Imperialism, Russia and Syria
John Molyneux and Memet Uludag
First published in Irish Marxist Review 21.
The question of Syria
and attitudes to Western intervention, Russian intervention, the Syrian
Revolution and the Assad regime have generated much heated debate on the left
internationally and in Ireland. We are responding to this debate with articles
by John Molyneux on imperialism and Russia
and by Memet Uludag on the Assad regime and their joint article on the
political conclusions that follow from this analysis.
Imperialism and Russia
John Molyneux
The Marxist analysis of imperialism was developed in a
mixture of debate and cooperation by a number of great Marxists, principally
Luxemburg, Bukharin and Lenin, just over one hundred years ago. It argued that
the logic of capitalist development had led to a new international imperialist
stage of the system, characterised by giant monopoly corporations operating
globally and, with the aid of their various capitalist states, occupying,
dominating and dividing up virtually the entire world.
The main imperial powers of the time
were Great Britain, Germany, France, Russia, USA and Japan with more minor ones such as Belgium and
Austria-Hungary. The Marxist theory of imperialism was concerned not only with
relations between these imperialisms and their colonies, i.e. how Britain
exploited India, South Africa and Ireland, how France oppressed Algeria, Morocco and
Martinique or Russia ruled Latvia, Georgia and Uzbekistan and so on, but also
with the rivalries between the major imperial powers and how this led to war.
Understanding the economic roots of the catastrophe of the First World War was
one the key concerns of the whole debate on imperialism and all the Marxists cited above[1],
whatever their secondary differences, agreed that imperialism, arising from the
fundamental drive of capitalist competitive accumulation, led to war for ‘the
division and redivision of the world’.
At that time the central inter-
imperialist conflict was between Britain and Germany. Britain as pioneer in
terms of capitalist industrialisation had established by far the largest world
empire ‘on which the sun never set’. Germany, by contrast, was a late
developer, only becoming a unified nation in 1870, and only entering the world
stage at a time when the planet was pretty much already carved up. But in terms
of industrial and financial strength (and therefore military strength) Germany
was overtaking Britain. German imperialism therefore demanded its ‘fair share’
of colonies. British imperialism, unsurprisingly, was resistant to this idea of
sharing out its ‘property’. And it was around this central conflict that
systems of alliances formed – France and Russia and later the US with Britain,
and Austria-Hungary, Italy and the Ottoman Empire with Germany – that fought it
out on Flanders Fields and the Eastern Front.
One hundred years on it is widely
accepted that the First World War was a humanitarian catastrophe and, in left
wing circles, probably that it was an imperialist catastrophe, but this was far
from being the case at the time and it is worth briefly recalling the various
‘left’ political responses to the war. First we should note that the large
majority of what today would be called ‘the left’ supported the War. By this I
mean they backed ‘their own’ nation, supported their own ruling class, in the
War. This was true of almost all the leaders of the numerous socialist parties
that made up the Second International and of various other syndicalists and
anarchists , including the Russian anarchist, Kropotkin and many Russian SRs (Socialist
Revolutionaries). Many of these leftists advanced ‘left –wing’ arguments for
their position. The German socialists said they were fighting against Tsarist
barbarism, the Russian and British said they were fighting against German
(sometimes Prussian)militarism. Where it was popular, eg. in Ireland, it was
said they were fighting for the rights of small nations such as ‘poor little
Belgium’. The Marxists who opposed the
War such as those mentioned above along with the likes of Karl Liebknecht and
Clara Zetkin in Germany, LeonTrotsky, James Connolly,and John MacLean in Scotland, were a tiny minority.
Amongst these revolutionary opponents of the war there were differences of
emphasis but the fiercest in his opposition – and historically the most important
– was Lenin, so it is worth setting out his position in his own words.
What is this war being fought for, which is bringing mankind unparalleled,
suffering? The government and the bourgeoisie of each belligerent country are
squandering millions of rubles on hooks and newspapers so as to lay the blame
on the foe, arouse the people’s furious hatred of the enemy, and stop at no lie
so as to depict themselves as the side that has been unjustly attacked and is
now “defending” itself. In reality, this is a war between two groups of
predatory Great Powers, and it is being fought for the partitioning of
colonies, the enslavement of other nations, and advantages and privileges of
the world market. This is a most reactionary war, a war of modern slave-holders
aimed at preserving and consolidating capitalist slavery. Britain and France
are lying when they assert that they are warring for Belgium’s freedom. In
reality, they have long been preparing the war, and are waging it with the
purpose of robbing Germany and stripping her of her colonies; they have signed
a treaty with Italy and Russia on the pillage and carving up of Turkey and
Austria. The tsarist monarchy in Russia is waging a predatory war aimed at
seizing Galicia, taking territory away from Turkey, enslaving Persia, Mongolia,
etc. Germany is waging war with the
purpose of grabbing British, Belgian, and French
colonies. Whether Germany or Russia wins, or whether there is a “draw”, the war
will bring humanity fresh oppression of hundreds and hundreds of millions of
people in the colonies, in Persia, Turkey and China, a fresh enslavement of
nations, and new chains for the working class of all countries.[2]
It is hard to
imagine a clearer statement of condemnation. However, to reinforce his
opposition, Lenin, following the German revolutionary, Karl Liebknecht’s
statement that in this war ‘The main enemy is at home!’ argued that the duty of
revolutionary socialists was to support the defeat of their own ruling class,
their own government:
A
revolutionary class cannot but wish for the defeat of its government in a
reactionary war, cannot fail to see that its military reverses facilitate its
overthrow. Only a bourgeois who believes that a war started by the governments
must necessarily end as a war between governments and wants it to end as such,
can regard as “ridiculous” and “absurd” the idea that the Socialists of all the belligerent
countries should wish for the defeat of all “their”
governments and express this wish. On the contrary, it is precisely a statement
of this kind that would conform to the cherished thoughts of every
class-conscious worker, and would be in line with our activities towards
converting the imperialist war into civil war.[3]
Two points should be made about
this position which are relevant to today. The first is that obviously
‘patriotic’ supporters of the war accused Lenin of being a supporter of Germany
and the Kaiser, and even of being a German secret agent, in the way that
opponents of the War on Iraq were accused of supporting Saddam Hussein. The
second is that treating his ‘own’ i.e. the Russian government as ‘the main enemy’ affected the
balance of Bolshevik agitation but it did not at all, as can be seen from the
extended quotation above, mean that Lenin abstained from attacking Germany. Nor
did he accept the fact that Germany was a lesser imperial power than Britain
or, in terms of enslaved nations, Russia was a justification for supporting
Germany. He was explicit on this point.
Germany is fighting not for the liberation, but for the
oppression of nations. It is not the business of Socialists to help the younger
and stronger robber (Germany) to rob the older and overgorged robbers.
Socialists must take advantage of the struggle between the robbers [4]to
overthrow them all. To be able to do this, the Socialists must first of all
tell the people the truth, namely, that this war is in a treble sense a war
between slave-owners to fortify slavery.[5]
Despite the
defeat of Germany in 1918 and the punitive nature of the Treaty of Versailles,
the underlying economic and geo-political realities remained such that the
pattern of alliances in the Second World War was close to a rerun of those in
the First (with the additions of Italy
and Japan on the German side). The Second World War, however, brought about a
fundamental restructuring of imperialism. Despite its victory Britain emerged
decisively weakened and destined to rapidly lose much of its empire. Germany
was partitioned and no longer a major power. The USA and the Soviet Union
emerged from the War as the world’s two leading powers and conflict between
them – the Cold War – soon developed.
Was the
Soviet Union imperialist?
From the
standpoint of the Marxist theory of imperialism it was indisputable that from
1945 onwards the United States was the world’s leading imperialist power. This
was clear in terms of both its overwhelming economic dominance and its military
power. In 1945 US GDP stood at 1.6
trillion dollars compared to the approx
1 trillion of the twelve main Western European countries[6]. In 1945 the US share of world manufacturing
production stood at over 50 % and in 1956 it accounted for 42 out the top fifty
corporations in the world.[7]
‘America’s military might was as great as its economic power. In 1949 ... US forces were stationed in 56
countries and had the use of 400 bases world-wide’[8].
Its military budgets far exceeded those of all other countries; it stood at the
head of what was by far the world’s biggest military alliance, NATO, and above
all it had nuclear weapons which it rapidly developed on an almost unimaginable
scale – sufficient to destroy the entire population of the globe. This
accumulation of imperial power enabled it to intervene, covertly or overtly, on
a regular basis to shape events in its interests from Latin America to the
Middle East to the Korean Peninsula.
Moreover, it is fair to say that, at least by the sixties, an
understanding of the role of US imperialism was widespread on the international
left. [9]
But what of the US’s only serious international rival, namely the USSR or
Soviet Union? Was this a rival imperialist power or something entirely
different?
As far as the
large majority of the global left were concerned, with the exception of the
pro-US social democrats, it was axiomatic throughout the second half of the
twentieth century that the Soviet Union was not, and could not be, imperialist.
This was because they associated imperialism with capitalism and believed that
the Soviet Union was, in some sense or other, a socialist society and therefore
essentially anti-imperialist. The Soviet
Union itself put a good deal of effort into cultivating this image. It
presented itself always as the advocate of ‘Peace’ and instructed its
supporters globally (members and fellow travellers of the numerous Communist
Parties) to participate in the various peace and disarmament movements of the
time, such as CND and could also cite its material aid to various anti-US
national liberation movements eg. in Vietnam. Even Trotskyists who rejected the official Soviet
propaganda and refused to regard it as socialist nevertheless tended to accept
that the Soviet Union was a (degenerated) workers’ state, because of the state
ownership of the means of production[10], and therefore could not be imperialist.
But if we set
aside the question of these labels and look not at what the Soviet state said
about itself but instead at what it actually did, it becomes abundantly clear
that its behaviour was highly imperialist.
As the Second
World War was drawing to a close Stalin, Roosevelt and Churchill met a Yalta in
October 1944 to discuss the post-war settlement. There they decided to divide
up Europe between them with the East being under Soviet control and the West
going to the US and Britain, completely over the heads of all the peoples
concerned. [11] It was
a classic imperialist carve-up directly reminiscent of what was done in the
Middle East with the Balfour Declaration and the Sykes-Picot Treaty and what
was done at the Treaty of Versailles. In so far as what actually happened differed
from the agreements reached in advance this was due to the disposition of
Russian and Allied forces on the ground at the end of the war.
The Soviet Union
then used the combination of the Red Army and the respective Eastern European
Communist Parties to, a) insist that the whole of Eastern Europe from Poland to
Bulgaria came into its sphere of influence and under its control; b) adopted
the Soviet economic and political model and c) used that control and that model
to subordinate the economies of the Eastern bloc to the needs of the Russian
economy. This was done by means of extreme war reparations, mixed companies and
unequal trade. Chris Harman describes this process in detail in his Class Struggles in Eastern Europe 1945-83[12]
and on the final element comments: ‘The method of exploitation was quite
simple: Eastern European goods were bought at below world market prices, at
times even below cost price, while Russian goods were sold in Eastern Europe at
above world prices’ [13]
This economic
exploitation and subordination was widely understood and resented by ‘ordinary’
people across the Eastern bloc and is one the main reasons, along with the police
state methods of the regimes, why Eastern Europe is characterised by a
succession of ‘anti-Soviet’ rebellions throughout the post-war period. The
first of these rebellions was in Yugoslavia in 1948. It was led by Marshall
Tito and the Yugoslav Communist Party and centred precisely on the Yugoslav’s
unwillingness to be economically subservient to Stalin and the Soviet Union.
The next was in the workers uprising in East Berlin in 1953, followed by
revolts in Poland and Hungary in 1956. The Hungarian revolt turned into a full
scale revolution. Then came the Prague Spring in Czechoslovakia in 1968 and the
Solidarnosc uprising in Poland in September 1980. The Soviet response to all these revolts was
invariably repressive and imperialist: on two occasions – Hungary ‘56 and
Czechoslovakia ’68 they mounted full scale military invasions. The cycle of
revolt and repression ended only when the Berlin Wall fell in 1989 and the
Communist regimes collapsed right across Eastern Europe and in Russia itself in
the years 1989-91.
Soviet
imperialism, however, was by no means confined to Eastern Europe. It operated also
within the boundaries of the USSR and in Asia.
The old Tsarist
empire was infamous as ‘the prison house of the people’s’ and was regularly denounced as such by Lenin and the
Bolsheviks. Their position was to defend unequivocally the right to
self-determination, including the right to secede, of all the various and
numerous oppressed nationalities of the
Russian empire – of Latvians, Estonians, Ukrainians, Georgians, Uzbeks, Kazaks
and so on. Under the Stalin regime all
the old oppression of these nations was restored. Although granted formal
‘autonomy’, all their economic,
political and cultural life was strictly controlled from Moscow through
European Russian party secretaries and there was a general process of cultural
Russification. In extreme cases whole supposedly autonomous National Republics
were dissolved and entire national populations were deported: this was the fate
of the Volga German Republic in 1941, the Kalmuk SSR in in 1943, the
Checheno-Ingush SSR and the Crimean Tartars in1946. Communists leaders from these
oppressed nations were also systematically persecuted. Tony Cliff writes:
‘Altogether in the big purge of 1937-8 the whole or majority of thirty national
governments were liquidated. The main accusation against them was their desire
for secession from the USSR.’[14]
And the outcome of this imperialist oppression was that the moment the
centralised Communist regime fell apart almost all these nationalities decided
to secede in much the same way as the moment the British empire was weakened,
the British colonies in India and Africa all established their independence.
Just as the US
and the Soviet Union partitioned Germany at the end of the War so they
partitioned Korea. The country was split
into a Soviet puppet regime in the North and a US puppet regime in the
South, a division from which the Korean people are still suffering. Then in
1950 North Korean forces, prompted and backed by the Soviet Union, invaded the
South. What followed was a three year proxy war between the great powers (also
with the involvement of China) which utterly devastated Korea and claimed
something like 3 million (overwhelmingly Korean) lives without achieving any
significant outcome. It was classic imperialist butchery in which ordinary
people were sacrificed on an industrial scale by both sides.
The Chinese
Revolution of 1949 when Mao’s Red Army captured Beijing was hailed as the
greatest victory for ’communism’ since 1917, but within seven years the Soviet
and Maoist Regimes were at each other’s throats in a split which divided the international
Communist movement , came close to war and affected geo-politics for
decades. Ostensibly the split was about
doctrine with the Maoists condemning
‘Soviet revisionism’ and preaching a more ‘revolutionary’
anti-imperialist line but China’s deeds and actual development give the lie to
this ‘ideological’ i.e. idealist explanation. In reality the basis of the split
was that the Soviet Union was attempting, as it did elsewhere, to impose its
will and its economic priorities on China but Mao, the Chinese nationalist was
having none of it. In other words the root of the problem was Russian
Imperialism.
Yet another
example was the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 which led to ten years
of war costing over 2 million lives and creating 5 million refugees at the end
of which Russia was forced to admit defeat and withdraw.
Nor did Russian
imperialism come to an end with the collapse of the Soviet Union. If, as was
often argued by right wing anti-communists, Soviet imperialism was driven by
ideology, by a political aspiration to force communism on the whole world, then
these imperialist wars should have ceased after 1991. If on the other hand
Soviet expansionism was, like western imperialism, fundamentally driven by
competitive capital accumulation, then one would expect it to continue despite
the abandonment of ‘Marxist’ or ‘Communist’ language and symbolism, and despite
the shift sideways from bureaucratic state capitalism to a mixed semi-state capitalism. Continue it did.
First under
Yeltsin and then under Putin Russia waged two brutal wars in 1994-96 and
1999-2000 in and against Chechenya. Amnesty International reported,
‘There were frequent reports that Russian
forces indiscriminately bombed and shelled civilian areas. Chechen civilians,
including medical personnel, continued to be the target of military attacks by
Russian forces. Hundreds of Chechen civilians and prisoners of war were extra
judicially executed’[15]
The Chechen
capital, Grozny, was flattened and occupied but guerrilla resistance continued
in the mountains for another nine years.
In August 2008 in
a short and totally unequal war, Russia invaded Georgia in a dispute about the
region of South Ossetia. In 2014 they intervened in the conflict in the Ukraine
to annexe the Crimean Peninsula.[16]
Reviewing this
brief survey of Russian imperialism since 1945 it could be objected that is
one-sided in that in each instance I have failed to consider the possible
justification for Russia’s actions as in the invasion of Hungary in 1956 was
necessary to prevent ‘fascist counter revolution’ or the invasion of
Czechoslovakia was necessary to prevent it being taken over by the West and the
invasion of Afghanistan was necessary to prevent it being taken over by
Islamist jihadis and so on. Any power always has its justifications; in the
modern world where ‘public opinion’ (i.e. the consciousness of the working
class) has to be considered even by dictators, no government ever simply says
we are imperialist predators. To have considered each of these justifications
in turn would have extended this article far beyond the space available, but it
is worth noting the pattern. In each case the ‘excuse’ put forward is the need
to combat a demonised enemy: fascists, western imperialists, jihadis, Islamic
terrorists etc. The problem is that, with the substitution of evil communists
for western imperialists this turns out to be more or less the same list of enemies
used by the US and the UK to justify their numerous imperialist interventions.
Two final points
should be made about this. The first is that whether Cuba, Vietnam or Nicaragua
‘went communist’ or not was a matter for the Cuban, Vietnamese and Nicaraguan
people alone: the US had no right to any say in the matter. Similarly if
Hungary[17]
or Czechoslovakia or Poland wished to cease being ‘communist’ or Afghanistan
wanted to be Islamic or Chechenya wanted to be both Islamist and independent
that was for them to decide not Russia. The second is that no serious person
will believe that in 1914 Britain, who held in subjection India, Ireland and
half of Africa, went to war for the sake of ‘poor little Belgium’ or that the
US fought for three years in Korea out of concern for the rights of the Korean
people. By the same token are we really being asked to believe that the Russian
state which had deported the Chechens and the Crimean Tartars wholesale in the
thirties and forties was motivated by international solidarity, rather than,
for example, its desire to protect oil supply lines or to have a foothold on
the Black Sea, when it came to 1999 or 2014?
No, the pattern
of imperialist behaviour is long standing and consistent and therefore when it
comes to assessing Russia’s current interventions in the war in Syria there is
absolutely no reason to imagine that it is motivated by anything other than
imperialist calculation and self interest.
Assad’s Syria
Memet Uludag
On March 15 2018 the war in Syria
entered its eighth year without a solution. The ongoing situation in Syria has
caused deep divisions in public opinion, as well as divisions within the
international left. Today, as the social and economic reasons of the 2011
uprising are fading away from most analyses and debates, it is still very
important to understand the conditions within which the revolt began. To
understand the triggers of the revolution and its popular demands we also need
to understand the nature of the Assad regime, among others things.
In this article, I would like to
briefly look at the recent history of Syria and try to explain the nature of
the Assad regime in terms of its social and economic policies. The
revolutionary uprising has long been crushed by domestic and foreign
counter-revolutionary forces. There are multiple reasons for the emergence of
these forces and the defeat of the revolution. I am not going to deal with
these as part of this article.
Various sources estimate the death
toll in Syria to be between 350,000 and 500,000.[i] There
are more than 11 million Syrian refugees of which 6 million internally and 5
million externally displaced. More than 13 million people in Syria are in
continuous need of humanitarian assistance.[ii] These
figures alone make us think why the Syrians, who paid such a heavy price in the
end, had risen up against the Assad regime.
Once a protestor, now a refugee
At one of the public meetings in
Dublin, organised by United Against Racism, a Syrian refugee speaker had said,
“We went out onto the streets to protest.
We wanted change. People wanted change for a long time. It was men, women, and
families on the streets. In the beginning it was peaceful. But very soon we
were attacked by the regime forces. We hadn’t expected such a harsh response.
We ended up hiding from these attacks. People
were arrested, shot and killed.”
In 2016-17, there were mass
protests in Ireland. What had began as a mobilisation against the introduction
of water charges had soon turned into protests against the government and its
policies. People wanted change. People wanted the government to go. Nobody would ever expect to see the armed state forces on the
streets, shooting and killing people. The initial heavy handed police
response in local areas eventually disappeared. It wasn’t because the Irish
Government didn’t want to stop the protests, or send out more police but
because Ireland was not Syria, it was not ruled by a regime like that in Syria.
Arab Spring
In 2011 uprisings began in
various Arab countries that became known as the ‘Arab Spring’. Protests had
toppled the dictatorial presidents of Tunisia's
and Egypt. This gave hope to Syrian people who wanted change. The revolts in
Tunisia had begun with Mohamed Bouazizi (29 March 1984–4 January 2011), a
Tunisian street vendor setting himself on fire against the police
brutality. The catalyst in Syria was the arrest and torture of a group of young
boys in Daara for writing a graffiti that read “It's your turn, Doctor Bashar al-Assad". Hundreds of
protesters took to the streets in outrage at the boys' arrests. The protestors
were gunned down in horrific scenes that would be relayed around the world and
spark an uprising involving hundreds of thousands of people across Syria.
Torture as the Norm
As widely documented, the Syrian
security forces are so well-known for their torture methods that the US, under
George W. Bush, called upon them to help interrogate suspected al Qaeda members.
The faith of the Daraa boys was indeed not going to be any different than those
arrested and sent to Syria by the American government.
A detailed interview in 2017 with
survivors of rape and torture in Assad’s prisons exposed the gruesome nature of
the state security forces.[iii] [iv] [v]
Following the 2008/9 global
financial crash, as with the international Occupy Movement, the uprisings of
Arab Spring were an inspiration for the global anti-capitalist and
anti-imperialist struggle. These revolts had emerged in countries that were
under long standing powerful dictatorial regimes. Syria under the rule of Assad
was no exception.
Bashar al-Assad came to power in
2000, following the death of his father Hafez al-Assad, who was the President
of Syria from 1971 to 2000. Bashar is also the commander-in-chief of the Syrian
Armed Forces and the Regional Secretary of the Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party's in
Syria.
A short political history of Syria
Syrian history, beginning with
the independence from France in 1946 has been one of multiple military coups, social
turmoil with different class interests emerging, power struggles between
nationalists, communists and others that represented these interests, and
ultimately the establishment of strong Ba’ath Party rule.
The period between 1946 and 1958
saw a number of economic and social reforms including reforms in labour laws
and establishment of trade union membership and strike rights. But none of
these were to be permanent gains under various ruling powers that followed. The
revolt in 2011 was not the first uprising by Syrians. In 1951, following an
uprising the year before the first congress of peasants was held in Aleppo.[vi]
Peasants mobilised to bring about changes in their living conditions.
Pressurised by the landlords to stop the land redistribution, the government
eventually suppressed the peasant mobilisation. As a response to growing social
unease, in 1958 a section of the army officers forced Syria into a union with
Egypt, forming the United Arab Republic (UAR). Unopposed by the Communists, UAR
was supported by the Ba’ath Party. This period, lasting until 1961, started a
process of industrialisation, social welfare reforms, land distribution and
nationalising of major industries. During the same period, independent workers’
and peasants’ organisations were increasingly targeted by the regime and
strikes were banned. The unity between Egypt and Syria fell apart when the
Syrians objected to their second class status within the union. This was
followed by a military coup by the Ba’athists in 1963. The new regime continued
on with the industrialisation and nationalisation process with the state and
bureaucracy increasingly taking control of industries and the wider economy. In
an article published in International Socialism, Issue 135, Jonathan Maunder
argues that, "Syria’s entry into the
UAR and the 1963 coup can be seen as examples of what Tony Cliff called
deflected permanent revolution, a deviation from the process of permanent
revolution as outlined by the Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky”.[vii]
Maunder, correctly concludes that, “the
results of this deflected permanent revolution were forms of state capitalism,
not socialism”. Tony Cliff in his 1967 pamphlet “The struggle in the Middle
East”[viii]
wrote, “In Syria the Ba’ath regime has
been more radical than Nasser’s regime in the field of land reform. But neither
Nasser nor the Ba’ath can ever become revolutionary, or grow beyond their
middle-class social basis. Their social base is the army officers, civil servants
and teachers, sons of merchants and prosperous artisans, better-off peasants
and small-scale landowners.” Small in size
and relatively unorganised the Syrian working class did not manage to establish
itself as a leading force in society.
Bashar al-Assad’s father Hafez
al-Assad came to power in 1971, after an intra-party coup in 1970 that removed
Salah Jadid, a Ba’athist army officer. He ruled the country until his death in
2000. Under his rule and the ‘Collective Movement’ the regime wanted to sustain
the nationalist-socialist line of the state and the Ba'ath party. This created
not a true socialist nation but a Syria that was highly centralised, with the
military and elite bureaucrats playing a key role at all levels, including the
economy. Hafez al-Assad strengthened his power using deeply sectarian methods
of creating an elite state bureaucracy and an army composed of high-ranking
officers from the minority Muslim Alawi sect.
Till the 1980’s Syria saw strong growth in the economy with evermore increased numbers of workers
and dropping relative poverty. At the beginning of the
1980’s the economic growth declined sharply. Having enjoyed a decade of growth
and total control (and suppression) of any opposition, the regime started
attacking the gains of the previous period. Wages were cut; subsidies on basic
goods were removed. In the early 1990’s
unemployment rose sharply to 16%[ix] and
according to some figures more than 70% of the population were living below the relative poverty line. In early 90’s the regime
started a process of opening up the country to private business which marked
the beginning of ‘market economy’. What was a form of state capitalism under
the rule of an elite military-bureaucrat class had begun to turn towards
capitalism.
Between 1980 and 2000, the regime
of Hafez al-Assad committed numerous massacres against civilians and organised
opposition forces. In 1982, following attacks in the
previous two years, the regime had murdered more than 20,000 civilians. 1980 saw the massacre of inmates in Tadmur
Prison, which Amnesty International described as “a source of despair, torture and degrading treatment”[x]
From Father Assad to Son Assad - The Nature of the Assad Regime
Bashar al-Assad inherited his
father’s power in 2000 and continued to open up the country to capitalist
economy by advancing a neoliberal model while maintaining his harsh dictatorial
rule. During the previous decades the economy was falsely described as ‘socialist’
when really it was a state capitalist dictatorship.He replaced this with a
so-called ‘social market economy’
while in fact everything had begun to be market driven and hardly anything
about it was social. Bashar al-Assad had begun to put the might of his power to
the use of private capital and started creating an environment of crony
capitalism by handing over state industries and assets to his family members,
close allies and to powerful elites within the regime. Even Chatham
House, a ‘prestigious’ pro-capitalist research and policy institute says, “The uprising against the Assad regime was
sparked by the security services’ brutal response to a demonstration of dissent
by schoolchildren in Deraa. However, economic grievances were an important
element fuelling the disaffection, both in Deraa – where the appropriation of
land for Makhlouf’s duty-free enterprise had been a contentious issue – and
elsewhere in Syria”[xi]
Since the 2011 uprising in Syria,
especially and most importantly within the international left and the global
anti-war movement there have been deep divisions on the nature of the Assad
regime. Some sections of the left and others have described his regime as,
‘anti-imperialist’ or ‘progressive’ or ‘pro-Palestinian’ or ‘pro-secularism’
etc. and dismissed the popular uprising against all ‘good things’ as a plot.
The escalating war in the country, the emergence of counter-revolutionary
Islamist forces and the intervention by global imperialists, especially the US,
have given further excuse to Assad defenders to reject the social-political
conditions which gave rise to the revolt in Syria. Furthermore, ‘defending the
Assad regime’ has been put forward as an anti-imperialist duty for the left.
According to Assad defenders, the only imperialist force in Syria is the US led
bloc and all other forces, including the civilian protestors and
counter-revolutionary forces alike are part of an imperialist attempt to topple
the regime. Thus, they conclude that the Russian and Iranian intervention in
the war is a ‘legitimate’ and justified intervention in order to defend a
‘legitimate’ government.
In his article, titled “The
Syrian Cause and Anti-Imperialism”[xii] the
Syrian revolutionary Yassin Al-Haj Saleh refers to a conversation: “I was in Istanbul for about ten days when I
met a Turkish communist who explained to me that what was going on in Syria was
nothing but an imperialist conspiracy against a progressive, anti-imperialist
regime”. He then argues why we need to understand the political and social
dimensions of the Syrian struggle and the nature of the Assad regime, to make sense of it all.
Secularism
The so called ‘secularism’ of
Assad is in fact all about a deep ethnic and religious sectarian divide in the
country. As Saleh explains, “the Regime’s
so-called secularism is almost completely an ideological façade that covers its
essential sectarianism. Divide and rule is not only a colonial method, it has
become the regime’s method for over two generations. By the way, the regime
never used the word secularism in its discourse in the past. Bashar or Buthaina
Shaban only used this word in interviews with western journalists. Like the War
on Terror, this is only another cheap commodity to sell to Western powers and
even those on the left looking for ways to avoid recognizing the fascist
character of the Assad regime. Inside Syria, the regime rules through a process
of sectarianization to entice Syrians to fear and mistrust each other based on
their sect. The regime attempts to present itself as the only force capable of
keeping these divisions, which it in fact foments, in check. This is a
deliberate policy. Sectarianism is not a primordial characteristic of Syria, or
any other nation for that matter. It was foisted upon the country in order to
divide the population and maintain the regime.”[xiii]
Furthermore, the secularism in Syria
is another form of class oppression where the regime using its military might
dismissed any opposition by the poorer sections of the society as a
backward-religious-terrorist attempt. Assad and his family have been portrayed
as western style secularists while his Grand Mufti of Damascus has been
blessing the killing of civilians in his prisons. Secularism is in fact nothing
but protecting the class interests of the ‘westernised’ lifestyles of the upper
classes and the elites within the inner circles of the regime.
Anti-Imperialism of Assad
There are two major global
imperialist forces in Syria: The US and Russia. The US maintains it anti-Assad
position while Russia, with the support from Iran is doing its best to
keep the regime in power and secure its global interests. The intervention by
the US does not make the Assad regime anti-imperialist. In fact, given the
nature of the Russian state and its self-serving actions in Syria, the Assad
regime is in alliance with an imperialist power, it’s just not the US in this
case.
Historically, the regime has presented itself as an enemy of Israel, a supporter of
Palestinians and Hamas, and Hezbollah in Lebanon. In fact, its history is full
of contradictions and political manoeuvres that at all times served the interests
of the regime and the ruling class in Syria. It used the Palestinian struggle
against Israel as a bargaining chip and to create a position of strength in the
region. The Palestinian issue also gave Syria a bargaining chip against the US.
The Palestinian refugees in Syria have always been under suspicion and
surveillance by the regime.
Hafez al-Assad supported the
first US-led war in Iraq in 1991.
Saleh describes Assad regimes
‘anti-imperialism’ as “the regime always
played a double game. Inside the country, the regime blackmailed Syrians,
claiming that we were all under threat from outsiders, the old colonial powers,
Western imperialism, and the Israeli occupation. It nurtured a besieged castle
mentality and paranoia in the population. This was always useful to incriminate
dissidents as foreign agents and impose political and ideological uniformity on
Syrians. At the same time the regime blackmailed the Western powers with its
assertion that it was a bulwark against fundamentalism and terrorism in Syria
and the region. It was always prepared to slander its own population in
presence of western diplomats, journalists, and scholars. The Assadists knew
well that this discourse was marketable to imperialist powers that were engaged
in their so-called War on Terror; this same discourse had justified the murder
of tens of thousands killed in the early 1980s and now hundreds of thousands in
their ongoing counterrevolution. Beneath all this rhetoric, the Assad dynasty’s
main aim is to stay in power forever and accumulate millions and billions of
dollars that comes with ruling the country.”[xiv]
The Syrian regime is neither
socialist, nor progressive. It has turned from a form of bureaucratic and
military controlled state-capitalism into a neoliberal state. The state is not
secular where religion and state are fully divorced but one that uses religion,
among others to create sectarian divisions. These divisions have historically
helped strengthen the ruling class in Syria. The
Assad regimes have had many U-turns and political manoeuvres to protect the
interests of the Syrian ruling class and to position themselves accordingly.
The regime is not a democracy but an authoritarian dictatorship. It has been
successfully using ‘anti-imperialism’ to suppress all forms of opposition in
the county. While it pretended to protect minorities, such a Christian groups;
it has always been oppressive to other ethnic groups such as the Kurds.
When one looks at the
presidential election results of the past 45
years one has to wonder: How can any regime achieve such ‘great’ results?
2014 Bashar al-Assad 88.7%,
2007 Bashar al-Assad 99.82%,
2000 Bashar al-Assad 99.7%,
1999 Hafez al-Assad 100%,
1991 Hafez al-Assad 99.99%
1985 Hafez al-Assad 100%,
1978 Hafez al-Assad 99.9%,
1971 Hafez al-Assad 99.2%
There is only one answer to that:
by constant oppression using a brutal state apparatus with total lack of
freedom.
The Syrian people rose up for
change. They ended up becoming refugees and
their revolution was defeated for now. But that doesn’t change the facts about
the regime and the reasons why people went out to protest in 2011.
[1]
The ‘Marxist’ exception to this was Karl Kautsky, the so-called Pope of Marxism
and the ideological leader of the Second International who believed that imperialism,
or ‘ultra-imperialism’ could be conducive to peace in a similar way to some
advocates of globalisation argued it would make for a peaceful world. Lenin
furiously rejected Kautsky’s suggestion. See the discussion of this issue in
John Molyneux, Lenin for Today,
London 2017, pp 71-74.
[2]
Lenin, ‘Appeal on the War ‘(1915). https://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1915/aug/x04.htm
[6]
These are in 1990 International Geary- Khamis dollars, a standard measure which
facilitates historical and international comparisons taken from Angus Maddison,
The World Economy: Historical Statistics,
OECD 2003, p.85 and 51.
[7]
See John Rees, Imperialism and
Resistance, London 2006, p.43.
[8]
As above, p.42.
[9]
In saying this it should not be forgotten that a very large part of
international social democracy (from Clement Attlee and Ernest Bevin in the
1945 British Labour Government to Harold Wilson and Tony Blair along with the
German Social Democrats, the leadership of the Irish Labour Party etc.)
actually supported US imperialism throughout the post-war period, from Korea to
Vietnam to Iraq.
[10]
The authors of this article do not accept that the Soviet Union was either
socialist or a workers state, degenerated or otherwise. Following Tony Cliff, State Capitalism in Russia, we regard it
as bureaucratic state capitalist.
[11]
See the vivid description of this actually happening in Gabriel Kolko, The Politics of War, New York 1970,
pp114-5.
[12]
See Chris Harman Class Struggles in Eastern Europe 1945-83,
London, 1988 pp41-49.
[13]
As above p.45.
[14]
Tony Cliff, Russia –A Marxist Analysis,
London 1955. p.190
[16]
The conflict in the Ukraine was very complex and cannot be discussed here but
this is a thorough and impressive analysis, Rob Ferguson, ‘Ukraine:
imperialism, war and the left’, International
Socialism 144. http://isj.org.uk/ukraine-imperialism-war-and-the-left/
[17]
In making this general argument I specifically do not want to give the
impression that I accept in anyway the lie that the Hungarian Revolution of
1956 with its mass workers’ councils and its heroic working class resistance to
Soviet tanks was a ‘fascist counter-revolution’. See Chris Harman, Class Struggles in Eastern Europe 1945-83,
as above, especially pp139-143.
[i] 2016, UN envoy estimates
400,000 killed. The UN special envoy for Syria has estimated that 400,000 people have
been killed throughout the past five years of civil war
[iii] Inside Assad's prisons: Horrors facing
female inmates in Syrian jails revealed
[v] The Young Men Who Started Syria's
Revolution Speak About Daraa, Where It All Began
https://news.vice.com/article/the-young-men-who-started-syrias-revolution-speak-about-daraa-where-it-all-began
https://news.vice.com/article/the-young-men-who-started-syrias-revolution-speak-about-daraa-where-it-all-began
[viii] The struggle in the Middle
East,
Tony Cliff, https://www.marxists.org/archive/cliff/works/1990/10/struggleme.htm
[x] Syria: Torture, despair and
dehumanisation in Tadmur Military Prison. Amnesty International 18
September 2001
[xi] Syria’s Economy Picking up
the Pieces, Research Paper, David Butter, Middle East and North Africa Programme
| June 2015
[xii] The Syrian Cause and
Anti-Imperialism, Yassin Al-Haj Saleh, http://www.yassinhs.com/2017/05/05/the-syrian-cause-and-anti-imperialism/
[xiii] Revolution, counterrevolution, and imperialism in Syria, Interview with
Yassin al-Haj Saleh, International Socialist Review
Syria: the debate on
the left
John Molyneux and Memet Uludag
Debate on the left about Syria,
in Ireland and internationally, has centred on whether or not it is possible to
combine opposition to all US and Western intervention in Syria with opposition
to Russian intervention and to the Assad regime’s war on his own people.
On one hand there are some supporters of the Syrian people and even of
the Syrian revolution who are so bitter against the Assad regime and its
Russian backers and so desperate at the ongoing plight of the Syrian people
that they end up calling for some kind of Western intervention. Sometimes this
takes the form of outright calls for bombing but often it consists of vaguer
calls for ‘the international community’ to ‘do something’, or to implement
sanctions or to ‘establish a no-fly zone’.
We understand that these calls
are often well intentioned, motivated by a desire to alleviate the suffering of
the Syrian people, but we disagree completely with this approach. We believe it
loses sight of the fact that US imperialism, as argued above, is the main
imperial force in the world and encourages the illusion that it undertakes
‘humanitarian’ interventions when it doesn’t. If the US intervenes in Syria it
will not be to help the Syrian people but to advance its own imperial interests
and it won’t make the situation better, it will make it even worse and could
easily escalate into wider Middle Eastern War.
The concept of ‘the international
community’ is also an illusion. It suggests that the various imperialist and
capitalist powers whose domestic role is to administer and maintain the
exploitation of their respective working classes somehow, when they get
together, become benevolent humanitarians acting in the best interests of
oppressed peoples. They do not. The ‘international community’ is a euphemism
that all too often actually means US imperialism and its many allies.
The imposition of a ‘no-fly zone’
sounds like a ‘peaceful’ solution but is not thought through. A no-fly zone is
meaningless unless it is enforced and it could only be enforced by the US
military or its allies. It would simply serve as a stepping stone to war and
invasion. Sanctions, in this case, would legitimise the idea of US and the
Western powers as the world’s police and hit the ordinary people of Syria.
There is a fundamental difference between imperialist imposed sanctions on
Syria and BDS (boycott, divestment and sanctions) on Zionist Israel which is a
popular movement from below in solidarity with, and called for by, the
Palestinian people.
Thus we should oppose all Western
intervention in Syria, other than provision of humanitarian aid which should be
massively expanded. If our governments and rulers really care about the Syrian
people there is something very simple they can do: welcome the refugees!
But if opposition to Western
intervention is our first priority this should be accompanied by opposition to
Russian intervention, to the appalling Assad regime and to the interventions by
other regional powers – Iran, Turkey, Israel etc. The tyrannical Assad regime,
as described above, deserves only to be overthrown but this is a task for the
Syrian people themselves.
There are some, particularly from
a Stalinist background or influenced by the same, who argue that any criticism
of Russia or Assad ‘objectively’ supports either US imperialism or ISIS and
other reactionary jihadist forces. We reject this for the following reasons:
a)
It is perfectly possible to criticise Russia and
its imperialism without supporting the US. Socialists have been doing this for
many decades and it has not prevented us from opposing and mobilising massively
against the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, the Afghan War, the Iraq War and the bombing
of Syria. Russia is not as big a power as the US but it is no less imperialist,
as its record shows.
b)
It is perfectly possible to condemn Assad’s war
on his own people without supporting any foreign intervention. Not to do so is
to defend the indefensible. It is a matter of indisputable fact that by far the
biggest killer of Syrian civilians has been the Assad regime.
c)
The idea
that opposing Assad means supporting ISIS and other counter-revolutionary
jihadists denies to the Syrian people the possibility of progressive and
revolutionary action and consciousness. Indeed it says to them you have no
right to rebel against the tyrannical regime by whom you are oppressed. Intentionally or not it is a concession to
Islamophobia. It was clear that attitudes of this sort influenced some leftist
responses to the whole phenomenon of the Arab Spring, with the half stated
belief that a genuine popular democratic revolution could not be produced by
Arabs/Muslims; it had to be orchestrated behind the scenes by either the
Americans or the Islamists or both.
d)
We stand in solidarity with the Syrian people
and with the Syrian Revolution of 2011 and with the Arab Spring as a whole. We
believe that, sooner or later, the peoples of the Middle East will rise again.