27 Apr 2023

Dire shortages in essential chemotherapy drugs will mean “people will die” needlessly

Benjamin Mateus


“People will die from this shortage, for sure.” Director of the division of molecular imaging and therapeutics at the University of Alabama, Jonathan McConathy, referring to the drug Pluvicto.

Recently, hospitals across the country have been notified by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) of severe shortages of critical but commonly used chemotherapy drugs that will persist for the next three to six months. These are creating hopeless situations for possibly hundreds of thousands of patients with either new or recurrent malignancies, while placing the entire edifice of oncologic care into crisis mode.

Jeffrey Pilz, assistant director of Pharmacy, Medication Safety, and Drug Policy at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center, noted recently, “Drug shortages are impacting every therapeutic area of practice at this time. In 2023, shortages are reaching record numbers, and unfortunately, our oncology medications are not immune.”

For instance, according to a recent statement issued by the Society of Gynecologic Oncology (SGO) on April 21, 2023, “Currently, a US shortage of carboplatin and cisplatin exists that will likely last several months and possibly longer. Platinum drug [the molecular basis for the two mentioned drugs] shortages were first reported to the FDA on February 10, 2023. The recommendations below address how we can conserve carboplatin and cisplatin and allocate the limited supply to those patients who will experience the most significant benefit.” 

These platinum-based agents are front and center of the treatment of women with advanced ovarian and uterine cancer. Both drugs have proven their importance in head-to-head randomized control trials spanning more than three decades. 

In their strategy, the SGO issued the following guidance: “Ration doses by rounding doses down to the nearest vial size as a first step to ensure efficient use. If the shortage becomes more critical, consider reserving carboplatin and cisplatin for curative intent treatment” [my italics-BM]. Medical oncologists at some hospitals have been given this rationing guidance, implying the shortages are quite pronounced.

Besides these, other cancer drugs such as Pluvicto, made by Swiss drugmaker Novartis, for the treatment of advanced prostate cancer, are facing manufacturing delays and will only “meaningfully” increase by the second half of the year. 

Other shortages include methotrexate, fluorouracil, and BCG [Bacillus Calmette-Guerin] that treat a variety of diseases including cancers of the skin, bone, blood or lymphatic, and lungs in all ages. BCG, also known as an anti-tuberculosis vaccine, is effective in the management of bladder cancers. Without these treatment options available to patients, treating physicians may have to turn to less effective options with worse side effects. Some may find their disease progressed beyond hope as they wait to hear from their oncologists.

Drug shortages are not new, but in the last decade, the shortages have been skyrocketing, including for cancer drugs. The American Society of Health Systems Pharmacists has reported that there are over 300 drugs in short supply in the US, which include all classes of drugs. These shortages are also taking longer to mitigate. Moreover, the COVID pandemic has added fuel to the fire.

A Johns Hopkins Medicine report from 2020 noted, “Over the past 10 years, eight of the 10 commonly used drugs in the treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukemia, the most common childhood cancer affecting thousands of children each year in the US, have temporarily been unavailable.”

According to a Senate report released in March by the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, chaired by Michigan Senator Gary Peters, new drug shortages in the US increased by 30 percent from 2021 to 2022. At the end of last year, 295 active drug shortages were reported, a five-year high. Additionally, while shortages on average last about 1.5 years, more than two dozen vital medications have been in scarcity for more than a decade.

In the US, each year, more than one million people are undergoing chemotherapy or radiation across the country. In a report on the estimated number of individuals living with metastatic cancer in the US, more than half are recurrent cancers. For this population of patients, systemic treatment with chemotherapy and other cancer treatment agents is essential to place their disease in remission with the hope it will not recur. 

Estimated numbers of Individuals living with metastatic cancer in the US 2018. [Photo: Journal of the National Cancer Institute]

According to a study published in 2019 in the journal Lancet Oncology, at a global level, the incidence of cancer is projected to rise to 26 million annual cases by 2040, an increase of over 52 percent in the next two decades. Should evidence-based guidelines be applied according to a person’s cancer diagnosis and stage, the number of patients who would need first-line chemotherapy would increase from 9.8 million to 15 million by 2040. 

Sixty-seven percent of these patients reside in low or middle-income countries, which means that the shortages presently being faced in the US are amplified in these regions who do not have the resources to compete for these life-saving treatments. Researcher Brooke Wilson at the University of New South Wales, lead author of the Lancet study on the global cancer outcomes, told Cancer World magazine, “The rising cancer burden and the increasing demands for chemotherapy globally will be major health crises during the next 20 years. The gap between available service provision and demand is substantial, especially in low-income and middle-income countries.”

She added, “Strategic investments to expand capacity for chemotherapy delivery globally are urgently needed.” And when the issue of capacity is raised, this also implies a legion of physicians, nurses, technicians in almost every discipline of health care that includes laboratory, radiographic, pathology, surgical, patient care, infectious diseases, and the assortment of equipment and well-stocked pharmaceuticals to tend to urgent health needs. 

These raise the present questions of the shortage in chemotherapy to a socioeconomic and, therefore, a political level. What are the mechanisms in place to ensure the world’s population, when faced with such a devastating diagnosis as cancer, can be provided with evidence-based treatment that should be available to all as a democratic and social right?

As the report notes, by 2040, 53 percent of the 26 million cancer cases will need chemotherapy. By then there will be around 2.5 million lung cancers, 1.9 million breast cancers, and 1.7 million colorectal cancers; the report warns “the greatest absolute increases in new cases will occur for these three types of cancer (around 900k cases of lung cancer, 620k of colorectal and 500k breast cancer requiring chemotherapy annually).”

study published in the British Medical Journal in November 2020, in the midst of the raging COVID pandemic, found that delaying chemotherapy by even one month meant the risk of dying increased by six to 13 percent. And the longer the delay in providing treatment, whether it was surgery, radiation or chemotherapy, the higher grew the risk of dying. 

The authors concluded, “Taken as a whole, these results suggest there is an urgent need to consider how we organize our cancer services. The prevailing paradigm has been around access to new treatments to improve outcomes, but from a system level, gains in survival might be achieved by prioritizing efforts to minimize the time from cancer diagnosis to initiation of treatment from weeks to days.”

With regards to the March 2023 Senate report and shortage of active drugs, Senator Peters states, “Drug shortages are not a new problem. They are caused by a number of factors, including economic drivers, insufficient supply chain visibility, and a continued US over-reliance on both foreign and geographically concentrated sources for medications and their raw materials.” And over the last two decades much of the manufacturing has shifted to China, and even more so to India, in line with economic diktats to decrease production costs.

Active active pharmaceutical ingredient (API) Drug master Files, by year of filing and country of manufacture. [Photo: US Pharmacopeia ]

Revenue from oncology drugs for 2023 has been estimated at over $200 billion and is expected to rise by nearly 70 percent over the next four to five years. The shortages being felt are mainly affecting older generic drug products, which account for 90 percent of all the drugs sold in the US. According to the FDA, of the drugs that went into shortage between 2013 and 2017, two-thirds were generic, with a median price of $8.73 per dose, and first approved for use more than 35 years ago.

In short, delays in manufacturing have more to do with the narrow profit margins that do not incentivize the markets to produce them in sufficient quantities to forestall critical drug shortages. As Dr. Vimala Raghavendran, senior director of the pharmaceutical supply chain center at US Pharmacopeia, testified, “Manufacturers only receive pennies per dose for some of these drugs.”

As an FDA report to Congress noted in 2020 and reiterated in the Senate report by Peters, “With few incentives to enter or remain in the market for a narrow but critical set of generic drugs, manufacturers of these products often decide to leave the market, and few if any others decide to enter, which can lead to shortages and have lingering effects on a product’s availability over time.”

Although the report attempts to couch the crisis of drug shortages in the oft-used rhetoric of national security risk, warning that the US is overly reliant on “foreign and geographically concentrated sources for critical drugs,” the driving force is, in final analysis, the crisis of capitalist production based on profit, and the ossified nation-state system.

Free fall of First Republic Bank in US signals deepening of financial crisis

Nick Beams


The plunge in the shares of First Republic Bank continued yesterday, bringing to 95 percent the total loss which began after the bank revealed it had lost $100 billion in deposits as a result of the fallout from the bankruptcy of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) and Signature Bank last month.

The bank’s shares dropped 30 percent on Wednesday after their value was halved the day before, as last month’s rescue operation, in which 11 major banks headed by JPMorgan Chase deposited $30 billion, disintegrated.

First Republic’s announcement Tuesday that it planned to slash 20–25 percent of its workforce and sell off assets did not stave off a second day of panic selling.

At the start of March, the share price of First Republic was $115. At the close of trade yesterday it was down to $5.69. Trading in the bank’s shares had to be halted several times over the past two days because of the rapidity of the plunge.

A pedestrian walks past a First Republic Bank location in San Francisco, Tuesday, April 25, 2023. [AP Photo/Jeff Chiu]

Throughout the banking crisis, the official story line from regulatory authorities and Biden administration officials has been that the problems are confined to “outliers.” According to this narrative, the collapse of SVB was a result of “mismanagement,” and the US banking system is “sound” and “resilient.”

That piece of fiction was exposed when the bailout of uninsured SVB and Signature depositors, estimated to have cost around $22.5 billion so far, was organised by invoking a “systemic exemption” provision that allowed the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to bail out those with more than $250,000 in deposits.

The official story was left in tatters following this week’s First Republic share plunge. According to a report in the Financial Times (FT) published under the headline “Share sell-off in First Republic shares causes alarm in Washington,” the bank was “in touch with the US government, which is on high alert” following the failure of SVB and Signature.

The FT said officials from the White House, the Federal Reserve and the US Treasury had been in contact with First Republic, and the Biden administration was becoming “increasingly concerned” that the bank was running out of time to reassure depositors and investors.

According to the report, an unnamed official maintained that “the government was not concerned about contagion beyond First Republic.” If that were the case, then it would be possible for the market to carry out its verdict that, in the words of the Wall Street Journal, “First Republic is nearly worthless in its current state.”

However, it appears that any bank of almost any size is “too big to fail.” This is because the issues leading to their demise are present throughout the financial system. While each bank has its own particular circumstances, the underlying cause is the rise in interest rates at the fastest rate in 40 years.

In the case of SVB, it was the losses on the market value of its Treasury bonds, which it had piled into during the years of ultra-easy money under the quantitative easing program of the US Federal Reserve.

First Republic was heavily into the high-end mortgage market loans, amounting to $173 billion at the end of March, of which around $100 billion were to single buyers, many of them wealthy, whom the bank attracted by offering low rates.

The Economist reported that Mark Zuckerberg took out a 30-year mortgage for his $59 million Palo Alto home at 1.05 percent. The value of such loans has now plunged as interest rates have risen.

As part of the low-rate deal, rich customers agreed to move their deposits to the bank, but they are now moving out. To try to bolster its financial position, First Republic has had to borrow money from the Fed at 4.5 percent interest.

The net interest rate margin—the difference between what First Republic receives on loans and what it pays for money—has contracted, with the result, as the article noted, that the bank earned next to nothing on net interest in March and is essentially paying as much for money as it is receiving.

In some ways, the impending collapse of First Republic may be of greater concern than that of SVB. The California bank operated in a specialised area of the market—high-tech companies and start-ups backed by the inflow of money from venture capital firms.

According to an analysis conducted by the FT, SVB operated what, in many ways, was a Ponzi scheme—a business model in which money and profit are generated by the inflow of more money.

SVB provided money to what it called “fragile start-ups,” which meant its deposit base was vulnerable to a drought in venture capital funding.

“It also lent freely to them, expecting to be repaid not from the cash flows of the business, but from the eventual bonanza when new investors supplied another round of capital.”

But when this supply dried up because of the tightening of monetary policy by the Fed and cash was withdrawn, SVB had to sell off bonds it had purchased, turning a book loss into a realised loss because the interest rate hikes had lowered the bonds’ market value below their purchase price.

First Republic may have far greater significance than SVB because its operations are replicated more broadly by other medium-sized banks in both the home mortgage and commercial real estate markets, which are being hit by the interest rate rises.

The FT cited comments by Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at the financial intelligence firm CRA Research, who pointed to the possibility of more stress for regional banks.

“I think that in general investors believe [First Republic] is an isolated event, but at the same time, the minute they say that they’re then looking over their shoulder to make sure that no other bank is sneaking up on them. It’s like the cockroach theory: if you see one, you’re going to see more than one,” he said.

In the case of commercial real estate, the market problems caused by higher interest rates are being compounded by COVID, because the prevalence of at-home working means the demand for office space is contracting.

Federal officials are now reported to be trying to bring the major banks together to hammer out a deal. But after the failure of the $30 billion major bank rescue operation organised by Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and JPMorgan chief Jamie Dimon, there appears to be no great appetite for acquiring First Republic because of its parlous financial position.

This has raised the question of whether the “systemic risk exception” to enable the FDIC to guarantee all uninsured deposits should be invoked. But this could lead to a further shift of deposits from small and medium-sized banks.

One way of meeting such a danger would be for the FDIC to guarantee all deposits without limit at all banks, and such a prospect is being canvassed.

26 Apr 2023

In defence of decolonial and disruptive curriculum

Bhabani Shankar Nayak


Universities are no longer producing critical mass to question power for social, political and economic transformation of society for greater common goods. Universities are no longer producing independent knowledge traditions to address essentialist and emancipatory needs of individuals and societies in short run and long run. The governmental and non-governmental funding bodies control the nature, scope, structure and outputs of the research within higher education. The growing managerialisms have transformed universities and higher educational institutions into bastions of compliance culture in the name of quality processes, knowledge transfer and employability. The unqualified, underqualified and inefficient managers of higher education hide behind these processes in the name of student satisfaction. These managers neither teach nor conduct research but talk about abstract quality processes in teaching and research; the twin pillars of higher education. This is the context in which higher education needs radical transformation to ensure its critical role in the lives of individuals, states and societies.

Universities and institutions of higher education must decolonise itself from dominant knowledge traditions, Eurocentric bias, managerialism, patriarchy, capitalism and all forms of hierarchy. These issues hinder in the growth of secular, scientific and pluriversal knowledge traditions focusing on the people and planet. The dominant knowledge traditions uphold ruling and non-ruling class interests and create paradigms to sustain all forms of inequalities and exploitative systems and processes. The universalisation of dominant knowledge traditions are inherently carrying Eurocentric bias in teaching, learning and dissemination of research publications. It also produces different forms of managerial gate keeping to sustain such a form of knowledge tradition that upholds values of racialised patriarchal capitalism. This is neither sustainable nor helpful for progressive social transformation.

Decolonialisation of curriculum, research and teaching does not mean adding or replacing scholars and their work within representational framework.  Decolonisation of curriculum means decolonisation and democratisation of knowledge production, evaluation and dissemination beyond the dominant frameworks of knowledge traditions which are racially managed, sexually controlled and territorially prejudiced.

Similarly, decolonisation also demands the end of managerialism and modularisation of higher education. It is destroying interconnectedness of knowledge production, management and dissemination.  The growing managerialism and modularisation has led to race of profit driven education in which students, teachers and researchers compete with each other for gradation; students for marks, teachers for student satisfaction grades, and researchers for quick impact factor evaluation. This unhealthy competition destroys the critical potentials of teaching and research in higher education and in the processes of knowledge production and dissemination.  In such a scenario, knowledge transfer in higher education has becoming a process driven machine where education is merely a profit driven business.

In this context, universities, higher education institutions and practitioners of higher education needs to decolonise themselves and develop disruptive curriculum for a greater common good focusing on people and the planet. Decolonisation and disruptive curriculum development needs to focus on the ideal that knowledge needs free and autonomous to be secular, scientific and social. Disruption of teaching, learning, evaluation, research, knowledge production, management and dissemination is central to develop new forms of pluriversal, democratic, secular and scientific knowledge traditions accessible and available to all without any forms of barriers.

Egalitarian, inclusive, democratic and sustainable values are imperative for all involved in the production, management and dissemination of knowledge. The human empowerment needs to replace human resource development in higher education. The honing of universal values of science, secularism, citizenship rights and peaceful coexistence with natural world is crucial for the present and future of higher education. Universities and other intuitions of higher education needs to play a greater role in such a transformation.

Recent technological advancements and digitalisation of society demands greater transparency in the processes of knowledge production and dissemination. Universities and higher education institutions can’t insulate themselves from such a demand for accountability in the form of providing democratic, secular and scientific knowledge to all irrespective of their social, economic, political, sexual, racial, regional, cultural and religious backgrounds. Therefore, democratisation of knowledge and deepening of secular and scientific ethos are needs of our present and future. Decolonise mind and disrupt power for a radical transformation of education for the emancipation of individuals and societies from all forms of inequalities, exploitations and bondages of reactionary thoughts and practices. for greater common goods which can serve people and the planet.

Erdogan regime jails Kurdish nationalists

Ulaş Ateşçi


President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan’s government has launched a police operation arresting at least 126 people, including Kurdish politicians, journalists, lawyers and artists. Arrest warrants were issued for a total of 216 people in operations yesterday in 21 provinces, centred on Diyarbakır. The police operation provoked protests in Diyarbakır, Istanbul, Bursa, Izmir, Mardin, Mersin, Van and many other cities.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan speaking on Thursday, June 9, 2022 [AP Photo/Turkish Presidency ]

At least 25 lawyers were arrested and the Aram Publishing House in Diyarbakır was raided. In addition, the City Theatre and the Dicle Culture and Art Association in Diyarbakır, the Mesopotamia Culture and Art Association in Mardin and the Bahar Cultural Centre in Batman were raided and many artists were arrested.

According to Mezopotamya Agency, among those detained are “Mezopotamya Agency (MA) Editor Abdurrahman Gök, MA reporters Ahmet Kanbal and Mehmet Åžah Oruç, JINNEWS Beritan Canözer, Yeni YaÅŸam Editor-in-Chief Osman Akın, Xwebûn official Kadri Esen, journalists Mehmet Yalçın, Mikail Barut, Salih KeleÅŸ and Remzi Akkaya” and HDP executives Özlem Gündüz and Mahfuz Güleryüz.

Arzu Kurt, a leading member of the Association of Lawyers for Freedom (ÖHD), said its members had been detained, and that “a confidentiality order on the file and a 24-hour restriction on lawyers” had been issued. According to the MA, they were arrested on charges of “membership” in the outlawed Kurdistan Communities Union (KCK), an umbrella group that includes the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), the Democratic Union Party (PYD) in Syria. This is a pretext the Turkish state has used for decades to carry out arrests.

In a statement denouncing the police raids, the HDP called it a “new coup,” adding: “The government, which has been trying to prolong its life with political coups, massacres, black propaganda, special warfare methods, threats, blackmail and all kinds of attacks since 2015, has started a new coup process against the May 14 elections with mass arrests this morning.”

It added, “This operation is an operation to steal the ballot boxes and the will of the people. This operation is an open intimidation and threat to society and its political preferences.”

This crackdown, coming less than three weeks before explosive national elections, is a flagrant attack on democratic rights. The ErdoÄŸan government has repeatedly cracked down on the Kurdish nationalist Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP) and its affiliated groups. It is clear that this attack is bound up with the deep crisis of ErdoÄŸan’s ruling Islamist Justice and Development Party (AKP).

After more than 20 years in power, ErdoÄŸan’s AKP faces widespread social opposition, which has only grown since the February 6 earthquake disaster that led to tens of thousands of preventable deaths.

According to many polls, ErdoÄŸan is likely to lose both the presidential and parliamentary elections. The HDP, which has around 6 million voters’ support and supported ErdoÄŸan’s rival Kemal KılıçdaroÄŸlu in the presidential election, is expected to have a significant impact on the election results.

The defense of democratic rights can only be carried out in opposition to every faction of the capitalist political establishment. This includes opposing any action by ErdoÄŸan to follow the example of his right-wing authoritarian counterparts like Donald Trump in the US or Jair Bolsonaro in Brazil, and refusing to accept the election results; or to take military action against Kurdish militias in Syria or Iraq. It also involves opposing the reactionary role of ErdoÄŸan’s rivals, such as Kemal KılıçdaroÄŸlu’s Republican People’s Party (CHP).

Since 2015, the ErdoÄŸan government has increasingly targeted the HDP. In this period, many HDP deputies were stripped of their parliamentary immunity and jailed, with the support of KılıçdaroÄŸlu’s Republican People’s Party (CHP). Thousands of HDP members were arrested, while elected mayors were dismissed by government orders.

Before this police-state repression, however, the HDP and its predecessor, the Peace and Democracy Party (BDP), were firmly allied with ErdoÄŸan himself. The so-called “peace process” negotiations between Ankara and the PKK, continued until 2015 under the auspices of the US and European powers. It was essentially an attempt by the Turkish and Kurdish ruling elites to forge an alliance to obtain a share in the ongoing plunder of the Middle East led by the imperialist powers.

The ErdoÄŸan government, starting in 2011, was one of the most ardent supporters of the US-led war for regime change against the Russian-backed Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. However, it ended the so-called “peace process” with the Kurdish nationalists when the People’s Protection Units (YPG), the PKK’s sister organization in Syria, emerged as the main US proxy force in that country. The Turkish government feared that the consolidation of a Kurdish entity in Syria could lead to the separation of majority-Kurdish regions of Turkey.

Renewed violent conflicts thereupon erupted inside Turkey itself between ErdoÄŸan and the Kurdish nationalist organizations.

The HDP is a pro-NATO party like ErdoÄŸan’s AKP or KılıçdaroÄŸlu’s CHP, although it seeks to adopt a “democratic” and even “anti-imperialist” pose. The HDP has glorified the YPG’s dirty alliance with US imperialism in Syria as the “Rojava revolution.” It recently declared that Finland’s accession to NATO, in a move aimed to escalate the US-NATO war against Russia in Ukraine, was “legitimate.”

According to a recent report by the Washington Post, citing leaked Pentagon documents, Ukrainian military intelligence planned in December to attack Russian forces in Syria through the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), of which the YPG is the backbone. The Post wrote, “Ukrainian officers considered training operatives of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), the military force of Syria’s Kurdish-controlled autonomous northeast, to strike Russian targets…”

It continued: “As planning occurred last fall, the SDF sought training, air defense systems and a guarantee that its role would be kept secret in exchange for supporting Ukrainian operations. The leadership of the SDF also forbade strikes on Russian positions in Kurdish areas, the document says.”

Moreover, according to the document, Ankara was also aware of the plan. The Turkish officials “‘sought to avoid potential blowback’ and suggested that Ukraine stage its attacks from Kurdish areas instead of those in the north and northwest held by other rebel groups, some of them backed by Turkey.” An SDF official denied the document, while the Turkish Foreign Ministry and the Turkish embassy in the US did not respond to the Post’s questions.

Pentagon’s Ukraine war leaks expose Spain’s Podemos and its pseudo-left rival, Sumar

Alejandro López


The leaking of Pentagon documents on the NATO war in Ukraine has provoked a faction fight between Podemos and its newly-founded electoral rival, Sumar, led by Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Díaz. The leaked documents exposed the lies of NATO governments, including the Socialist Party (PSOE)-Podemos government Díaz leads. They reveal that NATO has troops in Ukraine, that NATO is directly involved in the war, and that Ukraine’s military is in a far worse position than presented by NATO media.

Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Díaz [Photo by U.S. Department of Labor / CC BY 2.0]

The entire corrupt pseudo-left political milieu of Podemos and Sumar lied to the public and hid from the working class the imminent danger of all-out NATO-Russia war. Last February, Minister of Foreign Affairs José Manuel Albares, said sending troops to Ukraine “is absolutely ruled out by Spain, the European Union or NATO.” He dismissed reports of NATO troops on the ground as a “hoax.”

PSOE-Podemos Defense Minister Margarita Robles said: 'Never, ever, will any troops from a NATO country, and Spain is one of them, participate in the war in Ukraine.” This is, she claimed, “an absolutely impossible scenario; non-existent.”

Albares and Robles were reacting to a speech made days before by Podemos general secretary and Minister of Social Rights Ione Belarra. Also hiding that NATO troops are already fighting Russia in Ukraine, Belarra postured as a critic of her own government. She said, “They told us, first, that we were never going to send offensive material. Then they told us that we did have to send anti-aircraft missiles; then, that we are going to send tanks and now jet fighters; what's next, sending Spanish soldiers to Ukraine?”

The documents show more than 150 US and NATO troops are, in fact, deployed in Ukraine. Podemos and Sumar are political tools of a conspiracy, hatched behind the backs of the people of Spain and the NATO countries, to wage an undeclared war on Russia, a nuclear-armed power.

In a press conference, Belarra said that Podemos is 'very concerned about these leaks' released 'according to which elite NATO, British, French soldiers are reportedly already in Ukraine.” She claimed that “there are two different positions within this government” on the Ukraine war, without adding any further points on the positions of Podemos or Sumar.

After the initial shock of the leaks, Podemos reacted by trying to cover itself, launching a factional struggle accusing Sumar of being pro-NATO. The level of cynicism involved is virtually indescribable. Indeed, Podemos leader Ione Belarra and Sumar leader and Deputy Prime Minister Yolanda Díaz are both ministers of a NATO government that, only last Friday, sent Leopard tanks to the Ukrainian army.

For days, however, Podemos officials denounced Sumar for being subservient to NATO and the Ukraine war. In a ludicrous video posted last week, Podemos made thinly-veiled criticisms of Díaz, reminding her of her lack of opposition to sending weapons to Ukraine. Podemos members, it asserted, are “outraged when they see that their ministers look the other way with NATO and the war in Ukraine, and that only Ione [Belarra] says what she thinks” about the war.

On CTXT, ex-Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias defended his party’s supposed criticisms of NATO against Diaz, stating: “These leaked security documents confirm an involvement of the United States and Europe in the war that goes beyond sending money and weapons. That is, they would confirm that we have been lied to.”

He then defended Belarra’s criticisms of NATO war strategy in Ukraine, claiming that her previous statements are “relevant and the best proof that Podemos ministers are criticized in the media for daring to say what the leaders of Sumar privately recognize is true.”

Yolanda Díaz reacted by accusing Iglesias of male chauvinism on a La Sexta TV interview. Asked whether she believed Iglesias imposed “male-chauvinist situations” on her, she replied: “Yes, absolutely, I think that I did and so did all of Spain. It was this thumping on the table during negotiations. … I’m used to this, Jordi.”

She thereupon doubled down on defending the arguments the PSOE-Podemos government has given to justify the NATO war on Russia in Ukraine, whatever the risks. She said, 'If I were prime minister, I would fulfill a fundamental objective, which is to deploy our own European security policy. The Russian war is illegal, illegitimate, and all my solidarity with Ukraine. When there is an illegitimate aggression, the Ukrainian people have the right to defense.”

This debate exposes both the fraud of Sumar’s claim to represent a political alternative to Podemos, and of Podemos’ posturing as an “anti-imperialist” critic of Sumar.

Díaz and Sumar as a whole have the closest ties to Podemos; Díaz was nominated as Deputy Prime Minister by former Podemos leader Pablo Iglesias after he resigned from that post. The Sumar alliance she leads includes various Podemos allies: the Stalinist-led United Left (IU), More Country (Más País), Greens Equo (Verdes Equo), and In Common We Can (ECP). It includes two government ministers and the mayors of Barcelona and Valencia—Spain’s second and third largest cities, respectively.

Podemos was not invited, however, after Díaz refused to commit to internal primary elections. A faction fight is now unfolding inside the affluent petty-bourgeois milieu of Podemos for access to influence and posts in the capitalist state machine. Sumar ('Unite') electoral platform was launched earlier this month by Deputy Prime Minister and Labour minister Yolanda Díaz for this year’s national elections in December. Díaz announced that she aspires to become prime minister.

There are no differences of political principle or class orientation between Sumar and Podemos. Both are populist, nationalist and pro-capitalist parties of the affluent middle class, theoretically rooted in a postmodernist rejection of Marxism and of the revolutionary role of the working class. Both are led by pro-NATO ministers of the Spanish capitalist state that wage imperialist war abroad and class war on workers at home.

Sumar has no differences with Podemos’ ultra-reactionary domestic policies, which it has helped to formulate and impose on the working class. This includes pension cuts and a labour reform; pumping €140 billion of EU bailout funds into Spanish corporations and banks; a profits-over-lives policy in the COVID-19 pandemic leading to over 160,000 deaths; the barbaric incarceration and murder of migrants, including the infamous massacre of 37 refugees at the borders of the Spanish enclave of Melilla in Africa; and violent crackdowns on striking metalworkers and truck drivers.

Despite their differences on foreign policy, neither Belarra nor Díaz specifically criticizes their government’s decision to send €320 million in military aid to Ukraine. This includes rocket launchers, armoured vehicles and tanks and the training of over 850 Ukrainian soldiers on Spanish soil. Spanish weapons provided by Podemos and Sumar ended up in the hands of the neo-Nazi Azov Battalion.

To the extent that differences have arisen, they are on questions of how to market Spanish imperialism’s foreign policy. This reflects not opposition to war in the working class, but tactical divisions within the Spanish political establishment over how to balance its war policies between Washington, the NATO alliance, the European Union, Russia, and the growing influence of China. For now, at least, Sumar is more closely associating itself to support for NATO and Podemos with a call for strategic autonomy from Washington.

After French President Emmanuel Macron traveled to China and called for “European strategic autonomy” from Washington, Iglesias told CTXT that he defends “European strategic autonomy” and wants to remain within NATO. He said Podemos “must continue hold our hand out despite the insults.”

But this “autonomy” means an independent imperialist course for European capitalism, against rivals abroad and the workers at home. While Washington and the US-led NATO alliance play leading roles in stoking wars with Russia and China in a bid to preserve US global hegemony, Europe’s pseudo-left parties that advocate a “multi-polar” capitalist order are also unflaggingly reactionary. The calls for “autonomy” is not the liberty and social and democratic rights of working people, but, instead, the liberty of the capitalist classes to wage war in the pursuit of their profit interests.

Podemos and Sumar are united in their hostility to the global upsurge of the working class against real wage cuts and attacks on social and democratic rights. This is reflected in the strike by over 120,000 Canadian federal government workers, the three-month-long mass protests in France against President Emmanuel Macron’s pension cuts, and major strikes by health care and postal workers in Britain and education workers in the United States. All of these struggles are objectively defying the ruling class.

Biden seeks reelection amid war, COVID and inflation

Patrick Martin


President Joe Biden’s announcement Tuesday that he will seek reelection in 2024, while predictable and widely expected, is nonetheless a significant event. It demonstrates the deepening political crisis of the capitalist two-party system and of American capitalism as a whole.

President Joe Biden at SK Siltron CSS, a computer chip factory in Bay City, Michigan, November 29, 2022. [AP Photo/Patrick Semansky]

The Democratic Party cannot provide an alternative to an 80-year-old man whose physical health and mental competence are clearly at issue, and who would be 86 years old before he leaves the White House at the end of a second term.

As for the Republicans, the fascist former president, Donald Trump, at 76 the second-oldest man ever to occupy the White House, is the clear favorite for the party’s presidential nomination. Should Trump fail to secure the nomination, another fascist, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, is waiting in the wings.

These are the choices that the capitalist two-party system offers working people, although, according to recent polls, Biden and Trump are the two least popular politicians among the presidential hopefuls. Only 5 percent of those polled looked with favor on a rematch of the 2020 election, in which Biden defeated Trump by 7 million votes, and by a margin of 306–232 in the Electoral College.

When the Stalinist bureaucracy had reached the end of its rope in the Soviet Union, in the early 1980s, it advanced a series of aging leaders, a gerontocracy that demonstrated visibly its ossification. After the death of Leonid Brezhnev, 75, Yuri Andropov, 68, succeeded him, followed by Konstantin Chernenko, 72. They now seem positively youthful compared to the current crop of leaders in Washington, with Biden, age 80, in the White House; the troika of Nancy Pelosi, Steny Hoyer and Jim Clyburn, all in their 80s, in control of the House of Representatives until last November; and Chuck Schumer, 72, and Mitch McConnell, 81, leading the Democrats and Republicans in the Senate.

As in the USSR, the aging and semi-senile leadership is a sign of unresolved contradictions which make it difficult for the ruling elite to make the transition from one generation to the next in its leading personnel. The nature of these contradictions is suggested by the three-minute video presentation in which Biden made the case for his own reelection. The video is remarkable, both for what it includes, but mainly for what it passes over in silence, particularly the war in Ukraine, the central focus of the Biden administration for the past two years.

Biden declares freedom and democracy to be the central issues in the 2024 elections, citing three major threats: the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol, the Supreme Court ruling overturning the Roe v. Wade decision on abortion rights and efforts by the Republican Party to restrict voting rights.

These are, of course, highly significant issues. But the Democratic Party has done nothing to defend any of these rights. The House committee hearings into January 6 and the ensuing Justice Department investigation have not resulted in the criminal prosecution of any of those responsible for organizing and instigating the violent attack on Congress, which was aimed at blocking certification of Trump’s election defeat and keeping him in the White House. Trump and his top collaborators in the White House, Pentagon and other federal agencies still walk free.

Similarly, the Democrats failed to take any action to safeguard abortion rights from the 6–3 ultra-right majority on the Supreme Court when they had a majority in both houses of Congress. They are using abortion now purely as a “get-out-the-vote” tactic to mobilize younger voters who otherwise have been alienated by the right-wing policies of the Biden administration. The attack on voting rights has likewise been reduced to a means of mobilizing black and Hispanic voters to go to the polls in 2024 and vote for Democrats, who would not pass a voting rights bill when they controlled Congress.

Even more significant are the issues suppressed in Biden’s announcement video.

There is no mention of the US-instigated proxy war in Ukraine, despite the incessant claims by the Biden administration that this is a war to defend democracy and human rights against Russian aggression. Even when declaring that his campaign theme is the defense of freedom, Biden does not dare to make the connection to the war in Ukraine, because he knows it is deeply unpopular. Nor could he refer to the danger of nuclear war arising from this conflict, because the policy of his administration is to recklessly escalate the war and support provocations against Russia that could trigger a nuclear response.

He was likewise silent on the COVID pandemic, which has claimed the lives of more than 1.1 million Americans, a large majority of them while Biden was in the White House. During the 2020 election campaign, Biden declared during one debate that 200,000 Americans had died of coronavirus during Trump’s time in office. “Anyone who’s responsible for that many deaths should not remain as president of the United States of America,” he said. More than three times that number have died of the preventable disease during Biden’s presidency, and the pandemic is ongoing.

Biden said nothing about inflation or the economic crisis of world capitalism more generally, although that is surely a central issue in the minds of working people. His administration and the Federal Reserve are pursuing a policy of using higher interest rates and higher unemployment to suppress the mounting struggles of the working class driven by inflation. This was signaled most directly by Biden’s pushing legislation through Congress last December to ban a strike by 115,000 rail workers and impose a concessions contract on them.

The next two years will be ones of deepening crisis and social and political explosions, which will break up the seeming political paralysis in US ruling circles and shake the existing political order to its foundation. The two-party system, already deeply discredited, can provide no way forward for tens of millions of working people.

Senator Bernie Sanders, Biden’s major opponent for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020, announced his endorsement within minutes of the release of the campaign video, saying, “I’m in to do what I can to make sure that the president is reelected.” All other leading Democrats are following suit, confirming that there will be no challenge to Biden from within his own party.

As for the right-wing opposition, the Republican Party has moved decisively in the direction of fascism, with the majority of its congressional delegation having voted to overturn the decision made by voters in the 2020 elections in favor of keeping Trump in the White House as an unelected president and would-be dictator.

The struggle against war, the pandemic and economic crisis, and the defense of democratic rights, cannot be left to any section of the capitalist class and the politicians who serve and represent the financial oligarchy. The working class must advance its own independent political alternative.

Europe leads record rise in global military spending to $2.2 trillion as governments prepare for world war

Thomas Scripps



A soldier fires a machine gun from a Leopard 2 tank at the Field Marshal Rommel Barracks in Augustdorf, Germany, Wednesday, February 1, 2023. [AP Photo/Martin Meissner]

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) “Trends in Military Expenditure” briefing for 2022 is a chilling document, charting the gathering storm clouds of a third world war.

A global military spend of over $2.2 trillion—the highest level ever recorded by the organisation—shows the world’s governments are preparing for conflict on a scale not seen since 1945.

The combined arsenals of artillery and tanks, fighter and bomber aircraft, warships and missiles, including nuclear weapons, are enough to raze society to the ground several times over. And they are being readied for action.

Military spending increased by 3.7 percent in real terms over 2021, the sharpest rise in 30 years, despite high rates of inflation. SIPRI writes, “Without adjusting for inflation, spending grew by 6.5 percent in 2022—the biggest year-on-year nominal increase in global military spending since 2010.”

United States spending of $877 billion—39 percent of the global total, three times the spend of second-place China—confirms Washington’s place as the world’s leading warmonger and instigator of military aggression.

But by far the fastest increase in spending (13 percent) was among US allies in Europe. At the centre of two world wars, the continent is once again being turned into an armed camp.

The scale of the proxy war being waged by NATO against Russia through Ukraine is enormous. Ukraine’s own military spending for 2022 catapulted the country from the 36th largest armed forces budget in 2021 to the 11th largest in 2022—at $44 billion, 34 percent of its annual GDP. But this is only half the story.

SIPRI says it is not able to provide “an accurate assessment of the total amount of financial military aid to Ukraine,” giving an estimate of “at least $30 billion in 2022.” NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg announced this month that the current nominal figure was over $70 billion.

Whichever figure is closer to the truth for 2022, Ukraine’s military budget last year not only outstripped all NATO powers except the US, it was at least close to and potentially significantly higher than Russia’s $86.4 billion budget, even following Moscow’s 9.2 own percent increase.

Ukraine’s de facto NATO membership is here spelled out in dollars and cents, with Stoltenberg announcing last Friday the imperialist alliance’s intention to formalise this relationship.

The sums of money involved are staggering. Central and Western European military budgets climbed to a combined $345 billion, 30 percent higher than a decade ago and surpassing the level of 1989, at the end of the Cold War. Wealth that could alleviate many of the worst crises affecting human civilization is spent every year preparing for wars that threaten to end its existence in a nuclear Armageddon.

The increases so far are only a down payment on what is to come, as each country is drawn more and more fully into the maelstrom.

Sweden and Finland, recently incorporated into the NATO alliance, and Poland and Lithuania on its front line, all lifted military spending by at least 10 percent last year—up to 36 percent in the case of Finland. The Baltic states and Poland have committed to spending between 2.5 and 4 percent of GDP on their armed forces within two years.

The major European imperialist powers are following suit.

French President Emmanuel Macron’s plans announced this January to increase military spending by a third—taking GDP spending to 2 percent by 2025—for an additional €413 billion in total.

Germany, also pledged to hit 2 percent of GDP, has already set aside a massive €100 billion additional fund—equivalent to its entire military budget for almost two years—to modernise its armed forces.

Demands are constantly raised for governments to go further faster, either by Washington urging the European powers to pull their weight in US-led wars, or by representatives of Europe’s ruling elite such as Macron insisting on the need for “strategic autonomy” from the US to aggressively pursue their own objectives.

Referring to the NATO members’ pledge of military spending of 2 percent of GDP, Stoltenberg told Die Welt, “I expect that we will make a new pledge on defense spending when we meet in Vilnius at the NATO summit in July this year… I expect there to be a more ambitious pledge because everyone sees that we need to invest more.”

Warning that Europe faces “vassalisation” at the hands of the US, the European Council on Foreign Relations called this month for Europe to “Deploy western European forces to the east in greater numbers, offering to replace US forces in some cases”; “Pursue greater European military capabilities and greater capacity to act autonomously, both within and external to NATO” and to “Consider a European nuclear deterrent.”

War with Russia already threatens a direct clash between powers armed with multiple thousands of nuclear warheads. But America and the European powers’ imperialist ambitions are also set on China, owner of the world’s third-largest nuclear arsenal after the US and Russia.

Spurred on by US-led aggression against China over Taiwan, Asia was the second fastest growing region for military spending in 2022 after Europe. Military budgets in Asia and Oceania grew by 2.7 percent last year to $575 billion, a 45 percent rise over the last decade. China and US allies India and Japan led the way with increases of 4-6 percent.

Japanese, like German, imperialism is remilitarising to an extent not previously considered politically possible given the horrors inflicted by their militaries on the world’s population during the Second World War. Japan too is gearing up its armed forces in preparation for war with the same nations it invaded with such horrendous consequences only a lifetime ago.

The return of the arms race that characterised most of the 20th century points to the re-eruption of the same question which drove the world to catastrophe in 1914 and 1939—who will dominate the world, both economically and strategically?

The existential crisis of US imperialism—its explosive internal tensions and waning global economic supremacy—has provoked an unending series of imperialist wars and interventions intended to reverse its fortunes that has now escalated to the point of a direct confrontation alongside its allies with Russia and China.

Everywhere, the ruling class’s war aims depend on an assault on the living standards of the working class. Boosts to military spending last year took place as price rises drove an unprecedented fall in real wages—2.2 percent across the G20 for just the first six months of 2022, according to the International Labour Organization. Inflation is also being used by governments to erode the real-terms value of social spending on services like health care, education and welfare support.

These cuts are driving millions of workers into strikes and protests, to which the ruling elites respond with a turn to dictatorial forms of rule, as with Macron’s enacting pension cuts by decree and police repression of protests.

Australia eases citizenship requirements for New Zealanders as countries strengthen military ties

Tom Peters


Last weekend Australian Labor Party Prime Minister Anthony Albanese announced a policy change that will remove long-standing barriers for New Zealanders living in Australia to gain citizenship.

New Zealand Prime Minister Chris Hipkins, left, meets Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese in Canberra, Australia, Tuesday, February 7, 2023. [AP Photo/Hilary Wardhaugh]

In 2001, the right-wing Australian government led by Prime Minister John Howard introduced strict criteria making it much harder for New Zealanders to gain permanent residence and citizenship. As of 2016, New Zealanders could only apply if they had worked consecutively in Australia for five years, earning at least $53,900 a year, an insuperable barrier for hundreds of thousands of working class people.

Any New Zealander moving to Australia after 2001 could live and work there indefinitely under a temporary Special Category Visa (SCV), with no access to welfare benefits, public housing, student loans, disability support and no right to vote. Around 670,000 New Zealand citizens live in Australia (more than a tenth of the NZ population) and roughly half have no residence or citizenship. In recent years, Australia has deported hundreds of New Zealanders for often minor offences, including many who grew up in Australia. 

Under the new rules, New Zealanders on SCVs will be able to apply for citizenship from July if they have lived in Australia for four years, and the income threshold has been removed. 

The discrimination against New Zealanders was one component of the anti-immigrant measures enforced by successive Labor and Coalition governments, including the ongoing imprisonment of refugees in detention centres. New Zealand, for its part, has similar discriminatory policies, including frequent deportations of migrants from the Pacific, Asia and elsewhere. These broader anti-immigrant measures will remain unchanged.

The announcement of the new policy for New Zealanders in Australia has been exploited for maximum political advantage both by the Albanese government, as well as Chris Hipkins’ Labour Party-led government in NZ, which faces an election in October. In both countries, the established parties are increasingly discredited by the cost of living crisis, soaring social inequality and a catastrophic situation in public hospitals and aged care facilities caused by the decision to let COVID-19 rip.

One motivation behind the relaxation of citizenship criteria, which had been opposed by successive governments in Australia for more than two decades, is that the Albanese government is desperate to encourage immigration to fill labour shortages across all sectors of the economy. The tight labour market, caused in part by never-ending waves of illness from COVID-19, is an obstacle to the ruling elite’s plan to intensify exploitation by pushing up unemployment and reducing wages and conditions.

The timing of the deal and the rhetoric surrounding it, however, makes clear that it is part of a more fundamental push for closer strategic and military ties between Australia and New Zealand as both countries integrate themselves into US-led war preparations against China. The less restrictive citizenship rules, while they will undoubtedly be welcomed by working people in both countries, are not being done out of humanitarian motivations. 

The changes were in fact negotiated last year, but Hipkins, who visited Australia over the weekend, said the announcement was “deliberately timed to be on the closest weekend to Anzac Day… [to] reaffirm our incredibly strong Anzac mateship.” Anzac Day, April 25, is a public holiday in Australia and NZ that marks the entry of both countries into World War I in the Allies’ disastrous invasion of Gallipoli in Turkey.

The day is characterised by patriotic military parades and political speeches that glorify all the wars that Australia and NZ troops have fought in, including the bloody invasion and occupation of Afghanistan and Iraq.

At a joint press conference in Australia Hipkins said the “historic” citizenship agreement “will make an enormous difference to the lives of so many people making Australia home.” He immediately added that he and Albanese had “discussed the geostrategic challenges in our region and how, as allies, Australia and New Zealand can continue to work together to advance our common interests and values.”

Albanese was asked by one journalist whether he considered Australia and New Zealand to be “close allies when it comes to responding strategically in our region, in particular [in response to] China?” He replied: “We are absolutely close allies and will remain that in perpetuity.”

Hipkins endorsed the AUKUS military pact between Australia, the UK and United States, which will supply Australia with nuclear-powered attack submarines and ramp up collaboration between the imperialist powers throughout the Indo-Pacific region, as they gear up for war with China. 

“New Zealand agrees with the AUKUS partners that the collective objective needs to be the delivery of peace and stability and the preservation of an international rules-based system in our region,” Hipkins said. Defending the “rules-based system” established by US imperialism following World War II is the pretext for an unprecedented military build-up in the Indo-Pacific and continual military provocations against China.

New Zealand is a minor imperialist power, allied with Australia and part of the US-led Five Eyes intelligence network. Successive NZ governments have, however, been reluctant to say anything that might threaten the lucrative trade relationship with China, which takes about 30 percent of New Zealand’s exports.

This is now changing, as it becomes ever more clear that Washington is intent on provoking a Third World War against both Russia and China, to secure its domination over the world’s resources and markets. 

The Hipkins government has indicated that it is prepared to join some aspects of AUKUS, including the sharing of military and intelligence technology. 

Earlier this month, the Australian and New Zealand armies signed Plan ANZAC, an agreement to closely integrate their operations and share resources in anticipation of new conflicts. Chief of Australian Army Lieutenant General Simon Stuart said the plan would enhance “interoperability, capacity, ability to jointly support combat operations” and “will see both armies better prepared to work together to support security and stability missions.”

After signing the deal, Stuart and the head of the New Zealand Army, Major General John Boswell, travelled together to Fiji and Vanuatu to strengthen ties with military forces in the small Pacific island countries. Australia and New Zealand are seeking to push back against growing Chinese influence across the Pacific, which the ruling elite in both countries view as their colonial backyard.

A significant aspect of the new pathway to citizenship is that it will give hundreds of thousands of New Zealanders in Australia the “right” to enlist in the Defence Force, which is carrying out its biggest recruitment drive since the Vietnam War, and its biggest expansion in spending since the Second World War.

The New Zealand Herald, meanwhile, has marked Anzac Day by lamenting the “unbelievable surge” in people leaving the military. With just 9,000 active personnel and attrition rates of more than 15 percent, journalist Pete McKenzie stated that “if [the Defence Force] was asked to do a long-term peace-keeping mission in the Pacific, for example, it probably wouldn’t be able to do that, according to the people I spoke to.”

Amid the escalating US-NATO war against Russia in Ukraine, and declarations by the US that war with China is likely within the next two years, the Australian and New Zealand ruling elites are scrambling to build up their military forces and to place their countries on a war footing. 

The invocations of the “Anzac spirit” and enduring “mateship” by Australian and New Zealand politicians serve the crucial ideological function of glorifying the “sacrifices” made by working people in past wars, in order to condition the population for even more devastating wars in the future.