Maybe it’s something to do with the Millennium but revisionism
is everywhere. You can hardly open a paper without some widely accepted historical
truth being traduced as ‘myth’. From the comment of American academic Norman
Finkelstien that the Imperial War Museum view of the Holocaust read ‘like a
Harry Potter story’; to the Mel Gibson reworking of the American War of Independence,
to the refighting of ‘The Battle of Britain’ along class lines. Yet in the midst all the dissembling, a single paragraph by Paul Foot,
on where the blame for the rise of Hitler should lie, is, by some distance,
the most treacherous and despicable of the crop. Where The Mirror columnist Charlie Catchpole rushes to the defence of the well
cultivated myth of ‘The Few’ as “dashing young pilots with upper class accents”
(when as C4’s Secret History shows
they were overwhelmingly working class recruits, buttressed, by more than a
fair smattering of generally, better trained, Poles) Foot invents a series of
myths to malign ‘the few’ in another not unrelated conflict. Catchpole does
not attempt to deny the facts explored in Secret
History, but was insistent nonetheless that it was “nasty and mean-spirited”
of the makers of the programme to bring it up. ‘Nasty and mean-spirited’ were some of the more restrained criticisms that
greeted Norman Finkelstein’s book The Holocaust Industry. Unlike Mel Gibson’s, The Patriot, which was accused of inventing
atrocities in order to depict the British as Nazis, the central charge against
Finkelstien is that he is intent on denying the ‘uniqueness’ of the atrocities
committed by the Nazis against the Jews. For Jewish leaders like Nazi hunter
Simon Wiesenthal and Elie Weisel, the Nazi attempted extermination of the Jews
was ‘a unique event - and uniquely irrational’. Weisel for example is insistent
the Holocaust remains “a religious mystery, unknowable and inexplicable.” (Evening Standard) As is all too evident, the quarrel generally is not over the hard facts
of the past, but more hegemony over the future. For many the past is not history.
Indeed in all too often cases as with fascism, the past is not even past. It is against this backdrop that Foot’s own contribution has emerged. It
is a falsification of history at least as politically loaded as the accusations
laid against Finkelstien. Because as a mere glance at the map of Europe 2000
shows, the far-right are winning arguments and making substantial political
gains hand over fist, without any evidence of a cogent counter-strategy. Central to this inertia is that notion that fascism was an ‘inexplicable
aberration’, and could, had tactics differed a fraction, been entirely avoided,
Hitler could have been stopped by entirely legal and, most importantly, non-violent
methods. By constitutional means, by democratic elections, by, in a word -pacifism. Writing in The Guardian on
June 3 Foot, by seeking to explain the theoretical underpinning, went out of
his way to endorse this line of thinking. “Though their combined vote and their
influence in the country was substantially greater than those of the Nazis,
both sides - especially the communists - rigidly refused to form a united front
against the fascists. The communists, who at one stage were getting 6million
votes, renamed the social democrats ‘social fascists’. So great was the sectarian
divide in those crucial months before the deluge that the communists preferred
even to link up and stage strikes with the fascists rather than campaign in
the country and the factories for a unified force against fascism. ‘After Hitler,
our turn’ was the boast of communist leader Ernest Thalmann. After Hitler as
it happened communists and social democrats were at last united - in the concentration
camps.” Paul Foot is a highly respected and indeed influential journalist, so his
thesis deserves to be accorded some respect. I will therefore address the main
points chronologically. Before we begin it is only fair to say that as a simple statement of fact
it is in almost every respect false. Worse it is knowingly false. Paul Foot,
not to put too fine a point on it, is a liar - and given the level of research
on the subject - a brazen one to boot.
Even when leaving aside for the moment the pivotal question of political
‘unity on whose terms’, (revolution v reform), the very best in the circumstances
SPDICP unity as proposed by Foot could possibly have provided, was - electoral
unity only! Yet “a united front” on such a limited basis, Trotsky was absolutely
adamant, “decides nothing”. Particularly when the real ‘battle was for control
of the streets’. Thus for Trotsky the real “value of the united front”, was
“when Communist detachments come to the help of Socialist detachments and vice
a versa”. Fascism’s paramilitary cutting edge and the necessary ‘return of serve’
by anti-fascism, is something Foot, as a liberal, entirely ignores as if it
were a sideshow. But as any reading of history bears out, controlling the streets
was, and was considered to be, strategically pivotal. A reality even the official
record of injuries and fatalities bears out. In 1932, the year before Hitler
took power, the authorities reported that between January and September of that
year, seventy Nazis, fifty-four Communists, ten Social Democrats and twenty
‘others’ were killed in clashes - in Prussia alone. As guns were used only rarely,
the level of the fatalities are a testimony to the ferocity of the hand to hand
clashes, and also signify that the level and nature of the struggle was both
persistent and intense. A low level form of civil war in fact. Other statistics
give a sense of the scale of the conflict. Red Aid a communist support organisation
committed to looking after victims, prisoners and dependents, reported that,
between 1930 and 1931, no less than 18,000 communist volunteers were wounded
in such skirmishing. Not only does the level of struggle gives a lie to the Foot prognosis that
this could have all been sorted constitutionally and possibly even more ridiculously
by implication - on the result of that one election - it also exposes the myth
of the united front solely on an electoral basis providing any form of solution.
Moreover as Trotsky makes abundantly clear, the real value, (in total contrast
to the SWP interpretation) was not in an electoral alliance but was, first and
foremost and almost exclusively a - paramilitary one! A yet even more startling
truth is hidden within the dry and dusty statistics. Though a mere detail, it
nevertheless explodes the myth of communist intransigence, and emphatically
reverses the finger of blame. What the official records show, is that far from
communists being ‘especially sectarian’, or having a ‘preference for linking
up with Nazis’ pound for pound, and by some distance, the commitment of the
far smaller organisation to the fight against fascism, dwarfed and shamed, (though
not in Foot’s eyes) the strikingly larger Social Democrat Party. Staggeringly,
the Communists had two more of their fighters killed in Prussia in the first
nine months of 1932, than the 52 the SPD lost across - the whole of Germany
- in the previous eight years! Statistics which are all the more extraordinary,
when you consider that in 1928 the Communists had a membership of only 130,000
while around the same time, the SPD boasted of a membership just 30,000 - short
of a million! Cold statistics such as this utterly demolish the Foot argument
that it was the communists who were guilty of not pulling their weight. On the
contrary it is the ‘flabby pacifism’ of the SPD that emboldened the Nazis. Had the SPD even matched the Communists in terms of the wearing down of
Nazi morale; “correct the papa’s son’s patriots in their own way” as Trotsky
put it, not just in the “crucial few months before the deluge” that Foot typically
refers to, but in the eight years from 1925 onwards when battle was joined,
neither party, whether ‘united’ or otherwise would have ended up in the camps. To sum up, a compound of the ‘Jews first’ (see Hegemony over History, vol
4 iss 7) ‘hardmen responsible’ revisionism favoured by Weisel and Foot produces
a unitary view of events, that is both grotesque and Orwellian. Working class
communists are written out of history on the one hand, at the same time as being
held to account for it’s darkest chapter on the other. To then use, as is the
case, this ‘false memory’ “to arm us against any repetition of similar horrors
in the future” as Foot argues; to use it as the template for current anti-racist/fascist
strategies is, lunatic, and suicidal. If Catchpole can describe “C4’s attempt to destroy ‘The Few’ as it’s slimiest
hour”, then surely Foot’s attack on ‘The Few’ in another conflict, is his slimiest
paragraph. ‘History’, as someone once said, is merely ‘prophecy in reverse’. For the
SWP, as Foot demonstrates, what is reversed is not prophecy but truth. Reproduced from RA Volume 4, Issue 8, September/October '00 |
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