to Trump! 

Fascism is Advancing

Aboguemos por la paz, no a la guerra

Why communistshould support Hamas

Taft/Hartley Act: Disarming the Working Class

On the effects of Hurricane Helene

Is Fascism on the Ballot?]






REVOLUTIONARY DEMOCRACY


October 2024

Contents


Statement: General Elections in India 2024                                
Statement: The outcome of general elections 2024 in India         
Recent events in Bangladesh                                                    
Political defeat of the Awami League in 2024 elections,  Badruddin Umar
Two interviews with Badruddin Umar                                       
On Lenin's approach to the national question, Mustafa Yalciner
Exploitation of contract workers in Indian Railways,  Padam Kumar
Statement on the Union Budget 2024-25, New Trade Union Initiative of India
Statement on Operation Clean Jharkhand, FACAM                     
Declaration of the Marxist-Leninist Parties of Latin America      
‘Against genocide and Imperialist war’ –  Declaration of the 28th International Seminar on the Problems of the Revolution in Latin America
Lenin’s Criticism of Bogdanov’s Reactionary Sociological Views, (Part I) A. V. Shchegolov
The Carpet Weavers of Kuyan-Bulak Honour Lenin, Bertolt Brecht
A War for Freedom, a song by Makhdoom Muhiuddin                
Telangana, a poem by Kaifi Azmi                                              
India's support of Israel against the people of Gaza exposes Modi government Karan Varma
Correspondence between CPI and CPGB on the question of Pakistan and Indian National Unity,1945
Conversation between JV Stalin and Dolores Ibarruri on the Tactics of the Communist Party of Spain, 1948
Stalin - Zhou Enlai Talk, September 19, 1952                            

Book Review: ‘Albania Challenges Khrushchev Revisionism’

Saturday, March 30, 2024

On Land Day: BAP connecting domestic repression, Somalia, Cuba, Palestine, and Haiti + Paul Robeson, Stalin, and the History of the Soviet Union talk by Grover Furr March 31st

 March 30th iLand Day in Palestine, commemorating historic and widespread demonstrations on this day in 1976 against the expropriation of Palestinian (Israeli Arab, in this case?) land in the Galilee region, according to:  en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Land_Day  


The annual US Farmworker Awareness Week is March 25-31, ending on the birth anniversary of labor organizer Cesar Chavez in 1927 in Yuma, Arizona (Chavez passed away April 23, 1993 in San Luis, Arizona, near Yuma) saf-unite.org/national-farmworker-awareness-week/ , en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesar_Chavez and en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cesar_Chavez_Day  He worked closely with Dolores Huerta, born April 10, 1930 in what is now the ghost town of Dawson, New Mexico, near Cimarron:  en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dolores_Huerta


The Diggers began occupying Saint George'Hill, Weybridge in Surrey, England April 1, 1649:  en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diggers ?  Billy Bragg has a song about it.


Soviet officiaLavrentiy Beria, mentioned below, was born March 29, 1899 in Merkheuli, Tsarist Russia, now in Abkhazia but claimed by Georgia.



March 27th:  


BAP Groundings: The interconnected struggles of Cuba, Palestine, and Haiti.  
 

The rare protest that occurred in Santiago, Cuba, on March 17, 2024, featuring chants of "power and food," has garnered attention from the U.S. mainstream media. However, it's important to note that these reports often overlook the significant impact of the decades-long blockade imposed on Cuba. The Black Alliance For Peace Haiti/Americas Team acknowledges the interconnected struggles of Cuba, Palestine, Haiti, and domestic repression in the U.S. under fascism, revealing a shared thread of imperialist oppression and the war on the people. These nations encounter different forms of siege tactics aimed at establishing open-air prisons, perpetuated through methods such as embargoes, sanctions, psychological warfare, and colonial violence.
  1. The Mallory memo of 1960, a declassified U.S. government document, revealed that the objective of the blockade was to induce "hunger, desperation, and overthrow the Cuban government." This context is crucial in understanding the broader dynamics at play and the complexities of Cuban socio-political issues.
     
  2. The detrimental and illegal US blockade against Cuba stands as a stark example of imperialist aggression and economic warfare. For over six decades, the United States has enforced a cruel and unjust embargo that has inflicted immense suffering on the Cuban people, violating international law and basic principles of sovereignty. The blockade, characterized by severe restrictions on trade, financial transactions, and travel, has deprived Cuba of vital resources, including medicines, food, and equipment necessary for development. Moreover, the blockade's extraterritorial reach seeks to punish any entity or country engaging in legitimate trade or cooperation with Cuba, extending its harmful impact beyond Cuban borders.
     
  3. In both Cuba and Palestine, the ongoing actions of the United States have contributed to conditions akin to open-air prisons. The U.S. embargo on Cuba has devastating consequences on Cuba's healthcare, education, and overall well-being, and has deprived its people of essential resources, leading to desperation among many. The United States employs imperialist sanctions to impose economic and psychological warfare on nations like Cuba, exacerbating suffering and hindering development in these regions. Likewise, Palestine faces a brutal regime of apartheid, checkpoints, and control over basic necessities by an illegitimate settler state, creating a pervasive sense of imprisonment and oppression.
     
  4. Haiti's history and consciousness parallel Cuba's, highlighting a heightened awareness of imperialism and capitalism's detrimental impact on their development, sovereignty, and self-determination. Media narratives concerning both Cuba and Haiti serve as potent tools in justifying occupation and regimes, particularly within the context of imperialist agendas.
     
  5. Similar to the #SOSCuba narrative, U.S. media has manipulated a storyline that blames the Cuban government for issues, advocating for regime change. Headlines portraying the current situation in Haiti with terms like "cannibal gangs" serve as a pretext for occupation. In both cases, the narrative implies that the people are incapable of governing themselves. The romanticized idea of overthrowing the Cuban revolution disregards the deliberate resistance against foreign intervention and the potential outcome mirroring Haiti's struggles under Western capitalism.
     
  6. The struggle for people(s)-centered human rights (PCHRs) that is a centerpiece of BAP’s programmatic work serves as a counter to western imperialist motives, emphasizing comprehensive strategies for decolonization and radical social change. Cuba's socialist model, despite facing a blockade, demonstrates elements of PCHRs through democratic processes and rights protections, exposing the hypocrisy of capitalism and the relentless attacks on anti-imperialist nations.
For the Black Alliance For Peace, the interconnectedness of these struggles underscores the urgent need to dismantle imperialist structures, reject siege tactics and colonial violence, and champion principles of self-determination, solidarity, and human dignity. This understanding and approach grounded in BAP’s commitment to Black internationalism, People(s)-Centered Human Rights and the Black Radical Peace tradition reflects the interconnection of BAP’s oppositional principles and vision for the future.
 
LET CUBA LIVE
HANDS OFF HAITI
FREE PALESTINE




We Call for the Respect of Haitian Popular Sovereignty and
an End to Western Imperialist Intervention

A Zone of Peace Campaign Statement in Solidarity with the Haitian People

 


BOGOTA, COLOMBIA. 19 March 2024 – We denounce the ongoing attempts by Western imperialists to force an armed intervention and another illegitimate government on the Haitian people, as well as the collaboration of regional institutions in this intervention.
 
After months of the U.S., Core Group, and other imperialist collaborators working to execute an armed intervention into Haiti that they are now calling a “Multinational Security Service,” ex-de facto Prime Minister Ariel Henry has resigned from his illegitimately-held position. Those countries calling for military intervention – the U.S., France, Canada – have created the conditions making military intervention appear necessary and inevitable. Now, this same imperialist cabal wants to appoint a favorable “transitional government,” without input from the Haitian people.
 
As organizations of the Zone of Peace Campaign, we also denounce the role of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) working in collaboration with Western imperialists to deny the Haitian people their national sovereignty and collective self-determination. CARICOM has continued to betray the people of Haiti – in their support of western intervention, through select states’ choice to send troops to Haiti, and by including western imperialists in “negotiations” to which popular Haitian movements and organizations were not invited. CARICOM must reverse its position to one that opposes armed intervention into Haiti, and supports the efforts of the Haitian people to assert their sovereignty and reclaim their country.
 
We also remind all peoples and organizations of our hemisphere about the Community of Latin America and Caribbean States’ (CELAC) 2014 declaration of Latin America and the Caribbean as a ‘Zone of Peace.’ We recognize the recent CELAC statement by President Pro-Tempore Xiomara Castro, who declared that any “military action that violates the Principle of Non-Intervention and the Respect of Popular Self-Determination” in Haiti must be rejected, and we urge the CELAC “Troika” of Honduras, St. Vincent & The Grenadines, and Colombia to stand firm against imperialist aggression and intervention. It is clear that guaranteeing a true Zone of Peace in Our Americas requires a rejection of imperialist intervention in Haiti and all of our nations. This also requires a recognition of the human dignity of the people of Haiti and refusal to succumb to sensationalist western media and politicians that dehumanize Haitians and disregard the longstanding, organized popular mobilizations against imperialist aggression.
 
In addition to rejecting imperialist interventions and militarism, the call for a Zone of Peace in Our Americas means prioritizing People(s)-Centered Human Rights (PCHRs) in the Americas by observing the principles of national sovereignty, equal rights and self-determination of peoples. These are principles that must be defended through popular struggle. We, thus, support the statement of our comrades in MOLEGHAF, calling for organization and unity of revolutionary forces in Haiti against imperialist machinations.
 
Finally, we recognize and appreciate the forceful words of solidarity by Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro during and after the most recent CELAC meeting, which recognized that the current crisis is the result of western intervention and imperialist violence. President Maduro also called for “comprehensive economic and social support” and solidarity, instead of an intervention that will only cause more bloodshed.
 
As organizations of the Zone of Peace Campaign, we recently gathered in Bogota, Colombia, and agreed on the urgent need to support the people of Haiti and their popular mobilizations against ongoing imperialist violence. We call on all progressive, radical, and revolutionary movements and organizations across the Americas to support the Haitian people’s popular sovereignty and self-determination, to reject the “Multinational Security Support” mission, and to struggle for a peoples-centered Zone of Peace in Haiti and in all of Our Americas.
 
Hands Off Haiti!
 
Signed,
Organizations of the Zone of Peace Campaign
 
Black Alliance for Peace
Caribbean Movement for Peace and Integration
Caribbean Organisation for People’s Empowerment
Consejo por la Emancipación Plurinacional de Perú
Diaspora Pa’lante Collective
Friends of the ATC (Asociación de Trabajadores del Campo)
Movimiento Evita
Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition
Observatorio de los Derechos Humanos de los Pueblos
Proceso de Comunidades Negras – PCN
Red de Organizaciones AfroVenezolanas
Soli Puerto Rico
World Beyond War

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

Llamamos por el Respeto de la Soberanía Popular Haitiana y al Fin de la Intervención Imperialista Occidental
Declaración de la Campaña Zona de Paz en Solidaridad con el Pueblo Haitiano


BOGOTÁ, COLOMBIA. 19 de marzo de 2024 – Denunciamos los continuos intentos de los imperialistas occidentales de imponer una intervención armada y otro gobierno ilegítimo al pueblo haitiano, tal como la colaboración de instituciones regionales en esta intervención.
 
Después de meses de los Estados Unidos, el ‘Core Group’ y otros colaboradores imperialistas trabajando para llevar a cabo una intervención armada en Haití que ahora llaman "Servicio de Seguridad Multinacional" (MSS), el ex primer ministro de facto Ariel Henry ha renunciado a su cargo ilegítimamente sostenido. Esos países que piden la intervención militar – los Estados Unidos, Francia, Canadá – han creado las condiciones que hacen que la intervención militar parezca necesaria e inevitable. Ahora, esta misma camarilla imperialista quiere nombrar un "gobierno de transición" favorable, sin el consentimiento del pueblo haitiano.
 
Como organizaciones de la Campaña Zona de Paz, también denunciamos el papel de la Comunidad del Caribe (CARICOM) trabajando en colaboración con los imperialistas occidentales para negar al pueblo haitiano su soberanía nacional y su autodeterminación colectiva. CARICOM ha continuado traicionando al pueblo haitiano – en su apoyo a la intervención occidental, a través de la elección de estados selectos para enviar tropas a Haití, y al incluir a los imperialistas occidentales en "negociaciones" a las que no fueron invitados los movimientos y organizaciones populares haitianas. CARICOM debe revertir su posición a una que se oponga a la intervención armada en Haití, y apoye los esfuerzos del pueblo haitiano para afirmar su soberanía y recuperar su país.
 
También recordamos a todos los pueblos y organizaciones de nuestro hemisferio la declaración de 2014 de la Comunidad de Estados Latinoamericanos y Caribeños (CELAC) de América Latina y el Caribe como una ‘Zona de Paz’. Reconocemos la reciente declaración de la CELAC por parte de la Presidenta Pro Tempore Xiomara Castro, quien declaró que cualquier "acción militar que viole el principio de No Intervención y el Respeto a la Autodeterminación de los Pueblos" en Haití debe ser rechazada, y urgimos a la "Troika" de la CELAC de Honduras, San Vicente y las Granadinas, y Colombia a mantenerse firmes contra la agresión e intervención imperialista. Garantizar una verdadera Zona de Paz en Nuestra América requiere el rechazo de la intervención imperialista en Haití y en todas nuestras naciones. Esto también requiere el reconocimiento de la dignidad humana del pueblo de Haití y la negativa a sucumbir a los medios de comunicación occidentales sensacionalistas y a los políticos que deshumanizan a los haitianos y desprecian las movilizaciones populares organizadas de larga data contra la agresión imperialista.
 
Además de rechazar las intervenciones imperialistas y el militarismo, el llamado por una Zona de Paz en Nuestra América significa priorizar los Derechos Humanos Centrados en las Personas (PCHR por sus letras en inglés) en las Américas observando los principios de soberanía nacional, igualdad de derechos y autodeterminación de los pueblos. Estos son principios que deben ser defendidos a través de la lucha popular. Por lo tanto, apoyamos la declaración de nuestros compañeros en MOLEGHAF, quienes llaman por la organización y unidad de las fuerzas revolucionarias en Haití, contra las maquinaciones imperialistas.
 
Finalmente, reconocemos y apreciamos las palabras poderosas de solidaridad del Presidente venezolano Nicolás Maduro durante y después de la reunión más reciente de la CELAC, lo que reconoció que la crisis actual es el resultado de la intervención occidental y la violencia imperialista. El Presidente Maduro también llamó por un "apoyo económico y social integral" y por la solidaridad, en lugar de una intervención que sólo causará más derramamiento de sangre.
 
Como organizaciones de la Campaña Zona de Paz, nos reunimos recientemente en Bogotá, Colombia, y acordamos la urgente necesidad de apoyar al pueblo haitiano y sus movilizaciones populares contra la violencia imperialista en curso. Instamos a todos los movimientos y organizaciones progresistas, radicales y revolucionarios de las Américas a apoyar la soberanía popular y la autodeterminación del pueblo haitiano, rechazar la misión del MSS y luchar por una Zona de Paz centrada en los pueblos de Haití y de toda Nuestra América.
 
¡Fuera de Haití! ¡Hands Off Haiti!
 
Firmado,
Organizaciones de la Campaña Zona de Paz
 
Black Alliance for Peace
Caribbean Movement for Peace and Integration
Caribbean Organisation for People’s Empowerment
Consejo por la Emancipación Plurinacional de Perú
Diaspora Pa’lante Collective
Friends of the ATC (Asociación de Trabajadores del Campo)
Movimiento Evita
Nicaragua Solidarity Coalition
Observatorio de los Derechos Humanos de los Pueblos
Proceso de Comunidades Negras – PCN
Red de Organizaciones AfroVenezolanas
Soli Puerto Rico
World Beyond War




BAP Backgrounder: Haiti Behind the Headlines

March 11, 2024
 

Haiti is in the headlines again and, as usual, the headlines on Haiti are mostly negative. They are also largely false. Haiti, they tell us, is overrun by “gang violence.” Haiti is “a failed state,” standing on the verge of “anarchy” and teetering on the edge of “collapse.” Haiti, they tell us, can only be stabilized and saved through foreign military invasion and occupation. We have seen these stories before. We know their purpose. They serve to cover up the true origins of the “crisis” in Haiti while justifying foreign military intervention and setting up an attack on Haiti’s sovereignty.

What is the reality behind the headlines? The reality is that the crisis in Haiti is a crisis of imperialism. Those countries calling for military intervention – the US, France, Canada – have created the conditions making military intervention appear necessary and inevitable. The same countries calling for intervention are the same countries that will benefit from intervention, not the Haitian people. And for twenty years, those countries that cast Haiti as a failed state actively worked to destroy Haiti’s government while imposing foreign colonial rule.
 
On Haiti, the position of the Black Alliance for Peace has been consistent and clear. We reject the sensationalist headlines in the Western media with their racist assumptions that Haiti is ungovernable, and the Haitian people cannot govern themselves. We support the efforts of the Haitian people to assert their sovereignty and reclaim their country. We denounce the ongoing imperialist onslaught on Haiti and demand the removal of Haiti’s foreign, colonial rulers.
 

What’s Going on in Haiti? 3/11

  • The crisis in Haiti is a crisis of imperialism – but what does this mean? It means that the failure of governance in Haiti is not something internal to Haiti, but it is a result of the concerted effort on the part of the west to gut the Haitian state and destroy popular democracy in Haiti.
  • Haiti is currently under occupation by the US/UN and Core Group, a self-appointed cabal of foreign entities who effectively rule this country.
  • The occupation of Haiti began in 2004 with the US/France/Canada-sponsored coup d’état against Haiti’s democratically elected president. The coup d’etat was approved by the UN Security Council. It established an occupying military force (euphemistically called a “peacekeeping” mission), with the acronym MINUSTAH. Though the MINUSTAH mission officially ended in 2017, the UN office in Haiti was reconstituted as BIHUH. BINUH, along with the Core Group, continues to have a powerful role in Haitian affairs.
  • Over the past four years, the Haitian masses have mobilized and protested against an illegal government, imperial meddling, the removal of fuel subsidies leading to rising costs of living, and insecurity by elite-funded armed groups. However, these protests have been snuffed out by the US-installed puppet government. 
  • Since 2021, attempts to control Haiti by the US have intensified. In that year, Haiti’s president, Jovenel Moïse was assassinated and Ariel Henry was installed by the US and UN Core Group as the de facto prime minister. In the wake of the assassination of Moïse and the installation of Henry, the U.S. has sought to build a coalition of foreign states willing to send military forces to occupy Haiti, and to deal with Haiti’s ostensible “gang” problem.
  • The armed groups (the so-called “gangs”) mainly in the capital city of Haiti should be understood as “paramilitary” forces, as they are made up of former (and current) Haitian police and military elements.  These paramilitary forces are known to work for some of Haiti’s elite, including, some say, Ariel Henry (Haiti’s former de facto prime minister). It should also be noted that Haiti does not manufacture guns; the guns and ammunition come primarily from the US and the Dominican Republic; and the US has consistently rejected calls for an arms embargo.
  • Moreover, as Haitian organizations have demonstrated, it is the UN and Core Group occupation that has enabled the “gangsterization” of the country. When we speak of “gangs,” we must recognize that the real and most powerful gangs in the country are the US, the Core Group, and the illegal UN office in Haiti – all of whom helped to create the current crisis.
  • Most recently, Ariel Henry traveled to Kenya to sign an agreement with Kenya prime minister William Ruto authorizing the deployment of 1,000 Kenyan police officers as the head of a multinational military force whose ostensible purpose was to combat Haiti’s gang violence. But the US strategy for Haiti appears to have collapsed as Henry has been unable to return to Haiti and there is renewed challenge to the constitutionality of that deployment. 
  • The US is now scrambling for control, seeking to force Henry’s resignation while looking for a new puppet to serve as a figurehead for foreign rule of Haiti. While Haiti currently does not have a government, it has not descended into chaos or anarchy. The paramilitaries, it seems, are waiting for their orders to act, while the US strategy for Haiti is in crisis. 

Why Haiti?

For BAP, the historic struggles of the Haitian people to combat slavery, colonialism, and imperialism have been crucial to the struggles of African people throughout the globe. The attacks on Black sovereignty in Haiti are replicated in the attacks on Black people throughout the Americas. Today, Haiti is  important for U.S. geopolitical and economic viability. Haiti is in a key location in the Caribbean for US military and security strategy in the region, especially in light of the coming US confrontation with China and in the context of the strategic implementation of the Global Fragilities Act. Haiti’s economic importance stems from what western corporations perceive as a vast pool of cheap labor, and its unexploited land and mineral wealth.
 

BAP’S Position on the Current Situation in Haiti

  • BAP, as with many Haitian and other organizations, have consistently argued against a renewed foreign military intervention.
  • We have persistently demanded the end of the foreign occupation of Haiti. This includes the dissolution of the Core Group, the UN office in Haiti (BINHU), and the end of the constant meddling of the US, along with its junior partners, CARICOM, and Brazil’s Lula.
  • We have denounced the governments of the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) (with the exception of Venezuela and Cuba), for supporting US plans for armed intervention in Haiti and the denial of Haitian sovereignty.
  • We have denounced CARICOM leaders, and especially Barbados Prime Minister, Mia Mottley, for not only supporting US planned armed intervention in Haiti and offering their police and soldiers for the mission, but for also following US and Core Group dictates on the way forward in Haiti. Haiti’s solutions should come from Haitian people through broad consensus. CARICOM leaders cannot claim to be helping Haiti when they are acting as neo-colonial stooges of the US and the Core Group.
  • We have denounced the role of Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio “Lula” da Silva, for not only continuing Brazil’s role in the Core Group, but for also leading the charge, along with the criminal US government, for foreign armed military invasion of Haiti. We remind everyone that it was Lula’s government that led the military wing of the 2004 violent UN occupation of Haiti. Brazil’s soldiers led the mission for 13 years (until 2017).
  • In solidarity with Haitian groups, we have denounced the UN approved, US-funded, Kenyan-led foreign armed invasion and occupation of Haiti. We are adamant that a U.S./UN-led armed foreign intervention in Haiti is not only illegitimate, but illegal. We support Haitian people and civil society organizations who have been consistent in their opposition to foreign armed military intervention – and who have argued that the problems of Haiti are a direct result of the persistent and long-term meddling of the United States, the United Nations, and the Core Group.
  • We demand US accountability for flooding Haiti with military grade weapons. We demand that the US enforce the UN-stated arms embargo against the Haitian and U.S. elite who import guns into the country.
  • We will continue to support our comrades as they fight for a free and sovereign Haiti.

Long live Haiti!   

Read the online version here.




Black Alliance for Peace Says International Women’s Day Must be a Radical Call to Action Against Colonial Domination from Haiti to Palestine [March 8th]

 

Historically, African (Black) women in the U.S. have contributed to social progress movements, including the fight against  racial oppression,  patriarchy, capitalist exploitation, western imperialism, and colonialism. Women’s struggle for peace and freedom has challenged the U.S.’ push for war and global dominance. During today’s commemorations for International Women’s Day, women celebrated for their achievements highlight a stark reality of how far our communities have departed from the Black Radical Peace tradition.

Since October 7, 2023, Israeli Occupation forces have murdered over 30,000 Palestinians and displaced millions more. Despite the International Court of Justice's ruling, the U.S. has continued to justify and support Israel in its ongoing genocide, employing individuals like Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield to consistently vote no on proposed U.N. Security Council ceasefire resolutions for a toothless “humanitarian pause”. Thomas-Greenfield's willingness to serve as a loyal Blackface of Empire disregards Palestinians as a whole but also the enduring suffering of Palestinian women under settler colonial occupation, who give birth to still-born babies at checkpoints, and face widespread instances of sexualized torture, rape, and castration, irrespective of gender identity.

Press Secretary Karine Jean Pierre is celebrated as a “First Black” for Empire, but her Haitian family background obscures the fact that the Biden administration is pushing the latest call for occupation of Haiti. With the impending Multinational Security Support Mission in Haiti, we must remember the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti ( MINSUH ) which occupied Haiti after the removal of democratically elected President Jean-Bertrand Aristide, Haitian women experienced various forms of violence, exploitation, and marginalization. Haitian workers, predominantly women, have demanded wage increases and protested against the dehumanizing and demeaning sweatshops where they work. However, they have been met with paramilitary forces, used as a pretext for occupation, which will have detrimental effects on women.

Advocating regime change, supporting genocide, and signing draconian bills into law from Washington D.C to San Francisco, African (Black) women are being used as the faces of disparity and military proliferation, exacerbating the challenges faced by working-class African (Black) women. This is a blatant disregard of people-centered human rights and perpetuates full-spectrum domination, inevitably hindering the advancement of liberation struggles of colonized people worldwide. 

The contradictions of celebrating women's achievements while turning a blind eye to the suffering of colonized women, both domestically and globally, highlight the need to broaden the scope and meaning of International Women’s Day to make it a day of remembrance and resistance focused on the objective of overturning the structures and relationships imposed on the world by the Western colonial/capitalist system that degraded and dehumanized women across the planet. For BAP, International Women’s Day is a call to action. A clarion call to sharpen our weapons of opposition in order to strike at the heart of patriarchy, gender-based violence and capitalism.


Link to online version: https://blackallianceforpeace.com/bapstatements/womensday2024




Statement Against U.S. AFRICOM Airstrikes

Feared to Have Killed 2 Cuban Doctors [February 28th] 



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE     

Media Contact
communications [at blackallianceforpeace com]
(202) 643-1136
 

FEBRUARY 28, 2024 – The National Network on CubaThe Black Alliance for Peace, and Lowcountry Action Committee recently released a joint statement regarding the US Africa Command (AFRICOM) airstrikes in Somalia reported to have killed 2 Cuban doctors. Please see the statement below:

______________________


The National Network on CubaThe Black Alliance for Peace, and Lowcountry Action Committee strongly condemn the US Africa Command (AFRICOM) airstrikes in Somalia reported to have killed 2 Cuban doctors. We demand the U.S. release all information about the bombing to Cuba and the victims’ families.

Cuba has deployed more than 600,000 health workers to 165 nations over the last six decades on medical missions. Two Cubans serving in Kenya, Dr. Assel Herrera Correa, a specialist in general medicine, and Dr. Landy Rodriguez Hernandez, a surgeon, were kidnapped there in 2019 and held in Jilib, southern Somalia. Unofficial sources reported that a U.S. drone strike in Jilib on February 15 killed the Cuban doctors; an AFRICOM spokesperson confirmed the bombing but would not confirm any civilian casualties. Cuba’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs approached the U.S. government through diplomatic channels on February 18, seeking information, and has yet to receive a response. The President of Cuba’s National Assembly is now traveling to Kenya to carry out urgent negotiations and confirm the status of the doctors’ lives. We will continue sharing in Cuba’s hope of finding the doctors alive until there is official confirmation to the contrary.

We call on the U.S. to cooperate with an investigation and to share all information about the attack with Cuba. This attack shows once again that Cuba’s foreign policy is to save lives, while U.S. foreign policy is to occupy, bomb, blockade, and destroy lives. As Cuban leader Fidel Castro famously said, “Our country does not drop bombs on other peoples, nor does it send thousands of planes to bomb cities…Tens of thousands of Cuban doctors have provided internationalist services in the most remote and inhospitable places…Doctors, not bombs.”

U.S. troops should not be occupying Africa in the first place, nor should they be in Cuba at Guantánamo Bay. Despite the disingenuous altruistic spin the U.S. puts on their stated purpose for AFRICOM, its real and only purpose is to use military power to impose U.S. control over African land, resources, and labor in service to Western finance capital. AFRICOM’s drone operations in Africa have only caused violence, vicious anonymity, and "collateral damage." Primarily in Libya and Somalia, the numbers of confirmed civilian deaths from drones are as high as 3,200 in these two countries, and studies have shown these conditions “have inadvertently aided the growth of terrorist groups in the region.”

We join the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States and the Black Alliance for Peace in calling for an international “Zone of Peace” in the Americas. We stand in solidarity with all people facing imperialist violence, from Gaza to Guantánamo.


Unblock Cuba!
Let Cuba live! 
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ICSS meeting:  "Paul Robeson, Stalin, and the History of the Soviet Union," a talk by MSU professor Grover Furr, March 31st at 1:30pm Eastern, 10:30am Pacific – 


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Here is the full information from the sponsoring group, the ICSS [=?]:

    Sun, Mar 31, 2024: 10:30am-12:30pm Pacific

    *Paul Robeson, **Stalin and the
    History of the Soviet Union.*

    *Speaker: Grover Furr*

    Grover writes:
    In 1981 Paul Robeson’s son, Paul Robeson Jr, claimed that his father
    had told him privately that in June 1949 he, Paul Sr, learned about
    the persecution of some prominent Jews in the Soviet Union, but had
    never publicly revealed this fact and had asked his son to promise
    not to reveal it during his, Paul Sr’s, lifetime. In later years
    Paul Jr repeatedly confirmed this story. In a recent article I
    checked this story against the evidence that is now available and
    drew the only possible conclusion: that Paul Jr’s story is untrue.
    In our latest book, /Stalin Exonerated: Fact-Checking the Death of
    Solomon Mikhoels,/ Vladimir Bobrov and I show not just that the
    story that Joseph Stalin ordered the murder of Mikhoels is false [March 16, 1890
– January 13, 1948]. We show that it is a deliberate forgery by well-known scholars of Soviet history who are still active today.


    I would like to begin with some falsehoods about Stalin and the
    history of the Soviet Union in his time. Then I will outline why we
    should all be acutely aware of the falsification of Stalin-era
    Soviet history and what it means for the working class and
    progressive persons all over the world.
    Our speaker is *Grover Furr,* Professor of Medieval English
    literature at Montclair State University in New Jersey [ 
msuweb.montclair.edu/~furrg/ ]
. Prof. Furr is best known for his views on the Soviet Union in the Stalin period, based on his research of declassified documents in Russia after 1991, as in his first of many published books on the subject, /Khrushchev Lied, The Evidence that Every Revelation of Stalin's (and Beria's) Crimes in Nikita Khrushchev's Infamous Secret Speech to the 20th Party Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union on February 25, 1956, Is Provably False./ [Lavrentiy Pavlovich Beria was born March 29, 1899 in Merkheuli, Tsarist Russia, now in Abkhazia but claimed by Georgia, and he was executed December 23, 1953 in Moscow.]


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[4/16 -- See durhamspark.blogspot.com/2024/04/en-marcha-there-is-risk-of.html for text and YouTube links for the talk.]


Saturday, December 31, 2022

Dagbladet Arbejderen/Daily Worker: The Trotskyist World Movement

https://www.enhedogkamp.dk/den-trotskistiske-verdensbevaegelse-2/ [Originally published in the August-September 1995 issue of Dagbladet Arbejderen; republished by the APK in Danish based on a shortened Norwegian online version.] 


"The Trotskyist World Movement"



For many reasons, it may be appropriate to look at what Trotskyism and the Trotskyist world movement stand for as a political and ideological current. Often it is seen as something insignificant or simply as a left-wing tendency among many others, with a number of factions that clash with each other and have helped to give the "Trotskyist movement" a slightly ridiculous tinge.


This is a misjudgment.


Trotskyism is an international political and ideological current that has a history of almost a hundred years. It presents its own policies and program of socialism and "world revolution", and claims to be the true proponent of Marxism and revolution, especially against "Stalinist" (by which they mean Marxist-Leninist) distortion and manipulation.


International Trotskyism is not a mass movement and has never managed to gain any solid foundation in the working class. Nevertheless, there are Trotskyist groups that spread their ideas and theories in most countries and in all parts of the world. Trotskyism has undergone many changes and modifications in its historical development to the present day, but it has nevertheless retained its basic features and its own special identity through all the different phases.


After the final fall of socialism in Europe in 1989-91, Trotskyism as an international current has had some progress. The Trotskyist organizations – which are far from all affiliated with Mandel's Fourth International [footnote -- Ernest Mandel (1923–1995) was a Belgian economist and theorist and for decades the leading member of the Trotskyist Fourth International. Ed. note] – make up a significant part of the so-called left organizations in Western European countries. In addition, they have influence in the socialist, not the least the left socialist parties in a number of countries. There are new Trotskyist organizations in eastern European countries and the former Soviet Union, and there are also similar Trotskyist organizations in a large number of countries in Asia, Africa, North and South America. For a variety of reasons, however, Trotskyism has gained its greatest influence in the imperialist countries of Europe, and in the United States and Canada.


The origins of Trotskyism


Trotsky formulated his basic ideas in the first 20 years of this century (1900s, Ed. note). All the current Trotskyist organizations defend these ideas, for example, the so-called "theory of the permanent revolution", the impossibility of "socialism in one country", etc.


Trotskyism developed in Russia within the Russian Social Democratic Party with a special ideological and political platform, at the same time and in parallel with the development of social democratic right-wing opportunism, revisionism and reformism in the European social democratic parties before and during the First World War, linked to names such as Bernstein and, not the least, Kautsky. In 1915, Lenin called Trotsky "one of the most dangerous of Kautsky’s supporters".


Trotsky adopted a number of the opportunist social democratic ideas, not the least from the Germans Kautsky and Parvus, and embellished them with assurances of allegiance to Marxism and catchy slogans such as "permanent revolution."


In the struggles between opportunism and Leninism in the Russian Social Democratic Party, when the party split into the Social Democratic Mensheviks and Lenin's Bolsheviks, Trotsky was one of Lenin's political and theoretical opponents throughout the period 1903-17. He was described as a "centrist", a reconciler between the Social Democrats and the Communists. This was a position that Lenin saw as extremely damaging to the development of the Communist Party and to the possibilities of the revolution.  Just before the October Revolution, Trotsky left the Mensheviks. He defected "to the left" and became a member of Lenin's party. He was aware of the direction of the development and wanted to be part of the historic journey.


The fact that Trotskyism developed in Russia and for a short period "coexisted" with Marxism-Leninism in the Bolshevik Party had an enormous impact on the development of Trotskyism, its fate and role. By virtue of this, Trotskyism became especially suitable for operating and maneuvering both in relation to social democracy and communism.


Defected revolutionary hero


It is well known that Trotsky, by virtue of his considerable personal skill, became one of the leading figures in the Russian Revolution and the Civil War. During this period, Trotsky did not dare to openly attack Lenin and Leninism, who had enormous authority within the Bolshevik Party and the international communist movement that organized the Third International, the Comintern.


Trotsky's ideological and political platform –fully developed Trotskyism – was completely rejected by the Bolshevik Party in 1927. Of its nearly 750,000 members, the Trotskyist platform (which denied that it was possible to build socialism in the Soviet Union alone) received the support of less than one percent. But Trotsky (and the rest of the opposition in the Bolshevik Party) also had supporters in a number of communist parties in the capitalist countries. In the late 1920s and early 30s, there was a struggle in a number of parties between the line of supporters of Lenin and Stalin, on the one hand, and the line of Trotsky and the opposition, on the other. The battle ended in defeat for the Trotskyists and the opposition. Many of them went over to the social democratic parties.


From 1923 Trotsky began to talk about the "degeneration" of the party and Soviet power. Later, he began to describe the Soviet Union as a society that was neither capitalist nor socialist, but a degenerate workers' state, ruled by a bureaucracy that held power and used it for everything evil. When Trotsky went into exile, he was welcomed with open arms in the imperialist world, including by the Social Democrats, who saw Trotsky's defection as confirmation of their own criticism of the revolution. Then followed the period of Trotsky's struggle against Stalin and the socialist Soviet Union from abroad, and the secret subversion by the Trotskyists inside the country, in the party and in the state.


Trotskyism came into vogue. It became international. It came as life-giving water to the western media's propaganda mill, which had used the white counterrevolutionaries' outright lies about the communists. Trotsky's weapons against the Soviet Union, Stalin and the Communists had the advantage that they did not come from an overtly bourgeois group – which had an obvious interest in capitalism and possibly the restoration of tsarism – but from the mouth of a revolutionary hero. And his attack came from the "left".


It was at that time that it became common in the US and Western press, owned by multimillionaires, to attack Stalin and the CPSU for having "betrayed" the revolution, for not being revolutionary, socialist and communist enough.


In Trotsky's articles and books, anti-communist intellectuals and bourgeois propagandists found new formulations and angles for their attacks on the construction of socialism, and they were more effective than traditional anti-communist propaganda.


Trotskyism as an international current


Trotsky was not content to be a renegade revolutionary hero who earned large sums of money by allowing himself to be used by the imperialist media. He became the central figure in the attempts to build an international political movement with Trotskyism as an ideological basis, the Trotskyist world movement.


First he organized his colleagues in the "International Left Opposition", and in 1938 founded the Fourth International, for which he formulated the theoretical basis of the so-called "Transitional Program". This is still the basic material for the organization and its national sections, e.g. the SAP [Socialist Workers Party] in Denmark.


Trotskyism, however, had great difficulty in finding a "political space" as an independent current. In the 1920s and 30s right up to the 60s, two major organized currents existed in the labor movement: the mass social democratic parties on a reformist basis and the communist parties. Although Trotskyists relied heavily on gaining a foothold in the Communist Parties, they were expelled not only from the CPSU, but from the entire international communist movement. The social democratic parties that supported Trotsky as a "defector" and anti-Bolshevik did not need his talk of world revolution and his other left-wing phrases.


In this situation, the Trotskyists developed the so-called tactic of "entryism " – a tactic that consists of infiltrating the social democratic and communist parties and other organizations and gradually finding Trotskyist supporters.


However, this tactic was not particularly successful. Nowhere did it lead to the mass support of social democratic and communist workers, as they had hoped. The Trotskyist world movement entered into a protracted crisis, which intensified during and after the war due to the fall of Hitler and the emergence of the socialist camp.


The movement broke into small groups fighting among themselves. However, the tactics of entryism helped to ensure its survival. But it wasn't until the 1960s – after the CPSU's 20th Congress, the "de-Stalinization" and the split in the international communist movement – that the international Trotskyist movement began to see light at the end of the tunnel. A broader political field was now created for the Trotskyists in connection with the growing crisis of social democracy and the advance of modern revisionism in the international communist movement.


The Trotskyists had some influence in the student revolt of 1968 and played their own role in the development of the anti-communist “New Left" in those years, not the least on the ideological level. Many of the ideas and analyses of Trotskyism became part of the legacy of this "New Left".


During this period, the tactics of entryism were abandoned by most Trotskyist organizations, but not by all. At the Fourth International’s 10th World Congress in 1974, they passed a resolution on the building of "revolutionary-Marxist" parties in Europe, parties which supposedly would be "capable of leading the proletariat towards the victory of the socialist revolution", as they stated. This also assumed that the Fourth International was strengthened as the leading center of the "world revolution".


Today, the Trotskyist world movement feels strong enough to make a global push against the revolutionary movement, to replace Marxism and Leninism with Trotskyism as its ideological foundation, as the basic theory and program of contemporary revolutionary movements.


Therefore, there is every reason to take Trotskyism seriously as an international current. After more than half a century of directing its main attacks on the Soviet Union, the socialist countries and the communist parties, Trotskyism is now actively working to deal a decisive blow to communism and eradicate the theory and practice of the socialist revolution, Marxism-Leninism, which the ruling imperialist bourgeoisie still fears.


When we talk about the Trotskyist world movement, we must be aware that it is not an organizational or politically coherent entity. This is primarily due to the Trotskyist ideology and platform itself, which is the basis for countless divisions.


Ernest Mandel's Fourth International headquartered in Brussels, for example, is not the only one calling itself that. At a certain point in the 1970s, there were as many as six centers that called themselves the Fourth International.


Again and again, new Trotskyist organizations and groups emerge in different countries, and it always ends with infighting and competition between them over strategy, tactics and politics.


Nevertheless, they spring from a common ideology and share the same basic principles and attitudes. They have the same basic features that characterize all Trotskyist organizations, and their efforts are pulling in the same direction. All this makes it perfectly justified to sum up the fighting organizations and groupings as one political current, Trotskyism, or the Trotskyist world movement.


Permanent hopelessness


A main component of Trotskyism is the theory of the permanent revolution, which appears as the very key to the solution of the problems of world revolution. In reality, it should be called the theory of permanent hopelessness, because it concretely denies the possibility of the victory of the revolution and the construction of socialism in a particular country.


In short, the starting point of the theory of the permanent revolution is the particular Trotskyist analysis of imperialism. This analysis argues that with the outbreak of the First World War, the death knell rang for all national programs: the time for the world revolution has come and it must be understood as a worldwide process, a global explosion, or rather chain of explosions, in which capitalism is replaced by socialism on a world scale.


According to this theory, imperialism has transcended all national borders and has become a whole that cannot be broken down step by step. This is justified by capitalism's objective tendency towards the globalization of the world economy and the domination of monopolies over all key capitalist positions.


A simultaneous global showdown with capitalism is therefore the necessary form that the transition from capitalism to socialism must take. The task of the revolutionaries is to await and prepare for this situation, having created in advance a revolutionary organization on a world basis to lead the revolution, a "General Staff of the World Revolution". It is this role that the Fourth International has awarded itself.


Consequently, no concrete revolution can prevail, and socialism cannot be built in a single country or group of countries. A revolution in a single country, such as the October Revolution in Russia, can at most be the spark that ignites the world revolution.


The construction of a socialist society over a long period of time in a country or group of countries is therefore, by definition, impossible.


Trotsky described the world revolution as this all-encompassing global explosion, and the Trotskyists have repeatedly proclaimed that the world revolution is "just around the corner", "only a few years" away. Of course, it has not appeared, but Trotskyism acts the same way as the religious prophets of doom who set a date for the end of the world. Every time it turns out that it does not succeed, there will always be a new opportunity sometime in the future.


On the basis of this deeply unscientific and anti-Marxist theory of revolution, Trotskyism must necessarily reject and criticize concrete revolutions and attempts to build socialism that are actually taking place and that the working class and its allies have carried out in a number of countries in this [19th] century. None of them has been the spark that could trigger the chain of explosion of the world revolution.


It is therefore inherent in the theory of the permanent revolution that all concrete revolutions in individual countries are doomed to failure.


/—/


Mandel’s Fourth International described the Soviet Union as "a bureaucratically deformed workers' state", as a special, degenerate transitional society between capitalism and socialism, but acknowledged that the October Revolution overthrew the capitalist system in Russia. Others (such as the International Socialist movement) start from the theory of the impossibility of building socialism in one or more countries and deny that the Soviet Union ever abolished capitalism. What Lenin and Stalin built was not socialism, but "state capitalism" from start to finish.


Revolution and the class struggle


For the Trotskyists, history stopped in a certain sense in 1923. The world revolution failed, according to Trotskyist concepts, as the Russian Revolution did not trigger victorious revolutions in Western Europe, as a springboard to the "final showdown".


Therefore, Trotskyism perceives the great and rich revolutionary history of the 20th century as a single long "Stalinist" perversion.


According to the Trotskyists, no real socialism was ever built in the USSR or the other socialist countries. Trotskyism usually called them "degenerate workers' states", a kind of transitional society that was neither capitalist nor socialist.


The Trotskyists claim that after Trotsky was expelled from the Soviet Union, the revolution developed into a caricature, ruled by a perverted "Stalinist bureaucracy". This "analysis" was then repeated for all new socialist societies and countries.


It is a fact that as soon as the revolution has triumphed in one country, the Trotskyists have been busy slandering it, because according to their logic it is impossible in every way. On the basis of the permanent revolution, Trotskyism has strongly attacked all attempts to build socialism, and above all the Soviet Union in Stalin's time, ostensibly because they "postpone the world revolution" and lead the world revolutionary process astray.


Thus, they also have a ready-made explanation of why the "world revolution" that they themselves have predicted has failed. It is Stalin and the Communists' fault!


Crushing the "Stalinist bureaucracies", according to the Trotskyists, would have a necessary and stimulating effect on the progress of the world revolution. Therefore, the Trotskyists greeted the counterrevolution in the Soviet Union and the other former socialist countries with enthusiasm!


The crucial problem for the Trotskyists is that reality, revolution and the actual experiences of the international working class do not match their theorizing and formulas.


The working class has carried out the proletarian revolution in a large number of countries and, furthermore, a large number of anti-colonial and anti-imperialist revolutions have been carried out in this [19th] century.


Socialism has actually been built successfully in one country and later in a number of countries. First of all, in the USSR, which, according to Trotsky's predictions, had no chance of survival, not even for a few years. Before Hitler's attack on the Soviet Union, he proclaimed that the country would be crushed by the Nazi war machine.


But socialism proved capable of resisting the fascist war of aggression, the most brutal war the world has ever seen.


/—/


Lenin's theoretical justification for the possibility of the revolution triumphing and socialism being built in one country or group of countries was the uneven development of imperialism. The victory of the revolution in Russia and later elsewhere in the world and the construction of these countries as socialist societies have, of course, in practice disproved the Trotskyists' theory of the impossibility of socialism. This is true even if these are former socialist societies where capitalism has been resurrected. This is not because of the "impossibility of socialism", but because the class struggle continues in the socialist countries in conjunction with the pressure and subversion of imperialism and reaction to destroy socialism.


The fact that socialism was concretely frustrated and defeated at a certain point says nothing about the possibility or reality of revolution and socialism in this country or these countries. On the other hand, it tells us something about the sharp class struggle between socialism and capitalism on a world scale. It tells us that the class struggle continues even after the victory of the revolution and that there is still the possibility of counterrevolution in one form or another, and not only through imperialist war or invasion. It was something, for example, that Lenin and Stalin constantly emphasized with great severity, and they carried out the necessary countermeasures against the counterrevolutionary forces.


Socialism in one country


Let us for a moment accept the Trotskyists' presumptions that all attempts to build socialism have been defeated. That only capitalism exists in the world. That a handful of imperialist powers control the whole world; even in this case, the theory of permanent revolution does not hold.


The revolution is and will remain a concrete process in concrete countries or groups of countries, not a simultaneous revolution across the globe.


This is as true today as it was before the October Revolution.


During the First World War, Trotsky himself linked his hopes not to a proletarian revolution in Russia, but to the slogan of a United States of Europe.


He wrote: "In these historical circumstances the working class, the proletariat, can have no interest in defending the outlived and antiquated national ‘fatherland’, which has become the main obstacle to economic development. The task of the proletariat is to create a far more powerful fatherland, with far greater power of resistance – the Republican United States of Europe, as the foundation of the United States of the World. Against the stagnation of imperialism, the proletariat can only make a socialist organization of the world economy as today's political program."


Later, his successors repeated this nonsense with many variations, including the idea of a Republican United States of Europe. And it has even become practical bourgeois politics. Lenin replied that the slogan of a United States of Europe under capitalism is "either impossible or reactionary":


A United States of the World (not of Europe alone) is the state form of the unification and freedom of nations which we associate with socialism -- until the time when the complete victory of communism brings about the total disappearance of the state, including the democratic. As a separate slogan, however, the slogan of a United States of the World would hardly be a correct one, first, because it merges with socialism; second, because it may be wrongly interpreted to mean that the victory of socialism in a single country is impossible, and it may also create misconceptions as to the relations of such a country to the others….


Hence, the victory of socialism is possible first in several or even in one capitalist country alone." (Lenin: On the Slogan for a United States of Europe, Aug. 1915)


A revolutionary alternative?


The Trotskyist theory of permanent revolution encompasses a wide range of aspects beyond the erroneous conception of the world revolutionary process and the rejection of the possibility of the victory of socialism in a single country or group of countries. These other aspects of Trotskyist ideology are also fundamentally opposed to Marxism and the Leninist theory of revolution.


The ideology is based on the lack of faith in the victory of the revolution in a single country or group of countries and in the distrust of the ability of the working class to rally allies around it in the revolution, both in individual countries and on a world scale.


It denies the gradual development of concrete revolutions and of the various elements of the revolutionary world process. It denies the need for a revolutionary strategy and tactics based on the level of development of each country at all times and on the objective revolutionary tasks facing it.


It therefore underestimates the importance of the general democratic tasks, the importance of the national, anti-imperialist and democratic aspect of the revolutionary development on a world scale. It replaces a complicated formulation of strategy and tactics based on the national and international balance of forces, including the creation of the broadest possible class and popular alliances and a broad, concrete political program for the revolutionary movement in a particular country, with schematic revolutionary formulas which, according to the Trotskyists, are applicable everywhere.


/—-/


The basic programmatic document expressing Trotskyism's conception of the strategy and tactics of the revolutionary movement is still Trotsky's "Transitional Program" of 1938.


The essence of right-wing opportunism is to separate the day-to-day struggle from the strategy for socialism, from the revolution and the socialist goal. The social democratic parties of all shapes and sizes make the day-to-day struggle everything and socialism nothing. "Left opportunism", on the other hand, places the main emphasis on the perspective, the goal, and denies the importance of the day-to-day struggle and the demands of the day (in the broadest and most comprehensive sense) as the only thing that can prepare the people and develop the mass struggle to the level necessary to overthrow capitalism in a revolutionary situation and replace the state of the bourgeoisie with the new state of the working class.


Trotskyism believes it has found an easy way around these questions: instead of setting a series of day-to-day demands, each of which can be met under capitalism and which can therefore mobilize and organize broad fighting movements, the Trotskyist "Transitional Program" sets out a number of demands. Of these demands it is stated that "none of the transitional demands can be fully realized as long as the bourgeois regime continues to exist". Thus, the "break with capitalism" can exist as a concrete political possibility in any strike under capitalism, any strike can develop into a "general strike" that leads to "a struggle for power", to the creation of a so-called "dual power" – in the Trotskyist, not the Leninist sense – with workers' councils and strike committees. The Trotskyist organizations raise this whole group of formulas in virtually every labor struggle of even moderate importance.


These "radical" demands and methods, which, among many other errors, include the fact that they constantly overestimate the radicalization of the working class, in practice work contrary to their intention: the pseudo-revolutionary ideas are a line of defeat that ultimately give the social democratic reformists free rein. At the same time, the importance of the indispensable leading role of the revolutionary (communist) party is disregarded, both in the day-to-day struggles under capitalism and in a revolutionary situation.


This fundamentally subjective assessment of the class movements and class forces has the consequence that the patient organization of the mass struggles and mass movement is rejected and means that the Trotskyists are constantly tailing the spontaneous struggle. The Trotskyists are always either in the doldrums or in a high state of "revolutionary" exhilaration, helplessly carried away by the alternating ebb and flow of the class struggle.


The most serious flaw in the Trotskyist "Transitional Program" is the bourgeois and reformist view of state power. In reality, it does not at all raise the question of the class character of the bourgeois state and the necessity for the bourgeois state to be overthrown through revolution. The Trotskyists' conception of the state is parallel to the social democratic one: the bourgeois state can be used to promote socialism, so that more and more socialist elements can be gradually and frictionlessly incorporated into it, for example through nationalization. When Trotskyism adds certain ideas that a "dual power", factory councils and soviets can be created, even under normal capitalist conditions and not in a concrete exceptional situation with a strong revolutionary wave, it is just a "left-radical" icing of the old social democratic pie.


Between social democracy and communism


Trotskyism emerged as a centrist, conciliatory current between social democracy and Lenin's Bolshevism, as a special "left wing" rooted in social-democratic opportunism. This historical origin makes Trotskyism particularly suitable for maneuvering between the two basic lines of the workers' movement: social democratic reformism and the line of revolutionary class struggle, the communist line, which brings together class-conscious workers at the head of the entire working class and broad popular forces in all the struggles of this great revolutionary century.


Within this field, Trotskyism as an international current has shifted in the various historical periods – from before the October Revolution, in the period as opposition in the CPSU, in the 1930s and during the Second World War in the form of a current in exile that sought an international foothold, and in the different post-war periods.


In the different periods, the Trotskyists have used different tactics to establish a kind of "third way" between the reformist, social democratic line, which advocates preserving capitalism forever, and the communist line of revolution, destroying the capitalist state and building a new socialist society.


In its obituary for Ernest Mandel, the International Socialists praised him precisely for emphasizing the need to build a revolutionary alternative to both the social democratic and the "Stalinist (read: communist) parties" throughout the post-war period.


The fact that in the post-war period, and especially since the 1960s, Trotskyism has been given greater political scope is due to a number of factors:


The betrayal of the working class and socialism by social democratic reformism has become increasingly apparent and has led social democracy into a strategic crisis. Its obvious role as the main support of capitalist society, which is often preferred by the ruling bourgeois party, naturally leads to disillusionment in the social base of the party, among the members and voters from the working class. This is the main reason for the strategic crisis in, among others, the Western European social democratic parties, a crisis that for many decades has undermined their positions and led to widespread defections of their members and supporters.


Trotskyism is addressed not the least to the ever-renewed current of the left that is breaking with social democracy and reformism. The so-called "revolutionary alternative" is intended to prevent the flow from shifting to clearly revolutionary, communist positions.


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In reality, there are only two basic directions that are possible for the labor movement: the bourgeois direction, reformism and opportunism, or proletarian Marxism-Leninism. Either the path of class collaboration to maintain capitalism, or the path of scientific socialism to create the new socialist society. /—/



The parasitic nature of Trotskyism


The ideology and political sphere of action of Trotskyism, its historical role and development, are the basis of one of the conspicuous features of the movement and all its organizations: the role of parasites on the main political currents of the labor movement and the mass struggle.


Trotskyism looks right and left at the same time. Trotskyist organizations rarely refer to themselves as Trotskyist, preferring other terms: "revolutionary Marxists", "revolutionary socialists" or even "democratic socialists" when they look to the Social Democrats, while they present themselves as "Leninists" and "Bolsheviks" when they look in the direction of the communists.


In above-mentioned resolution of the 10th World Congress of the Fourth International, which put the building of "revolutionary parties" on the agenda, these parties are called "revolutionary" and "revolutionary-Marxist". They should be built on the basis of the emergence of "a new vanguard of a mass character", as it is called.


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The confusion of terms for the same thing – the organization and ideology of Trotskyism – obviously contributes to making it difficult to identify this current, which uses the definitions of other political currents without inhibition.


The Trotskyists regard the concrete struggles and movements of the working class both as an opportunity to spread the Trotskyist schemes and formulas, and as a field of activity for recruitment to the Trotskyist organizations. It is the Trotskyist ideology and organizational thinking that allows them not only to support such struggles in order to develop them to the maximum, but always to introduce extraneous purposes and intentions into the struggle, and it always ends with a call to organize with the Trotskyists.


A furious hatred of communism


The most prominent feature of Trotskyism as an international current, a feature that characterizes all Trotskyist groupings, is an uncontrollable hatred of the communist parties based on the foundations of Marxism-Leninism, and of all the successful revolutions and attempts to build socialism that have taken place in this century.


The history of Trotskyism is first and foremost a constant struggle against communism and Marxism-Leninism under the slogan of the "struggle against Stalinism". Today, Trotskyism actively and to a large extent contributes to revising the history of the working class and socialism, a process that bourgeois historians are also engaged in. Its aim is to rewrite and reinterpret the revolutionary struggles in an anti-revolutionary direction.


The struggle of Trotskyism against the Soviet Union and the international communist movement during the Stalin era is well known.


During the Gorbachev period, when the final transition to a Western-style capitalist system was being prepared in the Soviet Union, the trials of the 1930s against Trotskyists and others condemned as counterrevolutionaries were labeled "show trials" and the judgments "annulled." Western Trotskyists such as Isaac Deutscher were summoned as Soviet experts and advisers to governments on matters of the rehabilitation of the "innocent victims of Stalin's terror" at the very time when the privatization of social property was gaining momentum.


They were accused of undermining socialism and trying to restore capitalism. It is not accidental, of course, but historically perfectly logical, that forces such as Gorbachev and Yeltsin, who actually carried out the final restoration of capitalism and the dissolution of the Soviet Union, acquitted their predecessors, who had been slowed down in their counterrevolutionary activities.


However, capitalist Russia's issuance of certificates of innocence and the award of honors to the pioneers of the counterrevolution cannot change the historical truth about these forces, which were fought against under socialism and celebrated under capitalism.


We have to note that the temporarily last act of socialism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe also took place with expert Trotskyist assistance.


In the service of counterrevolution


Today, international Trotskyism is eagerly trying to rewrite the revolutionary history of the 20th century in a Trotskyist spirit. This is partly as a continuation of three-quarters of a century of struggle against the international communist movement, and partly in the attempt to replace Leninism with the theory and political practice with Trotskyism.


Trotskyist historiography is characterized by a pronounced hostility and supercritical attitude towards the actual revolutions that have taken place, by its attempts to hide or whitewash the real positions and role of the Trotskyist movement as an active participant in these processes, and by its attempts to hide the fact that it coincides with a bourgeois revision of history.


It would take far too far to review the entire revolutionary history of the [last] century and the role of the Trotskyists in it. On all crucial points, international Trotskyism has chosen a line that would have led to defeat if it had been translated into mass politics. It would not only have been, as it has been, a more or less limited obstacle to the revolution, a source of confusion and division of the revolutionary forces.


Let us take the attitude of Trotskyism to the fight against fascism as an example:


Trotskyism was opposed to support for the democratic countries attacked by fascism. When the Soviet Union was later attacked by Hitler's Germany, and the character of World War II thus changed, the Trotskyists declared that the war was still a war between the imperialist powers, and opposed the alliance between the Soviet Union, the United States and Great Britain, which had a significant impact on the defeat of Hitler and fascism.


In the post-war period, Trotskyism's denial of the possibility of revolution and socialism in one or several countries, the rejection of the anti-fascist popular fronts and of the national and democratic elements of the anti-imperialist struggle, have led the Trotskyists into direct confrontation with national liberation movements led by communist parties. In the Chinese Revolution, in Vietnam, Korea and many other places, the Trotskyist groups and the Fourth International itself stood against the strategies and lines that led to the victory of these revolutions.


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The Trotskyist literature is overflowing with an unquenchable hatred of the Communist Parties and, not the least, of their leaderships. It is a sewer of invective and aggressive attacks on all the "Stalinists" who spearheaded the greatest and most important popular struggles and revolutions of this last (20th) century: Stalin and the leadership of the CPSU, Georgi Dimitrov, Mao Zedong, Ho Chi-Minh, Kim Il Sung, Enver Hoxha, Fidel Castro and many more have been and continue to be targets of the raging Trotskyist propaganda of incitement. Sometimes it tries to camouflage the incitement as a "criticism of the personality cults", but in its content it is directed at the concrete revolutions, the construction of socialism and the leading force in it, the communist parties.


In return, the Trotskyist Tito and the Titoites defended Yugoslavia in its break with the former socialist camp and the international communist movement. They have always looked for fissures and divisions among the communists in order to exploit them for their own ends. They enthusiastically received Khrushchev's so-called "secret report" on Stalin and the "showdown with Stalinism", which initiated the counterrevolutionary process of modern revisionism, which eventually led to the fall of socialism and the dissolution of the Soviet Union. They saw this as a historical confirmation of their own struggle against the formerly socialist Soviet Union and the international communist movement.


Even the final capitalist counterrevolution in Eastern Europe and the dissolution of the Soviet Union were taken as proof of the correctness of Trotskyism's theory of permanent revolution and the impossibility of socialism in one country. Thus, Trotskyism contributes to concealing the real historical course of the international class struggle and the class struggle under socialism, thus appearing in parallel with bourgeois historiography. It sees the entire Soviet period as a single, static period without its own internal dynamics and course of development, as an unfortunate parenthesis in world history that basically "contradicts the course of history".


The genuine communist parties are systematically slandered as undemocratic, "Stalinist" command centers, as the dictatorship of the leadership over the members, built on the discipline of the dead. It is the Leninist principle of organisation, democratic centralism, which is particularly attacked. It is this principle that allows the parties to act uniformly and as a unified force in the class struggle and revolution, which is the prerequisite for their vigor and makes them parties of revolutionary action.


The role of Trotskyism in Eastern Europe


Trotskyist organizations played a particularly active role in the end game surrounding the fall of socialism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Counterrevolutionary movements such as Solidarity in Poland and Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia were hailed by the Trotskyists as "genuine revolutionary movements". The Trotskyists combined their energies with those of imperialism and the entire Western reaction in supporting the victory of these "popular movements" – that is, securing imperialism and the key positions of the international monopolies in the economies of these countries as Western-style capitalist systems.


In the past, Tito's break with international communism in 1948, the counterrevolutionary events in Poland and Hungary in 1956, and Dubcek's so-called Prague Spring in 1968, his "socialism with a human face", were hailed by the Trotskyists as genuine revolutionary movements directed against the Stalinist bureaucracy.


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The Marxist-Leninists have repeatedly 


stressed that the danger of capitalist restoration also exists in those countries where the revolution has triumphed and socialism has been built, and that the class struggle continues under socialism with the support of world imperialism and reaction. A peaceful counterrevolution is not only a theoretical and political possibility.


After the defeat of Hitler's Germany, which had tried in vain to crush socialism by force of arms, and the development of nuclear weapons, which would turn a war against socialism into an adventure with enormous risk also for imperialism, the strategy of peaceful counterrevolution, the strategy of the degeneration of socialism from within, became the very core of imperialism's struggle against socialism.


The arms and nuclear race were also methods which, through sustained pressure, would contribute to the degeneration of the Communist Parties and the socialist states, and at the same time increase and sharpen all contradictions, exploit all the flaws, shortcomings and problems of these countries in order to fan the flames of discontent and unrest.


It is obvious that Mandel and his Fourth International, these self-appointed experts of the socialist revolution, were completely and fundamentally wrong when they proclaimed that the "political revolution" they celebrated was no threat to the achievements of socialism, and would rule out any possibility of returning to capitalism. The activities and false assurances of the Trotskyists were an active part of the counterrevolution in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.


Mandel enthusiastically welcomed the fall of the Wall and the "mass popular movements" used as tools of open counterrevolution.


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Trotskyism is an international political current that acts as the foremost spearhead of opportunism, social democracy in the labor and revolutionary movement, with the special historical task of attacking the communist parties and Marxism-Leninism.


It is, of course, not identical to traditional social democracy, but goes hand in hand with it. It complements social democracy's attack on communism from the right with attacks from the "left". It speaks of permanent revolution, of the "dictatorship of the proletariat", of the necessity of a Bolshevik party, etc., but works in practice to undermine the Bolshevik parties, socialism and the dictatorship of the proletariat, and to spread maximum confusion in the ranks of the revolutionaries.


As an international political current, it offers its "program of world revolution" to the working class, youth and intellectuals. It has been shown that Trotskyism can, to a certain extent and for a certain period of time, deceive young people without solid revolutionary experience, and petty-bourgeois intellectuals who are attracted by phrase-mongering, the rejection of the fighting discipline of the working class and a petty-bourgeois mixture of radical "visions" and reformist practices – as reflected in the theory and program of Trotskyism.


All the facts show that Trotskyism is not "revolutionary Marxism", not "Bolshevism", but petty-bourgeois anti-communism.


The article was published in its entirety in the formerly revolutionary Daily Worker Aug.-Sep. 1995.