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PART THREE
The Second World War
Introduction
In the Introduction to the previous section, on the APCF and THE CIVIL WAR IN
SPAIN, we saw how the APCF, perhaps because of its anarchist orientation at that
time, fell into the trap of supporting one faction of the ruling class - the
democratic capitalists of the Republican Government - against another - the
fascist capitalists who sought to overthrow the government. Although for the
bourgeoisie the civil war in Spain was a success as a forerunner to the much
greater conflict which soon followed it, the APCF itself, as the articles in
this section show, managed not to be taken in be the mystification of
anti-fascism a second time around.
In Resist War!, the first article in this section, the APCF set out the
position which it adhered to throughout 1939-45: the cause of war is capitalism,
therefore the only way war can be ended for good is by the overthrow of the
capitalist system; this must be a world-wide revolution, since all the
capitalist states are aggressors from the working class's point of
view, and the workers can gain nothing from identifying their own
interests with those of their own or any other ruling class.
The APCF's revolutionary defeatist stance - stated succinctly again in the
short article on India - marked it out as virtually unique among the political
groupings of the time in Britain, and was another one of the many aspects of its
politics which clearly separated it from the so-called socialists of the
Communist Party and the Trotskyist sects.
The Communist Party's first instinct, in September 1939, had been to support
the war as anti-fascist, but within a month, on orders from the Communist
International in Russia, they had overturned this position and now opposed the
war as imperialist. Later still, in June 1941, after Russia itself had entered
the war, the CP reversed its position again and once more took to supporting the
war as anti-fascist. The CP's line from June 1941 onwards, and its
role in helping the war effort, are described and criticised in
this section in The Second Front and Freedom Of The Press.
As for the Trotskyists, they simply tail-ended every twist and turn of CP
policy; whatever disagreements they may have had with the ruling Stalinist gang,
in the final analysis they regarded Russia as a "workers state" worth
defending, and were therefore bound to the interests of Russian state capitalism
every bit as much as the CP was.
The APCF's analysis of Russia is worth mentioning briefly at this point. In
1935 the APCF had published a pamphlet called The Bourgeois Role Of Bolshevism,
which was a translation of the Theses on Bolshevism written by the Group of
International Communists (GIC) in Holland. In this text the GIC argued that the
1917 Russian revolution had been a capitalist revolution in which the Bolshevik
party had played the "bourgeois role" which the indigenous Russian
bourgeoisie had been too weak to fulfil itself. However, despite publishing the
Dutch group's Theses, the APCF did not share the GIC's views on this
issue. The APCF's own position on 1917 was the same as that set out by James
Kennedy in the article, Dictatorship, reprinted in the first section. In
contrast to the GIC, which had proceeded from a localist, country-by-country
point of view, Kennedy analysed the failure of the Russian revolution from a
world-historical perspective. The revolution in Russia, Kennedy argued, had been
a proletarian revolution, but, against the expectations of the Bolsheviks, it
had not spread beyond Russia. It was the isolation of the revolutionary workers
in Russia which within a few years led to the establishment of capitalism there,
under state control.
Whatever its precise origins, anyway, from around 1925 onwards the APCF had
begun to argue that it was state capitalism which existed in Russia, and not any
form of communism or "workers' state", so in 1939 the APCF was able to
see clearly that from the point of view of the working class the Russian system
was essentially no different from Britain, the USA, Germany, Japan, or wherever.
The APCF's opposition to all existing capitalist states therefore included
not supporting Russia in any way.
In the APCF's view, the existing nation-states were not only all equally capitalist,
but also all equally totalitarian, or at least tending to become so, in the sense that the state was now bringing under its control
ever-wider aspects of economic, social and political life.
This view was in part a rejection of bourgeois propaganda which portrayed the
Second World War as a struggle between democracy and fascism. The APCF argued
that the war was a struggle between 'democratic' and 'fascist' capitalists,
and that democracy and fascism were nothing more than forms of domination which
the ruling class could adopt or discard according to the needs of capital at any
given time.
However, the APCF was also making a wider observation: that totalitarian
state control was the political form which capitalism was universally tending to
adopt, and that the war was speeding up this process. This is essentially the
point of view on which Icarus's article on Events and Trends is
based.
The APCF's view was linked to a theory of capitalist 'decadence', some
aspects and implications of which are discussed elsewhere in this pamphlet in
the sections on PRINCIPLES AND TACTICS and PARTY AND CLASS. The political
features of decadence are touched on in the first section, in the articles To Anti-parliamentarians and The People's Convention. Briefly,
it is argued i~ these articles that democracy was the political form appropriate
to capitalism in its ascendant era of free competition, while totalitarian state
control was the political form appropriate to the decadent era of monopoly
capitalism.
Indeed, believing that parliamentary democracy was increasingly obsolescent,
and that the issue of parliamentary activity was therefore of rapidly decreasing
importance, the APCF proceeded to argue that to continue to call itself
'anti-parliamentarian' was now anachronistic. Consequently, in October 1941 the
APCF changed its old name and called itself instead the Workers' Revolutionary
League.
If the inevitable tendency towards state capitalism was developing as a
general response to the needs of capital in its period of 'decadence' and
permanent crisis, it was also being greatly accelerated by the specific needs of
capital during wartime; as the articles War and Fascism and FA Ridley's The Historic Consequences of the War argue,
'democratic' capitalism could only fight 'fascist' capitalism by becoming
'fascist' itself.
The APCF was certainly not short of evidence to sustain this argument, since
a whole battery of legislation was passed in Britain during the war designed to
give the state control over practically every aspect of economic, social and
political life.
Military conscription was introduced immediately, with all men aged between
18 and 41 liable to be called-up under the National Service (Armed Forces) Act.
One of the APCF's members, Willie McDougall, was for a while during the war
chairman of the Glasgow and West of Scotland branch of the No-Conscription
League, an organisation which arranged legal advice and mock tribunals for
war-resisters preparing to appear before the Conscientious Objectors Tribunals.
Many revolutionaries were imprisoned, some repeatedly, for refusing to comply
with the conscription acts.
In November 1939, Regulation 18B was introduced, giving the Home Secretary
the power to intern at his discretion, without trial, any persons of hostile
origins or associations" or anybody believed , 'to have been recently concerned in acts prejudicial to the public safety or the
defence of the realm or in the preparation or instigation of such acts". In
May 1940 the ~ powers were broadened to allow for the internment of any members
of organisations which might be used "for purposes prejudicial to the
public safety, the defence of the realm, the maintenance of public order, the
efficient prosecution of any war in which His Majesty may be engaged (!J, or the
maintenance of supplies or services essential to the life of the
community".
Also in May 1940, the Emergency Powers Act (EPA) was extended to empower the
Minister of Labour to direct workers and set wages, hours and conditions of work
in "key" establishments. Around the same time, the Conditions of
Employment and National Arbitration Order (known as Order 13O5~) was introduced,
which made strikes illegal unless a dispute had first exhausted, without
reaching any settlement, a stipulated procedure of negotiation involving the
Ministry of Labour and a National Arbitration Tribunal.
The Essential Works Order (EWO), 1941, introduced further state control over
labour power. Under this legislation a worker was obliged to give 7 days' notice
of resignation to his or her boss and to the National Service Officer, whose
permission had to be obtained before the worker involved could leave his or her
job. So rarely was this permission granted that virtually the only way workers
could leave workplaces controlled by the EWO was through getting the sack. The
EWO also legislated for the prosecution of workers for absenteeism and for
failure to carry out any reasonable order issued by the boss.
By the late summer of 1941 the reserve army of unemployed
had been virtually completely reintegrated into production
(or military service). Consequently, in December 1941 measures
were introduced allowing for the conscription of women aged 20-30:
mobile women (e.g. those without family ties or responsibilities) could be
directed to any area of the country where there was a labour shortage,
while immobile women were directed to employment nearer home. Women
entered the labour force in increasing numbers from this point
on, when the possibilities of increasing output through sheer weight
of numbers had begun to be exhausted, thus necessitating changes in
the actual techniques and organisation of production (e.g. dilution
of skilled work).
One effect of legislation of the sort outlined here was that by the end of
August 1943, 14072 men and 3067 women in England and Wales had been prosecuted
for of fences which would not have been punishable before the war; of these
totals, 1255 men and 199 women had been imprisoned.
At the beginning of 1944 the Bevin Boys scheme was announced, involving the
conscription of one in ten young men into coalmining rather than into the armed
forces. This provoked the apprentices strikes of March-April 1944, which were in
turn followed by the introduction of yet tougher legislation in the form of
Regulation 1AA, allowing for sentences of 5 years penal servitude and/or a £500
fine to be imposed on "any person who declared, instigated,
made anyone take part in, or otherwise acted in furtherance of a
strike amongst workers engaged in essential services".
Oppressive measures such as these, and their consequences for the working
conditions of the working class in Britain during the war, are mentioned in
several of the articles in this section, particularly War and Fascism. The
striking similarity between the position of workers in 'democratic' Britain and
fascist Germany can be seen by comparing the legislation described above with
the measures applying in Germany which Icarus mentions in Axis Workers Show Way.
All things considered, it becomes immediately apparent why the APCF should
have thought the following remark about war made by James Connolly in
October 1915 so pertinent as to reprint it in Solidarity 27 years later:
"In the name of freedom from militarism it establishes military rule;
battling for progress it abolishes trial by jury; and waging war for enlightened
rule it tramples the freedom of the press under the heel of
a military despot". (Solidarity June-July 1942).
Despite all this, workers in Britain were not completely cowed by
the onslaught of bourgeois coercion and propaganda, as
the following figures illustrate:
STOPPAGES OF WORK DUE TO INDUSTRIAL
DISPUTES
YEAR |
NUMBER OF STOPPAGES |
NUMBER OF WORKERS
INVOLVED |
|
1939 |
940 |
337,000 |
1940 |
922 |
299,000 |
1941 |
1251 |
360,000 |
1942 |
1303 |
456,000 |
1943 |
1785 |
557,000 |
1944 |
2194 |
821,000 |
1945 |
2293 |
531,000 |
However it is important that these figures are interpreted realistically.
Most workers in Britain did support the war, in the belief that they were
fighting fascism. What many of them were not prepared to tolerate was the resort
to fascist methods at home in order to prosecute the war. Workers would readily
resist their bosses and the state in order to protect their rights, wages and
conditions -but they did so within an overall political framework bounded by the
bourgeois mystification of antifascism.
All the same, even this economistic struggle had certain aspects which
revolutionaries found encouraging, since workers who were prepared to defend
their basic working and living conditions found their struggles opposed not only
by the bosses and the state, but also by organisations widely considered to be
on the side of the workers, such as the Labour and Communist Parties and the
trade unions. The lesson of this, that workers had to organise their own
struggles themselves, outside and against capitalist party and trade union
organisations, is elaborated by Icarus in The Turning Tide.
RESIST WAR
Workers! The Capitalist system - production for profit
instead of for use - is the cause of war! In the struggle for
markets in which to realise their profits, the Capitalists of the
world clash, and then expect their "hands" to become
"cannon-fodder"!
ALL, of the Capitalists are aggressors from the
workers' point of view. They rob you until you are industrial
"scrap", and will sacrifice you "to the last man" to
defend their imperial interest!
The British ruling class, who dictate by fascist
methods to the colonial workers and peasants, have got themselves in a fix.
Their infamous Versailles Treaty has rebounded like a boomerang -
as Socialists and Pacifists foretold at the time - and now they expect
the British workers to take the rap. Even so, they have not got the
decency to abolish the means test and other oppressive measures that
make life for the unemployed hell'. Millions for war and death,
but everything for life is grudged or withheld'.
Workers! Capitalism is a system of industrial
compulsion - the workers are forced to part with the right to proper
food, clothing and shelter. Their wages buy a mere subsistence. Now
they want to conscript us completely, industrially and militarily. They
may even feed us a little better, but it is only for the
"kill".Treat them with the contempt they deserve. Let
them defend their profits, their treaties with their own blood, not yours'.
They were indifferent when Abyssinian natives
were being massacred. China and Austria were disowned. Czecho-Slovakia was
betrayed. The Spanish Republic, with its glorious working class militants, was
refused all rights of defence - even of anti-aircraft guns. And now, these
allies defeated, they introduce conscription to fill the gaps - and to menace
the workers industrially'.
WORKERS! THE IRISH REPUBLICANS AND SOCIALISTS
PREVENTED CONSCRIPTION IN IRELAND during the last war BY A ONE-DAY GENERAL
STRIKE! Why not follow their example? Demand that your spokesmen call
a general strike!
Demand that the British ruling class, who have
helped to cause the present crisis as much as the others, abdicate to
the workers. We can solve the mess they cannot clear up'. The Italian
and German workers are restless. Don't drive them into the arms of
their rulers by supporting British Imperialism. Help them to rebel'.
DOWN WITH WORLD CAPITALISM, THE CAUSE OF WAR'.
DOWN WITH WAGE SLAVERY AND MILITARISM'.
WORKERS, UNITE AND FACE THE COMMON ENEMY
THOUGH WE MARCH IN DIFFERENT BATTALIONS, LET US STRIKE TOGETHER'.
CLASS BEFORE PARTY
HAIL THE DEMOCRACY OF THE WORKERS - THE WORKERS' ALL-IN COUNCILS OF ACTION'.
HAIL ANARCHISM - FREE SOCIALISM - THE ONLY HOPE OF THE WORLD'.
(May 1939)
JOHN M'GOVERN and WAR'.(extracts)
On Sunday evening, 15th October, a
very enthusiastic and successful anti-war meeting was held in St
Andrews (Grand) Hall, Glasgow, under the auspices of the
No-Conscription League, and despite lack of time for adequate
advertising, there was a large attendance.
John McGovern, on rising to speak, got a
magnificent reception. He said It was a great encouragement to see such a
large and enthusiastic audience. They were unfortunately in the midst of
one of the greatest tragedies since 1918. A war that no one knows
the length of or the end of. The policy so much urged of
"standing up to Hitler" had ensured war instead of averting
it, and this policy had been sponsored by, above all, those who had
deserted their old working-class positions.
Those who had opposed this policy had been called
traitors to the working class. ", said McGovern, "I have
been told since I was 18 years old that war had an economic cause -
the clash of interest of capitalists and financiers. I have always
been told that this clash of interest led to war, during which the
ruling classes were prepared to throw their working class into bloody conflict
to determine their share of the colonies, trade routes, etc, of the
world, and I have always believed that to be true. I have not only
been convinced, I have been 100 per cent certain that modern wars are
never for the defence of the common people but for the advantage of
the gangsters of each country. I therefore cannot support war unless I violate
my mental powers and become untrue to the things, I know and believe
in". He resisted the last war when he was of age to serve, and
now that he was over that age, he refused to hound the youth of this
country on to the bloody battlefields of Europe. They were told this
was a war for 'Freedom and Democracy. Was the ruling class which shot
down the workers at Tony Pandy in Wales concerned about freedom? Or
those who intervened on the side of the coal-owners against the miners
in 1926? They were prepared to see the streets red with blood because
the miners demanded a living wage. They have burned down cottages in
Ireland, in India, in Egypt and in South Africa. In Trinidad, 750,000
live on 2~d a day. Boys and girls of nine years have worked in the
mines in India, where for demanding the right of freedom 375 men, women and
children were shot at Amritsar. That is the same soulless,
hypocritical ruling class that are going to fight for freedom for the
people of this country.
These people did not object to Hitlerism when the German workers
were beaten in the streets and sent into concentration camps, and when
lysol was poured into their eyes. But when they see the rise of
a militaristic power threatening their colonial interests, their
loot, then the youth of the workers have to be trained and thrown into
bloody struggle in order to protect those interests.
The last time the victim was poor little Belgium, and the Kaiser
was the mad dog of Europe. Now it is poor little Poland, with Hitler
as the mad dog of Europe.
He would have them take a plebiscite for war and everyman
who voted for war would go on to the battlefield to fight it
(Loud cheers).
The trade union officials, in return for
recognition, were assisting in the speed-up of the workers of the munitions
factories, and, like the Labour Party, were also demanding places. He
cited the case of Tom Johnston as one of the worst sell-outs of the
war. This was the man who made his name by his anti-war paragraphs in
Forward. He had virtually disenfranchised his area by' having too many
jobs and was seldom in Parliament. How could Joe Westwood and Johnston
give service to the National Government and be members of the
Opposition against Chamberlain at the same time.
Greenwood and others wanted them to march against
Hitler, but the Army was going to march against the German working
class. They were going to murder them and allow them to murder our
boys.
McGovern said he met a man who was attached to
the French tank corps, and he gave him a harrowing eyewitness account
of the horrors of that type of warfare now going on in the Saar
region. He saw men who were wounded, trying to get out of the way of
the screaming monsters of wheels that were to crunch their bones and
bodies into pulp. He would never forget the horror of it. Yet we were
told this sort of thing must go on and on. If mothers and fathers
could only see and hear the groans and shrieks of the dying they would
realise that there is no glory in it and that no war justifies that
slaughter.
In Madrid he had seen the terrible effects of
even one bomb, where 57 bodies had been dismembered, with blood on the
walls, and heads, arms and legs intermingled with the debris.
These wars were for the selfish interests of the
ruling class; a sordid, soulless, material struggle for human gain. No
boy would ever march into battle through any fault of his.
If you believe in an Empire containing black and yellow
slaves, you could not deny Hitler's right to desire an empire also. If
it was right for us to have slave territories, Japan, Italy
and Germany were equally entitled to subdue and bribe native chiefs,
and so build up an empire. Hitler says: "If you don't agree, I
have nine million men ready to back me up". The French and
British retort that they have unlimited resources to defend their colonial
possessions. For this the workers are expected to murder one another.
They are taken from their slums to do the job and when it was finished
they were sent back to the slums, back to the Means Test, until they
were required again!
Until recently the CP were for this war 'for
democracy', but after 3 weeks their policy had again changed. Russia
had done a double somer (laughter) and the C.P. turn when 'Holy Joe' says
so (more laughter). It was a crazy world. France imprisons
her communists; Russia shoots them, and Germany liberates them (Loud
laughter).
Talking of "smashing Hitler" provoked
him to say "We must pay attention to our own Hitlers and let the
German workers deal with theirs. We must conduct the class struggle on
the home front. We must watch the profiteers, the landlords and so on "
McGovern 'brought the house down' with his
peroration - When it was said "we must fight to the last man" he
retorted: "I will fight to the last MP, to the last banker, to the
last landlord; I will fight to the last capitalist, the
last war-mongering bishop, the last editor of the last capitalist
newspaper; the last member of the House of Lords and the last member
of the royal family. If only these were left on' the battlefield the world
would be a much better place for all time."
(Mid-October 1939)
THE SECOND FRONT
by T. Nicolson
The advanced workers must elucidate the numerous questions which
are now arising with increasing sharpness, because the more
the workers understand and organise for the revolution, the less
the violence.
Let us concentrate then on the relationship between the
Russian situation and the situation of the workers here in Britain.
Since Russia is being attacked it does not follow
automatically that we support the present regime here. That is a
fallacious argument having its origin in the subservient, docile position
of the C.P. An alliance with Churchill and Co. means the preservation
of exploitation; for without this alliance Churchill would never have
encroached upon wages and the freedom of the workers without
serious repercussions. The Communist Party has cleared the way for
Capitalism's next stage, Fascism.
What is the C.P. programme? In short it is this. Russia
is being attacked, therefore let us get in line with capitalism,
support it forget the class struggle, we must have a second front
to alleviate the pressure on our Russian comrades. It sounds alright
but where will it lead us? Is it not a fact that the miners are
dissatisfied, that strike action is going on up and down the country,
that the workers' wages are being lowered by income tax and purchase
tax. Workers, working long hours, suffering ill-health from lack of
decent food, are being sent to prison for what is known as
absenteeism. Yet the boss is allowed to keep good coal seams till
after the war for further exploitation of the worker. Not one boss has been
sent to prison for retarding the so-called war effort; but the Glass
House is full, the Military Detention Baxracks are full, civil prisons are full,
young women are being thrown into jail for refusing war work. It is
only a fool, or those who don't understand, or who don't. wish to
understand the class struggle who would deny this fertile soil for
revolutionary propaganda.
The question arises: would the capitalist regime refuse to help Russia
if the C.?. didn't advocate it? It is obvious that British Imperialism
is disintegrating, it will do anything to save the sinking ship, why
not give arms to Russia to use against her greatest enemy Germany, and
so help to weaken her. The C.?. can shout from the house-tops for more
production, but Russia will only get what Britain thinks is necessary.
Russia is quite right in advocating a second front (with Stalin
visualising Britain as Imperialist Britain) but no revolutionary in
this country should act likewise. If Russia gives
certain guarantees to capitalist regimes, for instance, no
revolutionary propaganda, without also giving some guarantee to the
international workers, she has no right to even expect our
participation in a second front. If she gave the workers some stimulus
such as the complete smashing of the Hitlerite machine and the
inauguration of workers' control over industry, she might get some
support. Personally I think Russia, if she defeats Germany, must
demand that the workers set up their Soviets inside the German
factories. She will then have tremendous opposition from Britain and
America. Will the workers be able to switch over to the new tactics
after being schooled in the support Churchill Campaign? Does the C.P.
really think a second Confessional by Harry Pollitt will be all that's
necessary?.
The majority of the workers will fight the inevitable everyday struggle for
better conditions. They should be encouraged in this struggle, but all the while
we should be pointing out the historical mission of the workers - THE
ABOLITION OF THE WAGES SYSTEM
(June-July)1942
20 Year Pact
With a blaze of capitalist trumpets 20-year treaty between Imperialist
Britain and the USSR has been announced, the main terms
of which contain the following major blunders.
Germany and her allies are branded as the ONLY aggressors - a repetition
in advance of the "war guilt" clause in
the Versailles Treaty.
The continual harping on the necessity for COMPLETE
VICTORY, thus ruling out the possibility at any stage of
reasonable negotiations.
(A revolutionary government arising in Germany or any part
of Europe would not be allowed - if the Treaty could prevent it - to
make a separate peace).
Instead of the lesson having been learnt from the blunders
of Versailles, a SUPER VERSAILLES TREATY is visualised at
the conclusion of the present bloodbath.
Stalin accepts the capitalist view of what
constitutes "aggression The patent fact the British Empire is
founded on and lives by internal aggression against the British
WORKERS and external aggression and ruthless exploitation of the
colonial workers is ignored as if it did not exist. Instead of
so-called revolutionary Russia drawing forcible attention to the
present-day crimes of ALL imperialisms, Molotov publicly commits himself to
add the entire economic, political and armed forces of Russia to PROP
UP THE DYING CAPITALIST SYSTEM FOR TWENTY YEARS!
As symptomatic of the whole business Molotov travelled
about London in a closed car. Armed police accompanied him. Word went
round to sentries and other officials that 'no questions were to
be asked' about the identity of the man who hurried in and out of 10
Downing Street or the Foreign Office". No attempt here to contact
any of the WORKERS, much less the REVOLUTIONARY WORKERS by this
erstwhile revolutionist from the workers' fatherland!
(June-July 1942)
Freedom of the Press
and
the Daily Worker
by The Laird
The Ban on the Daily Worker ought to be removed: there is
no doubt about that. The Freedom of the Press is maintainable only
by fighting for it, even although it may seem that from a short view
point such freedom causes wrong roads to be taken, wrong paths to be
trod. However, wrong paths taken freely can be retraced freely. It is when
the wrong route is travelled because of sane vested or peculiar interest forcing
the way, that it leads to disaster and a procession of incorrect policies.
We must have an internationa1 as well as a national outlook on this though,
and, when we survey Willie Gallagher's fatherland we find that the Anarchist and
Workers' Opposition press was suppressed many years ago. The CPGB too Would
attempt to do likewise here if it had the opportunity.
Therefore it' is not on the grounds of freedom that the C.P. stake their
claim for the lifting of the ban. They want the ban lifted to help the
war effort. To be quite concise, they wish to
advocate more effectively for - longer hours, more production, greater
effort by the workers, the opening up of a second front: and all this to
take place under capitalism. Whom do the C.P. think Churchill is? Whom
do they think rule and control this country? To shout for greater
exploitation of the workers is to shout for a more efficient form
of capitalism and the next more efficient form in the catalogue is
Fascism.
Let us quote fron the Western Front Special issued by the
Scottish Committees of the C.P. (G.B.). "The Editorial Board of the
Daily Worker in a recent letter to Divisional Labour Parties, has made
it clear that it would lend all its effort to the policy of winning
the war, would aim to consolidate the unity of the democratic
alliance against Hitler and his satellites and would give every
support in the drive for increased production for the fighting fronts.
Furthermore the Editorial Board has declared that in the event of the
ban being lifted, and in the interests of national unity, they would
have no desire to revert to past controversies".
What a study in belly-crawling.' "Please sir, let us publish
our paper, and we'll allow the Labour Fakirs to lead the worker up
the garden and we won't say a thing; as long as we can publish our
paper, we will only attack the ILP, the Trotskyists, and the Left Wing
Communists".
Sure, let them publish the Daily Worker. It will be the
first thing to make the workers realise how far the C.P. has gone - TO
THE RIGHT THERE IS LIMIT.
(June-July 1942)
SOCIALISTS AND THE WAR
How often has it been said that it is the duty of all young Socialists
to go into the Army, that there is no alternative - one must go with
the workers into uniform and help to prepare for the day when
the holocaust is ended by the action of the masses?
The value of military training is indisputable, if we take
as our standpoint that Socialism will be achieved, not by a
peaceful evolution from Capitalism, but as a result of an elemental
struggle. The success of such a struggle, however, depends on the participation
of the vast masses of workers in the Army who have had military training those
who at first entered the Army under the influence chiefly of the
bosses' propaganda. Whether or not a handful
of revolutionary Socialists receive military training will make
little difference one way or the other.
The real question is: should revolutionists enter imperialist armies to
influence the soldiers? Those saying they should, hold that where-ever the
workers go (to church? to Hell? Why not to prison also, then?) the
Socialist should follow; young Socialists should go
with their generation... to the grave, and, if they think they can
help to keep it from the grave, they must, nevertheless, shut up and
obey orders. That is the traditional view. The object of such a course
is plain enough; that correct leadership must be given when
mass opposition to the war develops, and in the meanwhile carry on
Socialist propaganda in the army.
How is that to be done. Cases have occurred in which
soldiers have been discharged for the mere possession 6f
Communist literature, let alone for openly advocating a Socialist
struggle. And it must be clear that military authorities will not
regard with detached benevolence the consistent spreading of
revolutionary thoughts and literature. It follows that, in general,
work under such conditions must entail the watering down of these
ideas to such an extent as will present no danger to the authorities. That
leads one to ask whether entry into imperialist armies for this purpose is
worth while at all.
To come now to the assertion that it is necessary to
have revolutionaries in the army in order to give correct leadership when
the crisis comes. Only if an army is entirely insulated from civilian
life is that true. (And then nothing can be done, since a mere
handful of revolutionists would be powerless).' But there are few
instances in history when an army was hemmed off entirely - apart.
from professional or foreign troops. In the French and Russian
revolutions it was not possible to prevent civilian politics penetrating
the army. Thus, when the time arrived, the efforts of the more forward
spirits among the troops were exerted in the right direction. Ordered
to fire on "the mob", some refused, thus serving as
"the crystals in a saturate solution" as Trotsky put it. In
his "History of the Russian Revolution", Trotsky ref ers to
these nameless heroes who came out against their officers' orders They
were almost certainly not members of the Bolshevik party, and if they
had been they might have been expelled, as "efficient. soldiers"
in obeying orders. (Trotsky says that the Bolshevik strives to be the
best soldier. First duty of a soldier is obedience.) It is thus untrue
to say that initiative cannot arise from the ranks. On the other hand,
one must admit that the presence of authentic revolutionaries at such a
time could not but better the position slightly (in proportion to
their numbers). The point I wish to make here is that their presence
is not vitally necessary for the army to come over to the side of the
revolution.
If it is a hard-and-fast rule that Socialists should go wherever
the workers go, then we must presume that this applies equally to the
bourgeois-controlled army, bourgeois-controlled political parties, or
any other political parties,. not excluding the Fascist parties, whose
mass basis in Germany, especially, was formed largely out of
the workers.
It is well known that Fascism (as also militarism) is characterised
by an "intolerance" towards opposition. In what manner,
therefore, would revolutionary Socialists enter Fascist parties?
Certainly not for the purpose of peaceful education'. They would enter
them, if they entered them at all, as a 5th column on
behalf of the revolution. Can we not draw a parallel in the case of
imperialist armies?
Those advocating the traditional military policy
seek justification 'by the formulation of various seemingly
progressive demands. For instance, the Fourth International calls for
military training of the workers under trade union control, financed
by the Capitalist state. This is advanced as a slogan for rallying the
workers, notwithstanding the fact that it is unrealiseable without first
achieving' the Socialist revolution, whilst after the revolution such a course
would depend upon circumstances. Such slogans are unsuited to
present-day realities. Again, quite a fetish is made around the demand that
workers should learn "military arts",. and be trained as
officers. Surely,. if bourgeois governments have steeped their peoples in
this training, they have done so in their own interests, and for the
purpose of using the worker-soldiers as their pawns?
It is foolish to take the ostrich-like attitude that this process
of large-scale militarisation is really a blessing in
disguise simply because it seems likely to facilitate a forceful
overthrow. It should not provide subject matter for rejoicing, but
should, rather, arouse the wrath and detestation of sincere
revolutionists. For militarism crystallises the worst feature~ of
Capitalist inequality, oppression and rampant violence.
Though it is right to point out that humanitarian laments are of
no avail, it is fatal to ove"rlook the fact that the policy
behind this militarisation is the policy of the ruling classes,
and that militarisation is intended to accustom the masses' to
submissiveness and ready obedience. This, in turn, leads to a
psychology which would be, to say the very least, unfavourable for a
flowering of real workers' democracy. Rather would it encourage the growth
of the stifling fungi of bureaucracy and' despotism all over again. On this
triple count, therefore, militarism should be resisted in every
possible way.
So much is the military aspect stressed by some revolutionaries,
that one is led to wonder whether they are not more intent on
being good soldiers than Socialists. As if to reassure us, in the
same breath as they' declaim against inefficiency, desertion
or.conscientious objection, they call aloud for fraternisation'. Yet
does not this (the greatest danger to the ruling classes, and
doubtless condemned in every army manual) amount to the most wicked
indiscipline? One cannot have it both ways: either one is against
fraternisation and desertion, or for both. And when Lenin referred to
the Russian army "voting for peace with its feet", this' was
a bad thing? In this war Italians are said to desert en masse, because
they do not see the point in fighting. Our "Socialist
militarists" would presumably be foremost in shooting down these
unfortunates. Otherwise they would not be the "best soldiers" ...
To draw a parallel between factory and army and to say that the worker
has no choice but to accept the discipline of both, is unsound. Whereas
economic pressure forces the worker into the factory and makes him
"accept" its discipline, the direct class violence of
the bourgeoisie herds workers into the army, and trains them to
kill their brothers. That is the distinction. There is a choice, even
if legally it is limited: army or prison. And if that is so, it is
better that the individual Socialist decide for himself since the
whole matter is reduced to one of personal conditions.
There seems to be a tendency for many erstwhile
revolutionaries who have passed military age to "see why"
they were quite wrong in their youth. Palme Dutt, calling for mass
slaughter on a second front, was, in the last war sent down from his
University for Socialist peace propaganda. Morrison's former speeches
and writings would now be subjected to 2D, and their author to 18B for the
duration. Their revolutionary "opponents" of the Left agree with them
on the need for "obeying the historical process" by advocating that
workers obey the bosses' orders to go and slaughter other workers. (Is that,
incidentally, the "only true" Marxist policy? Were not Leo Jogiches,
co-founder of the Polish Social Democracy, Rosa Luxemburg, or James Connolly,
true marxists? Is it opposed to Marxism to 1eave such matters to the
individual - without of course taking up a pacifist attitude?) attitude?)
But it is time such arguments Were refuted.. It has gone on, for too long,
this tragedy of young and virile Socialists, the hope of the future, dying
without having struck a blow for their cause, in the false belief that they were
serving it. It is time to stop juggling with what are, whether we like the word
or not, vital principles.
(August - September 1942)
While Workers Die
At the recent Churchill-Stalin guzzle in Moscow the press
has described the atmosphere as "full of fun, a very jocular
party with Stalin giving a number of toasts, speaking with humour and
thoroughly enjoying his own jokes. There were at least 25 toasts.
Twenty-six courses were served and pyramids of vegetables and fruits
crowded the tables."
Discreetly enough, no mention is here made of the amount of liquor paraded,
but if we know our Churchill, there must have been plenty! The speeches,
doubtless, were of the same high level of insincerity as was the case
in the Molotov-Ribbentrop banquets of recent date! And for every drop
of champagne or wine wasted at this unseemly spectacle, hundreds of
gal Ions of Russian and German blood were at that very moment being
spilled on the various battlefronts. And because of the criminal
failure of these alleged statesmen to assuage the reasonable fears of
the German people, thousands of gallons more - not excluding British -
will be needlessly shed before the workers cry halt to this bestial
madness of war!
(August-September 1942)
The Historic Consequences of the War.
(extracts) by F.A. Ridley
(...) In so far as this war is a war of ideology - and it is that to a very
considerable extent - it evidently represents a conflict between two social
principles, the totalitarian state and economy (represented completely by
Russia, and, in a process of evolution, by Germany), whereas the
"Allies" - the British Empire, formerly France and America - stand for
a regime which approximates in phraseology, and to a certain extent, still, in
fact, the classical Liberal capitalism of the 19th century.
Democratic individualism versus totalitarian etatisme ('state-ism)', such, in
theory, and with certain modifications in practice, is the ideological content
of the present war. (In so far as the war is a war not of ideas but of
interests, it is simply an imperial quarrel of the old type. Such wars are but
too painfully familiar and, as such, do not call for any special comment.
Despite patriotic mythologies, the ideological difference between one empire
and another is not great; certainly by no means an adequate cause for
a war of planetary dimensions. In any case, evidence is now
accumulating to mountainous heights to demonstrate that the age of
coercive imperialism belongs irrevocably to a bygone phase in human
annals, and that, consequently, such conflicts are purely atavistic
in character). (N.B. Russia is, of course an "ally" from
necessity, not choice).
Observing the present war then solely from the standpoint of its
conflicting ideologies we are, perforce, driven to this rather melancholy
conclusion: whoever wins this war in the technical military sense, in so far as
this war is a war of ideas and systems, the democratic powers are already
defeated. In the present phase of historic development democratic capitalism
cannot conceivably stand, at any rate permanently, against state capitalism of
the totalitarian type, and it cannot do so for the simple but sufficient reason
that modern war itself is pre-eminently a totalitarian regime, and that,
consequently, the democratic powers, when faced with the necessity to wage
on their own behalf a war that is necessarily conducted in the
manner that is natural to their totalitarian opponents, must become,
in fact, totalitarian themselves in order to carry it on at all
effectively. Hence, in the ideological sense, the victory of the
anti-democratic bloc - whatever the actual fortunes of war - is
assured by, and at the very moment of, the declaration of war. The
very fact of war itself constitutes the victory of totalitarianism, for
modern war, irrespective of its military results, is in itself
pre-eminently the totalitarian thing; for the totalitarian state is,
after all, the perfect war machine.
And all this, be it remembered, is at the very beginning of
what promises to be a war of great length and unequalled
severity, involving everyone and every aspect of life, down to the
most minute details. It is not even questionable that long before the
end of the struggle state. control will embrace every aspect of life,
and that freedom and democracy will find their last refuge in the post-prandial perorations
of hortatory politicians. Indeed, if the primary aim of the Nazis is
to evangelise the world with the gospel of the Totalitarian
State, they have gone about their task in a business-like way; whether
they win or lose the war in an immediate technical sense, by the very
fact of its existence they have dealt the deathblow to (what they
style) "the degenerate democracies".
From that point of view with which we are here concerned,
the world-historical role of the present war, it is scarcely open
to question that it inaugurates an era of European, indeed, probably
of world totalitarianism, be it short or long in its duration.
It is manifestly demonstrable that all the vital forces at
work in the world today are themselves of a kind that is either
directly totalitarian in essence, or is, at least, highly amenable
to this kind of society. Not only is this the case with regard to the
Fascist States such as Germany, Italy and Spain, which now and for
some years past have been making the ideological pace in and for
the western world; but even more significant is it that the opponents
of Fascism also advocate societies of an all-inclusive nature. Thus,
the Third Reich has known but two real internal enemies:
the Roman Catholic Church - a totalitarian theocracy by definition -
and Stalinism, that secular theocracy which subjugates the individual,
in any and every manifestation of his activity, to a yoke more
despotic than any known to mankind since the regimes of the Old Man of
the Mountains - the Sheikh of the Assassins - and the Inca Sun-kings
of mediaeval Peru. For that matter, all the forms of socialism
existent today - with the solitary exception of anarchism now bloodily
liquidated in its last stronghold, Spain - aim avowedly at an
all-powerful bureaucratic state, unchecked by any restraints exercised
by private property rights, at a social state, in fact, which,
whatever the conscious aims and however loud the disclaimers of its
advocates, could, in fact, be nothing other than the most despotic of
absolutist authoritarian regimes. (In point of fact, it seems
extremely probable that the chief cause of the present slump in socialism
is to be found in the entire failure common to all its 20th century manifestations to free its libertarian and humanistic ends
from its bureaucratic and dictatorial means. A generation ago Georges Sorel
issued an impressive warning, one unheeded by the socialists alike of
his day and of ours, as to what would happen to socialism if it failed
to make its revolution before the decadence of capitalist Europe set
in - (c.f. "Reflections on Violence").
When viewed in the widest historical perspective the present war can, then,
only be construed as the gateway to a totalitarian
era. "Modern" civilisation, like ancient civilisation before
it, ends in a phase of etatisme, in the removal of all brakes and
checks upon the god-state, the omnipotent and omnipresent Leviathan,
"over all persons and causes supreme" .
(August-September l942)
India
We gladly accede to the request of our Indian comrades to publish
the following resolutions passed at their meeting on 11/8/42.
"That this mass meeting of the Indians in Glasgow held under
The Hindustani Majlis, have resolved unanimously that the
present policy of the British Government and that of the Government
of India is suicidal to the success of the cause of freedom in
the world and also to the eventual victory of the Allied Nations."
"That the present world situation demands a settlement of India's
crisis. This meeting therefore urges the British Government to alter its
present policy, and in order to win over the support of India' 5
millions as an effective Ally negotiations should immediately be re-opened
for the setting up of a Provisional National Government in India."
Abdul Ghafoor, Secretary.
In view of the shootings, floggings and even machine gunning from the
air, we fail to see any reason for our comrades' support of the Allied
aim: victory - and retaliation.
We are with them in their fight for liberation from British. Imperialism, but
we repudiate the capitulation to the slogan of "victory for the Allied
Nations (read Imperialists)". We stand for the victory
over Hitlerism and Mikadoism - by the German and Japanese workers, and
the simultaneous overthrow of all the Allied Imperialists by
the workers in Britain and America. We also wish to see the
reinstitution of the Workers' Soviets in Russia and the demolition of
the Stalinist bureaucracy. In a word, we fight for the destruction of
All Imperialism by the Proletarian World Revolution.'
(October-November l942)
Looting at Luton
A Luton firm complained to the local National Service officer
of "widespread absenteeism" among its women workers.
An investigation revealed the fact that children were working for over
60 hours a week!
This firm, the Davis Gas Stove Company, was fined £94, on 38 summonses
in connection with the employment of boys and girls under sixteen.
Some of the girls involved were only 14 years of age!
Why were these people not jailed, the same as some of
the workers were for absenteeism? Is this the equality of sacrifice
we hear so much about?
(October-November 1942)
The Royal Sacrifice
Every bath in Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle has to
be painted with a black and red (sorry) black or red line at the five
Inch level.
So reports Reynolds (20-9-42) and goes on to say that in
certain parts of the castle the boilers will be shut off and
anyone requiring hot water will have to carry it from the kitchen.
Does that not show we are fighting for Democracy. Our Royal Comrade
will have to carry a kettle of water to fill his ankle-deep bath?
'(October-November 1942)
GANDHI'S PACIFISM DEBUNKED
Spontaneous no rent movements by the peasants:, rising strikes. mass
demonstrations.... such was the situation in India when the soldiers were
brought out to restore 'order." 'At Peshawar the Garhwali soldiers
refused to fire on the people. Hindu troops, broke ranks and
fraternised with the crowds.
The Govt. of India subsequently refused all demands for an enquiry into
the incident, court-martialled and imposed savage sentences, on the
Garhwali soldiers who had refused to shoot in cold blood their fellow
countrymen.
Here is what Gandhi had to say on the matter:
"A soldier who disobeys an order to fire breaks the oath which he has
taken and renders himself guilty of criminal disobedience I cannot ask
officials and soldiers to disobey. for when I am in power, I SHALL IN ALL
LIKELIHOOD MAKE USE OF THOSE SAME OFFICIALS AND THOSE SAME SOLDIERS (our
emphasis). If I taught them to disobey I should be afraid that
they might do the same when I am in power."
(Ghandi, reply to the French Journalist, Petrasch, on the question of the
Garwhali soldiers, "Monde", February, 20th 1932)
(Solidarity 55-56, December l942-January l943),
Axis Workers Show Way
By "ICARUS"
('Icarus': pseudonym of ERNST SCHNEIDER, a merchant seaman active in the
naval mutinies at the start of the 1918 German Revolution. A member of
the German left communist movement, he came to Britain in the 1930s
after the Nazi take-over.)
CONTRARY TO THE NATIONALIST-REFORM MOVEMENT, THE REVOLUTIONARY PROLETARIAT IN
GERMANY HAS FOUGHT, AND IS STILL FIGHTING, CAPITALIST IMPERIALISM AND
THEREFORE NAZISM FROM ITS APPEARANCE IN THE ARENA OF CLASS CONFLICT UP
TO THE PRESENT DAY.
If deeds mean anything, a reference to the real historical events in Germany
during the last decades will be sufficient. Moreover, the prisons and
concentration camps still filled with oppositional workers, the thousands of
executed, and thousands fallen in open street fighting, bear a witness that
cannot be ignored. As a matter of fact, the true political opposition in Nazi
Germany is entirely a workers' revolutionary movement. That which in Allied
propaganda is styled the "anti-Nazi opposition of the Catholic
Church", is more or less imaginary.
The revolutionary workers opposition with its equipment of
an empirically organised underground network, using
continually changing methods, is trying to inform the masses as to just
what is going on, so that they will more readily understand the true
situation. These workers cannot be fooled with Goebbels', or any other
nationalistic propaganda.
In spite of all oppression, there has been during the war,
not only successful strikes, as for example, the mass action of
the German seamen in Italy, but also revolts, bloodily crushed, of
the toiling and soldiering masses in Germany itself.
There always has been, and still is, obstruction, absenteeism and organised
idleness in the German war industry. It speaks for the effectiveness and the
wide sphere of the anti-Nazi resistance, when even the Nazi Press is forced to
complain that:-"Many factories and other undertakings are
undermining discipline by offering money premiums to workers who do
not come regularly late to work, who do not pretend to be ill, and who work
during working time instead of idling."
It is significant that at the same time, Hitler's
Commissioner for Manpower has fixed heavier penalties for workers
refusing to accept employment, staying away from work without
justification or anyone found guilty of breaches of discipline.
According to a decree of August 22, 1942, the working hours in all occupied
countries are fixed at a week. The following are extracts from the decree:-
"With a view to mobilising the workers in the
occupied territories under the new manpower system for Europe, the
workers must be subjected to a strict and uniform direction.... It is
necessary to ensure both the appropriate and purposeful distribution of
these workers, with a view to satisfying the manpower needs of
the Reich and the occupied territories, and the highest
possible output.
In the occupied territories the highest possible output is also to be
ensured by introducing piece-work and bonus systems. In so far as
piece-time rates already exist in the factories, they shall be revised
with a view to releasing as far as possible any unused output capacity....
In cases where no piece-work or bonus systems are practicable,
consideration shall be given as to whether it is not possible further
to increase output by introducing output premiums. This, however, may
not be done in such a manner as to endanger the stability of the wages
position.
This decree shall also apply, mutatis mutandis, to
prisoners Of war."
Meanwhile millions of workers from the various
European countries become united with their German fellow workers in
the industrial plants. Here, the process goes on. A new, real class
movement is developing. History does not "jump", but a certain
leap will not only take the class traitors and the
"patriots" by surprise, but also the new so-called
administrators" when, as the war gathers momentum, the inevitable
acute revolutionary situation arrives.
Hail the Proletarian Revolution'.
The following are but a few of the latest news items which factually
corroborate our comrade's contentions:-
"BEHIND THE NEWS - The mutiny of the German submarine crews in
Kiel was no isolated incident." (Sunday Mail1 11/7/43)
"Mutiny aboard an Italian cruiser at Brindisi1 on the heel of Italy
followed an order to sail south on a "special assignment (Glasgow
Evening News 3/7/43)
(June-July 1943)
Events & Trends
by Icarus
According to a Swedish source, mutiny broke out among German troops
at Copenhagen. Some officers who were caught trying to escape
were shot immediately. There has been a whole series of German
workers' sailors' and soldiers' revolts during the present war, even
in Germany itself.
These revolts, however, still remain "secrets" of the
Allied authorities. The reason why cannot be in question - for
capitalist 1'law and order" is the core of Allied imperialism.
The "people's revolts" in occupied countries which "the
Gestapo is unable to crush", the "plots against the Big
Three" which the OGPU 1'discover", and the epics of the
Stalinist superman "Tito" who annihilates one German army after
another before breakfast - all this is propaganda of agents (so-called
patriots) hired by the capitalist imperialist governments.
Oliver Lyttleton, Minister of Production, declared at
Oxford that the "Beveridge approach to Social Security insists on
the worker's contribution as a condition of benefit, and on the
obligation to accept work If it was available".
Who said "Rats!" The workers are not only to have to pay
for their own misery, but are also going to be liable to forced
labour!
Herbert Morrison's keynote in his speech in Dundee was: "If
we are to avoid social and economic catastrophe after the war, we
shall have to continue war-time control, while both taxes and savings
will have to remain well above the pre-war normal."
"Great Britain in the last few years under a system of
public control has shown itself the best governed country In the
world." (News Chronicle).
This is precisely what J. Stalin claims for his dictatorship In Russia.
The tern "public control" is experienced in Nazi State control.
"Nationalisation" is on the way, with or without
Hitler, because there Is no other outlook for capitalist imperialism.
The inevitable form of organised capitalism is Nazism (Fascism). What
has happened in Italy, Russia, Poland, Germany, Austria, and so on,
is developing in Britain and everywhere else.
To postpone the necessity of workers' action now involves the loss
of maybe a century. Revolution or Totalitarian Slavery! Once
again the working class is forced to make its choice before it is
too late.
Mr Fred Marshall, MP, Chairman of the National Union of General and
Municipal Workers, quarrels in the Union's "Journal"
over the works-committees, which he blames for unofficial strikes.
He, the union controller, is naturally wholeheartedly against
the self-acting workers, and describes how efficiently he has cornered
the bullies.
"It is inevitable, in the nature of things, that sooner or later
they (the works-committees) begin to exceed the purpose for which they
were set up. They tend to become an organisation within
trade unionism possessing power without responsibility."
The honourable MP is of course terrified of any
real progressive change, which would deprive him of his job.
Though works-committees tied to Trade Unions with their conservative
ideologies, will not spoil the wage-peddlers' game. Independent,
class-conscious works-committees however, might land the reactionary trade
union leaders in the cart!
"Dutch oil experts are being sent from the where they will hold
themselves in readiness oil fields captured from the Japanese" (News Middle East to Australia, to assist in re-opening Chronicle 26 Jan.,
1944).
The "Refugee Governments" have got their "New Order".
They want to "hold" what they have exploited before. It is
not only oil that worries these liberators, it is the possession of
further resources in raw materials and efficient control of slave
labour.
Profit is the soul of their whole make-up; the greater as
well as the smaller nations.
Bert Wyler reports in the Daily Herald, January 6th,
1944, about a "secret patriotic army" in France which
receives pay by parachute from British aeroplanes:
"The army is organised on strictly military lines. Officer ranks
are Group Chief, Camp Chief and Regional Chief. Courses are
held regularly to train men in partisan fighting. Without exception
the instructors are members of the old regular army. In each camp
there is a political commissar, establishing liaison between the
fighting body and the central headquarters.
"These commissars write death sentences against
collaborationists and traitors. Special squads are ordered to carry out
the sentences. Numerous girl friends of German soldiers have recently
been executed. It is hoped that this organisation will be the foundation
of the regular French Army when the country is liberated."
In fact the capitalist rulers are not able to rule by the old means.
Capitalist class needs can only be fulfilled by full-scale Nazism.
The patriots, the Allied Imperialist 55 troops - the
so-called "special squads" - are preparing to succeed
Hitler's "Waffen SS". Just as the latter were used before,
so will the former be used in the future to crush uprising workers in
any country.
With regard to the proposals recently adopted by the-
Russian dictatorial regime, we may quote the News Chronicle for 3rd February 1944:
"The sixteen republics which make up the Soviet Union will
have their own Defence Ministers, but these will be subordinate to
the Defence Ministry of the Union. They will have their own armies
- national units with distinctive characteristics - but all the
army formations no doubt will be directed from the centre".
These changes, however, provide nothing new, for Hitler's "Gauleiterism"
has proved more effective than the union for hemispheric control. Russia is
thoroughly militarised. The war as it progresses, has accelerated this
development, and has brought about shifts and rearrangements in the
relationships of all existing interests. Further changes of even greater
importance, including the objectives for which this war is fought, are bound to
follow rapidly. Moreover, the revival of traditional Russian
nationalism has inevitably resuscitated the old policy of Pan-Slavism,
now used as an instrument of "Soviet" imperialism. The idea is
primarily to bring the Slav-populated lands under the supreme rule of
Moscow. Events have their own logic; they cannot be outwitted.
This new reform - which has been praised by the Allied press - in
no way implies a retreat from the strongly centralised
political structure and totalitarian methods In the USSR, for the
basic elements of state-capitalistic "National Socialism"
("Socialism-in-One-Country") remain unaltered.
The following Item from BUP was published - without comment
- in Reynolds News for 13th Feb., 1944:
"A remarkable speech in which it was stated that
Anglo-American co-operation could be carried on after the war only if
British and American monopolists were controlled was made by an Assistant
U.S. Attorney General, Mr Berge, in Washington yesterday. Britain's support in
the American Government's war against International cartels was necessary"
Since the mass-murder machinery is running smoothly,
the capitalist rulers are planning for the war after the present war
on Bolshevik-Nazi lines. New vested interests abroad are going to be
created by the annexation of foreign territory and its enforced
submission to the national monopolies of the dominating
"mother" country. Subsequently national monopolies in place
of international cartels are emphasised.
The trend is towards the formation of a state capitalist empire through
the annexation of other countries by The trend is twoards the formation of a
state capitalist empire through the annexation of other countries by all and any
means. Rival powers are to be wiped out entirely, because it is
quite hopeless for capitalist-imperialist rulers to come to any
permanent understanding In regard to their conflicting interests.
(May l944)
War and Fascism
We are now in our fifth year of this business, which requires that
the workers of the world butcher and maim one another, in which
the inventive genius of man, and the industry of mankind, is wasted
in the building of engines for destruction.
Let us try to discover, then, in which direction, to what goal, we are headed
in this country.
There has been introduced military and industrial conscription on boys,
girls, men and women.
Industrial conscription has been introduced in the form of the E.W.O.
Workers are forced to stay in poorly paid monotonous jobs,
which require them to work overtime to have a wage in keeping with
the increasing cost of living. Labour is directed from
"non-essential" to "essential11 work, young women are
transferred from factory to factory to suit the needs of capitalism.
And now, the youth of the country is being forced, willy nilly, down
the mines.
This conscription of labour, this reducing of the workers into absolute
slavery, is being carried out by a British Capitalist Imperialist Government. A
government whose record of oppression in India is ghastly, whose Prime Minister
denounces communism and openly associates with Italian fascists. A
government of coal-owners and financial magnates, whose one aim is
profit, profit, profit, at the expense of the workers, and it is
introducing these measures under the guise of fighting fascism.
In order to defeat German Nazism and Italian Fascism,
British National Socialism is being built up here. That means every
gun made, every plane assembled, every ship built and handed over to
capitalist control is aiding this British Capitalist government: is
strengthening it in its transfer from democratic to fascist capitalism
and ensuring an almost omnipotent boss class. Democratic capitalism
can only fight fascist capitalism by itself becoming fascist.
The only answer to fascism is the workers' social revolution,
by workers' control, by immediately fighting conscription in all
its phases, by building up workers' committees in opposition to
the Boss and the Trade Unions; by building Workers' Open Forums, where
the workers themselves can discuss and decide. By that method can we
stop fascism and open up the road to Workers' Power.
Build the Workers' Committees Build the Workers' Open Forums!
(May l944)
The Turning Tide
by Icarus
The current strike wave indicates changes amongst the
workers from within. The tendency is to make a direct stand against
the Capitalist controllers.
The flood of misery, official lies and betrayals during
the course of the war has awakened greater and ever greater masses.
Their instinct grows and class comradeship becomes broader and
deeper. This brings consciousness to the mass and changes - though
slowly - its ideologies.
The gap between leader and mass widens continuously and the spirit of
servility is fading away. More and more workers recognise the true situation.
Thus, their fighting activities grows The brilliant examples in Wales,
Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire, etc., spring to mind.
The urgent needs of the working class demanded that they
take matters in their own hands. Cutting free from the influence
of political quacks, the workers became aware, that what is done or
not done now determines what will be possible later on. In Nottingham
the miners at 14 pits struck spontaneously, with the effect that
their imprisoned fellow-worker was freed immediately. They did not
care a fig about the "warnings" of our class-enemies, but
boldly defied the Capitalist authorities. Here, the attainment of the
ultimate strategic objective is visible. Moreover, here by example of
deed, solidarity is shown - how the workers must act in order to put
an end to slavery and war.
Solidarity must be first fostered "at home", at the
workplaces, pits, factories, on board the ships, etc., before
world-wide working class solidarity can arise An example of workers
solidarity in the class struggle is of greater importance than a
thousand lectures.
It matters little, therefore, whether the "strike in Notts broke before
the strike in Midlothian was settled" What really matters is the
fact that the solidarity action of Notts miners became rapidly
more solidarity Cordorvan struck and was followed by
other "unofficial" strikes in different parts of the
country. True1 these fellow-workers returned - but unbroken - to the
pits and factories again. Clarity of class ideology, however, cannot be achieved
by one "lightning stroke" Needless to say, the notorious
back-stabbers, the politically-minded professionals and their would-be
successors in working class betrayal were ready to hand. They and their press,
losing ground, howled at the miners.
Even the miners' own paper, The Militant Scottish Miner, October l943,
has been doing its bit to confuse the miners politically. Under the editorial
heading "The Need for Political Action", we read:-
"The working class cannot achieve a solution to its pr6blems
by industrial action alone, necessary as that action is.
The political party representing the organised working class
is the Labour Party....
We must demand a General Election and campaign for the return of
a third labour Government."
Nothing learnt and nothing forgotten. The editorial writer misrepresents
the workers completely by holding out hope for
a "success" under Capitalism by distracting their attention
from acute problems of the present and directing their attention to
reactionary perspectives.instead of explaining the situation and
encouraging the readers, the same writer is playing - despite the historical
lessons of a century the old gramophone record, which runs that mass action of
the workers must be "advised" and controlled by party
politicians. This nonsensical talk about "industrial action" is
utterly confusing because every mass-action in the industrial sphere
is, in its effect, political. The radical phrases used, however, serve as a
cloak for his reformist swindle.
To ask the leaders of the labour Party and TU movement
"to break with their class-collaborationist policy" has
precisely the same effect as an appeal to lions to become vegetarians.
The same scribe wishes to make a deal with the same parties
in order to sustain and save it. This is the "education"
which the party "educated" editorial writer of The Militant Scottish
Miner offers its readers. Needless to say, this kind of education, as
well as its breeding ground, must be stamped out entirely. Class
solidarity and class actions can arise not with,. but only against,
groups and party interests. The workers themselves - freed from the
ties of the Capitalistic labour movement - must control their own
actions and organisations.
Since parties and Trade Unions can serve only
Capitalistic functions, an entirely new working class movement is
imperative. The action of Notts miners is a step along this track,
though, the first step only.
We can learn the possibilities of the future, if we grasp the poten of
to-day. The "unofficial" strike is a weapon of the working class.
All that hinders the revolutionary re-organisation of the working
class, must be thrown aside. This must be done now, because time does
not wait.
The struggle against the Capitalistic labour leader
ideology, the struggle against the treacherous party practices, must
be waged vigourously if the victory of the working class shall arise.
(May 1944)
Part Four, discussion on the working class and
political parties.
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