• Monthly Review
  • Monthly Review Press
  • MR (Castilian)
  • Climate & Capitalism
  • Money on the Left
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
MR Online
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact/Submission
  • Browse
    • Recent Articles Archive
    • by Subject
      • Ecology
      • Education
      • Imperialism
      • Inequality
      • Labor
      • Literature
      • Marxism
      • Movements
      • Philosophy
      • Political Economy
    • by Region
      • Africa
      • Americas
      • Asia
      • Australasia
      • Europe
      • Global
      • Middle East
    • by Category
      • Art
      • Commentary
      • Interview
      • Letter
      • News
      • Newswire
  • Monthly Review Essays
| Ever Fonseca Cuba Homenaje a la paz Homage to Peace 1970 | MR Online Ever Fonseca (Cuba), Homenaje a la paz (‘Homage to Peace’), 1970.

We do not want a divided planet; we want a World without walls: The Fifteenth Newsletter (2022)

By Vijay Prashad (Posted Apr 16, 2022)

Originally published: Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research on April 14, 2022 (more by Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research)  |
Culture, Ideology, Inequality, WarUnited StatesNewswireTricontinental Newsletter

Dear friends,

Greetings from the desk of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research.

While the United States began its illegal war against Iraq in 2003, Cuba’s President Fidel Castro spoke in Buenos Aires, Argentina. ‘Our country does not drop bombs on other peoples’, he said, ‘nor does it send thousands of planes to bomb cities… Our country’s tens of thousands of scientists and doctors have been educated on the idea of saving lives’. Cuba had an army, yes, but not an army for war; Castro called it ‘an army of white coats’. Most recently, Cuba’s Henry Reeve Brigade of medical practitioners have selflessly worked around the world to help stem the tide of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sergey Grinevich (Belarus), Tank, 2013.

Sergey Grinevich (Belarus), Tank, 2013.

Castro reminds us that there are two ways to be alive in this world. We can live in a war-filled world awash with weapons and confounded by intimidation, a world that continuously prepares for combat. Or, we can live in a world of teachers and doctors, scientists and social workers, storytellers and singers. We can put our confidence in people who help us create a better world than the one we live in today, this wretched world of war and profit, where ugliness threatens to overwhelm us.

The surface of our skin beats with the fear that a new iron curtain will descend, that there is pressure to box in China and Russia, to divide the world into camps. But that is impossible, because–as noted in last week’s newsletter–we live in a knot of contradictions and not in a clean cut world of certainties. Even close allies of the U.S., such as Australia, Germany, Japan, and India, cannot break their economic and political ties with Russia and China. Doing so would plunge them into a recession, bringing the kind of economic chaos that war and sanctions have already brought to Honduras, Pakistan, Peru, and Sri Lanka. In those countries–already battered by the International Monetary Fund by the greed of the elites and by foreign embassies–rising fuel prices have transformed an economic crisis into a political crisis.

Wars either end with the destruction of a country’s political institutions and its social capacity or they end with ceasefires and negotiations. The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation’s (NATO) war on Libya in 2011 ended with the country stumbling along with the smell of cordite in the air and a broken social order. The fate of Libya should not be repeated anywhere, certainly not in Ukraine. Yet it is a fate ordained for the people of Afghanistan, Somalia, and Yemen, who have been suffocated by wars egged on by the West–wars armed by the West and that have been profitable for the West.

Svetlana Rumak (Russia) Endless Green Fields, 2017.

Svetlana Rumak (Russia) Endless Green Fields, 2017.

When contemporary Russia emerged from the fall of the USSR, Boris Yeltsin led a coup against the Russian parliament, tanks blazing. Those currently in power in Russia operate in light of these violent beginnings and the experiences of other war-stricken nations. They will not allow themselves to suffer the fate of Libya or Yemen or Afghanistan. Negotiations between Russia and Ukraine are ongoing in Belarus’ Homyel Voblasts (or Gomel Region), but trust must be strengthened before a ceasefire can become a real possibility. Any ceasefire should not only apply to the war inside Ukraine–which is imperative–but should also include halting the broader U.S.-imposed pressure campaign on all of Eurasia.

What is that pressure campaign and why bother talking about it now? Shouldn’t we only say Russia out of Ukraine? Such a slogan, while correct, does not address the deeper problems that provoked this war in the first place.

When the USSR collapsed, Western countries wielded their resources and power through Boris Yeltsin (1991–1999) and then Vladimir Putin (from 1999). First, the West impoverished the Russian people by destroying the country’s social net and allowing elite Russians to devour the country’s social wealth. Then, they drew the new Russian billionaires into investing in Western-driven globalisation (including English football teams). The West backed Yeltsin’s bloody war in Chechnya (1994–1996) and then Putin’s war in Chechnya (1999–2000). Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair (1997–2007) signed allowances for Russia to buy British weapons till his arm hurt and welcomed Putin to London in 2000, saying, ‘I want Russia and the West to work together to promote stability and peace’. In 2001, former U.S. President George W. Bush described looking into Putin’s eyes and seeing his soul, calling him ‘straightforward and trustworthy’. In the same year, The New York Times’ Thomas Friedman encouraged readers to ‘keep rootin’ for Putin’. It was the West that helped the Russian billionaire class capture the state and ride astride Russian society.

Shakir Hassan al-Said (Iraq), The Victims, 1957.

Shakir Hassan al-Said (Iraq), The Victims, 1957.

Once the Russian government decided that integration with Europe and the U.S. was not possible, the West began to portray Putin as diabolical. This movie keeps replaying: Saddam Hussein of Iraq was a great hero of the U.S. and then its villain, the same with former military leader Manuel Antonio Noriega of Panama. Now the stakes are unforgivably higher, the dangers greater.

Beneath the surface of the current moment lies dynamics that we foregrounded in our tenth newsletter of this year. The U.S. unilaterally damaged the international arms control architecture, withdrawing from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty (2001) and the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty (2018) and thereby gutting the policy of deterrence. In December 2018, the U.S. pushed its allies to prevent, by a slim margin, the United Nations General Assembly from passing a resolution to defend the INF. Putin began to talk about the need for security guarantees, not from Ukraine or even from NATO, which is a puffed-up Trojan Horse of Washington’s ambitions: Russia needed security guarantees directly from the U.S..

Why? Because in 2018, the U.S. government announced a shift in foreign policy that signalled that they would increase their competition with China and Russia. NATO-led naval exercises near both countries also gave Russia cause for concern about its security. The U.S.’s bellicosity is enshrined in its 2022 National Defence Strategy, where it asserts that the United States is ‘prepared to prevail in conflict when necessary, prioritising [China’s] challenge in the Indo-Pacific, then the Russian challenge in Europe’. The key phrase is that the U.S. is prepared to prevail in conflict. The entire attitude of domination and of defeat is a macho attitude against humanity. The U.S.-imposed pressure campaign around Eurasia must end.

Abel Rodríguez (Colombia), Territorio de Mito (‘Myth Territory’), 2017.

Abel Rodríguez (Colombia), Territorio de Mito (‘Myth Territory’), 2017.

We do not want a divided world. We want a realistic world: a world of humanity that deals adequately with the climate catastrophe. A world that wants to end hunger and illiteracy. A world that wants to lift us out of despair into hope. A world with more armies of white coats and instead of armies with guns.

At Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research, we amplify the lives and voices of people building a world of hope against fear, a world of love against hate. One such person is Nela Martínez Espinosa (1912–2004), the focus of the third study in our Women of Struggle, Women in Struggle series. Nela, as we call her, was a leading figure in the Communist Party of Ecuador and a builder of institutions that infused the masses with confidence. These organisations included anti-fascist fronts and women’s federations, support for the rights of indigenous Ecuadorians, and platforms defending the Cuban Revolution. In 1944, during the Glorious May Revolution, Nela briefly led the government. Throughout her life, she worked tirelessly to build the basis for a better world.

Nela Martínez Espinosa In 2000, as president of the Women’s Continental Front for Peace and against Intervention, Nela fought against the creation of a U.S. military base in the city of Manta. ‘Colonisation returns’, Nela said. ‘How will we escape this colonisation? How can we justify ourselves in the face of our cowardice?’

That last question hangs over us. We do not want to live in a divided world. We must act to prevent the iron curtain from descending. We must fight against our fear. We must fight for a world without walls.

Warmly,

Vijay

Monthly Review does not necessarily adhere to all of the views conveyed in articles republished at MR Online. Our goal is to share a variety of left perspectives that we think our readers will find interesting or useful. —Eds.

About Vijay Prashad

Vijay Prashad is an Indian historian, editor and journalist. He is a writing fellow and chief correspondent at Globetrotter, a project of the Independent Media Institute. He is the chief editor of LeftWord Books and the director of Tricontinental: Institute for Social Research. He has written more than twenty books, including The Darker Nations: A People’s History of the Third World (The New Press, 2007), The Poorer Nations: A Possible History of the Global South (Verso, 2013), The Death of the Nation and the Future of the Arab Revolution (University of California Press, 2016) and Red Star Over the Third World (LeftWord, 2017). He writes regularly for Frontline, the Hindu, Newsclick, AlterNet and BirGün.
Tricontinental Newsletter
Russia investigating ISIS-style Ukrainian “social ad”
Russia’s Sergey Glazyev introduces the new global financial system
  • Also by Vijay Prashad

    • Can we please have an adult conversation about China? by Vijay Prashad August 12, 2022
    • Sri Lankans seek a World in which they can find laughter together: The Thirty-First Newsletter (2022) by Vijay Prashad August 05, 2022
    • All that I ask is that you fight for peace today: The Thirtieth Newsletter (2022) by Vijay Prashad July 29, 2022
    • It is dark, but I sing because the morning will come: The Twenty-Ninth Newsletter (2022) by Vijay Prashad July 22, 2022
  • Also By Vijay Prashad in Monthly Review Magazine

    • Africa Is on the Move May 01, 2022
    • Preface January 01, 2022
    • Introduction January 01, 2022
    • Quid Pro Quo? October 01, 2011
    • Reclaim the Neighborhood, Change the World December 01, 2007
    • Kathy Kelly’s Chispa December 01, 2005

    Books By Vijay Prashad

    • Washington Bullets: A History of the CIA, Coups, and Assassinations September 16, 2020

    Monthly Review Essays

    • From Commodity Fetishism to Teleological Positing: Lukács’s Concept of Labor and Its Relevance
      Wang Pu | Historia y conciencia de clase y el marxismo de Georg Lukács Dialektika | MR Online

      The concept of labor constituted a pivotal problematic in Georg Lukács’s theoretical development throughout his Marxist years.

    Lost & Found

    • Russia and the Ukraine crisis: The Eurasian Project in conflict with the triad imperialist policies
      Samir Amin | State flag of Ukraine behind a wall of anonymous protesters in Kyiv Ukraine | MR Online

      We wanted to draw readers attention to this piece by Samir Amin, which was written at the time of the Maidan Coup in 2014. —Eds. 1. The current global stage is dominated by the attempt of historical centers of imperialism (the U.S., Western and Central Europe, Japan—hereafter called “the Triad”) to maintain their exclusive control […]

    Trending

    Popular (last 30 days)

    RSS MR Press News

    • “The Return of Nature” wins ASA’s Paul Sweezy Outstanding Book Award August 11, 2022
    • Grappling with ‘Capital’s’ entirety: Not just for first-time readers (Heinrich reviewed by ‘Marx & Philosophy Review of Books’) August 10, 2022
    • Work work work – so a few can be rich (Yates published in “Counterpunch”) August 9, 2022
    • Rescuing Marx, and Marxism… (‘The Return of Nature’ reviewed by “Theory & Struggle”) August 1, 2022
    • WATCH “MR Conversations: Work Work Work,” with Michael Yates and Intan Suwandi (Plus: EXCERPTS) August 1, 2022

    RSS Climate & Capitalism

    • Ecosocialist Bookshelf, August 2022 August 14, 2022
    • Global hunger numbers jump; 2.3 billion are ‘food insecure’ August 9, 2022
    • U.S. has the warmest nights ever August 9, 2022
    • Tree Thieves: Crime and Survival in North America’s Woods August 5, 2022
    • Capitalism’s crimes against nature July 24, 2022

    RSS Monthly Review

    • July-August 2022 (Volume 74, Number 3) July 1, 2022 The Editors
    • Socialism and Ecological Survival: An Introduction July 1, 2022 John Bellamy Foster
    • The Limits to Growth: Ecosocialism or Barbarism July 1, 2022 Alberto Garzón Espinosa
    • Surviving Through Community Building in Catastrophic Times July 1, 2022 Sit Tsui
    • Climate Imperialism in the Twenty-First Century July 1, 2022 Jayati Ghosh

    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
    Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

    Creative Commons License

    Monthly Review Foundation
    134 W 29TH ST STE 706
    New York NY 10001-5304

    Tel: 212-691-2555