<https://socialistworker.org/2016/10/24/opposing-war-means-opposing-dictators>
>
> Opposing war means opposing dictatorship
> October 24, 2016

> How should the antiwar movement answer the questions about violence and 
> imperialism in Syria today? Rory Fanning, a member of Veterans for Peace and 
> author of Worth Fighting For: An Army Ranger's Journey Out of the Military 
> and Across America 
> <https://www.haymarketbooks.org/books/617-worth-fighting-for>, and Brian Bean 
> of the International Socialist Organization consider the question in light of 
> the formation of U.S. Hands Off Syria, a new and not-so-antiwar alliance.
>
> Syrian government troops pose with portraits of dictator Bashar al-Assad
> A DEBATE about violence and repression in Syria is raging on the antiwar left 
> internationally. There is a lot at stake.
>
> The U.S. antiwar movement currently lacks the numbers and momentum to 
> effectively challenge the ongoing wars perpetuated by Democratic President 
> Barack Obama that will undoubtedly continue--and possibly intensify--with the 
> next president. So rebuilding antiwar struggle must be a priority of the 
> left. And the health of what we build will rest, in part, on how we deal with 
> the Syria question.
>
> The issue in question is what attitude the left should take toward the 
> more-than-five-year-old anti-government uprising that started during the 2011 
> Arab Spring--and toward the Syrian regime and its international allies that 
> are trying to crush the revolt.
>
> Unfortunately, a significant part of the left has chosen to side against the 
> popular uprising 
> <https://socialistworker.org/2016/08/25/anti-imperialism-and-the-syrian-revolution>--because
>  of a false logic that since the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad and its 
> allies in Russia and Iran are generally, though not always, hostile toward 
> the U.S., they must be challenging imperialism, while the Syrian rebels 
> opposing the regime must be doing the work of the American empire.
>
> This faction on the left has coalesced around a new organization called U.S. 
> Hands Off Syria 
> <https://theredphoenixapl.org/2016/10/16/u-s-hands-off-syria-coalition-points-of-unity-statement/>
>  that is seeking support from antiwar organizations like Veterans For 
> Peace--of which one of the authors of this article is a member. We believe 
> that the politics and analysis of the U.S. Hands Off Syria coalition are 
> hazardous to rebuilding the kind of movement we need.
>
> U.S. Hands Off Syria is exclusively focused on opposing U.S. military 
> intervention and what it claims is Washington's determination to achieve 
> regime change in Syria. But this means the coalition and those who endorse it 
> ignore the main source of the barbaric violence and repression in Syria today 
> <https://socialistworker.org/2016/03/31/how-did-syria-become-a-burning-country>:
>  the Assad government, its allies within the region and the Russian empire 
> that backs Assad to the hilt.
>
> U.S. Hands Off Syria and its endorsing organizations aren't taking an 
> internationalist antiwar and anti-imperialist position. Their insistence, 
> against the facts, that U.S. intervention is the chief cause of bloodshed and 
> oppression in Syria leads them to accept--and in some cases even 
> celebrate--the suffering inflicted on masses of Syrians by Assad's government 
> and the Russian military.
>
> It is not possible to build a broad and principled antiwar movement while 
> supporting a dictator like Assad and an imperialist power like Vladimir 
> Putin's Russia.
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
>
> TO BE clear. we are unequivocally opposed to U.S. military intervention in 
> any form, from boots on the ground to a "no-fly zone." We are against United 
> Nations intervention since--as the people of Haiti, for one, know 
> <https://socialistworker.org/2008/12/12/the-forgotten-occupation>--a UN 
> occupation is still an occupation. We believe the U.S. government and the 
> Gulf states led by Saudi Arabia have tried to use sections of the popular 
> uprising as pawns to advance their interests, while opposing the mass 
> struggle for democracy as a threat to their own rule over the Middle East.
>
> We see the rise of Islamist groups like the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria 
> (ISIS) and Jabhat Fateh al-Sham, previously known as the al-Nusra Front, as a 
> disastrous consequence of U.S. imperial wars and Saudi and Gulf state 
> patronage 
> <http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/06/al-qaeda-iraq-syria-108214>, 
> as well as the maneuvering of the Assad regime to play on sectarian divisions 
> <http://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n07/peter-neumann/suspects-into-collaborators> in 
> an effort to divide and destroy the revolution.
>
> The situation in Syria is dire. There are no easy answers as to what must 
> come next, but it is clear that anti-imperialists cannot embrace a tyrant and 
> his powerful international backers. We reject the assertion that to be 
> against U.S. imperialism, it is necessary to be silent about what Assad and 
> Russia have done to Syria.
>
> This is precisely what U.S. Hands Off Syria does. For example, in its points 
> of unity <http://antiwarcommittee.org/2016/10/15/u-s-hands-off-syria/>, the 
> coalition protests U.S. and European Union sanctions and implies that they 
> are responsible for a refugee crisis that has forced half the Syrian 
> population from their homes--as if the terrorist military onslaught of the 
> regime and its Russian backer wasn’t the main thing driving Syrians to flee.
>
> Has the U.S. made the situation worse for the people of Syria? Absolutely. 
> For one thing, there would be no ISIS if not for the U.S. war and occupation 
> in Iraq. Has Russia helped a dictator suppress and murder a democratic 
> peaceful uprising? Absolutely.
>
> These statements are not contradictory. They are two parts of an accurate 
> understanding of the situation in Syria.
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
>
> THIS UNDERSTANDING must include defense of the right of the Syrian people to 
> self-determination, which is being violated not just by U.S. imperialism, but 
> Russian imperialism and regional powers such as Iran and Lebanon's Hezbollah 
> through their intervention on behalf of the Assad regime. The points of unity 
> for U.S. Hands Off Syria pay lip service to national self-determination, but 
> then make a mockery of this principle by claiming it justifies the Assad 
> regime "request[ing] and accept[ing] military assistance from other 
> countries" to crush a popular uprising.
>
> The picture in Syria is too complicated to fit the simple formula of 
> "campism" inherited from 1950s Stalinism that is being put forward by groups 
> in U.S. Hands Off Syria. But it must be said that the facts of Syria's 
> nightmare today are not complicated at all.
>
> To stand by the "campist" understanding of the war in Syria means omitting 
> the fact that it was started by the Assad regime when it mobilized its 
> well-armed military to crush peaceful demonstrations demanding democracy. The 
> regime's escalation of violence led to rebels taking up arms. How is this an 
> antiwar position?
>
> It means not opposing the genocidal bombardment of Aleppo being carried out 
> by Russian warplanes and various ground forces, both from Syria and not, that 
> has turned half of the city into ruins and made Aleppo the most bombed city 
> since the Second World War. How is this an antiwar position?
>
> U.S. Hands Off Syria has no comment about the regime's scorched-earth policy 
> against revolutionary Homs, Daraa, Deir-el Zour and Damascus suburbs that is 
> crystallized in the pro-regime slogan "Either Assad or We'll Burn this 
> Country." <http://mondoweiss.net/2016/05/excerpt-syrians-revolution> How is 
> this an antiwar position?
>
> Its organizers apologize for the slaughter, imprisonment and torture of 
> Syrian activists who have been mobilizing protest for nearly six years. How 
> is this a peace position?
>
> The answer is that it is not.
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
>
> U.S. HANDS Off Syria supporters dismiss criticism of the Syrian regime and 
> Russia by talking about a U.S. media bias that "demonizes Assad" and builds 
> support for "regime change."
>
> The confusion is perhaps understandable because the U.S. mainstream media is 
> biased toward defending U.S. foreign policy. So, for example, Western news 
> outlets reported on Russia's bombardment of Aleppo, but have downplayed the 
> U.S. war in Yemen 
> <https://socialistworker.org/2016/10/18/us-steps-ups-its-role-in-yemen>.
>
> Opponents of American wars have a well-founded and necessary distrust of the 
> media. But it is naïve to not have a similar distrust of the Russian-funded 
> RT.com or the Syrian state SANA media.
>
> We should criticize the duplicity and hypocrisy of the U.S. political and 
> media establishment. But acknowledging this doesn't mean ignoring the fact 
> that Bashar al-Assad has been a brutal dictator overseeing a totalitarian 
> police state <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oQJxEDVJJ98>, like his father 
> did before him. This tyranny is what sparked the uprising in Syria, as part 
> of the Arab Spring rebellions in North Africa and the Middle East. Assad's 
> attempt to suppress the revolution is completely in keeping with the regime's 
> autocratic record before 2011.
>
> Instead of taking a critical position toward ruling classes of any country, 
> U.S. Hands Off Syria has no criticism of Russia or the Assad regime. Indeed, 
> one of the groups that has signed on to this coalition, the U.S. Peace 
> Council, is currently holding meetings across the country for a "peace 
> delegation" to report back on its visit (partially funded by the Syrian 
> state) to Syria that included a two-hour meeting with Assad 
> <http://uspeacecouncil.org/?p=3019>.
>
> The "peace" delegation characterizes all resistance to the regime as the work 
> of "foreign-backed mercenaries" and "jihadist terrorists," to quote Joe 
> Jamison of the U.S. Peace Council in his presentation in Chicago earlier this 
> month. This is a grotesque slander of the many Syrians fighting for freedom 
> who are not associated with fundamentalist groups.
>
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
>
> WE MUST listen to the voices of Syrians who have been struggling since 2011. 
> Though the militarization imposed on the struggle by the violence of the 
> regime has channeled the resistance in a particular direction--and given an 
> outsized influence to counterrevolutionary Islamist forces, just as the Assad 
> regime had hoped--there are still plenty of sources that provide the point of 
> view of the struggle from below in Syria <https://syriasources.org/#content>. 
> A group of mainly white American leftists who get a stage-managed tour of the 
> country by the Syrian regime should not have the final word.
>
> We shouldn't ignore the fact that U.S. Peace Council and U.S. Hands Off Syria 
> are the product of the continuing influence of Stalinist politics on the 
> antiwar movement.
>
> The U.S. Peace Council itself is the American section of the World Peace 
> Council, formed in 1949 by the regime of Joseph Stalin as a tool for the 
> purpose of using Communist Parties outside Russia 
> <https://socialistworker.org/2008/11/07/the-comintern> to further the foreign 
> policy aims of the USSR. The council's "two-camp" view 
> <https://www.questia.com/article/1G1-95915300/the-dove-flies-east-whitehall-warsaw-and-the-1950>
>  held that world was divided into a peace-loving progressive bloc united 
> around the USSR and a warmongering capitalist bloc "spearheaded by the United 
> States."
>
> But as other socialists and opponents of war recognized at the time, the 
> WPC's parroting of Stalinist foreign policy left the council in the position 
> of defending Russian "peace-loving" tanks when they moved in to crush 
> workers' uprisings 
> <https://socialistworker.org/2009/11/06/revolts-behind-the-iron-curtain> in 
> Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslovakia in 1968, among other rebellions in the 
> USSR's Eastern European empire.
>
> The WPC also supported the Russian invasion of Afghanistan 
> <http://santibox.ch/Peace/Peacemaking.html#5.%20A%20New%20Start> starting in 
> 1979 and claimed to be "in solidarity" with Afghan people against U.S. and 
> Chinese aggression. This "peace-loving" invasion left over a million dead, 
> hundreds of thousands disabled, huge numbers made refugees and the 
> countryside littered with mines.
>
> The position of an independent left must be to stand with people fighting for 
> freedom and justice against their rulers. Syrians who want Assad gone deserve 
> solidarity from peace activists in the U.S. Are we to tell the people of 
> Syria that we can't comment or support their right to be free from tyranny 
> because the U.S. has voiced support for parts of the resistance and provided 
> some material backing?
>
> Antiwar organizations should not fall for "the enemy of my enemy is my 
> friend" approach. In this case, it ends up providing a cover for supporting 
> war and imperialism.
>
> U.S. imperialism is a behemoth that must be opposed, but it is not the only 
> threat to peace and democracy in the world. We have to consistent with our 
> arguments. We should not support any imperialist project or dictator. U.S. 
> Hands Off Syria does support these things. We have to be clear that this 
> alliance is not a peace group, or we will never be able to win people to 
> making a larger movement against war, occupation and oppression.
>
> To paraphrase an old slogan: Neither Washington nor Moscow, but democracy and 
> self-determination in every country of the world.



-- 
Peace Is Doable

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