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NEWS & LETTERS, October 2004

The Left fiddles while Darfur burns

by Peter Hudis

On the surface, it may appear that the international community is finally waking up to the genocide that the Sudanese government has been inflicting against the Black people of Darfur. After refusing for months to use the word "genocide" in reference to attacks by Sudan’s government and its Janjaweed militias, Secretary of State Colin Powell stated in early September that genocide is occurring in Darfur.

And on Sept. 20 the UN Security Council passed a resolution calling on Sudan to "resolve" the crisis peacefully and threatened sanctions if it fails to do so. However, there is less substance to these responses than meets the eye.

First, the resolution passed by the UN Security Council limits itself to calling for an international commission to "investigate" charges of war crimes and only says it will "consider" imposing sanctions on Sudan if it does not cooperate. The UN has not taken any steps to actually stop the fighting, which is taking 10,000 lives a month.

Second, the UN and Bush administration are calling on the Sudanese government--the very force which instigated the atrocities in Darfur--to "disarm" the Janjaweed militias, which it has so far shown virtually no interest in doing.

Third, Powell has stated that no action will be taken against Sudan unless the UN Security Council agrees that genocide is occurring in Darfur--something that will almost certainly not happen, since that approach is staunchly opposed by China, which has large investments in Sudan’s oil sector, as well as its own oppressed minorities.

As a result, while thousands of people in Darfur continue to die from military attacks and from malnutrition in refugee camps near Sudan’s border with Chad, the international community, including the Africa Union, continues to respond with either indifference or watered-down resolutions. Hundreds of thousands more may die within the next few months, unless the Sudanese government is forced to stop its scorched-earth policy in Darfur. Yet the Bush administration has made it clear that it is not interested in directly intervening in Darfur, given the trouble it is facing in trying to keep control of areas (like Iraq) which it deems "vital to U.S. national interests."

RESPONSE FROM THE LEFT

It should come as no surprise that the U.S. has responded so meekly to the genocide in Darfur; after all, stopping genocide has never been a major factor in its deliberations over whether or not to intervene in crises overseas. The failure of the U.S. to take any action to stop the genocide in Bosnia in the early 1990s (200,000 dead) and in Rwanda in the mid-1990s (800,000 dead) are the most recent cases in point.

More shocking (though perhaps also not surprising) has been the response of many left-wing critics of U.S. foreign policy. Incredibly, many are now denying that genocide is occurring in Darfur at all. Some argue that the belated efforts of the U.S. and European Union to get Sudan to stop its attacks on Darfur is part of an effort to gain control of Sudan’s oil and to undermine the position of China, which is the largest foreign investor in Sudan’s oil industry. Such denials of genocide fly in the face of both accounts by independent journalists and reports issued by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch.

One leftist, John Laughland, wrote in THE GUARDIAN on Aug. 2: "We ought to treat with skepticism the U.S. Congress declaration of genocide in the region....Our media has taken this complex picture [in Sudan] and projected on it a simple morality tale of ethnic cleansing and genocide. They gloss over the fact that the Janjaweed militia come from the same ethnic group and religion as they are allegedly persecuting."(1)

In fact, no one has questioned that the Janjaweed as well as the residents of Darfur are Muslims. The conflict is not an intra-religious conflict (as has been the case with Sudan’s three-decade war against secessionists in the southern part of the country) but one in which the central government is trying to crush aspirations for self-determination and an equitable distribution of the nation’s wealth by Darfur’s non-Arab, Black populace.

LEFTIST EXCUSES

Laughland and others are recycling the same kinds of arguments in regard to Sudan that we used to hear on Bosnia and Kosova, namely that Germany (which helped broker the recent negotiations between Sudan and the rebels in the south) is trying to "break up" Sudan just as it supposedly helped break up Yugoslavia, and the U.S. is "inventing" tales of ethnic cleansing in Darfur in order to bring down an "anti-imperialist" government. (In fact, as late as June 1991, when Croatia declared independence from Yugoslavia, Germany reaffirmed its support for a unified Yugoslavia, as did the U.S.; and Milosevic’s Serbia was an authoritarian state-capitalist regime which never represented any kind of alternative to the capitalist West.)

Until the crisis in Darfur became too noticeable to ignore in the past few months, the Bush administration was trying to forge closer relations with Sudan. Sudan denounced the September 11 attacks and said it was willing to work with the U.S. to "combat terrorism," and Bush followed this up by repairing some of the damage caused by Clinton’s destruction of Sudan’s main pharmaceutical plant by a U.S. preemptive attack in 1999.

Then as now, all too many on the Left seem willing to close their eyes to the brutal fact of ethnic cleansing and genocide, so long as the government committing such crimes issues enough "anti-imperialist" rhetoric to be viewed as a "victim" of U.S. policy.

Another leftist, Stephen Gowens, has recently written that while genocide "may" be occurring in Darfur, we should still oppose efforts by outside powers to stop the fighting since "the only effective protection against these attacks is to put an end to the imperialism that prompts them in the first place. And since what lies behind the exploiting, subjugating, and plunder is the incessant drive to accumulate that lies at the heart of capitalism, the task of achieving [an end to the violence] is inseparable from the task of replacing capitalism."(2)

This abstract revolutionism that ignores how to IMMEDIATELY stop the genocide in Darfur isn’t worth the paper it’s written on. It tries to USE the suffering in Darfur to generate "a movement against capitalism" instead of actively solidarizing with the people of Darfur. Such abstract calls for "revolution" only undermine the very idea of revolution. For why should anyone listen to leftists who call for a revolution against capitalism if they display such insensitivity towards actual people facing genocide?

The reason why many leftists failed to solidarize with Bosnia and Kosova and are repeating that with Darfur today is that despite their "anti-capitalist" rhetoric, they aren’t rooted in a vision of a new society centered on the self-activity of the human subject. What Marko Hoare wrote of the non-response to the "ethnic cleansing" of Bosnia and Kosova remains unfortunately all too true: "More striking even than the defense of denial of crimes against humanity by the left revisionists is their sheer lack of any positive vision for the future."

The IMMEDIATE--solidarizing with the people of Darfur--is inseparable from the ULTIMATE--working out a comprehensive, liberating vision of a noncapitalist future.

NOTES

1. See "The mask of altruism disguising a colonial war," by John Laughland, THE GUARDIAN, Aug. 2, 2004.

2."Sudan: Round Gazillion," by Stephen Gowans

3. "Genocide in the former Yugoslavia: a critique of left revisionism’s denial," by Marko Attila Hoare, JOURNAL OF GENOCIDE RESEARCH (2003), 5(4), p. 548.

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