Let us celebrate the fiftieth anniversary
of the founding of the communist (Marxist-Leninist-Maoist) and new
democratic movement of Afghanistan for the purposes of strengthening
the current communist and new democratic struggles in the country!
With the formation of the
Progressive Youth Organization [PYO] on October 4, 1965, on the basis
of a Marxist-Leninist-Maoist (that time Mao Zedong Thought) line and
anti-imperialist, anti-social-imperialist, anti-reactionary and
anti-revisionist orientation, under the leadership of comrade Akram
Yari, the communist and new democratic movement of Afghanistan came
into being. Due to the principled political line of the PYO and the
national and international environment, the new democratic movement
under the leadership of the PYO turned into the most extensive
political movement of the country, mobilizing tens of thousands of
revolutionary men and women, students, teachers, writers, workers, and
other toiling masses from all nationalities in struggles against
reactionaries, imperialists, social-imperialists; it was thus that the
Maoist communist movement flourished in the country.
Sholajawid was the name of
the journal which was propagating new democratic ideas; it was
initiated by the PYO and two other progressive groups, starting its
publication two years after the formation of the PYO in 1967. Due to
the crucial role this journal played in the expansion and spread of the
movement, the movement itself became known as Sholajawid. Although
only 11 issues of the journal were published, and subsequently
censored by the reactionary monarchy of Zahir Shah, even the limited
publication played an important historical role in the extensive and
widespread formation of the new democratic movement.
Definitely the PYO and the Sholajawid
movement, being young and inexperienced, was not without its
shortcomings and weaknesses; it definitely needed improvement and
evolution. Unfortunately, the internal weaknesses of the PYO, along
with an increasingly national and international unfavorable situation,
resulted into the fact that its movement could not continue to develop
and evolve. After a short period following its initial prosperity, it
moved towards collapse and dispersion.
The banning of the Sholajawid
journal and the suppression of the demonstrations in 1968 by the
repressive forces of the reactionary state under Zahir Shah – as well
as the arrest and imprisonment of a large number of the leaders of the
PYO and the movement – not only resulted in the first split in the Sholajawid
movement, but generated larger negative effects. Political-ideological
lines other than the line of its founder (Akram Yari) emerged within
PYO, and consequently two line struggles emerged within the
organization. These were not line struggles that strengthened and
expanded the organization but were ones that resulted in its collapse,
negatively impacting the entire movement.
After comrade Akram Yari's
withdrawal from active political struggle due to serious illness,
deviationist political lines took over the organization. These
deviationist political lines not only provided the basis of splits
within the PYO but also greatly facilitated the splits within the
broader movement. Thus, the main deviationist line, which later
negatively evolved into full fledged revisionism and capitulationism
(and there are those who are still following this path), led to a
significant split from the initial organization and movement, forcing
the entire communist and new democratic movement towards dissipation – a
drive towards revisionist, national and class capitulationist lines.
The dominance of the deviationist
and revisionist capitulationist lines over the dispersed body of the
communist and new democratic movement of Afghanistan lasted at least a
decade and a half (almost all of the 1970s and the first half of the
1980s). Therefore, the movement could not prevent the two Soviet
supported coups –the first in 1972 by Sardar Dawood, the second in 1978
by the gang of revisionist satraps of the Soviet social-imperialists
(the Peoples Democratic Party of Afghanistan [PDPA]) – and in the
struggle against the coup regime and the social-imperialist occupation
adopted unprincipled and incorrect political and military tactics and
strategy.
As a result – and despite the fact
that the communist and new democratic movement sacrificed tens of
thousands of its leaders, cadre, organizers, and masses under its
leadership in its confrontation with reactionary forces dependent on
the western imperialists and reactionary regional powers –this movement
could not employ these resistance struggles to expand, evolve, and
progress on the path of new democratic revolution. Rather, it suffered
bitter defeats. The negative effects of those bitter defeats are still
strongly felt and remain distressful.
During this decade and a half, the
principled communist and new democratic line did not have a clear
expression and presence; it was not considered a challenge to the
deviationist, collaborationist, and revisionist political lines. Severe
ideological, political and organizational weaknesses, along with a low
level of theoretical understanding, of the remnants and proponents of
the principled communist and new democratic movement in the mid-1980s
was apparent, facilitating the dominance of the collaborationist and
revisionist lines over the dispersed body of the movement.
Based on the defeat of the
deviationist, revisionist, and class and national collaborationist
lines – and the relative growth of the communist movement in the newly
international favorable circumstances, with efforts of parties and
organizations in the ranks of Revolutionary Internationalist Movement
[RIM] – the first groupings of the principled communist movement
emerged in Afghanistan. The emergence of the initial groups and
movements that were the clear expression of a principled communist line
not only reestablished the communist and new democracy movement in
Afghanistan, but reactivated and improved the political line of our
founder in the new national and international situation against
imperialism and reaction, and also against the dominance of the
aforementioned erroneous lines within different sections of the
movement.
Deviationists, revisionists, and
capitulationists who believed their dominance to be permanent and
without challenge over different sections of the movement – who assumed
that the principled line of the founder of the movement to have been
buried – considered the new slogans, and position of the new communist
movement as throwing old hay in the air. However, this new initiative
grew and expanded, becoming the expression of the principled stance and
slogans against the social-imperialist occupiers and their satraps,
against the power of the reactionary Jihadists and their brutal civil
war, and the reactionary repressive and archaic Taliban’s Emirate.
Moreover, this movement stood against invasion and occupation of
American imperialists from the beginning, opposing its allies
throughout Afghanistan and the formation of its puppet regime; this was
the only communist formation– the only non-reactionary representative
of the revolutionary peoples – that advocated national resistance
against occupiers and the puppet regime.
Although the old revisionists –
pressured by the subjective and objective conditions of the country,
world opinion, and the expansion of mass struggles and resistance
against the occupiers and the puppet regime –would gradually distanced
themselves from the open capitulationism they previously displayed– and
would sometimes, to a limited extent, take a stance against the
imperialist occupiers and their puppet government – it is the
reinitiated Maoist movement in the country that remains the solid
defender of the struggle and principled resistance against the
occupation and its puppet regime.
The new initiative of the communist
and new democratic line from its inception and until now has been the
theoretical and practical banner of the principled unity within our
broader movement. By following this path of unity it has struggled
against dispersion and sectarianism. Therefore, not only qualitatively
but also quantitatively, the movement has continued to grow. Currently,
C(M)PA and other Maoist organizations and individuals outside of the
party represent this new initiative.
Celebrating the 50th anniversary of
the Maoist movement in Afghanistan is an occasion that invites us all
to move towards unity based on a principled proletarian and new
democratic line, to collectively struggle, in a strong and organized
manner, against the occupiers and their satraps as the principal enemy
of the country and its people, moving forward on the path of preparing
for the revolutionary peoples and national war of resistance.
Certainly, the national resistance
struggle against the principal enemies of our country does not mean
suspending the new democratic struggles against them, or also against
anti-democratic feudal-bourgeois comprador forces opposed to occupiers
and the puppet regime. Nor can this national struggle ignore the
struggles against other imperialist and reactionary expansionist powers.
The experience of struggle
internationally and also in Afghanistan has continually proven that
one-sided emphasis on the national resistance against the current
principal enemy, and forgetting the new democratic struggles against
non-principal current enemies, will, in the last analysis, harm the
national resistance as a whole. This kind of one-dimensional national
resistance struggle, because it ignores the democratic demands of the
masses, will limit and reduce the participation of the masses in the
national resistance against the occupiers and the puppet regime; it may
even eliminate the possibility of their participation and thus will
strongly expand and prepare the ground for the maneuvers of the
reactionary and anti-democratic armed opposition to the occupiers and
the puppet regime.
Therefore, based on the interest of
the masses of Afghanistan and based on the communist and new
democratic program, we should not only merely talk about national
struggle and national war of resistance against occupiers and the
puppet regime, but we should talk about a revolutionary and national
peoples war of resistance. We need to carry forward such a struggle for
preparing to initiate and pursuing revolutionary and national peoples
war of resistance.
Resistance because we are
the victims of aggression and occupation of imperialists –of a foreign
reactionary power – and under the domination of a puppet regime. Our
struggle against these principal enemies of the people is characterized
by resistance: self-defense, defense of the independence of the
country, and defense of the freedom of the country and its people. This
struggle is the just struggle of the victims of occupation and against
invaders, occupiers and their puppets.
National because the
resistance struggle for defending the independence of the country and
the independence of its people is fundamentally based on the struggle
and resistance, on our national interests, and against the interests of
invaders, imperialist occupiers, their national traitor satraps – not a
limited religious and non-religious ideological struggle and
resistance. Any kind of attempt to impose such a limitation will limit
the scope of struggle against occupiers and their puppet regime,
eventually benefitting the imperialist occupation. Thus, the secular
character of this struggle and resistance is an unavoidable necessity.
National because this
resistance struggle must consider the defense and independence of the
country as a whole; it should not kick the wolves out the door so that
the hyenas enter from the windows. In the current epoch, the global
domination of the world capitalist imperialist system is marred by
serious contradictions and tensions between imperialists and
reactionary powers, and these powers are eager to employ any political
movement and initiative as an instrument for their interests against
their imperialist and reactionary rivals. The communist and the new
democratic movement of the country, while accepting the necessities of
struggle against American imperialism and its satrap regime, should also
pay attention to the necessities of this national responsibility.
It is obvious that struggle and
resistance has its material base and also its ideological and political
superstructure. At the same time, however, it is also true that in a
multi-national class society where there is diverse class and national
interests, and diverse thoughts and political world-views, a
broad-based resistance against occupiers and national traitors will be
multifarious and diverse and will have a democratic character.
Naturally, different forces engaged in this struggle will compete with
each other over the leadership of this resistance, and it cannot be
otherwise. If the communist and new democratic forces do not pay
attention to this reality, this could lead to political-ideological and
eventually organizational liquidationism, resulting in
capitulationism, the weakening of the struggle, and the inability to
consolidate revolutionary and progressive leadership over the
resistance.
However, this struggle should be
carried out under the overall interest of the resistance against the
occupying forces and the puppet regime, not in contention with the
general interests of the resistance. Ignoring this issue, by any force
including ours, will ultimately result in replacing the principal
contradiction with non-principal contradictions, only benefitting the
puppet regime and the occupying forces.
We should emphasize that a
resistance that is only male cannot be an authentic national
resistance. Women form half of society and a national resistance in the
real sense of word cannot happen without their inclusion. Any kind of
attempt to limit women, based on any kind of religious and cultural
excuse that would deprive them of their basic personal and social
rights, including the right to participate in the resistance against
occupiers and their satraps, is an attempt to distance half of the
population from the active national resistance, at the same time
consciously or unconsciously forcing them into the ideological and
political trap of the occupiers and the national traitor satraps who
often wield deceptive slogans about women’s rights or freedom. It is
obvious that such attempts are also extremely anti-democratic.
Peoples because a
national resistance struggle can only be an unrelenting and solid
struggle if it possesses a mass character, based on the superior
interests of the masses – that is, the revolutionary masses struggling
against the occupiers and the puppet regime – and not on the interests
of the exploiting and oppressive feudal comprador bourgeois classes.
The latter faction of the masses are classes whose interests are in
line with imperialism, particularly with the invading and occupying
imperialists, as well as the land-holding and bourgeois comprador
classes who are always prepared to collude with the occupiers and the
puppet regime. Giving mass character to the national resistance against
the occupiers and their puppets does not merely mean involving the
masses in the resistance: such involvement should mean the conscious
participation in national resistance based on their superior,
revolutionary interests rather than the interests of the exploiting
classes. From this perspective, giving mass character to the national
resistance against occupiers and national traitors requires the spread
of revolutionary consciousness among the masses of people, particularly
the lower layers of the toiling masses, workers, peasants, and the
poor petty-bourgeoisie. Enlightening the masses with revolutionary
consciousness requires prolonged and continuous efforts, but we should
acknowledge that, without a certain level of progress in this regard,
national resistance against the occupiers and the puppet regime cannot
develop, expand, and deepen a popular/mass character.
Revolutionary because the
peoples national resistance against occupiers and the puppet regime
should be armed with a scientific revolutionary worldview so that it can
direct the resistance against the capitalist-imperialist system, and
the reactionary system in the country. Otherwise, the resistance runs
the risk of being cut short, either in the middle of the national
resistance itself or after achieving its goal of partial independence –
the country could still remain in the shackles of the oppressive and
exploiting world system and the masses, despite heroic and selfless
sacrifices, would remain under the capitalist-imperialist world system
with the semi-feudal/semi-colonial classes in control. More
importantly, the revolutionary strategic orientation of the resistance
against occupiers and the puppet regime, guarantees continuous
progression of the national and popular characteristics of the
resistance.
Since the resistance against the
soviet social-imperialist occupiers and their puppet regime was carried
out under the leadership of reactionary forces dependent on western
imperialists, and was thus totally lacked revolutionary strategic
orientation, that resistance prepared the ground for the invasion of
American imperialism and its allies and the subsequent occupation and
formation of the current puppet regime. However, since the contemporary
resistance against the current occupiers and their satraps has not yet
led to the total withdrawal of the occupying forces and the collapse
of their puppet regime, the monopolistic dominance of the armed
reactionary resistance has resulted in the materialization of another
foreign invasion and occupation – that is, the invasion and occupation
that considers the entire country a province of a reactionary Arab
“caliphate.”
The forces that have raised the
black flags of the Islamic State [ISIS] in Afghanistan are the armies
of this reactionary Arab caliphate and are thus, in actuality, the
occupying forces of a reactionary foreign state, even if some of their
forces are originally from within the country. These forces as a whole
have been born and raised within the ranks of the current reactionary
resistance in Afghanistan. More importantly, the founders and original
leaders of this reactionary caliphate (ISIS) have also been raised in
the lap of the past reactionary resistance against the soviet
social-imperialists and their puppet regime. Despite the fact that the
“Arab Caliph” openly declares the leader of the Islamic Emirate of
Taliban an illiterate servant of Al-Qaeda, and calls the Emirate itself
“expired medicine”, the reactionary Taliban leadership are sending
ISIS messages of “Islamic brotherhood”, humbly and submissively asking
them not to become the reason of friction in the “Islamic resistance of
Afghanistan.” Have they not understood that ISIS does not accept
Afghanistan as a country and sees it a province of its Arabic
Caliphate?
If we suppose that the resistance against social imperialist invaders and occupiers and their puppets leads to the invasion and occupation of American imperialists and their allies, and then the resistance against the current occupiers and their puppets in the middle of journey prepares the ground for the invasion and occupation of a reactionary Arab caliphate, and that this is the destiny of Afghanistan, then we should be very worried.
If we suppose that the resistance against social imperialist invaders and occupiers and their puppets leads to the invasion and occupation of American imperialists and their allies, and then the resistance against the current occupiers and their puppets in the middle of journey prepares the ground for the invasion and occupation of a reactionary Arab caliphate, and that this is the destiny of Afghanistan, then we should be very worried.
With the spread of the influence of
ISIS in Afghanistan on the one hand, and the mysterious death of the
Taliban’s ex-leader (Mullah Muhammad Omar Akhund) on the other, the
country's situation has become even more complicated. With the
expansion of the influence of ISIS in Afghanistan, all foreign
jihadists in the region are now possible ISIS soldiers and should be
considered potential or active invading forces of that foreign power,
the target of revolutionary peoples and national resistance.
Mullah Muhammad Omar Akhund, who
was the uniting factor behind the Taliban’s fractured movement (which
was divided along ethnic, tribal, regional, and political lines), is
dead. In his absence, maintaining the unity of such an army, if not
impossible, is extremely difficult. Furthermore, his mysterious death
in Pakistan (kept secret for two years within a circle of a few
individuals), and the method of appointment of his successor, are
strong factors in creating friction amongst the Taliban. Definitely,
enormous efforts have been made for consolidating Mullah Akhtar Mansur’s
leadership, by his supporters within the Taliban and also by foreign
“friends”, and there is no doubt the greater part of the Taliban
movement will remain under the new leadership. However, certain
sections of the Taliban have not accepted the new leadership. These
forces can hardly stand on their own feet; it is highly possible that
under pressure from the new leadership of the Taliban they would
ultimately be forced towards the puppet regime or into joining ISIS.
Therefore, these forces should potentially be considered as either
capitulating to the regime or part of the invading army of ISIS.
Moreover, the death of Mullah
Muhammad Omar Akhund and the outbreak of friction within the Taliban
over appointing his successor has resulted in the close cooperation
between its new leadership and their Pakistani “friends”. Indeed, in
consolidating his position, Akhtar Mansur has held public meetings
throughout Pakistan. This situation has completely led to the
identification and publicity of their rank and file, thus it would
significantly increase the control of their Pakistani “friends” over
them, so that they cannot claim “they only partially have the support
of Pakistani friends.” It certainly can be said that the acceptance of
the Pakistan as the patron of peace in Afghanistan by the American
imperialists and the puppet regime has also significantly increased the
control of Pakistan over the Taliban.
All of these issues illustrate the
fact that the scope of aggression of foreign occupying powers over
Afghanistan has increased: at a time when the aggression and occupation
of the American imperialists and their allies has not ended, other
reactionary aggressive occupying forces, ISIS, have emerged in certain
pockets of the country and are dominating the lives of its people. At
the same time, the interventions of the Pakistani state, that are
constantly being carried out with cross border military incursions, as
well as the interventions of Iran, have increased. Therefore, our
revolutionary responsibility in terms of struggling against the
principal enemy has multiplied, but it has also increased in relation
to non-principal enemies as well, and we have to increase our efforts
towards them all.
Despite Obama’s verbal commitment
to withdraw all of America’s combat troops (except for the 1000 that
would remain to protect the American embassy in Kabul) by the end of
2016, its practical implementation has not yet materialized. The recent
wars in several parts of the country illustrate that the puppet regime
cannot maintain its hegemony without the presence of foreign occupying
powers. Even if Obama’s claims were to be realized according to the
security agreement between the American state and the puppet regime,
the legal path for the former's return to Afghanistan is available, and
due to the security agreement between NATO and the puppet regime the
legal path for the return of NATO occupying troops is also available.
In fact, the crisis-stricken and
corrupt puppet regime's continued existence is premised on the hope of
future support from its occupying imperialist masters rather than its
own constitution. However, the results of the longest war of American
imperialism (the war in Afghanistan) is clearly indicating that
American occupiers and their allies and puppets are unable to impose
the total subjugation of Afghanistan through war. Therefore, despite
the prolongation of their occupying presence – their support of the
puppet regime though military and non-military means –so as to
consolidate their authority, the imperialists are also constantly
trying to bring the reactionary Islamist insurgents to the negotiating
table by promising them a share in the regime.
Hence, the American imperialist
state, in alignment with the expansionist Indian state, is putting
pressure on Pakistan to reduce the field in which the Taliban can
maneuver, eventually forcing them to negotiate with the puppet regime.
Preventing economic aid to Pakistan so as to assert political pressure –
that might intensify in the near future – is being carried out by the
US for the aforementioned purpose. Tensions between Indian and Pakistan
regarding the control of Kashmir, and prolonged military engagement
between both sides, is a partial war that is being carried forward for
the negotiations for peace in Afghanistan between two reactionary,
expansionist regional atomic powers.
The revisionist and the
expansionist rulers of China are in their own way participating in this
game. China's plan to invest 50 Billion dollars in Pakistan is not
only a sign of their expansionist political and economic tendencies,
but is also an appeasing tactic to persuade Pakistan not to allow its
territories to be used as a base for training and organizing Uighur
Islamist militants. The point, here, is to prevent a safe haven for
Islamist insurgents opposed to the puppet regime and the occupying
powers in Afghanistan.
If this American, Indian, and
Chinese tripartite politics of carrot and stick towards Pakistan
continues, and even intensifies so that it becomes unbearable for
Pakistan, it is all too likely that sooner or later the Taliban under
the leadership of Mullah Akhtar Mansur, now firmly in their grip, will
be forced to resume negotiations with the puppet regime under the
supervision of Pakistan, the US, and China. In this case, the intense
and widespread military confrontation in the current season of war –
that we can certainly say is unfavorable to everyone involved – would
be employed as a negotiating chip for scoring political concessions.
Indeed, the reactionary resistance
of Taliban is not, in its essence, a total and relentless
anti-imperialist resistance. Even in the case of a military victory –
which it has now proven it cannot achieve – the Taliban cannot free the
country from the orbit of the reactionary world imperialist system.
Moreover, even if the negotiations
resume and move forward, in the final analysis everyone's share would
be determined based on their political and economic weight, and our
people would thus continue to suffer under an archaic system of
exploitation and oppression – the country will lack true independence.
The process of carrying these negotiations forward will also not be
smooth and easy; it will cause our people to provide immense sacrifices
and experience serious difficulties.
We called for celebrating the
fiftieth anniversary of the communist (Marxist-Leninist-Maoist) and the
new democratic movement in Afghanistan to loudly announce the long
fifty year presence of this movement in the arena of the revolutionary
political struggle in Afghanistan so as to state the fact that: the
fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Maoist movement is an
occasion that invites us all to consider five decades of the ups and
downs of revolutionary struggle and reaffirm our commitment to strongly
carry forward our patriotic, national, democratic, and revolutionary
responsibilities.
The Communist (Maoist) Party of
Afghanistan has repeatedly announced that the biggest flaw and weakness
of the current communist and new democratic movement of Afghanistan is
its mere political presence and lack of representation in the arena of
armed struggle against the occupiers and the puppet regime. Indeed it
is this limitation that is reducing the effect of our political and
ideological struggle against our principal and non-principal enemies.
In circumstances when the principal aspect of the struggles in the
country is armed struggles, the mere political and non-military voices
in an environment full of the thunders of bombs, canons, and guns are
rarely heard. Therefore, in these circumstances our struggle can only
have a path-breaking effect if it is carried out in preparation for the
people’s revolutionary national war of resistance against the occupiers
and the puppet regime (the current form of people’s war in the
country).
For correct, principled, timely and
effective conduct of these efforts, the Communist (Maoist) Party of
Afghanistan has to constantly mobilize and expand all of its members,
supporters, and the masses under its leadership. Moreover, the
Communist (Maoist) Party of Afghanistan and other Maoist forces and
individuals in the current situation need to establish stronger unity
amongst themselves, on the one hand, and carry forward polemics and
discussions for solving theoretical disagreements, on the other, so as
to expand their practical cooperation amongst themselves, and
ideologically and practically move towards cooperation, coordination,
and unity.
Forward on the path towards
initiating and carrying forward the revolutionary people’s national war
of resistance against imperialist occupiers, the puppet regime, and
reactionary ISIS occupiers!
Forward on the path of struggle against other reactionaries aligned with imperialist and reactionary powers!
Communist (Maoist) Party of Afghanistan
October 4, 2015
October 4, 2015
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