Early 2011 saw the
beginning of a massive uprising in the Arab countries of the Middle East and
North Africa. All over the region, regimes that were in power for decades were
toppled. There is hardly a country in the region that has not been affected.
The struggles saw thousands of workers in the streets venting their anger,
being truly inspirational in their efforts, to people all over the world.
Unfortunately the vision of a better and more just society that was shared by so
many has not yet materialized.
The Causes
Although there are
massive differences between the Arab countries, there are also some strong
uniting factors, first and foremost a common cultural sphere and a common
language. There is also a similarity in the sense that the whole region has
been at the mercy of imperialism for years. All the Arab economies are heavily
dependent on the foreign capital of Western European countries, especially
Britain, France and the USA, first as colonies and later more indirectly via
capital dependency. For example, the main foreign holders of Egyptian assets
are British and American companies. The regions wealth of natural resources,
namely oil and important trading routes, like the Suez canal, have given it a
special importance in the imperialist game of parasitic plunder by the Western
European and North American bourgeoisie.
The imperialists held
their grip on the region via a whole bunch of proxy regimes. All the regimes of
the region are extremely oppressive and authoritarian by Western standards. The
power of these regimes, no matter whether dressed up as monarchies or
republics, was, and is, mainly based on an excessive military apparatus that
has a special role in these societies. The Arab people were often denied the most
basic freedoms and rights, such as freedom of the press and free access to
media or the right to (freely) vote. The power of the local bourgeoisie was
bloodily exercised by the military which lived parasitically of the people.
On top of all these
factors came the economic crisis that started in 2007. Already in 2008, due to
massive speculation on grain and the consequent rising grain prices, hunger
riots in Egypt broke out. With the tightening economic climate the bourgeoisie
in the Arab countries became less and less willing to finance corrupt and
parasitic dynasties of rulers. Also, the
possibility for the ruling elite to make concessions to the working class and
the poor in these countries was drastically reduced. This explains why the
outburst of anger could take such a mass character and why the bourgeoisie was
actually often joining the upsurges.
From Tunisia... to Egypt... to Libya... to
Syria?
The general prairie
fire in the Arab world started with the rising of the people in Tunisia. A
period of mass demonstrations followed an incidence where an unemployed
graduate, who had become a street peddler, set himself on fire after his
license was taken away from him. In the following mass demonstrations the
organised working class, namely the Tunisian trade union federation UGTT played
a decisive role, although politically subordinate to the bourgeois forces. Ben
Ali had ruled Tunisia for 23 years and his clan had scrounged a large amount of
the economies profits. On January 15th last year he was brought
down. After this success many Arab countries witnessed similar revolts.
The most significant
of them was most likely Egypt, where the Dictatorship of Mubarak was brought to
an end after 30 years. The main force behind the uprising however was not the
working class but the urban poor, the petit bourgeoisie and parts of the
national bourgeoisie. Young people especially, who had graduated from
university and faced mass unemployment, were the motor of the protests.
Although Mubarak was brought down, the military which is a massive factor in
Egyptian society and previously was the pillar of Mubarak’s reign remained in
power. The overall situation for workers in Egypt has only marginally improved,
anti-trade union laws actually became even worse.
A break in the pattern
was the struggle that emerged in Libya. After having initially been a
spontaneous manifestation of general anger about Colonel Gaddafi’s four decade
rule, the resistance movement was taken over by a clique of former Gaddafi
loyalist who suddenly realized that they were better off on the side of the
NATO imperialists. The uprising turned into a bloody civil war and eventually
NATO forces, seeing their chance to get some booty from Libya’s oil reserves
and trying to appease the region by showing presence, came out in support of
the rebels.
The next state in-line
for a regime change seems to be Syria, where the 30 year rule of the Assad clan
is challenged by a massive rebel uprising. So far around 7000 people have been
brutally murdered by the pro government forces since the beginning of the
uprising last March. However the anti-Assad rebels seem to be hardly an
improvement for the working masses of Syria. The rebels are made up mainly of
petty bourgeois forces, trying to replace Assad’s regime with some bourgeois
democratic regime and not opposing foreign intervention. In Syria, another
Libya-like scenario seems likely. The Syrian working class has the least to win
from a civil war and foreign intervention, for them this will only mean more
suffering and more unnecessary losses.
Bourgeois democracy is the dictatorship of
capital!
Wherever a “democratic
regime change” has taken place in the Arab world it has so far been hardly an
improvement for the working people of these countries. In Egypt and in Tunisia,
the bourgeoisie and the military remain in power, in the proxy-elections in
these two countries mainly right-wing Islamic forces have profited. “Bourgeois
democracy” in these countries doesn’t mean a change of the living conditions of
the working class or more freedoms but merely more participation in power for
the national bourgeoisie.
Like the economies of
the Arab countries are dependent on foreign capital, the governments in the
region will always be dependent on the imperialist bourgeoisie. “Bourgeois
Democracy” is a privilege of the imperialist countries and is paid for with the
super-exploitation of the third world. All attempts to build Western-like
democracies in the Arab countries must therefore be in vain. The imperialists
will always make sure that the Arab states guarantee the imperialist’s
parasitic interests in the region. Even the “democratic” countries in the
Middle East, such as Turkey have to base their power heavily on the military to
control the contradictions in the powder keg of a society. So if the working
class and all the oppressed people in the Arab countries want to strive for
something better than the smokescreen of democracy they have to go beyond the
bourgeois order of things.
A working class answer is needed!
Although workers have
broadly participated in the various uprisings in the Arab world the working
class as an independent political factor has not yet stepped onto the scene in
this region. The first promising steps have been taken, like the strike movement
in Egypt after Mubarak had been expelled from power. These steps however, are
only small ones and the big step has yet to be made. The working class in the
Arab countries has a fighting tradition, dating back 50 years and more. The
pro-imperialist proxy-dictatorships in the region have made all attempts
possible to wipe out this tradition. However even now there are germs of a new
fighting working class. The strikes in Egypt in 2006 and in 2011 after the fall
of the Mubarak regime are a first glimpse of the enormous size and power the
working class holds in these countries. If the working class makes use of its
tradition and finds a way of appropriating the revolutionary ideas of Marxism
it could really spark off an Arab revolution.
In Britain we have to
recognize that it is not an Arab question, but a question of the working class
as a whole. Britain is at the forefront of the economic exploitation of the
region and has participated majorly in the military offensive against Libya.
The working class in Britain can gain no freedom as long as it holds other
people in shackles. The most practical solidarity we can give to the struggle
of the Arab working class is to struggle against our own imperialist-capitalist
rulers in Britain!