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Katrina, the Iraq war and the struggle for socialism
Statement of the Socialist Equality Party
23 September 2005
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The following statement is being distributed by supporters
of the Socialist Equality Party and the World Socialist Web
Site at the antiwar demonstrations being held Saturday, September
24, in Washington DC, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle.
At the main demonstration in Washington, the SEP/WSWS will be
setting up literature tables in the southwest segment of the Ellipse
and at the Washington Monument. The statement is available as
a PDF, which we encourage WSWS readers
to download and distribute.
As thousands march this weekend against the Iraq war, the dramatic
and tragic events in New Orleans have starkly posed the need for
a new, socialist political strategy to guide the struggle against
militarism and social reaction.
The massive loss of life and human suffering on the US Gulf
Coast are not so much the product of a sudden natural disaster
as of a protracted societal disintegration, of which the Iraq
war is itself a manifestation.
The abandonment of tens of thousands of poor and working class
citizens in the flooded streets of New Orleans without food, water
or medicine has laid bare the political, social and moral bankruptcy
of American capitalism.
The glorification of the capitalist market, the ruthless subordination
of all social interests to the private accumulation of wealth,
the rejection of even the most elementary forms of social planning
in favor of the unfettered drive for corporate profitall
of this set the stage for the Katrina catastrophe.
So too has the effective ban placed by the ruling establishment
and the media on any genuine debate over political alternatives
to this system. The relentless vilification of socialism has itself
contributed to the horrible price paid in New Orleans.
Nearly two decades ago, the Chernobyl nuclear disaster was
proclaimed by the media in the US and Western Europe as decisive
proof of the failure of the Soviet system, heralding its downfalland
no doubt it did express the incompetence and indifference of the
ruling bureaucracy. Can it not be said with even greater justification
that Hurricane Katrina has exposed the failure of American capitalism?
The hurricane brought to the surface some of the most essential
features of this systems profound crisis: the social deprivation
faced by tens of millions in America and the vast gulf that divides
the overwhelming majority of the peoplethose who work for
a wagefrom a fabulously wealthy oligarchy that controls
both major political parties.
It exposed as well the objective decline of US capitalism,
expressed in the disintegration of its infrastructure as well
as the incompetence and disarray at all levels of government.
The entire world looked on in horror and amazement as the response
of the indispensable superpower resembled that of
the most impoverished Third World regime.
The criminal negligence and indifference shown by the Bush
administration toward the people of New Orleans mirrors the criminality
and sadism of the US war in Iraq, which has now claimed the lives
of over a hundred thousand Iraqis and more than 1,900 US troops.
Just as the devastation on the Gulf Coast was not merely the
product of a natural disaster, the war itself is not some aberrationa
conspiracy by a handful of right-wing ideologues. Rather, it is
the inevitable product of an American capitalist society in deep
crisis.
The war in Iraq was launched in the interests of Americas
ruling elite. Its principal strategic aim from its origins has
been to assert the dominance of US capitalism over the Persian
Gulf region and its huge oil reserves, and to deny control of
those reserves to Washingtons economic rivals in Europe
and Asia.
Armed aggression has been employed in Iraq as part of a broader
US global strategy of utilizing American imperialisms military
supremacy as a lever for offsetting its protracted decline in
the world economya decline recorded in the unrelenting growth
of US debt and trade deficits.
The use of force to lay hold of vital resources and markets
has gone hand in hand with the destruction within the US of social
programs and attacks on real wages to fund massive tax cuts for
the rich. It is a policy of plunder at home and plunder abroad.
The policy of military aggression has been accompanied by the
militarization of society. For two-and-a-half years, Washington
has falsely claimed the war in Iraq is being waged to keep
Americans safe from a supposed terrorist threat. Yet, as
the abject failure of the governments response to the disaster
in New Orleans demonstrated, the safety and well-being of Americas
working people are its least concerns.
The supposed preoccupation with homeland security
and the pursuit of a global war on terrorism have
merely served as pretexts for wars of aggression and attacks on
democratic rights. When real disaster struck, Washingtons
response was martial law.
A new socialist movement is required
The outrage over the Katrina debacle combined with deepening
opposition to the war in Iraq are creating the conditions for
a powerful movement of political opposition by working people
in the US. If this movement is to succeed in bringing an end to
the war and eradicating the conditions of social inequality and
poverty exposed by Katrina, it must have an entirely new point
of departurea struggle for the socialist reorganization
of society.
Such a movement must be based on the struggle of working people
to conquer political power, not the politics of protest and pressure.
There is no doubt that the many thousands of students, youth
and working people who march in the streets of Washington this
weekend do so out of genuine anger and a burning desire to put
an end to a criminal war launched in their name.
But calls by the protest organizers to bring our demands
directly to the policymakers and send a clear message
to the White House and Congress serve a definite political
purpose. It is to subordinate mass opposition to the war to the
Democratic Party and divert the outrage over New Orleans back
into the confines of a two-party system that created the conditions
for the catastrophe in the first place.
It is high time to learn the lessons of more than two-and-a-half
years of protest against the war in Iraq. In the month preceding
the 2003 invasion, millions of people marched on every continent
to oppose it. This massive, internationally coordinated outpouring
revealed the basis for a new political movement, independent of
the existing political parties and institutions. Yet protest failed
to stop the war, and in the absence of an independent political
perspective this mass movement was dissipated.
In the US, opposition to the war was channeled into the Democratic
Party based on the illusion that this party could serve as a vehicle
to challenge Bushs policy in the 2004 presidential election.
However, the partys candidate, John Kerry, ran on a platform
that claimed the Democrats could wage the war more effectively.
Since its 2004 defeat, the Democratic Party has shifted even
further to the right. Those considered likely contenders for the
partys presidential nomination in 2008Hillary Clinton,
Joseph Biden, John Edwards and othershave accused the White
House of lacking a strategy to win, or advocated the
expansion of the war with the deployment of even more US troops
against the Iraqi people.
There is not a single prominent Democrat who is today calling
for the immediate withdrawal of US troops from Iraqa demand
polls now show is supported by the majority of the American people.
The social gulf that divides the American oligarchy from the
masses of people living from paycheck to paycheck finds its political
reflection in a two-party system that disenfranchises the great
majority of society. These social and political divides are unbridgeable.
The system can neither be pressured nor reformed.
The struggle against war, social inequality and the assault
on democratic rights can advance only on the path of an irrevocable
break with the Democratic Party and the building of a fundamentally
new political movement.
This means building a mass political party of working people
based on a socialist program for reordering society on the basis
of equality and social needs, rather than the piling up of corporate
profits and personal fortunes.
This party must advance a program of irreconcilable opposition
to imperialism, demanding the immediate and unconditional withdrawal
of US troops from Iraq, Afghanistan and wherever else they are
deployed to further US corporate interests. It must also fight
for holding criminally responsible all those who dragged the American
people into an illegal war based on lies.
The vast resources devoted to war and militarism, on the one
hand, and tax giveaways to the rich, on the other, must be utilized
to provide well-paying jobs, decent housing, education and health
care both to the stricken population of the US Gulf Coast and
the millions of others who have seen their living standards steadily
ground down by the policies of the Democrats and Republicans.
The twin debacles for American capitalism in Iraq and New Orleans
make clear that this historic task can be postponed no longer.
We urge all those seeking a genuine means of putting an end to
war, social inequality and political reaction to read and support
the World Socialist Web Site and join the Socialist Equality
Party.
See Also:
Bush reassures American ruling class
Tax cuts to continue, social programs to be slashed in wake of
Hurricane Katrina
[19 September 2005]
Bushs vision for New Orleans: a
profiteers paradise
[16 September 2005]
Recovering New Orleans' dead subordinated
to profit and politics
[16 September 2005]
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