www.newsandletters.org











NEWS & LETTERS, December 2001

Real solidarity eludes British Left

London - Against predictions that the fall of Kabul had taken the wind from the sails of the anti-war movement, Sunday Nov. 18 saw a massive demonstration here with estimates ranging from 50,000 to 100,000 participants. Called by the Stop The War Coalition, it brought together a wide range of support from the traditional Left, anti-racists, trade unionists, Asian youth and Islamic organizations. Significantly many coaches came from outside London, with 40 from Birmingham alone.

Sections of the bourgeois media have not adopted the warmongering tone that government spin doctors desire; instead there has been a split. The traditional ally of Blair, The Guardian, has been less than lukewarm, whilst the tabloid pro-New Labour Daily Mirror went so far as to declare, "This war is a fraud." Attempts by more loyal sections of the media, like Rupert Murdoch's The Sun, to denounce critics of the war as "traitors" has failed to squeeze out the dissenting voices.

Marvellous though the November protest was, it could have been even larger if we had a movement that was founded on principled opposition to both the Anglo-American warmongers and Islamic fundamentalist terrorism. But the Stop The War Coalition was formed top-down in an undemocratic stitch-up predominantly under the influence of the Socialist Workers Party (SWP, equivalent of the U.S. ISO), who have used their influence to ally with Islamic fundamentalism and sink to even newer depths of retrogression.

The British Left overwhelmingly adheres to a tunnel vision concept of anti-imperialism that amounts to no more than being anti-American. In SWP theory, Islamic fundamentalism is an anti-imperialist force alongside whom socialists should stand shoulder to shoulder. At the foundation of the Stop The War Coalition they refused to condemn Islamic fundamentalism or the atrocity in New York, preventing its inclusion within the campaigns principles. Despite all the words of "sympathy" this remains their practice. What is in fact British chauvinism wrapped in the red flag is revealed in the attitude to socialists from Islamic countries. The British left can afford itself the luxury of defending fundamentalism whilst living in an imperialist country; those Iranian and Iraqi revolutionaries in the UK are in no position to ally with their murderers. The SWP and company refused to listen to such voices, preferring the voice of fundamentalist bigots on the anti-war platform.

The consequences of this opportunist accommodation to reactionary ideas is exemplified in events at an anti-war meeting in Birmingham where the organisers stood back as fundamentalists forcibly excluded an Iranian Marxist for distributing anti-fundamentalist leaflets and segregated Asian women from men in the hall. At a subsequent meeting of the Birmingham Socialist Alliance a motion condemning the events was opposed by the SWP.

This practice by self-styled Marxists stands in contrast to leading theorists of our movement such as Lenin who argued "the need to combat Pan-Islamism and similar trends, which seek to combine the liberation movements against European and American imperialism with an attempt to strengthen the position of the khans, landowners and mullahs, etc."

The war is not over and there is a necessity of an anti-war movement to exist, but to truly become an influence on events it must project principles of universal freedom from war, oppression and terrorism. On its present basis, the movement may mobilise significant numbers but relative to even the seven and half million trade union members in the UK, never mind the working class as a whole, it will not shape events.

Christopher Ford

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons