Workers Vanguard No. 1016
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25 January 2013
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Neocolonial Slavery and World Socialist Revolution
(Quote of the Week)
In May 1940, as Germany was invading France during the second
interimperialist world war, the Trotskyist Fourth International convened an
Emergency Conference in New York City, drawing delegates from sections in North
and South America, Europe, China and Australia. Among its resolutions was one,
excerpted below, linking the struggle for liberation in the colonial and
semicolonial world with the fight for proletarian revolution in the advanced
imperialist countries.
Under the banner of bourgeois “democracy” and bourgeois “equality,”
the great capitalist empires were built upon the exploitation of the proletariat
at home and the enslavement of weaker peoples overseas. In the three centuries
of their growth, the capitalist nations warred constantly to acquire and expand
their colonial domains, to defend them against the raids of rivals, or to
suppress revolts of the colonial peoples. In 1914-18, the great imperialist
powers fought to redivide an already divided world. They succeeded only in
hastening the catastrophic decline of the capitalist system. The revolutions the
war engendered, however, failed to establish in the advanced West and the
backward East the proletarian power which could and can alone reorganize the
world on a socialist basis. The workers won and held power only in backward
Russia. Capitalism survived, but only to subject the world to the further
agonies of its passing. Twenty-two years after the armistice of 1918, contorted
by a crisis they were powerless to surmount, the imperialists plunged the world
once more into bloody conflict—Germany, Italy, and Japan to “expand or
die”—England, France, and the United States to defend and extend their world
hegemony....
In the colonies, in the past, imperialist rule has meant the
stifling of economic development and the perpetuation of backward economic and
social relations in their most oppressive forms. If an imperialist “solution” of
the present world conflict is imposed, a still greater rate of exploitation will
be forced upon the colonies and the thralldom of the past deepened multifold.
The Western Allies once more offer promises of “freedom” and “cooperation” after
they win the present war. But acceptance of such promises only paves the way for
the crueler deceptions of the Versailles [treaty at end of WWI] of tomorrow.
Germany, for its part, does not bother with deceptive illusions but fights
openly to rule the peoples it can conquer by blood and iron alone.
The hopes of liberation of the colonial peoples are therefore bound
up even more decisively than ever before with the emancipation of the workers of
the whole world. The colonies shall be freed, politically, economically, and
culturally, only when the workers of the advanced countries put an end to
capitalist rule and set out together with the backward peoples to reorganize
world economy on a new level, gearing it to social needs and not to monopolist
profits. Only in this way will the colonial and semicolonial countries be
enabled to emerge from their varying stages of backwardness and take their
places as integral sections of an advancing world socialist commonwealth.
—“The Colonial World and the Second Imperialist War” (May 1940),
reprinted in Documents of the Fourth International: The Formative Years
(1933-40) (Pathfinder Press, 1973)
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