Thursday, May 08, 2025

Vietnam, 30 April 1975 - 50 years ago 

East Asia: War and revolution

Monday 5 May 2025, by Pierre Rousset

Once France had been defeated after the Vietnamese victory at Dien Bien Phu (1954), the great powers imposed the Geneva Accords, which were highly unfavourable to the Vietminh, temporarily dividing the country into two military regrouping zones.

At the end of the Second World War, the Vietminh took advantage of a window of opportunity to declare independence. The Japanese occupiers had destroyed the French administration, before being themselves defeated in the Pacific theatre of operations. They had the political initiative, but in a fragile situation. Their military capabilities were weak and their authority contested, especially by religious sects and anti-communist nationalist movements.

Social revolution and land reform

With the agreement of Chiang Kai-shek’s China, the French expeditionary corps bombed the port of Haiphong in northern Vietnam in 1946. The first Vietnam War had begun. Hô Chi Minh’s offers of negotiations were rejected. Given the military balance of power, the war took the form of a protracted revolutionary war, mobilizing the peasantry. Patriotism was not enough. A call for agrarian reform was essential. From now on, national liberation and social revolution were intertwined. This would be the foundation on which to build a long-term resistance.

We also have to take into account the specificities of Vietnam, in relation to China (Beijing sent aid and advisors), which was able to take advantage of the vastness of the country and its population. At every stage, it was necessary to take into account the reactions of enemy forces and adapt strategy accordingly. There is a Vietnamese way of thinking about war.

The perspective of social and democratic emancipation

Deciding to resume the armed struggle in the second half of the 1950s could not have been an easy decision. The alternative was to confront the United States, or at least accept the division of the country ad vitam æternam, as in Korea. And leave the militant networks and social bases of the liberation movement in the South unsupported, in the face of an unscrupulous dictatorship.

People’s war (potentially) opens up a dynamic of social emancipation, which however runs the risk of running out of steam if it lasts too long. In Asia, the question is not only historical. Armed conflict, for example, has never ceased in Mindanao (in the south of the Philippine archipelago). Concrete answers must constantly be found to a double question: how to prevent armed groups from degenerating (which does happen), and how to concretely defend, in concrete conditions, the democratic freedom of decision-making and the rights of popular or mountain communities. In Burma, when the military junta seized power four years ago, it could be said that the whole country (almost) went into non-violent civic disobedience. The junta could have been overthrown, if only the “international community” had lent its support. Once again, this was not to be. And the repression ended up forcing the resistance to join the armed struggle, led in particular by ethnic minorities.

24 April 2025

Translated by International Viewpoint from L’Anticapitaliste.

P.S.

If you like this article or have found it useful, please consider donating towards the work of International Viewpoint. Simply follow this link: Donate then enter an amount of your choice. One-off donations are very welcome. But regular donations by standing order are also vital to our continuing functioning. See the last paragraph of this article for our bank account details and take out a standing order. Thanks.





Vietnam, 30 April 1975 - 50 years ago, a historic victory, but at what price?


Tuesday 29 April 2025, by Pierre Rousset

Vietnam’s independence was first proclaimed in August 1945, and we could soon be celebrating its 80th anniversary. De Gaulle decided otherwise, sending an expeditionary force to reconquer his lost colony. Indochina had to endure two devastating successive imperial wars, first French, then American. Washington mobilised all the means at its disposal to crush the Vietnamese revolution, certain that it would prevail - and was defeated. The image has gone down in history: the staff of the US embassy in Saigon exfiltrated by helicopter. On 30 April 1975.

When the Geneva Accords were signed in 1954 with the French government of Pierre Mendès-France, the Viet Minh was in a winning strategic position, the French forces having been decisively defeated. Nevertheless, these armistice agreements were particularly unfavourable to the Viet Minh. It was the ‘big brothers’, Russia and China, who forced the Vietminh to abandon many of its demands. It had to withdraw its troops to a ‘temporary regroupment zone’ in the north of the country, while the Saigon regime was free to redeploy its army in the south.

An election was to be held throughout the country, which would have seen the triumph of the Ho Chi Minh government. Of course, it did not take place. The United States and the Saigon regime had not even signed the agreements, ostensibly keeping their hands free. In their eyes, the division of the country had to become permanent, or even allow a military counter-offensive to overthrow the Democratic Republic of Vietnam (DRVN). The Mendès-France government knowingly passed the baton to Washington.

The Geneva agreements are one of the classic examples of armistices that lead to a permanent territorial division fraught with festering tensions (see the case of the Korean peninsula, which has become a nuclear ‘hot spot’) or to a new war, even worse than the previous one (in the case of Vietnam, precisely).

In the immediate term, the Saigon regime took advantage of the retreat of the revolutionary armed forces to launch a campaign to eliminate the cadres of the liberation movement in the South and attack their mass base, particularly among the peasantry and hill tribes of the high lands.

Stopping the revolutionary momentum in South-East Asia

The stakes went beyond the Indochinese peninsula. Washington wanted to stop the revolutionary momentum in South-East Asia. It was targeting China from the west, which had already been threatened in the east during the Korean War (1950-1953), and was seeking to consolidate the global supremacy of US imperialism. The second Vietnam War was intended to exemplify US omnipotence. The confrontation in Vietnam thus became the nodal point in the world situation where the balance of power between revolution and counter-revolution on the one hand, and between the so-called Western bloc (United States, Western Europe, Japan, etc.) and the Eastern bloc (China-USSR) on the other, was being shaped.

Although it benefited from a social base provided in particular by Catholics from the North, the (corrupt and dictatorial) regime in Saigon disappointed Washington’s expectations and it was forced to become ever more involved in the conflict, leading to an all-out war on all fronts, on an unprecedented scale: sending in hundreds of thousands of soldiers (the GIs, up to 550,000 men on the ground), carpet bombing of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam, counter-agrarian reform in the South, massive spraying of defoliants (the toxic Agent Orange) on wooded areas, development of military technologies to flush out fighters hiding in tunnels or spot night-time troop movements...

During the Second Indochina War, all the economic and technological power of the United States was mobilised and poured into Vietnam, a medium-sized Third World country. However, Moscow and Beijing knew that the US had its sights set on them, and Vietnam received substantial military aid via the Chinese border, even during the Cultural Revolution. This aid, important though it was, was nonetheless measured in terms of quality. The most sophisticated weapons, which would have made it possible to secure the skies over North Vietnam, were not supplied. The ‘big brothers’ did not want the DRVN to be defeated, which would have threatened them, but did they want victory or did they believe it was possible?

From the Tet offensive in 1968 to the fall of Saigon

The conflict took on a major international dimension, both in the so-called Third World and in the imperialist citadels. In the case of the Russian and Chinese revolutions, solidarity became fully relevant after victory. For the Vietnamese (and Algerian) revolutions, it was a key element of a constantly adapting strategy that eventually led to victory.

The Vietnamese leadership understood the importance of this new field of action and the national liberation movement invested a great deal in it, both diplomatically and in terms of militant solidarity. With a great deal of expertise, it called on the entire spectrum of political solidarity. This was one of the hallmarks of its overall strategy.

Solidarity was important in every part of the world, but of course the US anti-war movement had a special role to play.

Some have concluded that it was the anti-war movement that defeated Washington, in order to defend ‘pacifist’ theses on the uselessness of armed struggle. A misleading anachronism. For a long time, the American bourgeoisie supported the war effort, as did the majority of the scientists, researchers and engineers called upon to supply the army with the technologies it needed. The arms factories were running at full capacity. Resistance to the war certainly grew considerably in the second half of the 1960s, particularly among young people. However, for the protest to change dimension decisively, the military losses had to become too heavy, the economic cost of the conflict had to become too great, the ‘legitimacy’ of US imperialism in the world had to be too damaged, the veterans’ movements had to grow stronger and the political crisis erupted in 1972 with the Watergate scandal, forcing the resignation of Richard Nixon.

To force talks that would open up a political window of opportunity for victory, after the Tet offensive in 1968 (a military defeat but a political and diplomatic victory), the Vietnamese liberation movement imposed face-to-face negotiations: the RDVN (Democratic Republic of Vietnam) and the GRP (Provisional Revolutionary Government) in the south on one side, the United States and the Saigon regime on the other, this time excluding the presence of the ‘friendly’ major powers (Moscow, Beijing). The Paris negotiations opened but stalled. However, eager to gradually disengage in response to the domestic crisis, Washington began its policy of ‘Vietnamisation’, gradually withdrawing its armed forces while trying to consolidate the Saigon regime. The hard-fought signing of the Paris Agreements on 27 January 1973 sanctioned the withdrawal of the GIs. Two years later, in 1975, the final offensive was launched, with the Saigon army collapsing. The war finally came to an end, almost without fighting. Like a statement of fact.

Three decades of war

A historic victory of immense significance, but one for which the Vietnamese people and the liberation forces paid a terrible price. Three decades of war exhausted society, crushed political pluralism, decimated the cadres based in the south and left deep scars on the organisations that survived the ordeal (starting with the CPV). Vietnam was liberated and the revolution prevailed, but under an authoritarian regime. Because it was not sufficiently supported in time in 1945, 1954, 1968... ‘Soldier on the front line’, the Vietnamese people waged a struggle from which popular struggles around the world - those of my generation - have benefited enormously. They have paid a heavy price. They still deserve our support today, even when they are repressed by their own government.

Severely defeated, Washington never stopped seeking revenge. It imposed the isolation of Vietnam for a decade, this time with Chinese support. At a time of great schism between the USSR and China, Moscow was becoming ‘the main enemy’ in Beijing’s eyes. Even though Sino-Soviet aid had been of great importance to the Vietnamese war effort, Hanoi’s independence was little appreciated by the Beijing regime. In a new geopolitical context, Vietnam drew closer to Russia, before becoming the direct victim of reversals of international alliances, when the USA and China jointly supported the Khmer Rouge (!) in a new Indochina war in 1979. At that point, realpolitik reached a peak.

Cambodia plunged into chaos

The ‘Ho Chi Minh trail’ that allowed arms to reach the fighters in the south passed partly through Laos and eastern Cambodia, which, under the aegis of Prince Norodom Sihanouk, had not been significantly involved in the first Indochina war. While asserting his neutrality, the prince tolerated the Vietnamese presence.

By bombing Cambodia on a massive scale and supporting Lon Nol’s bloody coup d’état (1969-1970), the United States plunged the kingdom into war and chaos. It was then was neither socially nor politically prepared for a real ‘people’s war’; but its created a vacuum from which the Khmer Rouge benefited. On 17 April 1975, they conquered the capital. They imediatly emptied the city of its entire population, in anticipation of US bombing raids, they said at the time. However, they sent hospitalised people who could not survive the ordeal into internal exile. The reality soon became clear. The deportees were scattered across the country, with no hope of returning. Phnom Penh became a Khmer Rouge city where a carefully administered torture centre operated, with every ‘interrogation’ being archived.

What was going on? It was at this point that we realised how little we knew about this composite movement. A wing of the Khmer Rouge had collaborated with the Vietnamese on both sides of the border during the war. It was the victim of secret purges that enabled the Pol Pot faction to consolidate its power. It was a violently ethno-nationalist, racist and particularly anti-Vietnamese movement. Its social base? Hill tribes in the north (Pol Pot’s praetorian guard) and... the army, which he took control of. The Khmer Rouge were described as radical communists (?) and Maoists, but they acted the opposite. Back in the urban centres, the CCP hastened to reconstitute a workers’ base (creating a special status for workers in state-owned enterprises). It carried out a genuine agrarian reform and took emblematic measures for the women from popular strata. All this, of course, while consolidating its monopoly of power and its political control over society.

A Cambodian revolution would obviously not have been a carbon copy of its Chinese or Vietnamese counterparts. But what kind of revolution are we talking about? A peasant revolution, when the Khmer Rouge put the peasantry to forced labour? A working class one, with no even semi-proletarian presence? Bourgeois, when they abolished all currency? And how to define this state? By default, it has been described in many left-wing circles as a workers’ state. For my part, in 1985, I put forward the formula of a ‘miscarriage’ of a workers’ state yet to be born. A very convoluted debate, to say the least.

And what kind of state were we talking about? To what extent did it exist? It was at best embryonic. Above all, it lacked the social base on which to build itself. An army of peasants had cut itself off from the peasantry. Faced with such a borderline case, it is best not to rush to brandish concepts. The ‘unequal and combined’ history of the Second Indochina War led to the emergence of a chronically unstable situation in Cambodia, where an army imposed forced labour on the population in order to restore the kingdom’s former grandeur, even if it meant digging an immense network of canals... without any engineers to plan it (intellectuals being particularly targeted by the new government, headed by a handful of intellectuals).

The Khmer Rouge order simply collapsed with the Vietnamese military intervention of December 1978-January 1979. One of the reasons why Hanoi decided to act was the fate of the Vietnamese population of Cambodia, threatened with genocide, like other minorities. However, this intervention was seen by the majority of the population as a liberation. All the deportees began to return home spontaneously. Vietnam withdrew its troops (the last ones left the country in 1989), after installing a ‘friendly’ government (but not a client one, as history would later show).

Khmer Rouge power was irremediably unstable. Would it have been able to consolidate in the west and gain social content with the help of the Thai army, traffickers and gangs? If so, it would have become bourgeois. Political fiction.

The perspective that would have given a Cambodian revolution a progressive chance would have been to include it in Indochinese solidarity, with Laos and Vietnam. A section of the Khmer Rouge movement was perhaps in favour of this. The risk of being dominated by Hanoi was real, but nothing could have been as terrible as what happened - hundreds of thousands of victims - which caused a deep historical trauma whose imprint still insidiously marks Cambodia today.

The Socialist Federation of Indochinese States never came into being. There were many who did not want it: Pol Pot, Beijing, Washington, the UN and Sihanouk, who allowed himself to be manipulated by China and the United States by giving a veneer of international legality to the dirty war of 1979.

The Sino-Vietnamese war

The Polpotian Khmer Rouge claimed historical rights to the Mekong Delta and had made a series of murderous incursions into Vietnamese territory, before Hanoi decided to invade in 1978.

In response to Hanoi’s overthrow of the Khmer Rouge regime, China decided on a ‘punitive expedition’ in February-March 1979. It lasted a month. The border, 750 kilometres long, is mostly mountainous. The Chinese army carried out a frontal assault on the passes, supported by an artillery barrage and tanks. It managed to penetrate Vietnamese territory, but the operation ended in a double failure.

Firstly, a military failure. The disorganisation of the Chinese army and its shortcomings (in intelligence and command coordination) came as a surprise. It was counting on the fact that a large proportion of the regular Vietnamese forces were in Cambodia, but the local militias proved capable of countering the offensive launched by Beijing. The exposure of these shortcomings led to a crisis within the CCP leadership. The in-depth modernisation of its concepts and its military apparatus remained to be done.

It was also a strategic failure. Hanoi did not withdraw troops from Cambodia to reinforce its defences in North Vietnam. There was no truce for Beijing’s Khmer Rouge protégés.

The Sino-Soviet conflict

The Sino-Khmero-Vietnamese crisis represented one of the high points of the Sino-Soviet conflict, and also sanctioned a spectacular reversal of international alliances.

Relations between Beijing and Moscow have always been fraught with suspicion and tension. The Chinese revolution (as in Vietnam) had imposed itself against the division of zones of influence negotiated between the United States and the USSR at the end of the Second World War. Stalin had urged Mao not to overthrow Chiang Kai-sheck’s regime. He wanted to preserve his undivided control over the international communist movement. Finally, on a particularly contentious issue, he refused to allow China to acquire nuclear weapons.

China paid the price for the policy of peaceful coexistence advocated by Nikita Khrushchev, who supported India during the Sino-Indian conflict in the Himalayas in 1962. He also abruptly put an end to the technical assistance provided to the Chinese economy. The rapprochement between Moscow and Washington was clearly at the expense of the Chinese. The break was definitively consummated in 1969, with the Sino-Soviet border wars.

The schism in the ‘socialist camp’ gave Washington a free hand to play one side against the other. In 1971, Henry Kissinger secretly travelled to China to prepare for Richard Nixon’s visit to Beijing in 1972, which was followed by another visit to Moscow.

The deleterious consequences of the Sino-Soviet inter-bureaucratic conflict were felt throughout the world. The Vietnamese victory in 1975 nevertheless opened up a window of opportunity, as Washington was no longer in a position to intervene militarily on a massive scale abroad. The Sino-Indochinese crisis of 1978-1979, for its part, heralded the change of period in the 1980s, which saw my militant generation defeated in the ‘three sectors of the world revolution’ (Third World, Eastern European countries, imperialist countries).


War and revolution (brief additional notes)

At the end of the Second World War, the Japanese occupiers destroyed the French administration, before being themselves defeated in the Pacific theatre of operations. The Vietminh took advantage of this brief ‘favourable moment’, which it had anticipated, to declare independence. It acted very quickly and retained the political initiative, but in a fragile situation. Its military capabilities were weak and his authority contested, especially by religious sects and anti-communist nationalist movements.

Social revolution and land reform

With the agreement of Chiang Kai-shek’s China, the French expeditionary corps bombed the port of Haiphong in northern Vietnam in 1946. Thus began the first Vietnam War. Ho Chi Minh’s offers of negotiations were rejected. As a speech by Vo Nguyen Giap on his return from Paris shows, this possibility had been taken into account by the leadership of the Vietnamese Communist Party.

Given the balance of military forces, this war took the form of a protracted revolutionary war. It mobilised the peasantry. Patriotism was not enough. The call for agrarian reform was essential. From then on, national liberation and social revolution were intertwined. This would be the foundation on which resistance would be built over the long term.

There are strategic ‘models’. However, a strategy must take into account the evolution of the situation, the reactions of the enemy force, the results of previous phases of the struggle... In reality, a concrete strategy evolves and often combines elements that belong to different ‘models’. The Vietnamese never stopped adapting their strategy.

A strategy combines different forms of struggle. Strategic adaptability also means knowing how to stop armed struggle when it is no longer necessary.

A difficult decision

After 1954, the revival of armed resistance against the Saigon regime was delayed. The decision to resume the armed struggle, which was gradually implemented in the second half of the 1950s, could not have been an easy one to take, knowing that this time it would be the United States that would enter the fray. But what was the alternative? At the very least, accept the division of the country ad vitam æternam, as in Korea. To abandon without support the militant networks and social bases of the liberation movement in the South, in the face of an unscrupulous dictatorship. Leaving the initiative to Washington, should it decide to attack the Democratic Republic of Vietnam.

The prospect of social and democratic emancipation

When significant social sectors enter into armed resistance, it is because the violence of the established powers is unbearable. People’s warfare (potentially) opens up a dynamic of social emancipation, which nevertheless runs the risk of running out of steam when it lasts for a long time. In Asia, where conflicts have never ceased, the question posed is not just a historical one. Concrete responses must constantly be found to a twofold problem: how to prevent armed groups from degenerating (it happens...)? How to defend, in practical terms, the democratic freedom of decision-making and the rights of the grassroots or mountain communities that the combatants are supposed to be protecting? We have a wealth of experience in this area, particularly with our comrades in Mindanao, in the south of the Philippine archipelago.

In Burma, when the military junta seized all the power four years ago, you could say that (almost) the whole country went into non-violent civic disobedience. The junta could have been overthrown, if only the ‘international community’ had lent its support in time. Once again, this was not the case. And the repression ended up forcing the resistance in the central plain to join the armed struggle, led in particular by ethnic minorities. Once again, this was not a matter of a priori choice, but of obligation.

26 April 2025

Source: ESSF

P.S.

f you like this article or have found it useful, please consider donating towards the work of International Viewpoint. Simply follow this link: Donate then enter an amount of your choice. One-off donations are very welcome. But regular donations by standing order are also vital to our continuing functioning. See the last paragraph of this article for our bank account details and take out a standing order. Thanks.


Pierre Rousset
Pierre Rousset is a member of the leadership of the Fourth International particularly involved in solidarity with Asia. He is a member of the NPA in France.


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.
Mexico: “The right-wing parties are practically in the worst phase of their history”

Friday 2 May 2025, by Fabrice Thomas, José Luis


What’s the situation in Mexico after Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) and more recently Claudia Sheinbaum came to power as presidents, and after Trump’s attacks?

Latin America has been the scene of strong struggles against neoliberal policies. The independent struggles waged by teachers, peasants, students, indigenous peoples and so on have not achieved their goals. There were even major defeats. This meant that social and popular discontent with neoliberal policies in Mexico was channelled into elections. The discontent was channelled first through the Partido de la Revolución Democrática (Party of the Democratic Revolution - PRD) and more recently through the Movimiento de Regeneración Nacional (National Regeneration Movement - MoReNa). The former was led by Cuauhtémoc Cárdenas. It emerged from a nationalist break within the ruling party. The changes culminated within the party, with the arrival in power of AMLO as mayor of Mexico City. His term in office was characterized by a number of progressive reforms, such as the granting of a universal pension for people over 65 in Mexico City and other social policies.

This led the right to try to prevent him from becoming a candidate for the presidency in 2006 by means of a legal-political manoeuvre. People saw this as an anti-democratic attack. The country became polarized, and mass mobilizations took place to allow López Obrador to become a candidate. The electoral process raised many doubts, so much so that we claim there was massive fraud. A right-wing politician, Felipe Calderón Hinojosa, came to power. What followed was a process of resistance to the neoliberal policies of Felipe Calderón Hinojosa and Peña Nieto. The discontent was very strong: there was a high level of corruption within the Mexican government, which was entirely at the service of the interests of the wealthy who were subservient to the United States. This context explains AMLO’s victory with over 50% of the vote.

In 2018?

Yes, in 2018. AMLO came to power with strong popular support, enabling him to carry out some very important transformations, to improve the standard of living of the masses. One of these is the nationwide extension of the right to a universal pension. People over the age of 65 received support of $160 a month, which in Mexico means they can live more or less comfortably. Minimum wages were increased by almost 100%. Although this did not completely catch up with wages, the wage policy benefited several million Mexicans.

Later on, the Mexican bourgeoisie was also forced to pay taxes, because they were experts at tax evasion, thus broadening the tax base. He also waged a relentless battle against the corruption that was eating away at the state, and which has not ended.

Do you think these reforms became more anti-capitalist than anti-neoliberal, or did they have their limits?

There were many limits. We would have preferred a complete renationalization of state-owned energy companies like Pemex (Petróleos Mexicanos). But at least fuel prices have been stabilized. In-depth tax reform is also needed, as Mexico’s wealthy pay very little in relation to their enormous profits. AMLO also had a very “caudillo” leadership style. His MoReNa party is no more than an electoral apparatus, imposing candidates undemocratically, particularly from the right wing.

How do you explain the fact that López Obrador still had over 50% support at the end of his mandate, and that his candidate, Claudia Sheinbaum, was very successful?

There has been an undeniable improvement in the standard of living of the masses. Otherwise, the masses wouldn’t have voted so massively to elect Claudia Sheinbaum. She won almost 60% of the vote.

When did this happen? In 2024?

Yes, Claudia Sheinbaum has been president since October 2024 after her victory in June of that year. There was a strong ideological and cultural battle. In Mexico, the right-wing parties are practically in the worst phase of their history. They are very weakened and divided, and the ultra-right is an insignificant minority. Currently, even in the process of confronting Donald Trump’s threats to impose tariffs, Claudia Sheinbaum, according to recent polls, has the support of 85% of the population.

Trump’s statements and threats are provoking reactions not only from the government and Claudia Sheinbaum, but also from the general public...

What we’re seeing is a global problem, which doesn’t just concern Mexico, although it is part of the problem. We are faced with a declining imperialist power that is trying to pass on the cost of its crisis to the rest of the world, through taxes, tariffs and so on, and to put pressure on Europe to rearm and share the cost of NATO.

The crisis is deep: the US public debt crisis, the budget crisis. The US is also losing out, with technological deterioration, in competition with China. It is therefore trying to reposition itself. Donald Trump is threatening his closest partners, Mexico and Canada, with an increase in the cost of imports into the United States, on the pretext that these governments are doing nothing to combat drug smuggling, particularly fentanyl, and the migration problem.

The aim is in fact to seek a renegotiation, on how to produce, particularly within the framework of the free trade agreement. They want to recuperate many of the investments made in Mexico, and bring them to the United States, particularly in the automotive industry. It’s quite complicated, because there are value chains that have been in place for decades, and they can’t be changed overnight.

But the pressure is on. So far, Claudia Sheinbaum’s government has reacted firmly, denouncing the pretexts and sheer hypocrisy. Basically, what’s happening is blackmail, it’s the start of a trade war against Canada and Mexico, and if this government insists on maintaining these taxes, there will be a response on its part, to apply similar measures to other products, to compensate for what the United States is doing.

If the situation becomes tense, do you think there will be a lot of support from workers and the Mexican people?

Yes, yes, because the Mexican people strongly reject these aggressive, crude and authoritarian attitudes on the part of the U.S. government, and this has awakened nationalist resentment... and progressive resentment.

When there’s a confrontation between a strong, imperialist nation and a weak one, it’s clear that we’re with the weak nation, to confront it, especially when the leader of that nation not only acts in an authoritarian and imposing manner, but also has a whole far-right political agenda against migrants, a xenophobic, misogynist, anti-gender diversity, warmongering agenda and so on. In other words, here we are in a struggle that is both anti-imperialist, but must also be anti-fascist, because Trump represents the global ultra-right, which is acting in an increasingly openly united and coordinated manner with other ultra-right forces, both in Europe and Latin America. So we need to be clear that there are many issues at stake beyond the trade question, which is very important.

L’anticapitaliste 26 April 2025

P.S.


if you like this article or have found it useful, please consider donating towards the work of International Viewpoint. Simply follow this link: Donate then enter an amount of your choice. One-off donations are very welcome. But regular donations by standing order are also vital to our continuing functioning. See the last paragraph of this article for our bank account details and take out a standing order. Thanks.

Attached documentsmexico-the-right-wing-parties-are-practically-in-the-worst_a8966-2.pdf (PDF - 911.9 KiB)
Extraction PDF [->article8966]

Fabrice Thomas
Fabrice Thomas represented the LCR (French section of the Fourth International) at the first meeting of the Constituent Committee of the PRS.

José Luis
José Luis is an activist in the Fourth International and a member of the Mexican electricians’ union.


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.
Argentina: opposition to Milei revives

Tuesday 29 April 2025, by Elias Vola


After many months without a significant opposition movement to the government of President Javier Milei on the streets of Argentina, the 36-hour cross-industry strike of 9-10 April and the social reality of the country have brought the movement back to life.

Since the CGT, Argentina’s main trade union federation, abandoned its strategy of confrontation through strikes - the last one dating back to May 2024 - Milei’s anti-social, fascist policies had been able to unfold without any major backlash. Pensioners faced with increasingly inhumane living conditions met every Wednesday, but seemed isolated.
Against repression

The repression ordered by the minister for national security Patricia Bullrich to attack the pensioners’ rally on 12 March was the last straw. The anger linked to the massive deterioration in the material living conditions of a majority of the population has been reawakened. The trade unions, and more particularly the CGT, previously committed to a negotiating strategy that looked more like a humiliation session, called for a general strike. From then on, mobilization rose to a crescendo: on 19 March, the weekly gathering of pensioners found increasing support; on 24 March, the mobilization in memory of the dictatorship was strong; on 9 April, the eve of the strike, 50,000 people gathered in the central square of Buenos Aires, along with almost all the progressive political forces and trade union and social organizations of the capital.
The strike, our best weapon

By early evening, the initial feedback seemed to indicate that the strike was going to be a powerful one. It was the biggest since Milei came to power. Most of the key professional sectors took part in the strike. In the air transport sector, over 300 flights were cancelled, aeronautical factories were at a standstill for 36 hours, port services were interrupted, trains stopped running, automotive and steel companies were paralyzed, the oil sector virtually ceased to function, and civil servants and teachers, the Milei administration’s preferred targets, swelled the ranks of strikers. The example of the Vaca Muerta oil workers acted as a symbol: in this extractivist and ecocidal project, which Milei brandishes as the standard of tomorrow’s Argentina, the 15,000 employees gathered in an assembly voted unanimously to strike.

First political effect: Bullrich and her repressive protocol, opposing “the union caste that threatens the Republic” on 9 April, did not dare resort to force. The second political effect was that the estimated losses to employers from the two-day strike were between $200 and $880 million. Last but not least, Argentina’s workers reminded the far-right government that their resistance was far from over.
The Left still divided

The outlook for the opposition to Milei remains unclear. The strike also served as a reminder of the fragmentation of Argentine workers: the broad masses of informal workers, the most precarious and exploited, were barely represented. Similarly, the CGT bureaucracy’s agenda is too heterogeneous to guarantee a unifying horizon: between the preservation of its “conquests” (and land assets), failed negotiations, and some of its federations opting for subordination to the regime, the voices within it defending a perspective of struggle are far from hegemonic. Left-wing Peronism, for its part, seems bogged down in deplorable internal conflicts, while the far left remains too fragmented and sectarian to have any significant influence.

Nevertheless, the social misery generated by Milei’s policies continues to deepen. Food, transport and rent prices continue to rise, and the recent IMF mega-loan, which will do nothing to benefit the population, will only increase the anger.

L’anticapitaliste 16 April 2025


Attached documentsargentina-opposition-to-milei-revives_a8963.pdf (PDF - 905.5 KiB)
Extraction PDF [->article8963]

Argentina
Argentina: Milei, the crypto-presidential scam and the crisis of legitimacy
Argentina: ‘Anti-fascist and anti-racist pride’ against Milei
University funding law: Milei’s first failure?
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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.

AFRICA IS A COUNTRY


 DRC - Rwanda

Peace under the seal of business

Thursday 8 May 2025, by Paul Martial

The option of peace between the DRC and Rwanda is now becoming plausible, albeit fraught with obstacles. However, this is proving disadvantageous for Kinshasa.


Since 2021, Rwanda had activated and supported the M23 militia with weapons and men. It had succeeded in seizing a large part of the territories in the eastern region of the DRC, including the two regional capitals, Goma and Bukavu. African structures through mediation in Nairobi, Luanda and then Dar es Salaam had proved futile.
The involvement of the US

To everyone’s surprise, Qatar managed to bring together the presidents of the DRC and Rwanda, Félix Tshisekedi and Paul Kagame, for a one-on-one meeting. A few weeks later, the two foreign ministers of the warring countries, under the leadership of Secretary of State Marco Rubio, signed a declaration of principles in Washington. This recognises ‘respect for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of each State and the principle of non-interference in the internal affairs of the other State.’ The two countries also commit to ‘ceasing all support to armed groups.’ This refers to Rwanda’s support for the M23, but also to the links between the DRC’s armed forces and the FDLR (Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda), a group founded by Hutu génocidaires. All these commitments had already been made during previous meetings organised by African diplomats, but what is new is the economic aspect.

A stranglehold on minerals


Having failed to secure military support from African countries, Tshisekedi turned to the United States, proposing a deal: access to Congolese minerals in exchange for US protection. Trump showed interest and sent his special envoy Massad Boulos to begin discussions. As for Paul Kagame, he offered his country as a refuge for those expelled from the US. This was a similar proposal he had already made to the former Conservative government in Britain. As a sign of good will, the M23 withdrew from the town of Wakilake near the tin mine operated by Alphamin, a US company.

The agreement in principle includes ‘support for regional economic integration, in particular through transparency in the supply chains of critical minerals’. In addition, Trump has promised massive private and public investment in the region.
Numerous obstacles

This agreement is not necessarily to the advantage of the DRC because, in the value chain, the country risks being confined to a mineral reserve extracted by US companies, with Rwanda providing the logistics for export. But the situation is complex. The M23, which controls large parts of the Kivu region, is primarily concerned with securing land ownership for the Tutsi community. Negotiations between Kinshasa and the armed group have stalled because the latter is demanding integration into the army and, above all, into the institutions. In reality, the Kivu region would be economically integrated into Rwanda and politically controlled by the M23.

Chinese companies control the vast majority of the mining sector in the DRC, which means that the US will have to undertake lengthy and costly prospecting work and establish itself in territories controlled by the many existing militias. Finally, it is not certain that the other neighbouring country, Uganda, will welcome this agreement, which marginalises it. It could in turn be tempted to support armed groups.

8 May 2025

Translated by International Viewpoint from l’Anticapitaliste.


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Nigeria: against oil industry impunity


Saturday 3 May 2025, by Paul Martial



The Niger Delta has been totally devastated by decades of oil exploitation in Nigeria by the major Western oil companies. Huge tracts of land and mangrove swamps have been totally contaminated by oil, destroying all living things. People’s livelihoods, such as fishing and farming, have been wiped out. There is no longer any drinking water, and the air is polluted by the dozens of flares that burn continuously.

Shirking responsibility

The main oil companies are fleeing and selling their facilities to Nigerian companies. Their aim is to get rid of the wells, which have become less profitable and dangerous due to their obsolescence. It’s also a way for them to get away from their duty to clean up and compensate the Ogale and Bille communities. This is why TotalEnergies sold its assets to Chappal Energies for $860 million. Italy’s ENI sold its shares to Oando, and Exxon Mobile did the same for Seplat Energy. All these sales were made with the blessing of Nigeria’s President, Bola Tinubu, a former accountant with Mobil Nigeria, whose nephew is a director of the company Oando.
The Shell trial

Shell was about to do the same, with the backing of the Ministry of Petroleum Resources. The deal with Renaissance Africa Energy Company Limited, a consortium of four companies, was worth $2.4 billion, but parliament and the regulatory agency, under pressure from NGOs, opposed it. At the same time, members of the Ogale and Bille communities took legal action in London against the Anglo-Dutch company, which remains the largest in the Niger Delta. The case is now being heard by the UK High Court.

Shell’s defence is that most of the oil leaks that pollute the environment are due to hijackings by traffickers. To counter these arguments, Amnesty International, one of the parties involved in this battle, had to analyze tens of thousands of pieces of data showing the dilapidated state of the installations, in particular the corrosion of the pipelines. It was able to do this thanks to the mobilization of 3,545 volunteers from 142 countries to meticulously examine every document, every image. The demand is that Shell carry out clean-up work and pay compensation to the people who have suffered these serious consequences.

L’anticapitaliste 16 April 2025


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Zambia: people are victims of Extractivism

Thursday 1 May 2025, by Paul Martial


Despite recurring environmental disasters and the dangers to the population, the government of Zambia continues its extractivist policy. The southern African country has once again been hit by major pollution. 50 million tonnes of acidic sludge were discharged into the watercourse running alongside the Chinese company Sino Metals in Chambishi, which processes copper ores.

Ecological disaster

The accident occurred on 18 February 2025. A wall in a storage area containing the sludge gave way, allowing the toxic waste to flow into the Mwambashi River, which joins the Kafu stream. The latter meanders through five of the country’s provinces to join the Zambezi River.

The Zambian authorities did attempt to respond to the disaster by dumping 250 tonnes of lime to reduce the acidity; other aerial interventions involved the release of limestone. But none of this prevented the destruction of flora and fauna. Following the accident, the government stepped up inspections and closed the Ranging Mineral Processing Limited plant in Kalulishi for leaking sulphuric acid into the Kafue River. This is not the first time that Sino Metals has been involved in this type of accident. In 2011, and again in 2015, two similar problems occurred on its storage sites.
Mining at any cost

Zambia’s environmental laws are of a rather high standard. The only problem is that they are not enforced. What’s more, the country is heavily indebted, to the tune of 28 billion dollars. China holds $5 billion of this debt and is playing an important role in negotiations to make this financial burden less restrictive, hence the great leniency shown to mining companies by the Asian giant. But Chinese companies are not the only ones involved. Just 245 kilometres from Chambishi lies another mining town, Kabwe, considered to be one of the most polluted in the world.

For decades, lead and zinc have been mined here without any protection. This production has had harmful effects on the health of the local population, particularly children. Although the mine has closed, it has left a number of slag heaps in the open air. The government authorized a number of companies to work these stockpiles, extracting both lead and zinc residues. With the idea that “mining is the anchor of our economy, it’s the solution that will bring the most value, the most income”, as Jito Kayumba, economic advisor to Hakainde Hichilema, president-elect in 2021, puts it.
Children’s health sacrificed

As a result, truckloads of waste have been transported into the city itself, leaving some nine mounds scattered across the neighbourhoods. This exploitation has extremely serious health consequences. Experts believe that almost half of all children should receive emergency treatment for blood lead levels. Most of the companies are owned by leaders of the ruling party, giving them total impunity.

Clandestine miners also try their luck, extracting unprotected remnants of ore from the slag heaps and selling them to large companies specializing in processing. By making mining the alpha and omega of its economic policy, Hakainde Hichilema’s government is contributing to the deterioration of the environment and the health of many Zambians, without solving any social problems. The poverty rate is rising steadily, reaching 62%, a third of the population is malnourished, and at the same time the agricultural sector, which employs 60% of the population, is being neglected.
While the extraction of natural resources does little to create jobs, it does make the elite very rich. As proof of this, Zambia has one of the highest rates of inequality in

L’anticapitaliste 26 April 2025

P.S.


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Paul Martial
Paul Martial is a correspondent for International Viewpoint. He is editor of Afriques en Lutte and a member of the Fourth International in France.


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.

Trump’s Tariffs & Trade War On South Africa & The Working Class With Patrick Bond

May 1, 2025
Source: laborvideo

The imposition of tariffs on countries around the world has had a major impact on South Africa and many other countries in Africa. University of Johannesburg political economist Patrick Bond discusses the role of the Trump and Musk In South Africa.


Now is the Time for All Anti-Imperialists and All Justice-Loving People to Stand Unequivocally in Defense of Burkina Faso

It is no surprise to the Black Alliance for Peace’s (BAP) Africa Team and U.S. Out of Africa Network (USOAN) that aggression is stepping up against the countries in the anti-imperialist Alliance of Sahel States. This was reflected in the flagrantly baseless accusations against Burkina Faso’s leader Ibrahim Traoré. On April 3, 2025, U.S. AFRICOM Commander Michael Langley testified to the Senate Armed Services Committee and claimed without evidence that interim President Traoré is misusing the country’s gold mineral wealth in exchange for protection. Langley provided no details on how these supposed exchanges are carried out or from what Traoré needs protection.

The imperialist modus operandi is at play here and starts with demonizing and criminalizing the leader of a country as the war propaganda pretext for more direct intervention. We have seen this script before. Commander-In-Chief of Economic Fighters League of Ghana and Steering Committee member of the USOAN,  Ernesto Yeboah refutes the liberal framing meant to arrest dissent against what is at stake:

This is not about military vs. civilian rule. This is about imperialism vs. liberation. This is about Africans standing up — finally — and saying: Hands off Africa.

The BAP Africa Team and USOAN are heeding the call emanating across Africa to unite in defense of Burkina Faso. And we further call on all anti-imperialist forces around the world, especially Black forces, to sound the alarm and publicly denounce these designs before this all too familiar strategy takes root. In 2011, Black anti-imperialist forces were unable to effectively counter the heinous plan of the U.S.-EU-NATO Axis of Domination to destroy the revolutionary Pan-Africanist nation of Libya. BAP’s USOAN refuses to allow this fatal mistake to be repeated.

This time the complicity of silence by ECOWAS, the African Union, the Congressional Black Caucus, and the African (Black) comprador class around the world must be exposed.

This is a pivotal time for the struggle against imperialism in Africa. The emergence of the Alliance of Sahel States (AES) and the revolutionary example of self-determination being set by the people of Burkina Faso represents a historic breakthrough for Pan-Africanism that the U.S. and NATO have been eager to eliminate. The U.S.-EU-NATO axis is desperate to re-colonize Burkina Faso and to halt any further influence across Africa set by the example of the Alliance of Sahel States. What the U.S is angling to undermine is a popular process of decolonization.

Under President Traoré’s leadership, Burkina Faso has advanced toward food sovereignty, established a national gold refinery, and taken critical steps to reclaim its resources for the benefit of its people. The vague and opportunistic accusations issued by AFRICOM are designed to undermine these gains and set the stage for imperialist subversion. When U.S. officials speak of “strategic interests,” they mean the unfettered right to plunder Africa’s mineral wealth, dominate markets, and exploit African labor, all without the consent of African peoples. We must not allow the absurdity of the U.S. and NATO, currently complicit in the genocide of Palestinians, to pose as moral arbiters in Africa.

BAP and USOAN call on all anti-imperialist forces to join in active defense of Burkina Faso, demand the expulsion of AFRICOM from the continent, and ensure that no African nation suffers the fate that befell Libya in 2011.

The time to act is now!

The Black Alliance for Peace (BAP) seeks to recapture and redevelop the historic anti-war, anti-imperialist, and pro-peace positions of the radical black movement. Read other articles by Black Alliance for Peace, or visit Black Alliance for Peace's website.