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Washington Post columnist Michael Kelly red-baits the
Workers World Party
By David Walsh
24 January 2003
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The witch-hunting attack by columnist Michael Kelly on the
Workers World Party in the Washington Post (Marching
with Stalinists, January 22, 2003) was entirely predictable.
One right-wing hack or another was bound to get around to the
task.
Kelly, perpetually outraged and perpetually ignorant, takes
the occasion of last weeks massive demonstrations in Washington
and San Francisco against the imminent war on Iraq to denounce
one of the protests principal organizers, ANSWER (Act Now
to Stop War and End Racism), as a front group for the communist
Workers World Party.
The columnist goes on to identify Workers World with the Chinese
and North Korean regimes, Saddam Hussein, Slobodan Milosevic,
the mullahs of Iran, and the narco-gangsters of Colombia
and the bus-bombers of Hamas. The principal device employed
here, one long favored by witch-hunters, is the amalgam: throw
everything together in the hope of creating the maximum fear and
disorientation.
Reflected in this vicious attack on Workers World is a great
deal of nervousness within the media and political elite about
the mass opposition that has emerged to war against Iraq, revealed
in the recent demonstrations and underscored by opinion polls.
Kelly senses the isolation of the political establishment and
the growth of popular discontent over the Bush administrations
war-mongering abroad and its assault on democratic rights and
working class living standards at home. Reflecting the intellectual
and political degeneracy of his milieu, he lashes out, resorting
to the time-tested refuge of the distinctly American scoundrel:
red-baiting.
When a Marxist uses the term Stalinism it has a specific meaning.
It refers to the theory and practice of the national-opportunist
bureaucracy that emerged in the Soviet Union in the 1920s and
usurped political power from the workers and peasants who carried
out the 1917 October Revolution. In the final analysis, this bureaucracywhich
played a counterrevolutionary role internationallyreflected
the pressure of world imperialism on the isolated and economically
deprived workers state. Its strangling of the fledgling
Soviet democracy expressed a degeneration whose culmination was
the dismantling of the historic conquests of the October Revolution
and the restoration of capitalism.
To establish its power fully, the Stalinist caste carried out
a blood purge in the 1930s, exterminating the generation of socialists
that had led the revolution, first and foremost the Marxists who
took their lead from Leon Trotsky.
The World Socialist Web Site criticizes Workers World
for its orientation to the trade union bureaucracy and sections
of the Democratic Party in the US, and to bureaucratic and bourgeois
nationalist regimes internationally. Our differences are deep
and principled and involve essential issues in the development
of a revolutionary strategy for the American and international
working class.
There is a time and place to elaborate and explain these differences.
With Kelly and his ilk, however, we are dealing with political
scoundrels in the service of reaction. In opposition to Kellys
red-baiting, our attitude is unconditional and unequivocal defense
of the Workers World Party.
In his article Kelly raises September 11, 2001 as a turning
point in the history of civilization. In al Qaeda and in
the Taliban and in Saddam Husseins Iraq, liberal civilization
faced an enemy that represented nearly every evil that liberalism
has ever stood against. What was the left going to do? A pretty
straightforward call, you might say. America has its flaws. But
war involves choosing sides, and the American sidewhich
was, after all, the side of liberalism, of progressivism, of democracy,
of freedom, of not chucking gays off rooftops and not stoning
adulterers and not whipping women in the town square, and not
gassing minority populations and not torturing advocates of free
speechwas surely preferable to the side of the Islamofascists,
to borrow a word from the essayist and former man of the left,
Christopher Hitchens.
More amalgams and more lies. By a crude sleight of hand Kelly
identifies al Qaeda and the Taliban with the Iraqi Baathist
regime. The WSWS gives no political support to this bourgeois
nationalist regime. But no one has produced any credible evidence
linking it to the September 11 attacks. That which has been offered
has been exposed as fraudulent.
If Islamic fundamentalism represents nearly every evil
that liberalism has ever stood against, then perhaps Kelly
can explain why it was the policy of both Democratic and Republican
administrations for much of the past century, and especially from
the late 1970s, to foment, finance and arm these reactionary forces,
including Osama bin Laden and his cohorts, for the purpose of
opposing secular nationalist forces in the Middle East and destabilizing
the Soviet Union.
As for Hussein, no less an authority than the aforementioned
former man of the left and now the far right, Hitchens,
has acknowledged that The United States had at least a hand
in the coup that brought Saddam to power. It encouraged him in
his attack on Iran. At the very time of his worst conduct in Kurdistan,
Washington was his best friend. When he plotted to straighten
the Kuwaiti frontier in his favour, he was given the greenest
of lights.
The US provided the Iraqi regime with the ingredients for its
biological weapons program and looked on approvingly when Hussein
used chemical weapons against Iranian forces and minority populations
in the late 1980s.
Absent from Kellys litany is the one word that goes to
the heart of the US drive to conquer and dominate Iraqoil.
To mention it would point to the fact that the coming invasion
is a war of imperialist plunder, against a historically oppressed
former colony.
Liberalism, progressivism, democracy,
freedomthe invasion of Afghanistan embodied
these noble principles? Who is kidding whom? Leaving aside the
inconvenient fact that conditions in Afghanistan today are as
wretched as they were under the Talibanessentially one set
of warlords has replaced anotherand that the Saudi regime,
which practices a form of Islamic fundamentalism as reactionary
as the Talibans, has been kept afloat by the US for decades,
there is the matter of American imperialisms record around
the globe.
Washington has been the principal pillar of support for police-state
regimes and their hired torturers and murderers for decades, from
the CIA-backed governments in South Korea and Taiwan to the monstrous
Shah of Iran, to the death squads of Central America
and the military butchers in Chile and Argentina.
It is the US government and military that introduced napalm
and Agent Orange and We had to destroy the village
to save it into the modern lexicon, in a war in Southeast
Asia that cost some three million lives.
Not satisfied with the destruction caused by the 1991 Gulf
War and the death of 500,000 or more children as the result of
economic sanctions, Washington now proposes another war against
a defenseless Iraq, which will produce untold further misery.
The predatory policies of American imperialismthis is the
reality behind Kellys democracy and progressivism.
The columnists smears against the left are
an attack on all those who express differences with the policies
of the US government and an instinctive response to the threat
of a new popular radicalization. They are an attempt to intimidate
and silence all dissent. Kellys method is similar to that
used by racists in the South during the Civil Rights movement:
blame all opposition on outside agitators.
Kelly is one of many journalistic thugs in the service of the
American plutocracy. There are dozens of themthe Krauthammers,
Coulters, Sowells, Wills, etc., secreted out of the pores of an
elite increasingly insulated from the general population and hostile
to democratic rights. Their vocation, for which they are handsomely
paid, is pumping out lies and filth on a daily basis. They are
incapable of principled or reasoned discussion. There is no dialogue
with them. They stand on the opposite side of the political barricades.
See Also:
New York Times' Thomas Friedman:
"No problem with a war for oil"
[15 January 2003]
Inventing a pretext
for war against Iraq
Friedman of the Times executes an assignment for the Pentagon
[3 December 2002]
The Washington Post
and the killings in Yemen: "Liberal" press extols CIA's
Murder Inc.
[9 November 2002]
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