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Party of Socialism and Liberty, Brazil: Chavez’s call to form the Fifth International and the world situation
By Pedro Fuentes
January 11, 2010 -- At the meeting of left-wing political parties and socialists held in Caracas on the eve of the congress of the United Socialist Party of Venezuela (PSUV), Venezuela’s President Hugo Chavez called for the formation the Fifth Socialist International. In a strong speech in which he summarised the history of international socialist organisations, Chavez said, Confronting the capitalist crisis and the threat of war that threatens the future of humanity, it is time to convene the Fifth International, towards the unity of the left parties and revolutionaries willing to fight for socialism … of the parties and socialist currents and social movements in the world to create a common strategy for the fight against imperialism, the overthrow of capitalism by socialism.
At that meeting, which had a clearly
anti-imperialist tone, there were many parties that were out of place;
including, the Mexican Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI), the Chinese Communist
Party and even the Brazilian Workers Party (PT). Others were missing, for
example, the Brazilian Party of Socialism and Liberty (PSOL), the French New
Anti-Capitalist Party (NPA), the National Resistance Front of Honduras and the
Revolutionary Tendency of El Salvador, among others.
The call for a new international was
quickly accepted by a section of those attending – the Movement Towards
Socialism (MAS) of Bolivia, the New Country Party of Ecuador President Rafael
Correa, the militant Patricia Rhodas, representing the legitimate president of
Honduras, Manuel Zelaya, and other left wing groups such as the Socialist
Alliance of Australia. There was an explicit rejection from the communist parties
(except Cuba’s) and the Brazilian PT, because for them the São Paulo Forum is
still in effect.
Beyond all the
contradictions of Bolivarianism and the critical situation of the Venezuelan
process due to the weight of the bureaucracy, Chávez offered a proposal that we
consider progressive towards filling the international vacuum that exists
today; an advance that may become a leap to create an alternative to the deep
capitalist crisis we live in and provide a response to imperialist policy.
Political vacuum
The PSOL's -- and all of
those who claim to be anti-imperialist and socialist, as the NPA of France and
other socialist forces that have already replied -- response to that call must
be "We are present". We are present and we will be there because we
want to participate in the construction of this process that has just begun and
whose next date is the late April meeting in Caracas.
This proposal, if it
materialises, is inclined to address an acute contradiction that exists in
today's world situation. On one hand, the acute crisis of global capitalism has
placed a concrete and urgent need for international coordination and
international organisation. But at the same time, what we have so far is a
political vacuum in the international arena. This vacuum exists today because there
is no international organisation that is, or that may be, a real pole for the
world vanguard and the most radicalised sectors of mass movement. The World
Social Forum meetings, which were once a progressive place to coordinate the
actions of the anti-globalisation and antiwar movements, have been losing
strength as they have become increasingly controlled by parties like the PT and
other international bureaucratic institutions and apparatus.
Likewise, for us, the São
Paulo Forum, under the hegemony of the Brazilian PT, has followed the bourgeois
direction of that party so it is not a viable reference. The fronts or
coalitions of the communist parties that exist in Europe are primarily
interested in recovering parliamentary or governmental positions, so they are
not a viable reference either. Neither are the Trotskyist organisations, even
though they do have an international practice. The self-called Fourth
International, that [originated from] the division of the United Secretariat,
has developed some work with the masses and encouraged the France’s
Revolutionary Communist League (LCR) to participate in the creation of the NPA,
is also not viable. And neither are the various international organisations to reclaim
the Fourth International. Trotskyism is no more than small groups exclusively
proud of their international positions.
Surely there will be those
who, in name of "purity of program", will reject the call from
Caracas, or will require that this meeting provide a definite program for the
international socialist revolution as it existed in the Third and Fourth
internationals. For us, still valid is Marx’s sentence criticising the long but
ambiguous Gotha Program which would unite the two German socialist currents:
"Better a joint action than half dozen programs."
The Caracas' call is
about to build a regroupment in which the new Bolivarian radical nationalism,
the new anti-imperialist, Indigenous and anti-capitalist currents coexist with
the revolutionary socialist left.
For the sake of the progress of this process a broad united front organisation is required, which possesses features similar to the First International of Marx, the International Worker’s Association, than to the later internationals. The great Russian revolutionary David Ryazanov, in his excellent book about Marx and Engels, gave a very good definition of the International Worker’s Association. Ryazanov said:
Marx, in the Address, gave a classical example of "united front" tactics. He formulated the demands and emphasised all the points upon which the working class could and should unite, and on the basis of which a further development of the labour movement could be expected. From the immediate proletarian demands formulated by Marx the greater demands of the Cornmunist Manifesto would logically follow. (David Ryazanov, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, http://www.marx.org/archive/riazanov/works/1927-ma/index.htm, chapter 7) .
Indeed, the First International
was far from created on the basis of a finished program, as was the one
contained in the Communist Manifesto
written by Marx and Engels for the League of the Just. For Marx, it was more
important to bring together "trade unionists”, former English Chartists,
former followers of utopian socialist Robert Owen, Proudhonists, Bakuninists
and the militants and supporters of the League of the Just.
In the case of the Hugo
Chavez’s call, we believe that the most appropriate organisation that can arise
at the meeting in April 2010 is a continental and/or global anti-imperialist
front. This new international organisation could emerge around a program of
anti-imperialist and anti-capitalist struggle, a united front that would
include the supporters of the struggle against imperialism, from radical
nationalism to revolutionary socialist currents.
Politicals proposals from the meeting in Caracas
We support 100% the political reading and final
declaration of the Caracas meeting [see http://links.org.au/node/1375]; many of
the proposals are similar to those made at the international seminar organised
by the PSOL in Sao Paulo. Politically concrete actions are focused on the
rejection of the foreign military bases in Colombia and against the coup in
Honduras, including meeting/action proposals for the second week of December. Three
central characterisations are present in the texts and declarations: a) the
structural crisis of capitalism, b) the Yankee imperialist offensive on the
continent and war globally, c) 21st century socialism and the struggle for
socialism. These points can also be considered as broadly correct.
But these are issues,
particularly the second, on which we have to get deeper. Even if we believe
that the characterisation of the imperialist offensive is correct, transforming
it into the centre of Latin American politics has elements that tend to be
unilateral and it is used to lose sight of the limitations of the ongoing
process in our continent.
In an excellent interview that appeared in Brasil de Fato, vice-president García Linera of Bolivia said they are processes that are still taking place under capitalism, and which are only sketches of either a different project or of 21st century socialism. And while, on the one hand, this has to do with the current worldwide and continental correlation of forces, one has to note the responsibilities of the leaders to deepen the process and, specifically, the strong bureaucratic elements entrenched in the Venezuelan process that limit and hinder it.
The capitalist crisis
We have to understand
the Caracas’ progressive call under the new elements that characterise the
global situation. It happens in the context of significant political and
economic changes marked by the global economic crisis and chaotic growing
political uncertainty that dominate the world.
Against the opinion of
many establishment economists, including the Brazilian government's economic
managers who believes the crisis is over, Paul Krugman warned about the
creation of a new economic bubble. Krugman pointed out the dangers that the
massive inflow of speculative capital means for Brazil and forecast that the
economy of the core countries could have a decade of stagnation and recession
similar to the one experienced by Japan in the 1990s.
The Marxist economist
Jorge Benstein provides a deeper analysis. Referring to the new bubble and comparing
it with previous ones that created moderate increase in production and
consumption, Beinsten says that "the speculative sequence of the late 1990s
and 2007 is repeated but with a crucial difference: the context of the current
bubble is not economic growth but recession... The stockmarket bubble of 2009
happens at the same time with low levels of consumption, decline in productive
investment and constant increase in unemployment. Surplus capital blocked by a
declining productive economy achieves benefits in financial speculation, producing
a speculative-recessionary vicious cycle fueled by the fabulous governmental
bailouts."
Referring to the US
economy, he said that "it is clear that it cannot get out of the trap of
decline; the temporary relief, recovery attempts and drugged growth, strongly
recompose parasitic mechanisms which have led to the current disaster. And the
collapse of the empire (the main centre of the capitalist world) drags the
whole world system."
Benstein sees the decline
of the economy also linked to other "visible crises" that at any time
could strike a very fragile global system; these include the food and energy
crisis (which were present during 2008). "In sum, we are facing the convergence
of numerous crises which in reality is one global gigantic crisis with
different faces, never seen before in history, and its main appearance is a
great twilight that threatens to continue for a long time."
Benstein’s analysis is
correct in the sense of strategic trends. It cannot be used unilaterally for
the concrete policy framework, since it does not take into account the
short-term growth in Latin America and elsewhere achieved not only by the
bubble and the increase in consumption, but by some relative increase in the
rate of surplus value due to the weak resistance of workers’ movement. But it
is correct in essence and agrees with Krugman, who talks about new, stronger episodes
of crisis. This will make the world increasingly tend towards chaos, polarisation
and extreme political changes, as we saw after the Great Depression.
What about the Obama administration?
In this context US
President Barack Obama has shown weakness in the face of the daunting challenge
to keep his promises in domestic and international policy. Rather, in world
politics, he is following a course of reconciliation with the old Bush policy.
Troop numbers have increased in Afghanistan, where there is major resistance
and will cause a deadlock without solution. Moreover, it was clear the policy
of capitulation to the right wing resulted in blatant support for the coup in
Honduras.
These elements show the weakness of
Obama and the impossibility of a big change in US foreign policy. They are the
expression of the growing loss of US hegemony, to which he can only respond in the
same way as Bush had done.
This present crisis of "hegemonic"
imperialism tends to increase the "multipolarity". One example of
this is the growing independence of the Latin American members of ALBA, and of
Iran . (To some extent also Brazil, as expressed on Honduras, although in the
case of Brazil there is a line of constant negotiation with the US). At the
other end of this polarisation is the openly fascist policy of Israel that
Obama’s government ends up accepting.
The `continentalisation’ of Latin America
Garcia Linera, vice-president of Bolivia, in an interview that appeared in Brasil
de Fato, says that "for the first time in the last hundred years of
our continent there is a continental turn to the left", referring to new
processes that have not happened before. Comparing it with the process that
started with the Cuban Revolution, he noted that even thogh it was more radical
it was also was less continental, and at that time it was only episodic and
very partial due to the defeat of the armed groups that emerged in other
countries. We may add that this new process means not only the political emergence
of [Latin America’s Indigenous peoples], but also has led to new Latin American
governments politically independent of imperialism.
The new electoral
triumph in Bolivia shows the strength of this process. A new episode in the
same direction may be the success of Ollanta Humala in the 2011 presidential
election in Peru. A country of great importance in the region, where peasants,
workers and Indigenous people’s struggles have come together, and where Humala,
following policies that have common features with the those of Bolivia’s
President Evo Morale, has emerged as a true political alternative.
In the same interview Garcia
Linera said that "today in 2009 we are not in front of a prospect of
overcoming capitalism, to say otherwise is deceiving" but also said that
there are embryonic elements of another system.
Nevertheless, we
reaffirm our characterisation that they are progressive nationalist processes, revolutionary
in comparison to the period of neoliberalism. The processes of these countries
are irreversible, new schemes have emerged that are irreconcilable with
imperialist policies and politics of the more organic Latin American
bourgeoisie. (Even if there are big Latin American corporations that do good
business in Chavez's Venezuela, as is the case of Brazil’s Oderbretch.)
That is why there is and
there will be a growing polarisation in Latin America. There are now three
types of governments, the openly pro-US governments, which have the Colombian
government as its spearhead, those led by Brazil (that has its own policy for
its character as a regional power) including Argentina and Uruguay, and the politically
independent governments of Bolivia, Ecuador and Venezuela. The dynamic is one
of growing polarisation and continentalisation of the nationalist process. In
Honduras, this polarisation was present. On one side, the radicalisation
expressed by Zelaya and the other side an important sector and majority of the
native bourgeoisie, which remains subservient to US policy. This is widespread
throughout Latin America.
Imperialism is not a paper tiger
The weakening of US
global hegemony and the critical situation in Afghanistan does not mean that it
has become a paper tiger. On the contrary, it may become more aggressive. The
current movements in Latin America are saying that in the face of Washington’s critical
situation in the broader Middle East the US will be forced to retake control of
its backyard, that is, to resume its threatened hegemony in Latin America. US imperialism
needs to ensure that these processes are not extended, it needs to defeat them
and the main target is Chavez.
It is necessary to
confront the US policy clearly expressed in the coup of Honduras, the military
bases in Colombia and the reactivation of the US Navy’s Fourth Fleet. We are
and we will be together in a front with these countries, their governments and
social movements in the case of new imperialist offensive.
As we said, even if the
US suffers a defeat in Afghanistan it does not mean mechanically that they cannot
act militarily in our continent. The US may even withdraw from Afghanistan if
cornered, and make local low-intensity interventions with the pretext of fighting
terrorism, or by provocations using its puppet governments. The danger of such attacks
on Venezuela coming from Colombia, and in Bolivia from the anti-Morales “Bolivian
crescent”, even if it is now in decline.
But Yankee policy towards
Latin America is not only military. The other aspect is strengthening the Latin
American bourgeoisie, the usual junior partner of the empire. So it will also
use democratic reaction, negotiations and the polls to support its candidates,
in other words the carrot and stick policy.
Bureaucracy
This one-sidedness that
we mentioned in the analysis of the Caracas Declaration masks the fact that
bureaucracy is a problem that favous the weakening of the process and therefore
can promote the policy of imperialism. Even if these processes are now
progressive and irreconcilable with the imperialism, particularly in Venezuela,
they have created contradictions that damage the fight against imperialism and
hinder the deepening of structural measures that could weaken the local
bourgeoisie. Since these processes occur within the framework of the bourgeois
state, new contradictions have appeared, mainly expressed in the emergence of
the state bureaucracy which becomes privileged and tends to slow the process.
And that becomes a problem when trying to confront imperialism and the domestic
bourgeoisie that is hoping to act and regain power.
This is clearly visible
in Venezuela, the most politically advanced and key country. There,
Bolivarianism has been in power for 10 years. During this period, a political
breakthrough has taken place in its system of government and the mass movement,
and in its anti-imperialist consciousness thanks to the leadership of Chavez.
But at the same time, a bureaucracy that threatens the process from within has
emerged. Without defeating these sectors it will be very difficult to advance
the process, it can stall and be defeated by imperialism.
Present at the founding meeting of April in Caracas
To report these
contradictions does not mean in any way to minimise the importance of building
the new international organisation. On the contrary, the aim of bringing these
issues to light is to strengthen it. That is why we reaffirm our support for
the construction of a new international organisation that, if it materialises,
will join the real forces facing imperialism. This is, as we said, to build a
united front organisation in which all the currents that face imperialism are
involved, from radical nationalism, Indigenous peoples, revolutionary and
socialist organisations.
Such an organisation
must be a tool for promoting the revolutionary process in our continent and the
world. In that sense, it must make a clear distinction between government
policy and economic and diplomatic relations between governments, with the policy
of promoting anti-imperialist struggle in each country, supporting social movements
and political organisations that take the struggle forward.
No doubt that if it is
constituted in this way not only will it serve to promote the fight, avoiding
new defeats like in Honduras, but also to fight the bureaucratisation in any of
the ongoing processes. These are insights and ideas for the coming historic
meeting to be held in April 2010 in Caracas and in which we will apply our best
internationalist commitment.
[Pedro Fuentes is secretary for internationalist relations of the PSOL, Brazil]






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