The ISL Position on Wars
The 20th century marked the beginning of
capitalism's epoch of decay. Capitalism, just like any other socio-economic
system which preceded it, has reached a stage in which it is no longer a system
that develops the forces of production, but the very system that stands in the
way of their development. The wars of this epoch reflect this characteristic in
a terrifying manner.
The ISL does not believe that the capitalist system marks
"the end of history" nor does it believe that capitalism has not yet
outstretched its full potential. We support its overthrow and its replacement
by workers’ states, leading the transition to a higher socio-economic
system which would enable humanity to elevate its forces of production and
standard of living into levels as-yet unimaginable: Communism – the
highest stage of socialist society.
Like other socio-economic systems before it, capitalism
had to fight itself into existence and must be fought out of existence. The revolutionary
violence of its birth will be the major tool for its overthrow, unfortunate as
it may be. The ISL strongly opposes all pacifist idealist notions, which
fundamentally reject all forms of violence and make no distinction between
oppressor and oppressed, a distinction which is key in Marxist thought. We hold
those pacifist reformist ideas as historical non-possibilities that serve as a
mask for those who serve imperialism, or who are merely spreading illusions
about the capability of capitalism to conduct itself rationally and without
contradictions or antagonisms resulting in acts of violence.
It must be said, however, that capitalism did not create
wars. Armed bodies of people fought each other and within themselves for
control over resources ever since humanity can remember itself. The difference
between ancient wars and capitalist wars is the essential motive behind them
– scarcity. Prior to this period, there simply were not enough resources
to allow humanity as a whole to prosper and develop its means of production
farther. Capitalism, however, has allowed the development of the means to
abolish scarcity and has thus given humanity the potential to live in
"world peace". However the capitalist relations of production
themselves stand in its way.
The highest and final stage of capitalism is
characterized by imperialism – an epoch in which the boundaries of the
old-fashioned nation-states are too small to contain the forces of production.
As in the period of the primitive accumulation of capital, today the
capitalists force themselves on underdeveloped nations for the purpose of
extracting more surplus value by super-exploitation of "Third World"
workers. With the creation of a world economy each imperialist struggles to
become the only power which super-exploits, and thus they turn against one
another with brute force resulting in what history calls a World War, but which
is in reality an inter-imperialist war, with the "world" as its
victim.
The 20th century witnessed two such major inter-imperialist
wars that resulted in a holocaust unimaginable even by the most ruthless and
bloodthirsty of medieval barbarians, causing the death of close to 90 million
human beings! It is possible that the imperialists did not want a world war to
happen; they all spoke of diplomacy, reasoning, and most of all, of peace. But
in such an epoch of decay, the enchanted broom does not act any more upon the
sorcerer's commands. Instead of peace, diplomacy, and reason, we got weapons of
mass destruction capable of ending human existence as we know it. Instead of
progress and development, we got devastation, hunger, and epidemics with entire
major cities and industrial complexes reduced to rubble and dust, artifacts of
technology and knowledge lost to be dug out, as if they were archeological
relics. In 1914 it was clear that capitalism had outgrown itself and changed
from a mechanism of building into a mechanism of destruction, eating away at
itself in a vicious cycle of destroying and rebuilding without any regard to the
costs humanity has to pay as a result of this senseless psychopathic behavior.
In this epoch, humanity stands at the crossroads, having
to choose between the overthrow of the social-economic system which no longer
serves its needs, and facing its own extinction. A well-known phrase was coined
by Rosa Luxemburg: "Socialism or Barbarism", or as Lenin said:
"In order for humanity to survive, imperialism must die". So, for
anyone who wants humanity to survive, the question at hand is:
Who, How and What Will Kill Imperialism?
Theorists like Karl Kautsky have envisioned that in a
world in which the tendency of value is to centralize into the hands of fewer
and fewer capitalists, eventually a global society will be created and ruled by
a tiny elite of capitalists, "a holy alliance of imperialists",
joined together by their fear of global war. Those who observe reality through
the glasses of idealism and formal logic will find it hard not to agree with
this, and why not? It seems perfectly logical. But dialectical materialists
know that reason and human consciousness can change reality only if material
conditions allow it. The first and second world wars have taught us, at a
terrible cost, another lesson in the seemingly irrational workings of history.
As Lenin had predicted, the very conditions laid out by the capitalist system
did not allow the imperialists themselves to put an end to war; the opposite
would prove to be true.
Capitalism itself also contains the means for its
abolition. Along with the bourgeoisie as a ruling class, it has created the
working class, whose interests are inherently antagonistic to it. All other
classes – like peasants, professionals or artisans – are constant
factors of any class society and are not a unique phenomenon of the capitalist
system. Therefore, if some bourgeois ruling classes of various nations have
managed to climb up and become imperialists, the only class which has the
interest and the ability to stop them from tearing this world apart with their
inter-imperialist wars is the working class, and the only way for the working
class to do so is by overthrowing the bourgeoisie as a ruling class, smashing
the capitalist state's apparatus, and replacing it with a working-class state's
apparatus as a necessary step in leading humanity on its way to a classless,
stateless society with no possibilities of war.
The Correct Working-Class Policy Regarding an
Inter-Imperialist War
So what should the working class do in the event of an
impending world war, knowing that the power to stop it lies exclusively in its
own hands? The leaders of the international working class party, the Second
International, on the eve of the First World War, advised their supporters to
support their own bourgeoisie, claiming that the bourgeoisie on the other side
of the border were much worse. This is the classic "lesser evil"
argument which continues to be the flagship of reformist arguments to this very
day. It occurs often in history that following ‘lesser evil’ logic
leads to much greater evil.
From a Marxist point of view, knowing that the interests
of the bourgeoisie as a whole are antagonistic to those of the working class as
a whole, supporting either side in an inter-imperialist war seems and is
senseless. In case of an inter-imperialist war, the working class must act
internationally, not only by not supporting either side, but rather by opposing
all sides. This policy is called by Marxists "Revolutionary
Defeatism", named after the phrase coined by Lenin regarding imperialist
Russia's involvement in World War I: "Defeat is the lesser evil".
While this phrase has been open to much interpretation and misinterpretation,
we agree with Trotsky's understanding of the defeatist policy:
"In those cases where it is a
question of conflict between capitalist countries, the proletariat of any one
of them refuses categorically to sacrifice its historic interests, which in the
final analysis coincide with the interests of the nation and humanity, for the
sake of the military victory of the bourgeoisie. Lenin’s formula,
“defeat is the lesser evil,” means not defeat of one’s
country is the lesser evil as compared with the defeat of the enemy country but
that a military defeat resulting from the growth of the revolutionary movement
is infinitely more beneficial to the proletariat and to the whole people than
military victory assured by “civil peace.” Karl Liebknecht gave an
unsurpassed formula of proletarian policy in time of war: “The chief
enemy of the people is in its own country.” The victorious proletarian
revolution not only will rectify the evils caused by defeat but also will
create the final guarantee against future wars and defeats. This dialectical
attitude toward war is the most important element of revolutionary training and
therefore also of the struggle against war."[1]
The ultimate goal of the proletariat, should it fail in
preventing the war to begin with, is to turn the world war into a worldwide
civil war aimed to overthrow the bourgeoisie and capitalism. This policy is
called by Marxists "the transformation of imperialist war into civil
war". As in any war under capitalism, the bourgeoisie rely heavily on the
cooperation and support of the working class – it must work much more and
much harder in order to feed the wasteful bourgeois war machine, and more
importantly, it must outperform the workers of the "enemy nation". A
working class internationally conscious of its historical role in bringing down
capitalism would then have the perfect opportunity to do so, since without the
cooperation of the workers, not even a single bullet would fly, let alone an
H-Bomb. The workers' revolutionary opposition can result in a civil war that
would bring about the end of bourgeois rule, and thus the capitalist phase of
human history.
Revolutionary War
Revolutionary wars are wars waged between a progressive
side, whose interest is in the overthrowing of an outdated mode of production,
and a reactionary side, whose interests are in preserving it. Socialist
revolutionaries would give their support to victory of the progressive side.
This position could be easily learned from Marx's own
position on the civil war in the United States between the free labor North and
the slaveholding South:
"The present struggle between the
South and North is, therefore, nothing but a struggle between two social
systems, the system of slavery and the system of free labour. The struggle has
broken out because the two systems can no longer live peacefully side by side
on the North American continent. It can only be ended by the victory of one
system or the other."[2]
"He [Lincoln] errs only if he
imagines that the “loyal” slaveholders are to be moved by
benevolent speeches and rational arguments. They will yield only to force. So
far, we have only witnessed the first act of the Civil War — the
constitutional waging of war. The second act, the revolutionary waging of war,
is at hand."[3]
Once all outdated modes of production have been smashed
out of existence by capitalism, it has concluded its revolutionary role. Today,
when free competition has long ago given way to monopoly, and the struggle to
create a global market of commodities has long ago given way to imperialist
super-exploitation; Marxist revolutionaries' support should lie with those
elements which would hasten the fall of capitalist imperialism.
As we have established before, the working class should
rise to become the leader and spearhead of the anti-capitalist and
anti-imperialist resistance. Should the working class of any nation succeed in
overthrowing its own bourgeoisie and form a workers' state, Marxists will
defend it from any attack from the outside or inside of the given country and
support its victory in any war against any class enemy – imperialist or
not. The workers' interests lie in battling the laws laid down by the current
reactionary social production system, capitalism, and creating a new social
mode of production which would operate without the need for states or classes -
socialism. Therefore, the working class, in any armed conflict, is the
progressive side, receiving our unconditional support.
The only country in history that, through revolution,
managed to become a workers' state was the Soviet Union in 1917. It managed to
stay a workers' state up until 1939 when the Stalinist counterrevolution
finally completed the process of turning it back into a capitalist state in a
statified form. The young workers' state of 1917 was instantly attacked by
several bourgeois imperialist armies, namely the Russian bourgeoisie (the White
Army), Austria-Hungary, Germany, the Ottoman Empire, the far-reaching armed
tentacles of imperialist countries like the U.S., the UK, France and Italy, and
also non-imperialist reactionary bourgeois, peasant and petty-bourgeois armies.
Marxist revolutionaries would have supported the workers' state despite any
bureaucratic deformations which plagued it at the time and which were
eventually the cause of its internal demise.
World War II and the Rise of Fascism
On the eve of World War II, the USSR was no longer a
workers' state and would not have received any revolutionary support from true
Marxists. Our position is that turning the country back into a workers' state
would have required a new civil war between the working class and its
bureaucratic ruling class of exploiters – a social, rather than
political, revolution. (This is contrary to the position held by Trotsky until
his death in 1940.)
However, World War II was marked by the rise of a new enemy
to the working class, a political enemy whose main target is the working class.
By the use of brute force, it would try to deny it its most basic democratic
rights, attempting to seal off any possibility of a working-class revolution.
This enemy, so fierce it would strike fear even in the hearts of the bourgeois
ruling class, would receive the notorious name ‘fascism’, after the
Italian Fascist movement – the first of its kind to rise to power.
Naturally, fascism has terrified the workers throughout the
world; millions of them were willing to take arms in hands and smash the
fascist serpent. The bourgeoisie, in turn, would naturally pounce on this
opportunity, when the eyes of the workers are focused elsewhere, and cynically
demand "civil peace" from the working class - which in actuality
means far-reaching capitulations - while accusing those who refuse to make them
of refusing to contribute to the war effort, or even worse, of collaborating
with the fascist enemy.
With regards to defeatism, the transformation of
imperialist war into civil war was not as relatively easy in the second world
war as it was during the first, since in the former it was easier for the
bourgeoisie to sell to the workers the lie that this war was not just another
imperialist war designed to further their own interests in weakening and
eliminating imperialist competition, but was nothing less than a "war to
save democracy!"
Marxist revolutionaries know that fascism is nothing but
the uglier side of the same capitalist face, and that its rise to power is just
a symptom of a bourgeois ruling class so intimidated by the strong working
class and its impending revolution that it is willing to give the keys to its
country to right-wing militants rather than give its place away to a more
advanced mode of production of which it will no longer be the master.
Once again, as in any other imperialist war, regardless
of the political character of the rulers of the different imperialist
countries, our position would be both defeatism and the transformation of
imperialist war into civil war. If anyone should make capitulations to save its
skin from the fascists, it should be the bourgeoisie and not the working class.
After all, it was they who gave it control under the cover of democratic slogans.
Overall, the imperialist characteristic of a country is overwhelmingly more
significant to us than its political character.
Trotsky writes aptly about the possibility of an
inter-imperialist war and the correct proletarian attitude towards it:
"If the proletariat should find it
beyond its power to prevent war by means of revolution – and this is the
only means of preventing war – the workers, together with the whole
people, will be forced to participate in the army and in war. Individualistic
and anarchistic slogans of refusal to undergo military service, passive
resistance, desertion, sabotage are in basic contradiction to the methods of
the proletarian revolution. But just as in the factory the advanced worker
feels himself a slave of capital, preparing for his liberation, so in the
capitalist army too he feels himself a slave of imperialism. Compelled today to
give his muscles and even his life, he does not surrender his revolutionary
consciousness. He remains a fighter, learns how to use arms, explains even in
the trenches the class meaning of war, groups around himself the discontented,
connects them into cells, transmits the ideas and slogans of the party, watches
closely the changes in the mood of the masses, the subsiding of the patriotic
wave, the growth of indignation, and summons the soldiers to the aid of the
workers at the critical moment."[4]
For a working class which lives in a country plagued by
fascism, here's a summary of the correct tactics to counter fascism without
forfeiting the class struggle:
1. The working class can trust no one to defend it from
its political or class enemies. Therefore, in case of an armed onslaught upon
it, revolutionaries would call the workers to arm themselves for the purpose of
self-defense against the fascists.
2. A workers' revolutionary party must send an
infiltration force of propagandists into the army in order to win the support
of as many soldiers as possible (most of them come from the ranks of the poor
peasantry and the crisis-battered petty bourgeois) to the proletarian
revolution.
3. A united front of action, temporary and tactical only,
should be formed with all anti-fascist elements. The working class should
strive to rise to the leadership of this united front, win as many
anti-fascists to its side in the class war, and steer this movement towards the
socialist revolution. Under no circumstances should the working class make any
capitulations of its class interests to alien class elements, nor fall under
their control. Keeping the working class an independent, self-emancipating
fighting force is key to eliminating both the fascist threat and the capitalist
ruling class responsible for its very emergence.
The Lessons of the Spanish Revolution
An example of a civil war involving fascism is the Spanish
Revolution of 1936-1939. In this war a fascist army backed by Nazi Germany
attempted to take over Spain. Unlike in Germany, the working class in Spain was
not yet weakened by its traitorous leadership to the point where it had lost
all will to fight fascism. A "popular front" consisting of many
different and contradictory political and class elements was formed to fight
fascism.
Trotsky wrote on this "popular front":
"A bloc of divergent political groups
of the working class is sometimes completely indispensable for the solution of
common practical problems. In certain historical circumstances, such a bloc is
capable of attracting the oppressed petty-bourgeois masses whose interests are
close to the interests of the proletariat. The joint force of such a bloc can
prove far stronger than the sum of the forces of each of its component parts.
On the contrary, the political alliance between the proletariat and the
bourgeoisie, whose interests on basic questions in the present epoch diverge at
an angle of 180 degrees, as a general rule is capable only of paralyzing the
revolutionary force of the proletariat.
"Civil war, in which the force of
naked coercion is hardly effective, demands of its participants the spirit of
supreme self-abnegation. The workers and peasants can assure victory only if
they wage a struggle for their own emancipation. Under these conditions, to
subordinate the proletariat to the leadership of the bourgeoisie means
beforehand to assure defeat in the civil war."[5]
Trotsky was right, and the popular front tactic proved to
be disastrous to the working class and its revolution. Understanding that
bourgeois "democracy" and totalitarian fascism stem from the same
class interest in prolonging the death agony of capitalism helps Marxist
revolutionaries to see right through all sorts of class enemy propaganda, be it
bourgeois-liberal, reformist or centrist, and exposes its role in blocking the
revolutionary power of the working class. The only way to win an anti-fascist
campaign is to free the proletariat from the leadership of the bourgeoisie.
Wars and the "Third World"
Not all bourgeois countries have succeeded in becoming
imperialist. Some, in rare cases, had achieved imperialism but lost it in war.
These countries would most likely become the source of super-exploited labor
and/or cheap natural resources for the imperialist countries.
The bourgeois classes of these exploited nations possess
the same class interests as their imperialist counterparts and wish they could
increase their own value beyond all bounds. Not having the military power and
resources to exploit weaker countries, these bourgeois ruling classes would
face very unfavorable options for achieving their interests of expansion.
One of those options would be to try and increase the
exploitation rate of their own already super-exploited workers – a hard
task, since super-exploited workers already receive just enough wages for mere
survival, and to push them harder would result in a working-class united fight
for survival, or even a revolution. In such cases, the correct position to take
by Marxist revolutionaries is obviously to support the workers against the
bourgeoisie.
A second option, which will be discussed in this article,
is made possible by the fact that many of those exploited nations live within
territories whose borders were hand-drawn by the imperialists themselves,
creating significant national minorities. These minorities are either castes
who act as a ruling elite or are, as in most cases, an oppressed and
discriminated against national minority, perhaps refugees from neighboring
war-torn “Third World" countries, and generally politically weaker
than the ruling majority. The ruling bourgeoisie would have to exploit every
opportunity to eat away at the remaining rights of these minorities, who happen
in many cases to sit upon some valuable natural resources.
In such cases Marxists would take the side of the
oppressed minority against the oppressors regardless of the class nature of its
leadership. This position means joint tactical actions against a common enemy.
However, and most importantly, Marxists would give no political support to any
leadership whose interests are antagonistic to the working class, and under no
circumstances should the working class surrender its own interests or
capitulate any achievements to the bourgeoisie, nor give up on its military or
organizational independence from it once achieved.
Marxists would also call for the working class of the
oppressor nation to turn its arms against its own bourgeoisie and protect the
rights of the oppressed nation, turning the national civil war into a
revolutionary civil war.
A third option which the ruling class of an exploited
nation has is to try to get a bigger piece of their own nation's exploitation
pie from their imperialist overlords. A refusal by the imperialists sometimes
results in an armed conflict, or an 'anti-imperialist war'. This turn of the
bourgeoisie against imperialism may also be a result of inner pressures created
by the dissatisfied super-exploited working class and peasantry. The ruling
classes would then hope to succeed in diverting the anger of the masses from
themselves to the imperialist nations. Any resulting capitulations by the imperialists
would then be used to pacify the angry masses.
A non-imperialist nation engaged in a war against
imperialism would be regarded by Marxists in the same manner mentioned above
concerning an oppressed national minority, i.e., support for the victory of the
oppressed, regardless of the class nature of their leadership, and without
supporting any bourgeois or reactionary policies. Once again, the workers who
live in the imperialist nation would be called to support the revolutionary
defeat of their own bourgeoisie and the victory of the "Third World"
nation against it.
Such support would be given even to the most hated ruling
characters and regimes. For example, Trotsky had supported the Kuomintang, led
by the butcher Chiang Kai-Shek, against the attacks of imperialist Japan:
"In order to arrive at a real
national liberation it is necessary to overthrow the Kuomintang. But this does
not mean that we postpone the struggle until the time when the Kuomintang is
overthrown. The more the struggle against foreign oppression spreads the more
difficulties the Kuomintang will have. The more we line up the masses against
the Kuomintang the more the struggle against imperialism will develop.
"At the acute moment of Japanese intervention
the workers and the students called for arms. From whom? Again from the
Kuomintang. It would be a sectarian absurdity to abandon this demand under the
protext that we wish to overthrow the Kuonintang. We wish to overthrow it but
we have not yet reached that point. The more energetically we demand the arming
of the workers the sooner we shall reach it."[6]
Anti-imperialism overshadows even our anti-fascist
sentiments. While our anti-fascist strategies and tactics would apply
regardless of the imperialist or non-imperialist character of any given
country, we would support a non-imperialist country against an imperialist
country, even if the former is ruled by fascists.
Trotsky has explicitly expressed this position in an
interview with Mateo Fossa in 1938:
"In Brazil there now reigns a
semifascist regime that every revolutionary can only view with hatred. Let us
assume, however, that on the morrow England enters into a military conflict
with Brazil. I ask you on whose side of the conflict will the working class be?
I will answer for myself personally—in this case I will be on the side of
“fascist” Brazil against “democratic” Great Britain.
Why? Because in the conflict between them it will not be a question of democracy
or fascism. If England should be victorious, she will put another fascist in
Rio de Janeiro and will place double chains on Brazil. If Brazil on the
contrary should be victorious, it will give a mighty impulse to national and
democratic consciousness of the country and will lead to the overthrow of the
Vargas dictatorship. The defeat of England will at the same time deliver a blow
to British imperialism and will give an impulse to the revolutionary movement
of the British proletariat. Truly, one must have an empty head to reduce world antagonisms
and military conflicts to the struggle between fascism and democracy. Under all
masks one must know how to distinguish exploiters, slave-owners, and robbers!"
Imperialist Involvement in Third World Warfare
All of the above may seem like a well-worked scheme.
However, in many cases the situation at hand is far from clean cut. The
imperialists are well aware of the antagonism felt towards them in exploited
countries. They would use a wide range of tactics to keep these nations
fighting within and amongst themselves for scraps falling off their table.
In many situations where "Third World"
countries are engaged in warfare with each other, there is one imperialist
country or more involved in a direct or indirect manner, attempting to
capitalize on the war and turn it to their own interests in the given region.
When no imperialist is involved, a war between two
"Third World" countries will be regarded by us in the same manner
mentioned above regarding an inter-imperialist war. We would call the working
classes of both countries to unite against their own bourgeoisie and fight for
the establishment of a workers' state federation in the region, which would
grant every oppressed nation the right to self-determination.
However, a non-imperialist nation that turns against an
imperialist one often gives neighboring non-imperialist ruling classes an
excellent opportunity to show their loyalty to imperialism and offer to do
imperialism’s 'dirty work' for it by engaging in direct warfare against
the rebellious country, hoping to expand its influence in the region and get a
more favorable treatment from the imperialist bourgeoisie. The imperialists may
get involved either directly by sending their own forces to aid their
“Third World" allies, or indirectly by supplying arms and/or
military consultation. A rival imperialist may like to get involved and aid the
other side to further its own interests and/or weaken the former.
A war in which rival countries use other countries as an
indirect way to fight each other is referred to as a 'proxy war'. In such cases
the magnitude and depth of imperialist involvement would determine which side,
if any, would gain our support. A proxy war is meant to benefit one imperialist
or the other, and so under no circumstances would Marxists prefer the interests
of one imperialist to the other – we support none and oppose all.
Therefore, any ruling class which ties its interests directly to the interests
of imperialists would obviously get no support from Marxists who would rather
see it defeated.
The key question regarding imperialist involvement is to
what extent does the imperialist country directly control the "Third
World" army, and to what extent does the latter act on its own will.
Trotsky gave a rather extreme hypothetic example to demonstrate his position,
with which we completely agree:
"If Hitler tomorrow were forced to
send arms to the insurrectionary Indians, must the revolutionary German workers
oppose this concrete action by strikes or sabotage? On the contrary they must
make sure that the insurrectionists receive the arms as soon as possible."[7]
In this hypothetical scenario, Hitler does not directly
control the armed force to which he sends his military aid. Should a Third
World army become directly controlled by an imperialist power, it would not
receive any support from us.
The 2008 South Ossetia Conflict
An excellent case study which would help demonstrate the
ISL's position on this matter is the 2008 South Ossetia conflict. Georgia,
which is a non-imperialist country politically supported by the imperialist
U.S., has invaded the territories of the Ossetian and Abkhazian national
minorities, which are politically backed by imperialist Russia. As retaliation,
the Russians invaded Georgian territory.
Our position, in short, was to support the Ossetians and
Abkhazians against the Georgian attack, but once the Russians invaded Georgia,
we supported the defeat of imperialist Russia, without withdrawing our support
from the right of the Ossetians and Abkhazians to self-determination and
separation from either Georgia or Russia. We called for the working class of
the region to unite and fight for a socialist federation of the entire
Caucasus.
Most leftist groups around the world regarded this war as
a proxy war between the U.S. and Russia, and either chose either side or
opposed both, taking a pacifist position condemning all sides. These wrong
positions resulted from the confusion over standing with the oppressed and
giving political support to its leadership, and the confusion over direct and
indirect military involvement; they also resulted from an inability or
unwillingness to even tell the oppressor from the oppressed.
In our opinion, the political and indirect military
support Georgia got from NATO and also from Israel, in the form of selling arms
and military consultation, was not enough to label Georgia a country acting in
the interests of its imperialist supporters. Rather, our impression was that
this war was an act of defiance by the Georgian ruling class against its
imperialist neighbor - Russia. Of course, we did not think this act should be
conducted on the expense of the rights of national minorities, hence the
support we gave the latter.
Our Position on Guerilla Warfare, Guerilla-ism, and
Terrorism
As Marxist revolutionaries, we do not oppose guerilla
warfare as a tactic in the service of proletarian revolutionary warfare, and as
a section of the 'regular' workers' army consisting of armed workers' militias.
We do, however, strongly oppose guerrilla-ism, which is the idealist belief
that guerilla warfare could or should replace the proletarian army and achieve
victory on its own.
The working class, especially under monopoly capitalism,
is organized en masse more than ever before, with single factories employing
hundreds and even thousands of workers. Breaking them all down into small
semi-independent units makes no sense, of course. Calls of guerrillist nature
usually arise in countries where the working class constitutes a minority of
the general population (i.e. "Third World" countries), and are
usually propagated by elements outside the working class, such as peasants and
the urban petit bourgeois.
Should elements from these classes express an interest in
overthrowing the bourgeoisie, they must be led by the only revolutionary class
under capitalism – the working class, no matter how small. The very core
of Marxist thought stresses the centrality of the self-emancipating working
class (with its own strategies and tactics) in overthrowing capitalism.
Revolutions led by any other class just lead back to capitalism from the back
door.
Regarding terrorism, the general definition of which is
politically and emotionally charged and therefore disputed, Marxists define it
as an aspect of psychological warfare whose aim is to instill fear and
intimidation among both civilians and the military/police through the use of
limited but concentrated violence.[8]
Terrorism is roughly divided into two kinds – state
terrorism and individual terrorism. State terrorism is practiced by the ruling
class against political and military rivals. State terrorism, like any other
kind, does not distinguish between armed combatants and unarmed civilians, its
goal being to create a smokescreen of illusions in the invincibility of the
given state, its 'all knowing, all seeing' abilities through secret police and
army intelligence, and its zero tolerance of any verbal or physical attack
against it.
The use of state terrorism by a given state signifies its
relative weakness and its own fears for its survival, since both guerilla
warfare and terrorism are the tactics of those who feel that their backs are
against the wall. Our opposition to capitalist and imperialist states is regardless
of the tactics they use against their enemies. In the same manner, when a
workers' state is forced to use state-terrorist tactics, we will not withdraw
our support from it.
However, we categorically oppose the tactic of individual
terrorism. Trotsky aptly explains this position:
"In our eyes, individual terror is
inadmissible precisely because it belittles the role of the masses in their own
consciousness, reconciles them to their powerlessness, and turns their eyes and
hopes towards a great avenger and liberator who some day will come and
accomplish his mission. The anarchist prophets of the 'propaganda of the deed'
can argue all they want about the elevating and stimulating influence of
terrorist acts on the masses. Theoretical considerations and political
experience prove otherwise. The more 'effective' the terrorist acts, the
greater their impact, the more they reduce the interest of the masses in
self-organisation and self-education. But the smoke from the confusion clears
away, the panic disappears, the successor of the murdered minister makes his
appearance, life again settles into the old rut, the wheel of capitalist
exploitation turns as before; only the police repression grows more savage and
brazen. And as a result, in place of the kindled hopes and artificially aroused
excitement comes disillusionment and apathy."[9]
Having said that, we must also clarify that the support
we give to oppressed nations includes desperate or delusional individuals who
decide to take part in such an activity, and regardless of the damage they
cause for their own nation's struggle. Let us take for example the episode of
Herschel Grynszpan, a German-Jew who assassinated the German diplomat Ernst vom
Rath as an act of revenge against the German government, which at that time
deported German-Jews of Polish origin from Germany, among them Grynszpan's
family.
This attack, which could be labeled as individual
terrorism, was later used as a pretext for the German government to issue the
famous pogrom called 'Kristallnacht' against the German Jews in 1938. Grynszpan
was then attacked by both the bourgeois and Stalinist press as a collaborator
with Hitler, having served to him on a silver platter the pretext for the
pogrom.
Trotsky however, though condemning individual terrorism,
chose to defend Grynszpan:
"We Marxists consider the tactic of
individual terror inexpedient in the tasks of the liberating struggle of the
proletariat as well as oppressed nationalities. A single isolated hero cannot
replace the masses. But we understand only too clearly the inevitability of
such convulsive acts of despair and vengeance. All our emotions, all our
sympathies are with the self-sacrificing avengers even though they have been
unable to discover the correct road. Our sympathy becomes intensified because
Grynszpan is not a political militant but an inexperienced youth, almost a boy,
whose only counselor was a feeling of indignation. To tear Grynszpan out of the
hands of capitalist justice, which is capable of chopping off his head to
further serve capitalist diplomacy, is the elementary, immediate task of the
international working class!"[10]
Trotsky ends his article with the following paragraph,
which would be the best expression of our message to guerillists and individual
terrorists who act upon the burning desire to fight oppression, capitalism and
imperialism:
"In the moral sense, although not for
his mode of action, Grynszpan may serve as an example for every young
revolutionist. Our open moral solidarity with Grynszpan gives us an added right
to say to all the other would-be Grynszpans, to all those capable of
self-sacrifice in the struggle against despotism and bestiality: Seek another
road! Not the lone avenger but only a great revolutionary mass movement can
free the oppressed, a movement that will leave no remnant of the entire
structure of class exploitation, national oppression, and racial persecution.
The unprecedented crimes of fascism create a yearning for vengeance that is
wholly justifiable. But so monstrous is the scope of their crimes, that this
yearning cannot be satisfied by the assassination of isolated fascist
bureaucrats. For that it is necessary to set in motion millions, tens and
hundreds of millions of the oppressed throughout the whole world and lead them
in the assault upon the strongholds of the old society. Only the overthrow of
all forms of slavery, only the complete destruction of fascism, only the people
sitting in merciless judgment over the contemporary bandits and gangsters can provide
real satisfaction to the indignation of the people. This is precisely the task
that the Fourth International has set itself. It will cleanse the labor
movement of the plague of Stalinism. It will rally in its ranks the heroic
generation of the youth. It will cut a path to a worthier and a more humane
future."[11]
The ISL's Position on the Wars in Our Region
The ISL members live in the territory currently
controlled by the State of Israel. Since Israel is a product of the Zionist
colonialist movement, we decided it would be appropriate to dedicate a separate
chapter of this document to the wars resulting from the imperialist and Zionist
involvement and presence in this region. In this chapter we will attempt to
demonstrate how our positions towards the different kinds of wars are relevant
to the region in which we are active.
Like any other colonialist enterprise, the Zionist one
has created ethnic tensions between the Jewish and the Arab residents of
Palestine, first under Ottoman rule and afterwards under British rule. These
tensions, however, did not result in significant armed struggles up until the
late 1920s. Before that period, the Zionists did not feel the urge to form a
military force, not even a mere paramilitary organization. The colonialists
relied on security services of the local population as hired guards and the
Jewish guard society named “Ha'Shomer”.
In 1917, the Balfour declaration, stating that the
British Empire sympathizes with the Zionist idea of establishing a Jewish
"national home" in Palestine, was signed. From this point onwards the
Arab population would go on the defensive, understanding that this
"national home" for the Jews would inevitably come at their own
expense.
The rising tensions, coupled with intentional Zionist provocations,
would quickly result in violent clashes such as the Riots of 1920, the Jaffa
riots of 1921, and the 1929 massacre in Hebron. These riots were ethnically
directed against Jews in general rather then only colonialist Jews with
expansionist aspirations. Most victims of those riots were non-Zionist and
anti-Zionist Palestinian Jews, who used to live relatively peacefully side by
side with the Arab Palestinians before the Zionist colonialist enterprise.
Our position regarding these riots would have been to
oppose the Zionist colonialist enterprise and its provocative actions, but to
also oppose the attack on the Jewish Palestinians who had nothing to do with
Zionism. Our position was demonstrated well by countless Palestinian Arabs who
chose to defend their Jewish neighbors from the rioters, although they opposed
Zionism along with the rest of their people.
In 1936 the British imperialists announced their
intention to divide Palestine between the Arabs and the Zionists (the "two
state solution"), resulting in yet another armed clash. The 1936-1939 Arab
revolt in Palestine had already matured into an anti-imperialist struggle being
directed against British imperialism and its backing of the Zionist movement.
This revolt was led by the reactionary religious leader Haj Amin Al-Husseini,
who was appointed by the British. Although the interests of this reactionary
leadership of religious leaders and landowners were in the defeat of this
rebellion, we would have taken the side of the Palestinian rebels without
giving their leadership any political support.
The Communist Party, which at the time opposed the
two-state solution and Zionism, made the tragic mistake of supporting the Mufti
not only militarily but also politically, and the result was the defeat of the
revolt and later on several attacks by the reactionary leadership against
Palestinian trade unionists and workers.
The War of 1948
In November 1947, the UN announced its support to the two-state
solution, granting the Zionists 55% of Palestine even though they were
outnumbered by a 3 to 1 ratio. It was rejected by the Arabs, but the Zionists,
including the previously anti-Zionist communist party already influenced by
Stalinism, supported the partition plan and a new violent episode would quickly
ensue. Jewish and Arab militias had begun campaigns to seize control over the
entire territory of Palestine.
In 1948, with the withdrawal of the British forces from
Palestine, neighboring Arab troops from Jordan, Egypt, Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and
Saudi Arabia invaded Palestine, allegedly to aid the Palestinian people. In
turn, the Zionist militias had already begun a massive occupation and ethnic
cleansing campaign against the Palestinian Arab population.
In this war, as in 1936-1939, we would have supported the
Palestinians against the Zionists, once again without giving any political
support to the reactionary Palestinian leadership. The Communist Party,
however, sided with the Zionists, mimicking the Stalinists in the Kremlin and
claiming that the neighboring Arab armies were controlled by British
imperialism, and that the Zionists were actually fighting an anti-imperialist
war.
The timing and magnitude of the Arab armies' invasion
does raise some suspicions at the motives behind it. They were obviously
partially controlled by the British, but so were the Zionist militias who
already collaborated with them in the suppression of the Arab revolt in
1936-1939, and who now also enjoyed the aid of US nationals as pilots and other
volunteers. Furthermore, these armies conducted themselves in a manner which
was not designed to defeat the Zionists, but one which perfunctorily adhered to
the pressure of the local masses by perhaps carving out additional pieces of
land from the would-be Arab Palestinian state they allegedly protected.
Evidence for this can be found in the fact that whatever territory these armies
have managed to keep was not given back to the Palestinians but rather kept in
the hands of the respective countries that invaded them.
Therefore, regarding the Arab invasion of Palestine, we
would have welcomed any aid given to the Palestinians from outside. Should we
have had comrades in the region, they would have sided with the Arab armies for
the purpose of most effectively defending the Palestinians. They would also
have worked to expose the Arab regimes' traitorous schemes to the Palestinians
and the Arab masses, and attempted to turn this war into a revolutionary war
which would have created a Palestinian workers' state from the river to the sea
– a state where Jews and Arabs would be able to live together without
discrimination and violent ethnic tensions.
The Suez Crisis of 1956
On 29 October 1956, Israel, The UK and France launched a
combined attack against Egypt aimed at taking the recently nationalized Suez
Canal. The invasion was stopped as a result of US intervention trying to assert
its dominant position over the lesser imperialists. Also, rival imperialist
USSR, which backed Egypt by selling it weapons, had invaded Hungary at that
time, and the U.S. tried to win its propaganda war against it.
Our position regarding this conflict would have been to
stand with Egypt against the imperialist attack without supporting the
reactionary leadership. Should any imperialist country have chosen to send arms
to Egypt, we would have welcomed this aid as long as the Egyptians were acting
for their own interests in defending their country and not for the interests of
the U.S. or USSR.
The main importance of this conflict lies in determining
whether Israel should have been considered in 1956 as an imperialist state
acting on its own will or just a close ally and subordinate of the
imperialists. From the death toll of this conflict, one can easily conclude
that the Egyptian forces, even after the Soviet aid, were no match for the
Israeli invasion forces, Israeli casualties being 171 KIAs, a few hundred
wounded and 4 POWs, while the Egyptian casualties were estimated at 1500, up to
3000 KIAs, thousands wounded and close to 6000 POWs.
However, a book by the Zionist historian, diplomat and
secretary of the third Knesset, Nathaniel Lurch, claims that the Zionist state
was forced to enter the conflict by the French, on whom it was economically
dependent in those harsh times of financial crisis. Furthermore, while Israel
managed to conquer the Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, it was then reluctantly
forced by the U.S. and USSR to withdraw its forces.
The War of 1967
If until 1967 the imperialist status of Israel could be
disputed, then the 1967 war proved that Israel was already an imperialist
country and should be treated as such by Marxists. Without any significant
imperialist aid, Israel launched an attack on its neighboring non-imperialist
countries with the purpose of expanding its territory and strengthen its
position as a local power.
By winning the war, Israel tripled its territory,
displacing close to 200-250,000 Palestinians from the West Bank and 80-110,000
Syrians from the Golan Heights. Soon after that, Jewish colonialists were sent
to settle in the newly occupied lands, expanding further the Zionist
colonization and ethnic cleansing campaign in the region.
This attack was severely criticized not only by the Arab
world for obvious reasons, but by some imperialist countries as well. France
went as far as imposing an arms embargo upon Israel, forcing it to rely on the
U.S. for arms as well as focusing on its own arms production industry. Thus,
Israel's imperialist status was now well established. Our position regarding
the '67 war would have been a revolutionary defeat of Israel, regardless of the
fact that the Arab countries were backed politically and militarily by the
imperialist USSR.
The War of 1973
This war began with a surprise attack by Egypt and Syria
against Israel. While enjoying brief initial success, this attack was
eventually defeated, although it did cause a significant degree of
demoralization in the ranks of the Zionists and proved that no imperialist is
undefeatable. Realizing it, the Zionists agreed to sign a peace accord with
Egypt, which in turn has shifted its alliance from the USSR to the U.S.
Regardless of the imperialist backing Egypt and Syria got
from the USSR and the emergency aid Israel got from the U.S., which insured its
victory rather than crushing defeat, our position would have been a
revolutionary defeat of Israel, without giving the Arab regimes any political
support.
It should be said, however, that should we have had comrades
in Egypt or Syria, their mission would have been to expose the fact that
neither of them went to war with the Palestinian problem at heart, and that
under no circumstances did either of them intend to wipe out Israel, but merely
gain back their own lost territories. Our message to the masses of the region
is that the only way to defeat imperialism, Zionism, Israel, is by a
working-class revolution against the Arab bourgeois regimes.
This was the last open war fought between the Zionist
state and the Arab bourgeois armies of the region (i.e. large-scale war). The
allegedly anti-imperialist bourgeoisie has come to terms with Israel and has
increasingly turned to full or semi-cooperation with the interests of the
western imperialists ever since the fall of the Soviet regime in 1991.
Israel Faces Guerilla Warfare
The Palestinians, on whose expense the Zionist state was
established, have never got the chance to form a standing army, always fighting
with poor weapons, smuggled, improvised, bought or stolen. Their armed
resistance to the state of Israel and Zionist colonialism could be labeled as
guerilla warfare since day one.
Since the defeat of Egypt and Syria in the '73 war, the
Palestinians were basically left to fight Zionism on their own. During the late
'60s through the '70s the Arab regimes of Egypt, Syria and Jordan proceeded
further and quashed or evicted almost all the Palestinian resistance movements
taking refuge within their borders.
Without a revolutionary working-class leadership,
guerrilla-ism and individual terrorism, with all of their problems, became the
sole tactic and strategy of the struggling Palestinians, with the exception of
occasional spontaneous or coordinated petty-bourgeois and working-class strikes
that got quickly blocked and deflated by the bourgeois leadership.
The PLO, which rose to the leadership of the
Palestinians, was an umbrella organization based on the aforementioned
"Popular Front" rationale, which is not designed for victory but for
defeat, with the bourgeois leaders ending up cutting a deal with the
imperialist in exchange for quiet streets. It consisted of several factions,
all using some sort of pseudo-socialist and leftist rhetoric, all seeing
guerilla-ism as the only way to win back their stolen homeland.
Later on, in 1987, alongside a popular uprising called
the 'Intifada', an Islamist faction called Hamas consolidated within the
guerillist Palestinian liberation movement as an arm of the Muslim Brotherhood
movement and challenged the PLO leadership. This rivalry ended up in a recent
civil war which we will discuss later in this document.
While condemning the focus on petty-bourgeois guerilla
warfare as a replacement for working-class revolutionary warfare, and
condemning the targeting of unarmed civilians, we support the victory of the
Palestinian masses, regardless of their leadership, in their anti-imperialist
struggle against Israel, without giving any political support to the
reactionary ruling class and its representatives.
Israel's Involvement in the Lebanese Civil War
Driven away from Jordan, the PLO leadership has settled
in Lebanon. Lebanon, a "hand-drawn" state consisting of many
religious and national factions, was then on the verge of a bloody 25-year
inter-faction war. When in 1975 the war erupted, Israel did not take long to
seize the opportunity and attempt to crush the PLO and the Palestinian struggle
for self-determination with it.
In 1978 Israel invaded Lebanon and occupied the area
south of the Litani river. Due to pressures from the UN, Israel withdrew its
forces, keeping an occupied 19km wide "security zone", and
established a local fighting force under its control called the SLA, or the
South Lebanon Army.
On July 17, 1981, Israel bombed an office building, targeting
offices of the PLO, killing 300 civilians and wounding 800. This attack
resulted in a lip-service worldwide condemnation and a temporary aircraft
embargo imposed on Israel by the U.S.
On June 6, 1982, Israel invaded Lebanon again, attacking
PLO bases in Lebanon and heading straight for Beirut. But the eradication of
the PLO was apparently not the only goal Israel sought in Lebanon. On the 16th
of September 1982, Christian militias allied with Israel raided the Palestinian
refugee camps of Sabra and Shatila massacring 328 to 3500 Palestinian refugees.
The world was outraged, and Israel faced immense pressures to withdraw its
forces from Lebanon.
The withdrawal of Israel to the "security zone"
did not put an end to the PLO's troubles. The Syrian government and its allied
militias headed by 'Amal' attacked and destroyed several Palestinian refugee
camps, attempting to complete the job Israel left unfinished and to eliminate
the PLO's presence in Lebanon.
Eventually the PLO was defeated and its influence
dwindled in Lebanon as its leadership desperately sought a diplomatic way to
cut a deal with Israel and save itself from extinction, eventually resulting in
the Oslo accords of 1992. Yet the masses, Palestinian and Lebanese, still
wanted the anti-imperialist struggle to go on.
In Lebanon, the reigns of this anti-imperialist struggle
would soon be seized by an Iran-sponsored Shiite Islamist movement by the name
of 'Hezbollah'. After defeating its Shiite rival Amal, Hezbollah targeted the
Israeli occupation of the southern part of Lebanon. After 20 years of
occupation and bloody encounters with Hezbollah, on May 25th, 2000, Israel
withdrew its forces from southern Lebanon with the exception of an enclave
called the “Shaba'a Farms”.
Six years of relative silence were broken by the 2006
Lebanon war when Israel invaded Lebanon again as retaliation for the kidnapping
of two Israeli soldiers on the Lebanon border; the war killed and wounded many
civilians, leaving behind it heavily damaged infrastructure and causing yet
another humanitarian crisis.
However, the Israeli government, which claimed that this
attack would be the end of Hezbollah, suffered both a military and a political
defeat, as it managed to achieve nothing but putting the Lebanese civil
population through more massacres and devastation. The two soldiers were later
returned in coffins in exchange for many Lebanese political prisoners.
As in any anti-imperialist struggle, we would have
supported the Palestinian and the Lebanese militias in their struggle against
Israel (and Syria) without giving them any political support and exposing their
reactionary role to the masses.
The Palestinian Intifadas and the Birth of the
'Palestinian Authority'
In 1987, disappointed with the PLO's failures and
defeats, and the betrayal of the Arab regimes, the Palestinian people
spontaneously erupted in an uprising against the repressive Israeli occupation
and colonization of the 1967 territories. The uprising included many
spontaneous actions of all sorts of class traditions – from middle-class
civil disobedience and boycotts, to working-class strikes, barricades and
violent street clashes with the occupying troops by stone-throwing youth.
It didn't take long for the PLO to seize limited control
over the uprising and steer it towards failure once again. In the wake of the
PLO's weakness, rival Islamist factions were formed within the Palestinian
liberation movement, such as Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
The Intifada, while not managing to create a revolutionary
movement, did deal a heavy financial blow to Israel's market, estimated at
about 650 million dollars. In an effort to bring stabilization to the area
while continuing the colonization and strangling of the Palestinian population
in the 1967 occupied territories, the Israeli government decided to use the
PLO's reactionary character and offer its bourgeois faction a piece of the
exploitation pie in return for stifling the anti-imperialist Palestinian
movement.
The Madrid conference in 1991 and the Oslo accords of
1993 have allowed the PLO's old leadership to 'rise from the dead' and assume
limited control over a small part of the 1967 territories. The PLO promised the
Palestinian people that the diplomatic way would lead to a Palestinian state
with the '67 borders, with eastern Jerusalem as its capital. Both Israel and
the PLO were spreading new illusions and exhuming the old 'two-state solution',
as if a solution which did not work when the land ratio was 55 to 45 in favor
of the Zionists would actually work with an 80 to 20 ratio, increasing in favor
of the Zionists with every new settlement.
As expected by Marxist revolutionaries, the Oslo Accords
bloodily backfired, first with the Islamic factions expressing their will to
continue the anti-imperialist struggle against Israel with a series of suicide
bombings between the years 1993 to 2005 (when they stopped using this tactic,
renouncing it in 2006). Then, in October 2000, after the "peace
summit" in Camp David failed, and the butcher Ariel Sharon visited the
Muslim mosques in the 'Temple Mount' in Jerusalem, a new Palestinian popular
uprising and a new wave of violence swept the region – both inside and
outside the 1967 borders.
The Islamic factions were joined in their fight against
Israel by many PLO and ex-PLO rank-and-file members who formed new factions,
broke away from the direct control of the PLO, and engaged in attacks against
military and civilian targets, including religiously-inspired suicide bombings
never previously practiced by Palestinians associated with secularist factions.
Israel in turn seized the opportunity to deal another
deathblow to the Palestinian struggle for liberation. In 2002 the Israeli army
invaded the West Bank and the city of Jenin and launched a campaign of
devastation, killing at least 53 Palestinians, half of whom were unarmed
civilians, wounding hundreds and destroying entire streets and quarters. Soon
after the West Bank operation, Israel started constructing a separation wall as
a further move towards the ghettoization of the occupied Palestinian
population.
By unilaterally withdrawing its forces and civil settler
population from the Gaza strip in 2005, Israel attempted to similarly seal off
the Gaza Strip, preparing for a future onslaught.
In 2006, Hamas won the Palestinian elections from Fatah
– the largest faction in the PLO. As a result, several imperialist
countries, including Israel and the U.S., imposed sanctions upon the
Palestinians. Israel has tightened its siege of the Gaza Strip, creating a
humanitarian crisis. The U.S. and Israel started to prepare rival Fatah for a
military coup against Hamas, sending arms and providing training.
The resulting civil war of 2006-2008 gave victorious
Hamas control over the Gaza Strip, while Fatah remained in control of the West
Bank under the wings of Israeli protection.
In this war – in contrast to most leftists around
the world who supported Fatah, took a pacifist position condemning both sides,
or politically supported Hamas – we supported the victory of Hamas over
Fatah, which had clearly become a subordinate bourgeois faction acting as a
servant of imperialism. However, we did so, once again, without sparing Hamas
our criticism for being a reactionary capitalist clerical organization whose
assaults are directed against unarmed civilians, are which are used by the
Zionists as an excuse for their massacring of unarmed Palestinian civilians. We
also warned the masses that the class interests of the Hamas leadership are
stronger than its anti-imperialist sentiments, and that it is vigorously
seeking every opportunity to betray the Palestinian people and receive its own
piece of the exploitation pie alongside or instead of the disintegrating PLO.
So far Israel has not given up on its ally and it keeps
using Hamas as an excuse for its barbaric attacks against the Palestinians. A
recent example is the 2008-9 Gaza massacre in which the Palestinians suffered
heavy losses. However, once again, like in Lebanon 2006, the Zionists were
politically and militarily defeated, still not being able to break the
Palestinian will to fight, and unable to overthrow their elected leaders.
How much more could the Palestinians take? No one can
tell. Without creating a revolutionary working-class alternative to the
reactionary leadership, and with the expansion of the Zionist colonization of
the West Bank, the barrel of gun powder upon which this region sits is getting
closer and closer to blowing up and the Palestinians are moving further and
further away from even their most humble of dreams.
The decaying capitalist system with its devastating
crises gives the working class of this region plenty of opportunities to form
such a leadership. The Internationalist Socialist League is here to provide
this movement with our Marxist revolutionary scientific method – the only
way to achieve a victorious socialist revolution.
[1] Leon Trotsky, “War and the Fourth
International,”. June 10, 1934.
[2] Karl Marx,. The Civil War in the United
States, 1861.
[3] Karl Marx. A Criticism of American
Affairs, 1862.
[4] Leon Trotsky, ibid.
[5] Leon Trotsky. “The Lessons of Spain:
The Last Warning,” 1937.
[6] Leon Trotsky, “A Strategy of Action
and Not of Speculation, Letter to Pekin Friends, What are, at Present, the
Chief Elements of the Political Situation in China?” October 1932.
[7] Leon Trotsky, In Defense of Marxism: A
Petty-Bourgeois Opposition in the Socialist Workers Party. December 1939.
[8] From the Marxist Encyclopedia in: The Marxist
Internet Archive - http://www.marxists.org/glossary/terms/t/e.htm#terrorism
[9] Leon Trotsky, “Why Marxists Oppose
Individual Terrorism,” November 1911.
[10] Leon Trotsky. “For Grynszpan: Against
Fascist Pogrom Gangs and Stalinist Scoundrels,” 1939.
[11] Ibid.