A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, January 4, 2017
Russia Never Was Socialist
( January 3, 2017, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) This
year marks the centenary of the Russian Revolution where the focus will
be on the Bolshevik seizure of power in November 1917. The historic
rivalry between the Western Powers and the world’s first so-called
“Communist” state has been presented as a struggle between Western
‘liberal democracy’ versus Soviet ‘totalitarian Communism’. Many
believed that the fall of ‘Communism’ would usher in an era of global
peace. However, despite the arrival of Western-style representative
democracy in Russia, relations between Russia and the West appear to be
descending into a new ‘Cold War’.
In spite of what its leaders claimed, the Soviet Union was never a
‘Communist’ state, as real communism (or socialism) involves the
abolition of the state and the establishment of a global classless,
moneyless society where the means of production are held in common. This
was clearly not the case here, where the state owned the means of
living and employed a class of wage workers. At the time of the
revolution, social and economic conditions in Russia were not ripe for
socialism, as it was predominantly an agrarian economy based on peasant
labour. Also the working class in Russia and elsewhere did not have the
political consciousness required for establishing socialism. So, in
these conditions, only a form of capitalism could emerge.
Like other capitalist countries, the Soviet Union needed to compete in
global markets, secure trade routes and sources of raw materials. This
inevitably led to rivalry with major capitalist powers, like France and
Britain. Many in the Western ruling classes were horrified by Bolshevism
and feared that their ideas would spread among their workers,
especially in the context of the social and political unrest that
erupted in the aftermath of the First World War. They also feared that
Bolshevism could inspire the growing independence movements in their
overseas colonies. Nonetheless, nation states do not go to war to uphold
a belief system, they do so to advance their material interests.
British and French support for the White Army during the Russian Civil
War was as much about preventing the Bolsheviks from defaulting on
Russia’s foreign loans.
After the Second World War, the United States and the Soviet Union
emerged as the main powers, competing to control resources and trade
routes. This led them into a military rivalry, which became known as the
Cold War, and resulted in standoffs like the Cuban Missile Crisis. When
the Soviet Union collapsed in the early nineties, many believed that
the Cold War had ended. In the new Russia, former state bureaucrats
enriched themselves by coveting former state enterprises. However,
Russia has since grown stronger and is attempting to reassert itself
globally and reclaim its influence in Eastern Europe and the Middle
East. This has led it to fight a war against Georgia and more recently
to annex the Crimea and support the government forces in the Syrian
Civil War. By expanding its influence, Russia is challenging the
dominance of the Western Powers, and the latter have responded by
enlarging the Nato alliance and surrounding Russia with military bases.
This time, however, the pretence that the struggle is ideological has
been dropped. It can now be seen for what it always was: economic and
geopolitical.
(Adopted from the latest issue of Socialist Standard, the regular publication of the Britain Socialist Party)

