On the Libyan Revolution
Down with the
Imperialist Intervention in Libya!
For Workers’
Revolutions
Across North
Africa and the Middle East!
A Joint Statement by the League for the
Revolutionary Party (U.S.)
and the Internationalist Socialist League
(Israel/Occupied Palestine)
The leaders of the U.S., Britain
and France claim that their current bombardment of Muammar el-Qaddafi’s
dictatorship in Libya is motivated by a desire to aid one of the ongoing
struggles for democracy in the Arab world. As usual, they are lying. The same
imperialists who invaded and occupy Afghanistan and Iraq – and who support
Israel as it slaughters Palestinians – have not suddenly discovered a concern
for the oppressed.
On the contrary, the assault on Libya has
become a key part of the imperialists’ effort to stem the rising tide of mass
struggle in the region. They hope to install a new government in Libya that can
act as a more reliable enforcer of their interests than the erratic Qaddafi,
though they may be forced to settle for Libya to be divided, with the oil-rich
East in the hands of anti-Qaddafi forces. Importantly, the imperialists saw an
opportunity to cover their defense of the
rest of the region’s rulers from the threat of revolution by appearing to side
with at least one people fighting an oppressive dictator. Thus at the same time
that the U.S. was preparing its attack on Qaddafi’s forces, its allies were
murderously cracking down on the mass protest movements in Bahrain and
Yemen. Overall, the imperialists aim to assert their power to intervene
militarily where and whenever they deem it necessary (indeed the French
imperialists quickly followed their prominent role in the assault on Libya by
reasserting their authority over one of their former colonies, joining UN
forces in launching military attacks against Ivory Coast’s dictator Laurent Gbago). Under conditions of deepening economic crisis, the
capitalist powers’ competition for natural resources will drive worsening
clashes between them.
We say Down with the Imperialist
Intervention in Libya! because imperialism represents the biggest and most
immediate threat to the masses of Libya and the region. Only the masses have
the right to oust Qaddafi and only the strategy of international socialist
revolution led by a revolutionary party can achieve the freedom from oppression
and exploitation that they desire. For
Workers’ Revolutions Across North Africa and the Middle East!
Imperialism and the Middle East
Before launching their attack on Libya, the
imperialists had been on the retreat for months in the face of the explosion of
popular struggle against the dictatorships that rule the Middle East. With its
massive oil wealth and key shipping routes, the region has long been of vital
importance to the great powers. Since direct colonial rule ended after World
War II, the imperialists have relied on local dictators to do the dirty work
for them in keeping the masses down and the region open to exploitation. Yet in
recent months one after another of these strongmen has been toppled or
challenged.
First, protests and general strikes in
Tunisia demanding “Bread and Freedom” sent long-time dictator Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali fleeing
into exile. Then weeks of protests culminated in a wave of strikes that finally
forced Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak from power. Soon, the words “ash-sha’ab yurid isqat
an-nizam” – “the people want to bring down the
regime” – were being chanted by protesters in every major city in the Arab
world.
Fearing that they were losing control of the
entire region, the imperialists have been desperate to stem the mounting
popular rebellion and reassert their authority. At the same time, they have
recognized that openly backing a violent crackdown on the protests would only
encourage greater struggles against them. Then the outbreak of civil war in
Libya presented the imperialists with an opportunity.
The rebellion in Libya had originally broken
out as part of the broad upsurge of popular struggle against the region’s
rulers. Several cities, particularly in the East of the country, fell into the
protesters’ hands. But a counter-offensive saw Qaddafi’s forces soon poised to
re-conquer the center of rebel power in the city of Benghazi. There, the
bourgeois Transitional National Council (TNC) declared itself the rebel’s
official leadership and loudly called on the imperialists to intervene to save
them. “We have an opportunity to establish a new narrative of Western support
for Arab democrats,” wrote former Obama White House foreign policy adviser
Anne-Marie Slaughter in a New York Times
op-ed urging the U.S. to join Britain and France’s calls for a military
intervention against Qaddafi.[1]
Not surprisingly, the “narrative” of siding
with a mass struggle for democracy was a smokescreen covering new efforts to
put an end to the mass struggles in the region. Thus the U.S. worked with the
governments of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates to secure an
endorsement by the Arab League of an attack on Qaddafi’s forces, while it
simultaneously signaled its acceptance of the Saudi and UAE’s plan to aid
Bahrain’s dictatorship with an invasion force of thousands of troops to help
smash the protest movement there.[2]
One liberal commentator expressed shock at seeing “American tanks, guns and
tear gas” being used “to crush a peaceful democracy movement” and make “blood
run through the streets of Bahrain.”[3]
But as an unnamed foreign policy adviser to various White House administrations
commented to the Financial Times:
“The place where we have the least interest in the Middle East is Libya … the
place where we have the greatest interest is Bahrain,” strategically located
between Saudi Arabia and Iran and home to the U.S. Navy’s Fifth Fleet that
polices the region.[4]
Qaddafi and Imperialism
In the early part of his reign of over 40
years, Qaddafi promoted himself as a leader of Arab and African resistance
against imperialism, and even as a socialist. But in reality he was always a
capitalist ruler who favored nationalist capitalist development and used
anti-imperialist rhetoric to win support as he balanced between the great
powers during the Cold War.
While the imperialists have been able to use
their past demonization of Qaddafi to help justify singling him out for attack,
in recent years they had warmly embraced his dictatorship in return for his
opening up Libya’s oil resources and overall economy to greater exploitation,
repressing Islamist political forces and rounding up African immigrants into
concentration camps to prevent them crossing the Mediterranean into Europe.[5]
Indeed, Qaddafi has expressed his hostility
to the Arab struggle for democracy from the beginning. He condemned the
Tunisian masses for rising up “as if it was the Bolshevik or the American
revolution” and expressed his hope that the dictator Ben Ali could be returned
to power.[6]
Then, when protests began in Libya against his own dictatorship, Qaddafi spoke
out in an attempt to remind the imperialists of his loyalty to them as “an
important partner in fighting al Qaeda.” He appealed to the European
imperialists’ racist hostility to immigrants, warning them that “there are
millions of blacks who could come to the Mediterranean to cross to France and
Italy, and Libya plays a role in security in the Mediterranean.”[7]
Finally, when the imperialists began complaining about Qaddafi’s massacre of
rebels, he repeated his assertion that the rebels were nothing but armed
supporters of al Qaeda and favorably compared his attacks on rebel-held cities
to Israel’s monstrous bombing of Gaza in 2009: “even the Israelis in Gaza, when
they moved into the Gaza strip, they moved in with tanks to fight such
extremists. … It’s the same thing here!”[8]
The
Revolutionary Position
Many liberals and even leftists
support the imperialist intervention on the grounds that there was no other way
to rescue the rebels from Qaddafi’s tanks and planes. For example, Gilbert Achcar, a frequent contributor to the press of the United
Secretariat for the Fourth International (the USec
itself formally opposed the intervention) tried to qualify his support for
imperialist intervention by saying that “we must express defiance and advocate
full vigilance in monitoring the actions of those states carrying it out, to
make sure that they don't go beyond protecting civilians as mandated by the
[Security Council] resolution”[9] – as if the imperialist powers
ever intended not to interpret the resolution as they wished. Such a stance
gives the imperialists left cover for their plans to dominate Libya and to
restrain all the revolutions in the Arab countries.
Especially since the start of the attack on
Qaddafi’s forces, others on the left have portrayed the Libyan dictator as a
progressive opponent of the West, ignoring the brutal and exploitative reality
of his decades of rule, as well as his open embrace of imperialism in recent
years. But no such illusions are necessary for genuine working-class socialists
to stand for the defense of Libya, without giving one ounce of political
support to Qaddafi and his regime. The fact is that the revival of the
imperialists’ power to attack the dominated and exploited countries of the
“Third World” will threaten the masses everywhere. If the imperialists succeed
in toppling Qaddafi they will only do so in order to install a new oppressive
regime, as they did in Afghanistan and Iraq.
At the same time, other leftists who hold no
such illusions in Qaddafi have argued that the
protests against him have, from the outset, been completely different in nature
from the popular struggles sweeping the rest of the Arab world. The
anti-Qaddafi protesters are, in the words of one such group, nothing but a
“cabal of pro-imperialist ‘democrats,’ CIA stooges, monarchists and Islamists.”[10] Such a perspective does not distinguish between the
Transitional National Council and other “rebel” leaders, on the one hand – and
the ranks of fighters and the broader layers of masses who first were inspired
to protest Qaddafi’s rule, on the other.
The masses typically launch their
struggles still burdened by pro-capitalist leaders – even at times openly
pro-imperialist leaders – that do not represent their interests. One of the
tasks of revolutionaries is to take the masses' side whenever they are fighting
in their self-defense and for progressive aims, no matter how they are
being misled. But revolutionaries do this always with the purpose of not
only building the best immediate defense but also to expose the
treacherous role of pro-capitalist leaders and ideas. In terms of a general
revolutionary approach, the struggle in Libya is no exception.
The TNC is dominated by bourgeois forces
including former Qaddafi officials and defecting military officers, as well as
forces directly sponsored by the imperialists. It obviously in no way
represents a break from imperialism or capitalism and is ready to strike a deal
to guarantee imperialist profits and prerogatives just as Qaddafi did.
Like every other people in the Middle East
living under the tyranny of dictatorship, Libya’s masses were inspired by the
rebellions that toppled Tunisia’s and Egypt’s dictators. Broad numbers across
the country rallied to the first calls for protest against Qaddafi’s
dictatorship, hoping to win similar democratic victories. To be sure, various
anti-working class political forces, from free-market capitalists and liberal
democrats to Islamic fundamentalists, sought from the beginning to take
advantage of the upsurge of struggle in the hopes of riding it to power. Others
soon opportunistically took the side of the masses, including some prominent
figures from Qaddafi’s political and military leadership. Some planned all
along to invite the imperialists to intervene. But all major forces sought to
take advantage of the masses’ upsurge of militancy by promising to fight for
their freedom from Qaddafi’s tyranny.
Thus when Qaddafi’s forces sought to attack
the masses, it was the duty of revolutionaries to take the masses’ side and
fight for the defeat of the dictator’s forces without offering any political
support to their leaders.[11]
While Qaddafi favorably compared his use of tanks to repress the mass uprising
with the Israeli state’s assault on the Palestinians in Gaza, those on the left
who pointed to the reactionary views of leaders on the anti-Gaddafi side as
reason to take no side betrayed the
need to defend the masses against an immediate attack.[12]
But as Qaddafi launched his murderous
crackdown, protests for democracy gave way to armed confrontations and the
masses were sidelined. At first there were prominent expressions of opposition
to foreign intervention within the anti-Qaddafi movement, including signs
against intervention at mass rallies. But especially as Qaddafi’s forces dealt
defeats to the rebels on the battlefield, bourgeois forces in the Transitional
National Council in the anti-Qaddafi stronghold of Benghazi imposed themselves
on the struggle as its official leadership, hijacking the movement and tying it
to imperialist interests.
In the protests against Qaddafi’s rule and in
the fight to defend the masses against the dictatorship’s attacks,
revolutionary socialists would have always had the duty to warn of the danger
presented by the bourgeois forces imposing themselves on the struggle. But before the imperialist intervention,
where all clashes with the regime were immediately concerned with the defense
of the masses and their struggle, revolutionaries would have stood for the
defeat of Qaddafi’s forces. At that time, while fighting alongside other forces
opposed to Qaddafi, revolutionaries and other anti-imperialist fighters would
have had to make every effort to promote the independent organization of the
workers and oppressed and to advocate a strategy based on international appeals
to the masses and their organizations in the region – as the urgently needed
alternative to the TNC’s pro-imperialist strategy.
With their military intervention, the
imperialists inserted themselves in the struggle as the main overall enemy and
working-class internationalists stand for their defeat, supporting protest
actions against the intervention and opposing all steps toward the seizure of
power by forces like the TNC who base themselves on imperialist support.
Instead, revolutionaries have to continue to fight for the independent
organization of the workers and oppressed in Libya, and more than ever advocate
the strategy of international workers’ revolution as the only solution.
Of course while pursuing this overall
perspective, revolutionaries stand for the defense of the masses against their
most immediate threats. In cases where Qaddafi’s forces were attacking the
masses, revolutionaries would look to fight alongside all those resisting them.
It is impossible to paint the details of such hypothetical scenarios from afar.
But when Qaddafi forces are attacking rebel-held towns in order to crush not
just the fighters at this point but the masses in these areas, a bloc with the
anti-Qaddafi forces to defend the masses is still very likely necessary.
For Workers’ Revolutions Across North Africa
and the Middle East!
In Tunisia and Egypt, the mass struggles that
pushed the dictators from power were the culmination of years of rising
workers’ struggles. In Tunisia, the masses of working-class and poor people
were in the lead from the beginning, turning to their unions to call protests
and general strikes against the dictatorship. In Egypt it was only after weeks
of massive protests that the working class came to the fore with its nationwide
wave of strikes and workplace occupations that finally forced Mubarak from
power. The revolt in Libya, however, never had such a strong working-class
component. For one thing, Libya has a proportionately smaller working class.
Its rulers made billions by selling the rights to exploit the country’s oil
resources, and Qaddafi outlawed the formation of unions and any other mass
organizations that could have sprung into action when the struggle started this
year. It was no accident that they imported migrant workers, who are more
easily controlled, from Egypt, Tunisia, sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia
rather than allow the development of a strong indigenous working class. And
once Qaddafi began his military crackdown, tens of thousands of immigrant
workers fled the country, removing a key working-class force from the Libyan
struggle.
As well, Libya has a history of national
chauvinism and racism against migrant workers, especially black Africans. This
has worked against forging the necessary unity between immigrant workers and
native Libyan workers. It is largely the responsibility of the Qaddafi regime,
which has used traditional divide-and-rule strategies not only to deepen tribal
divisions within Libya but also to pit Libyan workers against sub-Saharan
immigrants. In the past decade there have been several episodes of mob assaults
on immigrant workers, including a vicious pogrom in October 2000.[13]
But racist anti-immigrant attacks have continued in the rebel-held areas today
as well, partly based on a racial profiling of Africans suspected of being
pro-Qaddafi mercenaries. A defense of immigrant workers is needed throughout
Libya.
The Libyan working class’s relative weakness
makes it all the more important for revolutionaries to take the lead in
fighting for unity with the workers and oppressed peoples of other countries,
beginning with the mass movements in neighboring Tunisia and Egypt. While
strikes demanding not just democracy but also jobs and better living conditions
were decisive in ousting the hated rulers in Tunisia and Egypt, the workers
have not yet found a revolutionary socialist leadership prepared to fight for
the working class to seize power. Instead, their struggles have slowed in the
face of military-backed regimes promising to hold democratic elections.
The mass struggles in the Middle East are far
from over, but the rebellions in the Arab world can lead to true liberation
only when the workers and oppressed realize that they must seize state power
and overturn capitalism and imperialist domination. To prepare to lead such
socialist revolutions, the most far-sighted, politically conscious workers must
come together to build vanguard revolutionary parties. If you agree with this perspective,
there is not a moment to waste. Join with us in fighting for the only path that
can free humanity from the chains of imperialist-enforced misery, once and for
all.
[1] Anne-Marie Slaughter, ‘Fiddling While Libya Burns,’ New York Times, March 13, 2011, www.nytimes.com/2011/03/14/opinion/14slaughter.html.
[2] For a useful description of Washington’s securing of the Arab League’s endorsement of the imperialist attack on Qaddafi’s forces and their collusion with repression in Bahrain, see Pepe Escobar, ‘Exposed: The US-Saudi Libya Deal,’ Asia Times Online, April 2, 2011, www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MD02Ak01.html.
[3] See Nicholas D. Kristof, ‘Bahrain Pulls a Qaddafi,’ New York Times, March 16, 2011, www.nytimes.com/2011/03/17/opinion/17kristof.html; and ‘Blood Runs Through the Streets of Bahrain,’ New York Times, February 17, 2011, www.nytimes.com/2011/02/18/opinion/18kristof.html.
[4] Richard McGregor and Daniel Dombey,
‘Foreign Policy: a Reticent America,’ Financial
Times, March 23, 2011, www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3ddd2d0c-557e-11e0-a2b1-00144feab49a.html.
[5] Global Detention Project, Libya Detention Profile, November 2009; www.globaldetentionproject.org/countries/africa/libya/introduction.html.
[6] ‘Libyan Leader Regrets Ben Ali’s Fall,’ Al Jazeera, January 17, 2011, english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2011/01/2011117244693773.html.
[7] ‘Western States Need Libyan Partnership: Gaddafi,’ Reuters, March 7, 2011, www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/07/us-libya-gaddafi-interview-idUSTRE7261V820110307.
[8] ‘Gadhafi:
Crackdown on Libya Revolt is Like Israel's War on Hamas in
[9] Gilbert Achcar,
‘Libyan Developments, ZSpace, March 19,
2011; www.zcommunications.org/libyan-developments-by-gilbert-achcar.
[10] Spartacist
League, ‘Defend
[11] This approach of standing for the military defense of all forces fighting the masses’ immediate enemy while at the same time advancing the cause of an independent working-class struggle for power was first developed by Lenin’s Bolsheviks in the course of the Russian revolution. For more on this approach, see Sy Landy, ‘Self-Determination and Military Defense: the Marxist Method,’ Proletarian Revolution No. 59 (Summer 1999); www.lrp-cofi.org/PR/MethodPR59.html.
[12] Among those who saw no side to take between Qaddafi and the masses and uttered not a word of concern for the victims of Qaddafi’s repression were the Spartacist League and its splinter the Internationalist Group; see their statements on the question at www.icl-fi.org/english/leaflets/libya.html and www.internationalist.org/defendlibyadefeatusunnatoassault1103.html respectively.
[13] ‘Pogrom,’ The Economist, October 12, 2000; www.economist.com/node/392844.