|
September
11th: The False Methods of Terrorism
by
Peter Taaffe (29/09/01)
THE
SOCIALIST Party has been forthright in its condemnation of those who attacked
the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. We described their methods as
those of "small groups employing mass terrorism".
At the
same time, we have not given any support to George Bush or Tony Blair,
who call for a "war against terrorism", yet support state terror
against defenceless and innocent people in the neo-colonial world.However,
our approach is not shared by all, even amongst other socialist groups.
Some are equivocal or refuse to 'condemn' these attacks. This attitude
is profoundly mistaken and risks alienating the majority of working class
people, driving them into the arms of Blair and Bush and their 'war' preparations.
Moreover, it flies in the face of a long-held principled opposition of
socialists to these methods.
Marxism
Historically,
Marxism has always been opposed to terrorist methods. In 1938 Leon Trotsky,
summing up the attitude of Bolshevism, stated: "All Marxists in Russia
began in the historic fight against terrorism". Trotsky pointed out
that under the one thousand years old Tsarist dictatorship in Russia:
"The first reaction of the youth was revenge, assassination of ministers,
and we [the Socialists and Marxists, the Bolsheviks] told them: 'Not that
[terrorist methods] is our revenge, not the assassination of ministers,
but the assassination of Tsarism, the order of tyranny'". And this
was in a country where the rise of the working class movement and their
parties - Bolsheviks and Mensheviks - confronted two great parties, the
Narodnya Volya (the Will of the People), and the Social Revolutionaries,
who based their tactics upon terror. These methods could hold sway over
a layer of young people; intellectuals, individual workers and peasants
only so long as the organised working class movement did not develop and
had not yet fully appeared on the political scene.
Revolution
The 1905
Russian Revolution, with the entry onto the scene of the masses, particularly
the working class, pushed these methods into the background. But the revolution's
defeat in 1907 once more saw the rise of terrorist methods. This was a
reaction to the murder, torture and imprisonment by the Tsarist state
machine. Even then, the Bolsheviks implacably opposed terrorist methods.
Trotsky compared individual terrorism to "liberals with bombs".
This appears strange to us today. Yet a liberal believes that a fundamental
change can be secured by partial measures. The replacement of a minister
or even a government is sufficient to bring about change. Similarly, terrorists
believe that by the assassination or bombing of an individual representative,
or even a group, of imperialism or capitalism, this system can be 'destabilised'
or even defeated.
Capitalists
However,
the capitalists will always find sufficient replacements for those removed
by the actions of terrorists. This is why socialists and Marxists counterpose
to these methods mass action, mass meetings, demonstrations and strikes,
including the general strike, to defeat the bosses and abolish capitalism.
Consequently, the activity of socialists and Marxists, and the labour
movement in general, is to help to make working class people conscious
of their immense latent power. They are the strongest potential force
in society, and Marxists emphasise that mass action is the key to social
and political change. The terrorist, notwithstanding their intentions,
actually lowers the consciousness of the working class in its own strength
and its ability to fight. They reinforce the idea that working class people
are passive in the face of the power of imperialism and capitalism.
Palestine
They
must wait for the 'great liberator', small conspiratorial groups, to act
for them in the struggle for emancipation. For the Palestinian people,
in the past the guerrillas based outside the country, in the rest of the
Arab world and internationally, were seen as their future liberators.
However, the 1980s' defeat in the Lebanon and the evacuation of the Palestinian
fighters following the Israeli occupation of that country dashed this
hope. This led to a feeling amongst the Palestinians on the West Bank,
in Gaza and within Israel itself that 'we must do it ourselves'. This
in turn led to the first intifada and the more recent and bloody second
intifada. This movement essentially is a mass movement with an armed wing.
It is true that groups such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad have mistakenly
resorted to the method of the 'suicide bomber' against Israeli forces.
When employed in Israel it has struck down ordinary Israelis.
Terrible
suffering
These
methods, we understand, are born out of the terrible suffering of the
Palestinians as well as the closing off by the Israeli state of other
legitimate means of struggle and protest. It has, however, been counterproductive,
both in terms of the increased killings and suffering of the Palestinian
masses and the excuse this gives to the Israeli ruling class to carry
through further repression. In the past, even though their methods were
wrong, the terrorists were often cast in a heroic mould. They were prepared
to sacrifice their lives by eliminating individual representatives of
capitalism - the army general, the minister, the chief of police, etc
- without killing the innocent. Modern 'terrorism' - although ultimately
it emanates from and is nourished by social, national, religious or ethnic
oppression - is different in character. Even in the 1970s and the 1980s,
when terrorism was prominent, those who used terror often tended to do
so indiscriminately. The car bomb, the planting of bombs in buildings,
the suicide bomber, often resulted in the death, not of the 'oppressors'
or their state forces, the symbols of their rule, etc., but of innocents
too.
Counterproductive
Marxists
criticised terrorism because it is counterproductive to its professed
aims of weakening 'the enemy', in the case of the US attacks, US imperialism.
On the contrary, it is invariably used to strengthen the rule of capital,
to reinforce its state power and hence its ability to pursue 'state terrorism'.
The capitalists have the excuse to attack or encroach upon civil and democratic
liberties. Most of all, these methods tend to drive the working class
into the arms, politically, of the bosses and their representatives. Witness
the attempts of the Bush administration, with the cover provided by the
bloodletting, to attack civil liberties - the holding of legal immigrants
indefinitely, increased powers for wire tapping, etc., the militarisation
of US society, armed guards on planes, the presence on troops on the streets,
the mobilisation of reservists, etc. The fact that there is considerable
and growing resistance to the attempts to hastily push through these measures
in the US Congress by the Bush administration is testimony to the determination
of the American people not to be panicked into accepting patently anti-democratic
measures under the guise of 'fighting terrorism'.
Bush
But Bush
enjoys the highest ratings of any president in history, 92%, compared
to 50% prior to 11 September. The attacks have achieved the seemingly
impossible: to make Bush - a "corporation disguised as a human being"
- popular, at least temporarily. Furthermore, US capitalism has managed
to bring under its 'coalition' umbrella, in a series of concentric circles,
regimes and forces hostile to US imperialism until recently, e.g. Iran,
Hezbollah in the Lebanon, etc. This itself is an indication of the effect
in scale and the character of the terrorist attacks in the US. It was
of a different order to anything that we have seen in the past. In Northern
Ireland, for instance, in 30 years of the Troubles, about half the number
were killed as perished in the attacks on one day in the US. In one US
firm, 1500 children lost a parent.
Mass
terror
Therefore,
it is an understatement to describe this as 'individual terrorism', aimed
at one specific target. These were the actions of a small conspiratorial
group; allegedly bin Laden's Al-Qaeda organisation, or those allied to
it, which perpetrated an act of mass terror, not just against the 7,000
that were killed but against the US population as a whole. In its wake,
the mass of the population are terrorised and terrified that it could
be repeated; even that 'bioterrorists' could act. At one stage, while
condemning 'individual terrorism', Trotsky did use the phrase of "mass
terrorism" by the working class. This could not in any way be equated
with the methods employed by the group, which 'bombed' the WTC and the
Pentagon. Trotsky was describing the necessary measures of the democratic
workers' state in Russia in 1917-23, using defensive measures needed to
safeguard the revolution against the 'White Terror' of the dispossessed
landlords, capitalists and their foreign capitalist backers.
Marxists
Marxists
today would not use such terminology, any more than we would use Karl
Marx's "dictatorship of the proletariat" because it can be link
socialism in the minds of workers to dictatorship, as with Stalinism.
Marx's idea can be better and more popularly explained by the call for
socialism and workers' democracy. Unbelievably, there are some socialists
who refuse to 'condemn' the US terrorist outrage. One such organisation
is the Socialist Workers Party in Britain. A circular to Socialist Alliance
members from leading SWP members, John Rees and Rob Hoveman, in answer
to a statement by a Socialist Alliance member that did condemn the attacks
stated: "We do not believe that the use of the word 'condemn' is
appropriate in relation to the tragic events in the US. Clearly we do
not support the attacks on working class people and it should go without
saying that we oppose the strategy of individual terrorism. "This
would be our preferred way of stating our case. But the language of 'condemnation'
is that which is always required of socialists and national liberation
movements by the media and the ruling class. It would have been better
to avoid it for this reason
There are lines to draw here - we believe
the Socialist Alliance should be part of an unstinting and principled
opposition to US and Western imperialism and the further mass murder Bush
and Blair intend to unleash on the world". It is nonsense on stilts
to argue that condemnation of the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington
will strengthen Blair and Bush. On the contrary, not to do so can drive
infuriated workers into the arms of the capitalists.
Nonsense
The muddled
thinking elaborated here falls into the very trap, which Rees and Hoveman
purport to avoid, of bolstering support for the capitalists. The Socialist
Party has made it absolutely clear that our criticisms of the actions
in the US are entirely different in content and character to the hypocritical
speeches of Bush and Blair when they attack 'terrorism'. They, and their
predecessors, have pursued mass terrorism, against the Iraqi people, the
Serbs. They have been complicit and silent when Israel invaded the Lebanon
in 1982 with the death of 17,000 people. Moreover, Blair and Bush do not
say a word about the 30,000 who were slaughtered because of the murderous
gangs of Nicaraguan contras who were supported and financed by US imperialism.
Nor do they have any comment about the 120,000 killed in Algeria - many
of them victims of the state terror of the Algerian government.
Condemn
We unreservedly
condemn the organised, systematic state terrorism of the capitalists.
But this does not release us as socialists and Marxists from a duty also
to criticise and show implacable opposition to the actions of terrorist
groups that play into the hands of the ruling class. This the Socialist
Party in England and Wales, and particularly our sister party has consistently
done in Northern Ireland, in Spain towards the actions of ETA, in Latin
America in the 1970s and in many other situations. Unfortunately, the
SWP and other alleged 'Marxist' organisations have not done this. There
is, therefore, a certain consistency in their present stance. Indeed,
they have sometimes been uncritical cheerleaders for the methods and policies
of terrorist groups. We recognise that the terrorist methods of a group
from an oppressed people have different causes and origins and intentions
than those of the ruling class.
Even a capitalist writer such as Daniel Warner from the International
Studies Institute in Geneva can write in the International Herald Tribune:
"Terrorism has causes. Growth in inequalities of wealth and lack
of political access leads to frustration, which potentially leads to aggression,
violence and terrorism. The greater the levels of frustration, the greater
the levels of violence. The higher the levels of repression, the higher
the levels of reaction. But what is terrorism? It is the activity of the
dispossessed, the voiceless, in a radically asymmetrical distribution
of power". In other words, it is in the social, national and the
religious situation, that we must look for the causes of terrorism. It
is true that the origins of the Al-Qaeda organisation, the social base
from which it grew, as well as those involved in the hijackings and killings
in the US, are different from other terrorist organisations. Bin Laden
himself is from a rich Saudi family, which came originally from the south
of the country on the borders of Yemen.
Osama
bin Laden
Asir
was the last part of the region to be conquered by the Saudi royal family
and did not come under its control until the early 1930s. This area remained
a wild backwater of unruly tribes for the next 50 years. Asir is just
north of Yemen where Osama bin Laden has his family roots. Others, part
of the al-Qaeda network who have been identified as hijackers, came from
middle class families, and even from the elite, in Egypt and other Arab
countries. Moreover, the Saudi regime gave support and sustenance, both
to bin Laden and the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, "thereby spawning
a baby that turned into a monster" [Robert Fisk, The Independent,
and 26 September].
Afghanistan
It was
the head of the Saudi secret service, Prince Turki bin Faisal al-Saud,
who promoted bin Laden and the Taliban in an attempt to create a counterweight
to the Shia tribes in Afghanistan supported by Iran. Moreover, the particular
form of Islam of bin Laden and the Saudis, Wahhabism, is a 'pure' form
of Islam, first preached in the 18th century by Abdul Wahhab. This treats
all who do not adhere to its doctrines, including other Moslems, as aspostates
or unbelievers, and thereby as candidates for extermination. But now,
bin Laden has turned against his Saudi masters, amongst other reasons
because of the capitulation of the Saudi monarchy to US imperialism in
its stationing of troops on its soil, which also contains the two holy
shrines of Islam, Medina and Mecca. There is nothing radical or anti-capitalist
about the religious obscurantist ideas of bin Laden or the al-Qaeda organisation.
Capitalist commentators are bemused as to why educated, technically skilled
people can resort to suicide bombing.
Impoverished
They
seem such a contrast to many of the impoverished Palestinian young people
who have blown themselves up in attacks on Israel and have little formal
education. The Tamil Tigers suicide soldiers and bombers came, in the
main, from the most oppressed Tamil layers. Even Hezbollah bombers, more
deeply versed, it seems, in the Koran, were older and had been steeled
by years of imprisonment. In the case of the US hijackers, "Our profile
of the suicide bomber never included pilots, highly educated people"
[International Herald Tribune, 17 September]. But this is not the first
time in history when suicide bombers, some from a privileged background,
have killed themselves in the act of inflicting a blow on 'the enemy'.
In the 19th century this was often the preferred method of those struggling
against national oppression. There is also, of course, the example of
the Kamikaze suicide bombers from Japan.
Causes
The causes,
the immediate trigger for such methods can seem to be obscure but are
rooted ultimately in the objective conditions of a country or region.
The age-old oppression by imperialism is keenly felt by all layers of
the Arab world, including those in the middle class, upper middle class
and even those coming from a capitalist background. The barbaric treatment
of the Palestinian masses by the Israeli ruling class, with the silence
and therefore connivance, of the Bush regime, which backs Israel to the
tune of $3 billion a year, enormously inflamed Arab public opinion in
the run-up to 11 September. Indeed, in June of this year the heir to the
Saudi throne, Crown Prince Abdullah, warned that the US hands off approach
was encouraging Israel to crush the intifada of the Palestinians. He called
off a visit to the White House. Egypt and Jordan warned the US of an outburst
of popular anger throughout the Arab world. Despite the apparently privileged
background and lifestyle of the hijackers, this mood in the Arab world
could not fail to communicate itself to them as it has done to Arab intellectuals
as a whole. Therefore, the actions of the hijackers, notwithstanding the
right-wing obscurantist programme of bin Laden, are ultimately grounded
in the feeling of intense oppression of the Arab people as a whole.
"War
against terrorism"
Consequently,
US imperialism's 'war against terrorism' cannot succeed in the long run
so long as the conditions that have bred terrorism remain. The fact that
these methods are used is also a reflection of the weakness of Marxism
and the organised working class movement. This is partly because of the
dramatic shift to the right of the ex-social democrats who head the ex-workers'
organisations. It is necessary to understand the causes of terrorism.
But in no way does this mean that socialists and Marxists should take
a shadow of responsibility for the methods that they use, which ultimately
play into the hands of the capitalists. Moreover, this does not for one
minute reinforce the position of Bush and Blair, mistakenly argued by
the leaders of the SWP, in preparing for or prosecuting a war against
terrorism. On the contrary, failure to distance ourselves from the perpetrators
of the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks will precisely reinforce
the position of imperialism and its war preparations. It wishes to picture
opponents of any war as either pacifists, dewy-eyed liberals, idealists
or as closet sympathisers of the terrorists. A refusal to condemn the
actions of the perpetrators of the attacks will play right into their
hands. It could prevent socialists from approaching and discussing with,
and hopefully convincing, workers who are horrified at what happened in
New York and Washington. They are fearful that they could be the next
victims of a terrorist outrage. Many of these are not bloodthirsty 'warmongers'
but will go along with arguments for a 'war against terrorism' unless
a viable alternative is put forward.
Not
pacifists
The Socialist
Party and its supporters are not pacifists. We will defend the democratic
rights of the working class (the right to strike, freedom of assembly,
a free press, etc.) from attacks, no matter what quarter it comes from
- with all legitimate political means at our disposal. In the event of
the capitalists seeking to take these away by force - as they did in Chile,
supported by Kissinger we have to remember- we would be prepared to fight
to defend such rights.
The worldwide 'war against terrorism' of Bush, Blair, etc. will undoubtedly
seek to paint all opponents of capitalism, the anti-globalisation anti-capitalist
activist - also as 'terrorists'. Berlusconi, the right-wing prime minister
of Italy, has done precisely this in the last week, equating the demonstrators
at Genoa with the US terrorists. They will attempt to equate terrorist
methods with working class organisations' right to defend themselves from
the attacks of the capitalists, including state attacks, neo-fascist and
right-wing attacks, etc. No matter how well intentioned, equivocation
in condemning terrorist methods will play into the hands of the capitalists.
The Socialist Party, Socialist Voice, and their supporters will
combat the false methods of those who perpetrated the New York outrage
and counterpose to this the ideas of mass struggle, of education, propaganda
and agitation to rid the world of capitalism and terrorism by fighting
for and establishing socialism.
|