http://www.marxist.com/imperialism-arab-revolution.htm

 Imperialism and the Arab
Revolution<http://www.marxist.com/imperialism-arab-revolution.htm>
Written by Lal Khan Tuesday, 12 April 2011
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*There is no future without the past. An empirical, mechanistic and a
pragmatic approach to the revolution sweeping across the region from the
Atlantic Ocean to the Arabian Sea would end up in a flawed analysis and a
disastrous fate for the mass upheaval.*

[image: Illustration:
Latuff]<http://www.marxist.com/images/stories/libya/US_and_EU_vultures-Latuff.gif>Illustration:
LatuffOnly from a historical perspective, linking the past and the future
with the events unfolding today, can one give a complete picture of the
situation and outline the needs and the prospects of the revolutionary
movement.

The role of imperialism being portrayed by the media is not only false but
is a blatant deception to confuse the masses. There is nothing new about the
imperialist aggression in Libya. Its is the same old story of a villainous
autocratic ruler, who is rather erratic and hinges on insanity, brutally
trying to drench an uprising in blood and rules over some of the largest
sulfur free oil reservoirs in the world. The bourgeois media is baying for
the blood of this callous dictator who just months ago was delivering pious
sermons to the leaders of the G8 countries who listened diligently.

If we look into the not too distant past, the same narrative was being
expressed in relation to Noriega in Panama, Saddam Hussein in Iraq and
several other military and civilian stooges of imperialism across the
neo-colonial world who got on the “wrong side of history”.

However, the main subterfuge behind imperialist “intervention” is their
rather “deep concern” for democracy, freedom and human rights. This motive
has been the main ploy in the wars and invasions killing millions in the
last century by imperialist aggression. On August 6, 1945 President Harry
Truman ordered the U.S. Air force to drop an atom bomb on Hiroshima. Three
days later they dropped a second bomb on Nagasaki. They did this despite the
fact that these were cities full of civilian and that were of no military
value and the Japanese were already defeated and suing for peace.

The arrogance of American power was put into words by the managing director
of the New York Times, Neil McNeil, who wrote that both the United States
and the world needed peace based on American principles – a Pax Americana.
The earlier version of this was the Monroe doctrine of 1823 which was
devised to subjugate the whole of the Latin American continent.

In the 1960s high explosives, napalm and cluster bombs rained down on
Vietnam. The U.S. air force dropped toxic chemicals, including the notorious
Agent Orange on forests, allegedly to kill the vegetation and deny shelter
to the guerillas. A total of 18 million tons of herbicide were dropped. In
all, the U.S. dropped more tons of explosives on Vietnam than were dropped
by all sides in the Second World War.

The more recent rewards of democracy and human rights were reaped by the
people of Iraq who had to sacrifice at the alter of the imperialist ‘Kali’
more than a million children to attain these gems doled out by the bosses of
the planet. The genocide in Afghanistan and Pakistan with daisy cutters,
cluster bombs and drone attacks are the price of achieving “democracy” of
the rich for the rich by the rich.

However, the present aggression in Libya shows a certain exhaustion of the
bestial military might of U.S. imperialism. Apart from the economic
catastrophe that has hit them, they are hindered by their failures in Iraq
and by the quagmire that has become Afghanistan. That explains why they want
the Europeans to lead the assault.

Sarkozy and Cameron, with plummeting popularity ratings at home, are trying
to play heroes and villains in Libya. They want to portray themselves as
being “on the right side of history” and with the added bonus of getting
easy access to the large oil reserves and revenues moving into the London
and Paris stock exchanges.

This won’t help them much to water down the rage of the French and British
youth and workers who have been inspired and emboldened by the Arab
revolution. This rhetoric of “saving the people of Benghazi” is very devious
to say the least. Given that Gaddafi’s ramshackle forces had proved unable
to crush the rebels in Misrata and Ajdabiya, an armed and hostile city of
more than 700,000 inhabitants was a far cry for Gaddafi’s mercenaries to
capture Benghazi.

However, the imperialist aggression will not and cannot proceed as
proclaimed. Stratfor, the think-tank of mainly ex-CIA staffers, wrote in its
recent analysis, “The test will come if a war designed to stop human
suffering begins to inflict human suffering”. Regime change has already
displaced the stated mission. Bombing from the air or the sea cannot achieve
any of the desired results. It will have to be “boots on the ground”. Even
the Pentagon is terrified of such a prospect. Mission failure is a serious
possibility.

As the imperialist stooges fell in Tunisia and Egypt the masters distanced
themselves. But now the most formidable despots are trembling in their
shoes. And here come the double standards about human rights and the farce
of bourgeois democracy. Why the refusal to impose no-fly zones on Bahrain,
Oman and Yemen? U.S. “military advisers” are actively taking part in the
repression being carried out by the Yemeni autocrat. But the army is
splitting and the Saudis are trying to develop another despot General Mohsen
as a replacement.

The core country is Saudi Arabia, the largest producer of oil in the world.
This dynastic despotism has been shaken and is making desperate attempts to
stave off the revolt that is simmering just beneath the surface.

Here there is an astonishing unanimity between U.S. imperialism and Islamic
fundamentalism. The religious right in Pakistan is so elusive about the
tyranny and brutality of their sacred Al Saud regime that they consider it a
sin to speak against this gang of former desert pirates.

However, the oppressed in Saudi Arabia will more than speak. They have
suffered the harrowing repression at the hands of this pious elite. It is
now a matter of life and death for these workers faced with drudgery in the
scorching heat of the Arabian Desert. Imperialism, gripped by economic
crisis and political decay, is acting like a wounded beast. The intervention
in Libya is aimed at cutting across the revolutionary tide of the Arab
Revolution. The Arab masses will only win by overthrowing the system against
which they rose, i.e. capitalism, and smashing all obstacles.
Home <http://www.marxist.com/> » Middle
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-----------------------------
http://www.marxist.com/saudi-women-teachers-protest-riyadh.htm
 Saudi women teachers protest in
Riyadh<http://www.marxist.com/saudi-women-teachers-protest-riyadh.htm>
Written by our correspondent in Riyadh Tuesday, 12 April 2011
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*On Tuesday, April 5, in Riyadh the (female) literacy campaign teachers
staged a protest in front of the Ministry of Civil Services, demanding full
time employment.*

Security forces asked the protesters to leave the place as soon as possible
after they were given promises that their demands would be met. According to
sources, some female teachers were arrested but this has not been confirmed
yet.

The teachers were holding placards with slogans against the regime and they
were raising their demands against the policies of King. The slogans on the
placards were: "A call to the king, enough promises", "We want your help,
but you become a burden", "Royal decree is clear, why violate the law?",
“Permanent jobs are our right", "20 years in literacy-campaign education, a
big loss for us"

Also many people protested in several other cities including Taif and Tabuk
at the same time as this protest was going on in Riyadh. The link for the
video coverage of the rally can be found on
Youtube<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HcZH2XTTu8A&feature=youtube_gdata_player>
:

*Video:*

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HcZH2XTTu8A&feature=youtube_gdata_player

  Home <http://www.marxist.com/> » Middle
East<http://www.marxist.com/middle-east/>» Saudi
Arabia <http://www.marxist.com/saudi-arabia/>


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