The current trajectory
holds out nothing good for the Syrian workers. When the Arab Spring
erupted last year there was much rash and loose talk about a Pan-Arab
revolution. I warned in relation to Egypt that there were only two
powerful organised forces at that time – the Muslim Brotherhood and
the Army. There was the potential for the Egyptian workers to form a
third, and more powerful organised force, but it was only a
potential. To achieve that the workers would have to concentrate on
building their own organisations, focussing on their own interests
and demands, and not subordinating themselves to the bourgeois and
petit-bourgeois revolutionary forces. In the absence of that I
argued there were only two likely outcomes. Either the events would
follow the path of the Revolutions of 1848, and of Russia in 1905, or
else they would follow the path of the Iranian Revolution in 1979,
which established the reactionary, clerical-fascist regime. When
many were proclaiming the victory of the revolution in bringing down
Mubarak, I warned it was no such thing, and that what had happened
had been a military coup, by which the Bonapartist Military regime
had ditched its figurehead in order to rule more effectively in its
own name. It is now clear, as the military has grasped all political
power in its own hands, closed down the parliament and neutered the
power of the Presidency, that that is exactly what has transpired.
The Muslim Brotherhood
have largely been isolated from the other revolutionary forces, who
now see the Brotherhood, and not the regime, as their main enemy. If
the Brotherhood now seek to turn the Presidency into any kind of
meaningful position, they will be confronted directly by the
Military. The likelihood is that the Brotherhood would not withstand
such a confrontation, though the possibility exists that it could
result in Civil War, similar to that raging next door in Syria, or
that in Libya.
Tunisia has many
similarities with Egypt, but it is quite clear that quite different
dynamics are in play in relation to Libya, and Syria, as well as to
the Gulf States. Already in Tunisia, the liberal forces of the
revolution are saying that the new regime is acting much the same as
the old regime. The natural reaction when these rebellions broke out
was to see them as progressive revolutions. I made the same mistake
myself, even though I warned from the experience of Iran in 1979,
that the danger was that unless the workers quickly became organised
and took the lead, other reactionary forces would seize the day. In
all the furore and excitement that attended the rash of uprisings, I
was led myself to see the uprising in Benghazi in the same light.
Yet, it soon became clear that the events in Libya were not at all
the same as those in Egypt or in Tunisia, and that what we were
looking at in Libya, was at best a Civil War being fought out by
contending factions divided along ethnic and tribal lines, and at
worst an attempt to mobilise and utilise sections of Libyan society,
by external powers for their own ends. What is now clear is that the
rebel forces amounted to only around 13,000 fighters (approximately
0.3% of the Libyan population), many of whom were Libyan fighters who
had returned solely to fight, many of them attached to the Islamic
Fighting Group that is connected to Al Qaeda, and whose forces had
gained experience as part of the insurgency in Iraq.
It also seems to be the
case that they were able to link up with other groups which had their
own axes to grind and own agendas. By no means even all of the
population of Benghazi, which had been the centre of opposition to
Tripoli, supported the rebels. As a State Capitalist society, the
majority of workers in Libya, which in any case has a very small
working-class, the majority being petit-bourgeois traders of one form
or another, were employed by the State. Of these the majority lived
in Tripoli, as does the majority of the population. The Libyan
working-class, therefore, had every material reason to at least not
oppose the regime upon whom its livelihood depended. That was
particularly the case given that the liberal bourgeois leaders of the
TNC were proposing a radical privatisation of state industries, and
the clerical-fascists have everywhere proven themselves the enemies
of the Labour Movement.
It is little wonder
then that Tripoli did not rise up against Gaddafi, and even when the
rebels and their imperialist allies were able to march into Tripoli,
having spent months subjecting it to intense bombing, there was no
mass jubilation by its residents, but only a muted silence, as they
pondered their fate. The months since Gaddaffi's fall must have
confirmed their worst fears. Libya has turned into a sectarian
hell-hole. Many state workers, particularly black workers have found
themselves rounded up by the clerical fascist gangs, and at best
incarcerated in concentration camps with appalling conditions. Many
have simply been executed, often having been tortured. Medicins
Sans Frontieres, pulled out of Misrata because it was finding itself
patching up people who had clearly been tortured, only to find that
their patients were whisked off by the clerical-fascists to be
tortured some more!
The oil rich East of
the country around Benghazi is seeking to separate itself from the
rest of the country in order that it can keep the oil wealth to
itself. The historic divisions between the tribes, which were
largely suppressed by Gaddafi's Bonapartist regime, have once again
been unleashed to add to the mix of cross-cutting cleavages that have
riven the country, and threaten to break it apart as it descends into
sectarian civil war. In addition, that has already spread across the
border, with masses of weapons now in the hands of Clerical-Fascist
forces in Mali, who have declared their own independent state, and
began its history by systematically destroying a world heritage site
in Timbuktu, because it did not conform with its own religious
prejudices. Clearly, not all mass rebellions are revolutionary or
progressive.
The masses of Bahrain
also have considerable grounds for opposing their regime as did the
masses in Libya, in Egypt and in Tunisia. But, in Bahrain an added
feature is the fact that the regime is dominated by the Sunni feudal
ruling family, whereas the majority of the people are Shia. Here the
dynamics are reversed. The US and Imperialism backs the ruling
tyrants, even giving the go ahead for the Formula 1 to take place
their. Cameron's main concern in his visits there has been not the
atrocities committed against its people, but to sell more weapons to
the regime in order that they can conduct those atrocities more
efficiently. Instead here, it is the influence of Iran that
exercises an external force to stimulate the rebellion. That Bahrain
has been the centre of rebellion is not surprising. Of all the Gulf
states it is the only one where Shia make up the majority. In the
other Gulf states Sunni constitute around 80% of the population.
However, it has to be born in mind that the populations of the Gulf
States are tiny compared with say Egypt, or Iran, Iraq and Syria.
The population of Saudi Arabia is only 27 million with actual Saudi
nationals making up only around 16 million, the other 11 million
being foreign workers. Of all the Gulf States Saudi Arabia is by far
the biggest, the other have population in the low single digits of
millions. By comparison, Iran's population is 79 million. Iraq's
population is 31 million.
In any ground war, the
ability to mobilise large numbers of troops is crucial, and size of
population is fundamental to that, as was demonstrated in the USSR's
ability to mobilise a huge army against the Nazis. Despite the fact
that the Gulf States have the latest weapons provided by Imperialism,
in any ground war, they would be likely to be quickly over run by the
forces of Iran and Iraq were they to be combined. That would rapidly
threaten the strategic interests of Imperialism, which is why it has
stood so solidly behind the Gulf tyrannies, and seeks to neuter Iran,
and its Shia allies. Any victory for Iran would also mean a victory
for Russia, and to an extent China, which has historically stood
behind these regimes, and would thereby create a seismic shift in
global strategic dynamics. The desire of Imperialism to remove Assad
has to be viewed with this in mind rather than any concern that the
West might have in regard to the needs of the Syrian people. Syria
is now the gateway to Iran, along with the US's military bases left
behind in Iraq, and the string of their bases established in the
“stans” of Central Asia.
It is clear that part
of the reason for the ferocity of the fighting in Syria, is due to
the fact that the Gulf tyrannies are providing significant numbers of
fighters, along with the latest weapons that are being fed in via
Jordan and Turkey under the tutelage of the CIA. As I pointed out a
month or so ago -
The First Casualty Of War
– one former British Intelligence Officer said that the Houla
Massacre had all the hallmarks of having been committed not by
Assad's supporters. Alistair Crooke commented,
“This
type of killing, beheadings, slitting of throats (of children too),
and of this mutilation of bodies, has been a characteristic not of
Levantine Islam, not of Syria, not of Lebanon, but what happened in
the Anbar province of Iraq. And so it seems to point very much in the
direction of groups that have been associated with the war in Iraq
against the United States who have perhaps returned to Syria, or
perhaps Iraqis who have come up from Anbar to take part in it,”
he says.
Crooke
believes the Al-Qaeda connection is misleading, as the massacre has
its tactical and ideological roots in the Iraq war.
“I
think the attack is more close to Musab al-Zarqawi
[who declared an all out war on Shia in Iraq], than
Al-Qaeda as we know it, in the sense that Zarqawi and Iraq gave birth
to this very strong, bigoted, anti-Shia, anti-Iranian rhetoric. Much
of that came into Syria when fighters from Anbar returned to their
homes around Homs and Hama.
“So
yes, we’re talking about Al-Qaeda like groups that are at the very
end of the spectrum of the opposition. They may be a minority in
terms of the numbers of the overall opposition, but they are defining
the war,” Crooke
maintains.”
Now, his
analysis has been confirmed by Germany's Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung. The
World Socialist Website reports that Rainer Hermann of the paper had confirmed his
earlier report that the Houla Massacre was carried out by Sunni
rebels not by Assad supporters. Hermann writes
The Houla plains region “is burdened by a
long history of sectarian tensions. ... Of the names of the civilians
killed, 84 are known. These are the fathers, mothers and 49 children
of the Al Sayyid family and two branches of the Abdarrazzaq family. …
Additionally killed in Taldou were relatives of the … member of
parliament Abdalmuti Mashlab.”
WSW also write,
“The nun Agnès-Maryam had already described
the escalation of sectarian violence around Homs in an open letter
toward the end of April. She warned of a step-by-step liquidation of
all minorities by the Sunni “rebels” and described the
displacement of Christians and Alawites from their homes and the rape
of young girls who had been given to the “rebels” as spoils of
war.”
Yet, western media exclusively portray atrocities
in Syria as being the responsibility of the regime or its supporters.
The BBC even displayed on its website graphic pictures purporting to
be from Syria, but which were in fact ten year old pictures of dead
children in Iraq!!!
But, none of that changes the brutal, vile nature
of Assad's regime. There seem a number of potential outcomes.
Firstly, Assad, as his father did, could succeed
in suppressing the opposition to him. Given, the fact that even the
Red Cross now describe the situation in Syria as a Civil War, its
unlikely that will be achieved without considerably more bloodshed
than has already been seen, if at all. Given the level of
opposition, given the extent of external involvement in Syria, given
the financing and provision of the latest weapons, and the undoubted
involvement of external Special Forces, its unlikely it can be
achieved at all. The more the latter develops to meet additional
suppression by Assad, the more it will become obvious, and the
greater the danger that Iran and Iraq will be drawn in more openly to
support Assad, including in themselves more openly encouraging
rebellion in Bahrain and other Gulf States, if not to openly threaten
those states themselves.
Any such escalation threatens to spark a regional
war across MENA. Already, Lebanon has been drawn in, and the
possibility for Turkey being drawn in is also obvious, which could
spread the conflict into Europe itself. That possibility can be seen
by simply looking at the way the Civil War in Libya has spread to
Mali and other parts of North Africa. Such Civil Wars are inherently
damaging to the interests of the working class in these countries
themselves let alone in relation to the relations between workers of
different countries. One commentator, yesterday spoke of Syria breaking into separate states, and particularly of a separate Kurdish state, which would feed into the existing conflict between Turkey and its Kurdish minority.
If Assad's regime survives, it will be on the
basis of massive bloodshed, and the intensification of existing
cleavages within the country that will create considerable
difficulties for building working class unity within the country.
Secondly, Assad could be defeated. But, it is
clear that the only forces in Syria capable of defeating him are the
clerical-fascists, and the Gulf tyrannies, and western Imperialism
standing behind them. But, any such victory for these forces will be
on the basis of the above intensification of fighting also. All of
the negative outcomes of that apply in this scenario too. It is
likely to lead to a genocide against Syrian Allawites, and despite
prompting to say otherwise by western journalists some of the rebels
have openly said so. That is even more likely to draw in Lebanon,
and Turkey, especially if that extends to attacks on Christians who
are increasingly concerned at the possibility of a clerical-fascist
regime. This scenario would be similar to the way in which
Imperialism used jihadists in Afghanistan to overthrow Soviet
occupation. It would be likely to spiral out of control,
resurrecting sectarian conflict in Lebanon, Turkey, and Iraq just to
start with.
Thirdly, Assad could be ousted as a result of
overt military action by Imperialism, as with Iraq. That seems
unlikely. Imperialism has found that a more efficient method is to
use high powered bombing to destroy infrastructure and thereby
generate demoralisation of domestic populations and militaries, and
to rely on domestic insurgencies and mercenaries/ideologically driven
forces, supplemented by extensive use of Special Forces. Again, that
was the lesson it learned in opposing the USSR in Afghanistan, and
which it has adopted in Kosovo – though ultimately there it had to
actually send in ground forces – and which it has used in Libya.
The main concern of Imperialism is not necessarily in these instances
to put in place its own stooge, and certainly not nation building.
These are not major areas of Capitalist investment in industrial
production, nor are they particularly dependent on them for the
supply of raw materials e.g. oil. There main concern here is
politico-strategic. It will be happy even with chaos, if it results
in the increasing isolation and undermining of Iran, because the main
aim is to prevent the development of a significant, and potentially
hostile regional power. It is certainly concerned to prevent such a
power, being oriented towards Russia and China.
Even were such an outcome to arise, it would offer
nothing good for Syrian workers because the resultant regime would be
necessarily repressive and hostile to workers interests. A look at
Iraq, or Libya demonstrates that.
The final solution would be for some other
external force to intervene such as Russia, perhaps under cover of
some Arab League intervention. That seem even more unlikely. The
Arab League would not move without Imperialist agreement, and its
unlikely that will be forthcoming, and thereby enhance the role of
Russia within the region.
The only progressive solution in Syria is one that
the workers themselves bring about. But, as in most parts of the
world at the moment it is not the Labour Movement that is the most
organised, the most homogeneous, the most conscious force driving
forward history. We have to recognise that fact, before we can
change it. Before attempting to provide solutions for all the
world's problems, which we do not have the resources to achieve, we
should focus our attention on dealing with that more serious problem.
We have to concentrate on resolving the problem of rebuilding an
organised, more homogeneous, more class conscious Labour Movement.
The starting point of that is also to focus on trying to build
workers unity, rather than subordinating ourselves through a false
unity with our class enemies, purely for the achievement of limited
bourgeois democratic goals.
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