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El periódico «La Voz de los Trabajadores»: Edición de marzo-abril

La guerra de Estados Unidos e Israel contra Irán es una escalada importante en el Medio Oriente que tiene implicaciones peligrosas para los trabajadores de todo el mundo. La brutalidad del asalto imperialista a nivel internacional va junto con el ataque a las libertades civiles por parte del régimen de Trump dentro de Estados Unidos. Esto incluye las operaciones continuas del ICE y la Patrulla Fronteriza, las amenazas a las elecciones de mitad de período de 2026, los retrocesos ambientales que afectan profundamente a la comunidad negra y la brutalidad policial sin control.
Nuestro editorial en este número nos advierte: «Existe un gran peligro de subestimar la determinación de la élite empresarial estadounidense de llevar adelante esta iniciativa. No podemos confiar en que las sentencias judiciales o las próximas elecciones nos salven. Debemos organizarnos ahora, no solo para realizar manifestaciones masivas y crear redes comunitarias contra la violencia del ICE, sino para encontrar el camino hacia la construcción de un nuevo partido de la clase trabajadora a través del cual podamos organizar nuestra defensa política en todos los planos y todos los días».
En este número también tenemos artículos sobre los archivos de Epstein y la clase dominante, la huelga de maestros de San Francisco y una reseña del nuevo álbum de U2.
La edición de marzo-abril de 2026 de nuestro periódico está disponible en formato impreso y en línea como PDF y contiene articulos en ingles y español. ¡Lee hoy mismo el último número de nuestro periódico con una descarga gratuita en PDF! Como siempre, agradecemos cualquier donación que ayude a sufragar los gastos de impresión.
Haz clic en la imagen para leer el periódico o envíanos un mensaje para recibir una copia impresa:
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Halt Brazil to Stop the Coronavirus
A general strike is needed to defeat the attacks by Bolsonaro, bosses and the National Congress.
It is necessary to use all the resources available in society to fight the pandemic and prevent the social catastrophe and the loss of thousands of lives. It is necessary to apply an emergency plan, under workers’ control, to tackle the pandemic in time. Guedes-Bolsonaro takes advantage of the crisis to make further attacks on workers, the poor and small businesses for the benefit of bankers, speculators, landowners, and large companies.
PSTU – Brazil
Social measures to fight the pandemic and the sanitary crisis- Decree immediate social quarantine
This is the only measure proven to prevent the infection and the spread of the virus.
All the cities affected by the coronavirus should immediately establish social quarantine. We have the right to stay at home and have paid leave.
Besides the schools, close industry, services, transport, trade, etc., except what is absolutely necessary to living and to fight the pandemic.
Keep essential services under workers’ control: distribution of food, medicines, hygiene products and medicines needed to tackle the crisis, bin collection, transport (only for healthcare users).
These workers must wear personal protective equipment against the virus in workplaces, and the government must ensure the commuting of these people.- Conduct mass free tests
Compel all available laboratories in the country to produce the test kits. Experts say that the incubation period could long up to nine days but in this period the virus is replicating. Testing, along with social quarantine, is crucial, as is demonstrated in the case of South Korea, where mass testing was applied.
Strengthen the state-owned Fiocruz Foundation, which has conditions to scale up the production of tests.
Declare public interest in test property. No Pharmaceutical industry can demand ownership. All the production capacity of tests must be put under state control to organize the production on a national scale to allow tests to those who need it.- Expansion of the SUS (equivalent to the NHS in Britain) public hospital network and the requisition of all private hospitals network under SUS command to centralize the use of hospital beds and equipment.
SUS has almost the same number of ICU beds as the private network but serves 75% of the population. The private network was expanded while the government cut funding of public health.
Everyone should enjoy equal treatment, regardless of social or economic status. The beds and ICU of the private network should be incorporated directly to the NHS and provide equal service to people in need. Not a penny for the private network and for those who want to speculate with the lives of others!- Build new ICUs and hospitals in an emergency speed
The current stage of virus proliferation requires more hospitals and ICU beds. This should be planned before the healthcare system collapses. The country has facilities and technology to build respirators for severely ill patients, as well as other equipment. Requisition of all companies with the capacity to produce them!
- Free distribution of alcohol in gel, masks, and medicines to the population
Brazil is the second producer of alcohol worldwide. It is a shame that most of the people do not have access to these basic items. All production must be nationalized and the manufactures placed under workers’ control.
- Protect and value healthcare workers.
Their jobs are more and more precarious, low paid and now there is a lack of PPE. The public and private healthcare workers are the true heroes in this struggle.
Immediate hiring of staff for the SUS to ensure quality services to patients and also because it is a fundamental part of security and prevention and to provide adequate working hours for all workers in the healthcare system.- Funds for public universities and for research, now!
- Provide all protective equipment to these professionals to avoid virus infection.
Economic measures to halt the social catastrophe
- No to layoffs! Jobs security now!
Every manufacture and service should shut down now. Companies continue to operate and spread the virus. And they want to cut wages yet.
- Paid leave! Full payment for all workers!
Workers must stay at home and gain full wages. We cannot accept that they turn the paid leave into vacations. We will not accept reduced working hours and wages, as Bolsonaro and Guedes want.
- 2.5 minimal wages for all gig economy workers and unemployed!
We defend an income equal to the average wage of a worker (2.5 minimum wages) for all those who do not have a formal job or who will no longer be able to work, including the self-employed, from trade to crafts, and unemployed. R$ 200 is an insult! Extension of unemployment insurance until the end of the crisis.
- No payment of rents, energy, and water bills!
- Immediate reduction in prices of gas and LPG.
Decrease and freeze in the price of LPG and gasoline in proportion to the reduction in the price of the barrel of oil. Maintaining the current price only serves to increase the profits of Petrobras’ private shareholders.
- Support for small businesses
The government allocated R$ 5 billion to the sector with interest rates that can reach 12% per month. But that is not all. There are 4.9 million small businesses in the country, which means a ridiculous loan of R$ 1,000 each. But, as sales are plummeting, they will only be able to pay their taxes collected by the government itself. A scandal, as 80% of jobs in Brazil are in small companies.
- National, state and local tax exemption for small businesses
- Exemption of water and energy bills.
- Unlimited business lines of credit for all small businesses.
How to pay the bill?
After saying that the pandemic is a fantasy, Bolsonaro decreed a state of calamity, which until now only served to allow wages to be reduced by up to 50% and to help large companies. And he continues saying that the country has no financial resources. It’s a lie! The problem is what they do with the money. We propose:- No payment of the public debt while the pandemic is threatening us!
In 2019, bankers and investment funds took out R$ 400 billion in debt service. The same will happen this year. Why do these people receive this amount while thousands of people can die?
- Nationalization of the financing system and creation of a single bank, zero interest rates for all loans.
The interest rate of a personal bank loan amounts to 6.05% per month (102.5% per year). Interest rates can reach 150% for overdrafts! A theft! They are true vampire bats. Why does this gang keep making billions in the midst of a social catastrophe?
- No to capital flight, banning of profits remittance to abroad.
In the first months of 2020 alone, more than R$ 44 billion was withdrawn from the country. The state of public calamity decree should serve to prevent sharks from flowing out capital not to reduce wages. Brazil’s international reserves should serve to combat the outbreak, providing all necessary funds to the SUS (Healthcare public system), not to feed these financial parasites.
- Use the international reserve to combat the pandemic and social catastrophe.
Brazil’s international reserve is worth US$ 350 bn. Why doesn’t the government use this mountain of dollars to fight the pandemic? Because it is a guarantee for international speculators to withdraw profits on “investments” made in the country.
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[Brazil] Socialism or Barbarism
The world is plunged into a crisis in which all the consequences are not yet glimpsed. According to Martin Wolf, of the New York Times, in an extreme situation, the pandemic can produce up to 60 million deaths, a number similar to that of the Second World War. This devastation adds to an unprecedented social-economic crisis.
PSTU – Brazil
The pandemic was predicted by scientists, but governments have not avoided it or prepared to face it. Why? Because the capitalist system is absolutely obsolete and destructive. It is a system aimed at accumulating capital and generating profit for an ever-smaller number of billionaires, irrationally devastating the environment and making millions of human beings disposable things, producing legions of unemployed. Each day this system throws humanity into stark crises and scenarios of barbarism and horrors that are getting worse. In the face of the crisis, they postpone the response. They only respond when profits are threatened, and they respond insufficiently. See Italy, where the working class is being forced to work in the industry: so, correctly, workers begin strikes and demand social quarantine.
In Brazil, a catastrophe of enormous proportions is approaching: in the healthcare system, economic and social. The geometric expansion of infection by the corona virus is already underway. The numbers are underestimated, as no mass tests are being done.
Bolsonaro and Mourão’s attitude is to defend barbarism. After saying that the pandemic was just a fantasy, he encouraged and participated in a rally in defense of a dictatorship when he should be quarantined. Realizing that his popularity was plummeting, he tried to disguise it, but then he showed his true colors. The policy of Bolsonaro and Paulo Guedes is to do nothing or almost nothing. Letting everyone get infected, and to let dye whoever dies. He takes the opportunity to lower wages and rights and facilitate layoffs.
The “Out with Bolsonaro” grows
It is necessary to say that those who try to advocate capitalism with a “more human face”, such as governors, the Congress Speaker Rodrigo Maia, etc., present proposals that are totally insufficient and do not fail to promote layoffs and unemployment at a time like this, as São Paulo state governor João Doria does. The Fundação Getúlio Vargas (FGV), an economics think-tank, foresees a negative economic growth of 4% this year (while the government talks of 0.5% down from 2.5%). The mainstream media and Congress try to defend a climate of “national unity” against the epidemic (in which the parliamentary left, such as PT, PCdoB, and PSOL participate), while in-operability reigns.
Day after day, the virus increasingly threatens the lives of millions, while unemployment and shortage of income growth. It is necessary to implement emergency measures: halt the country to stop the contagion and guarantee employment and income for all instead of praising the do-nothing Minister of Health Mandetta, who had the courage to call Bolsonaro a great helmsman. Only if it’s on the Titanic.
The working class, the gig economy workers, the youth, health professionals, small businessmen need to fight demanding these emergency measures from governments and big businessmen. This struggle has already begun:
Cherry workers in São José dos Campos (SP) went on strike and prevented layoffs; GM metalworkers have just won paid leave; telemarketing workers are struggling across the country.
Stop Brazil to stop the virus! We need to halt everything, organize a general strike, create mobilization that maintains social distancing, like pots-and-pans banging, to demand: general social quarantine; funds for healthcare and research; free distribution of basic mass protection equipment; job security and paid leave (not just R$ 200 (US$ 40)!) for all workers and unemployment benefits. And, of course, Out with Bolsonaro and Mourão and their project of dictatorship and slavery!
It’s time for unity to fight. We call PT, PSOL, PCdoB, Union Centrals and all movements to defend these basic demands and fight to win them, including against the ineffectiveness of governors and Congress. It is the lives of millions that are at stake.
And in this fight, it is necessary to raise “Out with Bolsonaro and Mourão”! Without that, it is unlikely that our efforts can be carried on to the end. We cannot wait until the 2022 general election to remove a government that lets the working class die and, for that reason, already has most of the people against it.
But if we must make a call for unity to fight, it must be said out loud that we need to build a revolutionary party, and that the working class need to advance in its self-organisation to make a socialist revolution. We cannot continue to be at the mercy of these governments and this system of 1% of billionaires, which profits at our expense and our destruction.
Therefore, neither Rodrigo Maia’s nor the Congress majority’s measures are effective against this pandemic. Nor the politics of PT, PCdoB and even PSOL, which advocate a broad electoral front, in collaboration with great businessmen and bourgeois parties in defense of supposedly better capitalism, can guarantee the perspective of a decent life for the people. We had already this proposal of reform of capitalism during the 13 years of PT in power. Not only did it ended in Bolsonaro, but it was not even able to universalize basic sanitation. It is a shame that, in a wealthy country like ours, 50% of the houses have no sanitation. And in the face of a catastrophe like this pandemic, we have a huge vulnerable contingent in a risky situation that could border on genocide.
We need a country and a socialist world, a revolutionary way out. A socialist workers’ government, based on workers’ councils. To achieve this, we need to build a revolutionary party. We are committed to this and invite you to come and help us in this strategic task. -
Voting “No” to Save Rent Control in Mountain View, California
Written by La Voz de l@s Trabajadores/ Workers’ Voice – South Bay
While most people’s attention was focused on the Democratic primary election on March 3rd, residents of Mountain View, CA had a reason to celebrate as results came in: voters overwhelmingly rejected Measure D, which would have significantly weakened rent control, following a months long battle between grassroots community organizers and landlords. While counting has still not concluded, as of March 13 with 98% of votes counted nearly 70% opposed the Council’s proposed amendment.
Measure D was an attempt to undermine the rent control provisions which were established when voters approved Measure V in the 2016 election. The Community Stabilization and Fair Rent Act placed all rental units constructed prior to February 1, 1995 under rent control and established a just cause eviction provision as a protection for tenants. The City Council proposed Measure D as an amendment to CSFRA, and its campaign was backed by nearly $200,000 from the California Apartment Association, the US’s largest landlord group.
Measure D’s well funded ad campaign claimed the measure would lower rents, prevent the Rental Housing Committee–an advisory board established by Measure V–from writing themselves paychecks, and that it would encourage landlords to provide necessary earthquake safety upgrades for rental units. Each of these claims were misleading. The measure would have raised the cap on the annual rent increase known as the Annual General Adjustment from its current range of 2-3% based on the cost of living (as established by Measure V) to a flat rate of 4%, and it would have allowed landlords to pass on the cost of capital improvements to tenants in the form of rent, raising annual increases to as much as 10%. The claim that it would stop the advisory board from paying themselves was a red herring, an attempt to appeal to tax conscious voters.The advisory board never received any compensation to begin with, and the claim that it would encourage landlords to increase earthquake safety drastically misrepresented the current state of earthquake safety preparedness in Mountain View.
Measure D is only the latest in a series of battles between Mountain View’s city council and tenants’ rights advocates, with the city council having previously pushed through legislation that would evict Mountain View residents living in RVs or other vehicles from the city. Despite being outspent 63 to 1 by the landlords, volunteers in the Mountain View Housing Justice Coalition put together a fierce ground game, going door to door for weeks to inform people about the deceptive measure as well as sending out mailers, putting up signs and staging demonstrations. Comrades of La Voz also participated in this effort, canvassing several neighborhoods to help defeat Measure D.
The housing justice organizers faced an uphill battle, despite Mountain View being a city of renters with 60% at the mercy of the landlords, immigrants make up a large portion of this population. A disenfranchised sector of the labor force, they are exploited and lack a voice in the electoral process and especially in this case cannot affect the outcome of a ballot measure that directly impacts them. Federal immigration laws do not bestow some essential rights on these workers.
Google which is based in Mountain View and other technology companies bear a great deal of the responsibility for the exorbitant rents. A new Gold Rush has taken hold this time workers from across the country and around the world seek careers with Silicon Valley firms. Housing becomes scarce and combined with the latitude given to developers and speculators labor not associated with tech companies are at risk of displacement.
The market drives housing costs and illustrates what the market can bear but is clearly greater than what can be borne by the working class in the city. Immigrants are disenfranchised and many of the renters are low income relative to the city’s median wage. While the interests of the landlord prevail at City Hall. Deprived of the ballot, immigrants are in need of allies working for our collective interest in the fight against displacement at the hands of landlords, developers and speculators.
Still, there were plenty of signs pointing to the housing justice groups’ victory. Canvassers knocking on doors were greeted by renters opposed to the Measure and many who already voted by mail. Similarly, “Yes on D” ads posted on Facebook were overwhelmed by a flurry of anger and laughter effectively turning the campaign’s paid propaganda spots into evidence of the public’s opposition to the measure.
While this has been an encouraging victory, the fight against the landlord’s offensive in Mountain View is far from over. Since the beginning of covid19 quarantine in Santa Clara County, Mountain View housing justice has been calling for a moratorium on evictions, as well as a guarantee of free internet services for tenants during the emergency. While there is some hope that simply petitioning the city council will accomplish this, the group currently lacks the relationships with unions necessary to call for a labor or rent strike which could guarantee the city council’s cooperation.
Even setting aside the crises of the current pandemic, housing justice groups will have to rally once again in November to defeat a “sneaky repeal” bill that would damage rent control even more than Measure D would have. The November Measure would in effect eliminate rent control in Mountain View by tying its implementation to the vacancy rate. It is also being sponsored by the CAA, who attempted to qualify a Measure for November 2018 but was unable to do so until this year. Last year the California State Legislature passed AB1482 which set an annual cap of 10% on rental units. Calculated as a maximum rate increase of 5% plus the CPI (cost of living) which for Santa Clara would equal more than 8% and possibly 10% with the addition of capital improvements, the legislation still allows for annual rate increases that would displace the working class who are not software engineer earning over $100,000. Mountain View’s Community Stabilization and Fair Rent Act (CSFRA) provides greater protection to tenants than the new state law. The CSFRA was passed by the people of Mountain View over opposition from landlords and their allies on the City Council. It is imperative that CSFRA be defended as it not only provides greater protection than AB1482 but also takes precedence.
November will also provide an opportunity to replace the local City Council members that have been pushing these pro-landlord bills to the ballot. Of the measure’s supporters, Councilmember Matichak has filed for reelection in November, and it’s expected that Mayor Abe-Koga will run as well, while a third councilmember will be termed out and ineligible to run. Lenny Siegel, who organized the community opposition against Measure D, will also be running for a Council seat. The CAA and their allies on the Council have revealed themselves as adversaries of Mountain View tenants. Tenants have come to realize this fact as they fight the repeated attempts to dilute or repeal rent control, the demolition of rent controlled units and the corresponding displacement that ensues. Mountain View Housing Justice protested outside City Hall proclaiming that housing is a human right. Inside the Council Chamber, speaking directly to its members the message was made clear. Tenants cannot rely on City Councils, they must fight their own battles because only the working class acting as a class for itself can battle and defeat the landlords. -
Covid-19 pandemic: let’s protect our lives not their profits!

A STATEMENT BY FOURTH INTERNATIONAL BUREAUThe coronavirus pandemic is a dramatic public health problem and the human suffering caused will be enormous. Already, in Western Europe, health systems are on the edge of asphyxia. If it spreads massively in countries in the Global South whose already weak or very fragile public health systems have been terribly undermined by 40 years of neo-liberal policies, deaths will be very high.
It is already the most serious pandemic in a century. The number of deaths due to the so-called Spanish flu of 1918-1919, although difficult to estimate, was considerable, striking above all young adults. Its impact was particularly severe coming on the heels of the First World War. The rapid expansion of the Covid-19 pandemic can be explained in particular by the weakening of popular capacity for resistance caused by the neo-liberal order and the rise in precariousness, in a context of the increase in international trade brought about by capitalist globalization, generalized commercialization and the primacy of the law of profit.
This new coronavirus was detected as early as November 2019 in China. The doctors and scientists who tried to raise the alarm were initially repressed and silenced. Had the CCP reacted immediately, the danger of an epidemic might have been nipped in the bud.
The policy of danger denial is not unique to the Chinese regime. Donald Trump in the United States mocked this “foreign virus”. Jair Bolsonaro, with Brazil already immersed in the pandemic, declared that “banning soccer matches is hysteria” and challenged laws and guidelines from health authorities to participate in a demonstration against Justice and Parliament. Boris Johnson in the United Kingdom initially advocated “herd immunization” (allowing the virus to spread so that the epidemic freely reaches its intrinsic limits, when some 70% of the population will be infected). He has had to change this callous and dangerous approach. Sophie Wilmès, Prime Minister of Belgium, for a long time turned a deaf ear to any warning. The French Presidency did not replenish the strategic stocks (protective clothing and products…) as soon as the first cases appeared in January 2020. The governments of the little-affected countries in Eastern Europe are not learning the lessons of the health crisis in the west of the continent.
The European Union has not been able to organize the most basic solidarity with hard-hit Italy, even though it does not even produce masks in the country… The main reason for this delay is that governments do not want to jeopardize economic activity and the movement of goods, and to devote only the minimum resources to the protection of populations. The desire to continue with austerity policies in the offensive of capital against labour, the spectre of recession, have been stronger than the preservation of people’s health.
Despite the very rapid progress in medical and scientific research, it is too early to predict the evolution of the SARS-CoV-2 virus: will it be sensitive to the arrival of good weather in the northern hemisphere and will the disease regress? Will it mutate and if so, will it gain or lose virulence? The spread of the disease from China has been on an east-west axis (including Europe, Iran and the United States), where conditions have been favourable. However, the virus is now present in the South as well, where it could multiply, for example at the next change of season, before returning in force to the North. A vaccine will take time to develop. It would be irresponsible to expect Covid-19 disease to die out naturally in the short term.
The virus is spreading very quickly. The ratio of proven cases of infection to the actual number of people affected is unknown in the absence of routine screening tests but its hazardousness is well established. Mortality of the disease may vary from country to country. It is said to be benign in 80% of cases, serious in 20%, including very serious in 5% and fatal in about 2% of cases. The elderly or the sickest are not the only ones in serious danger. Younger and younger people find themselves in intensive care where the epidemic explodes.
The mainstream media and governments focus on the differences in mortality rates by age, but they are careful not to draw attention to class differences and how mortality due to the coronavirus pandemic will affect human beings according to their income and wealth. Quarantine or access to intensive care when you are 70 years old and poor is not at all the same as when you are rich.
There are no antibodies to the new coronavirus in the population. The treatment of the seriously ill is heavy, requiring state-of-the-art equipment and trained, competent medical staff. Failing this (or if the hospital system is overwhelmed), many curable patients are dying and will die. If drastic measures are not taken, if 4 billion people are infected, 80 million people will die.
The Covid-19 pandemic should therefore be taken very seriously by all progressive militant networks, including our organizations. Wherever the epidemic develops, very firm measures to contain it and to protect the populations must be taken, making this a priority above the functioning of the capitalist economy. For all countries the lessons of the those first affected must be learned in order to prepare for its possible development, and to impose real preventive measures on governments.
Strong preventive plans
In most affected countries, because of a lack of preparedness, governments are managing the shortage, sometimes making a virtue of necessity. Where they exist, preventive plans must be strengthened, and established where they do not.
These plans must prepare for the reorganization of the health system as a whole and the mobilization of all necessary resources in the event of an epidemic, and in particular an immediate increase in the personnel of the health services which are already severely understaffed.
Hospitals have been subjected to successive budget cuts, weakened or even privatized, even though they are one of the pillars in the fight against an epidemic, dealing with heavy care. Private services of care, production of medicines and medical equipment must be requisitioned, under public and social control. The Spanish state government has taken the step of requisitioning private hospital beds.
Strategic stocks of protective clothing, hydro-alcoholic gels and screening kits must be established in priority for health and other essential workers and for the most at-risk sectors of the population.
Preventive plans also include medical and scientific research. Here again, however, due to austerity rationales, research funding has been reduced or cut, particularly for coronaviruses. All private companies working in this field must be nationalized under public and social control.
South Korea has shown the usefulness of mass screening tests for understanding the dynamics of the epidemic and intervening as early as possible. However, budgetary constraints have meant that stocks of these test have not been kept up to date even when they existed, creating dramatic situations. In a situation of shortage, the means of protection must be reserved as a priority for health care personnel, who may nevertheless find themselves under-equipped, and their households.
Living conditions must be guaranteed by suspension of rent, mortgage and utility payments. There must be immediate cessation of all evictions, the establishment of shelters with all the necessary facilities for the homeless, the requisition of empty housing so as not to leave people in insalubrious buildings. Those living on the street cannot self-isolate or be in confinement.
The upcoming economic and social crisis, unleashed by the pandemic but prepared by the accumulation of problems in the capitalist economy, should not be the occasion for a further concentration of wealth and destruction of social rights. Rather, progressive forces have to push for solutions based on the redistribution of resources and based on the common good.
Finally, given the soaring epidemic, very strict measures to limit social contact and travel, and thus drastically reduce economic activity, have had to be taken. Plans must therefore include massive aid to the population in order to prevent the rise of impoverishment and to ensure that no one is left destitute in times of health crisis. This must apply both to wage and independent workers. The costs of these restrictions should be borne by increasing taxes on profits and company income, and on the big fortunes.
The vital importance of social self-organization
We must demand that the authorities take all the necessary measures to protect the health and social welfare of the population, but nothing would be more dangerous than relying on them alone. The independent mobilization of social actors is indispensable.
The labour movement must fight for the cessation of all unnecessary production and transport, to ensure that the maximum health safety conditions are respected in the essential workplaces, and that workers’ incomes and contracts be fully maintained in the event of total or partial unemployment. Already strikes have taken place demanding that that workplaces devoted to inessential production, such as cars, be shut down for example in Mercedes Benz, Vitoria in the Basque country. Elsewhere essential workers, in hospitals in France or rubbish collection in Scotland, have taken action to demand better safety conditions.
Local organizations have an essential role to play on many levels. They help to break the isolation in which people can find themselves, notably women, who are likely to find themselves obliged to take on an even heavier burden of domestic and childcare duties during periods of confinement. By combating racism, xenophobia, LGBT+phobia they can make sure that precarious, migrant, undocumented and discriminated minorities are not excluded from the protections to which they are entitled. They can help women for whom confinement means a deadly lock-up with a violent spouse. They can ensure that daily gestures of “social distancing” are respected.
Many instances of grassroots organization at the level of a neighbourhood, a block of flats, with those proposing to help and those needing help (elderly, disabled, in quarantine) making contact, often for the first time, exist in different countries, in Britain, in the Netherlands, in France. In Italy, alongside the practical help, communities have come together to break social isolation and show solidarity through mass singalongs from their balconies.
Social movements must be able to rely on independent medical and scientific expertise to know which measures are effective and indispensable, and encourage international exchange. Doctors and researchers must engage with them.
Finally, the self-activity of the social movement is an irreplaceable democratic guarantee. The authoritarianism of the powers can be reinforced in times of health emergencies, in the name of efficiency. The broadest possible unitary mobilization front must be opposed to this dominant trend.
A global crisis of capitalist society
A pandemic represents a major test for a society. The situation in Lombardy, in northern Italy, is a dramatic illustration of what happens to the dominant order. Lombardy is one of the richest regions in Europe with one of the best hospital systems. This has nevertheless been weakened by neo-liberal policies. It is now drowned by the flood of seriously ill patients, to the point that the Association of Anaesthetists in Resuscitation has given the order to sort out patients and to treat only those with the greatest life expectancy, leaving the others to die.
This is not a one-off situation, such as when first-aid workers have to decide after an accident with multiple victims who to treat first, but a systemic failure that could have been avoided if health policy had been different. In peacetime, shortages are making it necessary to use war medicine in which one gives up trying to save everyone! This is a terrible breakdown of solidarity that is taking place in one of the world’s most economically and health-developed regions – and which may happen elsewhere in Europe tomorrow.
A clear condemnation of the dominant capitalist order
The question is not whether the Covid-19 pandemic will “normalize” itself tomorrow, but at the cost of how many deaths, how much social upheaval. This is a recurring question, because we are living in a time of the return of major epidemics (SARS, AIDS, H1N1, Zika, Ebola…). The chronic state of health crisis is today combined with the global ecological crisis (global warming is one of the facets), the permanent state of war, the instability of neo-liberal globalization and the financialization of capital, the debt crisis, the rise of precariousness and the disintegration of the social fabric, the rise of increasingly authoritarian regimes, discrimination, racism and xenophobia…
Fighting the health crisis requires concretely fighting the dictatorship of transnationals and pharmaceutical lobbies or agro-industry by opposing peasant agro-ecology and agro-forestry that allows the reconstitution of balanced ecosystems. It requires imposing an urban reform to put an end to unhealthy megacities. In general, counterposing to the logic of profit that of free care: any sick person must be treated free of charge, whatever their social status… Our lives are worth more than their profits.
Ecosocialism represents the alternative to this global crisis of capitalist society. The response to the health crisis should be mobilization in convergence with the other fields of struggle to achieve this alternative. Such a convergence of ecosocialist, feminist, workers’ struggles must have as its goal getting rid of the capitalist system that is killing us and the planet and build a new society.
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FBI: Hands off the Black Socialists in America!

FBI: Hands off the Black Socialists in America!
By JOHN LESLIE
Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation went to the home of Black Socialists in America (BSA) activist A. X., in Philadelphia on March 19. Agents left a card with his parents with a request to “talk.” They then went to his work in an attempt to interview him about alleged “advocacy” of violence against law enforcement because of a social media post.
This is a blatant attempt to intimidate a Black revolutionary organization and to send a chilling message to activist groups as the coronavirus crisis hits the United States. The BSA, which does “base-building” mutual aid work in the community, must be defended against this government attempt to sow fear in activist circles. As this crisis unfolds, workers and oppressed people will want to organize and fight back against government and Wall Street attacks. The climate movement will likely be the subject of government spying, if it has not already. We can anticipate that repressive measures and spying will be deployed against movements for social change.
If you are contacted by agents
If you are contacted by federal agents or police, don’t lie to them; that is a felony. Say as little as possible. You are not obligated to speak without an attorney present. Don’t open the door unless they produce a warrant signed by a judge. Ask them to leave a card and say that they should anticipate hearing from your attorney. If possible, record, photograph, or film any interaction.
An injury to one is an injury to all!
Government agencies have a long history of targeting organized labor, socialists and communists, and oppressed nationalities. Malcolm X, the Black Panther Party, and the Black Power Movement were all objects of surveillance, spying, intimidation, dirty tricks, and ultimately, assassinations. Activists were snitch-jacketed (accused of being cops or spies) by police agencies to encourage disunity between organizations. Police agencies spied on and disrupted left organizations and the antiwar movement during the Vietnam War era. In the 1980s, agents spied on and targeted Central America Solidarity movements and the Free South Africa movement. An undercover federal agent (ATF) had knowledge of Ku Klux Klan planning for the 1979 Greensboro massacre that killed members of the Communist Workers Party and did nothing to avert the slaughter.
Members of the Black Panther Party, the Black Liberation Army, and American Indian Movement (AIM) leader Leonard Peltier remain in prison today as the result of a massive federal campaign against revolutionaries called COINTELPRO. COINTELPRO aimed to disrupt revolutionary organizations and movements during the mass radicalization of the 1960s. FBI attacks on AIM and the BPP decimated and destroyed those movements and resulted in the assassinations and imprisonment of revolutionaries.
The FBI made the persecution of socialists and communists its central activity during the 1950s and even later. The agency shares great responsibility for creating a feeling of terror among working-class activists and in the population as a whole during the McCarthy era. Many scores of Communist Party members and sympathizers had their homes raided by the FBI or were spied on. Many lost their jobs as a consequence or had to undergo arrest, trial, and imprisonment. The Socialist Workers Party was also targeted by the FBI’s spying and disruption tactics, including under COINTELPRO in the 1970s, which led to its having to defend itself with a court suit against the government.
Far from being merely an investigatory agency, the FBI framed up Earth First! activist Judi Bari by planting a bomb in a car, which it blamed on her.This demonstrates that the FBI is not neutral and has engaged in outright malicious and dangerous acts.
It was revealed in a September 2010 Inspector General’s “Review of the FBI’s Investigation of Certain Domestic Advocacy Groups” that federal agents from 2001-2006, under the guise of stopping terrorism, had spied on antiwar activists and events sponsored by the Catholic Worker, Greenpeace, Quakers, and others. In regard to the Thomas Merton Center in Pittsburgh, the report stated, the FBI even fabricated a terrorism threat when it knew that none existed, leading to “inaccurate and misleading” testimony being given to Congress.
All people who support civil liberties and the rights of free speech and political assembly must speak with one voice against police state tactics. We must say no to political intimation by police and federal agents. We must say no to McCarthy-style witch hunting of labor organizations, antiwar activists, and socialists.
We call on the entire movement to unite in defense of these activists. It’s a basic principle of the socialist movement to say: “An attack on one is an attack on all!”
Hands off the Black Socialists in America!
Hands off popular movements!
An attack on one is an attack on all!
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[Chile] María Rivera: “Together We Will Get Piñera Out”
In the previous edition of Avanzada Socialista [Argentina’s PSTU’s newspaper] we published a note on who is María Rivera and why she is being persecuted by the government and police forces in Chile. In this edition, we had the chance to interview her and dig deeper into the Chilean revolution.
By: PSTU-Argentina 03/12/2020
AS: Four months into the revolutionary process, what is the current situation in the workers’ class and the women’s movement?
María: The process continues fully open and the mobilizations, that haven’t been halted even with the strong repression there has been, continue; we’ve surpassed 2500 apprehended.
Beginning January, the second multinational women’s meeting took place. It had high attendance, there were over five thousand women inscribed. It doubled the number of the first encounter. There was a very good discussion and concluded with important resolutions like the call to strike on March 9th and mobilizations on the 8th.
We hope the strike is strong, profound and prolonged. To this moment, the worker class has not participated with their organisms. They participate individually though, with their families. Many of the political prisoners are workers, even the ones on the front line.
Women’s participation has been imperative. We already know of the intervention by Las Tesis, the performance of “El violador eres tú” [or “A rapist in your path” as is commonly known] and implemented in several countries across the world. The women are very present, including in the front lines. They participate next to male peers in every line because there is a division of labor in the movements that is very important. Men and women who prepare meals, who work in the alternative health organisms that have been created in this revolution, bringing water, collecting clothing, etc.
AS: How is the strike for March 9th being prepared? Which associations are participating?
María: To this moment, there is the National Association of Fiscal Employees or ANEF (Asociación Nacional de Empleados Fiscales) that is preparing to strike. The private sector is very divided. The Labor Code in Chile allows as many unions as an industry can fit because you can form a union with just 8 workers. The bureaucracy is very strong and the workers have not yet broken that barrier. An important sector of the port workers and the private mining sector in the north of Chile participated in the November 12 strike. Hopefully they’ll join this strike as well as more workers.
AS: Earlier you mentioned there are more than 2500 political prisoners. What is the status on the persecution of these activists?
María: Indeed the government has taken two paths, two politics. One which is repression. Strengthening the criminal laws and another by reaching a “peace agreement”, that was signed in November to start a constituent process. The repression rises in all mobilizations, every week there are new political prisoners. We’ve confirmed that many kids have been detained because there are infiltrators in the mobilizations. There are young kids, as young as 14 and 15 years of age that are living extremely tough prison situations.
In one of my interventions in Dignidad Plaza, I called for the Carabineros (Chilean police) troupe to stop shooting and hitting the people, to turn their rifles in and move to the side of the struggle instead. Because their families, girlfriends, brothers and children are in this fight as well. That caused the Carabineros to file the “Improper Sedition” complaint against me.
There is a complaint presented by the Popular Defense due to the threats I’ve been receiving. If I am subpoenaed to declare due to the complaint, I will have no problem, as I am defending my freedom of expression and I will keep on defending it. I insist, the Carabineros troupe are the sons of the workers of this country and the only thing I ask of them is to stop attacking their people, and that to me is no crime.
AS: The process that is happening in Chile, had its repercussions in Argentina. Workers and students have shown their solidarity. What message do you have for them, how can we show our support from here to the Chilean revolution? Also, if you’d like to tell us what you’ve been doing in Buenos Aires these days.
María: First off, convene the students, workers, popular organizations and activists to take in their hands, the defense of almost 3 thousand young Chileans who are in preventive prison. To take into their hands the complaint against Piñera and take it to every media outlet you can because in Chile, human rights are being violated.
In the last couple of weeks I was in Brazil and Argentina making this complaint, asking for solidarity for the freedom of these prisoners. It went very well, I received a lot of support for this struggle. The Brazilian people, in the places I went to, were very open and receptive to knowing about what is happening in Chile and very supportive. Here in Argentina as well. I visited the PSTU, affiliated party with the MIT in Chile and welcomed me with a wonderful reception. Yesterday I was in the plenary meeting of Memoria, Verdad y Justicia (Memory, Truth and Justice), I also had a significant reception from the fellow partners that were there and I was able to show what is happening, and we took pictures expressing solidarity with the prisoners and with me. Today I had the honor of going to the round of the Madres de Plaza de Mayo (Mothers of Plaza de Mayo) who are a milestone in the struggle for human rights. I was with Norita Cortiña and they yelled “¡Fuera Piñera!” (“Piñera out!”) and “Those who don’t jump are pigs (cops)!” it was wonderful. On another note, I was in the Congress annex next to a series of personalities exposing the situation and I also received a lot of support there. So I leave full of new energies to take to the kids in jail. To tell them they are not anonymous, that everyone knows what is going on and that all of us together will be able to get Piñera out of office and build a future full of justice in Chile.
Translation by: Anastasia Ransewak -
Socialist Resurgence newspaper, Spring 2020
We would like to present the Spring issue of our new newspaper, Socialist Resurgence. with articles on the climate crisis, the 2020 elections, the plight of migrants, the social explosions in the Middle East, and women’s struggles, among others. If you would like a print copy of the paper, contact us.
Primera Edición periódico SR 2020 en español
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Coronavirus: ¡El capitalismo mata!
El mundo está amenazado por la pandemia del coronavirus, que puede reeditar los millones de muertes de la gripe española de 1918. La amenaza contra la humanidad incluye también una nueva recesión mundial que puede repetir la gravedad de la recesión de 1929.
Declarción de la LIT-CI
Esas catástrofes no son consecuencias de la naturaleza. Son productos del capitalismo, que funciona para generar ganancias para las grandes empresas y no para resolver los problemas de los trabajadores.
Se viene una catástrofe que se asemeja a las consecuencias de una guerra. Sería preciso girar la economía para poder responder a esa emergencia. Aún ahora, con la pandemia en curso, sería posible reducir sus consecuencias.
Pero los gobiernos del mundo están más interesados en seguir garantizando las ganancias de las grandes empresas, más que en salvar la vida de millones de trabajadores. Es el capitalismo que mata, ahora a través del coronavirus.
La pandemia del coronavirus es una seria amenaza a los trabajadores
Existió una subestimación de los gobiernos con relación a la amenaza del coronavirus. Trump comparó el coronavirus con la gripe común, y dice que el virus desaparecería en dos meses. Bolsonaro dice que la pandemia “es mucho más una fantasía”.
Lamentablemente, existen muchos trabajadores que reflejan esa visión, y terminan pensando que existen “exageraciones”, que “Muere mucha más gente de hambre” etc. O aún, que es una “maniobra del imperialismo”.
Es preciso decir la verdad. La pandemia del coronavirus es realmente una seria amenaza, principalmente para los trabajadores, para el pueblo pobre. A pesar de que fue llevada para los países por personas de clase media que pueden hacer viajes internacionales, esa enfermedad puede matar millones y millones de pobres y ancianos. Los viejos más ricos estarán protegidos por hospitales y unidades de terapia intensiva privadas y bien cuidados.
Es verdad que la tasa de mortalidad es de 3,4%. Pero, basta pensar en la posibilidad de tener centenas de millones de infectados para tener la dimensión de la amenaza real. Millones pueden morir. Situaciones como la de Italia y China, o mucho más graves, pueden darse en muchos países.
La venganza de la naturaleza
El coronavirus actual es semejante al virus que provocó una epidemia en 2002, infectó más de 8 mil personas y causó la muerte de 800. En 2012, otro coronavirus, originado en Arabia Saudita, causó otra epidemia internacional, matando 35% de los infectados.
Todos esos virus estaban desde hace siglos en sus reservorios animales, en murciélagos, en camellos en Asia y África. En algún momento, sufrieron mutaciones que posibilitaron que infectasen también a humanos. Se transformaron en epidemias por el avance de la explotación predatoria de áreas antes estabilizadas en sus ecosistemas naturales.
Eso no es solamente un “problema de la naturaleza”, sino una consecuencia de la agresión continuada a la naturaleza por parte del capitalismo, como el calentamiento global, los incendios forestales, etc.
Eso significa que después de esta pandemia, podremos tener, en breve, otras. Así como estuvo el SARS, H1N1, MERS, etc.
La pandemia afecta a un mundo desprotegido
Esta pandemia está atacando un mundo con una brutal polarización social. Las grandes empresas concentran la riqueza en la burguesía de una manera repugnante. Solo 2.153 magnates poseen más que los otros 4,6 mil millones de personas del mundo. El 50% más pobre tiene menos del 1% de la riqueza mundial.Lea también Declaración | Repudiamos la represión a los refugiados centroamericanosLa aplicación de los planes neoliberales y de austeridad amplió brutalmente la miseria, reduciendo salarios y precarizando los vínculos laborales. Una parte creciente de los trabajadores no tienen trabajos regulares, y tienen que trabajar todos los días sólo para comer. Los barrios pobres de las periferias de las grandes ciudades tienen pésimas casas, muchas sin alcantarillado, ni cloacas, ni agua.
Esos planes de austeridad de los gobiernos cortaron los presupuestos de la salud pública, privatizaron hospitales. La salud pública en el mundo está en crisis, desguazada. Con el impacto de la pandemia se va instalar el caos. Chile fue un ejemplo mundial elogiado por la burguesía por haber privatizado completamente la salud. Hoy el pueblo chileno no cuenta con un sistema público ni para lo cotidiano, menos aún para esta emergencia. Incluso EEUU –la mayor potencia del mundo – no está preparado: no existe un sistema público, y ahora el pueblo norteamericano sufrirá duramente con el coronavirus.
La humanidad está completamente desprotegida, para enfrentar esta pandemia, por responsabilidad directa de la burguesía y sus gobiernos.
El Covid-19 se manifiesta como un resfrío o una gripe común en el 80% de los casos. Alrededor del 20% evoluciona mal, y 3,4% muere. La mortalidad es de alrededor del 1% entre los más jóvenes y llega al 15% en los mayores de 60 anos.
Los que evolucionan mal desarrollan una especie de neumonía y los casos más graves precisan de ventilación mecánica para asegurar su respiración y camas en Unidades de Terapia Intensivas (UTI).
Eso significa que en los próximos tres o cuatro meses se dará una sobrecarga brutal en los servicios de salud de los países afectados, con una perspectiva de colapso en varias regiones. Las filas en los hospitales, la falta de test para comprobar la enfermedad, de alcohol y máscaras serán el día a día de la población.

Pero algo más grave ocurrirá: la falta de camas de UTI [Unidad de terapia intensiva] y la desigualdad social en la atención a los enfermos. Los más ricos no tendrán dificultades en ser atendidos en los hospitales particulares. Los más pobres morirán por falta de camas de Terapia Intensiva.
Está comprobado que con el aislamiento social y con camas de UTI se puede bloquear la evolución de la enfermedad. Aparentemente, después de esconder el hecho, la dictadura china tuvo que enfrentar la enfermedad y sólo consiguió controlar la epidemia con el aislamiento de Wuhan, una ciudad de 11 millones de habitantes, haciendo que las personas se queden en sus casas y tratando a los enfermos. Italia, después de la difusión de la crisis, está intentando hacer lo mismo. En ambos lugares los costos en vidas fueron enormes.
Las señales de la barbarie capitalista
Ahora, cuando es imposible esconder la pandemia, los gobiernos intentan culpar a la “naturaleza”, o aún a “los extranjeros”. Muchas veces asumen ideologías racistas. Los gobiernos están teniendo posiciones cada vez más autoritarias y represivas para intentar evitar la reacción de la población.Lea también Italia | las sardinas y la huelga general (que no está allí)Para completar, culpan al coronavirus de la nueva crisis económica. Pero la pandemia sólo agravó la crisis que ya estaba comenzando, que puede llevar a una nueva recesión mundial tan grave como la de 2007-2009, o aún peor. Puede ser que la pandemia del coronavirus esté cumpliendo el mismo papel de la quiebra del banco Lehman Brother en 2008, que no fue la causa de la crisis, pero señalizó la recesión mundial.
Los gobiernos, aún en esta hora tan grave, adoptan medidas que tienen como objetivo preservar las grandes empresas y no proteger a los trabajadores y al pueblo pobre.
Trump anunció más incentivos fiscales para las empresas, incluso para industrias farmacéuticas. Pasa lo mismo con los gobiernos europeos y de todo el mundo. Junto con eso, corriendo detrás de los daños, anuncian medidas limitadas para contener la pandemia.
Basta imaginar la combinación de la crisis económica con la pandemia del coronavirus para ver que los elementos de barbarie van a crecer en el mundo. Es necesario encarar, usando una imagen de Lenin, la catástrofe que nos amenaza y combatirla.
Un programa de emergencia de los trabajadores para enfrentar la crisis
Nosotros defendemos que la vida de los trabajadores es más importante que las ganancias de las grandes empresas. Por eso, proponemos un programa anticapitalista para enfrentar esta crisis.
1- La única medida real para contener el desarrollo de la pandemia es el aislamiento social, manteniendo al pueblo en sus casas. ¿Pero como hacer eso?
Defendemos el derecho a quedarse en casa, manteniendo el salario para todos los trabajadores. Es un absurdo que gobiernos decreten el aislamiento social, pero mantengan las fábricas funcionando. Las huelgas en Italia en defensa del derecho de no ir a trabajar para protegerse, a pesar de las burocracias sindicales, son ejemplos para todo el mundo.
Defendemos la paralización de todas las empresas, con excepción de las volcadas a la producción de alimentos, remedios y productos farmacéuticos necesarios para enfrentar la crisis. Los trabajadores de esas empresas deben estar protegidos en el trabajo.
2- Pero ¿cómo los trabajadores precarizados pueden parar de trabajar por dos, tres o más meses sin morir de hambre? Defendemos una renta igual al salario medio de un trabajador, para todos los que no tienen trabajo o no pueden más trabajar, incluyendo los autónomos, del comercio, del artesanado.
3- Quedarse en casa es una necesidad imperiosa en esta pandemia. Pero, ¿qué casa? Una gran parte de los trabajadores vive en casas insalubres, con muchas personas, incluyendo niños y viejos. Defendemos la expropiación de las casas y apartamentos deshabitados, así como de los hoteles, para el alojamiento de los que no tienen casa.
4- Atendimiento médico gratuito y amplio para toda la población. Movilización de emergencia en los hospitales y puestos de salud, con la utilización de los edificios que fuese necesario para eso.
5- Distribución gratuita de alcohol, máscaras y medicamentos para la población. No puede ser que la mayoría de la población no tenga acceso a esos ítems básicos.Lea también Todo el apoyo a la huelga de los trabajadores de la PETROBRAS6- Aplicación completa y gratuita de test para el coronavirus en todos los pacientes enfermos. Eso es esencial para el diagnóstico de casos con pocos o ningún síntoma, que diseminan la enfermedad. Sin eso no se puede saber el número real de infectados y mucho menos controlar la enfermedad. Hasta un gobierno como el capitalista de Corea está haciendo eso con buenos resultados en la contención de la pandemia.
7- Estatización de los servicios de salud, con expropiación de los hospitales privados y de toda la red de Unidades de Terapia Intensivas.
Construcción en régimen de urgencia de los hospitales y camas de UTIs que sean necesarios en cada país. No es posible aceptar la limitación actual de las UTIs que van acabar condenando a millones de pobres a la muerte. Acabar con la desigualdad en la asistencia médica.
8- Expropiación de la industria productora de remedios para garantizar la fabricación y distribución gratuita de medicamentos para la población.
9- Los gobiernos dirán que no hay dinero para financiar este plan. Existe sí. Para eso es preciso revertir los planes económicos neoliberales. Basta de entregar dinero para las grandes empresas. Es hora de usar ese dinero para salvar la vida de los trabajadores y no para aumentar las ganancias para las empresas.
No al pago de la deuda externa de los países semicoloniales y dependientes, usar ese dinero para financiar planes económicos para garantizar empleos y salarios para los trabajadores y planes de salud de emergencia en los países.
10- Es necesario girar la economía para responder a la catástrofe que nos amenaza. Es preciso aplicar un plan de emergencia, bajo control de los trabajadores para enfrentar la pandemia.
El mundo puede ser completamente diferente si la economía es volcada para responder a las necesidades de los trabajadores y no para las ganancias de las grandes empresas. Por eso defendemos el socialismo, con la expropiación de las grandes empresas, la planificación de la economía y una democracia de los trabajadores.
Llamamos a todas las organizaciones del movimiento de masas a unirse en defensa de estas reivindicaciones. Llamamos a los trabajadores y pueblo pobre del mundo a la rebelión contra estos gobiernos asesinos. -
Conflict in Syria moves into its tenth year


A member of the Turkish-backed National Liberation Front raises a flag in the town of Saraqeb on Feb. 27. Syrian government and Russian troops recovered the town five days later. (Ghaith Alsayed / AP) By MICHAEL SCHREIBER
This month marks the beginning of the tenth year of conflict in Syria. The anniversary coincides with a ceasefire signed on March 5 by the leaders of Russia and Turkey to calm the fighting in the northern province of Idlib. Since the signing, a few of the over 900,000 civilians who fled toward the Turkish border have returned to their homes to collect their belongings. In many cases, they are finding mere ruins.
The impulse for the uprising against the regime of Bashar al-Assad took place in February 2011, when protests broke out in Damascus following the beating of a teenage boy by police. That helped to unleash an outpouring of grievances against the regime, many of them by small farmers who had been impoverished and displaced by drought and the regime’s inept response to their plight. A Day of Rage was called for March 15. Protests were held in many towns and cities; several were attacked by police.
The conflict escalated in the southern city of Deraa, where on March 6, 15 boys, all under the age of 15, had been arrested and tortured on charges of painting political slogans on walls. On March 18, when several thousand filled the streets in front of the Omari Mosque to demand that the boys be released, they were met with water cannons and live ammunition. Four people were killed.
As protest demonstrations spread throughout the country, Assad and his allies offered a few concessions to the protesters but spurned the demands for deep reform. Instead, on March 30, 2011, Assad gave a speech in which he denounced the protests as acts of “sedition” that had been incited by conspirators from abroad.
Simultaneously, the regime sought to portray the conflict as a sectarian one—primarily hatched by radicalized Sunnis to overthrow the secular Syrian government. Thus, on April 18, 2011, the Interior Ministry announced that the country faced “an armed insurrection under the motto of jihad to set up a Salafist state.” The government provided no evidence to back up its assertion. However, after the regime released close to 1500 radical Islamists from prison that summer, many of those ex-prisoners went on to found jihadist fighting groups—as the Syrian authorities probably expected (and hoped) they would.
Fairly early in the conflict, foreign governments like those of Qatar and Saudi Arabia entered the fray, with offerings of funds, training camps, and even weapons to rebel groups; each country favored different factions among the Islamist militias. The United States also intervened, as early as 2012, by funneling arms to selected “moderate” rebel forces and helping to train them, but such aid was limited and sporadic, and had a minor role in affecting the course of the war.
Within a couple of years, better-armed Islamist militias, including some that were jihadist in orientation, had succeeded in displacing a number of the local self-defense bodies (many loosely affiliated with the “Free Syrian Army”). The Islamists also increasingly dominated many of the grassroots governments that had sprung up in the liberated portions of Syria. By the end of 2013, the reactionary al-Nusra militia and the even more brutal Islamic State had begun to take center stage in the war. However, the popular struggle against the regime continued, on both a social basis and militarily.
Until the last half of 2015, the territory held by Assad’s demoralized Syrian Arab Army had been reduced primarily to a narrow strip of the country in the west. It took the entry of Iranian forces (led by Qassem Soleimani) and associated militias such as the Lebanese Hezbollah in early 2013, and then Russian forces in September 2015, to begin to turn the tide of the war in Assad’s favor—most decisively with the capture of eastern Aleppo in late 2016. The bombing by Russian planes and Syrian helicopters was relentless, contributing greatly to the over 500,000 civilian casualties.
As Assad and his international allies bombed, cannonaded, blockaded, and starved the towns and cities, gradually taking more and more territory, over 11 million people (out of a population of 21 million in 2011) were uprooted from their homes. Over 5 million sought refuge in Turkey (3.7 million), Iraq, Lebanon, and Jordan. Another 6 million were displaced but remained in Syria. As refugees flooded into Idlib province, the last large area to remain in rebel hands (outside of Kurdish-governed territory), its population doubled over the course of the war to 3 million.
Assad’s campaign to seize Idlib
In the spring of 2018, the Assad regime and the Russians touched off a campaign to capture Idlib, with sporadic bombing of towns in the eastern portion of the province. Turkey, which supports so-called “Free Syrian Army (FSA)” units in the border region, entered discussions with Russia to see if their governments might be able to obtain mutual concessions—and thus stave off a bloodbath in the region. Vladimir Putin’s broader goal was to move Turkey toward cultivating closer economic and political relations with Russia.
In September 2018, the Russian and Turkish leaders, Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdogan, meeting in Sochi, on the Black Sea, arrived at a pact that established a demilitarized zone that would separate the Assad forces from territory held by opponents. However, the talks produced only a momentary delay in fighting, while the jihadist Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, formerly affiliated with al-Qaeda, refused to abide by any cease-fire. Accordingly, the Assadist assault on Idlib resumed on a greater scale in 2019, and escalated in ferocity until this past February.
By the end of February 2020, regime forces had taken virtually the entire eastern half of Idlib province, plus a large part of the area between Idlib and the city of Aleppo. Over 400 civilians were reportedly killed in the government’s drive.
In undertaking the offensive, the pro-Assad forces repeated their earlier pattern of bombing civilian houses, schools, and hospitals. According to the UN Commission of Inquiry on Syria, reporting on March 2, such tactics constituted the “crime of intentionally terrorizing the population” in order to force civilians to flee. A correspondent for The New York Times (March 17, 2020) reported that towns and villages in the region he had visited to the south of Idlib city were largely deserted.
The UN commission’s paper specifically condemned Russia for bombing civilian targets, mentioning an airstrike on a marketplace last July, which killed at least 43 people, and an attack on a refugee camp in August, which killed at least 20. The commission stated that in both airstrikes, “the Russian Air Force did not direct the attacks at a specific military objective, amounting to the war crime of launching indiscriminate attacks in civilian areas.”
The UN commission also said that its investigators had observed war crimes by Syrian rebels allied with Turkey during the 2019 invasion of Kurdish areas, and that al-Qaeda-linked militias had caused civilian casualties with rocket attacks on areas held by the Syrian government.
Turkey responded to the Syrian regime’s offensive in February by sending an additional 12,000 troops into Idlib while mobilizing its allied Syrian rebel forces against regime targets. Erdogan pledged to expel Syrian government troops from the area. On Feb. 27, the Turkish-backed National Liberation Front (part of the FSA) re-captured the town of Saraqeb, at the key junction of the M5 and M4 highways. But just five days later, Assad’s troops were able to get around Turkish tanks and artillery, and to expel the rebels. Russian troops were then brought in to occupy the town.
In the meantime, on Feb. 27, at least 34 soldiers from Turkey who had been posted to an area south of Idlib city were killed in a Russian airstrike. Turkey immediately responded with drone and artillery attacks on Syrian Army positions.
This escalation hastened Russia’s and Turkey’s presidents to seek an accord that could lessen the chances of another direct military confrontation. The March 5 pact by Putin and Erdogan did reduce hostilities in the region to a trickle, but as yet there is no indication as to what degree or how long Assad will respect the Russian-Turkish cease-fire, which his government was left out of.
Assad sees the capture of Idlib as essential for the project of restoring trade routes between Aleppo, formerly the commercial capital of Syria, and the rest of the country. He has vowed to keep the M5 highway opened, which links Aleppo with Damascus and runs along the eastern border of the province. The east-west M4 highway, which bisects Idlib and connects the M5 with the Mediterranean coast and the southern lip of Turkey, is similarly important.
But the job of reconstructing Syria will be difficult even if Assad manages to restore all the territory under central government control—a monstrous task in itself with half the population uprooted. Cronyism and profiteering are further obstacles, and have in fact been aided by legislation such as Law 48, which allows private contractors to share with state entities in construction projects.
Syria was facing a severe economic crisis well before the recession that has hit the rest of the world following the coronavirus outbreak. Trade throughout much of the country, including Damascus, has been paralyzed. During the past year, the value of the Syrian pound was reduced by almost half to 1000 to the dollar. The UN estimates that the country needs more than $250 billion in aid to begin to get on its feet. And longer-term problems such as drought and environmental devastation must be dealt with.
No U.S. sanctions against Syria! End all U.S. intervention!
In the meantime, the Trump administration and Congress are considering a range of sanctions against Syria. The sanctions program was authorized following testimony before the U.S. Senate of a former Syrian military photographer who goes by the pseudonym Caesar. Caesar was responsible for smuggling out of Syria some 53,000 photographs of corpses of inmates within Syrian prisons. Many of the bodies were horribly bruised and mutilated. Investigators matched some of the gruesome photos to known people who had been arrested by Syrian authorities on political charges and never seen again. The photographs are a graphic record of the systematic torture and murder that goes on in Assad’s prisons.
Caesar and others have been urging Congress to implement the act that it passed in December, the “Caesar Syria Civilian Protection Act,” which authorizes the Trump administration to brief Congress on the “operation requirements of military and non-military means to enhance the protection of civilians inside Syria, especially civilians who are in besieged areas.” The deadline for Congress to respond with what it deems to be appropriate measures, such as economic sanctions against Syria, is in June.
We must reject all U.S. economic sanctions. Sanctions would only end up hurting the civilian population, which is already suffering terribly in Syria. The Syrian people require more aid, not less.
Of course, the threat of “military means” in the congressional resolution is particularly chilling. The United States, which has been a fierce belligerent in the Syrian war in order to further its own imperialist interests, has no right to continue its intervention into the region—military or otherwise. There is bitter irony in the fact that the U.S. government, having caused thousands of civilian casualties through its bombing of Raqqa and other cities, is now crying over the plight of civilians in Idlib.
It is likewise astounding that Congress members appear shocked over Caesar’s evidence of torture in Assad’s prisons. Is that not pure hypocrisy? Following the Bush administration’s invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, U.S. officials routinely “rendered” captured Islamic fighters into Assad’s prison system, with the firm understanding that they would undergo unspeakable tortures that the American interrogators would rather not have had on their own records. Surely, the members of Congress were aware of that arrangement.
The antiwar movement in the United States must continue to expose the duplicity of the U.S. government toward Syria and to demand: U.S. hands off! No sanctions! Withdraw all U.S. troops!
At the same time, working people and their allies in every country must continue to offer solidarity with the beleaguered people of Syria, demanding that Europe and the U.S. open their borders to the refugees—along with full screening for coronavirus and other diseases, quality health care, and schooling and employment opportunities.
For the displaced and jobless people inside Syria, we should demand that international authorities augment their aid programs in order to provide them with fully sufficient food, medicine, and permanent housing. Moreover, the Assad regime must open its border stations so that the Syrian people who require such aid, including those in Idlib, can receive it without hindrance and without fear. Finally, the Syrian government’s offensive against Idlib must end, allowing its civilian population to try to reconstruct their shattered towns and their lives.

