BY
RICHARD INGRAM
Links #22
New Course Publishers, Sydney 2002—128 pages, $8 each or $39 for
six issues
Order at <links@dsp.org.au>
Available from Resistance Bookshops (see page 2) or visit <http://www.resistancebooks.com>
The latest issue of the international socialist journal Links
focuses on the US war drive as it has developed since the 9/11 terrorist
attacks in New York and Washington. The cover headline asks “What's at
stake?”. The articles explore that question, not only in terms of immediately
threatened military confrontation but also in terms of the class struggle
in a number of countries.
The lead article, by Dipankar Bhattacharya, general secretary of the
Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist), is entitled “A war to defeat,
a world to win”, indicating that for socialists this is a time not only
of challenges but also of opportunities.
While the collapse of the Soviet Union and China's turn to the market
offer major opportunities for the expansion to capitalism, Bhattacharya
writes, “this expansion could be achieved only by aggravating the internal
contradictions” of the system — especially the contradictions between imperialism
and the Third World. The movement against capitalist globalisation, which
has not been derailed by the post-9/11 imperialist propaganda, is a sign
of the unmanageability of those contradictions.
Malik Miah, Barry Sheppard and Caroline Lund examine the war drive and
the “Bush Doctrine” from within the United States. They point out that
the offensive of US imperialism has been in preparation ever since the
collapse of the Soviet Union removed a major restraint on US military adventures.
Bush's “axis of evil” rhetoric indicates the US aim of suppressing any
opposition to its global dominance, while the suppression of civil liberties
within the US aims to cut off any possibility of domestic resistance.
But while there are notable similarities between the present offensive
of US imperialism and that of the 1950s, Miah, Sheppard and Lund also note
important differences.
Chief among them within the US is the different economic circumstances.
In the 1950s, political and social conservatism was underpinned by US capitalism's
ability to make economic concessions to the working class: “Prosperity
was a factor in the majority support among workers for the Cold War and
the anti-communist witch-hunt.” By contrast, “Since the end of the post-war
boom in the early 1970s, there has been a capitalist offensive against
the living standards and organisations” of the US working class.
Links also provides analyses of struggles and contradictions
unfolding in this new international context in five countries: Indonesia,
Vietnam, Zimbabwe, South Africa and Russia.
Pembebasan, the magazine of the People's Democratic Party of
Indonesia, provides an analysis of the growth of mass struggles as a result
of both increasing poverty and the Megawati Sukarnoputri government's attempts
to restrict democratic rights.
“The experience of four years since the fall of Suharto showed that
bourgeois government is unable to put an end to the crisis”, Pembebasan
points out. Therefore “the mass of people ... must start to realise that
their power of resistance, demonstrated in a host of struggles, has the
power to replace the Megawati government with a government that is free
from imperialist interests and New Order remnants”.
In a detailed and informative study, Michael Alexandros examines the
question, “Where is Vietnam heading?”. Alexandros outlines the competing
forces that are seeking to increase or restrict the role of the market,
and the ways in which this battle intersects with other social and political
questions.
Munyaradzi Gwisai, a leader of the International Socialist Organisation
of Zimbabwe, provides a concise history of that country's labour movement
as a background to recent developments, including the rise of the opposition
Movement for Democratic Change and the re-election of Robert Mugabe as
president. He explains how the ISOZ, despite being a small and relatively
new organisation, has been able to intervene in and influence national
politics (Gwisai was elected to parliament on the MDC ticket.)
In South Africa, as in much of the world, the neo-liberal offensive
has involved systematic efforts to privatise public services such as education,
electricity and water supplies. Particularly in the Third World, privatisation
quickly results in the poor being deprived of these services. Patrick Bond,
the author of a number of books on Southern Africa, describes a movement
that has arisen to resist these attacks by “decommodifying” necessities.
Boris Kagarlitsky, whose insightful work on post-Soviet Russia appears
frequently in Links, is represented by “What remains of Soviet culture?”,
which is an intriguing study of a question that has many implications for
future political developments.
Also in Links #22 are reports on the second Asia-Pacific International
Solidarity Conference in Sydney and the meeting of the European Anti-Capitalist
Left in Madrid.
This is an issue filled with thought-provoking and useful material.
From Green Left Weekly, January 15, 2003.
Visit the Green Left Weekly
home page.