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Left apologists for US imperialism red-bait the
antiwar movement
By David Walsh and Barry Grey
5 February 2003
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The emergence of a broad-based movement of opposition to the
Bush administrations war against Iraq caught the American
political and media establishment unawares. In the response of
the various factions of the ruling elite there has been one common
theme: the need to purge the antiwar movement of its left-wing
elements and render it politically harmless.
The instinctive response of the extreme right is to red-bait,
denouncing the demonstrations as the organizational work of communists
and other outside agitators. The establishment liberals
of the New York Times variety intervene more subtly in
an effort to isolate and discredit socialist tendencies and bring
the protests under the control of a section of the Democratic
Party.
Both factions have singled out for attack the Workers World
Party, which plays a leading role in ANSWER, a coalition of antiwar
groups that has organized large demonstrations in Washington and
elsewhere.
These efforts are aided and abetted by another groupex-radicals
and former antiwar liberals centered around the Nation
magazine. Three articles in particular, appearing at about the
time of the first significant US protests, held last October,
marked the beginning of this groups intervention. The articles
are: A Smart Peace Movement is MIA, by Marc Cooper,
which appeared in the Los Angeles Times of September 29,
2002; Who Will Lead? by Todd Gitlin (Mother Jones
magazine, October 14, 2002); and Behind the Placards: The
odd and troubling origins of todays antiwar movement,
by David Corn (LA Weekly, November 1, 2002).
Cooper, a contributing editor of the Nation, went to
Chile in 1971 to volunteer his services to the Salvador Allende
Popular Front regime and was serving as Allendes translator
at the time of the military coup. Gitlin was the president of
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) in 1963-64. After 16 years
at the University of California at Berkeley, he now is a professor
of journalism and sociology at Columbia University in New York.
Corn, the Washington editor of the Nation, formerly worked
for Ralph Naders Center for Study of Responsive Law.
The three pieces in question constitute a type of left
gutter journalism. Their authors are unable to muster serious
arguments, resorting instead to distortions, amalgams and ad hominem
attacks.
In their attacks on left-wing elements, they echo the professional
red-baiters. One telling episode speaks volumes about the political
and moral character of this political layer. On November 19, David
Corn appeared on the OReilly Factora talk-show
on Fox News hosted by the extreme-right demagogue Bill OReilly.
Corn carried out his assignment for OReilly, witch-hunting
the Workers World group and smearing the antiwar movement.
OReilly introduced Corn by saying, And you say
that the Workers World Party, a hardcore communist organization
in the USA, is putting together these peace rallies, is that true?
Corn replied, To call them an organization is perhaps giving
them too much credit. I doubt they have enough people to fill
a telephone booth. Theyre a very small sectarian political
outfit based in New York City.
OReilly, a figure in the tradition of Joseph McCarthy,
aptly characterized Corns appearance, saying, [Y]ou
finger a guy who is on the board of ANSWER ... you finger him
as being really the driver behind all this, right?
Gitlin and Cooper belong to the generation of former antiwar
protesters and radicals who have undergone a dramatic transformation
over the past two decades, shifting further and further to the
right. They long ago made their peace with the existing social
order and seek at every critical moment to demonstrate their loyalty
to the powers that be.
A watershed in the evolution of this layer was the civil war
in Yugoslavia in the early 1990s and the US-led bombing campaign
against Serbia in 1998. A host of former leftists became enthusiastic
supporters of imperialist intervention and uncritically accepted
the war propaganda doled out by the media, which portrayed the
NATO war as a crusade against ethnic cleansing.
The Yugoslav tragedy, including its dismemberment in 1991 and
the ensuing communalist strife in Bosnia and Kosovo, was the product
of a concerted campaign of destabilization carried out by the
US and the European powers. The ex-radicals ignored this process
and lent their left credentials to the demonization
of Slobodan Milosevic, the former Stalinist turned Serb nationalist.
Marxists, notwithstanding their opposition to the Milosevic regime
and its treatment of the Albanian Kosovars, recognized that the
US-NATO assault on Serbia was an imperialist war and the prelude
to greater, bloodier wars.
Given this background, it is noteworthy that in all three above-cited
articles, the authors make great play of the presence of former
US attorney general Ramsey Clark (a leading spokesman for ANSWER)
on the International Committee to Defend Slobodan Milosevic. Corn
observes that the WWP [Workers World Party] has campaigned
against the war-crimes trial of former Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevic and that Clark has called the tribunal a
tool of the West to crush those who stand in the way of US imperialism.
Corn, Gitlin and Cooper all take for granted that only an ultra-left
fanatic could hold such a position. That the Milosevic tribunal
is a politically motivated travesty of justice, staged in large
part to justify the US-NATO aggression against Yugoslavia, is
now widely acknowledged. The former Serbian president has been
able to turn the tables on his accusers and expose numerous distortions,
exaggerations and fabrications.
For our three authors, support for the US-NATO war against
Serbia was only the beginning of a new political career: that
of left defender of US militarism. All three embraced
the Bush administrations war on terror and the
US invasion of Afghanistan. Cooper writes in his LA Times
piece that a proportionate American military response
to Al Qaeda was not only justified but absolutely necessary
and paints the present abysmal situation in Afghanistan in glowing
colors.
Now, however, Cooper, Gitlin and Corn claim to be opponents
of a war against Iraq. Why they choose to oppose this particular
war, while defending its precursors, they do not explain. In fact,
as we shall see, they do not really oppose war against Iraq.
On the contrary, they accept uncritically all of the basic
premises of the American establishment, echoing the line of the
New York Times, which has criticized Bushs anti-Iraq
war drive on purely tactical, rather than principled, grounds.
The hallmark of all three is a lack of any serious analysishistorical,
political or social. In their haste to smear socialist and anti-imperialist
critics of Bushs war policy, they cannot be bothered with
such matters as the driving forces of the coming war, the history
of US intervention in the Persian Gulf and the Middle East, the
policies and political character of the Bush administration, the
social situation in the US, or the economic context within which
the war drive is unfolding.
Significantly, the word oil does not appear in
any of these articles.
All three writers presume to speak as political authorities
offering the benefit of their insight to save the
antiwar movement from self-destruction. But even apart from the
reactionary content of their politics, the dearth of substantive
analysis brands them as charlatans and imposters.
The good side of US imperialism
Cooper, in his article, denounces the knee-jerk faction
of the left who opposed the US war on Afghanistan: Steeped
in four decades worth of a crude anti-Americanism, it believed
that the use of any American military power was and would always
be immoral. Returning to this theme later in his article,
Cooper calls on what he refers to as more mature segments
of the left to step into the forefront of the peace
movement and displace those who can only see evil in America.
Coopers modus operandi is that of all demagogues:
setting up a straw man who can only see evil in America
in order to knock it down. Socialists do not see only evil
in America. They make a fundamental distinction between the ruling
elite, its political representatives and military command, on
the one hand, and its working population, on the other.
In any event, Cooper is not defending the American people from
crude attempts to lump them together with the US ruling elite.
He is defending American imperialism against those who fail to
see its positive side.
Cooper goes on to argue that the full dimensions of the
standoff with Iraq must be honestly acknowledged. He writes:
Yes, Bush is exploiting war fever for domestic political
purposes. But its also true that Hussein is a bloody tyrant
and that the Iraqi people would be much better off without him;
he has violated many UN resolutions; he continues to try to develop
horrific weapons of mass destruction; he cynically manipulated
the UN weapons inspection program and might again attempt to do
so if its is reinstated.
These are accusations taken directly from the stockpile of
US war propaganda, repeated as if they were indisputably true.
Cooper has no more proof of Iraqs horrific weapons
of mass destruction than George Bush, Donald Rumsfeld or
Colin Powell.
His parroting of the US line on Iraq raises the obvious question:
if the US military is capable of waging just wars
for democracy and human rights, as in Kosovo and Afghanistan,
why not support its latest humanitarian effort? In reality, Cooper
does not oppose a military strike on Iraq, he merely opposes the
administrations rush to war. (Gitlin repeats the same
phrase in his piece, calling on the left to weigh
in usefully ... against the rush to war.)
Cooper asks rhetorically, If the left is for containment
instead of invasion, then isnt it the US armed forces that
must do the containing?... If, at the end of the day, Hussein
does foil weapons inspections, what is to be done then? What are
the responsibilities of the international community in countenancing
or confronting a long-standing and dangerous dictator like Hussein?
Cooper chooses not to reply to his own question. He doesnt
have to. His answer is obvious.
Cooper speaks for a section of the ruling elite that seeks
a more prudent and deliberate buildup to war, fearing that Bushs
recklessness might have politically disastrous consequences. His
argument that The fight against Bin Ladens gang is
necessary, and going to war against Iraq can only detract from
it, is the line of a section of the Congressional Democrats,
some of whom voted to give Bush the authority to attack Iraq.
Gitlin: the patriotic antiwarrior
Gitlin postures as a friend to antiwar protesters, someone
who wishes the movement only the best. In his piece he calls the
emergence of protest an overdue fact and a necessary one.
He quickly turns his fire, however, on the leadership of
the current antiwar movementpresumably Workers Worldwhich
is building a firebreak around itself, turning the movement
toward the bitter-end orthodoxy of the Old Left and away from
the millions of Americans whose honest concerns and ambivalence
might fuel it.
What this bitter-end orthodoxy might be is never
spelled out. Its essence, however, is clear: opposition to capitalism.
The unorthodox Gitlin long ago made his peace with
the existing social order and has enjoyed a comfortable academic
life as a result.
With horror, Gitlin reports on speaking to a rally outside
the UN and glimpsing placards that read NO SANCTIONS, NO
BOMBING. Fairly frothing, Gitlin denounces this slogan as
emblematic of a refusal to face a grotesque world.
He rebukes the left-wing sectarians who promote NO
SANCTIONS, NO BOMBING for a near-total unwillingness
to rebuke Saddam Hussein and rejection of any conceivable
rationale for using force.
This hysterical reaction to the most elementary demands places
Gitlin, politically speaking, squarely within the ranks of the
Congressional Democrats, Clinton, and the rest of the liberal
establishment that has played a decisive role in facilitating
the Bush administrations war drive.
Describing left-wing opponents of the administrations
war policy as morally tainted, Gitlin asserts that
Liberal-left antiwarriors need to be out-front patriots
if they expect to draw the attention and the support of Americans
at large. Here the former Vietnam War protester projects
his own cowardice and prostration before US imperialism onto the
broad mass of working people. As with all his ilk, he can only
conceive of the American working class as a reactionary force.
Gitlin asks rhetorically: Doesnt Saddam Hussein
bear some responsibility for the disaster? Must that not be noted?
This insistence on the culpability of the Hussein regime and the
crimes committed by the various regimes targeted by the US, some
of which are real, some exaggerated, is a common feature of the
three writers articles.
It becomes the pretext for justifying imperialist intervention
and painting it in democratic and humanitarian colors. Here, as
in everything else, Gitlin and company are merely parroting the
ruling elite itself.
For Marxists, the depredations of these regimes are, at bottom,
expressions of their class character: they are regimes of the
national bourgeoisie. Their essentially reactionary character
is bound up with their inability to establish any genuine independence
from imperialism. Indeed, at one time or another, all of them,
including that of Saddam Hussein, have enjoyed the sponsorship
of the US or some other imperialist power.
The liberation of the people from such regimes is the task
of the working masses themselves, and is inseparably bound up
with the anti-imperialist and anti-capitalist struggles of the
international working class.
Red-baiting, liberal-style
Corn begins his article by referring scornfully to issues raised
at the October 26 rally in Washington: Free Mumia [Abu-Jamal].
Free the Cuban 5. Free Jamil Al-Amin (thats H. Rap Brown,
the former Black Panther convicted in March of killing a sheriffs
deputy in 2000). And free Leonard Peltier. Also, defeat Zionism.
And, while were at it, lets bring the capitalist system
to a halt.
Corns sarcasm is directed against any conception that
a connection exists between the Bush administrations warmongering
abroad and its policies of repression and social reaction at home,
as well as its support for the Sharon regime in Israel. This brings
to the fore the second thread that runs throughout the arguments
of Cooper, Gitlin and Corn.
In addition to isolating and purging left-wing elements from
the antiwar movement, they seek to separate the issue of war from
the social and political issues (social inequality, the attack
on democratic rights, the disenfranchisement of the working class
within the two-party system) with which it is organically linked.
These two themes are driven by the same political motivation:
to prevent the emergence of a popular movement against war based
on the working class and animated by a socialist perspective.
In any event, like Cooper and Gitlin, Corn is not really opposed
to war against Iraq. He merely differs with the Bush administrations
tactics, writing: In a telling sign of the organizers
priorities, the cause of Mumia Abu-Jamal ... drew greater attention
than the idea that revived and unfettered weapons inspections
should occur in Iraq before George W. Bush launches a war.
An antiwar movement dedicated to revived
and unfettered weapons inspections as the prelude to possible
military aggression! Such is Doctor Corns prescription.With
such friends, genuine opponents of the Iraq war have no need of
enemies.
Corn is the most explicit red-baiter and anticommunist of the
three, as his appearance on the OReilly program demonstrated.
He denies, in one passage, that it is red-baiting to note
the WWPs [Workers World Partys] not-too-hidden hand
in the antiwar movement, and then writes a few paragraphs later:
Sure, the commies can rent buses and obtain parade permits,
but if they have a say in the message, as they have had, the antiwar
movement is going to have a tough time signing up non-lefties.
Not accidentally, Corn is also the most explicit advocate of
the AFL-CIO trade union bureaucracy. The Washington editor of
the Nation writes: The antiwar movement wont
have a chance of applying pressure on the political system unless
it becomes much larger and able to squeeze elected officials at
home and in Washington. To reach that stage, the new peace movement
will need the involvement of labor unions and churches.
This would mean, in practice, an antiwar movement subordinate
to the union bureaucracy and the Democratic Party. Corn demands
to know, moreover, whether it is appropriate for groups
and churches that care about human rights and worker rights abroad
and at home to make common cause with those who champion socialist
tyrants? referring to the Workers World Partys support
for North Korean leader Kim Jong Il.
Calling Kim a socialist is a gross distortion of
reality, but then so too is the reference to the AFL-CIO as a
fighter for worker rights abroad and home. The US
trade union apparatus has for years been a conduit of CIA funds
and vehicle for American imperialist operations throughout Latin
America, Africa and Asia. At home it has collaborated
directly over the past 20 years in the destruction of living standards,
jobs, working conditions and pensions.
Cooper, Gitlin and Corn are hardened and conscious enemies
of any mass movement opposed to American capitalism. This makes
it impossible for them to oppose the war on Iraq, which it rooted
in the imperialist world system and its contradictions. The frenzied
character of the attacks by these three and others of their ilk
on radical elements in the antiwar movement is the product of
the objective situation itself, their resulting fear of a radicalized
population and their own sense of isolation.
Events, meanwhile, are brilliantly confirming the Marxist critique
of imperialism, which is reemerging politically and militarily
in its purest and most violent form. The more this critique is
vindicated, the more these essentially right-wing elements scramble
to lend their own imperialist power a democratic and
progressive coloration. The pathetic and transparent character
of their sweatings is a measure of the impossibility of their
assignment.
See Also:
New York Times offers
friendly advice to abort the antiwar movement
[28 January 2003]
Washington Post columnist
Michael Kelly red-baits the Workers World Party
[24 January 2003]
The political issues in the
struggle against war
[17 January 2003]
Journalist Christopher
Hitchens fully embraces the Bush war camp
[7 October 2002]
The war against Iraq
and Americas drive for world domination
[4 October 2002]
Imperialist
war in the Balkans and the decay of the petty-bourgeois left
[14 December 1995]
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