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The Communist Party, no.56, 2024
The Communist Party, no.56, 2024
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Issue 56
February-March 2024
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Last update Feb 8, 2024
WHAT DISTINGUISHES OUR PARTY – The line
running from Marx to Lenin to the foundation
of the Third International and the birth
of the Communist Party of Italy in Leghorn
(Livorno) 1921, and from there to the struggle
of the Italian Communist Left
against the degeneration in Moscow
and to the rejection of popular fronts
and coalition of resistance groups
– The tough work of restoring the revolutionary
doctrine and the party organ, in contact
with the working class, outside the realm
of personal politics and electoralist manoevrings
Contents:
1.
- The Gazan Proletariat - Crushed in a war between world imperialisms
2.
- The ICP calls upon all Proletarians to break the internal front!
3.
- Proletarians of all countries unite!
November 24, 2023, ICP leaflet distributed in Italy
4.
- Germany: Capitalism is in crisis and fascism is on the rise
(Report at General Meeting 26-28 January)
5.
- Venezuela-Guyana: Reject the Bourgeois parties and their dispute over the Essequibo Territory
6.
- Course of the Economy - An overview
(Report at General Meeting 26-28 January)
7.
- Miners in South Africa Continue the Proletariat’s Struggle Against Regime Unions
8.
- What has become of Giuseppe Sensi?
9.
- Strike at Özak Tekstil [Turkey]
10.
- In memoriam: Giovanni Casertano - Mother Ginevra - Mauro
The Gazan Proletariat Crushed in a war between world imperialisms
Yet another chapter in the Middle East war sees the
concentration of the bulk of military operations in the Gaza Strip.
Intense bombardments are hitting population centers already reduced to
rubble and furious ground clashes pitting Hamas militias and smaller
formations of the so-called "Palestinian resistance" against Israel’s
armed forces.
Casualties on the Palestinian side of the bombings now
number in the tens of thousands, and by the time we are about to send
this issue of our newspaper to press, the Gaza authorities report 24,000
confirmed dead from the bombings and clashes, plus several thousand
missing whose lifeless bodies lie under the rubble.
These are the atrocious costs of an asymmetrical war,
characterized by a considerable disparity in the weapons and means
available to the two sides.
But the ground fighting is not cost-free even for the
Israeli army, which has lost more than 180 soldiers in Gaza, which,
added to the casualties of the Oct. 7, 2023 attack conducted deep inside
Israel’s territory, add up to 1,400 dead, including 500 military
personnel and 900 civilians.
This gruesome accounting confirms our initial
assessments of this frightening wave of violence: this is not a people’s
war but a war between bourgeois States. This is in no way mitigated by
the disparity of losses in the two camps and the asymmetrical nature of
the conflict. This is evidenced by the fact that both sides, gripped by
blind nationalistic fury, declared from the beginning that they wanted
to annihilate the enemy. From the outset, the manner in which the war
operations were conducted and the further development of the conflict
confirmed this: just as Hamas did not spare Israeli civilians and
migrant workers in its fierce and unexpected October 7 attack, likewise
the fury of the Israeli air force made no distinction between Hamas
militiamen and unarmed Palestinian civilians. Blessing this nefarious
assimilation of the entire civilian population to Hamas militias came
the words of Israel’s President Herzog who declared in mid-October, "An
entire nation is responsible; the rhetoric about civilians not aware and
not involved is absolutely false".
In this war, as much as the balance of power is very
unbalanced in favor of the State of Israel, there is one element that
makes the two sides very similar in the way the fighting is conducted:
the lack of any scruples in slaughtering a very high number of
civilians. Indeed, it seems increasingly evident that the orders given
to the men-at-arms on both sides are precisely to reap the highest
number of civilian casualties in the opposing camp, exacerbating
nationalist sentiment, belligerent impulses and the desire for revenge.
This is the case even as the mid-term goals of the two
sides differ in relation to the disparity of forces at their disposal,
an aspect that propaganda on both sides uses to mystify the genuine
exterminating character of the ongoing war. The bourgeois leadership of
the "Palestinian resistance" insists on proposing a nonexistent national
liberation struggle, but if it did, it would not have exposed the people
of Gaza with such cynicism to Israel’s appalling vengeance.
Moreover, the struggle against the odious national
oppression imposed on the Palestinians might have won support even among
Israelis, primarily among the working class, if it had not been placed
on the plane of the massacre of civilians, in compliance with the
deliberate program of killing Jews wherever they are, carried out by the
obscurantist Hamas.
For its part, the current Israeli government harbors a confessional conception of the "Jewish State", which would belong to
Jews and not to all its citizens. The Israeli bourgeoisie attempts to
use the anti-Semitism entrenched in Muslim countries by about a century
of nationalist propaganda, first pan-Arabist and then pan-Islamist, in
order to tighten the ranks of the home front. Thus, if it succeeds in
convincing the people of Israel that in the Middle East and the world,
outside the confines of their little ghetto, everyone wants Jews dead,
Israeli workers will also instinctively seek protection in the military
might of "their" nation and "their" State. In this the Netanyahu
government knows how to wisely use the nightmare, in truth not entirely
without foundation, that the State of Israel may see its survival
challenged.
The bourgeois leadership of Hamas is housed in Qatar,
a monarchy whose wealth rests on gas and oil mining and which, to
complete the overall picture of capitalist rot, hosts on its territory,
the most powerful U.S. military base in the Middle East. This is despite
the fact that the United States has declared Hamas a "terrorist
organization" for several years.
The government of Israel does not seem to rule out the
possibility that the outlet for the ongoing military operations may be
to force at least part of the Palestinian population out of the Strip,
which has been rendered uninhabitable.
Today about 90 percent of the population of the Gaza
Strip have left their homes and are wandering under the bombs in search
of shelter, if more than 1 percent of the area’s inhabitants have
already met their deaths in the war events, if several tens of thousands
of wounded cannot receive adequate health care while the rest of the
population is forced into hunger and thirst, deprived of a roof under
which to face the winter, it seems clear that what the institutions of
the capitalist regime label a "humanitarian catastrophe" will impose
drastic decisions among which the evacuation of a large part of the
population from the Strip cannot be excluded.
By now, even the UN Secretary General says that a
famine looms over Gaza and that the Strip has become uninhabitable. All
of these statements could set the stage for a "humanitarian operation"
aimed at concealing the reality of ethnic cleansing. It is hard to
suppose that such an outcome was not in the vows of Israel’s rulers from
the outset when among those in that State’s government there were those
who went so far as to argue that one should literally "destroy Gaza" the
favorite abode of "absolute evil". The promise of the "Delenda Chartago"
was fulfilled.
But the military operations conducted by Israel’s
forces are not limited to Gaza. In the West Bank, too, Tsahal carries
out police actions aimed at terrorizing, flaunting contempt for that
subjugated population with attitudes of occupation troops that have long
become habitual. In the West Bank since Oct. 7, more than 300
Palestinians have been killed in raids and air raids carried out by
Tsahal and in shootings engaged in by Israeli settlers. Another 200 are
Palestinian casualties from the previous months of 2023.
In the opposite camp, after the Israeli ground
invasion it appears more difficult for Hamas and its political
satellites to strike inside Israeli territory and sow death and
destruction among the civilian population. Qassam missiles take off
increasingly rarely from the Strip. Yet the sense of fear among the
Israeli population persists, and in the hundreds of thousands are
displaced in areas near the Strip and the borders of Lebanon.
Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu, after skirmishes on
the border with Lebanon and missile launches by Hezbollah militias,
threatened to teach those Shiite militias a harsh lesson and repeat in
Beirut what he did in Gaza. In an Israeli airstrike conducted in a
Beirut suburb on Jan. 2, Hamas military leader Saleh al-Arouri was
killed, along with other members of his party. Indeed, the Israeli
government had proclaimed from the beginning of the war that all Hamas
military leaders should be considered "dead men".
This attack is a challenge to Hezbollah, the Lebanese
militia organically linked to Iran, and in the ongoing conflict a
lukewarm ally of Hamas. On Jan. 8, a new message was openly addressed to
Hezbollah with the killing by Israeli drone of Jawwad al-Tawil, the
commander of Hezbollah’s elite militia, demonstrating by this Israel’s
readiness to open a new front with Lebanon.
By means of Hezbollah and the pro-Iranian militias
stationed in Syria, it has been said that Iran borders Israel, but
Israel does not border Iran, a fact that places the regime in Tehran in
a condition of strategic superiority over the "Zionist Entity", as the
State of Israel is called by the media of Iranian obscurantism (and by
Iran’s leftist followers, who have become partisans of political Islam).
This explains the military pressure on Syria, with
hundreds of Israeli air raids targeting pro-Iranian militias as well as
military installations of the Syrian armed forces.
Moreover, Russia has never sought to defend the
airspace of the Syrian State, which has always been its iron ally in the
Middle East region. Russia had to offer something in terms of "security"
to Israel, with which it maintains good trade relations. In contrast,
the Israeli government never adopted the economic sanctions against
Moscow for its invasion of Ukraine. This understanding, already in the
shadows but surfacing in the sunlight for about a decade, allows Israel
to push provocations against Iran, such as when in late December it
killed in an air raid Seyyed Reza Mousavi, the top leader of the Iranian
Pasdaran in Syria. The fact that the site of Mousavi’s elimination was
the town of Sayyidah Zainab, a Shiite pilgrimage destination not far
from Damascus, implies a double threatening signal to Iran.
Embedded in the rivalry between Israel and Iran is the
Red Sea side, where the Houthis, Yemeni Shiites allied with Iran, have
come to threaten naval traffic in one of the major arteries of world
trade.
Exacerbating the threat of missile attacks and Houthi
raids is the treaty, which seals an understanding from the agreement
reached between the Iran and Saudi governments in Beijing last March.
Saudi Arabia, a rival of the Yemeni rebels, has lifted its blockade of
the Houthi-controlled Yemeni port of Hudaiyda and has not joined the
U.S.-sponsored international coalition to counter disruptive actions in
the Red Sea. These elements would suggest Riyadh’s choice of ground, but
things are not so linear now; any shift in the balance in the Middle
East context seems destined for some backlash. If the Oct. 7 attack
succeeded in its objective of preventing rapprochement between Saudi
Arabia, Israel and other Arab States in the immediate term, this cannot
fail to generate further backlash upon fragile regional balances.
Among these contradictions is the action of those who,
without being partisans of Israel or the United States, would like to
prevent the strengthening of relations between Iran and Saudi Arabia.
One example is the Jan. 3 bombing in Kerman, Iran during the memorial
services for Iranian General Qasem Soleimani. Solemani, was killed
during a U.S. operation in Iraq 4 years ago. The attack was claimed by
ISIS, confirming the determination of a significant faction of the
Middle Eastern bourgeoisie to oppose the growing regional influence of
the Islamic Republic. Iran, in turn, does everything to appear the great
promoter of the cause of the "Palestinian resistance".
The bourgeois war game of our time is as irrational,
monstrous and twisted as one can imagine. Including, among its "side
effects", for Palestinians and Jews, new decisive "final solutions".
Behind the veil of the mystifying self-representation
that the contending forces offer of themselves, amidst unexpected
agreements, sudden turns and betrayals, lies a very simple explanation:
the bewitched world of capital carries on a permanent war of aggression
against a proletariat still slumbering and whose awakening is feared,
while rival bourgeoisies pull their hair out and at the same time hold
hands so as not to dissolve in the vortex of the general catastrophe of
the capitalist mode of production.
The International Communist Party calls upon all Proletarians to break the internal front!
A party manifesto
For proletarian defeatism on both fronts of the bourgeois wars
For the international brotherhood of workers
From Ukraine to Gaza – passing through Nagorno
Karabakh and all the trouble spots ready to ignite, from the Balkans to
Taiwan – capitalism promises an apocalypse of war.
On both sides of the fronts, the bourgeois political
regimes – be they democratic or authoritarian or disguised behind the
most varied ideologies, from religious to falsely socialist ones – blame
the war on the adversary, his politics, his civilization:
Russian-Chinese authoritarianism, US hegemonic culture, Islamic
extremism, Zionism…
Instead, capitalist economic interests hide behind
these ideological screens. When ideological bombing is not enough, the
bourgeoisies have no qualms about resorting to terrorist massacres to
convince the proletarians that there is a foreign enemy to fight. The
modern capitalist war is distinguished from all previous ones by
claiming victims mainly among civilians, that is, among the
proletarians.
The global economic crisis of capitalism is
determining the ignition of more and more conflicts and the tendency
towards a third imperialist conflict. The overproduction that has
afflicted senile, so-called Western capitalisms since the mid-seventies,
is now also manifested in the no longer young Asian capitalisms,
starting with China, which for three decades have kept world capitalism
afloat.
The inexorable advance of the crisis exacerbates
competition between companies and capitalist States: the war goes from
commercial to military. As in peace, bourgeois companies and States ask
their workers for economic sacrifices to win in economic competition, in
war they ask to sacrifice their own lives for the supposedly superior
interests of the country.
The workers’ struggle against exploitation, to prevent
competition against each other with lower wages and worse working
conditions, is the first step towards their joint international action,
and therefore towards opposition to the imperialist war which capitalism
is leading all humanity.
Only the international unity of the working class can
prevent or stop the war. But it is not based on vague references to
moral values, in the name of social peace and good feelings, in the
manner of the Churches or the hypocritical appeals of politicians, but
rather on the need to fight together in defense of one’s own conditions
and of life itself against a an enemy that is first and foremost
internal, that is, against its own national bourgeoisie and its
political regime. For this reason, in all countries the bourgeoisies
indicate to the workers an external enemy, which would be the cause of
their suffering, to be fought.
The Palestinian proletarians are cannon fodder for the
interests of the Palestinian bourgeoisie, which for decades has used
them by bargaining with part of the Arab-Middle Eastern bourgeoisies and
with the world imperialist powers that back them. Even the proletarians
of Israel are victims of their bourgeoisie, of its need to build its own
capitalist living space, supported by US imperialism, and will be forced
by it into a regional and global conflict, in which tens of thousands
will die, if they will not be able to overthrow it politically with the
revolution.
The Palestinian proletarian masses will put an end to
their suffering not by pursuing the objective of "free Palestine" from
the "Jordan to the sea", but with the international workers’ revolution
against all the national regimes in the area: from Iran to Egypt, from
’Iraq to Lebanon, from Syria to Turkey. Only a social revolution of the
proletarian class that makes a clean sweep of the bourgeois regimes and
their interests will be able to allow the true peaceful coexistence of
workers today divided by ethnic groups and religions by the bloody
machinations of the murderous bourgeoisies.
Proletarians of all countries unite!
ICP leaflet distributed in Italy, November 24
After the collapse of false communism in the USSR –
with which the Stalinist counter-revolution masked the development of
Russian State capitalism from the second half of the 1920s – and in the
satellite countries, subjugated by that imperialism, the bourgeoisies of
the so-called countries Westerners, allied and submissive to US
imperialism, had celebrated the triumph of capitalism, which from then
onwards had to proceed with its peaceful and progressive economic,
social and political development.
With this ideological operation, the international
bourgeoisie, including the Russian and Chinese ones, had to perpetuate
the lie of false socialism to deprive the proletariat of all countries
of any hope of overcoming capitalism and arriving at a society without
exploitation, classes, poverty, wars.
As predicted by authentic Marxism, world capitalism
was instead proceeding towards an ever deeper economic crisis, which
would bring more exploitation, more misery, more wars.
Military conflicts have continued to become
increasingly serious: Iraq 1990, former Yugoslavia in the 1990s,
Afghanistan since 2001, Iraq in 2003, Syria since 2011, Ukraine since
February 2022 and most recently the ongoing conflict in Gaza; to mention
just the main ones.
In all these conflicts the bourgeoisies on both sides
have always blamed the social and political culture of the adversary as
responsible for the war.
For Western democracies, conflicts would be the
product of a clash between civilisations, which would include both the
Islamic world and the authoritarianism of regimes – and societies – such
as the Russian one and, behind it, the Chinese.
On the opposite side of the front, the national
bourgeoisies propose a mirror ideology, only reversed for their own use
and consumption: wars would be a consequence of the hegemonic,
militaristic and prevaricating culture of the dominant imperialism,
which after the Second World War is that of the USA. Even for so-called
anti-Americanism, a clash between civilizations is underway: produced by
American civilization.
Giving support to these falsely pacifist ideologies of
the – at the moment – weaker bourgeois front, which clashes with the
dominant bourgeois front led by the USA, are also the political wreckage
of the collapse of Stalin’s false communism, those parties whose
falsification is come so low as to present countries such as China,
North Korea and, why not, Russia itself as alternatives to capitalism,
nor do they disdain to indicate regimes such as the Syrian, Iranian and
movements such as Hamas as allies.
All the bourgeois parties, on one side or the other of
the imperialist alignments, right or left, operate a caesura between the
political world, with its results on the military level, and that of the
economy. Instead, politics is nothing but a concentration of the economy
and all wars are the product of economic interests, not of cultures,
religions, ethnic groups, etc.
The Palestinian proletarian masses are used as cannon
fodder by the Arab and Middle Eastern bourgeois regimes, by the world
imperialist powers that back them and by the Palestinian bourgeoisie
itself for their economic interests. Palestinian national oppression – a
tragic and undeniable fact – is only a pretext for them. The
proletarians of Israel themselves are being led towards the massacre of
an imperialist war for the interests of their bourgeoisie and that of
the United States.
The world capitalist economy is sinking deeper and
deeper into a crisis of overproduction. Senile – so-called Western –
capitalisms have been suffering from overproduction since the
mid-1970s. World capitalism has been able to survive in recent decades
thanks to capitalist development in Asia, primarily in China. But now
Chinese capitalism has also entered the phase of overproduction, as the
bourgeois economists themselves admit. The result is the approach of a
catastrophic collapse of the world capitalist economy.
The increasingly frequent and serious conflicts, ever
closer to the centers of world imperialism, are a manifestation of the
deepening crisis of the capitalist economy. It is increasingly difficult
for all industrial and financial groups and bourgeois States to make
ends meet. They are all attacked by the crisis which is eroding profit
margins. And they all become aggressors.
War – that is, the utmost barbarism – is the only
solution capitalism has to its economic crisis. What brought capitalism
out of the economic crisis of the 1920s and 1930s was not the Keynesian
policies of State interventionism in the economy, but the Second World
War, with its destruction and 60 million victims, almost all of whom
were proletarians and poor farmers. Imperialist war destroys the excess
goods that prevent capitalism from continuing its crazy anti-human and
anti-historical capitalist accumulation, which they call growth.
But the imperialist war does not only destroy goods,
factories, infrastructures, cities. It also destroys the commodity
workforce, that is, millions of proletarians useless for the purposes of
capital accumulation because they were made redundant by the closure of
companies following the crisis or, if still employed, crushed by
exploitation brought to ever higher levels.
All national bourgeoisies and their State machinery of
domination are threatened, not by the economic crisis itself but,
ultimately, by the revolt of the starving and exploited proletarian
masses.
Above and beyond the wars for economic interests that
oppose them, all the national bourgeoisies are interested in ensuring
that the war is fought and that millions of proletarians are massacred
in it, in order to avoid revolution and thus save their own dominion and
their own privileges.
The imperialist war above the fronts is a single war
against the world proletariat for the preservation of capitalism, of
this society of exploitation and barbarism. War is not a political fact
separate from the capitalist economy but is the inevitable consequence
of a mode of production based on the exploitation of workers.
The only force that can prevent or stop war is that of
the working class. This force begins to form in the fight against
exploitation and leads to opposition to the greatest form of oppression
which is war, the sacrifice of the very life of the proletarians for the
economic interests of the bourgeoisie.
The workers’ struggle against exploitation is an
anti-national struggle: less exploitation means higher wages, shorter
working hours, less intense pace. This implies less competitiveness of
companies and national capitalism. This is why all bourgeois parties
always appeal to the good of the country: they whip the beast of burden
that is the proletariat!
Just as the bourgeois and their governments of all
colors today ask workers to work harder to make the company and the
country win in the market competition, so tomorrow they will force
workers to go to the slaughter of war, with the most suitable pretext to
the purpose: democracy, the Islamic threat, the response to an attack,
to a massacre.
The working class is interested in uniting to prevent
workers from competing with each other with low wages and high work
rates from one company to another, from one country to another. Workers
must unite today across divisions between companies, sectors,
territories and even between countries to resist exploitation, tomorrow
to oppose war.
Only the international unity of the proletarian class
can stop the war. But this unity is not an ideal, moral fact, like the
false appeals for peace of the church of Rome. The unity of wage workers
is the unity of the struggle and begins by declaring and practicing the
struggle first and foremost against their own bourgeoisie, rejecting
calls for national unity.
Even in Palestine, it is only unity between
Palestinian and Israeli proletarians that will put an end to the
conflict. It is only by fighting the bourgeois Palestinian parties that
want a "free" Palestine from the Jordan to the sea, with the implicit
massacre of millions of Israeli Jews, that the Palestinian proletarians
can give the Israeli proletarians the strength to fight the parties of
their bourgeoisie, which they push them to war against the Palestinians
with the threat that they want their destruction.
And it is only with the struggle of the proletarians
of Israel against their bourgeoisie, against its policy of segregation
and anti-Palestinian ethnic cleansing, that the Palestinian proletarians
can find the strength to fight the bourgeois nationalist Palestinian
parties.
More generally, throughout the Arab-Middle Eastern
area, the bourgeoisies use the external enemy represented by the
USA-Israel combination to deflect the anger of the proletarian masses
against it, and thus save their own domination and privilege. All
national bourgeoisies around the world always try to divert the anger of
the workers towards the external enemy.
Palestinian national oppression will end not with the
formation of a Palestinian State but with the international proletarian
revolution and the formation of a socialist republic comprising more and
more countries in the area, in which all minorities, including the
Jewish one, will be guaranteed all the rights.
Gaza reduced to rubble is not the result of hatred
between peoples and religions but of the most modern and cynical
bourgeois interests. It is the future that capitalism promises to most
of the cities of Europe and the world.
The first slogan of communism is always the same and
current, modern, just and necessary: proletarians of the whole world
unite!
Germany
Capitalism is in crisis and fascism is on the rise
Report at General Meeting 26-28 January
Economic stagnation in Germany, traditionally the
locomotive of the western European economy, has given rise in recent
months to social discontent and a surge in support for the far-right
Alternative für Deutschland (AfD) party as well as the reemergence of
explicitly Nazi factions. The weekend of 20-21 January saw mass
mobilizations against the far right in many German cities after it was
revealed that the AfD and its allies had met to discuss proposals to
deport millions of migrants and citizens of non-German heritage. For the
most part, demonstrators rallied behind the banner of “defend
democracy”. Yet, as was the case in the 1930s, this new fascism is the
direct product of capitalism in crisis and the political decisions taken
by mainstream democratic parties to contain it.
Germany’s economic performance has undergone a long
period of relative decline. Growth in GDP has not fully recovered from
the economic shocks of the pandemic, weak demand for its exports in
other countries, disruptions to supply chains, inflation, high interest
rates and the war in Ukraine. According to first calculations of the
Federal Statistical Office (Destatis), the price-adjusted gross domestic
product (GDP) was 0.3% lower in 2023 than in the previous year.
This weak economic performance has created turmoil
within the federal government, which is led by the Social Democratic
Party (SPD) and supported by the Green Party and the economically
conservative liberal party, the Free Democrats (FDP): the so-called
Ampelkoalition (traffic-light coalition) of red, green and yellow. After
weeks of wrangling between these parties about where the axe should fall
on public expenditure, on 18 January the parliamentary budget committee
approved a federal budget of €476.8 billion with new loans totalling
around €39 billion.
The government is constrained by the Schuldenbremse
(debt brake), which has been in force since 2009 (introduced by Angela
Merkel’s Grand Coalition government). The Schuldenbremse limits new
annual government debt to 0.35% of gross domestic product under Articles
109 and 115 of the German Constitution. It obliges the federal
government to balance budgets without new borrowing and to reduce debt
in the medium term. It was originally introduced to deal with the global
financial crisis of 2008 and to keep Germany within the rules of the
Eurozone, and may only be suspended in exceptional situations, which was
recently the case during the coronavirus pandemic. Its authors did not
envisage such prolonged periods of low growth.
To get round the restrictions, the coalition attempted
to reallocate €60 billion euros from unused coronavirus funds to the
Climate and Transformation Fund. However in November 2023, the Federal
Constitutional Court in Karlsruhe ruled that this reallocation of funds
was unconstitutional, and the €60 billion was removed from the budget.
After several years of exceptions, the Schuldenbremse
is thus to take full effect again. Although factions of the coalition
have spoken of suspending it again under certain circumstances, in the
meantime swingeing cuts have been imposed and many government
contractors have gone unpaid. The draft budget is being debated by the
two houses of the German parliament for the final enactment in February.
Planned measures that will hit workers include higher
prices for petrol and heating, a ticket tax on passenger flights, and
tougher wage restraint in publicly funded services such as the rail
network. The government also proposes cutting the federal subsidy to the
pension insurance scheme by €600 million euros per year from 2024 to
2027.
But the measure that has provoked the most vocal
opposition to date is the planned gradual abolition of tax relief on
agricultural diesel fuel. Thousands of farmers and farm workers have
taken to blocking city centres in tractors. The traffic light coalition
has not backed down from its plans to cut the subsidies, and although it
has made some other concessions, these have failed to appease farmers’
leaders, who have promised even bigger protests. Rising costs of fuel
and imported animal feeds, fertilizers etc. have put small-scale farmers
in financial jeopardy.
Meanwhile, inflationary pressures, though now easing,
have further eroded the spending power and living standards of the
German working class. Food inflation reached a high of 21.2% in March of
2023 and still stands at 4.6%. Young people are especially hard hit
through rising rent prices. In the second quarter of 2023, rent for
flats in Berlin averaged around €13.23 per square metre per month. At
the same time last year, rents were still €11.02 per square metre. This
corresponds to an increase of around 20%. Over the past decade, rents in
Berlin have more than doubled.
If the Schuldenbremse is indeed suspended, this will
bring little relief to the German working class: it will probably only
happen in order to provide further finance for the war in Ukraine, which
has already cost Germany in excess of €22 billion in terms of subsidies
and weapons supplies. SPD budget minister Dennis Rohde recently Stated,
“I believe that the Ukrainian fight for freedom must not ultimately fail
because of a conservative view of debt rules.” German capitalism sees
massive future opportunities for economic development in a Ukraine
prised away from Russian influence. However, the immediate impact of
cutting off Russian gas and disruption to food supplies has imposed a
cost estimated last year by the Association of German Chambers of
Commerce and Industry (DIHK) at between €100 and €160 billion, amounting
to around €2,000 per inhabitant.
Rail workers lead the resistance
In this new round of austerity, rail workers are
leading the resistance to mounting pressure on workers to do more for
less. After two 24-hour warning strikes in November and December, the
GDL train drivers’ union held a ballot that resulted in a 97% vote in
favour of an indefinite strike. However, the GDL leadership has thus far
refused to carry out the wishes of its members. A three-day strike was
called in early January and a further six-day strike commencing
Wednesday, 24 January.
Deutsche Bahn has offered an 11% pay increase over 32
months, which works out at 3.7% per year, well below the current rate of
inflation, and therefore a reduction in spending power. However, the
strike is not primarily about pay, but working conditions.
Under-investment has left the German rail network in disarray, and it is
the drivers who are paying the heaviest price, with long working hours,
changes of shift at short notice, and no recognition of the mental
stress and damage to family life this causes. The drivers want a
reduction in standard working time to 35 hours with full pay
compensation – a longstanding demand on which there has been no
progress.
On 5 January the employer, Deutsche Bahn (DB), made an
“offer” whereby the drivers would be forced to finance the reduction in
working hours themselves – effectively a 2.6% pay cut for every one hour
reduction in working hours. DB is State-owned, and the government has
set a fixed budget for the railway for this round of collective
bargaining as part of its savage cuts on public expenditure. The
proposed deal was (of course) dishonestly reported in the media,
provoking further anger among drivers.
One sector is booming
Despite the economic downturn, one sector is booming:
armaments. In 2023, the traffic light coalition (which includes the once
pacifist Green Party) approved arms exports worth €12.2 billion, a 40%
increase on 2022. German arms deliveries to Ukraine almost doubled in
2023 and accounted for the majority of exports in the second year of the
war at €4.44 billion, according to figures released by the Federal
Ministry of Economics.
Other major export markets include Norway (€1.2
billion), Hungary (€1.03 billion euros), the United Kingdom (€654.9
million), the United States (€545.4 million) and Poland (€327.9
million). Germany also has imperialist interests in the Far East. For
some time now, South Korea has been the largest export market for German
arms manufacturers outside NATO, accounting for €256.4 million in sales
in 2023. In December, Berlin and Seoul signed agreements to improve
their intelligence and military-industrial cooperation.
Germany has also contributed massively to Israel’s war
in Gaza, with a tenfold increase in the value of its exports to €323.2
million. Germany is one of Israel’s most steadfast allies and German
armaments manufacturers such as Rheinmetall are among the largest
beneficiaries. The company’s share price rose by around 15 per cent
within just five days of the start of the Gaza conflict and it is
currently working with Israeli partners Elbit Systems to develop a new
155-millimetre wheeled howitzer, as well as advanced combat drones. Not
that it is all one-way traffic: in 2024 Germany will spend €25 million
on the delivery of state-of-the art PULS (Precise and Universal
Launching System) multiple launch rocket systems from Elbit.
Indeed, Germany’s own military budget is a notable
exception to the spending cuts, climbing by €1.7 billion to a record
€51.8 billion. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine provided the rationale for
an increase in the military share of the budget, with a €100 billion
fund set up to modernize the German armed forces. Germany has committed
to meeting the NATO target of dedicating 2% of GDP to military
expenditure or, as the bourgeoisie prefers us to call it, “defense”. In
reality, the rise in spending points to Germany taking a more aggressive
stance on the international stage.
The rise of the far right
Economic pressures, combined with the revival of
German militarism, have driven a surge in support for far right populism
in general and the AfD in particular, which, as in other countries,
claims that there is a conspiracy between the “political establishment”
and immigrants against the “indigenous” German population. It has sought
to exploit the farmers’ protests with rhetoric that echoes the “Blood
and Soil” propaganda with which the Nazis appealed to rural communities
following the economic catastrophe of 1929.
The AfD was initially founded (in 2013) by
conservative economists and academics who had opposed the introduction
of the Euro and closer political integration in Europe. But its policies
and leadership changed after the arrival of a million refugees from the
Middle East in 2015, welcomed by Angela Merkel as an answer to a
profound demographic challenge to Germany: the rapidly ageing population
and low birth rates. Today, many leaders of the AfD blame not only these
recent immigrants but anyone of non-German heritage for every social and
economic problem – and this amounts to one-fifth of the total
population. High prices? Blame foreigners. High rents? Too many
foreigners. Poor healthcare? Foreigners. Etc.
However, the AfD has also gained traction as the only
major political party opposing the war in Ukraine. Not that it is doing
so for any benign reason; it wants to keep the weapons at home for use
by Germany’s own armed forces rather than export.
The slogan of the German far right has now moved on
from stopping or slowing immigration to “Remigration”. High-ranking
representatives of the far-right AfD met conspiratorially with other
right-wing actors and business executives at Lehnitzsee, north of
Potsdam, in November 2023 to discuss plans to expel people with foreign
roots living in Germany. Two members of Germany’s centre-right Christian
Democratic Party (CDU) also attended, both part of their party’s “Values
Union” association (WerteUnion).
Martin Sellner, a leading Austrian figure in the
“Identitarian Movement”, presented plans to urge or if necessary force
people who do not fit into a völkisch (Aryan) definition of German
society to leave the country. This includes people who are German
citizens but who are “not assimilated”. In echoes of the infamous
Wannsee Conference of 1942, there were only objections about the
feasibility of mass expulsions, but no doubts were raised at the event
as to the desirability of such plans. Ideas put forward included
discriminatory laws subjecting migrants to “high pressure to conform”
and making it easier to revoke their German passports and citizenship.
News of the conspiratorial meeting was first revealed
by Correctiv, a pro-democracy media collective, on January 10, one of
whose undercover reporters checked into the Lehnitzsee hotel and
infiltrated the event.
German antifascism
The news sparked a series of demonstrations, with
around 250,000 taking to the streets in Berlin, Hamburg, Frankfurt,
Hanover, Stuttgart, Munich and other German cities on Saturday, 20
January. They were, however, dominated by moralistic positions on
tolerance and diversity that have no substance and little resonance for
workers who are bearing the brunt of capital’s attacks. Typical was the
speech of the SPD’s Mike Josef, Lord Mayor of Frankfurt, and a former
organizer in the DGB trade union confederation: “As democrats, we are
standing up together against the enemies of humanity in this country,
here in Frankfurt and in Germany. We do this together, we do it with
determination – no matter where we come from and what we believe in.”
The analysis of the antifascist “left” in Germany is,
if anything, even worse. For them the problem is not that the mainstream
parties such as the SPD defend capitalist democracy, the preferred
political system of the bourgeoisie, but that they are not democratic
enough. For example, the Trotskist Socialist Equality Party writes that
“When Scholz and Co. try to present themselves as a ‘democratic’
alternative and opponent of the AfD, it is pure hypocrisy.” For the Left
Party (Die Linke) the answer is “unity” across the class divide behind
the slogan “Together against the right” through an amalgam of classless
social media identity groupings such as “Grannies against the Right”.
For us in the ICP, by contrast, there is no fight
against fascism without a fight against the capitalist system that
engenders it. Workers cannot choose between fascism and democracy; far
from being opposites, the one flows from the other. (Indeed, the
democratic Federal Republic already has constitutional powers to deny or
withdraw citizenship from individuals it regards as undesirable or not
“assimilated” or otherwise make their lives intolerable, as it has done
with the infamous Berufsverbot, the ban on people it regards as
extremists from entering certain professions.)
National unity or class struggle
As early as 1924 we wrote in our Report on Fascism,
“From a social point of view fascism does not represent a major change;
it does not represent the historical negation of the old bourgeois
methods of government, it merely represents the completely logical and
dialectical continuation of the preceding stage of so-called democratic
and liberal bourgeois government.” Democracy will resort to fascistic
methods, and even put fascists in power, according to the needs of the
epoch. And conversely, fascism will use democratic slogans such as “the
will of the people” and democratic instruments such as plebiscites.
There is even a German word, which first emerged in the First World War,
that expresses this perfectly: the Volksgemeinschaft is rooted in the
notion of uniting people across class divides to achieve a national
purpose.
The only way to fight fascism and militarism is
through class struggle. So long as key sections of the working class
such as the train drivers (many of whom are themselves of “non-Aryan”
heritage!) are ready and able to stand up and fight it will be
impossible for the bourgeoisie to divide and rule us at will, or to
pursue imperialist objectives through military means. It is therefore up
to the working class to fight not fascism alone, but capitalism itself,
in Germany and internationally!
The proletariat is the only force that can stop the
bourgeois war.
Venezuela-Guyana
Reject the Bourgeois parties and their dispute over the Essequibo Territory
The so-called Essequibo Territory is a geographical
area, including both land and a portion of maritime surface, included
between Venezuela’s eastern border with Guyana and the Essequibo River,
which cuts this country in two. That land, which represents more than
half of Guyana’s territory, has been the subject of a territorial
dispute between the two neighboring bourgeois States for decades.
The Esequibo is rich in raw materials, above all oil
and gas. The oil multinationals – first of all the American Exxon Mobil – in recent years have carried out operations to search for new
hydrocarbon deposits with fruitful results, benefiting from the support
of the Guyana government. The Venezuelan government protested these
operations, denouncing the military support given to them by the United
States government.
The regimes of Venezuela and Guyana, both of which are
cloaked in socialist disguises, reveal their real nature in disputing
this territory: the whole controversy is nothing other than a clash
between bourgeois States, in which the opposing world imperialist powers
intervene, at the end of control of raw materials and markets. Suffice
it to say that Venezuela holds the largest proven oil reserves in the
world.
Tension between the two countries began to rise when
in 2015 Exxon Mobil discovered a deposit at sea, which was then the
subject of a long-standing territorial dispute. Venezuelan President
Nicolás Maduro claimed that Exxon Mobil was destabilizing the area,
given that the multinational had relied on the government of Guyana to
carry out search operations in the area disputed between the two
countries. Exxon had had commercial relations with the Venezuelan
government in the past, but as a consequence of this affair, relations
between Caracas and the multinational were interrupted.
Among bourgeois there are no relationships of
friendship or ideological affinities but only of business and
convenience. In fact, other member companies of the PDSVA, the
Venezuelan State oil company, and the mixed capital companies present in
the country, first of all the US Chevron and the Chinese State company
CNOOC, also participate in the exploitation of the Esequibo resources.
For this reason, the accusations leveled by the
Venezuelan government against Exxon Mobil are equally hypocritical as
they are against the so-called "international community" for supporting
this multinational and Guyana. On both sides there are only the
interests of the various capitalist cliques at stake.
The workers are just labor to be exploited with the
lowest possible wages and cannon fodder to be deployed in the event of a
military confrontation.
The question of the Esequibo is used by the Venezuelan
bourgeois government to revive nationalism and strengthen national
unity, that is, the unity between the antagonistic classes, in the face
of the wear and tear of its following among the proletarian masses, also
in view of the presidential elections of 2024.
To this end, on December 3, the Caracas government
called a consultative referendum, with 5 questions regarding the
political conduct to be followed regarding the territorial dispute. The
pro-government parties have formed a “Coordination for the Campaign for
the Defense of the Esequibo”. The opposition parties, such as Democratic
Action, marched in the same direction, announcing the formation of
similar bodies and, like the government, giving indications of
participating in the referendum and voting in favor of the questions
posed by the government. The employers’ associations also supported the
government line and so did most of the trade unions.
The outcome, as expected, was a plebiscite with over
90% of votes in favour. There is much doubt about the veracity of the
result. But, despite the frantic propaganda of all the apparatuses of
the bourgeois regime in its various branches and the unity of all its
political parties, officially only 10.5 million voters went to vote,
approximately 50% of those entitled to vote, which highlights the
distrust of the proletarian masses towards bourgeois politics and its
electoral procedures.
In the unity of intent between government and
opposition parties regarding this territorial dispute, we can see the
common bourgeois origin of the two political sides, in whose false
opposition, which is by no means irreducible, they want to harness the
working class to prevent it from fighting for its own immediate and
historical interests.
Venezuelan workers have certainly not been consulted
to decide on the level of their wages, their pensions, the conditions of
employment, the quality of the working environment, and they must not
participate in any of the electoral mechanisms through which their
workers are chosen executioners in the factories and endorsed their
policies.
The promotion of patriotism, in addition to being
useful for parties trying to regain popularity, has other harmful
effects for the working class and beneficial for capitalist
exploitation. Nationalism unites the exploited with the exploiters in
the false common interest of defending the homeland and the national
economy, thus hindering the class struggle, distancing workers from the
fight for their true immediate interests (increase in wages and
pensions, reduction of the duration and intensity of work, health and
safety), placing the proletarians at the service of the interests of the
bosses (private or "State") to the point of making them cannon fodder in
a possible war.
None of the managements and trade union currents that
called to participate in the Consultative Referendum can be considered
an authentic force in defense of workers. On the contrary, they are
traitors to the immediate interests of the working class. Authentic
class trade union forces must reject any appeal to support the
Venezuelan bourgeois government in this territorial dispute and, if
necessary, oppose the sending of workers in uniform and in arms to
massacre themselves with their class brothers in Guyana, in a war
between capitalist States, fought to grab mineral wealth.
The workers, both in Venezuela and in Guyana, must
concentrate on the fight for wage and pension increases and for the
affirmation of their immediate interests, fighting from below for the
formation of a United Class Union Front and denouncing them as traitors
to the class workers all those trade union leaders who join the
bourgeois government and opposition parties by accepting their calls for
the "defense of the Esequibo" to march in the direction of a crazy and
criminal war against Guyana.
Course of the Economy - An overview
Report at General Meeting 26-28 January
The decline in inflation
The increase in interest rates has led to a slowdown
in the world economy, to the point of a global recession. This led to a
significant drop in inflation which, after reaching a peak in June 2022
of 9.1% in the United States and in October 2022 of 10.6% in Europe,
fell to 5.5% in June 2023. % in Europe and 3% in the United States.
However, inflation has started to increase slightly again in the United
States, reaching 3.7% in August, a phenomenon that is ascribed to the
summer season and government incentives to relocalize industrial
production and support the development of new technologies.
In Europe, the inflation gap between different
countries is tending to narrow: in June, the highest value, in the
United Kingdom, was 6.3% and in France 4.9%. A determining factor is
certainly the increase in the price of fuel, linked to the increase in
the price of oil
To boost oil prices, OPEC+ repeatedly cut daily
production, so much so that the supply-demand imbalance in the third
quarter reached 1.6 million barrels per day, the highest level since
2021. To offset this decline Oil-consuming countries are drawing on
supplies: in August alone they withdrew 76.3 million barrels, bringing
stocks to the lowest level in the last 13 months. The result was an
increase in prices. North Sea Brent crude was selling (September 2023)
at $94 per barrel.
The monopoly of some countries on the production of
hydrocarbons is not the only cause of the increase in prices. Added to
this is the underinvestment of the last ten years in the raw materials
and energy sectors, and speculation, which sees the opportunity to
obtain fabulous returns.
But, in the chronic crisis of the capitalist mode of
production, the recession will be followed by a new wave of deflation.
Central banks will then once again have to rush to the rescue of capital
to keep it on its feet.
Industrial production
The general trend is not only towards a sharp
slowdown, but even towards recession.
In the United States, despite the hundreds of billions
of dollars paid by the government to support industrial production and
to modernize it by developing new technological branches, since December
2022 we have witnessed a clear slowdown, with growth close to zero. For
industrial production, which includes the production of shale gas and
oil, only the small growth of 0.2% was recorded in the first eight
months of 2023, compared to the whole of 2022. However, if we consider
manufacturing production alone, we notice a decline of 1.7%, which comes
on top of 15 years of decline, which brings the sector to -7.6% compared
to the 2007 peak.
Even if a few hundred billion dollars in State aid
will allow American industrial production to modernize and face the
"energy transition", this will not prevent the spread of the historic
crisis of the capitalist mode of production.
The Japanese economy continues to struggle. After a
recovery of 5.1% in 2021, compared to -10.1% in 2020, and the very
modest growth of 0.2% in 2022, Japan will record -1.6% in 2023, bringing
the level of production at -19% compared to the maximum reached in 2007.
South Korea, after years of relatively strong growth,
averaging 2.8%, is now in the midst of a recession with industrial
production dropping 6.1% in the first seven months of the year! This is
not a negligible figure. A strong downward trend that heralds a
formidable crisis of overproduction.
Germany has been in recession since September 2021.
Together with Belgium, it was one of the few Western European countries
to have surpassed the peak reached in 2008, but has now lost its gains.
From 2014 to 2018, growth in Germany was weak (1.5% annual average) but
constant, while in the other Western European countries growth only
resumed during the two-year period 2017-18, marked by a favorable
international situation, and then fell from 2019 onwards in all the
main imperialist countries, including China.
In the first seven months of 2023, the German industry
recorded a very slight gain compared to 2022, of 0.21%. However, the
level of production fell by 7.7% compared to the peak in 2018, while
compared to that of 2008 we have a minus of 0.7%, in other words, German
capitalism has returned to its starting point.
The energy tariff choice made by the German
bourgeoisie was imposed on the whole of Europe by aligning the price of
electricity with that of gas, so that German industry is not at a
disadvantage compared to French industry, which benefits from cheaper
energy thanks to nuclear power. The French bourgeoisie agreed to
sacrifice its own industry, seeing the gains from the increased energy
rent and aimed to enrich itself, at the expense of the proletariat and
the petty bourgeoisie, by privatizing electricity production. A growing
mass of parasites bought electricity from EDF at low prices and sold it
at a higher price on the “free market”.
The German bourgeoisie had bet on low-cost Russian gas
for energy supply. But after the invasion of Ukraine by Russian
imperialism, Germany found itself forced to buy oil and gas from other
suppliers at high prices, thus reducing the competitiveness of its
industry vis-à-vis China and the United States. While the latter produce
shale gas and oil, China buys most of its hydrocarbons from Russia at a
30% discount. The Kremlin thus becomes increasingly dependent on Chinese
imperialism.
Like many old imperialist countries, Germany invests
little in infrastructure and digital technology, and some of the
industrial apparatus is obsolete. This weakens the competitiveness of
German capitalism.
For years, Germany has invested heavily in China to
take advantage of that gigantic, booming market. The prodigious
development of Chinese capitalism in the first twenty years of the
century contributed greatly to increasing the average rate of profit and
offered a gigantic market, saving the capitalist mode of production for
further decades. This was possible because, starting from the 1950s,
Chinese State capitalism developed a formidable industrial base with the
necessary infrastructure that allowed the flow of investments. The
German monopolies in the automotive, mechanical and chemical industries,
investing massively in China, have made fabulous profits for years. But
Chinese capitalism, which in the meantime has seen its growth slow down,
having acquired know-how from the West, is now able to compete in those
sectors, such as machine tools, chemical products, motor vehicles, which
are the strength of German capitalism.
China is Germany’s main trading partner, trade between
the two countries has reached 300 billion dollars. But Germany’s trade
deficit is continually growing. A trend that could be strengthened with
the growing competition from Chinese electric cars, whose prices are
competitive. Europe, and Germany in particular, is lagging behind in
this sector and cannot compete with Chinese production. After years of
refusing to invest in the production of batteries, magnets and electric
motors, the European industry, and the German one in particular, is
fighting for its survival. The succulent car market could completely
escape the European bourgeoisie, incapable of producing competitive
vehicles in terms of price and quality.
German capitalism in senile crisis thus risks
having to bow to much stronger imperialist powers.
French capitalism, like German capitalism, with
industrial production growth of 0.51%, fared slightly better in 2023
compared to 2022 which was a slight recession. But the general picture
is even less rosy than the German one. Compared to 2019, production is
4.9% lower, while it remains 12% below the peak of 2007. In other words,
the production level is very close to that of 2009, at the worst moment
of the overproduction crisis. As we can see, despite all the tricks they
have implemented, the older imperialist States are not able to get out
of the 2000-2009 crisis.
Europe’s other big sufferer is the United Kingdom.
After the strong recovery in 2021 from the fall of 2020, Great Britain
has been in recession again since October 2021. If we compare the index
for the first seven months of 2023 with those of 2022, we have -1.4%, a
decline which follows that of -3.7% in 2022. If we compare the 2019
index with the maximum reached in 2000, we discover that in 2022
industrial production is still 6.6% lower than that of 22 years earlier.
So British capitalism has been in recession since the 2000s. But, as if
by magic, the statisticians of the British bourgeoisie have manipulated
all the indices. If we take the average of the first seven months of
2023, a recession year compared to 2022, also in recession, we obtain a
surplus of 1.5% compared to the 2000 index! So the British bourgeoisie
would have us believe that British capitalism is doing better than
German capitalism.
This ignorance is also a confirmation for us of their
decadence: soon the bourgeoisies of all countries will no longer be
capable of producing reliable statistics. Instead of industrial
production they will rely on the much more dubious GDP statistics.
The situation in Italy is not any rosier. After a
strong recovery in 2021, +11.7%, which followed an 11% decline in 2020,
growth fell to +0.4% in 2022, before turning negative in 2023 at -2.7%,
based on the indices of the first nine months of the year. After the two
positive years of 2017 and 2018, Italian capitalism had reduced the gap
with the peak of 2007 by a no less staggering -17.6%. Despite the
post-pandemic recovery, industrial production is still 20% lower than in
2007.
In Poland, the accumulation of industrial
capital for some years stood at an average annual rate of 5.4%, a
notable growth when compared to the decrepit capitalisms of the Old
Continent. But with the recession that began at the beginning of the
year, production recorded a decline of 1.7% in the first six months.
World trade sees a slowdown in exports as of October
2022, but they have fallen sharply for most major imperialist countries.
Exports from China, Korea, the United States and Belgium fell by about
10%. Those of Japan by 5%. Chinese imports fell 15% in July
year-on-year. As always, the decline in imports is synonymous with
internal recession.
We can conclude that, as expected, after two years of
growth in 2017 and 2018, global capitalism is once again in recession.
It should be noted that the old imperialist countries, with the
exception of Belgium and Germany, have never regained the level reached
in 2007: all the recovery of these two years has been lost, and the
scale of production in most of the major imperialist countries is now
close to that of 2009!
China is also hit by recession and in the real estate
sector there are spectacular failures, such as that of Evergrande. The
general picture is that of high unemployment, with at least 20% of young
people out of work, a decline in consumption and a return to deflation.
With this crisis, an entire sector of the Chinese lower middle class and
middle class risks being ruined.
On a global scale, this adds up to the colossal debt
of companies, families and States, not to mention the devaluation of
trillions of bonds. As a result, the situation is much worse than in
2009.
In the current situation, with every capitalism
fighting for survival, we can expect an increasingly fierce trade war.
But the time will come when the failure of a few large
companies, which in turn leads to the failure of a large bank, will
cause all the dominoes to fall. The "every man for himself!" sooner or
later it will break out for the large imperialist States and some of
them could be forced to declare bankruptcy.
Miners in South Africa Continue the Proletariat’s Struggle Against Regime Unions
The latest clash in the ongoing struggle of the South
African mine workers against the regime union NUM (National Union of
Mineworkers) is the fight of the gold mining workers at the Gold One
Modder East operation in Springs, a major gold mining centre on the
Witwatersrand, 30 kilometres East of Johannesburg. The present conflict
began with a sit-in which started on the night of October 22-23 when the
workers stayed in the mine following their night shift. Of the 1,800
workers employed at that operation, 562 were there at the time to
conduct this sit-in, and many others showed up in the morning to
demonstrate their support for the action, which they affirmed was in
fact an action that the workers had agreed on and planned the night
before, in contradiction with the lies of the bourgeois press, which
claimed the workers were being held against their will by a radical
minority of supporters of the AMCU (Association of Mineworkers and
Construction Union). The AMCU is really supported by the vast majority
of the mineworkers, and its recognition by the company was the primary
demand in this sit-in. The "closed-shop agreement" between the NUM and
Gold One, according to South African law, allows for the recognition of
only one union, the one with a proven majority – proven, that is,
according to balloting processes set up by the conspiracy of the NUM and
Gold One.
We commended the determination of the 3,000 workers of
the Lonmin platinum mine in their struggle at Marikana in 2012 against
the bosses and the NUM, which culminated not with the crushing defeat of
the miners that the bourgeoisie hoped for when it shot down 34 of them
in the first week of the strike, but rather with a partial victory on
wages after the workers pressed on for four more weeks. But more
significant than the wage increase was the consequence that the
continuation of the strike after the massacre, and its spread to other
mines and even beyond the mining sector, eventually led to the
recognition of an AMCU majority in the mine and in other platinum mines,
and to a general weakening of the NUM’s hold on the class – along with
that of the COSATU (Congress of South African Trade Unions), with which
the NUM is affiliated and which constitutes one third of South Africa’s
tripartite alliance, next to the ANC and the Stalinist SACP. Hence the
real significance of the battle is its place as a major victory against
the regime union and in the progress made towards the unification of the
workers’ struggles.
Since then this long and arduous campaign has
continued with periodic clashes in several other mines, and gradually
the stranglehold of the COSATU is being weakened further, thanks to the
combativeness and intractability of the proletariat in Africa’s most
industrialized nation – and particularly of the workers in the mining
industry, because this sector places such large numbers of proletarians
(around 475,000 directly employed workers, as well as around a million
who are indirectly employed by the industry) in conditions which are
totally intolerable.
The gold mines have been a major front of the struggle
against the regime union since those victories in the platinum mines. By
2016 the AMCU had the same number of members as the NUM in Sibanye Gold.
In 2019 the AMCU attempted to win a higher wage than the one negotiated
by the NUM, by going on strike. This led to several violent clashes
between union members; according to the NUM and the media, AMCU workers
were attacking NUM workers, but the AMCU held that in fact it was once
again violence of the NUM against AMCU workers and against the NUM’s own
militant unionists, which is what occurred in the Marikana strike and in
other instances. Following the 2019 strike the government threatened to
deregister the union on various pretexts.
Over this entire period the bourgeois press has
maintained the narrative that all of these conflicts are instigated by
AMCU officials, that they constitute a long-running contest between the
two unions for influence in the mines, in which the workers themselves
are mere pawns. The actions of the NUM have repeatedly proven that this
is essentially fiction; the fight is between the proletariat and the
bourgeoisie, and the so-called power struggle between union leaders is
in reality just one chapter in this class war, the toppling of the
regime unions and the construction of a strong class union.
The bourgeoisie’s labelling of the sit-in at Gold One
Modder East as a “hostage situation” is thus consistent with its usual
narrative, but not with reality.
However, while the fight against the regime union has
made consistent progress, the dangers which we have commented on
previously continue to threaten the formation of a strong class
union. AMCU’s president Joseph Mathunjwa continues to make
frequent calls for respect for the bourgeois order, even reminiscing
about the superior management of the apartheid bourgeoisie, and
condemning the post-apartheid presidents for ruining a “functioning
state”. His calls for national unity and encouragement of racialised
struggle reveal a wide gulf between the combativeness of union’s
membership and the politics it officially espouses.
On October 25 the sit-in ended. At one point, Gold One
alleged, 109 workers forced their way out, after a violent struggle with
the “hostage takers”. Eventually the company determined that around 450
were hostages and 100-110 were hostage takers; consequently, the company
dismissed 74 workers, which it says were found to be guilty of
misconduct after a thorough investigation, for which there is scant
evidence, as many of the dismissed workers said they never received
their alleged hearings.
In the following weeks, Gold One, the NUM, and the
AMCU scheduled the termination of the closed-shop agreement, thus
opening the possibility of AMCU being recognised at the mine, but only
the possibility, since NUM and Gold One certainly haven’t given up their
resistance yet. On November 14 the agreement was set to terminate a
month later, on December 14. At this point, it seems, those three
parties felt the matter was resolved, including AMCU officials, whatever
there involvement in the sit-in had been. The workers essentially got
what they wanted, and the company demonstrated that there would be
consequences for the their militancy.
But, characteristically, the mineworkers were unfazed.
Following the night shift of December 7-8, a second sit-in was staged,
this time of 447 workers, which lasted until December 11. Their demand
was the immediate reinstatement of all 74 dismissed workers. The press,
Gold One, and the NUM initially maintained their confusion as to what
the issue was this time, since the workers got what the wanted with
regards to the closed-shop agreement. They claimed that it was difficult
to communicate with the workers inside the mine, and as with the
previous strike, little effort was made to communicate with the other
workers gathered outside the mine, because doing so would have confirmed
their support for the sit-in, and that it was in fact another planned
sit-in and not a hostage situation. On the 9th, Minister of Mineral
Resources and Energy Gwede Mantashe was brought in to give credence to
the “hostage situation” story: Mantashe insisted that brutal beatings
were occurring at the mine, as well as threats to execute hostages if
food and water were not delivered. These stories were parroted by Gold
One and NUM’s regional organiser, but Mantashe is the only source anyone
can give. Mantashe insisted that since this was a hostage situation, the
police would need to be brought in. The minister also lamented how these
indisciplined workers had gone “behind our backs” in seeking the
termination of the closed-shop agreement.
As the AMCU is not officially recognized at the mine,
it remained at a distance through both strikes, but did assert that the
version of events presented by the bosses and the NUM was completely
false. However, it does not seem to have made any attempt to organize
actions in solidarity with the Gold One mineworkers.
The strike ended on the 11th as miners gradually
emerged. As with the previous sit-in, the bourgeoisie’s narrative was
that hostages who had been starved and beaten were gradually forcing
there way out, and consequently their captors gave up. However, the
accounts of all the workers who emerged once again contradicted this:
the private security and the police had in fact been the real “captors”,
who clashed violently with the workers and then attempted to prevent
them from leaving to receive medical attention (and the same goes for
workers who were not injured, but needed to leave to get medicine, for
diabetes, etc.). They also prevented those inside the mine from
communicating with the outside, or from receiving food from their
families; then, after starving the workers, they restricted their
eventual retreat from the mine, only allowing the workers to leave in
ones and twos so as to prevent a crowd from forming outside the mine.
The ease with which the police and security can enforce starvation, and
prevent aid or communication between the workers inside the mine and
those outside, are major weaknesses of the sit-in strike tactic.
When the mine reopened after the holidays, many
workers were suddenly prevented from getting into the mine for their
shifts; over the first weeks of January, at least 445 workers were
fired, mostly over text, and 140 more were suspended. The practice of
mass firings in order to break the workers’ resistance is extremely
common in this sector, frequently followed by a rehiring of the same
workers after the wave of militancy has died down, though in this case
the company will probably look for replacement workers who are not so
set on opposing the regime union. The NUM has helped them in this regard
by promising to advocate only for the dismissed NUM members who haven’t
shown a desire to join AMCU.
But once again the mine workers show that their
willingness to fight is extremely difficult to stamp out. Gold One
reportedly cancelled a shift on January 10 over threats of another
sit-in, this time over both waves of dismissals, against the replacement
of those workers by contractors, and over the company’s refusal to pay
the workers their December salaries. The company has said the situation
is becoming “unsustainable”; in the second sit-in it claims the workers
cost the mine 12 to 15 million Rand per day. Hence despite the short
durations of the sit-ins due to the factors mentioned above, the workers
have been able to apply pressure to the company through their resolve
and solidarity, which continue to shine in spite of the efforts of all
the bourgeois forces united against them.
In our tradition - historical articles of the ICP
WHAT HAS BECOME OF GIUSEPPE SENSI?
From Seme Comunista, March 1939, Organ of the Italian Fraction of the International Communist Left.
We found it interesting because of the story existence and repression of Italian communist left militants in the USSR as well as documenting the contacts the Italian Left had in the English speaking world.
Centrism in the USSR, which has physically suppressed
the old Bolshevik guard, all those who were of ’Lenins time", has at the
same time acquired full control over foreign political emigration,
especially over that Italian emigration which as a whole would tend to
be "infected with leftism". Calligaris was re-arrested in the vast net
that was spread in 1937 prior to May 1 and the elections’ – not to
mention along with him, Mosca da Silva, Lazzaretti, Manservigi,
Cerquetti, Visconti (Allegrazza). All the Italian political emigres were
taken to Odessa at the end of last year. Their fate? It is unknown and
for many we can fear the worst.
Today we examine the case of Guiseppe Sensi. Sensi, if
we are not mistaken, is from the province of Arezzo. He had become a
political emigree when he was sentenced to more than twenty years in the
galleys of Fascism. He was arrested the night of April 22, 1937 by the
GPU which was lying in wait for him on his return from work. Sensi had
been expelled from the party on suspicion of belonging to our fraction,
or of being a "Trotskist", according to the formulas. He was one of
those who could have re entered the party, if he had permitted himself
to be convinced; moreover he had committed the error, which must have
proved fatal to him as wall as to many others, of becoming a Soviet
citizen. This placed him in the power of Stalinist terror, while the
Italian authorities could wash their hands of the case. Since the day of
his arrest, little or no news has leaked out. Only in December, 1937 en
route to his deportation, did Sensi obtain a means of getting word to
his wife – Sensi had a Russian wife and child. To her he wrote that he
had been sentenced to five years of deportation in Siberia" for having
been a member of the 1927 Opposition", and he concluded by advising her
to "seek another life for it may be that I shall never see you again".
In this brief line one feels a certain presentiment of
the fate which awaits many communists, Russian or foreign, accused of
having been members of the 1927 Opposition.
NO INFORMATION
The brother of Sensi another communist militant, who
served ten years in Italian jails, has sought for information in vain.
All his efforts at the Soviet Embassy have borne no results, although at
the beginning they were supported by that good centrist, Deputy Duclos,
The brother of Sensi did not ask that the party intervene, but only
begged to know that had become of his brother, if he were still alive,
and, if not, that they should give him news of his brother’s son and
wife, The laconic reply of the Soviet Ambassador was always the same.
Here are his exact words: "We have no information about your brother and
thus we are unable to furnish you with any news of him", The GPU does
not reveal whether or not it has already assassinated its victim. The
assassin, centrism, will have to rencana account of its misdeeds, and as
far as we are concerned, that account will reveal responsibility for
these crimes. The banditti who framed them was the Communist Party of
Italy. Have no illusions about that! In the debt which the Italian
Communist Party will have to pay to the Italian proletariat the name of
Sensi will not be forgotten. Nor will the names of all those others
assassinated in Russia and Spain.
Strike at Özak Tekstil [Turkey]
From KOMÜNİST PARTİ #7
A very important struggle and actual strike has been
taking place for the Turkish working class at Özak Tekstil, operating in
Şanlıurfa, since November 2023. The United States-based Levi Strauss
company is among the main customers of Özak Tekstil, which operates a
factory in Istanbul as well as Urfa. In this context, as the
International Communist Party, we found it appropriate to focus on this
struggle.
What happened
The struggle began on November 19, when approximately
450 of the 700 workers working in the Urfa factory came together and
declared that they left Öz İplik-İş, the collaborative regime union
affiliated with Hak-İş, and joined the combative BİRTEK-SEN (United
Textile Workers Union). It started with. Thus, BİRTEK-SEN, which until
then was a small combative textile union based in Antep, not only
increased its number of members several times, but also became the
authorized union in Özak Tekstil. Workers also complain about
ill-treatment, swearing, poor quality food, service problems, increased
workload, union-boss cooperation, daily wages cut despite being forced
to work 7 days after the February 6 earthquake, verbal harassment
against the private lives of female workers, and uncertain work that
sometimes lasts until four in the morning. They were against working
conditions such as working hours.
This was not the first rebellion against the regime
union in the region where the textile industry is widespread. About
three years ago, Özak Tekstil workers, together with the workers working
in the Urfa Uğur Tekstil factory, resigned from Öz İplik-İş again, this
time the regional manager at that time became a member of the DİSK
Textile Union, now the president of BİRTEK-SEN, and a hard struggle
lasted for months. It resulted in a win even though DİSK Tekstil did not
stand behind the workers. BİRTEK-SEN itself was born out of the
necessity of creating an alternative to the betrayal attitude of DİSK
Tekstil.
As a reaction to the organization of BİRTEK-SEN in the
factory, company managers and Öz İplik-İş managers began to pressure the
workers to return to the collaborative union, blackmailed them by
calling them for one-on-one meetings, and went so far as to threaten
female workers with intervening in their private lives. When the company
was about to lay off one worker on November 27, approximately 450
workers went on strike. In the following days, workers would face
barricades and gas baton attacks by the gendarmerie and police many
times, and workers and unionists, including the president of BİRTEK-SEN,
would be detained many times. Ultimately, on December 6, the gendarmerie
attacked the workers with batons and pepper gas and detained 19 workers
and three union leaders. As a result, workers who continued to work in
the factory went out and joined the strike.
The strike of Özak Tekstil workers had a remarkable
repercussion in the militant sections of the working class. BİRTEK-SEN
called for action on a national and international scale in solidarity
with the struggle of Özak Tekstil workers. In addition to many
grassroots unions in Turkey, especially members of the Deriteks union
affiliated with Türk-İş protested for Özak Tekstil workers or
commemorated Özak Tekstil workers in their actions. At the international
level, formations such as the Free Workers’ Union from Iran and the
Class Struggle Action Network from the USA tried to organize solidarity
with Özak Tekstil workers. Despite all this, DİSK Tekstil continued its
hostile attitude towards BİRTEK-SEN with the support of DİSK
headquarters.
Ultimately, Özak Tekstil laid off more than 400
workers and began trying to force the workers to end the struggle by
accepting compensation. This attitude of the boss was effective enough
to cause the number of workers engaged in active struggle to fall to
around 150. Still, the struggle of Özak workers continues with the
support of most of the workers who accepted compensation.
Lessons of Struggle
The fact that the Urfa-Antep region has a very large
industry and that a significant part of this industry is concentrated in
the textile sector revealed the possibility that what happened in Özak
Tekstil could have great effects throughout the country. The Özak
Tekstil strike could have triggered a massive attempt by the region’s
textile workers, most of whom are organized in Öz İplik İş, to change
unions, similar to what happened in the metal industry against the mafia
regime union Türk-Metal in 2015. Although this possibility seems far
from reality for now, the only chance for Özak Tekstil workers to win is
to expand their struggle by spreading it to the workers of enterprises
facing similar conditions. For this purpose, rather than focusing only
on the Özak Tekstil factory, mobile pickets can be sent to other textile
factories.
The main weakness of the Özak Tekstil struggle is the
illusion that Levi’s company taking action against Özak Tekstil will
bring victory. In fact, the arch enemy of the strikers is the Levi’s
company itself, even more than Özak Tekstil itself. Levi’s is one of the
textile monopolies that constitute world imperialism. Although its
headquarters is in the USA, it produces in countries such as Bangladesh
and Haiti, as well as Turkey, by taking advantage of the inequalities
between countries’ conditions created by the imperialist system.
Workers’ struggles against the Levi’s company have taken place in these
two countries in recent years. In this process, BİRTEK-SEN’s mistake was
that they addressed Levi’s bosses rather than Levi’s workers and took
their declared working condition commitments seriously. This attitude
can be explained by the illusions that the grassroots trade union
movement in Turkey carries about democracy in general and Western
democracies in particular.
Similarly, bourgeois left parties, both "solidarity"
by organizing unions and political parties together under the name of
"democracy platforms" and promising a solution to the issue through the
parliament through their deputies, contributed to preventing the
perspective of the spread of the struggle from becoming the focal point
of the Özak Tekstil struggle. The struggle of Özak Tekstil workers has
been embraced as another focus of activism to be supported alongside
many issues unrelated to the class struggle.
These weaknesses do not overshadow the heroic struggle
of Özak Tekstil workers under the leadership of their union BİRTEK-SEN.
Ultimately, in this strike, which took place in a relatively small
enterprise, Özak Tekstil workers fought a tough struggle alone in the
region and in their sector, under difficult conditions, and did not give
up and resisted the pressure of the boss, the regime union, the
gendarmerie, the police and the court. In this context, they have
undertaken an exemplary struggle for the Turkish working class, but all
this is not enough for the strike to win. It is time to address all
workers in the region, especially in the textile industry.
Struggles such as the Özak Tekstil strike, especially
to the extent that they unmask the opportunists leading DİSK, will
encourage workers at the base of DİSK to turn their faces away from the
regime unions and bourgeois left parties that their leaders are inclined
towards, towards the small but combative union focuses that have had to
organize outside DİSK. Thus, a grassroots class union front that emerges
can draw workers under the influence of the regime unions into a much
more struggle than establishing fronts from the top with the regime
unions and bourgeois left parties.
The following leaflet was distributed at Levi Strauss
store locations in the United States.
Internationalist Class Solidarity from the United States with the struggling Özak Tekstil Workers in Turkey!
For the past 10 days, factory workers at Özak Tekstil,
a textile factory in Urfa, southeastern Turkey, have been on strike and
fighting heroically against the company, the collaborationist union, and
the boss’s regime.
It all started on November 19th, when about 450
workers out of 700 employed at the factory gathered in an assembly and
announced that they were leaving the yellow, collaborationist union, Öz
İplik-İş (Real Thread Workers Union), a member of the Hak-İş regime
trade union confederation, and joining the confrontational union
Birtek-Sen (United Textile Workers Union).
The leaders of the company and the Öz İplik-İş leaders
reacted by starting to pressure the workers to return to the
collaborationist union, summoning them to one-on-one talks in which they
were blackmailed, going so far as to threaten the women workers with
intrusions into their private lives!
It was when the company went so far as to lay off a
worker – on November 27th – that about 450 workers went on strike, first
organizing a procession inside the factory and then coming out into the
street.
On November 29th, the Urfa governorate issued a ban on
demonstrations in the city, the police attacked workers outside the
factory, and the leader of Birtek-Sen was arrested and then released.
The next day, the army had deployed to prevent workers
from approaching the factory entrance thus allowing scabs to enter.
Since December 1st, the army has even erected a wall of iron gates and
armored cars to prevent workers from entering the street leading to the
factory!
On December 2nd, workers demonstrated in downtown Urfa
and were again attacked by police forces.
On December 5th, on the ninth day of the struggle, the
company reported the workers to the court for an “illegal strike.”
On Dec. 6th, the army attacked workers with batons and
tear gas, arresting 19 workers and three union leaders, including again
the head of Birtek-Sen. Resulting in the workers who were continuing to
work inside the factory coming out and joining the strike!
This struggle is very important because the area is an
industrial district with many other textile factories, including the
city of Gaziantep, 150 km west of Urfa, where Turkish and Syrian workers
united in a foundry strike last January, dealing a blow to the racist
propaganda of the ruling class.
This struggle is important also because it points the
way for the entire working class in Turkey on striking and organizing
outside and against the regime unions!
The strike has gained national prominence. In the city
of İzmir (Izmir), workers who are members of Deriteks, the textile
workers’ union that is a member of the Türk-İş regime trade union
confederation, staged a demonstration demanding wage increases and
expressed solidarity with their struggling class brothers and sisters at
Özak Tekstil in Urfa.
This textile factory has among its main clients; Levi
Strauss & Co, a United States based company. This is why as workers
in the U.S. and as CSAN (Class Struggle Action Network) we want to
express our solidarity with our class brothers and sisters at Özak
Tekstil, claiming their freedom to organize into a genuine fighting
union like Birtek-Sen, and to denounce the anti-worker front composed of
the bosses, the government and State, and regime unions!
We denounce Levi Strauss & Co. owners and bosses
as complicit in the exploitation and oppression of our fellow workers in
Turkey.
Long live the struggle of the workers of Özak Tekstil!
Long live class unionism, against collaborationist and regime unionism!
For the extension of the strike above factory and category boundaries!
For international workers’ solidarity and unity!
Class Struggle Action Network
In memoriam
Giovanni Casertano
Our comrafe Giovanni has left us. He was the last comrade of the old guard
that we still had among us. A great scholar, he continued to correspond
from Naples until late in life, never lacking in his and our work and
regularly collaborating with the party’s editorial committee.
Having said that he disliked "commemorations", we
write this to inform his comrades and those who knew him and rejoiced in
his vitality, brilliant intelligence and spirit, and loved him.
Mother Ginevra
Our party’s comrades all embrace comrade Alessandro who has lost his
mother. Ginevra was not a communist but she approved that her son was a
member of the party. She had proletarian origins and instincts and she has
always placed herself on the side of the oppressed. On the occasion of
party meetings in Turin she willingly opened her house and she did her
best to host comrades who came from abroad.
Mauro
With enormous sadness the Party informs all those who knew and loved him
of the untimely death of comrade Mauro.
Born and raised in one of Turin’s most proletarian and combative
neighborhoods, Le Vallette, from his early teens Mauro proved himself a
soldier at 14 years old when he joined in street clashes against the
police. He joined the ICP in 1986, and remained in the party for the
remainder of his life.
Mauro distinguished himself for his great ability to organize workers,
with acute sensitivity in the direction of workers’ struggles in the
defense of working conditions. He helped found the COBAS union of railroad
train crews.
Generous, intelligent, endowed with a gentle irony and helpfulness to
everyone, he was loved by workers and all who knew him.
We all find ourselves more alone now, it is true, and it cannot be
otherwise.
We communists reject the theories of religions, fake flowers to embellish
the chains that imprison humanity. But from the point of view of material
physics we know that Comrade Mauro is not dead. It remains present in the
four-dimensional space of events. It is we human beings who perceive time
as an inexorable flow from past to future, and from birth to death of
every living individual. But this is an illusion, produced by the
evolution of the species, suitable for ensuring our survival, but not
corresponding to the reality of the world universe. As communists we
reject this reduction to personalism and operate, and feel, according to
science and class consciousness.
Bourgeois and petty bourgeois slime, who fear wisdom and is inaccessible
from it, are steeped in selfish and competitive individualism. They can
only conceive of life as an extrinsic and enfifiant of the selfish self.
For us communists, true human value is determined by freeing themselves
from the self, merging into the community of social man, until we realize
ourselves as part of the energy matter of the universe, self-organized
stardust.
Mauro participated in this embrace of all our comrades, dead, living and
unborn, as he is alive today in the memory and social struggle of all
fighters for a liberated social hummanity.
St. Paul stated that Christians were in this world but were not of this
world. Mauro was also in this world but not of this world. He lived like
all of us in the world of selfishness, greed, the alienation of money, the
competition of individuals who like beasts fight to snatch the piece of
meat to take to the den called the family. But, unlike St. Paul, the new
world we communists do not place in Heaven but on Earth: the world of the
affracted humanity, of the social man who realizes and empowers his
individuality in the community of humankind. A humanity that does not see
in the other an enemy competitor but a brother with whom to joyfully share
the fruits of the earth and social labor.
Comrade Mauro participated in this great dream and pressing, urgent,
necessary and mature need. And in this he was a man.