Sunday, March 02, 2025

 

Venezuelan Navy Approaches Exxon FPSO Off Guyana

ExxonMobil's FPSO Prosperity on station in the Stabroek Block (ExxonMobil)
ExxonMobil's FPSO Prosperity on station in the Stabroek Block (ExxonMobil)

Published Mar 2, 2025 11:11 AM by The Maritime Executive

 

 

On Saturday, Guyana mobilized its military assets after Venezuelan navy reportedly entered its territorial waters. In a live address, Guyanese President Irfaan Ali said that a Venezuelan Coast Guard patrol ship was positioned within Exxon's Stabroek Block lease area, off the Atlantic coast of Guyana. The patrol ship is said to have approached oil production facilities, including ExxonMobil’s FPSO Prosperity.

The Venezuelan government has denied any wrongdoing, claiming that its patrol ship was operating in what it described as “disputed international waters”. In response to the incident, Guyana has summoned the Venezuelan ambassador to register a formal protest. In addition, Guyana has deployed air patrol and coast guard assets to boost surveillance of territorial waters.

“Guyana’s maritime boundaries are recognized under international law, and this incursion is a matter of grave concern. We will remain in close contact with our partners in protecting Guyana’s interests,” said President Ali.

US State Department’s Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs was among foreign partners to stand in solidarity with Guyana. “Venezuelan naval vessels threatening ExxonMobil’s FPSO unit is unacceptable and a clear violation of Guyana’s maritime territory. Further provocation will result in consequences for the Maduro regime,” commented the Bureau.

Guyana and Venezuela have a long-standing territorial dispute, with the matter currently before the International Court of Justice (ICJ). Guyana brought the case before the ICJ in 2018, seeking a final judgement on its internationally recognized boundary.

Venezuela claims the oil-rich Essequibo Region, which is under the control of Guyana. The area is located on the northwestern flank of Guyana, and constitutes nearly 70 percent of the country’s national territory. On several occasions, Venezuela has issued decrees to annex the region. In January, President Maduro went further to announce that Venezuela will conduct gubernatorial elections in Essequibo. This goes against an ICJ order issued back in December 2023. The order restricts Venezuela from interfering with the governance of Essequibo until the court renders a final judgment. The decision is expected by next year.

Venezuela intensified its ownership claims of Essequibo in 2015 after ExxonMobil revealed commercially viable oil reservoirs located offshore from the region. 

Exxon is an American company, and tensions between the regime of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and the White House are elevated at present. The Trump administration announced last week that it would be ending a partial license for Venezuelan oil exports to the U.S. Gulf Coast, cutting off one of the regime's few remaining sources of foreign currency. 

 

Meta's Waterworth Subsea Cable is About Geopolitics and Geoeconomics

Subsea cable
iStock

Published Mar 2, 2025 2:03 PM by The Strategist

 

 

[By Ravi Nayyar]

Announced on 14 February, Meta’s Project Waterworth is not just proposed to be the world’s longest submarine cable but reflects ever-shifting geopolitical and geoeconomic landscapes. It presents a great opportunity for Australia to collaborate more with its regional partners, especially India and the Pacific countries, on technologies keeping us online.

For Meta, this addition to subsea infrastructure is slated to open a chance to monetize accelerating international data flows. In developing and running this cable, Meta also seeks to prioritise its own traffic and minimise latency for its and its partners’ infrastructure and services. No surprises there.

But what is different this time is the clear recognition of intense geostrategic competition featuring both state and non-state actors. Connecting five continents, the proposed route, longer than the circumference of the planet, avoids areas subject to malign influence or control, such as the Baltic, Red and South China seas. Meta plans to lay as much of the cable as possible in deep water, making it harder for malicious actors to spy on or sabotage it.

Perhaps an even bigger takeaway is Meta’s choice of locations for cable landing points: the coastlines of three BRICS countries (India, South Africa and Brazil) and three Quad countries (India, Australia and the United States). With India being in both groupings, the route particularly reflects India’s rise as a digital, geopolitical and economic power. Meta has specifically said the cable will support India’s continued rise in the digital realm. With the world’s largest population, India is both a massive source of data to train Meta’s AI products and an emerging hub for data centres.

More broadly, Meta is seeking to be a bigger player in the submarine cable industry, and thus in geopolitics, competing with fellow US hyperscalers Google, Microsoft and Amazon. Indeed, those three companies and Meta represent about three quarters of active submarine cable capacity worldwide. Meta seeks to go one better by, as it said, ‘opening three new oceanic corridors’ with Project Waterworth.

Meta knows how the geostrategic significance of submarine cables is causing the technology’s politicisation, reflecting an ongoing split between the anti-China and pro-China camps in telecommunications amid the larger Sino-US technological rivalry.

As a US technology company, Meta arguably seeks to reinforce its value as a member of the anti-China camp, alongside Google, Microsoft and Amazon. It would see Project Waterworth as a downpayment on support from Western and partner governments (such as finance, easier regulatory approvals and oversight, and more robust diplomatic and operational support) to help counter Chinese influence in digital infrastructure, especially in the Global South.

In this context, Meta must beware cyber supply-chain risks that can arise from its and its operating partners using: Chinese equipment at any point in the technology stack; and unvetted remote access applications, managed security service providers and managed network service providers.

Rising cyber threats around telecommunications infrastructure underline the importance of such cyber supply chain risk management. In 2022, cybercriminals attacked the servers of the operator of a submarine cable that connected Hawaii with the Pacific. Chinese state-sponsored hackers have compromised US terrestrial telecommunications infrastructure for espionage and pre-positioning malicious capabilities to be deployed during a major security crisis (such as a Taiwan contingency).

Indeed, such are the risks to submarine cables that the US  Federal Communications Commission has proposed reforms to its regulatory regime. These changes relate to: cyber risk management by operators; banning certain hardware or software from regulated cables and their infrastructure; risks from remote access solutions; and cable operators reporting their use of managed network service providers.

While Project Waterworth may seem like just another planned cable by another Big Tech company, Australia should be paying attention because a cable landing point in northern Australia has been proposed. Meta’s plan reinforces the extraordinary significance of the maritime domain for Australia, with more than a dozen submarine cables already connecting us with the world via the Indian and Pacific Oceans. India’s role as a landing site is also important as Australia seeks to continue boosting economic and technology ties with New Delhi.

Project Waterworth also allows for further cyber diplomacy with Pacific partners. The project could bolster Pacific connectivity and cyber resilience through branches to Pacific countries, complementing Google’s efforts through the Pacific Connect Initiative.

The project further offers Australia the opportunity to work with regional partners to tackle regulatory fragmentation and boost operational collaboration on submarine cables. For example, the Australian Communications and Media Authority should engage regional counterparts to identify opportunities to harmonise and expand regulatory regimes, such as for cable repair and by mandating transparency from operators around cable damage (as ASPI’s Jocelinn Kang and Jessie Jacob have recommended). Canberra should work with regional partners to also increase information-sharing on risks around cables traversing exclusive economic zones. The Cable Connectivity and Resilience Centre of the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade could help mediate such engagement, while the Australian Cyber Security Centre and Cyber and Infrastructure Security Centre could provide expert advice to inform policy on the operational resilience of submarine cable infrastructure

Project Waterworth reflects our brave new world, especially its contested digital and maritime domains, and the opportunity for Australia to collaborate further with regional partners to keep us all online.

Ravi Nayyar is a fellow and research contributor at ASPI, associate fellow at the Social Cyber Institute, and a PhD Scholar at the University of Sydney. This article appears courtesy of The Strategist and may be found in its original form here

The opinions expressed herein are the author's and not necessarily those of The Maritime Executive.

"Detained, Tortured & Starved”: Report Details Abuse of Gaza Doctors & Staff in Israeli Detention
March 1, 2025


We continue to look at Israeli torture of Palestinian detainees with Naji Abbas from Physicians for Human Rights-Israel, which has just released a new report detailing the mistreatment of medical workers from Gaza. Hundreds of doctors, nurses, paramedics and other essential medical staff were arrested by Israeli forces in Gaza since October 2023 and held under brutal conditions, with many describing physical, psychological and sexual abuse, starvation, medical neglect and more. “It’s a whole journey of torture and abuse,” says Abbas, director of PHRI’s Prisoners and Detainees Department.



Transcript

This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org. I’m Amy Goodman, as we go now from Gaza to the occupied West Bank, to Ramallah, where we’re joined by Naji Abbas, director of the Prisoners Department at Physicians for Human Rights-Israel, the group’s new report headlined “Unlawfully Detained, Tortured, and Starved: The Plight of Gaza’s Medical Workers in Israeli Custody.”

If you can talk about the scope of your report, Naji Abbas, what you found? And then I want to ask you about Dr. Abu Safiya, as well.

NAJI ABBAS: Good afternoon, Amy, and for Dr. Khaled.

Actually, the address of our report can give you a direct picture to our findings. When we call it “Unlawfully Detained,” we are based on testimonies. And actually, we have testimonies more than we published, that show the same pattern and the same story that Dr. Khaled described just now. All the doctors, and also including Dr. Abu Safiya, are facing the same situation: being brutally arrested, without any cause, from their workplaces because they are doctors, interrogating through torture, beating, violence, sexual abuse, being held without any charges, without any proper legal procedure, in horrific conditions, including torture. We know torture before to get information, but here torture are being used in every day of the detention journey. It’s a whole journey of torture and abuse, using the starvation policies, denial of medical care. So, we tried in the address to give a direct picture to our all findings from all of the testimonies that we got.

AMY GOODMAN: Naji, you assert that the medical workers have been targeted for the very fact of their profession. Explain.

NAJI ABBAS: First of all, there’s the numbers of the healthcare workers who were arrested. We are speaking about hundreds. From the first invasion to Al-Shifa Hospital, and after that, Nasser Hospital, Al-Mamdani Hospital and Kamal Adwan, lately, we saw a pattern of attacking the health system in Gaza. And in every invasion, we heard about dozens of healthcare workers, staff of these hospitals, in these facilities, being taken away by the Israeli soldiers. And we didn’t know — we tried to find out what they are looking for, beside destroying the buildings of the hospitals, why they are taking the whole staff, the medical staff.

And through the testimonies, through our visits, we started to understood that the doctors were arrested mainly for collecting information. When you hear a doctor saying that he was forced to draw a map of the hospital, when he was asked about his colleagues, when he was asked if — you can understand that there’s a pattern of questioning looking, fishing — fishing for information. And they weren’t accused or charged with anything. All of the doctors, more than 100 medical staff who’s still, ’til now, in detention, have the same story of Dr. Khaled. They weren’t charged or accused as individuals with any offense. But all the interrogation were collecting information about their workplace, about their colleagues, about the health system in Gaza. And beside the doctors who were arrested inside the hospitals, we met doctors who were arrested through checkpoints of Israel’s army inside Gaza when they were trying to move with their families. So, if a soldier heard that he’s a doctor, he was arrested. So you can understand that they were targeted directly because of their profession.

AMY GOODMAN: Your report also details incidents of sexual assault, including the insertion of batons into and electric rods into the buttocks, leaving signs of burns or injuries. In fact, Dr. Khaled has talked about treating at least three prisoners when he was in prison with such injuries while they were detained.

NAJI ABBAS: That’s right. That’s right. All the testimonies described, as I said, the horrific conditions, horrific daily beating, the daily beating without any cause, without anything happening before. When you hear more than one doctor, like in Sde Teiman, they all started to know — the detainees, the doctors, started to know the unit names that storm to the section they are being held at — or, it’s not a section. When they call Sde Teiman — through the testimonies, you can see that the doctors are calling it bareksat. Bareksat is something like a stable. It’s not a section. It’s not a prison. It’s a military camp, and there are stables, actually, that people are being held at, including the doctors. So, you hear about the brutal violence of this unit called Unit 100. And actually, some of these units are accused, after that was revealed, that they raped, actually, some of the detainees in the last summer. That was revealed in the media. And this same unit entered every week, every two days, with dogs, beating, making — letting the dogs attack the doctors and the other detainees, without any cause, without any cause, without any logic reason to try to understand what they are looking for through these policies. But you can understand, it’s just a way of torturing people.

AMY GOODMAN: Thirty seconds on Dr. Abu Safiya. We’ve recently seen video of him since — the first time since we did not know where he was. He’s been detained, head of Kamal Adwan. Naji, what do you know?

NAJI ABBAS: We don’t know a lot. We know that Dr. Abu Safiya — Dr. Abu Safiya, in the first month, disappeared, as all the doctors. Dr. Khaled Alser disappeared, actually, for four months. And Dr. Abu Safiya, the same. He disappeared for one month. We didn’t know anything — where he was, in what conditions, why he are being detained. We didn’t know anything.

We know now that he’s in Ofer prison. Just one lawyer managed to visit him. PHR lawyers are not allowed yet to visit him. We know that he was held in isolation, in solitary confinement, for 25 days, with a cell alone, disconnected to the outside world.

And Dr. Abu Safiya, as all the doctors, all of the healthcare workers, nurses and doctors and paramedics, are not accused with anything. But you can see that the Israeli media is, like, interrogating Dr. Abu Safiya on media reports and accusing him with things that, in reality — and in the Israeli media — he wasn’t accused at. He wasn’t accused with an offense that he did. But the Israeli media — this propaganda of the Israeli media and the Israeli authorities is part of the targeting of the medical staff, trying to accuse the whole Gaza healthcare system and take its protections, the protection that the healthcare system and these medical personnels have by the international law, taking this away through media reports.

AMY GOODMAN: Naji Abbas, I want to thank you for being with us. Yes, you see him with helmeted guards through a prison in shackles, appearing exhausted. His family condemned the video broadcast, saying, “We reject any media outlet publishing the video without addressing the psychological terrorism involved and exposing the manipulation of his statements.” Naji Abbas, director of the Prisoners Department at Physicians for Human Rights-Israel. We’ll link to your new report, “Unlawfully Detained, Tortured, and Starved: The Plight of Gaza’s Medical Workers in Israeli Custody.”
The West has Long Demanded of Palestinians what Trump Demanded of Ukraine — and More

March 1, 2025
Source: Informed Comment





David Smith of The Guardian reminds us that Trump is a fan of World Wrestling Federation matches, in attempting to explain the sad spectacle at the White House on Friday.

Trump is demanding that Volodymyr Zelenskiyy, the president of Ukraine, “make peace” with Russia, accusing him of risking plunging the planet into WW III with his stand against the Russian invasion. Trump told Zelenskiyy, “you’re either going to make a deal or we’re out.” He meant by “deal” acquiescing in the Russian annexation of the Donbass and neighboring regions of Ukraine.

Democrats denounced Trump and JD Vance for the clearly rehearsed ambush. Léonie Chao-Fong at The Guardian quoted Senator Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) as saying of Zelenskiyy, “Our country thanks HIM and the Ukrainian patriots who have stood up to a dictator, buried their own & stopped Putin from marching right into the rest of Europe.”

I don’t bring all this up to talk about the rights and wrongs of the Ukraine War. There are military analysts and political scientists who have argued for some time that given Russia’s advantages in size and manpower, an outright Ukrainian victory is unlikely. That said, emboldening Putin in this way is unwise, sort of like letting your rival at the poker table know you don’t have any face cards.

I would like to take the moment to point out that Trump’s demands of Ukraine are no different than the US and Western Europe’s demands of the Palestinians back in the 1990s, and that nowadays the West appears to expect the Palestinians simply to commit mass suicide.

Like Ukraine, Palestine was also invaded — in the latter case by the Zionist settler colonialists, who took possession of it and chased Palestinians out of their homeland. The newly dubbed Israelis expelled 57% of the Palestinian population from what became Israel, stealing their homes and farms and taking them for themselves. They even finished bringing in the crops the Palestinians had planted. Those Palestinian refugees were crowded into Gaza, the West Bank, Jordan and Lebanon in the main. Now the Israelis are coming after these refugees, expelling them once again.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has displaced 10.2 million Ukrainians, about 23% of the Ukrainian population as it stood before the war. So Ukrainians have suffered much less displacement than the Palestinians.

Moreover, in 1967 Israel invaded and seized the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, occupying the Palestinians all over again, both the refugees settled there and the Palestinians who had lived in those territories before 1948. There were over 300,000 Palestinians from the West Bank working abroad when the Israeli troops marched in, and Israeli authorities locked them out of their country forever.

Since 2014, Russia has invaded and occupied 19% of Ukraine.

Israel took 78% of Palestine in 1948 by military conquest and through deliberate ethnic cleansing campaigns that included premeditated massacres of Palestinian villagers to spread panic.

So in 1993, the Palestine Liberation Organization did exactly what Trump is demanding Zelenskiyy do. They relinquished any claim on the part of Palestine the immigrant European Jews had grabbed and turned into Israel, accepting 22% of the old colonial British Mandate of Palestine on which to establish a Palestinian state. Israel pledged to withdraw from the territories occupied in 1967, with a deadline of 1997. Benjamin Netanyahu derailed that plan completely, and the Palestinians received less than nothing for having given up so much.

Trump is demanding that Zelenskiyy accept the equivalent of the 1993 Oslo Accords that were acquiesced in by the Palestinians. Zelinskiyy pointed out that Putin might do the deal but then renege, and Trump and Vance shouted him down. But that is exactly what the Israelis did.

Americans who feel that what Trump is asking Ukraine to do is unfair are suffering from a blind spot when it comes to the Palestinians. I don’t know if it is racism — that many Americans code Ukrainians as “White” and Palestinians as “Brown.” But many Americans cannot see the Palestinians, cannot empathize with them, cannot understand them as fellow human beings.

Now Trump is asking Palestinians to leave Gaza, one of the few bits of Palestine on which they still can live. It would be like asking 17 million Ukrainians permanently to pick up and go to Poland and other countries, giving up on Ukraine forever, and allowing Russian colonists to replace them. Even Trump isn’t asking that of the Ukrainians. Yet.




Juan Cole
Juan R. I. Cole is Richard P. Mitchell Collegiate Professor of History at the University of Michigan. For three and a half decades, he has sought to put the relationship of the West and the Muslim world in historical context, and he has written widely about Egypt, Iran, Iraq, and South Asia. His books include Muhammad: Prophet of Peace Amid the Clash of Empires; The New Arabs: How the Millennial Generation is Changing the Middle East; Engaging the Muslim World; and Napoleon’s Egypt: Invading the Middle East.


The Plunder of Ukraine: A Story of Debt, Greed, and Betrayal

As war rages, Ukraine faces a second invasion—one of debt, privatization, and resource plunder. Under the guise of aid, global powers are seizing its land and wealth, threatening its future.
March 1, 2025
Source: The Kucinich Report



The systematic plundering of Ukraine by international financial institutions and governments is underway. As history has shown in countless other countries, predatory terms will cripple Ukraine’s future, a continuation of war, by other means. This is colonization in action—not through military conquest, but through economic enslavement, that will bind Ukraine in perpetual debt and subjugation.

Ukraine is home to some of the world’s richest agricultural land and vast mineral deposits, including critical rare earth elements. Today, it is being sacrificed to the international community, its natural wealth placed on the altar of global capital. Her fertile land, water, and fragile ecosystems stand on the brink of exploitation—viewed not as living, sustaining forces, but as mere “natural resources” for extraction, debt collateral for creditors, and fuel for industrial appetites.

We will hear the familiar rhetoric of “green energy,” “sustainability,” and “digital transformation,” but behind these words lies a brutal reality: a feeding frenzy cloaked in the language of progress. The word we should be screaming is STOP!

Ukraine is at a crossroads, trapped between war, crushing debt, and mounting pressure to privatize its land and resources. Its agricultural wealth and critical minerals make it a prime target for financial and corporate extraction. International predators are circling.

At the center of this crisis is a proposed U.S.-Ukraine rare earth minerals deal worth, we are told, up to $500 billion—a deal that would place a significant share of Ukraine’s resources under U.S. control, under the guise of post-war reconstruction and repaying Ukraine for America’s war-time assistance.

The battle for Ukraine’s sovereignty is not only being fought on the battlefield—it is being waged in boardrooms, debt agreements, and privatization schemes. If this course is not challenged, the lasting economic servitude will compound the war’s physical destruction.

My Personal Connection to Ukraine

Ukraine holds a deep and inexplicable place in my heart, shaped in part by the hauntingly beautiful documentary The Babushkas of Chernobyl. This film tells the story of courageous women who, despite health warnings, returned to their homes inside the Exclusion Zone after the Chernobyl disaster. Their love for the land, their resilience, and their unwavering commitment to life left an indelible mark on me. These women embodied the land itself—bound to it as inextricably as the mycelial networks running through the soil, the women were the very nervous system of the country.

Shortly after the Russian invasion of Ukraine began, one of my closest friends—a highly trained, battle-tested Marine corpsman with multiple tours in the Middle East—felt an unshakable responsibility to protect. Without hesitation, he flew directly to Ukraine to serve and defend.

While we may have differed in our approaches to the war, we each sought to contribute in the ways we knew best to protect and alleviate unnecessary suffering. He, through his actions on the front lines; me, alongside Dennis Kucinich, working to promote diplomatic solutions and prevent further escalation of the conflict. Dennis has been a vocal advocate for peace, urging negotiations to end the war and warning against the dangers of prolonged military engagement.

And yet today, the U.S. is poised to seize control of Ukraine’s vast mineral wealth. It is called a partnership.

The $500 Billion Question

During President Zelenskyy’s scheduled visit to Washington, a deal is set to be signed granting the U.S. access to Ukraine’s critical minerals—titanium, lithium, uranium and graphite —resources essential to aerospace, defense, and renewable energy industries. Framed by President Trump as a form of repayment for U.S. military aid, this agreement raises profound concerns about Ukraine’s economic and ecological future.

Critics warn that the unchecked extraction of these resources by foreign interests could leave Ukraine stripped of its natural wealth while bearing the environmental consequences. With no long-term security guarantees from the U.S. and increasing pressure for Europe to take on Ukraine’s defense, this deal, as presently defined, exposes a deeper, more insidious reality:

Ukraine—arguably Europe’s most resource-rich nation—has been driven into debt and is now being systematically carved up by the international community. War or no war, Ukraine loses.

Geopolitical Chess – Color Revolutions and Western Control

The 2004 Orange Revolution marked a significant shift in Ukraine’s political landscape. Officially framed as a democratic movement, the U.S. provided approximately $65 million in the years leading up to the election to fund opposition groups and civil society initiatives. Though presented as support for free elections, this assistance was designed to move Ukraine away from adjacent Russia and closer to Western institutions like NATO and the European Union.

A decade later, the 2014 Maidan coup, supported by U.S. and European interests, removed a democratically elected president who was pursuing a balanced approach between Russia and the EU.

Since then, Ukraine has been subject to IMF-imposed austerity, agricultural land reform, and energy deregulation—all designed to open national assets to foreign ownership. Ukraine’s vast and fertile land is now in the crosshairs of multinational agribusinesses, financial institutions, and political powers eager to exploit its economic, social and political vulnerability.

The Push for Privatization: A Trojan Horse

Ukraine’s agricultural sector has long been recognized for its fertile black soil (chernozem), which has supported both large-scale grain exports and smallholder farming. In recent years, Ukraine developed a growing organic agriculture sector, exporting high-quality grains and oilseeds, particularly to European markets. However, the push for land privatization threatens to upend this progress, shifting agriculture toward the high-input, industrialized farming which characterizes Western agriculture.

For decades, Ukraine maintained a moratorium on selling agricultural land, protecting small farmers from corporate land grabs. That changed in 2021 when, under pressure from the IMF and World Bank, Ukraine lifted the ban, allowing farmland to be sold to private investors. Framed as modernization, this move has paved the way for land consolidation by foreign agribusinesses and oligarchs, endangering Ukraine’s food sovereignty and ecological balance.

The Debt Trap: A Future of Financial Dependence

The word “mortgage” comes from Old French, literally meaning “death pledge”—a trap that binds borrowers in a cycle of repayment that can last a lifetime. Ukraine’s debt burden has skyrocketed, with billions in loans from the IMF, World Bank, and Western governments.

The BlackRock-led Ukraine Development Fund alone is expected to raise at least $15 billion, adding to an already unsustainable financial load. Reconstruction costs are estimated at over $400 billion—an amount far beyond Ukraine’s revenue capacity. The result? A cycle of perpetual debt, ensuring that Ukraine remains a vassal state to Western financial interests.

The Mortgage Theory of Money Creation and Ukraine’s Financial Crisis

Ukraine operates under a debt-based monetary system where money is created primarily through loans issued by private banks. This is not a new phenomenon; the entire world has been mortgaged in this way. The African continent has been particularly prone to this model, where vast tracts of land have been leveraged as collateral for debt and financial speculation, often under the guise of development and investment.

Similarly, the process of land enclosures in Europe centuries ago set the stage for this system, as land was privatized and used to back the creation of money, disenfranchising local populations and concentrating wealth in the hands of financial elites.

The result is a cycle in which nations must continually borrow to sustain their economies, often at the cost of their sovereignty. Ukraine’s current financial crisis is a direct product of this system.

Rather than addressing the structural flaws of debt-driven money creation, Western financial institutions are using Ukraine’s economic vulnerability as leverage to push for land privatization and resource selloffs. This ensures that wealth continues to flow upward to multinational corporations and financial elites while the Ukrainian people bear the costs.

The Illusion of Aid and the Reality of Exploitation

Despite promises of aid and investment, financial subjugating is being imposed on Ukraine, through privatization of land and resources, increased foreign debt, and forced economic restructuring. None is this is designed to help Ukraine recover. It is designed to extract its wealth and ensure dependence on Western institutions for generations to come.

Countries subjected to IMF-led restructuring programs rarely recover to become independent, self-sustaining economies. Instead, they become locked into cycles of debt repayment, resource extraction, and foreign exploitation.

A Sovereign Path Forward: The NEED Act and Financial Independence

Is it conceivable that Ukraine has a path forward without being subjected to further exploitation tantamount to economic slavery? Yes. A monetary reform bill, presented to Congress more than a decade ago, could hold a key to Ukraine’s economic freedom.

The National Emergency Employment Defense (NEED) Act, originally introduced in the U.S. Congress, presents a compelling alternative to Ukraine’s current financial trajectory. Rooted in sovereign monetary reform, it advocates for a debt-free, publicly controlled money system that eliminates reliance on private banks for money creation.

Applying these principles to Ukraine could allow the country to achieve economic stability without resorting to land privatization or exploitative foreign investment deals. Sovereign money creation would enable Ukraine to fund its own recovery, protect its national assets, and break free from the predatory lending practices of Western financial institutions.

Ukraine’s True Battle: Sovereignty vs. Subjugation

What we are witnessing is colonization. Ukraine is being absorbed into the Western financial empire—not as an equal partner, but as a debt-ridden state forced to surrender its sovereignty in return for economic survival.

If Ukraine, or any nation, is to escape this fate, it must resist external pressures and embrace financial models that prioritize self-reliance and long-term stability. A genuine path to independence lies in rejecting the financial coercion of the West and implementing sovereign economic systems that put national well-being ahead of foreign interests.

At the heart of this plunder is the long-standing system of debt-based monetary reforms, pushed by Western creditors and financial institutions. These so-called “reforms” demand deep austerity, the privatization of essential assets, and, in this case, the opening of Ukraine’s economy to unrestricted foreign control by Ukraine’s “friends.”

History has shown this playbook before, and the results are always the same. From Latin America to Africa to post-Soviet Eastern Europe, nations subjected to these policies have not found prosperity but have instead been trapped in cycles of debt, poverty, and economic dependence. Such policies do not rebuild nations—they strip them bare, reducing them to debt slaves while their natural wealth is siphoned away by foreign interests.

The international community failed to stand for peace when it mattered most, allowing Ukraine to be drawn into war and driven into an ever-deepening financial hole. Now, they must redeem themselves—not by offering more predatory loans, not by coveting and extracting Ukraine’s resources, but by enabling true economic sovereignty for Ukraine. That means canceling odious debts, rejecting privatization schemes that benefit only foreign corporations, and ensuring Ukraine’s vast natural wealth remains in the hands of its own people. Anything less continues the war against Ukraine by other means.
Fascism

Trump, Putin and the war in Ukraine: Europe’s painful awakening to the rise of global Fascism

Thursday 27 February 2025, by Hanna Perekhoda


For the past few weeks, and even more so in recent days, a state of paralysis seems to have gripped the European political landscape. Yet, Trump, Putin, and other far-right leaders have never hidden their ambitions. They have openly stated them for years, without pretense. It must be said plainly: their project is a fascist one.


A fascist regime is taking hold in the United States. In Russia, it has already been in place for three years – a reality that many preferred to deny, clinging to the illusion of a smooth return to normalcy, to a status quo that was seen as only temporarily disrupted by Russia’s war against Ukraine.

The same status quo that allowed the European Union – Germany above all – to continue importing cheap Russian hydrocarbons while exporting high-end products to China and the United States. A world so comfortable that the Ukrainians, in their stubborn resistance, became nothing more than a nuisance. If only they had accepted to live under the occupation of a regime that rapes, kills, and tortures on a massive scale, perhaps we could have continued to prosper indefinitely... An illusion as naïve as it was cynical.

While Western Europe set aside its investments in defense, Russia, on the other hand, used its energy revenues to modernise its military apparatus. The annexation of Crimea in 2014 and its numerous influence operations across Europe – including crimes and assassinations – have gone virtually unpunished. In 2022, when Russia invaded Ukraine, the European system of prosperity and stability, built on moral corruption, collapsed.

Yet, European leaders clung to this illusion, limiting their ability to impose swift and effective sanctions against Russia and delaying aid to Ukraine at a critical moment – when it had the best chance to shift the balance of power on the battlefield. This hesitation allowed Russia to seize territory and strengthen its positions, making Ukraine’s counter offensives significantly more costly.

Having focused all our efforts on shutting our eyes to reality, we now find ourselves stunned by a situation where all our reference points have collapsed within a matter of weeks. J.D. Vance’s speech in Munich is a striking example of this.

J.D. Vance made it abundantly clear: his enemy is not Vladimir Putin, with whom the incoming U.S. administration shares many ideological affinities. His real enemy is in Europe – it is all those who resist the order he seeks to impose. The same man who advocates building walls to keep out migrants also wants to ban "barriers" against the far-right in Europe. As The Guardian aptly described, it was a call to arms for populist right-wing forces to seize power across Europe, with the promise that the "new sheriff in town" would help them do so. Nothing must stand in their triumphant march.

The statements emphasising the urgent need for European countries to radically and rapidly increase their military spending are, unfortunately, correct

Yet, barriers against this assault on Europe do exist. The first line of defense is European civil society, its democratic institutions. But there is another bulwark: the effort of millions of Ukrainians who, for the past three years, have been fighting to halt the rise of Russian fascism.

This barrier could collapse at any moment, while Europe continues to watch, nodding in passive acknowledgment, failing to see that the same murky waters are already seeping in from within.

The crackdown on migrants, the institutionalisation of misogyny and homophobia, the denial of climate change, the ruthless exploitation of both people and nature, the liquidation of Ukraine, the deportation of Palestinians – these are the pillars of the emerging new order, already taking shape. By now, this should be as clear as day: abandoning the victims of military aggression – just as we have done with the Palestinians and are now preparing to do with the Ukrainians – amounts to giving autocrats free rein to impose their rule through brute force.

This is a simple equation that any rational person should be able to grasp. It is all the more perplexing, then, that Donald Trump’s actions and those of his administration have apparently shocked Europeans. After all, he has repeatedly made it clear that this is exactly how he intends to act. What is truly surprising is not Trump himself, but rather the Europeans’ lack of preparation and strategic foresight.

The statements emphasizing the urgent need for European countries to radically and rapidly increase their military spending are, unfortunately, correct. According to The Financial Times, Russia’s military spending has now surpassed the combined defense budgets of all European countries. By 2025, Moscow will allocate even more funds to the war – 7.5% of its GDP, amounting to nearly 40% of the national budget.

This is one of the advantages authoritarian regimes hold over democracies: they can rapidly mobilise human and economic resources for war, imposing coercive measures without fear of mass opposition. An authoritarian state, whose population has been steeped in a late-capitalist ideology of cynicism and individualism – as is the case in Russia – can take this logic even further. Yet Europe seems blind to another fundamental reality of authoritarian regimes: once an autocrat embarks on a war of expansion, he cannot simply stop. The survival of his regime becomes inseparably tied to the war, which eventually consumes the entire structure of power.

European leaders, exemplified by Emmanuel Macron and Olaf Scholz, who now speak of the very real need to strengthen Europe’s defense, are the same ones who paved the way for this crisis. They condemn abuses of power on the international stage while tolerating Darwinian logic within their own societies – sustaining a system where the most powerful continue to dominate the most vulnerable. This contradiction weakens their credibility and fuels growing distrust toward democratic institutions. Such inconsistency creates fertile ground for the rise of fascist movements, which capitalize on these fractures to mobilize a disillusioned electorate.

Widening inequalities, a growing sense of injustice, and the perception of a political elite disconnected from reality weaken their legitimacy. A society that feels abandoned or ignored will struggle to support international commitments, even when they uphold fundamental principles such as the defense of rights and sovereignty.

The crackdown on migrants, the institutionalisation of misogyny and homophobia, the denial of climate change, the ruthless exploitation of both people and nature, the liquidation of Ukraine, the deportation of Palestinians – these are the pillars of the emerging new order, already taking shape

Populists exploit this discontent by fueling the notion that governments are sacrificing national interests in favor of supposedly distant causes, such as supporting Ukraine. Political figures like Jean-Luc Mélenchon in France and Sahra Wagenknecht in Germany denounce social injustice while embracing the law of the strongest on the international stage, justifying the violations committed by authoritarian regimes such as Russia. Their opportunistic positioning, driven by electoral calculations, strips their rhetoric of any credibility. Yet, it is impossible to separate domestic social justice from a country’s international policies. A society that tolerates or even encourages cynicism and domination on the global stage will inevitably normalize these same dynamics in its internal social relations – and vice versa.

A more just and cohesive society is better equipped to support international commitments and defense budgets – whose necessity is now undeniable. Effective and urgent redistribution policies are essential to restoring citizens’ trust. Thus, the assistance that European countries can provide to Ukraine is not limited to military or economic aid; it also hinges on resolving their own internal crisis of legitimacy. However, it must be repeated again and again: the aid that truly matters for every Ukrainian is military aid. It is the single most crucial condition for Ukraine’s survival as a society, as well as for each of its people.

Many, particularly in Germany, express concerns about the influence of the far-right in Ukraine. Yet, nothing fuels extremism more than an unjust "peace agreement" imposed on a victim of aggression against its will. No situation is more radicalizing than military occupation paired with systematic and brutal oppression. If Ukraine is forced to accept a peace dictated by Russia, the accumulated frustration and injustice will serve as fuel for radical movements, which will thrive at the expense of moderate and progressive forces. History is filled with examples of imposed peace agreements that have given rise to monsters – terrorist organisations born from despair and resentment.

Trump openly declares his willingness to negotiate without regard for the Ukrainian government or its people. In doing so, he aligns himself entirely with the Kremlin’s agenda and retroactively legitimises Russian aggression. Worse still, by refusing to call this invasion what it truly is – an illegal war of aggression, accompanied by egregious violations of international law and documented war crimes – he sends a deeply dangerous message. He reinforces the idea that such expansionist policies can not only be tolerated but even rewarded. Taiwan, the Philippines, the Baltic states, Moldova, and Armenia must now prepare to be next on the list. In this context, it is imperative to take a firm and unequivocal stance: no negotiations can take place at the expense of the Ukrainian people, and even less so without their consent.

The time for lamentations is over. The moment to act is now. For one day, when the dust settles and the fog lifts, we will inevitably ask ourselves in horror: how could we have been so passive, so blind, so indifferent in the face of this impending disaster?

voxeurop 23 February 2025

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Hanna Perekhoda
Hanna Perekhoda, a native of Donetsk, is a student at the University of Lausanne


International Viewpoint is published under the responsibility of the Bureau of the Fourth International. Signed articles do not necessarily reflect editorial policy. Articles can be reprinted with acknowledgement, and a live link if possible.
Women

Betrayed by the System in Brazil

Friday 28 February 2025, by L.M. Bonato



While various human rights reports show that annually between one and four million Brazilian women have abortions, the right to women’s bodily autonomy remains a major battle. Currently the law allows abortion only in the case of rape or to save the woman’s life. This means millons of women are forced to seek underground abortions.


Given the rise of conservative parties following Jair Bolsonaro’s presidency, far-right politicians are seeking to roll back legal abortion even in the case of rape. Congressman Sóstenes Cavalcante has introduced Bill PL 190424, which would criminalize abortion under all circumstances after 22 weeks of pregnancy.

If passed, this legislation would subject rape survivors to unbearable psychological burdens, forcing them to carry pregnancies to term. Meanwhile their aggressors face much lighter penalties.

Impact on Survivors
Due to his role in spreading disinformation, Jair Bolsonaro is currently ineligible for public office. However his influence is felt with the introduction of Bill PL 190424. Largely supported by members of the Congressional evangelical caucus, the bill is an affront to the secular state established in Brazil’s constitution.

Brazil is a predominantly Christian country, a slight majority Catholic but with evangelical congregations growing rapidly. In the face of social inequality they project a deeply conservative “prosperty gospel.”

While many may support the bill from a deeply religious and moralistic viewpoint, it is criminalizing the victims of abuse, not their abusers. Moreover, religious beliefs have no place in public health and policy. Abortion is a human right, recognized by the UN and World Health Organization.

The bill was marked “urgent” through a symbolic vote lasting just 23 seconds. Although this designation has since been revoked due to significant public pressure, the bill remains under congressional review and could still be passed.

This congressional proposal starkly reflects a state that not only fails to protect its citizens but also exacerbates the trauma endured by victims, further penalizing them by forcing them to carry the physical embodiment of their trauma for the rest of their lives.

The bill’s proponents argue that adoption after birth is “an option.” Yet this completely disregards the will and psycological needs of the person, who may face gestational depression, the dangers of younger victims to safely give birth, as well as the bureaucratic inefficiencies of Brazil’s adoption system. Societal prejudices hinder adoption and as a result, post-adoption support is inadequate. Brazil’s adoption system is already overwhelmed.

Judicial delays can take up to 10 years, often leaving children eligible for adoption only in adolescence while most prospective parents, aiming for easier familial integration, prefer infants or toddlers under three.
The “Child Pregnancy Bill”

Those most affected by Bill PL 190424 would be underage girls, and it’s already being referred to as the “Child Pregnancy Bill.”

Children, especially those from marginalized communities, take longer to recognize abuse and seek legal support. The psychological toll of processing the trauma and overcoming the stigma, even from medical and legal professionals, further delays access to legal abortion, often pushing the pregnancy beyond the 22-week limit.

According to a 2022 study by the Brazilian Public Security Forum, the country recorded the highest number of rapes in its history, with 74,930 victims, 75.8% of whom were cases of statutory rape. This alarming figure highlights Brazil’s culture of rape and pedophilia, which the state fails to dismantle — instead, it institutionalizes the crimes through patriarchal structures.

Under this bill, women and girls who terminate pregnancies resulting from rape could face up to 20 years in prison. They would be convicted as murderers and detained in juvenile facilities until they coud be transferred to the adult prison system — punishment that is not only cruel but also disproportionate, as rapists themselves face sentences ranging from six to 12 years, almost half the penalty imposed on the victims. Indeed, how many abusers are ever held accountable?

This dangerous inversion of roles discourages abuse reports, as victims, understandably opting for illegal abortions, would avoid formal complaints to escape such harsh consequences. Considering that most child sexual abuse in Brazil is perpetrated by family members, this is even more concerning. Victims, often coerced by their families into silence, would be denied legal support.
Criminalization and Trauma

For those who experience sexual violence, the trauma does not end with the act itself. Forensic examinations are frequently insensitively handled, meaning that survivors can be exposed to immediate post-trauma humiliation. They not only face the possibility of an unwanted pregnancy, but the questioning of what they may have done to cause their own victimization.

Yet “pro-life” advocates argue that the “unborn child” should not be punished, claiming that one crime does not justify another.

This means they prioritize the “rights” potential life over the rights of the pregnant person. How can one justify coercing a person to risk their health and well-being in order to bring a fetus to term?

The dominant Christianized notion in Brazil posits that “life begins at conception,” as the soul supposedly enters the body, making it sacred before birth. Debates on the nature of life vary. But the right to abortion cannot be restricted to one’s religious belief. It is a public health issue.

Denying this right strips affected women of ownership over their own bodies. Undermining female autonomy insults human dignity, placing a wide range of reproductive rights under the control of the church and state.

Where abortion is a legal right, no person with a uterus should be forced to continue a pregnancy or to undergo an abortion. The far right maintains that abortion, a safe and legal procedure in many countries, is coercive. But that stands the reality on its head — without access to abortion one is condemned to continuing a pregnancy despite the dangers and problems that may entail. By forcing women to carry unwanted pregnancies, the state turns their bodies into sanctuaries for abuse, where trauma solidifies and renews daily.

Criminalizing abortion does not reduce abortion rates — it only makes the procedure less safe. An estimated 70% of abortions in Brazil are performed clandestinely.
The Fight Against Oppression

Women who choose to terminate pregnancies, even when it’s legally prohibited, have resorted to unsafe methods that can result in irreversible consequences. Annually around 200,000 hospitalizations are due to unsafe abortions, predominantly among young and impoverished women.

At the beginning of the 21st century, Brazil’s rate of maternal mortality stood at 45.8 per 100,000. with unsafe abortions the fourth leading cause of death.

Protestors across Brazil have taken to the streets in hundreds of peaceful demonstrations against Bill PL 190424 — the largist being 10,000 marching in São Paulo — and forcing national media coverage. Feminist organizations, social movements, and human rights collectives are mobilizing to resist this proposal and demanding that the government respect women’s rights. Thus the feminist movement is not just demonstrating against this reaction­ary bill, but confronting the entire dismal state of reproductive rights.

Only five years ago Brazil and Argentina had similar restrictive abortion laws, although Argentinian feminists were able to work more openly. At the end of 2020 Argentina’s congress passed a law that made abortion available upon request for the first 14 weeks of pregnancy and guarantees access to abortion services free of charge in both public and private health care facilities. This was the result of a sustained movement that involved massive demonstrations.

Clearly the fight for female freedom and autonomy must be a collective effort, extending to all women confronting patriarchal systems worldwide and opposing every form of gender oppression and restriction of women’s rights. International solidarity can play a crucial role in amplifying resistance beyond South America’s borders.

Against the Current 28 February 2025


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L.M. Bonato

L.M. Bonato is a Brazilian writer featured in several literary anthologies, including New Beats, Microcontos, Chegámos (Ediotora Persona), Lua Gibosa do Bosque da Solidão (Triumpus), and the first edition of Esparama magazine. Her specialty is book reviews.


International Viewpoint is published under the responsibility of the Bureau of the Fourth International. Signed articles do not necessarily reflect editorial policy. Articles can be reprinted with acknowledgement, and a live link if possible.


Social movements

#StopFuelingGenocide: Boycott Chevron!


Saturday 1 March 2025, by Ted Franklin


During the second weekend of Trump’s second term, demonstrators in more than 20 U.S. cities staged lively protests outside Chevron gas stations, plants, and offices. Their demand: an end to the oil giant’s lucrative partnership with the apartheid State of Israel.


In Oakland and Alameda, California, scores of protesters braved an atmospheric river to successfully halt patronage at Chevron-owned gas stations. In Washington, D.C., demonstrators gathered outside Chevron’s lobbying office calling for Chevron to “Stop Fueling Genocide.”

Other spirited actions took place in Birmingham, Alabama; Bellingham, Tacoma, Wenatchee, and Seattle, Washington; Portland, Oregon; San Jose, Silicon Valley, Berkeley, Sacramento, Chino Hills, and Los Angeles California; Plano, Texas; Tampa, Florida; and Golden, Colorado.

Many of the demonstrators have confronted Chevron before. The corporation has long been a world-class villain in the eyes of climate and environmental activists for its ecological depredations around the world.

Now it has become one of the prime targets of global BDS (boycott, divestment, sanctions) organizing in support of the Palestinian people. With a huge public presence of more than 7,000 gas stations in the United States and a direct role in empowering Israel’s atrocities, Chevron is a prime candidate for an organized consumer boycott.

Chevron earned its billing as a top-tier target of the Palestinian-led BDS Movement by pumping gas — lots of it. Israel’s war machine couldn’t run without the gas supplied by Chevron. Off the coast of Palestine in the eastern Mediterranean Sea there are vast reserves of fossil gas. Since 2020 Chevron has operated the two major Israeli-claimed fossil gas fields, Tamar and Leviathan.

As Israel bombed hospitals, homes, universities, and UN schools in Gaza, Chevron pumped gas from the depths of the sea to feed Israel’s onshore power generation plants. The plants produce most of Israel’s electricity. Without Chevron’s ongoing contribution the lights would go out on Israel’s military, police stations, and illegal settlements. Chevron also pumps billions of dollars in revenue to Israeli government coffers.
Demanding an End to Complicity

The Palestinian BDS National Committee (BNC) — the largest coalition in Palestinian civil society — launched the escalating global boycott campaign targeting Chevron in January 2024. The BDS movement had first called for divestment from Chevron in 2020 when Chevron took over from Noble Energy as the primary owner and operator of Israel’s gas fields. The campaign is now expanding to engage with the broader public by mounting a consumer boycott of Chevron gas stations, including those operating under the brand names Texaco and Caltex.

“Chevron has been a divestment target, but we added it as a boycott target after Israel’s Gaza genocide began, and we’ve already seen campaigns and actions around the world at Chevron gas stations, refineries, and corporate offices as well as Chevron’s university partnerships and event sponsorships,” says Olivia Katbi, BNC North American coordinator.

“We are not asking for charity, but for solidarity,” explains Omar Barghouti, cofounder of the BNC in 2005 and recipient of the Gandhi Peace Award in 2017. “We’re demanding an end to complicity. As the struggle that ended apartheid in South Africa has shown, ending state, corporate, and institutional complicity in Israel’s regime of oppression, especially through the nonviolent tactics of BDS, is the most effective form of solidarity with our liberation struggle.”

The BDS movement based its targeting of Chevron on a strategic analysis of how a boycott can have a meaningful impact on corporations complicit in suffering.
Opportunity for a Win

“The BDS movement uses the historically successful method of targeted boycotts inspired by the South African anti-apartheid movement, the US Civil Rights movement, and the Indian anti-colonial struggle, among others worldwide,” says Katbi. “We strategically focus on a relatively smaller number of carefully selected companies that play a clear and direct role in Israel’s crimes — and where there is a real potential for winning.”

Katbi further explains, “Chevron entered the Israeli market in 2020; it can just as easily exit. Therefore, we see this as a winnable campaign. The Chevron campaign has an easy way for consumers to be involved and apply pressure, by boycotting, picketing, and engaging with local gas stations. This tactic is inspired by the Shell boycott during the South African anti-apartheid movement.

Other complicit companies with gas stations, like Valero, are on the divestment list. But to be successful in our boycott campaigning against Chevron, we need to focus on one company at a time.”

While expressing appreciation for those who feel compelled to boycott all products and services of companies tied in any way to Israel, the BDS movement argues for more focus on fewer targets. Spontaneous campaigns aimed at Starbucks and McDonald’s have attracted popular support, but they don’t make the BNC’s list of priority targets. Apartheid can thrive without Ventis and Big Macs, they say, but it can’t run without gas. Going after every complicit company runs the risk of making no impression on any of them.
Cross-Movement Synergy: Apartheid and Environmental Devastation

The BDS Movement also sees in the Chevron boycott a strategic opportunity to build an alliance between Palestine solidarity and environmental activists based on a shared understanding and abhorrence of the human, ecological, and climate impacts of Israel’s assault on Gaza.

Chevron holds the “distinction” of being the world’s leading historical producer of greenhouse gas emissions among investor-owned oil companies. An exhaustive 2021 report on Chevron’s global record of ecocide, genocide, and corruption exposed Chevron’s “severe abuse of Indigenous people, as well as massive destruction of local environments while forcing the world into a crisis from fossil fuel-induced climate change.” Israel’s war, like all wars, contributes directly to destroying the climate and adding fuel to the fossil fuel industry’s effort to burn up the planet.

“We’re building a global intersectional Boycott Chevron campaign in partnership with the climate justice movement and Indigenous peoples around the world, including in Ecuador, who are exposing and resisting the colonial violence of Chevron’s extractivism, environmental destruction, and grave human rights violations,” says BNC’s Barghouti.

“In Gaza, Israel is not only committing a genocide against 2.3 million Palestinians,” Barghouti avers.

“It is also committing what international law experts call domicide — the mass destruction of homes and living conditions to make our territory uninhabitable — and ecocide. Though the full extent of the damage caused to the environment by Israel’s relentless bombardment and destruction in Gaza has not yet been documented, satellite imagery already showed the destruction of about 38 to 48 percent of tree cover and farmland.”

As the Guardian reported nearly a year ago, “Palestinian olive groves and farms have been reduced to packed earth. Soil and groundwater have been contaminated by munitions and toxins. The sea is choked with sewage and waste, the air polluted by smoke and particulate matter.”

“Palestinians living under Israel’s colonial rule, with no control over our land or natural resources, are highly vulnerable to the climate crisis,” Barghouti stresses.

“With Israel monopolizing resources, destroying our agricultural land, denying access to water, rising temperatures are exacerbating desertification as well as water and land scarcity, entrenching climate apartheid.”
#BoycottChevron Strengthens Solidarity

U.S. organizations ranging from the Quaker group American Friends Service Committee (AFSC) and US Campaign for Palestinian Rights (USCPR) to the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) have taken up the BNC’s call to organize around the Chevron Boycott. AFSC has provided an extensive toolkit for organizers, including designs for stickers, banners, and flyers that can be adapted by local campaigns and a Fact Sheet: Chevron Fuels Israeli Apartheid and War Crimes.

Since the launch of the boycott, the BNC reports that “tens of thousands of consumers have taken the pledge to boycott Chevron gas stations, dozens of groups around the world have led pickets at Chevron, Caltex, and Texaco gas stations, and at least three cities have divested from Chevron.”

In February 2024, hundreds of protesters staged a “Chevron Out of Palestine” rally outside the gates of Chevron’s Richmond refinery, one of the largest refineries in California. The participants and endorsers of the rally included such diverse groups as the Oil & Gas Action Network, East Bay DSA, Idle No More, Bay Area Palestine Solidarity, Labor Rise Climate Jobs Action Group, Jewish Voice for Peace, Common Humanity Collective, Sunrise Movement, 1000 Grandmothers, Rich City Rays, Rising Tide, Coalition Against Chevron in Myanmar, San Francisco Committee for Human Rights in the Philippines, Asian Pacific Environmental Network, Palestinian Feminist Collective, Bay Area Health Workers for Palestine, Muslim Writers Collective, Amazon Watch, California Trade Justice Coalition.

In August 2024, a similarly broad coalition of organizations in Los Angeles, dedicated to Palestinian human rights and to addressing the global climate crisis, demonstrated at the Chevron Refinery in El Segundo, just south of the LA airport.

The LA coalition included Black Lives Matter, Code Pink, Extinction Rebellion, Veterans for Peace, White People 4 Black Lives, Queers 4 Palestine, Youth Climate Strike, SoCal 350 Climate Action, and local chapters of Students for Justice in Palestine.

Demonstrations at the refinery gates have served a useful purpose in uniting different social movements in common cause, but the isolated locations of the refineries means that the actions reached few members of the public directly. That is changing as the emphasis shifts to gas station pickets reaching out to Chevron’s customers.

Operating under the brand names Chevron, Texaco, and Caltex, Chevron stations are scattered across 21 states, with the largest concentrations in California, Texas, Georgia, Florida, Alabama, Washington, Louisiana, Arizona, Oregon, and Nevada.

Hundreds are corporate-owned, but the majority are owned by franchisees who are locked into long-term relationships with the behemoth. Boycott organizers are asking these franchise owners to communicate directly with Chevron urging termination of its contracts with Israel.

In September 2024, #BoycottChevron climate justice groups and human rights activists staged 15 public events around the world as part of a week of action targeting Chevron. Protesters decorated Chevron’s headquarters in San Ramon, California, with a large banner declaring Chevron “the genocide energy company.”

Demonstrators at gas stations asked vehicle owners to gas up elsewhere and Chevron franchise owners to sign a letter asking Chevron to divest from Israel and post in their window a notice that they have asked Chevron to do so. Franchisees who sign on will not be picketed.

In September 2024 #BoycottChevron climate justice groups and human rights activists staged 15 public events around the world as part of a week of action targeting Chevron. Protesters decorated Chevron’s headquarters in San Ramon, California, with a large banner declaring Chevron “the genocide energy company.”

Demonstrators at gas stations asked vehicle owners to fill up elsewhere and sign the boycott pledge. Chevron franchise owners were asked to sign a letter asking the corporation to divest from Israel and to post a notice in their window that they have done so. Franchisees who sign on are not picketed.

As part of the September week of action the Democratic Socialists of America International Committee launched DSA’s own #StopFuelingGenocide campaign, calling on DSA chapters across the country to help build the boycott. In recent months California DSA members organized demonstrations at gas stations in Oakland, Silicon Valley, and San Diego, and Texas DSAers staged actions in Houston and Austin.

Chevron seeks to curry local favor by investing a small portion of its PR budget in the nonprofit community. When local governments seek to regulate Chevron’s activities the beneficiaries of Chevron’s “charity” are expected to show up at public hearings and put a community face on Chevron’s talking points. DSA is encouraging its chapters to pressure nonprofits and organizers of charity events to turn down fossil-fuel money this year.

Chevron is in the process of moving its global headquarters from California to Houston, Texas, where it is the main sponsor of the annual Houston Marathon. This year, Houston DSA was on hand to explain that Chevron’s generosity in Houston is funded in part by its profiteering in the Eastern Mediterranean.
It’s Only a Short-Term Business

Boycott organizers recognize that it will take a massive global movement to persuade Chevron to end its business in Israel, much less to end its production of fossil fuels, as the future of a human-habitable planet requires.

Despite the challenges, #BoycottChevron activists believe victory is possible. Besides the boycott campaign, there are many other factors at play.

Chevron’s assets off the coast of Palestine face risks beyond the very real reputational injury and economic pressure the international movement brings to bear. Chevron CEO Mike Wirth acknowledged in a sit-down interview sponsored by the Atlantic Council, a ruling-class think tank, that Chevron’s gas fields in the Eastern Mediterranean face physical peril operating in a war zone.

As the 2021 report shows, with hundreds of lawsuits on every continent against the corporation for spills, blowouts, and other violations of numerous laws including those against violent crimes, Chevron was already liable for tens of billions of dollars in fines and compensation before it began its activities connected to the Palestinian genocide.

“Chevron only began investments in Israeli apartheid markets in 2020,” DSA campaign leaders explain in their orientation for boycott organizers. “Our task is to make it easier and more profitable for Chevron to divest from its assets in Israel than to continue holding on to them. Chevron can choose to sell off this investment at any time. We can win.”

You can join the #BoycottChevron campaign by sending a message to CEO Mike Wirth via bit.ly/boycottchevron

Resources:

Fact Sheet: Chevron Fuels Israeli Apartheid and War Crimes, Action Center for Corporate Accountability

AFSC Boycott Chevron campaign info

BDS Movement’s Call for a Consumer Boycott of Chevron-Branded Gas Stations

Report on Chevron’s Global Destruction: Ecocide, Genocide, and Corruption

Source: Against the Current 1 March 2025


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Ted Franklin

Ted Franklin is an organizer and retired union attorney who serves on the coordinating committee and editorial board of System Change Not Climate Change. He is a founding member of the Labor Rise Climate Jobs Action Group and No Coal in Oakland, and is active in efforts to unite the climate justice and labor movements on common goals.


International Viewpoint is published under the responsibility of the Bureau of the Fourth International. Signed articles do not necessarily reflect editorial policy. Articles can be reprinted with acknowledgement, and a live link if possible.

 

Paul Le Blanc: Why I am rejoining Solidarity and some thoughts on the future



Published 

US historian Paul Le Blanc

A longtime friend, with whom I share a mutual respect, recently sent me an email regarding my decision to rejoin Solidarity.* What follows are the texts (slightly edited) of a two-part answer to him, and then my replies to a couple of emails he sent in response.


I will try to give a sense of where rejoining Solidarity fits into my thinking about what we seem to be facing and “what is to be done” at this point in time. This will take a couple of emails — this one dealing with more general matters, and another that I will send tomorrow dealing more directly with the questions you have asked.

It feels to me that time is running out — certainly for me and perhaps for humanity.

Being almost 78 years old, I do not expect to be politically functional (or even alive) for more than five years or so. Although I am definitely feeling, shall we say, “less energetic” than was the case in earlier phases of my life, the fact remains that for now I seem to have some juice left in me — so there is still an impulse to do what I can to help advance the struggle. But I find a heightened need to pick and choose. (More on that in a moment.)

Parallel to this, it seems to me that time is limited in regard to saving humanity from being overwhelmed by a cascade of social and environmental catastrophes — it feels like we may have a decade or two or three to pull that off, but not much more. At this point, particularly in the United States, it is not clear that we can pull that off, given the fact that Trumpism and similar toxic authoritarian trends are in the ascendency and the organised left has largely disintegrated.

On the other hand, as social and environmental catastrophes unfold, it is likely that a deepening radicalisation will spread among more and more people. That signifies a revolutionary potential that might culminate in effective struggles for a better future. But without coherent organisations to strategise and organise in a way that is capable of helping to shape and mobilise that radicalisation, such revolutionary potential cannot be realised. The fact is that there are no such organisations. Changing that situation, to my way of thinking, must be the highest priority around which to make use of the time and energy remaining to me.

I find that one of the things I am able to do is to write books and articles, and to help generate and circulate books and articles by others, which help move thinking in that direction — and also to give talks and help generate discussions and discussion sessions at conferences and elsewhere that go in that direction. Another thing I am able to do is to be involved in modest but meaningful activist efforts — and given time and energy limitations already alluded to, over the past couple of years, I have focused on environmental justice efforts primarily through the Pittsburgh Green New Deal and the Global Ecosocialist Network.

But this is not enough. If the organisation we need is actually going to come into being, I think much of it will come together through the efforts of thoughtful and experienced activists who are currently in a small scattering of already-existing groups. This includes Solidarity. And that brings us more directly to the question you have raised in your email. In tomorrow's concluding email, I will take that up.


First of all, I owe you an apology. Not only because I am a day late in sending this off, but especially because it has ballooned into something much more than what you were asking for. It has become more a saga of a decades-long organisational quest than a direct answer to a simple question. You may decide to skip over much of what follows in order to get to the more direct answer, and for that I would certainly not blame you.

In any event, here is the promised concluding email on what we are facing and “what is to be done,” dealing specifically with your initial questions:

  • Why I decided to rejoin Solidarity.
  • What are my thoughts on the internal affairs of Solidarity.

When I was in the process of rejoining, I was asked to fill out a brief questionnaire which included the question: “Why are you interested in joining Solidarity?” Here is the brief response I gave:

Since the 2019 collapse of the ISO, Solidarity has continued to function as a socialist organisation, formally representing perspectives with which I am in basic agreement.

I believe the mass socialist organisation that I would like to see will probably draw from smaller organisational clusters of revolutionary socialists, of which Solidarity has proved to be one of the most durable.

Also, Solidarity is affiliated with the Fourth International, with which I strongly identify.

Everything I wrote in that brief response is true — but I was keenly aware of providing only a limited sketch of what I truly think. In approaching more complete answers to the questions you have raised, it might make sense to outline why I joined Solidarity in the first place and why I left it.

How I came to join Solidarity is a long story — sort of like a “shaggy dog” story — that has its roots in more than two decades of preliminaries.

Preliminaries

Long, long ago, after considerable experience as a new left activist in the 1960s and early '70s, and after considerable thought (and also a considerable amount of independent study), I made the decision to join the Socialist Workers Party (SWP), to which I devoted ten years of my life as a political activist.

The SWP of the 1970s was a unique intergenerational entity, with layers of comrades (some still a living part of the organisation) with experience going back to the socialist movement headed by Eugene V Debs and seasoned by the militant Industrial Workers of the World, powerfully impacted (back in the day, in real time) by Vladimir Lenin and Leon Trotsky and other comrades who made the Russian Revolution of 1917. It included some who had been part of the early Communist movement of the 1920s, people who resisted and fought against the twin corruptions of Stalinist authoritarianism and reformist adaptation to capitalism, and new layers of comrades who had been active in the radical mass upsurges of the ’30s and ’40s. It included some who had found ways to survive and endure as revolutionaries in the face of the conservative backlash during the ’50s, and more who had been part of the radical resurgence of the ’60s.

There was much to be learned in this rich context — including some negative qualities that were sectarian and sterile — but, for me as well as others, there was much more that was incredibly positive and helped to shape us as serious political activists.

Some of the negative qualities in the makeup of the SWP came to the fore as the late ’70s flowed into the ’80s, corrupting the newer and younger leadership, pushing aside the organisation's positive qualities and traditions. This trend culminated in a covert programmatic transformation of the organisation into a cultish and authoritarian sect involving waves of expulsions and resignations. (Elsewhere I have attempted to help document and analyse all of this.)

After my own expulsion, and a brief period of trying to find my way within the organisational cross-currents of those who had also been driven out, I ended up in the smallest and most modest of the organisations — the Fourth Internationalist Tendency (FIT). Unlike the other new groups, the FIT did not intend to become a replacement of the SWP. Instead, it focused on three goals.

  1. One goal was to demonstrate that utilising an essentially non-sectarian variant of the old SWP orientation could contribute positively to developing an understanding of and engagement with US and global realities.
  2. Another goal was to utilise that analytical approach to explaining how and why the positive political entity that the SWP represented could degenerate into its opposite.
  3. A central goal was to labour, with assistance from the Fourth International, to create a situation through which those who had been expelled and driven out of the SWP would be taken back into that organisation. This would provide an organisational framework for serious, clarifying, democratic discussions and debates (which had been prevented by the corrupted new leadership), culminating in decisions to guide the efforts of a unified US section of the Fourth International.

As I have been writing this, it has occurred to me that my ongoing references to the importance of the Fourth International (FI) seem to suggest that perhaps I should compose a third email to explain how I see this global network that originated with Trotsky and his co-thinkers back in the 1930s. I will avoid composing that addendum — though I will offer a few more comments on the FI later in this email.

The FIT came into existence at the close of 1983, but it was not until seven years later that the SWP leadership — in an offhand manner — publicly stated that it no longer considered itself part of the FI. This news caused not a ripple of dissent in what was left of the SWP membership. At that point, at the conclusion of a democratic discussion, the FIT adopted as its third goal a commitment to unite with one of the organised fragments of expelled SWPers as a first step in uniting all fragments into a new, unified FI section. The two possibilities for more immediate steps of unification were Socialist Action and the FI Caucus of Solidarity. We committed ourselves to a serious exploration of these possibilities.

Joining Solidarity

Initially, some of us guessed that Socialist Action (SA) would be the group with which we would unify. But the discussion process soon revealed that SA’s rigidity would allow unity only on the basis of the FIT being absorbed and digested into an organisation that would permit no dissent from its predetermined sectarian trajectory. Solidarity, on the other hand, made it clear that — assuming we would accept the fact that the FI Caucus was organically inseparable from Solidarity as a whole — we would be welcomed into the organisation, with full democratic rights to maintain our political orientation, including the right to continue producing, as an independent journal, our monthly Bulletin in Defense of Marxism. On this basis, a majority of the FIT voted to dissolve our organisation and — on an individual basis — join Solidarity. It was on this basis that I joined Solidarity.

Those who had been part of the FIT quickly went in different directions:

  • Some who had disagreed with the majority decision chose not to join Solidarity.
  • Among those who joined, one grouping of younger comrades who had been especially enthusiastic about joining were soon outraged that their idealised and highly romanticised notion of what Solidarity was turned out to be a mirage. They formed an irreconcilable and provocative faction that the bulk of Solidarity members found intolerable, resulting in them being kicked out.
  • One highly articulate FIT leader made his own place and his own way in Solidarity, with no serious inclination to consult with others who had been in the FIT, contributing to the disintegration of what some had envisioned as an FIT current within Solidarity.
  • Several members found the organisation to be quite inhospitable to attitudes that had been acceptable in the FIT, and some could not find in the new group the sense of community and purpose that had been a norm for them in the FIT — and they drifted away.
  • Several older comrades were not able to be active in the new group, and death soon claimed most of those who decided to stay the course.
  • Very few adjusted to simply being members of Solidarity.

At a certain point, I decided that I would be part of this “very few.” I worked to help build a Solidarity chapter in Pittsburgh and eventually (although sometimes identifying with an oppositional current) served for two years as part of Solidarity's political committee.

Leaving Solidarity

This brings me — at long last — to why I left Solidarity. After considerable experience, I came to the conclusion that, in large measure, my earlier critique of Solidarity (when I was part of the FIT) had been at least partly correct.

Solidarity initially came into being as a “regroupment” effort initiated by three separate entities with somewhat different histories — the International Socialists, Workers Power, and a sizable group of former SWPers who constituted the first split-off from Socialist Action, adopting the name Socialist Unity. Part of the glue that seemed to hold this three-group entity together was to avoid political disagreements, especially those rooted in each group’s history, that might result in disunity.

This tended to nurture an internal culture of theoretical agnosticism and to choke off the possibility of having serious political discussions that might, in fact, have given the organisation as a whole a sense of direction. People were encouraged to do their own thing and not feel compelled to work together on a common orientation. Meetings tended to move away from discussions of “what we should do” and devolved into one or another activist giving an informational report on what they were doing, which resulted in meetings having a “show-and-tell” quality. For some this posed a question of why one should keep attending meetings that simply added up to talk-talk-talk.

I became fond of quoting one of the organisation’s founders, who noted, after a few years, that “Solidarity is an organization of revolutionaries — it is not yet a revolutionary organization.” Inspired by my vision of the best that the SWP had been, I was hopeful that there might be some commonly agreed-upon project that could give the organisation a sense of collective purpose and collective functioning, forming a bridge to Solidarity actually becoming a revolutionary organisation.

There were attempts to get things going in that direction. At one point, a couple of experienced labour comrades urged that the organisation adopt a general orientation of trade union organising among workers. At another point, we seemed to be on the verge of a campaign designed to transform Solidarity into an activist anti-racist organisation. At yet a different point, there was an attempt to get all of the Solidarity chapters to unify around conducting a series of classes reading and discussing a broad range of Marxist texts. For various reasons, none of these efforts gained sufficient support or traction to get off the ground.

I noticed that the organisation’s membership was aging, with attrition due less to death than to apparent weariness. Periodically a new group of young comrades would join (this happened with the last major incarnation of the Pittsburgh chapter) — but most of the promising influxes of youth would give way to one or another exodus fostered by confusion, boredom, disillusionment or the lure of new reformist or anarchist fashions. There was no durable growth. I began to see (and refer to) Solidarity as “the slow boat to nowhere.”

There were four reasons for my staying in Solidarity.

  1. I was in basic agreement with what Solidarity formally stood for, even if — as an organisation — it did not seem to be doing much about this.
  2. I respected the fact that it contained revolutionaries and activists who did good work, albeit more or less independently of what Solidarity was (or more accurately, was not) doing.
  3. I felt that a person self-identifying as a revolutionary socialist should be part of an organisation which stands for revolutionary socialism — and that a FI supporter should belong to an organisation having some relationship, even a loose one, with the FI.
  4. Solidarity was blessedly free of any sectarian pretence of being an adequate revolutionary organisation, let alone of being the incarnation (or even the embryo) of the revolutionary organisation we need.

For several years I offered very frank critiques of Solidarity in the organisation’s internal discussion bulletins. At a certain point I was very clear in my mind and in things that I said that the primary reason I remained in Solidarity was because I did not see anything better — and if that changed, I would leave Solidarity.

At a certain point, I concluded that something better had come into being: the International Socialist Organization. The ISO was now the largest revolutionary socialist organisation in the United States — with substantial resources and a largely youthful membership — and it was moving away from the insular sectarianism with which it had been afflicted. As a group it was clearly committed to Bolshevik-Leninist traditions that were important to me (and which Solidarity, as an organisation, stood aside from). It was also proving to be interested in developing a relationship with the FI. 

I was in basic agreement with its political program, and I found that my clearly and publicly stated disagreements would be tolerated. I found through experience that I could work fairly well with this group. Despite limitations I could perceive, which were largely due to youthful inexperience, I concluded that I could do more as part of the ISO than was possible as part of Solidarity.

I have no regrets about shifting my membership from Solidarity to the ISO when I did, nor do I regret most of my ten-year experience in the ISO. On the other hand, limitations that I perceived seemed clearer to me as time went on — and these problems eventually generated a severe internal crisis which culminated in its precipitous collapse. Elsewhere I have attempted to more fully describe and analyse this.

How I came to rejoin Solidarity

Finally, finally, finally at long last I am coming to a direct answer to your questions. But first (of course!) there is something more I want to interject.

Amid the rise and fall and disappearance of organisations in which I placed great hopes, I have attempted to remain true to my revolutionary commitments in four ways. One element of “remaining true” involves the continuation of a substantial amount of writing, editing, speaking, educational work, and so on. A second has involved a commitment to keeping alive a revolutionary internationalist engagement — connecting with activists in more than a dozen countries that I have visited, plus engaging with global networks, including the International Institute for Research and Education and the FI. A third has involved sustaining, to the best of my abilities, an involvement in at least some activist efforts. And a fourth has been reflected in my being a member of certain socialist organisations — and my rejoining Solidarity especially fits into this fourth element of trying to be true. So I will say something more about this fourth element, with a focus on how it has been realised over the past five years.

Not long after the collapse of the ISO, I decided to join two socialist organisations — the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) and the Tempest Collective.

It was easy to join DSA nationally — which I did early on by filling out a brief form and signing up for a modest automatic dues payment. This was simply a means for making contact with, and receiving information about, what had suddenly, in the wake of the initial Bernie Sanders Presidential campaign, become the largest socialist group in the US (with a paper membership hitting the 100,000 mark, and an active membership estimated at only 10% of that — which was still an impressive 10,000 people). To be a member required one to agree with a very general commitment to democratic, progressive, and socialist principles — which was no problem at all.

I almost joined the local branch (consisting of 700 paper members, “only” about 10% active), but I veered away after close friends reported that it had been taken over by an intolerant clique engaging in “cancel culture” and expulsions (including of the group’s initial leaders) aimed at those guilty of “incorrect” behaviour.

After a couple of years, this ugliness seemed to have melted away, and I joined the local DSA chapter. In addition to attending some of the monthly meetings (generally drawing between 40 and 80 people — mostly between 18 and 30-something years of age), I attempted to become engaged with two different working groups — the ecosocialist working group and the political education working group.

It turned out that the first — under the banner of “mutual aid” — was basically engaged in providing free food to poor people, and I was unable to find my footing within it. Through the second I was able to help organise two good educational programs (using short videos and capable speakers) that were embedded in chapter meetings: one on the Green New Deal and another on Rosa Luxemburg. The first working group seems to have melted away. The capable coordinator of the second resigned after concluding that DSA was so diffuse and non-activist that his time would be better spent in a different organisation, consequently joining the Party of Socialism and Liberation.

While disagreeing with this comrade’s solution, his critique struck me as more or less accurate — but it still makes sense to me to maintain my membership at this time, with no high expectations.

My expectations were much higher with Tempest. The initial core of the group was composed of people who had been part of the ISO, and most were between the ages of 20 and 50. Others who were not from the ISO also joined. The hundred or so members were predominantly much younger than me, very bright, with a much higher level of political experience and theoretical knowledge than was common in DSA. Yet there were also limitations which resulted in my becoming keenly disappointed.

There were at least two problems, it seemed to me, that were responsible for these limitations. One was the fact that comrades had been badly burned by the negative aspects of the ISO experience, with the collapse of confident and optimistic assumptions, which fed into a deeply agnostic and uncertain approach to actually doing things (reminiscent of some of Solidarity’s limitations).

Another problem was the fact that the internal culture of the ISO in its “good old days” had very serious limitations. Many branches were animated by routines involving paper sales, literature tables, forums, abstract political discussions, and not much else — such as participating with non-members in serious social struggles. There were comrades who did engage in serious mass work and organising, but this was not connected with any democratic collectivist process within the ISO as a whole. There was a disconnect, it seemed to me, between discussion and struggle, contributing to a shallowness in political understanding and organisational norms.

It seemed clear to me, through some frustrating experiences, that my efforts in the group were unlikely to be fruitful. Worse, it seemed to me that the group as a whole had no clear sense of activist direction and, from what I could see, seemed unlikely to find its way to such a direction. Still, I am in basic agreement with what the group stands for, and I know it contains very good people. So it makes sense to me to continue paying dues and to remain a member.

Also, as Bertolt Brecht once said: “Because things are as they are, they will not stay as they are.” We have entered a period destined to be saturated by very terrible shocks. This includes the proliferation of environmental catastrophes, complemented by a jarring triumph and predictable outcomes of Trumpism.

This will have — and already is having — a powerful impact on the lives and consciousness of millions of people, and a mass radicalisation is in the process of unfolding, with people pushed out of what has been “normal.” (This also impacts on members of such groups as Solidarity, DSA and Tempest.) Where they end up cannot be predicted, but the outcome will not automatically be a future shaped by revolutionary-democratic, humanist, and socialist values and commitments.

I believe that hoped-for future can only come into being if an organisation that does not yet exist can somehow come into being: a revolutionary socialist organisation with sufficient political clarity, rock-hard commitment combined with tactical flexibility, organisational coherence, and a mass base.

If such an organisation does come into being, it will in large measure be the result of different forces — in part drawn from small groups of good people with the right kinds of ideas and commitments — cohering into something approximating what is needed.

Despite its obvious imperfections, it seems to me that DSA is one such group. The Tempest Collective is another. That is one reason that I choose to belong to them. And based on my experience and brooding reflections, it seems obvious to me that Solidarity is yet another — and that it makes sense for me to belong to it. And so I have rejoined it.

Internal stirrings in Solidarity

The first question is finally answered, and now on to the second. This can be done more succinctly, because I have just become a member of Solidarity once again, so there is much less I am able to say about the state of the internal affairs of Solidarity.

I have been warmly welcomed into the organisation. As one comrade put it: “Welcome home.” I have had substantial telephone discussions with a couple of people. But where I live (Pittsburgh) there is no longer (and not yet) a branch of the organisation.

On the other hand, I have attended a couple of online meetings that have been organised to discuss some of the internal documents prepared for the upcoming World Congress of the FI. One of these discussions was an open meeting of Solidarity’s National Committee, which also discussed a motion that Solidarity become the US section of the FI. In a straw poll taken at the meeting, this motion passed almost unanimously (with a couple of abstentions). Soon a mail poll of the entire membership will decide the matter.

In the two Zoom discussions there were several things I noticed. Solidarity seems the same in some ways, but also different. Some of the same old faces are there, but some are gone, and there were some new faces as well. It is as if the organisation has been stirred, and it is not quite the same as when I left it. There were differences on important questions — yet these were discussed with a clarity and comradeliness that positively impressed me. At the same time, I found common reference points that made me feel very much at home.

Regardless of the outcome of the upcoming vote regarding the nature of Solidarity’s relationship with the FI, the fact that it is taking place — along with the discussions I witnessed and participated in — indicates a dramatic development. I think it is a good development.

Whether or not one considers all the changes to have been for the better, it is undeniable that the FI has also changed.

When it was initially founded in 1938, the FI perceived itself as “the world party of socialist revolution” — in contrast to the Second International that had been corrupted by policies and practices of a reformist bureaucracy, and in contrast to the Third International that had been corrupted by policies and practices of the Stalinist bureaucracy. Both of these were brilliantly and incisively analysed and critiqued by Trotsky and his co-thinkers. It was anticipated that the tiny forces in the FI would soon be reinforced by massive breakaways of revolutionary-minded elements from the Socialist and Communist movements, plus other radicalised forces from the ranks of the working class and the oppressed.

This anticipated growth did not happen, although for many years Fourth Internationalists were unwilling or unable to let go of this vision. Eventually, some dissident members sarcastically proclaimed that the FI had shifted from being the world party of socialist revolution to the world party of socialist resolutions.

In the 21st century, rejecting the notion that it represents “the sole vanguard,” the FI describes itself in this way: “Its forces are limited, but they are present on every continent and have actively contributed to the resistance to Nazism, May ’68 in France, solidarity with anti-colonial struggles (Algeria, Vietnam), the growth of the anti-globalization movement and the development of ecosocialism.” Today it reaches out to those who share the “belief that an ecosocialist society, liberated from class, gender, race or colonial domination is needed, and can be achieved only through a revolution.”

To the extent that Solidarity — not a cluster of its members, but the organisation as a whole — connects with the FI, it seems to me to be going in a revolutionary internationalist direction that will make the organisation stronger, while also (through the contribution of its own experience and insights) making the FI stronger.


I am glad to have received your most recent email.

One thing that strikes me is that I may have presented my thoughts on the FI in an unbalanced and misleading way. It was not decisive in my rejoining Solidarity — I was quite unaware of current developments regarding Solidarity’s relationship with the FI before I decided to rejoin. Only after rejoining did I discover that such developments were unfolding, that an FI World Congress was coming up, and that a couple of about-to-take-place online discussions in Solidarity were to be focused on that. Attending both discussions (over the past week-and-a-half) pulled my narrative in that direction more than would otherwise have been the case.

This is not to be dismissive of the FI — but more decisive for me is a general internationalism which has become a more intense part of my experiences, perceptions and commitments over the past couple of decades. Connecting with activists and groups in more than twenty countries — most of whom were not affiliated with the FI — has been of profound importance for me. My thinking and feelings about the FI (in its current incarnation) fit into that but do not define it.

While Solidarity’s growing connection with the FI strikes me quite positively, it was — to repeat — not a factor in my rejoining. Instead, that decision flowed from the belief that the effective revolutionary socialist group we need is likely to be initiated (as I have noted) by

... small groups of good people with the right kinds of ideas and commitments ... cohering into something approximating what is needed.

Despite its obvious imperfections, it seems to me that DSA is one such group. The Tempest Collective is another. That is one reason that I choose to belong to them. And based on my experience and brooding reflections, it seems obvious to me that Solidarity is yet another — and that it makes sense for me to belong to it. And so I have rejoined it.

Of course, DSA as a whole will not go in this direction — but I agree with you that elements within it might, particularly if Solidarity and Tempest unite for the purpose of bringing such an organisation into being.

Your conclusions about the current crisis of capitalism make sense to me, and I very much agree with your quite negative assessment of the Democratic Party (although I believe some left-wing Democrats elected to local offices could be won to something better).

I would like to respond to something you say with which I am in sympathy but also only partial agreement. You write: “My two major concerns are: getting a base in the working class via union work (including issues of race, gender, climate, internationalism, etc.) and being clear on the Democratic Party and the need to actually begin experiments in independent political action.”

I want to see a strong left-wing base in the working class, and I am in favour of the kind of class-conscious, democratic, radical union work you describe. But most people who are part of the working class are not in unions, most members of Tempest and Solidarity are not in unions, and for that matter, I am not in a union. It would not be a simple thing for a majority of us (including most workers) to be in a union. For that matter, successful engagement in independent political action will be dependent on popular mobilisations and struggles, through social movements largely functioning outside of a trade union framework.

At the same time, I think you are right that if a small group tries to do too many things, “prioritising” all of the important social movements, its efforts will be too diffuse. There needs to be greater focus, and I think your two major concerns are necessary but not sufficient. 

I think there is another concern that should be added, which connects with the two you have identified while allowing for the engagement of activists outside of the unions, with potential for uniting social movements prepared to push in the direction of independent political action. For me, this additional focus has to do with what has been identified, variously, as the Green New Deal, Climate Justice, Climate Jobs, etc. Over the past few years, I have devoted a considerable amount of energy to that.

In any event, I very much agree with you that it would be a very good thing for Tempest, Solidarity, and others to join together to build a broader revolutionary current. I also agree with your comment: “Perhaps building a broader revolutionary current could be such a project centred on independent political action, union democracy, growth, and militancy; anti-imperialism; anti-racism/gender rights; ecosocialism; and an understanding of the deep nature of the crisis of capitalism (even if there is disagreement on the specifics).”


I was pleased to receive your most recent email, which dramatically narrows any seeming disagreements between us. I am very glad that my clarification regarding revolutionary internationalism has been understood. I am also heartened by your two assertions that “any revolutionary current we can aid won't be mostly workers, but it is a matter of direction,” and that “it will be the social movements that are key to independent political action, but I think local union groups can be drawn in …” 

I would only add that most of those involved in social movements and in such groups as Tempest, Solidarity, and DSA may not be unionised workers, but they happen to be part of the working class (due to the fact that they are dependent for a living income derived from the sale of their labour-power, that is to say, their ability to work for an employer). In any event, I think we are pretty much on the same page.

I think we are also in agreement regarding the logic of helping to create greater socialist unity around the general political and activist orientation we have been discussing — which might fruitfully involve an organisational unity of those involved in the Tempest Collective, Solidarity, and at least some of the currents in DSA. Bringing this about will, of course, not be a simple matter, but it will certainly be worth staying in touch with each other to share information and ideas. 

And beyond that, there may be some things we can do together — and with others — to help advance such a unification process.

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    This means I am currently a member of three socialist organisations – Solidarity, the Tempest Collective, and Democratic Socialists of America. The reasons for this are indicated below.