Trotsky's ghost wandering the White House
Influence
on Bush aides: Bolshevik's writings supported the idea of pre-emptive war
National Post
Saturday, June 07, 2003
Joseph Stalin, the Soviet
dictator, was paranoid. Perhaps his deepest fears centred around his great
rival for the leadership of the Bolshevik movement, Leon Trotsky. Stalin went
to extraordinary lengths to obliterate not only Trotsky but also the ragtag
international fellowship known as the Left Opposition, which supported
Trotsky's political program. In the late 1920s, Stalin expelled Trotsky from
the Communist Party and deported him from the Soviet Union. Almost instantly, other
Communist parties moved to excommunicate Trotsky's followers, notably the
Americans James P. Cannon and Max Shachtman.
In 1933, while in exile in
Turkey, Trotsky regrouped his supporters as the Fourth International. Never
amounting to more than a few thousand individuals scattered across the globe,
the Fourth International was constantly harassed by Stalin's secret police, as
well as by capitalist governments. The terrible purge trials that Stalin
ordered in the late 1930s were designed in part to eliminate any remaining
Trotskyists in the Soviet Union. Fleeing from country to country, Trotsky ended
up in Mexico, where he was murdered by an ice-pick-wielding Stalinist assassin
in 1940. Like Macbeth after the murder of Banquo, Stalin became even more obsessed
with his great foe after killing him. Fearing a revival of Trotskyism, Stalin's
secret police continued to monitor the activities of Trotsky's widow in Mexico,
as well as the far-flung activities of the Fourth International.
- - -
More than a decade after
the demise of the Soviet Union, Stalin's war against Trotsky may seem like
quaint ancient history. Yet Stalin was right to fear Trotsky's influence.
Unlike Stalin, Trotsky was a man of genuine intellectual achievement, a
brilliant literary critic and historian as well as a military strategist of
genius. Trotsky's movement, although never numerous, attracted many sharp
minds. At one time or another, the Fourth International included among its
followers the painter Frida Kahlo (who had an affair with Trotsky), the
novelist Saul Bellow, the poet André Breton and the Trinidadian polymath C.L.R.
James.
As evidence of the
continuing intellectual influence of Trotsky, consider the curious fact that
some of the books about the Middle East crisis that are causing the greatest
stir were written by thinkers deeply shaped by the tradition of the Fourth
International.
In seeking advice about
Iraqi society, members of the Bush administration (notably Paul D. Wolfowitz,
the Deputy Secretary of Defence, and Dick Cheney, the Vice-President)
frequently consulted Kanan Makiya, an Iraqi-American intellectual whose book
The Republic of Fear is considered to be the definitive analysis of Saddam
Hussein's tyrannical rule.
As the journalist
Christopher Hitchens notes, Makiya is "known to veterans of the Trotskyist
movement as a one-time leading Arab member of the Fourth International."
When speaking about Trotskyism, Hitchens has a voice of authority. Like Makiya,
Hitchens is a former Trotskyist who is influential in Washington circles as an
advocate for a militantly interventionist policy in the Middle East. Despite
his leftism, Hitchens has been invited into the White House as an ad hoc
consultant.
Other supporters of the
Iraq war also have a Trotsky-tinged past. On the left, the historian Paul
Berman, author of a new book called Terror and Liberalism, has been a resonant
voice among those who want a more muscular struggle against Islamic
fundamentalism. Berman counts the Trotskyist C.L.R. James as a major influence.
Among neo-conservatives, Berman's counterpart is Stephen Schwartz, a historian
whose new book, The Two Faces of Islam, is a key text among those who want the
United States to sever its ties with Saudi Arabia. Schwartz spent his formative
years in a Spanish Trotskyist group.
To this day, Schwartz
speaks of Trotsky affectionately as "the old man" and
"L.D." (initials from Trotsky's birth name, Lev Davidovich
Bronstein). "To a great extent, I still consider myself to be [one of the]
disciples of L.D," he admits, and he observes that in certain Washington
circles, the ghost of Trotsky still hovers around. At a party in February
celebrating a new book about Iraq, Schwartz exchanged banter with Wolfowitz
about Trotsky, the Moscow Trials and Max Shachtman.
"I've talked to Wolfowitz
about all of this," Schwartz notes. "We had this discussion about
Shachtman. He knows all that stuff, but was never part of it. He's definitely
aware." The yoking together of Paul Wolfowitz and Leon Trotsky sounds odd,
but a long and tortuous history explains the link between the Bolshevik left
and the Republican right.
To understand how some
Trotskyists ended up as advocates of U.S. expansionism, it is important to know
something about Max Shachtman, Trotsky's controversial American disciple.
Shachtman's career provides the definitive template of the trajectory that
carries people from the Left Opposition to support for the Pentagon.
Throughout the 1930s,
Shachtman loyally hewed to the Trotsky line that the Soviet Union as a state
deserved to be defended even though Stalin's leadership had to be overthrown.
However, when the Soviet Union forged an alliance with Hitler and invaded
Finland, Shachtman moved to a politics of total opposition, eventually known as
the "third camp" position. Shachtman argued in the 1940s and 1950s
that socialists should oppose both capitalism and Soviet communism, both
Washington and Moscow.
Yet as the Cold War wore
on, Shachtman became increasingly convinced Soviet Communism was "the
greater and more dangerous" enemy. "There was a way on the third camp
left that anti-Stalinism was so deeply ingrained that it obscured everything
else," says Christopher Phelps, whose introduction to the new book Race
and Revolution details the Trotskyist debate on racial politics. Phelps is an eloquent
advocate for the position that the best portion of Shachtman's legacy still
belongs to the left.
By the early 1970s,
Shachtman was a supporter of the Vietnam War and the strongly anti-Communist
Democrats such as Senator Henry Jackson. Shachtman had a legion of young
followers (known as Shachtmanites) active in labour unions and had an umbrella
group known as the Social Democrats. When the Shachtmanites started working for
Senator Jackson, they forged close ties with hard-nosed Cold War liberals who
also advised Jackson, including Richard Perle and Paul Wolfowitz; these two had
another tie to the Trotskyism; their mentor was Albert Wohlstetter, a defence
intellectual who had been a Schachtmanite in the late 1940s.
Shachtman died in 1972,
but his followers rose in the ranks of the labour movement and government
bureaucracy. Because of their long battles against Stalinism, Shachtmanites
were perfect recruits for the renewed struggle against Soviet communism that
started up again after the Vietnam War. Throughout the 1970s, intellectuals
forged by the Shachtman tradition filled the pages of neo-conservative
publications. Then in the 1980s, many Social Democrats found themselves working
in the Reagan administration, notably Jeanne Kirkpatrick (who was ambassador to
the United Nations) and Elliott Abrams (whose tenure as assistant secretary of
state was marred by his involvement with the Iran-Contra scandal).
The distance between the
Russia of 1917 and the Washington of 2003 is so great that many question
whether Trotsky and Shachtman have really left a legacy for the Bush
administration. For Christopher Phelps, the circuitous route from Trotsky to
Bush is "more a matter of rupture and abandonment of the left than
continuity."
Stephen Schwartz
disagrees. "I see a psychological, ideological and intellectual
continuity," says Schwartz, who defines Trotsky's legacy to
neo-conservatism in terms of a set of valuable lessons. By his opposition to
both Hitler and Stalin, Trotsky taught the Left Opposition the need to have a
politics that was proactive and willing to take unpopular positions.
"Those are the two things that the neo-cons and the Trotskyists always had
in common: the ability to anticipate rather than react and the moral courage to
stand apart from liberal left opinion when liberal left opinion acts like a
mob."
Trotsky was also a great
military leader, and Schwartz finds support for the idea of pre-emptive war in
the old Bolshevik's writings. "Nobody who is a Trotskyist can really be a
pacifist," Schwartz notes. "Trotskyism is a militaristic disposition.
When you are Trotskyist, we don't refer to him as a great literary critic, we
refer to him as the founder of the Red Army."
Paul Berman agrees with
Schwartz that Trotskyists are by definition internationalists who are willing
to go to war when necessary. "The Left Opposition and the non-Communist
left comes out of classic socialism, so it's not a pacifist tradition,"
Berman observes. "It's an internationalist tradition. It has a natural
ability to sympathize or feel solidarity for people in places that might strike
other Americans or Canadians as extremely remote."
Christopher Phelps,
however, doubts these claims of a Trotskyist tradition that would support the
war in Iraq. For the Left Opposition, internationalism was not simply about
fighting all over the world. "Internationalism meant solidarity with other
peoples and not imperialist imposition upon them," Phelps notes.
Though Trotsky was a
military leader, Phelps also notes "the Left Opposition had a long history
of opposition to imperialist war. They weren't pacifists, but they were against
capitalist wars fought by capitalist states. It's true that there is no
squeamishness about the application of force when necessary. The question is,
is force used on behalf of a class that is trying to create a world with much
less violence or is it force used on behalf of a state that is itself the
largest purveyor of organized violence in the world? There is a big
difference." Seeing the Iraq war as an imperialist adventure, Phelps is
confident "Trotsky and Shachtman in the '30s and '40s wouldn't have
supported this war."
This dispute over the true
legacy of Trotsky and Shachtman illustrates how the Left Opposition still stirs
passion. The strength of a living tradition is in its ability to inspire rival
interpretations. Despite Stalin's best efforts, Trotskyism is a living force
that people fight over.