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Tens of thousands to protest on eve of G8 summit
Fight against war and social reaction requires a socialist
strategy
Statement of the World Socialist Web Site editorial
board
1 June 2007
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The following statement will be distributed at a mass demonstration
to he held June 2 near the site of the G8 summit in the German
resort of Heilligendamm. It is also posted in PDF
format. We urge our readers and supporters to download the statement
and help distribute it at the June 2 rally.
Millions of people are deeply disturbed by the current state
of society. They are vehemently opposed to the policies of the
ruling elites all over the world and are seeking ways to resist
them. They face, however, a contradiction. Experience shows that
protest, even if it embraces masses of people, is not sufficient
to resolve the great problems of war, repression and social reaction.
This has been amply shown by the mass demonstrations against
past G8 summits, as well as the international rallies against
the Iraq war. As long as the protests are politically dominated
by illusions that the old reformist parties can be pressured to
the left, they are doomed to failure.
This however, is precisely the standpoint of Attac and other
organizers of the June 2 demonstration against the G8 summit,
who maintain that another world is possible within
the framework of the capitalist system.
This perspective flies in the face of reality.
The G8 summit being held in the German resort of Heiligendamm
casts a powerful spotlight on the current state of capitalist
society. The leaders of the worlds most powerful states
have entrenched themselves behind a kilometres-long, reinforced
barbed wire high-security fence, and are being guarded by the
largest deployment of police in German post-war history.
The 12-million-euro fence is a stark symbol of the relationship
between governments around the world and the broad masses of the
populations they purport to represent. Democracy has been turned
into a hollow phrase. In the run-up to the summit, the police
have carried out a series of raids, organized massive surveillance
and imposed bans on demonstrations, seeking to intimidate oppositionist
groups and individuals in brazen violation of basic democratic
rights.
Those participating in the summit represent the interests of
the narrow social elites that have enormously increased their
wealth over the past three decades. This international financial
aristocracy includes the 500 billionaires who together possess
as much wealth as the poorer half of mankind. It embraces the
speculators whose annual income totals up to a billion dollars;
the top executives of large companies, whose salaries and bonuses
range into the hundreds of millions; and the new Russians
who have acquired colossal fortunes by plundering the assets of
the former Soviet Union.
Social inequality has reached unprecedented levels worldwide.
It is expressed not only in the gulf between rich and poor countries,
but also within the countries themselves. While some two percent
live in extravagant luxury, the vast majority of the people eke
out a precarious existence, plagued by economic insecurity, stagnating
or declining living standards, or outright poverty.
Such levels of inequality cannot, in the long run, be maintained
through peaceful means. Sooner or later social contradictions
must erupt into violent class confrontations. This is why the
ruling classes are seizing every opportunity to build up the police
powers of the state and expand their military forces.
The Iraq war is a concentrated expression of this process.
It is now universally accepted that the official reasons given
for the war were based on lies. The US led-war was always about
oil and strategic influence. The oil lobby, with Vice President
Cheney at its head, played a significant role in the war preparations.
Four years later Iraq has been destroyed as a sovereign country
and Iraqi society has been devastated. An estimated 700,000 Iraqis
have died as a result of the war and occupation, and four million
have been turned into refugees. Nearly 3,500 American soldiers
have been sacrificed on the altar of imperialist interests.
The regime in Washington has established an extensive police
state apparatus within America itself. Elementary democratic rights
such as habeas corpus have been repudiated, but the war continues
unabated. Barely a week ago the US Congress, controlled by the
Democratic Party, voted a further $100 billion to continue the
war.
All those heads of state participating in the G8 summit are
agreed that the US cannot be allowed to lose this war. Regardless
of tactical differences with Washington, they regard a military
defeat for the US as a blow to their own imperialist interests.
They are therefore responding by sending their own troops into
the Middle East and other strategic regions of the world.
It was none other than the German Green Party leader and former
foreign minister Joschka Fischer who, at a meeting at Berlins
Humboldt University, complained of the shocking loss of
significance of Europe in the world, and urged a more resolute
approach towards foreign policy and security interests, placing
particular emphasis on Europes geopolitical neighbours
in the Middle East. The tragic deaths of three German soldiers
in the Afghan region of Kundus have been exploited by the German
government and media to prepare the population for further military
operations and further casualties.
The Italian head of government, Romano Prodi, went so far as
to threaten his resignation in order to continue, in the face
of massive popular opposition, the Italian military deployments
in Afghanistan and Lebanon and the expansion of the US military
base in Vicenza.
In France, the new president, Nicolas Sarkozy, wants to build
a second aircraft carrier in order to increase the countrys
ability to intervene militarily around the world.
Rising militarism goes hand in hand with growing tensions between
the Great Power nations, who quarrel over their respective spheres
of influence and imperialist interests in the manner of thieves
dividing their booty. There are indications that this could be
the first G8 summit in many years to end in open disagreement.
Russia sees itself as threatened by Americas planned
anti-missile defense system. It demonstratively tested a new intercontinental
missile just prior to the summit.
The host of the summit, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, has
used the issue of climate policy to put pressure on the US, which,
for its part, categorically rejects any commitment to international
environmental targets.
It would be the height of naivety to believe that the conservative
German chancellor has suddenly discovered her love for the environment.
The objective of the summitthe limitation to two degrees
of any increase in world temperaturesis non-committal and,
in view of the impending environmental disaster, entirely inadequate.
However, the environment issue is ideally suited, working in
collaboration with the rising industrializing countries China
and India, to gain an advantage over the US. China and India have
rejected any commitment to a reduction in greenhouse gases as
long as the US does not do the same. In pursuing this policy,
Merkel is able to rely on the wholehearted support of the Greens.
Those taking part in the Heiligendamm summit are completely
united on one question: They all agree that the assault on the
living standards and past social gains of the working class must
continue unabated.
The election victory of the right-wing Gaullist Sarkozy in
France is seen by the political elite throughout Europe as a signal
to finally press ahead with the introduction of American
conditions across the continent. Sarkozy is intent on introducing
drastic laws this summer to restrict the right to strike and inflict
harsher punishment on juvenile offenders. His prime minister,
François Fillon, has used the phrase electric shock
to describe the French governments plans.
Against the right-wing politics of the Social
Democrats and the Left Party
Any serious opposition to war, repression and attacks on social
benefits must proceed from the fact that all of these evils are
inseparability connected to the crisis of the capitalist system.
The subordination of all aspects of social life to the dictates
of the capitalist market has become such an immense anachronism
as to threaten the future of human society.
Revolutionary developments in computer technology, communications
and transportation have created the possibility for interconnecting
the labor of millions all over the world and making enormous gains
in productivity and scientific progress, which could lay the basis
for solving all of mankinds basic problems. However, within
the framework of the capitalist profit system, globalization produces
the opposite results. Technological progress is being used to
lower wages and destroy jobs, while a tiny elite amasses ever
greater personal wealth.
Whoever declares that this state of affairs is merely the result
of a misdirected policy, which can be corrected simply through
popular pressure, is either indulging in self-deceit or consciously
misleading others.
All those political parties that defend capitalist property
relations, whether nominally of the left or right variety, have
adapted themselves to the demands of big business as soon as they
assumed governmental power. This in itself demonstrates that militarism
and welfare cuts are not simply the result of the subjective will
of this or that politician, but rather a product of the failure
of the capitalist system as a whole.
In Germany, the former governing coalition of the Social Democratic
Party (SPD) and the Green Party carried out the most comprehensive
attack on social welfare benefits in recent history, while overseeing
the transformation of the German military from a defensive army
to an offensive, interventionist force. The Italian government
led by Prodi has pursued a similar course, with the active support
of the successor organizations to the Italian Communist Party.
The German Left Party is following the same course. On a national
level, it seeks to pose as a pole of opposition, and supports
the protests against the G8 summit.
In Berlin, however, where the party shares power with the SPD,
it has been responsible for implementing cuts in public services
that go far beyond those carried out in any other German state.
The drastic laws now being implemented to repress protesters in
the state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, where the summit is
being held, were also passed by a coalition of the Left Party
and SPD.
The Left Party seeks to limit the opposition to the G8 summit
to protest politics. It spreads the illusion that moral pressure
and appeals to reason can force the ruling elite to change course.
It thereby creates a safety valve for social opposition, without
endangering capitalist rule. The Left Party is strictly opposed
to a genuine socialist perspective directed against the basis
of capitalist property relations.
The Left Party is supplemented by autonomous and anarchist
groups, which seek to compensate for their lack of perspective
by provocative and sometimes violent acts of protest. Such tactics
are also aimed at pressuring the ruling class. These groups have
absolutely no interest in a socialist perspective and the struggle
to spread such a program within the working class.
At the same time, the German authorities use these groups to
brand any opposition to existing social conditions as criminal
or terrorist. Police agents are often directly involved
in their provocations. A revolutionary socialist strategy has
nothing in common with the infantile antics of such anarchist
groups.
At the centre of a socialist strategy is the construction of
a political movement of the working class that combines the defense
of social and democratic rights with the struggle for a socialist
society in which human need takes priority over the profit interests
of big business. Such a movement must be completely independent
of the old reformist organizations, which use all available means
to defend the capitalist order.
Objections are often raised to a socialist program by claiming
that such a perspective failed in the Soviet Union and the former
East Germany. Such an argument is based either on a lack of knowledge
of the history of the twentieth century, or a distortion and misrepresentation
of that history.
The forms of ownership established by the 1917 October Revolution
provided an impetus for enormous social progress. One of the most
backward countries in the world was transformed in a short period
of time into a powerful industrial nation.
The Soviet Union, however, was wracked by a profound contradiction.
It remained internationally isolated, and the backwardness inherited
from its past took its revenge in the form of a parasitic bureaucracy,
which, under Stalins leadership, wrested power from the
working class and wiped out the genuine socialist and internationalist
elements in the country in a series of bloody purges in the 1930s.
In a final betrayal, the heirs to the Stalinist bureaucracy organized
the reintroduction of capitalism in the 1990s.
As a result of the Stalinist repression, the working class
was unable to defend the gains of the October Revolution. The
consequences have proved dreadful. Since the reintroduction of
capitalism, the broad masses in the former Soviet Union and the
states of Eastern Europe have experienced an economic and cultural
decline unparalleled in a period of peace.
The fate of the Soviet Union confirms the Marxist standpoint
that socialism can be established only on an international scale.
It presupposes the political unity and cooperation of the working
classes of all countries and nationalities.
The Social Equality Party is building an international, socialist
mass party as the German section of the International Committee
of the Fourth International. The World Socialist Web Site (www.wsws.org) provides a comprehensive
analysis of all important international developments on a daily
basis in up to twelve languages, and provides a vital political
orientation. The International Committee of the Fourth International
has also established its own international student federation,
the International Students for Social Equality (ISSE).
We invite all those participating in the demonstration against
the G8 summit to study the analysis of the WSWS on a daily basis.
Establish contact with our editorial board and assist in the building
of the SEP and ISSE.
See Also:
Germany: Huge police deployment
in run-up to G8 summit
[31 May 2007]
Heiligendamms Green
Zone: Massive security preparations for upcoming G8 summit
in Germany
[25 May 2007]
Under the pretext of the struggle
against terror: German police conduct massive operation
against G8 protesters
[11 May 2007]
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