Difference between revisions of "Freedom 29/6/National Liberation or Class War?"
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'''{{Drop|L}}ET US SEE if the {{w|NLF|Viet_Cong}} (of {{w|Viet­nam|South_Vietnam}}) is a re­volu­tion­ary organ­isa­tion.''' | '''{{Drop|L}}ET US SEE if the {{w|NLF|Viet_Cong}} (of {{w|Viet­nam|South_Vietnam}}) is a re­volu­tion­ary organ­isa­tion.''' | ||
− | '''{{tab}}It is evid­ent that the sole fact that the NLF sup­ports the armed strug­gle against {{w| | + | '''{{tab}}It is evid­ent that the sole fact that the NLF sup­ports the armed strug­gle against {{w|US|United_States}} {{w|im­peri­al­ism|Vietnam_War}} does not prove that its views and ac­tions are re­volu­tion­ary (just as the {{w|Gaul­lists|Gaullism}}, in 1940, parti­cip­ated in the armed strug­gle against {{w|German|Nazi_Germany}} {{w|im­peri­al­ism|German_military_administration_in_occupied_France_during_World_War_II}}).''' |
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− | {{tab}}Since 1930 (see ''Solid­ar­'' pamph­let and ''Voix Ouvrier'') the peas­ants (95% of the pop­u­la­tion) have been in a state of per­man­ent in­sur­rec­tion against feudal ex­ploit­a­tion. On the whole they sup­port the {{w|Viet­cong|Viet_Cong}} which they see as a force cap­able of break­ing the so­cial struc­ture. The first in­sur­rec­tions were sup­ported by the {{w|ICP|Indochinese_Communist_Party}}; how­ever, after the {{w|7th Con­gress|Seventh_World_Congress_of_the_Comintern}} of the {{w|Com­intern|Communist_International}} (1935) which ad­voc­ated the tac­tic of the Pop­u­lar Front (al­li­ance with the so-<wbr>called pro­gres­sive bour­geoisie), the ICP took a step back­wards: it aban­doned the slo­gan {{q|Down with {{w|French im­peri­al­ism|French_Indochina}}}} and the strug­gle for in­de­pend­ence. | + | {{tab}}Since 1930 (see ''Solid­ar­ity'' pamph­let and ''Voix Ouvrier'') the peas­ants (95% of the pop­u­la­tion) have been in a state of per­man­ent in­sur­rec­tion against feudal ex­ploit­a­tion. On the whole they sup­port the {{w|Viet­cong|Viet_Cong}} which they see as a force cap­able of break­ing the so­cial struc­ture. The first in­sur­rec­tions were sup­ported by the {{w|ICP|Indochinese_Communist_Party}}; how­ever, after the {{w|7th Con­gress|Seventh_World_Congress_of_the_Comintern}} of the {{w|Com­intern|Communist_International}} (1935) which ad­voc­ated the tac­tic of the Pop­u­lar Front (al­li­ance with the so-<wbr>called pro­gres­sive bour­geoisie), the ICP took a step back­wards: it aban­doned the slo­gan {{q|Down with {{w|French im­peri­al­ism|French_Indochina}}}} and the strug­gle for in­de­pend­ence. |
− | {{tab}}The ICP faith­fully fol­lowed {{w|Stalin|Joseph_Stalin}}{{s}} di­rect­ives after the {{w|Russo-<wbr>German rap­proche­ment| | + | {{tab}}The ICP faith­fully fol­lowed {{w|Stalin|Joseph_Stalin}}{{s}} di­rect­ives after the {{w|Russo-<wbr>German rap­proche­ment|Molotov–Ribbentrop_Pact}} of 1939, de­fend­ing {{w|German fas­cism|Nazism}} against French ag­gres­sion. Since 1940 the Amer­icans have been in­ter­ested in Indo-<wbr>China. At {{w|Yalta|Yalta_Conference}} (1945<!-- '1940' in original -->) {{w|Roose­velt|Franklin_D._Roosevelt}} pro­posed to re­place French oc­cu­pa­tion by an inter­na­tional (in ef­fect US) oc­cu­pa­tion. Stalin agreed. |
{{tab}}In March, 1945, the Japan­ese launched an {{w|of­fens­ive|Japanese_coup_d'état_in_French_Indochina}} against the French {{w|gar­ri­sons|Garrison}}. The USA re­fused to help; the French forces were decim­ated, the Japan­ese pro­claimed {{w|Indo-<wbr>China in­de­pend­ent|Empire_of_Vietnam}}, but con­tinued their oc­cu­pa­tion. The ICP pre­pared for the oc­cu­pa­tion of the coun­try by the {{w|al­lies|Allies_of_World_War_II}}. Amer­icans and Brit­ish oc­cu­pied the south of the coun­try, {{w|Ho Chi Minh|Ho_Chi_Minh}} took Hanoi; he sup­ported the USA. France in its turn de­clared Indo-<wbr>China in­de­pend­ent and under­took to pull out its troops in five years. The ICP fol­lowed di­rect­ives of the {{w|USSR|Soviet_Union}}; a strict ap­pli­ca­tion of the Yalta Agree­ment; Indo-<wbr>China was made part of the West. There was no ques­tion of so­cial re­volu­tion or of in­de­pend­ence. | {{tab}}In March, 1945, the Japan­ese launched an {{w|of­fens­ive|Japanese_coup_d'état_in_French_Indochina}} against the French {{w|gar­ri­sons|Garrison}}. The USA re­fused to help; the French forces were decim­ated, the Japan­ese pro­claimed {{w|Indo-<wbr>China in­de­pend­ent|Empire_of_Vietnam}}, but con­tinued their oc­cu­pa­tion. The ICP pre­pared for the oc­cu­pa­tion of the coun­try by the {{w|al­lies|Allies_of_World_War_II}}. Amer­icans and Brit­ish oc­cu­pied the south of the coun­try, {{w|Ho Chi Minh|Ho_Chi_Minh}} took Hanoi; he sup­ported the USA. France in its turn de­clared Indo-<wbr>China in­de­pend­ent and under­took to pull out its troops in five years. The ICP fol­lowed di­rect­ives of the {{w|USSR|Soviet_Union}}; a strict ap­pli­ca­tion of the Yalta Agree­ment; Indo-<wbr>China was made part of the West. There was no ques­tion of so­cial re­volu­tion or of in­de­pend­ence. | ||
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− | {{tab}}This is the not-<wbr>too-<wbr>glori­ous past of the French Com­mun­ist Party and the Indo-<wbr>Chinese Com­mun­ist Party; the latter now con­trols the Demo­cratic Repub­lic of Viet­nam, the {{ | + | {{tab}}This is the not-<wbr>too-<wbr>glori­ous past of the French Com­mun­ist Party and the Indo-<wbr>Chinese Com­mun­ist Party; the latter now con­trols the Demo­cratic Repub­lic of Viet­nam, the {{q|worker{{s|r}} state}} which, in its sup­port for the NLF, re­fers three times, in its four points to the Geneva Agree­ment. That is, it plays the re­form­ist, dip­lo­matic and parlia­ment­ary game worthy of its past and of its polit­ical con­cep­tions, in par­tic­u­lar Front­ism as a strat­egy. |
− | {{tab}}Front­ism, or union with {{q|ad­vanced bour­geois parties}} en­tails prac­tical con­ces­sions, more­over, it can only deal with | + | {{tab}}Front­ism, or union with {{q|ad­vanced bour­geois parties}} en­tails prac­tical con­ces­sions, more­over, it can only deal with one prob­lem lim­ited by time and space; it en­tails polar­isa­tion lim­ited to one as­pect of re­pres­sion; there­fore the or­gan­isa­tion is ab­sorbed in a short time by the bour­geois ideo­logy. It is in the same way, and by the same pro­cess, that a cen­tral­ist organ­isa­tion which has as its ob­ject­ive the tak­ing of that su­preme ele­ment of re­pres­sion, state power, be­comes in­teg­rated into the bour­geois world and there­fore counter-<wbr>revolu­tion­ary. It is the polit­ics of na­tional unity and the pop­u­lar front which led the French CP to sup­port French im­peri­al­ism in 1946, Ho Chi Minh to sup­port Bao Dai against the Viet­nam­ese re­volu­tion­aries, and which will lead to a be­trayal of the Viet­nam­ese who fight to set up a {{w|Stalin­ist|Stalinism}} regime. So much for so­cial­ism! |
{{tab}}Besides, the world {{q|so­cial­ism}} isn{{t}} men­tioned once in the four and five points of the NLF and DRV. | {{tab}}Besides, the world {{q|so­cial­ism}} isn{{t}} men­tioned once in the four and five points of the NLF and DRV. | ||
− | {{tab}}Front­ism is also the con­se­quence of a con­cep­tion of the role of an organ­isa­tion that is that which pre­tends to rep­res­ent other things than itself such as the {{q|ob­ject­ive}} inter­ests of a class or a people. Out of this grows the {{q|in­fal­lible}} organ­isa­tion and every­thing must be sub­jected to its strat­egy; its strat­egy be­comes the Re­volu­tion. It be­comes an end in it­self, it is the bearer of Re­volu­tion, and it is not afraid of ally­ing it­self with the bour­geoisie, of sacri­fi­cing re­volu­tion­ary strug­gles in order to con­trol them better. It is it­self the Re­volu­tion. | + | {{tab}}Front­ism is also the con­se­quence of a con­cep­tion of the role of an organ­isa­tion, that is that which pre­tends to rep­res­ent other things than itself such as the {{q|ob­ject­ive}} inter­ests of a class or a people. Out of this grows the {{q|in­fal­lible}} organ­isa­tion and every­thing must be sub­jected to its strat­egy; its strat­egy be­comes the Re­volu­tion. It be­comes an end in it­self, it is the bearer of Re­volu­tion, and it is not afraid of ally­ing it­self with the bour­geoisie, of sacri­fi­cing re­volu­tion­ary strug­gles in order to con­trol them better. It is it­self the Re­volu­tion. |
{{tab}}It is the {{w|com­mun­ist inter­na­tional|Communist_International}} di­rected by Stalin to which the {{w|Chin­ese|Chinese_Communist_Revolution}} and Viet­nam­ese re­volu­tions were sacri­ficed. It is the {{w|Bolshe­vik|Bolshevik}} Party of {{w|Trotsky|Leon_Trotsky}} and {{w|Lenin|Vladimir_Lenin}} against {{w|Kron­stadt|Kronstadt_rebellion}} and {{w|Makhno|Nestor_Makhno}}. | {{tab}}It is the {{w|com­mun­ist inter­na­tional|Communist_International}} di­rected by Stalin to which the {{w|Chin­ese|Chinese_Communist_Revolution}} and Viet­nam­ese re­volu­tions were sacri­ficed. It is the {{w|Bolshe­vik|Bolshevik}} Party of {{w|Trotsky|Leon_Trotsky}} and {{w|Lenin|Vladimir_Lenin}} against {{w|Kron­stadt|Kronstadt_rebellion}} and {{w|Makhno|Nestor_Makhno}}. | ||
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{{tab}}Thus {{w|Che Guevara|Che_Guevara}} af­firms cor­rectly that in order to aid Viet­nam it is neces­sary to open up new fronts of strug­gle every­where in the world, but he claims that these fronts must be above all anti-<wbr>Amer­ican im­peri­al­ism. | {{tab}}Thus {{w|Che Guevara|Che_Guevara}} af­firms cor­rectly that in order to aid Viet­nam it is neces­sary to open up new fronts of strug­gle every­where in the world, but he claims that these fronts must be above all anti-<wbr>Amer­ican im­peri­al­ism. | ||
− | {{tab}}But im­peri­al­ism is only the arena, and not the su­preme arena at that, but only the most ad­vanced, of a cer­tain highly-<wbr>devel­oped cap­it­al­ism; it | + | {{tab}}But im­peri­al­ism is only the arena, and not the su­preme arena at that, but only the most ad­vanced, of a cer­tain highly-<wbr>devel­oped cap­it­al­ism; it is not the mark of other nais­sant cap­it­al­isms such as those of the {{w|third world|Third_World}}. And so the bour­geoisie of im­peri­al­ist coun­tries enter mo­ment­ar­ily into con­flict with the ris­ing bour­geoisie of back­ward coun­tries who wish to de­velop the forces of pro­duc­tion for their own ends. Thus the slo­gan {{q|Against Im­peri­al­ism}} finds its echo among the ad­van­cing bour­geoisie. Hence the neces­sary al­li­ance with them. Fin­ally it isn{{t}} the pro­le­tariat which needs this al­li­ance to live, but the bour­geoisie, which in order to real­ise its na­tional re­volu­tion (its {{w|1789|French_Revolution}}) must lean on the op­pressed classes whose strug­gle is thus alien­ated and over­rid­den. |
{{tab}}In ef­fect the strug­gle of the op­pressed is against im­peri­al­ism and against the ris­ing bour­geoisie, which are only two as­pects of the same op­pres­sion. | {{tab}}In ef­fect the strug­gle of the op­pressed is against im­peri­al­ism and against the ris­ing bour­geoisie, which are only two as­pects of the same op­pres­sion. | ||
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− | {{tab}}To claim that since the NLF isn{{t}} re­volu­tion­ary, what is hap­pen­ing in Viet­nam isn{{t}} re­volu­tion­ary, and there­fore doesn{{t}} inter­est us, would be a mis­take of the same kind as that which con­sists of sup­port­ing (verb­ally or course) the NLF for want of some­thing else. To group all the com­bat­ants in Viet­nam under the NLF is to play the game of the latter, that is to say that there were no longer Anarch­ists in Spain after {{w|Montsény<!-- 'Montséry' in original -->|Federica_Montseny}}, {{w|Oliver|Juan_García_Oliver}} and others had entered the {{w|gov­ern­ment|Popular_Front_(Spain)}}. | + | {{tab}}To claim that since the NLF isn{{t}} re­volu­tion­ary, what is hap­pen­ing in Viet­nam isn{{t}} re­volu­tion­ary, and there­fore doesn{{t}} inter­est us, would be a mis­take of the same kind as that which con­sists of sup­port­ing (verb­ally or course) the NLF for want of some­thing else. To group all the com­bat­ants in Viet­nam under the NLF is to play the game of the latter, that is to say, to claim the re­pre­sent­iv­ity of an organ­isa­tion out­side it­self. In the same way one could say that there were no longer Anarch­ists in Spain after {{w|Montsény<!-- 'Montséry' in original -->|Federica_Montseny}}, {{w|Oliver|Juan_García_Oliver}} and others had entered the {{w|gov­ern­ment|Popular_Front_(Spain)}}. |
{{tab}}It is this con­cep­tion of organ­isa­tion which makes cer­tain Trotsky­ists com­mit a grave error. Not being able to have a posi­tion on Viet­nam, to sup­port the strug­gle means for them to sup­port an organ­isa­tion at all costs, even if it has been openly op­posed to them ({{w|con­cen­tra­tion camps|Internment}} for Trotsky­ists on the ini­ti­at­ive of Uncle Ho). | {{tab}}It is this con­cep­tion of organ­isa­tion which makes cer­tain Trotsky­ists com­mit a grave error. Not being able to have a posi­tion on Viet­nam, to sup­port the strug­gle means for them to sup­port an organ­isa­tion at all costs, even if it has been openly op­posed to them ({{w|con­cen­tra­tion camps|Internment}} for Trotsky­ists on the ini­ti­at­ive of Uncle Ho). | ||
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{{tab}}'''1. They sup­port un­con­di­tion­ally a non-<wbr>revolu­tion­ary organ­isa­tion and an ideal­istic con­cept of re­volu­tion.''' | {{tab}}'''1. They sup­port un­con­di­tion­ally a non-<wbr>revolu­tion­ary organ­isa­tion and an ideal­istic con­cept of re­volu­tion.''' | ||
− | {{tab}}'''2. They hide the true prob­lem which is the class strug­gle in France | + | {{tab}}'''2. They hide the true prob­lem which is the class strug­gle in France and make the people think they can do some­thing for Viet­nam out­side di­rect action.''' |
{{tab}}Of what does di­rect ac­tion con­sist in the con­di­tions in which we find our­selves, is that facing the French bour­geoisie and Amer­ican pen­et­ra­tion? It con­sists only of ac­tion against Amer­ican in­stal­la­tions which, more­over, would con­trib­ute to the de­noun­cing of re­form­ist and legal­ist organ­isa­tions, whose sup­port would only be verbal. | {{tab}}Of what does di­rect ac­tion con­sist in the con­di­tions in which we find our­selves, is that facing the French bour­geoisie and Amer­ican pen­et­ra­tion? It con­sists only of ac­tion against Amer­ican in­stal­la­tions which, more­over, would con­trib­ute to the de­noun­cing of re­form­ist and legal­ist organ­isa­tions, whose sup­port would only be verbal. | ||
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− | <div style="text-align:right;">[[Author:Nanterre Anarchist Group|{{sc|Nanterre Anarch­ist Group}}]]{{tab}}</div> | + | <div style="text-align:right;">[[Author:Nanterre Anarchist Group|{{sc|Nanterre Anarch­ist Group}}]].{{tab}}</div> |
</div> | </div> | ||
Latest revision as of 17:53, 13 April 2018
LET US SEE if the NLF (of Vietnam) is a revolutionary organisation.
It is evident that the sole fact that the NLF supports the armed struggle against US imperialism does not prove that its views and actions are revolutionary (just as the Gaullists, in 1940, participated in the armed struggle against German imperialism).
THE NLF PROGRAMME
Let us examine the programme of the NLF, in particular the famous five points of its Central Committee.
The first point accuses US imperialism of having sabotaged the Geneva Agreement. We already have here the embryo of a false analysis, since this implies that they need not have been sabotaged, that is, that an agreement between nations can be valid.
The second point states that their aim is to create an independent, democratic, peaceful and neutral state. This is not an aim which anarchists can support.
In points 1, 3, 4 and 5 they always refer to the notion of ‘people’ and not of ‘classes’, which makes one think that it is not the world bourgeoisie that have made and broken the Geneva Agreement, but only US imperialism, and that the Vietnamese form a whole in themselves, that is, that there are no dominant classes in Vietnam, nor any aspiring to be such.
NLF OBJECTIVES
Also let us look at the declaration of N’Guyen Hno Tho, of the NLF in L’Humanité (28.8.66):
‘Our objective is to set up in South Vietnam a united national democratic government re-
For a revolutionary to support the NLF and its political positions, in these conditions, is to make the same mistake as to support the Gaullist programme during the Resistance, the Popular Front in 1936, and the CNT collaborationists with the Republicans in Spain.
This is to fall into the trap of uniting against our privileged enemies in particular, which is only one aspect of the general repression, and it is to support the theory of revolution by palliatives.
We will elaborate on this when we make a criticism of Frontism. But before this we must refute another argument. One often hears it said that the NLF is in fact supported by a revolutionary organisation (the ex-<span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: Indo-
Apart from the fact that we always have the same attitude to a Communist Party or a workers’ state, we must criticise more deeply the position of the Indo-Chinese Communist Party and the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, in order to understand what Marxist-Leninism is, that is, the strategy of compromise built into a programme, revolution by steps, that is, an idealist vision of history, a sort of messianism.
PERMANENT INSURRECTION
Since 1930 (see Solidarity pamphlet and Voix Ouvrier) the peasants (95% of the population) have been in a state of permanent insurrection against feudal exploitation. On the whole they support the Vietcong which they see as a force capable of breaking the social structure. The first insurrections were supported by the ICP; however, after the 7th Congress of the Comintern (1935) which advocated the tactic of the Popular Front (alliance with the so-
The ICP faithfully followed Stalin’s directives after the <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: Russo-
In March, 1945, the Japanese launched an offensive against the French garrisons. The USA refused to help; the French forces were decimated, the Japanese proclaimed <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: Indo-
MILITANTS ASSASSINATED
The nationalists and revolutionary militants (Trotskyists especially) were systematically assassinated by the ICP which supported the pro-
Ho Chi Minh permitted French troops to penetrate freely into the interior of the country. He called on the population to celebrate the arrival of the new occupying forces. So the French reinforced their positions until the day when suddenly they bombarded Haiphong (24.12.46). The French Communist Party ranged itself on the side of French imperialism.
In September, 1945, the French Government (in which the Communists participated) asked for a military budget of 100 million to reinforce the expeditionary forces. The Communists voted for this. In January, 1946, a new military budget was approved by the Communists.
In December 1946 the 182 Communist Deputies approved unanimously a message of congratulation sent to General Leclerc for his action in Indo-
During the debates in the Assembly (14.3.47 and 18.3.47) the Right-
FRONTISM
This is the not-
Frontism, or union with ‘advanced bourgeois parties’ entails practical concessions, moreover, it can only deal with one problem limited by time and space; it entails polarisation limited to one aspect of repression; therefore the organisation is absorbed in a short time by the bourgeois ideology. It is in the same way, and by the same process, that a centralist organisation which has as its objective the taking of that supreme element of repression, state power, becomes integrated into the bourgeois world and therefore counter-
Besides, the world ‘socialism’ isn’t mentioned once in the four and five points of the NLF and DRV.
Frontism is also the consequence of a conception of the role of an organisation, that is that which pretends to represent other things than itself such as the ‘objective’ interests of a class or a people. Out of this grows the ‘infallible’ organisation and everything must be subjected to its strategy; its strategy becomes the Revolution. It becomes an end in itself, it is the bearer of Revolution, and it is not afraid of allying itself with the bourgeoisie, of sacrificing revolutionary struggles in order to control them better. It is itself the Revolution.
It is the communist international directed by Stalin to which the Chinese and Vietnamese revolutions were sacrificed. It is the Bolshevik Party of Trotsky and Lenin against Kronstadt and Makhno.
REVOLUTION BY PALLIATIVES
Frontism, we have seen, is the theory of revolution by palliatives (the palliatives are in effect the progressive march of the organisation towards power).
Thus Che Guevara affirms correctly that in order to aid Vietnam it is necessary to open up new fronts of struggle everywhere in the world, but he claims that these fronts must be above all anti-
But imperialism is only the arena, and not the supreme arena at that, but only the most advanced, of a certain highly-
In effect the struggle of the oppressed is against imperialism and against the rising bourgeoisie, which are only two aspects of the same oppression.
Even so, in the cases where imperialism is defeated and the so-
The struggle therefore must take place in the realm of the direct hold on the means of production by the producers and in their own authentic control.
The only problem is this: in the countries of the Third World, are the workers capable, by themselves, of realising primitive accumulation (is it necessary in the setting of world revolution?) and of developing productive forces and of directing them in the sectors which they themselves choose? Or is it necessary to entrust this work to a gang of technocrats supported by the Party, or to a National Bourgeoisie?
THE REVOLUTIONARY VIEW
The only revolutionary view is the first, even if it leads to a certain number of temporary failures.
Marxists of all tendencies choose the other view. They prefer the NEP to Soviet power.
WHAT ARE WE TO DO?
To claim that since the NLF isn’t revolutionary, what is happening in Vietnam isn’t revolutionary, and therefore doesn’t interest us, would be a mistake of the same kind as that which consists of supporting (verbally or course) the NLF for want of something else. To group all the combatants in Vietnam under the NLF is to play the game of the latter, that is to say, to claim the representivity of an organisation outside itself. In the same way one could say that there were no longer Anarchists in Spain after Montsény, Oliver and others had entered the government.
It is this conception of organisation which makes certain Trotskyists commit a grave error. Not being able to have a position on Vietnam, to support the struggle means for them to support an organisation at all costs, even if it has been openly opposed to them (concentration camps for Trotskyists on the initiative of Uncle Ho).
As far as the Anarchists are concerned there are those who consider the NLF and the Vietnamese engaged in the struggle to be the same and reject them both, and those who support the NLF.
On one side there is abstentionism, on the other activism, two attitudes arising from the same Marxist and bourgeois conception of organisation, both of which feebly hide the failure of revolutionary perspective when one abandons the standpoint of class struggle.
For us the valid point of view on Vietnam is this; there is a confrontation between two imperialisms from which a rising bourgeoisie is trying to profit, superimposing itself on an authentic popular revolution. The NLF has always denied this revolution and presents the struggle of the Vietcong solely as a war of National Liberation.
Therefore if we reject the concept of nation (which is a product of bourgeois ideology) and use that of class, we can see that the only means of supporting the struggle of the peasants and workers of Vietnam is to weaken the bourgeoisie where we are. The best help is for us to get rid of our capitalists and our bureaucrats.
It now remains for us to analyse revolutionary perspectives in France and to define our actions there. In this respect the analysis of the situation in Vietnam has been useful since it has allowed us to define some positions and some mistakes we should not make.
From our point of view the Vietnam Committees are the expression of a double theoretical and practical error.
1. They support unconditionally a non-
2. They hide the true problem which is the class struggle in France and make the people think they can do something for Vietnam outside direct action.
Of what does direct action consist in the conditions in which we find ourselves, is that facing the French bourgeoisie and American penetration? It consists only of action against American installations which, moreover, would contribute to the denouncing of reformist and legalist organisations, whose support would only be verbal.
We must therefore denounce the Vietnam Committees and place ourselves on other ground. Of course we can also talk to people in the street, we can attend meetings and put over our point of view and start discussions on imperialism, the class struggle, etc. … which may cause the Vietnam Committee to split. We must always defend the totality of our positions.