Conclusions and thoughts about the causes of the restoration of capitalism
The
operation to restore capitalism to the socialist countries began from within
and from the top, without being preceded by any military imperialist
intervention to restore capitalism or any popular uprising or internal clash. The
history of the revolutionary labour movement has known defeats, but at
different historical moments, when the outcome of the struggle had not been already
determined. Under such circumstances, the clash developed in a straightforward
way between the decisive action of the revolutionary popular masses on the one
hand, and the forces of the local and international bourgeois class on the
other.
The conditions,
methods and means used to restore capitalism make it compulsory to study the
problem with the subjective factor as starting point, i.e. the party and the
state socialist system, as well as the total of primarily internal
contradictions reported in the realm of social and economic relations. At that
particular point in time when capitalism was restored, the other group of
contradictions, concerning the relations between socialism and capitalism,
while exerting a considerable influence on the sequence and interdependence of
the internal events that led to the counter-revolution, was not however
decisive.
26. The
vanguard, leading role of the party as a ruling party and the nucleus of the
political system, was gradually lost. It became lax and the party's principles
and operating rules and policy for promoting
cadres had become blunted.
The fact
alone that the threat of counter-revolution was not suspected demonstrates the alteration in the
identity and character of the communist parties in the socialist countries.
There were
also specific events, and especially in Europe, which should have been
recognised as "warning signs" (Hungary, Poland, Czechoslovakia, the
problems of Yugoslavia, Romania and Albania, as well as the revisionist attack
using Eurocommunism as the spearhead to strike the communist movement in
capitalist Europe).
Phenomena
of splits in communist parties in capitalist Europe also constituted a strong
warning of the ideological pressure exerted by capitalism and its ideology on
the ranks of the workers' and communist movements in the capitalist countries.
The
communist parties, as shown more clearly by recent developments, regarded their
leading, vanguard role in the society as being given and incontestable. The
successes in building socialism and in the international field cultivated a
spirit of smugness and complacency. Unity with the people and democratic
relations with the working people and with social organisations -all that was
most precious and necessary for socialism- ceased to be of interest and to be
kept up and renewed continuously.
From one
point on, they became detached from reality, they lost their ability to grasp
the people's mood, problems, needs and concerns. The party organs and
organisations were transformed into bureaucratic-type services which resulted
in weakening the creativity and initiative of the popular masses and their
active participation in building socialism.
Control
over the party, its organisations and cadres by the broad popular masses
weakened gradually until it finally disappeared.
The leading
bodies of the communist parties were responsible for undermining the process of
criticism and self-criticism from above and below, resulting in the formal and
schematic implementation of decisions, in a tendency to conceal and embellish
true situations, in the lack of concern for the quality of work and results,
and in a spirit where everybody covered for everybody else. A climate of
tolerance was cultivated toward distortions of policy, violations of state
discipline, and the quality of production.
Inner-party
democracy was violated, the way was cleared for careerism among cadres, for the
exploitation of party and government positions, for subjectivism in the
selection of cadres. The principle of equality among communists was violated,
and during recent years phenomena of contempt for party comradeship appeared
and became stronger.
As a result
of such developments, the doors were left wide open to cadres who had selfish
motives, who suffered from a lack of political ability and farsightedness, or
who were unable to understand and search out the suggestions and remarks of the
working people, or to distinguish dissenting viewpoints from anti-socialist
propaganda. The ability of the communist parties to base their decisions on
scientific data was reduced, with results of more general significance to the
building of socialism and dealing with complex and intricate phenomena.
These
phenomena, incompatible with the nature of the communist party, opened the way
to undermining the party's prestige among the people.
27.
Theoretical viewpoints were cultivated or options preferred which constituted
deviations from our theory, violations of building principles. The front of
struggle with imperialism and revisionism was weakened. In some cases,
erroneous theories were adopted, which either did not correspond to reality or
simplified theoretical issues regarding the building of socialism, e.g.
theories which put forward the rapid transition to developed socialism and
communism, underestimating the complex and long-term character of the
transitional period (see 20th congress), theories about the "all-people
state", "all-people party" and "all-people democracy".
(19)
The
directions of the 20th congress toward "a variety of forms of transition
of various countries to socialism, under certain conditions" was utilised
by the leaderships of communist parties as a theoretical foundation for an
offensive against the scientific theory of socialism. In the name of national
specificities and particularities, the immutable laws of the socialist
revolution were revised. Views were put forward that through structural reforms
and "the policy of democracy" it would be possible for the capitalist
system to be transformed into a socialist one, without a revolutionary leap.
Such views
underestimate and underrate the fact that the exploiting classes, supported by
militarism and the reactionary bureaucratic machinery, offer resistance, that
any form of transition is subject to general laws, and is the result of a
comprehensive parliamentary and non-parliamentary struggle.
During the
period that followed, influenced by the experience from Chile and Portugal and
by imperialism's change of tactics, some of the viewpoints and ideas of the
20th congress were set aside. Any changes in orientation relative to the 20th
congress took place silently in the sense that they were not accompanied by a
more general theoretical, open, collective discussion in the countries and
within the ranks of the communist movement.
The strategy
of ideological subversion -as can be seen in retrospect today in the light of
experience- did not encounter the corresponding aggressive and united response
from the communist movement, from the parties and government leaderships in the
socialist countries. Although in the parties' documents, especially
those of the CPSU, reference is made to the dangerous nature of imperialism's
new tactics, in practice insufficient efforts were made to sound the alarm and
put the communist movement on the alert in order to confront the new situation
aggressively and convincingly.
The bourgeois class, with the rich historic experience it
already had from the first moment the independent labour movement appeared,
skilfully shifted the focus of the ideological struggle from outside to inside
the communist movement and the socialist system. In its strategy and tactics,
it utilised the rich historic experience in adapting and readapting which was
acquired from its confrontation and cooperation with various classes, strata and
political forces (absolute monarchy, constitutional monarchy, parliamentary
republic, fascist dictatorship, military coups). It utilised the mistakes,
weaknesses and ambitions of leading cadres, and took advantage of the social
and political climate that cultivated deviations and discontent.
We also believe, on the basis of retrospective experience,
that in documents of the communist parties of the socialist countries, the
indisputable victories of socialism were overestimated, as well as the
spectacular changes which took place in the world after World War II, in such a
way as to underestimate the complex new problems which arose during the course
of developments.
In certain cases, the phenomena of the crisis of capitalism
were presented as being absolute, and a simplistic viewpoint was cultivated
with respect to the disintegration of the capitalist system. The ability of
capitalism to apply new scientific and technological advances to production was
underestimated, despite their contradictions and adverse effects on the life
and rights of the working people.
Deviation was not generated automatically, in a vacuum.
There were new problems which did not find solutions, mistakes which were not
revealed in good time or whose main cause was not identified, subjective and
superficial assessments that evolved and slipped into deviation.
Certain erroneous or Utopian views about the problems in
international life and the confrontation between the two social systems
expressed a tendency to back down under the ideological pressure of the
bourgeois ideology, despite the fact that the Soviet Union and the other
socialist countries did not hesitate to confront imperialism at critical
moments, in order to defend socialism and the countries who were waging
national liberation wars.
Whether directly or indirectly, opportunism opened the way
for the weakening of the communist parties. It constituted the ideological
basis for imperialism's efforts to undermine and weaken socialism to succeed.
The problem cannot be solved by a formal exorcism of
revisionist, opportunistic and liquidationist views and by denouncing their
holders. The principles of the materialist-dialectical interpretation of
history led to the search for objective facts in social, economic and cultural
life on the basis of which the conditions may be created for the appearance of
opportunistic theories and practices within the labour movement. This does not
mean that the prevalence of opportunism is inevitable. When there is awareness
of the objective factors which favour the phenomenon, then it is possible for
the communist movement to deal with problems, side effects and even temporary
defeats.
28. Creative ideological and political work was weakened, as
was multi-faceted educational activity aimed at developing socialist
consciousness and at ensuring the constant growth and improvement of the new
type of person required to build the socialist society.
Socialist thought could and should have constituted the
steering gear to the development of this new society, which had to chart new
paths under conditions of intense confrontation with bourgeois and petty
bourgeois ideology, with opportunism and revisionism. The building of socialism
requires a relatively high educational and political-ideological level among
the broad popular masses, as well as a certain level of knowledge and
consciousness, so that they may be able to respond to the complex creative and
initiative-oriented political and organisational process.
Under conditions of sharp ideological confrontation with
capitalism, and of particular growth in the role of ideological activity within
the socialist societies, this significant front of activity was neglected, and
not adapted to changing conditions because it was taken for granted that the
working people were convinced supporters of the system. The complexity of the
process of cultivating socialist consciousness through direct, active
participation in solving the problems of building socialism and managing social
and political affairs was underestimated.
The discussion of ideological and political problems did not
mobilise the whole party, its bodies, members and non-party supporters, and
indeed the entire society. In this way, an opportunity would have been provided
for a broad expression of views and orientations, and erroneous views would
have been confronted using ideological means and persuasive arguments. The
evolution of ideas does not automatically keep pace with social evolution;
progressive and revolutionary ideas give way in conditions under which the
people's initiative and creative action is blunted, lax and reduced, allowing
anachronistic remnants, individualism, subjectivism and localism to return and
become stronger. Thus are conditions created which permit the conduits of
infiltration and reproduction of bourgeois and petty bourgeois ideology, of
compromise and lassitude in face of the complexity of problems, to operate
effectively. These inadequacies appear more pronounced today, under conditions
of general regression.
29. There was a delay in the creative evolution, development
and enrichment of revolutionary theory by the experience of socialist
construction and the action of revolutionary forces. Without any intention of
invalidating the scientific research and theoretical researches in the Soviet
Union and the other socialist countries, developments indicate that the
communist parties were responsible for the theoretical delay in the creative
development of Marxist-Leninist theory in conditions of socialist construction
and the contemporary world. Scientific studies being conducted by special
research centres, some of which belonged to the party itself, were either
underestimated or overlooked.
Likewise underestimated was the need for socialism to be
built through the constant development of the theory, the renewal of knowledge,
which in conjunction with active participation in management and
administration, prepares the ground for the development of a new type of
person.
The theoretical and scientific problems were not studied in
advance, so that the difficulties could be confronted promptly, and so that new
trends, contradictions and conflicts which needed to be resolved in a
dialectical way could be identified. The success of the October Revolution and
the rise of the revolutionary movement that followed, proved that one of the basic
elements of its success was the fact that for some time previously, a series of
crucial theoretical issues had been studied by the Classics. Giving experience
an absolute character without having recourse to theory and scientific research
can be detrimental. The party, as the vanguard section of the people, must
perceive new problems promptly, must be able to anticipate, and not to lose
track of the overall movement, the whole, in face of the immediate, the
everyday, the partial.
30. The dialectical relationship between direct and
representative democracy became weak and failed to function with the quality
and as required by the times and by the complex tasks of socialist
construction.
It has not been possible, throughout the course of socialist
construction, to combine central planning with popular initiative, to cultivate
the feeling among the people that they are managing socialist ownership. From
the 1970s on, this phenomenon became more marked, and took on an acute form.
Problems appeared in the development of forms of socialist
democracy and in their correct functioning, including excessive powers and such
phenomena which could not all be justified by the objective nature of the
problems and/or special conditions. The potentialities inherent in this particular
system -- whose basic criterion is the conscious participation of the people,
social control over governments and administrative bodies, and the dialectical
relationship and unit: "party-Soviet-people" -- were either not
discovered or not utilised.
The loss of experienced cadres and fighters during the civil
war and World War II, and the need to utilise the strongest, most capable
cadres on the front of socialist construction created gaps in the composition
of the Soviets. Owing to objective circumstances, a new generation of cadres
was promoted which did not have the experience required to solve problems in a
democratic way and with the people's participation and support. They were
elected within a climate of laxness and careerism.
These consequences, while noted, were not dealt with
effectively by the communist parties and organs of state power, and thus the
problems were reproduced in a more acute way.
The main problem which must be investigated further, so as
to make use of the relevant experience, has to do with the role and use of the
Soviets as a form of state power and the relations between local Soviets and
workers' collectives.
Even though laws were passed which continuously gave new
rights to the local Soviets, to the working people and to workers' groups, in
fact the procedures for popular participation and control were becoming merely
formal in nature.
An equally serious issue which requires deeper examination
was the status and role of the trade unions and other mass organisations of the
socialist society. Legally and institutionally, their role was consolidated
through laws and decisions, and through participation in all social and
political affairs. In practice, their role was not developed to the highest
possible degree.
The loosening of the party's links with the people and the
detachment of the central organs from the working people had an adverse effect
on the utilisation of the mass-organisations which should have constituted
poles of attraction for non-party forces, for the people, to engage in active
participation and control of state and party organs.
The primary, paramount responsibility for the above
phenomena lies in the role and activity of the communist party which, by its
nature and role, should have had the first concern for correlating its activity
with the initiative of the people and cultivating participation by the people
constantly. It should have restricted and eliminated administrative methods and
created the conditions required to increase the role of the direct and representative
organs of the people in the economic and organizational functions of the
socialist state.
31. The negative phenomena and problems that appeared do not
disprove the theoretical position that in the socialist society there is a
political transitional period during which the state is expressed by the
political term revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat, implying a full
and substantial difference between it and the dictatorship of the bourgeois
class in the capitalist society.
The criticism which was leveled at the socialist political
system by anti-socialist forces in the capitalist countries, reformists and
revisionists, started out from a consciously-or unconsciously in some cases-
mistaken hypothesis, i.e. equating the criteria of capitalism and socialism,
and from a classless treatment of democracy and freedom.
One of the most characteristic views of this type is
identifying democracy with the multi-party system, with the number of parties
that exercise power and take part in government. Socialism does not preclude
the existence and functioning of other parties, Their existence is mainly
determined by objective criteria. The number, nature and role of the political
parties under socialism, apart from the communist party, depends on specific
national specificities and traditions, on the social stratification or on
historical reasons (e.g. the Social Revolutionaries although they participated
in the first Soviet government, crossed over to the counter-revolution during
the civil war).
The course of socialist construction showed the need, at
each phase, at each level of socialist development, to ensure the best possible
combination of democracy and centralism in the economic field of society with
the primary goal being to improve centralism and develop democracy.
Centralism must express the basic interests of the working
people and democracy the continuing presence of the people in the exercise of
power. The most harmonic possible combination of the two, their dialectical
interaction, constitutes a factor showing the ability of the socialist system
to defend itself from mistakes and subversive activities. The growth of
centralism to the detriment of democracy caused serious side-effects in
economic development and in satisfying collective interests, and became a
factor which weakened the defence of the socialist system.
Achieving popular participation and social control over
socialist ownership proved not to be an easy matter, as the socialist system is
historically separated from communist self-government.
For the people to become the supreme and sole owners of the
social wealth as a whole requires time and constant effort so as to secure,
improve and widen the rights of control, and to ensure the all-round
development of the human personality.
Although this was of intense concern at party congresses and
specific relevant decisions and plans were formulated, it does not appear that
this issue was dealt with effectively, on the basis of targets and needs.
Apart from the objective difficulties, the mistakes,
violations and deviations which can be summarized in the quality of the
relation between the working people and socialist ownership, the presence of
the working people in exercising the functions of power in harmonic relation
with the increased significance of a central administration (20), likewise
influenced the problems that arose.
32. In the course of
building socialism, the principle of "from each according to his ability,
to each according to his work" was substantially violated. The system of
economic and moral incentives required constant improvements. To the extent
that this failed to occur and was violated, the ground was prepared for
indifference to work and to increasing productivity. These factors led to the
creation of incomes which did not correspond to the quantity and quality of the
work done. Despite the periodic efforts at economic reform in the socialist
countries, the role of the economic methods and incentives in the popular
economy did not finally become stronger, central planning became rigid and
centralised. Problems remained in the transport of goods and in the prompt
supply of the market.
In this regard, discussions were held and critical remarks
put forward by communist parties and Marxist economists, about the way in which
the law of value, commodity-money relations was used in administering and
operating enterprises and the way in which workers1 collectives were utilised.
Questions related in particular to commodity-money
relations, the quality of consumer goods and services, economic and moral
incentives, social control and participation in planning and administration
require further, special discussion. There are grounds for critical remarks,
but special examination and greater depth are required. Studies need to be made,
in cooperation with communist parties and scientists, of the experience of
certain countries in Central and Eastern Europe, such as Hungary and Poland, in
which experiments and applications were conducted.
Some proved to be ineffective and are to be blamed for the
appearance of capitalist ownership with side-effects in the ideological and
political realms.
Problems which appeared, and which constituted deviations
from theory, not only failed to refute, but even confirmed the general
direction of Marxism-Leninism, i.e. that socialisation (in its two main forms,
state and cooperative) could not go ahead during the period of socialism in the
form of separate independent communities, but as state ownership, because of
the need to develop the productive forces and to secure the collective interest
during the transitional period.
The problems, weaknesses and mistakes which appeared in the
dialectical relationship between democracy and centralism in the field of
planning, in the local Soviets and the workers' collectives and their role,
cannot be used as an excuse for projecting, as a counterweight to socialism,
the "market economy" and "free competition" and the policy
of privatisations or the Utopian, in the best possible case, view of "self-administration"
and "self-management" which would lead to splitting united,
nationwide socialist ownership into ownership by groups of producers, to the
detriment of the social whole and the collective interest. Social ownership and
central planning have been subject to constant attacks and slanders by
anti-socialist forces. In essence, it is the abolition of class exploitation
and the political power of the working class and its allies that is being
targeted.
33. The system of internal contradictions in socialism,
which constitutes the core of the materialist dialectic, was overlooked. The
need to secure dialectical unity and interaction between the productive
relations and productive forces at every phase and level of development was
underestimated.
This may prove to be a key issue in many of the questions
which concern us here with respect to the ground on which mistakes, weaknesses,
deficiencies and finally deviations flourished. The problem of the
contradictions in socialism did not become an object of theoretical studies and
mainly of practical solutions, resulting in adverse effects that were reflected
in the economic, social and political fields. Some of Lenin's most basic
thoughts were underestimated, according to which socialism is not free of
contradictions and disagreements and that these, when they are overlooked, can
take on the nature of a conflict.(21)
The process of unifying the socialist society was
overestimated or made absolute. Mistaken views prevailed which argued that
contradictions lose their significance in socialism; the result was that
inconsistencies, disharmonies and problems were not identified and dealt with
to the extent required by circumstances.
At times, particularly during the 1970s and more intensively
after the Polish crisis, intense discussions were carried out about the
dialectic of contradictions in socialism, but these discussions did not
continue. While issues were brought to the fore, practical solutions to this
crucial problem do not seem to have been provided beyond theoretical discussions
and studies carried out by various scientific institutes.
At every phase in the development of the socialist society,
under conditions where the scientific and technological revolution showed the
organic link between social and technological progress, the communist parties
and state organs should have been directing their attention continuously to the
following problems: improving productive relations, developing the productive
forces, achieving the optimum organisation of the whole mechanism of the economy,
raising socialist consciousness and increasing the cultural development of the
peoples in the socialist countries.
Under conditions of socialist construction -as distinct from
capitalism- the characteristic feature was the rapid and in some cases heady
increases in people's material and intellectual needs; therefore the need for
the development of the productive forces was constantly growing.
To the extent that these contradictions were not faced,
conflicts arose between social production and consumption, between individual
and social interests. In this instance, the contradiction could not be removed
by cultivating and idealising individual consumerism nor of course by ignoring
the growing trend in personal and collective needs. The course of socialist
construction shows that problems were created and discontent was cultivated to
the extent that there was no "yardstick" of balance on the basis of
objective possibilities.
34. The stratification of the socialist society was
overlooked, a fact which prepared the way for contradictions between general,
partial, special and local interests.
When the foundations of socialism were laid, class
distinctions were abolished; distinctions and differences of roles between the
working class and the other social strata of the population, peasantry and
intellectuals, which were manifested in various forms (contradictions between
town and country, physical and mental labour etc.) diminished but were not
abolished.
Other distinctions were associated with the level of socialist
development, with forms of socialist ownership, with historic, national and
local specificities. Yet others, which appeared as differences of consciousness
and orientation, stemmed from the survival of anachronistic viewpoints or from
the pressure of the bourgeois ideology under conditions of ideological attack
by imperialism.
Contradictions in the socialist society are linked with the
Marxist position on the nature of this society, which is described as a
transitional period in the revolutionary transformation of capitalist into
communist society. It is a period during which full social equality cannot be
achieved.(22)
Historical experience has vindicated the positions of the
Marxist-Leninist Classics. It has provided a lot of new data for deeper study
and for the development of concepts about the contradictions in socialism. It
has confirmed that the socialist society retains remnants, traditions, and deep
traces of the old society whose offspring it was.
The class struggle does not stop with the victory of the
socialist revolution. It continues and intensifies at critical moments,
particularly during the period in which efforts are being made to socialise the
main means of production, and to lay the foundations for socialism. The
exploiting classes do not give up easily, despite the fact that they constitute
a minority and have lost some of their most basic economic and political
supports.
The intensity, duration, sharpness and form in which the
class struggle is manifested depends on the pace at which socialist relations
are built, and on the international surroundings and balance of forces. During
the entire period in which private capital and small commodity production
exist, new elements of the bourgeois class are reproduced. The situation is
also affected by the international balance of forces, and the strategy and
tactics of imperialism which is constantly looking for an internal foothold to
promote the overthrow of socialism from within, since external intervention is
not an easy matter.
Its sharpness and forms are not the same for all countries;
the national specificities, the traditions of the workers' and communist
movement, the quality of the bonds between the party and the people, the
quality of the alliance between the working class and the other social strata
who are fighting for socialist measures and transformations in that particular
country, all have a part to play.
It is obvious that, as the socialist relations of production
are consolidated, as socialist democracy develops, and as the self-driven,
active popular participation in the building and administration of political
and social matters increases, the opponents of socialism will be minimized.
35. The widespread use in socialism of the advances of the
scientific and technological revolution was delayed.
Congresses of communist parties in the socialist countries
repeatedly identified problems in the unsatisfactory implementation and
utilisation of new technologies. The scientific and technological revolution
was applied and utilised unequally and selectively: in the military economy, in
space, in some sectors of heavy industry and in large-scale projects; less so
in the consumer goods and services industries.
Apart from objective, historical factors, the reasons for
the relatively low utilisation of science and technology and the equally low
return on investments should be sought in the following factors: In the role of
the economic administrative mechanism, in the forms and methods of
administration and management, in the system of distribution according to the
quantity and quality of the work, in the system of material and moral
incentives, in the rational use of material, financial and manpower resources,
and closely related to the participation of the people in the administration, management
and control of planning and administration bodies.
These factors play a significant role in taking advantage of
the potentialities of socialist ownership, which cannot be put into practice by
themselves, without the human factor and the support of science and technology.
The passage from extensive to intensive development is linked also with the
forms and quality of socialist democracy, with the participation of the masses.
Another factor which should be studied with the help of the
experience of communist parties and scientists is the problem of the
possibilities of socialist accumulation -- in specific countries and under
specific historic conditions - which acts as an objective factor, encouraging
or restraining continued growth, and above all that of the comprehensive
application of technological advances.
Perceiving the way in which technology has been used in
socialism does not disprove the fact that the socialist relations of production
provided a significant thrust to the growth of the productive forces and to the
visible technological progress in countries which had started at the lowest
point in comparison with the corresponding situation in the developed
capitalist countries. A series of studies and statistics have proved that in
the socialist countries, the productive forces developed and that a
considerable effort was made to develop science and technology. Discoveries and
scientific research still retain their value in many fields. The USSR in
particular, periodically pulled ahead of the developed capitalist countries.
There are no grounds for the argument that is widely
disseminated in the capitalist countries, namely that the delay in modernising
the productive forces was the decisive cause of the overthrow of the systems in
the socialist countries.
These views that see the development of the means of
production, technology and science as being the exclusive criterion for
progressiveness and democracy have proved to be one-sided. They overlook the
problem of ownership in capitalism, as well as the position and role of the
working people in the productive process.
The development of productive forces, despite their
creative, revolutionary nature, is not the exclusive indicator of the creative
aspect of human activity and the social status of the working people.
Socialism, even with lower productivity, and especially when this is due to
historic, objective reasons, is in a position to offer the working people more
than capitalism because of the qualitative elements it brings to working and
living conditions. Abolishing the exploitation of man by man creates a new
system of human values which determines the quality of life and the ranking of
criteria and needs.
Undoubtedly the development of the material and technical
infrastructure on the basis of scientific and technological revolution, the
level of development of the means of production, and sophisticated
mechanisation and automation contribute to the development of productive
relations.
36. The application of the principle of proletarian
internationalism was weakened owing to the loosening of and the split in the
international communist movement's unity of action in the struggle against
imperialism and revisionism.
At critical periods, the united strategy and tactics of the
world communist movement was not marshalled against the united strategy and
tactics of imperialism. A particularly heavy blow against the unity of the
international communist movement was the breach between the CPSU and the
Communist Party of China, with repercussions in the international balance of
forces and in the unity of action against imperialism. It had an adverse chain
reaction on many communist parties all over the world. It was exploited to step
up anti-communism and anti-socialism. The unity of the communist movement was
then further tried by the wave of Eurocommunism, which signaled the
infiltration of revisionist, defeatist, compromising attitudes within the ranks
of the communist movement in capitalist Europe.
The adverse effects and repercussions from the dissolution
of the Communist International as a united centre offering a forum for the
exchange of views with other communist parties need to be studied and
understood. The new form of coordination that was established, with the help of
international conferences, contributed up to a certain point in time to the
common elaboration of strategy and tactics, to joint action. Along the way,
this too was substantially abandoned due to ideological disagreements and
breaches in the ranks of the communist movement. The bilateral and multilateral
regional meetings mainly on international issues that replaced it were
insufficient to deal with matters related to joint action or ideological and
theoretical problems. The discussion and confrontation was of a more or less
formal nature, a long way from lively, creative discussion about the essence of
problems.
There were periods when the discussion which was focused on
ideological differences took on the form of an open breach and severance of
relations of all kinds, resulting in widening the gap and divisions. In other
cases, in the name of independent responsibility and non-intervention in
parties' internal affairs, all discussion and criticism ceased, with the result
that relations took on a strictly formal character in the exchange of views and
opinions. Both tactics ultimately led to the same result: to the loosening of
unity or the facile alignment behind one or another view. The main thing was
that the discussion of theoretical problems and the reasons for one or the
other view or deviation was reduced or weakened.
There must be continuing efforts, through the exchange of
views with other communist parties on the basis of long-term positive as well
as negative experience, to deepen our understanding of the ways and means of
conducting discussions about ideological matters and differences between the
communist parties, and about the type of relations that developed between them
on an international and regional level.
When the discussion of the different viewpoints is conducted
on the basis of communist principles, not only is exploitation by the forces of
imperialism precluded, but on the contrary, the result constitutes a serious
factor in confronting these forces.
37. Mistakes were made in the strategy and tactics of
socialism in its confrontation with imperialism.
On the part of imperialism, the confrontation between the
two systems was not just an ideological struggle, but a form of subversive
activity against socialism.
The line of peaceful co-existence as it was developed during
the early post-war years, and to some extent at the 19th and mainly 20th
Congress, permitted the cultivation of Utopian views, i.e. that it was possible
for imperialism to abandon war and military means and to accept a new world
order which would be based on the principles of mutual benefit and cooperation
on an equal footing; and that it would be possible for imperialism to accept a
peace-time economy and the utilisation of the resources saved through
disarmament by countries with development problems.
The radical change in the balance of forces, the constant
progress of the international revolutionary process, and united, world action
by the anti-imperialist forces can effectively prevent aggressiveness and
military interventions and raids by imperialism.
At that particular phase in history, it was not noticed that
the USA with its European allies were reinforcing the weaker Sinks in
capitalism, keeping them in the imperialist system with both overt and covert
interventions in countries' internal affairs using political, economic and
military means and with the main instrument being the constant threat of the
use of atomic and then nuclear weapons.
It is one thing to fight to avert war, especially
thermonuclear war, and an entirely different thing to put forward the view
-under specific conditions- that it is possible to eliminate war in general.
38. A negative influence was likewise exerted by the
assessment of the possibilities and role of social democracy during the
post-war period.
A main element in the communist strategy was to seek joint
action and alliance with social democracy in the cause of detente and peace,
but also more generally in the anti-imperialist struggle. The social democracy
of Western Europe, irrespective of its verbal proclamations and periodic
superficial maneuvers, was in fact on the side of the imperialist forces in the
anti-socialist, anti-communist "human rights" campaign. The European
social democrats were responsible for breaking up the cooperation with the
communist parties, following U.S. pressures (through the Marshall plan) which
required the expulsion of communists from post-war governments.
At critical moments, when the anti-imperialist, anti-militarist
movement should have been strengthened and broadened, the policy of imperialism
was condoned by attributing equal blame to the USSR and the USA for the arms
race. The defensive Warsaw Treaty was identified with the cold-war, aggressive
NATO. And indeed, certain social democracy parties, such as the SPD led by
Willy Brandt, played an active part in the so-called "bridge" policy
(Ost-politik), clearly aiming at the annexation of the GDR, and the
encouragement of anti-socialist activities from within. The rise of social
democratic parties to government power offered many proofs of the nature of
these parties, and of the services they offered in support of the capitalist
system and the management of its crisis.
The capitalist system could not retain and mainly it could
not reproduce its power without the support of the ideology and policy of
social democracy, which apart from supporting capitalism, proved to be a major
factor in undermining the power and unity of the labour movement.
Today it
can be seen clearly that there was a need for a strong, convincing and militant
ideological front against the theories of social democracy which, at that time
cultivated illusions that there is a so-called third road to socialism.
e-mail:cpg@int.kke.gr