People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVIII
No. 50 December 12, 2004 |
XVII PCP CONGRESS ASSERTS
It Is A Time Of Revolutionary Potential
Sitaram Yechury
Yechury meeting with the legendary leader of the Portuguese Communist Party, Alvaro Cunhal
during the 15th Party Congress of the PCP (File photo)
THE
17th Congress of the Portuguese Communist Party (PCP) has made a rich analysis
of the current international situation. Noting that the Congress is being held
at a time of fierce all out imperialist offensive, the Political Thesis adopted
by the Congress concludes that we are living through a time of great retreats
and danger of historic regression but also of strong resistance and
revolutionary potential.
World
capitalism is not merely incapable of solving the major problems facing humanity
but on the contrary is contributing to the exacerbation of misery and heighten
exploitation. The Political Thesis notes:
Capitalist
globalisation's tragic consequences are there for all to see. The world has
become more unfair, less democratic, more dangerous and unsafe. There is
heightened exploitation, militarism and wars, an all-out attack against basic
rights, freedoms and safeguards, an attempt to criminalise resistance to
aggression. Meanwhile, the struggle and resistance of progressive forces,
workers and peoples is asserting itself and becoming more diverse. The class
struggle of the working class and working people is intensifying. Peoples are
confronting imperialist aggression with greater determination. In spite of its
socially and politically heterogeneous nature, the "anti-globalisation
movement" against neo-liberalism and war is objectively anti-imperialist
and anti-capitalist.
The
report points out the glaring inequalities that have mounted in this phase of
capitalist globalisation. The number of people living below the poverty line has
grown in most developing countries with 1.1 billion living on less than $1 a
day. At the same time the combined wealth of the world’s 50 biggest
billionaires is equal to the combined GDP of all Sub Saharan African Countries
where 688 million people struggle for survival. Current
UN figures put the number of hunger deaths at 36 million per year i.e. nearly 3
million people die due to starvation every month. Over thirty thousand children
die everyday from avoidable causes in the developing countries. Over 10 per cent
of the world’s children between the ages of 10 to 14 are exploited as child
labour and over 2 million are forced into the sex industry.
Even
in the developed capitalist world the conditions of the working people have
sharply deteriorated. The unemployed people in the OECD countries are today in
excess of 50 million, unprecedented in the post Second World War period. Only 25
per cent of the world’s population holds 85 per cent of its resources. The
domination of international finance capital in this phase of globalisation is
clearly demonstrated by the fact that the financial assets stand at about 300
per cent of each country’s GDP. It is this huge bubble that is leading the
present phase of globalisation. The concentration and centralisation of capital
continues to grow rapidly with multinational corporations controlling over
two-thirds of world’s production as well as trade.
The
report notes that under these circumstances all the four major world
contradictions are intensifying. Though the PCP does not deal with these
contradictions as we do, but in terms of content they have analysed the movement
of these contradictions noting the process of intensification.
DRIVE OF
Simultaneously, with intensifying economic exploitation the current international situation also highlights the political and military hegemonic drive of imperialism.
Three
years after September 11, it has become obvious that the so-called war on
terrorism is essentially just a political and ideological disguise for
imperialism's strategic goal of world domination. The problem of terrorism -
historically contrary to workers' and peoples' interests - is a real one, and
needs to be consistently fought. But the "war on terrorism" waged by
the US and its allies - using methods of veritable State terrorism - only
nourishes and extends it, rather than reducing and isolating it. Terrorism
can be fought essentially by attacking its social-economic and ideological roots
- exploitation, poverty, growing social inequalities and injustice, national
oppression and plunder, cultural and religious persecution - not by flouting
International Law, systematically attacking rights, freedoms and safeguards, and
with that excuse fostering racism and war.
Stating
that it is only through the strengthening of the global anti-imperialist
struggle can this offensive be met, the PCP emphasises that nothing can replace
this struggle in each country. In the present phase of globalistaion, the
defence of national sovereignty continues to be an essential factor of
resistance against imperialist globalisation. Hence, the struggle for socialism
individually in each country and as the alternative to global capitalism stands
out more sharply and starkly.
Confronting
the inhumane reality of capitalism, socialism is more and more clearly the
choice that today stands before humankind. However, the resolution notes the
objective realities before the international communist movement.
OBJECTIVE
REALITIES
The
international situation's development is very obviously highlighting the need to
strengthen communist parties, to enhance their internationalist
cooperation and solidarity, to convincingly and confidently assert the goal of
building a socialist society, the need to counter old and new lines of attack
against revolutionary parties' ideological and organisational foundations.
Overcoming the major weaknesses that currently exist and building up strong
communist parties is essential for the struggle’s success.
There
are very diverse problems and obstacles on the road to a resurgence of the international
communist and revolutionary movement. Overcoming them requires
steadfastness of principles, creative responses to new realities, revolutionary
tenacity. Among these difficulties and obstacles are: imperialism's global
offensive, with its fierce attacks on democratic rights, freedoms and
safeguards, and its criminalisation of all forces that resist it; the
de-structuring and instability of social relations, with their profound effects
on class forces' line-up and composition and on the formation of class
consciousness; and also the objective and subjective repercussions of the
USSR’s dismemberment and of socialism's defeats in Europe.
The
weakening of communist parties left the road open to a resurgence of beliefs and
practices with petty-bourgeois, radical-reformist, anarchist-leaning and
anti-communist roots. Major parties continue to suffer from the emergence of
strong trends that want communist parties to give up their identity and abandon
their constituent elements (revolutionary theory, class nature, organisational
form, and socialism as the goal) and want to dilute the parties into ambiguous
"left-wing" projects.
The
complex struggle to strengthen communist parties and assert them as an
irreplaceable tool of resistance and alternative, implies an ability to bond
with the working class, the working people, the people as a whole, to spearhead
their struggles, to formulate a clear prospect of change and revolution. At the
same time, it implies systematic criticism of opportunist and capitulationist
views, and particularly of utopian pre-Marxist and neo-Bernsteinian theories
that ignore, negate or counter the class struggle and the historic achievements
of Marxist-Leninist thought and practice. And it implies also criticism of
sectarian and dogmatic stances. For a party to be communist, it is not enough to
just call itself communist.
The
aggressiveness of big capital and imperialism – together with their narrowing
social support base – makes it particularly necessary to extend cooperation
and solidarity among communist parties and all other revolutionary and Left-wing
anti-capitalist forces. It is very urgent to overcome existing shortcomings in
this respect. Otherwise, widespread discontentment and protests against
neo-liberal and warmongering policies may well be frustrated or be ensnared by
some variant of reformism with structural ties to the capitalist exploitation
system's reproduction - such as for example, social-democracy.
To
stop the race to the abyss, to end wars of aggression and systematic
interference in peoples’ internal affairs, to solve the major international
conflicts and problems to overcome the most striking social injustices and
inequalities – it is essential to effect thorough-going progressive and
revolutionary changes directed against big business’s power and property
system, and at challenging its exploitation and reproduction mechanisms.
Such
changes – which address the need to resolve capitalism’s central
contradiction, between the social nature of production and the private
appropriation of its produce – have long since been inherent in the system’s
contradictions and limitations, and intrinsic to the new historical epoch
heralded in by the October Revolution. The big problem is that the maturing of
objective material conditions currently underway is not matched by the
subjective conditions.
Socialism’s
defeats broke the balance of forces in imperialism’s favour, gave capitalism a
new lease on life, had repercussions in weakening communist parties and other
revolutionary forces, have negatively influenced the masses’ confidence and
fighting spirit. With the immense economic, military, and ideological power it
still wields, imperialism has temporarily regained the initiative and is on the
offensive, in spite of the crisis that is rotting it inside.
REVOLUTIONARY
POTENTIAL
The
time is still one of resistance and gathering strength. But it is also a time of
real revolutionary potential. Policies of exploitation, oppression and war are
encountering growing resistance and struggle everywhere. Battles are underway
whose outcome will greatly influence the worldwide balance and line-up of
forces. As in other periods of historical transition, great difficulties and
dangers coexist with great potential for advancing the struggle and expanding
the revolutionary forces.
It
is this long and arduous struggle that every communist party will have to wage
on the basis of the concrete realities that exist in each one of the countries.
Reflecting the optimism based on concrete objective analysis of the current
situation, the report concludes as follows:
Being
steadfast in our principles and convictions, and consciously incorporating the
struggle for immediate goals into the wider goal of thorough-going
anti-capitalist change - which implies a constant and strong rejection of
unprincipled pragmatism and of opportunist adaptation to the system's logic –
these are of the utmost importance to fully materialise the revolutionary
potential that the current dangerous situation bears within it, and to bring
about socialism's resurgence as the alternative to capitalism. Yes, another
world is possible - and necessary. A socialist world!
Quoting
Bertold Brecht the outgoing general secretary of the PCP Comrade Carlos
Carvalhas summed up the mood of the Congress:
Do not accept what is a matter of habit as a natural thing, because in times of bloody disorder, or organised confusion, of conscientious arbitrariness, of dehumanised humanity, nothing should seem natural and nothing should seem impossible to change….