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Title: The End of Antifa? Author: Antti Rautiainen Date: 28 November 2014 Language: en Topics: anti-fascism, Russia, Ukraine Source: Retrieved on 3rd November 2021 from https://avtonom.org/en/author_columns/end-antifa
Despite the bleakness of the situation in Ukraine, at least I was amused
by the fact that Nazis were fighting on both sides of the front, killing
each other.
But then I found out that some âanti-fascistsâ have been doing the same
[1] [2] [3].
I am sure that in terms of the entire former Soviet Union only a
minority of the Antifas is willing to die for Poroshenko or Putin.
However, the scale of this problem is significant, and any attempts to
react to it [4] also have their shortcomings [5].
Imagine, for example that BORN[6] or NSO-North[7] were to capture St.
Petersburg and declare it a âNational republic.â Or some Caucasus
Emirate[8] were to grab Stavropol and established a government there. In
this case, would we demand that Putin âimmediately stop military actions
and resolve the conflict in a peaceful way, in an open and equal
negotiation, without the threat of violence,â as was formulated in the
statement made by ârepresentatives of music bands, antifascist groups
and DIY initiatives?â I doubt it.
Of course, fighting on Putinâs side against either of the above wouldnât
be an option either, as anarchists should not engage in any war except
class war.
These shortcomings in the position adopted by the subcultural milieu are
a minor issue. The bigger issue is that of people from the anti-fascist
movement supporting either the position of the government in Kiev, or
the pro-Russian âCrimea is oursâ one.
Antifa in the ex-USSR has always formed a common front for the different
movements, from the anarchists, social democrats and Stalinists to
liberals and even national-patriots, and it was deliberately created to
be so. Under the circumstances in the â00s this approach was a necessary
one, with many benefits for anarchists. Since anarchist tactics and
positions have always been more clearly defined than those of the rest,
anarchists managed to involve many patriots and other undecided, in
actions such as: May Day, January 19 [9], anarchist blocs during the
protest wave against election fraud 2011â2012, etc. Antifa was one of
the very few successful projects of anarchists in the ex-USSR in the
past 15 years, but this success was accompanied by big losses, murdered
comrades.
Many of the âundecidedâ drifted towards the anarchist movement, but not
all of them. There was always a considerable segment that only wanted to
have fun at gigs without the threat of Nazis, or stood in support of
âveterans,â simply being antifascist, without seeing any other
alternative to power. And not all of them have been âundecided,â as a
neutral attitude towards power and capital can also be a well argued and
thought out choice. I do not believe in some universal individual
progress in search for truth, I believe that the formation of the
individual opinion is largely the result of random processes and depends
little on oneâs intelligence. And currently, with the growing wave of
patriotism, in Russia as well as in the Ukraine, of course, most of the
âundecidedâ are drifting towards supporting their respective
governments.
The fact that the most patriotic elements of Antifa have ended up on
opposite sides of the front in Ukraine shows that the Antifa era is
over. As a matter of fact, in Russia this era had already ended by
2011â2012 with Nazis, perhaps only temporarily, reducing the degree of
violence and, for the first time since the period of the RNE[10],
focusing on building a mass protest movement. The shaky unity among
Antifa was only possible when fighting off a common threat, but with the
defeat of BORN and NSO-North, and the tactical reorientation of Russian
fascists towards mass movement politics, this unity quickly dissolved
and with it, many aspects of Antifa as well.
The âleft unity,â built up during the protests of 2011â2012, is now
buried together with the anti-fascism of the previous era. With the
general rise of patriotism, Sergei Udaltsov[11] and other âleftistsâ
took a pro-Kremlin stance in regards to the Ukraine. These people are
the core of the Russian âleft,â and the majority of âleftistsâ
everywhere are Imperialists, who in difficult times always take the side
of the authorities. The National-Bolshevik Party has, after almost a
decade of liberal politics, also returned to its 1993 position, which
can be briefly summarized using their old slogan âStalin, Beriya,
Gulag!â
Now we are in the awkward situation where our comrades are imprisoned
together with these âleftistsâ for the âBolotnaya square case.â There is
nothing we can do about this â political prisoners are always a legacy
from the past. The struggles for which they are serving time are always
struggles of the past. This is not to imply that past struggles were
mistakes or absurd. In 2002, 2005, and even 2009 the anti-fascist
struggle was a central issue. It was an important struggle, no one
should regret having participated in it, even if some of our allies from
that period are now allies of the state, and thus our enemies. It was as
important as going to the âBolotnaya squareâ in 2012, no matter the
consequences.
The new political situation is in many aspects similar to that of
1999â2002, the time of the second Chechenyan conflict. On the one hand
it was difficult to take action back then because it was impossible to
find allies â there were just a small handful of anti-war âleftists,â
and the liberals were busy with pointless projects such as the electoral
campaign for Khakamada[12]. On the other hand, at that time it was
simpler knowing that we could only count on ourselves, as only
anarchists held positions which made sense.
I got used to these conditions, and adopted the classifications from
those times for life. Thus, the current situation is clear to me. But I
do understand why people who were used to such categories as âAntifaâ or
âleftâ are confused confused. In the best case they write naive
statements, in the worst case they support the DNR[13] or even join the
war against it. But times changes, and it is necessary to see these
changes and reach the appropriate conclusions.
[1] Interview with anti-fascists, including âTimurâ who volunteered in
the Azov battalion of the Ukrainian government
[2] Interview with Anton Fatullayev, former Russian anti-fascist
prisoner who went to fight on the pro-Russian rebel side and died soon
after the interview
[3] Interview from a Russian TV-channel with Spanish âanti-fascistsâ who
went to fight for the pro-Russian rebels
[4] Letter from ârepresentatives of bands, antifascist groups and
DIY-initiatives from around the worldâ against the war.
...
Full list of signatures is available here:
[5] These shortcomings, related to a vague pacifism, are explained in
detail in this (comradely) commentary of comrade Mrachnik on Nihilist.li
website, which is not available in English. The following paragraphs of
this column follow a line of argumentation similar to that of comrade
Mrachnik.
...
[6] Fighting Organisation of Russian Nationalists, Nazi terror group.
Members of this organization were sentenced for the murder of
anti-fascists Stanislav Markelov and Anastasia Baburova, and some are
currently in court facing charges for having participated in the murders
of anti-fascists Ivan Khutorskoy, Fyodor Filatov, and Ilya Dzhaparidzhe
among others.
[7] National Socialist Organisation â North, Nazi terror group, members
of which were sentenced for the murder of anti-fascist Alexey Krylov and
26 other killings.
[8] Clandestine Islamist government operating in the southern most part
of Russia, the northern slope of Caucasus mountains. Declared
established by former clandestine president of separatist Chechnya,
Dokku Umarov in October 2007.
[9] Annually, a demonstration takes place on the 19^(th) of January in
remembrance of the murders of Stanislav Markelov and Anastasia Baburova
on that date in 2009. This is the biggest annual anti-fascist
demonstration in Moscow .
[10] Russian National Unity, nationalist organisation which for a brief
period in the â90s managed to rally most of the far- right under its
flag. Subsequently they fell into oblivion as authorities excluded it
from parliamentary politics and its leader Aleksandr Barkashov became
more and more erratic.
[11] Leader of the Left Front uniting a wide spectrum of Russian
leftists, those left of the parliamentarian Communist Party of the
Russian Federation. Imprisoned on the bogus charges of having organised
the Bolotnaya square riot on the 6^(th) of May 2012. Unlike the Left
Front, has adopted pro-government position on the Ukrainian war.
[12] Irina Khakamada, independent (neo)liberal, anti-war candidate in
the 2004 presidential elections. Gained 3.9% of the vote.
[13] Donetsk Peopleâs Republic of pro-Russian separatists.