WORLD REVOLUTION AND COMMUNIST TACTICS
Anton Pannekoek - 1920
Theory itself becomes a material force once it takes a hold on the masses. Theory is capable of taking a hold on the masses... once it becomes radical. Karl Marx
![]()
I
![]()
The transformation of capitalism into communism is brought about by two forces,
one material and the other mental, the latter having its origins in the former.
The material development of the economy generates consciousness, and this
activates the will to revolution. Marxist science, arising as a function of the
general tendencies of capitalist development, forms first the theory of the
socialist party and subsequently that of the communist party, and it endows the
revolutionary movement with a profound and vigorous intellectual unity. While
this theory is gradually penetrating one section of the proletariat, the masses'
own experiences are bound to foster practical recognition that capitalism is no
longer viable to an increasing extent. World war and rapid economic collapse now
make revolution objectively necessary before the masses have grasped communism
intellectually : and this contradiction is at the root of the contradictions,
hesitations and setbacks which make the revolution a long and painful process.
Nevertheless, theory itself now gains new momentum and rapidly takes a hold on
the masses; but both these processes are inevitably held up by the practical
problems which have suddenly risen up so massively.
As far as Western Europe is concerned, the development of the revolution is
mainly determined by two forces : the collapse of the capitalist economy and the
example of Soviet Russia. The reasons why the proletariat was able to achieve
victory so quickly and with such relative ease in Russia -- the weakness of the
bourgeoisie, the alliance with the peasantry, the fact that the revolution took
place during the war -- need not be elaborated here. The example of a state in
which working people are the rulers, where they have abolished capitalism and
are engaged in building communism, could not but make a great impression upon
the proletariat of the entire world. Of course, this example would not in itself
have been sufficient to spur the workers in other countries on to proletarian
revolution. The human mind is most strongly influenced by the effects of its own
material environment; so that if indigenous capitalism had retained all its old
strength, the news from far-away Russia would have made little impression. 'Full
of respectful admiration, but in a timid, petty-bourgeois way, without the
courage to save themselves, Russia and humanity as a whole by taking action'
this was how the masses struck Rutgers [*1]
upon his return to Western Europe from Russia. When the war came to an end,
everyone here hoped for a rapid upturn in the economy, and a lying press
depicted Russia as a place of chaos and barbarism; and so the masses bided their
time. But since then, the opposite has come about : chaos has spread in the
traditional home of civilisation, while the new order in Russia is showing
increasing strength. Now the masses are stirring here as well.
Economic collapse is the most powerful spur to revolution. Germany and Austria
are already completely shattered and pauperised economically, Italy and France
are in inexorable decline. England has suffered so badly that it is doubtful
whether its government's vigorous attempts at reconstruction can avert collapse,
and in America the first threatening signs of crisis are appearing. And in each
country, more or less in this same order, unrest is growing in the masses; they
are struggling against impoverishment in great strike-movements which hit the
economy even harder; these struggles are gradually developing into a conscious
revolutionary struggle, and, without being communists by conviction, the masses
are more and more following the path which communism shows them, for practical
necessity is driving them in that direction.
With the growth of this necessity and mood, carried by them, so to speak, the
communist vanguard has been developing in these countries; this vanguard
recognises the goals clearly and regroups itself in the Third International. The
distinguishing feature of this developing process of revolution is a sharp
separation of communism from socialism, in both ideological and organisational
terms. This separation is most marked in the countries of Central Europe
precipitated into economic crisis by the Treaty of Versailles, where a
social-democratic regime was necessary to save the bourgeois state. The crisis
is so profound and irremediable there that the mass of radical social-democratic
workers, the USP, are pressing for affiliation to Moscow, although they still
largely hold to the old social-democratic methods, traditions, slogans and
leaders. In Italy, the entire social-democratic party has joined the Third
International; a militant revolutionary mood among the masses, who are engaged
in constant small-scale warfare against government and bourgeoisie, permits us
to overlook the theoretical mixture of socialist, syndicalist and communist
perspectives. In France, communist groups have only recently detached themselves
from the social-democratic party and the trade-union movement, and are now
moving towards the formation of a communist party. In England, the profound
effect of the war upon the old, familiar conditions has generated a communist
movement, as yet consisting of several groups and parties of different origins
and new organisational formations. In America, two communist parties have
detached themselves from the Social-Democratic Party, while the latter has also
aligned itself with Moscow.
Soviet Russia's unexpected resilience to the onslaughts of reaction has both
compelled the Entente to negotiate and also made a new and powerful impression
upon the labour parties of the West. The Second International is breaking up; a
general movement of the centre groups towards Moscow has set in under the
impulsion of the growing revolutionary mood of the masses. These groups have
adopted the new name of communists without their former perspectives having
greatly altered, and they are transferring the conceptions and methods of the
old social democrats into the new international. As a sign that these countries
have now become more ripe for revolution, a phenomenon precisely opposite to the
original one is now appearing : with their entry into the Third International or
declaration in favour of its principles, as in the case of the USP mentioned
above, the sharp distinction between communists and social democrats is once
again fading. Whatever attempts are made to keep such parties formally outside
the Third International in an effort to conserve some firmness of principle,
they nevertheless insinuate themselves into the leadership of each country's
revolutionary movement, maintaining their influence over the militant masses by
paying lip-service to the new slogans. This is how every ruling stratum
behaves : rather than allow itself to be cut off from the masses, it becomes
'revolutionary' itself, in order to deflate the revolution as far as possible by
its influence. And many communists tend to see only the increased strength thus
accruing to us, and not also the increase in vulnerability.
With the appearance of communism and the Russian example, the proletarian revolution seemed to have gained a simple, straightforward form. In reality, however, the various difficulties now being encountered are revealing the forces which make it an extremely complex and arduous process.
II
Issues and the solutions to them, programmes and tactics, do not spring from
abstract principles, but are only determined by experience, by the real practice
of life. The communists' conceptions of their goal and of how it is to be
attained must be elaborated on the basis of previous revolutionary practice, as
they always have been. The Russian revolution and the course which the German
revolution has taken up to this point represent all the evidence so far
available to us as to the motive forces, conditions and forms of the proletarian
revolution.
The Russian revolution brought the proletariat political control in so
astonishingly rapid an upturn that it took Western European observers completely
by surprise at the time, and although the reasons for it are clearly
identifiable, it has come to seem more and more astonishing in view of the
difficulties that we are now experiencing in Western Europe. Its initial effect
was inevitably that in the first flush of enthusiasm, the difficulties facing
the revolution in Western Europe were underestimated. Before the eyes of the
world proletariat, the Russian revolution unveiled the principles of the new
order in all the radiance and purity of their power -- the dictatorship of the
proletariat, the soviet system as a new mode of democracy, the reorganisation of
industry, agriculture and education. In many respects, it gave a picture of the
nature and content of the proletarian revolution so simple, clear and
comprehensive, so idyllic one might almost say, that nothing could seem easier
than to follow this example. However, the German revolution has shown that this
was not so simple, and the forces which came to the fore in Germany are by and
large at work throughout the rest of Europe.
When German imperialism collapsed in November 1918, the working class was
completely unprepared for the seizure of power. Shattered in mind and spirit by
the four years of war and still caught up in social-democratic traditions, it
was unable to achieve clear recognition of its task within the first few weeks,
when governmental authority had lapsed; the intensive but brief period of
communist propaganda could not compensate for this lack. The German bourgeoisie
had learnt more from the Russian example than the proletariat; decking itself
out in red in order to lull the workers' vigilance, it immediately began to
rebuild the organs of its power. The workers' councils voluntarily surrendered
their power to the leaders of the Social-Democratic Party and the democratic
parliament. The workers still bearing arms as soldiers disarmed not the
bourgeoisie, but themselves; the most active workers' groups were crushed by
newly formed white guards, and the bourgeoisie was formed into armed civil
militias. With the connivance of the trade-union leaderships, the now
defenceless workers were little by little robbed of all the improvements in
working conditions won in the course of the revolution. The way to communism was
thus blocked with barbed-wire entanglements to secure the survival of
capitalism, to enable it to sink ever deeper into chaos, that is.
These experiences gained in the course of the German revolution cannot, of
course, be automatically applied to the other countries of Western Europe; the
development of the revolution will follow still other courses there. Power will
not suddenly fall into the hands of the unprepared masses as a result of
politico-military collapse; the proletariat will have to fight hard for it, and
will thus have attained a higher degree of maturity when it is won. What
happened at fever-pace in Germany after the November revolution is already
taking place more quietly in other countries : the bourgeoisie is drawing the
consequences of the Russian revolution, making military preparations for civil
war and at the same time organising the political deception of the proletariat
by means of social democracy. But in spite of these differences, the German
revolution shows certain general characteristics and offers certain lessons of
general significance. It has made it apparent that the revolution in Western
Europe will be a slow, arduous process and revealed what forces are
responsible for this. The slow tempo of revolutionary development in Western
Europe, although only relative, has given rise to a clash of conflicting
tactical currents. In times of rapid revolutionary development, tactical
differences are quickly overcome in action, or else do not become conscious;
intensive principled agitation clarifies people's minds, and at the same time
the masses flood in and political action overturns old conceptions. When a
period of external stagnation sets in, however; when the masses let anything
pass without protest and revolutionary slogans no longer seem able to catch the
imagination; when difficulties mount up and the adversary seems to rise up more
colossal with each engagement; when the Communist Party remains weak and
experiences only defeats -- then perspectives diverge, new courses of action and
new tactical methods are sought. There then emerge two main tendencies, which
can be recognised in every country, for all the local variations. The one
current seeks to revolutionise and clarify people's minds by word and deed, and
to this end tries to pose the new principles in the sharpest possible contrast
to the old, received conceptions. The other current attempts to draw the masses
still on the sidelines into practical activity, and therefore emphasises points
of agreement rather than points of difference in an attempt to avoid as far as
is possible anything that might deter them. The first strives for a clear, sharp
separation among the masses, the second for unity; the first current may be
termed the radical tendency, the second the opportunist one. Given the current
situation in Western Europe, with the revolution encountering powerful obstacles
on the one hand and the Soviet Union's staunch resistance to the Entente
governments' efforts to overthrow it making a powerful impression upon the
masses on the other, we can expect a greater influx into the Third International
of workers' groups until now undecided; and as a result, opportunism will
doubtless become a powerful force in the Communist International.
Opportunism does not necessarily mean a pliant, conciliatory attitude and
vocabulary, nor radicalism a more acerbic manner; on the contrary, lack of
clear, principled tactics is all too often concealed in rabidly strident
language; and indeed, in revolutionary situations, it is characteristic of
opportunism to suddenly set all its hopes on the great revolutionary deed. Its
essence lies in always considering the immediate questions, not what lies in the
future, and to fix on the superficial aspects of phenomena rather than seeing
the determinant deeper bases. When the forces are not immediately adequate for
the attainment of a certain goal, it tends to make for that goal by another way,
by roundabout means, rather than strengthen those forces. For its goal is
immediate success, and to that it sacrifices the conditions for lasting success
in the future. It seeks justification in the fact that by forming alliances with
other 'progressive' groups and by making concessions to outdated conceptions, it
is often possible to gain power or at least split the enemy, the coalition of
capitalist classes, and thus bring about conditions more favourable for the
struggle. But power in such cases always turns out to be an illusion, personal
power exercised by individual leaders and not the power of the proletarian
class; this contradiction brings nothing but confusion, corruption and conflict
in its wake. Conquest of governmental power not based upon a working class fully
prepared to exercise its hegemony would be lost again, or else have to make so
many concessions to reactionary forces that it would be inwardly spent. A split
in the ranks of the class hostile to us -- the much vaunted slogan of reformism
-- would not affect the unity of the inwardly united bourgeoisie, but would
deceive, confuse and weaken the proletariat. Of course it can happen that the
communist vanguard of the proletariat is obliged to take over political power
before the normal conditions are met; but only what the masses thereby gain in
terms of clarity, insight, solidarity and autonomy has lasting value as the
foundation of further development towards communism.
The history of the Second International is full of examples of this policy of
opportunism, and they are beginning to appear in the Third. It used to consist
in seeking the assistance of non-socialist workers' groups or other classes to
attain the goal of socialism. This led to tactics becoming corrupted, and
finally to collapse. The situation of the Third International is now
fundamentally different; for that period of quiet capitalist development is over
when social democracy in the best sense of the word could do nothing more than
prepare for a future revolutionary epoch by fighting confusion with principled
policies. Capitalism is now collapsing; the world cannot wait until our
propaganda has won a majority to lucid communist insight; the masses must
intervene, and as rapidly as possible, if they themselves and the world are to
be saved from catastrophe. What can a small party, however principled, do when
what is needed are the masses ? Is not opportunism, with its efforts to gather
the broadest masses quickly, dictated by necessity ?
A revolution can no more be made by a big mass party or coalition of different
parties than by a small radical party. It breaks out spontaneously among the
masses; action instigated by a party can sometimes trigger it off ( a rare
occurrence ), but the determining forces lie elsewhere, in the psychological
factors deep in the unconscious of the masses and in the great events of world
politics. The function of a revolutionary party lies in propagating clear
understanding in advance, so that throughout the masses there will be elements
who know what must be done and who are capable of judging the situation for
themselves. And in the course of revolution the party has to raise the
programme, slogans and directives which the spontaneously acting masses
recognise as correct because they find that they express their own aims in their
most adequate form and hence achieve greater clarity of purpose; it is thus that
the party comes to lead the struggle. So long as the masses remain inactive,
this may appear to be an unrewarding tactic; but clarity of principle has an
implicit effect on many who at first hold back, and revolution reveals its
active power of giving a definite direction to the struggle. If, on the other
hand, it has been attempted to assemble a large party by watering down
principles, forming alliances and making concessions, then this enables confused
elements to gain influence in times of revolution without the masses being able
to see through their inadequacy. Conformity to traditional perspectives is an
attempt to gain power without the revolution in ideas that is the precondition
of doing so; its effect is therefore to hold back the course of revolution. It
is also doomed to failure, for only the most radical thinking can take a hold on
the masses once they engage in revolution, while moderation only satisfies them
so long as the revolution has yet to be made. A revolution simultaneously
involves a profound upheaval in the masses' thinking; it creates the conditions
for this, and is itself conditioned by it; leadership in the revolution thus
falls to the Communist Party by virtue of the world-transforming power of its
unambiguous principles.
In contrast with the strong, sharp emphasis on the new principles -- soviet
system and dictatorship -- which distinguish communism from social democracy,
opportunism in the Third International relies as far as possible upon the forms
of struggle taken over from the Second International. After the Russian
revolution had replaced parliamentary activity with the soviet system and built
up the trade-union movement on the basis of the factory, the first impulse in
Western Europe was to follow this example. The Communist Party of Germany
boycotted the elections for the National Assembly and campaigned for immediate
or gradual organisational separation from the trade unions. When the revolution
slackened and stagnated in 1919, however, the Central Committee of the KPD
introduced a different tactic which amounted to opting for parliamentarianism
and supporting the old trade-union confederations against the industrial unions.
The main argument behind this is that the Communist Party must not lose the
leadership of the masses, who still think entirely in parliamentary terms, who
are best reached through electoral campaigns and parliamentary speeches, and
who, by entering the trade unions en masse, have increased their membership to
seven million. The same thinking is to be seen in England in the attitude of the
BSP : they do not want to break with the Labour Party, although it belongs to
the Second International, for fear of losing contact with the mass of
trade-unionists. These arguments are most sharply formulated and marshalled by
our friend Karl Radek, whose Development of the World Revolution and the
Tasks of the Communist Party, written in prison in Berlin, may be regarded
as the programmatic statement of communist opportunism. [*2]
Here it is argued that the proletarian revolution in Western Europe will be a
long drawn-out process, in which communism should use every means of propaganda,
in which parliamentary activity and the trade-union movement will remain the
principal weapons of the proletariat, with the gradual introduction of workers'
control as a new objective.
An examination of the foundations, conditions and difficulties of the proletarian revolution in Western Europe will show how far this is correct.
III
It has repeatedly been emphasised that the revolution will take a long time in
Western Europe because the bourgeoisie is so much more powerful here than in
Russia. Let us analyse the basis of this power. Does it lie in their numbers ?
The proletarian masses are much more numerous. Does it lie in the bourgeoisie's
mastery over the whole of economic life ? This certainly used to be an important
power-factor; but their hegemony is fading, and in Central Europe the economy is
completely bankrupt. Does it lie in their control of the state, with all its
means of coercion ? Certainly, it has always used the latter to hold the
proletariat down, which is why the conquest of state power was the proletariat's
first objective. But in November 1918, state power slipped from the nerveless
grasp of the bourgeoisie in Germany and Austria, the coercive apparatus of the
state was completely paralysed, the masses were in control; and the bourgeoisie
was nevertheless able to build this state power up again and once more subjugate
the workers. This proves that the bourgeoisie possessed another hidden source of
power which had remained intact and which permitted it to re-establish its
hegemony when everything seemed shattered. This hidden power is the
bourgeoisie's ideological hold over the proletariat. Because the proletarian
masses were still completely governed by a bourgeois mentality, they restored
the hegemony of the bourgeoisie with their own hands after it had collapsed. [*3]
The German experience brings us face to face with the major problem of the
revolution in Western Europe. In these countries, the old bourgeois mode of
production and the centuries-old civilisation which has developed with it have
completely impressed themselves upon the thoughts and feelings of the popular
masses. Hence, the mentality and inner character of the masses here is quite
different from that in the countries of the East, who have not experienced the
rule of bourgeois culture; and this is what distinguishes the different courses
that the revolution has taken in the East and the West. In England, France,
Holland, Italy, Germany and Scandinavia, there has been a powerful burgher class
based on petty-bourgeois and primitive capitalist production since the Middle
Ages; as feudalism declined, there also grew up in the countryside an equally
powerful independent peasant class, in which the individual was also master in
his own small business. Bourgeois sensibilities developed into a solid national
culture on this foundation, particularly in the maritime countries of England
and France, which took the lead in capitalist development. In the nineteenth
century, the subjection of the whole economy to capital and the inclusion of the
most outlying farms into the capitalist world-trade system enhanced and refined
this national culture, and the psychological propaganda of press, school and
church drummed it firmly into the heads of the masses, both those whom capital
proletarianised and attracted into the cities and those it left on the land.
This is true not only of the homelands of capitalism, but also, albeit in
different forms, of America and Australia, where Europeans founded new states,
and of the countries of Central Europe, Germany, Austria, Italy, which had until
then stagnated, but where the new surge of capitalist development was able to
connect with an old, backward, small-peasant economy and a petty-bourgeois
culture. But when capitalism pressed into the countries of Eastern Europe, it
encountered very different material conditions and traditions. Here, in Russia,
Poland, Hungary, even in Germany east of the Elbe, there was no strong bourgeois
class which had long dominated the life of the spirit; the latter was determined
by primitive agricultural conditions, with large-scale landed property,
patriarchal feudalism and village communism. Here, therefore, the masses related
to communism in a more primitive, simple, open way, as receptive as blank paper.
Western European social democrats often expressed derisive astonishment that the
'ignorant' Russians could claim to be the vanguard of the new world of labour.
Referring to these social democrats, an English delegate at the communist
conference in Amsterdam [*4]
pointed up the difference quite correctly : the Russians may be more ignorant,
but the English workers are stuffed so full of prejudices that it is harder to
propagate communism among them. These 'prejudices' are only the superficial,
external aspect of the bourgeois mentality which saturates the majority of the
proletariat of England, Western Europe and America.
The entire content of this mentality is so many-sided and complex in its
opposition to the proletarian, communist worldview that it can scarcely be
summarised in a few sentences. Its primary characteristic is individualism,
which has its origins in earlier petty-bourgeois and peasant forms of labour and
only gradually gives way to the new proletarian sense of community and of the
necessity of accepting discipline -- this characteristic is probably most
pronounced in the bourgeoisie and proletariat of the Anglo-Saxon countries. The
individual's perspective is limited to his work-place, instead of embracing
society as a whole; so absolute does the principle of the division of labour
seem, that politics itself, the government of the whole of society, is seen not
as everybody's business, but as the monopoly of a ruling stratum, the
specialised province of particular experts, the politicians. With its centuries
of material and intellectual commerce, its literature and art, bourgeois culture
has embedded itself in the proletarian masses, and generates a feeling of
national solidarity, anchored deeper in the unconscious than external
indifference or superficial internationalism suggest; this can potentially
express itself in national class solidarity, and greatly hinders international
action.
Bourgeois culture exists in the proletariat primarily as a traditional cast of
thought. The masses caught up in it think in ideological instead of real terms :
bourgeois thought has always been ideological. But this ideology and tradition
are not integrated; the mental reflexes left over from the innumerable class
struggles of former centuries have survived as political and religious systems
of thought which separate the old bourgeois world, and hence the proletarians
born of it, into groups, churches, sects, parties, divided according to their
ideological perspectives. The bourgeois past thus also survives in the
proletariat as an organisational tradition that stands in the way of the class
unity necessary for the creation of the new world; in these archaic
organisations the workers make up the followers and adherents of a bourgeois
vanguard. It is the intelligentsia which supplies the leaders in these
ideological struggles. The intelligentsia -- priests, teachers, literati,
journalists, artists, politicians -- form a numerous class, the function of
which is to foster, develop and propagate bourgeois culture; it passes this on
to the masses, and acts as mediator between the hegemony of capital and the
interests of the masses. The hegemony of capital is rooted in this group's
intellectual leadership of the masses. For even though the oppressed masses have
often rebelled against capital and its agencies, they have only done so under
the leadership of the intelligentsia; and the firm solidarity and discipline won
in this common struggle subsequently proves to be the strongest support of the
system once these leaders openly go over to the side of capitalism. Thus, the
Christian ideology of the declining petty bourgeois strata, which had become a
living force as an expression of their struggle against the modern capitalist
state, often proved its worth subsequently as a reactionary system that
bolstered up the state, as with Catholicism in Germany after the Kulturkampf. [*5]
Despite the value of its theoretical contribution, much the same is true of the
role played by social democracy in destroying and extinguishing old ideologies
in the rising work-force, as history demanded it should do : it made the
proletarian masses mentally dependent upon political and other leaders, who, as
specialists, the masses left to manage all the important matters of a general
nature affecting the class, instead of themselves taking them in hand. The firm
solidarity and discipline which developed in the often acute class struggles of
half a century did not bury capitalism, for it represented the power of
leadership and organisation over the masses; and in August 1914 and November
1918 these made the masses helpless tools of the bourgeoisie, of imperialism and
of reaction. The ideological power of the bourgeois past over the proletariat
means that in many of the countries of Western Europe, in Germany and Holland,
for example, it is divided into ideologically opposed groups which stand in the
way of class unity. Social democracy originally sought to realise this class
unity, but partly due to its opportunist tactics, which substituted purely
political policies for class politics, it was unsuccessful in this : it merely
increased the number of groups by one.
In times of crisis when the masses are driven to desperation and to action, the
hegemony of bourgeois ideology over the masses cannot prevent the power of this
tradition temporarily flagging, as in Germany in November 1918. But then the
ideology comes to the fore again, and turns temporary victory into defeat. The
concrete forces which in our view make up the hegemony of bourgeois conceptions
can be seen at work in the case of Germany : in reverence for abstract slogans
like 'democracy'; in the power of old habits of thought and programme-points,
such as the realisation of socialism through parliamentary leaders and a
socialist government; in the lack of proletarian self-confidence evidenced by
the effect upon the masses of the barrage of filthy lies published about Russia;
in the masses' lack of faith in their own power; but above all, in their trust
in the party, in the organisation and in the leaders who for decades had
incarnated their struggle, their revolutionary goals, their idealism. The
tremendous mental, moral and material power of the organisations, these enormous
machines painstakingly created by the masses themselves with years of effort,
which incarnated the tradition of the forms of struggle belonging to a period in
which the labour movement was a limb of ascendant capital, now crushed all the
revolutionary tendencies once more flaring up in the masses.
This example will not remain unique. The contradiction between the rapid
economic collapse of capitalism and the immaturity of spirit represented by the
power of bourgeois tradition over the proletariat -- a contradiction which has
not come about by accident, in that the proletariat cannot achieve the maturity
of spirit required for hegemony and freedom within a flourishing capitalism --
can only be resolved by the process of revolutionary development, in which
spontaneous uprisings and seizures of power alternate with setbacks. It makes it
very improbable that the revolution will take a course in which the proletariat
for a long time storms the fortress of capital in vain, using both the old and
new means of struggle, until it eventually conquers it once and for all; and the
tactics of a long drawn-out and carefully engineered siege posed in Radek's
schema thus fall through. The tactical problem is not how to win power as
quickly as possible if such power will be merely illusory -- this is only too
easy an option for the communists -- but how the basis of lasting class power is
to be developed in the proletariat. No 'resolute minority' can resolve the
problems which can only be resolved by the action of the class as a whole; and
if the populace allows such a seizure of power to take place over its head with
apparent indifference, it is not, for all that, a genuinely passive mass, but is
capable, in so far as it has not been won over to communism, of rounding upon
the revolution at any moment as the active follower of reaction. And a
'coalition with the gallows on hand' would do no more than disguise an untenable
party dictatorship of this kind. [*6]
When a tremendous uprising of the proletariat destroys the bankrupt rule of the
bourgeoisie, and the Communist Party, the clearest vanguard of the proletariat,
takes over political control, it has only one task -- to eradicate the sources
of weakness in the proletariat by all possible means and to strengthen it so
that it will be fully equal to the revolutionary struggles that the future holds
in store. This means raising the masses themselves to the highest pitch of
activity, whipping up their initiative, increasing their self-confidence, so
that they themselves will be able to recognise the tasks thrust upon them, for
it is only thus that the latter can be successfully carried out. This makes it
necessary to break the domination of traditional organisational forms and of the
old leaders, and in no circumstances to join them in a coalition government; to
develop the new forms, to consolidate the material power of the masses; only in
this way will it be possible to reorganise both production and defence against
the external assaults of capitalism, and this is the precondition of preventing
counter-revolution.
Such power as the bourgeoisie still possesses in this period resides in the proletariat's lack of autonomy and independence of spirit. The process of revolutionary development consists in the proletariat emancipating itself from this dependence, from the traditions of the past -- and this is only possible through its own experience of struggle. Where capitalism is already an institution of long standing and the workers have thus already been struggling against it for several generations, the proletariat has in every period had to build up methods, forms and aids to struggle corresponding to the contemporary stage of capitalist development, and these have soon ceased to be seen as the temporary expedients that they are, and instead idolised as lasting, absolute, perfect forms; they have thus subsequently become fetters upon development which had to be broken. Whereas the class is caught up in constant upheaval and rapid development, the leaders remain at a particular stage, as the spokesmen of a particular phase, and their tremendous influence can hold back the movement; forms of action become dogmas, and organisations are raised to the status of ends in themselves, making it all the more difficult to reorientate and readapt to the changed conditions of struggle. This still applies; every stage of the development of the class struggle must overcome the traditions of previous stages if it is to be capable of recognising its own tasks clearly and carrying them out effectively -- except that development is now proceeding at a far faster pace. The revolution thus develops through the process of internal struggle. It is within the proletariat itself that the resistances develop which it must overcome; and in overcoming them, the proletariat overcomes its own limitations and matures towards communism.
IV
Parliamentary activity and the trade-union movement were the two principal forms
of struggle in the time of the Second International.
The congresses of the first International Working-Men's Association laid the
basis of this tactic by taking issue with primitive conceptions belonging to the
pre-capitalist, petty-bourgeois period and, in accordance with Marx's social
theory, defining the character of the proletarian class struggle as a continuous
struggle by the proletariat against capitalism for the means of subsistence, a
struggle which would lead to the conquest of political power. When the period of
bourgeois revolutions and armed uprisings had come to a close, this political
struggle could only be carried on within the framework of the old or newly
created national states, and trade-union struggle was often subject to even
tighter restrictions. The First International was therefore bound to break up;
and the struggle for the new tactics, which it was itself unable to practise,
burst it apart; meanwhile, the tradition of the old conceptions and methods of
struggle remained alive amongst the anarchists. The new tactics were bequeathed
by the International to those who would have to put them into practice, the
trade unions and Social-Democratic Parties which were springing up on every
hand. When the Second International arose as a loose federation of the latter,
it did in fact still have to combat tradition in the form of anarchism; but the
legacy of the First International already formed its undisputed tactical base.
Today, every communist knows why these methods of struggle were necessary and
productive at that time : when the working class is developing within ascendant
capitalism, it is not yet capable of creating organs which would enable it to
control and order society, nor can it even conceive the necessity of doing so.
It must first orientate itself mentally and learn to understand capitalism and
its class rule. The vanguard of the proletariat, the Social-Democratic Party,
must reveal the nature of the system through its propaganda and show the masses
their goals by raising class demands. It was therefore necessary for its
spokesmen to enter the parliaments, the centres of bourgeois rule, in order to
raise their voices on the tribunes and take part in conflicts between the
political parties.
Matters change when the struggle of the proletariat enters a revolutionary
phase. We are not here concerned with the question of why the parliamentary
system is inadequate as a system of government for the masses and why it must
give way to the soviet system, but with the utilisation of parliament as a means
of struggle by the proletariat. [*7]
As such, parliamentary activity is the paradigm of struggles in which only the
leaders are actively involved and in which the masses themselves play a
subordinate role. It consists in individual deputies carrying on the main
battle; this is bound to arouse the illusion among the masses that others can do
their fighting for them. People used to believe that leaders could obtain
important reforms for the workers in parliament; and the illusion even arose
that parliamentarians could carry out the transformation to socialism by acts of
parliament. Now that parliamentarianism has grown more modest in its claims, one
hears the argument that deputies in parliament could make an important
contribution to communist propaganda. [1]
But this always means that the main emphasis falls on the leaders, and it is
taken for granted that specialists will determine policy -- even if this is done
under the democratic veil of debates and resolutions by congresses; the history
of social democracy is a series of unsuccessful attempts to induce the members
themselves to determine policy. This is all inevitable while the proletariat is
carrying on a parliamentary struggle, while the masses have yet to create organs
of self-action, while the revolution has still to be made, that is; and as soon
as the masses start to intervene, act and take decisions on their own behalf,
the disadvantages of parliamentary struggle become overwhelming.
As we argued above, the tactical problem is how we are to eradicate the
traditional bourgeois mentality which paralyses the strength of the proletarian
masses; everything which lends new power to the received conceptions is harmful.
The most tenacious and intractable element in this mentality is dependence upon
leaders, whom the masses leave to determine general questions and to manage
their class affairs. Parliamentarianism inevitably tends to inhibit the
autonomous activity by the masses that is necessary for revolution. Fine
speeches may be made in parliament exhorting the proletariat to revolutionary
action; it is not in such words that the latter has its origins, however, but in
the hard necessity of there being no other alternative.
Revolution also demands something more than the massive assault that topples a
government and which, as we know, cannot be summoned up by leaders, but can only
spring from the profound impulse of the masses. Revolution requires social
reconstruction to be undertaken, difficult decisions made, the whole proletariat
involved in creative action -- and this is only possible if first the vanguard,
then a greater and greater number take matters in hand themselves, know their
own responsibilities, investigate, agitate, wrestle, strive, reflect, assess,
seize chances and act upon them. But all this is difficult and laborious; thus,
so long as the working class thinks it sees an easier way out through others
acting on its behalf leading agitation from a high platform, taking decisions,
giving signals for action, making laws -- the old habits of thought and the old
weaknesses will make it hesitate and remain passive.
While on the one hand parliamentarianism has the counterrevolutionary effect of
strengthening the leaders' dominance over the masses, on the other it has a
tendency to corrupt these leaders themselves. When personal statesmanship has to
compensate for what is lacking in the active power of the masses, petty
diplomacy develops; whatever intentions the party may have started out with, it
has to try and gain a legal base, a position of parliamentary power; and so
finally the relationship between means and ends is reversed, and it is no longer
parliament that serves as a means towards communism, but communism that stands
as an advertising slogan for parliamentary politics. In the process, however,
the communist party itself takes on a different character. Instead of a vanguard
grouping the entire class behind it for the purpose of revolutionary action, it
becomes a parliamentary party with the same legal status as the others, joining
in their quarrels, a new edition of the old social democracy under new radical
slogans. Whereas there can be no essential antagonism, no internal conflict
between the revolutionary working class and the communist party, since the party
incarnates a form of synthesis between the proletariat's most lucid
class-consciousness and its growing unity, parliamentary activity shatters this
unity and creates the possibility of such a conflict : instead of unifying the
class, communism becomes a new party with its own party chiefs, a party which
falls in with the others and thus perpetuates the political division of the
class. All these tendencies will doubtless be cut short once again by the
development of the economy in a revolutionary sense; but even the first
beginnings of this process can only harm the revolutionary movement by
inhibiting the development of lucid class-consciousness; and when the economic
situation temporarily favours counter-revolution, this policy will pave the way
for a diversion of the revolution on to the terrain of reaction.
What is great and truly communist about the Russian revolution is above all the
fact that it has awoken the masses' own activity and ignited the spiritual and
physical energy in them to build and sustain a new society. Rousing the masses
to this consciousness of their own power is something which cannot be achieved
all at once, but only in stages; one stage on this way to independence is the
rejection of parliamentarianism. When, in December 1918, the newly formed
Communist Party of Germany resolved to boycott the National Assembly, this
decision did not proceed from any immature illusion of quick, easy victory, but
from the proletariat's need to emancipate itself from its psychological
dependence upon parliamentary representatives -- a necessary reaction against
the tradition of social democracy -- because the way to self-activity could now
be seen to lie in building up the council system. However, one half of those
united at that time, those who have stayed in the KPD, readopted
parliamentarianism with the ebb of the revolution : with what consequences it
remains to be seen, but which have in part been demonstrated already. In other
countries too, opinion is divided among the communists, and many groups want to
refrain from parliamentary activity even before the outbreak of revolution. The
international dispute over the use of parliament as a method of struggle will
thus clearly be one of the main tactical issues within the Third International
over the next few years.
At any rate, everyone is agreed that parliamentary activity only forms a subsidiary feature of our tactics. The Second International was able to develop up to the point where it had brought out and laid bare the essence of the new tactics : that the proletariat can only conquer imperialism with the weapons of mass action. The Second International itself was no longer able to employ these; it was bound to collapse when the world war put the revolutionary class struggle on to an international plane. The legacy of the earlier internationals was the natural foundation of the new international : mass action by the proletariat to the point of general strike and civil war forms the common tactical platform of the communists. In parliamentary activity the proletariat is divided into nations, and a genuinely international intervention is not possible; in mass action against international capital national divisions fall away, and every movement, to whatever countries it extends or is limited, is part of a single world struggle.
V
Just as parliamentary activity incarnates the leaders' psychological hold over
the working masses, so the trade-union movement incarnates their material
authority. Under capitalism, the trade unions form the natural organisations for
the regroupment of the proletariat; and Marx emphasised their significance as
such from the first. In developed capitalism, and even more in the epoch of
imperialism, the trade unions have become enormous confederations which manifest
the same developmental tendencies as the bourgeois state in an earlier period.
There has grown up within them a class of officials, a bureaucracy, which
controls all the organisation's resources -- funds, press, the appointment of
officials; often they have even more far-reaching powers, so that they have
changed from being the servants of the collectivity to become its masters, and
have identified themselves with the organisation. And the trade unions also
resemble the state and its bureaucracy in that, democratic forms
notwithstanding, the will of the members is unable to prevail against the
bureaucracy; every revolt breaks on the carefully constructed apparatus of
orders of business and statutes before it can shake the hierarchy. It is only
after years of stubborn persistence that an opposition can sometimes register a
limited success, and usually this only amounts to a change in personnel. In the
last few years, before and since the war, this situation has therefore often
given rise to rebellions by the membership in England, Germany and America; they
have struck on their own initiative, against the will of the leadership or the
decisions of the union itself. That this should seem natural and be taken as
such is an expression of the fact that the organisation is not simply a
collective organ of the members, but as it were something alien to them; that
the workers do not control their union, but that it stands over them as an
external force against which they can rebel, although they themselves are the
source of its strength -- once again like the state itself. If the revolt dies
down, the old order is established once again; it knows how to assert itself in
spite of the hatred and impotent bitterness of the masses, for it relies upon
these masses' indifference and their lack of clear insight and united,
persistent purpose, and is sustained by the inner necessity of trade-union
organisation as the only means of finding strength in numbers against capital.
It was by combating capital, combating its tendencies to absolute
impoverisation, setting limits to the latter and thus making the existence of
the working class possible, that the trade-union movement fulfilled its role in
capitalism, and this made it a limb of capitalist society itself. But once the
proletariat ceases to be a member of capitalist society and, with the advent of
revolution, becomes its destroyer, the trade union enters into conflict with the
proletariat.
It becomes legal, an open supporter of the state and recognised by the latter,
it makes 'expansion of the economy before the revolution' its slogan, in other
words, the maintenance of capitalism. In Germany today millions of proletarians,
until now intimidated by the terrorism of the ruling class, are streaming into
the unions out of a mixture of timidity and incipient militancy. The resemblance
of the trade-union confederations, which now embrace almost the entire working
class, to the state structure is becoming even closer. The trade-union officials
collaborate with the state bureaucracy not only in using their power to hold
down the working class on behalf of capital, but also in the fact that their
'policy' increasingly amounts to deceiving the masses by demagogic means and
securing their consent to the bargains that the unions have made with the
capitalists. And even the methods employed vary according to the conditions :
rough and brutal in Germany, where the trade-union leaders have landed the
workers with piece-work and longer working hours by means of coercion and
cunning deception, subtle and refined in England, where the trade-union
mandarins, like the government, give the appearance of allowing themselves to be
reluctantly pushed on by the workers, while in reality they are sabotaging the
latter's demands.
Marx' and Lenin's insistence that the way in which the state is organised
precludes its use as an instrument of proletarian revolution, notwithstanding
its democratic forms, must therefore also apply to the trade-union
organisations. Their counterrevolutionary potential cannot be destroyed or
diminished by a change of personnel, by the substitution of radical or
'revolutionary' leaders for reactionary ones. It is the form of the organisation
that renders the masses all but impotent and prevents them making the trade
union an organ of their will. The revolution can only be successful by
destroying this organisation, that is to say so completely revolutionising its
organisational structure that it becomes something completely different. The
soviet system, constructed from within, is not only capable of uprooting and
abolishing the state bureaucracy, but the trade-union bureaucracy as well; it
will form not only the new political organs to replace parliament, but also the
basis of the new trade unions. The idea that a particular organisational form is
revolutionary has been held up to scorn in the party disputes in Germany on the
grounds that what counts is the revolutionary mentality of the members. But if
the most important element of the revolution consists in the masses taking their
own affairs -- the management of society and production -- in hand themselves,
then any form of organisation which does not permit control and direction by the
masses themselves is counterrevolutionary and harmful; and it should therefore
be replaced by another form that is revolutionary in that it enables the workers
themselves to determine everything actively. This is not to say that this form
is to be set up within a still passive work-force in readiness for the
revolutionary feeling of the workers to function within it in time to come :
this new form of organisation can itself only be set up in the process of
revolution, by workers making a revolutionary intervention. But recognition of
the role played by the current form of organisation determines the attitude
which the communists have to take with regard to the attempts already being made
to weaken or burst this form.
Efforts to keep the bureaucratic apparatus as small as possible and to look to
the activity of the masses for effectiveness have been particularly marked in
the syndicalist movement, and even more so in the 'industrial' union movement.
This is why so many communists have spoken out for support of these
organisations against the central confederations. So long as capitalism remains
intact, however, these new formations cannot take on any comprehensive role --
the importance of the American IWW derives from particular circumstances, namely
the existence of a numerous, unskilled proletariat largely of foreign extraction
outside the old confederations. The Shop Committees movement and Shop Stewards
movement in England are much closer to the soviet system, in that they are mass
organs formed in opposition to the bureaucracy in the course of struggle. The
'unions' in Germany are even more deliberately modelled on the idea of the
soviet, but the stagnation of the revolution has left them weak. Every new
formation of this type that weakens the central confederations and their inner
cohesion removes an impediment to revolution and weakens the
counterrevolutionary potential of the trade-union bureaucracy. The notion of
keeping all oppositional and revolutionary forces together within the
confederations in order for them eventually to take these organisations over as
a majority and revolutionise them is certainly tempting. But in the first place,
this is a vain hope, as fanciful as the related notion of taking over the
Social-Democratic party, because the bureaucracy already knows how to deal with
an opposition before it becomes too dangerous. And secondly, revolution does not
proceed according to a smooth programme, but elemental outbreaks on the part of
passionately active groups always play a particular role within it as a force
driving it forward. If the communists were to defend the central confederations
against such initiatives out of opportunistic considerations of temporary gain,
they would reinforce the inhibitions which will later be their most formidable
obstacle.
The formation by the workers of the soviets, their own organs of power and action, in itself signifies the disintegration and dissolution of the state. As a much more recent form of organisation and one created by the proletariat itself, the trade union will survive much longer, because it has its roots in a much more living tradition of personal experience, and once it has shaken off state-democratic illusions, will therefore claim a place in the conceptual world of the proletariat. But since the trade unions have emerged from the proletariat itself, as products of its own creative activity, it is in this field that we shall see the most new formations as continual attempts to adapt to new conditions; following the process of revolution, new forms of struggle and organisation will be built on the model of the soviets in a process of constant transformation and development.
VI
The conception that revolution in Western Europe will take the form of an
orderly siege of the fortress of capital which the proletariat, organised by the
Communist Party into a disciplined army and using time-proven weapons, will
repeatedly assault until the enemy surrenders is a neo-reformist perspective
that certainly does not correspond to the conditions of struggle in the old
capitalist countries. Here there may occur revolutions and conquests of power
that quickly turn into defeat; the bourgeoisie will be able to reassert its
domination, but this will result in even greater dislocation of the economy;
transitional forms may arise which, because of their inadequacy, only prolong
the chaos. Certain conditions must be fulfilled in any society for the social
process of production and collective existence to be possible, and these
relations acquire the firm hold of spontaneous habits and moral norms -- sense
of duty, industriousness, discipline : in the first instance, the process of
revolution consists in a loosening of these old relations. Their decay is a
necessary by-product of the dissolution of capitalism, while the new bonds
corresponding to the communist reorganisation of work and society, the
development of which we have witnessed in Russia, have yet to grow sufficiently
strong. Thus, a transitional period of social and political chaos becomes
inevitable. Where the proletariat is able to seize power rapidly and keep a firm
hold upon it, as in Russia, the transitional period can be short and can be
brought rapidly to a close by positive construction. But in Western Europe, the
process of destruction will be much more drawn out. In Germany we see the
working class split into groups in which this process has reached different
stages, and which therefore cannot yet achieve unity in action. The symptoms of
recent revolutionary movements indicate that the entire nation, and indeed,
Central Europe as a whole, is dissolving, that the popular masses are
fragmenting into separate strata and regions, with each acting on its own
account : here the masses manage to arm themselves and more or less gain
political power; elsewhere they paralyse the power of the bourgeoisie in strike
movements; in a third place they shut themselves off as a peasant republic, and
somewhere else they support white guards, or perhaps toss aside the remnants of
feudalism in primitive agrarian revolts -- the destruction must obviously be
thorough-going before we can begin to think of the real construction of
communism. It cannot be the task of the Communist Party to act the schoolmaster
in this upheaval and make vain attempts to truss it in a straitjacket of
traditional forms; its task is to support the forces of the proletarian movement
everywhere, to connect the spontaneous actions together, to give them a broad
idea of how they are related to one another, and thereby prepare the unification
of the disparate actions and thus put itself at the head of the movement as a
whole.
The first phase of the dissolution of capitalism is to be seen in those
countries of the Entente where its hegemony is as yet unshaken; in an
irresistible decline in production and in the value of their currencies, an
increase in the frequency of strikes and a strong aversion to work among the
proletariat. The second phase, the period of counter-revolution, i.e. the
political hegemony of the bourgeoisie in the epoch of revolution, means complete
economic collapse; we can study this best in Germany and the remainder of
Central Europe. If a communist system had arisen immediately after the political
revolution, organised reconstruction could have begun in spite of the Versailles
and St Germain peace treaties, in spite of the poverty and the exhaustion. But
the Ebert-Noske regime no more thought of organised reconstruction than did
Renner and Bauer; [*8]
they gave the bourgeoisie a free hand, and saw their duty as consisting solely
in the suppression of the proletariat. The bourgeoisie, or rather each
individual bourgeois, acted in a characteristically bourgeois manner; each of
them thought only of making as much profit as possible and of rescuing for his
personal use whatever could be saved from the cataclysm. It is true that there
was talk in newspapers and manifestoes of the need to rebuild economic life by
organised effort, but this was simply for the workers' consumption, fine phrases
to conceal the fact that despite their exhaustion, they were under rigorous
compulsion to work in the most intensive conditions possible. In reality, of
course, not a single bourgeois concerned himself one jot with the general
national interest, but only with his personal gain. At first, trade became the
principal means of self-enrichment, as it used to be in the old days; the
depreciation of the currency provided the opportunity to export everything that
was needed for economic expansion or even for the mere survival of the masses --
raw materials, food, finished products, means of production, and after that,
factories themselves and property. Racketeering reigned everywhere among the
bourgeois strata, supported by unbridled corruption on the part of officialdom.
And so all their former possessions and everything that was not to be
surrendered as war reparations was packed off abroad by the 'leaders of
production'. Likewise in the domain of production, the private pursuit of profit
intervened to wreck economic life by its total indifference towards the common
welfare. In order to force piecework and longer working hours upon proletarians
or to get rid of rebellious elements among them, they were locked out and the
factories set at a standstill, regardless of the stagnation caused throughout
the rest of the industry as a consequence. On top of that came the incompetence
of the bureaucratic management in the state enterprises, which degenerated into
utter vacillation when the powerful hand of the government was missing.
Restriction of production, the most primitive method of raising prices and one
which competition would render impossible in a healthy capitalist economy,
became respectable once more. In the stock-market reports capitalism seems to be
flourishing again, but the high dividends are consuming the last remaining
property and are themselves being frittered away on luxuries. What we have
witnessed in Germany over the last year is not something out of the ordinary,
but the functioning of the general class character of the bourgeoisie. Their
only aim is, and always has been, personal profit, which in normal capitalism
sustains production, but which brings about the total destruction of the economy
as capitalism degenerates. And things will go the same way in other countries;
once production has been dislocated beyond a certain point and the currency has
depreciated sharply, then the complete collapse of the economy will result if
the pursuit of private profit by the bourgeoisie is given free reign -- and this
is what the political hegemony of the bourgeoisie amounts to, whatever
non-communist party it may hide behind.
The difficulties of the reconstruction facing the proletariat of Western Europe
in these circumstances are far greater than they were in Russia -- the
subsequent destruction of industrial productive forces by Kolchak and Denikin is
a pale shadow by comparison. Reconstruction cannot wait for a new political
order to be set up, it must be begun in the very process of revolution by the
proletariat taking over the organisation of production and abolishing the
bourgeoisie's control over the material essentials of life wherever the
proletariat gains power. Works councils can serve to keep an eye on the use of
goods in the factories; but it is clear that this cannot prevent all the
anti-social racketeering of the bourgeoisie. To do so, the most resolute
utilisation of armed political power is necessary. Where the profiteers
recklessly squander the national wealth without heed for the common good, where
armed reaction blindly murders and destroys, the proletariat must intervene and
fight with no half-measures in order to protect the common good and the life of
the people.
The difficulties of reorganising a society that has been completely destroyed
are so great that they appear insuperable before the event, and this makes it
impossible to set up a programme for reconstruction in advance. But they must be
overcome, and the proletariat will overcome them by the infinite self-sacrifice
and commitment, the boundless power of soul and spirit and the tremendous
psychological and moral energies which the revolution is able to awaken in its
weakened and tortured frame.
At this point, a few problems may be touched on in passing. The question of
technical cadres in industry will only give temporary difficulties : although
their thinking is bourgeois through and through and they are deeply hostile to
proletarian rule, they will nevertheless conform in the end. Getting commerce
and industry moving will above all be a question of supplying raw materials; and
this question coincides with that of food-stuffs. The question of food-supplies
is central to the revolution in Western Europe, since the highly industrialised
population cannot get by even under capitalism without imports from abroad. For
the revolution, however, the question of food-supplies is intimately bound up
with the whole agrarian question, and the principles of communist regulation of
agriculture must influence measures taken to deal with hunger even during the
revolution. Junker estates and large-scale landed property are ripe for
expropriation and collective exploitation; the small farmers will be freed from
all capitalist oppression and encouraged to adopt methods of intensive
cultivation through support and assistance of every kind from the state and
co-operative arrangements; medium-scale farmers -- who own half the land in
Western and South-Western Germany, for example -- have a strongly
individualistic and hence anti-communist mentality, but their economic position
is as yet unassailable : they cannot therefore be expropriated, and will have to
be integrated into the sphere of the economic process as a whole through the
exchange of products and the development of productivity, for it is only with
communism that maximum productivity can be developed in agriculture and the
individual enterprise introduced by capitalism transcended. It follows that the
workers will see in the landowners a hostile class and in the rural workers and
small farmers allies in the revolution, while they have no cause for making
enemies of the middle farming strata, even though the latter may be of a hostile
disposition towards them. This means that during the first period of chaos
preceding the establishment of a system of exchanging products, requisitions
must be carried out only as an emergency measure among these strata, as an
absolutely unavoidable balancing operation between famine in the towns and in
the country. The struggle against hunger will have to be dealt with primarily by
imports from abroad. Soviet Russia, with her rich stocks of foodstuffs and raw
materials, will thus save and provide for the revolution in Western Europe. The
Western European working class thus has the highest and most personal interest
in the defence and support of Soviet Russia.
The reconstruction of the economy, inordinately difficult as it will be, is not the main problem for the Communist Party. When the proletarian masses develop their intellectual and moral potential to the full, they will resolve it themselves. The prime duty of the Communist Party is to arouse and foster this potential. It must eradicate all the received ideas which leave the proletariat timid and unsure of itself, set itself against everything that breeds illusions among the workers about easier courses and restrains them from the most radical measures, energetically oppose all the tendencies which stop short at half-measures or compromises. And there are still many such tendencies.
VII
The transition from capitalism to communism will not proceed according to a
simple schema of conquering political power, introducing the council system and
then abolishing private commerce, even though this represents the broad outline
of development. That would only be possible if one could undertake
reconstruction in some sort of void. But out of capitalism there have grown
forms of production and organisation which have firm roots in the consciousness
of the masses, and which can themselves only be overthrown in a process of
political and economic revolution. We have already mentioned the agrarian forms
of production, which will have to follow a particular course of development.
There have grown up in the working class under capitalism forms of organisation,
different in detail from country to country, which represent a powerful force,
which cannot immediately be abolished and which will thus play an important role
in the course of the revolution.
This applies in the first instance to political parties. The role of social
democracy in the present crisis of capitalism is sufficiently well known, but in
Central Europe it has practically played itself out. Even its most radical
sections, such as the USP in Germany, exercise a harmful influence, not only by
splitting the proletariat, but above all by confusing the masses and restraining
them from action with their social-democratic notions of political leaders
directing the fate of the people by their deeds and dealings. And if the
Communist Party constitutes itself into a parliamentary party which, instead of
attempting to assert the dictatorship of the class, attempts to establish that
of the party -- that is to say the party leadership -- then it too may become a
hindrance to development. The attitude of the Communist Party of Germany during
the revolutionary March movement, when it announced that the proletariat was not
yet ripe for dictatorship and that it would therefore encounter any 'genuinely
socialist government' that might be formed as a 'loyal opposition', in other
words restrain the proletariat from waging the fiercest revolutionary struggle
against such a government, was itself criticised from many quarters. [2]
A government of socialist party leaders may arise in the course of the
revolution as a transitional form; this will be expressing a temporary balance
between the revolutionary and bourgeois forces, and it will tend to freeze and
perpetuate the temporary balance between the destruction of the old and the
development of the new. It would be something like a more radical version of the
Ebert-Haase-Dittmann regime; [*9]
and its basis shows what can be expected of it : a seeming balance of hostile
classes, but under the preponderance of the bourgeoisie, a mixture of
parliamentary democracy and a kind of council system for the workers,
socialisation subject to the veto of the Entente powers' imperialism with the
profits of capital being maintained, futile attempts to prevent classes clashing
violently. It is always the workers who take a beating in such circumstances.
Not only can a regime of this sort achieve nothing in terms of reconstruction,
it does not even attempt to do so, since its only aim is to halt the revolution
in mid-course. Since it attempts both to prevent the further disintegration of
capitalism and also the development of the full political power of the
proletariat, its effects are directly counter-revolutionary. Communists have no
choice but to fight such regimes in the most uncompromising manner.
Just as in Germany the Social-Democratic Party was formerly the leading
organisation of the proletariat, so in England the trade-union movement, in the
course of almost a century of history, has put down the deepest roots in the
working class. Here it has long been the ideal of the younger radical
trade-union leaders -- Robert Smillie is a typical example -- for the working
class to govern society by means of the trade-union organisation. Even the
revolutionary syndicalists and the spokesmen of the IWW in America, although
affiliated to the Third International, imagine the future rule of the
proletariat primarily along these lines. Radical trade-unionists see the soviet
system not as the purest form of proletarian dictatorship, but rather as a
regime of politicians and intellectuals built up on a base of working-class
organisations. They see the trade union movement, on the other hand, as the
natural organisation of the proletariat, created by the proletariat, which
governs itself within it and which will go on to govern the whole of the
work-process. Once the old ideal of 'industrial democracy' has been realised and
the trade union is master in the factory, its collective organ, the trade-union
congress, will take over the function of guiding and managing the economy as a
whole. It will then be the real 'parliament of labour' and replace the old
bourgeois parliament of parties. These circles often shrink from a one-sided and
'unfair' class dictatorship as an infringement of democracy, however; labour is
to rule, but others are not to be without rights. Therefore, in addition to the
labour parliament, which governs work, the basis of life, a second house could
be elected by universal suffrage to represent the whole nation and exercise its
influence on public and cultural matters and questions of general political
concern.
This conception of government by the trade unions should not be confused with
'labourism', the politics of the 'Labour Party', which is currently led by
trade-unionists. This latter stands for the penetration of the bourgeois
parliament of today by the trade unions, who will build a 'workers' party' on
the same footing as other parties with the objective of becoming the party of
government in their place. This party is completely bourgeois, and there is
little to choose between Henderson and Ebert. It will give the English
bourgeoisie the opportunity to continue its old policies on a broader basis as
soon as the threat of pressure from below makes this necessary, and hence weaken
and confuse the workers by taking their leaders into the government. A
government of the workers' party, something which seemed imminent a year ago
when the masses were in so revolutionary a mood, but which the leaders
themselves have put back into the distant future by holding the radical current
down, would, like the Ebert regime in Germany, have been nothing but government
on behalf of the bourgeoisie. But it remains to be seen whether the far-sighted,
subtle English bourgeoisie does not trust itself to stultify and suppress the
masses more effectively than these working-class bureaucrats.
A genuine trade-union government as conceived by the radicals is as unlike this
workers' party politics, this 'labourism', as revolution is unlike reform. Only
a real revolution in political relationships -- whether violent or in keeping
with the old English models -- could bring it about; and in the eyes of the
broad masses, it would represent the conquest of power by the proletariat. But
it is nevertheless quite different from the goal of communism. It is based on
the limited ideology which develops in trade-union struggles, where one does not
confront world capital as a whole in all its interwoven forms -- finance
capital, bank capital, agricultural capital, colonial capital -- but only its
industrial form. It is based on marxist economics, now being eagerly studied in
the English working class, which show production to be a mechanism of
exploitation, but without the deeper marxist social theory, historical
materialism. It recognises that work constitutes the basis of the world and thus
wants labour to rule the world; but it does not see that all the abstract
spheres of political and intellectual life are determined by the mode of
production, and it is therefore disposed to leave them to the bourgeois
intelligentsia, provided that the latter recognises the primacy of labour. Such
a workers' regime would in reality be a government of the trade-union
bureaucracy complemented by the radical section of the old state bureaucracy,
which it would leave in charge of the specialist fields of culture, politics and
suchlike on the grounds of their special competence in these matters. It is
obvious that its economic programme will not coincide with communist
expropriation, but will only go so far as the expropriation of big capital,
while the 'honest' profits of the smaller entrepreneur, hitherto fleeced and
kept in subjection by this big capital, will be spared. It is even open to doubt
whether they will take up the standpoint of complete freedom for India, an
integral element of the communist programme, on the colonial question, this
life-nerve of the ruling class of England.
It cannot be predicted in what manner, to what degree and with what purity a
political form of this kind will be realised. The English bourgeoisie has always
understood the art of using well-timed concessions to check movement towards
revolutionary objectives; how far it is able to continue this tactic in the
future will depend primarily on the depth of the economic crisis. If trade-union
discipline is eroded from below by uncontrollable industrial revolts and
communism simultaneously gains a hold on the masses, then the radical and
reformist trade-unionists will agree on a common line; if the struggle goes
sharply against the old reformist politics of the leaders, the radical
trade-unionists and the communists will go hand in hand.
These tendencies are not confined to England. The trade unions are the most
powerful workers' organisations in every country; as soon as a political clash
topples the old state power, it will inevitably fall into the hands of the best
organised and most influential force on hand. In Germany in November 1918, the
trade-union executives formed the counter-revolutionary guard behind Ebert; and
in the recent March crisis, they entered the political arena in an attempt to
gain direct influence upon the composition of the government. The only purpose
of this support for the Ebert regime was to deceive the proletariat the more
subtly with the fraud of a 'government under the control of the workers'
organisations'. But it shows that the same tendency exists here as in England.
And even if the Legiens and Bauers [*10]
are too tainted by counter-revolution, new radical trade-unionists from the USP
tendency will take their place just as last year the Independents under Dissmann
won the leadership of the great metalworkers' federation. If a revolutionary
movement overthrows the Ebert regime, this tightly organised force of seven
million will doubtless be ready to seize power, in conjunction with the C P or
in opposition to it.
A 'government of the working class' along these lines by the trade unions cannot
be stable; although it may be able to hold its own for a long time during a slow
process of economic decline, in an acute revolutionary crisis it will only be
able to survive as a tottering transitional phenomenon. Its programme, as we
have outlined above, cannot be radical. But a current which will sanction such
measures not, like communism, as a temporary transitional form at most to be
deliberately utilised for the purpose of building up a communist organisation,
but as a definitive programme, must necessarily come into conflict with and
antagonism towards the masses. Firstly, because it does not render bourgeois
elements completely powerless, but grants them a certain position of power in
the bureaucracy and perhaps in parliament, from which they can continue to wage
the class struggle. The bourgeoisie will endeavour to consolidate these
positions of strength, while the proletariat, because it cannot annihilate the
hostile class under these conditions, must attempt to establish a
straightforward soviet system as the organ of its dictatorship; in this battle
between two mighty opponents, economic reconstruction will be impossible. [3]
And secondly, because a government of trade-union leaders of this kind cannot
resolve the problems which society is posing; for the latter can only be
resolved through the proletarian masses' own initiative and activity, fuelled by
the self-sacrificing and unbounded enthusiasm which only communism, with all its
perspectives of total freedom and supreme intellectual and moral elevation, can
command. A current which seeks to abolish material poverty and exploitation, but
deliberately confines itself to this goal, which leaves the bourgeois
superstructure intact and at the same time holds back from revolutionising the
mental outlook and ideology of the proletariat, cannot release these great
energies in the masses; and so it will be incapable of resolving the material
problems of initiating economic expansion and ending the chaos.
The trade-union regime will attempt to consolidate and stabilise the prevailing
level of the revolutionary process, just like the 'genuinely socialist' regime
-- except that it will do so at a much more developed stage, when the primacy of
the bourgeoisie has been destroyed and a certain balance of class power has
arisen with the proletariat predominant; when the entire profit of capital can
no longer be saved, but only its less repellent petty-capitalist form; when it
is no longer bourgeois but socialist expansion that is being attempted, albeit
with insufficient resources. It thus signifies the last stand of the bourgeois
class : when the bourgeoisie can no longer withstand the assault of the masses
on the Scheidemann-Henderson-Renaudel line, it falls back to its last line of
defence, the Smillie-Dissman-Merrheim line. [*11]
When it is no longer able to deceive the proletariat by having 'workers' in a
bourgeois or socialist regime, it can only attempt to keep the proletariat from
its ultimate radical goals by a 'government of workers' organisations' and thus
in part retain its privileged position. Such a government is
counterrevolutionary in nature, in so far as it seeks to arrest the necessary
development of the revolution towards the total destruction of the bourgeois
world and prevent total communism from attaining its greatest and clearest
objectives. The struggle of the communists may at present often run parallel
with that of the radical trade-unionists; but it would be dangerous tactics not
to clearly identify the differences of principle and objective when this
happens. And these considerations also bear upon the attitude of the communists
towards the trade-union confederations of today; everything which consolidates
their unity and strength consolidates the force which will one day put itself in
the way of the onward march of the revolution.
When communism conducts a strong and principled struggle against this
transitional political form, it represents the living revolutionary tendencies
in the proletariat. The same revolutionary action on the part of the proletariat
which prepares the way for the rule of a worker-bureaucracy by smashing the
apparatus of bourgeois power simultaneously drives the masses on to form their
own organs, the councils, which immediately undermine the basis of the
bureaucratic trade unions' machinery. The development of the soviet system is at
the same time the struggle of the proletariat to replace the incomplete form of
its dictatorship by complete dictatorship. But with the intensive labour which
all the never-ending attempts to 'reorganise' the economy will demand, a
leadership bureaucracy will be able to retain great power for a long time, and
the masses' capacity to get rid of it will only develop slowly. These various
forms and phases of the process of development do not, moreover, follow on in
the abstract, logical succession in which we have set them down as degrees of
maturation : they all occur at the same time, become entangled and coexist in a
chaos of tendencies that complement each other, combat each other and dissolve
each other, and it is through this struggle that the general development of the
revolution proceeds. As Marx himself put it:
Proletarian revolutions constantly criticise themselves, continually interrupt themselves in the course of their own development, come back to the seemingly complete in order to start it all over again, treat the inadequacies of their own first attempts with cruelly radical contempt, seem only to throw their adversaries down to enable them to draw new strength from the earth and rise up again to face them all the more gigantic.
The resistances which issue from the proletariat itself as expressions of weakness must be overcome in order for it to develop its full strength; and this process of development is generated by conflict, it proceeds from crisis to crisis, driven on by struggle. In the beginning was the deed, but it was only the beginning. It demands an instant of united purpose to overthrow a ruling class, but only the lasting unity conferred by clear insight can keep a firm grasp upon victory. Otherwise there comes the reverse which is not a return to the old rulers, but a new hegemony in a new form, with new personnel and new illusions. Each new phase of the revolution brings a new layer of as yet unused leaders to the surface as the representatives of particular forms of organisation, and the overthrow of each of these in turn represents a higher stage in the proletariat's self-emancipation. The strength of the proletariat is not merely the raw power of the single violent act which throws the enemy down, but also the strength of mind which breaks the old mental dependence and thus succeeds in keeping a tight hold on what has been seized by storm. The growth of this strength in the ebb and flow of revolution is the growth of proletarian freedom.
VIII
In Western Europe, capitalism is in a state of progressive collapse; yet in
Russia, despite the terrible difficulties, production is being built up under a
new order. The hegemony of communism does not mean that production is completely
based on a communist order -- this latter is only possible after a relatively
lengthy process of development -- but that the working class is consciously
developing the system of production towards communism. [4]
This development cannot at any point go beyond what the prevailing technical and
social foundations permit, and therefore it inevitably manifests transitional
forms in which vestiges of the old bourgeois world appear. According to what we
have heard of the situation in Russia here in Western Europe, such vestiges do
indeed exist there.
Russia is an enormous peasant land; industry there has not developed to the
unnatural extent of a 'workshop' of the world as it has in Western Europe,
making export and expansion a question of life and death, but just sufficiently
for the formation of a working class able to take over the government of society
as a developed class. Agriculture is the occupation of the popular masses, and
modern, large-scale farms are in a minority, although they play a valuable role
in the development of communism. It is the small units that make up the
majority : not the wretched, exploited little properties of Western Europe, but
farms which secure the welfare of the peasants and which the soviet regime is
seeking to integrate more and more closely into the system as a whole by means
of material assistance in the form of extra equipment and tools and by intensive
cultural and specialist education. It is nevertheless natural that this form of
enterprise generates a certain spirit of individualism alien to communism,
which, among the 'rich peasants', has become a hostile, resolutely
anti-communist frame of mind. The Entente has doubtless speculated on this in
its proposals to trade with co-operatives, intending to initiate a bourgeois
counter-movement by drawing these strata into bourgeois pursuit of profit. But
because fear of feudal reaction binds them to the present regime as their major
interest, such efforts must come to nothing, and when Western European
imperialism collapses this danger will disappear completely.
Industry is predominantly a centrally organised, exploitation-free system of
production; it is the heart of the new order, and the leadership of the state is
based on the industrial proletariat. But even this system of production is in a
transitional phase; the technical and administrative cadres in the factories and
in the state apparatus exercise greater authority than is commensurate with
developed communism. The need to increase production quickly and the even more
urgent need to create an efficient army to fend off the attacks of reaction made
it imperative to make good the lack of reliable leaders in the shortest possible
time; the threat of famine and the assaults of the enemy did not permit all
resources to be directed towards a more gradual raising of the general level of
competence and to the development of all as the basis of a collective communist
system. Thus a new bureaucracy inevitably arose from the new leaders and
functionaries, absorbing the old bureaucracy into itself. This is at times
regarded with some anxiety as a peril to the new order, and it can only be
removed by a broad development of the masses. Although the latter is being
undertaken with the utmost energy, only the communist surplus by which man
ceases to be the slave of his labour will form a lasting foundation for it. Only
surplus creates the material conditions for freedom and equality; so long as the
struggle against nature and against the forces of capital remains intense, an
inordinate degree of specialisation will remain necessary.
It is worth noting that although our analysis predicts that development in
Western Europe will take a different direction from that of Russia insofar as we
can foresee the course which it will follow as the revolution progresses, both
manifest the same politico-economic structure : industry run according to
communist principles with workers' councils forming the element of
self-management under the technical direction and political hegemony of a
worker-bureaucracy, while agriculture retains an individualistic,
petty-bourgeois character in the dominant small and medium-scale sectors. But
this coincidence is not so extraordinary for all that, in that this kind of
social structure is determined not by previous political history, but by basic
technico-economic conditions -- the level of development attained by industrial
and agricultural technology and the formation of the proletarian masses -- which
are in both cases the same. [5]
But despite this coincidence, there is a great difference in significance and
goal. In Western Europe this politico-economic structure forms a transitional
stage at which the bourgeoisie is ultimately able to arrest its decline, whereas
in Russia the attempt is consciously being made to pursue development further in
a communist direction. In Western Europe, it forms a phase in the class struggle
between bourgeoisie and proletariat, in Russia a phase in the new economic
expansion. With the same external forms, Western Europe is on the downward path
of a declining culture, Russia on the rising movement of a new culture.
While the Russian revolution was still young and weak and was looking to an
imminent outbreak of revolution in Europe to save it, a different conception of
its significance reigned. Russia, it was then maintained, was only an outpost of
the revolution where favourable circumstances had enabled the proletariat to
seize power so early; but this proletariat was weak and unformed and almost
swallowed up in the infinite masses of the peasantry. The proletariat of
economically backward Russia could only make temporary advances; as soon as the
great masses of the fully-fledged Western European proletariat came to power in
the most developed industrial countries, with all their technical and
organisational experience and their ancient wealth of culture, then we should
see communism flourish to an extent that would make the Russian contribution,
welcome as it was, seem weak and inadequate by comparison. The heart and
strength of the new communist world lay where capitalism had reached the height
of its power, in England, in Germany, in America, and laid the basis for the new
mode of production.
This conception takes no account of the difficulties facing the revolution in
Western Europe. Where the proletariat only slowly gains firm control and the
bourgeoisie is upon occasion able to win back power in part or in whole, nothing
can come of economic reconstruction. Capitalist expansion is impossible; every
time the bourgeoisie obtains a free hand, it creates new chaos and destroys the
bases which could have served for the construction of communist production.
Again and again it prevents the consolidation of the new proletarian order by
bloody reaction and destruction. This occurred even in Russia : the destruction
of industrial installations and mines in the Urals and the Donetz basin by
Kolchak and Denikin, as well as the need to deploy the best workers and the
greater part of the productive forces against them, was a serious blow to the
economy and damaged and delayed communist expansion -- and even though the
initiation of trade relations with America and the West may considerably favour
a new upturn, the greatest, most self-sacrificing effort will be needed on the
part of the masses in Russia to achieve complete recovery from this damage. But
-- and herein lies the difference -- the soviet republic has remained intact in
Russia as an organised centre of communist power which has already developed
tremendous internal stability. In Western Europe there will be just as much
destruction and murder, here too the best forces of the proletariat will be
wiped out in the course of the struggle, but here we lack an already
consolidated, organised soviet state that could serve as a source of strength.
The classes are wearing each other out in a devastating civil war, and so long
as construction comes to nothing, chaos and misery will continue to rule. This
will be the lot of countries where the proletariat does not immediately
recognise its task with clear insight and united purpose, that is to say where
bourgeois traditions weaken and split the workers, dim their eyes and subdue
their hearts. It will take decades to overcome the infectious, paralysing
influence of bourgeois culture upon the proletariat in the old capitalist
countries. And meanwhile, production lies in ruins and the country degenerates
into an economic desert.
At the same time as Western Europe, stagnating economically, painfully struggles
with its bourgeois past, in the East, in Russia, the economy is flourishing
under a communist order. What used to distinguish the developed capitalist
countries from the backward East was the tremendous sophistication of their
material and mental means of production -- a dense network of railways,
factories, ships, and a dense, technically skilled population. But during the
collapse of capitalism, in the long civil war, in the period of stagnation when
too little is being produced, this heritage is being dissipated, used up or
destroyed. The indestructible forces of production, science, technical
capabilities, are not tied to these countries; their bearers will find a new
homeland in Russia, where trade will also provide a sanctuary for part of
Europe's material and technical riches. Soviet Russia's trade agreement with
Western Europe and America will, if taken seriously and operated with a will,
tend to accentuate this contradiction, because it furthers the economic
expansion of Russia while delaying collapse in Western Europe, thus giving
capitalism a breathing space and paralysing the revolutionary potential of the
masses -- for how long and to what extent remains to be seen. Politically, this
will be expressed in an apparent stabilisation of a bourgeois regime or one of
the other types discussed above and in a simultaneous rise to power of
opportunist tendencies within communism; by recognising the old methods of
struggle and engaging in parliamentary activity and loyal opposition within the
old trade unions, the communist parties in Western Europe will acquire a legal
status, like social-democracy before them, and in the face of this, the radical,
revolutionary current will see itself forced into a minority. However, it is
entirely improbable that capitalism will enjoy a real new flowering; the private
interests of the capitalists trading with Russia will not defer to the economy
as a whole, and for the sake of profit they will ship off essential basic
elements of production to Russia; nor can the proletariat again be brought into
a state of dependence. Thus the crisis will drag on; lasting improvement is
impossible and will continually be arrested; the process of revolution and civil
war will be delayed and drawn out, the complete rule of communism and the
beginning of new growth put off into the distant future. Meanwhile, in the East,
the economy will develop untrammelled in a powerful upsurge, and new paths will
be opened up on the basis of the most advanced natural science -- which the West
is incapable of exploiting -- together with the new social science, humanity's
newly won control over its own social forces. And these forces, increased a
hundredfold by the new energies flowing from freedom and equality, will make
Russia the centre of the new communist world order.
This will not be the first time in world history that the centre of the
civilised world has shifted in the transition to a new mode of production or one
of its phases. In antiquity, it moved from the Middle East to Southern Europe,
in the Middle Ages, from Southern to Western Europe; with the rise of colonial
and merchant capital, first Spain, then Holland and England became the leading
nation, and with the rise of industry England. The cause of these shifts can in
fact be embraced in a general historical principle : where the earlier economic
form reached its highest development, the material and mental forces, the
politico-juridical institutions which secured its existence and which were
necessary for its full development, were so strongly constructed that they
offered almost insuperable resistance to the development of new forms. Thus, the
institution of slavery inhibited the development of feudalism at the twilight of
antiquity; thus, the guild laws applying in the great wealthy cities of medieval
times meant that later capitalist manufacturing could only develop in other
centres hitherto insignificant; thus in the late eighteenth century, the
political order of French absolutism which had fostered industry under Colbert
obstructed the introduction of the large-scale industry that made England a
manufacturing nation. There even exists a corresponding law in organic nature, a
corollary to Darwin's 'survival of the fittest' known as the law of the
'survival of the unfitted' : when a species of animal has become specialised and
differentiated into a wealth of forms all perfectly adapted to particular
conditions of life in that period -- like the Saurians in the Secondary Era --
it becomes incapable of evolving into a new species; all the various options for
adaptation and development have been lost and cannot be retrieved. The
development of a new species proceeds from primitive forms which, because they
have remained undifferentiated, have retained all their potential for
development, and the old species which is incapable of further adaptation dies
out. The phenomenon whereby leadership in economic, political and cultural
development continually shifts from one people or nation to another in the
course of human history -- explained away by bourgeois science with the fantasy
of a nation or race having 'exhausted its life force' -- is a particular
incidence of this organic rule.
![]()
We now see why it is that the primacy of Western Europe and America -- which the
bourgeoisie is pleased to attribute to the intellectual and moral superiority of
their race -- will evaporate, and where we can foresee it shifting to. New
countries, where the masses are not poisoned by the fug of a bourgeois ideology,
where the beginnings of industrial development have raised the mind from its
former slumber and a communist sense of solidarity has awoken, where the raw
materials are available to use the most advanced technology inherited from
capitalism for a renewal of the traditional forms of production, where
oppression elicits the development of the qualities fostered by struggle, but
where no over-powerful bourgeoisie can obstruct this process of regeneration --
it is such countries that will be the centres of the new communist world.
Russia, itself half a continent when taken in conjunction with Siberia, already
stands first in line. But these conditions are also present to a greater or
lesser extent in other countries of the East, in India, in China. Although there
may be other sources of immaturity, these Asian countries must not be overlooked
in considering the communist world revolution.
This world revolution is not seen in its full universal significance if
considered only from the Western European perspective. Russia not only forms the
eastern part of Europe, it is much more the western part of Asia, and not only
in a geographical, but also in a politico-economic sense. The old Russia had
little in common with Europe : it was the westernmost of those politico-economic
structures which Marx termed 'oriental despotic powers', and which included all
the great empires of ancient and modern Asia. Based on the village communism of
a largely homogeneous peasantry, there evolved within these an absolute rule by
princes and the nobility, which also drew support from relatively small-scale
but nevertheless important trade in craft goods. Into this mode of production,
which, despite superficial changes of ruler, had gone on reproducing itself in
the same way for thousands of years, Western European capital penetrated from
all sides, dissolving, fermenting, undermining, exploiting, impoverishing; by
trade, by direct subjection and plunder, by exploitation of natural riches, by
the construction of railways and factories, by state loans to the princes, by
the export of food and raw materials -- all of which is encompassed in the term
'colonial policy'. Whereas India, with its enormous riches, was conquered early,
plundered and then proletarianised and industrialised, it was only later,
through modern colonial policy, that other countries fell prey to developed
capital. Although on the surface Russia had played the role of a great European
power since 1700, it too became a colony of European capital; due to direct
military contact with Europe it went earlier and more precipitately the way that
Persia and China were subsequently to go. Before the last world war 70 per cent
of the iron industry, the greater part of the railways, 90 per cent of platinum
production and 75 per cent of the naphtha industry were in the hands of European
capitalists, and through the enormous national debts of tsarism, the latter also
exploited the Russian peasantry past the point of starvation. While the working
class in Russia worked under the same conditions as those of Western Europe,
with the result that a body of revolutionary marxist views developed, Russia's
entire economic situation nevertheless made it the westernmost of the Asiatic
empires.
The Russian revolution is the beginning of the great revolt by Asia against the
Western European capital concentrated in England. As a rule, we in Western
Europe only consider the effects which it has here, where the advanced
theoretical development of the Russian revolutionaries has made them the
teachers of the proletariat as it reaches towards communism. But its workings in
the East are more important still; and Asian questions therefore influence the
policies of the soviet republic almost more than European questions. The call
for freedom and for the self-determination of all peoples and for struggle
against European capital throughout Asia is going out from Moscow, where
delegations from Asiatic tribes are arriving one after another. [6]
The threads lead from the soviet republic of Turan to India and the Moslem
countries; in Southern China the revolutionaries have sought to follow the
example of government by soviets; the pan-Islamic movement developing in the
Middle East under the leadership of Turkey is trying to connect with Russia.
This is where the significance of the world struggle between Russia and England
as the exponents of two social systems lies; and this struggle cannot therefore
end in real peace, despite temporary pauses, for the process of ferment in Asia
is continuing. English politicians who look a little further ahead than the
petty-bourgeois demagogue Lloyd George clearly see the danger here threatening
English domination of the world, and with it the whole of capitalism; they
rightly say that Russia is more dangerous than Germany ever was. But they cannot
act forcefully, for the beginnings of revolutionary development in the English
proletariat do not permit any regime other than one of bourgeois demagogy.
The interests of Asia are in essence the interests of the human race. Eight
hundred million people live in Russia, China and India, in the Sibero-Russian
plain and the fertile valleys of the Ganges and the Yangtse Kiang, more than
half the population of the earth and almost three times as many as in the part
of Europe under capitalist domination. And the seeds of revolution have appeared
everywhere, besides Russia; on the one hand, powerful strike-movements flaring
up where industrial proletarians are huddled together, as in Bombay and Hankow;
on the other, nationalist movements under the leadership of the rising national
intelligentsia. As far as can be judged from the reticent English press, the
world war was a powerful stimulus to national movements, but then suppressed
them forcefully, while industry is in such an upsurge that gold is flowing in
torrents from America to East Asia. When the wave of economic crisis hits these
countries -- it seems to have overtaken Japan already -- new struggles can be
expected. The question may be raised as to whether purely nationalist movements
seeking a national capitalist order in Asia should be supported, since they will
be hostile to their own proletarian liberation movements; but development will
clearly not take this course. It is true that until now the rising
intelligentsia has orientated itself in terms of European nationalism and, as
the ideologues of the developing indigenous bourgeoisie, advocated a national
bourgeois government on Western lines; but this idea is paling with the decline
of Europe, and they will doubtless come strongly under the intellectual sway of
Russian bolshevism and find in it the means to fuse with the proletarian
strike-movements and uprisings. Thus, the national liberation movements of Asia
will perhaps adopt a communist world view and a communist programme on the firm
material ground of the workers' and peasants' class struggle against the
barbaric oppression of world capital sooner than external appearances might lead
us to believe.
The fact that these peoples are predominantly agrarian need be no more of an
obstacle than it was in Russia : communist communities will not consist of
tightly-packed huddles of factory towns, for the capitalist division between
industrial and agricultural nations will cease to exist; agriculture will have
to take up a great deal of space within them. The predominant agricultural
character will nevertheless render the revolution more difficult, since the
mental disposition is less favourable under such conditions. Doubtless a
prolonged period of intellectual and political upheaval will also be necessary
in these countries. The difficulties here are different from those in Europe,
less of an active than of a passive nature : they lie less in the strength of
the resistance than in the slow pace at which activity is awakening, not in
overcoming internal chaos, but in developing the unity to drive out the foreign
exploiter. We will not go into the particulars of these difficulties here -- the
religious and national fragmentation of India, the petty-bourgeois character of
China. However the political and economic forms continue to develop, the central
problem which must first be overcome is to destroy the hegemony of European and
American capital.
The hard struggle for the annihilation of capitalism is the common task which the workers of Western Europe and the USA have to accomplish hand-in-hand with the vast populations of Asia. We are at present only at the beginning of this process. When the German revolution takes a decisive turn and connects with Russia, when revolutionary mass struggles break out in England and America, when revolt flares up in India, when communism pushes its frontiers forward to the Rhine and the Indian Ocean, then the world revolution will enter into its next mighty phase. With its vassals in the League of Nations and its American and Japanese allies, the world-ruling English bourgeoisie, assaulted from within and without, its world power threatened by colonial rebellions and wars of liberation, paralysed internally by strikes and civil war, will have to exert all its strength and raise mercenary armies against both enemies. When the English working class, backed up by the rest of the European proletariat, attacks its bourgeoisie, it will fight doubly for communism, clearing the way for communism in England and helping to free Asia. And conversely, it will be able to count on the support of the main communist forces when armed hirelings of the bourgeoisie seek to drown its struggle in blood -- for Western Europe and the islands off its coast are only a peninsula projecting from the great Russo-Asian complex of lands. The common struggle against capital will unite the proletarian masses of the whole world. And when finally, at the end of the arduous struggle, the European workers, deeply exhausted, stand in the clear morning light of freedom, they will greet the liberated peoples of Asia in the East and shake hands in Moscow, the capital of the new humanity.
Postscript to
World Revolution and Communist Tactics
![]()
The above theses were written in April and sent off to Russia to be available
for consideration by the executive committee and the congress in making their
tactical decisions. The situation has meanwhile altered, in that the executive
committee in Moscow and the leading comrades in Russia have come down completely
on the side of opportunism, with the result that this tendency prevailed at the
Second Congress of the Communist International.
The policy in question first made its appearance in Germany, when Radek, using all the ideological and material influence that he and the KPD leadership cou