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World Socialist Web Site holds international conference
on socialism and the struggle against war
By the Editorial Board
1 April 2003
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Today we are publishing this summary account of the WSWS-Socialist
Equality Party conference held over the weekend in Ann Arbor,
Michigan, and the opening report to the conference given by David
North, chairman of the WSWS International Editorial Board and
national secretary of the SEP in the United States. Over the next
several days we will publish the resolutions adopted by the conference,
as well as the remarks made by the presenters and portions of
the discussion from both the conference floor and the platform.
On March 29-30, the World Socialist Web Site and the
Socialist Equality Party held an international conference entitled
Socialism and the Struggle against Imperialism and War:
the Strategy and Program of a New International Working Class
Movement. The conference was held in Ann Arbor, Michigan
and was attended by 150 delegates.
Delegates came from many parts of the US, some traveling hundreds
of miles from the South, the West Coast and the East Coast to
attend. Many of the workers, high school and college students
and retired workers who attended were readers of the WSWS, who
became interested in socialism and the policies of the Socialist
Equality Party through the daily commentary and political analysis
provided by the web site.
The opening report was given by David North, chairman of the
WSWS International Editorial Board and national secretary of the
Socialist Equality Party in the US. [See: Into
the maelstrom: the crisis of American imperialism and the war
against Iraq ] North denounced the war on Iraq and warned
that the American government, in the face of unanticipated resistance
from the Iraqi people, will employ ever more brutal methods in
its assault on the country.
The Pentagon is now being compelled to confront the unanticipated
consequences of its own illusions, he said. With unbounded
cynicism, the Bush administration has dubbed this war Operation
Iraqi Freedom. In the face of increasing mass resistance,
the logic of its objectivethe seizure of Iraq and its transformation
into an American colonial protectoratewill drive the United
States into increasingly violent reprisals against the Iraqi people...
Unless the government is stopped, this war will degenerate inevitably
into an orgy of mass murder.
North continued: The greatest mistake would be to underestimate
the tenacity of the ruling elite and its capacity for ruthlessness.
The American ruling class and its military are not invincible.
But they are not a pushover. All its vast historical experience,
accumulated in the course of countless wars against enemies abroad
and in bitter struggle against opposition at home, has conditioned
the ruling elite to respond with unrestrained brutality to challenges
to its class interests.
North denounced the role of the media in promoting and justifying
the war. The last year witnessed the complete degeneration
of the establishment media into nothing more than an outlet of
White House and Pentagon propaganda. It made no attempt to distinguish
fact from misinformation, lies and pure fiction. The media gladly
accepted its integration as a tool of the militarys psychological
operations.
North welcomed the outpouring of international opposition to
the war and emphasized the need to elaborate a political perspective
to guide this opposition. It is our aim, he said,
to develop the World Socialist Web Site as the intellectual
and political center of a new international socialist movementto
provide the orientation, analysis and program required by all
those entering into struggle against imperialist war, against
all forms of human exploitation and injustice, and for social
equality.
The conference unanimously passed resolutions denouncing the
war and demanding the withdrawal of US and British troops from
Iraq, calling for the international unity of the working class,
declaring for the political independence of the working class,
opposing the growing assault on democratic rights, condemning
the attacks on working class living standards and the growth of
social inequality, and denouncing the American media for its complicity
in the war.
In endorsing the resolution Stop the war with Iraq! US,
Britain out of the Middle East! the delegates declared,
All those responsible for launching the US war against Iraqthe
top officials of the Bush administration, the Republican and Democratic
leaders in Congress, the military commanders, and the heads of
the media monopoliesare guilty of war crimes and should
be brought to judgment before an international tribunal.
They called for the international working class to demand the
immediate withdrawal of US and British military forces from Iraq,
an immediate end to all sanctions, and an emergency program of
humanitarian and economic aid for the Iraqi people.
Barry Grey, a member of the WSWS editorial board, introduced
the resolution on the political independence of the working class.
He emphasized the need for a definitive break with the Democratic
Party, citing the long history of the political subordination
of American workers to this bourgeois party, extending back to
the nineteenth century in the period prior to the Civil War, when
the Democratic Party defended the interests of the southern slaveocracy.
Grey stressed that the political independence of the working
class could not be achieved through the construction of a reformist
third party. Rather, as the resolution stated, it
could be achieved only through the building of a party that
attacks the economic foundations of the capitalist system.
The resolution concluded: We undertake the task of building
the Socialist Equality Party as the mass political party of the
working class which, on the basis of an internationalist and socialist
program, will fight for power.
Many international delegates attended the conference, including
Ulrich Rippert, national secretary of the German Partei für
Soziale Gleichheit, Chris Marsden, national secretary of the British
Socialist Equality Party, Linda Tenenbaum, assistant national
secretary of the Australian Socialist Equality Party, Keith Jones,
national secretary of the SEP of Canada, and Vladimir Volkov of
Russia, a member of the WSWS International Editorial Board.
The international delegates joined with delegates from across
the US to pass the resolution on the international unity of the
working class, which declared: The only genuine mass base
for the struggle against imperialism and war is the American and
international working class...[This struggle] cannot be developed
from abovethrough the auspices of one or another of the
imperialist powers, national governments, or institutions such
as the United Nations.... Only by building a movement from belowamong
the broad masses of working peopleand imbuing it with an
international socialist strategy aimed at the complete transformation
of society, can the struggle against war go forward.
The discussion at the conference was intense and lively, with
many of the delegates participating. Some had been reading the
WSWS for years, but now felt the need to become more politically
active. A number of young people asked questions about the perspective
of the Socialist Equality Party and spoke of the need for a serious
study of history and politics. Others discussed the particular
problems they faced in different parts of the country and spoke
in support of the resolutions.
In the resolution on democratic rights, the conference demanded
the immediate release of the thousands of immigrants arrested
on spurious charges following September 11. The delegates condemned
the Patriot Act and other anti-democratic legislation, and called
for an independent inquiry into the events of September 11, which
have been used by the American ruling elite to justify its assault
on civil liberties and constitutional safeguards.
In the resolution War and the social crisis in the United
States the conference stressed the need for a movement that
linked the struggle against war with the struggle for social equality.
It raised the need for socialist policies to provide decent jobs
and wages, education, health care and housing for all. The delegates
called for the conversion of the arms industry into publicly owned
institutions for the production of socially useful goods, and
for the nationalization of giant corporations under the democratic
control of the working population.
The delegates pledged to fight for the development of the World
Socialist Web Site and the expansion of its readership. They
stressed the critical role of the WSWS in promoting the growth
of socialist consciousness in the international working class.
See Also:
Into the maelstrom: the crisis of American
imperialism and the war against Iraq
[1 April 2003]
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