The main Trotskyist faction in France was grouped around the Communist Revolutionary League (LCR) which was mostly Mandelite. Cliffites don't really exist in France as a significant tendency. The presidential candidate in 2007 for the LCR (Besancenot) got 1.5 million votes. They ended up trying a refoundation project called the New Anticapitalist Party. There are also other notable tendencies which can get 1-2% of the national vote and are 'semi-clandestine' (such as "Worker's Struggle") and actually organize in expectation of a revolution but are seen as strange by most people outside of them. These groups don't try to influence the Socialist Party, which they see as a fraud. Some (significant) splinter groups do try to influence the Communist Party or join the Left Front (which won about 10% last presidential election I think). I think "state capitalist" theories in France are much more commonly associated with Maoism.
In Latin America, it is more diverse but Cliffites aren't a significant tendency anywhere, the less orthodox Trotskyists tended to be supporters of guerrilla war instead. (Well, the mainline Trotskyists turned to guerrilla war but gave up on it, with these groups sticking to it.) The Trotskyists in countries like Brazil tend to be more divided by orientation to "pink tide" parties. Like there are groups that operate in PT, groups that help lead or support PSOL, etc. The most interesting work being done by these groups, in my mind, is the nitty-gritty neighborhood and workplace organizing. Unfortunately sometimes this becomes formulaic and dogmatic, like shouting at people to demand a worker's state, but a lot of the time it is like... oh the government reclaimed a factory, let's get a job there and help people build a democratic workplace, then spread that demand. In Venezuela there is an incredible ferment of these radical Chavista groups. A poster on here once noted that these groups will spend large amounts of time in open conflict with PSUV politicians and the police but then generally turn out for the PSUV in election campaigns to "continue the process". I don't think all or even many of these groups identify as Trotskyist but that is where Trotskyists tend to focus their energy, which I think is a good thing. In my opinion, that sort of ferment all jumbled up between different types of critical/dissident communists is where the future is anyway.
Their program for action in cases like Libya consists of campaigning to embargo Libyan goods and campaigning for asset freezes.
He also wrote books that were sort of contrarian takes on major historical events, like a history of the second world war which said it was a number of semi-autonomous wars, most of them inter-imperialist, the only justifiable one being the defence of the Soviet Union.
getfiscal posted:
That was informative. Thank you, Donald-kun. Obviously, as a true Marxist-Leninist, I disagree with your remarks about the future of communism, but there is still time for you to come round before you face the gulag.
http://warontherocks.com/2016/08/the-decay-of-the-syrian-regime-is-much-worse-than-you-think/
An incident that occurred in February of this year may serve as an example of what lies ahead. Engaged in heavy clashes with rebel forces near the town of Harbinafsah, militia leader Ahmed Ismail called on his fellow warlord in the neighboring town of Baarin for desperately needed reinforcements. Fadi Qaribish, head of the Baarins armed men, rudely refused the request. The following day, feeling betrayed and with a local ceasefire having taken effect, Ismail turned his guns against Qaribish. Before long, he was joined by detachments from Hama’s air force intelligence, looking to support their preferred client and squash the insubordinate militant. But Qaribish successfully fought off the combined attack and subsequently established his own checkpoints along the roads in the area, cutting into Ismail’s smuggling routes to the rebel pocket. The regime has not dared bother Baarin since.
Edited by Flying_horse_in_saudi_arabia ()
No harm, no foul.
US-backed 'Syrian rebels' beating kidnapped #Druze civilian Ayub Al Nasser from Nijran, #Suwayda to extort money pic.twitter.com/l8Sqb9fXmG
— The 'Nimr' Tiger (@Souria4Syrians) September 5, 2016
Everyone who knows what Aleppo is also seems to think we should arm al-Qaeda because of a picture of a kid with dirt on his face so whatever
— the good posts guy (@Lowenaffchen) September 8, 2016
HenryKrinkle posted:
The new White Helmets movie looks great. pic.twitter.com/jksrG4lsvU
— Ali. (@Ali_Kourani) September 8, 2016
#YPG internationalist volunteers send a message to #Erdogan, in response to #Turkey calling them terrorists pic.twitter.com/tIOhfkUKNx
— Syria Today (@todayinsyria) September 9, 2016
The "everyone gets a puppy" orphanage creeps into the pilot's view at the edge of the horizon.
Regime rejected Russian suggestions which included more rights for Kurds in May 2016 https://t.co/TtpGHR6Lhz pic.twitter.com/BByLvZDeo1
— Wladimir (@vvanwilgenburg) September 12, 2016
Panopticon posted:thank you lion assad for standing up to the imperialism of warmonger putin
Regime rejected Russian suggestions which included more rights for Kurds in May 2016 https://t.co/TtpGHR6Lhz pic.twitter.com/BByLvZDeo1
— Wladimir (@vvanwilgenburg) September 12, 2016
the tone of that ecfr paper is pretty ridiculous, "those darn syrians are just so attached to a centralized state that provides services, a stable environment, and has defended the society from foreign attack, why wont they just let neoliberal regionalism do its thing"
Panopticon posted:thank you lion assad for standing up to the imperialism of warmonger putin
Regime rejected Russian suggestions which included more rights for Kurds in May 2016 https://t.co/TtpGHR6Lhz pic.twitter.com/BByLvZDeo1
— Wladimir (@vvanwilgenburg) September 12, 2016
lmao
"I would like to thank {...} Jeremy Shapiro {...} whose
input and advice have been invaluable in the course of my
work on this paper"
yes that is Jeremy Shapiro "senior fellow in the Project on International Order and Strategy and the Center on the United States and Europe at Brookings Institute"
VIDEO: US forces chased out of rebel held al-Rai after tension with Turkish backed rebels - @ValkryV pic.twitter.com/pekTx9z9v8
— Conflict News (@Conflicts) September 16, 2016
Another footage from ar-Rai,#Syria .Protest against #US troops
— Mete Sohtaoğlu (@metesohtaoglu) September 16, 2016
📹https://t.co/G4z1HRuHSe pic.twitter.com/WQ3MJpv2dd