[In short, a large part of the Arab, European and Latin American left
has sacrificed internationalism to a geostrategic order in which the
peoples and their democratic struggles no longer have any friends and
in which this left, irrelevant and in retreat now throughout the
world, has let the regimes against which the “Arabs” rose up in 2011
advance without resistance. We have understood nothing, we have done
nothing to help, we have handed over to the enemy all our weapons,
including conscience. After Syria democracy is retreating everywhere.
Aleppo is indeed the tomb of the Syrians’ dreams of freedom, but it is
also the tomb of the global left. Just when we need it most.]

http://www.europe-solidaire.org/spip.php?article39894

Aleppo, the tomb of the left – Some harsh lessons for the international left

Wednesday 21 December 2016, by ALBA RICO Santiago, FIDLER Richard

The defeat of Aleppo: Introduction

Aided by the bombs of the Russian air force and the bullets of foreign
militias organized by Iran, Syria’s president Bashar Al-Assad has
finally managed to destroy the eastern sector of the country’s largest
city Aleppo, the major remaining pocket of popular resistance to his
regime.

In the following article Santiago Alba Rico, a Spanish-born
philosopher and writer based in Tunisia, analyzes what the defeat in
Syria means for democratic and progressive opinion everywhere, and in
particular the far-reaching implications of the failure of much of the
international left to identify with and mobilize in support of the
people of Syria in their powerful rebellion against oppression and
repression. This failure, he argues, was a critical factor that
facilitated the efforts of Assad and his reactionary international
allies to drown the revolt in a river of blood.

Alba Rico’s harsh assessment of “the left” in this article may seem
caricatural to some readers; not everyone on the left is an apologist
for Assad or Putin. However, the indifference of many, or their
unwillingness to confront the important issues posed by the war, which
I think are accurately described by Alba Rico, has given free rein to
those who choose to see the conflict in Syria as little more than a
rerun of a Cold War scenario of imperialism versus a Third World
government.

Santiago Alba Rico is well-known in the European left for his
perceptive analyses of the popular rebellions in the Middle East and
North Africa during the last six years collectively identified as the
“Arab Spring.”

His article was first published in the Spanish online newspaper
Público and has since been widely reproduced elsewhere. My translation
from the Spanish. And a special thanks to Art Young, a long-time
comrade in Toronto who is active in Palestine solidarity, for his
helpful collaboration with me in working through these issues
ourselves.

Richard Fidler

Aleppo, the tomb of the left

To kill on a large scale, as we know, it is necessary to lie as well
as to insult and deprecate the victims. That is what the United States
did in Iraq and what Israel has always done in Palestine. In 2003 the
entire left shared this accusation along with ordinary decent people,
and together with them the left vented its anger, and expressed its
sympathy, after the bombing of Baghdad or Gaza. But it seems that
whatever shocks and enrages us when it is the USA or Israel that are
the tormentors has become routine in the mindset of the left when it
comes to Syria. We have accepted large-scale lying that allows the
Assad regime and its occupying allies — Russia, Iran and Hezbollah —
to carry out large-scale slaughter, and in doing so not only have we
abandoned and deprecated the victims but we have also separated
ourselves from ordinary decent people. A major part of the global left
has effectively placed itself on the margin of ethics, alongside the
dictators and the many imperialisms that are vanquishing the region.
In a Europe where neofascism — and Islamist terrorism — are increasing
rapidly, this new error, along with so many others, can cost us very
dearly.

Much lying had to be done to make it possible for Assad to kill on a
large scale. It meant denying that the Syrian regime was a
dictatorship and even stating that it is anti-imperialist, socialist
and humanist. It meant denying that there had been a very transversal,
non-sectarian democratic revolution in which millions of Syrians —
many of them on the left, not affiliated with any leadership or party
— were participating; a sort of giant 15M [1] crystallized in Councils
and Local Coordinating Committees. It meant denying the brutal
repression of the demonstrations, the arrests, the torture, the
disappearances. It meant denying the legitimacy of the Free Syrian
Army. It meant denying the bombing with barrels of dynamite and the
use of chemical weapons by the regime. It meant denying or justifying
the massive bombing by Putin’s Russia. It meant denying the tolerance
of all of them — Assad, Russia, Iran, USA, Saudi Arabia, Turkey —
toward the growth of ISIS. It meant denying the Iranian occupation of
Syria. It meant denying the existence of Russian imperialism and that
country’s excellent relations with Israel. It meant denying the
erratic indifference of the United States, which intervened only to
simultaneously give a free hand to Syria and Saudi Arabia. It meant
denying the arms embargo that left the rebellion in the hands of the
more radical sectors, as counter-revolutionary as the regime itself.
It meant denying the existence of simultaneous demonstrations against
Assad and against ISIS or other jihadist militias in towns and cities
that had been besieged and destroyed. It meant denying the absence of
ISIS in Aleppo, from which it had been expelled by the FSA in 2014. It
meant denying the suffering and terror of the people of Aleppo who
­were under siege. But worse, it meant denying the heroism, the
sacrifice, the determination to fight of thousands of young Syrians
who are like us and want what we do. And worst of all, it meant
deprecating them, slandering them, insulting them, making them
terrorists, mercenaries or enemies of “freedom.”

Never has the left, faced with a people’s revolution, behaved so
ignobly. Not only has it failed to solidarize with that revolution or,
once it was defeated, honour its heroes and lament the outcome, but
instead it has spat in its face and celebrated its death and its
defeat. Consistent with this typically imperialist (or Stalinist)
denialism, it has taken its place alongside the European far right.
Furthermore, it has repressed the mobilizations in our cities. And to
cap it all it has criminalized the sensible left which, along with
ordinary decent people has denounced the crimes of Assad and his
allies while similarly denouncing the crimes of Saudi Arabia, Turkey
and the United States or — to be sure — the intolerable fascism, fully
equivalent to that of the regime, of ISIS or the Al-Nusra Front.

As the communist Yassin Al Haj Saleh, for 16 years a prisoner in the
regime’s dungeons and one of the greatest living intellectuals, says,
Syria reveals the state of the old left and registers its death. When
a global democratic revolution exploded six years ago, with the “Arab
world” as its epicenter, the left was not prepared either to champion
it or to make the most of it, let alone understand it. Today, when the
victorious counter-revolutions extend the resuscitated “Arab
dictatorships” to the USA and Europe, the left has remained irrelevant
as resistance and alternative. Troubled or discomfited, all of the
actors have abandoned or fought against the Syrian democratic forces
and all — governments, fascist organizations and communist parties —
have ended up coinciding in the narrative of the “lesser evil” that
condemns Syria to eternal dictatorship, the region to sectarian
violence, and Europe to endless terrorism.

This theory of the “lesser evil” (a lesser evil to the murder of
hundreds of thousands of Syrians, who have been bombed, tortured, or
disappeared!) has been the historical template of that regional
“stability,” oppressive and deadly for the peoples, that during the
second half of the 20th century justified the West’s support to all
the dictatorships in the area. After an abortive revolution, this
model of the previous century now returns with redoubled ferocity,
coupled with and lubricated by a sector of the left that applauds and
cheers Bashar Al Assad’s “great victory”; a model that pertains so
much to the last century that it can be said that some are celebrating
this “great victory” as if, 25 years later and thanks to Putin, the
USSR had finally won the Cold War. One thing is certain: what has also
been lost this time, in Syria and Europe, and in Russia and Latin
America, are democracy and justice, the only possible solutions to the
authoritarianisms, imperialisms and fascisms — whether jihadist or
half-European — triplet siblings that are gaining territory without
resistance, that identify with each other and, accordingly, can only
be defeated if they are fought simultaneously.

How are we to define these “Arab revolutions” that are now
definitively dying in Aleppo with the complicity of jihadism and the
complacency of the broad international alliance of right and left
thrown against Syria? These revolutions were above all a revolt
against the yoke of the geopolitics that had frozen, as if in amber,
the inequalities and resistances in the area for at least 70 years. In
a world of unequal power relationships between nation-states,
geopolitics always limits any emancipatory politics of the left. That
is to say, geopolitics is not of the left. If we have to take it into
account in order to make minimal progress in a realistic way against
the imperialist powers and in favour of sovereignty, we cannot go so
far as to contradict the elemental principles associated with the
universal character of any ethic of liberation: that which was once
called “internationalism,” the instinct that must be recovered in a
non-identitarian and democratic version.

The so-called “Arab world” (which is also Kurd, Imazighen, Berber,
Toubou, etc.) is the most painful example of an entire region that is
a hostage of its own oil wealth, sacrificed to the common interest of
competing powers and subpowers — so-called “stability.” When the
peoples of the area rebelled in 2011 in opposition to this monstrous
“equilibrium,” without seeking permission from anyone, and on the
margin of all inter-national interests, geopolitics ensnared them, as
in a straitjacket, and the left, alongside their enemies, hastened to
tie the sleeves and tighten the steel buttons.

In a context in which US hegemony is weakening, in which other powers,
imperialist as well, are freeing themselves from its hegemony in order
to impose their own agendas, and in which the campism of the second
half of the 20th century is replaced by a hornet’s nest of
counterposed reactionary interests very similar to that of the First
World War — and because this time there is not a single anticapitalist
or emancipatory force or project — the left, understanding nothing
about the “new world disorder” or its reactionary configuration, has
hastened to deliver the Syrian people, bound hand and foot, to a
murderous dictator, Putin’s Russia, the ayatollahs’ Iran, and along
the way the Islamic State and the Sunni theocracies of the Gulf. In
other words, to what Pablo Bustinduy [2] has called “the geopolitics
of disaster.” Now it is not done in the name of the “lesser evil”
(Franco and Pinochet a lesser evil?). Troubled and overwhelmed by
these popular intifadas that it did not understand (save for a handful
of “Trotskyists” who were “Trotskyists” only because they did
understand and support them), the global left reacted from the
beginning in the same way as the governments and the far right,
supporting the dictators. For the imperialists this has never posed
any problem (“our sons of bitches” [3]) but it should have meant
something to people who claim to be “on the left” but who have ended
up renouncing any attempt to understand the world in tune with its
ethical and political principles. Abandoning our own people on the
ground, they supported the executioners and allowed them to kill on a
large scale. To do this, as we said, they had to take leave of the
truth and submit to the same culturalist, racist and Islamophobic
clichés of the worst European rightists.

Relying on an outdated geopolitical way of thinking that blocks any
grappling with the “new world disorder,” the left has effectively
abandoned its ethical principles in exchange for nothing; or, more
precisely, in order to promote the return in an expanded and worsened
version of the dictatorships, imperialisms and jihadisms. This great
geostrategic success has been achieved at the cost of accepting a
three-fold contradiction that is incompatible with the universality of
the ethic of liberation and is brutally Western and Orientalist.

To accept this geostrategic yoke — otherwise illusory and unfounded —
presupposes, firstly, declaring shamelessly that inhabitants of Madrid
are entitled to fight an insufficiently democratic monarchy and a
corrupt bipartisan system and to desire, without risking their lives,
more democracy and more social justice for their country, while
Syrians must on the other hand support a dictatorship that jails,
tortures and assassinates them and renounce any glimmer of democracy
and social justice.

To accept this false geostrategic yoke presupposes, secondly, saying
as well that the imprisonment of Andrés Bódalo [4] in Spain is much
more serious than that of Yassin Al Haj Saleh or Salama Keile or
Samira Khalil, all of them communists, in Syria; or that the arrest of
some puppeteers or the prosecution of a city councillor in Madrid is
much more serious than the siege through hunger and bombing of an
entire country.

To accept this false geostrategic yoke presupposes, finally, claiming
in a perfectly ordinary way the right of Spanish (or Latin American)
people to decide whether and when and how the “Arabs” can rebel
against their dictators. The Syrians, it seems, must do what they are
told from afar by a left that has exposed itself as impotent, useless
and blind in its own countries. It also means experiencing as a
threat, not as a hope, the democratic will and social struggles of
other peoples: those fighting in more difficult conditions for the
same things as we do become not comrades but enemies, not valiant
partners with whom we must express our solidarity but “terrorist”
criminals, the term that we have rightly denounced or downplayed when
it is used by our judges or our “imperialist” governments.

***In short, a large part of the Arab, European and Latin American
left has sacrificed internationalism to a geostrategic order in which
the peoples and their democratic struggles no longer have any friends
and in which this left, irrelevant and in retreat now throughout the
world, has let the regimes against which the “Arabs” rose up in 2011
advance without resistance. We have understood nothing, we have done
nothing to help, we have handed over to the enemy all our weapons,
including conscience. After Syria democracy is retreating everywhere.
Aleppo is indeed the tomb of the Syrians’ dreams of freedom, but it is
also the tomb of the global left. Just when we need it most.***
[Emphasis added.]

Santiago Alba Rico

P.S.

* 
http://lifeonleft.blogspot.fr/2016/12/the-defeat-of-aleppo-some-harsh-lessons.html

* Original version from Publico:
http://ctxt.es/es/20161214/Firmas/10137/santiago-alba-rico-alepo-eeuu-israel-Putin-geopolitica.htm

Footnotes

[1] The anti-austerity movement in Spain began with massive
demonstrations and occupations on May 15, 2011, now known colloquially
as 15M, inspired in part by the social uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt
at that time.

[2] Pablo Bustinduy is a Podemos member of Madrid’s City Council and
works with the party’s delegation in the European Parliament.

[3] Franklin Roosevelt is reported to have referred to Nicaraguan
dictator Anastasio Somoza as “a son of a bitch, but he’s our son of a
bitch.”

[4] Andrés Bódalo is a well-known trade unionist and former Podemos
candidate in Jaén, Andalusia, who was convicted of an “offence to
authority” and sentenced to three years and six months imprisonment
for allegedly assaulting a Social Democratic City Council member who
had pushed his way through a mass workers’ demonstration outside the
City Hall:
http://www.indultobodalo.info
Many observers say Bódalo was actually attempting to maintain order
among the demonstrators.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to