by
The Russian Revolution of 1917 erupted on the fiftieth anniversary
of the publication of Karl Marx’s Capital. From the
start, the October Revolution seemed both to confirm and contradict Marx’s
analysis. He had envisioned a working-class-based socialist revolution breaking
out in the developed capitalist countries of Western Europe. But the 1882
preface to the Communist Manifesto, written a year
before his death, amended this by pointing to a revolution in Russia as a
possible “signal for proletarian revolution in the West.”1 Yet although a worker-peasant revolution under Marxist
leadership triumphed in Russia in 1917, Russia was still a largely
underdeveloped country, and the revolutionary uprisings in Germany and Central
Europe which followed were weak and easily extinguished.
In these
circumstances, Soviet Russia, completely isolated, faced a massive
counterrevolution, with all the major imperialist powers intervening on the
side of the White Russian forces in the Civil War. “Socialism in one country,”
the basic defensive posture of the USSR throughout its history, was thus to a
large extent a geopolitical reality imposed on it from outside. This was
evident beginning with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, in which Russia was forced
to give up much of the territory of the Tsarist Empire, followed soon after by
the Treaty of Versailles, which sought to isolate it still further.
It was imperialism—not in its generic sense, encompassing the whole
history of colonialism—but in its connection to the monopoly stage of
capitalism, as V. I. Lenin employed the term, that constituted the differentia specifica of twentieth-century
capitalism, determining the conditions of both revolution and
counterrevolution. Already by the late nineteenth century, the contest over
colonies that had shaped much of European conflict since the seventeenth
century had been replaced by a struggle of a qualitatively new kind:
competition between nation-states and their corporations, not for imperial
zones, but for actual global hegemony in an increasingly interconnected
imperialist world system.2 Henceforth revolution and counterrevolution would be
interrelated at the level of the system as a whole. All revolutionary waves,
concentrated in the periphery where exploitation was most severe, since
intensified by the extraction of surplus by the metropolitan powers, were
revolts against imperialism, and were confronted by imperialist
counterrevolution, organized by the core capitalist states.3Complicating this was the fact that a privileged sector of the
working class in the advanced capitalist states could be seen as benefitting
indirectly from the drain of surplus from the periphery, giving rise to a
“labor aristocracy,” a phenomenon first singled out Frederick Engels and later
theorized by Lenin in his Imperialism, the Highest Stage
of Capitalism.4
Still, in 1967, a half-century after October 1917 and a hundred
years after Capital, it was not unreasonable to
assume, amid the Vietnam War and the Cultural Revolution in China, that world
revolution would gradually gain the upper hand, and that the revolutions that
had occurred, not only in Russia, but also in China, Cuba, and elsewhere, were
irreversible. The twentieth century had already proven itself the bloodiest in
human history. Yet it was also a period of enormous advances in human
liberation. If the forces of world counterrevolution were gathering, their
victory, even in the short run, was far from certain. As Herbert Marcuse
declared in the opening pages of his 1972 Counterrevolution and Revolt:
The Western world
has reached a new stage of development: now, the defense of the capitalist
system requires the organization of counterrevolution at home and abroad. In
its extreme manifestations, it practices the horrors of the Nazi regime.
Wholesale massacres in Indochina, Indonesia, the Congo, Nigeria, Pakistan, and
the Sudan are unleashed against everything which is called “communist” or which
is in revolt against governments subservient to the imperialist countries.
Cruel persecution prevails in the Latin American countries under fascist and
military dictatorships. Torture has become a normal instrument of
“interrogation” around the world. The agony of religious wars revives at the
height of Western civilization, and a constant flow of arms from the rich
countries to the poor helps to perpetuate the oppression of national and social
liberation…. The counterrevolution is largely preventative and, in the Western
world, altogether preventative…. Capitalism reorganizes itself to meet the
threat of a revolution which would be the most radical of all historical
revolutions. It would be the first truly world-historicalrevolution.
Today, a hundred years after the Russian Revolution and a
century-and-a-half after Capital, conditions
have changed. It would appear that the clock has been turned back, and the
forces of global counterrevolution have triumphed. Most of the emancipatory
movements that seemed to be gaining ground in the 1960s, primarily in the
periphery, have been roundly defeated.
Nevertheless, the material contradictions of capitalist
development—particularly in the form of the planetary ecological emergency—are
in many ways more serious than ever before. Since the Great Financial Crisis of
2007–09 pulled the veil away, it is abundantly clear that the present phase of
global monopoly-finance capital, with its unprecedented levels of inequality,
its stagnation and instability, its civilization-destroying bellicosity, its
destruction of the environment, and its new forms of political-economic
reaction, threatens the future not only of this generation, but that of all
generations—the very survival of humanity. As Eric Hobsbawm concluded in his
history of the twentieth century, “the price of failure, that is to say, the
alternative to a changed society, is darkness.”5
Reaction on a World Scale
If imperialist
counterrevolution triumphed in the end over the revolutionary waves of the
twentieth century, how are we to understand this, and what does it mean for the
future of world revolution? The answer requires a survey, in desperate brevity,
of the whole history of imperialist geopolitics over the last century.
The period from the mid-1870s through the First World War marked a
qualitative break in the logic of capitalist development. Contemporary
observers as early as the 1870s spoke of the “new imperialism,” to refer to a
rapid increase in colonial acquisitions, the rise of new imperial powers, and a
reemergence of inter-imperialist rivalries.6 It was in this phase of the system that monopoly
capital—capitalism dominated by giant industrial and financial firms—arose.
Germany and the United States were rapidly entering the new age of heavy
industry and advancing by leaps and bounds into the monopoly stage of
capitalism, while Britain lagged behind in both respects.7 British hegemony over the capitalist world economy, dating
from the Industrial Revolution, while still unrivalled in scale, was
increasingly threatened under a new multipolar order of competing core states.
The last three decades of the nineteenth century were years of economic
stagnation, known in Europe at the time as the Great Depression. But it also
represented an age of dramatic shifts in the locus of capitalist power.
Observing these trends, proponents of imperialism in the major
capitalist states developed the new pseudoscience of geopolitics, which focused
on the struggle for hegemony in the world system. Geopolitics can be understood
in Clausewitzian terms as war by other means, often leading to the actual
outbreak of hostilities. It had its origins primarily in the United States and
Germany in the 1890s, marking the rise of both nations as imperial powers. In
the United States, the new outlook was best represented by Charles Conant’s
“The Economic Basis of Imperialism” (1898) and Brooks Adams’s The New Empire (1902)—both of which projected U.S.
political-economic hegemony over large parts of the globe, particularly the
Pacific.8 The founder of the German school of Geopolitik was Friedrich Ratzel, who in the 1890s
coined the term Lebensraum, “living space,” as an
imperative of German policy. “There is in this small planet,” Ratzel wrote,
“sufficient space for only one great state.”9
However, what can be called classical geopolitical analysis only
appeared in the interwar years and during the Second World War. Its leading
British theorist was Halford MacKinder, a former director of the London School
of Economics and for twelve years a Member of Parliament from Glasgow. In Democratic Ideals and Reality (1919), he wrote:
“The great wars of history are the outcome, direct or indirect, of the unequal
growth of nations.” The object of capitalist geopolitics was to promote “the
growth of empires,” ending in “a single World-Empire.”10MacKinder was famous for his doctrine of the Heartland. Hegemony
over what he called the World-Island (the interlocked continents of Europe,
Asia, and Africa) and through it control of the entire world, could only be
achieved, he argued, by dominating the Heartland—the enormous transcontinental
landmass of Eurasia, encompassing Eastern Europe, Russia, and Central Asia. The
Heartland was “the greatest natural fortress on earth,” because of its
inaccessibility to the sea.11 In the new Eurasian age, land power—not sea power, as in past
centuries—would be decisive. In Mackinder’s famous dictum:
Who rules East
Europe commands the Heartland:
Who rules the Heartland commands the World-Island:
Who rules the World-Island commands the World.12
Who rules the Heartland commands the World-Island:
Who rules the World-Island commands the World.12
Mackinder’s geopolitical strategy was influenced by the Russian
Revolution, and used to justify imperialist counterrevolution. In 1919, the
British government appointed him high commissioner for South Russia,
responsible for organizing British support for General Denikin and the White
Army in the Civil War. Following the Red Army’s defeat of Denikin, Mackinder
returned to London and reported to the government that, although Britain was
right to fear German industrialization and militarism, German rearmament, then
ostensibly blocked by the Treaty of Versailles, was essential. For Mackinder,
Germany constituted the chief bulwark against Bolshevik control of Eastern
Europe, and thus of the geopolitical Heartland.13
Mackinder was not the only influential interwar figure to promote
such beliefs. It was this same logic that led Neville Chamberlain’s government
two decades later not so much to “appease” Nazi Germany, as to collude with it,
in the hope that Germany would turn its guns eastward, toward the USSR. Indeed,
the Treaty of Versailles, as Thorstein Veblen explained, was a “compact for the
reduction of Soviet Russia,” which while “not written into the text of the
Treaty,” could “be said to have been the parchment upon which the text was
written.”14
In Germany, the leading geopolitical theorist of the 1930s and ’40s
was Karl Haushofer, the mentor of Rudolf Hess (Deputy Führer in the Nazi
regime), and himself a key adviser to Adolf Hitler. He saw the British and U.S.
empires as the main threat to Germany, and thus advocated the creation of a
great Eurasian intercontinental power bloc, with Germany entering into an
alliance of convenience with Russia and Japan to destroy Anglo-American power.
With the signing of the Hitler-Stalin Nonaggression Pact, he wrote: “Now
finally, the collaboration of the Axis powers, and of the Far
East, stands distinctly before the German soul. At last there is
hope of survival against the Anaconda policy [the strangling encirclement] of
the Western democracies.”15
In the United States, the foremost geopolitical thinker of the age
was Nicholas Spykman. In America’s Strategy in World
Politics (1942) and his posthumous The Geography of Peace (1944), Spykman opposed
Mackinder’s Heartland, land-based geopolitical strategy, in favor of one that
emphasized sea power. By controlling the coastal rimlands of Europe, the Middle
East, East Asia, and the Pacific, the United States could encircle the Eurasian
Heartland, then controlled by the USSR. Spykman insisted on the need for an
American-British hegemony over the globe, and was primarily concerned in The Geography of Peace with preventing the USSR
from establishing “a hegemony over the European rimland.” The Soviet Union, he
argued, would be unable to defend itself against “a united rimland.”16 Spykman’s geopolitics exerted a powerful if largely forgotten
influence on U.S. foreign policy with the advent of the Cold War, including
George Kennan’s strategy of “containment,” as well as the grand designs of the
Council on Foreign Relations.
In 1943, Mackinder underscored the global stakes for the U.S.
empire, declaring in Foreign Affairs that
“the territory of the Soviet Union is equivalent to the Heartland,” over which
it could not be allowed to retain control.17 Washington’s initial geopolitical strategy adopted during the
Second World War was intended to extend U.S. hegemony outward beyond what the
Council on Foreign Relations called the Grand Area of the British and American
empires, to further encompass continental Europe, the Middle East, and the
rimlands of Asia.18 In the new anticommunist crusade, revolutions were to be
fought all across the globe, but especially in these strategic areas. Not only
the Council on Foreign Relations, but a succession of leading Cold War and
post-Cold War strategic planners, such as James Burnham, Eugene Rostow, Henry
Kissinger, Zbigniew Brzezinski, and Paul Wolfowitz, would go on to argue in
similar terms.19 Washington would ultimately set itself the wider objective of
dominating states and regions throughout the world, as well as controlling
strategic resources, capital movements, currencies, and world trade. However,
the full extent of U.S. imperial ambitions was to become apparent only in the
period of naked imperialism following the demise of the Soviet Union.20
The clearest official statement of this new global ambition was the
Defense Planning Guidance for 1994–1999 (portions of which were leaked to
the New York Times in 1992) overseen by Wolfowitz as
undersecretary of defense for policy. This became known as the Wolfowitz
Doctrine, commonly associated with the rise of neoconservatism. Intended as a
direct response to the disappearance of the USSR from the world stage, it
explicitly declared that the new goal of U.S. geopolitical strategy would be
the indefinite prevention of the reemergence of any rival power that could
threaten American supremacy—that is, the pursuit of a permanent unipolar world.
“Russia,” the document stated, “will remain the strongest military power in
Eurasia and the only power in the world with the capability of destroying the
United States.”21It thus continued to be the principal long-run target.
As Brzezinski, Carter’s national security adviser, put it in 1997
in The Grand Chessboard, “the United States…now enjoys
international primacy, with its power directly deployed on three peripheries of
the Eurasian continent”—Western Europe and parts of Eastern Europe, Central
Asia and the Middle East, and East Asia and the Pacific Rim. The goal, he
argued, was to create a “hegemony of a new type” or “global supremacy,”
indefinitely establishing the United States as “the first and only truly global
power.”22 The new world order then envisioned was one of U.S. unipolar
power, backed by nuclear primacy. Regime change in mid-level states considered
of geopolitical significance and outside the U.S. empire—even those previously
tolerated in the context of the Cold War—became essential. Here the goal was
not to create stable democracies—an objective never considered viable in key
strategic areas such as the Middle East—but rather to destroy “rogue states”
and unassimilated political blocs, particularly on the outskirts of the
Eurasian Heartland and in the oil-rich Persian Gulf, that could threaten the
security or hinder the expansion of the U.S. empire. The blowback from this
grand strategy of destruction is most evident today in the rise of the Islamic
State.
The U.S. imperial grand strategy for the post-Soviet era first
outlined in the Defense Planning Guidance had as its governing assumption the
eventual resurgence of hostilities with a now capitalist Russia, as that nation
inevitably recovered. In anticipation of this, the U.S. hegemon and its NATO
allies expanded further into Eurasia and surrounding regions, engaging in wars
in the Balkans, Central Asia, the Middle East, and North Africa, tightening the
noose around Russia over the quarter-century from 1992 to the present.23 This same grand imperial strategy included the suppression of
all anti-systemic movements and forces in key strategic areas in the periphery,
as well as attempts to constrain China militarily and politically.
Following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the United
States, the New World Order originally declared by George H. W. Bush took on
the additional ideological mantle of the War on Terrorism introduced by George
W. Bush. This justified a strategy of permanent war and “humanitarian
interventions” throughout the global periphery. In its efforts to assert total
dominance over the Middle East following the 2003 Iraq War, the United States,
backed by NATO, designated Iran and—particularly after the 2011 invasion of
Libya—Syria as the leading Middle Eastern states sponsoring terrorism, making
their demise its principal objective. Yet the real reasons for regime change in
the Middle East and elsewhere, as Wolfowitz had intimated in the early 1990s to
General Wesley Clark, were strictly geopolitical.24
The Obama administration, together with its NATO allies, brokered
the 2014 coup in Ukraine, putting in place a pliant far-right government headed
by a Western-friendly oligarch, thereby proclaiming in no uncertain terms the
New Cold War against Russia. This reflected a strategic campaign in the works
since at least 2007, when Vladimir Putin defiantly declared that “the unipolar
policy model [of absolute U.S. global supremacy] is not only unacceptable but
also impossible in today’s world.”25 The long counterrevolution against the Soviet Union was thus
extended into a geopolitical struggle aimed at a reemerging, now capitalist,
Russia. The latter struck back by absorbing Crimea (formerly part of Ukraine)
following a referendum; seeking to stabilize conditions in eastern Ukraine on
its border, particularly with respect to Russian nationals; and intervening to
counter the U.S.-Saudi-sponsored proxy war against the Assad regime in
Syria—thereby succeeding in preventing the toppling of its main Middle Eastern
ally.
Remarkably, the new Trump administration, representing a somewhat
different faction of the U.S. capitalist class—beholden particularly to the
fossil-fuel industry and financial sector and drawing heavily on a lower
middle-class, ultra-nationalist ideology—initially signaled a geopolitical
shift, aimed at détente with Russia. This was to be accompanied by a policy of
concentrating on countering the Islamic State, Iran, North Korea, and China as
the principal global antagonists—a view associated with the “clash of
civilizations” strategy of Samuel P. Huntington, as opposed to the Eurasian
Heartland approach of Wolfowitz and Brzezinski.26The incoming administration made it clear that China, with its
rapid economic growth and increasing regional power, represented the main
threat to U.S. hegemony (and U.S. jobs), and hence the main target of its
imperial strategy.
Nevertheless, the
greater part of the U.S. military-industrial complex, from the Pentagon to the
intelligence agencies to the major security contractors, has strongly resisted
this shift away from Russia as the principal antagonist—to the point of
insinuating treason on the part of the Trump administration for its preliminary
discussions with Russian officials, portrayed as collusion with the enemy.
Hence, the administration has been subject to an unprecedented number of leaks
from within the national security state, and has come under investigation for
its communications with Russia during the campaign and the post-election
transition. For dominant sections of the U.S. ruling class, it remains
essential that Russia, occupying the Eurasian Heartland, and still constituting
the chief nuclear rival, should remain the principal target of U.S. grand
strategy. The stability of the NATO alliance, and the entire U.S. strategy of
permanently subordinating Europe to its rule, is founded on the New Cold War
with Russia.
For the U.S. ruling
class, the strength of the U.S. economy, the supremacy of the dollar, and hence
the financial power of Washington, are all seen as dependent on U.S. global
primacy. Although U.S. GDP growth and that of the other core capitalist
countries has stagnated, with the West losing ground economically to a rapidly
developing China, the increasingly irrational geopolitical strategy coming out
of Washington still has as its objective a unipolar world order. This is to be
leveraged by an array of strategic assets, including the combined weight of the
triad alliance of the United States and Canada, Europe, and Japan under U.S.
leadership; geopolitical dominance; military and technological power; and
financial supremacy via the dollar.
The aggressiveness of this imperial strategy can be seen in the
U.S. pursuit of absolute dominance in nuclear weapons capabilities under the
rubric of the “modernization” of all three legs of its nuclear arsenal. The
object is to take full advantage of the fact that a weakened Russia fell behind
for years in maintaining and modernizing its own nuclear weaponry, allowing the
United States to pull decisively ahead. U.S. nuclear strategy is now predicated
on the “death of MAD” (Mutual Assured Destruction), that is, the demise of the
entire system of deterrence.27 Those formulating U.S. strategic doctrine increasingly
believe that the United States is currently capable, while using only a small
part of its nuclear arsenal, of destroying enough nuclear weapons of an
opponent in a first strike (or counterforce attack)—even in the case of
Russia—to prevail in a nuclear confrontation. In short, Pentagon planners now
believe the United States has attained “strategic primacy” in nuclear weapons
capability.28 This would make a first strike against any enemy on Earth
“thinkable” for the first time since 1945, when Truman ordered the dropping of
the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, resulting in hundreds of thousands
of civilian casualties—in what was a political rather than a military decision,
and the first real act of the Cold War.29 Ominously, with the imminent death of MAD, the other side
too, in any period of nuclear tensions, has greater incentive to strike first,
lest it be destroyed completely by a U.S. hegemon no longer restrained by fears
of its own destruction in the event of a first strike on its part.30
“An essential feature of imperialism,” Lenin wrote, “is the rivalry
between a number of great powers in the striving for hegemony.”31 Such dangers are redoubled over the long run when one
capitalist nation, as in the case of the United States in the twenty-first
century, seeks to create a unipolar world or superimperialist order.
In the second half of the twentieth century, the United States
showed itself to be the world’s most destructive nation, killing millions in
wars, invasions, and counterinsurgencies across the globe.32 This bloody legacy continues into the present: over a single
Labor Day weekend, on September 3–5, 2016, the United States dropped bombs on
or fired missiles at six largely Islamic countries: Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya,
Somalia, Syria, and Yemen. In 2015, it dropped a total of over 22,000 bombs on
Iraq and Syria alone.33 No country opposed to the United States can afford to
underestimate the level of violence that could be directed at it by the U.S.
hegemon.
Revolution: The Human Future
In the twentieth century, revolutions were as much a product of
resistance to imperialism as of class struggle. They most often broke out, as
Lenin observed, in the “weak links” of the imperialist world system.34 Inevitably, they were met with counterrevolution organized by
the great powers of the capitalist core. Even a small uprising was likely to be
seen as a threat to world capitalist rule, and was usually crushed with brutal
force, as in Ronald Reagan’s massive 1983 invasion of the tiny island of
Grenada, or the covert war against the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. The dominant
ideology invariably blames the enormous human cost of this warfare on the
revolutions themselves, rather than on imperialist counterrevolutions, which
are rapidly erased from historical memory.
In 1970, MR editors
Harry Magdoff and Paul Sweezy were invited to the inauguration of Chilean
President Salvador Allende, who had been democratically elected as the head of
a Popular Unity government, which promised to introduce socialism in Chile,
starting with the nationalization of U.S. corporate assets in the country’s
major industries. Magdoff and Sweezy were longtime friends of Allende’s, and
their analysis at the time of his inauguration focused on the dangers arising
from the close connections between the United States and the Chilean military,
suggesting the strong likelihood of a military coup to be sponsored by
Washington and carried out by Chile’s praetorian guard. Imperialism, they
warned, respects no rule of law where challenges to the existing order are
concerned. And indeed, a bloody seizure of power, led by General Augusto
Pinochet and engineered by the United States, occurred three years later,
taking the life of Allende and thousands of others.35
All of this
reaffirms the historical truth that there can be no socialist
revolution—however it should arise—that is not also forced to confront the
reality of counterrevolution. Indeed, in judging revolution and
counterrevolution over the last century, particular stress must be put on the
strength and virulence of the counterrevolution. The struggles and errors of
the revolutionists are only to be seen in the context of this wider historical
dialectic.
From history textbooks to the mainstream news media, the dominant
ideology in the West today presents the Russian Revolution of 1917 as an utter
failure from beginning to end. The USSR, we are told, collapsed under the
weight of its own internal inefficiencies and irremediable defects—though these
accounts often claim almost in the same breath that it was U.S. power and
military might that “won” the Cold War. It is undeniable that the history of
the USSR was rife with historical tragedies and social and economic
contradictions. Much of the enormous human potential that the Russian
Revolution unleashed was exhausted in the devastating Civil War—in which the
White Russian forces were directly supported by troops and arms from the West.
The Soviet Union later fell prey to Joseph Stalin’s extreme collectivization
and brutal purges.36
Nevertheless, the
USSR over its history also underwent extraordinary industrial development, the
conditions of the working class generally improved, and the population enjoyed
certain economic securities lacking elsewhere. It was the Soviet Union that
saved the West in the Second World War, beginning with the dramatic defeat of
the Wehrmacht at Stalingrad—the turning point of the war—and the victorious
westward march of the Red Army (though the war also took a huge toll: the USSR
lost more than twenty million people). The Soviet Union’s very existence
inspired movements for human liberation in the third world. With the growth of
the Soviet bloc and the region’s economic and technological accomplishments,
the position of the USSR in the world seemed secure well into the 1970s. Its
central planning system, despite certain inefficiencies and a tendency to
degenerate into an overly bureaucratized command economy, offered a new and in
many ways successful approach to economic and social development in
noncapitalist terms.
But the USSR failed to carry forward the socialist revolution. The
postrevolutionary society that emerged generated its own bureaucratic ruling
class, the nomenklatura, which had arisen from
the inequities of the system. The USSR’s stubborn refusal to allow independent
development in Eastern Europe (albeit viewed as a necessary buffer zone against
Western invasion) was made clear in the Soviet invasions of Hungary in 1956 and
Czechoslovakia in 1968.37
In the end, the USSR lost its inner dynamism, relying too much on
extensive (the forced drafting of labor and resources) rather than intensive
development (dynamic productivity from technological innovation and the
unleashing of creative forces). It was exhausted by a decades-long military,
political, and economic contest with the West, forced to compete in a massive
arms race that it could ill afford.38 For all their superficial promise, Mikhail Gorbachev’s misconceived
and indeed disastrous glasnost (openness)
and perestroika (restructuring) policies massively
undid the system, rather than reforming it. Although the loss of Eastern
Europe, symbolically marked by the fall of the Berlin Wall, contributed to this
unraveling, it was the Soviet nomenklatura that
proved to be the system’s final undoing, as numerous representatives of the
Soviet power elite and a corrupted privileged intelligentsia, in alliance with
Boris Yeltsin and the West, chose to dissolve the post-revolutionary state from
above—believing that their own individual and class interests would be better
promoted under capitalism.39
Yet in spite of all of this, the experience of the USSR, as the
first major socialist break with the capitalist system, continues to inspire
and to inform revolution in the twenty-first century. Hugo Chávez’s Bolivarian
Revolution—though it took an entirely different form and is now itself
imperiled by a counterrevolution supported by the United States—could hardly
have been imagined without the Soviet example.40 The USSR’s extraordinary economic, technological, and
cultural achievements are not easily erased in the historical memory.41
The world capitalist
crisis of the late twentieth century eventually engulfed the core capitalist
nations themselves as they sank from the 1970s on into economic
stagnation—partly counteracted by the financialization of accumulation in the
1980s and ’90s, which, however, ended with the bursting of the housing bubble
in 2007–09. With the full onset of stagnation since the Great Financial Crisis,
the positions of the working class and lower-middle class in the advanced
capitalist states have plummeted. Inequality has reached its highest level in
history, both within nations and globally.
So severe is this seemingly endless crisis that it has destabilized
the state within the core capitalist countries. The ruling classes of the
various capitalist countries have responded to the growing popular
disenchantment by resurrecting the radical right as a kind of ballast for
stabilizing the system. Neoliberalism has thus partially given way to
neofascism, or what may prove to be a neoliberal-neofascist (or center
right/radical right) alliance. In the United States, science itself is rejected
as a threat to capitalism, with climate-change denial now the official stance
of the Trump White House.42 The “destruction of reason” is thus complete.43
Reactionary forces have of course gained the upper hand many times
before in the history of the class struggle, only to give rise to new
revolutionary waves. Commenting on the defeat of the 1848 revolutions in
Europe, Engels observed in Germany: Revolution and
Counter-Revolution:
A more signal defeat
undergone by the continental revolutionary party—or rather parties—upon all
points of the line of battle, cannot be imagined. But what of that?… Everyone
knows nowadays that wherever there is a revolutionary convulsion, there must be
some social want in the background, which is prevented, by outward
institutions, from satisfying itself…. If, then, we have been beaten, we have
nothing else to do but to begin again from the beginning.44
Although the
historical conditions have been transformed many times over, these sentiments
still ring true. Given today’s ever more desperate need for social change, it
is necessary “to begin again from the beginning,” creating a new, more
revolutionary socialism for the twenty-first century. Massive, democratic,
egalitarian, ecological, revolutionary change in both center and periphery
represents the only truly human future. The alternative is the death of all
humanity.
Notes
1.
↩Karl Marx and
Frederick Engels, “Preface to the Second Russian edition of the Manifesto of
the Communist Party,” in Teodor Shanin, ed., Late Marx and the Russian
Road (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1983), 138–39.
2.
↩The analysis
differs here from most world-systems theory, which sees the successive
hegemonies of the Dutch, the British, and the United States within the
world-economy as essentially the same, denying the distinctiveness of the monopoly
stage of capitalism.
3.
↩For a history of
revolutionary waves in the periphery up until the 1980s see L. S. Stavrianos,Global Rift: The third world Comes of Age (New
York: Morrow, 1981).
4.
↩Frederick Engels,The Condition of the Working Class in England(Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 1993), 324; V. I. Lenin,Imperialism, the Highest State
of Capitalism(Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1939),13–14, 106–08. On
the shift of revolution to the third world and its impact on Marxian theory,
see Paul M. Sweezy,Modern Capitalism and Other Essays(New
York: Monthly Review Press, 1972), 147–65.
5.
↩Eric Hobsbawm,The Age of Extremes (New York: Vintage, 1994),
585.
6.
↩R. Koebner and H.
D. Schmidt,Imperialism: The Story and Significance of a Political Word, 1840–1960(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1965), 175.
7.
↩E. J. Hobsbawm,Industry and Empire (London: Penguin, 1969),
172–93.
8.
↩Charles A. Conant,
“The Economic Basis of Imperialism,”North American Review 167,
no. 502 (1898): 326–40.
9.
↩Ratzel quoted in
Robert Strausz-Hupé,Geopolitics: The Struggle for Space and Power (New
York: Putnam, 1942), 31.
10.
↩Halford Mackinder,Democratic Ideals and Reality (New York: Holt,
1919), 1–2.
11.
↩Halford Mackinder,
“The Round World and the Winning of the Peace,”Foreign Affairs 21,
no. 4 (1943): 601.
12.
↩MacKinder,Democratic Ideals and Reality, 186.
13.
↩Brian W. Blouet,Halford Mackinder (College Station, TX: Texas
A&M University Press, 1987), 172–77.
14.
↩Thorstein Veblen,Essays in Our Changing Order (New York: Viking,
1943), 464.
15.
↩Christopher
Hitchens, “Chamberlain: Collusion, Not Appeasement,”Monthly Review 46, no. 8 (January 1995): 44–55;
Clement Leibovitz,The Chamberlain-Hitler Deal (Edmonton,
CA: Éditions Duval, 1995).
16.
↩Nicholas John
Spykman,America’s Strategy in World Politics (New York:
Harcourt, Brace, 1942), 19, 458–60;Geography of Peace (New
York: Harcourt, Brace, 1944), 43, 57.
17.
↩Halford Mackinder,
“The Round World and the Winning of the Peace,” 598.
18.
↩Noam Chomsky, “The Cold War and the
Superpowers,”Monthly Review 33,
no. 6 (November 1981): 1–10; Gabriel Kolko,The Politics of War (New
York: Random House, 1968).
19.
↩See John Bellamy
Foster, “The New Geopolitics of Empire,”Monthly Review 57, no. 8 (January 2006): 9–14.
20.
↩John Bellamy
Foster, Naked Imperialism (New
York: Monthly Review Press, 2006).
21.
↩See Foster, “The
New Geopolitics of Empire,” 9–12; Diana Johnstone, “Doomsday Postponed?” in
Paul H. Johnstone,From MAD to Madness: Inside Pentagon Nuclear
War Planning (Atlanta, GA: Clarity, 2017), 275–77.
22.
↩Zbigniew
Brzezinski,The Grand Chessboard: American Primacy and Its Geostrategic
Imperatives (New York: Basic, 1997), 3, 10, 30–39.
23.
↩Richard N. Haass, “The New Thirty Years War,” Project Syndicate, July 21, 2014,
http://project-syndicate.org.
24.
↩General Wesley K.
Clark,Don’t Wait for the Next War (New York:
PublicAffairs, 2014), 37–40.
25.
↩Putin quoted in
Johnstone, “Doomsday Postponed?” 277.
26.
↩Samuel P.
Huntington,The Clash of Civilizations (New York: Simon and
Schuster, 2011).
27.
↩Johnstone,
“Doomsday Postponed?” 275.
28.
↩Johnstone,
“Doomsday Postponed?” 278–84; Keir A. Lieber and Daryl G. Press, “The New Era of Nuclear Weapons, Deterrence, and Conflict,”Strategic Studies Quarterly 7, no. 1 (2013): 3–14,
“The Rise of U.S. Nuclear Primacy,”Foreign Affairs 85,
no. 2 (2016): 42–54; Hans M. Kristensen, Matthew McKenzie, and Theodore A.
Potsoi, “How US Nuclear Force Modernization is Undermining Strategic
Stability: The Burst-Height Compensating Super-Fuze,”Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, March 1, 2017.
29.
↩The dropping of
atomic bombs was a geopolitical rather than military act, since the Japanese
had already offered to enter negotiations for surrender. The United States,
however, sought an immediate and unconditional surrender, to stop the Russian
advance in Asia and to signal the immensity of U.S. military power. Use of
atomic bombs against Japan was opposed at the time by the top generals and
admirals within the U.S. military. As Diana Johnstone has argued: “the targets
were not military, the effects were not military.” See Diana Johnstone, “The
Dangerous Seduction of Absolute Power,” in Johnstone, ed.,From MAD to Madness, 15–30; Gar Alperovitz,The Decision to Use the Atomic Bomb (New York:
Vintage, 1996).
30.
↩Johnstone,
“Doomsday Postponed?” 278–84; Cohn Hallinan, “These Nuclear Breakthroughs Are Endangering the World,”Foreign Policy in Focus, April 26, 2017.
31.
↩Lenin,Imperialism, 91.
32.
↩On casualties from
U.S. warfare in the periphery, especially those of civilians, see John Tirman,The Deaths of Others: The Fate of Civilians in America’s Wars (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2011), 316–36. On the history of U.S. military
interventions from 1945 through the 1980s, see Gabriel Kolko,Confronting the Third World (New York: Pantheon,
1988).
33.
↩Parts of this
paragraph were taken from “Notes from the Editors,”Monthly Review 68, no. 6 (November 2016): inside
covers. See Missy Ryan, “A Reminder of the Permanent Wars,”Washington Post, September 8, 2016; Micah Zenko, “How Many Bombs Did the United States Drop in 2015?”
Council on Foreign Relations blog, January 7, 2016, http://blogs.cfr.org; Tom Engelhardt, “You Must Be Kidding: The Exasperating, Never-Ending Sprawl of
American Empire,”In These Times,
September 23, 2016.
34.
↩Lenin,Imperialism, 9–14.
35.
↩Harry Magdoff and
Paul M. Sweezy, “Peaceful Transition to Socialism?”Monthly Review 22, no. 8 (January 1971): 1–18; “Notes
from the Editors,”Monthly Review 22, no. 7
(December 1970): inside covers.
36.
↩Ian C. D. Moffat,The Allied Intervention in Russia, 1918–1920 (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
37.
↩See Stephen Cohen,
“The Breakup of the Soviet Union Ended Russia’s March to Democracy,”Guardian, December 12, 2006; Moshe Lewin,The Soviet Century(London: Verso, 2005), 348, 385;
Samir Amin,Russia and the Long Transition from Capitalism to Socialism (New
York: Monthly Review Press, 2016), 57–58; Paul M. Sweezy,Post-Revolutionary Society (New York: Monthly
Review Press, 1980), 113–33.
38.
↩Harry Magdoff and
Paul M. Sweezy, “Perestroika and the Future of Socialism,”Monthly Review 41, no. 10 (March 1990):
1–13 and 41, no. 11 (April 1990): 1–7. The USSR operated on its
production possibilities curve, relying on full capacity production, while
monopoly-capitalist economies like the United States operated below their
production possibilities curve, with substantial idle capacity. This meant that
the former always faced a choice between “guns and butter,” while the latter
was able to expand both guns and butter—and indeed more butter because more
guns. This understanding was the basis of “military Keynesianism.” On the role
that U.S. military Keynesianism played in forcing the USSR into a damaging arms
race, see John Bellamy Foster, Hannah Holleman, and Robert W. McChesney, “The U.S. Imperial Triangle and
Military Spending,”Monthly Review 60,
no. 5 (October 2008): 2–9.
39.
↩Mikhail Gorbachev
introduced the conditions that led to the downfall of the Soviet state, but it
was Yeltsin who carried out the coup de grâce, going so far as to initiate an
armed overthrow of the elected parliament, cheered on by the capitalist West.
40.
↩This is quite
literally so, since many of Chávez’s revolutionary ideas, as he often
acknowledged, were drawn from Mészáros’s critique of the “capital system,”
which encompassed the USSR, in István Mészáros, Beyond Capital (New York: Monthly Review Press,
1995).
41.
↩See Amin, Russia and the Long
Transition.
42.
↩See John Bellamy
Foster, “Trump and Climate Catastrophe,”Monthly Review68, no. 9 (February 2017): 1–17; “Neofascism in the White House,”Monthly Review68, no. 11 (April 2017): 1–30.
43.
↩Georg Lukács,The Destruction of Reason(London: Merlin, 1980).
44.
↩Frederick Engels,Germany: Revolution and Counter-Revolution (New
York: International Publishers, 1969), 9–10.