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New York Times offers friendly advice
to abort the anti-war movement
By David Walsh
28 January 2003
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This months mass demonstrations against the Bush administrations
imminent war in Iraq took the political and media establishment
by surprise. The surge of opposition evaded their political radar
screens. They had either ignored the growing resistance or pretended
it did not exist.
Once the depth of popular sentiment against war became impossible
to disregard, the various factions of bourgeois opinion makers
swung into action. They had now to confront the reality of a nascent
mass movement emerging outside of their control.
On the one side are political thugs like right-wing commentator
Michael Kelly, who launch witch-hunting attacks on the communist
Workers World Party, which played a prominent role in organizing
the protests. (See Washington
Post columnist Michael Kelly red-baits the Workers World Party,
24 January 2003). This is the crude and filthy face of bourgeois
politics. The particular task assigned to these forces is to stir
up everything backward and poisonous in the body politic.
The liberal, or erstwhile liberal, establishment, represented
most prominently by the New York Times, has undertaken
a subtler and more sinister intervention. Its aim is to isolate
the left-wing elements and drive them out, so as to bring the
movement under the control of reliable political agents of the
ruling elite, principally the Democratic Party.
This is the significance of a January 24 Times article,
Some War Protesters Uneasy With Others. Lynette Clemetson
writes that behind the scenes, some of the protesters have
questioned whether the message of opposing the war with Iraq is
being tainted or at least diluted by other causes of International
Answer, which sponsored both the Washington and San Francisco
rallies.... Some of the groups chief organizers are active
in the Workers World Party, a radical socialist group with roots
in the Stalin-era Soviet Union.
The precise meaning of the phrase roots in the Stalin-era
Soviet Union is not explained. The founder of Workers World,
Sam Marcy, was associated with the Trotskyist movement until he
abandoned it in 1959 and founded his own group. The evident purpose
of the inchoate reference is to drag in the name of Stalin as
a political epithet.
The unstated political motivation of the article is indicated
by the insinuation that the movement against war in Iraq is being
tainted by the illegitimate interjection of other
causes.
Clemetson elaborates on this theme: Answers critics
say they simply wish that when it sponsors antiwar rallies, it
would confine its message to opposition to the war. She
cites the comments of Tikkun magazine editor Rabbi Michael
Lerner, whose concerns include pro-Palestinian speeches.
Lerner observes, It feels that we are being manipulated
when subjected to mindless speeches and slogans whose knee-jerk
anti-imperialism rarely articulates the deep reasons we should
oppose corporate globalization.
In a hopeful tone the Times notes that the next major
rally, to be held February 15 in New York, is being organized
by United for Peace, a coalition of more than 120 groups,
most of them less radical than Answer.
The political message is clear. The Times wants an anti-war
movement that does not go beyond the confines of the existing
social order. The newspapers editors are alerting sections
of the middle class: you can have your rallies and protests, but
not on the basis of anti-capitalism.
The Times editors are arguing for a protest movement
that accepts certain basic premisesabove all, the defense
of US imperialism and its right to dominate the world. They fear
the development of a movement that links the struggle against
war to critical social issues in America and makes a direct appeal
to the working class.
The Times sudden interest in the anti-war movement
is cynical and self-serving. The newspaper has been one of the
chief drum-beaters for war. Only Saturday, in an article calling
on Bush to delay a conflict only until the necessary international
support can be built up, Op-Ed columnist and senior writer for
the New York Times Magazine Bill Keller asserted: So
far in its showdown with Iraq, the Bush administration has mostly
done the right things.... There are compelling reasons for war
with Iraq.
How should serious opponents of US militarism respond to the
attempt by the Times to politically tame and strangle any
movement against imperialist war?
In our view, they should make every effort to expose these
attempts and drive such pro-imperialist elements out of the anti-war
movement. As events have already shown, together with the Democratic
Party and the establishment liberals come the red-baiters. And
behind the red-baiters come the state and the police.
The anti-war movement must be built from the start as an anti-capitalist
movement. At the heart of building a mass movement is the
struggle to mobilize the working class independently of the bourgeois
parties, above all, the Democrats. Long and painful experience
demonstrates that any movement that remains subordinate to the
parties representing the interests of big business is doomed to
impotence and failure.
Here is where fundamental political differences between the
World Socialist Web Site and the Workers World Party emerge.
The latter seeks to maintain a political alliance with sections
of the Democratic Party and the AFL-CIO trade union bureaucracy.
Indeed, Workers World facilitates the domination of the anti-war
movement by these elements.
It hopes to cajole and win over such forces. This is the reactionary
heritage of Stalinism and its perspective of subordinating the
working class to the liberal bourgeoisiea policy that attained
a finished, and politically disastrous, expression in the popular
fronts engineered by Stalinist Communist Parties in the
1930s.
Today, with the protracted crisis of American liberalism resulting
in utter prostration before the most right wing sections of the
ruling elite, this political line assumes the most noxious forms.
Thus Workers World prides itself in parading the likes of Al Sharpton
before anti-war protesters. It genuflects to such charlatans and
presents them as legitimate peoples leaders,
providing them with much needed credibility.
An alliance with the Democrats and the trade union bureaucrats
is possible only on the basis of repudiating any serious opposition
to capitalism. This alliance cannot be combined with a genuine
appeal to working people. Far from broadening the
anti-war movement, the influence of the Democratic Party and AFL-CIO
bureaucrats would guarantee the strangulation of democratic debate,
narrow the movements social base and transform anti-war
activity into a harmless sideshow, a pressure-valve regulated
by the Congressional Democrats. The end result would be to alienate
the working class and keep it on the sideline.
Imperialist war cannot be stopped by moral appeals to sections
of the ruling elite, or the application of pressure on the Democratic
Party. Nothing could be more futile and self-defeating than such
a strategy. Only the international working class can halt the
drive to war against Iraq and the danger of world war, because
only the working class is capable of replacing the capitalist
system with an egalitarian and truly democratic society.
A movement of broad masses of workers and youth must not only
articulate their general concerns, including opposition to war,
but provide a program to address their needs and interests: decent
jobs, education, health care, housing, democratic rights. Only
a socialist program can fulfill that need.
A truly broad and democratic anti-war movement will intervene
boldly in the working population, explaining the link between
social inequality, poverty, homelessness and the criminal policies
of the Bush administration. It will raise the necessity for a
decisive break with both big business parties and the need for
a new, independent socialist movement. It will openly state that
a successful struggle against war and militarism means going to
the source of these evils, the profit system. It will be an international
movement, armed with an international strategy.
And it will have sufficient political consciousness to distinguish
between its friends and its enemies, and reject with contempt
the malevolent advice of such pillars of American imperialism
as the New York Times.
See Also:
Washington Post columnist Michael
Kelly red-baits the Workers World Party
[24 January 2003]
New York Times discovers the opposition
to war in Iraq
[21 January 2003]
Sam Marcy,
an apologist for bureaucracy
[13 February 1998]
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