From: Danielle Ni Dhighe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 04 Jan 2002 13:24:32 -0800
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [Peoples War] IRSP: Republican Forum: A way forward for
Republicanism

Starry Plough
December 2001/January 2002
http://www.irsm.org/irsp/starryplough/

Republican Forum: A way forward for Republicanism
By John Martin, Political Secretary, Irish Republican Socialist Party

It was a momentous day for Republicanism in Ireland. Tuesday the 23rd
of September 2001 - the day the Provisional IRA decommissioned
weapons in order to save not only the Good Friday Agreement but also
the Stormont Assembly. The shock waves are rumbling through the
Republican heartlands ever since.

A number of phrases are heard - "At least 'the stickies' didn't
decommission", "an act of unparalleled treachery", "we told you so"
and so on. When the issue was first raised in the early days of the
peace process the IRSP was sceptical about the whole process but did
not believe that decommissioning was an issue or that any republican
group would voluntarily decommission its weapons.

Representatives of the Republican Socialist Movement met with
representatives of the Provisional Movement on a number of occasions
over the last five years and were assured that decommissioning of
weapons would not happen. We had no reason to disbelieve the
sincerity of those we spoke with. It was a matter for them; it is
still a matter for them. But for all that there is no doubt that
shock, disillusionment, feelings of betrayal, and a shaken trust in
the leadership, and a reluctant but necessary step all summon up what
strong supporters of the Provisional Movement feel.

Emotions run high and talk of "what about Bombay Street?",
etc., echoes through the streets of Belfast. The image of the burning
streets of Ardoyne '69 runs through the mind as the northern
nationalist working class tries to come to terms with this event. It
is always a good thing to become disillusioned. That is the throwing
away of false illusions and the start of seeing things as they really
are. The Irps feel for those whose have feelings of betrayal and
disillusionment.

Within our own history we have suffered our own disillusionments. So
we understand why many out there are feeling bruised and sensitive to
criticism. But now is the time to see things as they really are not
as we wish them to be. When the civil rights movement started not
only Republicans of all shades but socialists of all shades
didn't know how to react.

Those who later went on to form the Provisionals were reluctant to
become involved in what was a reformist movement. Those who later
went on to take the Official IRA down a dead end street of arrogant
political self seeking saw the civil rights movement as the only way
forward and tried to suppress both the emergence of a more militant
brand of Republicanism and any manifestation of class struggle. Those
of us who consistently and persistently raised social and economic
issues within the mass struggle that the civil rights movement became
were derided as ultra leftists, wreckers, Trots and looney lefties.

Socialists veered between a full acceptance of the nationalist agenda
or swallowing whole a form of British imperialist socialism under the
guise of an exotic form of communism. Out of all this confusion the
Provisionals emerged from the ashes of '69 and the failure of the
Official leadership to re-arm the North in a time of increasing
political tension. The Provos rejected a reformist agenda and
launched an armed campaign on the single issue of Brits Out.

Later in 73/74 the Official Republican Movement split again and
eventually the IRSP/INLA emerged to re-establish the Republican
Socialist tradition that they felt had been betrayed by the
Officials. The programme the IRSP then set out has still not yet been
met. We have not yet attained a Broad Front, removed the Brits or
established the Socialist Republic.

Much water has flowed under the bridge since the seventies and there
have been many changes. The Provisionals have accepted, albeit 30
years later, the reformist strategy first put forward by the
Officials. The reason for armed struggle has gone and their goals can
be achieved by political means and the growth of the Catholic
population. The Good Friday Agreement saw the Provisionals ditch one
of the pillars of Republicanism, non-sectarianism, when they accepted
the sectarian headcount that gave them seats in the Stormont Cabinet.

This can all be very confusing for those who trust in leaderships and
go for the personalities in politics. A trust in a Gerry, a Martin,
or even a Ruari will eventually lead to disillusionment. All of us as
individuals are influenced not only by our parents and neighbourhood
but also by the interaction between our core beliefs and our actions.

We are formed in specific historical and economic conditions. We all
are in a sense prisoners of history and also of the organisations we
are members of. The Provisionals were an all-class alliance merging
militarists, disaffected urban nationalist youths and traditional
nationalists from rural areas. During the seventies this alliance,
while capable of launching ferocious military attacks, made no
political progress. Sinn Fein in the 70's was a right wing pro-
Catholic and anti-communist mouth piece for the IRA with the
occasional radical articles to appeal to more left wing elements.

When the hunger strikes occurred the urban based northern seized the
leadership, swung the movement towards the left to soak up the
militant radicalised working class youth, the growing republican-
minded women's groups and the radical intellectuals politicised
by the mass actions around the hunger strikes.

During all this time regular contact was kept up with the British
Intelligence services through various contacts. This was because the
Provo leadership recognised that eventually they would have to do a
deal with their enemy. They knew from the mid-eighties that the
continuation of the armed struggle was a road to nowhere. The
Armalite and Ballot Box strategy saw the Provisionals make many
political gains.

They were able to exercise a strangle hold over most nationalist
working class areas in the north and through the exercise
of social and economic control which they had wrestled from the
SDLP/Catholic Church were able to create a middle bureaucracy of
supporters who formed the intellectual backbone for their control in
the ghettoes. All opposition whether militarily or politically was
ruthlessly crushed within their areas of control. Throughout all this
they were able to retain the loyal support of their base because of
their militancy and also their astute political leadership.

This leadership was trusted. The development of their peace strategy
was an advance from the Armalite, etc., strategy. It was strongly
driven by their support base in the USA. The swing to the left of the
early eighties was slowed, a distancing began with anti-imperialist
movements worldwide, the suits came in and the advisers multiplied.

Now they were appealing to the emergent nationalist middle classes
within the North and they began to occupy the ground that the SDLP
had once walked on. That is because they represent bourgeois Ireland.

That is why they can occupy seats in a capitalist government and
introduce privatisation schemes into the educational system. Of
course they will oppose corrupt practices and use radical phrases but
their whole function now as a political organisation is to make
Ireland a more effective and efficient place for international
capital to invest in. That is the importance of the USA connections.

Obviously the creation of one Republican governmental system on the
isle of Ireland will reduce bureaucracy and make easier access for
multinationals to government and speed the integration of Ireland
into the whole NATO defence scheme. This will be in spite of the
desire of individual Republicans to keep Ireland neutral. Their
subjective wishes will come up against the brutal logic of
Imperialism and objective reality will always over-come subjective
wishes.

Witness the response to the Colombian Three, the Turkish hunger
strike, and the September 11th massacres. There is no way that their
principal leaderships will be identified with any radical movements
from now on. No matter how much that leadership may support the cause
of the Turkish hunger strikers they can not be seen to do so. Some of
the middle-tier leaders will be allowed to associate and participate
with safe leftist tinged causes but not the leadership. He who pays
the piper calls the tune and be under no illusions the tune is now
called from Washington.

That is not to say that the IRSP have all the answers. We don't.
It is always easier to criticise than to put forward solutions. Since
the return of the Republican Socialist Movement to its political
roots following a bitter political and military struggle in the mid-
nineties we have been measured in our criticisms of other
Republicans. While critical of the Good Friday Agreement and the
political basis of the peace process, we accepted the verdict of the
people of Ireland as expressed in referenda and persuaded the
leadership of the INLA to call an unconditional ceasefire. We are for
peace. We are for politics. We are for the democratic road. We are
against militarism. But we are not for Republicans, or socialists for
that matter, taking their seats in a capitalist government. We are
not for decommissioning and we are for the defence of working class
areas from sectarian attacks.

Does that lead to political impotence?

We don't believe so. Our politics have always been based on a
class analysis and can be best summed up in the words of Seamus
Costello, "I owe my allegiance to the working class". The working
class of all countries are our friends and allies. The capitalists of
all countries are our enemies. Capitalism is ruthless in its logic as
it breaks down national barriers and creates a global economy. There
can be no Socialist Republic built in Ireland in isolation. The idea
of a socialist paradise isle surrounded by capitalist states is a
fantasy. That is why Republicans have always been internationalists
from Tone to Connolly, from O'Donnell to Costello. Republicanism
itself was an import to Ireland from France. What is going on today
in Afghanistan, in Colombia, in Sierra Leone and Iraq, impinges on
the day to day life of people in Ireland.

In its relentless pursuit of profit modern day capitalism is no
respecter of states or governments. Hence the creation of super
states like the European Union. It is in this context that we in the
IRSP are internationalist. The international capital market
profoundly affects the Irish working class. Many of the 1200 workers
who have only recently been told that they are facing redundancies
are instinctively aware of the internationalist nature of capitalism.

It is the task of socialists and Republicans to bring together the
best elements of both Republicanism and socialism and create an
alliance of the dispossessed within this isle that can successfully
challenge the cosy capitalist consensus that accepts the permanency
of the capitalist system. The Provisional Movement has clearly shown
by the actions of its leadership that it accepts that consensus. We
do not.

An all-class alliance of nationalist Ireland, while it may weaken the
unionist case, also weakens the working class. It is a case
of "Labour must wait" as De Valera said during the war of
independence. But now it is the current leaders of Sinn Fein who are
saying labour must wait. We disagree.

Labour, that is the needs and aspirations of the Irish working class,
cannot wait, must not wait. They are the only class capable of
building a just and equitable society on this isle. That is why we
repeat the call we made a number of years ago for the creation of a
Republican Forum with which to rally the disorganised and demoralised
forces of the left. There is a way forward for the Republican and
socialist left, and we intend to play our full part in rallying the
Irish working class.

If you are radical, Republican, and working class, play your part.

Join us in the struggle. On to the Republic.


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