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|Viet&shy;nam|South_Vietnam}}) is a re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary organ&shy;isa&shy;tion.'''
 
'''{{Drop|L}}ET US SEE if the {{w|NLF|Viet_Cong}} (of {{w|Viet&shy;nam|South_Vietnam}}) is a re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary organ&shy;isa&shy;tion.'''
  
'''{{tab}}It is evid&shy;ent that the sole fact that the NLF sup&shy;ports the armed strug&shy;gle against {{w|United States|US}} {{w|im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism|Vietnam_War}} does not prove that its views and ac&shy;tions are re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary (just as the {{w|Gaul&shy;lists|Gaullism}}, in 1940, parti&shy;cip&shy;ated in the armed strug&shy;gle against {{w|German|Nazi_Germany}} {{w|im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism|German_military_administration_in_occupied_France_during_World_War_II}}).'''
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'''{{tab}}It is evid&shy;ent that the sole fact that the NLF sup&shy;ports the armed strug&shy;gle against {{w|US|United_States}} {{w|im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism|Vietnam_War}} does not prove that its views and ac&shy;tions are re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary (just as the {{w|Gaul&shy;lists|Gaullism}}, in 1940, parti&shy;cip&shy;ated in the armed strug&shy;gle against {{w|German|Nazi_Germany}} {{w|im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism|German_military_administration_in_occupied_France_during_World_War_II}}).'''
  
  
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{{tab}}Since 1930 (see ''Solid&shy;ar&shy;'' pamph&shy;let and ''Voix Ouvrier'') the peas&shy;ants (95% of the pop&shy;u&shy;la&shy;tion) have been in a state of per&shy;man&shy;ent in&shy;sur&shy;rec&shy;tion against feudal ex&shy;ploit&shy;a&shy;tion. On the whole they sup&shy;port the {{w|Viet&shy;cong|Viet_Cong}} which they see as a force cap&shy;able of break&shy;ing the so&shy;cial struc&shy;ture. The first in&shy;sur&shy;rec&shy;tions were sup&shy;ported by the {{w|ICP|Indochinese_Communist_Party}}; how&shy;ever, after the {{w|7th Con&shy;gress|Seventh_World_Congress_of_the_Comintern}} of the {{w|Com&shy;intern|Communist_International}} (1935) which ad&shy;voc&shy;ated the tac&shy;tic of the Pop&shy;u&shy;lar Front (al&shy;li&shy;ance with the so-<wbr>called pro&shy;gres&shy;sive bour&shy;geoisie), the ICP took a step back&shy;wards: it aban&shy;doned the slo&shy;gan {{q|Down with {{w|French im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism|French_Indochina}}}} and the strug&shy;gle for in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ence.
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{{tab}}Since 1930 (see ''Solid&shy;ar&shy;ity'' pamph&shy;let and ''Voix Ouvrier'') the peas&shy;ants (95% of the pop&shy;u&shy;la&shy;tion) have been in a state of per&shy;man&shy;ent in&shy;sur&shy;rec&shy;tion against feudal ex&shy;ploit&shy;a&shy;tion. On the whole they sup&shy;port the {{w|Viet&shy;cong|Viet_Cong}} which they see as a force cap&shy;able of break&shy;ing the so&shy;cial struc&shy;ture. The first in&shy;sur&shy;rec&shy;tions were sup&shy;ported by the {{w|ICP|Indochinese_Communist_Party}}; how&shy;ever, after the {{w|7th Con&shy;gress|Seventh_World_Congress_of_the_Comintern}} of the {{w|Com&shy;intern|Communist_International}} (1935) which ad&shy;voc&shy;ated the tac&shy;tic of the Pop&shy;u&shy;lar Front (al&shy;li&shy;ance with the so-<wbr>called pro&shy;gres&shy;sive bour&shy;geoisie), the ICP took a step back&shy;wards: it aban&shy;doned the slo&shy;gan {{q|Down with {{w|French im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism|French_Indochina}}}} and the strug&shy;gle for in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ence.
  
{{tab}}The ICP faith&shy;fully fol&shy;lowed {{w|Stalin|Joseph_Stalin}}{{s}} di&shy;rect&shy;ives after the {{w|Russo-<wbr>German rap&shy;proche&shy;ment|Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact}} of 1939, de&shy;fend&shy;ing {{w|German fas&shy;cism|Nazism}} against French ag&shy;gres&shy;sion. Since 1940 the Amer&shy;icans have been in&shy;ter&shy;ested in Indo-<wbr>China. At {{w|Yalta|Yalta_Conference}} (1945<!-- '1940' in original -->) {{w|Roose&shy;velt|Franklin_D._Roosevelt}} pro&shy;posed to re&shy;place French oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion by an inter&shy;na&shy;tional (in ef&shy;fect US) oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion. Stalin agreed.
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{{tab}}The ICP faith&shy;fully fol&shy;lowed {{w|Stalin|Joseph_Stalin}}{{s}} di&shy;rect&shy;ives after the {{w|Russo-<wbr>German rap&shy;proche&shy;ment|Molotov–Ribbentrop_Pact}} of 1939, de&shy;fend&shy;ing {{w|German fas&shy;cism|Nazism}} against French ag&shy;gres&shy;sion. Since 1940 the Amer&shy;icans have been in&shy;ter&shy;ested in Indo-<wbr>China. At {{w|Yalta|Yalta_Conference}} (1945<!-- '1940' in original -->) {{w|Roose&shy;velt|Franklin_D._Roosevelt}} pro&shy;posed to re&shy;place French oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion by an inter&shy;na&shy;tional (in ef&shy;fect US) oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion. Stalin agreed.
  
 
{{tab}}In March, 1945, the Japan&shy;ese launched an {{w|of&shy;fens&shy;ive|Japanese_coup_d'état_in_French_Indochina}} against the French {{w|gar&shy;ri&shy;sons|Garrison}}. The USA re&shy;fused to help; the French forces were decim&shy;ated, the Japan&shy;ese pro&shy;claimed {{w|Indo-<wbr>China in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ent|Empire_of_Vietnam}}, but con&shy;tinued their oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion. The ICP pre&shy;pared for the oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion of the coun&shy;try by the {{w|al&shy;lies|Allies_of_World_War_II}}. Amer&shy;icans and Brit&shy;ish oc&shy;cu&shy;pied the south of the coun&shy;try, {{w|Ho Chi Minh|Ho_Chi_Minh}} took Hanoi; he sup&shy;ported the USA. France in its turn de&shy;clared Indo-<wbr>China in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ent and under&shy;took to pull out its troops in five years. The ICP fol&shy;lowed di&shy;rect&shy;ives of the {{w|USSR|Soviet_Union}}; a strict ap&shy;pli&shy;ca&shy;tion of the Yalta Agree&shy;ment; Indo-<wbr>China was made part of the West. There was no ques&shy;tion of so&shy;cial re&shy;volu&shy;tion or of in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ence.
 
{{tab}}In March, 1945, the Japan&shy;ese launched an {{w|of&shy;fens&shy;ive|Japanese_coup_d'état_in_French_Indochina}} against the French {{w|gar&shy;ri&shy;sons|Garrison}}. The USA re&shy;fused to help; the French forces were decim&shy;ated, the Japan&shy;ese pro&shy;claimed {{w|Indo-<wbr>China in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ent|Empire_of_Vietnam}}, but con&shy;tinued their oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion. The ICP pre&shy;pared for the oc&shy;cu&shy;pa&shy;tion of the coun&shy;try by the {{w|al&shy;lies|Allies_of_World_War_II}}. Amer&shy;icans and Brit&shy;ish oc&shy;cu&shy;pied the south of the coun&shy;try, {{w|Ho Chi Minh|Ho_Chi_Minh}} took Hanoi; he sup&shy;ported the USA. France in its turn de&shy;clared Indo-<wbr>China in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ent and under&shy;took to pull out its troops in five years. The ICP fol&shy;lowed di&shy;rect&shy;ives of the {{w|USSR|Soviet_Union}}; a strict ap&shy;pli&shy;ca&shy;tion of the Yalta Agree&shy;ment; Indo-<wbr>China was made part of the West. There was no ques&shy;tion of so&shy;cial re&shy;volu&shy;tion or of in&shy;de&shy;pend&shy;ence.
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{{tab}}This is the not-<wbr>too-<wbr>glori&shy;ous past of the French Com&shy;mun&shy;ist Party and the Indo-<wbr>Chinese Com&shy;mun&shy;ist Party; the latter now con&shy;trols the Demo&shy;cratic Repub&shy;lic of Viet&shy;nam, the worker{{s|r}} state which, in its sup&shy;port for the NLF, re&shy;fers three times, in its four points to the Geneva Agree&shy;ment. That is, it plays the re&shy;form&shy;ist dip&shy;lo&shy;matic and parlia&shy;ment&shy;ary game worthy of its past and of its polit&shy;ical con&shy;cep&shy;tions, in par&shy;tic&shy;u&shy;lar Front&shy;ism as a strat&shy;egy.
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{{tab}}This is the not-<wbr>too-<wbr>glori&shy;ous past of the French Com&shy;mun&shy;ist Party and the Indo-<wbr>Chinese Com&shy;mun&shy;ist Party; the latter now con&shy;trols the Demo&shy;cratic Repub&shy;lic of Viet&shy;nam, the {{q|worker{{s|r}} state}} which, in its sup&shy;port for the NLF, re&shy;fers three times, in its four points to the Geneva Agree&shy;ment. That is, it plays the re&shy;form&shy;ist, dip&shy;lo&shy;matic and parlia&shy;ment&shy;ary game worthy of its past and of its polit&shy;ical con&shy;cep&shy;tions, in par&shy;tic&shy;u&shy;lar Front&shy;ism as a strat&shy;egy.
  
{{tab}}Front&shy;ism, or union with {{q|ad&shy;vanced bour&shy;geois parties}} en&shy;tails prac&shy;tical  con&shy;ces&shy;sions, more&shy;over, it can only deal with on eprob&shy;lem lim&shy;ited by time and space; it en&shy;tails polar&shy;isa&shy;tion lim&shy;ited to one as&shy;pect of re&shy;pres&shy;sion; there&shy;fore the or&shy;gan&shy;isa&shy;tion is ab&shy;sorbed in a short time by the bour&shy;geois ideo&shy;logy. It is in the same way, and by the same pro&shy;cess, that a cen&shy;tral&shy;ist organ&shy;isa&shy;tion which has as its ob&shy;ject&shy;ive the tak&shy;ing of the su&shy;preme ele&shy;ment of re&shy;pres&shy;sion, state power, be&shy;comes in&shy;teg&shy;rated into the bour&shy;geois world and there&shy;fore counter-<wbr>revolu&shy;tion&shy;ary. It is the polit&shy;ics of na&shy;tional unity and the pop&shy;u&shy;lar front which led the French CP to sup&shy;port French im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism in 1946, Ho Chi Minh to sup&shy;port Bao Dai against the Viet&shy;nam&shy;ese re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;aries, and which will lead to a be&shy;trayal of the Viet&shy;nam&shy;ese who fight to set up a {{w|Stalin&shy;ist|Stalinism}} regime. So much for so&shy;cial&shy;ism!
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{{tab}}Front&shy;ism, or union with {{q|ad&shy;vanced bour&shy;geois parties}} en&shy;tails prac&shy;tical  con&shy;ces&shy;sions, more&shy;over, it can only deal with one prob&shy;lem lim&shy;ited by time and space; it en&shy;tails polar&shy;isa&shy;tion lim&shy;ited to one as&shy;pect of re&shy;pres&shy;sion; there&shy;fore the or&shy;gan&shy;isa&shy;tion is ab&shy;sorbed in a short time by the bour&shy;geois ideo&shy;logy. It is in the same way, and by the same pro&shy;cess, that a cen&shy;tral&shy;ist organ&shy;isa&shy;tion which has as its ob&shy;ject&shy;ive the tak&shy;ing of that su&shy;preme ele&shy;ment of re&shy;pres&shy;sion, state power, be&shy;comes in&shy;teg&shy;rated into the bour&shy;geois world and there&shy;fore counter-<wbr>revolu&shy;tion&shy;ary. It is the polit&shy;ics of na&shy;tional unity and the pop&shy;u&shy;lar front which led the French CP to sup&shy;port French im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism in 1946, Ho Chi Minh to sup&shy;port Bao Dai against the Viet&shy;nam&shy;ese re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;aries, and which will lead to a be&shy;trayal of the Viet&shy;nam&shy;ese who fight to set up a {{w|Stalin&shy;ist|Stalinism}} regime. So much for so&shy;cial&shy;ism!
  
 
{{tab}}Besides, the world {{q|so&shy;cial&shy;ism}} isn{{t}} men&shy;tioned once in the four and five points of the NLF and DRV.
 
{{tab}}Besides, the world {{q|so&shy;cial&shy;ism}} isn{{t}} men&shy;tioned once in the four and five points of the NLF and DRV.
  
{{tab}}Front&shy;ism is also the con&shy;se&shy;quence of a con&shy;cep&shy;tion of the role of an organ&shy;isa&shy;tion that is that which pre&shy;tends to rep&shy;res&shy;ent other things than itself such as the {{q|ob&shy;ject&shy;ive}} inter&shy;ests of a class or a people. Out of this grows the {{q|in&shy;fal&shy;lible}} organ&shy;isa&shy;tion and every&shy;thing must be sub&shy;jected to its strat&shy;egy; its strat&shy;egy be&shy;comes the Re&shy;volu&shy;tion. It be&shy;comes an end in it&shy;self, it is the bearer of Re&shy;volu&shy;tion, and it is not afraid of ally&shy;ing it&shy;self with the bour&shy;geoisie, of sacri&shy;fi&shy;cing re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary strug&shy;gles in order to con&shy;trol them better. It is it&shy;self the Re&shy;volu&shy;tion.
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{{tab}}Front&shy;ism is also the con&shy;se&shy;quence of a con&shy;cep&shy;tion of the role of an organ&shy;isa&shy;tion, that is that which pre&shy;tends to rep&shy;res&shy;ent other things than itself such as the {{q|ob&shy;ject&shy;ive}} inter&shy;ests of a class or a people. Out of this grows the {{q|in&shy;fal&shy;lible}} organ&shy;isa&shy;tion and every&shy;thing must be sub&shy;jected to its strat&shy;egy; its strat&shy;egy be&shy;comes the Re&shy;volu&shy;tion. It be&shy;comes an end in it&shy;self, it is the bearer of Re&shy;volu&shy;tion, and it is not afraid of ally&shy;ing it&shy;self with the bour&shy;geoisie, of sacri&shy;fi&shy;cing re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary strug&shy;gles in order to con&shy;trol them better. It is it&shy;self the Re&shy;volu&shy;tion.
  
 
{{tab}}It is the {{w|com&shy;mun&shy;ist inter&shy;na&shy;tional|Communist_International}} di&shy;rected by Stalin to which the {{w|Chin&shy;ese|Chinese_Communist_Revolution}} and Viet&shy;nam&shy;ese re&shy;volu&shy;tions were sacri&shy;ficed. It is the {{w|Bolshe&shy;vik|Bolshevik}} Party of {{w|Trotsky|Leon_Trotsky}} and {{w|Lenin|Vladimir_Lenin}} against {{w|Kron&shy;stadt|Kronstadt_rebellion}} and {{w|Makhno|Nestor_Makhno}}.
 
{{tab}}It is the {{w|com&shy;mun&shy;ist inter&shy;na&shy;tional|Communist_International}} di&shy;rected by Stalin to which the {{w|Chin&shy;ese|Chinese_Communist_Revolution}} and Viet&shy;nam&shy;ese re&shy;volu&shy;tions were sacri&shy;ficed. It is the {{w|Bolshe&shy;vik|Bolshevik}} Party of {{w|Trotsky|Leon_Trotsky}} and {{w|Lenin|Vladimir_Lenin}} against {{w|Kron&shy;stadt|Kronstadt_rebellion}} and {{w|Makhno|Nestor_Makhno}}.
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{{tab}}Thus {{w|Che Guevara|Che_Guevara}} af&shy;firms cor&shy;rectly that in order to aid Viet&shy;nam it is neces&shy;sary to open up new fronts of strug&shy;gle every&shy;where in the world, but he claims that these fronts must be above all anti-<wbr>Amer&shy;ican im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism.
 
{{tab}}Thus {{w|Che Guevara|Che_Guevara}} af&shy;firms cor&shy;rectly that in order to aid Viet&shy;nam it is neces&shy;sary to open up new fronts of strug&shy;gle every&shy;where in the world, but he claims that these fronts must be above all anti-<wbr>Amer&shy;ican im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism.
  
{{tab}}But im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism is only the arena, and not the su&shy;preme arena at that, but only the most ad&shy;vanced, of a cer&shy;tain highly-<wbr>devel&shy;oped cap&shy;it&shy;al&shy;ism; it si not the mark of other mais&shy;sant cap&shy;it&shy;al&shy;isms such as those of the {{w|third world|Third_World}}. And so the bour&shy;geoisie of im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ist coun&shy;tries enter mo&shy;ment&shy;ar&shy;ily into con&shy;flict with the ris&shy;ing bour&shy;geoisie of back&shy;ward coun&shy;tries who wish to de&shy;velop the forces of pro&shy;duc&shy;tion for their own ends. Thus the slo&shy;gan {{q|Against Im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism}} finds its echo among the ad&shy;van&shy;cing bour&shy;geoisie. Hence the neces&shy;sary al&shy;li&shy;ance with them. Fin&shy;ally it isn{{t}} the pro&shy;le&shy;tariat which needs this al&shy;li&shy;ance to live, but the bour&shy;geoisie, which in order to real&shy;ise its na&shy;tional re&shy;volu&shy;tion (its {{w|1789|French_Revolution}}) must lean on the op&shy;pressed classes whose strug&shy;gle is thus alien&shy;ated and over&shy;rid&shy;den.
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{{tab}}But im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism is only the arena, and not the su&shy;preme arena at that, but only the most ad&shy;vanced, of a cer&shy;tain highly-<wbr>devel&shy;oped cap&shy;it&shy;al&shy;ism; it is not the mark of other nais&shy;sant cap&shy;it&shy;al&shy;isms such as those of the {{w|third world|Third_World}}. And so the bour&shy;geoisie of im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ist coun&shy;tries enter mo&shy;ment&shy;ar&shy;ily into con&shy;flict with the ris&shy;ing bour&shy;geoisie of back&shy;ward coun&shy;tries who wish to de&shy;velop the forces of pro&shy;duc&shy;tion for their own ends. Thus the slo&shy;gan {{q|Against Im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism}} finds its echo among the ad&shy;van&shy;cing bour&shy;geoisie. Hence the neces&shy;sary al&shy;li&shy;ance with them. Fin&shy;ally it isn{{t}} the pro&shy;le&shy;tariat which needs this al&shy;li&shy;ance to live, but the bour&shy;geoisie, which in order to real&shy;ise its na&shy;tional re&shy;volu&shy;tion (its {{w|1789|French_Revolution}}) must lean on the op&shy;pressed classes whose strug&shy;gle is thus alien&shy;ated and over&shy;rid&shy;den.
  
 
{{tab}}In ef&shy;fect the strug&shy;gle of the op&shy;pressed is against im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism and against the ris&shy;ing bour&shy;geoisie, which are only two as&shy;pects of the same op&shy;pres&shy;sion.
 
{{tab}}In ef&shy;fect the strug&shy;gle of the op&shy;pressed is against im&shy;peri&shy;al&shy;ism and against the ris&shy;ing bour&shy;geoisie, which are only two as&shy;pects of the same op&shy;pres&shy;sion.
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{{tab}}To claim that since the NLF isn{{t}} re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary, what is hap&shy;pen&shy;ing in Viet&shy;nam isn{{t}} re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary, and there&shy;fore doesn{{t}} inter&shy;est us, would be a mis&shy;take of the same kind as that which con&shy;sists of sup&shy;port&shy;ing (verb&shy;ally or course) the NLF for want of some&shy;thing else. To group all the com&shy;bat&shy;ants in Viet&shy;nam under the NLF is to play the game of the latter, that is to say that there were no longer Anarch&shy;ists in Spain after {{w|Monts&eacute;ny<!-- 'Montséry' in original -->|Federica_Montseny}}, {{w|Oliver|Juan_García_Oliver}} and others had entered the {{w|gov&shy;ern&shy;ment|Popular_Front_(Spain)}}.
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{{tab}}To claim that since the NLF isn{{t}} re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary, what is hap&shy;pen&shy;ing in Viet&shy;nam isn{{t}} re&shy;volu&shy;tion&shy;ary, and there&shy;fore doesn{{t}} inter&shy;est us, would be a mis&shy;take of the same kind as that which con&shy;sists of sup&shy;port&shy;ing (verb&shy;ally or course) the NLF for want of some&shy;thing else. To group all the com&shy;bat&shy;ants in Viet&shy;nam under the NLF is to play the game of the latter, that is to say, to claim the re&shy;pre&shy;sent&shy;iv&shy;ity of an organ&shy;isa&shy;tion out&shy;side it&shy;self. In the same way one could say that there were no longer Anarch&shy;ists in Spain after {{w|Monts&eacute;ny<!-- 'Montséry' in original -->|Federica_Montseny}}, {{w|Oliver|Juan_García_Oliver}} and others had entered the {{w|gov&shy;ern&shy;ment|Popular_Front_(Spain)}}.
  
 
{{tab}}It is this con&shy;cep&shy;tion of organ&shy;isa&shy;tion which makes cer&shy;tain Trotsky&shy;ists com&shy;mit a grave error. Not being able to have a posi&shy;tion on Viet&shy;nam, to sup&shy;port the strug&shy;gle means for them to sup&shy;port an organ&shy;isa&shy;tion at all costs, even if it has been openly op&shy;posed to them ({{w|con&shy;cen&shy;tra&shy;tion camps|Internment}} for Trotsky&shy;ists on the ini&shy;ti&shy;at&shy;ive of Uncle Ho).
 
{{tab}}It is this con&shy;cep&shy;tion of organ&shy;isa&shy;tion which makes cer&shy;tain Trotsky&shy;ists com&shy;mit a grave error. Not being able to have a posi&shy;tion on Viet&shy;nam, to sup&shy;port the strug&shy;gle means for them to sup&shy;port an organ&shy;isa&shy;tion at all costs, even if it has been openly op&shy;posed to them ({{w|con&shy;cen&shy;tra&shy;tion camps|Internment}} for Trotsky&shy;ists on the ini&shy;ti&shy;at&shy;ive of Uncle Ho).
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{{tab}}'''1.&emsp;They sup&shy;port un&shy;con&shy;di&shy;tion&shy;ally a non-<wbr>revolu&shy;tion&shy;ary organ&shy;isa&shy;tion and an ideal&shy;istic con&shy;cept of re&shy;volu&shy;tion.'''
 
{{tab}}'''1.&emsp;They sup&shy;port un&shy;con&shy;di&shy;tion&shy;ally a non-<wbr>revolu&shy;tion&shy;ary organ&shy;isa&shy;tion and an ideal&shy;istic con&shy;cept of re&shy;volu&shy;tion.'''
  
{{tab}}'''2.&emsp;They hide the true prob&shy;lem which is the class strug&shy;gle in France adn make the people think they can do some&shy;thing for Viet&shy;nam out&shy;side di&shy;rect action.'''
+
{{tab}}'''2.&emsp;They hide the true prob&shy;lem which is the class strug&shy;gle in France and make the people think they can do some&shy;thing for Viet&shy;nam out&shy;side di&shy;rect action.'''
  
 
{{tab}}Of what does di&shy;rect ac&shy;tion con&shy;sist in the con&shy;di&shy;tions in which we find our&shy;selves, is that facing the French bour&shy;geoisie and Amer&shy;ican pen&shy;et&shy;ra&shy;tion? It con&shy;sists only of ac&shy;tion against Amer&shy;ican in&shy;stal&shy;la&shy;tions which, more&shy;over, would con&shy;trib&shy;ute to the de&shy;noun&shy;cing of re&shy;form&shy;ist and legal&shy;ist organ&shy;isa&shy;tions, whose sup&shy;port would only be verbal.
 
{{tab}}Of what does di&shy;rect ac&shy;tion con&shy;sist in the con&shy;di&shy;tions in which we find our&shy;selves, is that facing the French bour&shy;geoisie and Amer&shy;ican pen&shy;et&shy;ra&shy;tion? It con&shy;sists only of ac&shy;tion against Amer&shy;ican in&shy;stal&shy;la&shy;tions which, more&shy;over, would con&shy;trib&shy;ute to the de&shy;noun&shy;cing of re&shy;form&shy;ist and legal&shy;ist organ&shy;isa&shy;tions, whose sup&shy;port would only be verbal.
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<div style="text-align:right;">[[Author:Nanterre Anarchist Group|{{sc|Nanterre Anarch&shy;ist Group}}]]{{tab}}</div>
+
<div style="text-align:right;">[[Author:Nanterre Anarchist Group|{{sc|Nanterre Anarch&shy;ist Group}}]].{{tab}}</div>
 
</div>
 
</div>
  

Latest revision as of 17:53, 13 April 2018


6
National Liberation or Class War?


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-unit­ing the re­pre­sent­at­ives of all so­cial classes, of all be­liefs, and of patri­otic not­abil­it­ies and polit­ical parties. …’ (Even the French Com­mun­ist Party does not go that far on the road to re­form­ism.)

  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-Chinese CP">Indo-Chinese CP) it­self sup­ported by the work­ers’ state of Hanoi, and that the al­li­ance is only tac­tical, be­cause after the vic­tory the bour­geois ele­ments will be jet­tisoned in order to con­struct the so­cial­ist order.

  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-called pro­gres­sive bour­geoisie), the ICP took a step back­wards: it aban­doned the slo­gan ‘Down with French im­peri­al­ism’ and the strug­gle for in­de­pend­ence.

  The ICP faith­fully fol­lowed Stalin’s di­rect­ives after the <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: Russo-German rap­proche­ment">Russo-German rap­proche­ment of 1939, de­fend­ing German fas­cism against French ag­gres­sion. Since 1940 the Amer­icans have been in­ter­ested in Indo-China. At Yalta (1945) Roose­velt pro­posed to re­place French oc­cu­pa­tion by an inter­na­tional (in ef­fect US) oc­cu­pa­tion. Stalin agreed.

  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-China in­de­pend­ent">Indo-China in­de­pend­ent, but con­tinued their oc­cu­pa­tion. The ICP pre­pared for the oc­cu­pa­tion of the coun­try by the al­lies. Amer­icans and Brit­ish oc­cu­pied the south of the coun­try, Ho Chi Minh took Hanoi; he sup­ported the USA. France in its turn de­clared Indo-China in­de­pend­ent and under­took to pull out its troops in five years. The ICP fol­lowed di­rect­ives of the USSR; a strict ap­pli­ca­tion of the Yalta Agree­ment; Indo-China was made part of the West. There was no ques­tion of so­cial re­volu­tion or of in­de­pend­ence.


MILITANTS ASSASSINATED


  The na­tion­al­ists and re­volu­tion­ary milit­ants (Trotsky­ists espe­cially) were sys­tem­at­ic­ally as­sas­sin­ated by the ICP which sup­ported the pro-French pup­pet Bao-Dai ‘as the sym­bol of our desire to stay within the frame­work of the French Union’.

  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-China

  During the de­bates in the As­sembly (14.3.47 and 18.3.47) the Right-wing Deput­ies ap­plauded the Com­mun­ist Deput­ies for their sup­port of French ag­gres­sion.


FRONTISM


  This is the not-too-glori­ous past of the French Com­mun­ist Party and the Indo-Chinese Com­mun­ist Party; the latter now con­trols the Demo­cratic Repub­lic of Viet­nam, the ‘workers’ 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.

  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-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 Stalin­ist regime. So much for so­cial­ism!

  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-Amer­ican im­peri­al­ism.

  But im­peri­al­ism is only the arena, and not the su­preme arena at that, but only the most ad­vanced, of a cer­tain highly-devel­oped cap­it­al­ism; it is not the mark of other nais­sant cap­it­al­isms such as those of the 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 ‘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 1789) must lean on the op­pressed classes whose strug­gle is thus alien­ated and over­rid­den.

  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-called re­volu­tion­ary party takes power, the ap­par­atus of this party finds it­self play­ing the role of flat­terer to the ris­ing bour­geoisie (cf. Cuba) which al­ways finds a way of chan­ging so as to em­bed it­self in the sys­tem.

  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-revolu­tion­ary organ­isa­tion and an ideal­istic con­cept of re­volu­tion.

  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.