10 Jan 2024

Uncertainty drives market gyrations

Nick Beams


The New Year has opened with uncertainty the dominant feature of international financial markets. A number of questions are arising including: the direction of interest rate policy by the US Federal Reserve and other major central banks; the impact of the interest rate rises over the past 18 months on corporate debt and the commercial property sector; and the effect of rising government debt on the bond market.

Last year ended with a surge on Wall Street on the expectation that the Fed was going to cut interest rates at least three times this year, possibly as early as March, leading to the longest weekly “winning streak” for the market in almost 20 years.

Traders on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. [AP Photo/Richard Drew]

But after the party there was what was characterised as a sobering up, with loss of 1.5 percent in the S&P 500 for the first week of the year after nine straight weeks of gains. This week opened with a rise.

The characteristic feature of the swings has been their domination by the so-called Magnificent Seven – Apple, Amazon, Microsoft, Nvidia, Tesla, Alphabet (Google’s parent) and Meta (Facebook’s parent). After being responsible for the largest portion of the rise, they accounted for 70 percent of the S&P’s decline in the first week of the year.

Their size and the degree of financial concentration they embody is indicated by calculations which show that their total market capitalisation of around $12 trillion is equivalent to the entire market capitalisation of the Canadian, British, and Japanese stock markets combined.

The reason for the swings is the endless calculation and recalculation of where finance capital believes Fed interest policy will go. The surge, which began in October, was given a significant boost by the Fed’s December 13 meeting and the clear indication by Fed chair Jerome Powell at his press conference that rate cuts were under active consideration. The sobering up came when the minutes of the meeting were issued which showed that the claims of a pivot may have been overblown.

The sharp swings in the market create the conditions for the appropriation of large amounts of money, but also for significant losses for those on the wrong side.

While speculation on the direction of interest rates continues, the longer-term effect of the rate rises carried out since March 2022, which have seen the Fed rate rise from near zero to around 5 percent, is starting to show up.

According to analysis by Bloomberg, non-performing loans, where there has not been a payment for at least 90 days, are expected to rise to a combined $24.4 billion at the four largest American banks—JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Citigroup—for the last three months of 2023.

This is an increase of $6.6 billion on the figure at the end of 2022.

One of the key areas of concern over the longer-term is commercial property. Loans taken out at historically low interest rates when the Fed was undertaking quantitative easing now must be refinanced at much higher rates. Moreover, the market for office space is experiencing a downturn.

According to a report by four economists published by the National Bureau of Economics, there is an underlying crisis developing in the banking system as $5 trillion of debt taken out in the zero-rate era becomes progressively due.

Colombia University professor, Tomasz Piskorski, one of the authors, said: “It’s not a liquidity problem; it’s a solvency problem.”

In the three months to the end of September, it has been reported the volume of missed payments for loans on properties rented to others rose by 30 percent, or by $4.4 billion, to $17.7 billion.

At the start of the year the FT reported that billions of dollars “will fall due on hundreds of big US office buildings that their owners are likely to struggle to refinance at current rates.”

The size of this “wall of debt,” as it has been characterised in the financial media, is estimated to be $117 billion.

The situation could worsen because, as Richard Hill, head of real estate at the global investment company Cohen & Steers told the FT: “We are in the very beginning of trying to weather the office markets downturn.” The worsening situation had “everything to do with financing costs going back up.”

Another factor which could bring significant financial turbulence is the rise in government debt. In a report issued in November, the Institute for International Finance said the global debt stock rose by over $9.5 trillion in the first three quarters of last year to more than $307 trillion.

The biggest increases were in so-called mature markets, the US, Japan, France and the UK.

With elections taking place in more than 50 countries this year, the IIF pointed to the interconnection between politics and finance.

“If upcoming elections lead to populist policies aimed at controlling social tensions, the result could be more government borrowing and less fiscal restraint. Budget deficits are already running well above pre-pandemic levels in many countries and are expected to add around $5.3 trillion per year to the global government debt.”

This could increase the interest rate burden for many sovereign debtors, because of the expectation that rates would remain higher for longer and generate boom bust cycles in the fixed-income bond markets.

The report cited the recent volatility in the US Treasury market “partially triggered by speculation about a significant rise in government borrowing” as an example of what could take place.

Referring to the IIF analysis yesterday, the FT reported comments by Jim Cielinski, head of global fixed income at the bond trader Janus Henderson, who said deficits were “out of control and the real story is there’s no mechanism for controlling them.” The issue would become one of serious concern to financial markets in the next six to 12 months.

Robert Tipp, head of global bonds at PGIM Fixed Income, said: “We are truly in an unmoored environment for government debt compared with previous centuries. At present, countries such as the US and Italy were getting a ‘free pass’ but that could change.”

How that could take place was referenced by Sir Robert Stheeman, the outgoing head of the UK’s debt management office, in an interview with the FT last week. Without directly citing it, he recalled the financial crisis of September-October 2022 when the short-lived Truss government in Britain sought to finance tax cuts for the wealthy and corporations by increasing debt.

The bond market went into turmoil as pension funds faced a collapse and a major crisis was only averted through an intervention by the Bank of England.

Steetham noted that “in a world where we have debt to sell, policymaking cannot be divorced from the reality of the market.”

While he did not spell it out, that reality could well assert itself in the form of a crisis as it did just 16 months ago.

Amid signs of a COVID surge, Sri Lankan government blocks testing and preventive measures

Kapila Fernando


In the last week of December, three COVID-19 deaths were reported in Sri Lanka, raising serious concerns of a renewed surge in COVID-19 pandemic.

  • On December 24, a 65-year-old man died of pneumonia in Kandy Hospital.
  • On December 25, a 63-year-old woman died after being admitted to Gampaha General Hospital due to vomiting and respiratory problems.
  • On December 29, a 54-year-old mother of three died after being admitted to Anuradhapura General Hospital due to respiratory problems.

All three were confirmed as COVID-infected through tests only after their death. However, it has not yet been confirmed with which COVID variant they had been infected. On January 4, one more death from the COVID-19 was reported.

The bodies of COVID-19 victims placed on hospital stretchers in Sri Lanka. [Photo: Facebook]

The deaths have been reported under circumstances in which the Omicron subvariant, known as JN.1, has rapidly spread throughout more than 40 countries, including the US, in Europe, and in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu that neighbours Sri Lanka. Moreover, the previous strong variant known as BA.2.86 (nicknamed “Pirola”) has not yet gone away.

The reporting of three COVID deaths in a week underscores the danger that many more people are infected across the island under conditions where testing and preventative measures have been all but abandoned.

The government of President Ranil Wickremesinghe and health authorities, however, have refused to increase testing or to take other emergency health care measures such as contact tracing and quarantining to stop the spread of the deadly virus.

Instead, at a press conference held on December 2, Health Minister Ramesh Pathirana said that the people should get used to the health practices followed during the previous COVID period. The government is cynically washing its hands of its responsibility to protect the public from the pandemic and blaming the public instead.

Around the world, capitalist governments have placed corporate profits above human lives. The previous Sri Lankan government of President Gotabhaya Rajapakse in 2021 repeated the lie that the “pandemic is over” and its impact has diminished, even as the Omicron variant continued to spread. The Wickremesinghe government is now following the same murderous policy.

Health ministry spokesperson, Dr G. Wijesuriya, justified the government’s non-implementation COVID testing and other preventative health measures, telling the media on December 29 that “the deaths have nothing to do with the COVID-19 virus.” A day later, he changed his tune, saying: “The public should not have any unnecessary fear of an outbreak of COVID-19.”

In the face of demands from health workers to increase COVID testing, health authorities fraudulently claimed that “sample tests” were conducted by the health ministry and their results were “good”.

The Federation of Health Professionals (FHP) has warned the Health Secretary that “many unnecessary problems may arise by not testing for COVID.” It also asked what tests the ministry is conducting and what are the results.

According to the FHP, even when antibody test kits (antigen tests) are available in hospitals, COVID tests are not being done. Hospitals do not have a system to test health workers with COVID symptoms or suspected COVID patients.

The FHP posed other questions to the Health Secretary including: it is normal to do necessary medical tests in connection with any disease, but why is it not done in connection with COVID; and why are unknown “samples” being tested, even though there are many suspected COVID patients in hospitals?

The media reported on January 4 that rather than increasing testing, the PCR unit conducting COVID tests at the Colombo General Hospital has been completely closed.

Dr. Chandima Jeewandara, director of the Allergy, Immunology and Cell Biology Unit of the University of Sri Jayawardenapura, told the media on December 31 that the new COVID variants may badly affect the elderly and people with chronic diseases and these people needed to get a booster vaccine and wear masks. He also said that he believed that the new subvariant JN.1 may have already come to Sri Lanka.

The Wickremesinghe government and health authorities are creating the conditions for the rapid spread of the deadly COVID virus and its new variants throughout the country without any hindrance.

The criminal disregard of the capitalist ruling class for public health is underlined by the fact that most of the seven million Pfizer vaccines imported into Sri Lanka in 2021/2022 have been allowed to expire. According to former health minister Keheliya Rambukwella, only 13 percent of the imported Pfizer vaccines have been used. The government simply failed to develop a coherent plan to provide vaccinations, especially boosters, in areas outside of Colombo.

The public health care system, which is already suffering from shortages of essential personnel, equipment and drugs, cannot cope with a resurgence of the COVID pandemic. Epidemics of dengue, malaria, encephalitis, leptospirosis and measles in Sri Lanka have already exposed serious public health deficiencies. Most COVID testing, vaccination and treatment are confined to expensive private hospitals which ordinary working people cannot afford.

Sri Lankan governments are not exceptional. Around the world, COVID testing and prevention have all but halted as the deadly virus has been allowed rip through the world’s population. The official global death toll stands at seven million, but many more will have died from the disease as governments insist people “live with COVID.” In Sri Lanka, more than 16,000 have died.

Independent medical scientists are warning that the danger of the pandemic continues with evolution of deadly new strains. Many millions who have been infected suffer from the impact of Long COVID that can seriously harm vital organs and lead to heart attacks and strokes as well as kidney and neurological diseases.

Hospitals strained across the US as over 2 million Americans now infected with COVID each day

Benjamin Mateus


On Tuesday, Biobot Analytics published their latest data on COVID-19 wastewater levels in the United States, which scientists estimate now correlate to over 2 million infections per day, the second-highest figure of the entire pandemic.

The current wave is now 20 percent higher than the peak seen in January 2023, after which the Biden administration and the World Health Organization (WHO) moved to arbitrarily end their respective COVID-19 public health emergency (PHE) declarations in May 2023. These unscientific decisions led to the rapid dismantling of all vestiges of pandemic surveillance, including accurate data on testing, hospitalizations and deaths, leaving wastewater data as the sole reliable metric on viral transmission.

While Tuesday’s data indicate that the current wave of infections appears to be peaking, this will only be clear once next week’s data are released. Regardless, the US remains mired in a horrific wave of mass infection with a virus that is still hospitalizing and killing masses of people globally and causing untold long-term damage to the health of the population.

The current surge is being driven by the JN.1 variant, which rapidly became dominant in the US and across the globe over the last several weeks. Corresponding with these waves of infections, hospitalizations have also started to rise, with many health systems inundated in the US, Canada and Europe.

Weekly hospitalizations across the US jumped 20 percent for the week ending December 30, compared to the week prior, and have more than doubled since the first week in November. Much of this is affecting those 70 years or older, who are at greater risk of death from their infection.

In Ohio, which is currently experiencing its highest wastewater levels of any point in the pandemic, emergency room physician Dr. David Christopher bluntly noted, “It’s a total plague ward shitshow in most emergency departments right now. Don’t believe me? Then ask anyone you know who works in one. If they’re being honest, willing to talk and aren’t too exhausted, you’ll likely hear some horror stories. It hasn’t been this bad since December 2021.”

North Carolina recently hit its highest level of COVID hospital admissions for the pandemic. It is one of several states to have some hospitals reinstate mask mandates in an attempt to curb the high rates of COVID transmission in the health sector. Those at or over 70 years of age account for nearly 60 percent of admissions.

Healthcare workers at Michigan Medicine in Ann Arbor, speaking with reporters from the World Socialist Web Site, said they were facing overcrowded emergency departments and ICUs over capacity. One worker observed, “COVID is rampant. Keep your masks on. It’s ramping up. Biden thinks it’s nonexistent, management thinks it’s nonexistent, too. I don’t think we are testing anyone. We are testing if they are a suspected case, but we don’t always know.”

Another nurse added, “What worries me the most is patients who are getting COVID when they are in the hospital. Then the roommate gets COVID too. And we don’t even move the patient anymore when they get COVID. There are no rules about informing the roommate either.”

In a recent TikTok post by a US healthcare worker who chose not to name her hospital or region of the country, she remarked, “I’m just letting you guys know from someone who works in a hospital, COVID is getting really really bad. I think I saw a statistic that said next week will peak with COVID cases at two million infections [per day]. The building I’m at has five floors.”

She added, “The third and fourth and a lot of the ICU are full of COVID patients. So, get yourself an N95, stay indoors if you can, test frequently, and do not trust the numbers the government is giving you, because they are not correct.”

Despite the massive ongoing surge that has been steadily rising since the summer, and the concomitant rise in hospital admissions which are inundating the health systems, the attitude adopted by the Biden Administration remains one of total indifference to the public health threats to the population.

This point was underscored when a reporter asked Karine Jean-Pierre about the high or very high levels of respiratory illnesses across more than 31 states, and the possibility of reimplementing mask mandates. The visibly annoyed White House press secretary responded, “So look, it is up to each and every American to make their decision on what they want to do.”

Outside of some esoteric discussion in the media on the rise of JN.1, there is hardly any mention of the current state of mass infections and hospitalizations across the country in any of the major media outlets. Any such coverage simply downplays the dangers posed by these infections, normalizes the idea that SARS-CoV-2 continues to evolve and transmit rapidly, and omits altogether any explanation as to why the Biden administration and CDC continue to completely ignore the pandemic.

One of the few exceptions was a recent opinion piece published in the LA Times by Dr. Eric Topol, a leading expert on the pandemic, speaking succinctly and to the point about the absurd lack of any pandemic response. Topol asked, “What is the exit strategy that could get us to ‘return to normal’? It certainly can’t happen with the current complacency and false belief that the virus will burn out and go away. Inevitably, there will be another strain in the future that we are not at all prepared for and will lead to yet another very big wave across the planet.”

He added, “It’s crickets from the White House on COVID now, with no messaging on getting updated booster or masking. The Biden administration has done far too little to accelerate research on effective treatments for Long COVID … This passivity reinforces the illusion that the pandemic is behind us when it’s actually raging. And this season will be followed by a more quiescent period, which will, once again, lull us into thinking the pandemic is over.”

More disconcerting, and in line with predictions made by Arijit Chakravarty and colleagues that SARS-CoV-2 has the ability to become more virulent, evidence has emerged from two recent publications, one based in Ohio and the other from Europe, that the JN.1 strain appears to more efficiently infect cells in the lower lung, meaning the virus has regained some of its traits from the pre-Omicron strains, which were considered more deadly.

The researchers from Germany and France wrote that BA.2.86, the variant nicknamed “Pirola” from which JN.1 evolved, “has regained a trait characteristic of early SARS-CoV-2 lineages: robust lung cell entry. The variant might constitute an elevated health threat as compared to previous Omicron sublineages.”

Fortune journalist Erin Prater, one of the few consistent reporters on the pandemic in the bourgeois press, cautiously warned about these developments, “Omicron had a penchant for infecting the upper airway versus the lower airway, where prior versions of the virus tended to accumulate, causing more severe disease. The new studies offer proof that this trend may very well be reversing, the authors contend. If true, it’s bad news for those who hoped the virus was slowly attenuating to the equivalent of a common cold.”

US congressional leaders announce $1.7 trillion budget deal for 2024

Jacob Crosse


On Sunday, US House and Senate leaders announced they had agreed to a 2024 budget proposal that would total nearly $1.7 trillion, including a record $886.3 billion for the military.

From left, Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, R-La., at the Capitol in Washington, Tuesday, Dec. 12, 2023. [AP Photo/.J. Scott Applewhite]

While the Pentagon will be flush with cash, the non-defense discretionary spending agreed to by both parties, and endorsed by President Joe Biden, is $772.7 billion. This means the US government is to spend over $100 billion more on the military than the combined amount for departments that provide K-12 education; low-income housing assistance; nutrition assistance for young children, families and the elderly; financial aid for college students; public health programs; science and medical research and other social needs.

The proposed budget does nothing to address the social crisis in America that has led to falling life expectancy, record homelessness and increased hunger.

An analysis of the budget deal by Roll Call notes that the framework provides “a very slight overall increase in non-defense funding, about 0.2 percent above the previous year,” while military and “security-related spending would rise by nearly $28 billion, or more than 3 percent.”

Despite the flat-lining of social spending, coupled with an increase in military and border police funds, the far-right Christian-evangelical House speaker, Mike Johnson, is fending off attacks from a fascistic faction of House Republicans for agreeing to the budget.

In a letter to the House Republican conference on Sunday, Johnson said the agreement included an additional $16 billion in spending cuts that he had negotiated. These include $6.1 billion in pandemic aid and $10 billion from the IRS. The trimming of the IRS is part of an ongoing effort by the Republican Party to erase some $80 billion in funding, spread out over 10 years, that had been appropriated to allow the agency to go after sophisticated and wealthy tax cheats.

Johnson told Republicans that the budget “will not satisfy everyone, and they do not cut as much spending as many of us would like.” He claimed nevertheless that it was “the most favorable budget agreement Republicans have achieved in over a decade.”

In a Fox News appearance Tuesday, Johnson said the budget was a “step in the right direction” and amounted to “the first reduction in non-defense spending in many years.”

While the Senate and House leadership have agreed to the broad “top line” budget proposal, the actual text of the bill has yet to be written and likely will not be available until next week. The House only resumed on Monday, while the Senate returned to work on Tuesday.

If the budget or a separate continuing resolution (CR) is not passed by January 19, there will be a partial government shutdown. Funding for the departments of Agriculture, Transportation, Energy and Veterans expires on January 19, while funding for Commerce, Justice, Defense, Homeland Security, Labor, State, Interior, Financial Services and other agencies expires on February 2. Previously passed stop-gap measures provided funding for four of the government spending bills through January 19, while eight other spending bills provided funding through February 2.

Last Friday, Roll Call reported that during a breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor, White House Office of Management and Budget Director Shalanda Young expressed doubt that an agreement would be reached before the first, January 19, deadline.

On Sunday night, shortly after the budget figure was released, the House Freedom Caucus tweeted that the budget was “even worse than we thought,” and a “total failure.” The caucus’ X/Twitter account reposted a December 29, 2023, statement that read, in part, “[W]e are extremely troubled that House Republican leadership is considering an agreement with Democrats to spend even higher than the modest $1.59 trillion statutory cap set six months ago by the Fiscal Responsibility act.”

Several Republicans inside and outside the Freedom Caucus have already indicated they will vote against the deal. Speaking on CNN Monday evening, the Freedom Caucus policy chair, Rep. Chip Roy (R-Texas), said he wished “Speaker Johnson weren’t doing this,” and added that he was “very disappointed.”

Roy said there needed to be “some real conversations this week about what we need to do going forward.” Asked by CNN host Kaitlin Collins if those conversations included moving to vacate the speakership, Roy replied, “That’s not the road I prefer. I didn’t prefer to go down that road with Speaker McCarthy.”

He continued: “We need to figure out how to get this all done together. But it isn’t good and there’s a lot of my colleagues who are pretty frustrated about it, so we’ll see what happens this week.”

In an interview on the Steve Deace Show, Roy added, “I’m leaving it (vacating the speakership) on the table. I’m not gonna say I’m gonna go file it tomorrow night. I’m not saying I’m not gonna file it tomorrow. I think the speaker needs to know that we’re angry about it.”

While Johnson will have a hard time wrangling votes from Freedom Caucus members, the Democratic Party leadership has already voiced its support for the proposal, meaning Johnson will have to rely primarily on Democratic votes to pass a budget that prepares for world war, guarantees further social cuts and funds savage attacks on immigrants.

In a joint statement released Sunday, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-New York) and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries (D-New York) said the framework agreement “clears the way for Congress” to “address many of the major challenges America faces at home and abroad.”

The statement called on “both sides” to “work together in a bipartisan way and avoid a costly and disruptive shutdown.” The Associated Press reported that in a call to Democrats, Schumer stressed that it was “a good deal for Democrats and the country.”

In a statement released by the White House, Biden said the 2024 budget proposal “reflects the funding levels that I negotiated with both parties and signed into law last spring.”

International Court of Justice complaint demonstrates that Israel is carrying out genocide

Tom Carter




A Palestinian child looks at the graves of people killed in the Israeli bombardment of the Gaza Strip and buried inside the Shifa Hospital grounds in Gaza City, December 31, 2023. [AP Photo/Mohammed Hajjar]

On Thursday and Friday of this week, arguments will be heard in the International Court of Justice in extraordinary proceedings that have been initiated against the state of Israel under the 1948 Genocide Convention.

These proceedings were initiated by South Africa in a formal complaint filed on December 29, which described the ongoing onslaught by Israeli armed forces against the civilian population of Gaza as “genocidal in character” because it is being carried out with the “specific intent,” in violation of the Genocide Convention, “to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group.”

This ICJ complaint is 84 pages of densely-spaced text, with 574 footnotes, nearly each citing to a longer and more detailed report or document. It presents a devastating, overwhelming case.

As of December 29, South Africa’s complaint documented the deaths of “in excess of 21,110 named Palestinians, including over 7,729 children—with over 7,780 others missing, presumed dead under the rubble.” On top of these deaths, “over 55,243 other Palestinians” have been injured, with many of these injuries involving amputations or permanent disfigurement.

The complaint continues, “Israel has also laid waste to vast areas of Gaza, including entire neighborhoods, and has damaged or destroyed in excess of 355,000 Palestinian homes.” This bombing campaign has forced “the evacuation of 1.9 million people or 85 percent of the population of Gaza from their homes.” The Israeli military is pushing these displaced people “into ever smaller areas, without adequate shelter, in which they continue to be attacked, killed and harmed.”

The bombing campaign is not just “indiscriminate.” In a section titled, “Destruction of Palestinian life in Gaza,” the complaint documents Israel’s targeted and systematic destruction of courts, libraries, universities, museums, historic structures, religious sites, schools, buildings housing records and historical artifacts, and even graveyards.

The complaint also documents Israel’s obstruction of “essential food, water, medicine, fuel, shelter and other humanitarian assistance for the besieged and blockaded Palestinian people,” citing warnings by experts that “silent, slow deaths caused by hunger and thirst risk surpassing those violent deaths already caused by Israeli bombs and missiles.”

“Most of the Palestinian people in Gaza are now starving,” the complaint states, “with levels of starvation rising daily.” The complaint cites evidence gathered by the World Health Organization that an “unprecedented 93 percent of the population in Gaza is facing crisis levels of hunger, with insufficient food and high levels of malnutrition.”

Approximately 70 percent of the victims of Israel’s operation have been women and children: “Two mothers are estimated to be killed every hour in Gaza.” The complaint also accuses Israel of deliberately imposing “measures intended to prevent Palestinian births” through a blockade on medical supplies.

The complaint juxtaposes this detailed factual account of Israel’s rampage against Gaza with the expressions of genocidal intent coming directly out of the mouths of Israeli leaders, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who stated on October 28, “You must remember what Amalek has done to you,” referring to a biblical passage that states, “go, attack Amalek … Spare no one, but kill alike men and women, infants and sucklings.”

On October 7, Nissim Vaturi, Deputy Speaker of the Knesset and Member of the Foreign Affairs and Security Committee, wrote, “Now we all have one common goal—erasing the Gaza Strip from the face of the earth. Those who are unable will be replaced.”

On October 9, Defense Minister Yoav Gallant stated that Israel was “imposing a complete siege on Gaza. No electricity, no food, no water, no fuel.” On November 11, Israel’s Minister of Agriculture declared, “We are now actually rolling out the Gaza Nakba,” referring to the Nakba of 1948, in which over 80 percent of the Palestinian population were forced from their homes.

On November 6, Giora Eiland, an Israeli Army Reservist Major General, wrote that Israel “needs to create a humanitarian crisis in Gaza . . . Gaza will become a place where no human being can exist.” He went on to declare that “severe epidemics in the south of the Gaza Strip will bring victory closer.”

Members of the Israeli Knesset have repeatedly called for Gaza to be “wiped out,” “flatten[ed]”, “eras[ed],” and “[c]rush[ed] . . . on all its inhabitants.” Meanwhile, “genocidal messages” are “routinely broadcast — without censure or sanction — in Israeli media.” These include “Gaza should be razed” and “there are 2.5 million terrorists,” referring to the entire Palestinian population.

Anticipating that Israeli officials will invoke the events of October 7 to justify their conduct, the complaint points out that in the years of the twenty-first century preceding October 7, 2023, “approximately 7,569 Palestinians, including 1,699 children” were killed in “four asymmetrical wars.”

Since it was filed, South Africa’s complaint has been endorsed by at least 60 countries, including the entire Organization of Islamic Countries, which includes Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and Iran, together with Malaysia, Turkey, Jordan and Bolivia.

The complaint, however, will have no effect on Israel’s conduct of the genocide, or on the support of the imperialist powers. The Netanyahu regime denounced the complaint as “ridiculous” and an “absurd blood libel.”

Biden administration national security spokesperson John Kirby responded to South Africa’s complaint by calling it “meritless, counterproductive and completely without any basis in fact whatsoever.” Matt Miller, a State Department spokesperson, claimed that the American government is “not seeing any acts that constitute genocide.”

These dishonest evasions are assisted by the major American newspapers and television news programs, which have generally refused to report the factual contents of the complaint.

The ICJ, sometimes called the World Court, is the highest judicial body of the United Nations. The complaint brought by South Africa may take years to make its way through ICJ procedures, which will feature the formal presentation of evidence and argument. The hearings this week will focus on the request for “preliminary measures” in the complaint, including South Africa’s request that Israel be ordered to immediately “cease killing and causing serious mental and bodily harm to Palestinian people in Gaza.”

There is certainly enough factual evidence described in the complaint to warrant not only an immediate halt to Israel’s operations in Gaza, but the immediate arrest of the entire Israeli government, together with their accomplices and co-conspirators in Washington and the other imperialist capitals. Each day that passes while these war criminals remain at large is a scandal and an indictment of the entire capitalist social order and all of its institutions worldwide.

The ICJ complaint also serves as a devastating refutation of the efforts underway in many countries to delegitimize and criminalize all criticism of the Israeli government as “antisemitism.”

The overwhelming factual evidence that Israel is engaged in genocide also implicates the domestic laws of many countries, including those of the US, which nominally prohibit financial and other support for the perpetrators of genocide. To that end, a detailed complaint accusing Israel of violating the Genocide Convention has already been filed by the Center for Constitutional Rights in a US federal court in November.

The ICJ complaint also serves to further underscore the duty of Israeli soldiers under international law—and for that matter, American military personnel—to refuse to obey orders that would make them accomplices in war crimes. As was established in the trials of Nazi officials at Nuremburg, “following orders” is no defense when it comes to the crime of genocide.

However, nobody familiar with the history of the UN, itself implicated in countless bloody wars of imperialist aggression over the last three quarters of a century, will place any confidence in its procedures to bring about an end to Israel’s genocidal campaign in Gaza, let alone to prosecute the war criminals in Washington and Tel Aviv. Lenin’s description of the UN’s predecessor, the League of Nations, as a “thieves’ kitchen” is no less true of the UN today.

Between 2015 and 2022, the UN General Assembly adopted no less than 140 resolutions condemning Israel, as compared with a total of 68 resolutions condemning all other countries combined, but the UN failed to take any significant steps to enforce them, and Israel has simply ignored them. In December, a total of 153 out of 193 UN member countries voted for a resolution calling for a “ceasefire” in Gaza, with only 10 countries opposed. But that resolution served to slow neither Israel’s genocidal operations nor the flow of massively destructive weapons to Israel from the United States.

For its part, the ICJ, which consists of 15 judges elected by the General Assembly, does not have any mechanism for enforcing its decisions directly.

Regardless of the ultimate outcome of these proceedings—and regardless of the motives of the South African government and the other capitalist governments endorsing the complaint, which are doing so for their own cynical and contingent political reasons—the significance of the complaint to the ICJ lies in its thorough and objective presentation, in one place, for all the world to read, of a devastating exposure of what is, factually and legally and in every sense of the word, a genocide, in which the Israeli government is fully implicated, together with its imperialist backers, chiefly the United States.

Having appointed itself the “world’s policeman” in the aftermath of the liquidation of the Soviet Union—meddling, invading, sanctioning and bombing its way around the world in the name of “human rights” and a “responsibility to protect”—the world is confronted with the spectacle of an American government that is now defending the perpetrators of genocide in broad daylight as it continues to supply the weapons that are being used to carry it out.

The exposure of the fraud of “human rights imperialism,” as reflected in the Gaza genocide and in the case being presented in the ICJ, is itself a reflection of the crisis of world capitalism. Unable to overcome its internal contradictions within a capitalist framework, that system is staggering back upon the most horrific forms of barbarism of the last century. In this context, the Gaza genocide, for all its criminality, is only a foretaste of the horrors to come if these contradictions are not addressed and resolved.

Attal named French prime minister as Borne government falls

Alex Lantier




Gabriel Attal, France's new Prime Minister, arrives for the handover ceremony on January 9, 2024 in Paris. [AP Photo/Ludovic Marin]

French President Emmanuel Macron announced yesterday the replacement of Prime Minister Elisabeth Borne by former Education Minister Gabriel Attal. At age 34, Attal became the youngest prime minister since the founding of France’s current Fifth Republic in 1958. He will now seek to assemble a cabinet of ministers for approval by Macron.

On Monday, Borne resigned, making clear that she had been pushed out by the presidency. Her resignation letter noted Emmanuel Macron’s “will” to “name a new prime minister” and defended the “essential reforms” she imposed while in office. Chief among these were the pension cuts adopted last spring despite overwhelming popular opposition and mass strikes brutally repressed by riot police, and sold out by France’s corrupt trade union bureaucracies.

Borne wrote, “Now that I must present the resignation of my government, I wanted to say how passionate I was about the mission, guided by our shared concern of producing rapid, tangible results for our fellow citizens.”

The final announcement that Macron had named Attal prime minister did not come until yesterday afternoon, however, amid reports of bitter conflicts inside the Macron government. Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, Interior Minister Gérald Darmanin, Elysée presidential palace chief of staff Alexis Kohler, and Macron’s former Prime Minister Edouard Philippe all reportedly objected to Attal. “Bruno and Gérald screamed,” one anonymous minister told BFM-TV, while one of Le Maire’s advisors said he “does not want to work for a youth aged 34.”

As a result, yesterday morning, even after his name had been rumored as a potential prime minister, Attal held a meeting with education trade union bureaucrats which he had previously cancelled.

After Macron finally named Attal, however, Elysée palace officials cynically argued that having a new prime minister would allow for a politically-expedient rebranding of Macron’s policy agenda. Macron, one of his advisors told Le Monde, is inserting “a semi-colon, giving time to take a breath in his decade in power, changing tone as one might do in a musical score or in a poem.”

In reality, by naming Attal, Macron aims to deepen and accelerate the ever more overtly fascistic turn he has carried out since his re-election in 2022.

Borne was despised for imposing Macron’s massively unpopular pension cuts without a parliamentary vote, using the French constitution’s anti-democratic Article 49-3 provision on budgetary matters. Since Macron’s party lost its parliamentary majority in the 2022 elections, Borne ultimately resorted to the 49-3 to block parliamentary votes no less than 23 times. Starting after the adoption of Macron’s pension cuts last spring, there was mounting speculation in corporate media that Macron would remove her as a political liability.

Ultimately, however, Borne survived as prime minister until the crisis caused inside Macron’s party by the adoption last month of his fascistic anti-immigration law. This law blocks immigrants from receiving social benefits, in line with the “national preference” policy of the neo-fascist National Rally (RN) of Marine Le Pen. This law, which utterly exposed the charlatanry of Macron’s claims to be fighting for democracy against neo-fascism, led several members of his party to resign, including Borne’s former chief of staff, Health Minister Aurélien Rousseau. 

Borne herself also struck a somewhat discordant note on the immigration law, claiming to be “profoundly humanist,” and pointing to her background as the daughter of immigrants to say that she would ensure that the anti-immigration law would “respect our values.”

While Borne’s record is deeply reactionary, Attal’s record and his support for the immigration law appear more compatible with the openly fascistic turn Macron is carrying out. 

Attal, the product of an elite education at the Ecole Alsacienne school and the Sciences Po political science university, was only 26 when he followed Macron, leaving the big-business Socialist Party (PS) and joining Macron’s On the March party (since renamed Renaissance) in 2016. After serving as the government’s spokesman, he worked on Macron’s plan to impose universal national military service on French youth, and then, as a Minister for Balanced Budget, on the austerity agenda that led to last year’s pension cuts. Attal was finally named education minister last July.

As education minister, Attal oversaw anti-democratic measures like the imposition of a ban on the Muslim abaya in the schools, plans to segregate classes according to academic performance starting in junior high school, and plans to reintroduce mandatory school uniforms.

In a brief, perfunctory speech yesterday afternoon accepting the office of prime minister, Attal laid out a domestic agenda of continued assaults on the working class. He pledged to “continue transforming our economy,” to “drastically simplify the life of our companies and entrepreneurs,” and to carry out “resolute action towards the youth.”

Officials of the far-right RN, for their part, described Attal as someone who would adopt a far-right agenda from within Macron’s party. “He is very crafty. He always stays calm, with a smile, speaks the way we do without ever insulting us and uses our themes in a much more subtle way than the others, which is what makes him harder to fight,” said Jean-Philippe Tanguy, a RN legislator for the Somme, who added, “We will let him show his cards, and we’ll hit him when we need to.”

Indeed, Macron’s nomination of Attal is the political product of his turn towards the far right, particularly after last year’s pension struggle. It is now widely understood, among broad layers of workers and youth in France, that Macron rules via police violence against the people, impoverishing workers to enrich the wealthy. This policy goes hand in hand with a massive surge in French military spending, as Macron backs NATO’s war with Russia in Ukraine and the Israeli government’s genocide in Gaza.

Faced with these escalating and explosive class tensions, the Macron government has embarked on an attempt to divert these tensions along racial and ethnic lines with fascistic appeals to anti-immigrant hatreds. It is also planning to largely adopt the RN’s agenda as it runs against the RN in this year’s European elections. Attal is well positioned to implement this reactionary agenda in the service of Macron’s policies of imperialist war abroad and war on the working class at home.

Relying on police-state repression and the support of corrupt union bureaucrats to strangle workers’ struggles, Macron depends on the exorbitant powers of France’s executive presidency, served by an ever narrower circle of top officials personally loyal to him. This has created the conditions for the rapid promotion of young, politically-connected reactionaries like Attal.

9 Jan 2024

The Year Ahead: Ten Issues and One Wild Card

Mel Gurtov



2024 is likely to be filled with more than the usual challenges to planetary safety and survival. Here’s a look at 10 issues and a wild card that suggest what’s ahead internationally that is worth our attention.

1. It will be another year of record temperatures and accompanying environmental stresses: more droughts, hurricanes, floods, species and coral reef losses. Antarctica’s ice loss will be particularly remarkable. The agreements reached at the COP28 conference on climate change will be cited again and again, but probably not in celebration of widespread compliance. In the US, climate litigation will be on the upswing. Among the most interesting cases will be those in Oregon, Hawaii, and California in which young people—following on a favorable court decision in Montana—are suing to protect the health of future generations from environmental damage.

2. Major wars in Ukraine and Israel/Palestine will continue throughout the year, with international support for Ukraine and Israel trending down. Expect the Ukraine war to feature more Ukrainian attacks inside Russia and some spillover of Russian attacks into NATO (Poland) countries. The humanitarian crisis in Gaza will become unmanageable as Israel’s occupation tightens. Israel may be convulsed by renewed conflict between the far right and liberals over judicial independence. Its war with Hezbollah may not be containable, leading either to Israeli military action in Lebanon or to conflict with Iran—or both. There may be calls in the US to attack Iran, not just in support of Israel but also to create regime change and end Iran’s nuclear program.

3. Failed and failing states may increase under the weight of coups, civil wars, climate change, and deteriorating economic conditions that include high food insecurity. Africa has many such stories: Sudan, Niger, Burkina Faso, Somalia. But Africa is not alone; Haiti, Myanmar, and Pakistan also stand out. These signs of collapsing authority will put enormous pressure to provide aid on the UN and other international and nongovernmental organizations—aid that will be increasingly hard to come by.

4. The debt crisis for the poorest countries will intensify, especially in sub-Saharan Africa, where every country is deeply in debt to China and has no foreseeable way out.

5. China will mainly be looking inward, not outward, as its economy gets deeper into trouble. Internal security will have top priority for Xi Jinping as he doubles down on party, military, and social discipline. Repression may intensify as the party-state seeks to thwart rising social dissatisfaction.

6. China-US relations may improve marginally as high-level diplomacy normalizes, especially military-to-military communication. But improvement depends on stabilization of the Taiwan situation following upcoming elections, and a cooling down of tensions in the South China Sea. Neither of those possibilities is likely if a pro-independence candidate wins in Taiwan and if the Philippines and China cannot resolve their competing territorial claims in the South China Sea.

7. The nuclear issue in North Korea will again raise alarms as Pyongyang carries out more long-range missile tests. Another North Korean underground nuclear test is also possible. The chances of a resumption of US-North Korea diplomacy seem remote.

8. Illiberal populism, a.k.a strong-arm autocracy, is likely to strengthen in so-called democracies such as Modi’s India, Orban’s Hungary, and Erdogan’s Turkey. Expect anti-democratic leaders in China, Russia, and elsewhere to continue their disinformation efforts aimed at supporting far-right politicians and denigrating liberals. Worse yet, centrist parties in Europe will seek to pacify the far right to maintain their ruling coalitions.

9. Cyberhacking and other threats to governmental and personal security will increase. Chinese hacking of US targets, for instance, has changed from economic sabotage to acquire corporate secrets, to attacks on critical infrastructure such as utilities and transport systems, experts say. The hacking issue seems destined to become a top matter for US-China discussions.

10. Immigration will continue to challenge liberal governments and give fuel to far-right politicians and extremist groups. The tendency everywhere will be to limit immigration by narrowing amnesty and residency rules.

Finally, the wild card: the US elections. A Trump victory would mean a turnabout from international involvement to domestic upheaval as Trump seeks retribution against his enemies. His politics of revenge will have global consequences.

It would portend a dramatic decline in democratic governance and liberal values, a significant withdrawal of the US from alliances and international organizations, pressure on Ukraine to give in to Russian occupation of its land, a major reduction in US foreign aid and other international programs, termination of US commitments on climate change, and a significant uptick in US-China tensions (especially over Taiwan). Authoritarian leaders and politicians around the world will cite the US retreat from democracy as a model and act accordingly.

Even a Biden win, if not accompanied by Democratic control of the House or Senate, would spell trouble for US international commitments, starting with Ukraine and climate change.

Sorry to be so pessimistic, but facts and trends are inescapable. It would be nice to live in peaceful, harmonious times, but we don’t.