From: Jari-Pekka Raitamaa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: [luokkataistelu] War Polarises Italy

War Polarises Italy

Italy is the European country which has seen the biggest and most widespread
protests against the US bombing of Afghanistan. It is also the only country
that has seen its prime minister urging the population onto the streets in
pro-war demonstrations. There is a deep polarisation as well as a deep
radicalisation going on in Italian society. These processes seem to have
been accelerated rather than obliterated by the onset of war. With or
without it, Italy's workers and youth have undoubtedly taken up a position
in the front ranks of the international struggle against capitalism.

Only weeks after the replacement of the 'Olive Tree' government in this May'
s general election, by that of the billionaire tycoon Silvio Berlusconi,
millions of engineering workers were on strike against attempts to undermine
their wages and conditions. The burgeoning hatred for the new government
undoubtedly lay behind the massive turnout of 300,000 demonstrators in July
on the streets of Genoa at the time of the G8 summit.

After the attacks of September 11th in the USA on the World Trade Centre and
the Pentagon, Italian workers and young people were among the first to show
they would not be intimidated by attempts to paint as terrorists anyone who
opposed capitalist governments. They were on the streets in larger than
usual numbers during the annual Communist Re-foundation demonstration in
Rome on September 29. 120,000 trade unionists, activists, school and
university students demonstrated under red flags and banners with placards
saying things like: "Down with the three 'B's of the Apocalypse - Bush, Bin
Laden and Berlusconi!"

Bombing in Afghanistan
Two days after the first air attacks on Afghanistan, tens of thousands of
students and left activists were on the streets of Italy's cities to say No
to War! In the week leading up to the traditional Peace March from Perugia
to Assisi on September 14, transport workers had been walking off the job
for an hour's anti war protest, or as much as a day, in pursuit of their own
demands against deregulation and privatisation as well as against the
attacks on Afghanistan. School students had been walking out of classes to
express their hatred of the idea of war. All Rome schools had been out on
Friday 12 for example.

The march of 14 September itself was phenomenal - bigger than on any
occasion in its 41 year history, and far larger than any during the Gulf War
or two years ago when Italy decided to participate directly in the NATO
bombardment of Serbia. It was, by many estimates, except those of the
(Genovesi!) far larger even than the massive anti G8 demonstration in Genoa.
Liberazione, the daily paper of Communist Refoundation, whose banners and
flags produce a sea of red on all these occasions, described the event as
"An invasion of peace" across 25 kilometres of Umbrian countryside.

The September day was as hot as July 21 had been in Genoa. The assistance
from local residents with water hoses and buckets was just as welcome. The
spirit of the predominantly young demonstrators was as determined and
defiant as in Genoa against a rotten world order. The anger felt over the
waging of war by the richest super powers against one of the poorest
countries on the earth's surface was intense. This did not stop whole
sections of the march from expressing the sheer joy of being there; they
sang, danced and made merry for twelve hours apparently non-stop!

Democratic Left
The only sour note was struck by the appearance on the peace march of the
leaders of two parties who had voted in Parliament to support the US war
effort. Francesco Rutelli of the Margherita (christian social democratic)
Party and Massimo D'Alema of the one-time 'communist', now Democratic Left
(DS) claimed they were as entitled as anyone to take their place on the
demonstration! Few agreed. They were booed and whistled at in derision until
they left the march. well before the end!

These were the main figures in the centre left Olive Tree coalition which
was in power for five years until May this year. They had lost power mainly
because of the wide range of anti-working class policies they initiated,
including more privatisation than any previous government. It had also given
been the government that agreed to participate in NATO's Kosova war. Now, at
the first vote in parliament on the war in Afghanistan, it had fractured.
The Greens and Cossutta's Democratic Communist Party of Italy (Pcdi) went
against the bombings while the larger Margherita and Democratic Left (DS)
parties voted in favour.

The same pattern was followed over the vote for Italy to send 2,700 military
personnel, including soldiers and carabinieri, to Afghanistan. But now more
DS members have gone into open revolt. There is quite a wide layer of youth
in the party, who are still wary of what they see as a Stalinist or
over-centralised approach of the leaders of the Rifondazione to politics or
organisation and cling to the idea that their party can be taken back to the
left.

Many of them, would have marched on the lively 150,000 strong anti-war
demonstration in Rome on November 10, arguing that their party should never
have voted for Italy's involvement in this war. Also there was the DS vice
president of the Senate upper house, Cesare Salvi. He told La Repubblica he
had no qualms about being in the same demonstration as the leader of
Rifondazione, Fausto Bertinotti. "On May 13 the left lost (the election)
with two million votes lost by the wayside because of the absence of an
agreement with Refoundation." This and not running after the centre had
given Berlusconi his victory.

At the other extreme of the party stands Luciano Violante, parliamentary
leader of the DS in the lower house. On November 1 he was quoted in the
Manifesto newspaper, declaring his intention of going on the pro-war
demonstration organised by Forza Italia and Berlusconi's House of Liberty in
Rome - also on November 10! Others in his party were said to see no
difference between supporting the bombing, from the position taken by the
Italian Communist Party two or three decades ago in opposing the terrorism
of the 'Red Brigades'!

On 'Usaday', as November 10 was dubbed, when the 'antis' outnumbered the
'pros' by at least three to one, Rutelli and the newly-elected leader of the
DS, Piero Fassino, this time against being at either event, flew off to the
coast to visit the troops embarking for Afghanistan.

On the week-end of 17 - 18 November, the Democratic Left was holding what
promised to be a tense and possibly explosive national congress in the town
of Pesaro. Reports have appeared of local DS assemblies voting by a majority
for their party not to support the war. Right wingers who defend
participation in the war, see themselves becoming a fully-fledged Social
Democratic party and lining up with Blair, Bush and Jospin. Although the DS
is already thoroughly bourgeoisified, there are those within it who are set
to put up a fight in the other direction - to renew the party's left
credentials by breaking with neo-liberal and imperialist policies of any
kind. If they find an inadequate response to their campaign, they could well
conclude the time has come to leave the party. Others may draw the same
conclusion and the party begin to break up and dissolve.

Contradictions in the ruling camp
The issue of Italy's involvement in what has, from the beginning, been seen
as the USA's war, has naturally put all political forces to the test. The
behaviour of Berlusconi himself during the war has aroused the anger of
millions of workers and students, but also of the far right in his own
coalition. Members of the 'post-fascist' National Alliance were unwilling to
march with him on the streets of their fatherland under the banner of the
United States.

There is an irony, if not a large measure of hypocrisy, in the prime
minister trying to be accepted into Bush's team in the crusade against
terrorism when sitting in his cabinet are representatives of the party - the
National Alliance - which was responsible for planting a bomb in Bologna
railway station in 1980 that killed 85 people. His attempts were not helped
by the infamous comments he made about the inferiority of Muslim
civilisation which threatened to undermine all the diplomatic efforts of his
allies to get a number of important Muslim countries to tolerate, if not
support, the US bombings. Berlusconi used the same occasion to 'reveal' the
threat of a terror attack on the G8 Summit and use it as an excuse for the
notoriously brutal police attack on the Diaz school on the night of 21 July.

Under cover of the war, too, the business tycoon prime minister has been
busy getting laws changed to keep him out of the fraud and corruption
courts. (One of the measures has been to make more difficult the exchange of
incriminating evidence across borders, at a time when his allies in the war
effort have been calling for an easing of cross-border exchanges!).

The Italian prime minister has been displaying a marked preference for being
seen as a friend of Bush and the wealthiest nation in the world rather than
as a poor relation in the European family. His reluctance to go into the
European Airbus venture, while backed by the Defence Minister, Martino, has
irritated some of his other ministers, including Rugiero the Foreign
Minister and the Deputy Prime Minister, Fini.

Harsh Budget
Recent material has actually confirmed that, strictly speaking, Italy should
not even be part of the Euro project within the European Union. It was the
previous 'Olive Tree' administration who managed to halve the size of Italy'
s more than 6% budget deficit by a blatant fiddle using the derivatives
market to produce figures in Italian currency that allowed them to qualify!
But it is the present government which is pursuing a harsh austerity budget
to stay within the criteria.

It can only do this by making enormous cut-backs on its public spending and
trying to undermine the power of the historically militant working class of
Italy.

Figures for growth have been revised downwards to less than 2% even before
the world downturn began to make itself felt. Alitalia workers have already
entered a struggle over retrenchment and the textile, clothing and fashion
industry is said to be in grave peril. The struggles in the car industry
arise from the large fall-off in sales due to a classical crisis of
over-capacity on the word market. The major employers like the super rich
Agnelli family which owns the Fiat Empire will always seek to put the onus
on their workforce rather than take any cut-backs themselves.

It is a testament to the strength and combativity of the Italian workers
that only now are the bosses and their henchmen in government moving to
attack long-held rights in relation to employment that their other European
counter-parts lost years or even decades ago.

Berlusconi's ministers are now trying to impose all manner of anti-working
class policies. Union leaders like Sergio Cofferati of the Cgil, Luigi
Angeletti of the Uil and Savino Pezzotta of the Cisl are still prepared to
sit round tables in talks with the government but the 'white book' of Labour
and Welfare Minister Maroni is arousing the anger of millions of workers.
The metalworkers are spearheading a battle against its provisions for
regional rather than national labour contracts, for the lifting of
restrictions on making workers redundant and diminishing their right to
compensation. A whole list of other measures aims at easing the way for
deregulation, privatisation and casualisation.

Maroni is also campaigning hard for the government's notorious pension
'reforms'. A small promised increase in the basic pension with a plan to
raise the retirement age and gradually whittle away pensioners' entitlements
is being fircely resisted by Italy's (aging) workforce.

Education minister Moratti, is trying to push through a whole shopping list
of measures to smash full-time jobs of tens of thousands of teachers and to
pour resources into private rather than state education. Hence the nickname
for her ministry as 'the ministry for the 6%' (of private schools) and the
wave of strikes called by the radical union Cobas and the other unions in
Education. Il Manifesto comments on 10 November that the unions are giving
the government a little longer but "The rope is tight. Thus the idea is
beginning to circulate of an open social confrontation, leading up to a
possible general strike (a word not yet uttered)".

Towards a general strike?
In fact, the party of Communist Refoundation has begun to pose this as the
only way to bring together and generalise the wave of protests taking place
almost daily in Italy at the present time. Piero Bernocchi, leader of Cobas
spoke at a rally of 30,000 in Rome on 31 October, the day of education
strikes throughout the country. "We are against a war budget that cuts
resources for education and diverts them into military spending - L3,000
milliard (�1 billion) is destined from the government to the Ministry of
Defence - and against a war that adds deaths to deaths without succeeding in
dealing with the basis of terror."

The term 'hot autumn' is back on people's lips, reviving memories of the
gigantic strike struggles of 1979. As yet, the struggles are by no means on
the same scale. Nor is there as widespread an awareness that the bosses
system needs to be totally replaced. But there is perhaps an even wider
understanding of the evils of capitalism in Italy and on a world scale.

The radical stance of such a large part of Italy's working class and its
youth is to a certain extent 'traditional', but the existence of a sizeable
party that explains the role of capitalism world-wide and campaigns against
it is undoubtedly an important factor that does not exist today in other
European countries. The Communist Refoundation has an active campaigning
membership of 100,000 or so 10,000 youth with a wide support that was
increasing even at the time of the May elections and will be far bigger
today as a result of the events that have taken place even within the first
100 days of Berlusconi's government. It has a daily paper - Liberazione -
and agitates for full support to strikes and demonstrations organised by
Cobas, rdb, Cub, Fiom and any other trade unions when they move into action.

Fausto Bertinotti, the Rc leader warns constantly now of "a profound crisis
in society". The double evil of war and terrorism are "an organic component"
of the second (phase of) globalisation, he says (Il Manifesto 1 November).
(The first ended with the attack on the Twin Towers in New York).

'No Global'
The anti-globalisation movement in all countries (in Italy known as 'no
global') is extremely diverse and proud of it. But some of its leaders make
a virtue of having no one ideology, no one solution and no central
organisation. This can reflect a healthy reaction against the old Stalinist
way of running 'left' organisations or even societies - in Eastern Europe
and the Soviet Union, but it leaves the movement amorphous and without clear
purpose and direction. The movement of Social Centres that has been
initiated and built up in recent years by Italy's young and discontented are
often led by extremely radical figures. Casarin, their recognised
spokesperson is linked with the 'Tutte Bianchi' civil disobedience movement,
and is even the subject of popular songs sung by the youth on their marches.

It seems as if the Social Forums, the more moderate federal structures that
represent the no-global movement locally are already facing problems arising
from their very broad make-up. Obviously the christian pacifists involved,
and the environmentalists are going to have a different outlook on life and
on struggle from the 'disobedients'. Their outlook is also far more on the
individual and 'moral' plane than on the idea od collective action and
organisation of the students, workers and activists who base themselves on
the ideas of Marx and Engels and on the experience of the Russian
Revolution.

It is clear that the organisations which have come out most forcefully
against the war and against the policies of the Berlusconi government -
those with a policy of defiance, of occupations and of strikes - have been
boosted in the course of the anti-war protests - the Party of Communist
Refoundation, the Cobas and Cub trade unions and the militant Metalworkers'
union (FIOM). There is even a substantial left inside the largest trade
union federation - the Cgil. This reflects the pressure building up from
below in Italian society and also the struggle taking place in other parts
of the anti-capitalist movement between those who think capitalism can be
reformed and those who are convinced it needs to be replaced with genuine
socialism.

A party as strongly socialist as the Refoundation, needs to emphasise its
distinctly socialist/communist nature if it is to pick up the most
radicalised youth. It would be a mistake for it to lose its identity in the
Social Forum movement. It is important to participate and to help harness
the still growing anti-globalisation anger into effective protests. But
that, in itself, will not be enough to provide the kind of lead that the
energetic and defiant working class of Italy needs in order to conduct a
struggle to get rid of capitalism.

A programme taking up the demands to stop privatisations, closures and job
losses, for big injections of public finance into schools, health, housing
and transport must explain that capitalism itself is not able to provide the
basic necessities for all. It must explain the need to take Refoundation
further on the road towards a mass workers' party with a programme of public
ownership of the big banks, industrial companies and land under democratic
control and management by the working class.

The case for a planned economy has not been keenly advocated since the days
of the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the Stalinist regimes in Eastern
Europe and the Soviet Union. It has not been sufficiently related to modern
conditions or explained in terms of genuine participatory socialist
planning. That is the task which the CWI sees as most urgent for the active
and youthful layers in Refoundation, in the colleges and schools and in the
workplaces to set themselves. The renewed combativity of workers and
students at this time makes the prospect of convincing them of the ideas of
socialism so much more likely to succeed.

Clare Doyle
17 November 2001


_________________________________________________
 
KOMINFORM
P.O. Box 66
00841 Helsinki
Phone +358-40-7177941
Fax +358-9-7591081
http://www.kominf.pp.fi
 
General class struggle news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe mails to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Geopolitical news:
 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
subscribe: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
__________________________________________________

Reply via email to