Report on Political Discussions
Between
the League for the Revolutionary Party (U.S.) and
the Internationalist Socialist League (Israel/Occupied
Palestine)
A Joint Statement by the LRP and ISL
For over eighteen months, the League for the
Revolutionary Party (U.S.) and the Internationalist Socialist League
(Israel/Occupied Palestine) have conducted discussions over political theory
and program. Through these discussions our two organizations have established a
very significant degree of agreement on key questions.
Practical participation in great
working-class struggles quickly and decisively tests the revolutionary
credentials of political parties. Both the LRP and ISL are, however, small
propaganda groups; while we make every effort to join in the struggles of our
fellow workers and oppressed people, our size and geographic isolation
inevitably limit our ability to participate in and test our revolutionary
program in practice. Under these conditions, our two groups’ claims to
represent the genuine banner of revolutionary Marxism are mostly to be judged
on the level of theory and program and on stands on the great events in the
international class struggle. Therefore, the LRP and the ISL have taken an
extended period of time to methodically discuss a broad range of theoretical
and programmatic questions. Mindful of the hasty, unprincipled fusions and
splits that typify relations between groups on the far left, we aim to present
a principled, theoretically serious alternative, the better to win the
confidence of revolutionary-minded workers.
Our discussions so far have addressed
questions ranging from the strategy for Palestinian liberation, to the class
nature of the Stalinist and ex-Stalinist states and the causes of the current
global economic crisis. During this time we have also discussed new events
– such as the Russia-Georgia war of 2008, Israel’s war on Gaza in
the winter of 2008-9, and the recent events in Iran – and the attitude
revolutionary socialists should have toward them.
Comrades of the LRP and ISL have also visited
each other’s countries for face-to-face discussions. Those visits have
provided both groups the opportunity to experience first-hand the democratic
debate from which each group’s positions develop, as well as each
other’s practical efforts to advance the cause of building the
revolutionary party through participation in existing working-class struggles,
protest movements and left milieus.
Genuine revolutionaries look for co-thinkers
– comrades who think for themselves and who can collectively work to
solve the current and future theoretical and programmatic problems presented by
the class struggle – and who can together conduct a determined struggle
to build the international revolutionary leadership our class needs. The LRP
and ISL’s experience of discussions and cooperation to this point give us
no reason to doubt that in our respective organizations we have found such
comrades. By announcing our discussions, our two groups wish to provide
interested revolutionary-minded workers and youth with the opportunity to
follow our developing political discussion and collaboration and judge its
serious and principled character.
In this report, since the ISL is a relatively
new organization, we will describe some of its history and then summarize our
two groups’ discussions so far.
ORIGINS OF THE ISL
The comrades who founded the ISL have
traveled a long way politically in recent years: from the International Marxist
Tendency (IMT), which is among the most class-collaborationist groups claiming
the banner of Trotskyism, to their current discussions with the LRP. Indeed the
ISL’s senior member, Yossi Schwartz, began his search for genuine
revolutionary working-class politics as a member of the Israeli Communist
Party. After breaking from Stalinism, however, Comrade Schwartz, like many
other would-be revolutionaries, became trapped for years inside the maze of
“orthodox Trotskyism,” most notably as a long-term and prominent
member of the Spartacist Tendency, as well as a brief later association with
the Co-ordinating Committee for the Refoundation of the Fourth International
(led by the Argentine Partido Obrero).
Having gone through the traumatic experience
of the Spartacists’ stifling sectarianism and abusively bureaucratic
internal life, Comrade Schwartz mistakenly looked to join an ostensibly
Trotskyist group that seemed the exact opposite. So in 2003, he and others
chose to join the IMT. A key reason for their decision was their mistaken
belief that the most important thing they could do to advance the cause of
building a revolutionary party in Israel at the time was to enter the Communist
Party in order to recruit radicalizing elements, particularly among its
Palestinian rank-and-file. The IMT, which is known for its conception that
entry into and support for reformist Social Democratic and Stalinist parties is
an unavoidable stage of working-class struggle, was all too eager to encourage
such a perspective.
But historical events were already working to
spur the radicalization of the comrades who would go on to form the ISL.
Zionism was rapidly heading toward a crisis of legitimacy, as its brutal
oppression of the Palestinians became increasingly exposed around the world.
Most importantly, the Palestinian struggle had reached a dead-end and a
terrible crisis of leadership. In the Oslo Accords of 1993, the nationalist PLO
leadership had completely betrayed the struggle for Palestinian
self-determination by accepting the state of Israel’s right to exist on
stolen Palestinian land. Since then, through its notoriously corrupt
Palestinian Authority government, the PLO has acted to police the masses on
behalf of Israel in the small territories it had been permitted to oversee. In
reaction to this betrayal, the populist Islamists of Hamas and other groups
claimed to represent a political alternative that would not sellout to the
Zionists. While events would disprove these claims, their radical posturing won
them increasing popular support.
The founding ISL comrades’ initial
differences with the IMT arose in the aftermath of the Israeli invasion of
Lebanon in 2006. The IMT’s leaders insisted that Israel’s Jewish
working class is no less potentially revolutionary than any other, and so they
expected that the defeat of Israel’s war aims in Lebanon in 2006 would
trigger a leftward radicalization within it. It turned out that the Israeli
Jewish workers not only overwhelmingly supported their government’s
bloody offensive, but after the war they swung further to the right, boosting
support for right-wing Israeli politicians who criticized the government for
not prosecuting the war more ruthlessly.
This development is explained by the unique
nature of Israel as a colonial settler state. It is a basic truth that the
great majority of the world’s workers have “nothing to lose but
their chains” and therefore have a fundamental interest in overthrowing
the capitalist system. The same cannot be said of Israel’s Jewish
workers. Like other labor-aristocratic layers in imperialist countries, they
enjoy certain material privileges based on the imperialist status of their
ruling class. But unlike even other labor-aristocratic workers, their gains are
enjoyed at the direct expense of the Palestinian masses and they live on land
stolen from the Palestinians. Thus they see the aggressive actions of the
Israeli state as the guarantor of their privileged existence. While the IMT,
like most socialist groups, stubbornly closes its eyes to these facts, the
future ISLers soon realized that they could not afford to do the same if they
were to advance a genuine perspective for the struggle for Palestinian
liberation and for socialist revolution in the Middle East.
The breaking point came with the 2007 civil
war in Gaza. Elections to the parliament of the Palestinian Authority in 2006
had seen Hamas score a crushing victory over the PLO’s dominant Fatah
faction. The following year, Fatah military forces, with the political and
material support of both Israel and the United States, launched an offensive
against Hamas with the aim of driving it from power. Recognizing that the
Palestinian masses had handed Hamas their electoral victory as a protest
against Fatah’s betrayals, and that the latter’s military attack on
Hamas was being conducted at the service of Israeli and U.S. imperialism, the
future ISLers correctly took a stand on the side of the Palestinian masses in
Gaza under the leadership of Hamas and for the defeat for Fatah and the aims of
its imperialist backers. The IMT leaders, on the other hand, opposed this
courageous stand and instead insisted on a position of neutrality in the civil
war.
The future ISLers did not capitulate to the
IMT leadership’s arguments, however, and went to the Tendency’s
next international conference, in Barcelona in 2007 to argue their case. The
pressure of debate there forced the comrades to look more critically at the
positions the IMT was taking elsewhere around the world, as well as to look
deeper to the roots of their political disagreements.
As they explain in their document “The
ISL’s Break with the IMT,”1 the
comrades soon argued against the IMT’s popular frontist policies in
Pakistan, where its supporters were functioning as a part of the bourgeois
Pakistan People’s Party, and in Venezuela, where the IMT had become
uncritical cheerleaders of bourgeois nationalist Hugo Chávez. During
these debates they also caught IMT leader Alan Woods in an outright lie when he
denied that the Irish Communists had supported the nationalists in the 1922-23
civil war. All this was predictably more than the IMT’s leaders could
take, and they soon expelled the comrades without ever pressing charges or
allowing them the right to defend their views in a trial.
FOUNDING VIEWS OF THE ISL
In their political struggle with the IMT
leadership, the future ISLers’ disagreements over the Palestinian
struggle quickly spread to differences over a range of international issues.
Following their expulsion, the comrades began rethinking their understanding of
Marxism on the most fundamental level.
1. In
Defense of the Strategy of Permanent Revolution
The betrayal of the cause of Palestinian
self-determination by the PLO confirmed Trotsky’s perspective of
permanent revolution, which teaches that bourgeois forces among the oppressed
are ultimately dependent on the imperialist system for their privileged social
position and would inevitably side against the masses. Trotsky argued that the
struggle of the oppressed for their liberation could only achieve victory
through the revolutionary overthrow of capitalism by the working class; and
that the working class could, in
turn, only win popular support and fit itself to rule by establishing itself as
the unwavering champion of the cause of the oppressed.
However, many who claimed the banner of
Trotskyism insisted that the Palestinians had to sacrifice their rights to one
extent or another in order to win the support of Israeli workers. The ISL
comrades concluded that the starting point for a revolutionary program in
Israel/Occupied Palestine had to be an uncompromising struggle for Palestinian
self-determination, which means the full right of return of Palestinians to
their homeland and their right to majority rule in a Palestinian workers’
state.
How could such a workers’ revolution be
achieved? Recognizing that the Palestinian masses were outgunned and
overpowered by the Israeli state, the IMT’s leaders had previously
convinced the ISLers that the Palestinians had no alternative but to base their
hopes on the supposedly revolutionary potential of the Israeli working class.
The ISLers recognized that this perspective was hopeless. They broke out of the
narrow perspective limited to the national borders of Israel and Palestine and
pointed to the potential of the revolutionary struggles of the working class of
the entire region, particularly that of the Arab working class of neighboring
states, to come to the aid of the Palestinian workers and poor. The Palestinian
working class would at the same time continue its inspiring role in the
anti-imperialist and working-class struggle in the Middle East and around the
world.
Further, the ISL comrades understood that
behind the IMT’s refusal to defend Hamas against Fatah’s
imperialist-backed attacks stood an overall accommodation by the IMT to
imperialism. For example, in the case of the Malvinas (Falklands) war of 1982,
the IMT refused to defend Argentina, an oppressed neo-colonial country, against
British imperialism. Similarly, in the struggles in Northern Ireland, the IMT
had refused to side with the Irish Republican Army fighting against British
imperialism. And beyond the IMT, the ISL comrades saw that all the major
groupings claiming the banner of Trotskyism had at some time or other similarly
betrayed the principle of unwavering defense of the oppressed against
imperialist attack.
2. The
Collapse of Stalinism and the Bankruptcy of “Orthodox Trotskyism”
Further spurring the ISL’s
radicalization was the collapse of Stalinism, an event totally unexpected by
the “orthodox Trotskyist” milieu that the ISL’s founding
members were part of. The core faith of the orthodox milieu is that the
Stalinist states were workers’ states. That view was refuted by the fact
that the working class barely lifted a finger to defend “their”
states from collapsing and in many cases had been a key force in anti-Stalinist
mass struggles. But if the Stalinist states were not workers’ states,
what was their class nature? The ISL comrades correctly concluded that if the
working class had been oppressed and exploited by those states, then the
Stalinist bureaucracy that ruled them must have functioned as a capitalist
ruling class.
The ISL’s break from the orthodox
“deformed workers’ state” theory did not lead them to a break
from Trotskyism, however. On the contrary, they continued their struggle to
defend the authentic revolutionary tradition from abuse and distortion. The ISL
comrades had fought inside the IMT to defend the perspective of permanent
revolution from those who betrayed it in Trotsky’s name. Now they
understood that the idea that the Stalinists had created workers’ states
after the Second World War betrayed not only Trotsky’s judgment that the
Stalinists were a thoroughly counterrevolutionary force, but also the
fundamental Marxist understanding that only the working class could overthrow
capitalism. The ISL now saw that rejecting illusions in the progressive
potential of Stalinism was essential for reviving the genuine revolutionary
tradition of Trotskyism.
Importantly, the ISL comrades quickly
concluded that the idea that Stalinist forces could play a revolutionary role
expressed a cynical lack of confidence in the revolutionary potential of the working
class, as well as the illusory hope that non-proletarian forces could succeed
in overthrowing capitalism where the workers had failed. This cynicism
explained the IMT’s capitulation to social democratic reformism at home
in Britain, as well as its political support for bourgeois nationalist forces
in Pakistan and Venezuela. It also explained the very similar capitulations of
the Spartacists, who are notorious for their celebratory support for Stalinists
as well as for Stalinist-influenced nationalist popular fronts like the
Sandinistas in Nicaragua and the FMLN in El Salvador in the 1980s.
As the ISL comrades re-examined the history
of Trotskyism, they began tracing a pattern of betrayals all the way back to
the post-World War II period. The IMT’s craven support to Chávez
in Venezuela was not fundamentally different from the degenerating post-war
Fourth International’s support to Tito in Yugoslavia, to whom its leaders
ludicrously offered membership in the International. ISLers had known that the
Fourth International had crossed the class line by supporting the government of
an “anti-imperialist” bourgeois party in the Bolivian revolution of
1952; the FI’s relatively large Bolivian section, with a significant base
in the working class, betrayed Trotskyism’s basic principle of always
fighting for the political and organizational independence of the working class
from capitalist forces. The FI thus contributed to the demobilization and
demoralization of the working class and bore responsibility for the workers’
ultimate defeat. The ISLers would later conclude that this decisive betrayal in
practice marked the end of the FI as a revolutionary organization.
With these basic ideas, the ISL turned to
studying the views of the few ostensibly Trotskyist groupings with a
“state capitalist” analysis of Stalinism. They turned first to the
largest such grouping, the International Socialist Tendency led by the British
Socialist Workers Party. But a quick review of the IST’s political record
revealed a pattern of opportunist positions no better than those of the
“orthodox Trotskyist” milieu they had broken from. In particular,
the SWP was certainly anti-Zionist but it habitually capitulated to the
nationalist and Islamist leaderships of Muslims both in Britain and in the
Middle Eastern countries occupied by the imperialists. The ISL had a brief
correspondence with the IST, which also revealed the IST’s stunningly
cynical attitude toward the prospects for working-class revolutionary struggle
in the Middle East: the IST advised the ISL to give up their efforts and move
to Britain!
Soon thereafter, the ISL turned to the LRP
and discovered that we already shared common positions on both Stalinism and
struggles in Palestine. The ISL then initiated contact with the LRP and we set
about our political discussions.
TOPICS OF DISCUSSION, POINTS OF AGREEMENT AND
QUESTIONS FOR FUTURE DISCUSSION
After sharing our respective political
histories and general worldview, our two groups began examining in more detail
those questions on which we already had basic agreement, Israel/Occupied
Palestine and the class nature of the Stalinist states.
1. Israel/Occupied
Palestine
Reviewing key historical struggles, we began
with the revolutionary attitude toward the wars of 1948, 1956 and 1973. We
agreed on the importance of standing with the Palestinians against all of
Israel’s imperialist attacks, including in the war of 1948, a position
that even the then-still-revolutionary Fourth International had failed to take
at the time.
On the program for the working-class struggle
in Israel/Occupied Palestine today, we agreed that its starting point is an
uncompromising struggle for the overthrow of the Israeli state and for the
self-determination of the oppressed Palestinian people, which can only be
achieved in the form of a Palestinian workers’ state over the whole
territory that is now Israel and Palestine. We reached tentative agreement on a
number of programmatic issues – including language policy, opposition to
revolutionaries participating in elections to the Israeli Knesset, the demand
for a constituent assembly in Israel/Occupied Palestine, the land question, the
revolutionary attitude toward Israel’s Histadrut unions, Trotsky’s
Proletarian Military Policy, and tactics for promoting working class struggle
in Israel. We expect our agreement on these issues to be confirmed in the form
of published documents in the future.
One question our two organizations do not
agree on is whether Israeli Jews constitute a nation. The LRP has taken for
granted that the struggle to dispossess the Palestinian people and build the
Zionist state established an Israeli Jewish nation with a distinct national
consciousness. The ISL, on the other hand, believes that while Israel bears
many of the basic characteristics of a nation, it lacks the conscious
identification of itself as such. Indeed, Israel officially denies that it is
the state of its own citizens, insisting that it is rather the state and
homeland of a world Jewish nation. Both groups recognize that this disagreement
does not affect our attitude towards Israeli self-determination: as an
oppressor people whose self-determination can only be exercised at the expense
of the oppressed Palestinians, Israeli Jews do not have rights to stolen
Palestinian land or property, or the right to an apartheid-style minority rule.
2. Stalinism
and Marxist Economic Theory
The ISL studied the LRP’s book, The
Life and Death of Stalinism and came to a broad agreement with the
LRP’s theory of Stalinism as statified capitalism. This was later
expressed in its document Trotskyism and the Class Character of the
Stalinist States.2 We also discussed
the LRP’s understanding of economic theory and the pattern of economic
crises in capitalism’s epoch of decay that is developed at length in The
Life and Death of Stalinism and in several published articles, and explored
those ideas further in discussions of the current economic crisis.
3. The
COFI Political Resolution
We also discussed, point by point, the
LRP’s most comprehensive programmatic statement, the Political
Resolution of the Communist Organization for the Fourth International.3 We
established comprehensive agreement on its perspective, which has been
confirmed as the ISL has begun publishing programmatic documents of its own,
including The Socialist Revolution and the Vanguard Party4, which deals with the decisive role of
the vanguard revolutionary party in raising the revolutionary consciousness of
the working class, and The ISL Position on Wars5.
We specifically agreed that we opposed the strategy of “deep
entrism” into Stalinist or Social-Democratic parties, which is not the
same as the temporary entry tactic advocated by Trotsky in the 1930's.
4. Contemporary
Events in the Class Struggle
Our discussions also addressed contemporary
events in the international class struggle. We came to similar conclusions
regarding the Russia-Georgia war in the summer of 2008. The LRP’s public
statement on the question, Russian Imperialism Out of Georgia! U.S., NATO
Imperialists Out of the Caucusus!6
greatly benefited from our discussions, and the ISL’s position was later
expressed in The ISL Position on
Wars.7 We also discussed Israel’s war on Gaza in
the winter of 2008-9, and our agreement was expressed in the independent
statements our two organizations published on these events, the LRP’s
leaflet “Defeat Israeli and U.S. Imperialism – Stop the Slaughter
in Gaza”8 and the ISL’s leaflet “Not
for a cease fire but for the immediate withdrawal of Israel from Gaza and the
smashing of the siege of Gaza!”
IN CONCLUSION
This past summer ISL comrades visited the
U.S., and the ISL’s Yossi Schwartz was the featured speaker at a public
meeting organized by the LRP in New York City on “The Crisis of Zionism
and the Prospects for Revolution in the Middle East.” At that meeting,
both our groups argued for an uncompromising struggle against Zionism and for
the Palestinian nation’s right to self-determination as an essential part
of the struggle for socialist revolution in the Middle East. Others at the
meeting, including representatives and former supporters of the Spartacist
League and the International Bolshevik Tendency, argued that socialists should
support both the Palestinians’ and the Israeli Jews’ claims to
self-determination. LRP and ISL speakers challenged them to state clearly which
of the Palestinians’ democratic rights they were opposed to, since
Israeli Jews can only have a state of their own by either denying
Palestinians’ right to return to the land from which they were ethnically
cleansed, or by ruling over the Palestinian majority in a form of apartheid. No
supporter of the Spartacist perspective even attempted to answer our question.
LRP and ISL comrades’ experience of jointly defending the only viable perspective
for Palestinian liberation only further confirmed our shared political
perspective and our growing bonds of comradeship.
The discussions so far have clearly
established a great degree of political agreement between the LRP and ISL.
Future discussions will focus more on the LRP’s perspectives on issues of
strategic importance to the United States class struggle in particular, such as
the struggle against racism, as well as of questions that have so far only been
discussed in passing, such as our understanding of revolutionary work in the
unions and other mass movements. Perspectives for building our two
organizations in our respective countries will be discussed. We will also seek
to put our agreement to the test of new developments in the international class
struggle by issuing joint statements on major issues. We have begun by adopting
our first joint statement, “Stop the U.S./Israeli War Threats Against
Iran!”
We are confident that further discussions, as
well as the test of collaborative work in responding to new events in the
international class struggle, will confirm that we share a common Marxist world
view, and that the ISL will be joining the fraternal grouping of comrades in
the Communist Organization for the Fourth International (COFI).