§ ICC Preface
¶This text of Internationalisme is taken from a series of
articles published in 1947 called Present Problems of the Workers
Movement’. We refer the reader to the introduction to the first part of
this article published in the International Review 33. In that
introduction we tried to put Internationalisme’s critique of
the organizational conceptions of the Internationalist Communist Party
of Italy into the historical context of the post-war period.
¶Having criticized in part 1 the conception of the brilliant
leader
which theorized that only certain individuals have the
capacity to deepen revolutionary theory, in this second part
Internationalisme attacks discipline
, a corollary of
this conception which treats the militants of the organization as robots
who have nothing to do with discussing the political orientation of the
organization. Internationalisme reaffirms that the
only basis for the organization and for concerted
communist action is the consciousness of the militants participating in
it. The greater and the clearer this consciousness, the stronger the
organization, the more concerted and effective its action.
¶Since the ’40s, all the repeated splits from the original ICP of Italy founded on this ruinous vision of the organization, up to today’s dislocation of the biggest of these splits (the International Communist Party (Programma Comunista)), have only confirmed the validity of Internationalisme’s warning about such conceptions.
§ Discipline … our principal
strength…
¶At the time of the parliamentary elections in Italy at the end of
1946, a lead article – which was really a program unto itself – appeared
in the main publications of the Internationalist Communist Party with
Our Strength
as its title and the Secretary-General of the Party
as its author. What was it all about? The disturbance provoked in the
ranks of the ICP by the electoral policy of the Party. One part of the
comrades, more obedient (it appears) to the memory of the abstentionist
traditions of the Bordiga faction than to a really clear position,
revolted against the policy of participation in the elections. These
comrades reacted more out of bad temper, lack of enthusiasm and
practical carelessness
in the electoral campaign than a clear
political and ideological struggle within the Party. On the other hand,
a certain number of comrades carried their electoralist enthusiasm to
the point of taking part in the referendum for the Monarchy or the
Republic
, evidently by voting for the Republic, despite the
abstentionist position on the referendum taken by the Central
Committee.
¶Thus, in seeking to avoid disturbing
the Party by a general
discussion on parliamentarism, in again taking-up the no longer valid
policy known as revolutionary parliamentarism
, the Party has
effectively confused the understanding of its members who no longer know
to what genius
to bow, some participating too eagerly, others too
coolly. The Party has blown hot and cold, and has come out of the
electoralist adventure in a very bad way1.
¶It is against this condition that the Secretary-General rose up with such vehemence in his editorial. Brandishing the thunderbolt of discipline, he cleaves asunder the local political improvisations of left and right. What counts is not the correctness or error of a position, but of impressing the fact that there is a general political line – that of the Central Committee – to which one owes obedience. It is a matter of discipline. The discipline which is the principal strength of the Party … and of the army, the first NCO to come by would add. It is true that the Secretary-General specifies a discipline which is freely consented to. God be praised! With this addition we are completely reassured…
¶What beneficial results have come in the wake of this call to
discipline? From the south, from the north, from right and left, a
growing number of militants have, in their own way, translated freely
consented discipline
into freely executed resignations. The leaders
of the ICP have told us, in vain, that this is the transformation of
quantity into quality
and that the quantity which left the Party
took away with it a false understanding of communist discipline. To that
we reply by saying that our view is that those who have remained – and
most of all the Central Committee – have retained not a false
understanding of communist discipline, but a false conception of
communism as a whole.
¶What is discipline? An imposition of the will of
others. The adjective freely consented
is only a
rhetorical flourish at the end to make the thing more attractive. If it
emanates from those who submit to it, there is no need to remind them –
and above all to continuously remind them – that it has been freely
consented
.
¶The bourgeoisie has always pretended that its laws,
its order, its democracy are the
emanation of the free will
of the people. It is in the name of
this free will
that it has constructed prisons on the front of
which it has inscribed in letters of blood, Liberty, Equality,
Fraternity
. It is also in this same name that it mobilizes the
people into armies, where during the intervals between massacres it
reveals to them their free will
which is called
discipline.
¶Marriage, it seems, is a free contract, so that divorce, separation
turns into an intolerable mockery. Submit to your own will
has
been the perfection of the Jesuitical art of the exploiting classes.
Thus, gift-wrapped and nicely decked out in ribbons, oppression is
presented to the oppressed. Everyone knows that it was out of love, out
of respect for their divine souls, to save them, that the Christian
inquisition burned heretics whom it sincerely pitied. The divine soul of
the inquisition has become today freely consented
discipline.
¶One, two, one, two, left, right… march!
Exercise your
freely consented
discipline and you will be happy!
¶What is the basis of the communist conception – and we repeat, not of
discipline but – of organization and action? It has as its postulate
that men act freely in being fully conscious of their
interests. Historical, economic and ideological evolution condition this
development of consciousness. Freedom
only exists when this
consciousness is present. Where there is no consciousness, freedom is an
empty word, a lie; there is only oppression and submission, even if it
is formally freely consented
.
¶Communists do not have the task of bringing freedom to the working
class; they have no gifts to bring. They only aid the proletariat in
becoming conscious of the general goals of the movement
, as the
Communist Manifesto expresses it in a truly correct
fashion.
¶Socialism is only possible by being a conscious act of the working class. Everything which promotes the development of consciousness is socialist, but only what promotes it. You do not bring socialism by the club. Not because the club is an immoral means – as a Koestler would say – but because the club does not contain the element of consciousness. The club is quite moral when the goal you assign yourself is class oppression and domination, because it concretely brings about this goal. There do not – and cannot – exist other means to this end. When one has recourse to the club – and discipline is a moral club – to compensate for a lack of consciousness one turns one’s back on socialism, one brings about the conditions for non-socialism. That is why we are categorically opposed to violence within the working class after the triumph of the proletarian revolution, and are the resolute adversaries of the recourse to discipline within the Party.
¶Let there be no misunderstanding! We do not reject the necessity for organization, we do not reject the necessity for concerted action. On the contrary. But we deny that discipline can ever serve as a basis for this action, being in its nature alien to it. Communist organization and concerted action have for a basis uniquely the consciousness of the militants who compose it. The greater and clearer is this consciousness, the stronger is the organization and the more concerted and more effective is its action.
¶Lenin more than once violently denounced the recourse to freely
consented discipline
as a club of the bureaucracy. If he used the
term discipline, he always understood it – and he many times explained
himself on this subject – in the sense of the will to organized action,
based on the revolutionary consciousness and conviction of each
militant.
¶One cannot require militants – as does the Central Committee of the ICP – to carry out an action with which they do not understand, or which goes against their convictions. That would be to believe that one can do revolutionary work with a mass of cretins or slaves. The need for discipline, raised to the level of a revolutionary divinity, then becomes understandable. In reality, revolutionary activity can only be done by conscious and convinced militants. And then, this activity breaks all the chains, including the ones forged by holy discipline.
¶Old militants remember what a trap, what a terrible weapon against revolutionaries, this discipline constituted in the hands of the bureaucrats and leadership of the Communist International. The Nazis had their holy tribunals, the Zinovievs at the head of the CI had their holy discipline: a veritable inquisition, with its control commissions torturing and investigating the very soul of each comrade. A strait-jacket was imposed on the parties, imprisoning and stifling every manifestation of the development of revolutionary consciousness. The height of refinement consisted in forcing militants to publicly defend what they condemned in the organizations and organs of which they were a part. This was the test of the perfect Bolshevik. The Moscow trials did not differ in nature from this conception of freely consented discipline. If the history of class oppression had not bequeathed this notion of discipline, it would have been necessary for the Stalinist counterrevolution to invent it.
¶We know militants of the first order in the ICP of Italy, who in order to escape this dilemma of participating in the electoral campaign against their convictions, or through lack of discipline, could find nothing better than the ruse of an opportune trip. To consciously use guile, deceit with the Party, to disapprove and hold one’s tongue, to let things alone: here are the clear results of these methods. What degradation for the Party, what debasement for the militants!
¶The discipline of the ICP doesn’t extend only to the members of the
Italian Party, it is also required on the part of the Belgian and French
fractions. Abstentionism was something that went without saying in the
International Communist Left. So, a comrade of the French Fraction of
the Communist Left writes an article in its newspaper trying to
reconcile abstentionism with the participationism of the ICP. According
to her, this is not a question of principle and therefore the
participation of the ICP is perfectly acceptable, though she believes
that it would have been preferable
to abstain. As one can see, a
not very vicious
criticism – dictated above all by the need to
justify the French Fraction’s critique of the electoral participation of
the Trotskyists in France.
¶But even this criticism was enough for the offending comrade to be
called to order by the Secretary of the Party in Italy. Fulminating, the
Secretary declared the criticism of the policy of the Central Committee
from overseas to be unacceptable. The accusation of a knife in the
back
was taken up again, but this time it came from Italy against
France.
¶Marx, Lenin said: teach, explain, convince. … discipline …
discipline …
echoes the Central Committee. There is no task more
important than that of forming conscious militants, by a steady work of
education, explanation and political discussion. This task is at the
same time the safe way of guaranteeing and strengthening revolutionary
activity. The ICP of Italy has discovered a more effective means:
discipline. There is nothing surprising in that, after all. When one
adheres to the concept of the genius contemplating himself and basking
in his own reflected light, the Central Committee becomes the general
staff distilling and transforming this light into orders and ukases, the
militants into lieutenants, NCOs and corporals, and the working class
into a mass of soldiers who are taught that discipline is our
principal strength
.
¶This conception of the struggle of the proletariat and of the Party is that of a drill sergeant in the French army. It has its source in age-old oppression and the domination of man by man. It is up to the proletariat to get rid of it forever.
The right of factions: The internal regime of the revolutionary organization
¶It can appear flabbergasting after the past long years of epic struggles within the CI over the right of factions, to return today to this question. It seemed resolved, for every revolutionary, by lived experience. It is, however, this right of factions that we are obliged to defend today against the leaders of the ICP of Italy.
¶No revolutionary can speak of freedom or democracy in general,
because no revolutionary is duped by general formulae, because he always
tries to bring out their real social content, their class content. More
than anyone else, we are beholden to Lenin for having torn off the mask
and laid bare the shameless lies covered up by the beautiful words
freedom
and democracy
in general.
¶What is true for class society is also true for the political formations active within it. The Second International was very democratic, but its democracy consisted in drowning the revolutionary spirit in an ocean of bourgeois ideological influences. Communists want nothing of this democracy, where all the flood-gates are opened to drown the revolutionary spark. The break with these parties of the bourgeoisie which call them-selves socialist and democratic was necessary and justified. The foundations of the Third International on the basis of the exclusion of this so-called democracy were the historic response to this. This response is a definitive acquisition for the workers’ movement.
¶When we speak of workers’ democracy, of democracy within the
organization, we understand something completely different from the
socialist left, the Trotskyists and other demagogues. The democracy
which they try to sell to us, with a tremor in their voice and honey on
their lips, is the one where the organization is free
to furnish
ministers to run the bourgeois state, the one which allows you to
freely
participate in imperialist war. These organizational
democracies are no closer to us than the non-democratic organizations of
Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin, which do exactly the same work. Nothing is
more revolting than the annexation (the socialist parties are familiar
with imperialist annexations) of Rosa Luxemburg by the tartuffes of the
socialist left in order to oppose its democratism
to Bolshevik
intolerance
. Rosa, any more than Lenin, hadn’t resolved all the
problems of workers’ democracy, but both know what this socialist
democracy meant, and both denounced it accordingly.
¶When we speak of the internal regime, we must be understood as talking about an organization based on class criteria and on a revolutionary program, and not one open to the first advocate coming from the bourgeoisie. Our freedom is not freedom itself, abstract, but essentially concrete. It is the freedom of revolutionaries, grouped together, seeking the best means to act for social emancipation. On this common basis, tending to the same goal, many divergences always unfailingly arise along the way. These divergences always express either the absence of all the elements for an answer, the real difficulties of the struggle or the immaturity of thought. They can neither be conjured away nor prohibited, but on the contrary must be resolved by the experience of the struggle itself and by the free confrontation of ideas. The regime of the organization, therefore, consists not in stifling divergences but in creating the conditions for their solution. That is to say, to promote, and to bring them into the light of day, instead of allowing them to develop clandestinely. Nothing poisons the atmosphere of an organization more than when divergences remain hidden. Not only does the organization thereby deprive itself of any possibility of resolving them, but it slowly undermines its very foundations. At the first difficulty, at the first serious reverse, the edifice that one believed was as solid as a rock, cracks and collapses, leaving behind a pile of stones. What was only a tempest is transformed into a decisive catastrophe.
¶We need a strong party, say the comrades of the ICP, a united party,
which the existence of tendencies, the struggle of factions, will divide
and weaken. To support this thesis, these same comrades invoke the
resolution presented by Lenin and adopted at the 10th Congress of the
Russian CP, prohibiting the existence of factions in the Party. This
appeal to the famous resolution of Lenin and its adoption today,
characterizes better than anything else the whole evolution of the
Italian Fraction which has become a Party. A policy which the Italian
Left and the whole left in the CI rebelled and fought against for more
than 20 years has today become the credo of the perfect
militant
of the ICP. Must we also recall the fact that the resolution was adopted
by a party three years after the revolution (it had never been envisaged
previously) which found itself in the grip of innumerable difficulties:
foreign blockade, civil war, famine and economic ruin within? The
Russian revolution was in a terrible impasse. Either the world
revolution would save it or it would succumb under the combined pressure
of the external world and internal difficulties. The Bolsheviks in power
submitted to this pressure and retreated on the economic plane and, what
is a thousand times more serious, on the political plane. The resolution
on the prohibition of factions, that Lenin moreover presented as
temporary, dictated by the terrible contingent
conditions in which the Party was operating, was one of a series of
measures which far from strengthening the revolution in fact only opened
up the road to its degeneration.
¶The 10th Congress saw, at the same time as this resolution was adopted, the crushing by state violence of the workers’ revolt at Kronstadt and the beginning of the massive deportation of oppositionists in the Party to Siberia. Ideological suffocation within the Party could only be conceived together with violence within the class. The state organ of violence and coercion substituted itself for the ideological, economic and unitary organs of the class; party, unions and soviets. The GPU replaced discussion. The counter-revolution swamped the revolution, under the flag of socialism; an iniquitous regime of state capitalism was being constituted.
¶Marx said, apropos of Louis Bonaparte, that great historical events
happen twice, and he added, the first time as tragedy, the second
time as farce.
The ICP of Italy reproduces as farce what was the
grandeur and tragedy of the Russian revolution and of the Bolshevik
Party. The anti-fascist coalition committee of Brussels for the
Petrograd Soviet, Vercesi in the place of Lenin, the poor Central
Committee in Milan for the Communist International in Moscow, where the
revolutionaries of all countries assembled; the tragedy of a struggle of
tens of millions of men by the petty intrigues of a few village chiefs.
Around the question of the right of factions, the fate of the Russian
and world revolution was played out in 1921. No factions in Italy in
1947 are the cry of the impotent, not wanting to be forced to think as a
result of criticism, and not wanting their peace to be disturbed. No
factions led to the assassination of a revolution in 1921. No factions
in 1947 are at the most a little miscarriage of a non-viable party.
¶But even as farce, the prohibition of factions becomes a serious handicap to the reconstruction of the revolutionary organization. The reconstruction of the International Bureau of the International Communist Left could serve us as a palpable example of the prevailing methods. This International Bureau found itself dislocated with the outbreak of the war. During the war political divergences manifested themselves within the groups and between the groups belonging to the International Communist Left. What must be the method for the reconstruction of the organizational and political unity of the ICL? Our group proposed the convocation of an international conference of all the groups belonging to the ICL and having for its objective the broadest discussion of all the questions at issue. Against us, there prevailed the other method, which consisted in muting divergences as much as possible and in exalting the constitution of the Party in Italy – round which any new regroupment had to be made. No international discussion or criticism was tolerated, and a semblance of a conference took place at the end of 1946. Our spirit of criticism and frank discussion was considered intolerable and unacceptable, and in response to our documents (the only ones which had been submitted to discussion for the conference) they preferred not only not to discuss them, but besides to simply eliminate us from the conference.
¶We published in Internationalisme no. 16 of December 1946
our document sent to all the groups belonging to the ICL with a view to
the conference. In this document, we have – as is our old habit –
enunciated all the political divergences existing in the ICL and frankly
explained our point of view. In this same number of
Internationalisme can also be found the response
of this
singular International Bureau. This response says since your letter
once more demonstrates the constant deformation of the facts and
political positions taken by the ICP of Italy or the French and Belgian
Fractions
and further on since your activity is limited to sowing
confusion and slinging mud at our comrades, we have unanimously excluded
the possibility of accepting your demand to participate in the
international meeting of organizations of the ICL.
¶One can think what one likes about the spirit in which this response has been made, but one must recognize in its absence of political arguments that it does not lack energy and decision … of a bureaucratic sort. What the response does not say and what is to a very high degree characteristic of the truly general conception of discipline professed and practiced by this organization, is the following decision taken in great secrecy2. Here is what a comrade of the ICP of Italy wrote us on this subject the day following this international meeting:
¶
On Sunday, December 8, the meeting of the delegates of the International Political Bureau of the ICP took place. In reference to your letter addressed to the comrades of the fractions of the ICL of Italy, an official response will be made and sent shortly. In reference to your request for common meetings for subsequent discussions, your proposition has been rejected. Besides, an order has been given to every comrade to break all communication with the dissident fractions. I therefore regret that I will not in the future be able to continue my contact with your group(Jober, December 9, 1946).
¶Do we need to comment on this internal and secret decision? Certainly not. We will only add that in Moscow, Stalin evidently had more appropriate means to isolate revolutionaries: the cells of the Loubianka prison, the camps at Verkhni Ouralsk and if necessary a bullet in the neck. Thank God the ICL does not yet have this power – and we will do everything so that it never does – but this is not to its credit. What really [is] important is the goal pursued and the method, which consists in trying to isolate, in wanting to reduce to silence the thought of an adversary, of those who do not think as you do. Fatally, and corresponding to the place that you occupy and the strength you possess, you are led to more and more violent measures. The difference with Stalinism is not a question of nature, but solely one of degree.
¶The only regret that the ICP must have is that of being compelled to have recourse to these miserable means of forbidding members to have any contact with dissident fractions. The whole conception concerning the internal regime of the organization and its relations with the class is illustrated and concretized in this – in our opinion – monstrous and disgusting decision. Excommunication, calumny, imposed silence; such are the methods which are substituted for explanation, discussion and ideological confrontation. Here is a typical example of the new conception of organization.
§ Conclusion
¶A comrade of the ICL has written us a long letter, as he says to
unburden himself of everything which has weighed on him, from the
anti-fascist coalition to the new conception of the party.
The
Party,
he writes in his letter, is not the goal of the workers’
movement, it is only a means. But the end does not justify the means.
These must be impregnated with the character of the ends that they seek
to attain, the ends must be present in each of the means employed.
Consequently, the Party cannot be built following Leninist conceptions,
because that would mean – once again – absence of democracy: military
discipline, prohibition of free expression, infractions for one’s
opinions, the mystification of the monolithism of the Party. If
democracy is the most glorious mystification of all times, that
must not prevent us from being for proletarian democracy in the Party,
the workers’ movement and the class. Or let someone propose a better
term. What counts is the thing itself. Proletarian democracy means the
right of expression, freedom of thought, freedom to disagree, an end to
naked violence and terror in all their forms in the Party – and
naturally, in the class.
¶We understand and share entirely the indignation of this comrade when
he speaks out against the building of the barracks
Party and the dictatorship over the
proletariat. How far is this comrade’s healthy and revolutionary
conception of the organization and internal regime from this other
conception that one of the leaders of the ICP of Italy recently gave us:
Our conception of the Party
– he literally said – is a
monolithic, homogeneous and monopolistic Party.
¶Such a conception, linked to the concept of the brilliant leader and to military discipline, has nothing to do with the revolutionary work of the proletariat, where everything is conditioned by the raising of consciousness, by the ideological maturation of the working class. Monolithism, homogeneity and monopoly are the holy trinity of fascism and of Stalinism.
¶The fact that a person or party calling itself revolutionary can lay claim to such a formula tragically indicates all the decadence, all the degeneration of the workers’ movement. On this triple basis, you cannot construct the party of the revolution, but rather a new barracks for the workers. You effectively contribute to keeping the workers in a state of submission or domination. You engage in a counter-revolutionary act.
¶What makes us doubt the possibility of putting the ICP of Italy
right, more than its actual political errors, is its conception of
organization, of its relation to the whole of the class. The ideas
through which the end of the revolutionary life of the Bolshevik Party
manifested itself and which marked the beginning of its disgrace –
prohibition of factions, suppression of free expression in the Party and
in the class, the cult of discipline, the exaltation of the infallible
leader – serve today as the foundation, as the basis of the ICP of Italy
and of the ICL. If it sticks to this road, the ICP can never serve the
cause of socialism. It is with a full consciousness of the gravity of
what we are saying that we cry out: Stop! Turn back, because you’re
heading for a fatal fall.
¶Marc
According to the latest news, the ICP of Italy will not participate in the next elections. So the Central Committee has decided. Is this the result of a re-examination of the position and of a discussion in the Party? Don’t be fooled. It is always too soon to open a discussion which would risk
disturbing
the comrades, as our well-known leader told us. But what then? Simply that the Party has lost many members and its treasury is empty. So, lacking munitions the Central Committee has decided to stop the war and not participate in the next elections. It is a convenient position which satisfies everyone and, besides, has the advantage of disturbing no one. It is what our leader callsthe reverse transformation of quantity into quality
.↩︎This is comrade Jober who was then in discussion with us in the name of Turin Federation of the ICP, which he represented. Since then, the Turin Federation, protesting against the method of the Central Committee, has become autonomous and in this capacity participated in the international contact conference. See Internationalisme no 24.↩︎