Click on the headline to link to the "International Communist League" website.
Markin comment:
I place some material in this space which may be of interest to the radical public that I do not necessarily agree with or support. Off hand, as I have mentioned before, I think it would be easier, infinitely easier, to fight for the socialist revolution straight up than some of the“remedies” provided by the commentators in these entries. But part of that struggle for the socialist revolution is to sort out the “real” stuff from the fluff as we struggle for that more just world that animates our efforts.
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Workers Vanguard No. 1009
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28 September 2012 |
Imperialists’ Hands Off Syria!
For the past year and a half, the Syrian population has been
crushed between two reactionary forces that have ravaged the country in a
devastating civil war. Faced with an insurgency dominated by forces centrally
from the majority Sunni Muslim population and backed by sundry imperialist and
regional powers, the murderous Ba’ath Party regime of Bashar al-Assad has sought
to stamp out the rebellion through the massive use of firepower, including
against residential areas. Insurgents have likewise carried out gruesome
massacres of civilians. Key Syrian opposition leaders have appealed for
imperialist military intervention, echoing the Libyan “rebels” who became
willing tools for the NATO bombing campaign last year. While the imperialists
are currently focusing on providing material and logistical support to the
anti-Assad forces, the Obama White House has declared that military options are
not “off the table.”
Revolutionary Marxists support neither side in this civil war, in
which a victory of one combatant or the other would do nothing to further the
cause of the working class and the oppressed. However, workers internationally
do have a side in opposing military intervention by the
imperialists. In the event of imperialist attack, we would stand for the defense
of Syria while maintaining proletarian political opposition to Assad’s
bloodsoaked rule.
The civil war grew out of a series of demonstrations in the
provincial city of Dara’a in Syria’s southern Sunni region in March 2011 as
“Arab Spring” protests were sweeping North Africa and the Near East. The
demonstrations spread beyond Dara’a, and the Assad regime murderously unleashed
troops and tanks on civilians. Increasing numbers of soldiers defected, forming
the core of an array of anti-government militias. Key commanders of this
so-called Free Syrian Army (FSA) were for years part of the Assad regime’s
repressive machinery.
Presenting itself as the main political leadership of the
opposition is the Syrian National Council (SNC), a coalition of exiles and
opposition groups. A number of the principal spokesmen for this lash-up have
longstanding ties to U.S. State Department and national security officials, as
detailed by the London Guardian (12 July) article, “The Syrian
Opposition: Who’s Doing the Talking?”
The SNC today is dominated by the reactionary Muslim Brotherhood,
which controls the largest number of seats in the Council as well as the
committee that distributes money and other aid to anti-Assad forces in Syria.
Furthermore, Sunni jihadist groups from other Muslim countries have increasingly
joined the armed rebellion. These developments have complicated matters for the
U.S. rulers, who are conscious that those who just killed their ambassador to
Libya were fundamentalists financed and armed by Washington last year to help
overthrow Muammar el-Qaddafi.
Syria is a patchwork of ethnic, national and sectarian groupings,
where the regime dominated by the Alawite minority holds sway over the Sunni
majority, Kurds, Christians, Druze and others, posing the danger of the conflict
degenerating into communal warfare. This situation is the legacy of the
divide-and-rule policies of the colonial powers, which carved up the Near East
following World War I (see article on page 4).
Although the Obama administration is wary of directly intervening
militarily into the conflict, it has allocated some $25 million to the Syrian
“rebels” in accordance with a secret order signed by the president earlier this
year. All the while, Washington has maintained the pretense of not supplying
“lethal weapons.” U.S. intelligence agents, working with their counterparts from
Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, are “drawing on their experience in Libya” to
help direct support to the anti-Assad forces (Wall Street Journal, 13
June). They work out of a secret “nerve center” set up in Adana, a Turkish city
near the Syrian border, which is also home to Incirlik, the U.S. air base.
According to the New York Times (21 June), arms are funneled into
Syria “by way of a shadowy network of intermediaries including Syria’s Muslim
Brotherhood.”
The imperialists have imposed on Syria a broad range of economic
sanctions, with the Obama administration ratcheting up U.S. measures last month.
Syria has been particularly hard hit by an oil embargo imposed a year ago by the
European Union (EU). Until then, oil exports, almost all of which went to EU
member states, were the mainstay of the Syrian economy, which has severely
contracted under the embargo. The main casualties have been rural and urban
laborers, especially the poor and most vulnerable, who face rampant inflation,
massive layoffs and shortages of gasoline and other refined oil products as well
as staple foods. Attempts to implement United Nations Security Council sanctions
have been thwarted by opposition from Russia, which is also supplying the Assad
regime with intelligence and arms, and China.
Behind Washington’s drive to effect “regime change” in Damascus is
the determination of America’s imperialist rulers to perpetuate and extend their
world dominance. Syria has historically occupied a pivotal position in the
oil-rich Near East. The country exerts key influence in Lebanon, particularly
through its support to the Shi’ite fundamentalist Hezbollah, and serves as the
most significant Arab ally of Iran. Tehran’s influence in the region was given a
major boost by the U.S. invasion of Saddam Hussein’s Iraq in 2003 and the
installation of a predominantly Shi’ite regime in Baghdad. For years, the U.S.
rulers have been hostile toward Iran, as have been the Sunni monarchs in Saudi
Arabia and the Gulf states, who have been major suppliers of arms to anti-Assad
forces, especially to the Sunni jihadists. What the U.S. ended up getting
through its murderous occupation of Iraq was an Iran-friendly regime.
French imperialism, now under Socialist Party president François
Hollande, has been beating the drums for an “international coalition” to impose
a “no-fly zone” over part of Syria. However, the White House has resisted any
such move, even as the chorus of influential figures in Washington calling for
U.S. military intervention now extends beyond right-wing Republicans like John
McCain to include the likes of William Perry and Madeleine Albright. The latter
two served, respectively, as secretary of defense and secretary of state under
Democratic president Bill Clinton in the mid-late 1990s as the U.S. rained bombs
on Iraq and the former Yugoslavia.
Just as the New York Times retailed Washington’s lies about
Hussein’s “weapons of mass destruction” in the run-up to the 2003 U.S. invasion
of Iraq, so today the bourgeois press prints any fabrication put out by the
Syrian opposition. Thus, the press worldwide reported that the Syrian military
had perpetrated the August 25 massacre of at least 245 men, women and children
in Daraya, near Damascus. Yet an on-site investigation by veteran journalist
Robert Fisk pointed to the killing of civilians by insurgents
(Independent, 29 August). A local resident told Fisk: “One of the dead
was a postman—they included him because he was a government worker.”
It was a U.S.-financed group of Iraqi exiles, Ahmed Chalabi’s Iraqi
National Congress, that generated the bogus reports of Hussein’s WMDs. This
summer, it was the U.S.-backed Syrian opposition that put out patently spurious
reports claiming that Assad was moving chemical weapons out of storage
facilities and preparing to use them. When Obama last month warned of “enormous
consequences,” the Syrian government countered that it would only use chemical
weapons “in case of external aggression.”
Uniquely among the principal minorities in Syria, the Kurds as a
people constitute a nation that extends into Turkey, Iran and Iraq. But their
struggle against national oppression has been betrayed time and again by
competing nationalist leaders who act as lackeys of the imperialists or of one
local bourgeois regime or another. To achieve Kurdish self-determination
requires the proletarian revolutionary overthrow of the four capitalist states
and the formation of a Socialist Republic of United Kurdistan.
During the popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt last year, we
pointed to the working class, whose strikes played a major role in bringing down
both despotic regimes, as the potential gravedigger of the bourgeois order. We
underlined the urgent need for the proletariat to act as the leader of all the
oppressed masses. However, while the proletariat continues to wage economic
struggles, politically it is subordinated to Islamist and other bourgeois
forces.
For the proletariat to emerge as a contender for power, it is
necessary to undertake the forging of vanguard workers parties that oppose the
imperialists and all domestic bourgeois forces—from the military bonapartists
and liberal political figures to reactionary political Islam. There will be no
end to ethnic and national oppression, no emancipation of women, no end to the
exploitation of working people short of a thoroughgoing proletarian revolution
that opens the road to the establishment of a socialist federation of the Near
East, as part of the struggle for world proletarian revolution.
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