¶More than a conference of delegates from the Socialist parties of the neutral nations is needed to re-organize the International. Such a conference cannot even be an instrument for peace, for now that all the high-sounding resolutions of the Social-Democracy have become mere empty talk, no one feels any respect for its power.
¶Even if the leaders of all Socialist parties should meet when the war
is over, fall about each others’ necks and forgive each other their
nationalist sins, their International
would be nothing more than
an International of Leaders for the protection of common interests. An
International that obediently falls apart into opposing national armies
when the Bourgeoisie demands war for the support of its interests is no
real International of Labor. The International of the Proletariat is
possible only when founded upon incessant opposition and increasing
struggle against the ruling classes. The first condition for a real
international policy of the Proletariat is the tactic of the
class-struggle, the emphatic denial of all opportunism in inner
politics.
¶But more than this we must take up the fight against war, not with resolutions but by doing everything in our power to prevent war. To prevent war the working-class needs mental power and material power. The creation of this power alone can make possible a re-organization of the International.
¶Mental power is necessary. As long as a ruling class can so influence
their minds that the workers will take up arms against other nations, so
long will it be impossible to prevent wars. As long as bourgeois
theories and catchwords can sweep the workers into the tide of war and
war-enthusiasm, so long will the ranks of the laboring class be
disrupted again and again, so long will Socialism be a dream. One of
these bourgeois catchwords is that of Wars of Defense.
§ THE WAR OF DEFENSE
¶A number of American Socialists have expressed the opinion that the German Social Democrats were to blame for having failed to hinder the war; on the other hand they maintain that the French and Belgian comrades were absolutely justified in defending their country when it was attacked.
¶If this judgment, which fundamentally arises out of an already fixed attitude in favor of one nation and against the other, was right, then the German comrades would stand exonerated, along with those of France and Belgium. For in Germany every worker and every Social Democrat was absolutely convinced that his nation was in danger of invasion by the enemy. They believed, as firmly as did the French Socialists, that they were taking up arms only for defense.
¶Who was right? Who was wrong? First let us look at France. For more
than twenty years France has been in a firm alliance with Russia. In
1902 came the understanding with England, the Entente, settling
all old conflicts with England, France, choosing sides with England in
the growing antagonism between England and Germany. By France we here
mean the French government, the clique of politicians, controlled by
High Finance, doing the bidding of the money-wolves, and controlling
Parliament by a corrupt party machine. The people have just as little
influence in France as in Germany or in England. Of these governments we
speak When we discuss the conflicts and alliances of France, England,
Germany and Russia. The objects of their conflicts are always foreign
lands which they desire to control as colonies or as spheres of
influence,
seeking tremendous profits for their own capital. The
Entente of 1902, for instance, consisted merely of an
understanding concerning Egypt and Morocco, France relinquishing its
claims upon Egypt and turning it over to the English, who have occupied
it since 1882; England, on the other hand, turning over Morocco to the
French capitalists. But here a new claimant came to the front. Germany
demanded the right to be heard. The English author Brailsford, whose
book, The War of Steel and Gold (appearing shortly before the
war) presents in its first part an excellent exposition of the economic
foundations of Imperialism and modern politics, says:
¶
The German thesis was perfectly simple, and in principle defensible. It was that France and Britain had no right by an exclusive bargain to settle the fate of Morocco without consulting other Powers. The answer of the French and British press was more plausible than convincing. It was our case that as what we call thetradeof Morocco is mainly in French and British hands, Germany was not in any real sense an interested party. Thetradeof Morocco, if by that word is meant the exchange of European manufactured goods against the raw produce of its agriculture, is at best inconsiderable. No one would risk the lives of soldiers and the money of taxpayers for the sake of the Moroccan market. What matters in Morocco is the wealth of its virgin mines. This was an open field, and here Germany has as good or bad a claim as anyone else. A German firm, the Mannesmann Brothers, could indeed boast that it had obtained an exclusive concession to work all the mines of Morocco in return for money which it had lent to an embarrassed Sultan during its civil wars. That this was the real issue is proved by the terms which were more than once discussed between Paris and Berlin for the settlement of the dispute. A détente or provisional settlement of the dispute was concluded in 1910, which had only one clause–that German finance would share with French finance in the various undertakings and companies, which aimed atopening upMorocco by ports, railways, mines and other public works. No effect was ever given to this undertaking, and German irritation at the delays of French diplomacy and French finance culminated in the despatch of the gunboat Panther to Agadir as a prelude to furtherconversations.Had M. Caillaux remained in power we know, from the subsequent investigations before the Senate’s Committee, how these conversations would have ended. They would have effected not merely an adjustment of French and German colonial interests, but a general understanding which would have covered the whole field of German-Franco relations. The points on which he had begun to negotiate were all economic, and chief among them was a proposal to put an end to the boycott by French finance of the Baghdad railway, and to admit German securities to quotation on the Paris exchange.
¶Like two hungry beasts that have both fastened their eyes upon the
same prey, these governments watch and stealthily follow each other,
growling and threatening, now ready to attack, now retreating–and then,
when suddenly the whole pack springs up, jumping upon each others’
backs, throttling and biting, shall the priest come and decide: this one
here is to blame, he was the first to spring; the others are merely
defending themselves? Among the servants of French capital it was
Delcassé above all who strove, together with King Edward, to isolate
Germany, to rivet more firmly the ring of its opponents, to loosen the
bonds that bound it to its allies. Germany felt itself penned in,
was hindered on all sides in its efforts towards expansion of the
Entente powers. This was true at the time of the Agadir crisis,
when Lloyd George threatened in his Mansion House speech that England
stood ready to place its armed strength at the disposal of France, and
urged Germany to retreat. It is worthy of special notice that this
threat, which might have precipitated war at that time, was agreed upon
by three persons only, Asquith, Grey and Lloyd George: that is, the
English Parliamentary government! This autocratic attitude on the part
of three English ministers is one of the causes of the present war: For
it left with the German bourgeoisie the firm conviction that its
enemies, in order to prevent the growth of Germany, had prepared to
surround it with an ever increasing force, until the hour should come
when they were ready to pounce upon it.
¶The immediate cause of the war came from the East. France was drawn
in as an ally of Russia. This alliance chained it fast to Russia; we
could speak of a French defense only if Russia as well had been forced
to defend itself against a German attack. Was this the case? The first
to attack was Austria, when it presented its ultimatum to Servia and
declared war. Russia stood behind Servia and threatened Austria; Germany
backed up Austria, and issued an ultimatum to Russia. Russia might have
avoided a war by stopping its mobilization, Germany might have avoided
it by bringing pressure to bear upon Austria. And should we say: The
real reason lies much further back; Russia mobilized because Germany had
humiliated it in 1909; not Austria but Servia was the first aggressor,
when it inspired the murder of the Austrian prince
?–it but proves
that a close examination of the question as to who was the aggressor,
leads us into a tangled web of past quarrels and antagonisms. We come
across Austria harassing the Serbs striving for a large national state
and export harbors; Austria aiming to extend its powers over the
Balkans; imperialistic conflicts between Russia and Germany in
Armenia.
¶The war of 1914 did not come because one nation attacked another
voluntarily with malice aforethought; it came because at a certain
degree of tension Russia and Germany both said to themselves: If it
must be let, let it be now!
They grasped the opportunity. In the
last days of July a fruitful attempt had been made to persuade Austria
and Russia to come to terms in the Serbian controversy; what prevented
peace was the ultimatum issued by Germany–according to England; was the
mobilization of Russia–according to Germany. In reality there is no way
of distinguishing the aggressor from the defender; each one attacks and
defends himself from the other. In this struggle for world-power any
differentiation between aggressive
and defensive
wars is
senseless.
¶Nevertheless this differentiation has played an important part in the Social Democratic movement. Repeatedly Socialists have declared openly that they were opposed to all war, but that they would defend their countries if attacked. Prominent party leaders like Bebel espoused this point of view. Kautsky opposed him in the convention of 1906 in Essen, calling attention to the fact that the government can always make it appear its nation is attacked. How true this standpoint is, the war of 1870 with Bismarck’s falsified message, as well as the present war, plainly show.
¶But this does not entirely dispose of the matter. This point of view
is founded on the conception that wars are precipitated at will by the
action of one’s own or a foreign government. The position of the
proletariat then should be: Down with the disturbers of peace! That may
have been true at one time; but not to-day. War to-day is imperialistic
war; the disturber is capitalistic development, capital hungry for
world-power. They all want power, land, colonies. They threaten and are
threatened by each other. None of them desired war voluntarily,
knowingly, but they all knew that it was inevitable, and struck when
chances were favorable. These circumstances make the war appear to every
bourgeoisie, to every government, a war of defense. It was more than
mere hypocritical attempts to deceive the people. It was a war in
defense of their world-power, their world-aims against those of
their competitors. Thus each felt that he was in the right, and went
forth with all the energy and conviction he possessed to clear the track
for the future. For the mass of the people the word defense has an
entirely different meaning. Farmers and small citizens knew
nothing of world politics. When they are told, The Russians threaten
us, the Germans are attacking us,
it means to them a defense of
their peace and their livelihood. The catchword so many Socialists use,
Take part only in a war of defense,
is the political translation
of the old bourgeois and small farmer standpoint: I will leave him
alone who leaves me alone, but him who will disturb the peace of my home
I shall strike upon the head.
¶So it was natural as well as necessary for the ruling class to make
the war appear as a war of defense. This lie alone could make the mass
of the people support war. The middle class and farmer elements came of
their own accord, the Socialist party responded to the old formula that
provides for participation in wars of defense. This formula at the
present time serves only to make the workers willing to go to war for
Imperialism. If in times to come wars are to be prevented by the action
of the proletariat it will first be necessary that they become mentally
free from bourgeois influence and middle class traditions. _A new
International can be built up only upon one principle: Down with all
war, down with the war of defense_!
§ ACTION AGAINST WAR
¶It is not enough for the workers to oppose war, every war, to refuse to be led astray by the cry of national defense. They must also have the power and the means to prevent war.
¶In the International Socialist Review for November a writer
rightly condemns the European Socialists in no measured terms for having
violated their duty as Socialists1. He picks to pieces
their flimsy arguments of defense,
fatherland
and
culture.
But when he comes to the question, Could the
Socialists have acted otherwise than they did? Could they have prevented
the war?
his answer is: A careful analysis of the facts proves
that they could. It lay within their power. There was just one course
they could have adopted. It was desperate. It was bloody, but it could
have saved millions of lives. It was the only weapon that could have
beaten down the murderous clash of militarism. It was
revolution!
¶This answer will fail to satisfy a great many readers. Furthermore, it will excuse the German Socialists in the eyes of a great many others. For there is not the slightest doubt that Germany, not to speak of the others, was not ready for a proletarian revolution. The number of those who oppose Socialists there is again as large as the number of those who cast Socialist votes. Even among the latter only a part would fight actively for Socialism. Behind the others stands the whole might of the nation. If Revolution were the only alternative, we should have to concede that the German Socialists, as well as the others, could not have acted differently, that they were forced to submit without opposition to the commands to war of the bourgeoisie.
¶But this conclusion is false. To make this clear let us first examine
the meaning of the word revolution.
What seems in the distant
horizon a single fine streak of color becomes, as we approach it a broad
landscape with hills and valleys, full of variation. So a revolution,
which in the distance looms up as one indivisible final goal, as one
single, glowing deed, becomes as we approach it a whole historical
period with peculiar characteristics, full of charges, of ascents and
descents, of great events and deadening reverses. He who stands far from
the goal in the midst of the first period of propaganda and rallying of
forces, in the first period of the workers’ awakening, is right when he
points to the revolution as something in the distant future, as the
signal for all great coming changes. There lies the mountain, the
glowing summit, whose view inspires us with courage and patience as we
painfully force our way through thicket and morass. But when the great
masses have been organized and are filled with the spirit of Socialism,
then Revolution ceases to be an ideal and becomes a practical question.
The distant ideal becomes definite, difficult practice. How
shall we go on? He who stands at the foot of the mountain still has the
most difficult, the nearest way to go.
¶Now only can he see it plainly. This was, approximately, the position of the German working-class movement. To the comrades in other countries it seemed so large, so mighty, so strong, that they asked: Why do not the Germans make a Revolution? In reality they but stood at the foot of the mountain. In reality the German saw most clearly how difficult, how great a struggle still remained, how far off still was victory and Socialism.
¶Revolutions are not made; they grow out of deeds, movements,
struggles, when circumstances have become ripe. This ripeness of
conditions depends upon the existence of a revolutionary class
internally so strong, possessing such great social power, that every
struggle, every action, results in a victory. The great French
Revolution, for instance, was a long chain of rebellions, of meetings of
delegated bodies, of peaceful legislation and bloody wars. It was due to
the strength and the stubborn self-confidence of the middle class that
the beginning, the calling of the Generalstannde
for the
alleviation of the financial straits of its governments, culminated in
the Revolution. Every courageous word, every bold deed, every bitter
battle with the government aroused energy and enthusiasm in thousands
and drew them into the struggle. Their determination forced the
government to make concessions, but each new concession, each new
attempt at suppression weakened the position of the government. The
first representatives that met in 1789 had only modest aims; they hardly
knew the strength of their own class. Only during the Revolution and
through it, their strength and the strength of the middle class grew and
with its power grew its demands. In 1848 we see similar developments.
The immediate cause was a parliamentary conflict between the middle
class opposition and the government. The prohibition of a public
demonstration resulted in tumults, which fed by the deep dissatisfaction
of the masses and the small bourgeoisie grew until the whole
governmental system was overthrown. And if we look upon the Revolution
in a still wider sense, as the conquest of power by the new class of the
bourgeoisie, we see a process that lasted for hundreds of years, bitter
class struggles alternating with periods of quiet growth of economic
power.
¶The proletarian revolution, which is once more to place a new class into power, will also be a long historical process, though it may be completed in a comparatively much shorter time than the ascent of the bourgeoisie to power on account of the rapidity of economic development. This process divides naturally into a number of individual revolutionary actions, which alternate with periods of quiet, of peaceful organization and even of periodic collapse.
¶For a revolutionary action of this kind it is not necessary that the
majority of the workers think as Socialists, that they must be willing
to sacrifice all for the Socialist Revolution. Minorities can undertake
such actions when they feel that the unthinking masses will sympathize
with its aim and can be swept along by the force of the movement. Of
course, the might of the proletariat, its organization and
class-consciousness, must have reached a certain stage to engage in this
revolutionary action. And by this action hopefulness, energy and
proletarian class-consciousness, the solidarity of the masses, in short
the strength of the proletariat, are strengthened so that they will be
capable of undertaking still more difficult struggles. The aim of such
an action is not the Revolution. These actions are undertaken to gain
more insignificant ends, that may be termed important
reforms. But the success of the struggle or perhaps the opposition
which necessarily calls forth more energetic activity, will mean
increased strength, courage, self-confidence. Aims will grow larger and
higher as the scope of the struggle widens. The Etats généraux
of
1789 thought neither of a republic nor of parliamentary government, the
opposition of 1848 desired only more liberal Ministers. But the
development of a feeling of power in the people carried them far beyond
this original aim. To be sure, citadels may be won in such a storm that
lie beyond the strength that has been gained, and may then be lost in a
counter-revolution.
¶Reformists promise the workers that they can win improvements and
reforms by uniting with capitalist parties and giving up the
class-struggle, that these reforms will improve the condition of the
workers, that they will receive constantly increasing rights and
influence, so that the world will finally become quite an attractive
place for them. Many Radicals speak of the final goal, the Revolution,
for which we must strengthen our organization, so that we may, when the
hour has struck, suddenly overthrow the rule of Capital by a gigantic
rebellion. We maintain, on the other hand, that capitalist rule cannot
be destroyed at one blow, that it will take a series of struggles,
which, each in itself, will bring a partial gain in as much as the
masses will force the ruling classes to give in. But each partial
victory must be won by the revolutionary conflicts. In 1893 the Belgian
Parliament, and in 1905 the Czar, were forced to give in to a mass
strike. In Russia, in recent years, the workers were forced to fight for
the most fundamental rights, for their organization and their press by
the quiet means of collections and imprisonment, by the greater means of
demonstrations and strikes. In America the workers fought for the right
of organization and assemblage in a revolutionary manner, by sacrificing
their own interests. They could not expect to win these reforms by
begging and the good will of the bourgeoisie. They did not say: Why
fight for such insignificant measures? We want the Revolution!
In
Germany the struggle for popular suffrage in Prussia was begun five
years ago with the revolutionary means of colossal street
demonstrations, in spite of police prohibition. This movement has since
come to a standstill because the leaders feared that the government
would crush the organizations of the workers. Each one of these actions
strengthened the power, the courage, the organization of the workers.
Their discontinuance marks the beginning of the decline, was the
precursor of the present downfall.
¶At the time of the bourgeois revolutions the decisive actions were civil war, as in England in 1646; armed rebellions, as in Paris in 1790; street battles and barricades, as in 1848. In the proletarian movement the method of armed conflict played a part only in the earliest period, When the Army was still small, technique primitive, cities small and the people middle class in character. To-day we are in a period of gigantic armies and compulsory military service, centralized governments, gigantic cities with millions of working-people;–and other methods prevail. The pressure the masses are now able to exert by demonstrating in the streets and expressing their wishes in spite of policemen’s clubs, is a warning to the government; the readiness to sacrifice is the measure of their determination. More effective still is the mass strike, when the proletariat uses its power over production to cripple the whole industrial life of the nation; no government can rule for any length of time against the determined resistance of the masses.
¶These mass actions are the revolutionary method of the modern proletariat. They are only possible when the numbers, the readiness to fight, the solidarity, and the understanding of the proletariat has reached a high level. But, on the other hand, they awaken these qualities in no small degree, they attract new fighters who have stood aside, they increase their courage, their knowledge, their solidarity.
¶Instead of a single Revolution we find a series of revolutionary actions, which run through the whole historical period in which the proletariat is fighting for supremacy. Each of these actions has a concrete aim, which is not the whole Revolution and consequently can be granted by the ruling class if forced to it by necessity. Each of these struggles, each of these actions, increases the strength of the proletariat. Each one helps to build the foundation of its supremacy, and undermines a little the power of the ruling class. When, at last, the power of the proletariat has been completely built up, when its organization, its power and its solidarity, its class-consciousness and social understanding have reached the highest point, when at the same time the moral standing, the authority, the strength and the physical force of the government have broken down, then the class rule of capitalism will crumble like an empty shell. The Revolution will be accomplished.
¶If we ask again: could the German proletariat have done anything against the war–because it was strongest in organization and knowledge–the answer is yes. It could not have made a Revolution, but it could have used revolutionary action. It might have exerted an extraordinary pressure upon the government by calling mass demonstrations and mass-strikes in the week before the war broke out, had it been determined to combat war with all its might.
¶We know that the conditions were not ripe for such a struggle. There were great Socialist masses and strong organizations–such as will be necessary in other countries as well–but they did not know how to act on their own initiative, the leaders feared that a struggle would mean the destruction of the organization. The movement was not prepared for the use of revolutionary tactics–and mass action. But this war will not be the last one.
¶In a few decades we may be facing a new and greater world-war. Then the proletariat of Europe and America will again face the question: How can we prevent this war? Then we must not beg the question as we did in Basel in 1912. Then the International of Labor must know that it must oppose the war spirit of the ruling classes in all nations with the revolutionary mass action of organizations and a Socialist working-class, lest it be again torn and crushed in the turmoil.
Uswald, Harry. (November 1914). Militarism and Socialism: An Analysis of the Factors that Led European Socialists to Support the War. International Socialist Review, 15(5), 289-300. – MIA note.↩︎