The lessons of history

August 23rd, 2007 admin

George W Bush - the spoilt daddy's boy, formerly coke-snorting oil baron, election thief, onetime Texan chief executioner and today al-Qaeda's chief recruitment sergeant - remains one of the most intensely despised global hate figures in modern history. The actions of his thuggish administration have driven millions to the streets of every continent in some of the biggest demonstrations to have ever taken place. The chief representative of the most regressive elements of US society, he is most associated in the popular imagination with piles of corpses and rubble.

And yet - despite leading the most reactionary US administration of our times - he has always enjoyed allies in the political wing of the British labour movement. Tony Blair, of course, was the most prominent example; but aspiring Blairite hack Luke Akehurst is a more obscure but equally committed member of this tendency. Today he wrote a thoughtful post agreeing with the man humanity loves to hate - specifically, Bush's dubious comparisons yesterday between the 'American War' in Vietnam and the current US occupation of Iraq.

In agreeing with Bush's suggestion that US defeat in Vietnam was a tragedy that led to a huge tide of human suffering, Luke depends on the testimony of refugees who undeniably suffered at the hands of Hanoi's Stalinist regime and fled the country. He also makes a direct appeal to our socialist instincts by pointing out that the Communist victory eventually produced a perverse mishmash of Stalinist totalitarianism and unrestrained market forces. Effectively, the US abandoned its loyal allies in a civil war against a totalitarian menace that was to consume the lives of millions in Southeast Asia.

I happen to hold a rather different analysis of the US intervention in Vietnam. During the Second World War, a nationalist movement led by Ho Chi Minh emerged against a brutal colonial regime jointly led by Vichy France and Imperial Japan. Like many anti-colonial movements of this period, the predominantly peasant Viet Minh drew ideological inspiration from official 'Communism'; but, like other such movements, could only be understood primarily as a national liberation movement. Indeed, when declaring independence from France on 2 September 1945, Ho Chi Minh quoted extensively from the US Declaration of Independence. France immediately attempted to brutally re-assert its direct colonial control over Vietnam with the support of the US government. The US was fully aware of the overwhelming support of the Vietnamese people for the movement for national liberation; indeed, US President Eisenhower himself privately conceded that Ho Chi Minh could well have won up to 80% of votes in a free election.

As the French faced defeat, the US increasingly assumed the role of the former colonial power. The US helped catapult into power and prop up the murderous South Vietnamese dictatorship of Ngo Dinh Diem - before they lost confidence in his ability to beat the Viet Cong and had him overthrown and executed in November 1963. Prior to his assassination, JFK dramatically increased the number of military advisors; but it was Johnson who used the effectively fabricated Gulf of Tonkin incident in order to send hundreds of thousands of US working-class troops to the Vietnamese graveyard.

During the course of the war, the US carpet-bombed Southeast Asia, slaughtering up to three million civilians and ravaging an already impoverished country. Human rights abuses were rampant: we've all heard of the My Lai massacre and that blood-curdling quote from a US officer that "We had to destroy the village to save it." In reality, this was the tip of the iceberg: in a war against a peasant population that so brutalised them, the US army routinely burned villages to the ground and engaged in murder and rape of civilians on a mass scale. Infamously, the US army poured millions of gallons of Agent Orange across the Vietnamese countryside in one of the most grotesque acts of chemical warfare of the postwar era: today, thousands of Vietnamese civilians still suffer from the devastating effects.

Luke regurgitates the myth propagated by every imperialist country that loses a war: that it could have been won if there had been sufficient political will. This sort of myth is most famous for circulating among the German hard right after World War I: it has similarly been propagated by the US hard right since their country was booted out of Vietnam. The fact is the US was waging war against an unbeatable national liberation movement supported by millions of peasants in alliance with a brutal and despised South Vietnamese dictatorship. The antiwar movement in the US escalated as it became clear that the war was unwinnable (which top US generals began to realise as early as 1968 following the Tet Offensive) and therefore thousands of US soldiers were pointlessly dying in a fundamentally unjust war. It was a product of defeat: not a cause of defeat.

Yes, out of the chaos of the war emerged Pol Pot in Cambodia. Firstly, Cambodia was a country devastated by US bombing: indeed, the US dropped more bombs on the country than all the Allies did in the whole of World War II. Hundreds of thousands were exterminated as a result in a horror that was to be overshadowed by the crimes of the Cambodian tyranny. Secondly, Cambodia was liberated from the horror of Pol Pot by the Vietnamese army - an act opposed by the US government who actually voted at the UN for the Khmer Rouge to remain accepted as the legitimate government of the country. Indeed, the US actively encouraged Chinese support for Pol Pot's forces.

And yes, crimes were committed by the victors of the Vietnam War. Terrible though they were for those affected - such as Thanh Vu - they were not even on the same scale as the nihilism of the 'American War'.

Luke echoes Bush in drawing parallels with Iraq today. In his view, if the US were to withdraw from Iraq, there would be devastating bloodshed in the country, millions of Iraqi refugees and the possibility of the country turning into "an anarchic warzone of ethnic cleansing", or resuming dictatorship, or falling under Iranian domination.

Once again, I think it's fair to say that me and Luke have a different reading of modern Iraqi history. I'd argue that the Ba'athists came to power with the help of the CIA, who even helpfully provided them with lists of names of Communists (who were then efficiently slaughtered). Saddam's regime received military and economic support from the West during its war against then-Middle Eastern enemy number one, Iran. It then overplayed its hand by attempting to annex a country led by another dictatorship which happened to sitting on top of a huge oil supply, thus potentially threatening US dominace over the Middle East's natural resources. After Iraq was devastated during the Gulf War, the West then subjected its people to possibly the most extreme sanctions regime ever directed at a country with the death of at least a million civilians (deaths Madeleine Albright infamously referred to when claiming that the "price is worth it").

We all know the story since 2003. The US - shamefully, in alliance with our own government - launched an illegal war against Iraq using a false pretext. According to a peer-reviewed Lancet report, around 650,000 civilians have perished as a result - around 250,000 of which were directly killed by occupying forces. In the first year of the occupation, the risk of violent death increased 58 times as compared with the rate that existed under Saddam's tyranny. Torture, arbitrary arrests and civilian massacres at the hands of US forces and their client militias are everyday occurences in post-Saddam Iraq. Furthermore, the occupation has helped to open sectarian fissures and served as a magnet for terrorist squads that have indiscriminantly attacked Iraqi civilians - and helped to radicalise Muslims not just in the Middle East, but right across the globe.

I've already made my case for the immediate withdrawal of occupying forces: a withdrawal which can't come a day sooner.

Yes, there are parallels between Iraq and Vietnam - but not the ones that George W Bush and Luke Akehurst would like to draw. Both are unwinnable wars in which the US has used its unparallelled force against a civilian population with the resulting deaths of hundreds of thousands.

What Luke suggests will take place if the US withdraws has already happened - because of the fact the US is occupying the country. Millions of Iraqis have become refugees because of the war; US-promoted sectarian fissures have helped to provoke growing intercine sectarian warfare; Iranian power in the country has - undeniably - drastically increased because of the invasion; and violent chaos reigns supreme, with the occupying troops and the jihadis they have produced both inflicting terrible bloodshed on the country.

I'm not going to pretend that Iraq will become a bed of roses when the US withdraws. It won't - the devastation caused by the war is simply too great. But it will certainly be the beginning of the end of Iraq's current nightmare.

And if anything comes from the killing fields of Iraq, it has to be two words: never again.

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All eyes on Scotland

August 19th, 2007 admin

(I know, I know, I said that I'd be back blogging again... But hey, it's August and nothing much is going on. However, I will now be back blogging - and this time I mean it...)

Today, the Scottish Campaign for Socialism (CfS) - the organised Labour left in Scotland - meets in emergency session to discuss fielding a candidate against well-connected Brownite ultra Wendy Alexander in the impending Scottish Labour leadership election.

In true Brownite fashion, the Scottish party hierarchy is determined to avoid an old-fashioned democratic contest in which party members and trade unionists actually have a say in the future of their party - despite the fact that Alexander has the support of around 7% of Scottish voters. Fortunately, the left thinks differently. A statement issued by the CfS yesterday cited Alexander's "refusal to rule out privatisation of the Scottish water industry and her commitment to continuing with the economic madness of PFI/PPP in the public services" as a reason why "it is important that a candidate should come forward to challenge the failed policies of the past..."

Elaine Smith MSP (the convenor of the CfS) was in no doubt about what sort of issues a democratic contest should focus on: "We want to talk about issues like PFI, like bus re-regulation and transport in Scotland, like sustainable economic jobs. We want to talk about affordable housing. We want to talk about Trident in Scotland." These are, of course, issues that are close to the hearts of Scottish Labour party members and trade unionists - and the Brownite clique are only too aware of this.

What are the chances of the left actually winning if MSPs don't follow the example of the PLP back in May and veto a contest (6 MSPs are required to nominate a candidate)? Better than you may think. A poll of Scottish party members even before the Iraq war showed massive disillusionment with New Labour. In March 2003, only 33% of party members - in the supposed heartland of the Brownite machine - supported Gordon Brown as Blair's successor. Furthermore, party members expressed their belief that New Labour cared more about the middle classes and big business than the working class and unemployed. Such was their alienation from New Labour that 45% of members never attended local meetings. The situation today can only be worse from the perspective of the New Labour clique.

Opposition to Trident in the Scottish Labour party is so great that no Labour MSP could bring themselves to vote for renewal in a vote in June 2007: the majority abstained while 5 MSPs voted against.

Equally, a left leadership candidate would win thousands of votes in the affiliated unions. Take UNISON Scotland, which represents 150,000 workers in public services. In direct contrast to the rightwing Prentis mafia that rules the roost nationally, UNISON Scotland's LabourLink voted to support John McDonnell if he made the ballot paper. Other affiliated trade unionists could use an election to stand up against unpopular Brownite policies such as PFI or the war in Iraq.

Furthermore, a Scottish Labour party led by the left could sweep to power. This is a country in which, in the recent elections to the Scottish Parliament, the Tories only managed to win 13.4% of the seats. The SNP managed to win not least because they postured to the left of Labour on a whole range of issues. Excluding the Lib Dems, parties claiming to be left-of-centre won three quarters of the Parliament's seats.

Policies supported by the left enjoy huge support in Scotland. Two thirds of the population support immediate withdrawal from Iraq; there is overwhelming opposition to privatisation; and a large majority oppose Trident.

To put it simply: a left-led party represents Scottish Labour's best chance of kicking out the Nats and reclaiming power. A democratic contest would involve currently demoralised party and trade union activists and boost Labour's standing in the polls.

The political conditions for the Scottish Labour left are better than they have been for years. The Scottish Socialist Party - which sucked out so many socialists from the Labour party into what (unsurprisingly) turned out to be a political deadend - is in total collapse. A leadership campaign would revitalise the Scottish Labour left.

Not only that, but it would prove an inspiration and morale boost to a British Labour left still suffering from confusion and disillusionment after the Brown coronation shock. A Scottish Labour leadership election could help renew the Labour left on a national scale.

So, who's the candidate going to be? My own preference is Elaine Smith - a deeply principled , high-profile socialist who openly backed John McDonnell's leadership campaign from the beginning and did everything she could to help. However, I defer to the choice of Scottish comrades. Bill Butler may be the only left candidate who can get the nomination of 6 MSPs
- and if so, we must wholeheartedly support him.

If a contest isn't vetoed by Labour MSPs, then I hope that a left leadership campaign will look to the best aspects of the John4Leader campaign: a forward-looking campaign promoting 21st socialism that avoids the 'Old Labour' trap; a thoroughly grassroots campaign; and a sophisticated internet campaign.

First Scotland, then...

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The Brown bounce

August 2nd, 2007 admin

(Firstly, apologies for the lack of blog updates... Hopefully I'm now back up and running...)

Since the coronation of Gordon Brown as unelected leader of the Labour party, Labour's poll rating has shot up. One recent poll put Labour on a whopping 41% and the Tories on only 32% - which, if translated into seats at a general election, would double Labour's majority.
What does this mean? There is no denying that Gordon Brown has been underestimated by both his enemies on the left and right. In the age of "politics without the politics", it was easy to unfavourably contrast Brown with his undeniably charismatic precedessor. For example, during John McDonnell's leadership campaign, I repeatedly argued that Brown would be "Blair without the charisma" - and I was far from being the only one.

On the right, Blairites and the Tories conspired together in an attempt to force David Miliband to stand. The Tories had not-very-subtle but surprisingly little noted motives for doing so: as Michael Portillo recently admitted, "The Tories pretended to be afraid that David Miliband might win (and noisily set up a stop-Miliband unit, like some second world war decoy), hoping to lure him into the fray." Portillo himself was part of the conspiracy; the Torygraph was one noisy media supporter of the campaign; and prominent Tory blogger Iain Dale wrote a piece arguing that Miliband is "the Labour cabinet member most Tories fear." In actual fact, the Tories knew that Miliband didn't have even the remotest chance of winning - but they believed that, given the lack of real political differences between Brown and Miliband, such a contest would have focused on Brown's alleged personality flaws. Brown would have emerged victorious but damaged - and all the mud thrown at Brown would have been regurgitated word-for-word by Cameron. Very clever.

Clearly, Brown has been underestimated as a political operator. He doesn't have Blair's charisma, but he's cleverly spun a new style: softly softly, "a safe pair of hands", and pseudo-consensual. The substance hasn't changed, but the style has - including the the rhetoric on foreign policy (Iraq, the "war on terror", the relationship with the US) and privatisation of public services. For many in the Labour party and trade union movement, the Blair era was like being repeatedly beaten by a violent mugger. The Brown era is more like being mugged by a sweet-talking pickpocket - it hurts less and it's less clear what's actually going on, but the result is just the same. This is exactly what makes Brown more dangerous. This is a Labour prime minister who has parachuted in to Government the rightwing bosses' leader Digby Jones and proposed an unprecedented attack on the Labour party's remaining democratic structures - but the left (still confused and disorientated after the leadership defeat) looks more impotent than ever.

Indeed, Brown has conducted a series of political masterstrokes that has sidelined critics on both left and right. How can the Tories and Blairites accuse Brown of moving to the left when ultra-Thatcherite Digby Jones is in his Government? How can the left argue that Brown represents no change from Blairism with this new style that he's adopted? With these sorts of tactics, he makes us on the left and our rightwing enemies look like irrelevants sniping from the sidelines. Unfortunately - with one striking exception - our enemies are cleverer, more organised, more united and more tactically aware than the parliamentary left.

Part of Brown's genius is that - how many civil servants he's sacked, services he's privatised and outsourced, or wars he's funded and despite co-founding New Labour - he's managed to appear distant from the policies of the Blair era, in large part because of his famous long-standing entirely personal rivalry with Blair. Blairism conjures up images of visceral hostility to the unions, rampant pro-Americanism, privatisation, and pro-war adventurism. Try as we might on the left, "Brownism" (at present) just doesn't conjure up these sorts of connotations. Even now, some on the left have illusions in Brown. One leading leftwing Labour party figure is going round telling people that Brown "is one of us" and a "Labour party man through and through" in contrast to the "alien" Blair - despite going much further than Blair by including Labour's arch-enemies in the Cabinet.

But there are more profound reasons for the so-called "Brown bounce". In actual fact, it is more of an "anti-Blair bounce". Labour's poll began to rocket as soon as Blair resigned, even when apparently contradictory polls seemed to show that Brown would actually diminish Labour's poll lead. Blair has effectively been a lameduck prime minister since the Iraq war. Millions of Labour's natural voters had grown to detest him. Mr Blobby could have been Blair's replacement and Labour's poll would probably still have rebounded.

At the same time, there are deepseated reasons for the crisis in the Tory party that have nothing to do with the alleged superficiality of Cameronism. David Cameron is one of the most charismatic Tory leaders in modern political history. The problem he faces is that, firstly, middle-class Tory voters have never had it so good: under New Labour, their wealth has reached unprecedented levels. That's why they don't have the same burning hatred of Labour that millions of working-class voters had of the Tories in the 1980s and 1990s: after all, they had suffered mass unemployment, the massacre of traditional industries, impoverishment, the end of job security, the disintegration of their local communities and other disasters.

Secondly, capital continues to have more confidence in New Labour than the Tories. New Labour carefully seduced capital during the famous 'Prawn Cocktail Offensive' masterminded by John Smith and Mo Mowlam; Brown has pursued pro-market, pro-business policies that have ensured a stable capitalist economy under which profits have boomed. Much of capital doesn't take Cameron seriously, doesn't see a pressing need to switch back to their traditional Tory allegiance and is more than happy to have a supposedly social-democratic government imposing capitalist policies, thus sidelining any potential critics.

Thirdly, the working-class Toryism which boomed in another period is all but dead. It's difficult today to even imagine that Northern working-class cities such as Liverpool once had Tory MPs. The entire city of Manchester today has no Tory councillors. The Tories After being smashed by the all-out class war of Thatcherism in the 1980s, burning hatred of the Tories still runs strong among millions of working-class people. This understandable terror of the return of the Tories ironically helped to sustain Blairism - like the pigs in Animal Farm who warned the animals that the alternative to their rule was the old farmer.

Of course, things could change. The current credit-fuelled boom could collapse. Inflation could continue to rise. Interest rates could rise further and produce middle-class hostility to New Labour.

However, I'm going to make these predictions. Firstly, there will be a general election in the not-too-distant future. Secondly, Labour will win the election with a similar majority as today. Thirdly, David Cameron will resign as Tory leader and leave Parliament. Fourthly, David Davis will be his only viable replacement. Fifthly, there will not be another Labour leadership contest for at least 6 years. Such a contest will be bittersweet for the left: there won't be an obvious successor in whom the trade union bureaucracy and softer left have illusions in (like Brown) - but there will be fewer left MPs and the soft left will be more likely to run their own candidate (probably Cruddas - who has gone very quiet since the deputy leadership contest).

Oh - and sixthly - Michael Meacher's leadership ambitions will continue unabated. You think I'm joking. Seriously, I'm not.

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