9 Mar 2021

Pentagon asks to double Pacific budget as top admiral says US must prepare to “fight” China

Andre Damon


The US military has asked Congress to double its budget in the Pacific as part of an unprecedented military buildup aimed at China.

The Pentagon submitted the request as part of its so-called “Pacific Deterrence Initiative” centered around fielding a “network of precision-strike missiles” in Taiwan and Japan targeting China, with the capability to “sustain combat operations for extended periods.”

In this Feb. 10, 20201, photo, President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris walk with Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Mark Milley and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin at the Pentagon in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool)

In testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday, Navy Adm. Philip Davidson, head of the Indo-Pacific Command, made it clear that the military buildup is aimed not only at threatening China but in fighting a war.

“We absolutely must be prepared to fight and win should competition turn to conflict,” Davidson said.

In a striking statement of the imminence of a conflict between two of the world’s leading nuclear powers, Davidson made clear that the timetable for a major conflict is not in decades, but in years.

“I worry that they’re accelerating their ambitions to supplant the United States and our leadership role in the rules-based international order, which they’ve long said that they want to do that by 2050. I’m worried about them moving that target closer,” he continued. “Taiwan is clearly one of their ambitions before then. And I think the threat is manifest during this decade, in fact, in the next six years.”

Last week, Davidson echoed his remarks at the American Enterprise Institute, where the admiral stressed that “the period between now and 2026, this decade, is the time horizon in which China is positioned to achieve overmatch in its capability, and when Beijing could, ‘could,’ widely choose to forcibly change the status quo in the region.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken also last week singled out China as the singular US adversary. “Several countries present us with serious challenges," he said, "including Russia, Iran, North Korea… but the challenge posed by China is different. China is the only country with the economic, diplomatic, military and technological power to challenge the United States."

The Pentagon’s plans for a military buildup in the Pacific make clear the content of Blinkin’s words. The response of the United States to China’s growing economic weight is the threat of military aggression.

The US missile buildup in the Pacific follows Washington’s withdrawal from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty, the most significant nuclear arms reduction treaty of the 20th century.

“The INF treaty unnecessarily constrained the United States,” Senator Jim Risch, the ranking Republican member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, told Nikkei.

While the INF treaty was signed with the Soviet Union and applied to Russia, the primary target of the US in withdrawing from the treaty was China.

With the Pentagon’s “Pacific Defense Initiative,” it is clear what the withdrawal will look like in practice: the planned deployment of missiles within just minutes of flight time to China’s major coastal cities, placing the US and China on a hair trigger for war.

Risch told Nikkei that the deployment of intermediate-range missiles in the Indo-Pacific “is a great and increasingly necessary area of discussion for the United States and Japan to explore.”

This move is both insane and criminal. Japan, the only country in which nuclear weapons were ever used in wartime, would be used as an unsinkable aircraft carrier in a missile standoff between the world’s two most powerful military powers. If the missiles were ever used for their intended purposes, the collateral damage would be Japanese lives.

On Tuesday, a novel titled, 2034: A Novel of the Next World War, portraying the buildup to a war between the United States and China, went on sale. It was co-authored by Adm. James Stavridis (ret.), former supreme allied commander of NATO, and former Marine Special Operations Officer Elliot Ackerman.

Commenting on the book, Stavridis observed, “The novel lays out a pretty plausible ladder of escalation that goes from a conventional attack to a second conventional attack to a third conventional attack to America deciding to pull a tactical nuclear weapon and use it... That’s more real [a prospect] than I wish it were.”

Australia Post restructure driven by gig-economy overhaul of logistics and delivery

Martin Scott


Late last month, Australia Post, the state-owned postal service, announced a 15.5 percent year on year jump in revenue to $4.3 billion for the first half of the 2020-21 financial year. This was mostly on the back of a 25.9 percent increase in parcel revenue to $3.4 billion.

While takings from letter mail again declined, from $1.1 billion to $900 million, cost-cutting under the Alternative Delivery Model (ADM) meant losses in that section fell from $87 million to $74.2 million. Parcel delivery produced a $240.8 million profit, yielding an overall after tax return of $166.6 million for the six-month period.

Australia Post facility in Sydney

Last year, on the pretext of the coronavirus pandemic, Australia Post began its most significant restructure in more than twenty years. Under the ADM, postal workers are now assigned two “beats” instead of one, which they work on alternate days, substantially increasing the volume of mail each worker must deliver. Thousands of posties have been assigned to deliver only parcels, as part of a shift towards that lucrative sector and away from letter delivery.

Without any consultation with workers, the Communication Electrical and Plumbers Union (CEPU) and the Communications Workers Union (CWU) accepted the ADM and agreed to a 12-month strike ban. They are enforcing the restructure, which has already resulted in intolerable workloads and has forced many longstanding postal staff to retire.

The unions claimed that the ADM was a temporary response to the pandemic, but in reality these measures had nothing whatsoever to do with safeguarding the health of postal workers. More than 50 Australia Post workers tested positive for COVID-19 in the early stages of the pandemic, a fact which was concealed for months by management and the union.

In reality, the ADM follows years of job cuts and restructuring, carried out with the support of successive Labor and Liberal-National governments and the union. This corporatised Australia Post, transforming it into an entity run by highly-paid executives whose sole aim is to drive up revenue. It prepared it for the latest restructure, which is aimed at boosting profits from parcel delivery, in preparation for full privatisation.

The restructuring is part of a major overhaul of the logistics and warehousing sector in Australia and internationally.

For the first time in more than a decade, the United States Postal Service (USPS), the national government postal service, reported a decline in package volume in 2019, although overall volume across the industry increased by 11 percent. This was largely a result of online giant Amazon increasingly using its own drivers, at least in the most populous areas. This is part of Amazon’s drive to establish its own delivery service, thereby virtually eliminating the USPS.

The scale of Amazon’s US operations is such that, even as it has brought close to 50 percent of deliveries in house, its products still account for more than a quarter of the USPS’s parcel business.

While Australia Post currently handles around 80 percent of the country’s parcel deliveries, management is keenly aware that the corporation faces increasing competition from new players in the parcel delivery business. If it does not ensure market share, by reorganising operations, and adopt the labour practices of its competitors, plans for future privatisation will be jeopardised.

Amazon began the Australian roll out of its Flex delivery service last year, so far serving Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane, and Perth. From March 1, Uber will begin offering delivery services to all businesses rather than just restaurants.

These companies use a gig-economy model, under which workers are treated as independent contractors rather than employees. As such, workers have no guaranteed hours, leave entitlements, sick pay or superannuation, and are responsible for all expenses.

The COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the growth of the gig economy as hundreds of thousands of workers have been thrown out of stable jobs and forced to accept any work available.

A December 2020 report from the Australian Bureau of Statistics showed that more than 100 percent of Australia’s net employment increase from July to August came from self-employed workers. In other words, the number of self-employed contractors and workers in the gig economy is outstripping the return of permanent jobs that were destroyed in the opening stages of the pandemic, and full-time positions continue to be slashed.

While Amazon’s Australian business has not yet achieved anything like the market dominance the company has in the US, a dramatic increase in online shopping, intensified by the COVID-19 pandemic, has provided a boon for the retailer.

Amazon Australia recorded $1.12 billion in revenue last year, twice what it recorded in 2019. While this remains only a fraction of the US$386 billion revenue of Amazon in the US, the company is clearly committed to rapid expansion across Australia.

The injection of $371 million from the US parent company allowed Amazon to open its fourth Australian distribution centre in Brisbane last September. A second Sydney facility is set to open later this year.

While Amazon is currently a major customer of Australia Post, the introduction of Flex is a clear indication that the company aims to increase its margins by using its own service for last-mile delivery in major cities.

Flex drivers are paid $108 for each four hour delivery block they complete. Workers in Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth receive penalty rates on Saturday and Sunday, but those in Sydney do not.

Drivers in Perth report online that most blocks require them to deliver around 40 packages, i.e., one every six minutes.

Amazon does not guarantee workers a minimum number of hours each week. Instead, drivers must compete for shifts by frantically refreshing an app. Drivers’ comments on social media indicate that it is virtually impossible to secure more than four or five shifts per week.

As “independent contractors,” these drivers must pay for their own fuel, vehicle maintenance and insurance, and are not entitled to paid leave, or workers’ compensation if they are injured on the job.

The Victorian Transport Industry Council estimates the hourly operating costs of an owner driver at $13.78, meaning Flex drivers are left with around $13 per hour in pay after expenses.

These abysmal conditions are in line with what is experienced by other gig-economy workers in Australia. A Transport Workers Union survey last year found that food delivery workers in Australia receive an average of just $10.42 per hour. To earn the median income of $49,805, these workers would need to work more than 90 hours per week.

This is a warning to workers at Australia Post and throughout the delivery and warehousing sectors.

The federal government, Labor and the trade unions are all committed to using the pandemic for a further pro-business overhaul of workplace conditions and industrial relations. The centrepiece is increased “flexibility” for employees, i.e., an even greater destruction of full-time jobs. Increasingly, the conditions of the “gig economy” are being brought to all sections of the workforce, including those that were once associated with permanent employment and tolerable conditions.

This is seen in the sweeping restructuring being carried out at Coles and Woolworths, with the assistance of the United Workers Union (UWU). Coles is seeking to shut five warehouses, to be replaced by two automated facilities, and to cut more than 2,000 jobs in the process by the end of 2023. Woolworths is planning to shutter three warehouses at a cost of some 1,300 jobs.

The UWU has sought to prevent any struggle against this restructure. Last month it forced through a sell-out agreement at Coles’ Smeaton Grange facility in southwestern Sydney, providing for the closure of the warehouse, the axeing of all of the jobs, and the minimal pay and redundancy provisions demanded by the supermarket giant.

The UWU betrayal, carried out in the face of widespread opposition from workers, parallels the role of the unions at Australia Post, which are acting as the police enforcers of the ADM.

One after the other, workers struggles are being isolated by the unions and blacked out by the media to prevent a broader movement from emerging. The unions do everything they can to atomise the working class, to block any struggle against the draconian conditions they are imposing on behalf of the major corporations.

At both Coles and Australia Post, the unions insist that workers must accept job-cutting and the destruction of their hard won conditions as an inevitable consequence of automation and other developments in technological processes.

These arguments expose only the fact that the unions entirely accept and defend the capitalist profit system. Together with the company managements, they insist that all advances in production must be used solely to boost the profits of ultra-wealthy shareholders.

In fact, the issue is not automation in itself, but which class oversees and controls it. Technological developments could be used to shorten the working day, without any reduction in pay, and to improve conditions, including in the field of health and safety.

That, however, requires that the major corporations and banks be placed under public ownership and democratic workers’ control, so that they can be operated to meet the needs of workers and of society, rather than a parasitic financial elite. In other words, developments in industry directly pose the necessity of a fight for a workers’ government and socialism, as the only means of defending jobs and basic conditions.

This in turn requires a rebellion against the thoroughly corporatised unions. New organisations of struggle, such as the Australia Post rank-and-file committee that was established at the beginning of the year, must be formed in all workplaces. Workers at Australia Post must unify with their class brothers and sisters in the warehousing sector, at Coles, Woolworths and elsewhere, as well as with the super-exploited staff at Amazon, Uber and throughout the gig-economy.

New Zealand Reserve Bank reports $69 billion of assets in Māori economy

John Braddock


A report released by the New Zealand Reserve Bank in January revealed that Māori businesses and non-profit organisations owned almost $NZ69 billion ($US50.2 billion) in assets as of 2018. The report, produced by economic consultancy BERL, said most of the assets of the “Māori economy” were in the private sector.

Reserve Bank Governor Adrian Orr said the report, entitled Te Ōhanga Māori, was written before the COVID-19 pandemic but gave a snapshot of the Māori economy just before the outbreak.

Maori businesswoman Traci Houpapa speaking at the Reserve Bank launch of the report (Screenshot, Youtube)

Māori businesses were booming in the five years to 2018, boosted by speculation in the property market, ultra-low interest rates, and the 2008-2017 National Party government’s corporate tax cuts, which have been retained by the current Labour Party-led government.

New Zealand’s total Gross Domestic Product (GDP) increased 20 percent between 2013 and 2018, but the growth for the Māori business sector was nearly double that at 37 percent. If the trend continues, the Māori economy is expected to be worth $100 billion well before 2030.

Components of the $68.7 billion include: $39.1 billion held by 9,880 firms owned by Māori employers, $8.6 billion in businesses of 18,600 self-employed Māori, and $21 billion in trusts, incorporations, and other Māori entities, including $14 billion in natural resources. Deloitte has estimated that $7.1 billion is held by large tribal organisations such as Ngāi Tahu, Waikato Tainui, Ngāti Whātua Ōrākei, Tuhoe and Ngāti Porou.

BERL notes that the Treaty of Waitangi settlements—payments to the tribes by the state purportedly in recompense for historical crimes, including the widespread confiscation of Māori land in the nineteenth century—account for $2.2 billion in cash and assets transferred over 25 years. Of the $13.8 billion assets held by the “top tier” 120 entities, more than $7 billion is held by around 50 organisations and interests which pre-date the settlement process and benefited from it.

The figures also reveal the staggering profits accumulated by Māori businesses through the exploitation of workers of all races. Beginning with the launching of the Treaty claims process by the pro-business Lange Labour government of the 1980s, Māori businesses have flourished during an extended period of social counter-revolution. Their profitability and asset growth is the product of decades of attacks on jobs, wages, working conditions, public services and social rights of the working class.

BERL found that since 2013 Māori business activity increased in a range of industries, including construction, retail and information media. The number of Māori in employment in 2018 totaled 329,200, an increase of over 105,200, or 47 percent, since 2013, along with a 46 percent increase in the number of Māori employers.

A high proportion of Māori business assets, more than $23 billion, derive from agriculture, fishing and forestry, including $2.9 billion in fishing and aquaculture and $4.3 billion in forestry ventures. Another $17 billion is held in property. Māori entities, such as tribal businesses, have considerable investments in industrial, commercial, and residential property totaling $4.8 billion, all deriving income from the overheated property market.

Māori have a major presence in those industries particularly notorious for high levels of worker exploitation. The ruthless pursuit of profits in the fishing industry was highlighted in 2011 when the Sunday Star-Times reported on conditions approaching slave labour on foreign charter vessels (FCVs).

Under a 1992 Waitangi Tribunal settlement, millions of dollars in cash and fishing quotas were allocated to Māori tribes, enabling them to control some 37 percent of the industry. Tribal-based businesses have since generated millions in profits by hiring FCVs, employing mainly Indonesian crew who are paid as little $260 a month and suffer frequent abuse.

Agriculture and forestry are similarly dominated by widespread cost-cutting, attacks on conditions and intensified exploitation to increase profits, resulting in frequent injuries and deaths. Forestry accounts for an average of about five workplace deaths a year. In 2020, despite lengthy disruptions to production due to COVID-19 lockdowns, there were 19 deaths in agriculture and forestry combined, a high proportion of the deceased being Māori.

In the tourism industry, White Island Tours (WIT), owned by Ngati Awa Holdings, a tribal corporation, is one of the businesses under investigation for its role in the horrific deaths and injuries sustained by a tour party caught in the volcanic eruption in December 2019. Two of the company’s guides died in the eruption.

Tour operators and government regulators ignored expert warnings for years about the danger of an eruption on the private uninhabited island, so that millions could be made from guided tours. Ngati Awa Holdings has more than $151 million in assets, with chairman Paul Quinn a well-connected member of the Māori business and political elite. The decision to prosecute is currently in the hands of the police and WorkSafe.

Overwhelming evidence gives the lie to claims by Maori nationalists and their pseudo-left supporters that Māori business ownership is more benign than non-Māori ownership. Martyn Bradbury, editor of the trade union-funded Daily Blog, has fraudulently claimed that tribal businesses can “redefine Maori capitalism so that it isn’t the exact same venal capitalism that we know and hate.”

Business and political organisations such as the Iwi Leaders Group, and the Māori Party, which was part of the conservative 2008-2017 National government, advocate for the privatisation of public services, including electricity and water, provided that they can profit from the process.

Under the social welfare initiative introduced by the National Party-Māori Party government, Whanau Ora, tribal-linked corporations and authorities such as the Waipareira Trust have been paid millions by the state to run social services. Demands are being raised for more child welfare services to be outsourced from the public sector to tribal entities, along with Māori-run healthcare and Māori-run prisons. All of this is dressed up as “Māori solutions” for “Māori people.” Funding would be diverted from public services to create a racially segregated system for the benefit of the tribal elites.

The great majority of the Maori population remains part of the most oppressed sections of the working class. The Te Ōhanga Māori report notes that Māori households receive 35 percent of their income from social security and assistance, compared with 9 percent for non-Māori households. Social security claims nearly trebled between 2013 and 2018, and by 2018 Māori households were collectively $9 billion in debt.

The report also identifies an “epidemic of in-work poverty.” In 2018, nearly 50 percent (162,756 people) of the Māori workforce were in low-skilled, low-security, and low-paid occupations, an increase of 58,473 from 2013. Māori people remain over-represented in all the social statistics on poverty, poor health, low educational attainment and rates of imprisonment.

Māori society is riven with social class inequality. A narrow privileged layer has been created and integrated into the corporate and political establishment. Alongside it, a middle class group of state sector apparatchiks, academics, lawyers, union officials and pseudo-left organisations work to justify the entire set-up with constant invocations of racial identity politics. The fundamental purpose is to drive a wedge between Māori workers and their class brothers and sisters in order to prevent a unified struggle against capitalism.

In response to the deepening social crisis, the recently re-installed Labour Party-led government is again promoting the nationalist ideology of “biculturalism,” the notion that New Zealand consists of two national cultures: Māori and European. During Waitangi Day celebrations on February 6 Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced a new national holiday will be created to recognise Matariki, the Māori New Year. This move was swiftly followed by a law change to entrench the ability of local councils to establish Māori wards, yet another affirmative action measure designed to benefit a small section of middle and upper class Maori.

Ardern used her Waitangi Day speech to walk back from her earlier phony promises to lead “transformational change” for Māori. In her Waitangi address in 2018 she demagogically asked to be “held to account” on issues where Māori were disproportionately impacted, including child poverty and Māori incarceration rates. This year, however, Ardern evasively declared the government is now striving for “foundational change”—but in the indeterminate future.

Beijing set to impose a new, anti-democratic election law on Hong Kong

Ben McGrath


China’s National People’s Congress (NPC) is set to confirm a new law for Hong Kong that will drastically alter the city’s electoral process. Since large-scale protests erupted in 2019, Beijing has enacted a number of anti-democratic measures to rein in any opposition in the city. The central government hopes to silence demands for increased democratic rights in order to prevent a larger eruption of discontent in the working class in Hong Kong and on the mainland.

The NPC will formally reveal the new law on Thursday when its session concludes. The changes include expanding the number of seats in Hong Kong’s legislature, known as the Legislative Council (LegCo) from 70 to 90, but reducing the proportion of directly elected representatives from 50 to 20 percent. Until now, the other half of the LegCo’s membership has been elected from so-called functional constituencies, narrowly representing various professions and industries and favouring establishment figures with ties to Beijing.

Police in Hong Kong detain a protester after pepper spraying him, July. 1, 2020 (AP Photo/Vincent Yu)

In addition, anyone wishing to stand for election to the LegCo would have to be chosen by the same election committee that selects the chief executive, the local leader of Hong Kong. Beijing uses this method to ensure the chief executive is loyal to the central government. It has also been the source of frustration and anger for Hong Kongers, including during the 2019 protests, as demonstrators demanded the right to directly elect the top government executive.

In addition to covering elections for the chief executive and the LegCo, the new law will apply to candidates running for local district councils. In November 2019 district elections, pro-Beijing candidates were heavily defeated, with the official opposition pan-democrats securing 390 out of 452 seats.

Beijing has justified the new law saying only Chinese “patriots” should be able to run for office. Wang Yi, China’s foreign minister, stated on Sunday, “Loyalty to the motherland is a basic political ethic of all public office holders and aspirants anywhere in the world—Hong Kong is no exception.”

Since the start of the protest movement in 2019, Beijing has denounced “outside forces,” namely the United States and the United Kingdom, for stoking the demonstrations while accusing the pan-democrat legislators of collaboration with the US and UK. While many within the pan-democrats have ties to Washington and London, Beijing’s accusations were aimed at discrediting the legitimate demands of broad layers of protesters for democratic rights as well as to distract from the underlying social and economic inequality driving mass discontent.

While the current election legislation is aimed at restricting the pan-democrats access to political office, it is a direct attack on the democratic rights of the population.

Beijing has also enacted a number of new laws and measures to clamp down on political opposition in the city. This includes the national security law enacted last summer outlawing “sedition” and other forms of anti-government speech. In January, 47 activists were rounded up in police raids and charged under the new law on February 28. They face lengthy prison sentences if convicted. LegCo elections were delayed last July as Beijing feared a similar trouncing of its candidates as in the previous district elections.

The pan-democrat bloc, however, does not represent a progressive way forward for Hong Kong workers and youth. They represent a section of the political and economic elite in Hong Kong, with some, like the flagship Democratic Party, seeking accommodation with Beijing. Others attempt to appear radical or even anti-capitalist in order to prevent youth and workers from breaking with the pan-democrats and capitalism as a whole.

When workers started to move into open struggle in the summer of 2019, the pan-democrats worked to sow confusion by painting the struggle as Hong Kong versus the mainland, as well as generating illusions that Washington or London would defend democratic rights. Like the pro-Beijing faction in Hong Kong, the pan-democrats are hostile to the broader democratic social demands of students and workers. Achieving these demands necessarily requires a break with capitalism and the realization of socialism, which both Beijing and the pan-democrats oppose.

Beijing’s concern is not the pan-democrats themselves, but that any criticism of Beijing and the misnamed Chinese Communist Party (CPP) will fuel broader social discontent in Hong Kong and on the mainland. The Chinese ruling elite’s greatest fear is that the Chinese working class enters into a united and independent struggle to assert its own political interests against capitalist exploitation.

At the same time, Beijing is not indifferent to the machinations of Washington. President Joe Biden and his administration in Washington are continuing in the footsteps of his predecessors Barack Obama and Donald Trump, further ramping up military and economic pressure on China.

On Friday, State Department spokesperson Ned Price denounced the election law, saying, “These are a direct attack on Hong Kong’s autonomy, Hong Kong’s freedoms, and the democratic processes, limiting participation, reducing democratic representation, and stifling political debate in order to defy the clear will of the people of Hong Kong and to deny their voice in their own government and governance.”

The US is exploiting the situation in Hong Kong, as well as other regions like Xinjiang and Taiwan, in an effort to surround and isolate China. Biden is also pushing the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue, between the US, Australia, India, and Japan, which amounts to a military alliance against China. The leaders of the four countries are due to hold their first joint meeting this week.

Last Wednesday, Secretary of State Antony Blinken called China the “only country with the economic, diplomatic, military and technological power to seriously challenge” the US. He evoked Hong Kong as well as Xinjiang to justify the continued military build-up against China.

US imperialism has for decades exploited “human rights” to justify regime change operations and wars to further its interests, while maintaining close ties with autocratic regimes. Now it is preparing for war with China which it regards as the chief threat to its global hegemony. Washington is desperate to arrest its own relative economic decline in relation to China, especially as the US economy falters in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.

A Short History of Uighur Resistance

Louis Proyect


In a by now familiar pattern, Grayzone has taken up the cause of a powerful and oppressive state against a weaker enemy using a geopolitical litmus test. Since the USA has invaded and occupied dozens of Third World countries for over two hundred years, there’s no point in taking the side of any oppressed nationality or ethnic group since willy-nilly they are acting on behalf of Wall Street, the CIA, NATO, George Soros, ad infinitum, ad nauseam.

Why bother looking at the deeper historical roots of a conflict when all you need to do is dredge up some evidence that the State Department has paid off some dissidents. Long before Max Blumenthal and his cohorts launched Grayzone, Michel Chossudovsky had perfected this methodology at Global Research. When young people filled Tahrir Square in Cairo to demand the overthrow of Mubarak, Tony Cartalucci took Mubarak’s side in a Global Research article because the National Endowment for Democracy had funneled some cash to his opponents. I am surprised that Chossudovsky did not sue Grayzone for the theft of intellectual property.

For this scenario to work, you have to find some cause célèbre. Until Victoria Nuland made that phone call to the US Ambassador to Ukraine in 2014, President Yanukovych was the people’s choice. Corruption? Police brutality? Russian meddling in Ukraine’s political affairs? What did that matter when liberals in the USA were cheering on Euromaidan?

As it turns out, not everybody opposed to Russian domination was a liberal. In a 1914 speech made in Zurich, Lenin declared:

What Ireland was for England, Ukraine has become for Russia: exploited in the extreme, and getting nothing in return. Thus the interests of the world proletariat in general and the Russian proletariat in particular require that the Ukraine regains its state independence, since only this will permit the development of the cultural level that the proletariat needs. Unfortunately some of our comrades have become imperial Russian patriots. We Muscovites, are enslaved not only because we allow ourselves to be oppressed, but because out passivity allows others to be oppressed, which is not in our interests.

Why bother studying how Stalin became one of those imperial Russian patriots whose forced collectivization cost the lives of millions of Ukrainians? Let bygones be bygones when so much was at stake in Ukraine in 2014, especially Yanukovych’s mansion that included a yacht pier, an equestrian club, a shooting range, a tennis court, a golf course, an ostrich farm, a helicopter pad, and a small church.

Now, Grayzone’s attention is riveted on the Uighurs. In five different articles published since August 23, 2018, its reporters have warned about an unarmed and largely quiescent population, which is .0084 of the dominant Han nationality, becoming a mortal threat to China. All of these intrepid anti-imperialists at Grayzone have probably never thought much about how Muslims speaking a Turkic language ever ended up as part of China. Anybody with the slightest familiarity with American history would instinctively understand that when Texas became part of the USA, it was the result of an expansionist foreign policy, especially since the indigenous population did not speak English and showed little sympathy for the invading army. So what’s the difference between that and China’s colonization of Xinjiang?

The USA annexed Mexico in 1845. Showing the same kind of alpha male drive, the Qing dynasty annexed East Turkistan in 1759, henceforth to be called Xinjiang, or new territory. Like other “stans” along the Czarist empire’s south, the population was Muslim and formerly ruled by the Mongols for hundreds of years. While Russia was able to annex Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, and Kyrgyzstan in the second half of the 19th century, East Turkistan was just out of reach. Due to geographical happenstance, the Uighurs became Chinese subjects.

The Qing dynasty drove the Zunghar rulers, a branch of the Mongol empire, from East Turkistan but retained its methods for controlling Muslims. Additionally, the Chinese saw the newly absorbed region as an outpost rather than as a bridge to commercial ties as it does today with the New Silk Road. They relied on the Mongols and the Manchus (the people from Manchuria) to keep the Uighurs under their thumb. However, the term Uighur was not how the Muslims called themselves at the time. The name was a reference to an erstwhile Uighur empire from the 7th century that had vanished just like the Jewish Khazar empire from around the same time.

Not long after the Qing dynasty’s takeover, it lost control of Xinjiang as a result of Muslim warlords being able to subdue the relatively weak Mongol and Manchu militias paid to police the native population on its behalf. Eventually, the Qing reconquered Xinjiang around 1880 with the intention of tightening the screws.

Following the lead of Catherine the Great in Ukraine, the Qing hoped to forcibly assimilate the native population. The Mandarin language would become official just as Russian became official in Ukraine. Anticipating the way that Xinjiang is ruled today, Zuo Zongtang, the architect of the region’s reconquest, stated “if we wish to change their peculiar customs and assimilate them to our Chinese ways (huafeng), we must found free schools (yishu) and make the Muslim children read (Chinese) books, recognize characters, and understand spoken language.” In keeping with this new education system, Confucianism would become the de facto ideology.

However, since the Han population remained small in this border region, this was more of a wish list than facts on the ground. Muslims continued to enjoy relative freedom and were able to stay in touch with others living in the “stans”.

Rotten at the core, just like Czarism, the Qing dynasty was toppled in 1911 by Republican armies hoping to unify and modernize the country. Unlike the ferment in Russia, socialism was not on the agenda. Indeed, the new government hoped to keep the empire intact. This did not sit well with the Muslims in Xinjiang who had hopes for national independence in keeping with Lenin’s writings on the national question. For Uighurs, the fall of the Qing did have its upside. Yang Zengxin, the new administrator of Xinjiang reporting to the Republican rulers, had little interest in forcibly assimilating the Muslim population. His main concern was warding off Bolshevik influence over the region that was ineluctably drawn to Lenin’s support for self-determination. The worries were real. The roots of the modern Uighur nationalist movement, including the use of the name Uighur to represent the people’s aspirations, was explicitly Leninist.

Yang Zengxin was replaced by Jin Suren in 1928. Unlike Yang, he was hostile to Muslim interests, both economically and culturally. He levied huge taxes on farm production and banned pilgrimages to Mecca. This led to massive resistance and civil war. China relied on a military detachment led by Sheng Shicai, who both suppressed the uprising and toppled Yang. In an effort to pacify the region even further, Sheng divided Xinjiang into two separate states, with the south under Muslim control and the north ruled by Sheng himself on behalf of the colonizers.

In a startling about-face, Sheng—a ruthless authoritarian—looked to the USSR as a patron of his political ambitions and even joined the Communist Party. There must have been some sympathy for revolutionary change on his part since he adopted policies consistent with Lenin’s views on the national question, just was the case in Ukraine in the early 1920s. The Soviets invited 30,000 Uighurs to study at Soviet universities where they trained in Marxism. The net result was a Soviet-style multi-ethnic state that broke with China’s colonizing past. By 1935, Xinjiang was known as the homeland of the Uighurs and a close ally of the USSR.

Unfortunately, Sheng’s identification with Soviet leaders included a willingness to imitate Stalin’s ruthless police state controls. Just as Stalin was suppressing Ukrainian nationalism, his protégé Sheng began to purge Uighur officials who were seen as far too willing to speak their mind. Repression once again led to turmoil in Xinjiang as Muslim resistance grew into a new uprising. Sheng put the uprising down with military assistance from the USSR, which by this point had become utterly hostile to any forms of resistance to Stalinist rule. Just as was the case with the Moscow Trials, Uighur resistance was characterized as a Trotskyite conspiracy.

Showing his characteristic capriciousness, Sheng broke with Stalin in 1942 and had a hundred leading Communist Party members arrested. Sheng’s power eventually waned and he became a minor official in the Kuomintang machinery. Showing his opportunist nature, Stalin sought to build up Uighur power as leverage against the anti-Communist rulers in China. Despite his bureaucratic methods, his intervention led to the biggest breakthroughs for Uighur self-determination. In October 1944, the Soviets helped the Uighurs mount a revolt across Xinjiang that led to a major step forward. Armed with Soviet weapons, they were able to secure a victory that led to the formation of the East Turkistan Republic (ETR).

Through the rest of the 1940s, the ETR adopted all of the features of a modern state with Soviet aid. It published literature in the Uighur language, had its own uniformed army, school system, national flag and even a national anthem. Stalin was even able to persuade the Kuomintang to adjust to new realities. It accommodated itself to Uighur power and even mandated that the Uighur language have the same official status as Mandarin in government departments.

One might think that the Maoist revolution might even deepen Uighur power since its ideology paid lip-service to the Comintern. Unfortunately, the forced assimilation of Uighurs under Mao made previous forms of colonial rule in the region’s past look minor by comparison. No matter the lip-service, Maoism was based on the idea of flattening the difference in Chinese society, which led to disastrous consequences in the late 1950s and continues to this day.

Despite gaining autonomy in 1955, Xinjiang faced increasing pressure to accept Han domination. No longer were Uighur language books imported from the USSR. Furthermore, assimilation accelerated in the aftermath of the “Hundred Flowers Campaign”. Frightened by the masses taking its recommendations seriously, the Maoist state sought to stifle the independent movements through an “anti-Rightist” campaign that led to 1,612 Uighur political leaders being labeled “local nationalists” and sent to work camps just as is the case today.

To get a firm grip on the region, Mao sent in more Han who would eventually become equal in numbers to the Uighur population. Under provisions of the Great Leap Forward, there were the first attempts to throttle the Muslim religion which China cynically described as helping to “blend the nationalities”. Chinese domination deepened further during the Great Cultural Revolution as Red Guards took it upon themselves to view Islam and Uighur culture as reactionary. Most of the secular elite in the country were sent to labor camps for “re-education”.

With the transformation of the Chinese economy to capitalism, Xinjiang was no longer seen as a colonial outpost. Instead, as China turned outward, it became a region for rapid economic development and a gateway to the West through the New Silk Road. Forced assimilation was no longer a matter of blending the nationalities. Instead, it was a means of marginalizing the Uighurs so that factories, mines, farms and infrastructure could be built up without interference. In this sense, it was no longer a matter of 19th century colonialism but up-to-date imperialist predation, all of which Grayzone defends as “anti-imperialist” in Orwellian fashion.

In closing, I’d like to familiarize my readers with Abdulla Rozibaqiev who symbolized the radicalism behind Uighur nationalism. While obscure to many on the left, even those who are opposed to Chinese domination, this Taranchi-born Communist should have earned the respect of revolutionaries everywhere. That Stalin and Mao found such men and women disposable only supports the conclusion that the 20th century revolution was aborted in its infancy.

The Taranchi were primarily an agricultural people who settled around the oases in Xinjiang and became the most militant fighters against Chinese domination. Born in 1897, Rozibaqiev was a founding member of the Muslim Workers Council in May 1917. A year later, he joined the Bolshevik Party, one of the first Muslims to do so. In March 1918, he joined other Taranchis in an armed uprising that established Soviet rule in East Turkistan. In 1920, the Taranchis assembled a cavalry unit to assist the Red Army against the counter-revolution, with Rozibaqiev holding the position of Political Commissar.

In 1921, you have the first clear sign that the Uighurs were determined to achieve self-determination in a struggle led by revolutionary socialists. In Tashkent, the capital of Uzbekistan, The Revolutionary Union of Altishahri-Jungharian Workers held a conference that Uighur scholars regard as the birth of a nation. The conference was initiated by the Turkestan bureau of the Comintern and timed with the release of “The Voice of the Poor”, the very first revolutionary socialist Uighur newspaper. The front page featured an article by Rozibaqiev announcing the conference.

Keeping in mind that the Uighur nationality was still in an embryonic form, Rozibaqiev became the leading advocate of unity among peoples who still retained tribal identities in many ways. In an article for the “The Voice of the Poor”, Rozibaqiev wrote:

Some brothers have put forward the view that considering Kashgaris and Taranchis as one, and joining an ‘Uyghur’ section is wrong. The mistakenness of this view is clear, because the Taranchis are Uyghur sons who came from Altishahr not long ago … Besides this, the culture, history and lifestyle of the Kashgaris are one and the same, and each is tied up with the other.

When some Uighurs disdained the usefulness of developing class unity with the Chinese, Rozibaqiev rebuked them by saying that “this is not nationalism, but narrow tribalism, even lower than nationalism”. He further stressed the internationalist view that “the strengthening of the Soviet government is tied up with the victory and assistance of the Chinese workers.”

For most Uighurs today, the name Abdulla Rozibaqiev will draw a blank. Given the repression in Xinjiang, any aspect of Uighur culture will be suppressed, including the articles written by a Marxist revolutionary who theoretically should be promoted in Xinjiang by the Chinese Communists—if only they were Communists rather than the 21st century’s emerging number one imperialist power cheered on by the neo-Stalinists at Grayzone.

The Internal Feud That May Doom Scottish Nationalism

Patrick Cockburn


Most nationalist movements wait until they have achieved independence before having a civil war over who runs the country. But Nicola Sturgeon and Alex Salmond have jumped the gun by opening hostilities while Scottish self-determination is still well over the horizon.

Could it remain an unattainable goal thanks to the open warfare between the past and present leaders of the Scottish National Party? The feud has broken the sense of inexorable progress towards Scottish independence propelled by the political skills of the SNP leadership and aided by the British government’s repeated blunders.

The British media loves a good dog fight and the melodrama of the Sturgeon/Salmond battle has swiftly promoted Scottish politics to the top of the news agenda in a way unseen since the referendum on Scottish independence in 2014.

The ill-concealed unionist sympathies of sections of the press have ensured a pro-Salmond bias and antipathy to Sturgeon, leading her actions to be compared by some to President Nixon during the Watergate scandal. “What did she know and when did she know it?” asked one commentator with relish. A breach of the “ministerial code”, though recently carried out with impunity by Priti Patel under Boris Johnson, is spoken of in awed tones as if it were a capital offence.

Much of this venom is driven by a desperate effort to damage the SNP before the May election for the Holyrood parliament in which, at the time of writing, the SNP is set to win a narrow majority. It would interpret this as giving it a popular mandate for demanding a second referendum on independence. Since the popularity and competence of Sturgeon is the SNP’s biggest asset at the polls, anything damaging to her – even if it does not destroy her politically – could stall the advance towards a pro-independence vote.

Trivial or exaggerated many of the allegations of misconduct against her may be, but to explain them to the Scottish parliament she has had to admit to serial incompetence by her administration at every level.

Suppose that the secret purpose of this process was the political assassination of Salmond, then the assassins were comically inept. Suppose, far more likely, that the purpose was simply to deal with allegations of sexual harassment against him without fear or favour, then the blundering is equally culpable.

Yemen’s Death Sentence

Charles Pierson


“Disappointing” was how UN Secretary-General António Guterres described last week’s donor conference for Yemen.  The fifth UN Virtual High-Level Pledging Event for the Humanitarian Situation in Yemen resulted in pledges of only $1.7 billion.  That’s just half of the $3.85 billion called for by the secretary-general.  Nor is there any guarantee that donors will make good on their commitments.

How things have changed from just three years ago.  There were $2.01 billion in pledges in 2018, “100 per cent of which were fulfilled,” according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.  Pledges the following year rose to $2.6 billion.

Then came 2020.  That year’s pledges of $1.35 billion fell a billion dollars short of the UN goal of $3.4 billion.

Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates head a coalition that has been at war with Yemen’s Houthi rebels (Ansar Allah) since 2015.  The US criminally assists the coalition with intelligence, targeting assistance, spare airplane parts, arms sales, and (until November 2018) in-flight refueling for coalition warplanes.  The US-supported coalition seeks to restore the government of Yemeni President Abdrabbuh Mansur Hadi, who was ousted by the Houthis in 2015.  Saudi and UAE airstrikes have killed some 20,000 Yemeni civilians since 2015.  Using starvation as a weapon, the coalition deliberately targets water treatment plants and food production facilities—a war crime.  Half of Yemen’s hospitals and medical clinics have been destroyed or forced to close.  Many health care workers go without pay.  The coalition bombs cranes used in Yemeni ports, making it impossible to unload desperately needed food, medicine, and fuel.  A coalition naval blockade prevents ships traveling to Yemen from docking for periods up to 100 days.  This delays urgently needed commercial and humanitarian shipments of food, fuel, and medicine from reaching Yemen’s people.

Bombing and blockade have combined to push Yemen to the brink of famine.  CNN senior international correspondent Nima Elbagir told Democracy Now!’s Amy Goodman that food in Yemen has become unaffordable. Elbagir described seeing markets “full of food” being sold by “almost skeletal” vendors.  “The food was rotting,” Elbagir said, “because no one can afford to buy it.”

“Cutting aid is a death sentence”

It is a cruel irony that the US, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE, which are destroying Yemen, are the same countries that Yemen most relies on for humanitarian aid.  Over the past two years, the Saudis, UAE, and US have all slashed aid to Yemen.

Following a $1 billion pledge in 2019, Saudi Arabia pledged only $500 million in 2020.  As of February 25, 2021, the Saudis had paid just $200 million.  This year, the Saudis pledged $430 million.  We’ll see how much of that the kingdom actually ponies up.

In 2019, the US provided $746 million, one fifth of all humanitarian aid going to Yemen.  Then in March, 2020, the Trump Administration slashed $73 million in aid for the Houthi-controlled north.  At this year’s donor conference on March 1, the US pledged a mere $191 million.

UN Secretary-General António Guterres said afterwards that “cutting aid is a death sentence.”  Even before the war, Yemen was the poorest country in the Arab world.  Today, 80% of Yemenis, some 24 million people, relies on aid.  Two point three million Yemeni children suffer from acute malnutrition.  Food rations have been reduced by half for millions of Yemenis.  The $3.85 billion Guterres called for this year would feed 13-14 million Yemenis each month. Covid-19’s advent has only added to Yemenis’ suffering.

The reason the US, Saudi Arabia, UAE, and other donors give for slashing aid is Houthi obstruction of aid deliveries.  However, it’s hard not to think that Iran’s support for the Houthis is also a factor.  As the Trump Administration was heading out the door in January, it took time to designate the Houthis as a Foreign Terrorist Organization (“FTO”).  The move alarmed aid organizations.  The FTO designation meant that anyone dealing with the Houthis, as aid organizations cannot avoid doing, would be subject to sanctions and criminal prosecution.

President Joe Biden lifted the FTO designation, but has not restored the Trump cuts to humanitarian aid for Yemen’s north.  The $191 million the US pledged last week does not include the $73 million in aid for the north the Trump Administration cut last March.

Several things need to happen immediately.  President Biden must follow through on his promises to end US support for coalition “offensive operations” and to “reassess” the US-Saudi relationship.  The near-unconditional support the US gives Saudi Arabia must end.  The Trump aid cuts must be restored and enough additional aid provided so that Yemen can avoid famine.

Dr. Aisha Jumaan, president and founder of the Yemen Relief and Reconstruction Foundation, which provides humanitarian aid, says that “The Biden Administration has been given a rare chance to right past wrongs.  The Obama Administration, with Biden as vice president, supported the Saudi-led war on Yemen that created the largest humanitarian crisis in the world.  We must act now to save lives.”