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SEP public meeting in Sydney
The fight against imperialist war: the socialist perspective
By Nick Beams
17 April 2003
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On April 13, the Socialist Equality Party (SEP) in Australia
convened a public meeting entitled The fight against imperialist
war: the socialist perspective at the University of Technology
in Sydney to discuss the political lessons of the US-led invasion
of Iraq. SEP national secretary Nick Beams, a member of the World
Socialist Web Site Editorial Board, delivered the main report
to the well-attended meeting that was followed by an extensive
question-and-answer session. His address is published below.
It is not even four weeks since the US and its allies, Britain
and Australia, launched their war on Iraq. But in that short period
of time world history has irrevocably changed course.
The fundamental issue which confronts the mass of ordinary
humanity, including the people of the United States, struggling
to improve their lives, to secure their futures and exercise their
basic democratic and political rights, is this: What is to be
done about the volcanic eruption of American imperialism? A new
historical era has begun and its outcome will determine the fate
of humanity for decades to come.
This is not some kind of left-wing assertion. It
is obvious to any politically literate person. As a comment published
in Britains Observer newspaper on April 6 characterised
it, success in Iraq means that those who have control of US foreign
policy are being confirmed in power. Sooner rather than
later, they will carry forward their program of pre-emptive attack
on potentially hostile regimes and strike at another
country. If this happens, we enter a century of violence and unpredictable
counter-violence [Neal Ascherson, A fearful war to
remember, the Observer].
For the writer of this comment, the problem is the so-called
neo-conservatives, or neocons, that run the Bush administration,
in particular through their control of the Pentagon. But the eruption
of imperialist war cannot be ascribed to a conspiracy by a group
of individuals. This is the bad Hitler method of examining
history. We should recall that Hitler was placed in power by the
dominant sections of the German ruling classes because his program
met the deep-seated historical problems they confronted. In the
same way, the policies of the Bush regime are the outcome of fundamental
contradictions within American capitalism.
The onslaught against Iraq is not simply the result of decisions
taken by a neo-conservative cabal. Rather, their elevation is
a graphic expression of a growing cancer in the American body
politic. The Bush administration, with enormous power concentrated
in the hands of the executive, functions as a kind of imperiumthe
Congress having handed over war-making powers and the Democrats
abandoning any pretence that they function as an opposition.
Having been funded by the most powerful corporations, the regime
operates in the closest connection with them, especially those
associated with the outright fraud, looting and financial swindles
of the past decade. There is nothing accidental about the close
relationship between Bush and Enron, or between Cheney and Haliburton
as it moves to make quick profits from the reconstruction
of Iraq.
This regime, which claims it wishes to bring democracy to Iraq
and the Middle East, is associated with deepening attacks on democratic
rights at home through the Patriot Act and the establishment of
the Department of Homeland Security. The violent attack on protestors
in Oakland is a warning of what is to come.
Bushs central economic and social program is the transfer
of wealth from the broad mass of the population to the ruling
elites. Today, the annual income of the richest 14,000 families
in the US is greater than the annual income of the poorest 20
million families. Such historically unprecedented polarisation
of wealth is simply not compatible with democratic forms of rule.
The task of ensuring public support is given to
the mass media, which serves to pollute the social atmosphere
and delude the mass of the population. As we explained in the
resolution of the WSWS international conference in Ann Arbor,
Michigan on March 29-30: Not since Joseph Goebbels served
as Hitlers propaganda minister has there been such an orchestration
of the media. It would take a Goebbels to dub this war of colonial
aggression Operation Iraqi Freedom, and TV networks
and newspapers worthy of the Nazi-dominated German press to go
along with it.
It has been said many times, but bears repeating, that the
value of every crisis is that it reveals the real trends of development.
After this war, there can be no return to the status quo ante-bellum.
In the past weeks and months, culminating in the conquest of Iraq,
all the norms and conventions governing international relations
have been swept aside. They cannot be put back together. Not since
the march of Hitlers armies in Europe have we seen imperialist
violence on such a scale.
The supporters of the war, and those who seek to justify it
retrospectively, point to the cheering crowds that greeted US
forces in some sections of Baghdad. But now it turns out that
the incident in which Saddam Husseins statue was torn downhailed
as the equivalent of the fall of the Bastille, VE Day or the bringing
down of the Berlin Wallwas a completely manufactured event.
In any case, it should be recalled that cheering crowds greeted
the march of German forces into Austria in the Anschluss of
1938. Even in World War II, the Nazi forces were welcomed in parts
of the Ukraine by people who, at that point, saw them as a means
of ending the oppression suffered under Stalin. But that did not
alter the character of the German military operations.
Indeed, the US and its allies, including Australia, are now
guilty of the same crime for which the Nazi leaders were charged
and convicted at Nurembergthe planning and execution of
a war of aggression. They are guilty of perpetrating the most
horrific war crimesthe slaughter of thousands of civilians
and the massacre of tens of thousands of soldiers. This is liberation
by mass murder.
Those who entertained the hope that the removal of the Saddam
Hussein dictatorship would improve their situation are very rapidly
discovering, like so many before them, that they cannot realise
their goals of freedom from oppression through the actions of
one or other imperialist power. This is because these powers have
their own agenda, which does not include the aspirations of the
masses.
What is this agenda?
One thing has been clearly established: the purpose of this
war was not to search for and destroy weapons of mass destruction.
Even before the war was launched, this claim had been exposed,
along with the forged documents and falsifications on which it
was based.
In dealing with this issue, let me simply refer to a recent
article by a well-known rightwing American commentator, Robert
Novak.
The real reason for attacking the Iraqi regime,
he wrote, has always been disconnected from its public rationale.
On the day after the US launched the military strike that quickly
liberated Afghanistan from the Taliban, my column identified Iraq
as the second target in President Bushs war against terrorism.
I did not write one word about weapons of mass destruction because
not one such word was mentioned to me in many interviews with
Bush policymakers [Where are the WMD?, townhall.com,
April 7, 2003].
Novak, who has many connections with the Bush regime, makes
clear that all the talk of weapons of mass destruction
was for public consumption and, if possible, to win formal UN
support for the war.
In the weeks leading up the invasion, as the weapons
of mass destruction propaganda began to wear thin, the Bush
administration tried a new tack: the war was being undertaken
to liberate the Iraqi people and bring democracy.
These claims are also fast being exposed. In the first place,
democracy cannot be imposed by military force from above. This
is because genuine democracy can only arise through a struggle
from below, by the mass of ordinary people. That is the last thing
the US and its allies want to seethat is why they supported
the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein over such a long period.
Secondly, genuine democracy is in contradiction to US perspectives
for the region. Let us take the issue of Israel. According to
US Undersecretary of State Marc Grossman, the first act he wants
undertaken by a new Iraqi government is recognition of the state
of Israel. Moreover, genuine democracy would see control of the
oil resources in the hands of the Iraqi people but US policy is
to privatise ownership of oil, weaken the OPEC cartel and breakdown
state control of oil resources across the Middle East.
As Australian Strategic Policy Institute Hugh White explained
in a recent article in the Sydney Morning Herald, what
the US wants is a new strongman for a US-friendly Iraq, perhaps
modelled on the regime of President Hosni Mubarak in Egypt. In
other words, the much-vaunted democracy will turn out to be a
repressive regime differing only from that of Saddam Hussein by
the fact that it supports, rather than opposes, the US agenda.
Washingtons aims are not simply confined to the immediate
securing of the oil resources of Iraqimportant as that objective
is. The US has a wider perspectivenothing less than the
re-organisation of the Middle East, and indeed the entire world,
under its hegemony. Anyone who was under the illusion that it
was just a matter of regime change in Iraq has been given a rude
awakening in recent days with the latest warnings to Syria and
Iran.
As the US launched its war, US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
warned that any movement of military supplies into Iraq across
the Syrian border would be considered a hostile act
and declared that any militias entering Iraq from Iran would be
attacked. In a speech to the American Israel Public Affairs Committee,
US Secretary of State Colin Powell reinforced the point, declaring
that Syria faces a critical choice and that Iran had
to halt its efforts to obtain weapons of mass destruction, as
well as ending support for terrorists including groups violently
opposed to Israel.
These remarks were not made off the cuff, but reflect the policy
of the Bush regime. According to John Bolton, the Under Secretary
of State for arms control and international security, the US will
place an extremely high priority on halting a secret
nuclear weapons program in Iran once the war on Iraq is over.
In the aftermath of Iraq, he said, dealing
with the Iranian nuclear weapons program will be of equal importance
as dealing with the North Korean nuclear weapons program.
Bolton said Syria, Iran and Libya were seeking to obtain weapons
of mass destruction. While he hoped that the attack on Iraq would
dissuade them he added: I dont think any of us are
naïve enough to think the example of Iraq alone will be sufficient.
The policy of regime change
The policy of regime change throughout the Middle
East has been years in the making. In July 1996 prominent members
of the Bush regime, including Under Secretary of Defence Douglas
Feith and David Wurmser, now senior assistant to John Bolton,
and key foreign policy adviser Richard Perle, prepared a policy
paper for the incoming Netanyahu government in Israel in which
they called for a clean break from the policies of
the past. The land for peace perspective had to go.
Israel can shape its strategic environment, in cooperation
with Turkey and Jordan, by weakening, containing and even rolling
back Syria, the report said. This effort can focus
on removing Saddam Hussein from power in Iraqan important
Israeli objective in its own rightas a means of foiling
Syrias regional ambitions. Or as Perle, put it recently,
after Iraq, the attitude of the US to every other regime in the
region is: youre next.
Outside of the Middle East, the most immediate target is North
Korea. According to special advisor to UN secretary general Kofi
Annan, Maurice Strong, who visited that country recently, there
is now a real prospect of war. I think war is unnecessary,
its unthinkable and unfortunately its entirely possible,
he said.
The new policy is visible to anyone not totally blinded by
mass media images and propaganda. According to the veteran American
historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr, the Cold War doctrine of containment
and deterrence has been replaced by the Bush doctrine of preventive
war. The president has adopted a policy of anticipatory
self-defence that is alarmingly similar to the policy that
imperial Japan employed at Pearl Harbor [ St. Petersburg
Times, April 6, 2003].
We are confronted with the question: Where is US imperialism
heading?
Former CIA director James Woolsey, until recently touted as
the information minister in the new regime to be established in
Iraq, has made clear that the war on Iraq is just the beginning.
After the Cold War, or World War III, as he calls it, the US is
now engaged in World War IV, which could last for decades. As
we move toward a new Middle East, over the years and, I think
over the decades to come ... we will make a lot of people very
nervous, he said in a speech earlier this month.
These remarks, made to a meeting of college students in Los
Angeles organised by an organisation called Americans for
Victory Over Terrorisma group headed by Reagans
education secretary William Bennettwere drawn from a longer
speech delivered by Woolsey on November 16, 2002. In that speech
Woolsey declared that the US was engaged in a war against the
Islamist Shia that rule in Iran, the fascist Baath
parties of Iraq and Syria and the Islamist Sunni. He concluded
as follows:
I would say this, both to the terrorists and to the pathological
predators such as Saddam Hussein and to the autocrats as well,
the barbarics, the Saudi royal family. They have to realise that
now for the fourth time in 100 years, weve been awakened
and this country is on the march. We didnt choose this fight,
but were in it. And being on the march, theres only
one way were going to be able to win it. Its the way
we won World War I fighting for Wilsons 14 points. The way
we won World War II fighting for Churchills and Roosevelts
Atlantic Charter and the way we won World War III fighting for
the noble ideas ... best expressed by President Reagan, but also
very importantly at the beginning by President Truman, that this
was not a war of us against them. It was not a war of countries.
It was a war of freedom against tyranny.
This will take time. It will be difficult. But I think
we need to say to both the terrorists and the dictators and also
to the autocrats who from time to time are friendly with us, that
we know, we understand we are going to make you nervous. We want
you to be nervous. We want you to realise now for the fourth time
in 100 years, this country is on the march and we are on the side
of those whom you most fearyour own people.
Hearing such an outburst, and making the necessary allowances
for translation, its easy to imagine that one has been thrown
back in time to listen to a speech by Hitler or some other Nazi,
expounding on the world historical mission of Germany.
The only value of Woolseys speech is that it does direct
attention to the historical development of United States imperialism,
which is very much on the march. And it is only on the basis of
an historical understanding that we can answer the question we
posed at the outset: how does humanity now confront and deal with
this eruption of imperialist violence?
Historic contradictions of capitalism
The First World War, into which the US intervened in April
1917 and announced its arrival as a world power, was not a war
for democracy or the 14 points of Woodrow Wilson. It was a war
among the great capitalist powers for global domination.
The previous four decades had seen the greatest economic expansion
in the history of mankind. But this expansion driven forward by
the truly dynamic development of capitalism, gave rise to new
historical problems.
The growth of trade and finance, the gathering and processing
of raw materials and resources from all over the world, the establishment
of vast networks of international transport and communications,
and the replacement of the small owner-run enterprise with giant
corporations employing thousands and tens of thousands of peopleall
of this signified that the productive forces had completely outgrown
the framework of the national state in which they had previously
been developed.
How was the world to be organised?
Each one of the great capitalist powers, driven by the profit
requirements of the powerful industries and financial concerns
that dominated economic life, sought to shape the world according
to its own needs and interests. But these interests collided one
with another and could not be harmonised. Consequently, the great
powers were led inexorably into a deepening conflict with each
other, the outcome of which was World War One.
The US at first stood aside from this conflict as it sought
to profit from it. But eventually America too had to intervene
militarily. Its goals were summed up with remarkable frankness
by the former president Theodore Roosevelt in the autumn of 1917.
The US, he insisted, did not go to war to make democracy
safe. Rather, he insisted, America had entered the war to
make the world safe for ourselves. This is our
war, Americas war. If we do not win it we shall some day
have to reckon with Germany single-handed. Therefore, for our
own sake let us strike down Germany [cited in Arno Mayer,
The Political Origins of the New Diplomacy, pp. 344-345].
The attitude of the Marxist movement to the war was grounded
on a scientific appreciation. It was, in the final analysis, the
revolt of the productive forces against the nation-state system.
Imperialism, Trotsky explained, represents the
predatory capitalist expression of a progressive tendency in economic
developmentto construct a human economy on a world scale,
freed from the cramping fetters of the nation and the state
[cited in Lenins Struggle for a Revolutionary International,
pp. 369-370].
Imperialist war was the method by which capitalism tried to
solve the problems to which it had produced. But it could find
no progressive solution.
However, it had brought into being a new social force that
couldthe international working class. The working class,
created on a global scale by the development of capitalism, was
called on to advance the next stage in mankinds development
through the international socialist revolution and the development
of a planned socialist economy, that is, through the intelligent
co-operation of the worlds producers.
Imperialist war or socialist revolution
Arising from what we now refer as the globalisation of production,
these two conflicting perspectiveseither imperialist war
for the division and redivision of the world, or the socialist
revolution and the rational reorganisation of the world in accordance
with the needs of humanityhave continued to define our epoch
that began with the outbreak of World War I.
US imperialism intervened in World War I to ensure than it
retained the upper hand against its rivals such as Germany. But
it was soon confronted with a much bigger danger in the shape
of the Russian Revolution, which represented the negation of the
entire capitalist order.
As one American official remarked, the problem with the Bolsheviks
was that they did not recognise either private property or the
nation-state. The Bolsheviks were based on an entirely different
world outlook. Consequently, the imperialist powers, with America
playing a leading role, sent armed forces to try to overthrow
the revolution and to frantically prevent its spread to Central
Europe and Germany.
America was one of the senior partners in a coalition
resolved to contain or destroy the Bolshevik Revolution. To achieve
this objective the Allies needed the military services of Finland,
Poland, Rumania, and Germany, even at the price of allowing conservative
and reactionary forces in these countries to benefit from this
anti-Bolshevik campaign [Mayer, p. 22].
In her diary, the British Fabian socialist Beatrice Webb pointed
to the fears that gripped the rulers of Europe as they came together
at the Paris peace conference of 1919. Are we confronted
with another Russia in Austria, possibly even in Germanya
Continent in rampant revolution ...[Mayer, p. 9].
The famous American sociologist Thornstein Veblen observed
that while the drive to defeat Bolshevism was not written
in the text of the [Versailles] Treaty it was nonetheless
the parchment upon which the text was written [Mayer,
p. 29].
The imperialist powers, together with the leaders of the trade
unions and the so-called socialist and labour parties, succeeded
in isolating the revolution. It was not overturned, but the isolation
led to degeneration and the rise of a bureaucracy headed by Stalin.
The perspective of internationalism, the struggle for world socialist
revolution, was replaced with the program of socialism in one
country.
While they may have contained the revolution, the capitalist
powers could not open up new vistas for the development of mankind.
On the contrary, after two decades of continuous unemployment,
depression, fascism, civil war and military dictatorship, a second
world war erupted.
The intervention of America into this war was not motivated
by the defence of democracy or the struggle to defeat fascism.
American imperialism could have co-existed with German fascism
and Japanese militarism, save for one characteristic feature of
these regimes. Their expansion was grounded on the development
of closed economic regions and the US required an open door
throughout the world in order to give room for the dynamic development
of its productive forces.
Consequently, the US insisted that not only would Germany and
Japan be defeated in the war but that Imperial Preferencethe
economic organisation based on the British Empirehad to
go as well. The conclusion of World War II saw the emergence of
the US as the unchallenged and pre-eminent capitalist power. But
in its rise to world dominance, it was still confronted by the
Soviet Union.
Containment or rollback
In the immediate aftermath of the war, a struggle broke out
in the American ruling class over the policy to be adopted. Was
the US strategy to be based on containment or rollbackthe
outright overthrow of the USSR? There were many factors involved
in determining the outcome of this conflict. In the aftermath
of the war, the overthrow of the Soviet Union posed great risks.
It had acquired military and political power because of its role
in the overthrow of the Nazi regime. There was a swing to the
left in the populations of Western Europe in the aftermath of
the war, and the struggle against imperialist domination erupted
in the colonies of the capitalist powers.
Nevertheless, it was by no means a settled question. In the
Korean War, General MacArthur advocated a nuclear attack on China
and, in the confrontation over Cuba, the US military was ready
to launch a war.
However, to the extent that the post-war expansion of capitalism
continued, the US overall pursued a policy of restraint. But from
the middle of the 1970s, as the post-war boom came to an end and
the US began to lose its absolute predominance over its rivals,
a distinct change can be seen. By the end of the decade, the Carter
administration was organising an intervention into Afghanistan
with the express purpose of drawing the Soviet Union into a quagmire
and weakening it.
The policy of détente was abandoned and, under the Reagan
administration, an increasingly aggressive policy was pursued
towards the Soviet Union. This new orientation was bound up with
a shift in domestic policy. The policies of social welfare reformism,
founded in the time of the New Deal of President Roosevelt, were
scrapped and a global offensive launched against the American
and international working class.
In the former colonial countries, the so-called Third World,
the perspective of national development was undermined and these
countries were forced, under the pressure of structural
adjustment programs dictated by the International Monetary
Fund, to integrate themselves into the framework of the global
market.
At the end of the 1980s, the Stalinist bureaucracy determined
that it could no longer maintain its position and that its only
option was capitulation. It took the last step in the process
begun in the 1920s, when it usurped power from the working class,
and organised the restoration of capitalism.
With the collapse of the Soviet Union, US imperialism faced
new opportunities and new challenges. The opportunities lay in
the fact that the Soviet Union, the chief obstacle that had prevented
the US exercising global domination since 1917, was now gone.
The challenge was to prevent the other major capitalist powers
from exploiting this new situation and eclipsing the US.
These considerations were the basis of a statement drawn up
at the beginning of 1992 on US strategy in the post-Cold War era.
Entitled Defence Planning Guidance (DPG), it was drafted up by
the then under secretary of defence for policy, Paul Wolfowitz,
whose immediate boss was defence secretary, and now vice-president,
Dick Cheney.
Our first objective, the document stated, is
to prevent the re-emergence of a new rival. This is a dominant
consideration underlying the new regional defence strategy and
requires that we endeavour to prevent any hostile power from dominating
a region whose resources would, under consolidated control, be
sufficient to generate global power. These regions include Western
Europe, East Asia, the territory of the former Soviet Union, and
Southwest Asia. It was necessary, the document continued,
for the US to maintain the mechanism for deterring potential
competitors from even aspiring to a larger regional or global
rule.
However, it was not immediately possible in the early 1990s
to pursue the aggressive strategy set out in the DPG document.
A number of reports and articles have now documented the campaign
by the so-called neo-conservatives, who came together in 1997
to form the Project for a New American Century, to advance their
program. In September 2000, they published a major report entitled
Rebuilding Americas Defences. The basis of their
perspective was the strategy outlined by Cheney in 1992 which,
they said, provided a blueprint for maintaining US pre-eminence,
precluding the rise of a great power rival, and shaping the international
security order in line with American principles and interests.
Economic decline
The strategy developed by Wolfowitz, Cheney and their collaborators
over the past decade for the global dominance of the US is now
the central program of the Bush administration. This outcome,
however, cannot be viewed simply as the consequence of a determined
political campaign by these individuals. Their campaign itself
was the expression of, and met up with, deep-seated changes within
US capitalism and its position in the world economy.
Defining US objectives in the first Gulf War of 1990-91, President
Bush said it would establish the basis for a new world order.
The US, however, faced a very different situation from that which
confronted it at the end of World War II when it had set out to
remake the world.
At that time, the US was the worlds leading creditor
nation, the pre-eminent source of capital, the holder of two thirds
of the worlds gold stocks, and the home to some 50 percent
of the worlds industrial production, enjoying a vastly superior
productivity of labour. Forty years later, however, it presented
a different picture. No longer the worlds major creditor,
it was moving into debt, and in the course of the 1990s was to
become the worlds biggest debtor. US firms that had dominated
the world in the previous period were being challenged.
It is not the first time in history that a major power has
sought to bolster its weakening economic position by a resort
to military means. Moreover, the driving forces for a more aggressive
foreign policy are not only to be found externally. There were
powerful domestic factors at work as well.
The economic changes in US capitalism, above all the rise of
financial parasitism, have resulted in changed class relations
which have in turn created a certain social base, within the US
itself, for the promotion of imperialist violence. Increasingly
in the 1990s, vast wealth has been accumulated not through the
development of new products or new manufacturing processes but
via financial manipulation, share market transactions, mergers
and takeovers, and, in the latter part of the 1990s, through outright
fraud.
The rise of such methods is always an indication of an approaching
crisis in the heart of the capitalist economy. It signifies that
downward pressures are being exerted on the rate of profit and
that, as Marx explained, individual sections of capital must increasingly
resort to the general promotion of swindling, frenzied
ventures and new adventures in order to try
and maintain their individual profit rates above the falling social
average.
Ultimately, of course, capital cannot overcome its problems
through these methods. But the rise of financial speculation did
lead to the creation of a new rich, drawn from middle
class and professional layers. This upwardly mobile social stratum,
although a relatively small section of the population, provides
a certain social basis for imperialist policies. They are a segment
of the population for whom liberal New York Times
columnist Thomas Friedmana man who has no problem with a
war for oilspeaks.
The re-emergence of falling profit rates has had another social
consequence. Capital has sought to arrest the decline in profits
by clawing back the concessions it was forced to make in the past.
This is the origin of the ongoing attack on wages, social conditions
and the social infrastructureaffecting the lives of the
vast majority of the populationthat has marked the past
two decades. In other words, the same processes, which have given
rise to financial parasitism, have resulted in a deepening social
polarisation.
The economic and social origins of militarism can now be clearly
seen. Under conditions of deepening tensions at home, produced
by the growth of truly unprecedented social and economic inequality,
the ruling elites resort to militarism as a means to find an external
outlet for increased social pressures. At the same time, the employment
of militarism to ensure the conquest of global markets and resources
is a means to generate additional sources of profit.
Inter-imperialist conflict
But this increased aggressiveness of US imperialism leads to
ever-greater conflict with its rivals. There is a profound significance
to the fact that the post-war Atlantic alliance lies, as one US
commentator put it, in the rubble of Baghdad. In the
final analysis, this is because under conditions of falling profits,
overcapacity in all sections of industry, low growth rates and
a generally deflationary environment, the world market has become
a battlegrounda battleground in which economic weapons can,
at a certain point, give way to military means.
The conflict between the US and the European powers over the
launching of the war against Iraq, and now the dispute over post-war
Iraq, is about the exploitation of the resources of that country.
Its not just about oil. What is at stake are telecommunications
contracts, building contracts, transport contracts and so on.
Now that the US has assumed control it is seeking to wipe out
the debts owed to Russia by the former regime. And Condoleezza
Rice has made clear that reconstruction contracts should go only
to companies from countries that sacrificed lives and blood
for the liberation of Iraq.
The post-war alliances and relations have irrevocably broken
down. International relations increasingly assume the form of
a struggle of each against all, in which alliances may be formed
at one stage only to be broken at another, should the need arise.
As in the period before World War I, it is impossible to predict
the exact alignments. But one thing can be said with certainty:
in all the worlds major capitals, the conclusion is being
drawn that military forces must be built up.
Consider, for example, the comment by former French Prime Minister
Laurent Fabius in the Financial Times of March 26 under
the title A stronger Europe for a better world. France,
Fabius insisted, wants a new internationalism based
on multilateralism and compliance with international law. Unless
this happens there can be no peace.
But how can these goals be realised? The war shows the need
to construct a united Europe and rapidly create a European
defence force. According to Fabius: Europe was unable
to make its voice heard in the US because it lacked a unified
defence force. Only with the development of such a force
can the major European powers, France and Germany, draw to their
side the countries of the former Soviet bloc.
In other words, according to Fabius, the international situation
marked by the eruption of American militarism requires the re-arming
of Europe. Other capitalist powers are drawing the same conclusion.
According to a report in the Australian Financial Review
of April 7, pressure is building for Japan to reduce its military
dependence on Washington. And the push for Japan to acquire
offensive weapons for defensive purposes, such as
Tomahawk cruise missiles and long range bombers is gathering momentum.
Meanwhile a row has erupted in the last few days on the Indian
sub-continent because of statements by Indian government ministers
that American action against Iraq gives India the right to take
pre-emptive action against Pakistan.
A socialist perspective
The twenty-first century is beginning like the twentieth with
an arms race among the major capitalist powers as they seek to
advance their interests on the global arena.
The significance of the conflicts among the major powers over
Iraq is clear: they were not motivated by peace or concerns for
the fate of the Iraqi people, but by what the US actions portend
for the future. They all know that for the US, Iraq is not the
end, but the beginning, and that at a certain point they could
be forced to defend their own interests militarily. In other words,
the seeds of a third world war have not only been planted, they
have germinated and are starting to sprout.
This means that opposition to American imperialist violence
cannot be based on support for one or other of the capitalist
powers or a coalition of them. Chirac does not represent opposition
to imperialist violence; he simply expresses it in another form.
There is only one social force that can resolve the crisis
for mankind created by imperialist capitalism. That is the international
working class. It must fight for its own independent programthe
reorganisation of the world on the basis of a socialist perspective.
The first attempt to implement this program ended in failure,
for which mankind paid a terrible price.
But history has now presented the problem anew. And at the
same time, it has created the conditions for it to be resolved.
The basis for the unification of the international working class
has been created by the very processes, rooted in the globalisation
of capitalist production, which have given rise to the resurgence
of imperialism.
But history is a hard taskmaster and she has also bequeathed
to us all the problems arising from the defeats and betrayals
of the socialist revolution in the twentieth century. These problems
are concentrated in the crisis of perspective, of consciousness,
in the international working class.
The working people of the world have, as yet, no program on
which to unify their struggles and take political power in their
own hands.
The resolution of this problem is the key to the whole situation.
It is to this task that the WSWS is dedicated. Is the task difficult?
Extremely so. But there is no other way out. Either the socialist
revolution or the relapse of mankind into the most terrible forms
of barbarismthose are the alternatives.
The task of constructing a socialist leadership is extremely
difficult. But the reconciliation of imperialist capitalism with
democracy, peace and material prosperity for the mass of the worlds
people is impossible.
Therefore we urge you to give the most urgent consideration
to our program, to join the SEP and play your part in building
the ICFI as the world party of socialist revolution.
See Also:
The crisis of American capitalism
and the war against Iraq
[21 March 2003]
The political economy
of American militarism in the 21st century
[1 November 2002]
The war against Iraq
and America's drive for world domination
[4 October 2002]
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