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From: The Colonial Revolution and the Deformed Workers' States
July 1978
http://www.marxist.com/TUT/TUT4-4.html
Highlighting here by Walter
Lippmann, 2010. This is from the Trotskyist tendency led by Ted Grant.
IN BOURGEOIS
countries in the past, where the bourgeoisie has a role to play and
looks forward confidently to the future - ie when it is genuinely
progressive in developing the productive forces - it has decades and
generations to perfect the state as an instrument of its own class rule.
The army, police, civil service, middle layers and especially all key
positions at the top; heads of civil service, heads of departments,
police chiefs, the officer corps and especially the colonels and
generals are carefully selected to serve the needs and interests of the
ruling class. With a developing economy and a mission and a role they
eagerly serve the 'national interest' ie the interest of the possessing
class - the ruling class.
In Syria, as
in all the ex-colonial countries, the imperialists, in this case the
French, partly under the pressure of their rivals, especially American
imperialism, were compelled to relinquish their direct military
domination. The state which emerged is not fixed and static. The
weakness and incapacity of the bourgeoisie gave a certain independence
to the military caste. Hence the perpetual coups and counter-coups of
the military. But in the last analysis they reflect the class interests
of the ruling class. They cannot play an independent role.
The struggle
between the cliques in the army reflects the instability and
contradictions in the given society. The personal aims of the generals
reflect the differing interests of social classes or fractions of
classes of society, the petit-bourgeois in its various fractions, the
bourgeoisie, or even under certain conditions the proletariat in so far
as thay are successful in gaining power. The officer caste must reflect the
interest of some class or grouping in society.
They do not represent themselves though of course they can plunder the
society and elevate their own ruling caste. Nevertheless they must have
a class basis in a given society.
Bonapartist
regimes do not rest on air but balance between the classes. In the final
analysis they represent whichever is the dominant class in society. The
economy of that class determines its class character. Some of these
countries, as in Latin America, a semi-colonial continent which was
under the domination of British then especially American imperialism for
the last century, nevertheless, have been nominally independent for more
than a century. In consequence, despite a period of turbulence the
ruling class of landowners and capitalists has had sufficient period to
perfect their state. Sometimes the armed forces of different fractions
or factions of armed forces, can reflect different fractions of the
ruling class and even the pressures of imperialism, primarily American
imperialism.
But, up to
now, they have always reflected the interest of the ruling class in the
defence of private ownership.
In Burma,
where the regime, newly emerged from British domination and where the
ruling class was incapable of successfully 'holding the country together',
it faced a series of rebellions and wars. The army was formed from the
the Anti-Fascist Peoples Freedom League, which described itself as 'socialist'.
With China as
a model next door, the army leaders tired of the incapacity of the
landowners and capitalists to solve the problems of Burma. Basing
themselves on the support of the workers and peasants, they organised a
coup, expropriated the landowners and capitalists and established Burma
as a 'Burmese Buddhist Socialist State'.
China
Yet up to the
Russian revolution even Lenin denied the possibility of the victory of
the proletarian revolution in a backward country. The Chinese revolution
of 1944-9 did not proceed on the model of the revolution of 1925-7. It
was apeasant war, which
took place because of the complete incapacity of the bourgeoisie to
carry out the tasks of the bourgois-democratic revolution - the ending
of landlordism, national unification and the expulsion of imperialism -
it ended with victory to the Chinese Stalinists.
The programme
of the Chinese Stalinists was not fundamentally different to that of
Castro later in Cuba: 50 or 100 years of 'national capitalism' and an
alliance with the 'national bourgeoisie'. Hence the belief of many
American bourgeois that they were 'agrarian reformers'.
Only the
Marxist tendency in Britain argued against the Stalinists and the
alleged 'Trotskyist' sects and explained the inevitability of Mao's
victory and the establishment of a deformed workers' state.
At a time
when Mao and the Chinese CP had the programme of capitalism and 'national
democracy' we could predict the inevitability
of proletarian Bonapartism as
the next stage in China. This had nothing in common with the methods of
the proletarian revolution in Russia in 1917.
Power was
gained through the peasant war by giving land to the soldiers in Chiang
Kai Shek's army. Then, by balancing between the classes and playing them
off against each other in Bonapartist fashion, once military victory was
achieved, landlordism and capitalism were expropriated. Nearly all the
so-called 'Trotskyist' sects now accept the accomplished fact. But never
before in history has it even been theoretically posed that a peasant
war on classical lines could lead to a workers' state, however deformed. The
workers in China were passive throughout the civil war for reasons we
will not enter here. But here was a perfect example of one class - the
peasants in the form of the Red Army - carrying out the tasks of another.
It is amusing
now to see the sects without turning a hair, swallowing the idea that a
'workers' state' was established in China by the peasant army, only
because at the head of the army was the so-called 'Communist' Party. In
classical Marxist theory this idea would be precisely considered hair-raising
and fantastic. The peasants, as
a class, are least
capable of assuming a socialist consciousness.
It is an
aberration of Marxism to think that such a process is 'normal'. It can
only be explained by the impasse of
capitalism in China, the paralysis of imperialism, the existence of a
strong deformed Bonapartist state in Stalinist Russia, and most
important of all, the delay in the victory in the industrially advanced
countries of the world. The colonial countries cannot wait. The problems
are too crushing. There is
no way forward on the basis of capitalism. Hence
the peculiar aberrations in colonial countries. But the price for this,
as in the Soviet Union, is a second political revolution to put the
control of society, industry and the state in the hands of the
proletariat. Only thus could the first genuine beginnings of the
transition of socialism, or rather steps in that direction, commence.
The wide
support for 'socialism' not only among the working class, but among the
peasants and wide layers of the petit-bourgeoisie in the cities in
colonial countries, is the expression of the complete blind alley of
landlordism and capitalism in the colonial world in the modern epoch. It
is also a result of the Russian and Chinese revolutions and their
achievements in developing industry and the economy. It is this that
lays the groundwork for the development of proletarian Bonapartism.
The state can
be reduced to armed bodies of men, according to Engels. With the defeat
and destruction of the police and army of Chiang Kai Shek, with the
destruction of the army of Batista[1] in
Cuba, power was in the hands respectively of Mao and Castro. The fact
that nominally Mao was a 'Communist' and Castro a bourgeois democrat
altered nothing.
Moscow's
Image
So far was
Mao from the model of the proletarian revolution that on entering
Shanghai and other cities, workers who had seized their factories and
met Mao with demonstrations of red flags were instantly shot in order to
'restore order'! The state created by Mao was in the image of Moscow,
1949, not Moscow 1917!
Mao, in
typical Bonapartist fashion on the basis of the peasant army, always an
instrument of (bourgeois) Bonapartism in the past, balanced between the
classes. Having perfected a state in the image of Moscow, leaning on
the workers and peasants, he could snuff out the bourgeoisie painlessly. As
Trotsky put it, for a lion you need a gun, for a flea, a fingernail will
do! Therefore, having balanced between the bourgeoisie and the workers
and peasants in order to prevent the workers from taking power, Mao and
his gang - after perfecting the state - could then crush the bourgeoisie
before turning on the workers and peasants to crush whatever elements of
workers' democracy had developed.
The
bureaucracy then developed a totalitarian one-party dictatorship,
centred round the Bonapartist dictatorship of one single individual -
Mao. But, not for nothing has Marxist theory given the task of achieving
the socialist revolution and the transition to socialism to the working
class. This is not an arbitrary role but because of the specific role in production of
the proletariat which gives it a specific
consciousness possessed by no other class. Least
of all can the petit-bourgeois peasant develop this consciousness. A
revolution based on the latter class by its very nature would be doomed
to degeneration and Bonapartism. It is precisely because a proletarian
Bonapartist dictatorship protects the privileges of the elite of state,
party, the army, industry and the intellectuals of art and science that
it has succeeded in so many backward countries.
Marxism finds
in the development of the productive forces the key to the development
of society. On a
capitalist basis there is no longer a way forward, particularly for
backward countries. That
is why army officers, intellectuals and others, affected by the decay of
their societies can under certain
conditions switch their
allegiance. A change to proletarian Bonapartism actually enlarges their
power, prestige, privileges and income. They become the sole commanding
and directing stratum of the society, raising themselves even higher
over the masses than in the past. Instead of being subservient to the
weak, craven and ineffectual bourgeoisie they become the masters of
society.
Transitional Economies
The tendency
towards statification of
the productive forces, which have grown beyond the limits of private
ownership, is manifest in the most highly developed economies and even
in the most reactionary colonial countries.
There is no
possibility of a consistent, uninterrupted and continuous increase in
productive forces in the countries of the so-called third world on a
capitalist basis. Production stagnates or falls. In the world recessions,
particularly in the smaller countries, living standards fall. There is
no way out on the basis of the capitalist system. That explains the
terror regimes of bourgeois Bonapartism like that of Pakistan,
Indonesia, Argentina, Chile and Zaire. But with bayonets and bullets, on
the basis of an out-dated and antiquated system, only very temporary
respite is given. Discontent multiplies and is reflected in the officer
caste of the armed forces and throughout the society. This in turn leads
to conspiracies of individuals and groups of officers.
The army
is a mirror of
society and reflects its contradictions. That
and not the mere whims of the officers concerned, is the cause of the
upheavals as in Syria. It is an indication of the agonised crisis of
society, which cannot be solved in the old way. These strata of society
can espouse 'socialism' of the Stalinist variety - proletarian
Bonapartism - all the more enthusiastically because of their contempt
for the masses of workers and peasants.
The horrible
caricature of workers' rule in Russia, China, and the other countries of
deformed workers' states attracts them precisely because of the position
of the 'intellectual' educated cadres of that society. What is repulsive
to Marxism is what attracts the Stalinists.
All that
these states have in common with healthy workers' states or with the
Russia of 1917-23 is state ownership of the means of production. On that
basis they can plan and develop the productive resources with forced
marches at a pace absolutely impossible on their former landlord-capitalist
basis. This is possible of course for only a limited
period of time. At some
point the Stalinist regimes become an absolute hindrance and a fetter to
production. Russia and Eastern Europe are reaching these limits. In
common with a healthy workers' state on the accepted Marxist norm is the
fact that they are transitional economies between capitalism and
socialism.
But Marxism
teaches that a movement towards socialism requires the control, guidance
and participation of the proletariat. With a privileged elite in
uncontrolled dominance and not reconciled to the loss of its status in a
'withering away' of the state, this produces new contradictions. As the
corruption, nepotism, waste, mismanagement and chaos which bureaucratic
control necessarily involves comes more and more into contradiction with
the needs of social development, this manifests itself in the heightened
antagonism between the proletariat and the bureaucratic elite.
Trotsky long
ago explained that in the case of Russia the bureaucracy developed the
productive forces in a way in which the bourgeoisie was incapable of
doing, but at three times the cost to the masses. The bureaucracy
fulfills the function, a relatively progressive
function, which the bourgeoisie had accomplished in the past. But
Trotsky explained that this role also engenders its own contradictions.
The bureaucracy is in some senses even less prepared than the
bourgeoisie to reconcile itself to the loss of privilege and power.
Instead it grows even more to become a monstrous cancer on society. It
can only be removed by political
revolution.
This will be
triggered either by events at home or the successful gaining of power by
the proletariat and the constitution of a workers' democracy in one of
the advanced capitalist countries. It will be by social revolution in
the West or by victorious political revolution in Russia and Eastern
Europe that a healthy workers' state and a workers' democracy will be
created. It must be emphasised that the only features these deformed
workers' states have in common with the ideal workers' state is state
ownership of the economy and a plan of production.
Only one of the 'idealist' and 'eclectic' sects could discover a
fundamental difference between the peasant war in which Mao came to
power and the guerrilla war of Castro, based on peasants and semi-peasants
and landless peasants as well as some ex-workers. There is not much
difference, despite the bourgeois democratic ideas in Castro's head
which in any event were not all that different from the programme on
which Mao fought the civil war.
At least in the last stages of
the struggle, the participation of the working class, with the general
strike in Havana, turned the scales in Castro's favour. Nothing
of this sort happened in the civil war in China of 1945-9. Nor was this
kind of intervention desired by Mao; true, had it not been for the
stupidity of American imperialism the outcome could have been different
in Cuba. But with the impasse of
Cuban capitalism like that of Chinese capitalism, just as Mao had used
the strong proletarian Bonapartist state of Russia as a model, so Castro
used Eastern Europe and China as models in his conflict with American imperialism.
In both cases
this marked an enormous step forward historically. Landlordism and
capitalism were eliminated. That meant the removal of the fetters of
semi-feudal landlordism and of private ownership of industry. The
monopoly of foreign trade, following the Russian model, is also a
powerful progressive factor. These measures meant a gigantic release of
the constraints on the productive forces. Hence in advance we
could hail the Chinese revolution as the second greatest event in human
history, the Russian revolution being the first. Nevertheless because of
its Bonapartist character - and the inevitable vested interest of the
bureaucracy in maintaining the rule of privilege, prestige, power and
income for the ruling layers of the bureaucracy itself - the masses
would have to pay with a second revolution before there could be a
workers' democracy on the level of that in Russia of 1917-23.
Because of
the incapacity of the sects to apply Marxism and 'Marxist philosophy' in
a concrete manner they have landed themselves in ludicrous
contradictions. Thus they declared Eastern Europe to be state capitalist
in 1945-47 - while Russia, which occupied Eastern Europe with the Red
Army, was a 'degenerated workers' state'.
When Tito
broke with Stalin, overnight, from mysteriously being 'capitalist',
Yugoslavia became a healthier workers' state than even Russia in 1917!
This did not prevent these sects from simultaneously declaring Eastern
Europe still to be capitalist. China remained 'state capitalist'
according to them until 1951 or 1953. Then, 'Hey Presto', China, from
being 'state capitalist', was mysteriously transformed into a 'healthy
workers' state'!
All this
muddle and theoretical confusion has never been explained by any one of
these petit-bourgeois tendencies masquerading as Marxists.
One sect claimed Cuba was a
petit-bourgeois Bonapartist state while describing China as a relatively
healthy workers' state in which political revolution was not necessary.
Not a single one of these tendencies was capable of analysing the main
forces and processes of the epoch, in which the colonial world saw a
caricature of permanent revolution in
which weird and deformed workers' states were being set up. Not a
single one of them understood the meaning of the Chinese 'cultural
revolution'. Some hailed this as a second version of the 'Paris Commune'!
Only recently - some 30 years too late - some reluctantly concluded that
the Chinese revolution was deformed from the start. Our tendency
explained the process in advance of Mao's victory.
All the
objective conditions for a socialist revolution are now maturing in
Western Europe, Japan and the USA. The process, however, will be
protracted because of the weakness of the forces of genuine Marxism. It
is the delay of the revolution in the West, and now its protracted
character, which gives room for these peculiar regimes in the
neo-colonial countries. They are reaching unbearable tensions with semi-starvation
of great masses without a roof or a crust. The insolent parasitism and
luxury of the landlords and capitalists in contrast, leaning on
imperialism, invests all the contradictions in these societies with an
explosive force. It is on the basis of this weakness of imperialism, the
glaring rottenness and decay of landlordism-capitalism - which makes
possible the development of the curious process of proletarian
Bonapartism. Taking advantage of the revolt of the masses of peasants,
petit-bourgeoisie and even workers, the elite of officers, intellectuals
etc, can emerge, as in Ethiopia, with firm power in their hands on the
basis of the support of the workers and peasants. They can perfect a
'KGB' secret police of their own to silence anyone who would object to
their privileges.
The peasantry,
by its very nature a class of individuals not bound together by
production, is therefore the perfect instrument for bourgeois or
proletarian Bonapartism. It is a class that can inherently be
manipulated and deceived; a class that looks towards the 'Tsar as a
father of the people', or to the god-head, Mao. The urban petit-bourgeois
too have these attributes; in Germany and Italy they looked to Hitler
and Mussolini as 'leaders'. Only
the proletariat stands
firmly for genuine democracy - ie workers' democracy in a workers' state
- which is the only system where its direct
rule can be manifested.
Our tendency
has explained and predicted these processes. There is no real
possibility of moving forward in the colonial world on a capitalist
basis. It is this, plus the lagging of the proletarian revolution in the
advanced industrialised countries, which has led to these regimes taking
ten steps forward and five steps back. They can - at least for a period
in most cases - develop the productive forces with seven league boots,
on the basis of proletarian Bonapartism. They carry out in backward
countries the historic role which was carried out by the bourgeoisie in
the capitalist countries in the past.
The whole
essence of Trotsky's theory of the permanent revolution lies in the idea
that the colonial
bourgeoisie and the bourgeoisie of the backward countries are incapable
of carrying out the tasks of the bourgeois democratic revolution. This
is because of their links with the landlords and the imperialists. The
banks have mortgages on the land, industrialists have landed estates in
the country, the landlords invest in industry and the whole is entangled
together and linked with imperialism in a web of vested interests
opposed to change.
Under these
circumstances the task of carrying out the bourgeois-democratic
revolution fell on the shoulders of the proletariat. But the proletariat,
having conquered power at the head of the peasantry and the majority of
the nation, would not stop at the accomplishment of the bourgeois-democratic
tasks of expropriating the landowners, unifying the nation, and
expelling the imperialists. It
would then pass on to the socialist tasks, the
expropriation of the bourgeoisie and the setting up of a workers' state.
But the socialist tasks could not be encompassed in a
single country, especially a backward colonial country. The revolution
would have to spread to the more advanced countries. Hence the term for
this process, permanent revolution beginning as a bourgeois revolution,
becoming a socialist one, ending in international revolution.
It is true
that, owing to the development of the Stalinist bureaucracy and the
reformist degeneration of the Communist Parties, exceptional
difficulties have been put in the path of the proletariat in both
advanced and backward countries. But the impasse of landlordism and
capitalism in the so-called third world has been aggravated during the
course of the decades since the outbreak of the second world war. For a
period, the industrialised capitalist countries passed through a
relative development of productive forces, once the political
preconditions had been established by the betrayal in the early post-war
period of Stalinism and reformism.
But while
living standards in the West increased at least in absolute terms, in
the 'third world' with few exceptions there was a decline in already low
living standards. The decay of antiquated land relations under the
inexorable pressure of the world market continued apace. A large surplus
population of paupers, beggars and lumpens is endemic in the colonial
world. On the old relations there is no way out. In
Vietnam, Laos,
Kampuchea, Burma, Syria, Angola, Mozambique, Aden, Benin, Ethiopia and
as models, Cuba and China (which
in their turn had the model of Eastern Europe as a beacon showing the
way) there
has been a transformation of social relations.
This is
because of the rotten ripeness of world capitalism for the socialist
revolution. But all history shows that where, for one reason or another,
the new progressive class is incapable of carrying out its functions of
transforming society, this is often done (in a reactionary way, perhaps)
by other classes or castes. Thus in Japan big sections of the feudal
lords became capitalists and in Germany - as Marx, Engels, Lenin and
Trotsky recognised - the landowning Junkers of East Prussia under
Bismarck and the monarchy carried out the task of the national
unification of Germany - a task of the bourgeois democratic revolution.
Attractive
Power
As Marx long
ago explained, there is no such thing as a supra-historical blue-print.
It is necessary to take the material objective reality as it is and then
explain it. That is the method of 'Marxist philosophy' and not the
philosophical gibberish of the sects. But it is not only necessary to
see objective reality as it is, but to explain the process that brought
it into being, the contradictions encompassing it, the law of social
movement which it represents and the future processes of contradictions
and change which will envelop it. Its process of birth, development,
decay and the changes which will destroy it.
Under the
conditions of the decay of capitalism-landlordism in the colonial
countries, all the social contradictions are aggravated to an extreme.
Social tensions reach an unbearable level. Hence in one country after
another in Asia, Africa and Latin America, bourgeois democracy is
replaced by bourgeois Bonapartist dictatorships or proletarian
Bonapartist dictatorships.
In the above-named
ex-colonial countries not one proceeded on the model of the norm of the
socialist revolution. Neither did the countries of Eastern Europe before
them in the aftermath of the second world war.
The great
Marxist teachers in the past have often explained that once the norm of
the socialist revolution has been established in the main capitalist
countries, it would have an irresistible appeal to the rest of the world
and result in a painless transformation without conflict. Even the
bourgeoisie would recognise the superiority of workers' democracy, apart
from the effect this would have on the world working class. Marx himself
believed that in this way the backward areas of the world, and even the
backward countries of Europe, would be brought forward by the advanced
industrialised countries acting as a magnet and a model of socialism.
Lenin and Trotsky conceived of the socialist revolution taking place in
some backward countries first only with the leading role and
participation of the proletariat. The proletariat would lead the petit-bourgeois
masses, especially the peasantry, to the overthrow of landlordism and
capitalism and then link the workers to the international working class
and the tasks of the world revolution.
The
Bonapartist totalitarian dictatorship in Russia, a completely deformed
workers' state, repels workers in advanced capitalist countries. This is
because nothing remains of October except the abolition of landlordism
and capitalism, a plan of production, plus the monopoly of foreign trade,
albeit bureaucratically twisted and distorted.
But
nevertheless the mighty achievements of the revolution, the productive
advances, the abolition of backwardness bringing Russia to the position
of the second industrial power of the world, have an enormous attractive
power for the colonial masses. (This is further reinforced by the
example of the Chinese revolution which in the space of less than a
quarter of a century has transformed China into a mighty power.) In most
of the colonial countries where it still exists, bourgeois democracy is
a hollow and empty shell backed up at various times by 'states of siege',
states of emergency and even martial law.
Consequently
the lack of workers' democracy in these proletarian Bonapartist states
is not such a drawback in attracting the masses. It is a positive
attractive feature as far as the professional and lower army officers
are concerned. The solution of their most pressing problems of food,
clothing and shelter loom large in the minds of the colonial masses.
Ethiopia
This in its
turn has an enormous effect in the countries of Asia, Africa and Latin
America. The bourgeois-Bonapartist regimes in the colonial countries are
charged with terrible contradictions. Their problems are insoluble. They
spend large sums on armaments, further exacerbating the poverty of the
masses. They are inherently unstable. They provoke the hatred of the
workers, the petit-bourgeoisie, the students and peasants. Even the weak
bourgeoisie they represent comes into collision with them.
It is in this
social soil that plots, counter-plots and conspiracies in the army
flourish. The army (or armed forces) is always moulded in the image of
society and is not independent of it. Where the army dominates, that
indicates a crisis in society and a regime of crisis.
Different
cliques, groups or even individuals at the top in the army come to
reflect groupings, sections of classes or classes in society. They do
not represent themselves but precisely reflect the antagonistic
interests of different classes in society.
Under
conditions of social crisis people change. This applies to classes and
even individuals. Thus Marx explained that with the decay of feudalism a
section of the feudal lords, bigger or smaller as the case may be, goes
over to the side of the bourgeoisie in the bourgeois revolution. A
section of the bourgeoisie, particularly the intellectual bourgeoisie,
can also put themselves on the standpoint of the proletariat.
No more
barren, formalistic, anti-dialectical, philosophically idealist, anti-'Marxist
philosophy' idea in the history of the movement has been put forward
than by those who argue that because Castro
began his revolutionary struggle as a bourgeois democrat with bourgeois
democratic ideas and goals that
therefore he must remain a bourgeois democrat for all eternity. They
forget that Marx and Engels themselves began as bourgeois
democrats who broke
decisively with the bourgeoisie and became leaders of the proletariat.
Under
conditions of the crisis of capitalism in Portugal[2],
a semi-colonial country, a majority of the officer caste, sickened by
the decades of dictatorship and the seemingly unending wars in Africa
which they realised they could not win, moved in the direction of
revolution and 'socialism'. Only our tendency explained this process.
This gave an
impetus to the movement of the working class, which then reacted in its
turn on the army. This affected not only the rank and file, and the
lower ranks of the officers, but even some admirals and generals who
were sincerely desirous of solving the problems of Portuguese society
and the Portuguese people.
This was
something that would have been impossible in previous revolutions. Thus,
99 per cent of the officer caste supported Franco in the Spanish civil
war.
True enough,
because of the reformist and Stalinist betrayal of the Portuguese
revolution which prevented it from being carried through to completion,
there has been a reaction. The army has been purged and purged again to
become a more reliable instrument of the bourgeoisie.
But how far
this has succeeded remains to be tested in the events of the revolution
in the coming months and years.
But what it
has demonstrated is the need for a genuine dialectical understanding and
interpretation of the events of the present epoch. If such a
transfonnation was possible, in a semi-colonial but imperialist
capitalist Portugal, how much more could similar processes take place in
the newly independent countries of Africa and of Asia?
Events in
Ethiopia have crushingly confirmed the theses we have worked out. There,
the famine brought about by Haile Selassie and the landlord nobility,
was the last catastrophe even the officer caste was prepared to tolerate.
The callous indifference of the Emperor and the landlord class to the
famine and the death from starvation of hundreds of thousands and
possibly even millions, plus the accumulated social contradictions in a
backward country under the pressure of imperialism, pushed the middle
layers of the officer caste to organise a coup.
This in its
turn awakened the movement of the small working class in Addis Abbaba
and the students and petit-bourgeois layers in the capital and in the
towns. It awakened the peasantry also into a cataclysmic movement to
gain control of land. Thus the 1000 year old 'empire' and its class
structure crumbled to dust.
The crisis in
the army and the attempts at counter-revolution, the further impetus
this gave to the guerrilla war in Eritrea, the querrilla war in the
Ogaden, aided by the direct intervention of Somalia, the uprisings of
the Galla and other tribes, all acted as a spur to the revolution.
The movement
of the classes in turn had its effect on the new ruling junta in the
army. It produced splits and individual and group conspiracies of
officers. These reflected the classes in battle in Ethiopia and the
developing civil war in the whole country. Whatever
the individual whims of the officers, they reflected (as in Syria) - and
had to reflect - the class struggle taking place. Hardly
any wished for a return to the old regime.
The model of
the Emperor's landlord semi-feudal regime was rejected by the bulk of
the officer caste. But there were differences as to how far to go, which
ended in armed conflicts and executions. This, in a distorted way
perhaps, reflected the struggle of the classes in Ethiopia.
It ended in
the victory of Lieutenant Colonel Mengistu. Already the land had been
divided among the peasants and industry nationalised without
compensation to the imperialists and the native capitalists (though of
course compensation is not necessarily the decisive factor).
In the
struggles Lieutenant Colonel Mengistu emerged victorious as a
Bonapartist dictator under the influence of the wars and civil wars. In
order to obtain mass
support Mengistu,
formerly a high-up officer of the Emperor, has been forced to go all the
way. He has declared himself a 'Marxist-Leninist' (probably without
reading a single word of Marx or Lenin) and set about creating a one
party 'Marxist-Leninist' totalitarian dictatorship. This is in the image
of Moscow or Peking. The landlords and capitalists are expropriated and
the imperialist countries are without real influence on the processes
taking place in Ethiopia.
In this case
the process is clear. It is even clearer than in Mozambique, Angola or
the former Aden, and this without a direct struggle against imperialist
occupation.
The
imperialists are too weak and debilitated to intervene directly by
military means and can only grind their teeth in impotence.
But
undoubtedly only the Militant foresaw
these possibilities in advance for many countries in Asia, Africa and
Latin America. The revolution, or rather the primary tasks of the
revolution, in backward countries have been accomplished in the regimes
mentioned above. Landlordism has been eliminated. Capitalism has been
destroyed, the influence of imperialism dispelled.
Thus the bourgeois origin of the leadership of the guerrilla movement in
Cuba was of third or fifth rate importance. What was important was the
attempt to take action to bring Cuba back to neo-colonial status which
precipitated the break of Castro with American imperialism.
It is the
social and economic similarities which are decisive for a Marxist in the
social overturns in these countries.
To carry
through a revolution like that of Russia in October 1917 requires the
consciousness, the action, the understanding and the active
participation and movement of the proletariat itself in the overthrow of
capitalism and landlordism. It requires organs and organisations through
which the proletariat can move, such as soviets, shop stewards
committees, trade unions and so on. After the victory of the rule of the
workers, the checking and control can be effected by such organs of
workers' rule.
In a
revolution according to
the norm such ad hoc
committees and traditional organisations are indispensable. They are a
training ground for the workers in the art of running the state, of
developing the solidarity and understanding of the workers. After a
victorious overthrow of capital they become vehicles for workers' rule,
the organs of the new state and of workers' democracy.
But where - as in Eastern Europe, China, Cuba, Syria,
Ethiopia - the overthrow takes place with the support of
the workers and peasants certainly but without
their active control, clearly
the result must be different.
The
petit-bourgeois intellectuals, army officers, leaders of guerrilla bands
use the workers and peasants as cannon fodder, merely as points of
support, as a gun rest, so to speak.
Their aim,
conscious or unconscious, is not power for the workers and peasants, but
power for their elite. They had and have their model in Stalinist
Russia.The revolution - change in property relations -begins where the
Russian revolution ended, Stalinist Russia of 1945-9, or if you prefer,
Stalinist Russia of 1978. They are fundamentally the same; a one party
totalitarian state where the proletariat is helpless and atomised, with
an apparatus of control of the state by the officials. The guerrilla
army chiefs, who with an iron hand imposed discipline, take control
undoubtedly with the support of the masses but with no organs of workers'
rule independent of the state. Also, none of the rights and powers of
the workers and peasants, which the existence of soviets as organs of
workers' power would mean, exist.
For a
transition to a Bonapartist workers' state such organs of workers'
democracy, indispensable for a healthy workers' state, would be an
enormous hindrance. They constituted a tremendous obstacle to the
Stalinist bureaucracy in Russia, which had to wage a Herculean struggle
and even a one-sided civil war to erase the last remnants of workers'
democracy, which stood in the way of their untrammelled and dictatorial
rule. This was reflected through the one man dictatorship of Stalin and
his successors.
What is
important is that this was the model of 'socialism' for Mao, for Castro,
for Mengistu, for the Burmese generals and for the Baathist 'Muslim'
generals in Syria.
Army and
Intellectuals
It is
important to see that what all these variegated forces have in common is
not the secondary personal differences but the social forces and class
forces they represent.
Mengistu,
Castro, the Burmese
generals broke with their class
background and the advantages or disadvantages of their bourgeois and
university education and outlook. It is true that they did not put
themselves on the standpoint of the proletariat - as Marx and Lenin did
- but they accepted the much easier 'socialism' which entailed the
individual rule of them
and of their elite on the
backs of the working class and peasants.
All
individual differences are stamped out by the decisive class and
economic changes which they have presided over in their countries and
their societies.
All the self-styled
'Marxist-Leninist' sects have not even understood the ABC of Marxism as
taught by its founder and echoed by Lenin and Trotsky. This is something
to marvel at. The emancipation of the working class is the task of the
workers themselves. This is not because it is some kind of penance which
the workers must do or because they are 'nice people'. It is because
without this there is the inevitability of a small minority having a
monopoly of culture they will then use - and inevitably abuse - against
the interests of the workers and peasants and in their own interests.
Also, mobilisation of the proletariat, its conscious struggle for power,
and fight for workers' democracy, transforms the proletariat and fits it
for the task of workers' rule. This then partially rubs off onto the
peasants and petit-bourgeoisie which follow the proletariat in both the
advanced and the backward countries. This process does not take place
with the struggle of the petit-bourgeois guerrilla bands or where
radical army officer cliques take power.
Thus, the
intellectual and army elite in all the social revolutions and overturns
in the countries mentioned took state countrol firmly into their own
hands. They had the passive - or more or less active support - of the
masses. But there was not the conscious
organised movement of the
proletariat. The peasants and petit-bourgeoisie are not a viable
substitute for the 'self-movement' of the proletariat.
It is a
striking fact that in the case of every sect, they accept Mao and the
Chinese revolution ex-post-facto and
find in the 'Communist' badge of Mao the excuse for this. In reality Mao
was an ex-Communist who had broken with the proletariat and put himself
at the head of a peasant war.
The fact that
he later balanced between the classes and in typical Bonapartist
fashion, leaned on the workers for a time, alters nothing. The fact that
the Peking gangsters called their hideous caricature 'socialism' or
sometimes the dictatorship of the 'proletariat' also alters nothing.
There is no fundamental difference economically or socially between any
of these regimes. This means that the secondary differences in
comparison with the fundamentals are only of trifling importance.
Lenin's Mistake
It is no accident also that all
the sects base themselves on the mistake of Lenin in What
is to be Done - that the
proletariat on its own is
capable only of 'trade union consciousness' and not 'socialist
consciousness'. In reality this is not Lenin's idea but
appropriately Kautsky's. Lenin discovered his mistake, and Lenin's works,
as those of Marx and Engels and Trotsky, not to add Luxemburg and
Mehring, are the living refutation of this idea. In all 55 volumes of
Lenin's works there is never again the repetition of this error. In fact,
without idealising the proletariat, as with all the great Marxists - all
his works, down to the smallest article, are saturated with confidence
and trust in the mighty
power of the proletariat
as the only vehicle which
would lead mankind to socialism. This, of course, comes from the
dialectical materialism of Marx.
In reality
all these gentlemen of the sects have a haughty if secret - and
sometimes not completely secret at that - contempt for the working class.
Dialectically, while embracing enthusiastically this false idea about
trade union consciousness, at the same time,
they worship at the shrine of Ho
Chi Minh or Mao or Castro or Tito or some other proletarian
Bonapartist dictator. They are incapable of understanding the process of
history and the temporary conjuncture of the economic upswing which led
to a long lull in the class struggle in the West and the continuing
crisis of society in the underdeveloped world. This was one of the
corollary factors of the West's boom and inevitably led to the rise and
development of proletarian Bonapartism in the colonial world, which the
dominance of Stalinism in Russia and the predominance of Stalinism and
reformism in the workers' movement in the world contributed to. Only
genuine Marxism has been able from the beginning to explain all these 'outlandish'
phenomena from the viewpoint of the working class and the class nature
of society and the organic crisis of world
capitalism which is
manifested first of all at its weaker and more backward extremities.
All these proletarian
Bonapartist regimes are temporary aberrations on the road of the world
revolution. The excrescence which Stalinism represents will be
eliminated almost in passing when the mighty proletariat of one of the
advanced countries takes power in the West or the regimes of Russia and
Eastern Europe are regenerated by the overthrow of bureaucracies.
In a number of works we have traced the contradictions
and inconsistencies which the sects show on the question of what is a
healthy workers' state with 'bureaucratic deformations', or what is a
deformed workers' state. Though both are based on state ownership, they
are fundamentally different in their super-structure. For
that reason a political
revolution is necessary
in the case of a deformed workers' state before a 'workers' democracy'
or 'the dictatorship of the proletariat' in its political as well as
economic sense, can be established. On the other hand, a workers' state
with 'bureaucratic deformations' is a workers' state under conditions of
backwardness and isolation which can still be reformed through the
restoration of party, trade union and state democracy, ie a return to
the control of the workers and peasants and where, if only in vestigial
form, these organisations still exist under the pressure of the workers.
Some sects
have bowed down before Castro as the leader and organiser of a 'healthy
workers' state'. They went even further and compared his 'struggle
against bureaucracy' with that of Trotsky against Stalinism. They
actually committed the indecency of publishing the photographs of
Trotsky and Castro together as fighters against bureaucracy and for
democratic socialism. They thus showed that they understood neither the
role of Trotsky as an immortal fighter against the Stalinist bureaucracy
nor Castro's role as the incarnation of the Cuban Stalinist bureaucracy.
Words are
cheap. 'Castro's struggle'
against the Cuban bureaucracy was no different in essence to that of
Stalin on occasions against the Russian bureaucracy. Stalin as a
Bonapartist dictator sometimes attacked the 'bureaucracy' in
words.He went further on occasions and leaned on the workers and
peasants. This happened when the greedy bureaucrats went too far in
their swindling, speculation and plundering of the state and threatened
to devour the foundations of the state.
Stalin took action even against high-up bureaucrats and
certainly against wide sections of the lower ranks of the bureaucracy.
This was to preserve the Stalinist system by making scapegoats of some
bureaucrats, especially the lower ranks.
Fundamentally,
Castro's role in Cuba is the same. True, he played the leading personal
role in the guerrilla war, the overthrow of Batista, the movement
towards expelling imperialism, and overthrowing landlordism and
capitalism.
Stalin had
lived through a proletarian revolution together with the existence of a
workers' democracy, yet he carried out a counter-revolution against it.
But right from the
first day, the Cuban revolution was deformed and distorted. The
proletariat never held political power directly as in Russia. The fact
that even today probably the decisive bulk of the Cuban people, as the
Chinese people too, support the regime at this stage, alters nothing as
to its character. Castro's strictures against bureaucracy, like Stalin's,
are necessary if he is to preserve the role of 'Bonapartist arbiter' and
'father of the people'.
Now, when
dealing with Ethiopia, some of those who bow the knee before Castro,
declare Mengistu - whose regime is basically a copy of that of Russia,
China and Cuba - to be 'fascist'. This particular example of contortions
and eclectic acrobatics can only be greeted with gales of laughter by
genuine Marxism.
State
Capitalism?
Why is
Mengistu's regime 'state capitalist' and different to the others? There
is no explanation. They merely echo the arguments of the student, Maoist
ultra-lefts in Ethiopia. At least the Ethiopian Maoists have the
consistency to declare - as the Maoists have done everywhere - that
Russia too is 'state capitalist'.
The proof of
the 'fascist' character of the Mengistu regime, they claim, is the
vicious repression, the executions, the repression of national rights
and the national revolutions of a similar character to that of Ethiopia
- of Eritrea and the Ogaden - and the suppression of other national
minorities. The crushing and dissolution of independent trade unions and
all the nascent democratic organs of self-expression of the workers and
peasants is certainly to be condemned. So also is the concentration of
power into the hands of the Army junta clique and the dictatorship of
Mengistu.
But one rubs
one's eyes in disbelief at the shallowness of the 'Marxism' of these
self-styled Trotskyists'. For every crime committed by Mengistu in this
regard, Stalin committed a hundred times more! The repression of
independent organs of the workers must have reached a state of
perfection by the bueaucracy in Russia. Puppet 'unions' exist which
resemble the Arbeitfront of
the Nazis in Germany. The Russian 'Communist' Party is the arm of the
bureaucracy itself and has long ago ceased to be a workers' party.
Concentration camps, or 'labour camps' as they are called, and
psychiatric 'hospitals' have been established for all dissidents - right
or left.
The national
oppression of the minorities, and especially of worker dissidents,
reached levels never reached even under Tsarism. A one-party
totalitarian machine has been established without allowing any
opposition anywhere among workers, peasants and intellegentsia. The
regimentation of art, science and government into a Stalinist
straitjacket, without any independent initiative or thought, has been
unequalled in history except, possibly, in Hitler's Germany. More or
less, that is the picture common to all the proletarian Bonapartist
states, including China and Cuba.
Some of the sects pick up the
characterisation of the Mengistu regime from the Maoists. They also
support the heroic guerrilla peasant war in the Ogaden and in Eritrea,
which, if victorious, would probably end in a carbon copy of Cuba or of
Mengistu's Ethiopia. That would be inevitable with a backward
economy and with the limited nationalist leadership looking to their own
resources alone and not seeing the necessity of linking up with the
workers of the advanced capitalist countries. If there is a struggle for
national rights of these peoples - so long as there is not the direct
intervention of imperialism - we would give critical support to the
struggle as we would for example to the struggle of the Ukranian people
for independence from Stalinist Russia. An independent socialist soviet
Ukraine would prepare the way for a genuine and voluntary socialist
soviet federation of all the peoples of the USSR. This could only be
achieved by the overthrow of the Russian Stalinist bureaucracy by the
Russian working class.
Support
for Revolution
Unfortunately
in Eritrea and the Ogaden, as in Ethiopia for the next period, democracy
will receive short shrift. This is inevitable on the bases of a peasant
war, as well as the Stalinist ideology of their leaders.
But as we did
in the case of Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia (Kampuchea) and for that
matter China also - we would give support without closing our eyes to
the inevitability of Stalinist totalitarian regimes whatever the result
of the conflict.
Because of
its character as a national
struggle (though on the
basis of state ownership and the elimination of landlordism and
capitalism) and the limited outlook of its leadership, neither the
Somalis nor the Eritreans have a means of influencing or winning over
the peasant soldiers of Ethiopia. They too have carried through a
revolution and are influenced by the national idea of a united Ethiopia.
The
proletarian and far sighted policy of Lenin - in standing firmly for the
bourgeois-democratic right of self-determination - has no place
unfortunately in the policy of the Ethiopians. But neither is there
present, on any side in the conflict, the other policies of Marxism -
democratic-centralism in the Party, democracy in the soviets, trade
unions and so on.
Our policy is
dictated first by the international socialist proletarian revolution and
its interests. The defeat of imperialism and the overthrow of
landlordism and capitalism in the Horn of Africa are big steps forward.
This is
despite the conflict between 'socialist states' which sows confusion
among the advanced workers and the proletariat generally. The complexity
of the problem and the need to keep our ideas clear is shown by the way
imperialism and the Russian and Cuban bureaucracy have changed sides.
Yesterday the
imperialists supported Haile Selassie and the landlord-capitalist regime
in Ethiopia against Somalia and the guerrilla movement in Eritrea.
Russia and Cuba financed, armed and organised the Somali state and
supported the guerrillas in Eritrea with arms, finance and technical
assistance. Ethiopia assumed more importance in their eyes, with the
collapse of the Emperor, followed by the overthrow of the semi-feudal
landlord-capitalist regime. Ethiopia has 35 million people against
approximately 2 or 3 million each in Eritrea and Somalia.
Opportunistically taking advantage of the civil war in Ethiopia,
organised by the landlord-capitalist counter-revolution, President Barre
of Somalia sent troops into the Ogaden. He hoped for the disintegration
and collapse of the Ethiopian revolution. He was nationally limited and
short-sighted, interested only in a 'greater Somalia'. Undoubtedly the
imperialists, surreptitiously through the semi-feudal reactionary Arab
states like Saudi-Arabia, gave support to the Somalis, as they now give
support to the Eritreans despite the social character of the movement in
Eritrea. They wish to weaken Ethiopia and strike a blow against the
Russian bureaucracy.
The Russian bureaucracy and
Castro have changed horses in mid-stream after vainly attempting to
persuade the Somali rulers to make a compromise and establish a
federation of Eritrea, Somalia and Ethiopia. This would
undoubtedly have been the best solution, given the character of all
these regimes either as Bonapartist deformed workers' states, or such
states in the process of formation.
When the
Somalis rejected this proposal the bureaucracy switched sides. It is not
certain that the Ethiopians were in agreement with this proposal either.
Now they are trying to negotiate some form of agreement between Eritrea
and Ethiopea. If the Eritreans do not accept some form of limited 'autonomy'
Cuba and Russia seem certain to support the crushing in blood of the
Eritrean attempt at self-determination. The imperialists, unable to
intervene directly, will weep crocodile tears about the national and
democratic rights of the Eritrean people. (Yesterday they brutally tried
to suppress the rights of the Vietnamese people.)
But what is
really entertaining about these dramatic conflicts is the position of
some of the sects. They solemnly declaim that Russia (correctly) is a
deformed workers' state and Cuba (incorrectly) a relatively 'healthy'
workers' state. But in no way do they explain how and why the relatively
'healthy' workers' state of Cuba or the deformed workers' state of
Russia actively helps the 'fascist' state of Ethiopia to establish
itself and suppress the national rights of the people of Eritrea who are
attempting to establish a 'Marxist' regime and the Somalis of the Ogaden
and the other minorities.
Undoubtedly,
on the basis of land distribution, the overwhelming majority of the
Ethiopian peasants support the Ethiopian regime for want of an
alternative.
It is
theoretically possible of course that for the purpose of 'defence'
against other capitalist states, a deformed workers' state or even a
healthy workers' state could ally itself with a reactionary or fascist
state. Stalin's Russia did this in 1939 with the 'non-aggression' pact
with Hitler's Germany.
But what
strategic necessity was there for Brezhnev and Castro to switch from
supporting Somalia and Eritrea to their 'fascist' rivals? The rulers of
the deformed workers' states would look with trepidation at the rise of
a healthy workers' state in the industrialised countries because of the
social reverberations it would provoke in their own countries. But they
would welcome the establishment of social regimes on the pattern of
their own regimes in the backward and neo-colonial countries.
This
strengthens them internationally against their capitalist imperialist
rivals. The basic world antagonism between the social structures of
these countries and capitalist countries remains.
Stalinism
and Fascism
Ethiopia is a
country far more backward than Russian Czarism or even pre-revolutionary
China, and is under conditions of civil war on every front. With a
leadership which takes Cuba and China as its model, without
revolutionary training, this officer leadership has moved towards
Stalinist conceptions in the course of the revolution. But we cannot
throw out the baby with the bathwater. We must separate out the
enormously progressive kernel from the reactionary wrappings.
Landlordism and capitalism have been eliminated and this decisive fact
will have far-flung effects on the whole of the African revolution in
the coming epoch.
Not for
nothing did Trotsky explain to the American Socialist Workers Party that, separated
from state ownership of industry and the land, the political regime
in Russia was fascist! There was nothing to distinguish the political
regime of Stalin from that of Hitler except the decisive fact that one
defended and had its privileges based on state ownership while the other
had its privileges, power, income and prestige based on the defence of
private property. That was a fundamental and decisive difference! There
is no difference in the fundamentals of economic and political structure
of Ethiopia from China, Syria, Russia or any of the deformed workers'
states.
The latest
events in Indo-China have served again to show the ridiculous
contortions of the policies of all the sects. Our tendency gave
wholehearted support to the struggle of the Vietnamese 'Communist' Party
of Ho Chi Minh and its Laotian and Cambodian off-shoots in their
peasant guerrilla war against American and world imperialism and
their native puppets.
We supported
the struggle unconditionally and wholeheartedly. We supported it because
it was a colonial war for liberation. We would have supported such a war
even under bourgeois or petit-bourgois leadership which had fought
merely for the right of national self-determination alone. But it
inevitably became a war for social
liberation as well as national
liberation - in the sense
of fighting for the elimination also of landlordism and capitalism.
Without this, the struggle could not have been carried on for decades
against overwhelming military odds.
How far the
sects have strayed from the Marxist or Trotskyist method was shown by
the polemics between two different sects of the same international
tendency about how far the Vietnamese were 'unconscious' Trotskyists
operating on the basis of the permanent revolution.
None of these
worthies have understood the peculiar character of the epoch as far as
the colonial or ex-colonial areas of the world are concerned. Nor have
they understood the inevitable perversion of the revolution under either
open Stalinist - or pseudo-communist leadership - or that of radical
sections of the officer caste. They have not understood the inevitable
consequences when a colonial revolution is led to its progressive and
'final' conclusion of eliminating capitalism and landlordism but when
the main force is not that of the working class with a Marxist
leadership.
When the main
force is a peasant army using classic peasant tactics of guerrilla war,
then it must result in a 'deformed workers' state' even if
that were not the aim of the leaders. In
the event of an army coup of the younger officers, allied to 'intellectuals'
and students, the consequences would - inevitably - be the same.
This is
particularly the case given the world environment of strong Bonapartist
workers' states, in the form of Stalinist Russia and other countries.
Taken together with the existence of the imperialist powers there could
be no other outcome.
Of course if
there were in existence healthy workers' states - for instance in Russia,
or one of the big industrialised states of Europe, or Japan - then the
results and the possibilities would be entirely different. The
proletariat and people of the advanced workers' states would give aid
and assistance to a workers' state in a backward country, linking the
economies together, and sending tens of thousands of technicians to
small countries and hundreds of thousands to one with a big population.
That would mean rapid industrialisation plus workers' democracy. That is
what Lenin meant when he said Africa could move straight from tribalism
to communism.
But given the
present relationship of class forces in international affairs, with
classical reformism and Stalinist reformism dominant in the workers'
movement of the advanced countries, such a conclusion in Vietnam,
Cambodia and Laos was ruled out.
Indo-China
Clashes
That is why
our tendency, while wholeheartedly supporting the Vietnamese and Indo-Chinese
revolutions, warned the
workers and peasants of
these countries that while they should actively support the struggle and
fight for social and national liberation, at the same time the dominance
of the struggle by the Stalinist leadership would mean that while an
enormous social step forward would be taken by the victory of the
national liberation movement, it would be succeeded by a new enslavement
by the totalitarian Stalinist bureaucracy. Without a Marxist party and
without Marxist leadership the goal of the 'Communist Party' leadership
would be a state in the image of the so-called 'socialism' of Russia or
China.
We appealed
to the advanced workers of Britain, America, France and the world, to
support the social and national liberation struggle of the Indo-Chinese
peoples, because it weakened imperialism and world capitalism. The
liberation of the productive forces of these countries, by the overthrow
of the rule of capital, would be of immense long-term benefit to the
people of these countries and also to the world proletariat.
But we
never deceived ourselves or
the workers and peasants of the world as to the inevitable nature (the
class relationship of forces) of the regimes which would be set up in
these countries.
We warned of,
and predicted, the inevitable setting up of nationalist
totalitarian Stalinist regimes in these countries but
even we had not expected just how far they would go in their distortions.
The armed
clashes between Cambodia and Vietnam are a crushing condemnation of all
those 'Trotskyist' sects in Britain and internationally who did not
understand the class nature of these regimes and their Stalinist
character. There was no surprise in these events for our tendency. The
clashes on the borders between Russia and China when tens of thousands
were killed had shown what nationalist bureaucrats are capable of.
These
bureaucracies cannot look beyond the boundaries of the national state.
Behind these clashes in former Indo-China are the aspirations of the
Vietnamese to set up an Indo-China federation of 'socialist states'.
Obviously this would have been of immense benefit to the economies of
all these countries. But the reason that the Cambodians are against the
setting up of such a federation is that under conditions of Bonapartist
totalitarianism they would inevitably come under the nationalist
domination and national oppression of the Vietnamese bureaucracy.
Leaving aside the virulent national chauvinism of the Cambodian
Stalinists, this would be as inevitable as it was in Stalinist China and
in Russia.
For the same
reason, the Vietnamese Stalinists, in their turn, would refuse to
federate with Stalinist China. They know, as the minorities in China
have seen, that they would come under the national oppression of the
Chinese bureaucracy. Even though economically it would be of immense
benefit, they would not agree to this, no more than would the Chinese
bureaucracy agree to a federation with Russia, though economically and
even in terms of world power politics, it would be colossally beneficial
to the peoples and the economies of both these countries. What stands in
the way are the national vested interests of the bureaucracies of all
these countries.
Only workers'
democracy, without any hint of national superiority or advantage as in
the days of Lenin and Trotsky, can have such a programme. But a
Bonapartist regime, basing itself on privilege and inequality, is
incapable of such a policy: the chauvinistic excesses of Stalinist
Russia and China are proof of this. Bonapartist totalitarian regimes by
their very nature, can never look beyond the narrow horizon of the
national state. By the very nature of bureaucracy and its privileges
they are nationally limited.
Basing
themselves on peasants, students and intellectuals, and without the
decisive domination and participation of the working class, they are
inevitably nationally limited.
Afghanistan
The working
class can secure its emancipation and the domination of society only by
overcoming all the prejudices of the past - national, racial, caste, sex
or any other. But only the working class and no other - and only under
Marxist leadership at that - is capable of this feat. But the
emancipation of the workers means the emancipation also of the petit-bourgeois
strata in society who, under the leadership of the working class, and
only under these conditions, would be capable of rising to these heights.
The petit-bourgeois
and the intellectuals can adopt the standpoint of the proletariat only
by breaking completely with their origins and the outlook of their class.
Under modern conditions that is extremely difficult where genuine
Marxists, as in the early days of Marx and Engels, have been reduced to
a handful.
This is
particularly the case today when the struggle is not merely in the
ideological sphere but where the immediate issue in country after
country is the transformation of society. In this situation it is easy
for the intellectuals to come under the domination of the muddled ideas
of Stalinism in its various forms.
Only a strong
workers' movement dominated by Marxism could make the metamorphosis of
such intellectuals possible.
This is
especially difficult in colonial or neo-colonial countries where the
problems are immediate, where the masses live an almost animal existence,
where also there are insuperable obstacles to modernisation and the
development of society on the basis of the semi-feudal landlord
capitalist regimes.
It is easier
for the intellectuals, the radical officers, even civil servants and
upper layers of professional people, doctors, dentists, lawyers and so
on to make the transition to Stalinist Bonapartism than to support
genuine but tiny Marxist tendencies. Especially this is so in most of
these countries where 'Marxism' does not exist as an organised tendency.
The 'Marxist-Leninism'
of Russia, China or Ethiopia suits them perfectly. It fits all their
prejudices. A 'socialism' where the elites of state, party, industry,
army and the professions have a standard of living way above that of the
masses seems perfectly normal and natural to them. A society where these
strata become the dominant and governing caste, has an enormous
attraction for them, especially as they see the enormous strides which
backward countries make with a forced march of 'socialism'.
Thus it is
easy for them to rationalise their class position. They have a hatred of
the corrupt landlords and capitalists under whose control their
societies and countries are either decaying or only inching ahead. They
have a contempt for the downtrodden masses of peasants and even for the
weak working class.
These stratas,
apart from their economic position, are imbued with an overwhelming
conceit and concern for their own importance in society. They are
concerned with perks, status, standing, power, privileges, income and
prestige. Thus, it is easy in the modern world to see how they can
embrace 'socialism' on the pattern of Cuba, for example.
In the past
period the fresh example of Afghanistan underlines the analysis we have
made of the colonial revolution. The 'Communist' Party of this terribly
backward country was only formed in the last decade or so. Like the
Baath Party in Syria, it had no difficulty in swallowing the doctrine of
'Islam' as well as 'communism'. It has done so because religious
superstition has deep roots among the overwhelmingly backward peasant
majority, 90 per cent of whom are illiterate.
Complete
Transformation
Now, as with
the Baath Party in Syria, the CP leaders in Afghanistan have allied
themselves with the radical lower and middle ranks of the officer caste
in the army.
The immediate
issue which precipitated the coup was famine - as in Ethiopia - and the
impossibility of the corrupt, semi-feudal Asiatic ruler, to cope with it.
Afghanistan has had many coups in the past decades leading to different
tribal leaders and groups gaining power. They merely changed the tops,
leaving the social structure intact. The same corruption inevitably
developed, leading, when the imposition had become unbearable on the
masses, to a famine, or through foreign intrigue, to a new coup. Thus,
social relations were contained in the same vicious circle. This new
coup opens up the possibility of striking in a new direction. 'Communists'
have become Prime Minister and President and also have a dominant role
in the government. This indicates in which direction the officers wish
to go. One of the first acts of the new regime has been to seize the
lands of the monarchy, which, though overthrown by the former Daud[3] regime,
still possessed 20 per cent of the land in Afghanistan! This is a new
departure and may be the beginning of a complete transformation of
social relations.
As in Poland,
where the Polish Stalinist bureaucracy came to an agreement with the
Catholic church, so in Afghanistan the Communist Party leadership,
together with the officers, can arrive at an agreement with the mullahs
of Islam. The fact that Taraki, the new Prime Minister, is the leader of
a so-called Communist Party alters nothing. He pursues the same policy
as that of the Syrian leaders of the Baath.
In the case
of Afghanistan, only two roads are possible at this stage. The working
class is miniscule. Sections of the intelligentsia, and apparently the
majority of the officers and a great part of the professionals, want to
construct a modern civilised state. The peasants want the land.
On the road
of capitalism and landlordism, there is no way forward. The army
officers wish to take the road traversed by Outer Mongolia. In fact
these peculiar changes are only possible because of the international
context. The crisis of imperialism and capitalism, the impasse of the
backward countries of the third world and the existence of the
proletarian revolutions in the West, are powerful factors in the case of
Afghanistan.
The barbarous
regimes also of Pakistan, Iran and nearby India have no attractive force.
The army officers, many, if not most, trained in Russia, are attracted
when they see the consequences of the Stalinist regime. It has a big
effect on the tribesmen, of similar peoples and even the same tribes, in
areas bordering Russia when they see the modernisation of areas of
Russia which formerly had as low a standard of living, and just as great
illiteracy and ignorance as themselves.
Marxist
Approach
The
industrialisation, complete literacy and high standards in comparison to
Afghanistan, are bound to impress these strata. In contrast, the
backwardness and barbarism on which the nobility thrived in Afghanistan
cannot but appal all the best elements - the intelligentsia, the
professionals and even the officer caste. They wish to break out from
poverty, ignorance and dirt from which their country suffers. The
capitalists of the West, with unemployment and industrial stagnation,
offer them nothing. They wish to break away from the vicious circle of
tribal rulers and different military regimes which change nothing
fundamental.
The world
crisis of capitalism hits the backward regions of the world even harder,
and impels them to draw the conclusion that capitalism offers no way
forward.
The
'republican' regime of Daud - incidentally, backed and propped up by
Moscow in the past - alters nothing. The upheavals and coups, leading to
mere changes of dynasties by different clans of the nobility during the
last fifty years have been completely sterile. The nobility and the
relations on the land on which they were based, was the main obstacle to
modernisation.
Under these
circumstances, if the new regime leans on the support of the peasants
and transforms society, then the way will be cleared for the development
of a regime in Afghanistan, like that of Cuba, Syria or Russia. This,
for the first time for centuries, will bring Afghanistan society forward
to the modern world. If the socialist transformation is completed, it
could comprise a new blow at capitalism and landlordism in the rest of
capitalist-landlord Asia, especially in the area of South Asia. It will
have incalculable effects on the Pathans and Baluchis of Pakistan and
will have a similar effect on the peoples on the borders of Iran. The
rotting regime of Pakistan in coming years will face complete
disintegration. A revamping of social relations in Afghanistan can
further contribute to the decay of this regime.
The tribesmen
will be influenced by the process taking place among their brothers
across the borders. On the North West frontiers of Pakistan and among
the Baluchis there is already endemic and simmering revolt, with these
peoples looking towards a unity with their brothers in Afghanistan. The
effect would be in widening circles, the repercussions of which could be
felt in Iran and further afield, also in India.
This is the
road which the 'Communist Party', which holds power together with the
radical officers, will take. The opposition of the old forces in
Afghanistan, as in Ethiopia, will in all probability impel them in this
direction.
If they
temporise, possibly under the influence of the Russian ambassador and
the Russian regime, they will prepare the way for a ferocious counter-revolution
based on the threatened nobility and the mullahs. If successful, counter-revolution
would restore the old regime on the bones of hundreds of thousands of
peasants, the massacres of the radical officers and the near
extermination of the educated elite. For the moment - until there is a
movement of the only advanced class which can bring a transition moving
in the direction of socialism in the industrially developed countries -
the most progressive development in Afghanistan seems at the present
time to be the installation of proletarian Bonapartism.
While not
closing our eyes to the new contradictions this will involve, on the
basis of a transitional economy of a workers' state, without workers'
democracy, Marxists, in a sober fashion, will support the emergence of
such a state and the further weakening not only of imperialism and
capitalism but also of regimes basing themselves on the remnants of
feudalism in the most backward countries.
Go back to contents page or
go on to next section, Introduction
to Section Five
NOTES
[1] Fulgencia
Batista was the US backed Cuban dictator, from 1933 until his overthrow
by the guerrilla army led by Castro in 1959.
[2] On
25 April 1974, a movement of armed forces officers overthrew the Caetano
dictatorship in Portugal, ushering in a revolutionary crisis.
[3] Mohammed
Daud came to power, overthrowing the monarchy in 1973. He was overthrown
by the Armed Forces Revolutionary Council on 27 April 1978, which
brought the Taraki regime to power.
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