AGAINST THE INTERNATIONAL ATTACK OF THE BOURGEOISIE
LET US RECONSTRUCT THE INTERNATIONAL PROLETARIAN ARMY
As militant communists in the OCI, engaged in the battle against capitalist
exploitation by the side of the proletariat, we warmly welcome this international
meeting in Paris.
An increasingly, global world economy and bourgeoisie that imposes its anti-proletariat
policies throughout the world by means of its supranational institutions (from the
IMF to the World Bank), now makes the total lack of any international coordination of the
proletariat intolerable.
One of the crucial reasons for no longer delaying a coordination of this type is the
general crisis, marked by violent contradictions, that has been gripping the world
capitalist economy for the last twenty years, and the consequences that this has had on
the political and economic conditions of the working class.
Hard-won episodes of economic recovery are followed by periods of increasingly profound
recession, and the competition among Western capitalists to snatch slices of the market
from each others hands has escalated beyond all recognition. All of this has led to a
vicious attack against the living and working conditions of the Western proletariat and an
increase in the super-exploitation, looting and oppression of the poor masses in the
capitalistically weaker countries. The incredible increases in productivity that the
exploitation of the working class has provided now means that unemployment continues to
grow even when the economy goes through one of its periods of recovery.
In all of the countries of the West, from Sweden to Germany, the immediate future promises
new cuts in public expenditure and welfare state, a ruthless drive to ensure a devastating
reduction in labour costs by whatever means, and even greater exploitation as a result of
longer working hours and further increases in productivity.
And yet there is still a widespread conviction among the proletariat of all countries that
this is just a temporary situation destined to be overcome by appropriate improvements
made at a national level with the contribution of all of the classes interested in the
well-being of the country.
This state of mind is above all due to the actions of reformist parties, which have been
teaching the proletariat for years to think in narrowly national terms, and have spread
the idea that there is no possible alternative to capitalism (even though, of course, it
needs to be improved).
But given that all of the major countries are afflicted by the same problems, the
root cause is clearly international in nature. We find ourselves faced by an increasingly
integrated world economy in which, for example, it is possible to transfer enormous
amounts of financial capital (more than can be found in any State budget) in no more than
a fraction of a second, and companies look at the entire planet as a source of possible
outlets, not only for their products, but also for their productive investments (because
they can then take advantage of the best conditions for increasing the value of their
capital).
It is this mechanism of a fully global capitalist economy that has come unhinged, and it
is the relentless and impersonal laws of the world market which force capitalists
everywhere to mount their ruthless attacks against their own proletariat in order to
remain competitive and off load onto the shoulders of the workers the costs of the
international crisis that they find themselves totally unable to overcome in any way.
All of the solutions offered to the working class at a national level are illusory. They
only serve the various bourgeoisie as a means of imposing further sacrifices on the
proletariat, in the name of the interests of the country but, in reality, to sustain
their own policies of economic, political and military penetration and create divisions
and conflicts among the proletariat of different countries, in order to weaken them
and make it easier to bend them to their own class interests. It is no accident that, at
the same time as they are launching their offensive against the conquests of the workers
in Western countries, they are also multiplying their military suppression at the revolts
of the oppressed masses and trying to impose new methods of looting and starvation wages
(as, for example, in ex-Yugoslavia) in order to keep their profits high and further
blackmail the workers in the metropoli.
What has to be understood is that no national recipe of any kind can keep the effects
of the international crisis at bay and, even more, that no possible solution exists that
can reconcile the interests of capital and labour. At a time of crisis, these interests
become even more conflicting and antagonistic: profits and competitiveness can only be
defended by destroying the living and working conditions of the proletariat.
The workers must place themselves at the level of conflict imposed by capitalism,
directing their efforts and energies towards the reconstruction of an international
proletarian army. It is only by recovering the international unity of the working
class that it will possible to oppose the offensive of bourgeoisie which, however
divided it may be in terms of competition, acts in unison against the proletariat by
crudely intensifying its exploitation and oppression everywhere. Every blow that
Governments and employers can inflict against their own workers represents a further
weakening of the proletariat as a whole and, viceversa, the defeat of bourgeois plans in a
single nation reinforces the international workers' movement.
Over the last few years, the working class has everywhere given proof of its willingness
to respond to the attacks against it: from the Italians against Berlusconi to the French
against Juppé, and from Britain to Germany. These struggles have demonstrated the
strength of the proletariat when it is united, but they have also highlighted the urgency
of its unification in an international front and the joining of this with the struggles
of the masses in the East and South of the world.
However, any discussion or action in this sense must be based as from now on
real power relationships: that is the independent organisation of the
proletariat and mobilisation and struggle - the proletariat's unique
point of strength.
There must be no false illusions about using bourgeois institutions or the parliamentary
route to thrust back the capitalist offensive. All of the political parties in the West
that have taken the electoral and parliamentary road have ended up by adopting an attitude
of loyalty towards their own institutions, which has first led them to subordinate the
workers', interests to the compatibility between these and the national economy and then,
step by step, to the progressive renunciation of pieces of their own political programmes.
The interests of the proletariat can only be defended outside the ambit of
parliaments and bourgeois institutions, which are in any case becoming increasingly
emptied of their decision making power by capitalism itself. As we are constantly reminded
by the obsessive propaganda of our economic masters: "the markets vote every day and
can oblige governments and parliaments to adopt those measures that are not just
necessary, but indispensable for setting national economics to rights".
Our response to the attempts of the bourgeoisie to divide and set in conflict the
proletariat of different countries must be a united international working class struggle,
which involves reconstructing an international organization to lead the proletariat in
this direction and towards the affirmation of working class power over society.
The consequent defence of the interests of the proletariat cannot be undertaken within
national horizons, nor on the basis of a logic that proposes to improve capitalism by
making it more "human" and thus simply limiting the most odious of the effects
of its dominion over the working class. It is necessary to attack the causes of the
exploitation, oppression and insecurity.
Capitalism, if it has ever been so, is certainly no longer reformable in this age of
monopolies and financial capital. Despite all of the attempts at reform made during this
century, we have not managed to avoid two World Wars, attacks against and the looting of
dependent countries, nor frightening recessions that put the very survival of the
proletariat in doubt.
We are today seeing a higher level of violent conflict between the social character
of production and the private character of its appropriation. In a desperate attempt to
cling on to its class privileges, the bourgeoisie is trying to react to this conflict by
economically and politically suffocating the proletariat and moving towards mass
destructions of a new and terrible kind. However, the exploitation, oppression and
inhumanity that this provokes also create the conditions for an even more extensive
struggle which, once the proletariat has taken political power, can put an and to
capitalist exploitation. The prospect of communism therefore becomes not only a
concrete possibility, but also an urgent necessity. because it is the only
solution capable of definitively liberating the proletariat and with it all mankind from
capitalist barbarism.
We members of the OCI feel ourselves directly involved in this battle and will do
everything that we can to contribute towards the international reunification of the
proletariat. We take today as an opportunity of establishing preliminary contacts with
other communists committed in the same sense.
ORGANIZZAZIONE COMUNISTA INTERNAZIONALISTA