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WSWS
: History
: 2005
SEP/WSWS Summer School
Lecture five:
World War I: The breakdown of capitalism
By Nick Beams
21 September 2005
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This lecture was delivered by Nick Beams, the national secretary
of the Socialist Equality Party of Australia and a member of the
WSWS Editorial Board, at the Socialist Equality Party/WSWS summer
school held August 14 to August 20, 2005 in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
This is the fifth lecture that was given at the school.
The first, entitled The
Russian Revolution and the unresolved historical problems of the
20th century was posted in four parts, from August 29
to September 1. The second, entitled Marxism
versus revisionism on the eve of the twentieth century,
was posted in three parts on September 2, 4 and 5. The third,
entitled The origins of Bolshevism
and What Is To Be Done? was posted in seven parts
from September 6 to September 13. The fourth, entitled
Marxism, history and the science
of perspective, was posted in six parts from September
14-20. These lectures were authored by World Socialist Web
Site Editorial Board Chairman David North.
Trotskys War and the International
In his book War and the International, first published
in serial form in the newspaper Golos in November 1914,
Leon Trotsky provided the most outstanding and far-sighted analysis
of the war that had erupted just three months earlier. Like all
the other Marxist leaders of that time, including, above all,
Lenin and Rosa Luxemburg, Trotsky was concerned with two interconnected
questions: 1) the origins of the war and its relationship to the
historical development of capitalism, and 2) the development of
a strategy for the international working class in the face of
the betrayal of the leaders of the Second Internationalabove
all, the leaders of German Social Democracywho had repudiated
the decisions of their own congresses and provided support for
their own ruling classes on the grounds of national
defence.
For Trotsky, the most pressing theoretical task, upon which
all strategic and tactical considerations depended, was to locate
the eruption of the war in the historical development of the world
capitalist economy.
Marx had explained that the era of social revolution arrives
when the material productive forces of society come into
conflict with the existing relations of production. At this
point, these relations are transformed from forms of development
of the productive forces into their fetters.
Herein lay the significance of the war. It announced the fact
that the entire nation-state system, which had been responsible
for the historically unprecedented economic growth of the previous
four decadesa veritable trampoline for the leap of the productive
forces, as Trotsky once called ithad become a fetter upon
their further rational development. Mankind had entered the epoch
of the social revolution.
The forces of production which capitalism has evolved
have outgrown the limits of nation and state, Trotsky wrote
in the very first sentence of his analysis. The national
state, the present political form, is too narrow for the exploitation
of these productive forces. The natural tendency of our economic
system, therefore, is to seek to break through the state boundaries.
The whole globe, the land and the sea, the surface as well as
the interior have become one economic workshop, the different
parts of which are inseparably connected with each other.
[1]
For Trotsky, this process, now described as globalisation,
had a far-reaching significance. If the ascent of mankind can
be reduced to a single measure, then it is surely the productivity
of labour, the growth of which provides the material basis for
the advancement of human civilisation. And increased productivity
of labour is inseparably bound up with the expansion of the productive
forces on a local, regional and global basis. The development
of the productive forces on a global scale had been carried forward
at a rapid pace in the last decades of the nineteenth century
under the aegis of the expanding capitalist powers.
But the process was increasingly contradictory, for, as Trotsky
explained, the capitalist states were led to struggle for
the subjection of the world-embracing economic system to the profit
interests of the bourgeoisie of each country. What the politics
of imperialism has demonstrated more than anything else is that
the old national state that was created in the wars of 1789-1815,
1848-1859, 1864-66, and 1870 has outlived itself, and is now an
intolerable hindrance to economic development. The present war
is at bottom a revolt of the forces of production against the
political form of nation and state. It means the collapse of the
national state as an independent economic unit. [2]
The task confronting mankind was to ensure the harmonious development
of the productive forces that had completely outgrown the nation-state
framework. However, the various bourgeois governments proposed
to solve this problem not through the intelligent, organised
cooperation of all of humanitys producers, but through the
exploitation of the worlds economic system by the capitalist
class of the victorious country, which country is by this war
to be transformed from a great power into a world power.
[3]
The war, Trotsky insisted, signified not only the downfall
of the national state, as an independent economic unit, but the
end of the progressive historical role of the capitalist economy.
The system of private property and the consequent struggle for
markets and profits threatened the very future of civilisation.
The future development of world economy on the capitalistic
basis means a ceaseless struggle for new and ever new fields of
capitalist exploitation, which must be obtained from one and the
same source, the earth. The economic rivalry under the banner
of militarism is accompanied by robbery and destruction which
violate the elementary principles of human economy. World production
revolts not only against the confusion produced by national and
state divisions, but also against the capitalist economic organisation,
which has now turned into barbarous disorganisation and chaos.
The war of 1914 is the most colossal breakdown in history of an
economic system destroyed by its own inherent contradictions.
[4]
The use of the term breakdown was not accidental.
It was a direct reference to the revisions of Bernstein, who had
sought to remove the revolutionary heart of the Marxist program
with his insistence that Marxs breakdown theory
had been refuted by events. Now history had delivered its verdict
on the revisionist controversy. The economic tendencies that Bernstein
maintained alleviated and overcame the contradictions of the capitalist
mode of production had actually raised them to new and terrible
heights.
This analysis of the objective historical significance of the
war had immediate implications for the development of a perspective
for the working class. There had to be a complete break with the
nationalist and gradualist politics of the Second International.
Against those who maintained that the first task of the working
class was national defence, after which the struggle for socialism
could resume, Trotsky explained that the working class could have
no interest in defending the outlived and antiquated national
fatherland, which has become the main obstacle to
economic development.
The central theme running through all of Trotskys analysis
was his insistence that the development of imperialism and the
eruption of war signified the birth of a new epoch in the development
of human civilisation.
Imperialism, he wrote, represents the predatory
expression of a progressive tendency in economic developmentto
construct human economy on a world scale, freed from the cramping
fetters of nation and state. The national idea in its naked form,
as counterposed to imperialism, is not only impotent but also
reactionary: it drags the economic life of mankind back to the
swaddling clothes of national limitedness. [5]
The development of imperialism and the eruption of war were
the contradictory expression of the fact that a new form of social
organisation was in the making, struggling to be born. Consequently,
there could be no return to the ante-bellum status quo, for that
epoch had passed into history.
The only way to meet the imperialistic perplexity
of capitalism was by opposing to it as a practical programme
of the day the socialist organisation of the world economy. War
is the method by which capitalism, at the climax of its development,
seeks to solve insoluble contradictions. To this method, the proletariat
must oppose its own method, the method of the social revolution.
[6]
It can be said, without fear of exaggeration, that from the
very outset of the war all the ideological and political resources
of the capitalist ruling classes had been concentrated on one
essential point: to refute the Marxist analysis that the eruption
of the First World War signified the historical bankruptcy of
the capitalist system and the necessity for its replacement by
international socialism in order to take forward the rational
development of mankinds productive forces.
In the heat of the conflict itself, bourgeois politicians on
all sides sought to place responsibility for the war on their
opponents: for the British politicians, the war was the outcome
of German aggression, which led to Germanys violation of
Belgian neutrality; for the German ruling classes, the issue was
Russian barbarism and the attempts of the other powers to deny
Germanys legitimate place in the world economic order; for
the French bourgeoisie, the war was fought against German oppression,
notwithstanding Frances alliance with Tsardom. At its conclusion,
the victors attempted to absolve themselves of responsibility
for the conflagration by writing into the Treaty of Versailles
the war guilt clause affixing responsibility on Germany.
For the US historian turned president, Woodrow Wilson, the
responsibility for the war lay in the political methods of the
nineteenth century, based on the so-called balance of power, secret
diplomacy and alliances. Wilsons analysis was motivated,
at least in part, by his understanding that if capitalism were
to withstand the shock of the war, a new perspective making an
appeal to democracy and freedom would need to be advanced. Significantly,
as he was preparing the famous Fourteen Points on which he was
to base American efforts to reorganise the post-war order and
make the world safe for democracy, Wilson made a study of Trotskys
booklet War and the International.
In the aftermath of the war, the British war-time prime minister,
Lloyd George, attempted to absolve all the bourgeois politicians
of blame for the conflagration. It arose almost inadvertently,
something of a muddle. No one at the head of affairs quite
meant war in July 1914, he explained. It was something into
which they glided, or rather staggered and stumbled.
He was to repeat this argument in his memoirs of the war. The
nations slithered over the brink into the boiling cauldron of
war without any trace of apprehension or dismay. Nobody
wanted war. [7]
More than nine decades on, the question of the origins of World
War I still has immediate relevance and significance. The reason
is not hard to find. It lies in the fact that, as the American
historian and foreign policy analyst George F. Kennan put it,
the war was the great seminal catastrophe of this
century. The routinised killing in the trenches, in which
wave after wave of young mensome of them little more than
boyswere repeatedly sent over the top, ushered
in a new epoch of barbarity and the death of millions.
What are the origins of this catastrophe? Are they rooted in
the capitalist mode of production itself? If so, does this not
establish the necessity for the abolition of capitalism? These
issues have lost none of their significance. The reason lies in
the fact that, in the words of the eminent French historian Elie
Halevy, the world crisis of 1914-18 was not only a warthe
war of 1914but a revolutionthe revolution of 1917.
The revolution was not simply a product of the war. It was conceived
by its leadership as opening the way forward for the development
of mankind out of the barbarism into which it had been plunged
by the capitalist ruling classes.
The origins of the war
The war of 1914 and the revolution of 1917these are the
two great events which opened and, to a great extent, continue
to define the present historical epoch. This is why we find that
even though Marxism has been declared dead and buried a thousand
times following the collapse of the Soviet Union, the defenders
of the present order feel compelled, in their analysis of the
origins of World War I, to declare it so for the thousandth and
first.
In his book on World War I, British historian Niall Ferguson
recalls the resolution of the Stuttgart Congress of the Second
International held in 1907. Wars between capitalist states,
the resolution declared, are as a rule the result of their
rivalry for world markets, as every state is not only concerned
in consolidating its own market but also in conquering new markets....
Further, these wars arise out of the never-ending armaments race
of militarism.... Wars are therefore inherent in the nature of
capitalism; they will only cease when the capitalist economy is
abolished. [8]
According to Ferguson, events themselves refuted the analysis
of Marxism. Inconveniently for Marxist theory, he
claims, there is scarcely any evidence that even the prospect
of economic benefits made businessmen want a major
European war, while in London, the overwhelming majority
of bankers were appalled at the prospect, not least because war
threatened to bankrupt most if not all of the major acceptance
houses engaged in financing international trade. [9]
After citing a number of businessmen and bankers who were opposed
to war, Ferguson produces what he considers to be his trump card
in refuting the analysis of the Marxist movement. The heavy
industrialist Hugo Stinnes, he declares, was so uninterested
in the idea of war that in 1914 he established the Union Mining
Company in Doncaster, with a view to bringing German technology
to the British coalfields. The Marxist interpretation of the
wars origins can be consigned to the rubbish bin of history,
along with the regimes which most heavily fostered it
(emphasis added). [10]
Ferguson adopts the crude method deployed by so many in the
past. According to his view, for the analysis of Marxism to be
valid we must be able to show that political leaders made their
decisions on the basis of a kind of profit-and-loss calculus of
economic interests, or that there was a secret cabal of businessmen
and financiers operating behind the scenes and pulling the strings
of government. Failure to find either, he maintains, cuts the
ground from under the feet of the Marxist argument.
In the first place, it must be said that Fergusons choice
of Hugo Stinnes as a representative of the pacific nature of German
big business is a rather unfortunate one. Just a few months after
the events recounted by Ferguson, when the war had broken out
and the initial position seemed to favour a rapid German victory,
Stinnes was at the centre of discussions in German government
and business circles over post-war plans for the carve-up of Franceabove
all, the detachment of its iron ore resources in Normandy in which
he had a considerable financial interest.
As one German historian has noted: From the turn of the
century onwards...in keeping with the trend towards vertical concentration
in mining and steel, heavy industry began to extend its reach
across the frontiers of the German Empire into Belgium and northern
France. German concerns steadily acquired a considerable number
of majority holdings in iron and coal mines in these regions.
Indeed, the scale of the commitment of German heavy industry in
Belgium and northern France looks almost like a prefiguration
of the plans for the formal territorial annexation of these regions
that later surfaced among German war aims during the First World
War. [11]
Ferguson believes he has proved his point against Marxism and
its analysis that war arises as an inevitable product of the capitalist
mode of productionthe struggle for markets, profits and
resourcesif he can demonstrate that business leaders and
bankers did not want war, and that it threatened their
interests.
But such a demonstration, even if were carried out, would prove
nothing. The point upon which Marxism insists is not that war
is simply subjectively decided upon by the capitalist class but
that, in the final analysis, it is the outcome of the objective
logic and contradictions of the capitalist profit system, which
work themselves out behind the backs of both politicians and businessmen.
At a certain point, these contradictions create the conditions
where political leaders feel they have no choice but to resort
to war if they are to defend the interests of their respective
states.
If one were to adopt Fergusons logic, it could be just
as well argued that fluctuations in the business cyclein
particular, recessionsare not a product of the contradictions
of the capitalist system either. After all, no business leader,
banker or capitalist politician wants recessionsthey
are bad both for business and politicsand they make strenuous
efforts to avoid them. But recessions and more serious slumps
nevertheless develop and are sometimes made even more severe than
they might otherwise have been precisely because of the efforts
of business leaders and politicians to prevent them.
Another recent book on World War I likewise takes issue with
Marxism on the origins of the war, although from a slightly different
perspective. The British historian Hew Strachan points to the
crucial role of the alliance system in not only failing to prevent
war but actually helping to promote it. When the crisis of July
1914 erupted, he writes, each power, conscious in a self-absorbed
way of its own potential weakness, felt it was on its mettle,
that its status as a great power would be forfeit if it failed
to act.
Strachan rightly insists that the July crisis cannot be taken
on its own. The positions adopted by the major powers were themselves
the outcome of previous crises and the decisions taken to resolve
them. Russia had to support Serbia because it had not done
so in 1909; Germany had to support Austria-Hungary because it
had backed down in 1913; France had to honour the commitments
to Russia Poincaré had repeated since 1912; Britains
apparent success in mediation encouraged a renewed effort in 1914.
However, the fluidity that had characterised international
relations in the eruption of the first major crisis over Morocco
in 1905 had given way to a certain rigidity in the international
system.
Such explanations, Strachan continues, are
unfashionably political and diplomatic. Economic and imperial
rivalries, the longer-range factors, help explain the growth of
international tension in the decade before 1914. Economic depression
encouraged the promotion of economic competition in nationalist
terms. But trade was international in its orientation; economic
interpenetration was a potent commercial argument against war.
Imperialism, as Bethmann Hollweg tried to show in his pursuit
of détente, could be made to cut across the alliance blocs.
Furthermore, even if economic factors are helpful in explaining
the long-range causes, it is hard to see how they fit into the
precise mechanics of the July crisis itself. Commercial circles
in July were appalled at the prospect of war and the anticipated
collapse of credit; Bethmann Hollweg, the Tsar, and Grey envisaged
economic dislocation and social collapse. In the short term,
the Leninist interpretation of the war as a final stage in the
decline of capitalism and imperialism, of war as a way of regulating
external economic imbalance and of resolving internal crises,
cannot be appropriate as an explanation of the causes of the First
World War. Indeed, what remains striking about those hot July
weeks is the role, not of collective forces nor of long-range
factors, but of the individual (Emphasis
added). [12]
Strachan attempts to refute the Marxist analysis of the war
by counterposing the longer-term economic processes, which he
admits are at work, to the individual decisions, political and
diplomatic, made by politicians in the short term. Of course,
with this method, one can easily demonstrate that the Marxist
analysis of any historical event is false because decisions are
always made in the short termthe day of the long-run process
never arrives, since history is always a series of events that
in and of themselves take place over a short term.
The problem here is not with Marxism, but with the setting
up as oppositesthe long term and the short term, the economic
and politicalprocesses that are, in fact, part of a unified
whole. The Marxist analysis of the historical process does not
deny the role of the individual and of political decision-making.
In fact, it insists that the economic processes that constitute
the driving forces of the historical process can be realised only
through conscious decisions. Nor does this mean that the responses
of politicians are simply the automatic or programmed response
to economic processes. There is by no means one and only one outcome
to a given set of circumstances. In fact, decisions taken at a
certain point can be critical for the course of future development.
But that course will itself, in the end, be determined by the
outcome of long-term economic processes and not the wishes and
intentions of the decision-makers.
Man, Marx explained, makes decisions, but not under conditions
of his own choosing. Rather, he does so in circumstances that
are handed down to him. Likewise capitalist politicians and diplomats.
As Strachan himself acknowledges, the decisions that were made
in the July crisis that led to war were undertaken in conditions
that had been shaped by previous decisions in earlier crises.
But it is not enough to stop there. It is necessary to examine
why these crises kept arising. What was it about the structure
of international politics that ensured that the great powers were
continually being placed in a situation where they were on the
brink of war? That requires an examination of the long-term economic
processes that were at work and their relationship to the historical
development of the world capitalist economy.
For Austria-Hungary, the issues bound up with the assassination
of Archduke Ferdinand involved nothing less than the maintenance
of the Empire itself. There was a clear recognition that the opportunity
had to be seized to deal with Serbia and check, if not completely
thwart, its ambitions to play the role played by Piedmont in the
unification of Italy and complete the national unification of
the southern Slavs. But a repeat of the Italian experience spelt
the end of the Empire, already confronting a rising tide of opposition
from the oppressed nationalities within its borders.
The rise of nationalist opposition, contrary to the conclusions
reached by the police mind, was not merely the work of agitators
and demagogues, but the outcome of the growth of capitalist relations
in eastern and southeastern Europe in the latter decades of the
nineteenth century.
The Balkan Peninsula, Trotsky wrote, had
entered on the path of capitalist development, and it was this
fact that raised the question of national self-determination of
the Balkan people as national states to the historical issue of
the day. [13]
But the road to national self-determination was blocked by
the existence of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Moreover, the maintenance
of the Austro-Hungarian Empire was not crucial just for the Hapsburgs,
it was of no less significance for the ruling classes of Germany.
Indeed, it has been shown that the sequence of demands and ultimatums
that ultimately led to the outbreak of war flowed from the insistence
of Berlin that Austria undertake the necessary measures to deal
with Serbia.
After first dealing with the issue of propaganda for a greater
Serbia and the activities of the Tsarist regime in the Balkans,
an official government publication issued at the time made clear
the long-term strategic interests of the German Empire behind
its insistence that Austria-Hungary take decisive action, even
at the risk of provoking a war.
Austria, the document insisted, was forced
to the realisation that it was not compatible with the dignity
or self-preservation of the Monarchy to look at the doings across
the border and remain passive. The Imperial Government informed
us of this view and asked for our opinion. We could sincerely
tell our ally that we agreed with his estimate and could assure
him that any action he might find necessary to put an end to the
movement in Serbia against the Austrian Monarchy would meet with
our approval. In doing so, we were well aware of the fact that
eventual war operations on the part of Austria-Hungary might bring
Russia into the field and might, according to the terms of our
alliance, involve us in a war.
But in view of the vital interests of Austria-Hungary
that were at stake, we could not advise our ally to show a leniency
incompatible with his dignity, or refuse him support in a moment
of such grave portent. We were less able to do this because our
own interests also were vitally threatened by the persistent agitation
in Serbia. If the Serbs, aided by Russia and France, had been
allowed to go on endangering the stability of our neighbouring
Monarchy, this would have led to the gradual breakdown of Austria
and to the subjection of all the Slavic races to the Russian rule.
[And] this in turn would have made the position of the Germanic
race in Central Europe quite precarious. An Austria morally weakened,
breaking down before the advance of Russian Pan-Slavism, would
not be an ally with whom we could reckon and on whom we could
depend, as we are obliged to depend, in the face of the increasingly
threatening attitude of our neighbours to the East and the West.
We therefore left Austria a free hand in its action against Serbia.
[14]
The reasons for Germanys insistence that Austria-Hungary
take firm action, even at the risk of war, are to be found in
the historical development of German capitalism over the preceding
four decades.
In the aftermath of the formation of the German Empire in 1871,
the new Reich chancellor, Bismarck, declared that Germany was
a satisfied power, seeking no further conquests or
colonies. Bismarcks policies were aimed at maintaining the
German position within Europe. But the foundation of the Empire
and the vast economic processes it unleashed meant that the balance
of power that had prevailed since the end of the Napoleonic Wars
was rapidly disrupted.
In the space of less than four decades, Germany passed from
a position of relative backwardness in western Europe to the worlds
second most powerful industrial economy. Already, by the end of
the century, it had outstripped France and challenged Great Britain
in significant areas. The very expansion of the German economy
posed new problems: access to raw materialsin particular,
iron ore for the expanding steel industryand the need to
secure new markets. Furthermore, the very industrialisation process
itself generated social and political tensions inside Germany
between the rising industrial concerns and the Junker landowning
classes, and between the rapidly growing working class and the
propertied classes as a whole.
Increasingly, by the end of the century, the Empire was proving
too narrow for the rapid expansion of German capitalism to which
its formation had given rise. A new orientation and policy were
called for. It came in the form of the adoption of Weltpolitik,
or world policy, announced by Kaiser Wilhelm II in 1897. The continental
policy pursued by Bismarck was increasingly outdated in the new
epoch of imperialism, as Britain and France engaged in the acquisition
of colonies, bringing new resources under their control, with
the implicit danger that German interests would be excluded.
In March 1900, German Chancellor von Bülow explained in
the course of a debate that what he understood by world
policy was merely the support and advancement of the
tasks that have grown out of our industry, our trade, the labour
power, intelligence and activity of our people. We had no intention
of conducting an aggressive policy of expansion. We only wanted
to protect the vital interests that we had acquired, in the natural
course of events, throughout the world. [15]
The notion that Germanys function as a world power was
the natural outgrowth of the formation of the German Empire was
widely held view in political, business and intellectual circles.
It was clearly set out by Max Weber in his inaugural lecture delivered
in Freiburg in 1895. We must appreciate, Weber declared,
that the unification of Germany was a youthful prank indulged
in by the nation in its old age and that because of its costliness
it would have been better left undone if it was meant to be the
end and not the starting point of a German policy of world power.
At the height of the war, in a lecture delivered on October
22, 1916, Weber again pointed to the connection between the formation
of the Empire and the confrontation now unfolding in Europe. If
we had not wished to risk this war, he emphasised, we
could have left the Reich unfounded and continued as a nation
of small states. [16]
The pursuit of Weltpolitik in the first decade of the century
gave rise to a series of international crises as the major powers
sought to advance their interests. For Germany, it was a question
of achieving an economic foothold and establishing itself on the
world arena, while for the older imperialist powers, Britain and
France, the central question increasingly became the necessity
to push back this new and dangerous rival.
But little more than a decade after it had been initiated,
Weltpolitik and its programme of massive naval construction were
experiencing something of a crisis. In the two conflicts with
France over Morocco, Germany had been pushed back, and on the
second occasion did not even receive support from its ally Austria-Hungary.
Internal problems were growing as well.
One of the motivations for Weltpolitik and the pursuit of a
naval programme was that it would provide the focus for the forging
of national unity, or at least a unity of all the property-owning
and middle classes against the emerging threat of the organised
working class. But the massive cost of the naval programme had
created problems in financing it. Meanwhile, the stability of
the regime was being threatened by the growth of the working class,
reflected in the expansion of electoral support for the Social
Democratic Party (SPD), which became the largest party in the
Reichstag in the elections of 1912.
The leader of the Pan-German League described the mood as follows:
The propertied and educated [classes] feel that they have
been disowned politically and silenced by the vote of the masses.
The entrepreneurs, who, owing to the development of recent decades,
have become the pillars of our national economy, see themselves
exposed to the arbitrary power of the working classes which are
spurred on by socialism. [17]
The historian V.R. Berghahn refers to a state of paralysis
that developed after 1912, which threatened the entire imperial
order.
Domestic paralysis was not a suitable means of preserving
the status quo.... [C]ould a foreign war perhaps act as a catalyst
for a renewed stabilisation of the Prusso-German monarchys
position both at home and abroad?... [T]hat idea was not alien
to influential political and military circles and the events of
1913 had done much to reinforce this type of thinking. Given their
feeling that time was running out, but also their awareness that
they still held an edge over their external and internal opponents,
the conservative elites became increasingly tempted to use their
superior powers before it became too late. [18]
Whether or not they were consciously seeking a war, by 1912
it had become clear to wide sections of the German ruling classes
that the attempt to find a place in the sun through
the exercise of naval power, forcing the older imperialist powers
to make concessions, had come to something of a dead end. Twice
Germany had attempted to assert what it considered to be its legitimate
economic rights in relation to Morocco, and twice it had suffered
a rebuff at the hands of Britain and France. A new way had to
be found.
This was the background to the proposal in 1912 by the industrialist
Walther Rathenau, the leading figure in the AEG electrical and
engineering combine, for the formation of an economic bloc, dominated
by Germany, in central Europe. Rathenau laid out the plan for
a Mitteleuropa to the Kaiser and Bethmann Hollweg.
Germanys volume of trade was the highest in the world,
and the expanding economy was becoming increasingly dependent
on imported raw materials. But Germany, unlike its rivals, the
United States and Britain, had yet to carve out an area of economic
domination as they had done, in the Americas and the British Empire.
It was necessary that Germany establish a central European economic
bloc that would form the basis for its advancement as an economic
power.
Southeastern Europe was assuming increasing economic importance.
By 1913, more than half of German foreign investment in Europe
was concentrated in the area between Vienna and Baghdad. This
amounted to almost 40 percent of Germanys entire world investment.
It was not that the programme for Mitteleuropa was to replace
Weltpolitik. Rather, it would be a means for realising its aims
under conditions in which the decade-long attempt to utilise naval
power had brought few results.
As Rathenau put it in December 1913, [T]he opportunity
for great German acquisitions has been missed. Woe to us that
we took nothing and received nothing. Germany, he contended,
as the strongest, richest, most populous and most industralised
country in Europe, had a rightful claim to further territory.
However, since outright appropriation was out of the question,
the only alternative was to strive for a central European
customs union that the Western states would sooner or later join,
like it or not. This would create an economic union that would
be equal or perhaps even superior to America. [19]
Looking back in 1917, Gustav Streseman, a leading member of
the National Liberal Party and a spokesman for powerful industrial
interests, summed up the concerns of growing sections of German
industry:
We saw others conquer worlds while we whose
whole economic and national situation [was] imperative, we who
were a growing people with a growing economy and a growing world
trade, watched the world being increasingly divided into spheres
of interest; we saw the world under the sceptre of others and
areas in which we were free to enjoy the competition which was
our economic breath of life became increasingly restricted.
[20] Stresemanns remarks summed up the feeling in German
political and business circles at the time of the wars outbreak.
Germany was being closed in, militarily, politically and economically.
At some point she would be forced to strike out.
The perspective of a Mitteleuropa dominated by Germany was
at the heart of the war aims policy spelt out by Chancellor Bethmann
Hollweg in early September 1914, when it appeared that a speedy
victory against France was in prospect.
The aim of the war, he declared, was to secure Germanys
position in the east and west for all time. To
this end, he continued, France must be so weakened
that she cannot rise again as a great power; Russia must be pushed
back from the German border as far as possible and her dominion
over the non-Russian vassal peoples broken.
France was to cede the ore field of Briey, necessary for the
supply of ore to our industry, and forced to pay a
war indemnity high enough to prevent [it] from spending
any considerable sums on armaments for the next 15-20 years.
Bethmann Hollweg continued: Furthermore, a commercial
treaty which makes France economically dependent on Germany, secures
the French market for our exports and makes it possible to exclude
British commerce from France. This treaty must secure us financial
and industrial freedom of movement in France in such fashion that
German enterprises can no longer receive different treatment from
French.
Belgium, if it were allowed to continue to exist as a state,
had to be reduced to a vassal state, with its coastline placed
at the disposal of the German military and reduced economically
to the status of a German province. Luxemburg would become a German
federal state and would receive portions of Belgian territory.
We must create a central European economic association
through common customs treaties, to include France, Belgium, Holland,
Denmark, Austria-Hungary, Poland, and perhaps Italy, Sweden and
Norway. This association will not have any common constitutional
supreme authority and all its members will be formally equal,
but in practice will be under German leadership and must stabilise
Germanys economic dominance over Mitteleuropa. [21]
The British historian James Joll acknowledges the importance
of the Mitteleuropa programme in the drawing up of German war
aims once the conflict began, but maintains that it cannot be
said that these aims were a motivating factor in launching the
war.
[S]ome doubts remain as to how far a programme produced
after the war had started is necessarily evidence of the immediate
reasons for the decision for war two months earlier. We shall
never know just what was in the minds of Bethmann and his colleagues
in July 1914 or how they saw the priority among the many considerations
which had to be taken into account. Whether they actually declared
war in order to achieve these economic and geopolitical goals
or for a number of more immediate reasons can never be decided.
What is certain is that once war had begun most of the belligerents
started to think of the gains they might win if victorious. The
British thought of removing German commercial and industrial competition
for many years to come as well as ending the threat from the German
navy. The French iron and steel magnates in the Comité
des Forges began, like their German counterparts, to think of
the territorial gains which would ensure for them control of their
raw materials. The Russians at once had visions of an advance
to Constantinople to win permanent control over the exit from
the Black Sea. There is perhaps a distinction to be made between
the war aims for which a country goes to war and the peace aims,
the terms on which she hopes to make peace once the war has begun
and victory seems in sight. [22]
The aim of these fine distinctions, not to say hair-splitting,
is to deny the Marxist thesis that the driving forces of the war
were rooted in economic and geopolitical conflicts of the major
capitalist powers.
So far as Germany is concerned, the war, as Fritz Fischer points
out, did not create any new goals but it did raise hopes
of realising the old ones that had been pursued in vain through
political and diplomatic means before the war. The war was felt
as a liberation from the limits of the prewar order, not only
in international politics but also in the economic and domestic
realm. [23]
According to Joll, however, since it is impossible to know
exactly what was in the mind of Bethmann Hollwegor the politicians
in Britain, Russia, Francein the July days, we cannot maintain
that the war was ultimately rooted in the economic forces that
were clearly revealed once it broke out.
In opposition to this method, consider the approach taken by
another historian, by no means a Marxist, who considered it necessary
to focus on the underlying forces at work. I shall disregard
the suggestions made retrospectively by a host of well-meaning
critics, wrote Elie Halevy, as to what such and such
a sovereign, a prime minister or a foreign secretary, should,
on this particular day, or at this or that particular hour, have
done or not done, said or not said, in order to prevent the war.
Pills to cure an earthquake! The object of my study is the earthquake
itself. [24]
The fact that politicians ascribe different motivations to
their actions at different times does not mean that we cannot
ascertain the causes of the war. Rather, it indicates that in
the course of the war itselfas in any great social crisisthe
accidental reasons and motivations are pushed more and more into
the background and the essential driving forceswhich may
have even remained concealed to those involved in making decisionscome
more clearly to the fore. Conscious decisions had to be made to
initiate war. But this does not mean at all that those who were
involved in the making of decisions were necessarily conscious
of all the economic and historical processes that had led them
to the position where they saw no alternative to the actions they
undertook.
The rise of German capitalism and the European
crisis
The concentration, so far, on the position of Germany should
not be taken to mean that Germany was any more responsible for
the war than the other great powers, and therefore should be rightfully
saddled with war guilt as prescribed by the Treaty
of Versailles. Rather, the emphasis on Germany flows from the
political economy of international relations at the turn of the
century. Above all, it was the dynamic development of German capitalism,
following the formation of the Empire in 1871, which upset the
balance of power in Europe.
Germany set out to change the status quo in line with the rise
of its industry and to advance its economic and geopolitical interests.
But in doing so it came into conflict with the other great powers
who were satisfied with the status quo, from which they derived
great benefit, and who were no less determined to retain it.
Germanys decision to seize upon the events in Sarajevo
in June 1914 in order to bolster its position in southeastern
Europe and force a showdown with Russia, Russias ally France,
and even with Britain if that proved necessary, was motivated
by concerns that it was necessary to act in the face of a worsening
international and domestic situation.
So far as France was concerned, the eruption of an all-European
war was the only road by which she could restore her position
on the European continent. French domination in the nineteenth
century had depended on the disunity of the German states. But
the Franco-Prussian war and the unification of Germany meant that
France depended on alliances with other powers against her more
powerful rival.
With the German annexation of Alsace-Lorraine following the
Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71, Marx had pointed to the inevitable
alignment of France with Russia, considered unthinkable at the
time because of the vast difference in the political systems of
the two countries. He who is not deafened by the momentary
clamour, he wrote, and is not interested in deafening
the German people, must see that the war of 1870 carried with
it, of necessity, a war between Germany and Russia, just as the
war of 1866 bore the war of 1870. I say of necessity, unless the
unlikely should happen, unless a revolution breaks out in Russia
before that time. If this does not occur, a war between Germany
and Russia may even now be regarded as un fait accompli.
It depends entirely upon the attitude of the German victor to
determine whether this war has been useful or dangerous. If they
take Alsace-Lorraine, then France with Russia will arm against
Germany. It is superfluous to point out the disastrous consequences.
[25]
Not that France was driven into war with Germany simply out
of a desire for revenge. In the four decades that had passed since
the annexation, other factors had come into play. The struggle
with Germany had gone beyond the confines of Europe as both powers
sought colonies and spheres of influence across the globe.
Looking back on the July crisis, the French president, Poincaré,
made clear the strategic issues which were bound up with the decision
to back Russia and refuse the German demand that France stay neutral.
On us rested two duties, difficult to reconcile but equally
sacred: to do our utmost to prevent a conflict, to do our utmost
in order that, should it burst forth in spite of us, we should
be prepared. But there were still two other duties, which also
at times ran the risk of being mutually contradictory: not to
break up an alliance on which French policy had been based for
a quarter of a century and the break-up of which could leave us
in isolation and at the mercy of our rivals; and nevertheless
to do what lay in our power to induce our ally to exercise moderation
in matters in which we were much less directly involved than herself.
[26]
Londons decision to enter the war on the side of France
and Russia against Germany was likewise motivated by long-term
strategic considerations, above all the belief that at some point
Britain would have to take a stand against Germany and that the
longer the confrontation was delayed the worse Britains
position would be.
Why could not a modus vivendi have been struck between Britain
and Germany? History and reason seemed to point in that direction.
After all, the two nations had never gone to war in the past,
shared many common interests and had developed closer economic
relationsthey were major markets for each others products.
Yet the rise of Germany increasingly threatened the global position
of Britain.
Almost 20 years before the July crisis, Foreign Secretary Edward
Grey had summarised his views on the rise of Germany as follows:
The fact is that the success of the British race has upset
the tempers of the rest of the world and now that they have ceased
quarrelling about the provinces in Europe and have turned their
eyes to distant places, they find us in the way everywhere. Hence
a general tendency to vote us a nuisance and combine against us.
I am afraid we shall have to fight sooner or later, unless some
European apple of discord falls amongst the Continental Powers...
[27]
British political leaders could recognise Germanys need
for global expansion, at least in the abstract. However, in the
words of a memorandum prepared on January 1, 1907 by Eyre Crowe,
the chief clerk at the Foreign Office, they would maintain the
most unbending determination to uphold British rights and interests
in every part of the globe. [28]
This memorandum was a detailed discussion of the strategic
issues which should guide British foreign policy in relation to
Germany and its rising claim to world power status. According
to Crowe, either Germany was aiming for general political and
maritime ascendancy, or she had no such clear-cut ambition but
was merely aiming to use her legitimate position to promote her
foreign commerce, spread the benefits of German culture and create
fresh German interests all over the world, wherever and whenever
a peaceful opportunity presented itself.
How would one be able to tell the difference? There was, in
fact, no necessity to undertake such a determination, Crowe explained,
because the consequences to Britain would be the same. The second
scheme may at any stage merge into the first, or conscious,
design scheme, and if ever the evolution scheme should
come to be realized, the position accruing to Germany would obviously
constitute as formidable a menace to the rest of the world as
would be presented by any deliberate conquest of a similar position
by malice aforethought.
The significance of the Crowe Memorandum is that it points
to the objective processes and tendencies at work in the Anglo-German
relationship. Whatever the policies pursued by its political elite
and whatever its intentions, Crowe maintained that the very economic
advance of Germany and the consequent spread of its interests
on a global scale represented a danger to the British Empire which
had to be countered.
While not denying Germanys legitimate expansion, he concluded,
care had to be taken to make clear that this benevolent
attitude will give way to determined opposition at the first sign
of British or allied interests being adversely affected.
One course which had to be abandoned, if the past were to be any
guide, was the road paved with graceful British concessionsconcessions
made without any conviction either of their justice or of their
being set off by equivalent counter-services. The vain hopes that
in this manner Germany can be conciliated and made
more friendly must be definitely given up.
On the continent of Europe, Britain demanded the maintenance
of the balance of power. But that balance
was being disrupted by the spread of capitalist development itself.
Germany was seeking to expand its interests, as was Russia, which
had experienced rapid growth in the latter years of the nineteenth
century and the first decade of the twentieth. Italy was a new
force on the Continent, while the old empires of Turkey and Austria-Hungary
were in an advanced state of decay.
Irrespective of the policies of the various governments, the
old European balance of power was being broken up. At the same
time, German expansion in whatever part of the globe it took place
inevitably came into conflict with the British Empire. The logic
of a policy which sought to maintain the old balance of power
coupled with unbending determination to uphold British
interests in every part of the globe was military conflict.
Indeed, as Churchill admitted in a moment of candour during
the 1913-14 debate over naval estimates: We have got all
we want in territory, and our claim to be left in unmolested enjoyment
of vast and splendid possessions, mainly acquired by violence,
largely maintained by force, often seems less reasonable to others
than to us. [29]
Britain had already intervened on the side of France in the
first Moroccan crisis in 1905. With the eruption of the second
crisis in 1911, the issues became even more clearly defined. In
the Foreign Office, Crowe defined the issue in terms of the balance
of power within Europe.
Germany, he noted in a Foreign Office minute, is
playing for the highest stakes. If her demands are acceded to
either in the Congo or in Morocco, orwhat she will, I believe,
try forin both regions, it will mean definitely the subjection
of France. The conditions demanded are not such as a country having
an independent foreign policy can possibly accept. The details
of the terms are not so very important now. It is a trial of strength,
if anything. Concession means not loss of interest or loss of
prestige. It means defeat with all its inevitable consequences.
[30]
These views of the Moroccan crisis were widely shared. According
to Sir Arthur Nicholson, the permanent undersecretary of state
in the Foreign Office, if Germany had her way, then our
policy since 1904 of preserving the equilibrium and consequently
the peace in Europe would collapse. Britains support
for France was motivated by the fear that if the Entente collapsed,
France might move to an accommodation with Germany, opening the
possibility that Britain would be isolated.
For Britain, the eruption of the July crisis was the culmination
of a conflict which had been developing over the preceding decade
and a half. Unless Germany gave up its demands for an alteration
of the European and international order, or Britain accepted great
changes in that order, conflict was inevitable. But neither side
could shift from its position because what was at stake were not
the designs, prestige or policies of politicians, but fundamental
economic interests of the states whose interests they represented.
A recent book surveying the decisions which led the great powers
to enter the war concludes that in Britain the interests of the
capitalist class had no bearing whatsoever. British industrialists
had very little influence on the policy-making elite, and the
great financiers of the City of London were terrified of war,
believing it would bring economic ruin. Whatever triggered
the British declaration of war in 1914, it was not the wishes
of the nations finance capitalists. [31]
Be that as it may, the decision to go to war was undertaken
in defence of the position of the British Empire, which, in turn,
was the foundation for the dominant position of British finance
capital. A decade before the outbreak of war, the Tory politician
Joseph Chamberlain had explained to the Citys bankers, in
no uncertain terms, the significance of the Empire for their activities.
You are the clearing-house of the world, he told
them. Why? Why is banking prosperous among you? Why is a
bill of exchange on London the standard currency of all commercial
transactions? Is it not because of the productive energy and capacity
which is behind it? Is it not because we have hitherto, at any
rate, been constantly creating new wealth? Is it not because of
the multiplicity, the variety, and the extent of our transactions?
If any one of these things suffers even a check, do you suppose
that you will not feel it? Do you imagine that you can in that
case sustain the position of which you are justly proud? Supposeif
such a supposition is permissibleyou no longer had the relations
which you have at present with our great Colonies and dependencies,
with India, with the neutral countries of the world, would you
then be its clearing-house? No, gentlemen. At least we can recognize
thisthat the prosperity of London is intimately connected
with the prosperity and greatness of the Empire of which it is
the centre. [32]
And the pivot upon which the Empire turned was India. The British
attachment to India was not based on some ill-defined search for
power for its own sake. Nor was it grounded on psychological factors.
India played a central and increasingly important role in providing
the underpinning for both British economic and military power.
As the viceroy to India Lord Curzon explained in 1901: As
long as we rule India we are the greatest power in the world.
If we lose it we shall drop straight away to a third-rate power.
[33]
From the very beginning of colonisation, India had played a
crucial role in the provision of finances for British capitalism.
In the latter decades of the nineteenth century, with the rise
of rival industrial powers (Germany and the United States) and
the increased competition for markets, this role became even more
important. Britain had for a long time run a deficit on the visible
balance of tradethe excess of imports over exports. But
this had been more than compensated for by the surplus on so-called
invisiblesitems such as freight and insurance. However,
towards the end of the nineteenth century, even this income was
becoming insufficient and the stability of British finance came
to depend increasingly on investment income and the revenue from
the so-called Home Charges levied on India.
The Indian market absorbed a large portion of British exports,
while at the same time India generated a trade surplus with the
rest of the worldit increased from £4 million to £50
million in the course of the latter half of the nineteenth centurywhich
was then drained off via the charges paid to Britain. In the words
of one study, before World War I the key to Britains
whole payments pattern lay in India, financing as she did more
than two fifths of Britains total deficits. [34]
But even as Britain became more dependent on India, the threats
to her domination of the colony and to the stability of the Empire
more generally were growing. The Boer War (1899-1902) proved to
be a shock to the British establishment. What was expected to
be a short conflictit will be over by Christmasdragged
on for more than two years, and at great cost in terms of both
men killed and finances.
It exposed the weakened military position of Britain, which
could certainly be capitalised on by her rivals on the European
continent. Definite political conclusions were drawn. No longer
could British foreign policy be guided by the preservation of
the splendid isolation which had characterised it
in the nineteenth century. Within five years of the Boer War a
series of arrangements had been entered into for the purpose of
strengthening Britains control of Empire.
First came the alliance with Japan in 1902, and then the settling
of differences with France over colonial issues via the entente
of 1904, a process which was repeated with the entente with Russia
in 1907. In the case of entente with France, British control over
Egypt, the key to control over the Middle East and the route to
India, was recognised, and with Russia, there was an explicit
recognition of British predominance in Afghanistan and an end
to the Russian threat to India from the north.
These measures were undertaken to strengthen Britains
grip on the Empire. But they had the effect of pulling Britain
into the conflicts on the European continent.
The war and the Russian Revolution
In his analysis of the war, James Joll, noting the statements
of the Second International that wars are inherent in the nature
of capitalism and will cease only when the capitalist economy
is replaced, acknowledged that, if true, this doctrine would
provide the most comprehensive explanation of the outbreak of
the First World War, though it would still leave open the question
of why this particular war started at that particular moment in
the mounting crisis of capitalism. [35]
The Marxist analysis of the war, however, does not seek to
establish exactly why the war broke out at the particular time
it did, as if the contradictions of the capitalist system operated
with a kind of iron determinism which excluded chance and accident.
On the contrary, Marxism insists that the laws of capitalism exert
their sway not directly, but rather through the accidental and
contingent.
In the case of World War I, it is clear that but for the accidental
assassination of the Austrian Archduke, the crisis would not have
developed as it did. Even after the assassination, it was by no
means predetermined that war would result. But there is no doubt
that even if war had been averted, the growing tensions, arising
from long-term historical processes ever more evident from the
beginning of the century, would have led to the eruption of another
crisis sooner rather than later.
While the Marxist analysis does not claim that the outbreak
of war in August 1914 was predetermined, it does maintain that
deep-going shifts in the world economy invested political crises
and international conflictsfor which there was ample combustible
materialwith an enormous tension.
The year 1913 forms a turning point in the long-term curve
of capitalist development. The preceding 15 years had seen the
most sustained economic growth in the history of capitalism to
that point. There were crises and recessions, but they were short-lived
and gave way to even faster growth once they had passed. But in
1913 there were clear signs of a major downturn in the international
economy.
The significance of a downturn in the global economy can be
seen from an examination of trade statistics. If the year 1913
is taken as the base, with an index of 100, world trade in the
years 1876-1880 was just 31.6, growing to 55.6 in the years 1896-1900.
This means that in the next 13 years it almost doubled. All the
major capitalist powers were becoming increasingly dependent on
and sensitive to movements on the world market, under conditions
where the competitive struggle among them was becoming more intense.
As Trotsky was to point out, the economic downturn of 1913
had a significant impact on the political relations between the
major powers because it was not just a recurring market fluctuation,
but signified a change in the economic situation of Europe.
The further development of the productive forces at approximately
the rate observed in Europe for almost all of the previous two
decades was extremely difficult. The growth of militarism occurred
not only because militarism and war create a market, but also
because militarism is an historical instrument of the bourgeoisie
in its struggle for independence, for its supremacy, and so on.
It is not accidental that the war started in the second year of
the crisis, revealing the great difficulties of the market. The
bourgeoisie felt the crisis through the agent of commerce, through
the economic agent and the diplomatic agent.... This created class
tension, made worse by politics, and this led to the war in August
1914. [36]
It was not that the war put a stop to the growth of the productive
forces. Rather, beginning in 1913, the growth of the productive
forces ran up against the barriers imposed by the capitalist economy.
This meant that the market was split up, competition was brought
to its intensest pitch and henceforward capitalist countries could
seek to eliminate each other from the market only by mechanical
means. [37]
The downturn in 1913 was not simply a market fluctuationa
recession taking place amidst a generally upward movement in the
long-term curve of capitalist development. It was a turning point
in the curve itself. Even if there had been no war in 1914, economic
stagnation would have set in, increasing the tensions between
the major capitalist powers and making the outbreak of war more
likely in the immediate future.
That the downturn in 1913 represented no ordinary recession
is indicated by the fact that after the war was over the European
economy never returned to the conditions of the decade prior to
the war. Indeed, in the general economic stagnation of the 1920s
(production in many areas only returned to 1913 levels by 1926-27)
the period prior to the war came to be looked on as a belle époque,
which could never return.
In order to bring out some of the fundamental issues of perspective
at the heart of the controversies surrounding World War I, I should
like to review a work by the British academic Neil Harding. In
his book Leninism, Harding finds that Lenins theories
were not the result of a politics of backwardness produced by
Russian conditionsas is so often asserted with regard to
What is to be Done?, for examplebut were authentic
Marxism and had indeed revitalised Marxism as a theory of
revolution. It is precisely because Leninism constitutes genuine
Marxism that, in Hardings view, it needs to be refuted.
Harding maintains that the eruption of the war and the betrayal
of the leaders of the Second International convinced Lenin that
he had a unique responsibility to restate the Marxist imperative
for revolution on a global scale, and to reformulate it in the
economic and political conditions of the modern world. [38]
Contrary to all those who try to portray Lenin as some kind
of opportunist who engaged in a grab for power in the chaos produced
by the war, basing himself on the popular demands of bread, peace
and land, Harding writes that Lenins response to the war
was to construct a Marxist account of the nature of modern
capitalism and how it had necessarily produced militarism and
war. This account, which is embodied in the book Imperialism,
the Highest Stage of Capitalism, defined the global
characteristics of what was held to be an entirely new epoch in
human historythe epoch of the final collapse of capitalism
and the advent of socialism and provided the theoretical
foundation of the Bolshevik-led revolution of October 1917. [39]
Harding correctly draws out that in the period prior to the
war the various schools of revisionism had argued that revolution
was both an implausible and unnecessary strategy and that, at
least in their hands, as a theory and practice of revolutionary
transformation, Marxism was virtually dead by 1914. He writes:
It was Lenin who, almost single-handedly, revived it, both
as a revolutionary theory and as a revolutionary practice; the
theory of imperialism was the very keystone of his whole enterprise.
[40]
He makes the important point that, so far as the events of
the Russian Revolution are concerned, Lenins perspective
was rejected at the outset. When Lenin advanced the perspective
of socialist revolution and the conquest of political power by
the working class, it was opposed not only by the leaders of all
the other political tendencies, but by his closest associates
in his own party. Pravda insisted that the April Theses
were Lenins personal view, which was unacceptable because
it proceeded from the assumption that the bourgeois democratic
revolution is finished and counts on the immediate conversion
of that revolution into the socialist revolution. Yet from
a minority of one in April 1917, Lenin became the leader of the
first workers state in November.
For Harding, the fatal flaw in Lenins perspective lies
in the fact that capitalism continued to survive, despite the
claims advanced in Imperialism. It proved to be neither
the highest nor the final stage of capitalist development.
The very persistence, adaptability and continued vitality
of capitalism could not be explained by the logic of Leninism.
The one feature of its system of thought that made the whole intelligible
was ... the contention that by 1914 capitalism was moribund: it
could no longer reproduce itself; its epoch was over. It was entirely
evident that the longer capitalism survived this prognosis, the
more empirical evidence undermined the Leninist metaphysic of
history. [41]
Lenin certainly characterised imperialism as the highest
stage of capitalism and the eve of the socialist
transformation, and he certainly did not envisage that capitalism
would survive into the twenty-first century. So was the perspective
which guided the revolution wrong? No small amount of confusion
has been created on this question, both by those who claim to
uphold Lenins perspective and those who denounce it.
For example, when we explained that globalisation represented
a further, qualitative development of the socialization of production,
we were assailed by the Spartacists and other assorted radicals
who denounced us for rejecting Lenin. If imperialism was the highest
stage of capitalist development, then how could we speak
about globalisation as being a qualitative development in the
socialization of production?
Then there are those who maintain that Lenins analysis
is refuted by the fact that capitalism has undergone vast changes
since the writing of Imperialism and that there has been
a significant development of the productive forces. How then is
it possible to speak of imperialism as the highest stage of capitalism?
And does this not mean that the Russian Revolution itself was
a premature attempt to overthrow the capitalist order and begin
the socialist transformation? That is, it was doomed to failure
from the very beginning because capitalism had not exhausted its
progressive potential.
In the first place, Lenin did not have the mechanical view
which is so often ascribed to him. Initially, he spoke of imperialism
as the latest phase of capitalist development. He
certainly characterised it as decaying and moribund
capitalism. But he pointed out that it would be wrong to
believe that this tendency to decay precludes the rapid growth
of capitalism. It does not. In the epoch of imperialism, certain
branches of industry, certain strata of the bourgeoisie and certain
countries betray, to a greater or lesser degree, now one and now
another of these tendencies. On the whole, capitalism is growing
far more rapidly than before; but this growth is not only becoming
more and more uneven in general, its unevenness also manifests
itself, in particular, in the decay of the countries which are
richest in capital (Britain). [42]
Lenin characterised the activities of British capital in living
off its earnings from capital exportsthe process of clipping
couponsas an expression of parasitism and decay in
the country richest in capital. One wonders what he might have
had to say about the activities of firms such as Enron and WorldCom
and the looting associated with the share market and dot.com bubble.
Lenins Imperialism vs. Kautskys
ultra-imperialism
Lenins analysis, both in Imperialism and his writings
throughout the war leading up to the October Revolution, can be
understood only by considering the positions against which it
was advanced. Imperialism is a direct refutation of Karl
Kautsky, who provided the theoretical rationale for the betrayals
of the leaders of the Second International, who supported their
own bourgeoisie in the imperialist war.
When Lenin wrote of imperialism as the highest
stage of capitalism, it was in answer to Kautskys assertion
that militarism and war were not objective tendencies of capitalist
development, but rather a passing phase, and that the ferocious
conflict which had erupted among the capitalist great powersthe
unleashing of barbarismcould be replaced by a peaceful division
of the earths resources, much in the same way as monopolies,
arising out of free competition, form cartels to divide up the
market.
The analysis of World War I undertaken by Lenin, Trotsky, Luxemburg
and other Marxists not only showed that the war had arisen from
the mounting contradictions of capitalism. It went further and
explained that the eruption of the war itself was a violent expression
of the fact that the progressive epoch of capitalist development
was over. Henceforth, as Rosa Luxemburg put it, mankind faced
the historical alternatives of socialism or barbarism. Therefore,
socialism became an objective historical necessity if human progress
were to continue. The struggle for political power by the working
class was not a perspective for the indefinite future, but had
been placed on the agenda.
Kautsky sought to base his opposition to this perspective on
the grounds of Marxism. The capitalist system, he maintained,
had not exhausted itself, the war did not represent its death
agony and the working class, having been unable to halt the war,
was in no position to launch a struggle for the overthrow of the
bourgeoisie.
Almost 30 years before, however, Frederick Engels had presented
an entirely different perspective, grounded in the understanding
that a whole epoch had come to a close and that future wars would
be very different from those of the nineteenth century.
No war is any longer possible for Prussia-Germany,
he wrote, except a world war and a world war indeed of an
extent and violence hitherto undreamt of. Eight to ten millions
of soldiers will massacre one another and in so doing devour the
whole of Europe until they have stripped it barer than any swarm
of locusts has ever done. The devastations of the Thirty Years
War compressed into three or four years, and spread over the whole
Continent; famine, pestilence, general demoralisation both of
the armies and the mass of the people produced by acute distress;
hopeless confusion of our artificial machinery in trade, industry
and credit, ending in general bankruptcy; collapse of the old
states and their traditional state wisdom to such an extent that
crowns will roll by the dozens on the pavement and there will
be no body to pick them up; absolute impossibility of foreseeing
how it will all end and who will come out of the struggle as victor;
only one result is absolutely certain: general exhaustion and
the establishment of the conditions for the ultimate victory of
the working class. [43]
Defending the SPD decision to vote for war credits, Kautsky
based himself on the initial support given by sections of the
masses for the war. It was not possible to oppose the war, let
alone strive for the overthrow of the bourgeoisie, under those
conditions. Above all, he argued, there must be no struggle in
the party against the most right-wing supporters of the government
and the war. In war, he wrote, discipline is
the first requisite not only in the army but also in the party.
The most urgent task of the day was to preserve the organizations
and organs of the party and trade unions intact. [44]
The alternative of imperialism or socialism was a gross oversimplification
of a complex situation. It was necessary to maintain the party
and its organizations and prepare for a return to peaceful conditions
when the party would resume its pre-war course.
In his struggle against Kautsky, Lenin made clear that it was
necessary to deal with the objectivism and outright fatalism that
had come to dominate the Second International. In Kautskys
hands, Marxism had been transformed from a guide to revolutionary
action into a sophisticated rationalisation for the accomplished
fact.
It was not possible, Lenin insisted, to make an estimate of
the objective situation without including in that assessment the
role of the party itself. It was true that the masses had not
opposed the war, but this fact could not be considered
apart from the role of the party, and above all its leadership.
In pledging its loyalty to the Hohenzollern regime, the SPD itself
had contributed to this situation. Not that Lenin maintained that
the party had the task of launching an immediate struggle for
the seizure of powerthis was a caricature conjured up by
the opportunists. It was, however, necessary to maintain intransigent
opposition to the government to prepare the conditions when the
masses themselves would turn against it.
According to the opportunists, the government was at its strongest
when launching the war and hence the party could not openly oppose
it, as such action would lead to the destruction of the party.
On the contrary, Lenin maintained, in launching a war the ruling
regime was more than ever in need of the support of the very parties
that had claimed to oppose it in the past.
Lenins assessment has been verified by the historical
record. The attitude of the SPD towards the launching of a war
had been under discussion for some time in German ruling class
and political circles. There were fears that if a war went badly
the downfall of the regime itself would rapidly follow military
defeat.
In the July crisis, the position of the SPD figured prominently
in the calculations of Bethmann-Hollweg. His tactics were determined
by the assessment that the SPD leaders would support the war if
it could be presented so as to appear that rather than initiating
an offensive, which was actually the case, Germany was responding
to an attack from Russia. A war against tsarism could then be
given a progressive colouration.
At the heart of the conflict between Lenin and Kautsky was
their opposed assessments of the future of capitalism as a social
system. For Lenin, the necessity for international socialist revolutionthe
Russian Revolution of 1917 was conceived of as the first step
in this processflowed from the assessment that the eruption
of imperialist war represented the opening of an historic crisis
of the capitalist system, which, despite truces and even peace
settlements, could not be overcome.
Moreover, the very economic processes which lay at the heart
of the imperialist epochthe transformation from competitive
capitalism of the nineteenth century to the monopoly capitalism
of the twentiethhad created the objective foundations for
the development of an international socialist economy.
Kautskys perspective was set out in an article published
as the war was breaking out, but prepared in the months leading
up to it, in which he raised the prospect that the present imperialist
phase may give rise to a new epoch of ultra-imperialism.
Imperialism, he wrote, was a product of highly industrialised
capitalism, which consisted of the impulse of every industrial
capitalist nation to conquer and annex an ever greater agrarian
zone. Moreover, the incorporation of the conquered zone as a colony
or a sphere of influence of the given industrial nation meant
that imperialism came to replace free trade as a means of capitalist
expansion. The imperialist conquest of agrarian regions and the
efforts to reduce their populations to slavery would continue,
Kautsky maintained, and would cease only when the populations
of the colonies or the proletariat of the industrialised capitalist
countries had grown strong enough to throw off the capitalist
yoke. This side of imperialism could be conquered only by socialism.
But imperialism has another side. The tendency towards
the occupation and subjugation of the agrarian zones has produced
sharp contradictions between the industrialized capitalist states,
with the result that the arms race which was previously only a
race for land armaments has now also become [a] naval arms race,
and that the long prophesised World War has now become a fact.
Is this side of imperialism, too, a necessity for the continued
existence of capitalism, one that can only be overcome with capitalism
itself?
There is no economic necessity for continuing the arms
race after the World War, even from the standpoint of the capitalist
class itself, with the exception of at most certain armaments
interests. On the contrary, the capitalist economy is seriously
threatened precisely by the contradictions between its states.
Every far-sighted capitalist today must call on his fellows: capitalists
of all countries, unite!
Just as Marxs analysis of competition pointed to the
development of monopoly and the formation of cartels, Kautsky
continued, the result of the war could be a federation of the
strongest imperialist powers to renounce the arms race.
Hence from the purely economic standpoint it is not impossible
that capitalism may still live through another phase, the translation
of cartellization into foreign policy, a phase of ultra-imperialism,
which of course we must struggle against as energetically as we
do against imperialism, but whose perils lie in another direction,
not in that of the arms race and the threat to world peace.
[45]
According to Kautskys analysis, there was no objective
historical necessity to overturn capitalism through the socialist
revolution in order to end the barbarism unleashed by imperialist
war. On the contrary, save for a few isolated sections connected
with the arms industry, the imperialists themselves had an interest
in coming together to secure a state of world peace within which
to continue their economic plunder.
In his reply to Kautsky, Lenin made clear that whereas the
tendency of economic development was towards the development of
a single world trust, this development proceeded through such
contradictions and conflictseconomic, political and nationalthat
capitalism would be overthrown long before any world trust materialised
and the ultra-imperialist amalgamation of finance
capital could take place.
Furthermore, ultra-imperialist alliances, whether of one imperialist
coalition against another or a general alliance embracing
all the imperialist powers are inevitably nothing
more than a truce in periods between wars. Peaceful
alliances prepare the ground for wars, and in their turn grow
out of wars; the one conditions the other, producing alternating
forms of peaceful and non-peaceful struggle on one and the same
basis of imperialist connections and relations within world economics
and world politics. [46]
There were profound objective reasons, rooted in the very nature
of the capitalist mode of production itself, as to why it was
impossible to maintain an ultra-imperialist alliance of the kind
envisaged by Kautsky. Capitalism by its very nature developed
unevenly. After all, 50 years previously Germany was a miserable,
insignificant country if her capitalist strength were compared
with Britain at that time. Now she was challenging for the hegemony
of Europe.
It was inconceivable that in 10 or 20 years time the relative
strength of the imperialist powers would not have altered again.
Accordingly, any alliance formed at one point in time on the basis
of the relative strength of the participants would break down
at some point in the future, giving rise to the formation of new
alliances and new conflicts, because of the uneven development
of the capitalist economy itself.
There was another key aspect of Lenins analysis, no less
important than his refutation of Kautskys perspective of
ultra-imperialism. The objective historical necessity for socialist
revolution arose not simply from the fact that imperialism and
monopoly capitalism inevitably gave rise to world wars. It was
rooted in the very transformations in economic relations that
were being induced by monopoly capitalism.
Socialism, Lenin wrote, is now gazing at
us through all the windows of modern capitalism. [47] It
was necessary, he insisted, to examine the significance of the
changes in the relations of production that were being effected
by the development of monopoly capitalism. There was not just
mere interlocking of ownership. A vast global socialisation of
production was taking place at the base of monopoly capitalism.
When a big enterprise assumes gigantic proportions, and,
on the basis of an exact computation of mass data, organises according
to plan the supply of primary raw materials to the extent of two-thirds,
or three-fourths of that which is necessary for tens of millions
of people; when the raw materials are transported in a systematic
and organised manner to the most suitable places of production,
sometimes situated hundreds or thousands of miles from each other;
when a single centre directs all the consecutive stages of processing
the material right up to the manufacture of numerous varieties
of finished articles; when these products are distributed according
to a single plan among tens and hundreds of millions of consumers
... then it becomes evident that we have socialisation of production
and not mere interlocking; that private economic and
private property relations constitute a shell which no longer
fits its contents, a shell which must inevitably decay if its
removal is artificially delayed, a shell which may remain in a
state of decay for a fairly long period ... but which will inevitably
be removed. [48]
Lenin did not claim that it was impossible for capitalism to
continue. Rather, the economic and property relations would continue
to decay if their removal were artificially delayed, that is,
translating the guarded language of the pamphlet used to escape
the censor, if the present leaderships of the working class were
not replaced.
For Lenin, everything turned on this question. That is why
he, above all others in the international Marxist movement, insisted
on the necessity for a complete break from the Second International,
not just the open right-wingers, but above all from the centrists
such as Kautsky who played the most dangerous role. The establishment
of the Third International was an historic necessity.
For Harding, however, there is a fundamental contradiction
between an analysis which reveals how objective processes within
capitalism are making socialist revolution both possible and necessary,
and the insistence, at the same time, of the vital, indispensable,
role of the subjective factor in the historical process.
The presence of Lenin, he points out, was decisive for the
revolution in Russia. No amount of theoretical discussion about
the level of the productive forces, the level of socialist consciousness
or the international situation could settle the issue of whether
Russia would undertake a socialist revolution.
It was, in fact, settled by the accidental
presence of one man with an unshakeable belief that one civilisation
was foundering and that imperatively another had to be born. This
is to say no more than that Marxism never was a science
of revolution and the search for definitive guidance with
regard to the objective limits of action, particularly
and especially in periods of revolutionary trauma, was doomed
to failure. [49]
There is no gainsaying the decisive role of Lenin in the Russian
Revolution. But he was such a powerful factor in the situation
because his perspective was grounded on a far-reaching analysis
of objective processes and tendencies of development.
Revolution has often been likened to the process of birth and
the role of the revolutionary party to that of the midwife. The
birth of the baby is the outcome of objective processes. But it
is quite possible that, without the timely intervention of the
midwife, guided by knowledge of the birth process itself, tragedy
will result.
Analogies, of course, have their limits. But an examination
of history will show that the decisive intervention of the midwife
in the Russian Revolution brought the birth process to a successful
conclusion, and likewise, the lack of such an intervention in
the revolutionary upheavals in Germany and elsewhere in the period
immediately after the war had consequences which proved to be
disastrous. If Lenin was decisive in the Russian Revolution, then
it must be said that the murder of Rosa Luxemburg played a significant
role in the failure of the German revolution in the early 1920s.
We are left with the question: what would it mean to say that
Lenins perspective had been refuted? Not that capitalism
has continued to grow and that there have been developments in
the productive forces.
The critical issue is this: has the growth of capitalism since
World War I and the Russian Revolution overcome the contradictions
upon which Lenin, Trotsky and the Bolsheviks based their perspective
of world socialist revolution?
The significance of the Lenin-Kautsky conflict extends far
beyond the immediate circumstances of World War I. It involved
the clash of two diametrically opposed historical perspectives.
Kautskys theory of ultra-imperialism did not simply mean
the rejection of socialist revolution in the period surrounding
the war, but for an indefinite period into the future. This is
because at the heart of his world outlook was the conception that,
in the final analysis, the imperialist bourgeoisie, recognising
the dangers to its own rule resulting from the conflicts arising
from the contradiction between the development of an ever more
closely integrated global system of production and the political
framework based on the nation-state system, would be able to take
action to mitigate them.
No Marxist would ever deny the possibility that the bourgeoisie
will take action to try to save itself. Indeed, the political
economy of the twentieth century, at one level, could be written
as the history of successive efforts by the bourgeoisie to take
action to counteract the effect of the contradictions and conflicts
generated by the capitalist mode of production and prevent the
eruption of social revolution.
But analysis of the accumulation processthe heart of
the capitalist mode of productionreveals that there are
objectively given limits to the ability of the ruling classes
to suppress these conflicts. While capital as a whole
is a real entity, and its interests can be represented by far-sighted
capitalist politicians at certain points, capital exists in the
form of many capitals that are in continuous conflict with each
other for a portion of the surplus value that is extracted from
the working class. To the extent that the mass of surplus value
available to capital as a whole is increasing, the conflicts between
its different sections can be controlled and regulated. But once
the situation turns, as it inevitably does, it becomes increasingly
difficult for such regulation to take place and a period of inter-imperialist
conflict, leading ultimately to armed conflict, ensues.
History confirms what theoretical analysis reveals. At the
end of the 1980s, when the post-war framework of international
relations was beginning to break down, one writer perceptively
pointed to the relevance of the Lenin-Kautsky conflict.
As American power and leadership decline due to the operation
of the law of uneven development, he wrote,
will confrontation mount and the system collapse as one
nation after another pursues beggar-my-neighbour policies,
as Lenin would expect? Or, will Kautsky prove to be correct that
capitalists are too rational to permit this type of internecine
economic slaughter to take place? [50]
That question has been answered in the period of nearly two
decades since those lines were written. The postwar Atlantic alliance
has all but broken down as a result of the increasingly aggressive
role of US imperialism. Whereas the US sought to unite Europe
in the aftermath of the war, it now seeks to set the European
powers against each other for its own interests. The European
powers, having established the Common Market and the European
Union in order to prevent the reemergence of the conflicts that
brought two world wars in the space of three decades, are more
deeply divided than at any time since the Second World War.
A global conflict has erupted over markets and raw materials,
especially oil. And in the East, the rise of China is being greeted
with the question as to whether the emergence of this new industrial
power will play the same destabilising role in the twenty-first
century as the emergence of Germany did in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries.
The mechanisms that were set in place in the postwar period
for regulating the conflicts between the capitalist great powers
have either broken down or are in an advanced state of decay.
At the same time, social polarisation is deepening on an international
scale. The contradictions of the capitalist mode of production
which gave rise to World War I have not been overcome, but are
gathering with renewed force.
Notes:
[1] War and the International (Colombo: Young Socialist
Publications, 1971), p vii.
[2] Ibid, p. vii.
[3] Ibid, p. vii.
[4] Ibid, p. viii.
[5] Imperialism and the National Idea, in Lenins
Struggle for a Revolutionary International (New York: Pathfinder
Press), pp. 369-370.
[6] War and the International, pp. vii-x.
[7] Cited in Hamilton and Herwig, Decisions for War, 1914-17
(Cambridge, 2004), p. 19.
[8] The Pity of War (Allen Lane, 1998), p. 31.
[9] Ibid, p. 32.
[10] Ibid, p. 33.
[11] Wolfgang J. Mommsen, Imperial Germany 1867-1918: Politics
and Society in an Authoritarian State (London: Arnold, 1995),
p. 89.
[12] The First World War (Oxford University Press, 2001),
p. 101.
[13] Leon Trotsky, War and the International (Colombo:
Young Socialist Publications, 1971), p 6.
[14] Ibid, p. 13.
[15] Cited in Eric Hobsbawm, The Age of Empire, p. 302.
[16] Fritz Fischer, War of Illusions: German Policies
from 1911 to 1914 (London: Chatto & Windus, 1975), p.
32.
[17] Cited in V. R. Berghahn, Germany and the Approach of War
in 1914 (Macmillan, 1973), p. 146.
[18] Ibid, p. 164.
[19] Cited in Fritz Fischer, World Power or Decline (London:
Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1965), p 14.
[20] Cited in Fritz Fischer, War of Illusions: German Policies
from 1911 to 1914 (London: Chatto & Windus, 1975), p.
449.
[21] Cited in Fritz Fischer, Germanys Aims in the First
World War (New York: W. W. Norton, 1967), pp. 103-104.
[22] The Origins of the First World War (Longmans, 1992),
p. 169.
[23] Fritz Fischer, World Power or Decline, p. 18.
[24] The World Crisis of 1914-18 in Era of Tyrannies
(New York: Anchor Books, 1965), p. 210.
[25] Cited in Rosa Luxemburg Speaks (New York: Pathfinder
Press, 1970), pp. 279-280.
[26] David Stevenson, Armaments and the Coming of War (Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1996), p. 391.
[27] Cited in Zara S. Steiner, Britain and the Origins of the
First World War (London: Macmillan, 1977), p. 44.
[28] Ibid, p. 40.
[29] Cited in Kennedy, The Rise of the Anglo-German Antagonism
(London: The Ashfield Press, 1987), p. 467.
[30] Cited in Berghahn, op cit, pp. 95-96.
[31] Hamilton and Herwig, Decisions for War, 1914-1917
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), p.133.
[32] Cain and Hopkins, British Imperialism (London: 2002),
pp. 195-196.
[33] John H. Morrow Jr., The Great War: An Imperial History
(London: Routledge, 2004), p. 9.
[34] See S. B. Saul, Studies in British Overseas Trade,
cited in Hobsbawm, Industry and Empire (1968), p. 123.
[35] Joll, op cit, p. 146.
[36] Leon Trotsky, On the Question of Tendencies in the
Development of the World Economy, in The Ideas of Leon
Trotsky, H. Tickten and M. Cox ed. (London: Porcupine Press,
1995), pp. 355-70.
[37] Trotsky, The First Five Years of the Communist International,
vol. II, p. 306.
[38] Neil Harding, Leninism, p. 11.
[39] Ibid, p. 113.
[40] Ibid, p. 114.
[41] Ibid, pp. 277-78.
[42] Lenin, Collected Works, Volume 22, p. 300.
[43] Cited in Lenin, Prophetic Words, in Collected
Works Volume 27, p. 494.
[44] Cited in Massimo Salvadori, Karl Kautsky and the Socialist
Revolution 1880-1938 (London: Verso, 1990), p. 184.
[45] Kautsky, Ultra-imperialism in New Left Review,
no. 59, January-February, 1970.
[46] Lenin, Collected Works, Volume 22, p. 295.
[47] Lenin, Collected Works, Volume 25, p. 363.
[48] Lenin, Imperialism, op cit, p. 303.
[49] Neil Harding, Leninism, p. 110.
[50] Robert Gilpin, The Political Economy of International
Relations (Princeton University Press, 1987), p. 64.
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