Sunday, September 22, 2024


PAKISTAN

AS THE OLD IS DYING, A NEW STRUGGLES TO BE BORN

Published September 22, 2024
 DAWN / EOS
Illustration generated using Microsoft Designer

There are a few unique moments in global history when multiple crises, accumulated over a long period of time, express themselves simultaneously with an unprecedented intensity. Such a ‘polycrisis’ combines to form a crisis of legitimacy for the ruling order, highlighting the repressed deficiencies that undergird its apparent stability.

One example of such a moment is the crisis of the global colonial order in the late 19th century, where the scramble for colonies created intense antagonisms between the great European powers of the time. This inter-imperialist rivalry culminated in two World Wars, the rise of fascism, communism and anti-colonial movements, and the emergence of the United States (US) as the primary hegemon in the global order.

The world is now entering another such period of a great transition, with the slow decline of the US and the rapid rise of China. This historical tendency is exacerbated by the polycrisis that involves climate change, economic disintegration, global debt crises, and the emergence of a lethal war industry that combine to undermine the stability of the current order.

An important element of such great transitions is the loss of ideological certainties, with old narratives losing their appeal and being replaced by new ideas, as is being witnessed in the crisis of liberal democracies and the rise of the far-right (and, at times, far-left) parties/figures across the world.

Third World countries such as Pakistan are incorporated into these larger structural tensions that are tearing apart the world today. Beyond the dizzying pace of breaking news, we must decipher the breakdown of the political, economic and ideological anchors that have fallen apart and thrown the Pakistani state into an unprecedented crisis of legitimacy.

Decades of economic, political and social neglect have now metastasised into a scenario that sees Pakistan seemingly heading down a blind alley. Many indicators point towards a worsening of the crises that plague the country. Ammar Ali Jan attempts to answer the questions: how did we as a nation end up here, and is there any way out?

A TIME OF TRANSITION

The multiple hybrid regimes, the rigged elections, the controlled media and a subservient parliament are all failing to cover-up the instability that haunts the present dispensation, demonstrating the intensity of the challenge faced by those who would want a return to ‘normalcy.’

One of the key elements of a crisis of legitimacy is that it destabilises conventional measures through which a crisis is often averted, producing a state of emergency where the past becomes a poor guide to resolve a radically novel situation.

My contention is that the current political, economic and social crisis engulfing Pakistan is part of long-term historical trends, both global and specific to our own history, that are now maturing into a full blown existential threat to our polity. The grievances have accumulated over time, exacerbated by the ruthless exploitation by the ruling elites and their refusal to follow any legal frameworks that may restrain their power.

On the other hand, the changing geopolitical situation, as well as the declining global economy, has meant that there is very little possibility of a bailout by Western powers. The Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (PTI) versus the Pakistan Democratic Movement (PDM) drama, and the fissures in the judiciary, military and the media, are reflective of this larger breakdown of structures that once sustained the ruling dispensation.

Moreover, while Imran Khan represents the crisis in its most potent, disruptive element, our tragedy is compounded by the fact that neither he, nor any other political force, has emerged that can present an alternative vision to move beyond the punishing stagnation afflicting our society. The crisis of imagination makes our predicament all the more painful.

We are then living through the ‘End Times’ of a journey that contained much promise, but was derailed by despair, greed and short-sightedness. To discern this fall, the multiple crises of political economy, ideology and political leadership have to be understood in their historical formation that are now combining to impose a permanent form of destabilisation in our system.


The current political, economic and social crisis engulfing Pakistan is part of long-term historical trends, both global and specific to our own history, that are now maturing into a full blown existential threat to our polity. The grievances have accumulated over time, exacerbated by the ruthless exploitation by the ruling elites and their refusal to follow any legal frameworks that may restrain their power.

THE COLLAPSE OF A RENTIER ECONOMY

The roots of Pakistan’s economic crisis lay in the fateful decisions made by our political elites in the 1950s. Pakistan’s independence occurred at a heightening moment of Cold War rivalry between the US and the Soviet Union. American author and journalist William Blum, in his fantastic book titled Killing Hope: US Military and CIA Interventions Since World War II, explains how the “bipolar world”, split between the capitalist and the socialist camps, did not reflect the actual power imbalance that existed between the two sides.

The Soviet Union had suffered enormous destruction during the Second World War, including the death of 27 million people, as it fought against a punishing Nazi military occupation. On the other hand, the US did not see its mainland get attacked by war, emerging as the primary industrial power (50 percent of global industrial production) and became the primary creditor of the world.

This imbalance explains why the US aggressively thwarted any left-wing movement in Europe and across the colonial world while the Soviet Union maintained, contrary to the Western narrative, a minimalist interventionist position. This was a time of high prestige for left-wing movements, as they had played a pivotal role in anti-fascist and anti-colonial struggles.

Thus, the US, with the aid of the newly formed Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), embarked upon a ruthless campaign of subjugating mass movements in the name of ‘fighting communism’, a crusade that led them to attack or destabilise countries as distinct as Italy, Korea, Angola, Guatemala, Syria, the Phillipines and a host of other countries in the 1950s.

The historian Christopher Simpson meticulously shows how the US camp did not consist of ‘liberal democrats’ but often involved former Nazi sympathisers who were given respectability by the US to fight the “communist threat” in Europe.

In the Third World, this alliance of the ‘free world’ was secured through an alliance with conservative forces that often denounced the more emancipatory ideals of the anti-colonial struggles. The key pillar of this alliance was the military, a conservative force that became the vanguard in the fight against socialism.

The US developed special relations with military officers in countries as diverse as South Africa, Indonesia, Brazil and a host of other developing countries. In other words, developmental funds to these countries were tied to their participation in America’s war against communism, which often meant brutal repression at home.

Pakistan’s ruling elites, always anxious of their place in popular politics, made a Faustian pact with Washington by joining the Southeast Asia Treaty Organisation (SEATO) in 1954 and the Central Treaty Organisation (CENTO) in 1955, sealing the country’s fate for decades to come.

Pakistan’s incorporation into the global order as a client state meant a surrender of a sovereign path of development for the country. Pakistan’s economic growth was now permanently tied to its relationship with Washington, with massive aid flows generating impressive growth in the 1960s, 1980s and 2000s. Incidentally, all these growth spurts were experienced under military regimes, solidifying the legitimacy of the institution and strangling the prospects of a democratic polity.

Pakistan’s pre-eminent social scientist Hamza Alavi described this expanding power of the coercive apparatuses by calling Pakistan an “overdeveloped state”, where a “military-bureaucratic oligarchy” controlled the levers of power. The power of the landed and industrial elites was secured through the military that used its role as the primary mediator of imperialist rents to cement its hegemony on the political scene.

The impressive growth stories under military regimes veiled a darker reality. Our economic engine was not fuelled by a long term vision for industrial growth, but was linked to perpetual wars in the region in

which we were expected to participate as proxies. In the 1960s, anchoring Pakistan into the anti-communist camp and wiping out Leftist elements in the nascent postcolonial state was central to the CIA’s strategy for the region.

Not only were Leftist organisations repressed, including the tragic murder of the Communist Party of Pakistan’s secretary general Hassan Nasir, democrats from across the spectrum were declared traitors to the federation, putting in place a tradition that continues to haunt us.

One of the most famous ‘traitors’ of this era was ‘Mother of the Nation’ Fatima Jinnah, who challenged Gen Ayub Khan’s dictatorship and suffered an electoral defeat in a presidential election widely believed to be rigged.


US President John F Kennedy, Gen Ayub Khan, and US Vice President Lyndon B Johnson pictured in the Oval Office in Washington on July 13, 1961: Ayub’s development model, built on extreme forms of class and regional inequality, experienced its slow demise when the US pulled its support after the Pakistan-India war in 1965 | John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum

DIGGING THE HOLE DEEPER

This tendency of centralisation of state authority and the demonisation of opponents was further strengthened under Gen Ziaul Haq, whose draconian repression of political activists, including the judicial murder of Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, stands out as a particularly brutal period.

To compound the problem, the aid flows to Pakistan were tied to the military junta’s commitment to fighting a US-sponsored Afghan jihad, turning the country into a bastion of right-wing militants from across the Muslim world.

The economic boom during the Zia regime was linked to the construction of this jihadi infrastructure, an infrastructure geared towards war, destruction and bigotry, which wrecked Afghanistan and Pakistan while fuelling conflicts across the region. Less than two decades later, Gen Pervez Musharraf’s economic success was also tied to imperialist rents, this time to dismantle this jihadi infrastructure.

The obverse side of this development model was not only economic inequality, but the recurrent collapse that we faced whenever we were abandoned by Washington. Ayub’s development model, built on extreme forms of class and regional inequality, experienced its slow demise when the US pulled its support after the Pakistan-India war in 1965.

The deteriorating economic situation led to riots across Pakistan in 1968-1969, an unexpected victory of anti-establishment forces in the 1970 elections, and a brutal military operation that ended in the dismemberment of Pakistan, concluding the “Decade of Development” with nothing to show but blood and tears.

The same pattern was repeated in the case of Zia and Musharraf regimes. In both cases, America’s diminishing interest in Afghanistan meant an abrupt drying up of resources for Pakistani governments. While Washington became involved in wars elsewhere, the Afghan wars crippled our polity, leading to a rise in religious extremism, prompting repeated internal military operations, and causing the deaths of at least 70,000 Pakistani citizens, including political leaders.

This boom and bust cycle has created a strong consuming class that has benefitted from this rent-seeking behaviour of the state. Yet, the parasitic nature of our elites can be gauged from the fact that their lifestyles are comparable to their counterparts in places such as India, South Korea etc while being decades behind them in industrial/economic output. Instead, their wealth was owed to their links to the Pakistani state, which in turn depended on borrowed money from the US as part of providing its territory and services for America’s proxy wars in the region.

My contention is that this arrangement has come to a definitive end. The US is no longer an industrial power that can give cheap loans to its client states. With a military budget of US$883 billion and a declining industrial base, its ability to demolish far exceeds its ability to reconstruct, as witnessed in a series of wars across the Middle East.

On the other hand, China’s model is geared towards trade and boosting industrial productivity, an enterprise that our rent-seeking elites are singularly incapable of undertaking, as demonstrated by the botched results of the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

It is no wonder that abandonment by the US is leading to outbursts by the political leadership, with Imran Khan claiming that his government was overthrown by the US, while Ishaq Dar recently claimed that the International Monetary Fund (IMF) was punishing Pakistan for geostrategic reasons.

This angst is nothing but the painful withdrawal symptoms of a state addicted to proxy wars and the dollars associated with them. The result is an impossible debt burden that continues to get worse, with over 50 percent of our budget geared towards debt servicing. Instead of debating any reforms, the ruling elites are using the state to impose the costs of their own debt-fuelled lifestyles on to the public through increasing taxation.

Today, the political economy of Pakistan appears akin to what American political scientist Jodi Dean has described as “neo-feudalism”, a system where the rich increasingly impose rents upon society to feed their luxurious lifestyles. In other words, we are witnessing the end of citizenship and the emergence of a new kind of mass serfdom, with all the authoritarianism and militarised control such a tendency entails.


A man holds a placard during a protest in Karachi against inflation, unemployment and increased taxation on August 23, 2023: the ruling elites are using the state to impose the costs of their own debt-fuelled lifestyles on to the public through increasing taxation | AFP


IDEOLOGICAL DISARRAY

The state’s narrative about the ideology of Pakistan is also increasingly viewed with cynicism by an ever-growing section of society. As the American professor of history David Gilmartin has suggested, the Pakistan Movement was always an eclectic mix of Muslim nationalism and more mundane local realities that included social categories such as caste, region, language etc.

In other words, the universalising narrative of the state as an Islamic polity had to contend with historical differences, particularly the question of different nationalities/ linguistic groups that constitute Pakistan. This tension was felt in the early years, with conflicts raging in the peripheries during Jinnah’s own lifetime, including severe hostilities and riots, from the erstwhile North Western Frontier Province (NWFP, now Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa) to Dhaka in East Pakistan.

Such tensions were not unique to Pakistan, since most postcolonial national states had to engage with different ethno-national groups to create a unity of purpose. Yet, Pakistan’s fateful decision to join the US camp hastened the centralisation of the state with the excessive power of the military, which viewed assertion of ethnic difference as a negation of the idea of Pakistan.

It was not long before nationalist aspirations were also dubbed as ‘communism’, so that the great anti-communist crusade could be invoked to stifle dissent internally. The tragedy of 1971, where for the first time in human history, a majority population separated from a minority, did not soften the centralising tendencies of the state, as a brutal operation was launched in Balochistan in 1974 to defend the ‘integrity’ of the country.

Similarly, large sections of the Pakhtun population have grown under the shadow of US-sponsored proxy wars fought by the Pakistan state. The militarisation of everyday life, as well as the devastation caused by endless wars, has become an integral part of Baloch and Pakhtun identity.

Unfortunately, constitutional movements — such as the Pashtun Tahaffuz Movement (PTM) and the Baloch Yakjehti Committee (BYC) — have also been labelled as ‘traitors’, thus making any compromise increasingly difficult. The vacuum is resulting in the emergence of terrorist organisations, such as the Balochistan Liberation Army (BLA), that seek to exploit the ethnic cleavages in the country in order to push the region into a vortex of ethnic hate and bigotry.

Perhaps the biggest irony is that the state no longer even has a monopoly over political Islam. The state’s policy of waging jihad was part of a cynical world view of a rentier state rather than being reflective of any deep ideological commitment. As a result, jihadi and other religious forces have taken the initiative away from the state, often dictating Islam to the state rather than being dictated by it.

Gen Musharraf’s compliance in the US-led War on Terror, allowing drone strikes on Pakistani territory, and conducting military operations against religious groups, has hollowed out the state’s claim to be the primary representative of religion, depriving it of a key ideological cement to discipline populations.

The final frontier for the state was its monopoly over ‘Pakistaniat’, an elusive category that has intense emotional appeal for large sections of society. In that realm, PTI and Khan have decisively displaced the military as the primary expression of nationhood in mainland Pakistan.

For decades, the establishment projected Khan as a political alternative in whom the modernist, corporate aspirations of society coalesce with more traditional virtues of piety and personal integrity. After alienating political leaders from the peripheries and the mainstream, Khan was the final line of defence for the state.

Yet, in a bizarrely whimsical manner, the establishment switched sides, hoping that the military’s historical core support base would abandon PTI. Instead, they moved with the PTI, making Khan the embodiment of ‘Pakistani nationalism.’ Consequently, the state no longer has a monopoly over religion or nationalism, while also struggling to fend off intensifying challenges from ethno-nationalist forces.

IS THERE A BEGINNING AFTER THE END?

Adeel Malik, a scholar at the University of Oxford, has recently published some groundbreaking research on the social transformations occurring in society. Access to social media, university education and new employment opportunities have combined to reduce the influence of traditional power brokers across large parts of Pakistan. This fundamental shift has weakened old political parties that garnered their support from these patronage networks.

Such weakness is amplified by the fact that these parties have been targeted by the establishment for decades but have failed to develop any adequate vision for national politics. The result is that their primary politics now revolve around keeping one individual out of power, a task for which they are ready to jettison long-held principles of constitutionalism that they espoused in the past. In other words, they have been reduced to pure negativity, without a clear vision for what they offer to society.

Khan, on the other hand, represents the spirit of the time, insofar as these new social groups are more willing to coalesce around him. Yet, his stint in power was marred by the fact that he and his party offered precious little in terms of new ideas for Pakistan’s political economy. IMF conditionalities, bulldozing bills in the parliament (similar to what we recently witnessed with the clumsy attempt to pass the 26th Constitutional Amendment Bill), helplessness in front of rent-seeking elites while using severe repression against opponents, and very little discussion on redistribution of economic power were the hallmarks of his brief stint in power.

Even today, PTI’s strength remains its ability to harness the anger of the people through the production of a catchy narrative that feeds into the anxieties and aspirations of people. But a narrative is different from ideology, since the former can be moulded anytime to suit the particular audience one is addressing, while ideology requires a consistency of principles over an extended period of time.

This is why we hear very little from PTI in terms of a concrete vision for the future and a lot on how the current dispensation is a hopeless failure. Consequently, we have entered a stage of revolutionary aesthetics that veil a deep conservatism, an intensification of tactical manoeuvres but without any strategic horizons, and an increasing anger towards the status quo without any proposals for an alternative social contract.

What we are then witnessing in these multiple crises is the culmination of an order that began in the 1950s — a status quo that was propped up by foreign powers to do their bidding in the region, a political economy addicted to war, rents and excessive consumption, a failure to innovate, and a refusal to incorporate difference.

It is resulting in the dismantling of ideological underpinnings of the ruling order and a deep political disorientation, exemplified by the lack of imagination exhibited by political parties. In other words, the old order has lost its raison d’etre, and the instability we witness today is a symptom of a deeper crisis that signals the end of a historical epoch.

In moments of great transitions, repetition of old clichés is not possible. A crisis of imagination often turns into a crisis of adequate language itself. To answer the new questions we are confronted with, we must first be willing to situate ourselves in the novelty that stares us in the face.

There is no going back to becoming a client state for the US, just like there is little possibility of sustaining a rent-seeking economy that seeks to sacrifice the future of millions of children to sustain luxuries for the few. The spectre of ethnic hatred and religious extremism are no longer peripheral concerns but are becoming existential threats for our society.

One must remember that after every end, there is a new beginning. The moment is pregnant with extreme danger and unprecedented opportunities. The task of intellectuals in Pakistan is no longer to regurgitate clichés learnt from the West. Certainties have collapsed everywhere, and what we require are bold new ideas that can help us chart our journey anew in this transformed world.

In that sense, despite the tragic situation, there is an opportunity to rethink history and propose a new social contract around issues deemed taboo. Such ideas must be boldly generated and propagated to find new anchorage for Pakistan in the current moment.

The world is out of joint, and to seek illusions instead of truth in such moments will be a great abdication of intellectual responsibility. Our biggest failure will be if we continue to comfort ourselves with the belief that things will go back to a ‘normal’ equilibrium at some point.

The costs of failure are too high for us to remain comfortable in our illusions.

The writer is a historian, academic and political organiser. He is the founder and general secretary of the Haqooq-e-Khalq Party. X: @ammaralijan

Published in Dawn, EOS, September 22nd, 2024
PAKISTAN

Shaky stability

Khurram Husain 
Published September 19, 2024
Dawn




RARELY have I seen a situation like this one. The economy is finding an uneasy and shaky stability; as inflation peaks, the exchange rate looks like it might well stick, the backlog of unpaid dividends is being cleared, interest rates are on a downward trajectory from here on, the current account has returned to surplus, reserves are stable and so on. The list can get as long as one wants.

But the problems are growing. Rarely have we seen a situation where the economy stabilises while the government gets shaky. Usually, political and economic stability go together in our history. And mind you, I’m talking about economic stability, not growth. Paradoxically, periods of booming economic growth are also periods when politics becomes shaky.

Nawaz Sharif found himself facing disqualification right when his economic growth rates were hitting their peak and the first of the large mega projects his government had commissioned were getting ready for start of commercial operations. Likewise, Imran Khan found himself facing a vote of no-confidence precisely when the economy was hitting its peak growth rate of seven per cent.

But I cannot recall a government going wobbly when the stabilisation phase of the economy is peaking. That is where we are today. The economy has not fixed itself, nor is growth about to return. All that has happened is the worst effects of the bitter medicine one has to take to stabilise an out-of-control economy are now beginning to wear off. 

That’s all.

Usually this is the sweet spot. This is usually the time when the government of the day can start crowing about its achievement in having stabilised runaway fiscal deficits and falling foreign exchange reserves. Once interest rates start coming down — with IMF approval, as evidenced by the fact that an Executive Board meeting has been scheduled in the midst of the rate cuts — it usually means the worst is over.

They use bailouts and loans to fuel the country’s economy and repression to stifle the people’s will.

But this is the first time we are seeing a government struggle politically while having largely survived the worst of the economic pain. And as its political moorings start loosening, its capacity to stay on the path of stabilisation as required will weaken.

We are drowning in ironies today, but one to marvel at is how one of the strongest governments we have had in a long time in terms of its numbers in parliament is proving unequal to the task before it.

Despite its numbers in parliament and the strong backing of the establishment, this government is struggling to get things done that those with fewer numbers and less powerful backers in the past managed to do. This only means one thing: despite all its apparent strength in terms of its parliamentary arithmetic and powerful backing, this is probably the weakest government we have had in at least a quarter of a century.

How does that happen? How can a government be so strong by one standard, and yet so weak by another? This can only happen if the system of rule upon which the government stands itself is losing traction.

Systems are not build with force alone. They require buy-in from the population over whose affairs they preside. The current system of rule has taken a mortal hit on its ability to command its own population’s loyalties after more than two and a half years of the most ferocious inflationary fire the country has ever seen.

Nothing kills people’s faith in their system, their own lives and their future, like inflation. And the kind of inflation we have seen since May 2021 is literally unprecedented. The fire still burns, even if it has stopped spreading. It will be many years before people’s incomes potentially catch up with the loss their purchasing power has suffered over these years.

To compensate for the people’s loss of faith, the rulers of our time have resorted to gimmicks to deprive them of a voice in choosing their elected representatives.

When people protest this denial of fundamental rights, the rulers reply with repression, arrests, abuse. When attention is drawn to the violation of people’s rights, they respond with measures to silence the media, throttle the internet, police social media, and more repression. When the judiciary refuses to play ball with this escalating cycle of repression, along comes a constitutional amendment to bifurcate the apex court and make its crucial functions — constitutional interpretation — subordinate to the government of the day.

Thus kicks off a vicious cycle that eats away at the system’s legitimacy and weakens its foundations. Riding the whole wave is a group of leaders using the oldest of the old playbooks that has always been used in Pakistan. They use bailouts and loans to fuel the country’s economy and repression to stifle the people’s will. Historically this has worked, but only partially. Military rulers in the past managed to get large, concessional inflows with which to fuel the economy while engineering the local political landscape to their liking.

But this time it’s not working, and that is why the situation looks unique. The repression is not silencing the people’s will, and no foreign partner is stepping in with a bailout. A people burdened with inflation and repression at the same time will not be enthused about being part of the system that rules them. And the longer this state of affairs continues, the more the government will lose traction even as it succeeds in stabilising the macroeconomic indicators.

There is a lesson here for those who have not forgotten how to learn. Pakistan is not like one of those countries where a single dictator has ruled for three or four decades at a stretch. The demand for the ruler to earn his or her right to rule through the ‘just consent of the governed’ is strong here.

Less than eight months into its tenure, and one of the (arithmetically) strongest governments we have had in decades is already old and infirm. Time to read the writing on the wall.

The writer is a business and economy journalist.

khurram.husain@gmail.com

X: @khurramhusain

Published in Dawn, September 19th, 2024
PAKISTAN

TTP’s reach

DAWN
Editorial Published 
September 22, 2024 

THOUGH the banned TTP is principally a threat to Pakistan’s security, the terrorist group’s wider ambitions should not be ignored by the world.

In this regard, Pakistan’s ambassador to the UN, Munir Akram, recently told the Security Council that the TTP is an “umbrella organisation” for militant actors, with the potential to destabilise the region. Moreover, indicating the state’s dissatisfaction with the Afghan Taliban regime, he added that the TTP operates with “full support … of the Afghan interim government”.

There are, of course, justified reasons for the state’s frustration with the Afghan Taliban’s inability to crack down on cross-border terrorism. In attacks on Thursday and Friday, several security men were martyred, mostly in areas close to the Afghan border. In one incident, terrorists were prevented from crossing into Pakistan, while in another, Pakistani forces traded fire with Afghan security men.

Expanding on the TTP’s potential to cause havoc beyond Pakistan, Mr Akram cited the terrorist group‘s ties with Al Qaeda, saying that the TTP — by joining forces with the multinational terror franchise — could become a “spearhead” for regional and global terrorist goals. The TTP is already on the UN’s radar, as the multilateral body has affirmed that the outfit is currently the largest terror group in Afghanistan, enjoying close bonds with the Afghan rulers.

While there are strong ideological and doctrinal links between the Afghan Taliban and the TTP, the former are satisfied with implementing their rigid system internally, while the latter group has a wider ‘vision’, working as it does with transnational terror concerns. Therefore, as this paper has mentioned before, there is a need to pursue the anti-TTP campaign on two fronts: the domestic and the foreign.

Domestically, the state must ensure that TTP fighters and allied groups are not able to hold any territory or freely cross the Afghan frontier. Our demands for international action will lack conviction if we are not able to keep our own soil free of terrorist groups. Secondly, as the ambassador pointed out, the TTP — particularly its activities inside Afghanistan — should be a matter of global concern, specifically for regional states.

The TTP is not the only violent outfit operating within Afghanistan; Al Qaeda, IS-K, Central Asian fighters, as well as Uighur militants are also believed to have a presence in that country. Some have cordial relations with the Afghan Taliban, while others, for example IS-K, have adversarial ties with Kabul’s rulers. Therefore, Pakistan, along with Iran, the Central Asian states, Russia and China, should evolve a joint strategy to address the militancy problem in Afghanistan.

Pakistan’s warning about the threat the TTP poses should be heeded by the international community, as Afghanistan has remained a hotbed of extremist groups in the past. The same mistake should not be repeated.

Published in Dawn, September 22nd, 2024
AI development cannot be left to market whim, UN experts warn

AFP 
 September 20, 2024 

UNITED NATIONS: The development of artificial intelligence (AI) should not be guided by market forces alone, UN experts cautioned on Thursday, calling for the creation of tools for global cooperation. But they held back from suggesting the creation of a muscular worldwide governing body to oversee the rollout and evolution of a technology, the proliferation of which has raised fears around biases, misuse and dependence.

The panel of around 40 experts from the fields of technology, law and data protection was established by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres in October.

Their report, published days before the start of a high-profile “Summit of the Future,” raises the alarm over the lack of global governance of AI as well as the effective exclusion of developing countries from debates about the technology’s future.

Of the UN’s 193 members, just seven are part of the seven major initiatives linked to AI, while 118 are entirely absent — mostly nations of the global south. “There is, today, a global governance deficit with respect to AI,” which by its nature is cross-border, the experts warn in their report.

Alarm raised over lack of global governance and exclusion of developing countries from debate about technology’s future

“AI must serve humanity equitably and safely,” Guterres said this week. “Left unchecked, the dangers posed by artificial intelligence could have serious implications for democracy, peace, and stability.”

‘Too late’?


To the backdrop of his clarion call, the experts called on UN members to put in place mechanisms to grease the wheels of global cooperation on the issue, as well as to prevent unintended proliferation. “The development, deployment and use of such a technology cannot be left to the whims of markets alone,” the report says.

It called firstly for the creation of a group of scientific experts on AI modeled on the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) forum of experts, whose reports are the last word on the issue of climate change.

The panel would brief the international community on emerging risks, identify research needs as well as how it could be used to alleviate hunger, poverty, and gender inequality, among other goals.

That proposal is included in the draft Global Digital Compact, still under discussion, which is due to be adopted Sunday at the “Summit of the Future.” The report endorses setting up a light-touch “coordination” structure within the UN secretariat.

But it stops short of a fully-fledged international governance body — like that sought by Guterres — based on the model of the UN’s nuclear watchdog, the IAEA.

“If the risks of AI become more serious, and more concentrated, it might become necessary for Member States to consider a more robust international institution with monitoring, reporting, verification, and enforcement powers,” the report said.

The authors acknowledge that owing to the warp speed of change in AI, it would be pointless to attempt to draw up a comprehensive list of dangers presented by the ever-evolving technology.

Published in Dawn, September 20th, 2024

Rewiring humanity
Published September 21, 2024
DAWN





IMAGINE a world where libraries fit in your pocket, where distant voices echo in real-time across continents, and where the collective knowledge of humanity streams at your fingertips. This isn’t a utopian dream; it’s our present reality. In 2007, when Steve Jobs unveiled the iPhone, he set in motion a chain of innovations that would fundamentally alter our relationship with technology. This device became the paradigm for a new era of digital integration in everyday life, radically reshaping how we connect, work, and express ourselves.

Apple’s metamorphosis from a garage venture to a trillion-dollar titan epitomises the seminal ascent of Big Tech. Yet, Apple is merely one player on a grand technological stage, where the future of hu­­manity unfolds act by act. Consider a world ber­e­­­ft of Google’s omniscient search, Amazon’s ubiquito­­us marketplace, Instagram’s shared gallery of hu­­m­­­­an experience, or X’s real-time global conversations. In a mere two decades, these digital behemoths have propelled us from a world of fragmented communication to one where information flows as freely as thought itself. They’ve forged con­nections between billions, spawning an ecosystem that addresses a myriad of societal imperatives.

The democratisation of knowledge is perhaps Big Tech’s most profound gift to humanity, turning the internet into a vast, accessible repository, empowering both autodidacts and formal learners. This emancipation extends beyond the intellectual and into the economic realm, where e-commerce platforms have globalised local markets, and gig economy apps have shattered traditional notions of employment. In emerging economies, these digital tools enable entrepreneurs to leapfrog conventional development stages, fostering innovation and economic growth at an unprecedented pace.

At the epicentre of this seismic upheaval, Big Tech companies are charting the course of our collective future. Their substantial investments in artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and machine learning are expanding the frontiers of possibility. These advancements transcend the tech sector, driving breakthroughs in transportation and space exploration, transforming agriculture, and combating climate change with hyper-efficient energy systems. Technology-driven learning environments that go beyond physical boundaries are profoundly reshaping education. In healthcare, they are pioneering everything from real-time health monitoring to AI-assisted diagnostics, personalised medicine, gene editing, and bioengineering — paving the way for unprecedented improvements in human health and longevity.


The global footprint of Big Tech extends far beyond innovation or the foundation of our digital existence.

Moreover, the global footprint of Big Tech extends far beyond innovation or the foundation of our digital existence. Their economic impact reverberates worldwide, generating millions of jobs directly and through extensive supply chains. They’ve birthed entire industries, from app development to digital marketing, while their cloud computing services and network infrastructure investments support the exponential growth of our data-driven society.

In times of global crisis, such as the Covid-19 pandemic, these companies proved indispensable, facilitating remote work and education, thus sustaining economic and social continuity amid extraordinary disruption. Social media platforms evolved into digital agoras, bridging vast geographical chasms and fostering unparalleled cultural cross-pollination. During crises, these platforms metamorphose into critical infrastructure, coordinating relief efforts and disseminating vital information with unmatched efficiency.

However, this digital renaissance is not without its shadows. Big Tech now navigates an increasingly complex regulatory landscape. In the US, a bipartisan coalition of senators has proposed some of the most stringent technology regulations in decades. These include the American Innovation and Choice Online Act, aimed at preventing large platforms from favouring their own products; the American Data Privacy Protection Act, which seeks to establish a comprehensive national framework for data privacy; the Platform Accountability and Consumer Transparency Act, focused on increasing transparency in content moderation practices; and the Algorithmic Justice and Online Platform Transparency Act, designed to combat algorithmic bias and promote fairness in automated decision-making systems.

As the world becomes increasingly interconnected, unilateral regulation by any single country, especially one as influential as the US, risks creating fragmentation in the global digital ecosystem. An internationally coordinated approach is essential — only through global cooperation can we hope to create a regulatory framework that is as borderless and dynamic as the technology it seeks to govern.

The path forward demands a delicate balance — nurturing innovation while addressing legitimate concerns. It calls for a collaborative framework uniting tech companies, governments, and civil society. This tripartite alliance must tackle multifaceted challenges: establishing ethical guidelines for AI development, enhancing data protection and transparency, mitigating algorithmic biases, and creating robust global standards for data privacy and security. Equally vital are diversity initiatives that will ensure the fruits of innovation are shared inclusively, and dismantling the technological apartheid that silently segregates our society based on digital access.

In the realm of fair competition, the alliance must act as a vigilant guardian, safeguarding digital marketplaces as level playing fields where nascent innovators can challenge tech titans without fear of being stifled by preferential treatment. This watchfulness must extend to the equally crucial domain of content moderation. The goal must be to avoid burdening tech companies with an impossible mandate that forces them to choose between creating sterile voids or allowing anarchic cesspools — neither of which serves the public interest.

A promising path forward lies in developing an internationally coordinated, tiered system of content moderation with clear guidelines for different types of harmful content. This approach would es­­tablish baseline content policies while allowing for necessary cultural and legal variations. By prese­rving the vibrancy of online spaces while mitigating the spread of harmful content, such a system would serve both free expression and public safety.

As we stand at the helm of this technological revolution, where the algorithms of today sculpt the realities of tomorrow, we must recognise both the transformative power of Big Tech and the weight of its responsibility. The challenge extends beyond merely reining in Big Tech. By embracing this pivotal moment with wisdom and foresight, we can harness the raw power of technology into a catalyst for universal enlightenment and progress. In this grand digital odyssey, we are not just spectators, but the authors of our collective destiny.

The writer is an entrepreneur based in the US and the UK, and a shareholder in several technology companies, including some mentioned in this article.

sar@aya.yale.edu

X: @viewpointsar

Published in Dawn, September 21st, 2024
Anthems and perceptions


Muhammad Amir Rana 
Published September 22, 2024 
DAWN



ON Sept 26, 1960, Fidel Castro delivered a historic and defiant speech at the UN General Assembly, but it was not his words that caused the stir. Instead, Castro and his Cuban delegation refused to stand up for the US national anthem during the meeting, a clear symbolic rejection of American influence. This provocative gesture deepened the already strained relations between the US and Cuba, further fuelling Cold War tensions.

In addition to the diplomatic stand-off, Castro’s delegation faced blatant discrimination when New York hotels refused to accommodate them, forcing the group to find refuge in Harlem, a neighbourhood at the heart of New York’s Black community.


However, there was no similar backdrop to what the acting Afghan consul general, Muhib Ullah Shakil, did in Peshawar the other day during the National Rehmat-ul-lil-Aalamin (PBUH) Conference, when he did not stand up for the Pakistani national anthem. Afghanistan justified this refusal to stand by arguing that, since the anthem was set to music, it went against their religious beliefs. Just a few days later, a Taliban diplomat repeated the same action at the 38th International Islamic Unity Conference, where Iran’s president, Masoud Pezeshkian, was also present. Interestingly, Iran is also a state run by the clergy, but its anthem contains music.

Whatever the Taliban’s justification may have been, such junctures are considered an affront to the national dignity of the hosting state. Apart from the Cuban delegation’s protest of America’s undignified ‘hospitality’ and the Cold War background, there are several other examples where actions disrupting or going against flag hoisting or anthems of nations have had wider implications for bilateral ties.

Disputes over national anthems and flags often reflect deeper political tensions.

Diplomatic protocols for national anthems vary by country and occasion, but standard guidelines are generally followed during official ceremonies. These protocols may accommodate religious or cultural sensitivities; for example, diplomats from certain countries might refrain from specific gestures during anthems due to religious customs, and host nations usually respect such practices as long as it is communicated in advance.

It is certain that, at least in Pakistan, the Taliban diplomats had not conveyed their reservations to Pakistani officials. Otherwise, Pakistan’s Foreign Office would not have been provoked into giving a strong response to the undiplomatic gesture.

Afghanistan’s internal crisis is evident in its national symbols, despite the Taliban’s claims of peace in the country. National symbols unite people by creating an emotional bond among citizens. When these symbols fail to serve the purpose, a clear disarray within the citizenry becomes apparent. The ongoing dispute over the flag and anthem highlights the deep divisions between Afghanistan’s political factions and the struggle over the country’s identity, governance, and future direction.

When the Taliban took over Afghanistan in 2021, they replaced the national flag and anthem. The Taliban anthem, which lacks instrumental accompaniments, challenges singers to create a musical impact solely through their voices. Despite these changes, the Taliban’s flag and anthem are not widely recognised internationally, nor are they accepted by a large segment of the Afghan population, who still favour the pre-Taliban flag and anthem. The old Afghan anthem is still used at international sporting events, particularly in cricket, and Afghan players wholeheartedly respect it.

The Taliban’s anthem, ‘This is the Home of the Brave’, resembles a war song, with a tone often used by jihadist groups in their motivational music. In contrast, the pre-Taliban anthem was created by Article 20 of Afghanistan’s constitution, which mandated that the anthem include the names of the country’s various ethnic groups and the phrase ‘Allahu Akbar’.

This was an achievement for Afghanistan, a multi-ethnic country that created a consensus anthem in 2006. Kosovo, which declared independence from Serbia in 2008, is facing an anthem crisis because of its ethnic diversity. The country had left its national anthem without lyrics until a national consensus evolved over the words. The Israeli-Palestinian conflict is also an example in which tensions emanating from the two sides’ anthems are as deeply rooted as the historical, political, ideological, and ethnic differences between them. The Palestinian national anthem, Fida’i, and Israel’s national anthem, Hatikvah, have often caused mutual tensions.

Disputes over national anthems and flags often reflect deeper political tensions, territorial conflicts, or historical grievances between nations. Though symbolic, such incidents can stir nationalist sentiments and lead to diplomatic protests, potentially escalating broader tensions, as seen in the case of Cuba and the US. While international norms and diplomacy typically stress the importance of respecting national symbols, perceived violations can quickly become flashpoints in international relations. These disputes often underscore more profound political or historical divides.

For example, in 2017, China passed a ‘national anthem law’ after pro-democracy protesters began booing during the Chinese national anthem.

Perhaps Pakistan’s response to the ostensible disrespect for its anthem by the Taliban diplomat would have been different had the country had good relations with Kabul. After all, Pakistani society is as religious as the Afghans are, and, until 2022, when the Taliban refused to cut ties with the terrorist group TTP, a major segment of the state and society had fallen in love with the Taliban system.

After the Taliban takeover in 2021, a retired general, during an event, warned Pakistani political parties to be ready to face the music when the Taliban become a model for good governance. Pakistan’s former special envoy to Afghanistan, who recently left his post, was seemingly also influenced by the same perception and believed that the TTP was a Pakistani problem, which could only be addressed through improving the rule of law.

Such simplistic arguments turn more sensitive when compared to the emotionalism attached to national symbols. Indeed, the rule of law is an issue in Pakistan, but it cannot be used to justify the Taliban’s support for the violent TTP.

The writer is a security analyst.

Published in Dawn, September 22nd, 2024

Forever in fervour

Published September 22, 2024 
DAWN


ONE of my favourite lessons in the classroom is on the use of descriptors and adjectives, and to demonstrate, I teach how national holidays like Aug 14 are reported. Since I began work as a journalist in 1995, I have read iterations of ‘Pakistanis celebrated such-and-such day with fervour’. The exercise on reporting on national holidays without using patriotism in the copy is a great lesson and also allows reflection on how we’ve been conditioned to think.

If we’re singing the anthem every day at school or the cinema, or waving flags at a ce­­­remony, it does not necessarily mean we are patriotic. Habit does not equate fervour.

The opposite is also not true, ie, a person not waving flags etc is unpatriotic. Over the years, the weaponisation of ghaddar coupled with a highly inflammable society prone to violence has resulted in a deadly combination.

Patriotism has long been used to exclude communities — cementing stereotypes, creating divisions and keeping power in the hands of the elite.

Our guests’ beliefs deserve as much respect as ours.

I did not think a recommendation of Susan Brownmiller’s 1975 Against Our Will, about how men use rape to keep women in a state of fear, and its use in war by soldiers, would earn me a label of ‘anti-state’ by one student. It is almost a knee-jerk reaction when presented with something that goes against everything you’ve been taught. I don’t blame the student as much as I do the system that produced a factory of workers handing out certificates of patriotism.

I’ve been thinking this while watching the discussion around the Afghan diplomats not standing for Pakistan’s national anthem in KP. There is a lot of hysteria on YouTube and mainstream TV across the political divide. The diplomats’ explanation was pretty simple: they did not stand because the anthem contains music which they consider unIslamic; they meant no disrespect.

Because we are so conditioned into equa­ting respect with standing for the national anthem, the rage we felt is understandable but cannot be condoned. Our guests’ bel­iefs deserve as much respect as ours, especially when they have clarified their position. But we live in a strange time where my belief (read: facts) trumps everyone else’s.

A lot of folk on traditional and social media went out of their way to prove their loyalty to the state or the KP government which hosted the Afghan delegates. Chief Minister Ali Gandapur defended the Afghan diplomats, saying he accepted their explanation while the KP governor, Faisal Kundi described Gandapur as the chief minister of Afghanistan.

In this toxic battlefield that has created deep divisions which show no sign of healing, the media also chose sides.

One headline read: Gandapur “defends Afghan diplomat’s disrespect for national anthem” as if the act was intentional. Of course, readers would seethe.

I watched one news anchor use his YouTube channel to tell his audience to confront those who refuse to stand for the anthem. I’m pretty sure his anger was directed at PTI supporters for what he says is not distinguishing between state (ie anthem) and government.

It is problematic to police people’s choices. Perhaps a Pakistani chooses not to stand as a way to protest the state’s failure to protect its citizens’ rights.

Every country has its version of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ patriots. When American footballers were taking the knee — following the murder of George Floyd by the police in 2020 — as a way to protest racism, then US president Donald Trump said “maybe they shouldn’t be in the country”.

Narendra Modi has ignited hatred for Muslims in India. The British tabloid media is full of racist lang­uage about Mus­li­­ms. One survey done earlier this year fou­nd an “almost statistical correlation bet-ween GB News view-ers and hate crime”.

I think it is unpatriotic to be ill-infor-med.

After all, the act of calling someone unpatriotic is rooted in propaganda and/or misinformation. Belie­ving your leader is more patriotic than their opponents and running campaigns on this serves no purpose. It may win you more seats at the next (s)election but it does not prevent children from dying of pneumonia, the leading cause of death among children under five, according to Unicef. These deaths can be prevented through immunisation and one glance at the papers tells you how those drives are going.

This government’s not-so-slow-anymore erosion of our civil liberties has left us with few avenues of protest — we can’t tweet, we can’t even organise demonstrations without fear of reprisal. And a lot of the media is enabling this with their partisan positions, probably because their survival depends on it.

Patriotism is anti-poor and racist. In its current form, it is totalitarian, too. Patrio­tism works when democracy does because it allows all of us to peacefully coexist with our differences, with or without fervour.

The writer is a journalism instructor.

X: LedeingLady

Published in Dawn, September 22nd, 2024



PAKISTAN

Pilgrims stranded by transporters’ protest in Gwadar

Behram Baloch Published September 22, 2024 



GWADAR: A sit-in by local transporters in the port city of Gwadar for the second-consecutive day on Saturday has left hundreds of pilgrims returning from Iran stranded.

The pick-up owners’ alliance is holding a protest against the alleged atrocities of the Coast Guards at the Surbandan Cross.


Hundreds of protesters have placed barricades and boulders on the Coastal Highway and stopped traffic.

The pilgrims, including women and children, are stranded at the Pak-Iran border and waiting for the opening of the coastal highway.

Over 200 families are also waiting at the sit-in point as protestors are not allowing them to continue their journey towards Karachi and other cities.

A huge number of passenger coaches, buses and trucks carrying goods are also stuck on both sides of the coastal highway at the Surbandan cross.

The protesters have vowed not to end the demonstration until their grievances are addressed.

They allege that the Coast Guards were harassing the pick-up owners at the coastal and other highways.

The Coast Guard personnel hold up vehicles, including passenger coaches, for several hours on the pretext of checking.

The negotiations between the local administration of Gwadar and the protesters remained fruitless amid a lack of trust between the two sides.

Published in Dawn, September 22nd, 2024
Saudis cool talk of ties with Israel as Gaza conflict widens

AFP Published September 22, 2024
A WOMAN and a child inspect the damage after the Israeli strike on a school housing displaced Palestinians in Gaza City’s Zaytoun neighbourhood on Saturday.—AFP


RIYADH: Just a year after ann­ouncing that diplomatic ties with Israel were getting closer, Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince has shut down talk of normalisation as the Gaza conflict threatens to spread.

The tougher tone from Prince Mohammed bin Salman came the same day that exploding walkie-tal­k­ies killed members of Leba­n­on’s Hezbollah movement, again raising fears of a wider confrontation.

The Iran-backed group blamed Israel and has been exchanging fire with Israeli forces since October in support of Hamas.

The Saudis have previously made clear they want a path to a Palestinian state, but Prince Mohammed explicitly told the Shura Council on Wednesday that an “independent Palestinian state” is a condition for normalisation.

“We affirm that the kingdom (Saudi Arabia) will not establish diplomatic relations with Israel without one,” he said.

According to Saudi government adviser Ali Shihabi, Riyadh’s position was always clear, even if “some had insinuated that it was flexible”. Prince Mohammed wanted to “eliminate any ambiguity” with his latest comments, he said.

Weeks earlier, Prince Mohammed had told US TV channel Fox News that “every day we get closer” to normalisation, although he added: “For us, the Palestinian issue is very important. We need to solve that part.”

Israel ties unthinkable, for now

The US has pushed the idea of Saudi-Israeli normalisation, hoping to give an incentive to Israel’s right-wing Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stop the attacks on Gaza and at the same time gain a powerful Arab ally.

But after almost a year since the invasion of Gaza began, relations with Israel are simply unthinkable for the Saudi public, analysts say.

“The violence of the war and the atrocities committed against the Palestinians have killed the possibility that normalisation could be accepted by public opinion in Saudi Arabia,” said Rabha Saif Allam of the Cairo Centre for Strategic Studies.

According to Anna Jacobs of the International Crisis Group think tank, “Israel has crossed all the red lines and is trying to start a multi-front war, which will further destabilise the Middle East”.

Saudi Arabia initially opened talks on normalisation in an attempt to help calm the troubled region as it seeks to shift its oil-reliant economy to trade, business and tourism.

But a “spread of the conflict could affect development projects” and Saudi Arabia’s ability to attract investment, Allam said.

Prince Mohammed is now trying to “increase pressure on Israel and the US to achieve a ceasefire in Gaza”, Jacobs said.

Published in Dawn, September 22nd, 2024

Solidarity with Ukraine: A feminist perspective

Published 

More than two years have passed since Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. During this time, the Russian army has killed over 31,000 Ukrainian soldiers, and hundreds of thousands have been injured and killed. The Russian forces have systematically committed crimes against the civilian population, including torture, rape, physical and psychological violence, and bombing civilians and infrastructure. Despite these atrocities, the resistance of the Ukrainian people has been heroic, with Ukrainian women taking an active role in the defense of their country. 

We asked Ukrainian feminists to speak on why the struggle against Russia's imperialist invasion is not only about Ukraine, and why it is also about the future of humanity and should matter to the whole world. This video concludes with messages of solidarity from a US Black feminist and an Iranian feminist. 

 

From Ukraine to Palestine: The challenges of consistent internationalism


Published 
End occupations everywhere placard

First published at Spectre.

In the last two years, the world has been shaken by the intersection of several struggles. These include the heroic Ukrainian resistance to the Russian invasion, the uprising for women’s freedom in Iran, the renewed struggle for the liberation of Palestine, the popular resistance against the war in Sudan, and the new protests against the Assad regime in Syria.1 These movements each have their own dynamics and rhythm. Approaching these distinct movements from a common perspective and on an international scale poses serious questions for the left: Is it possible to support all these struggles simultaneously despite their distinct characteristics and contradictions? Can these struggles find solidarity with each other?

Many activists recognize in theory that these movements face the same decadent global capitalism and its imperialist state system. However, international and regional politics shape these resistance struggles, making it hard for them to unite against their common enemy. To accomplish that would require grasping that the cause of their oppression is not “bad governments,” but capitalism — a social and economic system ruled by the need to constantly accumulate capital and increase profits everywhere at any cost. That system generates economic crisis, austerity, geopolitical competition, wars, neocolonial dispossession, debt, and environmental destruction.

We are faced with the challenge of forging a politics capable of explaining the systematic opponent uniting these struggles from within them and their accompanying campaigns of solidarity. As Ashley Smith argues, building “international solidarity from below between oppressed nations like Palestine, Ukraine and Taiwan, as well as exploited workers in both the U.S. and China and throughout the world” is more urgent than ever.2 We live in a period of intensifying war and genocide (Ukraine, Palestine, Sudan). But forging this kind of solidarity is also an increasingly complex task in a state system beset by imperial rivalry between the United States, China, and Russia as well as growing interstate conflict.

These rivalries and conflicts impact working people’s democratic struggles, sometimes leading them to oppose one another. For example, supporting the democratic movements in Syria and Iran is often seen as a challenge to those supposedly “anti-imperialist” governments that make up the so-called “axis of resistance” opposing the genocidal Zionist project. Similarly, support for the Ukrainian people’s right of self-defense against Putin’s imperialist invasion seems to come at the cost of strengthening the United States, the European Union, and NATO, the main supporters of Israel’s genocidal war on Palestine.

To avoid becoming selective anti-imperial internationalists — whose support to all liberation movements is unconditional “in theory,” but depends on one’s national position in practice, or who establish an ontological or historical hierarchy among the movements — the left must develop a class analysis independent of the interests of governments that embraces the totality of struggles, states, and wars at the global level. Such analysis must show the connections between disparate movements for liberation, and the opportunities to establish direct links of solidarity between the different sectors of the exploited and the oppressed — that is, the possibilities of uniting these movements from below.

Against selective solidarity

A consistent internationalism must abandon the self-defeating vision of liberation by stages, which argues that some anti-imperialist struggles must “wait,” or worse, are an obstacle to others. This leads parts of the left, for example, to contend that the immediate needs of the Iranian youth or the Ukrainian resistance must be indefinitely “set aside” in order to “first” defeat the Israeli genocide against Palestinians or the NATO project. Others downplay opposition to the Israeli genocide to curry favor with the United States and ensure its support for Ukraine against Russia. This logic subordinates some democratic struggles to the interests of other, supposedly “more important” ones; in the process it destroys the basis for any coherent international solidarity.

In fact, this “stage-ist” view of liberation treats some imperialisms as “lesser evils” that should not be actively combated. In some cases, it opens the door to implicit support of these “lesser evils.” This approach compromises any principled anti-imperialism. Even worse, it undermines the true mechanism for collective liberation, which must challenge the imperialist logic (which ranks these struggles and places them in competition) to replace it with the proletarian logic (which seeks an alliance between all the exploited and oppressed against the forces that divide them). A consistent internationalism must embrace all genuine struggles from below and channel them into a process of permanent revolution — that is, a process of uninterrupted struggle against economic, social, and political inequality until complete liberation is achieved throughout the world.

As Trotsky put it, the aim is “a revolution which makes no compromise with any single form of class rule, which does not stop at the democratic stage, which goes over to socialist measures and to war against reaction from without: that is, a revolution whose every successive stage is rooted in the preceding one and which can end only in the complete liquidation of class society.”3 In short, the permanent revolution must bring a working-class internationalist outlook from the outset to all struggles.

Lessons from the Second Italo-Ethiopian War

The method of Marxist analysis developed by Trotsky (and others) is particularly useful for understanding the complex dynamics of wars in the imperialist epoch and offers a valuable framework for interpreting current conflicts. The present world situation, which is marked, on the one hand, by rivalries between imperialist powers with two loose blocs led by the United States and China, and, on the other hand, by intense struggles for democracy and self-determination, bears similarities to the crisis of the world order leading to the Second World War.4 4

Trotsky’s internationalist analyses of the Second Italo-Ethiopian War (1935–1936), the Spanish Revolution (1936–1939), and the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945), provide us with a useful methodology to guide the left in opposing all imperialisms and supporting all national liberation struggles today.5  For Trotsky, it was crucial to analyze the multiple imperial and class dynamics active in each of these struggles. Consequently, he analyzed the Second Italo-Ethiopian War as part of the totality of imperialist conflicts, national struggles, and class contradictions on a world scale. In October 1935, Mussolini launched an invasion of Ethiopia in the context of the rise of fascism and Italy’s growing economic competition with France and Britain for access to new markers and resources. Italy had lost its previous colonial war with Ethiopia in 1896, and was looking to both secure a fourth colony in Africa and fuel its racist and nationalist project to divert growing class unrest.

This invasion resulted in a seven-month war that revolutionary socialists analyzed as driven by two contradictions: the first contradiction, or conflict, was Ethiopia’s struggle to secure its national sovereignty as an independent country against fascist Italy’s imperialist aggression. Ethiopia had been one of the few uncolonized territories in Africa; at the same time, the emergent interimperialist rivalries that would lead to the Second World War were developing. This second conflict between France and Britain (joined eventually by the USSR and the United States) and Italy and Germany (with the later addition of Japan) would become the global conflagration between the Axis and the Allied powers.

The Second Italo-Ethiopian War was taking place in an international epoch that Trotsky characterized as one of “catastrophic commercial, industrial, agrarian and financial crisis, the break in international economic ties, the decline of the productive forces of humanity, the unbearable sharpening of class and international contradictions.” To understand each national development, it was necessary to consider “the multitude of factors and the intertwining of conflicting forces.”6 

This led Trotsky to argue that “the prospective war between Ethiopia and Italy stands in the same relation to a new world war as the Balkan War in 1912 did to the World War of 1914–18. Before there can be any new big war, the powers will have to declare themselves, and in this regard the Ethiopian-Italian war will define positions and indicate the coalitions.” In fact, both of the twentieth century’s world wars were preceded by smaller national conflicts, in which rival imperialist powers measured their forces and tested potential alliances before directly confronting each other.7 

The Second Italo-Ethiopian War was primarily characterized by anticolonial struggle. Thus, Trotsky called on the revolutionaries to take a determined military stand with Ethiopia: “we are for the defeat of Italy and the victory of Ethiopia, and therefore we must do everything possible to hinder by all available means support to Italian imperialism by the other imperialist powers, and at the same time facilitate the delivery of armaments, etc., to Ethiopia as best we can.”8 At stake for the revolutionary internationalists was the obligation to materially and militarily support the oppressed nation’s right to self-determination. Trotsky rejected the liberal framing of the contest as one between “bourgeois democracies” and “fascism.” At the time, Ethiopia was ruled by a feudal state and many of the Allies ruled over colonies like tyrants.

In the context of the imperialist powers’ rearmament and growing economic conflict, it was imperative to oppose the sanctions that the Allies imposed on Italy and hypocritically justified in the name of support for the Ethiopian people.9 These sanctions were merely one imperialist bloc’s attempt to weaken the other and escalate their economic war.

Opposing all the powers’ military budgets and vigorously denouncing rearmament was also crucial.10 As Trotsky argued, “it is necessary painstakingly to expose not only the open military budget but also all the masked forms of militarism, not leaving without a protest war manoeuvers, military furnishings, orders, etc.” Any socialist policy had to address the double nature of the war, simultaneously and dialectically harboring these two contradictory dynamics, instead of either formally isolating them or tackling them in “stages.” That is, while supporting the dominant struggle of national liberation, revolutionaries had an obligation to oppose the interimperialist conflict from advancing towards its catastrophic end in the Second World War.

During the Second Italo-Ethiopian War, this kind of internationalist solidarity was concretized by united demonstrations of workers, youth, and the Black diaspora, which were independent of the capitalist governments. These forces sent direct material aid to the Ethiopian people and launched labor initiatives to impose workers sanctions against Italy through direct action such as, for example, disrupting shipping. In 1935, members of the Black diaspora in London organized the International African Friends of Ethiopia (IAFE), headed by Amy Ashwood Garvey, C. L. R. James, and George Padmore.11 The IAFE held mass solidarity meetings and demonstrations. Similarly, in the United States, the Black diaspora organized solidarity demonstrations with the Ethiopian cause in Harlem.12 A. Philip Randolph, the leader of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, which became the first Black-led workers union in the American Federation of Labor, collected material aid to send directly to support the Ethiopian resistance.

Worker sanctions against Italy were counterposed to the government sanctions, as they gave workers the political agency to express their independent position, which rejected both Italy’s aggression and their own government’s military escalation. For example, in Britain, the Independent Labor Party (ILP) issued leaflets urging unions to form “All-Inclusive Workers Committee of Action” in solidarity with the Ethiopian people. C. L. R. James, while leading solidarity efforts in the ILP, addressed the workers who were “anxious to help the Ethiopian people” and incited them to “organise yourselves independently, and by your own sanctions, the use of your own power, assist the Ethiopian people.…Let us fight against not only Italian imperialism, but the other robbers and oppressors, French and British imperialism.” In the United States, the Workers’ Party also supported “the independent sanctions of the working class, its own boycotts, strikes, defense funds, mass demonstrations that can aid the battles of Ethiopian peoples, not the sanctions of finance capital and its puppet-states.13 

National liberation struggles amidst imperialist rivalry today

This methodology is profoundly useful for building solidarity with national liberation struggles in today’s imperialist order. To begin with Ukraine, Putin’s regime followed up his seizure of Crimea and parts of the Donbas in 2014 with an attempt at a full-scale invasion and occupation of Ukraine in February 2022. He claimed it was a “defensive” war to stop NATO expansion. Putin’s justification was, of course, a lie. Russian imperialism’s main motivation is reasserting to reassert its control over Ukraine, its natural resources, and the investments within both that country and others in its near abroad, such as Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Georgia. As Hannah Perekhoda has explained, Putin aims to build Russia’s empire, whip up Russian nationalism (in particular its old obsession of “turning Ukrainians into Russians”), and repress domestic movements struggling for democratic rights and improved living conditions.14 

Of course, like the Italo-Ethiopian War, the war in Ukraine has both a primary conflict (that is, Ukraine’s war for liberation from Putin’s imperialist aggression) and a secondary one (that is, the imperialist rivalry between Russia and Washington’s NATO bloc for economic, political, and military dominance over Ukraine and Eastern Europe). This secondary conflict, while remaining in the background, actively fuels the conflict.

Only developments in the war will determine whether this secondary rivalry will become the dominant one. For now, the primary feature of the war is national liberation. While NATO and Russia are not directly at war, this could change. For example, if NATO took direct control of Ukraine’s military or deployed its own forces in direct conflict with the Russian military, the character of the war would change qualitatively into a more directly interimperialist one.

The current struggle for the liberation of Palestine also contains two contradictions set in a hierarchical relationship to each other. It is primarily the Palestinian people’s fight against Israeli settler-colonialism and its supporters in the Western imperialist bloc (most importantly the United States and the European Union). At the same time, this conflict also involves, albeit indirectly, an interimperial conflict between the United States and Russia, as well as China, over hegemony in the Middle East.

Russian imperialism is for the moment playing both sides in the region. It supports Iran as a strategic military and political ally, while maintaining relations with Israel (despite criticism of its genocidal project), selling oil to Tel Aviv, and supporting the Abraham Accords and Israel’s normalization.15 

For its part, China also plays both sides. It has turned to diplomacy to broker the unity of the Palestinian resistance and support the so-called two-state solution, while it pressures Iran (with whom it signed an economic cooperation agreement in 2021) against entering into direct war with Israel.16 During the latest escalation between Iran and Israel in April, China called on “relevant parties to exercise calm and restraint to prevent further escalation.” At the same time, China dramatically expanded trade with Netanyahu’s Israel.17 It increased investment to become the second largest investor in Israel after the United States.18 Most of this investment is in Israel’s ports, telecommunications, energy, and technology—particularly its surveillance systems, which Beijing has deployed against its whole population, especially the predominantly Muslim Uyghurs in Xinjiang.19 As a result of this trade and investment, China is now the second largest importer of Israeli goods and the largest exporter to the Zionist state.20 China also has enormous investments in the surrounding states, including Saudi Arabia, which joined into its $1 trillion Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Chinese imperialism’s objective in the region is not Palestinian liberation, but preserving its economic interests, its access to fossil fuels, and its enormous BRI investment. That is, China’s objective is protecting key resources that help it compete with its imperial rival, the United States.

Confronting “imperialist combinations”

The main task for revolutionaries in such conflicts is to take a principled position of material solidarity with struggles of the oppressed without lending any support to imperialist powers trying to highjack them for their own purposes. In the 1930s, Britain and France sold their policy of sanctions against Italy through “support” for the Ethiopian cause, while the United States sent selective material aid to China to weaken Japan. The “friendly” imperialisms quickly tried to co-opt the leaderships of these wars of liberation, posing as “allies” when in reality they were only trying to undermine their respective rivals and win legitimacy for their own depredations.

Trotksy called these deceitful imperialist maneuvers from above “imperialist combinations,” which sought to manipulate national liberation movements for their capitalist interests and confuse and divide the working-class movement, thereby preventing independent and effective international solidarity. Similarly, today, the United States and the European Union pretend to defend Ukraine’s right to self-determination against Russian invasion with sanctions against Moscow and by sending arms in dribs and drabs to Ukraine. Meanwhile, Russia and China pose as allies of the Palestinian people by arming Iran, all while hypocritically maintaining their capitalist ties with Israel.

Such imperialist combinations are a major challenge to developing international solidarity from a working-class perspective. To defeat them, a principled anti-imperialist and internationalist policy must express and mobilize unconditional concrete and material support for all movements for democracy and liberation, while at the same time opposing all imperialist states — including those pretending to play “progressive” roles — and warning against the influence such states try to develop in these movements.

Today, the United States is the most flagrant example of imperialist combination. There is no doubt that a victory of the Ukrainian resistance will give confidence to other peoples oppressed by the Putin regime in Georgia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, and throughout Russia’s former empire. They, alongside the oppressed nationalities within Russia and the Russian working people as a whole, would be encouraged to stand up for their democratic rights and demands for social equality.

However, the Biden-NATO-EU-Zelensky combination sows an illusory hope that the Ukrainian working class can rely on Western imperialism to defeat Russian imperialism. This maneuver is both deceptive and dangerous: it confuses class consciousness and obscures the real path to real self-determination and independence for the Ukrainian people.

The Biden administration has once again shown the callous cynicism behind its “democratic” colors. The latest supplemental military aid package approved in May 2024 perfectly illustrates this sibylline manipulation.21 Of the additional $95 billion approved, $61 billion is for “aid to Ukraine.” In reality 37 percent of that portion is for US arms production to restock its arsenal, 18 percent is to bolster NATO’s presence in Europe, and only 22 percent ($14 billion) for direct arms shipment to Ukraine.22 $26 billion of the total aid package will fund the genocide of the Palestinian people at the hands of Israel, while the remaining $8 billion is devoted to countering China in the Indo-Pacific region.

The message to the United States and to the world population is that supporting national liberation efforts in Ukraine comes with the threefold price of: first, massively resupplying the United States’ and NATO’s military, while accelerating the militarization of the European Union; second, increasing the funding for the genocide of the Palestinian people; and third, helping the United States prepare for a coming third World War with China.23 

This Western “aid” has had the effect of putting the Ukrainian people on the ropes. Under pressure from Western creditors and their debt system, Zelensky’s government has passed neoliberal privatization reforms since coming to power, and is currently selling the country to the European Union and the International Monetary Fund in successive peace and reconstruction summits.24 Moreover, the government is imposing antiworker measures and cuts to social rights amidst the current war.25 To get rid of the bloody Russian occupation, Zelensky is telling the Ukrainian people to surrender their wealth to predatory Western capitalism, mortgaging the future of their national sovereignty.

In the face of this filthy blackmail, socialists must reject any military budget that serves US and EU imperialist interests and entraps Ukraine in neocolonial debt. We should instead propose independent alternatives of working class solidarity, as well as articulate and highlight the links of reciprocal solidarity between the distinct progressive struggles that rival imperialisms seek to divide and confront.

That is why it has been key, for example, that supporters of Ukraine have shown solidarity with the Palestinian struggle.26 The formation of the Ukraine-Palestine Solidarity Group, which differentiated itself from Zelensky’s neoliberal and pro-imperialist government, was particularly important. In their “Letter of Solidarity with the Palestinian People,” they “reject the Ukrainian government statements that express unconditional support for Israel’s military actions [insofar as] this position is a retreat from the support of Palestinian rights and condemnation of the Israeli occupation, which Ukraine has followed for decades.”27

Similarly the independent platform for “A People’s Peace, Not an Imperialist Peace” dismantled the false equation between aid to Ukraine and support for NATO’s growth. The platform declares that:

An effective military support of Ukraine does not require a new wave of armaments. We oppose NATO’s rearmament programmes and weapon exports to third countries. Instead, the countries of Europe and North America must provide the weapons from their existing, huge arsenals that will help Ukraine to defend itself effectively. In this sense, we demand that the arms industry should not serve the profit interests of capital—to the contrary, we want to work towards the social appropriation of the arms industry. This industry should serve the immediate interests of Ukraine. At the same time, for social and urgent ecological reasons, we underline the imperative of democratically converting the arms industry into socially useful production on a global scale.28 

Against the maneuvers and distortions of rival imperialisms, all national liberation movements and democratic struggles must maintain their political independence from capitalist states and their imperialist allies. We must unconditionally defend the right of self-defense of all oppressed peoples, which includes their right to request and accept all the material and military aid from any source necessary to achieve their liberation.

But this does not exempt internationalists from warning that all imperialist aid comes with strings and conditions, and from highlighting its dangerous effects. In navigating all these contradictions, the left must advocate the only effective political strategy: building an independent and class-based path to forging solidarity among the exploited and oppressed both within and without each country.

The task of revolutionaries in this imperialist epoch is precisely to decipher the innumerable conflicts within each struggle and its internal class dynamics, and to push forward initiatives and platforms of joint struggle that can challenge and defeat the imperialist combinations. Only with such a consistent internationalist approach can class solidarity on a world scale be built in practice and win our collective liberation.

Blanca Missé is an Associate Professor of French in the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures at San Francisco State University. Their specialties are the Enlightenment Francophone literature and culture, as well as Marxism, feminist theory, and film studies. They are an active member of their union (CFA-SFSU) and their local Faculty for Justice in Palestine (FJP) chapter, as well as the Ukraine Solidarity Network and Bay Area Labor for Palestine. They are affiliated with Workers’ Voice. A version of this article will appear in the journal Catàrsi in Catalan.