What Ukraine has taught us is that when a society’s conditions get worse, it doesn’t necessarily bring proletarian revolution closer. Without a sufficiently strong network of revolutionary cadres, ones which are prepared to defend themselves from reactionary violence, counterrevolution can find ways of continuing to prevail. Which is what the oligarchs in Ukraine have achieved since the 2014 coup, the event that’s greatly exacerbated capital’s contradictions within the country.
Washington’s post-2014 puppet governments have facilitated gargantuan corruption that’s wrecked the economy, enacted extreme neoliberal shock policies, and created harrowing costs for the country’s people by consistently provoking more conflict. This came after two decades of neoliberal social collapse and power grabs by oligarchs, which by 2011 had reduced Ukrainian public support for a multiparty system to one-third. The vast majority of the country’s people did not believe in liberalism, because liberalism had caused their living standards to plummet and the deterioration was greatly accelerating. Yet a return to Ukraine’s socialist past has since become more remote of a possibility than ever. The U.S. proxy regime has avoided a rise in communist influence by preemptively suppressing communist organizing, and has done so despite Ukraine having descended into a failed state since the coup. This has been achieved through paramilitarism, where the state has enabled the CIA to support neo-Nazi terrorist organizations within the country.
Could this have been avoided if Ukraine’s communist party had sufficiently armed and trained its members in guerrilla warfare beforehand? Of course, but whatever mistakes its leadership made came within the context of an unprecedented anti-communist coup two decades prior, and of a government that had been on the verge of again taking away its legal status the entire time. The party had to choose between gaining electoral seats, which were its most tenable path to power for the foreseeable future, and investing in a kind of armed revolt that communists simply can’t win without the emergence of the right conditions.
The increasing disillusionment of the masses with capitalism wasn’t enough, there also had to be a revolutionary crisis that would have made guerrilla actions in step with the masses. And since this wasn’t the case, the party felt it had no choice but to continue entirely investing in electoralism, despite the horrific history of what’s happened to communist parties when they’ve declined to arm themselves in the leadup to coup scenarios. I’m not saying it was correct in how it went about this, but these are the sensitive circumstances that can lead a communist party to steer away from militancy.
This underlies what should be our ultimate takeaway, despite these pieces of context behind the party’s lack of guerrilla preparation: the forces of counterrevolution in Ukraine would now be defeated, or at least seriously challenged, if there had been a communist army prior to the coup. This sentiment about communist parties always having responsibility to make the correct steps, and about counterrevolution’s triumph always at least partly being the fault of the revolutionaries, is reflected in Jim Dann’s critique of the failed “Focoism” guerrilla strategy by Che Guevara:
In countries throughout the world the people can overthrow the oppressive rule of imperialism and seize state power to build a bright future under socialism. Despite inevitable twists and turns in the struggle, the working class will eventually win victory. Defeats, in general, cannot be explained by an extraordinary series of accidents or because “adverse factors unbelievably built up” (as Fidel says in the introduction), but by defects in the political line. Many people around the Left have wishfully thought of Che as one of the foremost practitioners of People’s War. Unfortunately, this was not the case, as we shall show. “The liberation of the masses is accomplished by the masses themselves – this is a basic principle of Marxism-Leninism. Revolution or people’s war in any country is the business of the masses in that country and should be carried out primarily by their own efforts; there is no other way.” (Lin Piao, “Long Live the Victory of People’s War”)
Indeed, more could have been done to prevent or mitigate the violent anti-communist purge that’s been occurring these last eight years. Whereas Che’s error was in assuming he could kickstart a revolution in Bolivia without sufficient backing from the masses, the error of Ukraine’s communist party was in assuming it could survive without investing in any sort of guerrilla warfare strategy. These errors were inverse, in that one went too far while another didn’t go far enough. The party didn’t have to jump ahead of the masses by prematurely starting a guerrilla war; it only had to have a plan in place for physically protecting its members when a violent anti-communist purge started.
And it’s not like Ukraine’s present fascist nightmare was impossible to have foreseen prior to 2014. The party seemed aware of the risks of a fascist coup beforehand, as evidenced by its speculations about the 2011 unrest in Kazakhstan having been orchestrated by U.S. imperialism as part of a regime change attempt. But when NATO’s regime change network successfully absorbed Ukraine a few years later, the party was unprepared for what would follow. In the summer of 2014, only several months after the coup, the party’s leader described the direness of the situation:
After the coup d’état, we witnessed the formation of illegal armed militias that imposed their rule through violence and political terror. Opposition candidates were banned from campaigning and the media were severely censored. In Odessa, the arson that killed more than forty people rocked the whole world. In Mariupol, the regime opened fire on those celebrating the 9th May (marking the victory over Nazism). There has also been anti-Communist hysteria since the coup d’état. Comrades have been assaulted. Some have been taken into the woods and beaten. Party buildings have been damaged or requisitioned by the regime’s fascist militias. A few days after the presidential poll, there is even a procedure for banning the Communist Party; this was initiated by Ukraine’s attorney general, Oleh Makhnitsky, a member of the far-right Svoboda party. For all these reasons and in the name of the Ukrainian Communist Party, I call on France to take stock of what is really going on in my country.
Then the next year, that ban on the party happened, along with a law that imprisons people for ten years if they display communist symbols. Since then, as state services have further deteriorated, the fascist militias have filled the power vacuum within the most lawless places. This has occurred not in spite of the government, but because of it; even the administration of the Jewish Zelensky has had extensive ties to the neo-Nazi Azov Battalion, and has let neo-Nazis infiltrate every level of the government and military. This has allowed the government to make what would be a problem for it—the loss of law enforcement control within increasing amounts of the country—into a win for the government’s counterrevolutionary goals by letting fascist paramilitary violence run rampant. And now that Ukraine’s crisis has reached a breaking point, the neo-Nazi movement is able to scapegoat Russia for the situation and use it as a rallying cry for expanding the influence of racist ultra-nationalism.
As collapse scenarios become increasingly likely across the rest of the capitalist world, communists can’t win by sitting back and waiting for the system to fall apart. We must strike a balance between the two dangerous extremes of going on the offensive when the masses aren’t yet ready, and neglecting the base militancy preparations necessary to keep our movement in existence amid a fascist purge.
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