Workers Vanguard No. 1016
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25 January 2013
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Imperialist Troops Out of Mali Now!
JANUARY 21—In a stark assertion of French imperialism’s
domination over its former colonies in West Africa, Socialist Party president
François Hollande has launched a bombing campaign and intervention by some 2,000
ground troops in Mali. Billed as part of the global “war on terror,” the
military assault was intended to force a retreat by Islamic fundamentalist
forces that, having seized the northern half of the country, were threatening to
march on the capital, Bamako. Hollande bluntly ordered: “Destroy them. Take them
captive, if possible” (London Guardian, 15 January). His defense minister
candidly declared that the aim of the Mali mission is “total reconquest.”
However, as battles continue to rage in and around key towns that
had been seized by the fundamentalists, Hollande’s critics within the French
ruling class are beginning to fret about sinking in a quagmire if left to go it
alone. Meanwhile, the seizure of scores of hostages at a natural gas field in
Algeria by Islamists declaring their solidarity with the Malian rebels—and the
considerable loss of life when Algerian security retook the installation—may
offer a sampling of future fallout from the imperialist occupation of Mali.
After initially expressing concern over the intervention in Mali, the Algerian
regime saluted the effort, crucially allowing the French military overflight
rights.
While rulers of the major capitalist powers rushed to express their
solidarity with the French operation in Mali, they are also reticent about
contributing forces and money. The UN Security Council voted unanimously last
month to approve an African “peacekeeping” mission of some 3,300 troops, and
some countries of the Economic Community of West African States already have
hundreds of troops on site. But the imperialists have little expectation that
these forces will be an effective gendarmerie. Meanwhile Washington, after
initially distancing itself from the French operation, has dispatched about 100
“trainers” to African countries that are providing troops. Last week, European
Union foreign ministers agreed to send 450 “non-combat” troops to Mali,
supposedly to train its armed forces.
The Obama administration, still smarting from having its Libyan
ambassador killed by Islamist forces that had been armed and financed by the
U.S. and its allies in the drive to topple Muammar el-Qaddafi, has ruled out
sending its warplanes to Mali. The White House has also turned a deaf ear to
requests that it provide air tankers to help refuel French jets, which France
views as vital to its imperialist marauding given the vast distances it has to
cover in crossing over North Africa. However, Washington has offered to provide
limited logistical support to the French operation, as have Britain, Germany,
Italy, Belgium, Canada and Russia.
Immediately following the announcement of the French imperialist
expedition, our comrades of the Ligue Trotskyste de France issued a leaflet
demanding French troops out of Mali and all of Africa and calling for defense of
the insurgents against the imperialist intervention. The leaflet notes that
among France’s multiple security interests in the region are the uranium mines
in northern Niger, which have been operated for decades by the French Areva
nuclear power conglomerate and its predecessors.
The American bourgeoisie has its own imperialist interests in
Africa. A Congressional report last summer titled Africa Command: U.S.
Strategic Interests and the Role of the U.S. Military in Africa emphasized
“the increasing importance of Africa’s natural resources, particularly energy
resources” and expressed “mounting concern over violent extremist activities.”
The report cited, in particular, oil production in Nigeria—Africa’s largest oil
exporter and the fifth-largest supplier of oil to the U.S.—and the potential for
deep-water drilling in the Gulf of Guinea.
Washington has paid out tens of millions of dollars to beef up the
military in Mali and neighboring countries in order to prevent jihadists from
getting a foothold in the region. Under Barack Obama, the Horn of Africa port of
Djibouti, where more than 2,000 U.S. troops are stationed at Camp Lemonnier, has
become the busiest Predator drone base outside the Afghan war zone. Since 2007,
the U.S. military has also set up a dozen small air bases in Africa, from which
Special Ops forces launch surveillance flights. The U.S. military presence in
Africa has grown steadily under Obama, with an average of 5,000 troops spread
across the continent at any one time and 30 ships patrolling the Indian Ocean.
All U.S. bases and troops out of Africa!
As the LTF leaflet stresses, our military defense of the insurgents
in Mali implies not the least political support to the reactionary Islamists,
whose atrocities include floggings, amputations and the stoning to death last
summer of a couple accused of having an extramarital affair. In an act
reminiscent of the destruction by the Afghan Taliban of two ancient Buddha
statues in Bamiyan, the fundamentalists in Mali took pick-axes to Timbuktu’s
historic mausoleums and Sufi shrines, threatening as well its collection of rare
archives. Much less prominently reported by the Western bourgeois press are the
wholesale killings, disappearances and torture inflicted by the military regime
in Bamako on its perceived opponents.
The armed rebellion in northern Mali was initially led by the
secular National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), which has
variously called for independence or autonomy for the Tuareg region of Mali.
Distressed that the rebellion was gaining momentum, a group of officers seized
power in a coup in Bamako last March, suspended the constitution and launched a
campaign of terror against their political opponents. Within days, taking
advantage of the chaos, the MNLA seized the whole of northern Mali in alliance
with Islamic fundamentalist forces. The Islamists promptly turned on their MNLA
allies and drove them from the population centers. Today, the marginalized MNLA
warns of genocide if French air strikes allow the Malian army to “cross the
demarcation line” separating northern Mali from the south. Nevertheless, the
MNLA declares that it is “ready to help” the French intervention.
A particular target of the blood-soaked regime in Bamako has been
the civilian Tuareg population. The Tuaregs, the dominant ethnic group in
northern Mali, are a semi-nomadic people stretching across the Sahara who are
ethnically distinct both from Arabs, who constitute the majority in the
countries to the north of Mali, and the black Africans who inhabit southern Mali
and control the national government and military. When the northern rebellion
heated up a year ago, the military went on a killing spree, bombing the civilian
population and arresting, torturing and killing Tuaregs for the “crime” of their
ethnic origin. Not surprisingly, such atrocities spurred Tuaregs serving in the
Malian army, including a number trained by U.S. Special Forces, to go over to
the rebels.
Last February, mobs in Bamako attacked homes and businesses owned
by Tuaregs and other ethnic groups there—including Arabs, many of whom also
inhabit the north of the country—while security forces looked on. Last week, as
the French military pushed north to confront Islamist forces in the town of
Diabaly, Human Rights Watch reported that Malian soldiers in Niono, a town on
the road to Diabaly, were again massacring Tuareg and Arab civilians.
The rebel offensive that broke out in northern Mali was an indirect
consequence of the imperialists’ successful drive in 2011 to oust Qaddafi. Many
Malian Tuaregs worked in Libya’s oil fields, as well as in Qaddafi’s armed
forces, as a way to escape from conditions in northern Mali, which successive
regimes have left bereft of schools, hospitals and paved roads—to say nothing of
job opportunities. In the Sahel region south of the Sahara, almost a quarter of
a million children die of malnutrition-related causes each year, according to
Oxfam.
With the fall of Qaddafi—and the racist pogroms carried out by
imperialist-supported rebels in Libya—those Malian Tuaregs returned home,
bringing with them their military know-how and, in some cases, heavy weapons.
Many of the arms for the northern Malian rebels have been funneled in by
reactionary Islamists who were part of the imperialist-supported anti-Qaddafi
forces.
The imperialist onslaught will no doubt deepen the already intense
interethnic tensions in the region. These were highlighted in an article in the
London Guardian (6 July 2012) by its West Africa correspondent, Afua
Hirsch. Reporting from a Tuareg refugee camp in Burkina Faso, she wrote that the
black NGO staff were refusing to work with the lighter-skinned Tuaregs because
they “felt aggrieved by the reputation of the Tuaregs for enslaving black
Africans.” She noted that this history “still plays itself out in the Tuareg
caste system—where ‘Bella,’ dark-skinned members of the tribe who were once
slaves, still occupy the lowest positions.” In return, many Malian Tuaregs claim
that they have fled their country not only because of atrocities carried out by
the army but because Bella militias “are also targeting anyone with light
skin.”
That interethnic tensions and racial discrimination in the region
remain so poisonous today is a legacy of French colonialism, which
reinforced these and other reactionary aspects of the societies
they conquered. After subduing the Tuareg region of what was then called French
Sudan in the late 19th century, the colonialists set up a racially
discriminatory system that pitted Tuaregs and black Africans against each other.
Implementing a policy of divide and rule, the French government encouraged the
Tuaregs’ traditional supremacy over black Africans. Though the French
colonialists largely ended the slave trade in the first decades of colonial
occupation, they helped to ensure that black slaves remained subject to their
Tuareg masters long afterward. Their system of forced labor and compulsory
military service was based on racial criteria, with an exemption for the Tuareg
elite.
The French also played the Tuaregs off against black Africans—and
Algerian nationalists—through their drawing of territorial boundaries. In the
1950s, after it was discovered that the Saharan region was rich in mineral
resources, they floated the idea of creating a new French-controlled colony,
dominated by Tuaregs and Arabs, and limiting the soon-to-be independent Mali to
the overwhelmingly black south. France dropped that proposal, and independent
Mali was formed as a powder keg of ethnic tensions between Tuaregs and black
Africans, who led the first post-colonial government. Those tensions led
directly to the first Tuareg rebellion in 1963 and its brutal repression by the
Malian army.
There will be no end to the interethnic bloodshed and abject
poverty of the region within the framework of capitalism. Just as the October
Revolution in Russia in 1917 opened up the perspective of revolutionary change
in the backward regions of Central Asia, the emancipation of the masses in the
Sahel and other parts of Africa whose development has been so dreadfully
retarded must be linked to the international struggle of the working class for
socialist revolution. Proletarian revolution in South Africa, Egypt or other
countries in Africa that have experienced significant industrial development
would propel social transformation reaching into the most backward areas of the
continent. Such a perspective must include the fight for socialist revolution in
France and other imperialist centers, where Malian and other immigrant workers
can provide a living link to the struggles of the dispossessed in Africa. What
is necessary is the forging of Trotskyist vanguard parties committed to the
fight for new October Revolutions.
The following is a translation of the LTF leaflet, which was issued
on January 11.
* * *
The head of French imperialism, François Hollande, announced
tonight a military intervention of the French air force and special forces in
Mali as part of a so-called “anti-terrorist” operation. For months now, French
imperialism has been looking for a pretext to launch its killers into action in
its neocolonial backyard. Today we are told that the reactionary Islamists who
now control the north of Mali have supposedly launched an offensive against the
rest of the country, and that the Malian army supposedly collapsed when faced
with a hundred pickup trucks filled with Islamist forces, thus opening up the
road to the south all the way to Bamako. We have no idea what is true or not
about this story. Regardless, we denounce the French intervention. French
military out of Mali and out of Africa!
For the past year, Mali had been torn by a reactionary civil war in
which the international workers movement had no interest in supporting either
the military regime in Bamako or the anti-woman Islamists of the north. Now,
however, it is necessary to unequivocally defend the people who are being bombed
in the north against the neocolonial French military, without giving the least
political support to the benighted reactionaries. Defend the northern
insurgents against the French intervention!
Today’s New York Times reports rumors that a French military
helicopter was shot down by the northern troops. Any military setback for French
imperialism in this operation would weaken it and would thus be a boost to class
struggle in France against this capitalist-imperialist government, now led by
the Socialist Party and the bourgeois Greens, with the support of the Communist
Party (PCF). That is why the working class in France, with its strong component
of Malian workers—thousands of whom live in the Paris region—has a vested
interest in opposing French imperialism’s latest neocolonial military adventure.
We can say this even more forcefully because we called on workers not to vote
for Hollande as Commander-in-Chief, unlike the PCF and the New Anti-Capitalist
Party. As for the [fake-Trotskyist] Lutte Ouvrière, they did not want to choose
between abstaining and voting for Hollande.
The current disaster in Mali is the product of a long history of
French colonial and neocolonial oppression. French imperialists plundered the
country during decades of colonial occupation, marked by the systematic practice
of forced labor (only officially abolished in 1946). They then arbitrarily drew
the borders of an “independent” Malian state, which only had the bare trappings
of sovereignty. The currency, the CFA franc, is directly managed by the Banque
de France, which controls its exchange rate as well as deposits. The French
imperialist military intervention takes place in what France considers its
exclusive preserve. Its purpose is to maintain French imperialist domination in
the entire region—and especially to protect the profits of the Areva company,
which exploits enormous uranium deposits in neighboring Niger.
The situation in northern Mali today is a direct result of both the
oppression of the Tuareg population by the central Malian state and the
imperialist intervention in Libya in 2011, which François Hollande and [social
democrat] Jean-Luc Mélenchon supported. Not only did this military intervention
bring various rival Islamist militias to power in Libya, institutionalizing
sharia against women, but it also enabled reactionary Islamist groups
throughout the region to get arms. When it suits French interests, as in Libya
and Syria, Paris promotes the Islamists. But elsewhere, as in Afghanistan and
now Mali, they are massacred. This in itself shows the boundless cynicism of the
Hollande government and its interior minister Valls when they brandish “Islamic
terrorism”—a code word for launching racist police operations in France against
a population considered suspect because they are Muslims, in particular workers
of North African or West African origin and their families.
Algeria now rightly sees the French intervention directly on its
borders as a threat, a first since it gained independence in 1962 after seven
years of war. This casts a harsh light on Hollande’s “confession” speech
[admitting that the French had committed atrocities during the Algerian War]
when he traveled to Algeria just a few weeks ago. Meanwhile the war minister,
Jean-Yves Le Drian of the Socialist Party, had just honored the memory of
General Bigeard, the French general who came to symbolize torture during the
Algerian War.
For the last 30 years, Mali has been used mainly as a pool
providing ruthlessly exploited labor in France. Thousands of Malian workers in
France today are undocumented, even after years of living and working here. Many
youth of Malian origin participated in the 2005 revolt of the ghetto
neighborhoods and in protests against murderous racist police terror in the town
of Villiers-le-Bel. The labor movement must defend the ghetto youth, just as it
must oppose the neocolonial adventures of French imperialism. The working class
of this country must unite against the abuses carried out daily by the
capitalists and their government, which are intent on rolling back workers’
gains. Ultimately, there is only one way to put an end to the bloody crimes of
the brutal French military in the world: overthrowing the dictatorship of
capital in this country through a workers revolution led by a Bolshevik party.
French troops out of Mali and out of Africa! Down with French imperialism!
Down with the Hollande-Duflot capitalist government!
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