Paris, Friday the 13th, November 2015. Yet another
atrocity in the name of religion. A deliberate attempt to kill as many innocent
people as possible, at a pop concert, an international football match, and at
random in the streets. Of course there was a political motive behind it. It was
as President Hollande said, an act of war.
The ‘Islamic State’, which governs parts of
Syria and Iraq, to which the perpetrators owed allegiance and on whose behalf
they carried out the atrocity, is at war with various ordinary capitalist
states – Syria, Iraq, the United States, Russia, Britain and, of course, France, as well as others.
Deliberately targeting civilians is against
the Geneva Convention but not, apparently, against sharia law nor (if you are
on the winning side) against realpolitik,
as Dresden, Hamburg, Hiroshima and Nagasaki show. Once a war starts in the end
anything goes because, if a state loses, then even the life of its rulers is at
stake, let alone their position as rulers or the economic interests of its
capitalists.
We are dealing, then, with a war atrocity,
and wars arise from capitalism. They occur when, in the competition between
states for sources of raw material, trade routes, markets, investment outlets
and strategic points and areas to protect and acquire these, the rulers of a
capitalist state feel that their ‘vital interests’ are at stake and that they
have more to lose by not going to war.
In the Middle East what’s at stake is who
controls its oil resources and the routes by which the oil reaches the rest of
the world. The US and its allies (‘the West’) have been determined to control
this and largely do, but this control has always been challenged by local
elites. During the Cold War period these used secular nationalism to win mass
support, but in 1979 Iran set a new trend, which has since become dominant, by
exploiting religion instead. So, anti-Western feeling there, expressing the
interests of local elites, now takes the form of militant Islam.
In 2002 President George W Bush denounced
Iran, Iraq and North Korea as an ‘axis of evil’. The US State Department
quickly added Cuba, Libya and Syria. These all became targets for ‘regime
change’. The first to undergo this was Iraq, then Libya, with disastrous
results in both cases. Syria was to be the third. This attempt has had an even
worse result. Playing the Sunni Muslim card, financed and armed by Saudi Arabia
and Qatar, has created a monster that has taken the already extreme version of
Islam imposed in Saudi Arabia to an even further extreme, wanting to go back to
the 8th century and employing the barbarous methods of that time to
get there.
The reaction in France to the atrocity has
been to treat it as an attack on the ‘French nation’ whereas it was more
accurately an attack on the French state. The result has been a reinforcement
of French nationalism of the mistaken 'sacred union' between
workers and the ruling class there. Yet atrocities committed in the name of the
nationalism of so-called ‘nation-states’ are less than those of religion only
because these have not been around for so long.
The anarchist Bakunin raised the slogan
‘Neither God, nor Master’. Adapting it
as our response to the Paris atrocity: Neither God, nor State, but Humanity.
ALB
ALB
The city referred to in the above article is Nagasaki.....
ReplyDeleteSo -- is it "Aux armes, citoyens!" -- or just bougies et fleurs? Guidance please!
ReplyDelete