Anti-Imperialism, War and Peace, Part 0
Short General Introduction
To Anti-Imperialism, War and Peace
We are about to begin a new course on the SADTU Political
Education channel: Anti-Imperialism, War and Peace. A previous edition of this
course can be accessed here.
The series begins with Chapter 1 of Clausewitz’ “On War”,
described by one critic (Bernard Brodie) as “Not
simply the greatest, but the only great book on war”. Clausewitz shows the
dialectical (or in Clausewitz’ term “reciprocal”) nature of any study of war.
It also shows that war can only be an interval between negotiations. It is the
pursuit of politics by other means, means which cannot be conclusive, but which
have to yield in due course to politics, again.
We are for peace but we have to be prepared for war. We are
not pacifists, though we have no interest in bloodshed. We seek the ascendancy
of the working proletariat. We know that the bourgeois power is everywhere
defended with brutal force.
The ANC democratic breakthrough owes its existence to
successful armed struggle, in turn a part of a historic worldwide struggle
against Imperialism. Yet the South African armed struggle is barely
acknowledged. Instead, bourgeois virtues are daily paraded in front of us by
bourgeois “role models”. The South African police shoot demonstrators, while
bourgeois pacifism is pushed as a compulsory ideology for the rest of us.
Internationally in the 21st Century, Imperialism
has embarked upon a series of wars, including wars in Africa, which have the
character of “underdeveloping” once again and subordinating, or recolonising,
African countries.
Therefore it is necessary to have a frank look at the
question of the military. The political democracy must know enough about war to
be able to oversee and to command the military. The military must always be
subordinate to the political. This is the most important thing to know.
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