|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Russia
Russia and the war against Iraq
By Vladimir Volkov
20 February 2003
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
The war against Iraq, whose prime mover is the American Bush
administration, assisted by Tony Blairs British government,
might start any time in the next few weeks, perhaps even in a
few days. Having begun as an act of naked neocolonial aggression
against a weak and almost defenseless country, it will inevitably
set off a chain of events producing deep changes in political
and social relations throughout the world.
Aggression against Iraq will open a period of sharply escalated
militarism, the essential content of which will be a global re-division
of spheres of influence and control. This eruption of imperialist
violence will threaten the world with a conflagration whose extent
could exceed the catastrophes of the twentieth century.
Russia, by virtue of its territorial location and its enormous
natural resources, will not remain isolated from these events.
They will exert an immediate influence on the moods and attitudes
of the current Russian ruling elite. What is even more important,
they will provoke a rethinking about many important political
and historical questions among wide layers of Russian society.
In order to evaluate more concretely the depth and character
of these changes, it is necessary once again to ponder the general
nature of the coming war, its social roots, and its place in modern
world history.
War to re-divide the world
The American mass media portrays the war against Iraq as an
act of preventive self-defense against an enemy who threatens
the foundations of world civilization, and an effort to remove
the dictatorship of Saddam Hussein and set up a democratic regime
in Iraq. Nevertheless, an ever-growing number of people around
the world understand that this war will be carried out primarily
to conquer the oil resources of the Middle East.
Oil, however, is only one factor in the coming aggression.
The strategic calculations of the American ruling elite go beyond
oil and assume that the subjugation of Iraq will be a step on
the road to establishing world hegemony. In other words, the Bush
government is seeking to carry through a political and economic
reorganization of the world in the interests of American capital.
Not only weak and relatively backward states, like Iraq, but
even the most important competitors of the US in Europe and Asia
(such as Japan and China) are to be subjected to the will of the
American corporate and political elite. Russia, which combines
the second largest store of nuclear weapons, enormous natural
resources and an economy in acute distress, is also on the short
list of potential victims of this global imperialist will
to rule.
It is important to understand that the eruption of American
imperialism is not a product of someones mania for greatness,
or the sick imagination of the people in charge in Washington.
The causes are rooted in the fundamental contradictions of the
world capitalist system and the inability of capitalism to overcome
its contradictions in a peaceful and conflict-free manner. Contemporary
world productive forces can no longer be contained within the
framework of a system of nation states and within the economic
relations of private property, which constitute, in Marxs
words, the anatomy of capitalist society.
The extreme sharpening of these contradictions is not of recent
origin, but revealed itself at least one hundred years ago. The
insoluble conflict between the essentially social character of
production and the private form of appropriation under capitalism
had already twice in the twentieth century resulted in terrible
world wars, the first beginning in 1914 and the second in 1939.
Both of these slaughters ushered in a reorganization of the
entire complex of world economic and political relations, and
the United States played a leading role on both occasions. History
decreed that the United States would act as a stabilizing force
within capitalism, and, although it pursued primarily its own
predatory interests, it was able to assist its defeated former
enemies in Europe and Asia in restoring their socioeconomic and
political position within the world balance of power.[1]
Today the United States aims at another such reorganization.
But its role has changed. Today, America is neither a guarantor,
nor the ultimate anchor, of world capitalism, but, just the opposite,
lies at the center of the international crisis. Today it is a
power that actively destroys the past equilibrium. A new reorganization
in the spirit of Pax Americana presupposes not the peaceful
coexistence of a few imperialist rivals, but the complete
subjugation of them all to the will and interests of one. Clearly,
this goal must produce terrific resistance and a series of destructive
and bloody conflicts.
Conflict between the US and Europe
The active resistance of the German and French governments
to the military plans of the US is therefore not surprising. This
resistance has already threatened a collapse of some of the most
important structures of the postwar order, among them, NATO.
The European governments are motivated by two sorts of worries.
On the one hand, they fear that an American success in subjugating
Iraq will rapidly weaken their own geopolitical position and make
them much more vulnerable vis-à-vis the US, especially
with respect to their sources of energy. On the other hand, they
are terrified of growing social protest from belowfrom the
broad toiling masses within their own countries. This protest,
beginning as opposition to war, will inevitably become linked
in the popular consciousness to the rejection of the economic
policies of these states, which in the main differ little from
the measures taken by the administration in Washington.
For the sake of boosting the competitiveness of their capitalist
corporations, the European governments are preoccupied with the
dismantling of what remains of the social reforms and democratic
rights that the European working class won over many decades of
struggle.
However, the European elites most energetic in their criticism
of American war preparations are stuck in the horns of an insoluble
dilemma. They cannot silently acquiesce to the imperious will
of the US, since this would make them into a sort of American
protectorate. Neither can they develop a real opposition to war,
since this would lead to questions about the foundations of their
own socioeconomic and political domination.
That is why the opposition to the Iraq war on the part of European
parties and governments has such a limited, equivocal and deeply
hypocritical character. While rejecting the need for war at this
time, they accept American war aims as quite legitimate and justified.
Nobody talks openly about the goals of the war. All of them support
the myth that Iraq possesses weapons of mass destruction, and
thereby legitimize Washingtons war plans.
How does the position of Vladimir Putins Russian government
appear in this context? It equivocates even more than the Europeans.
While denying the need for a direct military intervention in Iraqs
affairs, it in no way questions even the most odious claims and
arguments used by the American administration and chorused by
the mass media as pretexts for launching the aggression.
Declaring its solidarity with Germany and France on the question
of Iraq, Moscow attempts to do everything it can to retain the
trust of its main partner across the Atlantic. Putin does not
wish to question the strategic choice in favor of
a prolonged alliance with America, which was announced following
September 11, 2001. He behaves as a pragmatist who haggles with
both sides, trying to figure out which will pay him more. The
Russian media presents this tail-wagging as a special sort of
wisdom, but, in truth, there is nothing behind it except a lackeys
Anything you wish.
The USSR and world imperialism
Putins policy of unprincipled maneuvering, devoid of
any clear and independent strategic goal, flows from the nature
of the regime that was established in Russia following the collapse
of the USSR in 1991. The new regime emerged through the direct
support of the leading imperialist powers, which had viewed the
existence of the Soviet Union as the great barrier to their establishment
of direct control over the significant natural, human and technical
resources in the interior of Eurasia.
The Soviet Union grew out of the October Revolution, one of
the greatest events in world history. International by its objective
nature, it established a workers and peasants government on the
ruins of the tsarist autocracy, and issued a challenge to the
world domination of capital.
Despite its subsequent isolation and degeneration under the
weight of economic backwardness, the Soviet regime did not lose
the greatest conquest of October 1917the nationalized property
relations. Notwithstanding the totalitarian character of its power,
the privileged Stalinist bureaucracy that emerged from the interstices
of the Soviet economy and became the embodiment of nationalist
reaction was afraid for many decades to attack the basic social
conquests of the Russian proletariat.
Trotsky justifiably called Stalinism the gangrene
of the workers state and an agency of world capitalism. Nevertheless,
the impetus of the Revolution was so powerful that for a long
time the bureaucracy was forced to resist the hegemonic pretensions
of world imperialism and defend the social foundations of the
USSR, although it did so using its own criminal and destructive
methods. It was only after the development of a new and specific
correlation of historical conditions that the Stalinist bureaucracy
threw aside all past pretensions about building socialism
and decided, finally, to switch completely to the side of world
imperialism, volunteering to act as its direct tool and junior
partner.[2]
The 11 years since the dissolution of the USSR have clearly
demonstrated the deeply destructive nature of this process, which
has led to a colossal regression in economic, social and cultural
life, a setback unprecedented in peacetime history. The governments
of Gorbachev, Yeltsin and Putin succeeded where the Nazi invasion
could not: they overthrew the social relations created by the
1917 Revolution and subordinated the former Soviet economy to
the dictates of the world capitalist market.
Exchanging power for property, the former bureaucracy
has successfully remade itself into a caste of new masters.[3]
But the historic conditions of its social transformation are such
as to leave little room for maneuver: the new ruling elite is
a powerless satellite of the world financial oligarchy and of
the leading imperialist states. Its own economic position is so
weak and so dependent on the vagaries of the world market as to
make Russias European dilemma an even more intractable
problem than that confronting the established great powers of
Europe.
On the one hand, the new Russian bourgeoisie has inherited
the traditional, historically developed spheres of geopolitical
influence of Great Russia. It has its own economic
interests, which are now under threat.
At the same time, it has virtually no assets with which to
counter the naked aggressiveness of the leading imperialist power,
the US. The new Russian elite cannot even, after the example of
Germany and France, play the card of anti-Americanism.
Under conditions of Russias widespread poverty, and the
memory of the recent better-fed Soviet past, combined with the
weak but persisting historical memories of the Revolution, such
anti-Americanism would inevitably assume the character of spontaneous
anti-capitalist attitudes, dangerous to the regime. The only resort
is Russian nationalism and chauvinism. But even this well-tried
reactionary gambit is supported by the Kremlin only to the extent
that the West considers it useful in securing its own interests
in Russia.
Whatever pose of opposition to the war the Putin government
assumes, it bears no trace of principle. Together with the German
and French governments, the Kremlin does not dispute the right
of a great power to attack Iraq and occupy it. Indeed, Putin has
a vested interest in asserting the rights of the powerful so as
to defend Russias right to attack and conquer its weaker
neighbors, in the manner of the tsarist autocracy.
Putin has his own criminal war in Chechnya. The second war
in the Northern Caucasus is now more than three years old and
continues to deal frightful wounds to the peoples of the region.
While it was provoked as a means of securing the transfer of power
in the Kremlin, it soon evolved into a means of defending the
neocolonial and geopolitical pretensions of the ruling Russian
elite.
As with the Bush administrations drive to war, Russias
war in Chechnya is an expression of deep crisis, from which Putins
regime sees only one way outthe escalation of external violence
and fomenting of chauvinist and militarist poison inside the country.
The struggle against social inequality and
war
Eleven years of capitalist reforms have brought
the Russian masses nothing but misery and impoverishment. It is
a lie to rationalize the social disaster by claiming that Russias
reforms have barely gotten under way. Those advancing this argument
appeal to an abstract model of capitalism that never existed in
history. According to this abstraction, the more capitalism there
is, the more democracy and well-being for everyone.[4]
Actually, the reforms have been essentially carried throughthat
is, they have achieved their goal. In the course of a few years
there has occurred a colossal transfer of the most significant
elements of nobodys state property into private
hands. The fact that tens and hundreds of millions have been left
without bare necessities, that they have been reduced to the level
of a struggle for physical existence, that diseases and crime
grow apace, that regional and ethnic conflicts keep escalating,
that the technical infrastructure has precipitously decayed, that
the natural resources are being plundered and depletedall
of this is not accidental. These are not mistakes,
but the only possible outcome of a social regression unprecedented
in modern history.
Contemporary capitalism daily demonstrates on a world scale
its inability to develop backward regions or solve economic and
social problems. Everything that goes toward the conditions of
life of the overwhelming majority of humans is sacrificed in the
name of private profit. In Russia also, the new elite strives
to enrich itself at any price and acts according to the principle,
after us, the deluge.
For a time there were attempts to blame the criminal character
of Russian capitalism on the heritage of communism,
or on some specifically Russian conditions. The recent American
corporate scandals, however, have proved that the methods of falsification,
asset looting, tax fraud, cooking the books, etc., are characteristic
of the behavior of the business elite in a leading capitalist
country no less than in Russia.
Present-day Russia leads the world in its extreme levels and
grotesque forms of social inequality. As if to illustrate the
Marxist critique of capitalism, it presents the spectacle of two
countries within its borders: the Russia of the new Russians
and the Russia of the average toiler: two existences, which meet
but rarely. Moscow, yesterdays advertisement for socialism,
has today become a symbol of the new capitalism a la Russethe
casino economy, a combination of New York and Las
Vegas.
A 2002 survey of the 188 richest persons in Europe includes
nine Russian citizens. Among these is the 39-year-old Mikhail
Khodorkovsky, a former Komsomol functionary, who presently heads
the leading oil company, Yukos. With assets of $8 billion, he
has made it onto the list of the 30 richest persons on the planet.
The list of billionaires includes the government official V.
Chernomyrdin ($1.35 billion) and the retiree R. Viakhirev ($1.8
billion). Both presided over Gazprom, the leading Russian gas
company, acting, obviously, not from motives of altruism.
At the same time, the wages in many branches of the Russian
economy are below the officially recognized minimum needed for
survival. According to the Ministry of Labor, the minimum wage
of 450 roubles per month decreed by the government constitutes
only 22 percent of this survival minimum, and does
not even provide for the physical survival of the worker.
Budgetary constraints prevent this survival minimum
from being raised to the level of real survival any time soon.
Meanwhile, Putins government continues to pay some $15 billion
each year to foreign creditors. This amount flows into the accounts
of world banks and Western governments.[5]
But what about democracy? might be the response.
It must be admitted that the average Russian is truly suffering.
But did we not win freedom in August of 1991?
Arguments of this sort are no weightier than the conviction
of those stubborn minds who insist that Russian reforms have not
yet begun. Of course, when the totalitarian Stalinist regime fell
there were solemn pronouncements about rights and freedoms, temporarily
borrowed from the history books on the bourgeois-democratic revolutions
in Europe and America.
These, however, were not conquests made by the people. Rather,
they resulted from the victory of one part of the bureaucracy
over another, at the expense of the interests of the people. In
reality, democracy, freedom and popular
sovereignty remained paper phrases, like the empty rhetoric
of the Stalin and Brezhnev constitutions of 1936 and 1977.
The new post-Soviet regime did not intend to carry out any
real destruction of Stalinism. Having pulled down the chiefs of
the former party hierarchy, it included in its ranks the larger
part of the old nomenclature. With the exception of purely surface
personnel and name changes, the whole apparatus of Stalinist oppression
(headed by the KGB) was preserved, and was soon elevated in status
once again.
The state coup carried out by Yeltsin in the fall of 1993 denuded
the new regime of even the fig leaf of democracy: the new presidential
prerogatives exceed the aspirations of some dictators. Popularly
elected parliament, independent judiciary, free pressthese
were all turned into a façade, behind which could be glimpsed
the self-satisfied, ugly mug of yesteryears Stalinist careerist,
who had in the meantime acquired the traditional habits of the
old tsarist bully. Today he defends with all his power the interests
of the semi-criminal nouveau riches.
Russian capitalism came to be. But its distinctive formthat
of a thoroughly corrupt, criminal and dependent enterpriseis
such because it cannot be anything else. We must accept this fact,
and draw the necessary conclusions from it. Capitalism in Russia
has no future because it has neither past, nor present. In a deeply
historical sense, it is illegitimate.
The present state cannot last for long, because it is a state
of deep crisis, not development. Whatever the initial outcome
of the US war against Iraq, in the end it will propel Russian
capitalism into a state of even greater dependency on the world
market. The popular illusion among the Russian people that Putin
is a national savior will sooner or later dissipate.
The masses will realize that Putin continues in the tradition
of Gorbachev and Yeltsin, that he represents oligarchic business,
bureaucracy and world capital, not the interests of the common
man.
Up to now the strength of the post-Soviet regime in Russia
lay in the popular belief that contemporary capitalism was different
than the system analyzed by Marx and Lenin, that after 1945 it
became compatible with social reform and democracy. The eruption
of imperialist antagonisms, wars and violence around the globe,
which is accompanied by ruthless attacks on the living standards
and rights of the working people even in the advanced countries,
will deal a crushing blow to such illusions. The working class
will rediscover that socialism is not an ideal of the past, but
a realistic response to the crisis of civilization that threatens
it with new and unprecedented forms of barbarism.
The war will bring forth not only the spirit of destruction.
It will also give momentum to revolutionary tendencies. The Fourth
International, which today embodies the concentrated expression
of a revolutionary alternative, and which at one time grew out
of the struggle of Russian Marxism against the growth of Stalinism,
will return to Russia.
Through the powerful weapon of the World Socialist Web Site,
the Fourth International will help the Russian masses realize
that it is impossible to fight war without tying this struggle
to the fight against social inequality and capitalism on a world
scale. The heritage of three Russian revolutions will inevitably
reemerge. The Russian working class will be obliged to find its
rightful place in the ranks of todays international struggle
for socialism.
Notes:
1. It is necessary to note that the American
decision to provide economic assistance to its imperialist competitors
was not rooted in long-term calculations or altruism, but rather
in its instinct for survival. The foundations of world capitalism
were buckling under the pressure of the international revolutionary
movement of the working class. There was no choice. When, following
World War I, the US assisted Austria and Weimar Germany in restoring
their economic systems, this was done to weaken the danger of
communist revolution in Europe. The same motives prevailed following
World War II with respect to Western Europe and Japan. Today,
the American ruling elite sees no reason for similar assistance
to its international competitors.
2. The collapse of the Soviet Union was not
predetermined either historically or economically. The main reason
that the Soviet economy ended up in a dead end was the reactionary
policy of the Stalinist bureaucracy, aimed at constructing socialism
in a single country. Within the context of the rapid growth
of economic globalization in the late 1970s and 1980s, this perspective
of autarchic development became ever more reactionary and economically
unviable. Integration of the Soviet economy into the world system
of production had to occur one way or another. The Iron
Curtain had to fall.
But this process could have happened in two
opposite ways: either in favor of socialism, or in favor of capitalism.
The extension of world proletarian revolution beyond the borders
of the USSR opened up the possibility for a progressive resolution
of this crisis. The bureaucracy feared this result most of all.
Under the cover of glasnost and perestroika
it adopted the opposite course: to privatize state property, liquidate
the monopoly of foreign trade and open the Soviet economy to the
transnational capitalist corporations.
Giving its own answer to the economic and social
crisis of the Soviet Union, the International Committee of the
Fourth International wrote at the time: The development
of socialism in the Soviet Union and the solution of the economic
problems arising in its evolution are indissolubly bound up with
the extension of proletarian revolution to the world arena. The
shortage of technology and the continuing contradictions between
industry and agriculture can only be resolved through access to
the world market. There are only two roads to the integration
of the Soviet Union into that marketthat of Gorbachev leading
towards capitalist restoration and that of the world socialist
revolution (Fourth International, vol. 14, no. 2,
June 1987, p. 38).
3. When speaking of the social character of
the Soviet Union, Marxists always noted that the bureaucracy was
not an economically dominant class, but rather played the role
of a privileged caste, a parasite on the foundations of the nationalized
economy. Has it now become a class in the true sense
of this word?
It is insufficient to simply extrapolate past
analysis onto contemporary conditions. From the point of view
of strictly economic definitions, we should probably call the
new layer of private owners in Russia a class. However,
while not rejecting this general approach, we consider that, absent
more concrete explanations, such a label would leave out of account
some very important social and historical peculiarities, and might
result in erroneous political conclusions.
The Russian entrepreneurs constitute a component
part of the world capitalist elite. But this elite is becoming
ever more parasitic. Its existence is tied less and less to a
definite historically necessary and, no less important, progressive
role in the productive process. In other words, the world bourgeoisie
steadily loses those characteristics that in the past made it
a social group able to dominate economically, not as a result
of naked violence, falsification, cooking the books and other
financial documents, etc.,i.e., through methods outside
the economic sphere.
Despite their accumulation of stolen riches,
a gang of highway robbers does not thereby become an economically
dominant class, just as the knife and the ax, needed for these
robberies, does not assume the role of means of production.
We are, of course, far from describing in a
general economic sense the present ruling elites of America, Europe
or Japan as gangs of robbers. But the historical tendency points
in this direction. This tendency shows itself more strongly with
respect to belated and grotesque Russian capitalism. The less
Russian businessmen are able to develop the economy,
the more they hold onto the gains conquered during the years of
prikhvatizatsiya [insider takeover, trans.]. The isolated
and esoteric character of this elite group steadily increases.
Hence, in our opinion, it justly earns the designation caste.
4. The real economic basis for illusions about
the indissoluble ties of capitalism and democracy lies in petty
commodity production based on individual ownership of the means
of production, the absence of widespread use of hired labor and
the equality of individual producers to one another. As Marx had
shown in Capital, in a historic sense petty commodity production
predated the capitalist form of production, and is far from being
its equivalent. Capitalism concentrates the means of production
in a few hands, expropriates the mass of independent producers
in the town and country, and, thereby, creates huge economic inequality,
thus leading to a situation where democracy sooner or later turns
into pure fiction.
In the eighteenth century, during the epoch
that preceded the industrial revolutionthe industrial and
technical foundation of capitalismthe petty commodity producer
could still appear as the embodiment of true human nature.
The great thinkers of the period, for example, Jean Jacques Rousseau,
worked out mentally plans for establishing a utopian democracy
of individual commodity producers, equal in their rights and economic
status. These ideas were demolished in the course of the French
Revolution.
5. During the years of perestroika,
among the circles of advanced intellectuals infected
with petty-bourgeois prejudices there was a popular phrase designed
to demonstrate the hopeless situation within the Soviet Union
as compared to the capitalist West: Our standard of life
equals their standard of death. It is impossible, without
a dose of bitter irony, to remember these words today. They reflected
arrogant expectations and dilettante beliefs in the miracle
of capitalism. The realities of market reforms have
far exceeded the most gloomy, albeit well-founded, warnings to
the contrary.
See Also:
EU summit agrees on war against Iraq as
a last resort
[19 February 2003]
How to deal with America?
The European dilemma
[25 January 2003]
In Defense
of the Russian Revolution
A Reply to the Post-Soviet School of Historical Falsification
[A lecture by David North]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |