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latest news

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.

  Kazakhstan

 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

  Belgium

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.

  Europe

 Nigeria
Story of the great general strike

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

  Nigeria, Video

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

  Kazakhstan

Tunisia
“The mass of people continue to struggle”

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

  Tunisia

US
For an independent Left challenge in Presidential elections

30/01/2012: Fight Against Corporate Politics

  US

 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.

  Environment

Cyprus
Partial general strike paralyses public sector

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

  Cyprus

Asia
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

  China

Egypt
Huge crowds in Tahrir Square mark revolution anniversary

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

  Egypt

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

  China

 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

  Brazil

Kazakhstan
New wave of arrests against opposition

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

  Kazakhstan

 Kazakhstan
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

  Kazakhstan, Video

USA
Mobilize to Support Longshore Workers

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

  US

 CWI International Meeting
World capitalism in crisis

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

  CWI, CWI Comment And Analysis

Britain
Stephen Lawrence murder – The untold story

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

  Britain

Scotland
ConDem government blunders independence referendum

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

  Scotland

Egypt
A year of revolution and counter-revolution

18/01/2012: As economic crisis worsens, new class conflicts loom

  Egypt

Nigeria
Widespread disapointment and anger as labour suspends strike

17/01/2012: Struggle forces Jonathan back a bit, but could have won far more with a more resolute leadership - We Condemn Repression by Police and Army

  Nigeria

World economy
The year of all risks

15/01/2012: On the brink of a new downturn

  World Economy

Britain
Pensions battle continues

15/01/2012: Public sector union left group organises open conference to keep up the fight

  Britain

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Iraq

Bush continues his dangerous blunder

www.socialistworld.net, 18/01/2007
website of the committee for a workers' international, CWI

"The most dangerous foreign policy blunder in this country since Vietnam" were the words Chuck Hagel, a Vietnam war veteran used to describe Bush’s latest revised Iraq strategy. Hagel, however, is not only a Vietnam war veteran but is also a US senator for Bush’s Republican party.

The Socialist

Bush’s new plan for Iraq was cloaked in hypocrisy. Bush said that anything other than his new strategy "would force a collapse of the Iraqi government, tear that country apart and result in mass killings on an unimaginable scale", without the slightest recognition that all his previous strategies brought about the current chaos and carnage.

And as the International Herald Tribune editorial (15 January) commented: "There are no really satisfying answers in Iraq, since all of the remaining options are bad. Still, some are notably worse than others, and Bush has come up with possibly the worst."

Bush’s new plan - to send a ’surge’ of 21,500 extra troops into Iraq - is similar to onslaughts that were tried and failed by the Bush regime in 2004, 2005 and 2006.

That’s why the ’new’ plan has met with almost universal rejection in the US and internationally. Once 73% of US people backed the invasion now 70% of Americans oppose the plan and 65% believe the invasion of Iraq was a mistake.

Isolated

Bush may have painted himself into the tightest corner in his bunker but he is determined to press ahead no matter how isolated he is or how disastrous the consequences.

The possibility of the president’s impeachment has been raised. However, this appears unlikely because of the time the process takes and because the Democrats have compromised and discredited themselves over the war and have no real alternative to Bush’s plans.

The most immediate consequence of Bush’s plan will be an escalation of conflict and bloodshed bringing further misery for the long-suffering people of Iraq and the Middle East. Despite his protestations that "if mistakes have been made the responsibility lies with me", Bush’s new strategy will compound his administration’s mistakes.

New conflicts?

The threat of attacks on Iran along with bombings of alleged al-Qa’ida bases in Somalia will also intensify fears that Bush’s new plans will widen the field of conflict.

Bush’s statement was quickly followed by US soldiers raiding Iranian missions in northern Iraq and seizing Iranian diplomats there. One Iranian minister said the Bush regime was moving from "cold war" to "hot war".

Three British cabinet ministers have expressed doubts about sending the extra troops. They fear - correctly - that Bush’s new hardline generals desire to ’eliminate’ Moqtada al-Sadr’s Shi-ite Mahdi army will result in a massive escalation of the violence in Iraq, which would see greater casualty levels among the 7,200 British troops based in predominantly Shia areas like Basra.

The Iraqi government of Nouri al-Maliki was brutally warned by US Secretary of State, Condoleeza Rice, that it was living on borrowed time unless it reined in the Shi-ite militias - an increasingly improbable prospect.

It is clear that Bush hopes that tackling the Shia militias is the first step to reducing sectarian violence and undercutting Iranian attempts to influence a Shia-dominated Iraq.

Whereas, the Iraq Study Group was pushing Bush to try and draw in Syria and Iran in to the process of ’stabilising’ Iraq, the Bush regime now prefers to go it alone - raising the danger of a wider Middle East conflict.

Tony Blair’s statements (see below) about preparing for more British involvement in wars is a further reflection of how far Blair, along with Bush, is preparing for more conflict in the Middle East and beyond.

Some critics have described Blair and Bush’s statements as delusional - which in part they are. No number of troops or new initiatives will be able to reverse the chaos that the invasion and occupation has brought about.

As long as the coalition forces occupy Iraq, the bloody chaos will continue, as it will even if they are withdrawn. Without a genuine political alternative based on a united working-class struggle for jobs, decent living standards, and democratic rights in Iraq, the existing political set-up of institutionalised sectarianism will lead to a violent fragmentation of Iraq.

Imperialism and capitalism has evidently failed to bring about a democratic Iraq, only a socialist movement in Iraq and throughout the region can end this capitalist nightmare.

Workers in Iraq, together with the rural poor, need to start building a strong non-sectarian movement of workers against imperialism. They should fight for a government of their own representatives to act in the interests of Iraq’s workers and poor rather than those of the capitalist class in the West and within Iraq.

Stop the War Coalition/CND demo

  • No Trident
  • Troops out of Iraq
  • Saturday 24 February
  • assemble 12noon, Speakers’ Corner, Hyde Park.
  • March to Trafalgar Square, London.

Blair’s vision: ’wars without end’

Tony Blair’s political failures in Iraq and Afghanistan - which have cost the lives of hundreds of thousands of civilians and nearly 200 UK service personnel deaths - has not stopped the megalomaniac prime minister envisaging a future of wars without end.

In a speech aboard HMS Albion, (appropriately enough for someone echoing the past days of the British empire!), Blair defined the future role of Britain’s armed forces. Notwithstanding the evidence of an overstretched military presence in Iraq and Afghanistan, he wants the armed forces to be centre stage in wars against ’global terrorism’, stretching endlessly into the future.

"My choice would be for armed forces... to be war fighters as well as peacekeepers; for a British foreign policy keeps our American alliance strong and is prepared to project hard as well as soft power," he said.

However, rather than countering ’terrorism’ Blair’s and Bush’s military adventures around the world have further fuelled the rise of right-wing political Islam and its networks of terrorist operatives.

History lesson

Incredibly, Blair said the challenge since the 9/11 attacks in the US resembled the ’free world’s’ fight against "revolutionary communism in its early and most militant phase".

This is a blatantly false and reactionary historical comparison. The response of British imperialism and its allies after the 1917 Russian revolution, where the working class came to power, was to try and crush it in blood!

Some 21 allied armies were sent to destroy the workers’ government (which had ended Russia’s war, and the Tsar’s oppressive rule) and restore a capitalist dictatorship. Only socialist internationalism and massive sacrifices by Russian workers and peasants prevented the imperialist powers in succeeding.

However, the devastation of the wars of intervention and the resulting political isolation so weakened the workers’ state as to create the conditions for the rise of a one-party Stalinist dictatorship - the negation of workers’ democracy.

Vladimir Lenin, the revolutionary socialist and leader of the 1917 revolution, described imperialism as "horror without end". Blair with his ’wars without end’ clearly identifies with continuing this bloody imperialist legacy.

From The Socialist, paper of the Socialist Party, cwi in England and Wales.


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