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Sri Lankan parties back imperialist war against Afghanistan
By K. Ratnayake
31 January 2002
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One noteworthy casualty of the US war against Afghanistan has
been the anti-imperialist rhetoric of the major parties
in Sri Lanka. All of them have supported the US military action,
the first direct imperialist intervention on the Indian subcontinent
since the British granted independence in the late 1940s. Moreover,
by backing the Bush administrations war on terrorism,
they have in effect signed up to ongoing US aggression to further
its global interests.
With the exception of the conservative United National Party
(UNP), the Sri Lankan parties for the past five decades have opposed
imperialist interference and aggressionat least in words.
In the 1990s, however, following the collapse of the Soviet Union
and thus the ability of countries like Sri Lanka to balance between
the two blocs, they increasingly accommodated to the interests
of the US and other major powers. Their open support for the US
war against impoverished Afghanistan marks the culmination of
this protracted process.
When the September 11 terrorist attacks on the US took place
the Peoples Alliance (PA) regime of President Chandrika
Kumaratunga was in power. The main party in the coalition is Kumaratungas
own Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), formed in the early 1950s
as a left alternative to the UNP. Based on the promotion
of Sinhala chauvinism, the SLFP routinely denounced the UNP as
a lackey of the British and then of US imperialism.
Half a century later Kumaratunga has ditched the anti-imperialism
of her father, S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike, and her mother, Sirima Bandaranaike,
who was also a prime minister in the 1960s. Madame Bandaranaike
was known for her criticisms of the US war against Vietnam and
her role in the non-aligned movement. In the past, Kumaratunga
herself postured as a radical. Even two years ago her PA government
had to express its support for the US-led war in a roundabout
way emphasising its deep concerns about ethnic
cleansing in Kosovo.
But there was no hesitation after the September 11 attack.
Kumaratunga immediately gave her full support to the Bush administrations
plans for war against Afghanistan and offered the use of the countrys
air and naval bases to the US military. The opposition UNP, which
has since come to power after elections last month, quickly followed
suit.
The PA coalition includes two left parties, the
Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) and the Communist Party of Sri
Lanka (SLCP). In the 1940s, the Trotskyist LSSP led a powerful
working class movement against British colonial rule and gained
in political stature as a result. In the 1950s, however, the party
increasingly adapted to the Sinhala chauvinism of the SLFP and
in 1964, openly betrayed the principles of Trotskyism and joined
the SLFP government. In the subsequent years, however, the LSSP
leaders continued to posture as Marxists and denounced imperialist
machinations.
Today, the LSSP is no more than a bureaucratic shell, serving
the needs of the ruling class and enjoying the petty privileges
it receives in return. Signing up for Bushs war against
terrorism, the LSSP announced that it has endorsed steps
taken by Sri Lanka to cooperate with the international community
in measures taken to weaken the capability of terrorist movements.
The party statement insisted that terrorism in all its forms
should be fought, then added the legalistic caveat that
imperialism should not be permitted to assert its own interests
under cover of making war against terrorism.
In other words, the LSSP supported the US war against Afghanistan
in so far as it was fighting terrorism but would not permit
the US to intervene to assert its own interests. Such a separation
is completely artificial and false. The Bush administration seized
on the September 11 attacks to wage a war in Afghanistan in order
to advance long-held US ambitions to dominate the oil and gas
reserves of Central Asiaa subject on which the LSSP maintains
a complete silence.
The LSSP leaders of the 1940s would have made political mincemeat
of the arguments being advanced by the party today. Indeed the
Trotskyists in Sri Lanka and India exposed the sophistry of the
Stalinist SLCP which supported the British during World War II
arguing that the conflict was a struggle for democracy against
fascism. As the LSSP correctly explained at the time, Britain
was cynically using democracy as the political cover
for prosecuting its interests, including the defence of its colonies
on the Indian subcontinent, in a war being waged between two imperialist
camps.
The other left partner in the PA coalition, the Stalinist Communist
Party (SLCP), was traditionally aligned to the Soviet bureaucracy
and tailored its anti-imperialist rhetoric to suit the needs of
Moscow. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, the party continued
to oppose US interventionsagainst Iraq in 1990 and Yugoslavia
in 1999but in ever more dilute forms. Following the September
11 attacks, however, all the past pretences were swept aside.
The SLCP offered its complete commitment and support for
the eradication of terrorism from the face of the earthno
hesitation, no qualification, not even a mention of the word imperialism.
The left of the left
One of the consequences of the LSSPs betrayal in 1964
was the emergence of radical organisations based on communal politics.
In the south, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) espoused a mixture
of Sinhala chauvinism, Maoism and Castroism and developed a base
of support among unemployed rural youth. Its subsequent evolution
has been sharply to the right, towards openly fascistic politics
and methods, but it has continued to portray itself as the left
of the left.
Blood-curdling rhetoric against US imperialism has been one
of the JVPs trademarks. Just a few months before September
11, the JVP held a picket line in front of the US embassy in Colombo
denouncing the continuing bombing raids against Iraq. But the
party was among the first to support the US war against Afghanistan.
It even offered some free advice to Washington on how to modify
its foreign policy in a good direction so as to use
Americas scientific knowledge and economic capabilities
for the good of mankind. The party statement expressed its
confidence that if the Bush administration followed these suggestions
it could become leader of the world without any effort.
Since 1994, the JVP has steadily been brought into the political
mainstream as an alternative to the increasingly discredited PA
and UNP. At the core of its program is support for Sinhala chauvinism
and demands for a military victory over the LTTE. In expressing
its support for the US war against Afghanistan, the JVP expressed
the views of sections of the military, state bureaucracy and business
that are looking for US military assistance against the Tigers.
As the party statement put it: We need diplomatic subtlety
to use the present world environment to protect the unitary character
of the country and defeat separatism.
The smaller Nava Sama Samaja Party (NSSP) appeared to be an
exception to the rule. To detail all the political twists and
turns of this thoroughly opportunist outfit would require a small
book. Suffice it to say that the NSSP was formed in a split from
the LSSP in the late 1970sits leaders supported the LSSPs
betrayal in 1964, remained in the party throughout the early 1970s
as part of a government that brutally suppressed a JVP uprising
and made inroads into the living standards of the working class,
and only left after the LSSP faced growing hostility from ordinary
workers.
The NSSP opposed the US war against Afghanistan but in doing
so only revealed the bankruptcy of its politics. In a statement
entitled Yankee terror comes home to roost, it supported
the reactionary Islamic fundamentalists of Al Qaeda and the Taliban
and eulogised the terrorist attacks in the US that killed thousands
of innocent people. The Afghan war, it stated, will
only strengthen the fighting spirit among Muslims, adding
that September 11 demonstrated that even a small group of
people... can make a massive blow at its selected enemy.... The
image of modern capitalism as a system that it is beyond challenge
from the oppressed and discarded [has] now gone for ever.
The NSSPs support for the Taliban is not an aberration
but the logical outcome of its radical politics. The party always
rejected the struggle for the political independence of the working
class in favour of various opportunist alliances and manoeuvres,
which it claimed would offer a shortcut to socialism. In the past,
the NSSP hailed figures such as Mao and Guevara as well as the
separatist LTTE, defending its communal politics and its terror
tactics. Now it winds up supporting Al Qaeda and the Talibanorganisations
that trace their origins to the US-backed Mujaheddin groups that
waged a war against the Soviet-backed regime in Afghanistan in
the 1980sas the means of challenging modern capitalism.
The fact that all of these parties have reached a political
dead-end has an objective significance that goes beyond the island
of Sri Lanka. It points to the end of the period when layers of
the radical middle class and even sections of the ruling class
in backward capitalist countries could readily posture as anti-imperialists,
or socialists that stood for the interests of the
masses. Their capitulation to the Bush administration confirms
a central tenet of Leon Trotskys theory of Permanent Revolutionthe
incapacity of the national bourgeoisie in countries of a belated
capitalist development to wage any consistent struggle against
imperialist oppression.
There is no doubt that the resurgence of colonialism represented
by the US war against Afghanistan will produce opposition in the
coming period. The Sri Lankan parties are aware that they are
treading on thin ice and for the most part have attempted to keep
their grovelling before the Bush administration out of the public
eye. Kumaratunga made no address to the nation to
justify her support for Bushs war against terrorism. No
debate took place in parliament. After their initial statements,
all of the parties kept a careful silence, with the complete acquiescence
of a tame media. It is as if the whole political establishment
in Colombo has come to a private agreement not to talk about a
dirty secret for fear of inflaming the masses.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) was the only party that
opposed the war and campaigned in the December elections to explain
the dangers confronting working people in Sri Lanka and throughout
the Indian subcontinent. The party emphasised that the working
class had to unify internationally around the struggle for socialism
as the only means of countering the growing threat posed by US
aggression. It is to these issues that workers, intellectuals,
students and others opposed to the actions of imperialism should
now turn.
See Also:
Sri Lankan government
cynically exploits terror attack in US
[24 September 2001]
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