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The main enemy is "our" bourgeoisie - again on social patriotism, from Workers' Democracy (dialogue)
In the previous and in this issue of “Within the Walls”, the magazine hosted in two parts,an article by Ch. Eliades, with the subtitle “a response to the editorial group of Workers' Democracy”. The reply concerns our article that was in a previous issue, which he considered a response to his own article in the March issue. He even notes that with that article we “entered” the dialogue around the “national issue” ourselves.
But apart from the fact that we have not now entered the “dialogue”, neither our previous article in “Within the Walls” nor this one are answers to Ch. Eliades and others who have similar political views. And they could not be, because to do so requires much more space than it would be possible for “Within the Walls” to allocate to us. We've been doing this for some time with a series of our articles in the newspaper "Workers' Democracy" that we published in 79-80, and in recent years with our articles in the Greek magazine “Mami” and in the “Ergatiki Alilegkii” newspaper of the Greek revolutionary organization OSE. In February '88 our book "THE CYPRUS PROBLEM and the Internationalist Tasks of Greek Cypriot Revolutionaries" was published.
That is why in our first article we referred to this book for a critique of all Greek Cypriot social patriots. We even explained that we would limit ourselves, as the subtitle said, only to “a few remarks on the occasion of Ch. Eliades” to show some contradictions of social patriotism. Such contradictions, like that of Ch. Eliades who claims that ““never has one barbarism ever undone or overthrown another previous barbarism” while at the same time calling for the removal of the settlers, without seeing that only with a comparable barbarism to that of '74 can this be done.
So Ch. Eliades' claim that we have wronged him because we did not present his politics in full is not valid. We did not say that we would do so. And there would have been no reason to revisit his writings if in his last article he had not directly inverted a very important position of ours.
Ch. Eliades devotes a part of his article to showing our “contradiction” when we denounce those who call for the expulsion of settlers as nationalists while on the other hand we accept that “as a matter of principle we agree with the removal of settlers” but we are concerned that “we will encounter difficult problems even on the issue of the departure of the last settler”. He even tries to “encourage” us by writing that: “No one claimed that this [the expulsion of all settlers] would be easy, nor is the road to democracy and socialism paved with rose petals.”
But Ch. Eliades did not want to notice that the one who “in principle agrees with the removal of the settlers” is DISY, and that the whole of that report was taken from the newspaper “Alitheia” to which we referred. Nor did he notice that right next to the statement “for reasons of principle we consider the above position to be correct”, i.e. “the withdrawal of the last settler”, there was in brackets our own ironic comment saying [“well, of course”].
If Ch. Eliades had read our article more carefully, or had he bothered to take a look at the contents of the book to which we referred, he would have seen that not only are we not “in principle” in favour of the expulsion of the settlers, but that our position is completely opposite to the one he attributes to us. Here is what we say about the settlers in the relevant chapter:
“They are here and they should be welcomed by the workers and not only them, but also anyone else, from wherever else they happen to come from. It is a matter of principle for the internationalists. The right in Europe is emboldened by racism against foreign workers. Cypriots in Thatcher's England face the same thing, and the trade union movement there has supported them.”
against the “our own” bourgeoisie
We also explain in the book why we consider the struggle for domination between the bourgeois classes in Cyprus as reactionary on both sides. As unjust, reactionary and exapnsionsit aims the Turkish and Turkish Cypriot bourgeoisie have, the Greek and Greek Cypriot bourgeoisie have equally unjust and reactionary aims. Whether one bourgeoisie dominates Cyprus or the other, the result will be the national oppression of the other ethnic group. That is why the task of the left is not to support the privileges of any nation and to subordinate themselves to reactionary aspirations, especially of 'their' bourgeoisie.
This is the basis on which we base our policy. Anyone who does not also see “our” bourgeoisie as aggressively expansionist and imperialist, does not do so because he sees “their” nation as better than the others.
This is exactly what social patriots can neither see nor want to see. Instead, when they are uncomfortable in the face of references to Lenin's policies they prefer to state, as Ch. Eliades does, that “we are giving Lenin a hard time”, and like “father Stalin” used to do. Of course, it would have been good if he had taken the trouble to prove this claim.
What characterises the policy of all social patriots who invoke Lenin is that they completely ignore (want to ignore!) some of the most basic points of Lenin's policy on national conflicts, i.e. they “forget” Lenin's insistence that the specific tasks of socialists are different according to the nation to which they belong. And that the main task of revolutionaries is to fight against their “own” bourgeoisie that has oppressed or oppresses or seeks to re-oppress other nationalities, and against its attempt to impose its rule on others:
“Internationalism is recommended in the break with your own social chauvinists… and with your own imperialist government… in your decision to accept the greatest national sacrifices… if this is beneficial to the development of the international workers' revolution.” (1)
Because Ch. Eliades does not want to understand this attitude, he wonders with much frustration and even more naivety if we would also describe as social patriots the Turkish revolutionaries who are fighting against “their” bourgeoisie to support the withdrawal of the Turkish army from Cyprus and the right of the Cypriots to live in a state. But… of course not. These are real socialists and internationalists. Social patriots are only all those Greek Cypriot or Greek leftists who fight so fervently for the withdrawal of the Turkish army and against partition, matters that are tasks specifically for Turkish and Turkish Cypriot revolutionaries.
Social patriots also do not want to know that Lenin believed that the duty of supporting the right of self-determination of oppressed nationalities lies specifically with the revolutionaries of the nation that oppressed or oppresses or seeks to oppress such nationalities, and they do not what to know what this position means. This can be seen from the fury with which Ch. Eliades denounces that we consider that the very “secession-creation of the “TRNC” is politically correct, and even in accordance with the Leninist conception of things”.