'Islamism and the new Arab left': a critique of the SWP

Submitted by AWL on 7 July, 2009 - 4:15 Author: Sacha Ismail

On the last day of the SWP's Marxism 2009 event, AWL comrades attended a meeting on 'Islamism and the new Arab left'. The meeting was for the most part about Egypt and its Muslim Brotherhood movement; the speaker was Anne Alexander, one of the SWP's resident experts on the Middle East.

Listening to Alexander speak, you learned a lot of interesting facts. But the overall picture she presented was hopelessly mangled by the SWP's confused theorisation of political Islam. The political conclusions which it suggested - summed up by the phrase "with the Islamists sometimes" - are a variant of those which three decades ago led to catastrophe for the left and the working class in Iran.

Alexander quite explicitly built on the arguments made by Chris Harman in his pamphlet The Prophet and the Proletariat. According to this view, Islamism, as a cross-class, petty bourgeois-led movement, is "contradictory" - simultaneously expressing a progressive or partially progressive critique of the brutality and dislocation of capitalist modernisation in the region (she described it as aiming to make modern civilisation "in some respects more human") and unable to genuinely confront imperialism and capitalism because it can never mobilise the working class and poor to 'go all the way'. In this sense it is comparable to other progressive petty bourgeois movements, national liberation movements for instance. While remaining critical and independent of all Islamists, we should distinguish between reformist and more revolutionary strands.

But what is progressive about the Islamist critique of capitalist modernity? Don't the Islamists aim to establish a society and state which, while still capitalist, are in almost all respects - democracy, freedom of speech and thought, emancipation of women, sexual liberation, ability of workers to organise - more reactionary and less 'human' than the society which they replace? (Which is saying something, when you consider that they are often in struggle against regimes such as the Shah of Iran or Mubarak's authoritarian pseudo-democracy in Egypt.)

Furthermore, while there are indeed many different strands of political Islam, the more radical Islamists, who will go further to confront the existing state, mobilising a mass movement to smash it, are in fact worse - since their 'radicalism' is in the service of reactionary goals, and their mass movement also smashes the working-class movement and the left. The Iranian counter-revolution of 1979 is a clear case in point.

It follows that we cannot relate to Islamist movements as we relate to movements whose basic goals are progressive (eg movements for the liberation of oppressed nations or social groups), let alone to working-class movements under reformist leadership. Rather we must relate to them as an often demagogic, but consistently reactionary force which poses a huge threat to the working class and the oppressed.

The structure of Anne Alexander's argument rested heavily on two supplementary points, both essentially 'straw men' arguments.

Firstly, she was at great pains to insist that Islamism is not fascist. As a flat statement, this is of course true; fascism arose in a specific context. However... Alexander claimed that, while Islamists are in many cases hostile to working-class struggle, Islamism's "primary goal is not to smash the working class". I really don't see the value of this distinction, given that Islamism in power and on the ascent to power does destroy the organisations of the labour movement with a fascist-type thoroughness. (Did the Nazi ideologues, as opposed to the bourgeois interests that made use of them and their supporters, really think that their primary goal was to smash the working class, rather than blood, honour, the resurrection of Germany etc?) Moreover, like fascism, it mobilises a mass movement of the poor and dispossessed (the unemployed, the impoverished petty bourgeoisie) to do so. It is fascistic - which is why SWP founder Tony Cliff described Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, the main subject of Alexander's talk, as "clerical fascist" in 1946 (see here), and why Workers' Liberty makes use of that term.

But, argued Alexander, we need to win over Islamism's base of social support; we have to understand that it gains strength because of the "contradictions" and brutality of capitalist development. These arguments, however, apply equally to fascism.

Secondly, she made great play of the failings of the Stalinist left in the Middle East, which abandoned independent working-class politics to the extent of merging itself into Arab nationalism; in Egypt, for instance, having effectively justified the Nasser regime's execution of striking workers' leaders on grounds of 'anti-imperialism', the Communists dissolved themselves into the Nasserite party. They were thus also willing to support the regime's suppression of the Muslim Brotherhood, a tradition continued by the Stalinist and Arab nationalist left for decades.

Clearly these 'mistakes' were not so much mistaken as criminal. Clearly we need to refound Marxism on the basis of working-class independence from all bourgeois factions and regimes, no matter how 'progressive' or 'anti-imperialist' they claim to be. But this yardstick, whose measure condemns those 'leftists' who collapsed into Arab nationalism, equally condemns those who abandon the necessary socialist hostility to the reactionary opposition the Islamists represent. Harman's formulation "with the state, never; with the fundamentalists, sometimes" is not the opposite of the Stalinists' capitulation to Arab nationalism, but its mirror image.

It is possible to retain independence from regimes such as Mubarak's, oppose the repressive measures which at present are directed in large part against the Islamists and remain sharply hostile to political Islam. Difficult, requiring skill, political sensitivity and tactical flexibility - but not impossible by any means. In the 1930s, after all, the Trotskyists refused to endorse bourgeois repression against the fascists, without in any way imagining that this required a letting up of revolutionary hostility to fascism.

The SWP clearly believes that it would be progressive if the Muslim Brotherhood came to power in Egypt. They are not uncritical; thus Alexander spoke about how the Brotherhood has supported the landlords in tussles over land reform. At the same time, she pointed out, they have supported some strikes against the regime and the bosses it serves. But again this misses the point. All kinds of reactionary forces are capable of endorsing movements of the exploited aimed against their most immediate enemies. Thatcher and Reagan 'supported' Solidarnosc as a blow against the Stalinist system; more to the point, the Iranian Islamists 'supported' the workers' uprising against the Shah.

Once the latter had come to power, however, they did smash the workers' movement and imposed an even more anti-working class regime. This is true everywhere that Islamists have come to or near power. Whether the majority of Egyptian workers realise it at present or not, for the Muslim Brothers to replace Mubarak would be a total disaster for their class. In the context of a rising tide of working-class struggle and the emergence of an independent trade union movement in Egypt, clarity on this question could not be more important. We do not want Egypt to be another Iran!

The spectre of the crisis in Iran hovered over the meeting; since we were very determinedly not called to speak, we did not think it would be verbalised. An unaffiliated Tunisian comrade was called, however, and made the necessary point - the Islamists make use of democratic slogans as a way of reaching the point where they can crush democracy. The left internationally needs to learn this lesson in argument before we learn it in the workers' blood spilt by another Islamist victory.

For more detailed analyses on the SWP and political Islam, see
The left and 'reactionary anti-imperialism': the theory of accommodation
Poisoning the new anti-capitalists: the practice of accommodation
(March 2002)

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