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Europe
No to the debt! No to the austerity! No to the blackmail!

09/02/2012: International struggle can end dictatorship of the markets

  CWI Comment And Analysis, Europe

NEWSFLASH
48-hour general strike tomorrow in Greece

09/02/2012: Anger spilling over against troika austerity

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Greece
Support for government in free fall

08/02/2012: General strike on 7 February opposes “mediaeval labour conditions!"

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Syria
Anti-regime protests facing ferocious response

08/02/2012: No trust in Arab League and imperialist powers

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Kazakhstan
Nazarbayev in Berlin

08/02/2012: A big protest rally in freezing temperatures greeted the Kazakhstan president as he attended a meeting to strengthen relations with the German government and big business.

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 Ireland
Joe Higgins addresses packed anti-household tax meeting

04/02/2012: Joe Higgins argues in Cork, 26 January, to resist the household tax: "Yes, we have a choice!"

  Ireland North, Video

Belgium
January 30 General Strike

03/02/2012: A strike corresponding to the level of anger over austerity programme

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EU summit
No capitalist solutions to the spiralling eurozone crisis

03/02/2012: The capitalist classes of Europe are all adopting the same policy of attempting to make the working class pay for the capitalist economic crisis.

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 Nigeria
Story of the great general strike

02/02/2012: A socialist view on recent showdown between government and people

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Italy
Dozens of No TAV activists arrested

01/02/2012: The repression will not stop the movement!

  Italy

Socialism
Answering Common Questions

31/01/2012: Frequently asked questions

Kazakhstan
Free Vadim Kuramshin!

31/01/2012: Urgent solidarity needed

  Kazakhstan

Kazakhstan
‘Labour Start’ editor makes outrageous claims against oil workers and CWI

31/01/2012: Worldwide solidarity campaign means the Kazakhstan regime can no longer deny 16 December massacre

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Tunisia
“The mass of people continue to struggle”

31/01/2012: Interview with two Tunisian socialists, one year after the fall of Ben Ali

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US
For an independent Left challenge in Presidential elections

30/01/2012: Fight Against Corporate Politics

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 US
Capitalist crisis and the occupy movement

30/01/2012: Bryan Koulouris explains how the USA is being transformed by the occupy movements which have arisen in anger at the growing inequality between the 1% and the 99% in the United States

  US, Video

Climate change
Dithering in Durban

30/01/2012: Once again, a United Nations-sponsored climate change conference has completely failed to address the issue of global warming.

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Cyprus
Partial general strike paralyses public sector

29/01/2012: December’s industrial action against austerity just the beginning of the fight-back!

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Feeling the coming storm

29/01/2012: Whole continent on the verge of major social convulsions and political shocks

  Asia, CWI Comment And Analysis

Latin America
No escape from world crisis

28/01/2012: The illusory appearance of a peculiar isolation from the international picture of stagnation, recession and economic crisis is fragile - a new period of turbulent class conflict lays ahead

  CWI Comment And Analysis, Latin America

China
“I was arrested by China’s Secret Police”.

27/01/2012: CWI’s Zhang Shujie speaks out at hearing in Sweden’s parliament

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Egypt
Huge crowds in Tahrir Square mark revolution anniversary

26/01/2012: Masses in Cairo and other cities demand end to military rule

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China
‘Long Hair’ to attend Stockholm hearing on state repression

26/01/2012: LSD legislator from Hong Kong to speak in support of young socialist Zhang Shujie, forced to flee China

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 CWI International Meeting
Illusion of stability in Latin America

25/01/2012: Contradictions and new struggles define situation in region

  CWI, Latin America

Brazil
In defence of Pinheirinho inhabitants!

25/01/2012: 3 year old child killed in fatal repression

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Kazakhstan
New wave of arrests against opposition

25/01/2012: Release Vadim Kuramshin and all those arrested – End harassment of opposition activists!

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After the Zhanaozen clampdown

25/01/2012: 16 December underlined the need for the workers’ movement to link economic demands to the struggle to bring down the regime

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USA
Mobilize to Support Longshore Workers

24/01/2012: Key Battle for the Labour and Occupy Movements

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 CWI International Meeting
World capitalism in crisis

22/01/2012: As world economy worsens, inter-imperialist relations intensify

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Britain
Stephen Lawrence murder – The untold story

21/01/2012: How socialists and the local community fought back against racism and the BNP

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Scotland
ConDem government blunders independence referendum

20/01/2012: Scottish National Party’s version of indepdendence a nightmare for workers

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History

How Gorbachev failed to save the Soviet Union

www.socialistworld.net, 01/05/2005
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

When Mikhail Gorbachev was selected as the Communist Party of the Soviet Union’s general secretary 20 years ago, in March 1985, it marked the beginning of the end of Stalinist rule in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.

Dave Reid, Socialist Party, England and Wales

The collapse of these regimes at the end of the 1980s and in the early 1990s led to capitalist politicians world-wide stepping up their attacks on the ideas of socialism. They now claimed there was no alternative to the capitalist free market.

However, these were not socialist regimes. In 1917 the working class in the old Russian empire came to power and created the first workers’ state in history. It nationalised the economy and laid the basis for socialism. But a combination of Russia’s isolation and backward economy enabled a privileged bureaucracy to develop, with Joseph Stalin as their figurehead. They held society in a suffocating, totalitarian grip, destroying all vestiges of workers’ democracy.

Even though the economy carried on its back the bureaucracy’s wastefulness, inefficiency and brutality, on the basis of the planned economy it developed rapidly through the 1930s. The Soviet Union emerged from the Second World War with the USA as one of the two world superpowers.

But, once society in the USSR developed a certain level of production and technique, i.e. became a modern economy, the old bureaucratic method of rule from the centre could no longer work. Marxists previously described the bureaucracy as a ’relative fetter’ on any further progress of these societies. Now it was becoming more and more an absolute fetter.

What was needed was the involvement of the whole of society in running the economy. The great Russian revolutionary Trotsky explained that a planned economy needs democracy like a body needs oxygen. Capitalism uses the market mechanism to regulate and direct its productive activity. It operates anarchically and unjustly and produces growing periodic crises, but it does provide a check on production.

Without a democratic plan, involving committees of workers on the shop floor, transport workers, distribution workers and working-class consumers covering every corner of the economy, a nationalised economy cannot possibly bring together the billions of strands of activity that a modern economic society demands.

And democracy was the one thing that the bureaucracy wouldn’t try to revive the economy - it would mean an end to power and privilege for the bureaucracy itself.

Lifting the lid

Gorbachev was charged with the responsibility of digging the Soviet economy out of the bog of stagnation that it had run into. The bureaucratic elite running society understood that unless the economy could be reinvigorated, huge social explosions would follow that would threaten its survival.

They saw the movement around Solidarnosc in Poland that began in 1981 amongst shipyard workers in Gdansk. In its early stages this movement posed the possibility of the bureaucracy’s rule being overthrown and the possible birth of a genuine workers’ democracy.

Gorbachev set out with two aims, to free up the economy and to widen the popular base of his hated regime. Perestroika was based on the idea of shaking up industry and allowing limited elements of the market into the Soviet economy.

These were not in themselves new ideas, previous Soviet leaders zigzagging between centralisation and decentralisation had "zigged" to such temporary reforms before, only later to "zag" and re-centralise the economy. What was different this time was the depth of the crisis.

So Gorbachev attempted to get some support from a popular base to break through obstinate opposition from bureaucrats who wanted to hang onto their own jobs. Glasnost (openness) was proposed as an idea of a new political regime where - in theory and within strict limits - the working class could criticise and where there would be some elections with more than one candidate.

Glasnost lifted the lid on huge discontent against the bureaucracy. The relaxation of the worst repression led to posters appearing on the walls attacking the bureaucracy: "Do away with the special privileges for politicians and bureaucrats" and "Not the people for socialism but socialism for the people". The loosening of repression brought forward a flood of criticism of the pampered bureaucracy’s privileges.

At this point there was very little support for any kind of turn to capitalism. Opinion polls showed support for capitalism as low as 3%. What working people were moving toward in a very general way was a workers’ democracy - real socialism.

However, a layer of the bureaucracy realised that the game was up, that the system was irredeemably flawed and that a few reforms would not save it. These bureaucrats were coming to the conclusion that there had to be root and branch change.

Led by Boris Yeltsin they began looking to the West and to capitalism. Under a real socialist system they would lose their luxurious lifestyles and privileges and control over society. Far more attractive to them was the installation of capitalism.

And at the same time capitalism in the West was going through a sustained, if shallow, boom. Compared to the stagnant Soviet economy, western capitalism looked very attractive to the elite.

Regimes tumble

Gorbachev’s reforms had spread to the Soviet Union’s satellite states in Eastern Europe where pro-democracy movements were undermining shaky regimes in Poland, Hungary, East Germany, Czechoslovakia and beyond. Mass popular movements swept Eastern Europe demanding democratic reform of the system i.e. real socialism, but also containing the first seeds of pro-capitalist illusions.

In 1989 the East German regime fell to a popular revolution that smashed down the Berlin Wall and also the Stalinist bureaucratic state machine. In the absence of a conscious revolutionary party in East Germany that could defend the nationalised, planned economy as well as achieving democracy, the West through the West German government was able to proffer the hand of the "free market" and restore capitalism.

In Russia, Gorbachev watched with alarm as the movement spread across Eastern Europe into the Soviet Union itself which had renamed itself the Confederation of Independent States (CIS). As the crisis developed, Gorbachev became more and more isolated between the old apparatchiks clinging onto the old regime and the new pro-capitalist group.

Rise of Yeltsin

In 1991 the struggle between these two wings culminated in the old regime’s failed coup attempt against the Yeltsin-dominated parliament. Even the coup leaders were resigned to capitalist "reforms", but wanted to reverse Gorbachev’s minor democratic reforms and return to a totalitarian state. The mass of workers, though suspicious of Yeltsin, moved to prevent the coup and it fizzled out as the army’s ranks refused to move.

Gorbachev now cut a pathetic figure. The coup leaders had arrested him. However, the coup’s failure resulted not just in Gorbachev’s release but also the final victory for the Yeltsin group. Gorbachev slipped from power and onto the western university lecture circuit. Yeltsin staggered into power and capitalism occupied Russia and the rest of the CIS in a series of brutal reforms.

As usual the elite benefited. Most of the new Russian capitalists were drawn from the old bureaucracy. Some became billionaires: Yeltsin made a fortune himself. But the capitalist counter-revolution affected the lives of hundreds of thousands as factory closures and the slashing of state benefits devastated living standards.

The average life expectancy tumbled in one of the most dramatic falls in history. Mikhail and Raisa Gorbachev retired in comfort, but Russia’s pensioners still have to fight for the most basic benefits.

Gorbachev later said that he always intended to impose capitalism, but he was being wise after the event. In fact he attempted to save a doomed system. He also said that the Russian Revolution was a great mistake, meaning that the Stalinist system was inevitable and condemned to fail.

The Gorbachevs and Yeltsins of the world cannot imagine a society without privileged elites. But the main lesson of Russia is that, instead of capitalism and Stalinism, the only way for humanity to develop is with socialist democracy.


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