Wars and terrorism

THE LATEST alleged terror plot in the UK has brought memories of 7/7 flooding
back, when more than fifty people were killed while travelling to work
in London. At the time of going to press twenty-four people had been arrested and
eleven charged over the alleged plot to blow up planes mid-flight.

Hannah Sell, Socialist Party deputy general secretary

The Socialist Party utterly condemned the horrific 7/7 and 9/11
bombings and all similar attacks. If the charges against those arrested
are proven, it will mean that this was a plot aiming to kill ordinary
people, mostly going on holiday, who would bear no responsibility for
the policies of Bush, Blair and the warmongers. Without doubt, whether
or not this plot is proven, the government holds responsibility for
making Britain, and the world, a more dangerous place. More than 70% of
people now believe government policy has made Britain more of a target
for terrorists.

At the same time, correctly, the reaction of most people, including
the vast majority of Muslims, is condemnation and horror that anyone
would conceive such a plot.

However, after the police killing of Jean Charles de Menezes and the
Forest Gate shooting there is also understandable scepticism about the
alleged plot amongst many.

The charging of the suspects alone will not completely alleviate this
suspicion. There are good reasons for that. For example, between the
introduction of new anti-terror legislation in 2000 and the 7/7
bombings, 700 people were arrested under the new legislation. Only 17
were convicted of any crime, and only three were convicted of crime
relating to terrorism!

Those include the ‘ricin plotters’ who were arrested in 2003 in a
fanfare of publicity about the threat of a chemical weapons attack on
London. When the case eventually came to trial it transpired there was
no evidence of ricin in the suspects’ flat and the charges were dropped.

That is not to suggest that it is excluded that the alleged plot will
turn out to be all too real. The 7/7 bombings demonstrated that there is
a tiny minority of young Muslims in Britain who are desperate enough to
plan and carry out such profoundly misguided, horrific attacks.

However, given the appalling record of the police, the Socialist
Party believes it is vital that elected representatives of the trade
unions and the communities involved should be allowed to see all of the
evidence against those who have been charged. It would be very damaging
for the government and Blair in particular, if those arrested were later
shown to be innocent; this therefore increases the danger of a repeat of
the Birmangham Six and Guildford Four cases where innocent Irish men
were sentenced to life imprisonment.

‘Evil’ ideology?

As after 7/7, the government and media explanation for why
British-born young men could be motivated to carry out such an attack is
to simply say they are in the grip of an ‘evil ideology’. Of course,
anyone who could carry out such acts will be considered ‘evil’. However,
if the plot is proven this will only be the third time suicide bombings
have been seriously planned in Europe, and the first two occasions were
the 7/7 and 21/7 plots in Britain last year.

It is inadequate to use ‘evil’ as an explanation for this change. If
we do not analyse the different factors that have led a tiny minority of
young men to be prepared to carry out such horrific acts we will
inevitably face future indiscriminate bombings.

Without doubt the occupation of Iraq has had a profound effect on the
consciousness of Muslims worldwide. How can it not when we hear on the
news of the continuing bloody occupation and slide towards civil war,
with an average of 100 Iraqis being killed in Baghdad every day.
Israel’s brutal assault on Lebanon, with the full backing of Blair, will
have enormously exacerbated that anger.

Oppression

US IMPERIALISM, backed by British imperialism, used 9/11 as a
justification to invade Afghanistan and especially Iraq. In reality,
Bush’s regime did so partly to increase its prestige in the wake of 9/11
by flexing its military might, but also to follow the dream of cheap oil
for US imperialism.

For millions of Muslims worldwide, however, Iraq, along with the
plight of Palestinians, the invasion of Lebanon, and the devastation
being wreaked in Chechnya, is understandably perceived as a war on their
religion.

Blair has brushed this argument aside, pointing out that 9/11 took
place before Iraq or Afghanistan was invaded. This is a facile argument.
Imperialist oppression of the Arab peoples did not begin with the
invasion of Iraq or even the brutal subjugation of the Palestinian
people over decades, but goes back at least as far as the imperialist
carve-up of the Middle East and its natural resources almost a century
ago.

The oppression of the Palestinians over the last decades has
undoubtedly angered the world’s 1.3 billion Muslims, as did the first
Iraq war and the sanctions against Iraq which resulted in the death of
half a million children, described as ‘a price worth paying’ by Madeline
Albright, then US Secretary of State.

That anger has been enormously fuelled by events since 9/11. And
unlike the oppression of the Palestinians, the British government has
been directly and unequivocally involved in the occupation of Iraq.
Blair has enthusiastically supported every nuance of US foreign policy
to a greater extent that any previous British prime minister. This has
inevitably had a particular effect on British Muslims.

The vast majority of Muslims in Britain are completely opposed to
terrorist attacks. Nonetheless, the increase in the tiny numbers who not
only support, but are prepared to take part in, such plots, is directly
linked to the US and British imperialism’s brutal policies.

However, the experience of Muslims here in Britain also plays a part.
Muslims as a whole are one of the poorest sections of British society.
One in seven of economically active Muslims are unemployed, compared
with one in 20 for the wider population. Unemployment and social
deprivation is particularly high amongst Pakistani and Bangladeshi
Muslims.

British Muslims have also suffered an increase in prejudice, with
racism increasingly being expressed in ‘anti-Islam’ terms. Immediately
after the 7/7 bombings there was a 600% increase in racist attacks.
Every Muslim, and person who might be ‘seen as Muslim’, must now fear
that the latest alleged plot will lead to another rise in racism.

The Socialist Party nationally, and in Walthamstow and the other
areas most affected, will counter this by initiating a campaign to unite
working-class people from every community against war, terror and
racism.

Campaigning to unite working-class people

Such a campaign, mobilising workers of every religion and of none,
would have an important effect in uniting working-class people and
showing to Muslim youth that it is the workers’ movement that offers a
way forward for them.

We will also fight against attacks on democratic rights. Even
high-ranking Asian police officers have publicly objected to the
government’s proposal for ‘passenger profiling’ which Chief
Superintendent Ali Dizaei and Assistant Commissioner Tarique Ghaffur
have described as creating a new criminal offence, "travelling while
Asian".

Young Asians, particularly men, are facing a huge increase in police
harassment. In London, for example, from 2001 to 2002 there was a 41%
increase in ‘stop and search’ of Asians by the Metropolitan police.

For the last six years the government has introduced endless rounds
of repressive ‘anti-terror’ legislation. Yet, as the campaign against
the IRA proved in the 1970s, no amount of draconian laws can prevent
terrorist attacks. Instead such legislation further alienates Muslim
youth.

We also have to warn the workers’ movement that in the future such
legislation could be used against it. Already the anti-terror laws
introduced in 2000 have been used against anti-war protests, and have
been used as a threat against protestors against world poverty at the G8
summit last year.

Recent events in Britain show again show the need to struggle to
build a socialist alternative of all working people to Blair and Bush
and the system they defend.

Capitalism is a system where the 400 billionaires own more than the
poorest 50% of the planet. It has created incredible wealth, science and
technique, but cannot provide clean water for 1.2 billion people or food
for the 841 million who are seriously malnourished.

It is a system that rides roughshod over the national and religious
rights of whole peoples, ultimately in order to defend the profits of
the giant multinationals that dominate the world economy. Only by ending
capitalism will it be possible to begin to build a society, based on
need not profit, which is capable of meeting the national aspirations of
all humanity.

It is urgent to fight to build a mass socialist alternative of all
working people that will oppose terrorism, imperialist wars and fight
Blair, Bush and their capitalist system and struggle for a socialist
world.