You are here
Home ›The Two Levels of the Lebanese Crisis
Each day the news brings to light the devastations spread by capitalism in crisis. The evermore frantic quest for sufficiently lucrative profit rates imposes on the one hand greater levels of exploitation of the working class, unemployment, lack of job security, generalized misery, and on the other hand an always more frequent resort to war. Yesterday Afghanistan and Iraq, today Lebanon. This permits us to predict tomorrow’s imperialist war fronts. Only the revolutionary class struggle can end this barbarity.
The Internal Scenario
Even though it has not yet been officially declared, Israel and Lebanon are at war. Presently, it has already caused hundreds of deaths amongst civilians, more than 500,000 refugees and an alarming humanitarian crisis throughout the whole region. The Israeli mini-imperialism and the American mega-imperialism on one side and Hezbollah and Hamas on the other have voluntarily reignited tensions in the Middle-East. With the new military occupation of the Gaza Strip and the aggression on the Lebanese border, the Israelis hope to attain a series of strategic objectives.
- With the attack on Lebanon, in response to the kidnapping of three Israeli soldiers, Israel has set back any possibility of reopening negotiations for the return of the occupied territories. In fact, the more the Middle East is set ablaze, the more Israel is keeping its colonies on the West Bank.
- Since the forced withdrawal of Syria from Lebanon, that country has become the main objective of Israeli expansionism, not as in 1982, just to constitute a security zone along its frontiers, but also to make it some kind of a military protectorate.
- This aggression also has as an objective of eliminating from the political scene Hamas and Hezbollah, labelled as terrorists even though they were lawfully elected and participate in their governments. The goal is to have neighbouring states that, if not allies, are at least governed by more docile or easily swayed forces.
- By defining Syria and Iran as terrorists - because of their complicity with Hamas and Hezbollah that they arm and finance - Israel has given the United States the pretext to transform the Lebanese question into an occasion to defend its interests in the area.
Hezbollah for its part, by refusing to free the soldiers has forced Israel to react militarily and because of this, to relax the military pressure in the Gaza Strip and on Hamas, exposing the fragility of the Lebanese government of Fouad Siniora whose arrival to power was facilitated by the United States and Israel. Today, Hezbollah represents in the eyes of the Lebanese population what Hamas represents in the Palestinian one: the only force capable of defending it against US and Israeli domination.
The International Scenario
With the difficulties encountered in Afghanistan and the relative loss of influence in the area surrounding the Caspian Sea, the always greater uncertainties about oil supplies from Venezuela and other South-American countries have rendered the control of the Persian Gulf even more important, more vital for American imperialism. It’s for this reason that Iraq was occupied. Henceforth, it’s Iran and Syria- already in his crosshairs for some time- that are causing the tenant of the White House to lose sleep. A few years ago, Iran would have been the object of an immediate military intervention (already largely planned). In the present state of affairs, the US government, despite itself, is limited to act indirectly. The prolongation of the intervention in Afghanistan, the unexpected quagmire in Iraq, the huge growth of the costs of war and the number of casualties, the unpopularity of Bush, the firm opposition of Europe, Russia and China has created a situation unfavourable to direct intervention.
With a direct offensive against Iran being off the table for the time being, the US has opted for a scorched earth strategy at the periphery while attacking those who for diverse reasons are considered its close allies, hoping that this could favour a more or less bloody change of government, which would render less problematic the US presence in the most strategic area in the world. The Lebanese crisis, the struggle against the terrorism of Hezbollah, with its real or supposed Iranian aide in arms, money or military logistics, all this was well adapted to the objective pursued.
In the mean time, the price of a barrel of oil is rising and the 80 dollar threshold is not far off. And the more oil prices rise, the more the oil rent fills the coffers of the oil companies and the American state that badly needs it to be able to finance its twin deficits in a national and international context that has changed in the past few years. First, the American economy, the most indebted in the world (more than 35 000 billion dollars US) has lost its energy self-sufficiency and is dependant on foreign oil for 70% of its needs. The commercial deficit has plummeted to 800 billion dollars. Russia, which in the same period has become the biggest supplier of energy in the world, if we take into account its exports of oil and natural gas, now accepts the Euro as a mode of payment for oil and not only the dollar as in the past. Iran, Venezuela and some African producers have done the same, which renders the appropriation mechanisms of the financial rent - that give the US control of the process of price setting-increasingly problematic and that undermines its most important source of financial supply. Europe has now stabilized its monetary zone, causing a series of problems to the supremacy of the dollar. Syria has officially declared it wants to convert its monetary reserves from dollars to Euros. China has already operated such a diversification to the tune of a few billion dollars. In 2005, even Saudi Arabia, the great ally of the US has also taken this direction and the threat on the dollar is on the agenda even in the South American countries. Thus, the supremacy of the dollar, one of the most important pillars supporting the imperialist power of the United States could collapse.
If we add to this the continuous stagnation of the American economy, the resumption of the fall of profit rates, its weak competitiveness at the international level, we can understand how much these weaknesses are dangerous and the importance of each occasion to get around them, whatever the means or costs. That is why the Lebanese crisis must be analyzed in its Middle-East context, where it started and where it will produce its devastating effects, but also at the international level, with its inter-imperialist confrontations of planetary dimensions. Its precisely the weakening of US imperialism and the acceleration of the recomposition process of alternative imperialist poles, in which Europe, Russia and China are the main actors, that reinforces the tendency towards expansion of the permanent imperialist war to key areas from a strategic and economic point of view. Moreover, today, every war, even when they demonstrate strong local characteristics like the one in Lebanon, are part and parcel of inter-imperialist conflicts. Hezbollah shows this by pursuing its internal political objectives (and not just internal) as long as it has the support of Iran and Syria, that are themselves under the protective wing of China, Russia and even Europe which, thanks to Rome Conference, has seized the occasion to insert itself fully in the Middle-East intrigue. After Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon, tomorrow it could be the Gulf of Guinea, South America or any other area of strategic interest.
More then ever in the present historical phase, capitalism, with its convulsions can only create permanent wars, hunger and growing misery for the great majority of the world’s population. That is why the reconstruction of the revolutionary party is always more necessary and urgent. A party capable of leading the masses of the proletariat away from the influence of bourgeois ideology in general and in the Middle-East context, away from the sirens of nationalism, in whatever forms it presents itself: lay, progressive, Zionist or fundamentalist. A party which will work towards the revolutionary solution which alone can put a stop to the barbarity of capitalism in crisis.
The International Bureau for the Revolutionary Party - August 1st, 2006Inizia da qui...
ICT sections
Fondamenti
- Bourgeois revolution
- Competition and monopoly
- Core and peripheral countries
- Crisis
- Decadence
- Democracy and dictatorship
- Exploitation and accumulation
- Factory and territory groups
- Financialization
- Globalization
- Historical materialism
- Imperialism
- Our Intervention
- Party and class
- Proletarian revolution
- Seigniorage
- Social classes
- Socialism and communism
- State
- State capitalism
- War economics
Fatti
- Activities
- Arms
- Automotive industry
- Books, art and culture
- Commerce
- Communications
- Conflicts
- Contracts and wages
- Corporate trends
- Criminal activities
- Disasters
- Discriminations
- Discussions
- Drugs and dependencies
- Economic policies
- Education and youth
- Elections and polls
- Energy, oil and fuels
- Environment and resources
- Financial market
- Food
- Health and social assistance
- Housing
- Information and media
- International relations
- Law
- Migrations
- Pensions and benefits
- Philosophy and religion
- Repression and control
- Science and technics
- Social unrest
- Terrorist outrages
- Transports
- Unemployment and precarity
- Workers' conditions and struggles
Storia
- 01. Prehistory
- 02. Ancient History
- 03. Middle Ages
- 04. Modern History
- 1800: Industrial Revolution
- 1900s
- 1910s
- 1911-12: Turko-Italian War for Libya
- 1912: Intransigent Revolutionary Fraction of the PSI
- 1912: Republic of China
- 1913: Fordism (assembly line)
- 1914-18: World War I
- 1917: Russian Revolution
- 1918: Abstentionist Communist Fraction of the PSI
- 1918: German Revolution
- 1919-20: Biennio Rosso in Italy
- 1919-43: Third International
- 1919: Hungarian Revolution
- 1930s
- 1931: Japan occupies Manchuria
- 1933-43: New Deal
- 1933-45: Nazism
- 1934: Long March of Chinese communists
- 1934: Miners' uprising in Asturias
- 1934: Workers' uprising in "Red Vienna"
- 1935-36: Italian Army Invades Ethiopia
- 1936-38: Great Purge
- 1936-39: Spanish Civil War
- 1937: International Bureau of Fractions of the Communist Left
- 1938: Fourth International
- 1940s
- 1960s
- 1980s
- 1979-89: Soviet war in Afghanistan
- 1980-88: Iran-Iraq War
- 1982: First Lebanon War
- 1982: Sabra and Chatila
- 1986: Chernobyl disaster
- 1987-93: First Intifada
- 1989: Fall of the Berlin Wall
- 1979-90: Thatcher Government
- 1980: Strikes in Poland
- 1982: Falklands War
- 1983: Foundation of IBRP
- 1984-85: UK Miners' Strike
- 1987: Perestroika
- 1989: Tiananmen Square Protests
- 1990s
- 1991: Breakup of Yugoslavia
- 1991: Dissolution of Soviet Union
- 1991: First Gulf War
- 1992-95: UN intervention in Somalia
- 1994-96: First Chechen War
- 1994: Genocide in Rwanda
- 1999-2000: Second Chechen War
- 1999: Introduction of euro
- 1999: Kosovo War
- 1999: WTO conference in Seattle
- 1995: NATO Bombing in Bosnia
- 2000s
- 2000: Second intifada
- 2001: September 11 attacks
- 2001: Piqueteros Movement in Argentina
- 2001: War in Afghanistan
- 2001: G8 Summit in Genoa
- 2003: Second Gulf War
- 2004: Asian Tsunami
- 2004: Madrid train bombings
- 2005: Banlieue riots in France
- 2005: Hurricane Katrina
- 2005: London bombings
- 2006: Anti-CPE movement in France
- 2006: Comuna de Oaxaca
- 2006: Second Lebanon War
- 2007: Subprime Crisis
- 2008: Onda movement in Italy
- 2008: War in Georgia
- 2008: Riots in Greece
- 2008: Pomigliano Struggle
- 2008: Global Crisis
- 2008: Automotive Crisis
- 2009: Post-election crisis in Iran
- 2009: Israel-Gaza conflict
- 2020s
- 1920s
- 1921-28: New Economic Policy
- 1921: Communist Party of Italy
- 1921: Kronstadt Rebellion
- 1922-45: Fascism
- 1922-52: Stalin is General Secretary of PCUS
- 1925-27: Canton and Shanghai revolt
- 1925: Comitato d'Intesa
- 1926: General strike in Britain
- 1926: Lyons Congress of PCd’I
- 1927: Vienna revolt
- 1928: First five-year plan
- 1928: Left Fraction of the PCd'I
- 1929: Great Depression
- 1950s
- 1970s
- 1969-80: Anni di piombo in Italy
- 1971: End of the Bretton Woods System
- 1971: Microprocessor
- 1973: Pinochet's military junta in Chile
- 1975: Toyotism (just-in-time)
- 1977-81: International Conferences Convoked by PCInt
- 1977: '77 movement
- 1978: Economic Reforms in China
- 1978: Islamic Revolution in Iran
- 1978: South Lebanon conflict
- 2010s
- 2010: Greek debt crisis
- 2011: War in Libya
- 2011: Indignados and Occupy movements
- 2011: Sovereign debt crisis
- 2011: Tsunami and Nuclear Disaster in Japan
- 2011: Uprising in Maghreb
- 2014: Euromaidan
- 2016: Brexit Referendum
- 2017: Catalan Referendum
- 2019: Maquiladoras Struggle
- 2010: Student Protests in UK and Italy
- 2011: War in Syria
- 2013: Black Lives Matter Movement
- 2014: Military Intervention Against ISIS
- 2015: Refugee Crisis
- 2018: Haft Tappeh Struggle
- 2018: Climate Movement
Persone
- Amadeo Bordiga
- Anton Pannekoek
- Antonio Gramsci
- Arrigo Cervetto
- Bruno Fortichiari
- Bruno Maffi
- Celso Beltrami
- Davide Casartelli
- Errico Malatesta
- Fabio Damen
- Fausto Atti
- Franco Migliaccio
- Franz Mehring
- Friedrich Engels
- Giorgio Paolucci
- Guido Torricelli
- Heinz Langerhans
- Helmut Wagner
- Henryk Grossmann
- Karl Korsch
- Karl Liebknecht
- Karl Marx
- Leon Trotsky
- Lorenzo Procopio
- Mario Acquaviva
- Mauro jr. Stefanini
- Michail Bakunin
- Onorato Damen
- Ottorino Perrone (Vercesi)
- Paul Mattick
- Rosa Luxemburg
- Vladimir Lenin
Politica
- Anarchism
- Anti-Americanism
- Anti-Globalization Movement
- Antifascism and United Front
- Antiracism
- Armed Struggle
- Autonomism and Workerism
- Base Unionism
- Bordigism
- Communist Left Inspired
- Cooperativism and autogestion
- DeLeonism
- Environmentalism
- Fascism
- Feminism
- German-Dutch Communist Left
- Gramscism
- ICC and French Communist Left
- Islamism
- Italian Communist Left
- Leninism
- Liberism
- Luxemburgism
- Maoism
- Marxism
- National Liberation Movements
- Nationalism
- No War But The Class War
- PCInt-ICT
- Pacifism
- Parliamentary Center-Right
- Parliamentary Left and Reformism
- Peasant movement
- Revolutionary Unionism
- Russian Communist Left
- Situationism
- Stalinism
- Statism and Keynesism
- Student Movement
- Titoism
- Trotskyism
- Unionism
Regioni
Login utente
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.