http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4533/the-left-and-the-people_extending-hamid-dabashis-c



 The Left and the People: Extending Hamid Dabashi's
Critique<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4533/the-left-and-the-people_extending-hamid-dabashis-c>
0<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4533/the-left-and-the-people_extending-hamid-dabashis-c#comments>
Mar
02 2012 by Vijay Prashad <http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/contributors/57116>
[image: Listen to this page using
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 [image: [The Syrian city of Homs being attacked by the army on 7 February
2012. Image from Wikimedia Commons]] [The Syrian city of Homs being
attacked by the army on 7 February 2012. Image from Wikimedia Commons]

*“The overall anti-imperialist sentiment remains strong among the Syrian
population and the attempts by parts of the Left to smear the entire
uprising as a stand-in for imperialism belies a Manichean worldview that
badly misunderstands the country’s history. I don’t see any contradiction
in opposing intervention and simultaneously being against the Assad
regime—which, we need to remember, has embraced neoliberalism and
consistently used a rhetoric of ‘anti-imperialism’ to obfuscate a practice
of accommodation with both the US and Israel.” Adam Hanieh, author, Capital
and Class in the Gulf Arab States, 2011. *

One of Hamid Dabashi’s most acidic critiques of Azar Nafisi’s *Reading
Lolita in Tehran* is that she indulged in the “systematic denigration of an
entire culture of revolutionary resistance.” A simple index for the Left is
to protect itself from this kind of amnesia. The Syrian people threw off
the violent regime of imperial France in their Great Revolt from 1925 to
1927. The revolt inaugurated a trek into Arab nationalism, whose most
eloquent energies were absorbed and distorted by the Ba’athist party that
has ruled Syria since 1963. Nonetheless the Syrian people incubate a thirst
for freedom from their suffocation by the Ba’ath regime. The problem has
been that the power of the Syrian state and the enchained geopolitics of
the region have denied them, for now.

In his recent piece for Al Jazeera,
Dabashi<http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2012/02/20122276412929860.html>makes
several important points, driving home what should be by now a
Leftist consensus concerning the ensemble of the Right – the United States,
Europe, Gulf Arab states and Israel. Dabashi suggests that this Right is
eager to poke its fingers into a rebellion only if it is able to fumigate
all the independent rebellious elements and produce a new regime in its
image. But then Dabashi pivots and turns his eye to the Left. His
accusation here is that both the Right and the Left are “statists,”
interested only in who is able to take “control of the state apparatus, of
state power, of steering (or more accurately *trying* to steer) the falling
regimes of power to their own direction.”

The problem here is not whether Dabashi is right or wrong. The problem is
in the generality of his exposition. I agree with him that the “Right” is
an entity. What divides it is not essential from the standpoint of the
Left. There are certainly non-interventionist “America First” types (such
as Pat Buchanan) who would not line up neatly next to
hyper-interventionists such as US Ambassador to the United Nations Susan
Rice. Given the balance of forces within the Right, however, Buchanan
barely makes a blip on the radar screen of power. The Rightist consensus is
for what they like to call a “muscular” foreign policy.

The Left, which is infinitely weaker, is therefore unable to forge such an
easy consensus. The diversity in the Left is far more important because, at
present, no current has a hold on the discourse of the Left. If one were to
ask of a self-professed Leftist, “what is your position on Syria?,” there
would be no adequate response. Leftist diversity is important to take into
consideration because it would allow us to have a serious discussion about
where we stand and where we ought to go.

*The Currents of the Left*

Dabashi does not specify whether his Left is in Syria or outside or whether
it is part of the Syrian diaspora or not. This is relevant given the
difference between the character of the debate outside and inside the
Syrian Left. The latter’s principle purpose is to settle accounts with the
Ba’ath regime and to move the revolution in the people’s favor. Whereas,
the character of the debate outside the Syrian Left must aim, among other
things, to lift the boot of imperialist suffocation off the necks of the
Syrian people and to prevent an imperialist intervention that makes the
task of the Syrian Left even harder.

Regarding Syria, the first divide in the Left is in the characterization of
the Ba’ath regime. One section, a very small one, takes the view that the
Ba’ath regime led by Bashar al-Assad is a revolutionary regime, whose
politics is made visible through its position vis-à-vis Israel (anti) and
Iran (pro). In this camp (inside Syria) lies the exhausted Syrian Communist
Party and (outside Syria) sits the website Global Research. Both the SCP
and Global Research take their anti-imperialism into territory that
occludes the authoritarianism of imperialism’s adversaries -- a classic
case of my enemy’s enemy is my friend.

Only the most inhumane among us would not see the bombardment of Homs as
unconscionable. Those who say this is a Civil War and try to defend the
attack on the city forget that even if this were a Civil War and *if* the
regime were actually progressive, it should not bomb civilian neighborhoods
in such an indiscriminate manner. The habit of the Ba’ath is to raze cities
and call it national integration (this is what al-Assad Senior did in Hama
in 1982). No Leftist can be cavalier about Homs.

Much of the Left recognizes that the Ba’ath regime is neither
anti-imperialist nor anti-capitalist. It recognizes that al-Assad’s
government has most often played the border guard for Israel, and
undoubtedly evokes no revolutionary good feelings amongst the Palestinians
in either Lebanon or the West Bank (perhaps a small current in Gaza, until
Hamas’ Ismail Haniya threw his support with the Syrian people against the
al-Assad regime). Among the Palestinian Left the fundamental break with
Syria took place during its betrayal of their cause in its invasion of
Lebanon in 1975. Most of the Left is also aware that the Ba’ath Party was
the enemy of both Nasserism (which banned the Ba’ath during the union of
Syria and Egypt between 1958 and 1961) and the original Syrian Communist
Party (when it was in its heyday before the military coup in 1961). During
its peak, the SCP did impressively well in the 1954 elections, scaring a
British intelligence official who moaned, “The increase in communism in
Syria during 1954, taken in conjuncture with the general trend to the left
and the government’s reluctance to take any really effective measures
against it, is an unfortunate development.” In 1944, the Ba’ath’s
intellectual godfathers Michel ‘Aflaq and Salah al-Din al-Bitar declared,
“Communism is alien and foreign to everything Arab.” It was the ideological
anvil on which the Ba’ath smashed the SCP into mute submission. And it has
been the Ba’ath polices over the past twenty-five years that have created a
neo-liberal elite in Syria’s cities, encaging the population in what Bassam
Haddad calls the “political economy of authoritarian resilience.”

If the bulk of the Left is sympathetic to an undoing of the Ba’ath regime
in Syria, there is yet no consensus on strategy. Most of us in the Atlantic
Left are, of course, not directly involved in the Syrian opposition’s
active and vibrant debates, which seek to find a way forward. Here there is
a prior question to be asked: could we even characterize the Syrian
opposition as being of the Left? The venerable Leftist Michel Kilo recently
said that he neither represents the new movement nor is he able to offer
much to it.

The steadfastness of this new movement and the resistance to the Ba’ath
regime has taken the older Syrian Left by surprise. Among the older
Leftists the struggle has opened up a period of reflection on the long-term
implications of this opening. There are a group of intellectuals who
traverse what might loosely be called the Left and the Liberal Left. This
includes people like Kilo certainly in addition to the journalist Fayez
Sara, the official spokesperson for the National Coordination Body for
Democratic Change Hussein al-Awdat, as well as the old Communists now
reform liberals Riad al-Turk and Hassan Abdel Azim. There is also a Syrian
Leftist revolutionary current, but it is largely outside the country and
lacks a mass base.

Some of them are in leadership positions for a movement that is askance
from them, with its own tempo and its own energy. What is the character of
this movement on the ground? What are its debates? Has it a position for
the future beyond the horizon of the departure of al-Assad? What is its
social vision toward the diverse matrix of Syria? These are the kinds of
questions that require further investigation. However, these are often the
kinds of questions that are put into amber during an armed struggle, unless
the armed struggle (like the Algerian National Liberation Front) emerged
out of a protracted ideological and political process. Syria, with its
Romania-like asphyxiation of the Ba’ath, perforce had a different
trajectory to insurrection than Algeria.

Leftists who are outside the confines of Syria must give their full and
active solidarity to the Syrian people, particularly to the Syrian New Left
in formation. Class-consciousness is not a thing that emerges fully formed
and in perfect condition. It emerges in struggle, filled with errors and
dangers, wearing the clothes it finds, learning to walk before it can run.
What those who are outside have to support is not this or that tendency but
the integrity of the full Syrian Left as it engages in a complex discussion
about the most effective strategy forward in a time of war.

*Intervention*

The debate in the Left outside the immediate Syrian Left should not be
“military intervention vs. no military intervention.” That is a debate
framed by the Right, to which the Left in the Atlantic world too often
succumbs. Such a debate treats as neutral the barbarism of North Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO) in places such as Iraq and Libya. Additionally,
it suggests that cruise missiles can simplify the contradictions on the
ground in places such as Syria. That human rights activists in Syria --
such as Haytham al-Maleh,who is also close to the Muslim Brotherhood --
favor bombardment of Syria says more about the demoralization of Syrians in
the face of forty years of dictatorship and brutality than necessarily
about the most effective way to both begin to uproot the Ba’ath regime by
maintaining the integrity and nascent dreams of the Syrian people.

It is here that a valid political intercession should be welcomed. It is
time to assess the character of the forces arrayed against the Syrian
people, and whether hope for an external intervention is either realistic
or to be sought. On the one hand, *Asharq Al-Awsat* quotes an unnamed US
military official that the US plans for an aerial blockade of northern
Syria. On the other hand, when asked about a NATO role in Syria, its chief
Anders Fogh Rasmussen said, “I don’t envision such a role for the
alliance.” The Atlantic powers ramp up their rhetoric at the same time as
they keep their swords sheathed. To talk about the geopolitics that
surrounds Syria (the Russian and Chinese UN veto) and the
cynicism<http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/4230/cynicism-around-syria_russia-as-smokescreen>of
Israel and the United States (who are not keen on the departure of the
Ba’ath regime) is not to deny the aspirations of the people. Such talk is
about warning them not to develop a strategy that will require a no-fly
zone and NATO cruise missiles. Saudi and Qatari Special Forces will not be
sufficient to take on the Syrian army, unless it cracks open and releases
defectors by the hundreds each day.

If no external military intervention is either forthcoming or to be
welcomed, the question for the outside Left is how best to build pressure
for a drawdown from the bloodletting that threatens to leave Syria anemic.
Is there an effective strategy toward a ceasefire? Should the Left in
Russia build pressure on the Putin regime to push the al-Assad government
toward a cessation of hostilities in Homs (a cessation is not just a
ceasefire, since it means that the troops must withdraw from the city)?
Should the Left in the United States and in the other NATO countries build
pressure for a less maximalist position in Syria (al-Assad must go)? Such
maximalism falsely emboldens the rebellion, whose members believe that this
means that the Cruise Missiles are on the way. It also hardens the obduracy
of the al-Assad regime, which has everything to lose by stopping its
assaults? Has the rebellion already weakened the legitimacy of the Ba’ath
regime sufficiently that it has had to make promises that it was unwilling
to make previously? It moved its goal posts from an abstract promise of
“reform” to “no Ba’ath monopoly on state power” at some future date. If
this is so, could a popular momentum build up toward an expedited transfer
of power and the establishment of a provisional unity government that is
under popular pressure to hold a truly democratic constitutional
referendum? The “referendum” held on February 26 in the midst of the
violence is not serious. Even the Russian Ambassador to the UN Vitaly
Churkin said that in the absence of peace, constitutional reform is a
“theoretical conversation.”

In the short term, shouldn’t the Left outside Syria raise the banner of a
humanitarian corridor run by the UN and other humanitarian agencies to lift
the siege of Homs?

*Organs of Class Rule*

Is the Left as narrowly focused on the capture of state power as Dabashi
claims? I am not sure. I think the Left is trying to make sense of the Arab
Spring, its diversity, its promise, and its perils (on that score, both
Dabashi<http://zed-books.blogspot.com/2011/10/arab-spring-by-hamid-dabashi.html>and
I<http://aidandabet.org/news/entry/vijay-prashads-arab-spring-libyan-winter/>have
books soon to appear on the Arab Spring). The Left groups inside the
nations of the Arab world are trying to navigate a new terrain where the
popular forces have energy but the institutional and ideological space is
occupied by clericalism of one kind or another. *The Left outside has to
commit itself to fight against imperialism’s habits, as the United States
and its North Atlantic allies try to re-erect their four pillars: oil,
Israel, stable allies (i. e. the Gulf Arab monarchies) and the encirclement
of Iran. We have to be vigilant on two fronts: (1) to not let our
anti-imperialism lead to the defense of authoritarian regimes in the region
and (2) to not let our enthusiasm for rebellion lead to cheering on the
cruise missiles from US warships. These two sirens should worry us as we
make our hesitant way alongside the rebirth of a New Left in the Arab world.
*

No Left can duck the question of the immediate-term and the long-term. The
questions above are largely short-term, but they do not exhaust our
imagination. There is no question that in our period the state form has not
yet been superseded. Indeed, the capture of state power remains firmly on
the table. The state is thus far a central accumulator of social wealth and
its main conduit for distribution. To remove the Left from the debate
around control of the state allows the Right to take charge of the state
form to its advantage. The case from Iran is apposite: the broad, popular
Iranian Revolution of 1979 was seized by the clerics and their allies to
forge the Islamic Republic. Other options were on the table. Concern for
state power does not mean of course that the Left has to allow the contest
over the state to be the main axis of its maneuvers. The promise of the
Left is to both seize the state for the immediate betterment of life, and
to open up a process to reconfigure society beyond the capitalist state
form. Ours is a dual mission, with one eye on the present and another on
the future.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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