§ Totalitarianism and Fascism
¶The horrors of fascism were not the first of their kind, nor were
they the last. Nor were they the worst, no matter what anyone says 1. These horrors were no worse than
normal
massacres due to wars, famines, etc. For the proletarians,
it was a more systematic version of the terrors experienced in 1832,
1848, 1871, 1919… However, fascism occupies a special place in the
spectacle of horrors. This time around, indeed, some capitalists and a
good part of the political class were repressed, along with the
leadership as well as the rank-and-file of the official working class
organisations. For the bourgeoisie and the petit bourgeoisie, fascism
was an abnormal phenomenon, a degradation of democratic values
explicable only by recourse to psychological explanations. Liberal
anti-fascism treated fascism as a perversion of Western civilisation,
thereby generating an obverse effect: the sado-masochistic fascination
with fascism as manifested by the collection of Nazi bric-a-brac.
Western humanism never understood that the swastikas worn by the Hell’s
Angels reflected the inverted image of its own vision of fascism. The
logic of this attitude can be summed up: if fascism is the ultimate
Evil, then let’s choose evil, let’s invert all the values. This
phenomenon is typical of a disoriented age.
¶The usual Marxist analysis certainly doesn’t get bogged down in
psychology. The interpretation of fascism as an instrument of big
business has been classic since Daniel Guerin 2.
But the seriousness of his analysis conceals a central error. Most of
the marxist
studies maintain the idea that, in spite of
everything, fascism was avoidable in 1922 or 1933. Fascism is reduced to
a weapon used by capitalism at a certain moment. According to these
studies capitalism would not have turned to fascism if the workers’
movement had exercised sufficient pressure rather than displaying its
sectarianism. Of course we wouldn’t have had a revolution,
but at
least Europe would have been spared Nazism, the camps, etc. Despite some
very accurate observations on social classes, the State, and the
connection between fascism and big business, this perspective succeeds
in missing the point that fascism was the product of a double failure;
the defeat of the revolutionaries who were crushed by the social
democrats and their liberal allies; followed by the failure of the
liberals and social democrats to manage Capital effectively. The nature
of fascism and its rise to power remain incomprehensible without
studying the class struggles of the preceding period and their
limitations. One cannot be understood without the other. It’s not by
accident that Guerin is mistaken not only about the significance of
fascism, but also about the French Popular Front, which he regards as a
missed revolution.
¶Paradoxically, the essence of antifascist mystification is that the democrats conceal the nature of fascism as much as possible while they display an apparent radicalism in denouncing it here, there, and everywhere. This has been going on for fifty years now.
¶Boris Souvarine wrote in 1925 3: Fascism here,
fascism there. Action Française – that’s fascism. The National Bloc –
that’s fascism… Every day for the last six months, Humanité
serves up a new fascist surprise. One day an enormous headline six
columns wide trumpets: SENATE FASCIST TO THE CORE. Another time, a
publisher refusing to print a communist newspaper is denounced: FASCIST
BLOW… There exists today in France neither Bolshevism nor fascism, any
more than Kerenskyism. Liberté and Humanité are
blowing hot air: the Fascism they conjure up for us is not viable, the
objective conditions for its existence are not yet realised… One cannot
leave the field free to reaction. But it is unnecessary to baptise this
reaction as fascism in order to fight it.
¶In a time of verbal inflation, fascism
is just a buzz word
used by leftists to demonstrate their radicalism. But its use indicates
both a confusion and a theoretical concession to the State and to
Capital. The essence of antifascism consists of struggling against
fascism while supporting democracy; in other words, of struggling not
for the destruction of capitalism, but to force capitalism to renounce
its totalitarian form. Socialism being identified with total democracy,
and capitalism with the growth of fascism, the opposition
proletariat/Capital, communism/wage labour, proletariat/State, is
shunted aside in favour of the opposition
Democracy
/Fascism
, presented as the quintessence of the
revolutionary perspective. Antifascism succeeds only in mixing two
phenomena: Fascism
properly so-called, and the evolution of
Capital and the State towards totalitarianism. In confusing these two
phenomena, in substituting the part for the whole, the cause of Fascism
and totalitarianism is mystified and one ends up reinforcing what one
seeks to combat.
¶We cannot come to grips with the evolution of capital and its
totalitarian forms by denouncing latent Fascism.
Fascism was a
particular episode in the evolution of Capital towards totalitarianism,
an evolution in which democracy has played and still plays a role as
counter-revolutionary as that of fascism. It is a misuse of language to
speak today of a non-violent, friendly
fascism which would leave
intact the traditional organs of the workers’ movement. Fascism was a
movement limited in time and space. The situation in Europe after 1918
gave it its original characteristics which will never recur.
¶Basically, fascism was associated with the economic and political unification of Capital, a tendency which has become general since 1914. Fascism was a particular way of realising this goal in certain countries – Italy and Germany – where the State proved itself incapable of establishing order (as it is understood by the bourgeoisie), even though the revolution had been crushed. Fascism has the following characteristics:
it is born in the street;
it stirs up disorder while preaching order;
it is a movement of obsolete middle classes ending in their more or less violent destruction; and
it regenerates, from outside, the traditional State which is incapable of resolving the capitalist crisis.
¶Fascism was a solution to a crisis of the State during the transition to the total domination of Capital over society. Workers’ organisations of a certain type were necessary in order to subdue the revolution; next fascism was required in order to put an end to the subsequent disorder. The crisis was never really overcome by fascism: the fascist State was effective only in a superficial way, because it rested on the systematic exclusion of the working class from social life. This crisis has been more successfully overcome by the State in our own times. The democratic State uses all the tools of fascism, in fact, more, because it integrates the workers’ organisations without annihilating them. Social unification goes beyond that brought about by fascism, but fascism as a specific movement has disappeared. It corresponded to the forced discipline of the bourgeoisie under the pressure of the State in a truly unique situation.
¶The bourgeoisie actually borrowed the name fascism
from
workers’ organisations in Italy, which often called themselves
fasces.
It’s significant that fascism defined itself first as a
form of organisation and not as a program. Its only program was to unite
everyone into fasces, to force together all the elements making up
society:
¶
Fascism steals from the proletariat its secret: organisation… Liberalism is all ideology with no organisation; fascism is all organisation with no ideology(Bordiga).
¶Dictatorship is not a weapon of Capital, but rather a tendency of
Capital which materialises whenever necessary. To return to
parliamentary democracy after a period of dictatorship, as in Germany
after 1945, signifies only that dictatorship is useless (until the next
time) for integrating the masses into the State. We are not denying that
democracy assures a gentler exploitation than dictatorship: anyone would
rather be exploited like a Swede than like a Brazilian. But do we have a
CHOICE? Democracy will transform itself into dictatorship as soon as it
is necessary. The State can have only one function which it can fulfil
either democratically or dictatorially. One might prefer the first mode
to the second, but one cannot bend the State to force it to remain
democratic. The political forms which Capital gives itself do not depend
on the action of the working class any more than they depend on the
intentions of the bourgeoisie. The Weimar Republic capitulated before
Hitler, in fact it welcomed him with open arms. And the Popular Front in
France did not prevent fascism
because France in 1936 did not
need to unify its Capital or reduce its middle classes. Such
transformations do not require any political choice on the part of the
proletariat.
¶Hitler is disparaged for retaining from the Viennese social democracy
of his youth only its methods of propaganda. So what? The essence
of socialism was more to be found in these methods than in the
distinguished writings of Austro-Marxism. The common problem of social
democracy and Nazism was how to organise the masses and, if necessary,
repress them. It was the socialists and not the Nazis who crushed the
proletarian insurrections. (This does not inhibit the current SPD, in
power again as in 1919, from publishing a postage stamp in honour of
Rosa Luxemburg whom it had murdered in 1919.) The dictatorship always
comes after the proletarians have been defeated by democracy with the
help of the unions and the parties of the Left. On the other hand, both
socialism and Nazism have contributed to an improvement (temporary) in
the standard of living. Like the SPD, Hitler became the instrument of a
social movement the content of which escaped him. Like the SPD, he
fought for power, for the right to mediate between the workers and
Capital. And both Hitler and the SPD became the tools of Capital and
were discarded once their respective tasks had been accomplished.
§ Antifascism – the Worst Product of Fascism
¶Since the fascism of the inter-war period, the term fascism
has remained in vogue. What political group has not accused its
adversaries of using fascist methods?
The Left never stops
denouncing resurgent fascism, the Right does not refrain from labelling
the PCF as the fascistic party.
Signifying everything and
anything, the word has lost its meaning since international liberal
opinion describes any strong State as fascist.
Thus the illusions
of the fascists of the thirties are resurrected and presented as
contemporary reality. Franco claimed to be a fascist like his mentors,
Hitler and Mussolini, but there was never any fascist International.
¶If today the Greek colonels and Chilean generals are called fascists by the dominant ideology, they nevertheless represent variants of the capitalist state. Applying the fascist label to the State is equivalent to denouncing the parties at the head of that State. Thus one avoids the critique of the State by denouncing those who direct it. The leftists seek to authenticate their extremism with their hue and cry about Fascism, while neglecting the critique of the State. In practice they are proposing another form of the State (democratic or popular) in place of the existing form.
¶The term fascism
is still more irrelevant in the advanced
capitalist countries, where the Communist and Socialist parties will
play a central role in any future fascist
State which is erected
against a revolutionary movement. In this case it is much more exact to
speak of the State pure and simple, and leave fascism out of it. Fascism
triumphed because its principles were generalised: the unification of
Capital and the efficient State. But in our times fascism has
disappeared as such, both as a political movement and as a form of the
State. In spite of some resemblances, the parties considered as fascist
since 1945 (in France, for example, the RPF, poujadism, to some extent
today the RPR) have not aimed at conquering an impotent State from the
outside 4.
¶To insist on the recurring menace of fascism is to ignore the fact that the real fascism was poorly suited to the task it took on and failed: rather than strengthening German national Capital, Nazism ended by dividing it in two. Today other forms of the State have come into being, far removed from Fascism and from that democracy we hear constantly eulogised.
¶With World War II, the mythology of Fascism was enriched by a new
element. This conflict was the necessary solution to problems both
economic (crash of 1929) and social (unruly working class which,
although non-revolutionary, had to be disciplined). World War II could
be depicted as a war against totalitarianism in the form of fascism.
This interpretation has endured, and the constant recall by the victors
of 1945 of the Nazi atrocities serves to justify the war by giving it
the character of a humanitarian crusade. Everything, even the atomic
bomb, could be justified against such a barbarous enemy. This
justification is, however, no more credible than the demagogy of the
Nazis, who claimed to struggle against capitalism and Western
plutocracy. The democratic
forces included in their ranks a State
as totalitarian and bloody as Hitler’s Germany: Stalin’s Soviet Union,
with its penal code prescribing the death penalty from the age of
twelve. Everyone knows as well that the Allies resorted to similar
methods of terror and extermination whenever they saw the need
(strategic bombing etc.). The West waited until the Cold War to denounce
the Soviet camps. But each capitalist country has had to deal with its
own specific problems. Great Britain had no Algerian war to cope with,
but the partition of India claimed millions of victims. The USA never
had to organise concentration camps 5 in order to silence its
workers and dispose of surplus petits bourgeois, but it found its own
colonial war in Vietnam. As for the Soviet Union, with its Gulag which
is today denounced the world over, it was content to concentrate into a
few decades the horrors spread out over several centuries in the older
capitalist countries, also resulting in millions of victims just in the
treatment of the Blacks alone. The development of Capital carries with
it certain consequences, of which the main ones are:
domination over the working class, involving the destruction, gentle or otherwise, of the revolutionary movement;
competition with other national Capitals, resulting in war.
¶When power is held by the workers’
parties, only one thing is
altered: workerist demagogy will be more conspicuous, but the workers
will not be spared the most severe repression when this becomes
necessary. The triumph of Capital is never as total as when the workers
mobilise themselves on its behalf in search of a better life.
¶In order to protect us from the excesses of Capital, antifascism as a
matter of course invokes the intervention of the State. Paradoxically,
antifascism becomes the champion of a strong State. For example, the PCF
asks us: What kind of State is necessary in France today?… Is our
State stable and strong, as the President of the Republic claims? No, it
is weak, it is impotent to pull the country out of the social and
political crisis in which it is mired. In fact it is encouraging
disorder 6.
¶Both dictatorship and democracy propose to strengthen the State the
former as a matter of principle, the latter in order to protect us –
ending up in the same result. Both are working towards the same goal –
totalitarianism. In both cases it is a matter of making everyone
participate in society: from the top down
for the dictators,
from the bottom up
for the democrats.
¶As regards dictatorship and democracy, can we speak of a struggle
between two sociologically differentiated fractions of Capital? Rather
we are dealing with two different methods of regimenting the
proletariat, either by integrating it forcibly, or by bringing it
together through the mediation of its own
organisations. Capital
opts for one or the other of these solutions according to the needs of
the moment. In Germany after 1918, social democracy and the unions were
indispensable for controlling the workers and isolating the
revolutionaries. On the other hand, after 1929, Germany had to
concentrate its industry, eliminate a section of the middle classes, and
discipline the bourgeoisie. The same traditional workers’ movement,
defending political pluralism and the immediate interests of the
workers, had become an impediment to further development. The
workers’ organisations
supported capitalism faithfully, but had
kept their autonomy; as organisations they sought above all to
perpetuate themselves. This made them play an effective
counter-revolutionary role in 1918-1921, as the failure of the German
revolution shows. In 1920 the social democratic organisations provided
the first example of anti-revolutionary antifascism (before fascism
existed in name) 7. Subsequently the weight acquired by
these organisations, both in society and in the State itself, mode them
play a role of social conservatism, of economic Malthusianism. They had
to be eliminated. They fulfilled an anti-communist function in 1918-1921
because they were the expression of the defence of wage labour as such;
but this same rationale required them to continue to represent the
immediate interests of wage earners, to the detriment of the
re-organisation of Capital as a whole.
¶One understands why Nazism had as its goal the violent destruction of the workers’ movement, contrary to the so-called fascist parties of today. This is the crucial difference. Social democracy had done its job of domesticating the workers well, too well. Social democracy had occupied an important position in the State but was incapable of unifying the whole of Germany behind it. This was the task of Nazism, which knew how to appeal to all classes, from the unemployed to the monopoly capitalists.
¶Similarly, the Unidad Popular in Chile was able to control the
workers, but without gathering the whole of the nation around it. Thus
it became necessary to overthrow it by force. On the contrary, there has
not (yet?) been any massive repression in Portugal since November 1975,
and if the current regime claims to be continuing the revolution of
the officers,
it is not because the power of the working class and
democratic organisations prevent a coup d’état from the Right. Left wing
parties and unions have never prevented any such thing, except when the
coup d’état was premature, e.g. the Kapp putsch in 1920. There is no
White terror in Portugal because it is unnecessary, the Socialist Party
up to the present time unifying the whole of society behind it.
¶Whether it admits it or not, antifascism has become the necessary
form of both working class and capitalist reformism. Antifascism unites
the two by claiming to represent the true ideal of the bourgeois
revolution betrayed by Capital. Democracy is conceived as an element of
socialism, an element already present in our society. Socialism is
envisaged as total democracy. The struggle for socialism would consist
of winning more and more democratic rights within the framework of
capitalism. With the help of the fascist scapegoat, democratic
gradualism is revitalised. Fascism and antifascism have the same origin
and the same program, but the former claimed to go beyond Capital and
classes, while the latter tries to attain the true
bourgeois
democracy which is endlessly perfectible through the addition of
stronger and stronger doses of democracy. In reality, bourgeois
democracy is a stage in the taking of power by Capital, and its
extension into the 20th century has resulted in the increasing isolation
of individuals. Born as the illusory solution to the problem of the
separation of human activity and society, democracy will never be able
to resolve the problem of the most separated society in the whole of
history. Antifascism will always end in increasing totalitarianism. Its
fight for a democratic
State will end in strengthening the
State.
¶For various reasons, the revolutionary analyses of fascism and antifascism, and in particular the analysis of the Spanish Civil War which is a more complex example, are ignored, misunderstood, or regularly distorted. At best, they are considered as an idealist perspective; at worst, as an indirect support of fascism. Note, they say how the PCI helped Mussolini by refusing to take fascism seriously, and especially by not allying itself with the democratic forces; or how the KPD allowed Hitler to come to power while treating the SPD as the principal enemy. In Spain, on the contrary, one has an example of resolute antifascist struggle, which might have succeeded if it hadn’t been for the deficiencies of the Stalinists – socialists – anarchists (cross out the appropriate names). These statements are based on a distortion of the facts.
§ Italy and Germany
¶In the forefront of the counter-truths, one finds a distorted account
of the case where at least an important section of the proletariat
struggled against fascism with its own methods and goals: Italy in
1918-1922. This struggle was not specifically antifascist: to struggle
against Capital meant to struggle against fascism as well as against
parliamentary democracy. This episode is significant because the
movement in question was lead by communists, and not by reform
socialists who had joined the Comintern, e.g. the PCF, or by Stalinists
competing in nationalist demagoguery with the Nazis (like the KPD with
its talk of national revolution
during the early thirties).
Perversely, the proletarian character of the struggle has allowed the
antifascists to reject everything revolutionary about the Italian
experience: the PCI, lead by Bordiga and the left communists at the
time, is charged with favouring the coming to power of Mussolini.
Without romanticising this episode, it is worth studying because it
shows without the slightest ambiguity that the subsequent defeatism of
the revolutionaries regarding the war of democracy
vs. fascism
(Spanish Civil War or World War II) is not an
attitude of purists insisting only on the revolution
and refusing
to budge until the Great Day. This defeatism was based quite simply on
the disappearance, during the twenties and thirties, of the proletariat
as a historical force, following its defeat after it had partially
constituted itself at the end of World War I.
¶The fascist repression occurred only after the proletarian defeat. It did not destroy the revolutionary forces which only the traditional workers’ movement could master by methods both direct and indirect. The revolutionaries were defeated by democracy which did not shrink from recourse to all the means available, including military action. Fascism destroyed only lesser opponents, including the reformist workers’ movement which had become an impediment to further development. It is a lie to depict the coming to power of Fascism as the result of street fights in which the fascists defeated the workers.
¶In Italy, as in many other countries, 1919 was the decisive year,
when the proletarian struggle was defeated by the direct action of the
State as well as by electoral politics. Up to 1922, the State granted
the greatest freedom of action to the Fascists: lenience in judicial
proceedings, unilateral disarmament of the workers, occasional armed
support, not to mention the Bonomi memorandum of October 1921, which
sent 60,000 officers into the Fascist assault groups to act as leaders.
Before the armed fascist offensive, the State appealed… to the ballot
box. During the workshop occupations of 1920, the State refrained from
attacking the proletarians, allowing their struggle to exhaust itself
with the help of the CGL, which broke the strikes. As for the
democrats,
they did not hesitate to form a national bloc
(liberals and rightists) including fascists, for the elections of May
1921. During June-July, 1921, the PSI concluded a useless and phoney
peace pact
with the fascists.
¶One can hardly speak of a coup d’état in 1922: it was a transfer of
power. The March on Rome
of Mussolini (who preferred to take the
train) was not a means of putting pressure on the legal government but
rather a publicity stunt. The ultimatum which he delivered to the
government on October 24 did not threaten civil war: it was a notice to
the capitalist State (and understood as such by the State) that
henceforth the PNF was the force most capable of assuring the unity of
the State. The State submitted very quickly. The martial law declared
after the failure of the attempt at compromise was cancelled by the
King, who then asked Mussolini to form the new government (which
included liberals). Every party except the PCI and PSI came to terms
with the PNF and voted for Mussolini in parliament. The power of the
dictator was ratified by democracy. The same scenario was reproduced in
Germany. Hitler was appointed chancellor by President Hindenburg
(elected in 1932 with the support of the socialists who saw in him… a
bulwark against Hitler), and the Nazis were a minority group in Hitler’s
first cabinet. After some hesitation, Capital supported Hitler since it
saw in him the political force necessary to unify the State and hence
society. (That Capital did not foresee certain subsequent forms of the
Nazi State is a secondary matter.)
¶In both countries, the workers’ movement
was far from being
vanquished by fascism. Its organisations, totally independent of the
proletarian social movement, functioned only to preserve their
institutional existence and were ready to accept any political regime
whatever, of the Right or of the Left, which would tolerate them. The
Spanish PSOE and its labour federation (UGT) collaborated between 1923
and 1930 with the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera. In 1932, the German
socialist unions, through the mouths of their leaders, declared
themselves independent of any political party and indifferent to the
form of the State, and tried to reach an understanding with Schleicher
(Hitler’s unfortunate predecessor), then with Hitler, who convinced them
that National Socialism would permit their continued existence. After
which the German unionists disappeared behind the swastikas at the same
time that May 1 1933, was transformed into the Festival of German
Labour.
The Nazis proceeded to dispatch the union leaders into
prisons and camps, which had the effect of bestowing on the survivors
the reputation of being resolute antifascists
from the first
hour.
¶In Italy, the union leaders wanted to reach an agreement of mutual tolerance with the fascists. They contacted the PNF late in 1922 and in 1923. Shortly before Mussolini took power, they declared:
¶
At this moment when political passions are exacerbated and two forces alien to the union movement (the PCI and PNF) are bitterly vying for power, the CGL feels its duty is to warn the workers about the interventions of parties or political regroupments aiming to involve the proletariat in a struggle from which it must remain absolutely aloof if it does not want to compromise its independence.
¶On the other hand, there was in February, 1934, in Austria, armed resistance by the left of the Social Democratic Party against the Forces of a State which showed itself increasingly dictatorial and conciliatory towards the Fascists. This struggle was not revolutionary in character, but arose from the fact that there had been practically no street battles in Austria after 1918. The most pugnacious proletarians (although not communists) had not been beaten, and had remained within social democracy which thus preserved some revolutionary tendencies. Of course this resistance broke out spontaneously, and did not succeed in coordinating itself.
¶The revolutionary critique of these events does not arrive at an
all or nothing
conclusion, as if one insisted on fighting only
for the revolution
and only at the side of the purest and
toughest communists. One must struggle, we are told, for reforms when it
is not possible to make the revolution; a well-led struggle for reforms
prepares the way for the revolution: who can do more, can do less; but
who cannot do less, cannot do more; who does not know how to defend
himself, will not know how to attack, etc. All these generalities are
missing the point. The polemic among Marxists, since the Second
International, is not concerned with the necessity or worthlessness of
communist participation in reformist struggles, which are in any case a
reality. It is a matter of knowing if a given struggle places the
workers under the control (direct or indirect) of Capital and in
particular of its State, and what position the revolutionaries must
adopt in this case. For a revolutionary, a struggle
(a word
leftists delight in) has no value in itself; the most violent actions
have often ended in constituting parties and unions which have
subsequently proved to be enemies of communism. Any struggle, no matter
how spontaneous in origin or how energetic, which puts the workers under
the dependence of the capitalist State, can have only a
counter-revolutionary function. The antifascist struggle, which claims
to search for a lesser evil (better to have capitalist democracy than
capitalist fascism), is like abandoning the frying pan for the fire.
Moreover, in placing oneself under the direction of a State, one must
accept all the consequences including the repression which it will
exercise, if required, against the workers and revolutionaries who want
to go beyond antifascism.
¶Rather than holding Bordiga and the PCI of 1921-1922 responsible for the triumph of Mussolini, one would be better advised to question the perpetual feebleness of antifascism, whose record is overwhelmingly negative: when did antifascism ever prevent or even slow down totalitarianism? World War II was supposed to safeguard the existence of democratic States, but parliamentary democracies are today the exception. In the so-called socialist countries, the disappearance of the traditional bourgeoisie and the demands of State capitalism have resulted in dictatorships which are in no way preferable to those of the former Axis countries. There are those who cherished illusions about China, but little by little the information available confirms the Marxist analyses already published 8 and reveals the existence of camps, the reality of which is still denied by the Maoists… just as the Stalinists have denied the existence of the Soviet camps for the last 30 years. Africa, Asia, and Latin America live under one party systems or military dictatorships. One is horrified by the Brazilian tortures, but Mexican democracy did not shrink from firing on demonstrators in 1968, killing 300. At least the defeat of the Axis powers brought peace… but only for Europeans, not for the millions who have died since in incessant wars and chronic famines. In short, the war to end all wars and totalitarianism was a failure.
¶The reply of the antifascists is automatic: it’s the fault of American or Soviet imperialism, or both; in any case, say the most radical, it’s because of the survival of capitalism and its attendant misdeeds. Agreed. But the problem remains. How could a war created by capitalist States have any other effect than the strengthening of Capital?
¶The antifascists (especially the revolutionaries
) conclude
exactly the opposite, calling for a new surge of antifascism, which must
continually be radicalised so it progresses as far as possible. They
never desist from denouncing fascist revivals
or methods,
but they never deduce from this the necessity to destroy the root of the
evil: Capital. Rather they draw the reverse conclusion that it is
necessary to return to true
antifascism, to proletarianise it, to
recommence the work of Sisyphus consisting of democratising capitalism.
Now one may hate fascism and love humanitarianism, but nothing will
change the crucial point:
The capitalist State (and that means every State) is more and more constrained to show itself as repressive and totalitarian;
all attempts to exert pressure on them so as to bend them in a direction more favourable to the workers or to
freedoms,
will end at best in nothing, at worst (usually the case) by reinforcing the widespread illusion that the State is an arbiter over society, a more or less neutral force which is above classes.
¶Leftists are quite capable of endlessly repeating the classic Marxist
analysis of the State as an instrument of class domination and at the
same time proposing to use
this same State. Similarly, leftists
will study Marx’s writings on the abolition of wage labour and exchange,
and then turn around and depict the revolution as an
ultra-democratisation of wage labour.
¶There are those who go further. They adopt part of the revolutionary
thesis in announcing that since Capital is synonymous with
fascism
the struggle for democracy against fascism implies the
struggle against Capital itself. But on what terrain do they fight? To
fight under the leadership of one or more capitalist States – because
they have and retain control of the struggle – is to ensure defeat in
the struggle against Capital. The struggle for democracy is not a
shortcut allowing the workers to make the revolution without realising
it. The proletariat will destroy totalitarianism only by destroying
democracy and all political forms at the same time. Until then there
will be a succession of fascist
and democratic
systems in
time and in space; dictatorial regimes transforming themselves willy
nilly into democratic regimes and vice versa; dictatorships coexisting
with democracies, the one type serving as a contrast and
self-justification for the other type.
¶Thus it is absurd to say that democracy furnishes a social system
more favourable than dictatorship to revolutionary activity, since the
former turns immediately to dictatorial means when menaced by
revolution; all the more so when the workers’ parties
are in
power. If one wished to pursue antifascism to its logical conclusion,
one would have to imitate certain left liberals who tell us: since the
revolutionary movement pushes Capital towards dictatorship, let us
renounce all revolution and content ourselves with going as far as
possible along the path of reforms as long as we don’t frighten Capital.
But this prudence is itself utopian, because the fascistisation
it tries to avoid is a product not only of revolutionary action, but of
capitalist concentration. We can argue about the timing and the
practical results of the participation of revolutionaries in democratic
movements up to the beginning of the 20th century, but this option is
excluded once Capital achieves total domination over society, for then
only one type of politics is possible: democracy becomes a mystification
and a trap for the unwary. Every time the proletarians depend on
democracy as a weapon against Capital, it escapes from their control or
is transformed into its opposite… Revolutionaries reject antifascism
because one cannot fight exclusively against ONE political form without
supporting the others, which is what antifascism is about strictly
speaking. The error of antifascism is not in struggling against fascism
but in giving precedence to this struggle, which renders it ineffective.
The revolutionaries do not denounce antifascism for not making the
revolution,
but for being powerless to stop totalitarianism, and for
reinforcing, voluntarily or not, Capital and the State.
¶Not only does democracy always surrender itself to fascism,
practically without a fight, but fascism also re-generates democracy
from itself as required by the state of socio-political forces. For
example, in 1943 Italy was obliged to join the camp of the victors, and
thus its leader, the dictator
Mussolini, found himself in a
minority on the Fascist Grand Council and submitted to the democratic
verdict of this organ. One of the top Fascist officials, Marshal
Badoglio, summoned the democratic opposition and formed a coalition
government. Mussolini was arrested. This is known in Italy as the
revolution of August 25, 1943.
The democrats hesitated, but
pressure from the Russians and the PCI forced them to accept a
government of national unity in April 1944, directed by Badoglio, to
which Togliatti and Benedetto Croce belonged. In June 1944, the
socialist Bonomi formed a ministry which excluded the fascists. This
established the tripartite formula (PCI – PSI – Christian Democracy)
which dominated the first years of the post-war period. Thus we see a
transition desired and partly orchestrated by the fascists. In the same
way as democracy understood in 1922 that the best means of preserving
the State was to entrust it to the dictatorship of the fascist party, so
it was that fascism in 1943 understood that the only way of protecting
the integrity of the nation and the continuity of the State was to
return the latter to the control of the democratic parties. Democracy
metamorphoses itself into fascism, and vice versa, according to the
circumstances: what is involved is a succession or combination of
political forms assuring the preservation of the State as the guarantor
of capitalism. Let us note that the return
to democracy is far
from producing in itself a renewal of class struggle. In fact the
workers’ parties coming to power are the first to fight in the name of
national Capital. Thus the material sacrifices and the renunciation of
class struggle, justified by the necessity of defeating Fascism
first,
were imposed after the defeat of the Axis, always in the name
of the ideal of the Resistance. The fascist and antifascist ideologies
are each adaptable to the momentary and fundamental interests of
Capital, according to the circumstances.
¶From the beginning, whenever the cry goes up fascism will not
pass
– not only does it always pass, but in such a grotesque manner
that the demarcation between fascism and non-fascism follows a line in
constant motion. For example, the French Left denounced the
Fascist
danger after May 13, 1958, but the secretary-general of
the SFIO collaborated in writing the constitution of the Fifth
Republic.
¶Portugal and Greece have offered new examples of the
self-transformation of dictatorships into democracies. Under the shock
of external circumstances (colonial question for Portugal, Cyprus
conflict for Greece), a section of the military preferred to dump the
regime in order to save the State; the democrats reason and act exactly
the same when the fascists
bid for power. The current Spanish
Communist Party expresses precisely this view (it remains to be seen
whether Spanish Capital wants and needs the PCE):
¶
Spanish society desires that everything be transformed in such a way that the normal functioning of the State is assured, without jolts or social convulsions. The continuity of the State demands the non-continuity of the regime.
¶There is a transition from one form to the other, a transition from which the proletariat is excluded and over which it exercises no control. If the proletariat tries to intervene, it ends up integrated into the State and its subsequent struggles are all the more difficult, as the Portuguese case clearly demonstrates.
§ Chile
¶It is probably the example of Chile which has done the most to revitalise the false opposition democracy/fascism. This case illustrates all too well the mechanism of the triumph of dictatorship, involving in this instance the triple defeat of the proletariat.
¶Contemporary to the events in Europe, the Chilean Popular Front of
the thirties had already designated its enemy as the oligarchy.
The struggle against oligarchic control of the legislature, presented as
a stifling of the most conservative forces, facilitated the evolution
towards a more centralised, presidential system with reinforced State
power, capable of pushing reforms, i.e. industrial development. This
Popular Front (which lasted essentially from 1936 to 1940) corresponded
to the conjuncture of the rise of the urban middle classes (bourgeoisie
and white collar workers) and working class struggles. The working class
was organised by the socialist labour federation (decimated by
repression); by the anarcho-syndicalist CGT, influenced by the IWW, and
rather weak (20 to 30 thousand members out of a total of 200,000
unionised); and especially by the federation under Communist Party
influence. The unions of white collar workers had carried on strikes in
the twenties as fierce as those of the industrial workers excepting
those two bastions of working class militancy: the nitrate (later
copper) and coal industries. Although insisting on agrarian reform the
socialist-Stalinist-Radical coalition did not succeed in imposing it on
the oligarchy. The coalition didn’t do much to recover the wealth lost
to foreign exploitation of natural resources (primarily nitrate) but
engineered a jump in industrial production such as Chile has never known
before or since. By means of institutions similar to those of the New
Deal the State secured the major portion of investments and introduced a
State capitalist structure concentrating on heavy industry and energy.
Industrial production increased during this period by 10% per annum;
from this period to 1960, by 4% per annum; and during the sixties by 1
to 2% per annum. A re-unification of the socialist and Stalinist labour
federations took place at the end of 1936 and weakened still more the
CGT; the Popular Front wiped out anything truly subversive. As a
coalition this regime lasted until 1940 when the Socialist party
withdrew. But the regime was able to continue until 1947 backed by
Radicals and the Communist Party as well as the intermittent support of
the fascist Phalange (rightist ancestor of Chilean Christian Democracy
and the party of origin of Christian Democrat leader Eduardo Frei 9). The Communist Party supported the
regime until 1947 when it was outlawed by the Radicals.
¶As the leftists always tell us Popular Fronts are also products of
working class struggle, but of a struggle which remains within the
framework of capitalism and pushes Capital to modernise itself. After
1970, the Unidad Popular gave itself as a goal the revitalising of
Chilean national Capital (which the PDC had not known how to protect
during the sixties), while integrating the workers. In the end the
Chilean proletariat was defeated three times over. Firstly by dropping
their economic struggles to array themselves under the banner of the
forces of the Left, accepting the new state because it was supported by
the workers’
organisations. Allende responded in 1971 to this
question:
¶
Do you think it possible to avoid the dictatorship of the proletariat?
¶Secondly, in suffering repression at the hands of the military after
the coup d’état, contrary to what the leftist press said about armed
resistance.
The proletarians had been disarmed materially and
ideologically by the government of Allende. The latter had forced the
workers to surrender their arms on numerous occasions. It had itself
initiated the transition towards a military government by appointing a
general as Minister of the Interior. In placing themselves under the
protection of the democratic State, which was congenitally incapable of
avoiding totalitarianism (because the State is above all for the State –
democratic or dictatorial – before it is for either democracy or
dictatorship), the proletarians condemned themselves in advance to
paralysis in the face of a coup from the Right. An important accord
between the UP and the PDC affirmed:
¶
We desire that the police and the armed forces continue to guarantee our democratic order, which implies the respect of the organised and hierarchical structure of the army and the police.
¶However the most ignoble defeat of all was the third. Here one must
bestow on the international extreme Left the medal which it deserves.
After having supported the capitalist State in order to push it further,
the Left and the extreme Left posed as prophets: We warned you: the
State is the repressive force of Capital.
The same ones who six
months earlier had stressed the entry of radical elements into the army
or the infiltration of revolutionaries into the whole of political and
social life, now repeated that the army had remained the army of the
bourgeoisie
and that they had known it all along…
¶Evidently searching first to justify their inextricable failure, they
made use of the emotion and shock caused by the coup d’état in order to
stifle the attempt by some proletarians (in Chile and elsewhere) to draw
lessons from these events. Instead of showing what the UP did and what
it could not do, these leftists revived the same old politics, giving it
a left wing tinge. The photo of Allende grasping an automatic weapon
during the coup became the symbol of left wing democracy, finally
resolved to fight effectively against fascism. The ballot is OK, but
it’s not enough: guns are also necessary – that’s the lesson the Left
draws from Chile. The death of Allende himself, sufficient
physical
proof of the failure of democracy, is disguised as proof
of his will to struggle.
¶
Now, if in the performance their interests prove to be uninteresting and their potency impotence, then either the fault lies with pernicious sophists, who split the indivisible people into different hostile camps, or the army was too brutalised and blinded to comprehend that the pure aims of democracy are the best thing for it itself. … In any case, the democrat comes out of the most disgraceful defeat just as immaculate as he was innocent when he went into it 11(Marx).
¶As for inquiring into the nature of the UP, into the content of this
famous struggle (by ballots one day, by bullets the next), in short,
into the nature of capitalism, communism, and the State, well that is
another matter, a luxury one cannot afford when Fascism attacks.
One could also ask why the industrial cordons
scarcely budged.
But now is a time for pulling together: defeat brings the antifascists
together even more surely than victory. Conversely, regarding the
Portuguese situation, one must avoid all criticism under the pretext of
not doing anything to hinder the movement.
In fact one of the
first declarations of the Portuguese Trotskyists after April 25, 1974,
was to denounce the ultra-leftists
who did not want to play the
game of democracy.
¶In short, the international extreme Left was united in obstructing the decipherment of the Chilean events, in order to detach the proletarians still further from the communist perspective. In this way the Left is preparing the return of Chilean democracy on the day when Capital has need of it again.
§ Portugal
¶Although it remains susceptible to new developments, the Portuguese case presents an insoluble riddle only to those (the most numerous) who don’t know what a revolution is. Even sincere but confused revolutionaries remain perplexed before the collapse of a movement which appeared to them so substantial a few months earlier. This incomprehension rests on a confusion. Portugal illustrates what the proletariat is capable of doing, demonstrating once again that Capital must take account of it. Proletarian action may not be the motor of history, but on the political and social plane it constitutes the keystone of the evolution of any modern capitalist country. However, this irruption on the historical scene is not automatically synonymous with revolutionary progress. To mix the two theoretically is to confuse the revolution with its opposite. To speak of the Portuguese revolution is to confuse revolution with a re-organisation of Capital. As long as the proletariat remains within the economic and political limits of capitalism, not only does the basis of society remain unchanged, but even the reforms obtained (political liberties and economic demands) are doomed to an ephemeral existence. Whatever Capital concedes under pressure from the working class con be taken back; in whole or in part, as soon as that pressure is relaxed: any movement condemns itself if it is limited to a pressure on capitalism. So long as proletarians act in this way, they are just banging their heads against the wall.
¶The Portuguese dictatorship had ceased to be the form adequate for
the development of a national Capital, as evidenced by its incapacity to
settle the colonial question. Far from enriching the metropolis, the
colonies destabilised it. Fortunately, ready to fight fascism,
there was… the army. The sole organised force in the country, only the
army could initiate change; as for carrying it through successfully,
that’s another matter. Acting according to habit, blinded by their role
and their claims to power within the framework of Capital, the Left and
the extreme Left detected a profound subversion of the army. Whereas
previously they had seen the officers only as colonial torturers, now
they discovered a People’s Army. With the aid of sociology, they
demonstrated the popular origins and aspirations of the military leaders
which allegedly inclined them towards socialism. It remained to
cultivate the good intentions of these officers, who, we were told,
asked only to be enlightened by the Marxists.
From the PS to the
most extreme leftists, the whole world conspired to conceal the simple
fact that the capitalist State had not disappeared, and that the army
remained its essential instrument.
¶Because some slots in the State apparatus were made available to
working class militants, we were told the State had changed its
function. Because it expressed itself in populist language, the army was
considered to be on the side of the workers. Because relative freedom of
speech prevailed, workers’ democracy
(foundation of socialism, as
everyone knows) was judged to be well established. Certainly there were
a series of warning signals and renewals of authority where the State
exhibited its old self. There again, the Left and the extreme Left drew
the conclusion that it was necessary to exert still more pressure on the
State, but without attacking it, out of fear of playing into the hands
of the Right.
However, they fulfilled precisely the program of
the Right and in doing so added something of which the Right is
generally incapable: the integration of the masses. The opening up of
the State to influences from the Left
does not signify its
withering away, but rather its strengthening. The Left placed a popular
ideology and the enthusiasm of the workers in the service of the
construction of Portuguese national capitalism.
¶The alliance between the Left and the army was a precarious one. The
Left brought the masses, the army the stability guaranteed by the threat
of its weapons. It was necessary for the PCP and PS to control the
masses carefully. In order to do so, they had to grant material
advantages which were dangerous for a weak capitalism. Hence the
contradictions and successive political rearrangements. The
workers’
organisations are capable of dominating the workers, not
of delivering to Capital the profits it requires. Thus it was necessary
to resolve the contradiction and re-establish discipline. The alleged
revolution had served to exhaust the most resolute, to discourage the
others, and to isolate, indeed, repress, the revolutionaries. Next the
State intervened brutally, demonstrating convincingly that it had never
disappeared. Those who attempted to conquer the State from within
succeeded only in sustaining it at a critical moment. A revolutionary
movement is not possible in Portugal, but is dependent on a wider
context, and in any case will be possible only on other bases than the
capitalist-democratic movement of April 1974.
¶The workers’ struggle, even for reformist goals, creates difficulties
for Capital and moreover constitutes the necessary experience for the
proletariat to prepare itself for revolution. The struggle prepares the
future: but this preparation can lead in two directions – nothing is
automatic – it can just as easily stifle as strengthen the communist
movement. Under these conditions it’s not sufficient to insist on the
autonomy
of the workers’ actions. Autonomy is no more a
revolutionary principle than planning
by a minority. The
revolution no more insists on democracy than on dictatorship.
¶Only by carrying out certain measures can the proletarians retain
control of the struggle. If they limit themselves to reformist action,
sooner or later the struggle will escape from their control and be taken
over by a specialised organ of the syndical type, which may call itself
a union or a committee of the base.
Autonomy is not a
revolutionary virtue in itself. Any form of organisation depends on the
content of the goal for which it was created. The emphasis cannot be put
on the self-activity of the workers, but on the communist perspective,
the realisation of which alone effectively allows working class action
to avoid falling under the leadership of traditional parties and unions.
The content of the action is the determining criterion: the revolution
is not just a matter of what the majority
wants. To give priority
to workers’ autonomy leads to a dead end.
¶Workerism is sometimes a healthy response, but is inevitably
catastrophic when it becomes an end in itself. Workerism tends to
conjure away the decisive tasks of the revolution. In the name of
workers’ democracy
it confines the proletarians to the capitalist
enterprise with its problems of production (not visualising the
revolution as the destruction of the enterprise as such). And workerism
mystifies the problem of the State. At best, it re-invents
revolutionary syndicalism.
§ Spain: War or Revolution?
¶Everywhere democracy was capitulating before dictatorship. More correctly, it was welcoming dictatorship with open arms. And Spain? Far from constituting the happy exception, Spain represented the extreme case of armed confrontation between democracy and fascism without changing the nature of the struggle: it is always two forms of capitalist development which are in opposition, two political forms of the capitalist State, two statist systems quarrelling over the legitimacy of the legal and normal capitalist State in a country. Moreover the confrontation was violent only because the workers had arrayed themselves against fascism. The complexity of the war in Spain comes from this double aspect; a civil war (proletariat vs. capital) transforming itself into a capitalist war (the proletarians supporting rival capitalist State structures in both camps).
¶After having given every facility to the rebels
to prepare
themselves, the Republic was going to negotiate and/or submit, when the
proletarians rose up against the fascist coup d’état, preventing its
success in half of the country. The Spanish War would not have been
unleashed without this authentic proletarian insurrection (it was more
than a spontaneous outbreak). But this alone does not suffice to
characterise the whole Spanish War and subsequent events. It defines
only the first moment of the struggle, which was effectively a
proletarian uprising. After having defeated the fascists in a large
number of cities, the workers held power. Such was the situation
immediately after their insurrection. But what did they proceed to do
with this power? Did they hand it back to the Republican State, or did
they use it to go further in the direction of communism? They put their
trust in the legal government, i.e. in the existing, capitalist State.
All their subsequent actions were carried out under the direction of
this State. This is the central point. It followed that in its armed
struggle against Franco and in its socio-economic transformations, the
whole movement of the Spanish proletarians was placing itself squarely
within the framework of the capitalist State and could only be
capitalist in nature. It’s true attempts to go further took place in the
social sphere (we shall speak further of this); but these attempts
remained hypothetical so long as the capitalist State was maintained.
The destruction of the State is the necessary (but not sufficient)
condition for communist revolution. In Spain, real power was exercised
by the State and not by organisations, unions, collectives, committees,
etc. The proof of this is that the mighty CNT had to submit to the PCE
(very weak prior to July 1936). One can verify this by the simple fact
that the State was able to use its power brutally when required (May
1937). There is no revolution without the destruction of the State. This
obvious
Marxist truth, forgotten by 99% of the Marxists
emerges once more from the Spanish tragedy.
¶
It is one of the peculiarities of revolutions that just as the people seem about to take a great start and to open a new era, they suffer themselves to be ruled by the delusions of the past and surrender all the power and influence they have so dearly won into the hands of men who represent, or are supposed to represent, the popular movement of a by-gone epoch 12(Marx).
¶We cannot compare the armed workers columns
of the second half
of 1936 with their subsequent militarisation and reduction to the level
of organs of the bourgeois army. A considerable difference separated
these two phases, but not in the sense that a non-revolutionary phase
followed a revolutionary phase: first there was a phase of stifling the
revolutionary awakening, during which the workers’ movement presented a
certain autonomy, a certain enthusiasm, indeed, a communist demeanour
well described by Orwell 13. Then this phase,
superficially revolutionary but in fact creating the conditions for a
classic anti-proletarian war, gave way naturally to what it had
prepared.
¶The columns left Barcelona to fight fascism in other cities,
principally Saragossa. Supposing they were attempting to spread the
revolution beyond the Republican zones, it would have been necessary to
revolutionise those Republican zones, either previously or
simultaneously 14. Durruti knew the State had not
been destroyed, but he ignored this fact. On the march his column,
composed of 70% anarchists, pushed for collectivisation. The militia
helped the peasants and taught them revolutionary ideas. But we have
only one purpose: to destroy the fascists.
Durruti put it well:
our militia will never defend the bourgeoisie, they just do not
attack it.
A fortnight before his death (November 21, 1936), Durruti
stated:
¶
A single thought, a single objective… destroy fascism… At the present time no one is concerned about increasing wages or reducing hours of work… to sacrifice oneself, to work as much as required… we must form a solid block of granite. The moment has arrived for the unions and political organisations to finish with the enemy once and for all. Behind the front, administrative skills are necessary… After this war is over, let’s not provoke, through our incompetence, another civil war among ourselves… To oppose fascist tyranny, we must present a single force: there must exist only a single organisation, with a single discipline.
¶The will to struggle can never serve as a substitute for a
revolutionary struggle. Furthermore, political violence is easily
adapted to capitalist purposes (as recent terrorism proves). The
fascination of armed struggle
quickly backfires on the
proletarians as soon as they direct their blows exclusively against a
particular form of the state rather than the State itself.
¶Under different conditions the military evolution of the antifascist camp (insurrection, followed by militias, finally a regular army) recalls the anti-Napoleonic guerrilla war described by Marx:
¶
By comparing the three periods of guerrilla warfare with the political history of Spain, it is found that they represent the respective degrees into which the counter-revolutionary spirit of the Government had succeeded in cooling the spirit of the people. Beginning with the rise of whole populations, the partisan war was next carried on by guerrilla bands, of which whole districts formed the reserve and terminated in corps francs continually on the point of dwindling into banditti, or sinking down to the level of standing regiments15.
¶The conditions cannot be juxtaposed, but in 1936 as in 1808, the
military evolution cannot be explained solely by technical
considerations related to military art: one must also consider the
relation of the political and social forces and its modification in an
anti-revolutionary sense. Let us note that the columns
of 1936
did not even succeed in waging a war of franc-tireurs [irregulars] and
stalled before Saragossa. The compromise evoked by Durruti above – the
necessity of unity at any price – could only give victory to the
Republican State first (over the proletariat) and to Franco next (over
the Republican State).
¶There was certainly the start of a revolution in Spain, but it failed
as soon as the proletarians put their faith in the existing State. It
scarcely matters what their intentions were. Even though the great
majority of proletarians who were ready to struggle against Franco under
the leadership of the State might have preferred to hang on to real
power in spite of everything, and supported the State only as a matter
of convenience, the determining factor is their act and not their
intention. After organising themselves to defeat the coup d’état, after
giving themselves the rudiments of an autonomous military structure (the
militias), the workers agreed to place themselves under the direction of
a coalition of workers’ organisations
(for the most part openly
counter-revolutionary) which accepted the authority of the legal State.
It is certain that at least some of the proletarians hoped to retain
real power (which they had effectively conquered, though only for a
short time), while leaving to the official State only the semblance of
power. This was truly an error, for which they paid dearly.
¶Some critics of the preceding analysis agree with our account of the
Spanish war but insist that the situation remained open
and could
have evolved. It was therefore necessary to support the autonomous
movement of the Spanish proletarians (at least until May 1937) even if
this movement had given itself forms quite inadequate to the true
situation. A movement was evolving, and it was necessary to contribute
to its ripening. To which the reply is that, on the contrary, the
autonomous movement of the proletariat quickly vanished as it was
absorbed into the structure of the State, which was not slow to stifle
any radical tendency. This was apparent to all by mid-1937, but the
bloody days of Barcelona
served only to unmask the reality which
had existed since the end of July, 1936: effective power had passed out
of the hands of the workers to the capitalist State. Let us add for
those who equate fascism and bourgeois dictatorship that the Republican
government made use of fascist methods
against the workers.
Certainly the number of victims was much less in comparison to the
repression of Franco, but this is connected with the different function
of the two repressions, democratic and fascist. An elementary division
of labour: the target group of the Republican government was much
smaller (uncontrollable elements, POUM, left of the CNT).
§ October 1917 and July 1936
¶It’s obvious that a revolution doesn’t develop in a day. There is always a confused and multiform movement. The whole problem is the ability of the revolutionary movement to act in an increasingly clear way and to go forward irreversibly. The comparison, often badly made, between Russia and Spain shows this well. Between February and October 1917, the soviets constituted a power parallel to that of the State. For quite some time they supported the legal State and thus did not act at all in a revolutionary manner. One could even say the soviets were counter-revolutionary. But this does not imply that they were fixed in their ways – in fact they were the site of a long and bitter struggle between the revolutionary current (represented especially, but not solely, by the Bolsheviks), and the various conciliators. It was only at the conclusion of this struggle that the soviets took up a position in opposition to the State 16. It would have been absurd for a communist to say in February, 1917: these soviets are not acting in a revolutionary manner, I shall denounce them and fight them. Because the soviets were not stabilised then. The conflict which animated the soviets over a period of months was not a struggle of ideas, but the reflection of an antagonism of genuine interests.
¶
It will be the interests – and not the principles – which will set the revolution in motion. In fact it is precisely from the interests, and from them alone, that the principles develop; which is to say that the revolution will not be merely political, but social as well 17(Marx).
¶The Russian workers and peasants wanted peace, land, and democratic reforms which the government would not grant. This antagonism explains the growing hostility, leading to confrontation, which divided the government from the masses. Moreover, earlier class struggles had led to the formation of a revolutionary minority knowing more or less (cf. the vacillations of the Bolshevik leadership after February) what it wanted, and which organised itself for these ends, taking up the demands of the masses to use them against the government. In April 1917, Lenin said:
¶
To speak of civil war before people have come to realise the need for it is undoubtedly to lapse into Blanquism. … It is the soldiers and not the capitalists who now have the guns and rifles; the capitalists are getting what they want now not by force but by deception, and to shout about violence now is senseless… For the time being we withdraw that slogan, but only for the time being 18.
¶As soon as the majority in the soviets shifted (in September), Lenin called for the armed seizure of power…
¶No such events happened in Spain. In spite of their frequency and
violence, the series of confrontations which took place after World War
I did not serve to unify the proletarians as a class. Restricted to
violent struggle because of the repression of the reformist movement,
they fought incessantly, but did not succeed in concentrating their
blows against the enemy. In this sense there was no revolutionary
party
in Spain. Not because a revolutionary minority did not
succeed in organising itself: this would be looking at the problem the
wrong way around. Rather because the struggles, virulent though they
were, did not result in a clear class opposition between proletariat and
Capital. To speak of a party
makes sense only if we understand it
as the organisation of the communist movement. But this movement was
always too weak, too dispersed (not geographically, but in the degree to
which it scattered its blows); it did not attack the heart of the enemy;
it did not free itself from the guardianship of the CNT, an organisation
basically reformist as all syndical organisations are condemned to
become, despite the pressure of radical militants; in brief, this
movement did not organise itself in a communist fashion because it did
not act in a communist fashion. The Spanish example demonstrates that
the intensity of the class struggle – indisputable in Spain – does not
automatically induce communist action, and thus the revolutionary party
to keep the action going. The Spanish proletarians were never reluctant
to sacrifice their lives (sometimes to no purpose), but never surmounted
the barrier which separated them from an attack against Capital (the
State, the commercial economic system). They took up arms, they took
spontaneous initiatives (libertarian communes before 1936,
collectivisations after), but did not go further. Very quickly they
yielded control over the militias to the Central Committee of the
Militias. Neither this organ, nor any other organ which emerged in this
fashion in Spain, can be compared to the Russian soviets. The
ambiguous position of the CC of the Militias,
simultaneously an
important appendage of the Generalidad
(Catalan government) and
a sort of coordinating committee for the various antifascist military
organisations,
implied its integration into the State, because it
was vulnerable to those organisations which were disputing over
(capitalist) State power 19.
¶In Russia there was a struggle between a radical minority which was
organised and capable of formulating the revolutionary perspective, and
the majority in the soviets. In Spain, the radical elements, whatever
they may have believed, accepted the position of the majority: Durruti
sallied forth to struggle against Franco, leaving the State intact
behind him. When the radicals did oppose the State, they did not seek to
destroy the workers’
organisations which were betraying
them (including the CNT and the POUM). The essential difference, the
reason why there was no Spanish October
was the absence in Spain
of a true contradiction of interests between the proletarians and the
State. Objectively,
proletariat and Capital are in opposition,
but this opposition exists at the level of principles, which doesn’t
coincide here with reality. In its effective social movement, the
Spanish proletariat was not compelled to confront, as a block, Capital
and the State. In Spain there were no burning demands, demands felt to
be absolutely necessary, which could force the workers to attack the
State in order to obtain them (as in Russia where one had peace, land,
etc.). This non-antagonistic situation was connected with the absence of
a party,
an absence which weighed heavily on events, preventing
the antagonism from ripening and bursting later. Compared to the
instability in Russia between February and October, Spain presented
itself as a situation on the road to normalisation from the beginning of
August 1936. If the army of the Russian State disintegrated after
February 1917, that of the Spanish State recomposed itself after July
1936, although in a new, popular
form.
§ The Paris Commune
¶One comparison (among others) demands attention and compels us to
criticise the usual Marxist view, which happens to be that of Marx
himself. After the Paris Commune, Marx drew his famous lesson: the
working class cannot simply lay hold of the ready-made State machinery,
and wield it for its own purposes 20.
But Marx failed
to establish clearly the distinction between the insurrectional movement
dating from March 18, 1871, and its later transformation, finalised by
the election of the Commune
on March 26. The formula Paris
Commune
includes both and conceals the evolution. The initial
movement was certainly revolutionary, in spite of its confusion, and
extended the social struggles of the Empire. But this movement was
willing next to give itself a political structure and a capitalist
social content. In effect the elected Commune changed only the exterior
forms of bourgeois democracy. If the bureaucracy and the permanent army
had become characteristic features of the capitalist State, they still
did not constitute its essence. Marx observed that:
¶
The Commune made that catchword of bourgeois revolutions, cheap government, a reality, destroying the two greatest sources of expenditure: the permanent army and the State bureaucracy 21.
¶As is well known, the elected Commune was largely dominated by
bourgeois republicans. The communists, cautious and few in number, had
formerly been obliged to express themselves in the republican press, so
weak was their own organisation, and did not carry much weight in the
life of the elected Commune. As for the program of the Commune – this is
the decisive criterion – we know it prefigured uniquely that of the
Third Republic. Even without any Machiavellianism on the part of the
bourgeoisie, the war of Paris against Versailles (very badly executed,
and not by chance) served to drain the revolutionary content and direct
the initial movement towards purely military activity. It is curious to
note that Marx defined the governmental form of the Commune above all by
its mode of operation, rather than what it effectively did. It was
indeed the true representation of all the healthy elements of French
society, and therefore the true national government
– but a
capitalist government, and not at all a workers’ government 22.
We shall not be able to study
here why Marx adopted such a contradictory position (at least in public,
for the First International, because he showed himself more critical in
private) 23. In any case, the mechanism for
stifling the revolutionary movement resembled that of 1936. As in 1871,
the Spanish Republic used as cannon fodder the Spanish and foreign
radical elements (naturally those most inclined to destroy fascism)
without fighting seriously itself, without using all the resources at
its disposal. In the absence of a class analysis of this power (as in
the example of 1871), these facts appear as errors,
indeed
treasons,
but never in their own logic.
§ Mexico
¶Another parallel is possible. During the Mexican bourgeois
revolution, the major portion of the organised working class was for a
time associated with the democratic and progressive State in order to
push the bourgeoisie forward and assure its own interests as wage
earners within Capital. The red battalions
of 1915-1916
represented the military alliance between the union movement and the
State, headed at the time by Carranza. Founded in 1912, the Casa del
Obrero Mundial decided to suspend the professional union
organisation
and struggle alongside the Republican State against
the bourgeoisie and its immediate allies, the military professionals
and the clergy.
A section of the workers’ movement refused and
violently opposed the COM and its ally, the State. The COM tried to
unionise all types of workers in the constitutionalist zones with the
backing of the army.
The red battalions fought simultaneously
against the other political forces aspiring to control the capitalist
State (reactionaries
) and against the rebel peasants and radical
workers 24.
¶It is curious to note that these battalions organised themselves
according to occupation or trade (typographers, railway workers, etc.).
In the Spanish war, some of the militias also carried the names of
trades. Similarly, in 1832, the Lyon insurrection saw the textile
workers organised into groups according to the hierarchy of labour: the
workers were mustered into workshop groups commanded by foremen. By such
means the wage-earners rose up in arms as wage earners to defend the
existing system of labour against the encroachments
(Marx) of
Capital. A difference in kind separates the revolt of 1832, directed
against the State, from the Mexican and Spanish examples where the
organised workers supported the State. But the point is to understand
the persistence of working class struggle on the basis of the
organisation of labour as such. Whether it integrates itself or not into
the State, such a struggle is doomed to failure, either by absorption
into the State or by repression under it. The communist movement can
conquer only if the proletarians go beyond the elementary uprising (even
armed) which does not attack wage labour itself. The wage earners can
only lead the armed struggle by destroying themselves as wage
earners.
§ Imperialist War
¶In order to have a revolution, it is necessary that there be at least
the beginning of an attack against the roots of society: the State and
the economic organisation. This is what happened in Russia starting from
February 1917 and accelerating little by little… One cannot speak of
such a beginning in Spain, where the proletarians submitted to the
State. From the beginning, everything they did (military struggle
against Franco, social transformations) was carried out under the aegis
of Capital. The best proof of this is the rapid development of those
activities which the antifascists of the Left are incapable of
explaining. The military struggle quickly turned to statist bourgeois
methods which were accepted by the extreme Left on the grounds of
efficiency (and which were almost always proven to be inefficient). The
democratic State can no more carry on armed struggle against fascism
than it can prevent it from coming to power peacefully. It is perfectly
normal for a bourgeois Republican State to reject the use of methods of
social struggle required to demoralise the enemy and reconcile itself
instead to a traditional war of fronts, where it stands no chance faced
with a modern army, better equipped and trained for this type of combat.
As for the socialisations and collectivisations, they likewise lacked
the driving force of communism, in particular because the
non-destruction of the State prevented them from organising an
anti-mercantile economy at the level of the whole of society, and
isolated them into a series of precariously juxtaposed communities
lacking common action. The State soon re-established its authority.
Consequently there was no revolution or even the beginnings of one in
Spain after August 1936. On the contrary the movement towards revolution
was increasingly obstructed and its renewal increasingly improbable. It
is striking to note that in May, 1937, the proletarians again pulled
themselves together to oppose the State (this time the democratic State)
by armed insurrection, but did not succeed in prolonging the battle to
the point of rupture with the State. After having submitted to the legal
State in 1936, the proletarians were able to shake the foundations of
this State in May, 1937, only to yield before the representative
organisations which urged them to lay down their arms. The proletarians
confronted the State, but did not destroy it. They accepted the counsels
of moderation from the POUM and the CNT: even the radical group
Friends of Durruti
did not call for the destruction of these
counter-revolutionary organisations.
¶We may speak of war in Spain, but not of revolution. The primary
function of this war was to solve a capitalist problem: the construction
of a legitimate State in Spain which would develop its national Capital
in the most efficient manner possible while integrating the proletariat.
Viewed from this angle, the analyses of the sociological composition of
the two opposing armies is largely irrelevant, like those analyses which
measure the proletarian
character of a party by the percentage of
workers among its members. Such facts are real enough and must be taken
into account, but are secondary in comparison to the social function of
what we are trying to understand. A party with a working class
membership which supports capitalism is counter-revolutionary. The
Spanish Republican army, which included certainly a great number of
workers but fought for capitalist objectives, was no more revolutionary
than Franco’s army.
¶The formula imperialist war
as applied to this conflict will
shock those who associate imperialism with the struggle for economic
domination, pure and simple. But the underlying purpose of imperialist
wars, from 1914-1918 to the present, is to resolve both the economic and
social contradictions of Capital, eliminating the potential tendency
towards the communist movement. It scarcely matters than in Spain the
war was not directly concerned with fighting over markets. The war
served to polarise the proletarians of the entire world, in both the
fascist and democratic countries, around the opposition
fascism/antifascism. Thus was the Holy Alliance of 1939-1945 prepared.
The economic and strategic motives were not, however, lacking. It was
necessary for the opposing camps, which were not yet well defined, to
win themselves allies or create benevolent neutrals, and to probe the
solidity of alliances. Also it was quite normal for Spain not to
participate in World War II. Spain had no need to do so, having solved
her own social problem by the double crushing (democratic and fascist)
of the proletarians in her own war; her economic problem was decided by
the victory of the conservative capitalist forces which proceeded to
limit the development of the forces of production in order to avoid a
social explosion. But again, contrary to all ideology, this
anti-capitalist, feudal
fascism began to develop the Spanish
economy in the sixties, in spite of itself.
§ Acronyms
§ Chile
- UP – Unidad Popular (electoral coalition of Socialist, Communist, and Radical parties with several smaller groups)
- CGT – Confederación General de Trabajadores
§ France
- PCF – Parti Communiste Français
- SFIO – Section française de l’Internationale ouvrière
§ Germany
- SPD – Sozialdemokratische Partei Deutschlands
- KPD – Kommunistische Partei Deutschlands
§ Italy
- PCI – Partito Comunista Italiano
- PSI – Partito Socialista Italiano
- PNF – Partito Nazionale Fascista
- CGL – Confederazione Generale del Lavoro
§ Portugal
- PCP – Partido Comunista Português
- PSP – Partido Socialista Português
§ Spain
- CNT – Confederación Nacional del Trabajo
- PSOE – Partido Socialista Obrero Español
- POUM – Partido Obrero de Unificación Marxista
- PCE – Partido Comunista de España
- UGT – Unión General de Trabajadores
Public opinion does not condemn Nazism so much for its horrors, because since then other States – in fact the capitalist organisation of the world economy – have proven to be just as destructive of human life, through wars and artificial famines, as the Nazis. Rather Nazism is condemned because it acted deliberately, because it was consciously willed, because it decided to exterminate the Jews. No one is responsible for famines which decimate whole peoples, but the Nazis – they wanted to exterminate. In order to eradicate this absurd moralism, one must have a materialist conception of the concentration camps. They were not the product of a world gone mad. On the contrary, they obeyed normal capitalist logic applied in special circumstances. Both in their origin and in their operation, the camps belonged to the capitalist world…↩︎
Daniel Guerin, Fascism and Big Business, New York (1973).↩︎
Bulletin communiste, Nov. 27, 1925. Boris Souvarine was born in Kiev in 1895 but emigrated to France at an early age. A self-educated worker, he was one of the founders of the Comintern and the PCF, but was expelled from both organisations in 1924 for leftist deviations.↩︎
Rassemblement du Peuple Français (RPF), a Gaullist party (1947-1952). Poujadism, a right-wing petty bourgeois movement of the 4th Republic. Rassemblement pour la République (RPR), a contemporary Gaullist party.↩︎
100,000 Japanese were interned in camps in the USA during World War II, but there was no need to liquidate them.↩︎
Humanité, March 6, 1972.↩︎
The Kapp Putsch of 1920 was defeated by a general strike, but the insurrection in the Ruhr which broke out immediately following and which aspired to go beyond the defence of democracy was repressed on behalf of the State… by the army which had just supported the putsch.↩︎
Simon Leys, The Chairman’s New Clothes: Mao and the Cultural Revolution, London (1977).↩︎
This support ranging from the extreme right to the left should not be surprising. It’s common enough for Latin American Communist parties to support military or dictatorial regimes on the grounds they are
progressive
in the sense of supporting the Allies during World War II, developing national capitalism, or making concessions to the workers. Cf. Victor Alba, Politics & the Labor Movement in Latin America, Stanford (1968). Maoists and Trotskyists often behave the same way, e.g. in Bolivia.↩︎Le Monde, Feb. 7-8 (1971).↩︎
Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, International, New York (1972), p. 54.↩︎
Marx & Engels, Collected Works 13, Lawrence & Wishart, London (1980), p. 340.↩︎
George Orwell, Homage to Catalonia, London (1938).↩︎
Abel Paz, Durruti: The People Armed, Black Rose Books, Montreal (1976).↩︎
Marx & Engels, Collected Works 13, London (1980), p. 422.↩︎
Oskar Anweiler, The Soviets: The Russian Workers, Peasants, and Soldiers Councils 1905-1921, New York (1974).↩︎
Marx & Engels, Écrits militaires, L’Herne (1970), p. 143.↩︎
V.I. Lenin, Collected Works 24, Moscow (1964), p, 236.↩︎
C. Semprún Maura, Révolution et contre-révolution en Catalogne, Mame (1974), pp, 53-60.↩︎
Marx & Engels, Writings on the Paris Commune, Monthly Review, New York (1971), p. 70.↩︎
Ibid., pp. 75-76,↩︎
Ibid., p. 80.↩︎
Saul K. Padover, ed., The Letters of Karl Marx, Prentice-Hall (1979), pp 333-335.↩︎
A. Nunes, Les révolutions du Mexique, Flammarion (1975), pp. 01-2.↩︎