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Title: Class War
Author: Alfredo M. Bonanno
Date: 1975
Language: en
Topics: armed struggle, class struggle, class war, Italy, violence
Source: Retrieved on April 7, 2011 from http://pantagruel-provocazione.blogspot.com/2009/12/class-war.html][pantagruel-provocazione.blogspot.com]].  Proofread text source from [[http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=3728, retrieved on December 10, 2020.
Notes: Original title: Guerra di classe, ‘Anarchismo’, First series — 1975 — numbers 4–5 — pages 195–207

Alfredo M. Bonanno

Class War

In Italy there is a civil war in course. Just as in every other part of

the world, the mortal clash has well defined characteristics in relation

to the conditions of exploitation imposed by the dominant class. That is

why we are speaking of class (civil) war.

State violence and defensive class violence are opposing each other in a

clash that only the politically short-sighted insist on not seeing. The

terrorism of the various organisations in the service of the bosses is a

constantly detectable element, just as in the other field, an

organisation of defence is beginning to take shape against the State

assassins, organisations that should be examined and evaluated in their

limits and perspectives. The other discourse, the so-called legalitarian

one, the discourse that finds its own phonetic expression in parliament,

can also be evaluated precisely once it is inserted into the logic of a

conflict in course. This is what we shall see.

The violence of the bosses and their servants

In a declaration made to the daily “Il Giorno” April 19 1968, the

managing director of the INAIL declared that the phenomenon of accidents

at work (white deaths) had taken on the dimension of a war: “one death

every hour, someone wounded every 6 seconds”. It is the workers who are

falling on the front of exploitation, while the “men of the left”

continue their parliamentary antics. Impossible work pace, piece work,

increase in nervous tension, monotony, impossibility to adapt reflexes

to the machine. The most dangerous period for the life of the worker are

the last working hours of the day. It is a true slaughterhouse.

Amputations of hands and lower limbs, the loss of eyes, burns,

crippling, to rheumatisms, bronchitis, deafness, digestive disturbances,

to nervous breakdowns and heart attacks. 80 per cent of the solderers in

the shipyards are deaf. A very high percentage of workers in the mining

and quarry sector suffer from silicosis. Those employed on the assembly

line in the Fiat, with moving belts, discovered after a few years that

they had considerable diminution in their sexual capacity. 50 per cent

of the workers in the textile sector suffer from dermatitis and

respiratory disturbances.

To that we should add the mortal accidents, those usually considered

accidental but which are dependent on the very logic of production. In

1960 statistics spoke of a death every hour, today we do not know the

exact figures but they have certainly not decreased. It is enough to

read the newspapers to realise how many workers die every day because of

work conditions, killed at the place of exploitation by the bosses and

their servants. It is necessary to recognise though, that the job of the

industrialist is not always that of the butcher. The boss gets very

upset when there are accidents at work, because it upsets him both at

the psychological level (much less) and at the economic one (much more).

But the logic of exploitation has its necessary steps which it cannot

extrapolate itself from. Its patience runs out though when the

exploited, in spite of all the care one has for him and all the

pre-occupations one has, insists in not docilely submitting to

exploitation. Then it is quite a different matter. To the ineluctable

logic of the capitalist process is added homicidal will and

determination. The boss turns to the State to have his sacrosanct right

to kill, cut to pieces, deteriorate the human material he has bought and

is therefore at his disposition, protected.

In this case the police intervene. Let us look at the cases where the

police in Italy have deliberately shot into the crowd, killing workers

who were demanding their own right to life. The answer was given in

bullets which have caused 133 deaths between 1946 and 1970 among

labourers, unemployed, workers, rice labourers, students. Looking at the

lists of workers killed by the police during demonstrations, in just

1969 one finds the death of a school teacher (Teresa Ricciardi), then

all the rest are very poor people, “rabble” who have always been shot at

for centuries with impunity. In an article in “L’Unità” in 1950 was

written: “La Celere (fast response units) are organising preventively”

listing police charges of demonstrations and shootings in detail; other

“preventive” versions related to weapons in the possession of workers

are drawn up for the use of the government and independent press,

designed to justify the use of arms by the police. In Catania, in piazza

Stesicora, during a demonstration against the Tambroni government,

communist building labourer Salvatore Novembre, aged 19, was killed

after being repeatedly struck by truncheons, and as he fell, losing

consciousness, a policeman deliberately shot him repeatedly. One, two,

three shots until he is slain, rendered unrecognisable. Then the

policeman lost himself in the crowd and carried on with his action. Not

yet dead, Salvatore was dragged to the centre of the square to serve as

an example to the citizens of Catania. Come carabinieri used machine

guns to prevent anyone from getting near to the poor youth who died from

loss of blood. In Reggio Emilia on the 7^(th) of the same month of July,

carabinieri and police shot into the crowd for forty minutes

uninterrupted, killing five people. Piergiuseppe Murgia tells of the

event: “...amidst the blinding smoke one could hear the shots. The

police are shooting. They shoot into the crowd. The people stop for a

moment, stupified. They cannot believe it. They are shooting from every

corner of the square. They are shooting at close range. At people.

Shooting without a break. The first to fall is Lauro Ferioli, aged 22,

father of a little boy. At the first shots he threw himself

incredulously towards the police as though to stop them: the agents are

a hundred yards from him: they shoot him full in the chest, they shoot

him in the face. A boy who witnessed this was to say, “He took one or

two steps, no more, and the machine gun fire set off right away. I found

myself right at his side and saw him turn round, fall over on himself

with blood pouring out of his mouth. He fell on top of me with all the

blood (...).” Meanwhile, the worker Marino Serri who was crying with

rage appeared at the corner of the street to protest crying “Murderers,

murderers”. Another volley struck him and he fell as well (...) Ovidio

Franchi, a boy worker aged 19, died shortly afterwards. A bullet had

struck him in the abdomen. Wounded, he tried to hold himself up,

clinging on to a shutter. Another, slightly wounded, wanted to help him,

then one in uniform turned up and shot both of them. Emilio Beverberi,

30 years, worker, ex-partisan: split in two by machine gun fire. Worker

Afro Tondelli, 35 years, is coldly murdered by a policeman who gets down

on his knees to take accurate aim and shoots a sitting target.”

Afterwards, on the orders of the police chiefs themselves and on the

mandate of the exploiters, the homicidal tactic of the police is

modified in the sense of a more subtle refinement. It is no coincidence,

in fact, that even in the most acute moments of tension there have been

no more mass massacres in the streets. From the dozens and dozens of

deaths in the years 46 — 50, it went to the eleven deaths of 1960 (peak

year of worker struggles), right to 1972 with a few deaths a year. In

recompense the strategy of tension was developed, aimed at involving the

left and at carrying out a coup d’etat with the proved complicity of

certain institutional organisms. From the death of Paolo Rossi in April

1966, to the death of the four communist comrades in April 1975, another

technique of killing was introduced. The assassins in the service of the

bosses have struck poor undefended people during various bombings in

banks and in trains with the aim of pushing the great mass towards that

order which, at institutional level, the fascists and bosses had made

themselves the paladins of. If on the one hand the electoral response

has been such as to render all thse attempts and all these massacres

useless, it cannot be denied that, at least from 1969 to 1973, this new

way of killing people managed to keep the government ship afloat. But it

had another effect. There is an abyss between the reaction of the

communist party at the time, for example, to the attack on Togliatti and

their reaction on the occasion of the killing of the four comrades in

April two years ago. In the more recent edition, Berlinguer turned up in

a double breased suit, to visit Moro to expose his lamentations, and to

this farse was added the strike of a few hours here and there and a very

distinctive formal debate in the house. What matters is the electoral

result, once that is safe who cares if comrades are dying, killed by the

violence of the bosses and their servants. So long as nothing disturbs

the idyll, of power every human sacrifice to this sanguinary god is

consented and exalted.

It has been proved that in this strategy of tension the fascists have

been used by the bosses in collaboration with the three “state

organisms”: the army, the judiciary, the government. The army has used

its special corps. Like the secret services and the police (in this

sense improperly, we are including the whole of the police and not only

the carabinieri and the army), to extend the web of the various plots,

to strike at the level of raids, intimidation and the execution of a

number of elements of the left, in particular anarchists; to maintain

contacts with other States at the level of the secret services. The

judiciary has employed its most trusted judges to “advocate” the most

thorny proceedings, thwarting the investigations of the fascists

concerning the Milan bombings, revoking superintendent Juliano who had

tried to denounce the fascists, shelving [fascist] Freda’s telephone

registrations, blowing up the unexpected bomb at the Commercial Bank in

Milan, thus getting rid of the handle of the receipt machine saved from

the explosion, and so on. The government gave the necessary

authorisation (in the case of the Commissario Julian, Fais himself

declared he had received orders from the home ministry), organising the

complex operation of balancing opposed extremisms, throwing into the

boiler of violence and a long string of killings, every possible means

and expedient to continue to manage a power that was threatening to leak

on all sides. As we shall see further on, the government complicity is

not only at a political level but reaches greater efficiency at the

economic one, contributing to the systematic theft carried out at the

cost of all the exploited.

The charges against the workers suddenly increased when the struggles

for the squatting in Celio in Rome and MacMahon in Milan took place and

once again the aforementioned assassins were seen going to the attack of

women and children with their usual nonchalance.

Another “democratic” characteristic of the pigs of any uniform is the

use of torture against arrested proletarians. Lelio Basso (who certainly

cannot be accused of extremism) writes: “...when someone from the

privileged social categories is arrested for a common crime, and I am

using the word in a very wide sense, he can be sure of going free from

coercive measures, even if he insists on denying. Imagine a diplomat G.

or a countess B., or a sir L., or industrial X., or civil servant Y.,

undergoing such treatment!” In fact, torture is the order of the day. In

the barracks, the prisons, the criminal asylums, orphanages. The

virtuous bourgeois pretend that they do not know about the institutional

importance of torture. They are horrified at the misdeeds of the Old

Inquisition, claiming that they do not know that that “praiseworthy”

institution has never ceased operating. They are afraid in the face of

the Nazi crematorium ovens, pretending they do not know that the prison

camps for the final solution always exist, even in our country, and they

are particularly efficient. But let us speak of torture for a moment.

In an old text of 1777 (V. Malerba “Ragionamento sopra la tortura”), we

read on page 36, “Torture is carried out not in punishment of a crime

the author of which is not known, but to get out of the mouth of the

accused the truth, which for the weakness of reason and inconstance,

cunning and falseness of witnesses often lies hidden in the darkness of

uncertainty”.

And further on, pages 108–109, “But one concedes to the adversary that a

tortured innocent gives in to pain and declares himself guilty, in the

case under examination, in which torture was ordered by the judge with

all the conditions that implies. What’s for them? To the rarity of this

example I oppose the public utility resulting from the law of torture. I

would say more, that the inconvenience of subjecting an innocent man,

who in the torment confesses to a crime, should not be attributed to the

injustice and barbarity of torture, but to a guilty weakness, and the

lack of a virtuous strength. Patience is a duty, an indispensable duty.

The innocent condemned to torment must accept with resignation and

suffer with tolerance all the sufferings, like a slave, which bend his

shoulder under the lash, which strikes him, making of his ills a means

for acquiring good”.

[...]

What we said is no more than a tenuous claim concerning the violence of

the bosses and their servants. Wecan find other aspects in what I call

indirect violence. The thefts of the politicians, the mafia organized at

State level, economic speculation carried out to the detriment of the

proletariat, constitute hidden but just as effective and dangerous

violence than the uncovered kind that strikes the individual.

The indirect violence of the bosses and their servants

The “mafia” is not a Sicilian phenomenon. It is a way of seeing things,

a way of building relationships and solving problems from a perspective

that could be called “feudal.” The Mafia organization par excellence

today is the large State managerial company, but more about that later.

For now, we care how the old mafia forms are used at the level of

political power. The antimafia stories are truly and deeply humorous. A

notorious mobster like Gioia is a minister of our government. In the

clash between police superintendent Mangano and the mafioso Coppola,

people are not sure whether to almost give preference to. the latter in

terms of honesty. Very obscure aspects lurk in the Commissario’s past.

Connections between drug trafficking and the old Mafia have been

established, as well as links between the latter and certain political

circles, from which could be inferred a specific interest in drug

trafficking of many of our men of power. But we are only just beginning.

The Sindona scandal has shown us how certain political circles work,

certain banks, certain State industrial societies, certain international

holdings. Let’s start with a “clean” job . Italy is the eighth exporter

of weapons, after the USA, the Soviet Union, Britain, France, Canada,

China, and West Germany. (Report of Stockholm International Peace

Research Institute). Since the first four countries are grabbing nearly

90% of the world market, the rest must be divided between the remaining

producers, hence a deadly combat. The solution is to sell to the

“difficult” countries, so Italy is supplier of arms to South Africa

(airplanes and naval fire control), Brazil (airplanes), Argentina

(airplanes) the former Portugal (airplanes and firearms), Israel

(helicopters and anti-tank missiles), “Congo-Kinshasa (planes) the old

Greece (helicopters), Spain (helicopters), and so on. As you can see we

give a considerable a contribution to the massacre of the people that

are under fascist oppression. The loss of the Portuguese and Greek

markets will be a big blow. Some of our industrialists are well known

sponsors of national and international fascism. Apart from the

18,500,000 lire that Monti gave to Rauti, which there is evidence of,

there is a continuous flow of funding that has produced such phenomena

as (funded by Piaggio).

The scandal of the sugar tells us how the societies (led by Piaggio and

Monti, the same who funded the fascists) paid several billion lire to

Christian Democrats and Socialists. But from last year till now,

everything has proceeded as before. A few months after the scandal of

the sugar it was the turn of the Montedison to escape the price block by

implementing up to 50% increases. It is truly the kingdom of thieves.

The financial management of large organizations such as ENEL or EGAM is

a mystery that could be investigated. The deficit in 1973 was 268

billion, that of 1974, 750, that of 1975 is forecast as 1600 billion,

that of 1978 is forecast as 16:800 billion. This is one of the most

obvious cases, but there are less showy ones such as that of the ESP or

such as the ghost banks that originate then disappear with all the

savings of the depositors. But what can we expect in a political reality

that moves a notorious pimp like Bernabei from the Television to the

chair of the Italstat, instead of at least leaving him to fall into a

void?

But all of these operations have one clear meaning: they identify not so

much a disease of the Italian institutions in the current year 1975, a

disease that should be treated in one way or another, as a chronic

failure of the bourgeois democratic institutions. Falsely democratic

institutions that have the sole aim of exploiting the proletariat

through violence and reducing it to consensus through any means of

convincing.

The indirect violence of the bosses and their servants produces an

increase in exploitation, the incredible accumulation of wealth on one

side of the fence and the formation of pockets of appalling poverty on

the other. It also produces the need to protect these riches from the

attack of the exploited, hence a new thrust of physical violence against

c1ass of producers. Physical violence and economic violence cannot be

separated but walk together, the one affecting the other and completing

the framework of the reactionary front of the class war.

Proletarian defence

The workers organize class defence. The unions should be the essential

structure of this defence, coordinated at representative level with the

political parties of the workers. In essence, this form of defence has

very great limitations. Even excluding the decidedly reactionary groups

of trade unions there are also elements of collaboration in the central

unions that appear to be more progressive. The defence of the workplace

implied in the reformist demands for improvement, lead, in moments of

crisis, to safeguarding not only the worker but also the organization of

exploitation. Political parties, which came into the government, have

altogether discarded their proletarian covering, hovering in the control

room trying to position themselves better to get a share of the pie.

Finally, the Communist Party renounced all the features of the old

revolutionary party, even the less compromising purely theoretical ones.

But exploitation is paid directly on the backs of the workers and not

those of their privileged trade union representatives and politicians,

so it often occurs that the latter are overtaken by initiatives of the

exploited and are forced to scramble for recovery operations. In

essence, proletarian defence consists of a legalistic area (trade unions

and leftist parties), which maintain a relationship with power that can

be defined collaboration. This is not the place to examine the problem

of the true counter-revolutionary essence of this law-abiding area,

however, it is an obstacle if only on an official level for power. In

addition, proletarian defence begins to organize itself around

autonomous groups that reject the logic of trade union associations and

political parties.

In Turin, Milan, Rome, Marghera, Pordenone, Florence, Naples, etc.. an

alternative within the same working-class movement has developed in

recent years , which involved active minorities and vanguards of

different kinds. Vanguardist structures of a Marxist-Leninist character

as well as active minorities of a libertarian character. It is in this

perspective that the actions of the revolutionary groups who went into

clandestinity to fight the bosses and their servants arms in hand should

be considered. It makes no sense to say that these “manifestations of

violence” are against the interests of the workers’ movement,

unrealistic and adventurous, and objectively provocatory. The armed

struggle in capitalist societies such as Italy, Germany, Britain,

France, is possible and has been demonstrated by groups like the Red

Brigades, the NAP, RAF., the Angry Brigade, the GARI. It is not a

question of adventurist positions but positions that follow logically

from the same struggles of the exploited.

Let’s examine this difficult point: The labour movement creates

struggles under the pressure of a growing class consciousness, often

these struggles are beyond the control of managers, for both local and

accidental reasons, and because workers are losing their confidence in

the trade unions cadres and political parties: These experiences of

autonomous struggle, wild, destructive, grasping the essence of

capitalist exploitation: murder and robbery; become the patrimony of the

politically aware minority who seek, each in their own political

perspective to develop it further. And here lies the critical moment. In

fact, in the clash between the classes, the holder of the power

indicates the possible limits of the conflict, the so-called limits of

legality, which when exceeded the repressive mechanism sets off. In this

way, the active minority, taking the wealth of experience that comes

from the autonomous struggles of the exploited, try to go forward, to be

a point of reference, an indication, but in doing so and forced to

radicalize their own position against the repressive mechanisms of the

State. This is pushed to the extreme limits, to armed defense against

the machine gun of the police, up the attack to survive, until death. To

say that the experiences of armed struggle in Italy and Europe today are

experiences orchestrated by the right, fascist provocative and criminal

experiences, is criminal and worthy only of the clowns and the sold out

of the Communist Party, not only because it offends the sacrifice of so

many comrades that offer their lives for their communist ideal, but, and

I would say mainly, because they deny any further revolutionary outlet

to the experiences of the base of the proletariat in struggle.

Taking into consideration. The closer experience of the Red Brigades we

must, first of all, say that we cannot agree with the general political

line (Marxist-Leninist) held by them, although we must admit that it is

the most subsequent Marxist revolutionary group acting in Italy today.

Apart from this, we must recognize the validity of their actions, a

judgement that cannot be contradicted once it is placed in the right

revolutionary perspective. The terrorist violence of the bosses and

their servants is constantly in act, every day workers are

systematically killed at the workplace, every day in the prisons,

criminal asylums, in befotrofi, proletarians and children of

proletarians experience that violence that well fed reformists know only

by hearsay. Against this system that makes torture and terror the two

essential foundations of production, one cannot remain at the stage of

peaceful protest, we cannot continue to attend the visits of Mr.

Berlinguer in double-breast to protest to the murderers that from behind

Parliamentary immunity authorize and call for the massacre of the

workers. Although many comrades belong to the extra-parliamentary

movements and not a few anarchists faced with the problem of armed

struggle pronounce against them. When, in a single issue, in 1972, we

spoke of it as an inescapable need that was needed to be studied and

considered, as an indispensable final showdown with the fascist and

clerical forces, we received a barrage of criticism and accusations,

even reaching the point of accusing us of being provocateurs. But the

truth is that even within the extra-parliamentary forces and the

anarchist movement there is a predominant pacifist current that

continues to delude itself to save in this way, a space of political

freedom that power can annul at any time.

We are not concerned here to defend the work of the Red Brigades, just

as we are not interested in theorising in absolute the utility or

negativity of armed struggle in Italy. We just want todraw attention to

the fact that in our current situation, in the face of torture, abuse,

exploitation, murder, there is something moving, a will to organize and

struggle. Another group, much more problematic than the Red Brigades, is

made up of the NAP. Not much is known of this organization, apart from a

few flyers distri buted, one of which is published among the documents

at the bottom of this file. The specific field of action are the

prisons. Why? On this subject a rhetoric of the occasion would be easy:

The reality is much more shocking. Torture, physical and moral

1’annihilation, killings, the use of bed restraints, sudden transfers,

threats, isolation. Prison can be a place of rest and quiet, almost a

resort for the mafia friends of the politicians or for spies who

collaborate: it becomes hell for rebels and representatives of the

active minority of the proletariat. In this reality revolutionary

propaganda has always flourished. Today, it finds still easier ground

both due to the large number of comrades who have entered prison in

recent years, and for the reforms, quite impracticable, thathave been

voted by parliament, alike the last ones that led to the events of

Rebibbia. The N.A.P. have tried to work in the rebellious perspective of

prisons and a number of their members have fallen in the course of gun

battles with the police or killed in mysterious circumstances. But

beyond the Red Brigades and the NAP., that costitute two glaring

examples of how the forces of some of the active minorities organise, in

the field of armed struggle there are a myriad of small actions on their

own, of struggles against the bosses and their servants, which under the

sign of autonomy encompasse reportable direct action. In this

perspective, the discourse is still completely open.

The tactics

In 1969 Baader wrote: The substance of the position of German

revolutionaries, is therefore that of the armed defence of proletarian

struggles. Instead, the critique of the reformist organizations wanted

to see the claim. To impose only one tactic: armed struggle. Instead the

indication that reached us from the organizations that work underground

is that next to the struggles of the exploited, even manipulated by the

unions and parties, in addition to action for clarification of the

substantive counterrevolutionary role that these bodies carry out, in

addition to the task of clarification about the new forms of repression,

should be developed defense organizations of the proletariat,

organizations capable of addressing future work and to serve as a

control in respect of the reactionary attempts to seize power with the

help of the fascists.. What is emerging from the tactics of the urban

guerrilla groups in Italy today is a pluralistic message. They do not

deny the need — in the current state of capitalist development — of the

worker struggles, but at the same time, denounced as murder, any attempt

to cut off the means of defense of the proletariat. In the event of a

physical confrontation with the reaction and with the fascists thousands

of comrades would be unnecessarily sacrificed to the current deliberate

obtuseness of the Communist Party leaders and hangers on.

As we saw in this same article, the claims of a possible military and

fascist solution, with the protective intervention of the CIA, become

much stronger as the electoral threat of the PCI gets greater and their

assurance not to show their teeth gets more ineredibili. The bosses even

if they can also have faith in those sold out like Berlinguer and

partners, cannot delude themselves that the base is as malleable, not

all having donned the double-breasted. From the game of the balance of

opposites (just as valid as the scheme of opposed extremists) a lot more

efficient attempts for a solution in the coup sense could emerge. In

that case a few dozen heroes would not solve anything and thousands of

comrades would end up massacred. The tactics of the guerrilla army in

Italy today spoints to the dangers of a ‘Chile’ situation suitable for

our country.But, suppose, for the sake of argument, the opposite

eventuality: the end of every coup aspiration; elimination (ie cutting

funding) of the fascists, Communist administration. The exploited fallen

into a different abyss always with no way out.

Ideological cover to make one shudder. Red flags and patriotic songs at

full blast. But even more refined and cruel exploitation and genocide in

the workplace because (apparently managed by the same workers forces).

In this perspective, the revolutionary discourse would be equally valid:

no longer against fascist dictatorship, but against another no less

terrible dictatorship even though of a different colour. The attempt to

disarm — not only physically but also psychologically — the masses can

be functional to prospective authors of a military coup, but in fact

comes in handy (and is defended to the bitter end) to the Communist

Party that it intends to take over the management of power with all the

calm that this requires, without disturbing anybody, to form the cadres

of the exploiting class of the future.

The new armed resistance must therefore imagine a possible future fight

against the attempt of coup by the right, as well as a Communist

dictatorship implemented by the bureaucracy of the party and the unions.

Today, however, it is forced to fight with the present fascism

represented by an elusive, state of affairs; difficult to define, and

the darkness which are all concerned about, the right, the left, the

centres and even the “extreme> left. And precisely this present

struggle, struggle to the death to survive, that is forcing the

guerrilla army in Italy to solve tactical and strategic problems that

are not easy, but are a heritage of great interest to all those that are

giving themselves, as we anarchists, a double possible future fight.

As we have seen the radicalization of the proletarian struggle is

leading some active minorities to reach levels of action that are

considered “outlaw” from power. From this moment one is, “going

underground.”. The conditions of survival are then very precise. First

you must find the money necessary for the very lives of militants and

the implementation of some actions: This money is generally made by the

revolutionary expropriations that the minority does a carico of the

exploiting class, in anticipation of expropriation and the final total

that will be the social revolution. These are actions that have been

carried out by revolutionaries of every era (from Garibaldi to Stalin to

give a not too relevant example), which is facing today, as in the past,

the angry criticism of the reformists, fearful that the mass might

confuse their candid program with that of common robbers. The rest of

the actions, the abduction of individuals responsible for proletarian

exploitation, spies, fascists; acts of sabotage against state property,

against the political centres, offices of reactionary political parties

etc. And countless other discoveries from time to time of revolutionary

proletarian fantasy, constitute the field of what is called “armed

propaganda>. Of course, many criticisms can be made from time to time

about the political opportunityof this or that action, the time lens,

the reason for a choice, etc., and we are not saying here that we

absolutely agree with the tactics of shooting first because in this way

we always end up being right, on the contrary, we just want to say that

this wealth of experience should not be thrown overboard, but studied,

analyzed and criticized.

Criticism

In essence, the criticisms that have been made to the experiences of

armed struggle today in Europe and Italy are all equally of a net

rejection. The problem is not even considered. The comrades that accept

armed struggle as a possible instrument of opposition to state terrorism

are considered provocative, agents of the reaction, fascists. A

criticism of this kind indicates only one thing: the fear that leftist

political parties, the extra-parliamentary movements of hangers on as

well as some anarchists have of losing their “agibility”. The PCI is

talking about provocators and bandits. The extremists are more clear.

Avanguardia operaia says, “with regard to the revival of the so-called

red terrorism by fanfanian propaganda, we reiterate our severe

condemnation of those who put themselves out of the labour movement. The

Pdup-Manifesto are more sophisticated: . And Lotta Continua, “...

political conception of despair that pushes some militant groups and to

lose the bond and trust in the class organizations of the workers, to

engage in a private and suicidal war to adapt instruments such as bombs

that proletarian and anti-fascist consciousness rejects in the hardest

possible way.”

The communique of the Federazioni anarchiche (FAI, GAF, GIA) on armed

struggle is of the same kind: ... We do not agree with these criticisms

because we consider them incomplete. In fact, especially the communique

of the anarchist Federazioni coglie nel segno when they speak of state

provocation and the possible use in the provocatory sense of the groups

that theorise and bring about armed struggle; coglie nel segno when they

state that anarchism has nothing to do with the armed vanguards of the

proletariat; but they do not convince us when they reduce anarchist

action to simply the stimulous of social contradictions, in support of

the selfmanaged struggle and direct action of the exploited mass, if

alongside all that one doesn’t consider opportune — before the spreading

of state terrorism — to organise a defence against the violence of the

bosses and their servants.

In that way the critique is unilateral. The validity of certain

struggles is affirmed and that of the armed struggle of a popular

matrice is denied, while, in contrast one cannot deny that the state

carries out a terrorism that is not only psychological but is also

physical. One should conclude that the state oppresses us with econoic,

cultural, etc exploitation, and kills us with military repression, while

our defence must stop at the first level, leaving them the initiative to

kill us as and how they like, with all commodity, like al tiro a segno.

Not just that, things do not stop there, in the case of the

extraparl.amentarians and the communist party they go as far as to see

any attempt at defence as fascist and provocatory.

Frankly this reasonig does not seem right to me. But there is more.

Pinsisting on these positions one is objectively playing the game of the

repression that is applying the rule of « divide and rule »,

experimented everywhere and which the mass murderer Stalin was a master

of. Through instruments of this kind anarchists such as Berneri were

slain in Spain, the collectives remained defenceless and more than a few

comrades were forced into clandestinity « anarchy reigning>. Let us stop

our fear for a moment, let’s stop and think. When our judgment coincides

perfectly with that of power, when our declarations seem to come out

from the multimillionaire printing presses of the communist party, when

fascists and communists si pallegaiano the terrorist respectively to

harmonically equilibrate the game of opposed extremisms, when the

policeman speaks the same language as we do, there must be something

wrong with us, not in the instruments of power that do not usually make

such kinds of mistakes. In practice the condemnations that we often

pronounce against the experiences of armed struggle are based on news

supplied by the press in the pay of the bosses; of actions compute; of

real motivations, of the frame ups constructed a priori and a posteriori

by the police, we know nothing. Yet our first instinct is to condemn

immediately whatever disturbs the programmatic framework of our

political activity.

Acting in this way the struggle against repression crystalises in a

monovalente form, following the desires of those who have an interest in

not disturbing the waters too much. The groups that recognise the need

for armed struggle are isolated, leaving them in balia of eventual

provocations.It is logical that an emarginated group can defend itself

up to a point, working in certain conditions of clandestinity and with

the obstacle of having all the left against it, unleashed in an abnormal

and criminal critique,does not have instruments di verifica, cannot

control its position nor even its own analyses.

The convictions stem from the official left originate from the same

matrix that gives approval when it comes to “strugglet against fascism

in Spain and other uncivilized countries”.

And precisely these days the mass massacre of five anti-fascist comrades

who were shot by the Spanish executioner, comrades belonging to

clandestine organizations of armed struggle in Spain (ETA and FRAP). On

this occasion, the anger was unanimous.

It has a certain effect reading bastards like the Christian Democrats in

this way: “We all feel deeply humbled and aware of the duty to ensure

the system of freedom that can be the bearer of many flaws, but as long

as it remains such, constitutes an element of certainty for citizens and

equilibrium and peace for the international community.”

And the worthy comrades of the Italian Communist Party: “the executions

must encourage all democrats, all anti-fascists, to extend their

mobilization to increase initiatives, to draw into the struggle millions

and millions of fighters for freedom in Spain. “ And the freedom of

Italy, France, Germany, Russia, the United States, of the rest of the

world?

Even the Pope spoke. Concealing less well than the other political

criminals the true reactionary matrix of Catholicism: “We reiterate the

strong disapproval of the series of terrorist attacks that have marred

that noble and always dear to us dear nation, and the courage of those

who, directly or indirectly, are responsible, for such an activity,

considered, wrongly, and taken as a legitimate tool of political

struggle. But to this condemnation we must also make follow a

condemnation of a repression so hard that he also ignored calls from

many quarters that have been raised against those executions.”

But this “holy crusade”, led by Paul VI, worthy successor of the holy

fathers of the Inquisition, characterized well by the ‘august’ presence

of the words of the Where there is boss exploitation, either under the

idiotic sign of fascism idiot, or under the intelligent sign of

bourgeois democracy, which conceals a no less odious fascism, armed

struggle is legitimate in that it provides for the defence of the

proletariat. And if the comrades of the Italian Communist Party who have

found so many eloquent words these days to defend the Spanish

revolutionaries victims of th executioner Franco, were consequent with

themselves, they should use the same words with the revolutionaries of

our own house, or at least open a clear critical debate on the proposals

that are coming from this side, preventing everything from disappearing

in the mist of an alleged provocation ultimately useful only to the boss

reaction.

Among our tasks, in addition to those engaged in the masses, political

clarification, the push toward self-managed initiatives and direct

action, must also be that of the organisation of proletarian defence.

This can not be — rightly — the work of a vanguard that proposes the

conquest of something or the guidance of the proletriat, but must be the

work of groups that seek to strike the enemy in the property and people,

developing the first elements of the popular resistance that developing

the first elements of the class war in course, overcoming the

contradictions of capitalism in a revolutionary sense, may, in a not too

distant future, at the economic, ideological and even military level

start the road to revolution social.