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WSWS : ISSE/SEP
Emergency Conference Against War
International Students for Social Equality/Socialist Equality
Party conference adopts socialist internationalist perspective
to oppose war
By Tom Carter
2 April 2007
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The International Students for Social Equality (ISSE)/Socialist
Equality Party (SEP) Emergency Conference Against War voted unanimously
April 1 for a resolution advancing a socialist and internationalist
program to oppose militarism and war. The two-day conference was
convened to develop a program for the mobilization of student
youth and the working class as a whole within the United States
and internationally to halt the war in Iraq and prevent the outbreak
of war against Iran.
The conference, held on the campus of the University of Michigan
in Ann Arbor, was attended by more than a hundred students and
workers from across the United States and from a number of other
countries. Delegates attended from Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky, Massachusetts,
New Jersey, New York, Illinois, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Washington,
Florida, Texas, Colorado, Connecticut, California, Oregon, and
Virginia. Seventeen delegates attended the conference from Canada;
others came from Germany and Australia.
The conference received greetings from Australia, Britain,
Turkey, and Romania. Supporters from Pakistan, Romania, the Philippines,
South Africa, Zambia, the UAE, Bangladesh, Haiti, Pakistan, Nigeria,
Turkey, Palestine, Ghana and Venezuela expressed interest in attending,
but were unable to come because of the high cost of travel and
the difficulty of gaining entry into the US.

Joe Kay, a member of the ISSE steering committee and a writer
for the World Socialist Web Site, set the tone for the
conference in his opening remarks. We are here to give voice
to the outrage and opposition felt by millions, indeed billions
of people around the world, who look on with horror at the devastation
wrought by imperialism, or are themselves the direct victims of
war and militarism, Kay said.
Within the framework of the existing political structures
and institutions internationally, he continued, the
interests and views of the vast majority of the worlds population
find no expression. We are here to give conscious expression to
these interests and views, and to elaborate a political program
that can end war.
Kay introduced for discussion a resolution outlining the fundamental
political perspective and program of the ISSE. Our response
to the war must be based on our understanding of the general tendencies
underlying it, he said. If war is a product of the
capitalist system, then war cannot be ended except through the
abolition of capitalism. A movement against war must be a movement
against capitalism.
The resolution pointed directly to the roots of imperialist
war in the profit system and the division of the world into competing
nation-states. The war against Iraq is an imperialist war,
the resolution stated. It is an act of aggression undertaken
in the interests of the corporate and financial oligarchy in the
United States and its allies in Britain and other countries. As
in the world wars of the twentieth century, what is taking place
is a re-division of global resources as the US ruling class seeks
to assert military control over key strategic regions.
The recent explosion of US militarism had its origins in the
historic decline over the past half-century of US capitalisms
global economic position, the resolution explained. American
capitalism rests on the fragile and unstable foundation of massive
capital inflows, unprecedented levels of debt, and various forms
of financial speculation and manipulation. Increasingly, a corrupt
ruling elite in the United States is seeking to use its principle
assetarmed force sustained by a military budget that exceeds
the combined military spending of the rest of the worldto
offset its declining economic power.
The resolution stressed that the only force capable of ending
the war was the international working classthe only social
force whose interests were irreconcilably opposed to the economic
and social interests that drove imperialism. The international
character of this class and the mass social questions it confronted
necessitated, the resolution argued, an internationalist program.
The global strategy of imperialism must be met by a global
strategy of the working class and an opposition to nationalism
in all its forms, it declared.
In February 2003, millions of people around the world
took to the streets to protest US war plans, the resolution
observed. However, because this movement was dominated by the
perspective of protest politics, Four years later, the war
drags on, even as popular opposition has intensified.
The resolution emphasized the necessity for the political independence
of the working class from all of the parties and groups that were
tied in one way or another to the political establishment. In
the US, this involved a complete break with the Democratic
Party and all those who seek to pressure the Democrats.
From the preparations for invasion, through to the most
recent escalation of the war, the Democratic Party in the US has
played the role of accomplice to the Bush administration,
the resolution observed. The Democratic Party is a bourgeois
party of imperialism, and all sections of the partys leadershipfrom
open reactionaries to the misnamed Out of Iraq Caucusare
responsible for the perpetuation of the war. The main concern
of the Democratic Party is to calibrate its public positions just
enough to smother social protest and forestall the development
of a movement that breaks free of the two-party system.
The resolution highlighted the fact that workers around the
world confronted similar political challenges. The Liberal
Party and New Democratic Party in Canada, the Labour Party in
Britain, the Australian Labor Party, the Socialist Parties in
France and Spain, and the Social Democratic Party in Germanyall
these supposedly left organizations have either facilitated
right-wing and militarist policies or carried them out directly.
The resolution insisted: The fight for the political
independence of the working class requires a conscious assimilation
of the history of revolutionary international socialism, from
Marx and Engels, to the Russian revolution, to the struggle of
the Trotskyist movement, represented today by the International
Committee of the Fourth International, against Stalinism and revisionism.
It concluded: The conference calls on workers and youth
around the world to build the Socialist Equality Party and the
ICFI, along with its student organization, the International Students
for Social Equality, to lead the struggle against war and the
capitalist system.
On Sunday, the second day of the conference, the political
perspective outlined in the resolution was accepted with the unanimous
support of all those in attendance. The World Socialist Web
Site will publish the resolution in full later this week.
In the course of the discussion on the resolution introduced
by Joe Kay, reports were delivered on the political situation
in the US, Sri Lanka, Italy, Canada, Germany, Russia, Iran and
Venezuela. Students and faculty active in building the ISSE on
university and high school campuses across the US and internationally
described the political, social, and economic circumstances confronting
students and youth, and stressed the necessity for the socialist
and internationalist perspective outlined in the resolution.
David North, national secretary of the SEP in the US and chairman
of the International Editorial Board of the World Socialist
Web Site, delivered remarks that stressed the inevitability
of coming political convulsions, in which the existing social
and economic organization of society would be increasingly called
into question.
The historical period characterized by the unchallenged superiority
of American capitalism and the preeminence of the US military
was coming to a close, North said. American capitalism was in
a decline, while the influence of Europe and emerging economic
powers such as India and China was increasing rapidly.
North said the US intervention in Iraq was an attempt to offset
that decline through the use of military force. The failure of
that enterprise, therefore, had catastrophic consequences for
US capitalism. A transition was underway to a new historical period,
in which the various imperialist powers would attempt to secure
their own interests through the use of military violence.
In this context, North stressed that it is only a matter
of time before the working class intervenes in politics.
The decisive question, he argued, was what program, principles,
and perspective would guide that intervention.
Further topics of discussion included the origins of the political
and social crisis in the United States, the history and lessons
of the anti-war movement, the educational work of the ISSE, problems
of art and culture, and the development of the World Socialist
Web Site. A collection to carry forward the work of the ISSE
raised $11,000 in donations.
The conference also unanimously adopted a resolution demanding
that the government of Sri Lanka conduct a thorough investigation
into the disappearance of Nadarajah Wimaleswaran, a member of
the Socialist Equality Party of Sri Lanka, and his friend Sivanathan
Mathivathanan, in the northern Jaffna islands on March 22.
There is every indication that the military is either
directly responsible for or complicit in this disappearance,
read the resolution, which was introduced by Parwini Zora, representing
the Sri Lankan SEP. We hold the Sri Lankan government responsible
for the fate of Wimaleswaran and Mathivathanan and demand that
it secure their immediate and safe release, it stated.
The resolution also demanded that the Sri Lankan government
conduct a genuine investigation into the murder of SEP supporter
Sivapragasam Mariyadas at his home in Mullipothana last August,
and prosecute those who carried out the killing.
It declared: This conference condemns these disappearances
and this murder as political crimes carried out against the Socialist
Equality Party of Sri Lanka and these individuals because of their
opposition to the war and their struggle to unite the working
class on the basis of an international socialist program against
all forms of communalist politics.
See Also:
Join the International Students
for Social Equality! Build an ISSE chapter at your college or
high school!
[19 February 2007]
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