Last week,
I looked at some of Trotsky's writings, in relation to the
Balkan Wars, and what they could tell us about similar such
wars today, in relation to the role of “Liberal Interventionism”. Today, I
want to look at more of Trotsky's writing, on the Balkan War, in that
light.
Trotsky
describes the beginning of the Balkan War with first Serbia and then
Bulgaria declaring war on Turkey, whose Empire, at that time
continued to spread through the Balkans, and into North Africa.
Parts of that Empire had already been taken away from Turkey by other
European Powers during the 19th Century. Italy, for
example had taken Libya away from them, and Britain held sway in
Egypt and Palestine. As I said in the previous post, Trotsky, of
course, saw the liberation of people from the Turkish Empire as a
progressive historical achievement. However, as was demonstrated in
last week's post, he made clear that Marxists are not at all
indifferent as to how such liberation is achieved. We are most
certainly not in favour of it being achieved on the back of some form
of Imperialist intervention. And, as Lenin set out in his writings
on the National Question, where liberation movements are in reality
acting as the agents of “Monarchical intrigues”, for which today
read Imperialist intrigues, though we could still use that phrase in
relation to the Gulf Monarchies activities in the Middle East and
North Africa, we have no business supporting such movements.
Trotsky
conducted interviews with various politicians and military commanders,
from both Serbia and Bulgaria. The military commanders described to
him how, from the beginning of the war, atrocities were committed by
their own men. They followed all of the same patterns we are
familiar with in more recent conflicts, such as rape, pillage, the
shooting of prisoners, and so on. The military commanders did not
condone such actions by their men, and set out that, on occasions, at
least the more principled officers – who had not themselves been
guilty of such atrocities – would punish those responsible.
Although, part of the reason for that was to maintain discipline more
than anything else. They needed to ensure that the troops were ready
to fight in the morning, not disappeared off raping and pillaging in
the nearest village. Part of the problem, as today, was the fact
that many of the fighters were not actual soldiers, but were various
militia, who had been drawn in to “defend” or “liberate” what
they saw as their homeland, or their fellow Slavs.
As I set out
last week, Trotsky believed that the real solution, for the peoples of
the Balkans, was the establishment of a Balkan Federation. That
position is consistent with the analysis and program developed from
Marx and Engels onwards, through to Lenin and Trotsky. Marx and
Engels argued that Nationalism was a progressive force only up to a
point i.e. up to the point where small principalities still dominated
by feudal relations, were being consolidated into modern bourgeois,
nation states. The development of the nation state, based upon a
single national market was the pre-condition for capitalist economic
development to proceed. But, beyond that point, Nationalism becomes
a reactionary force, working against the further development of
economic relations, and against the bringing together of the
international working-class. Moreover, those small nations, which
had not managed to establish themselves as nation state were
considered to no longer have the resources themselves to bring it
about. Marx and Engels described them as “Non-Historic Peoples”.
That was to say that they were like the 300 Nationalities that had
made up modern France, but whose existence was now fully subsumed
within the French Nation State.
These
“Non-Historic Peoples” would now be absorbed within some larger
state or federation of states, and any attempt by them to resist
should a development would be reactionary. It would, and did
necessarily result in these small unviable states seeking support
from outside. In the case of the nations Marx and Engels were
describing in Central and Eastern Europe, that meant the Tsarist
Russian Empire. That in turn would mean that these small nations
would put themselves in hock to these external powers, who almost by
definition would be reactionary. That basic position was carried on
by Lenin and Trotsky, who saw such small states as reactionary.
Lenin argued that the establishment of any new bourgeois state was to
be opposed, except in the most exceptional condition. Instead, as
Trotsky sets out here, the way forward was the establishment of
democratic, federal states, that provided the maximum autonomy for
each nation within it. There model was the United States of America,
or Switzerland.
Trotsky,
describes the historic function of the Balkan War in this context.
“The
Balkan war is an attempt to solve in the quickest possible way the
question of creating new state-political forms that shall be better
adapted to the needs of the economic and cultural development of the
Balkan peoples.
The
fundamental view of European democracy, Western and Eastern alike, on
this question is perfectly clear: The Balkans for the Balkan
peoples! It is necessary to vindicate the possibility for these
peoples themselves to settle their own affairs, not only as they wish
and see fit but also by their own strength, in the land where they
are established. This means that European democracy has to combat
every attempt to subject the fate of the Balkans to the
ambitions of the Great Powers. Whether these ambitions be presented
in the naked form of colonial policy or whether they be concealed
behind phrases about racial kinship, they all alike menace the
independence of the Balkan peoples. The Great Powers should be
allowed to seek places for themselves in the Balkan Peninsula in one
way only, that of free commercial rivalry and cultural influence.
The
Balkans for the Balkan Peoples! But this point of view signifies
nonintervention. It means not only opposition to the territorial
ambitions of the Great Powers, but also rejection of support for
Balkan Slavdom in its struggle against Turkish rule. Isn't this a
policy of narrow nationalism and state egoism? And doesn't it mean
democracy renouncing its very self?
Not at
all. Democracy has no right, political or moral, to entrust the
organisation of the Balkan peoples to forces that are outside its
control – for it is not known when and where these forces will stop, and democracy, having once granted them the mandate of its
political confidence, will be unable to check them.
The
Balkans for the Balkan peoples! This means not merely that the hands
of the Great Powers must not reach out towards the border of the
Balkans but also that, within this border, the Balkan peoples must
settle their own affairs, with their own forces, and according to
their own ideas, in the land where they live.” (pp 148-52)
Trotsky,
writing after the war had started, and after he had done these
interviews, setting out all of the atrocities being committed, said,
“The
Balkans for the Balkan peoples! This slogan is taken up here by all
politicians, both those of the extreme Left and those who serve the
dynasties. But the majority of politicians, while quite properly
refusing the Great Powers the right to make any claims on the
Balkans, desire at the same time that Russia should help, arms in
hand, the Balkan peoples to reorganise the Balkans as these leading
political personalities would like the Balkans to be. This hope, or
this demand, may become the source of great mistakes and great
misfortunes. I say nothing about the fact that this approach to the
question transforms the Balkan War into a conscious provocation to a
measuring of strength on the all-European scale, which can mean
nothing short of a European War. And, however dear to us the fate of
the young Balkan peoples, however warmly we wish for them the best
possible development of cultured existence on their own soil, there
is one thing we must tell them plainly and honestly, as we must tell
ourselves: We do not want, and we are unable to put our own cultural
development at risk. Bismark once said that the whole Balkan
Peninsula was not worth the bones of a single Pomeranian grenadier.
We too can say today: If the leading parties of the Balkans, after
all their sad experience of European intervention, can see no other
way of settling the fate of the Balkans but a fresh European
intervention, the results of which no one can foreordain, then their
political plans are indeed not worth the bones of a single
infantryman from Kursk. That may sound harsh, but it is the only way
that this tragic question can be seen by any honest democratic
politician who thinks not only of today but also of tomorrow.” (pp
153-4)
As I pointed
out last week this is one of the problems with the approach of the
liberal interventionism advocated by assorted liberal, and
opportunist politicians and groups. Almost by definition, the
experience of imperialist intervention around the globe, and the fact
that these various liberal and opportunist organisations will call
for it, whenever someone shouts atrocity, is guaranteed to ensure
that every small group with an axe to grind anywhere in the world,
will feel free to declare themselves rebels, or revolutionaries –
no matter how corrupt, reactionary, or beholden to other forces they
might be – and shout “genocide” or “atrocity” at the first
opportunity to produce a Youtube video demonstrating how the world
must immediately come to their aid, and put them into power in place
of their enemies! Trotsky describes, precisely this function of
intervention.
He cites a
number of Serbian and Bulgarian politicians who expressed their
confidence that Russia would intervene to support its Slavic brethren
in the Balkans. He writes,
“Only
in the setting of this confidence, which must, of course, have
serious foundations, as yet unknown to Russia's citizens, does the
resoluteness of the Balkan governments, which at first sight looks
too much like recklessness, become comprehensible.” (pp 156-7)
He then
qualifies this statement by saying that there are undoubted material
foundations for what was transpiring, arising from the economic
development of the area. He goes on,
“But,
the political consciousness of the masses is still so primitive here
that there is always a big gap between the known feelings of the
people and political action. As a mass, the people are politically
helpless. Parties and cliques therefore possess great opportunities
to exercise initiative, pressure and arbitrary decision. Without a
governmental policy directed toward war there would have been no war
– at any rate not now. And this policy on the part of the Balkan
governments would, in its turn, not have existed without the
confidence they feel, rightly or wrongly, that they are acting in
conformity to Russia's desires.” (p 157)
This could be quite easily applied today to the situation not just in
the Middle East and North Africa, but also to a large degree to the
situation in Central Asia, and to parts of Eastern Europe. The
difference being that it is political parties and cliques in these
areas manipulating the masses, and launching adventures either with
the connivance in advance of Imperialism, or at least as Trotsky
describes here, in the hope that Imperialism will come to their
assistance. The situation he describes is very similar to that we
see today, in fact. In MENA, and in Central Asia, and in Eastern
Europe, there is undoubted rapid, economic growth and development,
which has caused deep social transformations. This provides the
material base for various forms of social and political development.
But, that does not mean that it is not open to being manipulated, or
that various forces will not hijack such developments. That is what
happened in Iran in 1979. It is what has happened in Egypt, Libya
and Tunisia in the last year, with the Muslim Brotherhood, and more
extreme Islamist forces, using these developments to further their
own political ends.
The actions of Imperialism, and of the liberal interventionists, have
encouraged such a development by their actions over recent decades.
A similar development was seen a few years ago with the decision of
Georgia's demagogic leader Mikhail Saakashvilli, to launch a
genocidal attack on the peoples of South Ossetia. Saakasvilli who
gives the impression of a highly deluded man at the best of times,
was clearly convinced, as were the political leaders that Trotsky
describes, that despite launching his murderous attacks on South
Ossetia, the US and NATO would rush to his defence, if, as was
likely, Russia came to stop him, in defence of the South Ossetians.
A similar dangerous game is being played today by Turkey in relation
to Syria. As Trotsky set out, in relation to the Balkans, these
kinds of games, with today Russia and China standing behind Iran,
Iraq, Syria and Hezbollah in Lebanon, and the US and the EU standing
behind the Gulf Monarchies, Turkey, Jordan and the Sunni Islamist
fighters is leading to a “ conscious provocation to a measuring
of strength”, not just on a European scale, but on a global
scale.
In the meantime, the US backed regime in Bahrain, has continued its
own murderous and reactionary pogroms against its own people, with
not a word of protest from the West, and with not a minute of TV
coverage from the western media. On the contrary, the UK has just
signed a new agreement with Bahrain to provide it with yet more
military equipment and training, so that it can more effectively
murder its own people.
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