George Meany and the AFL-CIO have resigned from Nixon's Pay Board, weakening the facade of cooperation between labor and the administration. This reveals Meany's dual role of representing workers while also acting as an agent of Nixon's pro-business policies within the labor movement. Meany's resignation is a tactical move to strengthen the bureaucracy's influence in the Democratic Party and make them appear more pro-labor than Republicans ahead of the November elections, but the labor bureaucracy will ultimately continue imposing Nixon's wage controls once Democrats are elected. Nixon sees this and has opted for open war with the AFL-CIO, hoping records of Democrats and labor leaders will help Republicans.
George Meany and the AFL-CIO have resigned from Nixon's Pay Board, weakening the facade of cooperation between labor and the administration. This reveals Meany's dual role of representing workers while also acting as an agent of Nixon's pro-business policies within the labor movement. Meany's resignation is a tactical move to strengthen the bureaucracy's influence in the Democratic Party and make them appear more pro-labor than Republicans ahead of the November elections, but the labor bureaucracy will ultimately continue imposing Nixon's wage controls once Democrats are elected. Nixon sees this and has opted for open war with the AFL-CIO, hoping records of Democrats and labor leaders will help Republicans.
George Meany and the AFL-CIO have resigned from Nixon's Pay Board, weakening the facade of cooperation between labor and the administration. This reveals Meany's dual role of representing workers while also acting as an agent of Nixon's pro-business policies within the labor movement. Meany's resignation is a tactical move to strengthen the bureaucracy's influence in the Democratic Party and make them appear more pro-labor than Republicans ahead of the November elections, but the labor bureaucracy will ultimately continue imposing Nixon's wage controls once Democrats are elected. Nixon sees this and has opted for open war with the AFL-CIO, hoping records of Democrats and labor leaders will help Republicans.
George Meany and the AFL-CIO have resigned from Nixon's Pay Board, weakening the facade of cooperation between labor and the administration. This reveals Meany's dual role of representing workers while also acting as an agent of Nixon's pro-business policies within the labor movement. Meany's resignation is a tactical move to strengthen the bureaucracy's influence in the Democratic Party and make them appear more pro-labor than Republicans ahead of the November elections, but the labor bureaucracy will ultimately continue imposing Nixon's wage controls once Democrats are elected. Nixon sees this and has opted for open war with the AFL-CIO, hoping records of Democrats and labor leaders will help Republicans.
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W(JRKERS ,,IN'II,IRI) 251
No. 7 .. April 1972 The Irish Upsurge NOT GREEN AGAINST ORANGE, but Grief, Rubble, Religion: Flags and crosses mark the place where three boys died on Bloody Sunday. Left: George Meany of AFL-CID; Right: George Boldt, Chairman of Pay Board. Meany Maneuvers Against Nixon EMBARRASSES "PROGRESSIVES" George Meany and his bureaucratic cohorts-with one notable excep- tion-have at long last resigned from Nixon's Pay Board, stripping the Administration's anti-labor drive of a great deal of its facade of con- sensus and partnership in protecting American capitalism. In itself this is an excellent thing. Meany's action reveals his dual role as a workers' leader and si- multaneously an agent of Nixon's class within the workers' movement. When the working class understands this contradictory nature of the trade union bureaucracy, it will be armed with a vital weapon in the struggle to sweep it aside and install a revolutionary leadership. Meany's resignation is a tactical ploy to s t r en gt hen the bureauc- racy's hand in the Democratic Party by appearing to lead an anti-Nixon offensive, make the Democratic "friends of labor" look better than the Rep ubI i can s and help them get elected in November. Then Meany and his friends, who have always f a v 0 red wage-price controls and the economic and social relations of capitalism, will impose Nixon's poliCies themselves, Nixon knows this, and has opted for all-out war with the AFL-CIO, toping that the records of the Democrats and labor bureaucrats will play into his hands. His statements match in arrogance Meany's hypoc- risy; Nixon wishes to see the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie expressed I continued on page 2 On March 24 Prime Minister Heath announced the imposition of di- rect British nile over the Province of "l"orthern Ireland, ending 51 years of locaf rule. Heath's move, which received immediate Labour endorse- ment, reflects the growing exasperation in London with the sectarian strife which stalls British plans for a facelifted, pacified Ireland inte- grated into a modernized neo-colonial status with the Common Market, iJesp:.e the fea.cs of Fau.lkner's Protestant Neanderthals, the minimal concessions Heath has promised to the Catholics will not alleviat.e the oppression of the Catholic masses any more than did the occupation by British troops. The British move leaves the Protestants enraged and the Catholics quite properly unsatisfied, setting the stage for full-scale sectarian civil war in the near future. The tasks of Marxists to show the way to turn the conflict into a war against the capitalist order have never been more urgent. Since 1969, Ireland has s too d on the brink of a revolutionary cri- sis. Yet in proportion as revolu- tionary possibilities have unfolded in Ireland, the divisions among the Irish working masses have grown to cripple the proletariat and pro- long Ireland's semi-colonial status within Brit ish and E u r 0 pea n capitalism. One lesson of the needless shed- ding of working-class blood must be d r i v en home: that the armed forces of the imperialist state-in this case the British-do not pro- vide the slightest measure of pro- t e c t ion to the oppressed, whose plight stems fundamentally from the same bourgeois 0 r d e r which the troops serve. In 1969 the Cath- olic minority welcomed in British troops, believing that they would protect the Catholics against a sec- tar ian pogrom. With few excep- tions, the foresight of the left was no keener. Bernadette Devli n spoke for most of the left when she was reported as saying: "The saving of lives, the necessary saving of lives in that circumstance, was brought about by the whole sys- tem and therefore you cannot simply say take the troops out of Ulster. Be- cause the people will say you cannot take the troops out because if you do the people will die." -Workers 18 June 1970 The troops stayed, and the people died. Long before Bloody Sunday the actions of the British troops had taught the Catholics that al- though "s imp I y" demanding the troops' departure was insufficient, nevertheless their removal was an absolute precondition for end i n g police-state terror a g a ins t the northern Catholic minority. Today the IRA, with substantial mass support, bombs and shoots British troops, and others besides. They have succeeded in making life in Ulster extremely uncomfortable for British soldiers and much of the populace as well, but they have not dislodged the troops. The focus for 0 r g ani zed resistance is re- s t ric ted largely to the sec ret armies of the IRA, w h i c h among its other decisive weaknesses is pursuing a policy of virtually in- discriminate mass terrorism. The struggle has not spread to the South, nor has the capitalist government of Eire done anything to help, save provide limited, temporary semi- sanctuary. The b 0 u r g e 0 is state power of both Ulster and Eire rec- ognizes the mortal danger to it im- plicit (but not now actual) in the s t rug g Ie s of the working-class Catholic minority in the North. continued on page 9 On Marxist Method and 'Class Betrayal:; LEAGUE/Pg.5 2 WORKERS VANGUARD AT SMC CONFERENCE: Workers League, Labor Committee Guard SWP-Liberal Left Flank At a time of heightened class struggle and the breaking up ofthe delusion of the "American Cen- tury," as the dangers of world imperialist war loom more clearly before a restive world work- ing class, the American anti-war movement under the leadership 0 f the Socialist Workers Party / Young Socialist Alliance deepens its c l a s ~ collab- oration, justifies and defends it more openly. A greater gift to the reformist bureaucrats and re- actionary demagogues in maintaining the alle- giance ofthe workers cannot be imagined. But the appetite of the SWP to preserve its bloc with the 1 i b era 1 bourgeoisie at any cost is well known. Surely, then, the other currents active in the anti- war movement, whatever the differences among the m s e 1 v e s, have exposed the betrayal of tne renegade "Trotskyists" ofthe SWP /YSA on funda- mental class issues to all seriously anti- imperialist elements? The truth is that the ostensibly "left" opposi- tion to the SWP /YSA ant i - war leadership-the Workers League/Young Socialists and the National Caucus of Labor Committees - is not h i n g but a more sophisticated version of SWP class- collaboration, "rendering it m 0 r e profound" to fool the socialists; they have rendered the SWP invaluable assistance in maintaining the vehicle for their treachery, the National Pea c e Action Coalition (NPAC) and the Student Mobilization Committee (SMC). Given the parochial and sectarian character of most groups calling themselves "Marxist," and Meany Maneuvers Against Nixon-----, Continued/rom Poge 1 solely through himself: "The President cannot and will not allow any leader of labor or any lead- er of management, no matter how powerful, to put himself above the best interests of the Amer- ican people" (press briefing by Ziegler, NY Times, 23 March). Meany has exposed the fallacy which underlies the historic dual errors of revisionism in the workers' movement-tailing a section of the bureaucracy or seeking to by-pass it-and vindi- cated the Marxist analysis. Those leftists who originally placed confidence in the "Alliance for Labor Action" saw the union bureaucrats only in their aspect as workers' leaders, some lead- ing more and better than others. In accepting the bureaucratic framework and opting for one wing, the left restricts itself to the same limitations accepted by the bureaucrats of various stripes-tactical flexibility within the limits imposed by the preservation of capitalism. Thus the Communist Party hailed the bureaucratic founding of the ALA as "historic" and "planned to be the greatest crusade in labor's history" (Daily World, 29 May 1969). Today theUAW's Woodcock tails after the arch-reactionary Meany, while Fitzsimmons, the other "progressive" founder of the ALA, stays on the reconstituted Pay Board, holding the bag for Nixon. From the first the Spartacist League denounced the ALA as a ploy by long-time allies of Meany to create the appearance of distance between themselves and the increasingly unpopular symbols of the trade union status quo. Our leaflet to the members of District 65 in New York, part of the ALA lash-up, issued 28 May 1969 concludes: "So ifthe AFL-CIO is a conservative, bureaucratic organization, the Alliance for Labor Action (ALA) is a fake. It would be a crime if the Reuther-Livingston-Teamster alliance got away with their public relations ploy. A policy of struggle for militant gains within the trade union movement is necessary, but it's not going to be made by the smash and grab ALA tactics run by a bunch of cynical labor fakers!" (,'Where Is 65 Being Taken?") More recently, Workers Vanguard in March denounced as fraudulent the announced merger of the ILWU and Teamsters. Meany is now successfully posturing to the left, proclaiming defense of longshoremen's interests while Bridges and Fitzsimmons openly sell them out. So much for the fake "unity" maneuvers touted by the bureaucrats, the CP, Workers League, et al. ! Progressive Labor has zig-zagged between errors, unable to fight the bureaucrats because incapable of understanding them. When Hoffa was jailed, PL described the Teamsters as "tough" with a leadership somehow better than the run of bureaucracies in general: "Hoffa would not be behind bars today if he had kept to the tactics of struggle which had always worked for him and the Teamsters." (Challenge, April 1967, emphasis ours). With the founding of the ALA, however, PL denounced precisely the outlook it had professed, swinging over to the polar opposite of its earlier error to an identification of labor bureaucrats with "bosses,"and tending to abandon union struggle altogether. PL's abstentionist line on work within the organizations of the working class, an outlook expressed more consistently by the Labor Committee, ignores the fa c t that the bureaucrats, though traitors, necessarily base themselves on the workers' organizations and must actually lead them-within the framework of capitalism-in order to survive. To avoid the task of fighting against them for leadership in the unions is a betrayal because it allows the bureaucrats, as Meany is now dOing, to pose as the real workers' leaders and ~ away with it! John L. Lewis of the UMW and CIO, masqueraded as a brash independent workers' leader by defying Roosevelt during World War IT-only to sell out to Wendell Wilkie. Labor bureaucrats walked off the "tripartite" Korean War pay board only to crawl back later. Meany's tactics dif- fer now and then from those of his "brothers"-now to the left of them, now to their right-but his role is the same. Fitzsimmons and Meany, their tactical roles now reversed since the founding of the ALA, remain identical! The SL seeks to build a revolutionary leadership in the trade unions for the overthrow of the bureaucracy, a precondition for the class struggle against capitalism. Marxists raise demands on the bureaucrats only to expose their insufficiency as workers' leaders-not to call upon them to alter their fundamentally traitorous character voluntarily, as in the Workers League's de- mands on bureaucrats totally committed to the Democratic party to form a labor party. Instead, we call upon the ranks of labor to adopt a class struggle program which requires for its ac- complishment a revolutionary change of leadership in the trade unions. LABOR OFF THE PAY BOARD-FOR GOOD! No concessions to government control of any kind ! CONTROL'PRICES NOT WAGES! No government wage-price controls under any administration! BUILD A LABOR PARTy-through uncompromising struggle in the unions against the trade union bureaucrats of all stripes who tie the labor movement to the parties of the employers! the i r practice of "defending" the i r politics by avoiding debate, the greatest importance of gath- erings like the SMC Conference held in New York on February 26-27 is that they provide rare op- portunities to kick over the rocks and expose the tendencies which crawl beneath them to the light of political clarification. While the SWP /YSA cap it u I a t ion to social- chauvinism a nd SOCial-patriotism was consum- mated seven years ago, each year brings a new va ria t ion on the class -collaborationist theme. This year the eX-Trotskyist SWP's program od imperialist war was presented by the youth con,;.; tingent of the liberal (McGovern) and even the "center" (Muskie) imperialist bourgeoisie. The "workshop question" opened the confer- ence as the con fer en c e sponsors proposed an agenda w hi c h placed lengthy workshops before plenary discussion or presentation of resolutions. YSAers speaking in favor of the proposal rose and announced with great pomp and pride that "since we can read we do not need to have the proposals read to us." As if plenary sessions were supposed to consist of the reading aloud of proposals and not the dialectic of verbal debate-why go to the trouble and expense of holding conferences if a literary exchange and mail referendum will do? Is it not because a mail referendum is profoundly less democratic, as every trade unionist knows and as every self-proclaimed "Marxist" 0 ugh t to know? Workshops seem very cozy and demo- cratic since every person gets a chance to speak. But at a conference where many hostile political tendehcies are represented the only democratic means of presentation is plenary sessions where each tendency is allotted equal time for political presentations. Allotting time by individual as in workshops simply allows the largest tendency to hog the discussion. The proposed agenda was opposed primarily by the Spartacist League/Revolutionary Commu- nist youth (SL/RCY), the National Caucus of La- bor Committees (NCLC), and the Workers League/ Young Socialists (WL/YS). Agenda opposition was the sole principled gesture the WL could muster during the entire conference, and it even suc- ceeded in compromising itself on that. While the WL pointed out that the proposal for early work- shops was meant to suppress political diSCUSSion, when the motion passed the WL hurried off to its own workshop-from which they excluded other tendencies! The SWP/YSA had yet another gimmick for suppressing debate" Early in the conference a straw vote eliminated resolutions which did not have large support at that point. (What would the SWP think of an election law which dropped Pres- idential candidates from the ballot on the basis of a straw vote taken in April?) The WL voted for the straw vote procedure. Combined with its scandal- ous behavior concerning its own publicly adver- tised workshop, this demonstrated that the WL was as fearful as the SWP of political discussion and that the obj ection to the "workshops first" agenda was entirely phony. . Although the SWP considers it quite proper that blacks dis c u s son I y with blacks, women with women, gay with gay, etc., in exclusionist work- s hop s, it is vehemently non-exclusionist where bourgeois politiCians are concerned; it invited the class enemy to the labor workshop and defended the rig h t of the "Y 0 u t h Coordinators" for the Muskie and McGovern tic k e t s to address the workshop on how to "reach out" to labor. When an SL/R CY motion for the exclusion of these youth for Imperialism passed with the support of the NCLC, the SWP claimed that the "principle of non-exclusionism" (w h i c h apparently applied to no other workshop than the labor workshop) was violated and walked out. The walkout contrasted sharply with the be- havior of the SWP delegation at the recent Ver- sailles Peace Conference, dominated by the French continued on next page April1972 3 TWO VIEWS ON IMPERIALIST WAR: From Leon Trotsky From YSA Organizer Coyoacan, D. F. November 17, 1937 To the Editors of The Challenge Dear Friends: -- You are asking me to participate in your campaign against war. Permit me to limit my answer to a few words. In order to fight against war, it is necessary to understand clearly the rea- sons which cause war. It is necessary to know the laws of the development of the present, i.e.,imperialist society. The Marxist appraisal of war and the methods of fighting it have been expressed in the programmatic brochure of our International Secretariat, War and the Fourth International. It is necessary to make this pamphlet the subject of attentive and serious study in youth circles. In addition the conference witnessed the intervention of a number of sectarian political organizations such as the Spartacist League, the National Caucus of Labor Committees, and the Workers League. The proposals of these various organizations were decisively voted down as the SMC once again reaffirmed its character as an antiwar action organization. The fight against war is inseparable from the class struggle of the proletariat. Of particular importance was a motion proposed by the Spartacist League to exclude "bourgeois politicians and their representatives" from the conference. This proposal, which attempted to change the character of the antiwar move- ment as a movement organized around agreement to act against the war and open to everyone who opposes the war, was also overwhelmingly rejected. The reaffirmation of the nonexclusionary character of the antiwar movement, especially in an election period, was particularly important, Irreconcilable class consciousness is the first condition for a successful fight against war. ' To fight a g a ins t war means, first of all, to build a new International, to strengthen its ranks, to temper its cadres. , I warmly wish you success in this work! SMC Continued ... Communist Party, from which the Ligue Commu- niste (the SWp's fraternal associates in France) was excluded. The SWP did not walk out of Ver- sailles-thereby demonstrating that the "princi- ple of non-exclusionism" applies not even to their own fraternal groups but only to the class enemy, whose right to participate the SWP defended to the point of brutal violence at the July NPAC confer- ence. Class-collaboration has its 0 w n set of "principles. " Years of rule have taught the bourgeoisie a trick or two. They do not just happen to dispatch Nixon off to China quoting the Thought of Chair- man Mao, nor do their young hacks accidentally stumble into SMC conferences. The sandbox pol- iHcians for Muskie and McGovern are only too happy to co-sign with the SWP /YSA resolutions which state: "Our peace plan has one point and it's no sec ret: Immediate, total, unconditional withdrawal of U.S. troops, planes, bombs and ma- teriel from Indochina: Out now." The yare de- lighted to use the SWP to foster the liberal il- lusion that imp e ria 1 i s t war can be ended by "peaceful and legal" parades and in such a way that the American class struggle is not exacer- bated, just as they are only too happy to use China to obtain an imperialist peace in Vietnam, a peace that will mean the defeat of the Vietnamese revolution. Leninists also have a "peace plan" and it too "is no secret": "The slogans of Social Democracy must be: First an all embracing propaganda of the socialist revo- lution, to be extended to the army and military ac- tivities; emphasis to be placed on the necessity of turning the weapons, not against the brother wage- slaves of other countries but against the reaction of the bourgeois governments and parties in each country." -Lenin, Theses on War, Sept. 1914 "The slogan of 'peace' is incorrect as the slogan must be: changing the national war into civil war. This change may take a long time. it may and will demand preliminary conditions. but the work must all be conducted along the line of such ~ change, in this spirit, in this directionl'Lenin goes on to state, with WW I version of the SWP in mind] We can neither 'promise' civil war nor 'decree it' but it is our duty to work !!.l this direction, if need be for a very long time. -Lenin, letter to Shlyapnikov, Oct. 1914 Needless to say Lenin could find no liberal bourgeoisie willing to present his "peace plan"! We pu r p 0 s ely have selected Lenin's earliest statements on imperialist war, made when chau- vinism ran rampant, when the Second International was in shambles and the idea of a new Internation- al was music of the future, when the Bolsheviks were at the nadir of their influence, to demon- strate that Lenin did not save his revolutionary politics for revolutionary situations. One does not make a revolution by waiting for it to happen and then taking a communist position. And one cer- tainly does not make revolution by proposing end- Ie s s liberal-directed, imperialist-infested pa- rades as the strategy for fighting against imperialist war! Only the revolutionary mobiliza- tion of the w 0 r kin g class against the Muskies. McGoverns and Hartkes as well as a g a ins t the Nixons, only the systematic work of winning the class to the program of proletarian revolution can end the Vietnam war on our terms, not those of the oppressor. The "best" result which could hap- pen (and hasn't yet) through collaboration with the bourgeoisie on the" sin g I e issue" of the war is that the troops will be brought home-in order to be sent to war elsewhere, built up for future im- perialist wars, or sent against dock workers as Hartke has proposed. The "peace plan" of Muskie, McGovern and the SWP is the plan for an imper- ialist peace which will strengthen U.S. capitalism for new imperialist wars in new places. Only the "peace plan" of Lenin, i.e. "turning the guns the other way," leads to genuine peace. NCLC Discovers "Class-Ior-Itsell": S}J/C When Sen at 0 r Hartke consummated the pop front passions of the SWP and joined the NPAC steering committee, the International Socialists (IS) and the NCLC both dec ide d to "relate con- structively" (in the IS' phrase) and rushed in to sit on the same steering com mit tee with red- baiter, strike-breaker Hartke. The SWP/YSA had expected that by enticing Hartke onto the NPAC steering committee the hordes of innocent Demo- cratic youth would follow. Instead, traipsing after Hartke came the IS and NCLC. A popular front is a coalition of nominal so- cialists with the bourgeoisie; its program must be limited to the bourgeoisie's program as long as the "socialists" desire the bourgeoisie's partici- pation" To endorse a popular front or a confer- ence whose purpose is to consummate a popular front is to endorse bourgeois politics. Even the IS, which enters eve l' y t h i n g mushy and class- collaborationist (from Peace and Freedom to the pre sen t New American Movement), lacked the s tom a c h to endorse this SMC conference. The NCLC was the only nominallysocialistgroup (aside from the SWP /YSA, the architects of the pop front) to join hands with youth for McGovern and youth for Muskie in endorsing this confer- ence. Then, as the conference opened, the NCLC f e i g ned naivete, hypocritically discovered the taint of class collaboration and wit h d r e w their endorsement. The NCLC's maneuvering within NPAC/SMC flows directly from its counterrevolutionary con- ception of what NPAC and SMC are: On one hand NCLC cor r e c t 1 Y characterizes them as class- collaborationist popular fronts; and on the other hand it 0 f fer s the following characterization of SMC/NPAC in its resolution to the SMC confer- ence titled ''Working Class Alternatives in the Election Year": "The practical question is therefore where and how to begin to create such alliances of initiating forces. For this purpose, the SMC and its Sister, NPAC, organization have certain special qualifications and, consequently, certain inescapable moral responsi- bilities. These two organizations chiefly typify the only existing institutions in the U, S. which b r in g together virtually all of the much smaller groups and individuals professing a commitment to the uni- fied organization of working people against the pres- ent wage-gouging and other oppressive measures." The only "class-for-itself" formation w h i c h represents the revolutionary interests of the work- ing class and all the oppressed is the revolution- ary van g u a r d party. Even soviets are simply organs of dual power and whether they serve the revolutionary interests of the working class is de- cided by the struggle of parties within the soviets. The Menshevik-dominated soviets in the Russian Revolution supported the imperialist war and broke strikes as ruthlessly as any bourgeois govern- ment. But the NCLC. which identifies po pu I a r fronts with soviets, 'WOUld have entered the Ke- rensky government and in the 1930's in the U.S. we would find them in the American League for Peace and Democracy, not in the CIO. TheNCLC's misconception of the class nature -17 March 1972 of pop front formations extends to their equivocal position on the exclusion of the bOurgeoisie. While they supported SL/RCY motions for the uncondi- tional exclusion of the political representatives of the bourgeoisie, they did so only after constantly trying to dilute the class basis of these motions" Thus the NCLC report of the conference in their New Solidarity issue of 6-10 March: "While the Spartacist League habitually introduces a blanket motion for unconditional exclusion of all capitalist candidates, the N C L C specified as the reason for exclusion McGovern's participation in the pre sen t capitalist assault on workers' living s tan dar d s as indicated in the SWP factsheet on McGovern's anti-labor record and by his vote in the Senate three weeks previous to break the West Coast dock strike with a compulsory arbi- tration bill." W ere the Labor Com mit tee in Britain they would have to support the ex c Ius ion of Harold Wilson from anti-war conferences on the basis that he has an equally bad labor record, Many American labor fakers, like the ones who sat on the Pay Board, support compulsory arbitration and other anti-labor offensives but there is no class basis for their exclusion (as opposed to de- nunciat'toll) trom the anti-war movement. They, (".-; - New SL supporter demands expulsion of McGovern agent in SMC labor workshop. ,4 , and many 0 s ten sib 1 e socialists a s well, are traitors within the working-class movement who must be exposed. The bourgeoisie must be exclud- ed as the class enemy if the working class is to be independently mobilized against imperialist war. The purging of the class enemy is an abso- lute precondition for the exposure of the labor fakers and other class traitors. The NCLC further compromised itself by pass- ing out an open letter to the Detroit branch of the SWP which reaffirmed support for the SWP /YSA 's physical beating and exclusion of the Spartacist and Progressive Labor /SDS supporters from the July NPAC conference. The letter stated: "the NCLC ... supported the exclusion of the dis- ruptors and in fact considers the disruption to be a sabotage of an effective political challenge to the presence of bourgeois politicians." In fact, the SL forces had called for a political de- bate on w h e the r Hartke should be permitte,d to speak. The c h air man, Jerry Gordon, shouted down our mot ion and it was never voted on. To have sat on one's hands while Hartke spoke and waited until the next day following his speech is an ineffective academic non-challenge to the pres- ence of bourgeois politicians. While condemning the ;,'WP's Jenness-Pulley campaign as a "clo'vn-show" the NCLC proposes as the "working-class electoral alternative" an electoral campaign which would "welcome active support for our campaign from the whole popula- contillued on page 8 f i' f r r t f I I r f ( r r f I f t f [ [ r r r r r r r r I. F I" r r I l r [ [ r ( f ~ f I f II ii 4 WORKERS VANGUARD SL-RCY (and others) POp the Red Balloon The history of the New Left was largely the history of the rise and fall of SDS. Cut off by a generation of war and cold war from the tradition of the "Old Left," (a loose term covering both the reformist FDR-supporting Communist Party and the revolutionary Trotskyist Socialist Workers Party, and other groups besides) the New Left of the 1960's tried unsuccessfully to produce its own ideology of soc ia I change, independent of both mainstream liberalism and Mar xis m. As SDS swung leftward, dropping its communist exclusion clause in 1965, every traditional tendency from official stalinism (CP) to revolutionary commu- nism (Spartacist League) plus hangovers predating Marxism (anarchism, terrorism) and the newer variants 0 f Stalinism (PL "Maoism" and "Third Worldist" tendencies)-all began to gain followers in SDS, In the ensuing intense ideological strug- gle when spokesmen for the various tendencies had complete freedom to compete for hegemony, a major theoretical lesson was hammered out for many: that the working class is the modern agency of social revolution, Through their experience in SDS some petty-bourgeois radicals were able to overcome the oppressive weight of bourgeois ide- ology and re-Iearn the lesson set forth in the Communist Manifesto. This lesson, if assimilated and put into prac- tice, could have transformed the New Left into a socialist youth movement allied with, and facili- hting the development of, an emerging left-wing opposition to the labor bureaucracy in the unions. Instead, the lesson was squandered and deformed. Following the politically clarifying split of SDS into two factions-a ThirdWorld vanguardist tend- ency (RYMs I and II and the Maoist RU) and a pro- letarian-vanguardist tendency (W 0 r k e r-Student Alliance, led by PL and cr itically supported by the Spartacist League) both wings degenerated, the Third Worldists fairly rapidly, and PL/SDS over a longer period of time, Unable to break with Sta- linism and link up in a principled way with left- opposition struggles in the unions based on the t ran sit ion a Lprogram, PL/SDS retreated into campus parochialism and, somewhat later, more ordinary ref 0 r m ism, Thus the New Left as a whole diSintegrated into scattered grouplets and individuals, leaving be h i n d it recruits for the various organized tendencies and a considerable number of disillusioned cynics. Raising the Dead The New Left is now a corpse, but the leftover New Leftists try to revive it. Unfortunately for them, attempts to turn the clock back usually re- sult in unforeseen and comical situations. The most ridiculous recent case validating this his- toric law was the ill-fated "Red Balloon Confer- ence"which met at Stony Brook, New York on March 3-5. The conference was convened by the ''Red Balloon Collective" of Stony Brook, a group professing bas i call y Weatherman politics but Subscribe! $1.00 YEARLY INCLUDES SPARTACIST Name' _________________________________ _ Address City ________________________ _ State __ - ______________ _ Zip ____ _ WORKERS VIINfifJlIRD BOX 1377 / G.p.o. ;' NEW YORK / N.Y. 10001 lacking Weather man's dedication. Leaders of the Red Balloon Collective appar- ently decided they wanted the New Left again-but this time without the ideological struggle which characterized the original New Left and was its healthiest component. In their convention call pa- per, The Red Balloon, the RB Collective laid out an amorphous but nonetheless real political line- a blend of ThirdWorld Stalinism (political support to the PR G and its peace proposals), black nation- alism (asserting that the primary oppression of blacks is of a colonial nature, and glorifying black lumpenization), opposition to Newton on behalf of the Cleaver wing of Panther ism, and hippy life- style ism (calling for "revolutionary" communes, food co-ops, etc, and for a "worker -freak alli- ance"). Smart enough to lack confidence in their own program (which was a compromise hammered out in the inner chambers of the Red Balloon) the RB Collective determined not to lay it open to critical scrutiny: the new New Left must be free of political discussion so that the politiCS of the Red Balloon could win out by default. Thus, the RB prepared in advance an elaborate agenda designed to avert any possibility of politi- cal discussion. The pre-conference packet bla- tantly stated that "Floor debates have proven to as irrelevant to the topic of the workshop, or, if presented, voted down due to lack of opportunity for full political discussion. Generally speaking, the RB's agenda was an ingenious bureaucratic deyice, which Stalin would have admired, But the Red Balloon made one error which Sta- lin never made. Stalin's bureaucratized Comin- tern invited hard Stalinized cadres to its congres- ses; the Red Balloon sent its conference call far and wide, Imagine Stalin's dismay at three hun- dred anarcho-freaks turning up for a Comintern congress! This is exactly what happened to the Red Balloon as, from all corners of the country, from every underground-Iumpen f rea k - yip P Y commune, all the victims and rejects of capital- ist SOCiety, as well as a few subjectively revolu- tionary types, descended like a swarm of locusts on the "peaceful" college town of stony Brook. The SL/RCY also sent a small contingent with boxes of literature and a supply of leaflets titled "Pop the Red Balloon" which denounced the polit- ical line of the Red Balloon paper while calling for a defense of the group against police harass- ment, (Several days previously, while fighting the campus administration's ban on the conference, nineteen Red Balloonists had been arrested for "kidnapping" a n administrator.) Red Balloonist On Georg Lukacs' Dropping Dead "Hegel wrote, in 1796, in the diary of his sojourn through the Bernese Alps, that ' ... the Christian imagination has produced nothing but an inSipid legend. ' It is not accidental that the images associated with C h r is t ian it y-servility, sickness, corruption, weakness, degradation, masochism, cowardice, prostration-are the very images that define the life and work of Georg Lukacs, who recently did us the long-overdue courtesy of dropping dead. Uniting the mystic's propensity for sudden conversion and the most obsequious realism since Aquinas, Lukacs, _ for more than fifty years, specialized in adapting him- self to, and justifying, the given reality in which he found himself. Thus his philosophical erudition and 'classicism' were put in the service of the reality of forced labor camps, the Moscow trials, 'socialist' realism, stalin's destruction of the Bolshevik party and the degeneration of the Communist International." Workers Vanguard is pleased to recommend to its readers the pamphlet beginning with the above quote. "In Memory of Georg Lukacs," published by the Surrealist Group, is available through Franklin Rosemont, 3714 North Racine Ave., Chicago, Ill. 60613. The pamphlet is a satisfying de mystification of the leprous academic who for decades popularized all the works of stalinism to gullible intellectuals. be very costly to the unity of new organizations, That is why they have been eliminated here." The conference was to consist mainly of workshops organized around such topics as "racism," "sex- ism," etc. The brief plenary was to consist of motions raised and voted up by 2/3 majority in the workshops; the packet then stated "There will be NO proposals accepted from the floor of the plenary." The workshops themselves were all to by run by women (to combat self-confessed ramp- ant male chauvinism) who were hardened Red Bal- loonists who would see that only the most banal dis c u s s ion s took place. Thus major political statements attacking the entire world-view of the Red Balloon and counterposing a revolutionary working-class orientation would have little chance of ever reaching the floor for general discussion as they would probably be declared out of order WfJlIllEIiS VANGIJAIID Marxist Working-Class Monthly Published by the Spartacist League Editorial Board: Liz Gordon, Marv Treiger, Nick Benjamin (managing editor). Production manager: Karen Allen. Circulation manager: Janet Rogers. West Coast editor: Mark Small. New England editor: George Foster. Subscription: SI yearly (11 issues). Bundle rates for 10 or more copies. Address: Box 1377, G.P.O., New York, N. Y. 10001. Telephone: WA 5-8234. Opinions expressed in signed articles 01' letters do not necessarily express the editorial viewpoint. response to the leaflet and the SL/RCY presence was na tur a lly i m media t e ho stili t y. The SL/RCYers had to insist upon their right to set up a literature table on an equal basis with other tendencies-the Red Balloon c I aim e d exclusive right to allocate table space, using the argument that they had checked 0 u t the tables from the student union. Agenda Collapses When the conference began, the contradictions impliCit in the whole situation became immediate- ly apparent. It required one agenda motion from the SL/RCY (f 0 ram 0 r e extensive plenary in which motions could be raised) to break the elab- orate s t r u c t u reset up by the Red Balloon. A straw vote revealed that half the conference re- jected the RB's bureaucratic setup and desired general discussion-the SL/RCY because of polit- ical points it wished to make, the anarcho-freaks because of libertarianist objections to the bureau- cratic agenda. Thus the balloon burst before it got off the ground. The next two days were taken up with agenda squabbles and workshops, The SL/RCY called for a political plenary discussion, while the anarcho-freaks spent hours discussing their own sexism and setting up endless workshops with themes like "racism in our lives," "revolutionary food, ,. "Jewish nationalism," "media," etc. After these developments the conference reached its low point. The :1B Collective and its co-conspirators be- gan to ooze into two wings in the course of the conference. One wing leaned toward the creation of a "red party now," while the other wanted to retain the "mass radical youth organization" con- ception, modifying it into a sort of super coordi- nating com mit tee c I ear in g h 0 use for "the movement" continued on page 8 April1972
YlDtU<.Eli
5 THE "TROTSKYISM" OF THE SECOND INTERNATIONAL
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1 AND THE In the current period of heightened inter- imperialist rivalry, the pressures of war will be reflected in increasing measure in the opportun- ism of sections of the workers movement which abandon their proclaimed struggle for internation- al revolutionary solidarity of the workers in favor of support to one section or another of the im- perialists struggling for a greater share of plun- der. Our task becomes more urgent, therefore, to conduct a relentless exposure of workers' and radical organizations which now support, openly or backhandedly, bourgeois forces in war. We analyze here one recent case of egregious betrayal of the working class by an ostensibly revolutionary, eve n "Trotskyist" organization. That the Workers League, the American section of the "International Committee for the Fourth International" of TimWohlforth and Gerry Healy, took its public stand in favor of the mil ita r y moves of the Indian bourgeois government in the India-Pakistan war, responding to pressure no greater than the current relative popularity of the Indian action, indicates the certainty and depth of their future betrayals in wars of wider propor- tions and greater consequent pressure to betray to a section of the bourgeoisie. If the unbridled opportunism c h a r act e r is tic of the Workers League/Socialist Labour League combination is not politically expunged from the workers move- ment in time, revolutionists will write of them in future major wars as Lenin in 1915 characterized the policy of the social chauvinists of the Second International: "Forty-four years after the Paris Commune, after half a century of the mustering and preparing of mass forces, the revolutionary class of Europe must, at the present moment, when Europe is passing through a catastrophic period, think of how to quickly be- come the lackey of its national bourgeoisie, how to help it plunder, violate, ruin and conquer other peo- ples, and how to refrain from launching, on a mass scale, direct revolutionary propaganda and prepar- ation for revolutionary action." -Lenin, "Imperialism and Socialism in Italy," Collected Works, Vol. 21, p. 366. Such was Lenin's paraphrasing of the Second International's position. We s hall see why his fight for an independent working-class revolution- ary pol icy in bourgeois wars retains burning importance today" In the article 'War, R evolution and Self- Determination" in the January 1972 n urn b e r of Workers Vanguard. the Spartacist League ana- lyzed the India-Pakistan war and the duty of rev- olutionists to seek the defeat of both governments and their armies in that war. The SL position flew in the face, as usual, of most of what was be- ing said on the left; its opponents either directly supported the Indian army (Workers League/ Socialist Labour League) or claimed that behind that army, despite it, with its help or because of it, somehow, was a national liberation struggle instead of its opposite; somehow the invading In- dian army with its tanks and planes was being "used" by the Bengali workers and peasants. What remains of the "International Committee" of Tim Wohlforth and Gerry Healy explicitly stated: "We critically support the decision of the Indian bour- geois government to give military and economic aid to Bangia Desh" [Bulletin, 20 December 19711. We distinguished between aid from a bourgeOis government and control by that government and noted that the Indian bourgeoisie had obviously taken control of the just Bengali self-determina- tion s t rug g 1 e, and that. a "self-determination struggle" un de r the total military and political control of another nation's bourgeoisie is some- thing other than iCclaims to be. Wohlforth "replied" to our characterization of _ the IC as "waterboy for the Indian army" in an article "SpartacistRediscovers Shachtman" in the 17 January 1972 issue of his Bulletin. The title refers to WV's view that in 1942 the stance of the Workers Party of Max Shachtman on the question of the Chinese "self-determination struggle" was more Leninist t han that taken by the Socialist Workers Party led by James P. Cannon. Spartacist' 5 "Shachtmanism" The central thrust of the WL's "reply" is to 'smear the SL as "Shachtmanites," i. e. as anti- Marxist rel}egades, and thereby cancel out the impact ou r arguments (on Bangladesh, the WL position on the working-class character of the po- lice, their role in the National Peace Action Co- alition [NPAC] as left face of SWP class- collaboration documented in Workers Action #10, etc.) ar e having on Wohlforth's own ranks. He shelves any defense of his indefensible support to the Indian bourgeoiSie in favor of slander and label-pasting, hoping thereby to escape the im- possible task of answering what we said about his stand. After all, we may be right, but he has the method; and even when c()rrect we are still ab- stentionist petty-bourgeois empiricist swine. Wohlforth accuses the SL, together with the SWP, Red Mole, the OCI, etc., of sharing " ... the same methodological and class position as Shachtman group in 1940" [emphasis added1. The SWP majority in 1940 characterized the Shachtman-Burnham-Abern grouping as a petty- bourgeois current in flight from the working class and the imperative defense of the Soviet Union, and presumably that is now what the Wohlforthites tell each other the lot of us are. According to Wohlforth "the direct connection between the present day abstentionists and their Shachtmanite ancestors is Spartacist." Whatever this may mean metaphysically to Wohlforth, it is the direct reverse of the facts, as anybody outside the Workers League should have the political knowledge to recognize. None of the groups at- tacked for "abstentionism" (SWP, Red Mole, the OCI, and the SL) trace their political or organiza- tional ancestry to Shachtman' s W or kers Party /In- dependent Soc i ali s t Lea g u e/Young Socialist League; all of them to this day stand formally on the position of the Trotsky-Cannon Majority in the 1939-1940 SWPfaction fight; they all maintain formal continuity on the question of ti1e- class na- ture of the Soviet Union and the necessity to de- fend it against imp e ria Ii s m; a 11 regard the Shachtman-Burnham-Abern break a consequence of petty-bourgeois capitulation to anti-Soviet "democratic" imperialism. All of them! How the Pabloists (SWP, Red Mole) anctthe inverted Pablo- ists of Healy-Wohlforth's IC became revisionists had nothing to do with the issues of the 1939-1940 SWP fight, except in the elementary sense of the kinship of all varieties of revisionism and cen- trism. There is an organization which traces its ancestry to Shachtman-the International Social- ists-and they are not mentioned in Wohlforth's e s say on Shachtmanism! (The IS' "two wars" position on Bangladesh was criticized in the WV article.) Wohlforth quotes a section from ou r above- mentioned article in the January WV (leaving the source unidentified so as to make it tougher to look up) which raised the similarity between the slogan of self-determination for China in the cir- cumstances of World War II and support for Ben- gali "self-determination" under conditions of total Indian control of that movement. We referred to Shachtman's conclusion "t hat such support was merely backhanded assistance to U. S. imperial- ism which not only merely assisted, but controlled the Chinese forces." Wohlforth's "answer" avoids the China-India analogy, the question of the U.S. in China in World War II, and the question of Bangladesh inde- pendence-which is what our article was about. The section ofthe article he does quote was aimed not at Wohlforth, bu t at the more circumspect SWP, whose objective support to India was back- handed. In the section dealing with Wohlforth, titled "Healyite 'Principles' Oil the Tanks," we wrote: "The SWP 'merely' justifies the capitulation of the Bangia Desh leaders to the Indian army; the Healy- ites openly support the Indian bourgeoisie's army." This characterization was not sur m i s e on our part. We quoted the Bulletin text: "We I the 'International Committee'l critically sup- port the decision of the Indian bourgeois government to give military and economic aid to Bangia Desh." Since the WV's view that the IC "has proclaimed itself waterboy for the Indian bourgeoisie's army," was basedon a literal reading of the very words wrote in their press, no one should be surprised thatWohlforth does not deal with them. No chance. Why attempt to defend a grotesque betrayal? W ohlforth quotes our ref ere n c e to Shachtman's position on China in World War II, and lets fly. WV had said: "In a. {!Olemic with the SWP in 1942 it fell to Max Shachtman's lot to place the general principle of support to self-determination struggles within a context of Leninist regard for concrete reality. The issue was China. Should socialists support China's war against Japanese imperialism on the grounds of self-determination for China, or had such sup- port become merely, as Shachtman charged, back- handed assistance to U. S. imperialism which not merely aSSisted, but controlled the Chinese forces?" He replies: "Every word lof the SL passagel is like ,a textbook example ofthe reactionary empirical method of the petty bourgeoisie. First Max Shachtman is abstract- ed from . Max Shachtman. [Bulletin's dotsl It just happened to 'fall' to Shachtman, who had just com- mitted a criminal split with Trotsky deserting the defense of the Soviet Union under the class pressure of imp e ria lis m, to defend Leninist principle! Shachtman himself is broken up into a series of episodes and positions some of which are correct and some incorrect. This in itself represents a complete abandonment of theoretical thought." The generous, openminded reader, might be inclined to think that while the argument is ad- mittedly m u r k y and inept, where the BulLetin creates so much smoke there must be fire. The smoke turns out to be but dust as Wohlforth thrashes his straw man. What Is Shachtmanism? The character 0 f Shachtmanism and the ex- perience of the Workers Party is indeed fit mate- rial for discussion among Marxists. Wohlforth raises it to pose as "defender of Trotsky." For Wohlforth-in order to lend horror to his label- must assert that the break with the SWP in 1940 over the question of Soviet defensism was an im- mediate repudiation 0 f all Marxist principles- hereafter the SWP majority would be right on all dis put e d questions, and the "Shachtmanites" wrong on a 11 of them. To assert anything else would be breaking Shachtman up "into a series of episodes and positions some of which are correct and some incorrect" and a "complete abandon- ment of theoretical thought." That this nonsense can be passed off in public without flinching as the embodiment of "Marxist method" is an indictment not of Shachtmanism bu t the abysmal political miseducation carried on inside the WL. It runs counter to the experience and practice of Marx, Lenin, and Trotsky; it is a cultist argument at- continued on next page 6 Continued/rom Pllge 5 tractive to a Stalin-Wohlforth-Catholic mentality but de a t h to Marxists. It effectively denies the Leninist conception of both democratic centralism and the united front; it turns regroupment like that between the Bolsheviks and Trotsky's Mezhrayontsi in 1917 into capitulation not fusion, It flies in the face of reality in that during the war years there was substantial agreement between the SWP and the WP 0 n the issues they faced, much to the confusion of militant workers and the radical public generally, This led to the two or- ganizations holding unity negotiations in 1946 to consider whether sufficient agreement existed be- tween them to establish a fused party, Further, during the years 1940-46 the Workers Party con- sidered itself, and was considered by European Fourth International sections, as co-thinkers of the Fourth International, Wohlforthian Method: Cultist Cretinism W ohlforth 's r on w hat he fancies is "petty bourgeois r liricism" is Childish, stupid, and anti-Marxist tv the core. On one 1 eve 1, 2% course we must break Shachtmanism up "into a series of episodes some of which are correct and some incorrect," Wohlforth claims to be both a Leninist and a Trotskyist. To do so he m us t either employ the method he labels "empiricism" or simply ignore the intense polemiCS Lenin and Trotsky waged against each other for years, Ob- viously in those episodes one or the other, but not both and maybe neither, was correct. Trotsky was won over to Lenin's conception of the organ- izationalquestion and Lenin came to accept Trot- sky's stand on the Permanent Revolution and the tasks of the proletariat in the democratic revolu- tion, No intelligent study of the years before the October Revolution can fail to show that Lenin was wrong as against Trotsky on an aspect of their task, and vice versa, We do not claim that either Max Shachtman or J, p, Cannon were ever Marxists of the stature of Lenin or Trotsky, But only a politicaIimbecile, a cultist pseudo-Marxist can ignore the fact that generally healthy Marxist organizations and leaders have been wrong, or took inadequate positions on particular issues for periods 0 f time; and that even groups standing generally to their right occasionally took superi- or positions on particular issues at a given time, W ohlforth' s denunciations of the SL for noting that Shachtman espoused what we consider a correct position 0 n the Chinese issue shortly after his "criminal split with Trotsky" 0 n 1 y s how s his dread of critical analysis. What Wohlforth calls "the reactionary empirical method 0 f the petty bourgeoisie"-i. e. careful investigation in t 0 all the issues in a political dispute such as that be- tween the SWP and WP-Lenin considered essen- tial in politics, and remarked that anyone who did not study the issues for himself "can be dis- missed with a simple gesture of the hand, " Was it not Stalin who argued that to separate Trotsky's critique of bureaucratic degeneration in a workers state after the revolution from Trot- sky's centrist-Menshevik position 0 n organiza- tional questions before-the revolution constituted an abandonment of Marxism-that Trotsky, wrong earlier on the one question, had to be wrong on the other? Or conversely, was it not Stalin again who argued that to separate Lenin of the "revolu- tionary democratic dictatorship of the proletariat and the peasantry" from Lenin the builder of the democratic centralist Bolshevik party constituted the grossest heresy? In point of fact, it "just happened to fall" to Lenin to first abstract Lenin from, '. Lenin, to refute his "old self" in the April Theses, He had been an "Old Guard" within the Party and the main proponent of a now outmoded theory. Lenin's new position approximated Trotsky's correct theory that the dictatorship of the proletariat (in alliance with the peasantry) could be established in Russia without a prior European socialist revolution or a period of workers and peasants de m 0 c rat i c dictatorship. Has Wohlforth utterly forgotten that Trotsky- ism itself became a system only as a theoretical response to Stalin's progressive abandonment of the hard conclusions of the October Revolution, on the one hand, and Trotsky's shedding of his earli- er, "episodic" position on the party on the other? Stalin, like Wohlforth, began with the proposi- tion: The masters of Marxism are infallible and the renegades are wholly bankrupt. The cult Sta- lin built around Lenin was only preparatory to the one he built around himself, Stalin accomplished this not solely through the building of statues and the recitation of incantations, but through a theory of the direct coincidence of truth with a single individual's thought until that individual and not his pOSitions become the ultimate authority, The a p p 1 i cat ion of Trotsky's theory of uneven and combined development to the realm of cognition pro v ide s a use f u 1 antidote to this Stalinist- W ohlforthite theory. There is another aspect of Wohlforthian meth- odology we need to take up for a moment. Wohl- forth's celestial dialectic refuses to descend to the worldly plane. When we acknowledgedShacht- man's role on the Chinese question of 1942, we did so on the basis of his placing "the general principle of support to self-determination strug- gles within a context of Leninist regard for con- crete reality" against Wright of the SWP, It is not because we consider China of 1942 exactlyanalo- gous to Bangladesh in 1972 but rather because Shachtman's methodology was consistently Lenin- ist in those articles, When we consider the concrete, if you please, criteria of support to Chiang over which Wright and Shachtman a r gu ed, it resolves to whether military aid and strategic military subordination through imperialist control of the general staff (General Stillwell's command) was a sufficient basis to decisively t ran sf 0 r ill Chiang's anti- Japanese struggle into an appendage of U. S, im- perialism, Shachtman thought so; Wright did not, What Wohlforth has overlooked is t ha t both Shachtman and W rig h t, the WP and the SWP, agreed that a U.S. army invasion would make the question moot and of course subordination to im- perialist arms would be unmistakable. The physical pre sen c e of the Indian army backing '.:!E the mil ita r y command of General Aurora places W 0 h 1 for t h against Shachtman, Lenin, and the SWP! If there were a Dantean In- ferno to whichWohlforth were conSigned, it would consist of him endlessly fleeing all the figures, revolutionary and. centrist alike, who were after this political bandit's hide. Shortly after the WP's repudiation 0 f Soviet defensism and its s p 1 i t from the SWP, James Burnham split with the WP majority to find his place in ultra-right politics thereby lessening the internal pressure for a consistent anti-Marxist generalization, Shachtman and Abern continued to consider themselves Trotskyists until after the end of World War II, and in a few cases-and the question of support to Chiang Kai-Shek's China during the Pacific War was one of them-the Workers Party was correct as against the SWp, Anyone who reads it will discover that Shacht- man's argument was essentially an "orthodox" gloss on Lenin's position on Serbia and Poland during World War I, applying the criteria Lenin developed to the new imperialist war. That_the SWP could be wrong on an issue s h 0 u 1 d hardly surprise Wohlforth. In his own pamphlet "The Struggle for Marxism in the United States," Wohlforth characterizes the per i 0 d of World War II as one in which "American Radical- ism Reasserts Itself," arguing that the SWP was then s Ii p pin g into narrow "orthodoxy," able to "reassert" past positions but not creatively apply Marxist principles to new situations-a polite way of saying that their positions were wrong or in- adequate on a number of things. Is it then Wohl- forth's positionthatno one could be right on those questions? - - In the long run, under the enormous pressure of U. rimperialism, the Shachtmanites, left to their own devices, had to find themselves in the camp of that same imperialism. That happened, but not according to the Workers League's latest timetable-it took seventeen years from the split in 1940 before the reconciliation of the WP with American social democracy took place. It is not inconceivable that the whole process of the WP's disintegration could have been reversed had re- unification with the SWP taken place before the full pressure 0 f the cold war atmosphere bore down on both organizations, Certainly between the years 1940-46 theWP was no literary exponent of world imperialism, as one would infer from the Bulletin, but rather a left centrist party whose members seriously desired a communist revolu- tion, The disintegration and decay of the WP must be analyzed in the same way as the demise of the revolutionary SWP, as a pro c e s s by which the SWP moved to a severe deformation as a revolu- tionary party by 1953, when the prinCiple of inter- nationalism was undercut, to rightward moving centrism as the SWP totally em bra c e d Fidel Castro in 1961, to 1965, when they joined hands as reformists with the liberal imperialists in the anti-war popular front. To leave the question here would merely invite WORKERS VANGUARD" more WL sneers a bou t "evolutionary method," The "Shachtmanite " s 1 and e r is too valuable for Wohlforth to give up voluntarily; it is a time-worn anathema which has allowed him and the SWP to evade answering our charges of betrayal to their ranks. But it is easily exploded. Wohlforth vs. Wohlforth- Again In 1962 the forerunners of the Spartacist League and the present Wohlforth grouping were members of an oppositional minority tendency in the SWP. At the behest of Gerry Healy of the English SLL Wohlforth sought control of the tend- ency, and failing to win a majority, consummated an unprincipled split within its ranks, We have published the documents of this rupture in Marx- ist Bulletin #3: The SRI it in the RevolutiOnary Tendency. The first document in the collection is a letter from James Robertson to Geoffrey White, written a month before the break was carried out, detailing the machinations ofWohlforth in prepar- ing the split. It reads: "Tim Wohlforth gives every evidence of ardently desiring the Robertson-Ireland wing of the tendency out of the Min 0 r it Y and out of the party, and the sooner the better-as witness his concluding re- marks at the last NYC tendency meeting: 'Robert- son I s covertly for a split within a few months. If Jim goes, riddance!' And of course there is the 'break all ties, dee pen the breach' tone and of his document. Cannon wrote more mild- ly of Shachtman in 1940, thoul,;h Tim obviously be- lie\'es he and I are the exact reincarnations of those two then. So dri\'en is he to create a panic mood of hate to consummate a split of the tendency that to add to til(' compound picture of a petty bourl,;eois of the upper West Side's middle-class 103 St. the proletarian factory quarters at 101 St. that poor old Tim snarls and foams at any decent comrade to call the Shachtmanites of 1941-46 a left-centrist To cite Tim Wohl- forth against Tim Wohlforth, however: 'We can now an accurate picture of the po- litical development of the Shachtman tendency. It was born in 1940 as a petty bourgeois opposi- tion wit h in the Trotskyist movement. It went throul,;h a "second split" with the mass ex.odus of those who rode the 0 p p 0 sit ion bloc out of the movement altogether. It the!1 launched a party and attempted to compete with the SWP to be the Trotskyist party in this country. It contained at this time divergent tendencies which pushed it in different directions. It had within it tendencies which wished a reconciliation with the SWP by building a united Trotskyist party. It had other tendencies which forced it to the right-to a de- finitive break with Trotskyism in 1946. We can characterize the WP Q! this period as left cen- trist g r 0 u pin g unstable composition which couldn't quite decide exactly where was going. Then following the 1946 WP-SWP unity affair and with the opening of the cold-war witch hunt, it began to move to the right at an accelerated pace, transforming itself from a competing ten- Aprit 1972 dency within the Trotskyist m 0 vern e n t into a centrist "third camp" tendency which felt itself antagonistic to Trotskyism as well as to reform- ism. It stayed only for a relatively short time in this centrist limbo as it soon struck out in an open reformist direction, seeking today to be- come the loyal left wing of the so.cial democra- cy.' (page 22, What Makes Shachtman Run?, Tim Wohlforth, August, 1957.) The characteriZing of the WP is a small matter as it relates to our needs, but it is ~ ~ for one thing which is easily obscured by charges and ac- cusations-who is serious toward our history and theory and who has bent and twisted them for petty factional gain and to try to make a wrong line look good?" [our emphasis I -The Split ~ the Revolutionary Tendency, pp. 2-3. Behind the Facade: At left, Workers League demo nstration; below, the Indian tanks WL supported move into Bangladesh. In 1964 Wohlforth stated the following on the SWP which he now holds up against S hac h t man as absolutely right on the China issue: " ... The theoretical sterilitv of the SWP goes much far the r back than that [1940J having its roots in Cannon's empirical bloc with Trotsky covering ~ whole period from 1928101940. Cannon and the SWP's leading cadres never attempted to master the Marxist method. It was Trotsky's job to devel- op theory and Cannon's job to build an organization around his theories. This division of labor broke down with the Shachtman fight,in 1940 when a good half of the party was lost to petty bourgeois revi- sionism and the rest saved largely by Trotsky sup- planting the SWP leadership in the struggle." -Tim Wohlforth, letter to Robertson, 12 August 1964 in ACFI "Information Bulletin No.1" (undated) ref err i n g to the SL-ACFI unity negotiations. [our emphasis] \ Thus Wohlforth in 1964 considered the American Trotskyists from the time of their founding to be totally lacking in rev 0 I uti 0 n a r y capacity and nothing more than organizational hacks in a bloc with Trotsky. The impliCit conclusion, of course, is that Wohlforth is this country's first Marxist! But more important thanWohlforth's pathetic self- glorification is the logic of his argument, for given his characterization of the SWP surely it is axio- matic that without Trotsky the SWP, if it took any cor r e c t pOSitions at all, must have arrived at them by dumb luck or sterile reflexive orthodoxy! Wohlforth's twisting of history for petty faction- al gain is the same now as in 1962. The purpose, like the method, is analogous. A number of lead- ers of the SWP oppositional grouping which became the Revolutionary Tendency (RT) in 1961 had come over to Trotskyism from Shachtman's dissolving ISL/YSL, among them Mage, Robertson and Wohl- forth. The SWP leadership carried out a slander barrage against all these leaders, who had broken from Shachtmanism, as "unreconstructed Shacht- manites." The individuals who were to go on to found the SL insisted on a serious evaluation of the degeneration and decay of the Shachtmanite organizations, as they were to do with the partly parallel breakdown of the SWP. Wohlforth was then looking for an opening to make common cause with the Dobbs leadership to smash the Robertson- Mage-White grouping. The fraudulent iss u e of "Shachtmanism" arose, and Wohlforth jumped at the chance to use it, despite the fact that he was one of the central targets of the SWP's slander! As then, so now: to get the SL, he establishes another bloc with the SWP, reaching across ten years in time, to underwrite his contention that the SWP was right to expel these people, since all the time they were only concealed Shachtinanites! Now as then he continues to offer aid and credence to the SWP Pabloists as their loyal opposition, asking only one thing-get the Spartacist League! Parenthetically, one can trace a political origin to many of the present and past SL cadres and leaders that is different from that typical of the WL-SWP: namely origins in the CPUSA! T h us Geoff White was a state chairman of the CP and Smith Act indictee; Ed L., a long-time CPtrade union cadre; Jim Robertson, a CP youth activist; and then'Harry Turner, buried for years in a CP underground celL These were later joined by Dave Cunningham of the Iowa CP and Marv Treiger from the Los Angeles CPo All these comrades were led to Trotskyism out of the clash between their sub- jective revolutionary impulses and the realities of Stalinism, i. e. a recapitulation of the road of of the original Left Opposition itselfo In 1957 when Wohlforth was struggling to be a Marxist and not a political bandit he characterized rather well the pressures and d y n ami c s which made the WP "a left centrist grouping of unstable composition which couldn't quite decide where it was going" in the period before its definitive break with Trotskyism in 1946. According to Wohlforth today, his own analysis in 1957 can only be break- ing Shachtman up "into a series of episodes, some of which are correct and some incorrect," which is "a textbook example of the reactionary empiri- cal method of the petty bourgeoisie." Wohlforth says that in such an approach "Max Shachtman is abstracted from, .0 Max Shachtman"; we can only observe that the above counterpositioning indicates that, by W 0 h 1 for t h methodology, Wohlforth is dissolved into, . 0 Wohlforth. Hegel observed about the reflective nature of philosophy that "the owl of Minerva flies only at dusk"; Wohlforth's owl flies deaf, drunk and night- blind. Now, nearly ten years after the split in the RT, Wohlforth brings up the same charges, in the same manner, for an even baser purpose. This time Wohlforth uses the "Shachtmanism" s lander to cover his bloc with a section of the Indian bour: geoISie and the Indian army, a bloc which the logic of Marxism and class struggle dictates can only be ultimately directed a g a ins t the workers and peasants of India and Bangladesh and the revolu- tionary movement. Those Little Dots Wohlforth begins his piece with a quote from Trotsky: "Throughout all the vacillations and convulsions of the opposition, contradictory though they may be, two general features run like a guiding thread from the pinnacles of theory down to the most t r i f lin g political episodes. The first general feature is the absence of a unified conception .... History becomes transformed into a series of improvisations. We have here in the full sense of the term the disinte- gration of Marxism, the disintegration of theoreti- cal thought, the disintegration of politiCS into its constituent elements. EmpiriCism and its f 0 s t e r brother, impressionism, do min ate from top to bottom ... Throughout the vacillations and convul- sions of the opposition, there is a second general feature intimately bound up with the first, namely, a tendency to refrain from active participation, a tendency to self elimination, to abstentionism, na- turally under cover of ultra-radical phrases Hot on the trail of 'concrete' political tasks in words, the opposition actually places itself outside the his- torical process." One wouldn't know it from the Bull e tin text, but the quote from Trotsky which W ohlforth has adduced against the SL is taken from Trotsky's "An Open Letter to Comrade Burnham" included in In Defense of Marxism. More than the source is omitted. ~ omitting Trotsky's reference!9 what positions he was criticiz ing, Wohlforth' s quote amounts to nobetter than a forgery of Trotsky's words. Whatp 0 1 i tic sofBurnham 's is Trotsky characterizing? Omitted from Wohlforth's selec- tion are Trotsky's references to "Hitler and Stalin in Poland; Stalin and Mannerheim in Finland." Trotsky is referring to Burnham's refusal 1;0 de- fend the Soviet state and his-hostile attitude toward the dialectic and to the question of the class differ- ence between that state and its bourgeois- imperialist enemies. That is the first point: it was not for refusing military support to a bourgeois 7 state (in ~ kind of war) that Trotsky and the SWP majority denounc ed the Burnham-Shachtman- Abern minority. It was for their responsiveness to bourgeois public opinion running against such support to the Soviet Union. See any difference there, Cde. Wohlforth? Or is that hair-splitting over "concrete reality" again? Wohlforth: Revolutionary Defeatism Equals Abstentionism N ext point: Wohlforth hopes that a smokescreen of quotations from Trotsky written against posi- tion!i entirely different from the SL's will con- vince the reader that a position, clearly stated, against both of two warring bourgeois armies is- abstentionism! A really abstentionist organization would have evaded an a n a 1 y sis of the war, or claimed simply that wars are tragic events for the workers, The SL took the position of revolu- tionary defeatism against both Indian and Pakistani bourgeois governments and their armies. That Wohlforth calls abstentionism. He gets involved, he takes sides-no abstentionisthe, no indeed!- he pitched right into the fray on the side of one of the bourgeois robbers! The policy of revolutionary defeatism in a bourgeois war meant something rather different, for Trotsky, than standing "out- side the historical process." Wohlforth does::l't say so of course, but he has condemned Lenin's entire policy during World War I as "abstention- ist," and "empiricist" besides, since Lenin was manifestly concerned with "concrete conditions. " Wohlforth's "anti-abstentionism" is that of the betraying Sec 0 n d International which also took sides-lots of them-bourgeois sides. Wohlforth: Britain Equals Pakistan Third point: in case anyone of his readers is quick to notice the class distinction between the Soviet state-which was what the 1939-40 debate was about-and the bourgeois Indian state, Wohl- forth immediately dishes up another non-sequitur to cloud the issue doublyo At least in this instance his quote does refer to India. Thus the following from Trotsky, again offered without source: "India is participating in the imperialist war on the side of Great Britain. Does this mean that our at- titude toward India-not the Indian Bolsheviks but INDIA-is the same as toward Great Brit a in? If there exists in this world, in addition to Shachtman and Bur n ham, only two imperialist camps, then Where, per mit me to ask, shall we put India? A Marxist will say that despite India's being an inte- gral part of the British Empire and India's partici- pating in the imperialist war; despite the perfidi- ous policy of Gandhi and other nationalist leaders, our at tit u d e toward India is altogether different from our attitude toward England. We defend India against England." That is a good statement of the SL position: it too defends India against England, against the U. S., and the rest. Now Where, Cde. Wohlforth, did Trotsky defend an Indian war against PakIStan, or before that state's existence, against Afghanistan, Burma, Iran or China? You raise the ques- tion of wars and the colonial world. Name one instance in Tim Wohlforth which Lenin or Trotsky urged or supported a war by any colony, c 1 i e n t state, or imperialist-dominated backward nat ion a g a ins t another. By Bolivia against Peru? By Iran against Turkey? Does Wohl- forth presume to bend reality (or his despised "concrete conditions") to fit Trotsky's pOSition on a fundamentally different issue so far as to as- sert that Pakistan is imperialist like the U. S. or Britain while India is Pakistan's colony in rebel- lion? A war between Britain and India is of course a different matter for Marxists than a war between Britain and Germany. But a war between one tin- pot semi-colonial bourgeoisie and another such bourgeoisie is not different in this respect from a war between two great imperialist powers. Nei- ther India nor Pakistan is a colony of the other. To the assertion that East Bengal had a semi- colonial relationship to We s t Pakistan, against which the Indian army made war, a Marxist would have to reply that Tanganyika was a colony of Hohenzollern Germany; Britain war red against Germany in WorldWar I-did Lenin support Britain against Germany? Or advise the Tanganyikans to invite British control to aid" the war against Ger- many? He supported the right of the Irish to ac cept continued on next page 8 Continued from PlIge 7 WAR AND THE WORKERS LEAGUE G e r man arms-that did not amount to German control of the republican movement. (Because of "concrete reality," again, Wohlforth.) But Lenin certainly did not urge the Kaiser to send armies to Ireland, which would have mea n t trading the 'British yoke for the German, and one cannot con- ceive of a statement from him, "We Bolsheviks critically support the decision of the Hohenzollern government to send arms to the Irish rebels." He did not support no matter how critically the un- supportable motives of the German government; he supported the independent and entirely differ- ent motives of the Irish rebels, who were so situ- ated that the German "help" was not occupation or control-their struggle remained independent. In fact Trotsky's quote above comes down on the opposite sid e of Wohlforth's position. Does Trotsky favor the assistance from the subject In- dian nation to Britain in its war? He condemns the Indian nationalist leaders for that policy-and he would have condemned the Bengali nationalists' support to the adventure of conquest by the Indian bourgeoisie. Fourth point: in the "Conclusions" section of Trotsky's "An Open Letter to Comrade Burnham" from which Wohlforth tore a quote, stands a para- graph his sup p 0 r t e r s would do well to ponder. W ohlforth lumps the SL with Shachtman in alleged disregard for prinCiple, for theory, for veering about according to petty-bourgeois impression- ism. Trotsky said: "The politics of a party has a class character. With- out a class analysis of the state, the parties and ideological tendenCies, it is impossible to arrive at a correct political orientation. The party must condemn as vulgar opportunism the attempt to de- termine poliCies in relation to the USSR from inci- dent to incident and independently of the class nature of the Soviet state. " The WL owes an explanation of why it is necessary to pro c e e d from the class nature of the Soviet Continued from PlIge 4 There were chargeof bureaucratic manipula- tion, seXism, etc. within the ranks of the RBers since many prominent among the "red party now" tendency had originally been callers of the con- ference. The inner politics of the Red Balloon bore a curious similarity to the old inner circles of RYM/SDS. The mass organization presumably operated on the basis of "participatory democra- cy" which in practice meant anarchy up front and manipulation behind the scenes by the real deci- sion-makers who met in continuous secret ses- sions. In SDS it took the form of the National Of- fice Collective (Klonsky-Coleman-Dohrn) un til Weatherman formed their own leadership group in the Weatherbureau and successfully contested the NO for power. Stalinist-Third Worldist politics are doomed from their own internal contradictions to endless vacillation from sectarian partyism to opportun- ist movementism and back again. Weatherman at a certain point proclaimed itself the embryo of a "fighting red army" and then after a few quick defeats hid underground. Unable to link the party to the class through a transitional program and transitional organizations in a principled way, the RBers, as all Stalinists, rely on maneuvers. Under the pall cast over the Conference by our initial agenda fight, the RBers met in a selective and exclusive caucus (the SL/RCY was voted out WORKERS VANGUARD "'hat Lenin Thought of the Chargt' In 1915 Lenin wrote a polemic against the Italian social chauvinists who urged Italian entry into World War Ion the side of Britain and France. Our quotation begins with Lenin's paraphrase of the reformist position of a certain Barboni: "Neutrality is a narrow-minded ego ism, a non-understanding of the international situation: it is baseness towards Belgium, and 'absentee- ism', and 'the absent are always wrong' says Barboni, entirely in the spirit of Plekhanov and Axelrod. But since there are two legal parties in Italy, one reformist and the otheraSocial-Demo- cratic labour party,and since in that country it is impossible to fool the public by covering up the nudity of the Potresovs, Cherevanins, Levitskys and Co. with the fig-leaf 0 f Chkheidze's Du ma group or of the OrganiSing Committee, Barboni frankly admits the following: 'From this point of view I see more revolu- tionism in the activities of the reformist social- ists, who have been quick to realise the enor- mous importance that such a change in the poli- tical situation [in consequence of a victory over state in determining our attitude toward its mili- tary moves, yet we stand condemned as reaction- ary empiriCists when we proceed from the class nature of the Indian state! Wohlforth as Merlin The obscurantist, now- you- see- it- now- you- don't character of the "dialectic" developed by Stalin and Mao and adopted by Healy and Wohlforth could not possibly be illustrated more clearly than by the following syllogism, all parts of which are taken directly from his "Spartacist Rediscovers Shachtman." 1) The IC 0 pen 1 y offered "critical support" to the military move of the Indian bour- geois government. 2) The SL urged revolutionary BuUetin German militarism] will have for the future anti- capitalist struggle, and who, with perfect con- Sistency, have espoused the cause of the Triple Entente, than there is in the tactics of the official revolutionary socialists who, like a tortoise, have hidden under a shell of absolute neutrality' .... "In conclusion, we would like to note that, con- fronted by a workers' party, Barboni attempts to use sophistry so as to play up to the workers' revolutionary instincts. The internationalist so- cialists of Italy, who are opposed to a war which in fact is being waged for the imperialist interests of the Italian bourgeoisie, are depicted by him as adherents of a cowardly abstinence, a selfish de- sire to hide from the horrors of war ... " - Lenin, "Imperialism and Socialism in Italy," Collected Works, Vol. 21, pp. 364-365. d e f tis m on both sides. 3) The S1 policy is abstentioll!); ism, i. e. , the SL di<;l. not t a k e a s tan 4)"Not taking a stand means standing with the b 0 u r g e 0 i s i e." 5)Therefore the S L stood with the bour- geoisie. Max Shachtman And so support of the bourgeoisie be- comes support of the working class; the call to workers to practice revolutionary defeatism be- comes support of the bourgeoisie. Even Kautsky, who had to mislead a more sophisticated audience, never / / ./ sank to an argument so stu- pid and patently illogical. Creature at left of Bulletin cartoon received Bulletin's "critical support" All the lies, all the twist- ed logic and the distortion of Trotskyist history, the 0 r y and tradition, all the sland- ers abo u t "Shachtmanism" peddled to his supporters, will not be enough to wash the bloody disgrace from Wohlforth's and Healy's hands. They deliberately turned a section of the work- ers movement, raw unedu- cated would-be communists, into recruiting agents for a bourgeois army. The de- generated Second and Third Internationals sol d out for far higher stakes; Healy- Wohlforth's betrayal will not win them janitors' jobs, much less cabinet posts
Red Balloon of the meeting) to map out a new Grand Strategy. The shift to the "red party" conception under the circumstances amounted objectively to and re- flected psychologically a cowardly desertion of the troops they had amassed from around the coun- try. The conference never really ended. It simply diSSipated, suggesting that the secret weapon in the hands of the local authorities was simply to let things go on as planned. In the minds of the incurably self-deceivingRBers, after appropriate "self-criticisms" the conference may appear to have "transcended" its e lf into a super pan-Red Balloon caucus of the really real revolutionists. Revolutionary Committee Chases Balloon Into this s warn p charged the knights of the "Revolutionary Committee" (recent splitoff from youth Against War and Fascism), who had busily been rousing the hopes of radically inclined prison inmates and others in the great prospects for the con fer en c e. The Revolutionary Committee at- tempted to save the day by rallying the demoral..; ized into the special caucus. This grouplet, which formed the left appendage and loyal opposition of the Red Balloon, has a penchant for taking up the cudgels of the lost causes of assertedly left Sta- linist bureaucrats after they have lost. They style themselves Marcyites without Marcy (YAWF head) who, according to them represents the real con- tinuity with Trotskyism (even tho ugh shorn of Trotsky); they simultaneously take up the banner of Lin Piao (real Maoism without Mao) only to find themselves vending deflated Red Balloons for the real balloon vendors who had themselves collapsed. The spectacle of the Red Balloon Conference differed from its RYM-SDS predecessor in anoth- er telling respect. Throughout the Conference one noticed a distinctly listless atmosphere. Despite all the prattle about "new" or "liberated" life styles, despite all the bizarre trappings of anarcho-freakism, the Red Balloon Conference showed itself unable to generate any real enthusi- asm for a return to the bankrupt New Left, whose best elements long ago transcended radical petty- b 0 u r g e 0 i s populism in favor of a proletar ian struggle perspective. Despite its built-in self-destruct mechanisms, the Red Balloon or something like it may someday get off the ground and hover for a time. Workers Vanguard encourages its readers to guard against such a potential nuisance by adopting a simultane- ous policy of conSistently laughing them to scorn while pro v i din g principled defense for them against state repression.. Insights useful for both tactics are offered in the free leaflet, "Pop the Red Balloon, " available from Workers Vanguard . Kpril1972 9 Continued/rom Page 1 CLASS A GAINST CLASS! Rule of Proletariat or Iron Fist of Reaction Today's struggles in Ireland pose two alterna- tives: either the revolutionary ripping away of the oppressive old state, not only the Orange but also the Green, and the wielding of secular state power by the united Irish working class; or else a coun- terrevolutionary blood bath as sectarian fascism seizes upon the chaos of militant struggles which disrupt bourgeois "order" but cannot bring down the bourgeois state. The for mer course would lead almost immediately to a revolutionary up- surge throughout the area and the possibility of creating a socialist federation of the British Isles, a 'spectre to terrify all of bourgeois Europe. The latter situation of prolonged social instability and violence is the present course of the Irish upsurge, fitting closely what Trotsky described as the con- ditions for a fascist overthrow of bourgeois de - mocracy, with its iron fist shattering all working- class organs of struggle. If the struggle in the North reaches the point of social overturn, with the working class directly t h rea ten i n g the rule of the imperialist-petty- bourgeois bloc, the old order will find its surest and most energetic allies in the Green Tories of Southern reaction. lVationalism: From Bomb to Rortfolio Ireland has not suffered from a lack of militant struggle. As in so many other instances, however, even the subjectively best of the Irish militants have soon stumbled over that most disorienting of all questions facing the workers movement: the national question. The splinter republican move- ment w h ~ c h led the 1916 struggles became, in Jhe space of a few years, a complacent and reaction- ary national ruling class. What arose in 1916 was both a foretaste and a warning, though insufficient and dis tor ted, for the social s t rug g 1 e s in Ireland now. Orange Needs Green The northern counties under the Faulkner gov- ernment at Stormont are integrated both militarily (direct army occupation since 1969 and direct po- litical control from last March 24) and structur- ally into the English state and economy (with its "welfare state" appendage). The Faulkner govern- ment enjoys a wide base 0 f support among the northern Protestant majority, petty - bourgeois and working-class alike. If it is true that the regime's support derives in large part from the fanning of age-old obscurantist anti-Catholic prejudices, it is n eve r the 1 e s s also true that the clerical- reactionary "Green Tory" Catholic s tat e in the South appears to northern working-class Protes- tants not as a liberator but a san oppressive menace, worse than Faulkner and the British. So long as the South remains what it is, the observer must not allow either distaste 0 f Stormont and London nor sympathy for the centuries of wrong done the Irish Catholics to obscure the fact that Protestants in the North as a bloc stand unalter- ably opposed to unification with the present Eire. No revolutionary strategy which does not take ac- count of this elemental fact can be anything but dangerous phrasemaking. How strong and uniform this Protestant sentiment is can be gauged by the fact that the present government came to power one year ago as opponents of the former Premier, Chichester-Clark, 0 n a "get-tough" pro g ram aimed at the IRA and Catholic agitation for civil rights. This reactionary mass sectarian attitude is the result -orprevTous British machinili6-ns= "Playing-the Orange card," in-Churchill' s phrase- but !! ~ no longer British J2..Q!l9'. The sectarian mentality of the Protestant masses is today fed primarily by the immense gift to sectarian dema- gogy offeredby Th e-reacTIOnaryand rnTser.lbly poor state in the South. The present intranSigence of the northern Protestants in fact stands as an obstacle io the present preferred British imperi- alist pol icy toward Ireland-the dismantling of direct rule in favor of a federal, neo-colonial so- lution for all Ireland as the countries go into the European Economic Community. ""'" L Gould The national question is the stumbling block of the Irish revolution, and Irish nationalism divides the working class and is hence reactionary, i. e. nationalism must be smashed by working-class unity-this much is true, but a partial and one- sided truth. Nationalism will remain and grow if the leaders of the working class do not eliminate its appeal through a recognition of the reality of national oppression and a working-class program to combat that oppression and the national back- wardness and chauvinism it engenders to the great profit of the bourgeoisie. To demand recognition of the right to self- determination, i. e. the right to seccession and a separate state, does not imply that Marxists nec- essarily advocate that the workers actually take such a step. For Ireland, Marxists m us t pu t forward a series of linked demands against the existing op- pression;some will be expressions of the ultimate goal of communist unity a c r 0 s s present state boundaries, while 0 the r s represent an interim need to undercut nationalism through offering hard guarantees to the sectors of the working class presently pitted against each other. FOR THE RIGHT OF SELF-DETERMINATION FOR AN INDEPENDENT, DEMOCRATIC ULSTER -FOR THE UNIFICATION OF IRELAND IN A COMPLETELY SECULAR, DEMOCRATIC IRISH STATE; THEREFORE NEITHER ORANGE NOR GREEN BUT A WORKERS REPUBLIC! Through posing the first demand, we seek to cut across the legitimate aspects of the Protestant workers' fears of domination by the present, clerical re- actionary state in the South. We do not recognize a "right" of the Protestants to bpt for unity with Britain-t h e policy jus t imposed by Heath-as such a connection by definition guarantees con- tinued 0 p pre s s ion of the Catholics; hence the "independent" qualifier in the slogan. The demand is an assertion of independence from all traces of the Green Tory nationalism which illegitimately claims solidarity w i ~ h the plight of the oppressed Catholics. The first tlemand facilitates the reali- zation of the second, in fact, is indispensable to it; far from being counterposed, one is essential to the other. FOR THE RIGHT OF SELF-DETERMINATION FOR THE CELTIC FRINGE; FOR A SOCIALIST FEDERATION OF THE BRITISH ISr.ES. We stand for the right of all the nationally oppressed Celtic minorities-including the Bretons in France-to secede and form their own states. The twentieth century, the time of the utter exhaustion of the old progressive role of. the bourgeoiS states, is not the time to complain of the "divisive" and partly utopian character of such moves toward independ- ence; at the same time we urge these minorities to resist a separatist course, but acknowledge and defend their right to do so. The socialist federation of the British Isles is the only long-term solution, inasmuch as a work- ers' uprising in any part of the area must lead immediately to Civil war throughout the region. The chances of victory for the proletariat in such a struggle will be immensely enhanced if the ad- vanced workers are known by all sections of the masses to have disassociated themselves entirely fro m all "great" -nation c h a u v in ism through their emphatic recognition of the right to sf>lf- determination. The response of the British working class to the plight of the Irish, expressed through the above linked demands, is more immediate an issue due to the interpenetration of the Irish workers among the British and the relationship of the Irish econ- omy as a whole to Britain. Ireland remains today one of the poorest countries of Europe. To escape Irish squalor many Irish workers emigrate, and a large number seek work in Brita: , Hot only Ireland's products, but also 'Ireland" sons and daughters go to Britain. Despite the heavy emi- gration, however (Ireland is the only European country to have experienced a net loss in popula- tion in the last century) unemployment remains heavy in both Ulster and the South. During the "boom" yea r s of World War II, for example, Ulster unemployment dropped to "only" five per cent. The figures for 1966 place Ulster unemploy- ment among insured persons at 6.1 per cent, far above the 1. 5 per cent rate in the rest of the U. K. The rate for Ulster Catholics, however, has been about twice as high. The extension of the British "welfare state" to Ulster has tended to depress the desire of both Protestant and Catholic to emi- grate; in the South, however, due in part to the less extensive social welfare schemes, emigra- tion, though lower in the late 1960's, had reached a figure of around 60,000 annually in the 1950's. The Irish workers, concentrated mainly in the less sec u r e and lower-skilled jobs, may well prove to be the most militant section of their class throughout the British Isles. Less stultified than some of their English counterparts who have lived through a century of the dead-handed labor bu- reaucracy, the Irish workers in England and in Ireland may, like the new industrial proletariat of late TsaristRussia, prove more bold in action. An additional reason for coupling the demand of self-determination rights for an independent, democratic Ulster with the demand for a unified Ireland under workers' control and the perspec- tive of a socialist federation of the British Isles is to limit the reactionary-chauvinist potential in the genuine fear among the relatively skilled, rel- atively well-off (by low Irish standards) Protes- tant workers of the loss of their shabby but real benefits from the British welfare state. The at- titude of Ulster Protestants to their limited but real economic advantages-even in that backwater of a b a c k war d British economy-is somewhat analogous to the fears of white American workers t hat any advance in the condition of the black workers under capitalism will come at the ex- pense of the middle and upper layers of the work- ing class. What makes this mentality in Ulster especially hard to crack is the existence of a state boundary marking off Ulster from the other sec- tion of British-European capitalism's backyard in Eire, and hence the absolute necessity to deal with the national question. FOR AR ME D WORKING-CLASS DEFENSE AGAINST MASS TERRORISM, NOT ONLY THE ORANGE BUT ALSO THE GREEN! The terrorist units of the IRA, tog e the r with the Protestant vigilante organizations must be met oy the un- continued on next page 10 Continued ... CLASS A GAINST CLASS! compromIsmg resistance 0 f the working class. The popularity of the IRA and the whitewashing of its policies on this question by the left has con- tributed substantially to the false mass appeal of the two wings, especially the Provisionals. The issue of mass terror is not simply a dispute over "tactics"-it is fundamental to the evaluation by revolutionists of a group's class composition and program. The IRA is no more deserving of the support of professed revolutionists than a group of black nationalists in the U. S. conspiring, for example, to pour gasoline into the crowded New York subway system-however much the left does, and must, solidarize with their rage. Pabloist Confusion Although it has sup po r ted the Provisionals since, the Red Mole organization (section of the "United Secretariat of the Fourth International," nom ina 1 friends of the American SWP) origin- ally supported both contending wings of the IRA, giving the left anobject lesson in the patent ab- surdities to which uncritical enthusiasm for cur- rently popular petty-bourgeois formations leads. In the April 1971 Red Mole Bob Purdie, a leader of the British Pabloists, wrote regarding the split in the IRA and the various tactics used: 'We support both against British imperialism, and defend their right to take action against the British occupation forces. We have political differences with both, but we support their struggle uncondi- tionally, as is the duty of every British Revolution- ary. We recognize both as the vanguard of the op- pressed minority. We support them, and we support that minority when they attack British troops. We support them when they throw stones, when they throw petrol bombs, and when they shoot at British troops. Unconditionally." Behind the verbal militancy of Purdie's passage stands the utter bankruptcy of Pabloism as a Marx- ist strategy and the lack of any program whatso- ever for the consummation of the Irish revolution. It is the duty of every socialist to support every struggle of oppressed peoples against imperial- ism, just as we support every s t rug g 1 e of the working class against the employers; that goes without saying. This is true, furthermore, regard- less of whatever criticisms one may have of the course followed at any given moment. If Purdie had intended to say this, and nothing more, we would have no quarrel with him. But then he goes on to say that "we recognize both [IRA wings] as the vanguard ofthe oppressed minority," that "we support that minority ... unconditionally." mentors is not enough. Nor is barricade rhetoric or mere activist militancy adequate. To be sure, no one fit to bear the title revolutionary can possi- bly oppose the reflexive reaction of the oppressed- the street fighting tactics, the shooting of occupying soldiers, the periodic upsurge of rebellious vio- lence, and the rest. But no matter how justified, such e pis 0 des must not become a substitute for revolutionary political struggle. Without the knowl- edge of what to do next -that is, without a program, a conscious plan of action-the struggle will simply waste itself in secondary considerations." This point is crucially important where a de- veloped revolutionary vanguard exists embryon- ically or not at all. Marxists are neither Blan- quists nor spontaneists; revolution, in the epoch of proletarian revolution, is a SCience, and the role of the Marxist party is to direct and lead it in a SCientific, con sid ere d fashion. Perhaps even more relevant in this regard than the Commune is th e lesson 0 f Bolshevik experience during the "July Days" in 1917, four months before the Oc- tober Revolution w hen revolutionary Marxists possessed infinitely more influence than they do today in Ireland. At that time the Leninists posed an armed working-class demonstration in Petrograd and, where prohibition failed, took the lead themselves to channel the action into rela- tively pea c e fu I directions. They sought to re- strain an incident which could have led to .re- mature insurrection and the resultant beheading ,.- '1" WORKERS VANGUARd Spartacist Local Directory BERKELEY -OAKLAND. Box 852, Main P. O. , Berkeley, Calif. 94701. phone: 848-3029. BOSTON. Box 188, M. 1. T. Sta., Cambridge, Mass. 02139. phone: 321-3826. CHICAGO. Box 6471, Main P. 0., Chicago, Ill. 60680. phone: 643-4394. DENVER. (contact New York) EUREKA. Box 3061, Eureka, Calif. 95501. HOUSTON. (contact New York) LOS ANGELES. Box 38053, Wilcox Sta., Los Angeles, Calif. 90038. phone: 467-6855. NEW ORLEANS. (contact New York) NEW YORK. Box 1377, G. P. 0., New York, N. Y. 10001. phone: WA 5-2426. SAN DIEGO. Box 22052, Univ. City Sta., San Diego, Calif. 92122. phone: 453-1436. SAN FRANCISCO. Box 40574, San FranCiSCO, Calif. 94140. phone: 826-8259. STONY BROOK, L.1. Box 654, Port Jefferson, N. Y. 11777. phone: 246-6648. WASHINGTON,D.C.-BALTIMORE. phone: 223-1455. (PARIS, France.-phone 887.67.13.) Our conclusion is drawn not only from Red Mole's strategic outlook, but is buttressed by the observation in Purdie's sentence, "we support both [IRA wings] as the vanguard of the oppressed minorities." Both!! Two vanguards, and ... nei- ther of them a Marxist party! If Lenin were not already dead he would hang himself! The IRA Split We will do as Purdie did not and look to the programs of the contending IRA wings to see what each wants. Is there a class difference between We support the just struggles of the Irish against imperialism, just as we sup p 0 r t the victory of the Vietnamese revolution against imperialism and its Asian allies-unconditionally, in the mili- tary sense. We support neither in anY"uncondi- tional" sense for their pol i c i e s, because their existing programs are blueprints for proletarian defeat. Nowhere does Red Mole offer an analysis of the IRA program, the necessary tarting point for any political (programmatic) conditional 0':' unconditional support. The Pabloist policy is blind, rhetorical enthusing over current struggles and nothing more. Youths flee yet another bombing in bleak Belfast them? In the last analy- sis, rhetoric aSide, there is-the Provisionals find their base in and rest upon pet t y - bourgeois I r ish nationalism, ob- j ectively operate as a militant extension of the clerical Free S tat e in the South and find their main enemy in the Eng- lish presence in Ireland. The Officials are more formally MarXist, stressing the I e ad i n g role of the working class, calling for a soc- ialist republic, and nam- ing the enemy as capi- talist imperialism. (It is probably not accidental that the front page head- line of the August 1971 Red Mole reads: "For the IRA Against British Imperialism," limiting the enemy to Britain in the fashion of the Pro- It is the further duty of every Marxist to advise against outbreaks or incidents which run counter to the interests of the class and the socialist rev- olution. Enthusing over mistakes, on the ground that any rebellious motion on the part of the op- pressed is de facto "objectively anti-imperialist" is a betrayal of leadership. The history of class struggle is filled with examples of the revolution- ary party advising against actions which it con- sidered foredoomed to defeat, while nevertheless participating in tho s e which unavoidably broke over its head. It does so in order to prevent the movement from being led up a blind alley. and to use its influence to advocate switching pressure to another flank, forming defensive actions, etc. Marx's attitude toward the Paris Commune is a model. He warned the French proletariat against the pre mat u r e uprising, yet enthUSiastically threw himself and the First International behind it, offering advice, criticisms, defense w hen it nevertheless took place. The SL commented con- cretely on this problem in March 1971. In "The Irish Upsurge and the Cliff Group" we wrote: "But a vicarious emotional identification with the o p pre sse d Irish fighting back against their tor- of the workers movement by triumphant counter- revolution. The Bolshevik decision was a conscious one, determined by concrete analysis of the situation and ass e ssm en t of the strength of the various class alignments, the influence and preparedness of the party, etc. We would ask Purdie and the Pabloists: Was Lenin wrong? If he was right, how by your policy of enthusiastic support of every flareup, no matter how motivated or calculated, that occurs in North Ireland, could you implement your "political criticisms," i. e., how could your organization, with its poliCies, intervene to pre- vent actions it considered to lead to disaster? Or isn't the end result of your Pabloist methodologi- cal premise .the assumption that the victory of the Irish Revolution is inevitable and onrushing, and the counterrevolution so weak that no mistaken tactics could play into its hands? We submit that the above conclusion is the only possible one to be drawn from the Red Mole's ------ analysis: the Pabloist thesis that the revolution is so strong it is inevitable in the present period. The "inevitable" conclUSion, then, would have to be: under these Circumstances, is no need !or party to lea? the revolutionary struggle in Ireland. Those who slipporfthe-v.cdoryonheRussianR evolution can only be grateful Lenin and Trotsky had a totally different conception of how to make a revolution and that the R ed was not around to join the reformist chorus on the irrelevance of the Bol- shevik party. visionals.) If it is in this sense Purdie supports both, he is saying the petty-b 0 u r g e 0 i s i e as a class plays a role equal to the working class in socialist revolution - an idea which went out the window when Marx sat down to write. If he does not mean this, then he cannot con sid e r class analysis important in looking to program. Two classes, two vanguards? The IRA wings themselves do not and cannot support even each other. Despite the particular issue the IRA split over-the traditional abstention from sitting in bourgeois parliaments, a pOSition both wings now repudiate-the differences were real and fundamental, and this is recognized by all involved. Their relations are acrimonious and have led to violence between them; the OffiCials, further, have accused the Provisionals of among other things functioning like provocateurs. When Purdie supports both, does he support their mu- tual charges against each other? Would he support "both" of the venemously hostile Black Panther wings? Even in thE' hest case, Red Mole is guilty of polyvanguardism, the assumpfion that there can be more than one vanguard 0 f the class in the struggle toward revolution. If we can again use the Russian Revolution as a touchstone, Purdie's position is similar to saying he supports "both wings" of Russian Social Democracy in 1917- Bolshevik and Menshevik, the wing which guided the working class to power and the wing which fought against it. To say under similar circum- continued on next page April 1972 stances-the fact of the matter is that neither IRA win g has anything approaching a revolutionary program-that one supports "both" is to say one hopes for the revolution by ... supporting counter- revolution! That such a position is the apotheosis of silliness is true; it is also true that such is the only possible conclusion one can draw from Red Mole's strategy for the Irish Revolution o -- Nonetheless, factually w e 0 w e Red Mole an a polo g y, and offer it her e. In the Spartacist League's leaflet, "The Irish Upsurge and the Cliff Group," issued one year ago, we stated that the Healyites a Ion e among the major British left groups had 0 p p 0 sed the sending of troops to Ulster. Our information was incorrect; Red Mole has convincingly demonstrated that the Healyite claim to the unique correct position on this issue was, once again, a lie. A group which must con- stantly misrepresent the positions of its opponents may be assumed to have nothing of value to say; and the Healyite Socialist Labour Lea gu e has veered in a short time from an ultra-"working- class" concentration 0 nth e Irish class issues alone, to tailing the "Irish freedom fighters"- moving from the meaningless abstract to the false concrete. ! Capitulating to Chauvinism be- The position of uncritical enthusiasm for the mA exemplified by Red Mole is the common thrust of most organized left tendencies. It has at least the merit of solidarizing subjectively with an organization who s e struggles are identified with the side of the oppressed, A less prevalent but equally skewed approach to the Irish national question is held by the "Workers' Committee" which enjoys the support of Progressive Labor in the U. S. Their sympathy to the Protestants' legit- imate fears of incorporation into a clerical state has led them into a qualitative capitulation to the oppressive mood prevailing among the Protes- tants. In are c en t leaflet titled "The Working Class Solution to the National Conflict in Ireland, " the Workers' Committee states: "As far as the national conflict is [sic] Ireland is concerned, the main enemy of the Protestant work- ing class is the Catholic caPitaTIst class. It is not me Catholic population at large. It is not the Cath- olic working class. When Gerry Fitt refers to Ul- ster Protestants a s "a million monsters" that is simply an expression of the racialism which is al- ways aSSOCiated, to a greater or lesser degree, with nationalism. And when John McKeague refers tot h e Catholic community as "animals," that is also an ex pre s s ion of nationalism. Nationalism derives from capitalism. The working class stands opposed to capitalism and to its ideology. " [our emphasis] In the 1 e a fie t 's list of d e man d s we find the ollowing: "The committee demands that the Southern govern- ment abandon immediately its claim to rule over the Ulster Protestants. It demands the cessation of all propaganda directed against the Ulster Protes- tant nation. "It is only when this demand is met that conditions will exist for the full implementation of democratic rights for the Catholic minority in the North. The events since 1968 have made it quite clear that the masses will-not abaildOll their defences against the of the Catholic nauonalists un- til the latter abandon their attempts to bring the Ulster Protestants under their domination. It would be futile to expect otherwise. The succession of Unionist governments since 1968 have found that out to their cost." [our emphasis] Of course there is Protestant reaction and nation- alism and Catholic reaction and nationalism. We have attempted here to sketch the symbiotic re- lationship of the two. But our opposition to nation- alism, and to all bourgeois ideology, must never blind us to the distinction between the chauvinism of the oppressor and the chauvinism of the op- pressed. The working class is indeed obliged to eliminate those features of the Eire state and so- ciety which feed fear, obscurantism and reaction among the Protestant working masses. On Home Rule and Rome Rule Prevailing illusions about the benign, if bour- geois character of the state of Eire justify some examination of so m e of that state's particular features-well known, we may be certain, to the frightened and confused Protestants of Ulster. Eire is more than a nation which happens to have an overwhelming Catholic majority, It may be worth the space to quote article 44.1.2 of the Eire constitution on the relationship of the state to the Church of Rome: "The State recognises the special poSition of the Holy Catholic Apostolic and Roman Church as the guardian of the Faith professed by the great ma- jority of the citizens." On the family: "41.2.2'-The State shall, therefore, endeavor to ensure that mothers shall not be obliged by eco- nomic necessity to engage in labour to the neglect of their duties in the home. "41.3.2" -No law shall be enacted providing for the grant of a dissolution of marriage." Eire has the dubious distinction, therefore, to be one of the few places in the world prohibiting di- vorce, going even so far as to prohibit marriage between par t n e r s one of whom was legally di- vorced in another country (like Britain and Ulster) ! An event described by Liam de Paor in his ex- cellent book Divided Ulster serves to illustrate
the sort of thing in Eire which powerfully aids the Orange movement in whipping up anti-Catholic hysteria among Protestant workers. In 1950-51 occurred a scandal, widely publicized in the North but also in the South, in which the Minister of Health, a Dr. Browne, was forced to resign un- der strong pressure from the bishops and sub- sequently published the correspondence relating to his "Mother and Child Health Service" scheme which had aroused the intense opposition of both the hierarchy and his own party. The published correspondence revealed not only the predictable views of the hie r arc h y on sex education, the family, and public health care in general, but also the view of the then Prime Minister, Mr. Costello, who stated in a letter to Dr. Browne: " ... I understand that you have not replied to His Grae's letter. I am afraid you do not appear to realise the serious implications of the views ex- pressed in that letter, since you have, by adver- tisement and otherwise, continued to publicise the scheme to which objections have been taken. Such action might well seem to be de f ian c e of the Hierarchy .... "I have no doubt that all my colleagues and, in par- ticular, yourself would not be party to any propos- als affecting moral questions which would or might come into conflict with the definite teaching of the Catholic Church." This particular affair served not only to provide much grist for the propaganda mills of the Orange sectaries on the religious question, but also gave the working-class Protestants a glimpse of the sort of public health service-if any at all-they would enjoy under Green rule. Eire's book censorship is fairly well known; the list of banned books includes the works of Ire- land's best-known twentieth century author,James Joyce, Contraception, of course, is officially non- existent. But saying this is not to deny that the primary oppression in Ulster is that visited by the Prot- estants (including many Protestant workers) upon the Catholics; that this chauvinism was skillfully nurtured for centuries from London for its im- perialist ends; and that the 0 p pre s s ion of the Catholics in the North feeds Green Toryism among the Catholic masses even more than Green Tory- ism inflames the Protestants. Marxists in Ulster dare not evade their p rim a r y responsibility at home to solidarize in all ways including militarily with the s t rug g 1 e s of the Catholics for equal rights, To justify a betrayal of this elementary duty by oblique references to the "defences" of the Protestant masses without pointing out thflt such "defences" have verged on pogrom-which is why the Catholics originally welcomed British troops- represents an extreme case of accomodation to the backwardness of one's own working class, Black nationalism in the United States, even of the relatively honest and independent Black Pan- thers, has undoubtedly strengthened Wallaceism among the white workers and petty bourgeoisie. But we do not equate the chauvinism, the obscur- antist delusions oj the black nationalist movement with white we fight against both, It may even be true that most white workers will not be won to a program of common class struggle until the oppressed blacks prove to them that such is their perspective; the Ulster Protestants may not slough off their chauvinism until the Catholic 11 workers in Ulster and Eire abandon all their bourgeois-clerical illusions-but it ! not the :lim of Marxists!..o Rrolong the gDp Qf sectarian chau- vinism on the consciousness of relatively grivi- !eged workers Qy rationalizing their chauvinism! The "main enemy" of the Protestant workers is not the Catholic capitalist class, It is their "own, " Protestant and British, capitalist cia s s and its petty-bourgeois defenders! All the capi- talists are enemies of all workers everywhere, but the main battle of workers in one nation must always be a g a ins t their own bourgeoisie-only thus do they offer to their class brothers abroad a serious promise of their internationalism, that they do not stand with their own capitalists, mask- ing their stand wit h class-struggle ph r a s e s, against the workers of other countries, A revolutionary policy in Ireland a s every- where must begin "at home," For southern Ire- land, a struggle must be fought first and foremost against the bourgeoiSie and its religious-national trappings there, Only a Leninist-Trotskyist party in the South which has proven its complete inde- pendence of clerical reaction and the nationalist fantasies in which Ireland abounds can win the support of the Protestant workers and the British working class as a whole, The Protestant work- ers must, as a minimal gesture of good faith to the Ulster Catholics and all Irish workers, give un- stinting military support to the demands of the Catholics for equal rights, while maintaining the sharpest criticism of t hat movement's narrow limitationso Ireland will remain tottering for the foresee- able but not indefinite future,as ithas since 1969, on the brink of a revolutionary criSiS, lacking on- ly the subjective factor, the Leninist vanguard party, The Irish struggle could be the spark of proletarian revolution in the British Isles and Europe- it nearly was before-or the Irish re- sistance may once again, through its own nation- ally circumscribed conceptions, fall to misguid- ed herOism, and another dramatic failure 0 f primitive zeal in capitalism's last years, American leftists infatuated wit h "struggle" devoid of program would do well to look at Ireland today. Ireland has not lacked for heroic struggle- but the end result is the present one-a sectarian client state of British imperialism in the North and a scarcely less naked, client state in the South, mired in the "ould sod" of ignorance and clerical reaction, Neither e sse n t i a 1 policy can be carried on without the creation of an Irish movement dedi- cated to rebuilding the Fourth International-the struggle to assimilate and propagate the bitter revolutionary lessons of the pas t half century, Such a section will face the duty to combat both the revisionism of the unstable, contending sec- tions of the United Secretariat and the Healyite English SLL, whose limitless opportunism tem- pered by thuggery has earned them a reputation merited pr eviously only by Stalinists, On the level of mass work, the principal task of Marxists in Ireland in the nearfuture will have to be political- ly destroying the IRA in both its wings, while- and by means of-giving them full support against the armies, courts and in tel' n men t camps of Britain, Ulster and Eire, The fighters in the Irish reSistance, first and foremost the men and women of the IRA, can find their place on the proletariat's side in the Irish and British revolutions only if they are won to Leninism by a section of the reconstructed Fourth International in Britain and Ireland, The alterna- tive is intensified sectarian conflict and the as- sured victory for British and all European capi- talism in a barely refurbished, perhaps newly dismembered, Irish client state, Marxists m us t restrict their support, even critical support, to groups in the Irish struggle w hi c h sup p 0 r t the main thrust of each of the linked demands: FOR A SOCIALIST FEDERATIONOF THE BRITISH ISLES, FOR THE RIGHT OF SELF- DETERMINATION FOR THE CELTIC FRINGE, DOWN WITH MASS TERRORISM, NOT ONLY THE ORANGE BUT ALSO THE GREEN! FOR THE RIGHT OF SELF-DETERMINATION FOR AN INDEPENDENT, DEMOCRATIC ULSTER, THE ENGLISH OUT! FOR THE UNIFICATION OF IRELAND IN A COMPLETELY SECULAR, DEM- OCRATIC IRISH STATE; THEREFORE NEITHER ORANGE NOR GREEN BUT A WORKERS REPUBLIC! SDS
In Rightward Plunge The rightward motion 0 f Progressive Labor and SDS continues to deepen. Backing off from its earlier impulse toward a hard if elemental class- conscious stand, PL/SDS has turned toward ac- comodation to the "peace" popular front, to the SWP-dominated right wing of the women's libera- tion movement, and to lowest-level liberal moral- izing exemplified in SDS's cur r en t anti-racist textbook campaign. The latter single-issue orien- tation is the prime focus of the SDS National Con- ventionAgainst Racism held on March, 30 through April 2 at Harvard University. Even in its pro-working-class days, the PL- dominated Worker-Student Alliance SDS was dis- tinguished by low-level demands (non-Slip mats for cafeteria workers, etc.) and by a studied re- fusal to acknowledge its socialist politics even when asked. Now SDS abandons even its subjec- tive, moralizing and parochial concern for a sec- tion of the working class (campus workers) in favor of subjective, moralizing and parochial ap- peal to the academic allies of the liberal bour- geoisie. The anti-racist t ext boo k campaign focuses on racism as "the main way people are oppressed today f' [New Left Notes flyer, 6 No- vember 1971J. The main oppression in capitalist society, and the root of all special oppression, is wage slavery, but the current campaign steers clear of this issue out of fear of being denounced as socialist. Moreover, as the n am e indicates, the anti- racist textbook campaign does not even focus on the most significant and pervasive expreSSions of racism in American society, but rather on the threat posed by conservative academic ideologues like Shockley and Herrnstein to the liberal "anti- Continued/rom Pllge 3 racist" academics who oppose the new theories of inherent b I a c k inferiority but who support the same system as do the neo=racisfs. SDS' cam- paign could at best attract the sympathy of aca- demic liberals, but it cannot alleviate in the least the miserable conditions imposed upon blacks in the United States. PL's idealism and academic fixation lead it to maintain that white racism flows from the belief that blacks are genetically inferior. In reality, white r ac ism and its a c company ing belief in black inferiority are the reflection and attempt- ed justification in white consciousness of the ac- tual material oppression which blacks are forced to endure. Better-off social groups always tend in bourgeois society to regard with fear and contempt those less well-off, especially when they see a struggle on the part of the latter for an equality which seems to threaten their own share of the limited capitalist "pie." Only a higher sense of class interest and loyalty in the working class- the understanding that even the limited gains of sections of the class are endangered by the spe- cial oppression of other groups, the large "re- serve army of labor," etc. -can counter racism on a mass scale. Perhaps the most ominous feature of PL/SDS' s idealist single-issuism is the solution proposed to end racism in the academic world: pressure on university administrations, with their direct ties to the ruling class, to fir e racist professors. Reactionary and racist ideologues must be com- batted, but by the students, faculty, and workers demanding student-teacher-campus worker con- WORKERS VANGUARD trol of the schools, To demand that the adminis- tration take up the task is to invite the liberal and even the conservative bourgeoisie to cut the budg- ets, tear up union contracts and restrict enroll- ment on the convenient ex c u' s e of a campaign against raCism, as in the New York Teachers' Strike of 1968. Needless to say such measures only confirm the fears of whites and drive them to support of racist demagogues who warned them all along that the blacks and liberals would de- stroy their jobs and futures. The Spartacist League and R evolutionary Com- munist youth place the following demands on the SDS Convention: I. This conference con d em n and reverse SDS' concentration on the anti-racist textbook campaign as a conscious adaptation to academic liberalism, and reaffirm an anti-imperialist, pro-working- class 0 r i e n tat ion by openly declaring itself socialist. II. This conference condemn and reverse SDS' support for NPAC and SMC and its demonstrations as representing an alliance with the liberal wing of the ruling class. III. The main form the oppression of blacks takes is their concentration at the bottom of American society. The struggle against racism must con- centrate on fighting concrete acts and practices of racial oppression, rather than simply opposing racism as ape r vas i v e soc i a I attitude. This struggle must necessarily be linked to that of the w 0 r kin g c I ass as a whole and to the fight for socialism . RCV Class Series On the Russian Question The class series will deal with the degeneration of the Bolshevik Revolution and the class nature of the Soviet Union, as well as the struggle to rebuild the party of the proletarian revolution in the U. So S.R. on the program of political revolution which will restore workers' democracy and proletarian internationalism. Classes will be held at Columbia University at 7:30 p. m. on alternate Tuesdays, begin- ning on March 28th. For more information, and to get a reading list for the class, write: RCY, Box 454, Cooper Station, New York, N. Y.10003, or call:(212)831-30040r (212)925-2426. Workers League, Labor Committee Guard SWP-Liberal Left Flank tion .. " and which proposes schemes for "recon- verting" war industry into "productive" endeavor -which in the absence of the struggle for prole- tarian revolution is as utopian as the Biblical ex- hortation to beat swords into plowshares. Their elaborate taxation proposal, with its infatuation with state debts places them clearly as disciples of Proudhon, not of Marx. As Engels said of the Proudhonist fetish wi1jl debts and taxes: .. 'State debts! ' The working class knows that it did not make them and when it comes to power it will leave the payment of them to those who contracted them 'Taxes!' A matter that interests the bour- geoisie very much but the worker only very little. What the worker pays in taxes goes in the long run into the cost of production of labour power and must therefore be compensated for by the capitalist. All these things which are held up to us here as highly important questions for the working class are in reality of essential interest only to the bourgeois, and still more so to the petty bourgeois; and, de- spite Proudhon, we maintain that the working class is not called up 0 n to safeguard the interests of these classes." -Engels, The H.QJ.lliillgQuestion , Part One: How Proudhon Solves the Housing Question Further, the NCLC hacl nothing more to say about the Vietnam war than that the U. S. should get out "immediately and completely," a program they share with McGovern-Muskie and the SWP. Instead of exposing the futility of parades and pro- posing a means for the working class to fight im- perialist war (for example by strike action) the NCLC indulges in ethical exhortation for NPAC and SMC to assume their "inescapable moral re- sponsibilities" to become "embryonic soviets." The NC LC rhetoric r e e k s 0 f moralism and a middle-class, reformist, bloodless conception of class struggle. The Workers League's Bulletin report on the SMC conference asserts t hat a WL spokesman said: "Never before has there been an anti-war conference that was in such open collaboration with the Stalinists and liberals." But the WL/YS (which always "takes sides" on matters like the New York police "strike" of 1 a s t year and the military m 0 v e s of the Indian bourgeoisie-i. e . supporting both) refused to "take sides" and ab- stained on the SL/RCY motion to exclude the po- litical representatives of the capitalists from the conference and the anti-war movement. When the WL/YS submitted a motion condemning the Ver- sailles Congress as Stalinist and a betrayal of the Vietnamese revolution, the SL/RCY submitted an amendment ext end i n g the condemnation to the bourgeois pop front SMC conference. The WL op- posed the amendment, thus itself "taking sides" with both Stalinism and the liberal bourgeoisie- in the SMC. This stand exposed their motion on theVersailles Con fer e n c e as cheap phrase- mongering. By refUSing to condemn a bourgeois- dominated popular front-and then calling on !! to to ~ o n d e m n a Stalinist-dominated conference-the WL motion amounted to red-baiting and Shacht- manite Stalinophobic posturing. Likewise the WL calls on the SMC to condemn the Soviet and Chinese bu rea u c r a c i e s. "Trotskyists" could offer no greater assistance to the Stalinists in retaining the loyalty of subjectively revolutionary workers than by see kin g a bloc with the class enemy to denounce St ali n ism! The bourgeoisie must be thrown out of the anti-war movement precisely so that the working class vanguard can struggle against the Stalinist class traitors, untainted by the hypocritical "anti- Stalinism" (anti -communism) of the bourgeoisie! The main thrust of the WL/YS resolution was its call to "support the SWP election campaign." Uncritical, unconditional, the WL swallows whole a campaign whose central thrust is social patri- otic paCifism, union-busting,"community control," "independent" nationalist Chicano and black par- ties which would constitute obstacles to building a labor party, petty-bourgeois feminism, student vanguardism, etc. The cam p a i g n is devoid of working-class con ten t and is indistinguishable from the campaign of a bourgeois politiCian like Shirley Chisholm, who is also for community con- trol, feminism, paCifism, etc. If the SWP is chas- ing after the various youth for Imperialism the WL/YS runs right behind them. The Bulletin report quotes a YS member as stating: 'Weare mobilizing the youth separate from the Stalinists and the capitalists to take power." This is sheer youth-vanguardist nonsense that w 0 u I d m a k e even Ernest Mandel cringe. Classes take power, not generations. youth for McGovern, youth for Lindsay. youth for Muskie are youth, too, and highly conscious of it besides. The "method" ofthe WL/YS is eclectic, opportun- ist, idealist pragmatism. We say: Smash the class-collaborationist SMC and NPAC -destroy the cam pa i g n hall for the politicians of imp e ria lis m! The NCLC and WL YS-which denounce the SWP 'YSA while en- dorsing or equivocating on the class purposes of its creation. NPACSMC-m u s t be defeated as left supporters of the structure the SWP has built for the bourgeoisie. -