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Title: Third Worldism or Socialism Author: Solidarity Date: April 1971 Language: en Topics: Maoism, socialism, Third World, third world ideology, Sri Lanka, national liberation, Trotskyism Source: Retrieved on 6th December 2020 from https://libcom.org/library/third-worldism-or-socialism-solidarity-group
Various theories have been put forward as to why the left, in advanced
capitalist countries, should support national liberation struggles.
The Communist parties, for example, support such struggles because
nationalism in the Third World seems to collide with the interests of
the U.S. National liberation is thus thought to âweakenâ U.S.
imperialism. They hope that Russia, which supports these movements
ideologically and/or materially, will benefit.
The Maoists follow a similar logic, though after Nixonâs visit to China,
one suspects that Maoâs âanti-imperialistâ zeal may be directed only
against the Russian bureaucracy. Western Castroites and âprogressiveâ
liberals of all hues support such movements out of a sense of âmoral
dutyâ.
For these people, national liberation is a universal blessing which
should be given to â or taken by â the âleadersâ of the Third World. One
should add perhaps that these noble sentiments donât stop these same
Castroites and liberals from supporting capitalist âleadersâ like
McGovern in the U.S. â or calling for a return of the Labour Party in
the next British elections.
Trotskyist support for national liberation is a bit more sophisticated.
It consists of grand (and banal) historical schemes. First, the national
liberation movements should be supported ~ â this is the communal bed of
all Trotskyists (Mandel, Cliff, Healy, Ah, etc.). Whether the support is
âcriticalâ or âuncriticalâ is another matter â and here Trotskyists part
company and proceed to their respective rooms.
But, someone may ask, why the support in the first place? The answer
provided is an example of historical scheme -making: U.S. imperialism
will be weakenedâ by such movements. Such a âweakeningâ will impart
another âtransitionalâ twitch to the âdeath agony of capitalismâ which
in turn will foster other twitches ... and so on. Like all
mystifications, Trotskyism fails to give a coherent answer as to why,
especially since 1945, imperialism has been able to grant political
independence to many ex -colonial countries, a possibility that Lenin
and Trotsky explicitly denied.
The theory of âpermanent revolutionâ blinds Trotskyists to the realities
of national liberation. They still consider that the bourgeoisie, in the
Third World, is incapable of fighting for ânational independenceâ. But
they fail to grasp that the permanent revolutionâ, in Russia for
example, both began and ended as a bourgeois revolution (in spite of the
proletariatâs alleged âleading roleâ in the unfolding of the process).
In Russia, the bourgeois stage (i.e. both February and October) very
concretely ensured that there would be no future âsocialistâ unfolding.
The âpermanent ~ carried out by the Bolsheviks only brought about a
state-capitalist reorganisation of the economy and social life. The
âsolvingâ of the bourgeois tasks will destroy, as it did in Russia, all
the autonomous rank and file organisations of the working class
(councils and factory committees). They become subordinates of the
state, which is the organism par excellence for carrying out âbelatedâ
bourgeois revolutions.
Any bureaucracy, given favourable conditions, can âsolveâ the bourgeois
tasks in the Third World. The âpermanent revolutionâ doesnât need the
working class, except as cannon fodder. The accumulation of capital,
through expanded reproduction, is the basis of its bureaucratic power
and whether the bureaucracy accumulates successfully or not is besides
the point. In any case there has never been a âpureâ capitalist country
which has âsolvedâ all its bourgeois tasks. Even Britain still has a
queen.
Trotskyist support for movements of national liberation, however ~ is
thus support for another social group ... and not for the working class
or peasantry. Trotskyists present their support for the leadership of
various national liberation movements as a âtacticâ which will allow
them to gain control of the movement. In their mythology, the
leaderships of such movements are incapable of carrying out the struggle
for national independence. As we have seen, this is nonsense, pure and
simple: the Chinese, Cuban or North Vietnamese bureaucracies went âall
the wayâ in expropriating western capitalists without an ounce of help
from any of the Fourth Internationals. They also mercilessly slaughtered
or imprisoned all Trotskyists in those countries. Insofar as Trotskyists
babble about a âdemocratisationâ of such regimes through âpolitical
revolutionâ, they are the reformists of state capital.
Leninâs theory of imperialism, written in 1916, is usually quoted by all
the trad left groups to sanction their support for national liberation.
The theory holds that a Western âlabour aristocracyâ has been created
out of super-profits squeezed out of colonial countries. This is a
bourgeois concept because it places national factors above class
analysis. Concepts such as âproletarian nationsâ versus âimperialist
nationsâ flow naturally from such an analysis â they were in fact
peddled in the 30âs by fascists. Nowadays, Gunder Frank with his theory
of âthe development of under-developmentâ and Emmanuelâs âunequal
exchangeâ provide fresh examples of the bourgeois-leninist attitudes so
deeply entrenched in the left.
Nationalism and class struggle are irreconcilably opposed. A nation is a
bourgeois reality: it is capitalism with all its exploitation and
alienation, parcelled out in a single geographical unit. It doesnât
matter whether the nation is âsmall, âcolonialâ, âsemi-colonialâ or
ânon-imperialistâ. All nationalisms are reactionary because they
inevitably clash with class consciousness and poison it with chauvinism
and racialism.
The nationalist sentiment in the advanced countries is reactionary, not
only because it facilitates the plundering of the colonial workers and
peasants, but because it is a form of false consciousness which
ideologically binds the western workers to âtheirâ ruling classes.
Similarly, the ânationalism of the oppressedâ is reactionary because it
facilitates class collaboration between the colonial workers and
peasants and the âanti-imperialistâ nascent bureaucracies.
The Trotskyist myth that a successful national liberation will later
unleash âthe real class struggleâ is false, as the examples of Ethiopia,
North Vietnam, Mexico under Cardenas, and Brazil under Vargas bear out.
It is a rationalisation for the defence of new ruling classes in the
process of formation. As historical evidence shows, those new elites
usually become appendages of the already existing state capitalist bloc.
To this degree Trotskyism is a variety of vicarious social patriotism.
Any intelligent person can see that the fate of the advanced capitalist
countries doesnât depend on the Third Worldâs ability to cut off
supplies of raw materials. The Third Worldâs ruling classes will never
get together to plan or practice an effective boycott on a world scale.
Furthermore, the U.S. and Western Europe are becoming less dependent
upon many of the products of the Third World. Add to that the falling
prices for raw materials in the world market, the protectionist barriers
in the advanced countries, and one gets a picture of imminent barbarism
in the Third World. Its bargaining position vis-Ă -vis the West weakens
every year. Third Worldists should seriously ponder about these
tendencies.
National liberation struggles can be seen as attempts of sections of the
native ruling classes to appropriate a larger share of the value
generated in âtheir ownâ countries. Imperialist exploitation indeed
generates this consciousness in the more âeducatedâ strata of the Third
World. These strata tend to consider themselves as the repository of
âthe Fatherlandâ. Needless to say, a worsening in the trade terms for
raw materials in the Third World aggravates this situation. The growth
of many national liberation movements in the past 25 years is a
manifestation of the imbalance existing in the world market. The Third
World countries plunge deeper into decay, famine, stagnation, political
corruption and nepotism. National rebellion may them be channelled into
active politics by discontented army officers, priests, petty
bureaucrats, intellectuals and (of course) angry children of the
bourgeois and landlord classes. The grievances of the workers and
peasants are real too (the above mentioned worthies largely account for
them), but the nationalist leaders can still hope to capture the
imagination of the exploited. If this happens one sees the beginnings of
a national liberation movement based explicitly on class collaboration,
with all the reactionary implications this has for the exploited. They
emerge out of the frying pan of foreign exploitation into the fire of
national despotism.
For such regimes to survive against the open hostility of the Western
capitalist bloc, or its insidious world market mechanisms, it is
imperative that the regimes become dependent on the state capitalist
bloc (Russia and/or China). If this is not possible, an extremely
precarious balancing act (âneutralismâ) becomes the dominant fact of
life (as shown by Egypt or India). Without massive assistance from the
state capitalist bloc it is impossible for any such regime even modestly
to begin primitive accumulation. The majority of the Third World
countries donât have the resources to start such a programme on their
own. And even if they did, it could only be done (as any accumulation)
through intensified exploitation. Higher consumption levels and welfare
programmes may temporarily be established by these regimes. Those who
can see no further than economistic steps to âsocialismâ usually quote
this to explain why Castro is âbetterâ than Batista or Mao âpreferableâ
to Chiang. Without dealing with the reactionary implications of such
reformism at a national level, letâs see how the argument works
internationally. Castro supported the 1968 Russian invasion of
Czechoslovakia, Ho Chi Minh defended the Russian crushing of the
Hungarian revolution of 1956 and Mao supported Yahya Khanâs genocide in
Bangladesh. Thus what is âgainedâ at home is lost abroad, in the form of
heaps of corpses and massive political demoralisation. Does the trad
left keep account of such a reactionary balance sheet?
The ideological repercussions of such inter-national events are
difficult to gauge, but are no doubt reactionary. The further
bureaucratisation of the Third World merely reinforces working class
prejudices and apathy in the advanced countries. The responses of the
imperialist bourgeoisies will be to mount further protectionist barriers
and, at the same time, to increase the profitable arms trade. The
bureaucratisation of the Third World will enhance the prestige â both
ideological and diplomatic â of the state capitalist bloc, in spite of
the latterâs inter-imperialist rivalries. This process will be
accompanied by an increasing demoralisation and cynicism in the circles
of the trad left. This is already patently clear today: in many demos
covering international affairs, portraits of Ho, Mao, Castro, Guevara
and a host of other scoundrels (Hoxha, Kim-Il Sung, etc.) are obscenely
paraded. Such cults express the ideological debasement of our times, and
itâs no accident that working people feel only contempt or indifference
towards the trad left and the heroes it worships.
Another equally important dimension of national liberation struggles is
ignored by the trad left. It is the question of working class and
peasant democracy and of the revolutionary self-activity of the masses.
National liberation will always repress such autonomous working class
activities because the bourgeois goals of national liberation (i.e.
nation-building) are opposed â in class terms â to the historical
interests of working people (i.e. the liberation of humanity). It thus
becomes clear why all the leaderships of national liberation movements
attempt to control, from above, any initiative of the masses, and
prescribe for them only the politics of nationalism. To do this it is
necessary actually to terrorise the working masses (Ben Bellaâs FLN
massacred dozens of Algerian workers during the Algerian war of
âindependenceâ, Hoâs Viet Mihn helped the British and French to crush
the Saigon Workersâ Commune of 1945 and later assassinated dozens of
Trotskyists; Guevara publicly attacked the Cuban Trotskyists and
Castroâs attacks against them in 1966 sealed their fate even as
reformists of the Castroite ruling class.) The state capitalist elites,
even before they take power, must attempt to eradicate any independent
voice of opposition, and their complete rule wipes out any possibility
of even meagre measures of bourgeois democracy.
Support for any national liberation struggle is always reactionary. It
usually consists of:
1) support for a client state of the state capitalist bloc, which
amounts to defending state capitalist imperialism against Western
imperialism;
2) support for despotic regimes which destroy, together with classic
bourgeois property forms, any independent organisation of the working
class and peasantry.
It is often claimed that a distinction must be made between the
reactionary and bureaucratic leaderships of national liberation
struggles and the masses of people involved in such struggles. Their
objectives are said to be different. We believe this distinction seldom
to be valid. The foreigner is usually hated as a foreigner, not as an
exploiter, because he belongs to a different culture, not because he
extracts surplus value. This prepares the way for local exploiters to
step into the shoes of the foreign ones. Moreover the fact that a given
programme (say, national independence) has considerable support does not
endow it with any automatic validity. Mass âconsciousnessâ can be mass
âfalse-consciousnessâ. Millions of French, British, Russian and German
workers slaughtered one another in the first World War, having
internalised the ânationalâ ideas of their respective rulers. Hitler
secured 6 million votes in September 1930. The leaders of national
struggles can only come to power because there is a nationalist feeling
which they can successfully manipulate. The bonds of ânational unityâ
will then prove stronger than the more important but âdivisiveâ class
struggle.
In practice all that revolutionaries can currently do in the Third World
is to avoid compromise on the cardinal issue: namely that working people
have no âfatherlandâ and that for socialists the main enemy is always in
oneâs own country. Revolutionaries can strive to create autonomous
organs of struggle (peasants or village committees or workersâ groups)
with the aim of resisting exploitation, whatever the colour of the
exploiterâs skin. They can warn systematically of the dangers and
repression these bodies will face from foreign imperialism and from the
nascent bourgeoisie or bureaucracy. They can point out that their own
societies are divided into classes and that these classes have mutually
incompatible interests, just like the classes in the âforeignâ societies
that oppress them.
Although difficult this is essential and the only road that doesnât
involve mystifying oneself and oneâs own supporters. In South Vietnam,
for instance, the conflict of interests between rulers and ruled is
obvious enough. No great effort is needed to see the gulf separating the
well-fed corrupt politicians and generals in Saigon and the women,
riddled with hookworms, breaking their backs in the paddy fields. But in
the North? Is there really a community of interests between the Haiphong
docker or cement worker and the political commissar in Hanoi? Between
those who initiated and those who suppressed the peasant uprising of
November 1956? Between those who led and those who put down the Saigon
Commune of 1945? Between Ta Tu Thau and his followers and those who
butchered them? To even demand that such issues be discussed will
endanger the revolutionaries. Could there be better proof of the
viciously anti-working class nature of these regimes?
Some âThird Worldâ countries are so backward or isolated, and have such
an insignificant working class, that it is difficult to see how such a
class could even begin to struggle independently. The problem however is
not a national one. The solution to the misery and alienation of these
workers and peasants is in the international development of the
proletarian revolution. The revolution in the advanced capitalist
countries will decisively tip the scales the world over. The success of
such a revolution, even in its earliest stages, will liberate enormous
technological resources to help these isolated, weak and exploited
groups.
Owing to the different social, political and economic weights of various
Third World countries, proletarian revolutions or revolutionary workersâ
councils in these countries will have varying repercussions on their
neighbours, and on the advanced countries. The effects will, however, be
more political than economic. A workers and peasantsâ take-over in Chile
(which will irretrievably smash the Allende state) will not damage the
American economy. But such an explosive event might provide a
revolutionary example for the workers of Argentina, Peru, Bolivia, etc.,
and help the American workers to gain a revolutionary consciousness. The
same could be said of Nigeria, India or even Ceylon in their respective
contexts. He who rejects this perspective as âimprobableâ or
âimpossibleâ abandons any revolutionary perspective for the workers of
what is loosely called âthe Third Worldâ. In fact there are everywhere
only âtwo worldsâ: that of the exploiter and that of the exploited. To
this degree, the international working class is one class, with the same
historical objective.
We leave it to the trad left to support the imperialism of its choice,
be it Russian, or Chinese, or any new shining light in the Stalinist
cosmos. For us, the main enemy will always be at home, and the only way
we can help ourselves and the workers and peasants of the Third World is
to help make a socialist revolution here. But it would be tantamount to
scabbing if at any moment we supported reactionary movements which
exploit â no matter in how small a way â a section of the international
working class.