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WSWS : News
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ISSE demonstration to free Iranian students calls for international
unity of workers
By our reporter
19 February 2008
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On February 16, the International Students for Social Equality
(ISSE) held a demonstration in New York City to demand that the
Iranian government immediately release and drop all charges against
more than 40 left-wing students. In addition to calling attention
to the plight of these students, the demonstration focused on
the necessary political basis for a struggle against war, inequality,
and oppression.

ISSE members and supporters, together with a group of Iranian
students attending university in the US, rallied outside the Mission
of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the United Nations in midtown
Manhattan. Demonstrators emphasized the need for an international
socialist movement of students and workers. Basing itself on the
history and perspective of the Trotskyist movement, the ISSE rejects
any support for national bourgeois governments, including the
Iranian regime. The ISSE is the student organization of the International
Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI).
Joe Kay, a member of the ISSE Steering Committee, read a letter
to the Iranian government opposing the arrest of the students,
who are members of the group Azady Barabary (Students for Freedom
and Equality). (See ISSE demonstrates
in New York to demand release of jailed Iranian students)

The first wave of arrests occurred in December, when the group
organized a demonstration to denounce US war plans. The students
declared their opposition to all factions of the Iranian government,
including the Reformists grouped around former president Mohammad
Khatami. Kay said that the students involved in this demonstration
had reached a crucial insight. A movement against war and
imperialism cannot be subordinated to the national bourgeoisie
or national governments of Iran or any other country, he
said.
Kay emphasized that the ISSE was completely opposed to the
American ruling class and its ambitions in the Middle East. We
oppose any US action against Iran, we oppose plans for regime
change, we do not support the plans of American imperialism,
he said. However, our opposition to American imperialism
is not rooted in any support for the reactionary, antidemocratic
bourgeois governments of Iran or any other country. The struggle
against war requires the independent mobilization of workers and
students against all of these governments, against the nation-state
system.
Kay also read sections from the statement passed by the ISSE/SEP
Emergency Conference Against War held on March 31-April 1, 2007.
The statement denounced the Iraq war and plans for military action
against Iran, noting that the eruption of American imperialism
endangers the population of the entire world. The threat
of a new world war can be answered only by the unified global
struggle of the international working class, directed toward the
establishment of a democratic and egalitarian world socialist
society, it declared.
In laying out a perspective for the independent mobilization
of the working class, the statement explicitly rejected a nationalist
perspective. In economically less-developed countries, such
as Iran, China and India, the ruling elites have their own interest
and ambitions that are completely antagonistic to the interests
of the working class and have nothing to do with principled opposition
to imperialism. Opposition to wars against these countries in
no way implies support for their governments or the capitalist
interests that these governments represent. The defeat of imperialism
will not take place through the acquisition of nuclear or other
weapons by these states, but through the mobilization of the international
working class on the basis of a socialist program.
The working class is the only genuinely international
class, the statement emphasized, whose social interests
transcend the confines of the capitalist system of competing nation-states.
(See End the
occupation of Iraq! No to war against Iran! For an international
socialist movement against war!)
Kay said that the arrest of the Iranians students confirmed
this perspective. It demonstrated that the Iranian government,
when faced with opposition to its right-wing policies, could only
respond with repression. He ended by calling on Iranian students
to join hands with students and workers all over the world in
a common struggle against war and for an egalitarian, socialist
society.
Several of those attending also emphasized the role of internationalism.
Andre Damon, a student at the University of Delaware and a member
of the ISSE Steering Committee, commented, The problems
facing students and workers in the United States are the same
as those facing Iranian students and workers and workers all over
the world.
Damon noted that workers and students in the US have huge amounts
of debt. Over the past decades, wages have been stagnant
and falling in the US, while the cost of living has increased.
Students have to borrow in some cases 10, 20, 30 or even 50 thousand
dollars a year just to pay for tuition, for expenses and housing.
Economic conditions are likely to decline further as the US slides
into recession, Damon said.
Damon said that the entire world is confronted by the danger
of war. None of these problems can be solved on a national
basis or even on a student basis. Students have to turn to the
working class, to the international working class, and that is
the perspective that the ISSE fights for.
Julia, a freshman at Wagner College in Staten Island, said
that the attack on left-wing students in Iran was an international
cause. She said she hoped that the demonstration would show
students in Iran that they are being backed not only by
students in Iran, but by students in the United States.
Many of those joining the demonstration attended a meeting
afterward to discuss the political issues facing workers in Iran
and the US.
Bill Van Auken, the Socialist Equality Partys 2006 candidate
for US Senate from New York, placed the growing signs of social
tensions internationally within the context of the economic crisis
of world capitalism. It is the objective contradictions of world
capitalism, he said, that form the basis for the growth of an
international socialist movement.
Discussion focused on the history of Iran and the experiences
of the working class in the twentieth century. Throughout this
period, the Trotskyist movement, represented today by the ICFI,
has fought for an international orientation against all forms
of nationalism and reformism.
One participant noted the ICFIs consistent opposition
to Hugo Chavez in Venezuela and other forms of bourgeois nationalism
in Latin America, while Chavez has been lauded by many groups
calling themselves socialist. Chavez has developed close ties
to Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, even as the Iranian
government has carried out repressive attacks on students and
workers in Iran.
See Also:
Ahmadinejad under fire in lead up to
Irans parliamentary elections
[16 February 2008]
An interview with an Iranian
activist on arrests of left-wing students
[28 January 2008]
Iranian government intensifies
crackdown on left-wing opposition
[28 January 2008]
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