http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=8293

Eclectics or Dialectics? Unpacking PSL’s Defense of Racist,
Collaborationist Tyrannies

by PHAM BINH on APRIL 8, 2013

* [image: promo]Socialists and War: Two Opposing Trends* published by Party
for Socialism and Liberation (PSL) is as thin politically as it page-wise.
Clocking in at 46 pages, most of the book consists of freely available
published material: a
reprint<http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/justifying-imperialist-interventionint.html>
from
PSL’s newspaper, a *Dissident Voice*
interview<http://dissidentvoice.org/2012/08/libya-and-the-western-left-2/>with
Brian Becker who is the national director of PSL’s front group ANSWER
Coalition, and a historical document, the Basel
Manifesto<http://www.marxists.org/history/international/social-democracy/1912/basel-manifesto.htm>.
The only original work is Becker’s essay, “Socialists and War: Two Opposing
Trends,” which claims that socialist debates over imperialist intervention
into the Arab Spring are the modern analog to the
split<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1916/jan/x02.htm>
within
the socialist movement over World War One with myself as
Plekhanov<http://www.marxists.org/glossary/people/p/l.htm#plekhanov>
and
PSL as – who else? – the Bolsheviks. (Whether Becker gets to play Lenin and
Mazda Majidi Trotsky or vice versa in their 1914-1917 reenactment is
unclear.)

The book is a reminder that seven dollars doesn’t buy much of anything
these days.

Majidi’s article, “When Justifying Imperialist Intervention ‘Goes
Wrong’<http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/justifying-imperialist-interventionint.html>”
is a Revleft <http://www.revleft.com/>-style response to my essay, “Libya
and Syria: When Anti-Imperialism Goes
Wrong<http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=1097>.”
Majidi’s strawmen speak for themselves and need not be enumerated here.
However, his underlying method is of interest. He begins by asserting that,
“All demonstrations and opposition movements [are] not progressive.”
Undoubtedly this is true, and Majidi cites the Nazis and the Tea Party as
examples. So far, so good. He then adds what he calls “color revolutions”
to this list:

“Most color revolutions occurred in the former Soviet Republics, such as
Georgia’s Rose Revolution, Ukraine’s Orange Revolution and Kyrgyzstan’s
Tulip Revolution. But there have also been (successful or attempted) color
revolutions in other countries, such as Lebanon’s Cedar Revolution in 2005
and Iran’s Green Revolution in 2009.”

What is a “color revolution” according to Majidi?

“Color revolutions usually include the formation of coherent and unified
pro-imperialist political forces, which draw upon public discontent with
economic distress, corruption and political coercion. They involve several
operations, including the creation of division and disunity in the military
and an intense propaganda campaign. … Elements who participate in such
street protests are often a small part of the population and do not
represent the sentiments of the majority of the people, much less the
interests of the working class. In fact, many participants in the protests
may not support the agenda of the right-wing leadership and its imperialist
sponsors. Still, the imperialist propaganda campaign utilizes the protests,
however large or small, to promote regime change and the ascension of a
client state. The imperialists are not fools to do so; this is precisely
what such ‘democratic’ movements produce absent an alternative
working-class and anti-imperialist opposition.”

This is a description of associated features, not a rigorous definition.

Many of these features were present in the Egyptian revolution. The
“coherent and unified pro-imperialist political force” known as the Muslim
Brotherhood rode to power drawing “upon public discontent with economic
distress, corruption and political coercion.” Their regime enjoys a much
larger and firmer popular base than Mubarak’s decrepit dictatorship and in
that narrow sense U.S. imperialism was strengthened rather than weakened by
the January 25, 2011 revolution.

Does PSL consider the Egyptian case to be a “color revolution”? Of course
not<http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/egypt-a-continuous-process.html>.
Thus, the only consistency to PSL’s method is its inconsistency.
Eclecticism is inevitable because PSL continually substitutes description
for definition.

The next step in Majidi’s counter-argument is to ask, “What is the
political character of the Syrian and Libyan rebels?” Earlier in the
article, he poses questions of fundamental importance for approaching this
issue:

“In his entire article, Binh conveniently assumes the very thing that needs
to be proven—that the Libyan rebels and the Syrian opposition are
revolutionary. This false premise, once accepted, leads to all sorts of
false conclusions. What is the political character of the NTC-led rebels in
Libya? What qualified them as revolutionaries? How does Binh determine that
the Syrian opposition is revolutionary and the government
counter-revolutionary? When analyzing an opposition movement anywhere in
the world, this is the first question that needs to be asked.”

Wrong.

The first question that needs to be asked in assessing an opposition
movement is: what is it a movement *in opposition to*? What is the class
character of the regime it is coming into conflict with and why? Imagine
trying to analyze the political character Occupy Wall Street without
knowing the first thing about Wall Street! Majidi makes this exact mistake
by assessing the Libyan edition of the Arab Spring without *first* examining
the Ghadafi regime in any detail. Doing this would make defending the
regime from the protest movement as PSL does impossible because the regime
was guilty of the very things Majidi claims define the rebellion as
reactionary and right-wing: racism, collaboration with imperialism, and
pro-neoliberalism.
[image: hanging4.7. 77]

April 4, 1977, Bengazi. PSL’s “progressive” regime lynched students
(without trial) every year on April 4 to “commemorate” the anniversary of a
1976 student 
uprising<http://www.thenorthstar.info/%22http://www.shabablibya.org/news/libyans-remember-april-7th-as-a-day-of-rage-and-grief>
.

*Racism:* Much like the Polish,
Ukranian<http://www.philology.kiev.ua/new/node/4>,
and other national minorities of Tsarist Russia, Libya’s Amazigh were
forbidden from learning, speaking, or celebrating their language and
culture by Ghadafi’s regime. Those that dared
risked<http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/11/after-centuries-of-oppression-a-libyan-minority-sees-hope-in-qaddafis-fall/249099/>
arrest
and persecution.

Becker claims “Gaddafi had a lot of support from black Libyans who
considered [his] Africa-centric foreign policy to be positive” (33). Does
Becker believe Black Libyans supported Ghadafi when he made a racist
deal<http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/libya-and-the-arab-revolt-in.html>
with
Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi to keep Italy
free<http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2063399,00.html> of
Black immigrants,
saying<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/africaandindianocean/libya/8170956/Gaddafi-demands-4-billion-from-EU-or-Europe-will-turn-black.html>,
“We should stop this illegal immigration. If we don’t, Europe will become
Black, it will be overcome by people with different religions”?

*Collaboration with Imperialism:* *Socialists and War: Two Opposing
Trends* says
not a word about how Ghadafi’s regime tortured people on behalf of the
CIA<http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2199246/CIA-delivered-Gaddafi-Libyan-rebels-torture-waterboarding-widespread-agency-admit.html>
and
its British counterpart, MI6 <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-14750998>. Nor
does it mention Ghadafi’s mass
expulsion<http://www.nytimes.com/1995/10/05/world/libya-s-leader-urges-other-arab-countries-to-expel-palestinians.html>
of
thousands of Palestinian refugees in 1995 and his call on other Arab states
to follow suit.

*Neoliberalism:* Majidi never discusses the Ghadafi regime’s embrace of
neoliberalism, so comrade Becker’s
words<http://dissidentvoice.org/2012/08/libya-and-the-western-left-2/>
on
page 27 may come as a shock:

“Following the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, Gaddafi’s government saw the
handwriting on the wall and sought its own accommodation with the West. It
adopted a set of neoliberal policies and invited major western oil
companies to do business again, once sanctions had been lifted by Britain
and the United States.”

So for PSL, it is acceptable for a racist, tyrannical regime to collaborate
with U.S. imperialism and institute neoliberal policies but unacceptable
for a revolt against this same regime to have racist, collaborationist, and
neoliberal elements or characteristics. What is good for the goose is
absolutely impermissible for the gander. When Ghadafi made deals with
British Petroleum and other western oil companies, PSL said this was
understandable and
justified<http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/libya-and-the-arab-revolt-in.html>;
when the post-Ghadafi government honored those same deals, PSL labeled it a
pawn of imperialism.

This is doublethink masquerading as Marxist analysis.

Still, the question remains: was it correct to assume (as I did) that the
Libyan edition of the Arab Spring was revolutionary and not reactionary,
progressive and not regressive? If so, how do we make sense of PSL’s
charges of racism, collaborationism, and neoliberalism on the part of the
Libyan opposition?

The answer to the first question goes to the very heart of what the Arab
Spring is – a series ofbourgeois-democratic
revolutions<http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=5759>.
Unlike socialist revolutions and national liberation movements, democratic
revolutions are not necessarily anti-imperialist; the pro-imperialist
post-revolutionary governments in Egypt and Tunisia prove this. While the
socialist revolution is principally a struggle by and for the proletariat
(in conjunction with other classes and oppressed groups to be sure) against
the bourgeoisie as a whole, modern democratic revolutions pit oppositional
sections of the bourgeoisie against ruling sections of the bourgeoisie. PSL
points to the defection of neoliberal figures like Mahmoud Jibril from
Ghadafi’s regime to the side of the rebellion as proof that it was
reactionary while remaining oblivious to analogous neoliberal figures like
Mohammad Morsi and Amr Moussa in the Egyptian revolution and Hamadi
Jebali<http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/02/02/the-imf-and-tunisia/> in
the Tunisian revolution. PSL does not label these latter revolutions
right-wing, reactionary, or “colored.”

Again, PSL’s consistent inconsistency is blindly obvious.

Having exposed PSL’s inability to grasp that bourgeois and neoliberal
forces inevitably play a prominent role in modern democratic revolutions,
what of their charges that the Libyan opposition was racist against Blacks
and collaborated with imperialism? Does this not invalidate the claim that
the Libyan opposition was democratic in character?

Historically speaking, democratic revolutions were not anti-racist nor even
consistently democratic, the American revolution in which white
slaveholders and racists played a dominant role being a prime example. The
fact that bourgeois-democratic rights were not accorded to Blacks in 1776
and that America’s post-revolutionary government ruthlessly exterminated
the continent’s indigenous peoples does not change the revolution’s
democratic character. Libya’s democratic revolution in 2011 is no different
in this respect.

[image: LR1]

[image: LR2]

[image: LR3]

[image: Salem Al-Shoushan]

*Libya’s Black Revolutionary Democrats*

The problem for PSL and all those like Richard
Seymour<http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/aug/30/libya-spectacular-revolution-disgraced-racism>
who
saw Libya’s revolutionary democrats as little more than an anti-Black lynch
mob<http://blackagendareport.com/content/obama-hosts-international-debut-libya%E2%80%99s-racist-and-thoroughly-non-revolutionary-regime>
is
that they either deliberately ignored or were blissfully unaware of the
significant number of Black Libyans fighting Ghadafi’s forces. This would
have been impossible if anti-Black racism was the rule rather than the
exception<http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/09/12/1015087/-Racism-in-Libya>
among
the rebels. Southern rebel brigades made up of the Tuareg and Tebo
peoples<http://www.temehu.com/Libyan-People.htm> were
almost all Black.

Libya’s rebels had more Black commanding officers than the Union did during
the Civil War *and*they commanded non-Black and mixed race units.

*Right: Rebel commander Wanis Abu-Khmada berates a group of rebels in the
first days of the revolution for their lack of discipline.*

*Right: Rebel commander Abdul-Wahab Qayed. After the revolution, he was put
in command of Libya’s border protection forces.*



Thus, PSL’s 
depiction<http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/natos-rebels-are-lynching.html>
of
Libyan rebels as Klansmen is counterfactual slander.

As for the charge of collaborating or allying with imperialism, undoubtedly
this is true. The problem for PSL is that democratic revolutions – unlike
socialist revolutions – are not anti-imperialist by definition, and there
is no socialist equivalent of the 10 Commandments that forbids such
collaboration on a temporary or limited basis. Majidi concedes this,
writing:

“It is possible for one imperialist country, or a grouping of imperialist
countries, to temporarily aid independence movements in the oppressed world
in order to weaken the hold of their imperialist rivals in a different
country.”

By the same token, it is possible for one imperialist country, or a
grouping of imperialist countries, to temporarily aid democratic
revolutions in rival states just as monarchist France aided America’s
democratic revolution against British colonialism. Only a
fool<http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=1263> would
conclude that independence movements and democratic revolutions in the
oppressed world are reactionary because they receive temporary or limited
aid from a reactionary power.

At the root of PSL’s litany of errors is their utter failure to understand
democratic revolutions as Lenin and Marx
did<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1905/tactics/>.
This failure leads them to invent a
distinction<http://www.scribd.com/doc/133382854/Class-Analysis-of-Upsurge-in-Arab-World>
between
the “good” Arab Spring (against pro-U.S. dictatorships) and the “bad” Arab
Spring (against anti-U.S. dictatorships) instead of realizing that the Arab
Spring is an internationalist struggle against *all*dictatorships. Every
country affected by the Arab Spring saw a fight between bourgeois
anti-democratic states on the one hand and bourgeois-democratic mass
movements on the other; every one of these struggles and movements had and
has progressive, democratic <http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=8118> political
content compared to the tyrannical governments they struggled to reform or
remove.

Supporting one freedom struggle and not another is an exercise in the kind
of selective hypocrisy characteristic of
liberalism<http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/mao/selected-works/volume-2/mswv2_03.htm>,
as is the inability to recognize the
difference<http://www.thenorthstar.info/?p=1948> between
revolution and counter-revolution; PSL does both while claiming to be a
Marxist organization.

PSL’s attempt to pass off eclecticism as Marxism is even more apparent in
its internal documents. Richard Becker’s “A Class Analysis of the
Revolutionary Upsurge in the Arab
World<http://www.scribd.com/doc/133382854/Class-Analysis-of-Upsurge-in-Arab-World>”
is a 6-page chronological summary that is as broad as it is superficial. It
reads more like a Wikipedia entry than a thoroughgoing study of Libya’s
development since 1969 when a bourgeois nationalist military coup ended the
monarchy and inaugurated Ghadafi’s 42-year tyranny from the standpoint of
historical materialism. Becker’s 277 words “analyzing” (read: describing)
Libya contain no discussion of how Ghadafi imported right-less migrant
labor to staff the oil industry, creating an unemployed
*lumpenproletariat* among
native Libyans, no discussion of the country’s changing class and state
structures<http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/21520844.2012.666646#preview>,
and no recognition of Ghadafi’s impoverishment of the standing army in
favor of irregular armies of snitches, spies, and enforcers dressed up
as “revolutionary
committees<http://www.thenorthstar.info/www.shabablibya.org/news/libyans-remember-april-7th-as-a-day-of-rage-and-grief>.”
The national oppression of the Amazigh is invisible to Becker, mirroring
Ghadafi’s racist insistence
<http://allafrica.com/stories/201103200010.html> that
the Amazigh people and culture simply did not exist.

Having failed to properly examine the context and the regime that gave rise
to protests in Libya, Majidi moves on to sketch an alternate history of the
revolution that conforms all too perfectly with his description of  “color
revolutions.” He uses the fact that the Libyan revolt could not beat the
regime militarily in spring of 2011 as proof that it was not popular, not
progressive, nor a genuine revolution; perhaps he has never heard of the Paris
Commune of 
1871<http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1871/civil-war-france/index.htm>
that
was also unable to triumph militarily, or perhaps he believes the Commune
to be the very first “color revolution” (orchestrated by German and British
imperialists, no doubt). Whatever the case may be, the fact remains that
Libya was the first instance in the Arab Spring where a capitalist state
used lethal force against peaceful protests on a mass scale – the Egyptian
and Tunisian revolutions were fortunately never tested by this kind of
wanton bloodshed. Ghadafi was the bloody vanguard of the Arab Spring’s
counter-revolution, and his violent escalation prompted the democratic
opposition led by the National Transition Council to
seek<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/02/world/africa/02libya.html?_r=0>
military
aid from imperialist powers that previously they rejected as
unwanted<http://www.thenorthstar.info/wp-content/uploads/2012/07/foreign-300x204.jpg>
and
unnecessary.

If anyone is to blame for NATO’s intervention in Libya, it is Ghadafi. He
chose to shoot unarmed protesters *en masse, *handing NATO the political
capital it needed to step into what began as a peaceful struggle.

Majidi goes on to argue that because the NTC did not have the “support of
the entire population,” it was a fake, reactionary, unpopular “color
revolution,” as if there has *ever* been a revolution in world history that
was an exercise in unanimity! As evidence of popular support for Ghadafi,
he points to a single <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ts_qHfVQw2k>
state-sponsored
rally of hundreds of thousands held in Tripoli “in the midst of the massive
NATO bombing” (never mind the fact that NATO attacked only a
handful<http://www.nato.int/nato_static/assets/pdf/pdf_2011_07/20110702_110702-oup-update.pdf>
of
targets in Tripoli’s vicinity that day). What he omits is that Ghadafi was
an unelected autocrat with an entire state apparatus (including a secret
police) at his disposal to coerce people to show up, and, most damningly,
that there has been *not one* pro-Ghadafi rally in all of Libya in the
almost two years since the regime’s demise. If Ghadafi’s support emanated
organically from the grassroots and not from the networks of patronage
created by his regime’s oil money, this would not be the case.

Regardless of what position one took on the character of the Libyan
opposition back in 2011, what is indisputable today in 2013 is that
Ghadafi’s repressive bourgeois state machine
wassmashed<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1917/staterev/ch03.htm>
 and razed <http://www.economist.com/node/21526958> to the ground by the
self-armed population organized in militias, that there is no secret police
to terrorize the masses, that
strikes<http://www.libyaherald.com/2012/11/14/sidra-terminal-strike-threatens-400000-bd-exports/>
, 
protests<http://www.upi.com/Top_News/World-News/2012/11/02/Armed-men-occupy-Libyan-Parliament/UPI-93461351866044/>
, 
demonstrations<http://www.juancole.com/2012/09/free-libya-crowds-in-benghazi-rally-against-militias-drive-al-qaeda-out-of-city.html>,
and sit-ins are now regular occurrences, that freedom of the
press<http://feb17.info/media/video-libyas-first-english-radio-show-launches/>
 and 
expression<http://www.hrw.org/news/2012/06/14/libya-law-restricting-speech-ruled-unconstitutional>
exist,
that victims of racist oppression like the Amazigh have made
advances<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-21019020>,
that unlike Kosovo NATO has no bases there, and that free and fair
elections for a legislature were held to inaugurate a democratic
republic<http://www.juancole.com/2012/08/parliament-takes-over-in-modern-libyas-first-peaceful-transfer-of-power.html>.
All of this is a great leap forward, a tremendous democratic gain for
Libya’s oppressed and exploited that vindicates those who understood the
Libyan opposition to be progressive, revolutionary, and democratic in
character and serves as an irrefutable rebuke to those like PSL who
slandered the opposition as
monarchist(!)<http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/libya-and-the-arab-revolt-in.html>
, 
racist<http://www.pslweb.org/liberationnews/news/natos-rebels-are-lynching.html>,
unpopular, and reactionary.

Even stranger than PSL’s defense of racist, collaborationist tyrannies in
Libya and Syria from the Arab Spring’s democratic revolutions is their
assertion that today’s imperialism and the tasks it poses for socialists
remain almost totally
unchanged<http://dissidentvoice.org/2012/08/libya-and-the-western-left-2/>
from
Lenin’s time. In the face of wars like Libya and Mali where Iraq-style
colonization is not the name of the game, PSL can evidently only repeat
100-year-old formulas about
anti-colonial<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1914/self-det/>
wars
and revolutionary
defeatism<http://www.marxists.org/archive/lenin/works/1915/jul/26.htm>
.

[image: PSL]<http://www.thenorthstar.info/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/PSL.png>

Standing with independent bourgeois nationalist governments as they
slaughter their own peoples by the tens of thousands because said
governments have conflicts of interest with imperialist powers is
altogether different from standing with national liberation movements like
the Vietnamese NLF who battled the
slaughter<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rBDKzcjMHEs> wrought
by French and American occupiers. The first is criminal stupidity, the
second is anti-imperialism.

Two opposing trends indeed.


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



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