Links 09: Editor's introduction
'Democracy or death': Organising the Indonesian mass struggle
Following on from the theme of the last Links (Class struggle in South- East Asia) this issue begins by featuring an inside and in-depth look at the conditions for struggle of the Indonesian opposition to the Suharto dictatorship.
Our interview with one of the long-term central leaders of the
movement, Marlin, discusses the nature of the current mass discontent, the relationship between the urban poor and the working class, the possibilities for building a mass
anti-Suharto movement over the next few months and the strategic line of march of the Indonesian revolution.
With this issue we also look to strengthen further Links role as a vehicle for left and socialist polemic and debate.
The immediate issue is Phil Hearses review of Irwin Silbers book, Socialism: What Went Wrong?, which appeared in our last issue and has spurred Irwin Silber to reply. In reaffirming his judgement that Lenin seriously misestimated both the potential for revolution in post-World War I Europe as well as capitalisms potential for awesome revolutions in the productive forces, Silber criticises Hearse for conducting the discussion through the sectarian prism of yesteryear.
Hearse replies that Silbers whole theoretical approach is one of mind-numbing economic reductionism yielding the determinist judgement that socialist revolution was defeated because the twentieth century was too early for socialism. Hearse also engages Silber on the issue of social democracy and socialist strategy today. This is a critically important debate, and we invite Links readers to contribute.
Our ongoing coverage of the various aspects of the globalisation debate
is contained in two piecesan article by Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) leader Dipankar Bhattacharya on economic nationalism and the Indian left, and a selection from the Portuguese Communist Partys theses for its 1996 congress.
The challenges of defending the gains of socialist revolution in a world
where capital can appear all-powerful is taken up in a contribution by Cuban economist Carlos
Tablada. Tablada looks to the work of Che Guevara as a source of inspiration in the struggle to find a non-capitalist development path that avoids the bureaucratic deformation, alienation and inefficiency inherent in Soviet-style real socialism.
The Augean stable of "post- Marxism" is the target of James Petras latest polemic. In particular Petras targets post-Marxism as the ideology of many Non-Government Organisations and comments: In practice, non-governmental translates into anti-public spending activities, freeing the bulk of funds for neo-liberals to subsidise export capitalists while small sums trickle from the government to
NGOs.
Renfrey Clarke, Moscow correspondent of Australias Green Left Weekly, summarises the experience of six years in post- Communist Russia under the heading Why Russia Needs Another Revolution. After reading Clarkes account of that countrys mafia- driven economy it is hard to disagree.
Finally, we feature an interview with Peter Taaffe, the central leader of Englands Socialist Party. Although done before the electoral victory of Tony Blairs New Labour, Taaffes comments provide useful insights into the social roots of
Blairism.
With this issue we relaunch links on a thrice-yearly schedule. We will
appear in the first week of March, July and November.