This is an archive of the former website of the Maoist Internationalist Movement, which was run by the now defunct Maoist Internationalist Party - Amerika. The MIM now consists of many independent cells, many of which have their own indendendent organs both online and off. MIM(Prisons) serves these documents as a service to and reference for the anti-imperialist movement worldwide.
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THE MAOIST INTERNATIONALIST MOVEMENT
MIM Notes 48 JANUARY, 1991
MIM Notes speaks to and from the viewpoint of the
world's oppressed majority, and against the
imperialist-patriarchy. Pick it up and wield it in
the service of the people. support it, struggle
with it and write for it.
IN THIS ISSUE:
1. DIPLOMACY ADVANCES IMPERIALIST WAR PREPARATIONS
2. PRISON PROTEST SQUELCHED AT TRENTON
3. REVOLUTIONARY DEFEATISM
4. LETTERS
5. MAO SAYS STALIN 70% CORRECT
6. LIBERALISM KILLS
7. UNDER LOCK & KEY: NEWS FROM PRISONS AND PRISONERS
8. ONE YEAR IN BROOKLYN, NEXT YEAR IN JERUSALEM
9. 'NO BLOOD FOR OIL' WON'T END WORLD WARS
10. OPPRESSED COUNTRIES:CEASEFIRE REACHED IN LIBERIA
11. FMLN RELIES ON NEGOTIATIONS, NOT PEOPLE'S WAR
The Maoist Internationalist Movement (MIM) is a
revolutionary communist party that upholds
Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, comprising the collection
of existing or emerging Maoist internationalist
parties in the English-speaking imperialist
countries and their English-speaking internal
semi-colonies, as well as the existing or emerging
Spanish-speaking Maoist internationalist parties
of Aztlan, Puerto Rico and other territories of
the U.S. Empire. MIM Notes is the newspaper of
MIM. Notas Rojas is the newspaper of the Spanish-
speaking parties or emerging parties of MIM.
MIM is an internationalist organization that works
from the vantage point of the Third World
proletariat; thus, its members are not Amerikans,
but world citizens.
MIM struggles to end the oppression of all groups
over other groups: classes, genders, nations. MIM
knows this is only possible by building public
opinion to seize power through armed struggle.
Revolution is a reality for North America as the
military becomes over-extended in the government's
attempts to maintain world hegemony.
MIM differs from other communist parties on three
main questions: (1) MIM holds that after the
proletariat seizes power in socialist revolution,
the potential exists for capitalist restoration
under the leadership of a new bourgeoisie within
the communist party itself. In the case of the
USSR, the bourgeoisie seized power after the death
of Stalin in 1953; in China, it was after Mao's
death and the overthrow of the "Gang of Four" in
1976. (2) MIM upholds the Chinese Cultural
Revolution as the farthest advance of communism in
human history. (3) MIM believes the North American
white-working-class is primarily a non-
revolutionary worker-elite at this time; thus, it
is not the principal vehicle to advance Maoism in
this country.
MIM accepts people as members who agree on these
basic principles and accept democratic centralism,
the system of majority rule, on other questions of
party line.
"The theory of Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin is
universally applicable. We should regard it not as
dogma, but as a guide to action. Studying it is
not merely a matter of learning terms and phrases,
but of learning Marxism-Leninism as the science of
revolution."
-- Mao Zedong, Selected Works, Vol. II, p. 208
* * *
DIPLOMACY ADVANCES IMPERIALIST WAR PREPARATIONS
by MC12 & MC44
December 9, 1990--At the end of a long rainbow of coercive
diplomacy, the United States succeeded in wringing out an advance
approval of war against Iraq from the United Nations Security
Council on Nov. 29. The final vote on the council was 12-2.(1)
Instead of choosing between war and diplomacy, the United States
is pursuing both with a vengeance. Consolidating power over
allies, creating puppets and punishing defectors, the USA is
laying the groundwork for a broader military victory in the war of
expansion in the Middle East. The wide-ranging efforts undertaken
by the USA around the world underscore the imperialist nature of
the conflict, eliminating arguments that the war is caused by a
single policy decision or an aggressive personality.
Diplomacy
The Security Council resolution officially gave Iraq until Jan. 15
to surrender Kuwait to the United States or face total destruction
at the hands of the U.S. war machine.
China, Cuba and Yemen were the last holdouts, as the Bush
administration pulled out all the stops to ram the resolution
through. China, which has the power to veto a Security Council
resolution, held out for talks with U.S. Secretary of State James
Baker as a first step toward restarting the flow of commerce and
lending which the USA cut off after the state capitalist, pro-
Western Deng Xiaoping regime massacared students in Tiananmen
Square in June 1989. China got talks, but no (public) deal, so
they agreed to abstain instead of vetoing.
Baker met with the Cuban foreign minister at the last minute, the
highest level meeting between the two countries since the Cuban
revolution in 1959, but there were no deals and Cuba still voted
no.(2)
When Yemen also insisted on voting against the war, the USA
announced plans to cut off $70 million in annual aid to that
country.(3)
War all but certain
At a press conference on Nov. 30, President Bush made it clear
that he was not interested in a peaceful settlement (though of
course he said he was). He did say he had no intention of fighting
a half-assed war.
"This will not be a Vietnam," he said. "If we get one kid that's
apt to be in harm's way, I want him backed up to the hilt by
American firepower."
In the same speech, Bush said he would permit high-level talks
between the United States and Iraq, but was not prepared to make
any deals. The point of the talks was not to negotiate, he said,
but just to repeat U.S. demands to Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein's face.(4)
Twin occupations
Since the USA first sent troops to Saudi Arabia, in apparent
response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait, Saddam Hussein has said he
would only withdraw from Kuwait if Israel ended its 23-year
occupation of Palestinian land, and Syria pulled out of Lebanon
(see MIM Notes 45). While Bush has maintained that there is no
connection between the various illegal occupations in the region,
a number of Arab and non-aligned governments don't agree.
Cuba, Yemen, Malaysia and Colombia have drafted a Security Council
resolution, supported by most of the Council's members, which
calls for sending a U.N. delegation to investigate the Israeli
police killings at the Temple Mount Oct. 8, and proposes an
international peace conference to settle the "Palestinian
question."(5)
The United States, which holds a veto on the Council, would rather
come up with a proposal it wouldn't be obligated to veto. Any plan
which Israel would object to, and not comply with, is likely to be
vetoed to save the embarassment of having to back a pariah nation
at a time when the USA is supposedly supporting the U.N. Any
decision to hold an international peace conference, against the
will of Israel, would also be considered a major victory for
Saddam Hussein, because the USA has always blocked such measures
in the past. At the same time, if there is a U.S. veto and sell-
out Arab governments such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Syria
continue supporting the U.S. war, then these countries will surely
face the redoubled fury of their already-angry masses.
War war war
Meanwhile, the all-out buildup of war forces continues unabated.
Those liberals who whined when Bush announced he was moving into
an offensive posture were wrong to think Bush had changed his
plans. The buildup has not slowed since it began in August, when
the USA began marching on the road toward war.
Now U.S. troop strength in the region is planned to reach 430,000
by sometime in January,(6) and total allied forces already number
more than 500,000.(7)
The U.S. armed forces have called up more than 100,000 reserves to
supplement the force,(8) out of a total of 188,000 authorized for
the war.(9)
The all-"volunteer" army, which the war machine has used since
ending the draft in the early 70s, relies on economic coercion and
propaganda brainwashing to force young people into service. The
armed services are the tool by which imperialists send their poor
to die for others' riches.
But now the Army is preventing the expiration of enlistments,
retirements and transfers home, forcing thousands of soldiers per
month to remain in the service against their will--whether they
originally "volunteered" or not.(10) The U.S. war machine is
stretched thin--transferring soldiers from other important
bases--and the clamor for a military draft is growing louder.
As Iraq sends 250,000 more troops to join the 430,000 already in
Kuwait and Southern Iraq(11)--meeting the U.S. increase tit for
tat--the dream of a quick and easy war is becoming more and more
remote. Some reports conclude that an all-out frontal
attack--currently preferred by military planners--would cost the USA
up to 15% of its attacking forces.(22)
While the President claimed that "this will not be another
Vietnam. This will not be a protracted, drawn-out war," he didn't
say it won't have a price.
Imperialist conflicts explode
A lot of noise has been made over the small contributions to the
war made by U.S. allies. These critics either ignore or don't
understand that this war is not a moral crusade to end aggression
or defend the people of the Middle East.
The era of imperialism--the highest stage of capitalism and the
precursor to revolution--carries capitalist contradictions to their
fullest extreme. In this era, which began around the beginning of
this century, three conflicts are increased:
*the conflict between capital and labor, between monopoly
capitalists and the international proletariat,
*between imperialists themselves, as monopolists and national
powers vie for control over world resources, and
*between imperialist nations and the oppressed nations, where
increased exploitation of land and labor produce conditions
favorable to revolution.(12)
In the imperialist stage, capitalism's economic basis in
competition (expand-or-die) drives the capitalist powers to war to
grab more land and cheap labor for themselves, to allow the export
of capital into underdeveloped countries to flow freely. While
force is planned to bring Iraq beack into line as a U.S.-
controlled resource, the current crisis also allows the USA to
gain more control over vulnerable allies through diplomacy and
economic pressure, gaining an edge over rival imperialists
(especially European and Japanese powers) in the process. The
massive war machine is the tool of choice for the economically
weaker USA.
While Iraq generates huge profits from its export of oil, its
economy remains dependent on imports for infrastructure,
technology, and many basic necessities including food.
The threat of self-sufficient oil-producing countries is
especially acute in an era in which the United States is afraid of
losing control over Third World countries to other imperialists.
Control over international oil markets--gained in this case
militarily--has huge potential economic advantages for control over
the underdeveloped world.
One of the major prizes already emerging from the crisis is Syria,
which has been the Arab world's most vehement enemy of Iraq for
years. Pulling Syria into the Amerikan arena was deemed important
enough to demand a meeting between Bush and President Hafez al-
Assad of Syria, the first top-level contact between the two
countries in 11 years.(13)
The crisis has also reinforced the allegiance of such traditional
puppets as Egypt, Israel and Turkey, the latter of which only
recently agreed to allow its airbases to be used for an attack on
Iraq.(14)
The high oil prices, which have resulted from the war, while
causing fear on U.S markets, also have a bonus appeal for the USA.
The United States, the world's second largest producer of oil, can
expect to see its rivals suffer more from high prices, spreading
the effects of an oncoming recession more evenly. And Saudi
Arabia, the world's largest exporter, and currently squarely in
the U.S. back pocket, is drawing record profits from the
crisis--already $10 billion more than it would have otherwise.(15)
Some of that cash is going straight to the war effort, as the
Saudi monarchy has pledged $1.5 billion more to Egypt after it
agreed to beef up its military contribution, and up to $1 billion
to Syria for 15,000 troops and 300 tanks.(16) This aid in addition
to new loans, grants, and forgiven debts by the USA is used to
firm up client support; Egypt's military debt to the United States
has been forgiven (see MIM Notes 46).
But strategically speaking, more control over the Arabian
Peninsula and surrounding region is an important part of the USA's
long term plans.
The State Department in the 1940s called the Arabian Peninsula "a
stupendous source of strategic power, and one of the greatest
material prizes in world history," and "probably the richest
economic prize in the world in the field of foreign
investment."(17)
Iraq's invasion threw a wrench in the works of U.S. plans for
expansion into the region. In January, the administration had
announced the goal of increasing U.S. exports to Iraq, for which
the USA had become top trading partner.(17)
Earlier, in 1988, the U.S. government had said it was a good time
to get in on the Iraqi economy, due to a "wide range of economic
reforms to increase productivity and encourage private sector
industrial growth and import substitution," largely in the
agricultural sector.
"American firms are strongly encouraged to investigate the market
and introduce their products and services to Iraqi officials now,"
the government said.(18)
The goal of trade domination extended to Kuwait as well, which had
increased its U.S. imports from 1988 to 1989 by 24%.
The USA wants to better its trade balance with these countries--to
balance heavy oil imports--by increasing exports, especially of
capital-intensive industries. Seizing control of oil reserves is
an important part of creating and developing dependency on the
United States, supplemented by increased control over markets and
imports.
In 1989, Saudi Arabia exported twice the amount it imported in its
relationship with the USA. But in 1988, the United States regained
"chief supplier" status with Saudi Arabia, according to the U.S.
government, and the opportunity for a major increase in that
export market was just on the horizon. The state-owned Saudi oil
company had plans to double its production capacity in the next 10
years, to 10 million barrels per day, at a cost of $15-30
billion--money spent on capital-intensive infrastructure from which
U.S. exporters stand ready to profit.
The Commerce Department this April urged "U.S. oil equipment firms
[to] take immediate action to establish or reestablish a presence
in the Saudi market."(19)
Economic crisis at home
Recessions and expansion are balancing forces in the imperialist
march toward its own grave; they drive each other, producing
greater urgency and greater risks at every turn.
The bourgeoisie has admitted that the U.S. economy is in a
recession--meaning the economy is shrinking overall. And that
economic pressure is increasing the stakes for the expansionist
war.
The USA lost more than 250,000 jobs in November, as the official
unemployment rate climbed .2% to 5.9%--the highest official rate
since October 1987. 200,000 of those were factory jobs, for a
total of 800,000 lost in two years. Service jobs were also
down.(20)
The government's index of leading economic indicators was down 1.2
percent in October, other major indicators were at their lowest
point since 1982--all evidence that the economy shrank in October
and November.(21)
More than simply a dependent country which has gotten out of line,
such as Nicaragua, Iraq represents the prize of control over oil
economies with huge, capital-intensive profit-generating
industries. The potential economic independence of oil-exporting
countries underscores the need for military control to insure
thorough and widespread domination--with all the risks that
entails--while increasing the potential economic rewards in terms
of expansion and stability.
The United States is putting a lot of cards on the table in this
war. Its victory here would have catastrophic consequences for the
people of the Middle East in particular. Its loss could mark the
beginning of a truly new world order.
Notes:
1. Detroit Free Press (DFP) 11/30/90, p. A1.
2. DFP 11/30/90 p. 14A.
3. New York Times (NYT) 12/5/90, p. A11.
4. NYT12/1/90, p. A4.
5. NYT 12/8/90, p. A6.
6. DFP 11/29/90, p. A11.
7. NYT 12/7/90, A8.
8. NYT 12/5/90, p. A11.
9. NYT 12/4/90, p. A8.
10. NYT 11/24/90, p. A4.
11. NYT 11/27/90, p. A8.
12. See V. I. Lenin, Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism,
available from MIM for $2, postage paid.
13. DFP 11/30/90, p. 14A.
14. NYT 12/5/90, p. A1.
15. NYT 9/6/90; NPR 12/8/90.
16. NYT 12/6/90, p. 10.
17. Noam Chomsky in Z, 10/90.
18. Business America, 4/25/88.
19. Business America, 4/23/90.
20. NYT 12/8/90, p. A1.
21. NYT 12/4/90, p. C1.
22. Newsweek 12/10/90, p. 27.
* * *
PRISON PROTEST SQUELCHED AT TRENTON
by MC11
On Aug. 7, seven prisoners in New Jersey's maximum security
Trenton State Prison wore red armbands to commemorate the death of
George Jackson, an African-American revolutionary who died in
Soledad Prison (California) 25 years ago. In the weeks that
followed, the six were transferred, prison guards provoked another
set of prisoners to violent self-defence, seven more prisoners
were transferred to out-of-state prisons, and the prison went on
lockdown for over a month. Prison officials blamed the incidents
on a group of 68 prisoners who they charged with conspiring to
kill prison guards.
MIM recently received a letter and several newspaper clippings
from a prisoner being held in Trenton State's Management Care Unit
describing the events of August and September. With this
information and other interviews, MIM has pieced the story
together.
As spokesperson for the New Jersey State Department of Corrections
explains, "Demonstrations are illegal. All the prisoners know
that." But Linda Hickman, the wife of one of the prisoners who was
transferred in the aftermath of the violence, says "If six or more
guys are in a group, that's a demonstration. So the seven were
standing wherever, and the Department of Corrections says it's a
demonstration. The superintendent kept saying, if they'd just
asked permission, he would have allowed them to demonstrate."
Hickman, co-chair of the Concerned Families Association, a group
that formed during the lockdown to protest the Department of
Corrections' (DoC) treatment of the prisoners, says she has no
doubt that the DoC's reaction was primarily a response to the
prisoners' political beliefs. George Jackson, a member of the
Black Panther Party who advocated the armed overthrow of the U.S.
government and wrote inspiring propaganda for the Afrikan-American
masses from his prison cell, was never a favorite with the DoC.
(See book review, page 9). Prisoners daring to express their
solidarity with Jackson's revolutionary ideology were not about
to be looked on with favor either.
On Aug. 8, the seven prisoners who wore armbands were transferred
to a state facility for the criminally insane. Several weeks
later, they were separated and transferred against their will to
other New Jersey state prisons.
At Trenton on Aug. 10, as prisoners were returning to their cells
from the recreation yard, violence broke out between guards and
prisoners. Six guards were injured. The Department of Corrections
calls it a "premeditated, planned savage attack" by a "covert
organization of militant prisoners" who had conspired to kill the
guards. In a letter to Hickman following his transfer to another
part of Trenton State, one of the prisoners involved in the
incident describes what really happened.
Several days before the incident, the letter says, "racist guards
held a demonstration behind the prison walls demanding the
creation of an even more brutal and effective penal system [at
Trenton State]...." The prisoner population of Trenton State
Prison, according to the Department of Corrections, is 64% Black,
22% white, and 13% Hispanic.
The guards' demands were not officially sanctioned by the
Department of Corrections, but a campaign focused on provoking and
harassing Afrikan prisoners unofficially went into effect. On Aug.
10, the letter says, the harrassment reached the point where the
prisoners had to fight back. The prison went into lockdown
immediately.
According to an affidavit signed by prisoner John Bland, a new
round of prison guard brutality began moments after the outbreak
was quelled. Bland, along with 100 other prisoners, was in the
recreation yard when the violence broke out. They were ordered to
strip to their underwear before lining up to reenter the prison.
"I was stripped, frisked, and ordered to interlock my fingers on
top of my head and walk on the yellow line," his affidavit reads.
"There were officers in riot gear flanked on my right and left
side leading into the institution. I took approximately 20 steps
when Correction Officer Marczak hit me in my lower back with a
police stick. I fell to the ground and was cuffed behind my back.
A police stick was placed under the cuffs causing my back and head
to lunge forward toward the ground. While being escorted through
the institution in a bent forward position completely naked, I was
hit on the back with police sticks." Bland was left in a concrete
detention cell for three days without any clothing or bedding. He
was later charged with assaulting the guard that beat him.
Another prisoner, Andre Herd, also issued an affidavit describing
similar treatment. He added that guards screamed racial slurs at
him while hitting him with a baton.
The Concerned Family Association (CFA) formed soon after lockdown
measures went into effect. Says Hickman, "I understand this is a
prison, however, I have someone in there and I want to know what
the hell is going on." In the first phase of the lockdown, she
says, "The guys had no phone calls, no attorney visits, no visits
to the law library, no leaving the cell, no work--so no ability to
earn credits toward release--no contact with institutional
paralegals, no recreaction, no visits, they had one shower every
four days, their mail was tampered with, and a lot of guys lost
legal papers and personal property."
Five prisoners were transferred to out-of-state prisons against
their will soon after the incident, a Department of Corrections
official says. Sixty-eight prisoners were placed in solitary
confinement. By mid-December, 12 were still there.
The CFA attempted to meet with the commissioner, a top-level
prison bureaucrat, during the first few days of the lockdown, but,
Hickman says, "He said 'no, I do not meet with those type of
people.'" After the CFA complained to the governor's office, they
were able to meet with two low-level officials.
"They promised nothing," Hickman continues. "Oh no, they promised
to put up a sign saying 'contact visits are being
videotaped'--which is nothing. A five-year-old kid can do that."
The CFA's original goal, Hickman says, was to establish a visitors
advisory board which would meet regularly with the prison
administration to discuss conditions in the prison.
One of the prisoners who was transferred out of state was the
former chairperson of the Prisoners' Representative Council,
which, Hickman says, was "the only voice the guys had in the
prison." The chairperson acted as a liaison between the prisoners
and the prison administration; the council served as a forum for
communication between prisoners. David Lambert, Hickman's husband,
was made chairperson of the PRC after the lockdown. He was
transferred a few weeks later.
"David is vocal," Hickman says, "David is intelligent, and plus
David is gonna fight back. The day they transferred David was the
day [prison superintendent] Beyers decided to decentralize the
PRC. What he did was illegal and he knows it."
Instead of allowing prisoner representatives to meet and convey
their concerns to the prison administration, the administration
reorganized the system so that several prison officials are
responsible for meeting with one prisoner, individually, from
different areas of the prison.
Audrey Bomsey, an attorney with the Public Advocate's Office who
will represent some of the transferred prisoners, said in mid-
December that prisoner beatings by guards are continuing. The
guards, Bomsey says, still walk around in full riot gear.
* * *
REVOLUTIONARY DEFEATISM
by MC12
This war, and there is more and more reason to believe there will
be a war, is not simply a policy of the United States government.
This war is the inevitable result of imperialism--the product of
capitalism growing into its highest stage.
As long as capitalism is to survive, it must grow. By the
beginning of this century, the major capitalist powers had spread
beyond their borders, to the point where all the countries of the
world were subservient to one capitalist power or another. This
marked the dawn of the imperialist stage of capitalism--its final
stage.
When this first division of the world was achieved, the
imperialist powers bumped heads in their attempt to continue
acquiring more territory, more access to natural resources and
labor, and more markets to absorb the export of capital. Thus
World War I was an economic necessity, not a simple policy
decision. The history of world wars since then has since continued
in this vein.
But the lifeblood of imperialism--war--is also the cause of its
downfall. Imperialist wars spread out and eventually weaken
imperialist countries in relation to each other and also
absolutely.
In the long run then, imperialists losing wars is a good thing for
the international proletariat. It hastens the downfall of the
dictatorship of the bourgeoisie, and heralds the entry onto the
world stage of the dictatorship of the proletariat.
But imperialist wars mean that proletarians (or non-proletarian
lackeys of imperialism) fight and die for the interests of the
bourgeoisie. This is a crime, and revolutionaries must fight to
end all such wars. But calling for an end to the war--Stop the
war!--is an empty slogan unless it is the first step in the effort
to end all such wars, in the process of overthrowing imperialism
with proletarian revolution.
Revolutionaries wish no harm on the innocent or misguided people
who have joined the armies of imperialism. African-Americans and
Puerto Ricans in particular have historically been pressed by
economic coercion into service to die for their oppressors; this
is a crime against humanity.
MIM wants the USA to lose this war, knowing that means the deaths
of thousands of innocent people on both sides. This position is
only justifiable if it is backed up by the commitment to fight
imperialism to the bloody end ourselves, and to take full
advantage of this defeat of U.S. imperialism to advance the cause
of the international proletariat. Only in this way will the deaths
of U.S. and Iraqi soldiers not have been in vain.
In 1915 V. I. Lenin, leader of the 1917 Bolshevik revolution in
Russia, said of World War I: "Turning the present imperialist war
into civil war is the only correct proletarian slogan."(See The
War and the Second International) This is the long-term objective
of revolutionaries in the present war as well, first identified in
Lenin's theory of revolutionary defeatism--calling for the defeat
of one's country in an imperialist war.
MIM works toward such a war. Because even when social movements do
affect imperialist policies, as some say occurred during the
Vietnam War, the people of the world have nothing to celebrate
unless those movements lead to the destruction of imperialism in
the long run.
* * *
LETTERS
MIM NOTES CENSORED IN PRISON
Dear MIM:
I would first of all like to thank you for your consideration in
routinely sending me copies of your issues of MIM Notes. You
should know, however, that I have now been transferred to another
facility. I am no longer at the Correctional Center in X. I am now
here at the Correctional Center in Y. Unfortunately both
facilities have a rule of screening any left-wing literature or
news. However, they have no problem at all with incoming right-
wing christian literature which is not screened. This has been
quite frustrating for me to say the least. But, as a true warrior,
I refuse to throw in the towel. If you know of any legal way I can
fight this I am willing to go that route as well as the ones I've
already formulated.
Fight the Power
--Prisoner from the Midwest
MC 11 replies:
There have been some court rulings on censorship of publications
that prisoners may cite in arguments or court cases with various
prison bureaucracies. One court said that the Constitution
requires a "substantial factual showing by correctional officials
that a publication poses a tangible threat to the order, security,
or rehabilitative programs of the prison before they may bar the
publication from the facility."(1) Another court ruled that
"literature that criticizes police or corrections officials cannot
be excluded... [without] a substantial showing that the
publication does indeed pose a tangible threat to the order and
security of the institution...."(2) Another has said that a
revolutionary publication may not be censored only because of the
beliefs it expresses; it must be found to pose an actual threat to
security, order, or rehabilitation within the institution.(3)
Prison officials are not supposed to impose a blanket ban on a
periodical they find objectionable once--every issue is supposed to
be reviewed individually.(4) There is also some precedent for
requiring prison officials to censor only the portions of a
periodical that they deem unsuitable for prisoners' eyes, and
deliver the rest of it.(4)
As most prisoners undoubtedly realize, the decisions on who gets
sent to prison and the "rights" they have while living under the
direct control of the capitalist state are subjective. The system
is designed to protect itself and the ruling capitalist class
which it serves. So despite the existence of laws which ostensibly
protect prisoners' "rights," there is no guarantee that they will
be upheld or enforced. Even the rulings cited above, made under
the pretense of protecting prisoners' access to information, do
not seek to hide their underlying motivation, which is to maintain
tight control over any ideas or material that might convince a
prison population to revolt against their jailers.
In general, the capitalist class prefers to rule through the
ideology of liberal democracy--giving people as many "civil
rights," as much "freedom of expression" as possible without
threatening their own power. But for most prisoners liberal
democracy has long since been revealed as a sham, leaving
revolutionary ideology an increasingly logical and attractive
option. For the same reason MIM believes prisoners are one of the
most revolutionary groups in Amerika, then, the prison system
seeks to prevent prisoners from receiving MIM Notes. The prisoner
from the Midwest is not the first to have the newspaper censored.
MIM does not advocate prisoners attempting violent revolution
within U.S. prisons at this time, so technically MIM Notes cannot
be said pose a clear and present danger to the security and order
of the institution. Conditions in the United States are not right
for such actions yet--the state would simply crush a prison revolt
through military force. Instead MIM urges prisoners to join the
party, study Maoism, write for MIM Notes, and educate themselves
and those around them in political economy and revolutionary
strategy. It is our job as Maoists to create public opinion, both
inside and outside U.S. prisons, to enable such action--which no
doubt will be part of a larger revolution--to succeed.
Although MIM supports all attempts at prison reform through the
legal process as it does anything that will better prisoners'
current conditions, the party puts no faith in the legal process
as a method toward attaining justice--for prisoners or anyone else.
However, since the party sees prisoners as an important
revolutionary group and believes it is vital to gain their support
and participation, MIM will do its best to ensure that the
newspaper reaches the prisoners who request it. The party is in
the process of investigating the case of the prisoner from the
Midwest. Other prisoners who have a subscription but are not
receiving the paper should inform us of their situation.
Notes:
1. Jackson v. Ward, id. at 559; accord, Thibodeaux v. State of
South Dakota, 553 F.2d 558 (8th Cir. 1977); Aikens v. Jenkins, id.
at 775; also U.S. 396, 94 S.Ct. 1800 (1974), Procunier v.
Martinez, at 413, as cited in the second edition of Daniel E.
Manville's Prisoners' Self-Help Litigation Manual, Oceana
Publications, New York, 1986, p.91 and p.86.
2. Jackson v. Ward, at 563, op. cit., p. 91.
3. United States ex rel. Larkins v. Oswald, 510 F.2d 583, 587-88
(2d Cir, 1975) ("revolutionary or militant rhetoric" improperly
seized); Aikens v. Lash, 390 F.Supp. 663, 671-72 (N.D. Ind. 1975),
aff'd, 534 F 2d 751 (7th Cir.1976 (Mao Tse-Tung improperly
excluded), op. cit., p. 92.
4. Guajardo v. Estelle, 580 F. 2d at 762 (5th Cir. 1978), op.
cit., p. 93.
WEAK ANALYSIS AT GULF PROTESTS
Dear MIM:
The anti-war protest in my city was interesting. I didn't need a
mask or santa claus suit, so I wore dark shades [to avoid
detection--MC5] However, our mutual friend and I spotted some pigs
video-taping us and a group of Trotskyists, so we tried to lay
low; I did get out about 50-60 issues (probably because I was the
only one not asking for $) before I high-tailed it out of there.
The crowd consisted of mostly middle-class nonviolence-oriented
students, and a few "concerned" older people, basically your all-
white suburban dwellers who all believe that Dow Chemicals "let
you do great things." Now they may have legitimate cause for alarm
that their own sons, daughters, sisters and brothers could be
killed, and yet another monument to "American 'sacrifices'
overseas" will have to be built.
But they steadfastly refused to link the necessary continued
oppression of Third-World peoples with their own consumerism, and
a few of the speakers even called for some of that George Bush
"prudence" to let the economic violence (i.e. sanctions) run its
course, and starve the Iraqis into obedience.
It seems that unless Saddam voluntarily removes his troops and
apologizes (don't count on it), "Operation Imminent Thunder" plans
to thunder into Kuwait soon after January 15 and exterminate a few
more people of color for "our way of life" (count on that).
Body-bags were passed out and references made that 50,000 had been
sent to the Saudi desert for our poor boys. There was of course
the usual liberal call for a conditioned withdrawal and a
reinvestment in, some vague term, "infrastructure;" although this
may be another call for bribes for the white working class. But
that's not going to happen because they've already voluntarily
lined up front and center for the opportunity to travel and kill
dirty Arabs; Secretary of State Baker was simply telling the truth
when he stated that this mobilization was only about jobs.
It should come as no surprise that as the justification for the
cold war dies, that bringing all NATO troops back here could risk
economic collapse, so a new enemy had to be created... quickly.
Comrades, I think this could be an escalating of the North/South
conflict that you've referred to in the past. When these
"activists" are ready to see the true crisis that this could pose
for capitalism, and seek to work towards a
communist/internationalist future, the seeds of revolution may
have a chance to grow in this country. But not before an analysis
of class structure is done on a global scale, with a particular
form of injustice not being valued more or less because of
ethnicity, gender or sexual orientation.
The Trotskyists there were trying to convince me that I should
follow their own line on the Soviet system and the white working
class; I told them that I was not going to support a class that is
so influenced by racism and consumerism, and pointed out to them
that their reluctance to endorse Mao may stem from his skin color,
and not anything they could prove.
I didn't remember where you all stood on their group, the Worker's
Vanguard/Spartacus, but I was emphatic about Maoism being the
ideology that has liberated the largest number of people in
history.
-- MC15
December 1990
CONSCIOUSNESS = POWER
Dear MIM:
Rebellious greetings.
"Death will be often, but blood will flow continually on both
sides though."
In your recent paper (MIM Notes 47), I notice that you had
published my poem, with respect, loyalty and dedication I salute
you for your time, patience and commitment to the cause for
action.
The consciousness of the people will have to be raised before they
will fully adopt the concept of revolutionary violence because the
amerikkkan system has so thoroughly brainwashed the majority of
the world's people to believing that a revolutionary is a hating
person that preaches and practices hatred, (but it must be made
clear to the people that a revolutionary is drawn by the love of
his/her people.)
Malcolm X once said, "to be a revolutionary you would have to
spend some time in jail." This is in fact true, see, because once
you become known of your activities, the government will set out
to paralyze your movement/organization or eradicate you from
existence all at once. However, the Black Panther Party teaches
that, "if a comrade is serving the people then the people will
provide a place to sleep." Then they go on to say, "if comrades
are educating and organizing the masses, then the masses will
provide food and shelter for the 'rades." That's why they called
it "survival programs" and fundamentally speaking I think this is
what we need now if we're to build-to-win.
I wish to become a part of outside activities, something that has
to do with young movments. Your support is requested.
--A Young Dragon at War with the Government
December, 1990
SPONTANEOUS WASTE
Dear MIM:
More than XX of us met to form a "Revolutionary United Front" as a
result of the "drug war" conference here last month at X
University. We feel, our committee, which is a part of this front,
that Operation Desert Shield is just a maneuver typical of the
U.S. empire. A war on invasion of Iraq would be "an accident." No
one at the meeting had any scientific facts to support the
"Coalition to stop U.S. intervention in the Middle East"
viewpoint.
Anyhow the majority of this front agreed against spontaneous
"energy wasting" mobilizations around false issues which are being
pushed by the Rocky Mountain Peace Center (RMPC) which was
denounced as being "irritantly Gandhian."
There was a presentation for a "coherent leftist movement," and
after the Coors "bloodbath" we need to rebuild. Professor X X said
that an organization that can't protect itself is a useless
organization. Earlier the Irish Republican Army (IRA) was noted as
a good example of a self-defense organization.
It was implicitly stated that this front is not a united front
between "liberals and radicals." We don't want to "reclaim" the
constitution but put it in the trash heap of history. At this
point the front is made up of "settler activists" in the majority
along with Afrikan and Mexican intellectuals.
We just received MIM Notes 47 and will surely distribute it at our
next meeting. Unity is a process with its own rhythm. It takes
time, but we'll get there!
--In study and struggle,
XX for the Front
December 1990
MC5 replies:
The implication that the war in the Persian Gulf is a distraction
from organizing against national oppression in the United States
is not in agreement with the MIM line against militarism and
imperialism.
Maoists could disagree with this position the way the letter-
writer has. The question is not a fundamental line of demarcation.
The war in the Persian Gulf is important because imperialism is a
system reaching around the globe. Its global reach makes
imperialism seem very powerful. However, at the same time, the
global reach of imperialism makes it vulnerable.
The U.S. imperialists were not able to instantly quell Iraq's
threat to its empire with military forces. The imperialists have
sent a large portion of their troops from Europe to deal with
Hussein.
Moments like these give the oppressed nationalities everywhere an
inkling of what it will be like to rise up in revolution. The U.S.
empire cannot keep its grip everywhere at the same time.
DON'T GET CAUGHT SHORT
Dear MIM:
We have been receiving copies of MIM Notes which we have been
successfully distributing free. Unfortunately too successfully, as
the last issue I did not even get a chance to read. If possible I
would appreciate it if you would increase the quantity you are
sending by ten or fifteen per issue.
--Foreign distributor
November 1990
MIM Notes welcomes letters from all its readers. Letters may be
editor for space and clarity. MIM also distributes regular
theoretical debates. Those interested in joining should send $1
cash per month to MIM Notes, P.O. Box 3576, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-
3576.
THE CASE AGAINST STALIN:
CRITIC FAULTS STALIN FOR THE NON-AGGRESSION PACT WITH HITLER AND
EXECUTING MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY
Dear MIM:
From 1975 to 1981 I was a militant in a Maoist party. Then the
party dissolved and I became an independent grassroots movement
member in my country, until I came here not much ago.
I got MIM Notes 40 and read most of it. It was like to live again
in an old time. Actually, my ideas changed a lot in the past ten
years.
Probably you will think this is a letter from a revisionist.
Anyway, I want to write it.
I was very interested in Mao's writings in the 1970s. I read the
whole Selected Works and many Chinese magazines too. My comrades
called me "el chino" (the Chinese). I was the expert "in Chinese
questions." I read a lot of Stalin works, too.
In the 70s, the general secretary of the party where I was a
militant made a statement: "Stalin is a delimiting line. He made
errors but in the overall picture, he was a good revolutionist. So
we have to defend him. If not, we will fall step by step into the
mud of revisionism." So I defended him. Although I had many
arguments with people who said they didn't like any butcher, I
always defended him.
But the time passed and I began to take into account other points
of view and I began to change my mind about the "errors." For
instance, I noticed that the functioning rules of the Communist
Party Soviet Union (CPSU) were completely disturbed during
Stalin's time. During 13 years, there was no congress of the
party.
But this is not the worst. The worst is that most of those elected
to the Central Committee of the CPSU in the 17th Congress were
dead or in jail when it began the next congress. It is very hard
to believe that Bukharin, Kamenev, Zinoviev, Rakovski, Rikov,
Riazanov and the other many Bolsheviks killed during Stalin's rule
were all traitors.
Many Russian or non-Russian communists coming in 1939 from Spain
to the Soviet Union met the death they avoided [in the USSR] in
the struggle against fascism. This is the case of Antonov-Ovsenko,
for instance, the man who led the revolutionary fighters to take
the Winter Palace of 1917.
There is a lot of myth about Stalin's help to the Spanish Republic
during the civil war 1936-1939. It is true that the Soviet Union
sent to Spain planes and other arms. In that time, Stalin was very
interested in opposing fascism.
But he was also very interested in pressing Spanish communists to
fight against a little Marxist party, Partido Obrero de
Unificacion Marxista (POUM), that was denouncing Moscow's moves
against the old Bolsheviks. The general secretary of this party,
Joaquin Maurin, disappeared and many think he was killed by
Russian advisers.
The attacks against POUM and anarchists led in 1937 to the
Barcelona riots that weakened a lot the common front against
fascism. You can read about all this in Orwell's Homage to
Catalonnia. But there are two books by Jesœs Hernandez (Yo fui
ministro de Stalin and En el pa’s de la gran mentira) where you
can read about all this. Hernandez was a member of the central
committee of the Spanish CP and one of the two communist ministers
in the Republican Government during the war. In 1939, he fled to
the USSR and a few years later he wrote these two books.
There is a book by Z. Medvedev entitled Let History Judge--Origins
and Consequences of Stalinism. You can read there a lot about the
history of the Soviet Union during Stalin's life. There are three
interesting persons you can read about in this book: Yezhov,
Yagoda and Vyshinksy. Yezhov and Yagoda were the chiefs of the
police during the thirties, when many old Bolsheviks were killed.
They both were killed too. Vyshinsky, an old Menshevik, was the
state prosecutor in the great purges. He was a great liar who
without batting an eye listened to the "confessions" of the
defendants, most probably got by coercion and torture. He survived
Stalin and died in 1954.
In your paper I read about the intelligence of Stalin signing the
German-Soviet Pact in 1939. But Stalin was completely candid with
this pact. It's true the English wanted to push Hitler against the
USSR, but Stalin signed the Pact and thought the peace was already
granted for his country. Even he did silly things to make the
Germans happy.
Soon after the Pact, Litvinov, a Jew, was removed from his post.
Even the anti-German propaganda was forbidden. The movie Alexander
Nevski, an anti-German film directed by Eisenstein in 1937, was
put off circulation. Eisenstein was suggested to set up Wagner's
The Walkyrie at the Bolshoy. The opera had a great premiere with
the fascist ambassadors attending. A few weeks later Germany
attacked the Soviet Union. (Indeed, the opera was immediately
dropped and the film immediately sent to the theaters.)
Of course, Stalin did not pay attention to the information of
Soviet intelligence telling him the Germans were ready to attack.
(I read a very good French book about this. The title in English
would be The Red Orchestra.) It's not difficult to conclude that
the Soviet Union won the war against Germany in spite of Stalin,
not by his leadership.
I guess you support the idea the USSR was socialist until Stalin's
death. Then it became a state capitalist country. At least, this
is the usual Chinese-Maoist theory of the 60s and 70s.
Now I think that is a very simplistic theory. Where was the
bourgeoisie before the "Khrushchev coup d'etat"? Ninety-five
percent of the people in the party and the government were the
same before and after 1953. Was Beria the leader of the
proletarian line? I think he was really a leader, the leader of
the repression and murder line. It's impossible to deny that
repression weakened in the Soviet Union after Stalin's death and
the 20th Congress of the CP. If the bourgeoisie got the power
would it not be logical to think the new class would need more
repression? The problem of the nature of the East countries is a
great one. But I don't think Mao solved it.
I don't know much about Trotsky, but I think he was probably right
in many things. In the last years, I'm beginning to get closer to
his theory about the economic and social structure of the Soviet
Union. Anyway, it's clear he was killed by Stalin's orders. The
arm of Stalin was really long.
Stalin is for me one of the worst figures in recent history and
the one that "objectively" did more against communism than any
other.
I think Mao tried to analyze the experience in the Soviet Union,
but he was not successful. Really, I don't know if he can do much
more than he did. But it seems to me that in socialism it's
essential to maintain as wide and as much as possible the civil
liberties. Mao didn't oppose the Soviet repression of Berlin riots
in 1953 and the invasion of Hungary in 1956, when the president
Imre Nagy was shot. He didn't understand the centrality of
socialist democracy. He was too linked to the past, to Stalin. He
was not able to break the tradition of socialism with no
liberties.
It is impossible to have any warranty that a party cannot become
degenerated. You have to trust in people and, indeed, it is
neither a sure warranty.
It seems to me during Mao's rule, China developed a lot and
Chinese people improved very much their living standards. As you
say in your newspaper, almost never there was solving of political
problems in the Chinese CP by violent ways. (Nevertheless, Lin
Biao is a dark point in this respect.) The difference between Mao
and Stalin is for me the difference between a progressive figure
and a butcher tyrant.
Mao was very wrong in the nuclear war issue. He pushed forward
China to the arms race and he said many time they were not afraid
of nuclear war. His policy in this was completely unrealistic
(idealistic, if you prefer). He didn't take into account the
possibility of an end for mankind with a nuclear war. As Einstein
said, this possibility has to make a change in the way of thinking
in many issues. Now we know about the nuclear winter that probably
would slay all the upper life after a nuclear war.
It's very hard to be a Marxist in a world like the one of today.
You cannot deny [that former Romanian President] Nicolae Ceausescu
was a dictator who submitted the Romanian people to a great
oppression. Romania was probably one of the countries where women
have been most oppressed. But you know also Ceausescu had a very
good relationship with the Chinese, even in Mao's times. Almost
nobody in the left said something against this tyrant. Now, we
have to regret it.
The great capitalists in the world are happy. They are seeing new
markets where the Western products are coveted. Poland, Hungary,
East Germany are walking clearly to Western capitalist economies.
Bush and the U.S. right are exuberant not only for those things:
They got rid of Noriega, too, and at the end pushed Sandinistas
out of the government. In the abortion struggle they are winning
step by step. And, regardless of the changes in the East, the arms
companies are earning more money. The SDI [Star Wars] budget grew
again this year.
So, it is important that people struggle against this bourgeoisie
responsible for the repression and poverty of almost everybody in
many countries abroad and for the poverty and repression for many
in the States. This bourgeoisie that continues wasting money in
advanced weapons that perhaps some time can lead them to trust in
the possibility of winning a nuclear war and so, why not try it?
But I think this struggle is for years. We have capitalism for a
long time. It's important to get a good amount of supplies for the
travel and give up the dead weight.
I think it's possible to get supplies from the Marxist classics,
but also from Rosa Luxemburg, Rakovsky or Bukharin. And Malcolm X,
Martin Luther King and Rudi Dutschke. And we have good socialist
authors still living: Edward P. Thompson, Howard Zinn, Samir Amin,
Ernest Mandel. Many times perhaps we do not agree completely with
them, but we have to learn to endure the differences. Even non-
Marxist thinkers such as Bertrand Russell, Einstein or Ghandi can
light a little bit the way to liberation. But we need an open
mind.
When I was in the March 24 Archbishop Romero Commemoration and the
March to End the U.S. War in El Salvador I felt really good
regardless of the snow and the cold weather. There was a lot
different people there. But we all have a common struggle.
We have no common struggle with people like Stalin.
Good luck.
--Anti-Stalinist
* * *
MAO SAYS STALIN 70% CORRECT
MAO SAID THAT STALIN, IN SPITE OF HIS MANY MISTAKES, WAS 70%
CORRECT. STALIN MISSED THE ESSENTIAL POINT THAT CLASS STRUGGLE
CONTINUES UNDER SOCIALISM, BUT HE GUIDED THE SOVIET UNION AS WELL
AS ANY LEADER OF HIS DAY.
by MC5
The writer of the adjoining article, " case against Stalin," is an
articulate opponent of Josef Stalin. Stalin headed the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU) and Soviet government from 1922
until his death in 1953. MIM chooses to refute this article
because the critic makes many common charges against Stalin and
uses several important books that the bourgeoisie has in its
arsenal against communism.
None of the critic's arguments, treated below, suggest any
historical alternative leader to Stalin. Never does the critic
look at the choices available to the Soviet Union at that
particular time in history and suggest specific policies to avoid
Stalin's many errors.
The substance of a Maoist critique of Stalin is the understanding
that the bourgeoisie can arise from inside the party itself and
that class struggle continues after socialism is achieved. Stalin
made the mistake of thinking class struggle had ended in the
Soviet Union. This, however, does not mean that everything he did
was evil or that other Soviet leaders at the time would have done
any better. This essay treats the critics' charges against Stalin.
"Where was the bourgeoisie before the 'Khrushchev coup d'etat'"?
Chinese leader Mao Zedong who directed the Chinese revolution
until his death in September 1976, explained the origins under
socialism of a possible restoration of capitalism in the spring of
1976: "You are making the socialist revolution, and yet don't know
where the bourgeoisie is. It is right in the Communist Party--those
in power taking the capitalist road."(1)
Recognizing that in the highest ranks of government, party leaders
had a relationship to the means of production which made it
possible for them to become a bourgeoisie was Mao's distinctive
contribution to Marxism-Leninism. He was the first communist
government leader to explain this phenomena.
In capitalist society, government leaders do not control the means
of production politically because the means of production are not
owned by the public. But under socialism, party leaders exercise
political control over the means of production. Therefore the
question was whether the party leaders organized production in a
socialist way or in a capitalist way.
Soviet Communist Party Chairperson Nikita Krushchev, who came to
power in 1956 by a coup d'etat, and others were the bourgeoisie in
the party under Stalin. When Stalin died, they rose to power
(rehabilitating some of the leaders disgraced by Stalin along the
way). For more information on this subject MIM distributes a book
called The Restoration of Capitalism in the Soviet Union by W.B.
Bland for $7.50 priority mail.
Was the purge of communist leaders "the worst" about Stalin?
Stalin's harshest critics say he executed seven million people.(2)
Others use a figure of 20 million, counting starvation and civil
war. If there is any truth to these accounts, the "worst part"
about Stalin would be his attacks on the masses, not the party.
Many critics misunderstand the reason for these attacks and would
have killed even more ordinary civilians by starting a civil war
in the Soviet Union, purging their opponents or battling the Third
Reich without Allied support. It wasn't until Mao that there was a
theory of how to reorganize society and conduct class struggle
successfully, without just killing off everyone accused of
political impurities.
Leon Trotsky, for example, was himself like Stalin in that his
solution to party impurities was execution. As commander of the
Red Army (from March 1918 to January 1925)--the army of the
revolutionary Soviet Union--Trotsky ordered the use of military
force against the Krondstadt uprising of sailors in 1921. The
Krondstadt uprising was protesting Communist Party policies.(3)
While Trotsky was in charge of the civil war (1918-1920), he
ordered "killing honest Communists for such a relative trifle as
disobeying orders."(4) Furthermore, by Trotsky's orders, "A local
commissar was executed, as were twenty-six men who had deserted,
and he accompanied the executions with an order that in case of
mass desertion or unauthorized withdrawals it would be the
commissar who would be shot first."(4)
In contrast, the bourgeois academic Adam Ulam says Stalin would
have impressed "primitive Communists" during the civil war by
"shooting 'gentlemen' for treason." By this Ulam explains that
Stalin came down hard on former Tsarist military officials in the
Red Army who had questionable loyalties.
Trotsky and Stalin both were delegated powers of execution during
the civil war against those that opposed the communist revolution.
Both Trotsky and Stalin rightly saw executions as necessary, but
this point often gets lost when ignorant critics of Stalin marvel
at how little violence Trotsky did once he was out of power
compared with Stalin, who was still in power.
Neither Trotsky nor Stalin had Mao's theory that a potential
bourgeoisie was already in the party. They lacked an understanding
of the economic roots of the bourgeoisie and political struggle in
society at large. Stalin and Trotsky both executed what they
thought were holdovers from the old society.
Trotsky argued that the lack of development of the productive
forces held back the revolution in the Soviet Union. As such, the
Soviet Union could not have a full-fledged socialist revolution,
only one with a bureaucratic leadership. He said, "'the
dictatorship of the proletariat has found its distorted but
indubitable expression in the dictatorship of the
bureaucracy.'"(5) This, according to Trotsky, justified political
violence against those he labelled politically "Stalinist."(6)
For more on Mao's basic development of Marxism-Leninism and
differences with Trotsky and Stalin, see Mao's A Critique of
Soviet Economics.
Did Stalin order the demise of the leftists in the Spanish Civil
War from 1936-39?
As for the Spanish Civil War, this is the issue of Stalin, the
boogey-man in control of international movements. The Communist
Party of Peru (CPP which is known in the press as Sendero
Luminoso) is not under Stalin's thumb, Stalin having been dead 37
years. Still, the people's army in Peru kills mayors who call
themselves "democratic socialists" in a country run by a military
regime. In other words, people in countries outside the Soviet
Union have their own reasons for fighting a civil war within the
so-called left.
To blame the failure of the revolution in Spain on Stalin is to
attribute powers to him that he did not have. As it stands, the
critic blames Stalin for what happened in Spain without mentioning
what was better. No other government did anything to stand up to
Adolf Hitler and the Spanish fascists during that civil war in
Spain.
The imperialist governments did not render any aid to the anti-
fascists in Spain. Stalin's government did. If the Trotskyists had
overthrown a government anywhere in the world, they could have
given the anti-fascists government aid, but the Trotskyists
didn't, so no comparison between Trotskyism and Stalinism is
possible on this point.
There is a big difference between a Stalinist government and an
imperialist government. The Trotskyists and anarchists complaining
about Spain are just trying to blame their world-wide failure on
Stalin personally.
Did Stalin leave the USSR unprepared for the Nazi invasion in
1941?
If it had not been Stalin in power, it is likely that the world
would be under Hitler's Third Reich today. Even with Stalin's
breakneck industrialization to prepare for war--Hitler came very
close to completely conquering the Soviet Union in 1942.
As early as 1926, Stalin made defense against imperialist invasion
a high priority by harshly criticizing Trotsky for his "Clemenceau
Declaration."(5)
In the Clemenceau Declaration, Trotsky cites Clemenceau's
willingness to oppose the French government when the German were
80 kilometers from Paris. Trotsky was saying that the CPSU need to
fight the civil war with those who opposed them (in spite of the
German advance) in order to have the strongest government. This
was the last straw to many party members who then asked for
Trotsky expelled or even executed.
In 1931, Stalin made a speech famous for its exactness in
predicting the necessity of industrialization for World War II and
Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941: "No comrades... the
pace must not be slackened! On the contrary, we must quicken it as
much as is within our powers and possibilities.... The history of
old Russia shows... that because of her backwardness she was
constantly being defeated.... Beaten because of backwardness--
military, cultural, political, industrial, and agricultural
backwardness.... We are behind the leading countries by fifty to
one hundred years. We must make up this distance in ten years.
Either we do it or we go under."(7)
Most of the critic's points are small and taken out of context. It
is petty to discuss the moving of certain diplomats (mouth pieces
for state policies in the first place) or granting one opera or
denying any number of films in the face of preparing for World War
II and avoiding a Nazi attack as long as possible.
The critic is right Stalin did "silly things to get the Germans
happy" from 1939 to 1941 to avoid a world war where 20 million
Soviet people, as well as millions of German proletarians,
eventually died. One would hope that any statesperson would do
silly things without losing sight of the important things.
For example, Stalin dismissed a Jew, Litvinov, from the Foreign
Office before the Non-Aggression Pact of 1939, not after as the
critic asserts. Stalin replaced the Jew with an "Aryan" in order
to obtain the Non-Aggression Pact from Hitler.(8) That pact gained
Stalin crucial time to industrialize and prepare for Hitler.
Once again we should be glad Stalin was in power and not the
critic. Dealing with an irrational actor like Hitler, the critic
probably would have started war much earlier and without any
allies. In 1938, Stalin proposed to England and France that if
either of them were willing to fight the Nazis, the Soviet Union
would join. Yet, neither England nor France were willing to stand
up to Hitler in Czechoslovakia in 1938, so to fight, the Soviets
would have had to go it alone.(9)
As for other common bourgeois claims about Stalin in World War II,
Stalin's and Hitler's armies were face-to-face in Poland and the
rest of Eastern Europe before Hitler invaded the Soviet Union. It
was a tense situation for 18 months, especially in running into
each other in foreign countries.
It is not that Stalin ignored "the information of Soviet
intelligence" about Hitler's imminent invasion, which Stalin had
predicted years earlier. All the major powers were good at
determining the war postures of their opponents by examining their
troop movements. In the week before the invasion, Stalin publicly
lambasted the British for trying to provoke Stalin and Hitler. In
these statements, Stalin demonstrated his knowledge of the armies
amassed on the border with Germany.(10) Stalin recognized that he
should appear to uphold the Non-Aggression Pact scrupulously or
create a self-fulfilling prophecy of provocation and aggression.
Hitler conquered France, a power supposedly superior to the Soviet
Union, in a matter of weeks. He took over Eastern Europe. Then he
bombed England. Stalin was right to delay conflict as long as
possible.
If Stalin had not pushed the breakneck industrialization of the
Soviet Union, Hitler would have had all of Europe.
Industrialization was necessary to produce the resources that
Stalin needed to confront the Third Reich; the USSR's primitive
agricultural economy would have produced inadequate goods in
insufficient amounts.
If the USSR had failed, Hitler could have chosen to build up his
war-machine including the atomic bomb with all his new resources
or proceed with an immediate air-landing in England.
But why bother? England was letting everyone else do the fighting.
So if Hitler had conquered continental Europe, it seems unlikely
that England would have done anything but make a deal with Hitler
the way he wanted to to join the Aryan race to English stock to
conquer supposedly inferior peoples.
Since the United States was not involved, maybe it too would have
made a deal or remained isolated. Maybe it would have fought Japan
or maybe Japan wouldn't have attacked the United States if Hitler
had come to an understanding with England.
All this is to say that when Stalin signed the Non-Aggression
Pact, the Soviet Union was preparing to go it alone against Hitler
sooner or later.
Still, Stalin was forthright about the hardships fast
industrialization brought to his own people. "Of course, this is
an unpleasant fact, if we shut our eyes to the truth that our
country, our industry, cannot for a while do without this extra
exaction from the peasant."(11)
Stalin defended this course both in terms of economics and
preparation for impending war. "[By definition] the socialist
state cannot exploit the peasantry.... The payment of this extra
contribution takes place in the circumstances where the peasant's
standard of living continually improves." (11) In fact, most
peasants became industrial workers which meant a rapid increase in
the standard of living.
Between 1913, which had the highest pre-revolution industrial
production, and 1953 when Stalin died, industrial production
multiplied 30 times. This gave the Soviet Union an economy second
only to the United States'.(12)
Were there better historical alternatives to Stalin?
The anti-Stalin line has a basic weakness: It is possible to admit
every single one of the critic's points and still regard Stalin as
70% correct, just as Mao did. The article simply doesn't mention a
better alternative to Stalin during the period in question. Who
should have ruled instead of Stalin?
However much intellectuals might like Trotsky's ideas, in
practice they have amounted to the status quo of imperialism for
the last 63 years since Trotsky managed to get himself kicked out
of the CPSU. Trotskyism is a doctrine that attracts a lot of
commitment, but has yet to get anywhere. In all the world's
revolts and revolutions there has never been a Trotskyist
revolution.
There is not enough space here to dissect Trotsky's plan of the
mid-1920s to organize agriculture along military lines. For more
information on how Trotsky would have broken the alliance between
workers and peasants in the Soviet Union and brought about the
defeat of revolution much sooner, see Kostas Mavrakis's book On
Trotskyism.
Then there is Nikolai Bukharin, who became the second-ranking
member of the CPSU and government once Trotsky, Zinoviev and
Kamenev had thoroughly discredited themselves by 1927. Bukharin is
perhaps the most credible historical alternative to Stalin in the
Soviet Union of the 1930s. But Bukharin was on the same side with
Stalin on most issues till the late 1920s.
Then starting in 1928 there was a famine. Bukharin advocated
continuing the New Economic Policy (NEP)--a policy allowing free
trade and capitalist incentives for the peasantry. In contrast, by
1928 Stalin argued that capitalism could no longer develop Russian
agriculture, so he pushed for collectivization as the way out of
famine and forward into industrialization.
If Bukharin had had his way in agriculture, would the Soviet Union
have survived? The rest of the capitalist world was in the Great
Depression of 1929, a depression largely started in the capitalist
agricultural sector. Bukharin wanted more of the same depression-
causing capitalism to solve the Soviet grain crisis. Perhaps
agriculture would have muddled along, but industrialization would
not have occurred under a Bukharin-extended NEP.
If Hitler had blitzkrieged a Trotskyist Russia, where there was
civil war internally (perhaps labelled "political revolution" or
"dictatorship of the working class" over the peasantry ), or a
Bukharinist Russia, wallowing in agricultural feudalism, he would
have seized all of Russia right up to the Ural Mountains, probably
even before he occupied France.
The critic does not mention what would have happened if Stalin
hadn't led the record-breaking industrialization of the Soviet
Union. The bourgeois critics make so many loose and minute
accusations that people are likely to never learn the important
history of the period. The critic righteously condemns Stalin as a
butcher-tyrant, but the truth is the critic has the ethical
horizons of a tapeworm.
Notes:
1. Raymond Lotta, "Introduction: Mao Tsetung's Last Great Battle
(1973-76)," And Mao Makes Five (Chicago: Banner Press, 1978), p.
40.
2. Anton Antonov-Ovseyenko, The Time of Stalin: Portrait of a
Tyranny (New York: Harper & Row, 1980), p. 212.
3. Kostas Mavrakis, On Trotskyism: Problems of Theory and History
(Boston: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1976), pp. 10-11.
4. Adam Ulam, Stalin: The Man and His Era (Boston: Beacon Press
Books, 1989), p. 173.
5. Mavrakis, op. cit., pp. 74-5. On the Clemanceau Declaration see
Isaac Deutscher, The Prophet Unarmed: Trotsky: 1921-1929, pp. 349-
50.
6. MIM Notes 39..
7. Adam Ulam, Stalin: The Man and His Era (Boston: Beacon Press
Books, 1989), p. 340. Isaac Deutscher, Stalin: A Political
Biography (New York: Vintage Books, 1960), p. 328.
8. Deutscher, op. cit., p. 432.
9. Bruce Franklin, "Introduction," The Essential Stalin: Major
Theoretical Writings, 1905-1952, p. 24.
10. Deutscher, op. cit., pp. 454-5.
11. Ulam, op. cit., p. 306.
12. "More on the Historical Experience of the Dictatorship of the
Proletariat," People's Daily, (Peking: Communist Party of
China,12/29/56).
* * *
LIBERALISM KILLS
Reversal of Fortune
This is a liberal movie from hell. If you want to see a movie that
unabashedly cheerleads for the Amerikan legal system and proudly
upholds the letter of the law (as it stands--this movie is not even
about making reforms) as being more sacred than human life, this
is a good one.
It is the story of Claus Von Bulow, a real-life zillionaire who
was sentenced to 30 years for attempting to murder his wife, who
ended up in an irreversible coma.
The big hero is famous Harvard professor and practicing lawyer
Alan Dershowitz, who steps in to handle Von Bulow's appeal. He
regrettably has to ditch his other case, in which he is trying to
keep two innocent Black kids from being executed. The two kids
come up a few times in the course of the film, just to show what a
great liberal guy the esteemed lawyer is for doing lowly pro bono
work.
Dershowitz wrote the book the movie was based on. Hence the movie
glorifies Dershowitz, whose name is today in the news as the
attorney representing Leona "only the little people pay taxes"
Helmsley.
At one point in the movie the lawyer's ex-girlfriend, whom he is
trying to lure back, overhears him on the phone to one of the
kids. She is proud of him but disappointed by the lack of time and
attention he gives to his personal life. The viewer is supposed to
adopt her perspective sympathetically, conceding that while
charity is noble, it is not as important as their relationship.
The kids on death row are time-consuming charity work, not human
beings. Not that MIM thinks liberal or progressive lawyers can
make a difference--but this is an example of inconsistent and
corrupt values.
The most ironic line in the movie comes when the frustrated lawyer
says, "if I can't get two innocent Black kids off, I sure as hell
can't get Von Bulow off." This naive analysis of the legal system
maintains that while Black people might be unjustly persecuted
some of the time, the courts (representative of the Amerikan
public) are really on their side at heart.
More reactionary and disturbing is the notion that the challenge
of rescuing Claus Von Bulow in the name of legal
technicalities--those ever-so-important rights we all must
protect--is more important than the kids on death row, even if they
are innocent. Reversal of Fortune wants viewers to hate wealthy
people like Claus because their lives are decadent, but it offers
in contrast the humble life of the Harvard professor, who also
makes a killing. Further, the movie wants its audience to feel
sorry for rich people--they have problems too. Glenn Close (playing
Von Bulow's wife) spends several flashback scenes sobbing to her
husband that their marriage isn't as she expected; she never
wanted him to work when she had enough money to support them both.
In the name of the sanctity of the "right" to a fair trial, Claus
(probably guilty, but who cares--it's the principle) walks free and
the Black kids are still on death row. And the bourgeoisie lives
happily ever after.
--MC44
* * *
UNDER LOCK & KEY: NEWS FROM PRISONS AND PRISONERS
THE PRISON WRITINGS OF GEORGE JACKSON
Soledad Brother: The Prison Letters of George Jackson
by MC¯
George Jackson's letters to his family, friends and legal counsel
are uplifting writings, the words of a prisoner who would not
compromise with the authorities because he knew it would do no
good. Jackson's letters affirm the need to study political economy
to build revolution while conveying the repression of solitary
confinement and 23-hour-a-day lockdown.
The strength of this collection, edited by Jean Genet, is its
analysis of capitalism as the enemy. It is also a story of
Jackson's transformation from lumpenproletariat to Black
revolutionary nationalist. The weaknesses are Jackson's bad line
on women--whom he criticizes as counterrevolutionary--and his
focoist tendency to believe that the gun can liberate the Black
colony at once, regardless of the level of organization among the
masses or other historical conditions.
Women
The first part of the book, mostly letters to his mother and
father, is not very political. Jackson uses many sexist
stereotypes in this section, often to criticize his mother for
failing in his brother's and his own education. He says, for
example, that unmarried white women are left to become
prostitutes, nuns and lesbians (p.45). While it is true that
economic forces put more pressure on unmarried woman (the fastest
growing population in poverty are womean and children), Jackson's
stereotype is homophobic and derogatory.
Much of what could be criticized as sexist in Jackson's writing is
left as ambiguous. He says that "The white theory of 'the
emancipated woman' is a false idea" (p. 46), which is an economic
reality of Amerikan capitalism, but no context is given. To his
credit he does explain that Black women are the backbone of the
family (p. 74).
Non-violence
Jackson's analysis of non-violence is right on. The reality of
prison life shows non-violence for what it is: a privilege for
those who command the power of the law on their side.
"The concept of nonviolence is a false ideal," says Jackson in
criticizing Martin Luther King, Jr., the Black leader who lead
much of the Civil Rights Movement around desegregation. "It
presupposes the existence of compassion and a sense of justice on
the part of one's adversary. When this adversary has everything to
lose and nothing to gain by exercising justice and compassion, his
reaction can only be negative" (p. 128).
Jackson saw the limitations of non-violent protest in the
internationalist terms of the struggles in Vietnam and the
Philippines (p. 166). Still, this criticism could not be mistaken
for a mindless acceptance of violence as a tactic: "It may serve
our purpose to claim nonviolence, but we must never delude
ourselves into thinking that we can seize power from a position of
weakness, with half measures, polite programs, righteous
indignation, loud entreaties" (p. 167).
Study
Jackson knew that study was key to advancing the national
revolution and that without advanced theory the revolutionary army
he envisioned would be lead down a blind alley.
"To seize power for the people and relegate fascism to the history
of books the vanguard must change the basic patterns of thought.
We are going to have to study the principles of people's
movements. We are going to have to study them where they took
place and interpret them to fit our situation here. We have yet to
discover the meaning of people's war, people's army" (p. 168).
Focoism
The biggest weakness in Jackson's letters is his fondness for the
focoist revolutionary model, in which a small group sparks the
masses to rebel through an armed action. Jackson identifies
himself with Ernesto Che Geuvarra, the Cuban focoist who fought
the Cuban Revolution with Fidel Castro. Jackson is also a fan of
Franz Fanon, who believed that armed struggle itself creates a
revolutionary transformation. Jackson mentions many
revolutionaries in his letters, but he is not advocating Marxism-
Leninism-Mao Zedong Thought as the way forward.
In a letter to Angela Davis, Jackson suggests his program for an
"antiestablishment war." This involves getting some money
(unspecified means), opening "as many skeet, trap, rifle, and
pistol ranges as I could rent space for around the black
community," beginning martial arts training and publishing
propaganda on military strategy. All this would be done, in
Jackson's words, "without a hint of political flavoring" (p. 223).
Jackson relies on the idea that an armed action, not political
struggle, will create revolutionaries and bring the revolution. He
concludes this section saying "'One doesn't wait for all
conditions to be right to start the revolution, the forces of the
revolution itself will make the conditions right.' Che said
something like this" (p. 223).
With this tactical shortcoming and other problems in mind, MIM
suggests that people read George Jackson as a strong case for
liberation of the Black colony within the United States. Jackson
supports self-determination and Black liberation to the end and
was a strong ally of the international proletariat.
TRENTON PROTEST
by MC11
On Aug. 7, seven prisoners in New Jersey's maximum security
Trenton State Prison wore red armbands to commemorate the death of
George Jackson, an African-American revolutionary who died in
Soledad Prison (California) 25 years ago. In the weeks that
followed, the six were transferred, prison guards provoked another
set of prisoners to violent self-defence, seven more prisoners
were transferred to out-of-state prisons, and the prison went on
lockdown for over a month. Prison officials blamed the incidents
on a group of 68 prisoners who they charged with conspiring to
kill prison guards.
MIM recently received a letter and several newspaper clippings
from a prisoner being held in Trenton State's Management Care Unit
describing the events of August and September. With this
information and other interviews, MIM has pieced the story
together.
As spokesperson for the New Jersey State Department of Corrections
explains, "Demonstrations are illegal. All the prisoners know
that." But Linda Hickman, the wife of one of the prisoners who was
transferred in the aftermath of the violence, says "If six or more
guys are in a group, that's a demonstration. So the seven were
standing wherever, and the Department of Corrections says it's a
demonstration. The superintendent kept saying, if they'd just
asked permission, he would have allowed them to demonstrate."
Hickman, co-chair of the Concerned Families Association, a group
that formed during the lockdown to protest the Department of
Corrections' (DoC) treatment of the prisoners, says she has no
doubt that the DoC's reaction was primarily a response to the
prisoners' political beliefs. George Jackson, a member of the
Black Panther Party who advocated the armed overthrow of the U.S.
government and wrote inspiring propaganda for the Afrikan-American
masses from his prison cell, was never a favorite with the DoC.
(See book review, page 9). Prisoners daring to express their
solidarity with Jackson's revolutionary ideology were not about
to be looked on with favor either.
On Aug. 8, the seven prisoners who wore armbands were transferred
to a state facility for the criminally insane. Several weeks
later, they were separated and transferred against their will to
other New Jersey state prisons.
At Trenton on Aug. 10, as prisoners were returning to their cells
from the recreation yard, violence broke out between guards and
prisoners. Six guards were injured. The Department of Corrections
calls it a "premeditated, planned savage attack" by a "covert
organization of militant prisoners" who had conspired to kill the
guards. In a letter to Hickman following his transfer to another
part of Trenton State, one of the prisoners involved in the
incident describes what really happened.
Several days before the incident, the letter says, "racist guards
held a demonstration behind the prison walls demanding the
creation of an even more brutal and effective penal system [at
Trenton State]...." The prisoner population of Trenton State
Prison, according to the Department of Corrections, is 64% Black,
22% white, and 13% Hispanic.
The guards' demands were not officially sanctioned by the
Department of Corrections, but a campaign focused on provoking and
harassing Afrikan prisoners unofficially went into effect. On Aug.
10, the letter says, the harrassment reached the point where the
prisoners had to fight back. The prison went into lockdown
immediately.
According to an affidavit signed by prisoner John Bland, a new
round of prison guard brutality began moments after the outbreak
was quelled. Bland, along with 100 other prisoners, was in the
recreation yard when the violence broke out. They were ordered to
strip to their underwear before lining up to reenter the prison.
"I was stripped, frisked, and ordered to interlock my fingers on
top of my head and walk on the yellow line," his affidavit reads.
"There were officers in riot gear flanked on my right and left
side leading into the institution. I took approximately 20 steps
when Correction Officer Marczak hit me in my lower back with a
police stick. I fell to the ground and was cuffed behind my back.
A police stick was placed under the cuffs causing my back and head
to lunge forward toward the ground. While being escorted through
the institution in a bent forward position completely naked, I was
hit on the back with police sticks." Bland was left in a concrete
detention cell for three days without any clothing or bedding. He
was later charged with assaulting the guard that beat him.
Another prisoner, Andre Herd, also issued an affidavit describing
similar treatment. He added that guards screamed racial slurs at
him while hitting him with a baton.
The Concerned Family Association (CFA) formed soon after lockdown
measures went into effect. Says Hickman, "I understand this is a
prison, however, I have someone in there and I want to know what
the hell is going on." In the first phase of the lockdown, she
says, "The guys had no phone calls, no attorney visits, no visits
to the law library, no leaving the cell, no work--so no ability to
earn credits toward release--no contact with institutional
paralegals, no recreaction, no visits, they had one shower every
four days, their mail was tampered with, and a lot of guys lost
legal papers and personal property."
Five prisoners were transferred to out-of-state prisons against
their will soon after the incident, a Department of Corrections
official says. Sixty-eight prisoners were placed in solitary
confinement. By mid-December, 12 were still there.
The CFA attempted to meet with the commissioner, a top-level
prison bureaucrat, during the first few days of the lockdown, but,
Hickman says, "He said 'no, I do not meet with those type of
people.'" After the CFA complained to the governor's office, they
were able to meet with two low-level officials.
"They promised nothing," Hickman continues. "Oh no, they promised
to put up a sign saying 'contact visits are being
videotaped'--which is nothing. A five-year-old kid can do that."
The CFA's original goal, Hickman says, was to establish a visitors
advisory board which would meet regularly with the prison
administration to discuss conditions in the prison.
One of the prisoners who was transferred out of state was the
former chairperson of the Prisoners' Representative Council,
which, Hickman says, was "the only voice the guys had in the
prison." The chairperson acted as a liaison between the prisoners
and the prison administration; the council served as a forum for
communication between prisoners. David Lambert, Hickman's husband,
was made chairperson of the PRC after the lockdown. He was
transferred a few weeks later.
"David is vocal," Hickman says, "David is intelligent, and plus
David is gonna fight back. The day they transferred David was the
day [prison superintendent] Beyers decided to decentralize the
PRC. What he did was illegal and he knows it."
Instead of allowing prisoner representatives to meet and convey
their concerns to the prison administration, the administration
reorganized the system so that several prison officials are
responsible for meeting with one prisoner, individually, from
different areas of the prison.
Audrey Bomsey, an attorney with the Public Advocate's Office who
will represent some of the transferred prisoners, said in mid-
December that prisoner beatings by guards are continuing. The
guards, Bomsey says, still walk around in full riot gear.
* * *
ONE YEAR IN BROOKLYN, NEXT YEAR IN JERUSALEM
Meir Kahane
Drawing from two recently-published books, Robert I. Friedman'sThe
False Prophet: Rabbi Meir Kahane--from FBI Informant to Knesset
Member (Brooklyn: Lawrence Hill, 1990) and Ward Churchill and Jim
Vander Wall's The COINTELPRO Papers: Documents from the FBI's
Secret Wars Against Dissent in the United States (Boston: South
End, 1990), MIM Notes 47 looked at Kahane's early years as a para-
military youth group member, informant, author of CIA pro-Vietnam
War propaganda, and point-man in the FBI's war against the Black
Panther Party (BPP)--information largely suppressed by other
sources.
These are fearful times for Palestinian Arabs, and it seems
Kahane's death may ironically add to their worries. A generation
of Palestinians has grown up in the West Bank and Gaza Strip--lands
where they constitute the majority--under Israeli rule. Israel is
putting new energy into its effort to colonize the West Bank. War
in the Gulf may well bring a Palestinian holocaust. Kahane, as a
tool of the Amerikan state and a Zionist leader, personified
imperial aggression against Palestine. His death removed a potent
symbol of the enemy. And if memorial services in New York and
Israel are any indication, a JDL resurgence is on the horizon.
New York City cops intervened when the JDL attacked BPP
headquarters in 1970, restraining the Panthers while Kahane yelled
racist taunts through a bullhorn before driving off (p97). But
such actions helped to open the rift between New York's Blacks and
Jews--now so wide that 90% of Jews voted against Mayor Dinkins in
last year's elections.
Often using information supplied by Richard Perle, a Reagan
Pentagon man who was at the time chief aide to hawkish Sen. Henry
"Scoop" Jackson (p108), the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) or
the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Kahane's JDL showed it
could affect politics on a global scale as well. In the late
sixties Soviet Jews, inspired by Israel's victory in the Six Day
War, began to identify more closely with Zionism, holding rallies
and demanding exit visas. Soviet Premier Brezhnev cracked down
violently, renewing a tradition of Russian anti-Semitism which had
been dormant since the revolution. Kahane hatched a Machiavellian
plan to secure their release. U.S.-Soviet Strategic Arms
Limitation Talks (SALT I) were due to begin, and Kahane, with his
inside information, recognized that the militarily-inferior
Soviets most needed arms reduction. So he set about to hurt
superpower relations, forcing the Soviets to put more on the
bargaining table--namely visas for Jews.
Kahane always maintained that he was only trying to get publicity
for his cause. On December 29, 1969, for example, "the JDL
simultaneously took over the [New York] offices of TASS (the
Soviet press agency), Intourist (the Soviet tourist agency), and
Aeroflot (the Soviet airline), and boarded a Russian commercial
passenger plane...." (p108), issuing press releases to fill the
resulting front-page stories. But they can hardly have planned an
operation of such a scale without help from U.S. intelligence.
Later actions represented a campaign of outright terror. June
1970: an Aeroflot hijacking. The hijackers were sentenced to death
in Leningrad depite requests for commutation from President Nixon
and Pope Paul VI. Nov. 1970: bombing of Aeroflot and Intourist
offices. Jan. 1971: bombing of Soviet cultural center in
Washington. March 1971: bombing of pro-Soviet Communist Party, USA
headquarters. April 1971: bombing Soviet trade center in New York.
Dec.1971: bombing a Soviet ship in Rotterdam. (pp114-15).
Only when the campaign to re-elect Nixon in 1972 seemed to require
dŽtente, a Cold War thaw, did the U.S. government try to stop its
Frankenstein's monster. After forging links with the Mafia (pp120-
23), Kahane fled federal indictments and relocated to Israel in
Sept.1971 (p134). Setting up an Israeli JDL and steering clear of
electoral politics, Kahane began attacking offices of the
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in Europe and pressing for
Israeli settlements on the West Bank. There followed murders of
Palestinian mayors, a machine-gun assault on a bus carrying Arabs,
Kahane's election to the Knesset, the Israeli parliament, and
eventual removal when his outspoken racism grew embarrassing.
These events were too public for the press to ignore, though the
JDL's continuing ties to the Mossad--Israeli intelligence--and to
Yitzhak Shamir--Israel's prime minister--are never discussed.
Today Kahane's campaign for Soviet Jews has to be counted an
overwhelming success. Virtually all two million will be released
this year and next. With the U.S. State Department limiting
immigration here, they are going to Israel. Shamir has promised
that they won't be settled on the West Bank, but the Jews they
displace surely will be. More and more, Israel is taking the shape
Kahane and his friends--in Washington--envisioned.
--MC89
Note: All references are to Robert I. Friedman's The False
Prophet: Rabbi Meir Kahane-- from FBI Informant to Knesset Member
(Brooklyn: Lawrence Hill, 1990).
* * *
'NO BLOOD FOR OIL' WON'T END WORLD WARS
by MC24
Anti-war movements around the country and around the world are
growing as the Amerikan war-machine prepares for war with Iraq.
Thousands of protestors in Chicago; Washington D.C.; New York;
Milwaukee; Cambridge, Mass.; Columbus, Ohio; Seattle; Austin,
Texas; Ann Arbor, Mich. and Lincoln, Neb. all held mass
demonstrations in a national day of anti-war protest on Dec. 8.
Three thousand people attended the Washington rally. Anti-war
demonstrators marched from the White House to the Vietnam War
memorial where 50 protestors were arrested for blocking the street
after the police announced the rally had no permit.(1) Vietnam
veterans marched to the Vietnam War memorial to lay a wreath for
another imperialist war.
The next day about 3,000 anti-war demonstrators rallied in front
of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel after an awards ceremony at Ellis
Island in New York Harbor in which President Bush, Ronald Reagan,
and Richard Nixon were among 101 others being honored for their
contributions to Amerika. The protest was organized by the
Coalition Against U.S. Intervention in the Middle East.(3)
Campus activism has also figured prominently so far. Six
University of California-Berkeley students were arrested during a
sit-in at an ROTC building last month. Organized, Vietnam-style
teach-ins around the war at Rutgers, Princeton, Michigan.(4)
World-wide dissent
World-wide public dissent against this war is growing. Only 36% of
French people favor involvement in the U.S. war, according to a Le
Fiegero survey, down from 46% in September. An earlier survey
showed that 53% of the people in France wanted to support Amerikan
foreign policy; that figure has dropped to 40%.(4)
In Turkey, while Prime Minister Turgut Ozal grovels for the right
to participate in the war, 72% of respondents in a recent Turkish
poll opposed Turkish military involvement.(4)
Third World revolutionaries know Amerika's real concern is with
economic and global domination. They are not--like the bourgeoisie
and its allies benefiting from colonial resources --blinded by
Amerikan propaganda calling for "human rights" and respect for
"international law." Amerikan troops, culture and capital
continuously pillage the Third World to sustain its advanced
capitalist economy.
Polls in this country continue to show income level correlating to
level of support for the war (see MIM Notes 45). The oppressed of
this country--especially African-Americans and Puerto Ricans--have
fought and died in white Amerika's wars too many times. But of
course the United States also is not without its fair share of
war-crazed hawks. According to a recent Time/CNN poll taken, about
24% of the Amerikan people believe using nuclear weapons against
the Iraqi people would be justified if "we become bogged down in a
stalemate with Iraq."(5) Fifty-nine percent of the Amerikan public
believe that the "liberation of Kuwait is worth fighting for."
What is to be done?
So what is to be done, not just to stop this war, but all
imperialist world wars?
A wide variety of single issue and reformist groups in the United
States--including the Center for Constitutional Rights, the
Committee in Solidarity with the People of El Salvador, the
National Rainbow Coalition, U.S. Peace Council, American Friends
Service Committee, Palestine Solidarity Committee, Vietnam
Veterans of America, Presbyterian Church, SANE/Freeze, Progressive
Student Alliance--are involved in the anti-war effort. These groups
have organized a united coalition and set up a "1-800" number with
Western Union which sends "mailgrams" to the White House. The
message asks for a negotiated settlement in the Persian Gulf.(6)
MIM commends these anti-war sentiments, and particularly those
reservists around the country who have refused to fight another
Amerikan war.
But videos, chants and phone calls--even signs that read "NO BLOOD
FOR OIL"--will not put an end to this and other wars of expansion.
MIM does support all anti-imperialist struggles. However, MIM does
not want to see this anti-war movement fail in the same way that
the anti-Vietnam war movement of the 1960s did. The U.S. war
machine will not go away--in the Middle East or anywhere else--by
simply calling up the White House and asking Mr. Bush to "please
negotiate." Nor will it go away because of rallies.
The slogan "U.S. OUT OF THE MIDDLE EAST," is misleading. It
assumes that if and when the United States ends Operation Desert
Shield Amerika will no longer control the oil-fields (not to
mention Israel). This is simply not true. The only way the United
States will remove its troops from Saudi Arabia and Iraq is if it
could preserve the imperialist-capitalist structure by other
means. And history has shown that the economic demands of this
structure require wars of conquest and re-conquest.
MIM urges those who sincerely want to end all oppression and
imperialist wars to join a party with a program for the liberation
of the international proletariat--building for revolution step by
step.
The anti-war movement of the 60s was a failure because it did not
seize the long term goal of revolution. Students for a Democratic
Society (SDS), the largest student activist group organized in the
late 60s, was able to push for some campus gains--and turned a lot
of heads--but not much else was accomplished. With thousands or
even millions of people espousing revolutionary views, the
achievements of the 60s could and should have been monumental.
But SDS, like the anti-war movement emerging on college campuses
now, was a broad coalition group based on attracting as many
people as possible on the theory that political organization,
discipline, and correct analysis were not as important as getting
as many people to a rally as possible. The more people at the
rallies, the more effective the movement would be, it was argued.
This lead to a strategy of building a coalition group broad
enough to encompass people of all political stripes, including
many of those who had an interest in ending the immediate war
without attacking the system that caused it. Not surprisingly, the
end of the Vietnam war brought an end to the strength of SDS.
If broad coalition politics are "more effective" than
revolutionary politics, then such coalition groups should not
dissipate when they "succeed." Work with us toward revolution
against the imperialist war machine. Until capitalism is
destroyed, lives will be continue to be destroyed in order to feed
the oil-and-blood-thirsty beast which monstrously consumes the
world's people and resources.
Notes:
1. National Public Radio, 12/9/90
2. L.A. Times 10/21/90, p. A10.
3. Associated Press, 12/9/90
4. ABC Nightline, 12/6/90
5. Time, 12/10/90
6. Palestine Focus, 11-12/90.
* * *
OPPRESSED COUNTRIES:CEASEFIRE REACHED IN LIBERIA
by MC25
The 11-month civil war in Amerika's West African colony of Liberia
ostensibly ended Nov. 28 with a cease-fire agreement between
leading rebel Charles Taylor and representatives of the other four
contingents in the bloody power struggle that displaced half of
Liberia's population and killed at least 20,000 people. Talks
between the factions, held in Mali, were arranged by the Economic
Community of West African States (ECOWAS). This was the first
successful attempt to bring all sides to the negotiating table.(1)
The agreement came one week after the installation of the interim
government in the country's capital of Monrovia by a 6,000-member
West African peacekeeping force known as ECOMOG.(1)
Charles Taylor's attendance at the summit was made possible by
ECOMOG. Taylor had refused negotiations on grounds that the
interim government, which he called illegitimate, and its
supporter ECOWAS, had supported the country's ousted dictator.
Taylor and his NPFL (National Patriotic Front of Liberia) "Black
Scorpion" forces led the rebellion last December against the
regime of former President Samuel K. Doe.(2)
The interim government was represented by its President, Dr. Amos
Sawyer. Sawyer is the leader of the Movement for Justice in
Africa(MOJA) and its formerly banned Liberia People's Party
(LPP).(1)
Prince Johnson, the former commander of Taylor's forces and the
man responsible for Doe's death, also attended the summit.
Johnson's forces are rumored to have been supported by the United
States. Amerika wanted Doe murdered because he was no longer
useful, but was not happy about Taylor's links to Libya.(3)
Representing the remnants of Doe's forces, and members of his
Krahn ethnic group, was Brig. David Nimley. (1)
The fifth key player was ECOMOG itself, as the main source of
Taylor's continued objections, led by Nigerian Maj. Gen. Joshua
Dogdnyaro. Taylor later claimed that ECOMOG soldiers had violated
the ceasefire agreement on Nov. 30 by killing two NPFL
soldiers.(4)
Taylor refused to attend an earlier conference with ECOWAS in
Banjul, after declaring war on the group that created ECOMOG. The
rebel leader, then self-proclaimed president, seemingly had a
change of heart due largely to his loss of military and economic
aid from Libya, as well as from Ivory Coast and Burkina Faso--two
ECOWAS nations who refused to supply troops to ECOMOG.(1)
Taylor attributes his new acquiescence to the expansion of ECOMOG
from five member nations to include the 16 ECOWAS members, and his
belief that such an expansion will limit the threat of Nigerian
control over Liberia and its upcoming elections.(1)
Nigerian dominance
Nigeria, which Taylor has accused of supporting the Doe regime,
economically dominates ECOWAS, and in recent years has expressed
disillusionment with the regional cooperation goal. ECOWAS was
formed to support Pan-African goals of economic cooperation.
Dominance by Nigeria threatens the anti-imperialist intent of
ECOWAS. Another shadow of doubt on the prospects for ECOWAS
leadership is cast by the ready support offered to it by Johnson,
a likely Amerikan plant.(5)
The potential for the emergence of anti-imperialist leadership in
Liberia seems limited at this time.
History of dependence
Liberia was founded in 1822 by the American Colonization Society
as a penal colony for "freed" slaves who were seen as potential
"troublemakers." The dominance of the Amerikan-Liberian settlers
over politics promoted the acceptance of this colonial status and
almost full dependence on Amerikan aid.(6, 7)
The era ushered in by Doe represented a shift away from the
dominance of Amerikan-Liberians, who constitute a mere 60,000 of a
national population of 2.6 million. They had previously ruled
through property ownership requirements for voting.(6)
Doe's 1980 coup, which took power from the Amerikan-Liberian
oligarchy, also fueled the current divisions between the Krahn,
Gio and Mano ethnic groups. The coup may have been anti-
imperialist in intent, but it was corrupted by the pipeline of
U.S. money and Doe became a tyrant. Ten years of dictatorship and
monopartyism later, Doe's legacy is one of record foreign debts,
corruption, and military abuses.(8)
Many Liberians originally saw Charles Taylor as their ticket out
of Doe's nightmare. But through his massacre of the Krahn people
he has proven to be nothing more than the vengeful criminal Doe
accused him of being. Taylor has shown no desire to work for
Liberian self-reliance. In an attempt to gain U.S. approval, he
said, "I want to make Liberia the Hong Kong of West Africa."(3)
Enter Prince Johnson. Fed up with fighting Taylor's battles with
no prospects of personal power gain, Johnson formed a little army
of his own. Except he meant business, doing away with the
lingering threat of a Doe resurgence by killing him. Johnson did
what most Liberians, including Charles Taylor, wanted to do.(3)
Suddenly, Taylor lost the support of not only the Liberian
population, but also most of ECOWAS. Johnson quickly offered his
support to ECOMOG and the interim government, no doubt with
thoughts of retaining control over the military after the
elections.(3)
Sawyer is possibly the best alternative yet, and according to a
leading African political scientist he is a committed socialist.
He is a professor of political science at the University of
Liberia, who because of his long standing opposition to the Doe
regime spent the last several years in the United States,
presumably since the banning of the LPP. What he intends for the
socialist transformation of Liberia is unclear. His elite status,
commitment to constitutional and electoral change, and his exile
stint in Amerika indicate that he is not revolutionary.
Regardless, he is ineligible for election, as dictated by the
interim delegation.(8)
No date has been set for elections as yet. A victory gained by
Taylor or Johnson would clearly represent a renewal of Amerikan
ownership of Liberia. With both men's records of brutality in the
war preceding them, it is more likely that a political leader
would be elected. MIM knows little about the current goals of
political contenders to that election, and awaits the emergence of
an anti-imperialist agenda from any of them.
Notes:
1. NYT, 11/29/90, p. A3.
2. NYT, 11/27/90 p. A4.
3.West Africa 8/6-12/90, p. 2230-2231
4. NYT, 12/6/90, p. A9.
5. West Africa.10/22-28/90, p 2513
6. Africa, 1989, World Today Series, P.54.
7. Africa, South of the Sahara 1990, p.614
8. West Africa 9/10-16/90, p. 2478
* * *
FMLN RELIES ON NEGOTIATIONS, NOT PEOPLE'S WAR
by MC18
On Nov. 20, El Salvador's Farabundo Mart’ National Liberation
Front (FMLN) launched its biggest offensive of 1990. FMLN soldiers
attacked government installations in half of El Salvador's
provinces, including over a dozen military positions. Electrical
service was disrupted in more than two thirds of the country.(1)
This attack is the latest of the FMLN's 11-year revolt against the
U.S.-supported Salvadoran government, which is headed by President
Alfredo Cristiani and the ARENA party. Over 75,000 people have
died since the civil war began 11 years ago.(2) This most recent
attack resulted in at least 20 deaths and 46 wounded.(1) During
the ensuing violence of the following week the Salvadoran
government reported a total of 232 dead and 510 wounded.(2)
In response to the attack on its puppet government, the United
States announced on Dec. 7 that it would rush $48.1 million in
military aid and hardware to the Salvadoran military.(3) The $48.1
million is a reduction in the appropriated aid of $85 million,
half of which the U.S. Congress voted to withhold six weeks before
due to human-rights violations on the part of the Salvadoran
government.(3, also see MN #46) The United States has supported
the death-squad government of El Salvador with about $4 billion in
military and economic aid over the last decade. The low level of
aid in 1990 is in response to the growing unpopularity of public
support for the Salvadoran government in the U.S. Congress,
especially since the murder of six Jesuit priests by government
soldiers in 1989. The United States is certainly embarrassed by
last year's blatant display of ARENA's traditional death-squad
techniques, though not enough to actually revoke its support for
the ARENA government. Congress managed to end up leaving President
Bush with total authority over dispensation of aid. Bush will be
required to inform the United Nations of its intentions to release
the aid, but no United Nations approval will be necessary.(2)
The restoration of aid comes at a time when the Salvadoran
government and the FMLN are engaged in supposed "peace talks"
aimed at ending the decade-long rebellion.(3) The FMLN identified
its Nov. 20 offensive as "a military response to the armed forces'
impunity, repression, military operations and the intransigence of
the government which refuses to demilitarize society and clings to
a criminal army."(1)
The U.S. State Department will use the offensive to speed the
delivery of military aid, stating that the offensive "calls into
question the FMLN's sincerity at the negotiating table." But the
United States made no attempt to hide the fact that the talks are
meaningless. One State Department representative indicated that
"Just because they're talking doesn't mean that the war has
stopped."(2) With restoration of U.S. aid, the Salvadoran
government now has no motive for reaching a negotiated settlement
with the FMLN. On the contrary, the renewed aid will give them the
resources they need to proceed with their suppression of the FMLN.
Bush will undoubtedly also proceed to release the other half of
the allotted aid, since all he needs to do to issue the rest is
certify that the FMLN has failed to negotiate "in good faith" with
the Salvadoran government at the current U.N.-sponsored
negotiations in Switzerland.
MIM supports all national liberation movements that are struggling
to throw off the yoke of imperialism. And the FMLN has been
organizing and fighting against the United States for years. But
their coalition tactics have been ineffective. The FMLN's current
actions only reinforce MIM's previous analysis of the conflict
(see MIM Notes 46). The FMLN has repeatedly stated that they would
willingly demobilize and "join the current political process" if
the government's military is disbanded,(1) affirming the fact that
the FMLN is not interested in gaining independence for El Salvador
through revolution. Though it is clear that the FMLN doesn't
actually want to join the ARENA government, their strategy amounts
to wanting a bigger slice of the political pie, with no chance of
attaining national liberation from U.S. interference in the
Salvadoran economy. Their current rhetoric lacks meaningful
criticism of U.S. imperialism in Latin America, and rebukes the
Salvadoran government only in the fact that it has retained "a
criminal army."
The FMLN stated on Sep. 11, 1989 that they would ask for continued
U.S. financial aid once the armed struggle had ended, proposing to
the U.S. Congress "the transformation of military assistance into
an aid fund for El Salvador's economic and social recovery."(4)
This makes them, unfortunately, a willing pawn in the United
States' methodical efforts to cement U.S. hegemony over all of
Latin America.
Notes:
1. NYT 11/21/90, p. A3.
2. Detroit Free Press 11/29/90, p. 17A.
3. NYT 12/8/90, p. A3.
4. "FMLN Proposal to Achieve Democratization, an end to
Hostilities and a Just and Lasting Peace in El Salvador," FMLN,
9/11/89, p. 3