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IX. Critique of Imperialism
By the critique of imperialism, in the
broad sense of the term, we mean the attitude towards
imperialist policy of the different classes of society in
connection with their general ideology.
The enormous dimensions of finance capital
concentrated in a few hands and creating an extraordinarily
far-flung and close network of relationships and connections
which subordinates not only the small and medium, but also
even the very small capitalists and small masters, on the one
hand, and the increasingly intense struggle waged against
other national state groups of financiers for the division of
the world and domination over other countries, on the other
hand, cause the possessing classes to go over entirely to the
side of imperialism. "General" enthusiasm over the prospects
of imperialism, furious defense of it and painting it in the
brightest colors--such are the signs of the times. The
imperialist ideology also penetrates the working class. No
Chinese Wall separates it from the other classes. The leaders
of the present-day, so-called, "Social-Democratic" Party of
Germany are justly called "social-imperialists," that is,
Socialists in words and imperialists in deeds; but as early as
1902, Hobson noted the existence in England of "Fabian
imperialists" who belonged to the opportunist Fabian Society.
Bourgeois scholars and publicists usually
come out in defense of imperialism in a somewhat veiled form;
they obscure its complete domination and its profound roots,
strive to push into the forefront particular and secondary
details and do their very best to distract attention from
essentials by means of absolutely ridiculous schemes for "reform,"
such as police supervision of the trusts or banks, etc. Less
frequently, cynical and frank imperialists come forward who
are bold enough to admit the absurdity of the idea of
reforming the fundamental characteristics of imperialism.
We will give an example. The German
imperialists attempt, in the magazine Archives of World
Economy to follow the movements for national emancipation
in the colonies, particularly, of course, in colonies other
than those belonging to Germany. They note the unrest and the
protest movements in India, the movement in Natal (South
Africa), in the Dutch East Indies, etc. One of them,
commenting on an English report of a conference held on June
28-30, 1910, of representatives of various subject nations and
races, of peoples of Asia, Africa and Europe who are subject
to foreign rule, writes as follows in appraising the speeches
delivered at this conference: "We are told that we must fight
imperialism, that the ruling states should recognize the right
of subject peoples to independence, that an international
tribunal should supervise the fulfilment of treaties concluded
between the great powers and weak peoples. Further than the
expression of these pious wishes they do not go. We see no
trace of understanding of the fact that imperialism is
inseparably bound up with capitalism in its present form and
that, therefore (!!), an open struggle against imperialism
would be hopeless, unless, perhaps, the fight is confined to
protests against certain of its especially abhorrent excesses."*
[Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv, Bd. II, p. 193.] Since
the reform of the basis of imperialism is a deception, a "pious
wish," since the bourgeois representatives of the oppressed
nations go no "further" forward, the bourgeois representative
of an oppressing nation goes "further" backward, to
servility towards imperialism under cover of the claim to be "scientific."
"Logic," indeed!
The questions as to whether it is possible
to reform the basis of imperialism, whether to go forward to
the further intensification and deepening of the antagonisms
which it engenders, or backwards, towards allaying these
antagonisms, are fundamental questions in the critique of
imperialism. Since the specific political features of
imperialism are reaction all along the line and increased
national oppression resulting from the oppression of the
financial oligarchy and the elimination of free competition, a
petty-bourgeois-democratic opposition to imperialism arose in
the beginning of the twentieth century in nearly all
imperialist countries. And the desertion of Kautsky and of the
broad international Kautskyan trend from Marxism consists
precisely in the fact that Kautsky not only did not trouble to
oppose, was not only unable to oppose this petty-bourgeois
reformist opposition, which is really reactionary in its
economic basis, but became merged with it in practice.
In the United States, the imperialist war
waged against Spain in 1898 stirred up the opposition of the "anti-imperialists,"
the last of the Mohicans of bourgeois democracy, who declared
this war to be "criminal," regarded the annexation of foreign
territories as a violation of the Constitution, declared that
the treatment of Aguinaldo, leader of the native Filipinos (the
Americans promised him the independence of his country, but
later they landed troops and annexed it) as "Jingo treachery,"
and quoted the words of Lincoln: "When the white man governs
himself, that is self-government; but when he governs himself
and also governs others, it is no longer self-government; it
is despotism."* [J. Patouillet, L'impérialisme américain,
Dijon, 1904, p. 272.] But while all this criticism shrank
from recognizing the inseverable bond between imperialism and
the trusts, and, therefore, between imperialism and the
foundations of capitalism, while it shrank from joining the
forces engendered by large-scale capitalism and its
development--it remained a "pious wish."
This is also the main attitude taken by
Hobson in his critique of imperialism. Hobson anticipated
Kautsky in protesting against the "inevitability of
imperialism" argument, and in urging the necessity of "increasing
the consuming capacity" of the people (under capitalism!). The
petty-bourgeois point of view in the critique of imperialism,
the omnipotence of the banks, the financial oligarchy, etc.,
is adopted by the authors we have often quoted, such as Agahd,
A. Lansburgh, L. Eschwege, and among the French writers,
Victor Bérard, author of a superficial book entitled
England and Imperialism which appeared in 1900. All these
authors, who make no claim to be Marxists, contrast
imperialism with free competition and democracy, condemn the
Baghdad railway scheme as leading to conflicts and war, utter
"pious wishes" for peace, etc. This applies also to
the compiler of international stock and share issue statistics,
A. Neymarck, who, after calculating the hundreds of billions
of francs representing "international" securities, exclaimed
in 1912: "Is it possible to believe that peace may be
disturbed ... that, in the face of these enormous figures,
anyone would risk starting a war?"* [Bulletin de
l'lnstitut International de Statistique, t. XIX, livr. II
p. 225.]
Such simple-mindedness on the part of the
bourgeois economists is not surprising; moreover, it is in
their interest to pretend to be so naive and to talk "seriously"
about peace under imperialism. But what remains of Kautsky's
Marxism, when, in 1914, 1915 and 1916, he takes up the same
bourgeois-reformist point of view and affirms that "everybody
is agreed" (imperialists, pseudo Socialists and
social-pacifists) on the matter of peace? Instead of an
analysis of imperialism and an exposure of the depths of its
contradictions, we have nothing but a reformist "pious wish"
to wave them aside, to evade them.
Here is a sample of Kautsky's economic
criticism of imperialism. He takes the statistics of the
British export and import trade with Egypt for 1872 and 1912;
it transpires that this export and import trade has grown more
slowly than British foreign trade as a whole. From this
Kautsky concludes that: "we have no reason to suppose that
without military occupation the growth of British trade with
Egypt would have been less, simply as a result of the mere
operation of economic factors." "The urge of capital to expand
. . . can be best promoted, not by the violent methods of
imperialism, but by peaceful democracy."* [Kautsky,
Nationalstaat, imperialistischer Staat und Staatenbund
(National State, Imperialist State and Union of States--Tr.),
Nürnberg, pp. 72 and 70. ]
This argument of Kautsky's which is
repeated in every key by his Russian armor-bearer (and Russian
shielder of the social-chauvinists), Mr. Spectator,
constitutes the basis of Kautskyan critique of imperialism,
and that is why we must deal with it in greater detail. We
will begin with a quotation from Hilferding, whose conclusions
Kautsky on many occasions, and notably in April 1915, has
declared to have been "unanimously adopted by all socialist
theoreticians."
"It is not the business of the proletariat,"
writes Hilferding, "to contrast the more progressive
capitalist policy with that of the now bygone era of free
trade and of hostility towards the state. The reply of the
proletariat to the economic policy of finance capital, to
imperialism, cannot be free trade, but Socialism. The aim of
proletarian policy cannot now be the ideal of restoring free
competition--which has now become a reactionary ideal--but the
complete elimination of competition by the abolition of
capitalism."** [ Finance Capital, p. 567.]
Kautsky broke with Marxism by advocating in
the epoch of finance capital a "reactionary ideal," "peaceful
democracy," "the mere operation of economic factors," for
objectively this ideal drags us back from monopoly to
non-monopolist capitalism, and is a reformist swindle.
Trade with Egypt (or with any other colony
or semicolony) "would have grown more" without
military occupation, without imperialism, and without finance
capital. What does this mean? That capitalism would have
developed more rapidly if free competition had not been
restricted by monopolies in general, or by the "connections,"
yoke (i.e., also the monopoly) of finance capital, or by the
monopolist possession of colonies by certain countries?
Kautsky's argument can have no other
meaning, and this "meaning" is meaningless. Let us
assume that free competition, without any sort of monopoly,
would have developed capitalism and trade more
rapidly. But the more rapidly trade and capitalism develop,
the greater is the concentration of production and capital
which gives rise to monopoly. And monopolies have
already arisen--precisely out of free
competition! Even if monopolies have now begun to retard
progress, it is not an argument in favour of free competition,
which has become impossible after it has given rise to
monopoly.
Whichever way one turns Kautsky's argument,
one will kind nothing in it except reaction and bourgeois
reformism.
Even if we correct this argument and say,
as Spectator says, that the trade of the British colonies with
England is now developing more slowly than their trade with
other countries, it does not save Kautsky; for it is also
monopoly, also imperialism that is beating Great
Britain, only it is the monopoly and imperialism of another
country (America, Germany). It is known that the cartels have
given rise to a new and peculiar form of protective tariffs,
i.e., goods suitable for export are protected (Engels noted
this in Vol. III of Capital). It is known, too, that
the cartels and finance capital have a system peculiar to
themselves, that of "exporting goods at cut-rate prices," or "dumping,"
as the English call it: within a given country the cartel
sells its goods at high monopoly prices, but sells them abroad
at a much lower price to undercut the competitor, to enlarge
its own production to the utmost, etc. If Germany's trade with
the British colonies is developing more rapidly than Great
Britain's, it only proves that German imperialism is younger,
stronger and better organized than British imperialism, is
superior to it; but it by no means proves the "superiority" of
free trade, for it is not a fight between free trade and
protection and colonial dependence, but between two rival
imperialisms, two monopolies, two groups of finance capital.
The superiority of German imperialism over British imperialism
is more potent than the wall of colonial frontiers or of
protective tariffs: to use this as an "argument" in favour
of free trade and "peaceful democracy" is banal, it means
forgetting the essential features and characteristics of
imperialism, substituting petty-bourgeois reformism for
Marxism.
It is interesting to note that even the
bourgeois economist, A. Lansburgh, whose criticism of
imperialism is as petty-bourgeois as Kautsky's, nevertheless
got closer to a more scientific study of trade statistics. He
did not compare only one country, chosen at random, and only a
colony with the other countries; he examined the export trade
of an imperialist country: 1) with countries which are
financially dependent upon it, which borrow money from it; and
2) with countries which are financially independent. He
obtained the following results:
EXPORT TRADE OF GERMANY (Million marks)
|
|
1889 |
1908 |
Per cent increase |
|
To Countries Financially Dependent on
Germany |
Rumania |
48.2 |
70.8 |
47% |
|
Portugal |
19.0 |
32.8 |
73% |
|
Argentina |
60.7 |
147.0 |
143% |
|
Brazil |
48.7 |
84.5 |
73% |
|
Chile |
28.3 |
52.4 |
85% |
|
Turkey |
29.9 |
64.0 |
114% |
|
Total |
234.8 |
451.5 |
92% |
|
To Countries Financially Independent of
Germany |
Great Britain |
651.8 |
997.4 |
53% |
|
France |
210.2 |
437.9 |
108% |
|
Belgium |
137.2 |
322.8 |
135% |
|
Switzerland |
177.4 |
401.1 |
127% |
|
Australia |
21.2 |
64.5 |
205% |
|
Dutch East Indies |
8.8 |
40.7 |
363% |
|
Total |
1,206.6 |
2,264.4 |
87% |
Lansburgh did not draw conclusions
and therefore, strangely enough, failed to observe that if the
figures prove anything at all, they prove that he is wrong
for the exports to countries financially dependent on
Germany have grown more rapidly, if only slightly,
than those to the countries which are financially independent.
(We emphasize the "if," for Lansburgh's figures are far from
complete.)
Tracing the connection between exports and
loans, Lansburgh writes:
"In 1890-91 a Rumanian loan was floated
through the German banks, which had already in previous years
made advances on this loan. It was used chiefly to purchase
railway materials in Germany. In 1891 German exports to
Rumania amounted to 55,000,000 marks. The following year they
dropped to 39,400,000 marks and, with fluctuations, to
25,400,000 in 1900. Only in very recent years have they
regained the level of 1891 thanks to two new loans.
"German exports to Portugal rose, following
the loans of 1888-89, to 21,100,000 (1890); then, in the two
following years, they dropped to 16,200,000 and 7,400,000, and
regained their former level only in 1903.
"The figures of German trade with Argentina
are still more striking. Following the loans floated in 1888
and 1890, German exports to Argentina reached, in 1889,
60,700,000 marks. Two years later they only reached 18,600,000
marks, less than one-third of the previous figure. It was not
until 1901 that they regained and surpassed the level of 1889,
and then only as a result of new loans floated by the state
and by municipalities, with advances to build power stations,
and with other credit operations.
"Exports to Chile, as a consequence of the
loan of 1889, rose to 45,200,000 marks (in 1892) and a year
later dropped to 22,500,000 marks. A new Chilean loan floated
by the German banks in 1906 was followed by a rise of exports
to 84,700,000 marks in 1907, only to fall again to 52,400,000
marks in 1908.* [Die Bank, 1909, 2 p.819 et seq.]
From these facts Lansburgh draws the
amusing petty-bourgeois moral of how unstable and irregular
export trade is when it is bound up with loans, how bad it is
to invest capital abroad instead of "naturally" and "harmoniously"
developing home industry, how "costly" are the millions in
backsheesh that Krupp has to pay in floating foreign loans;
etc. But the facts tell us clearly: the increase in exports
is precisely connected with the swindling tricks of
finance capital, which is not concerned with bourgeois
morality, but with skinning the ox twice--first, it pockets
the profits from the loan; then it pockets other profits from
the same loan which the borrower uses to make
purchases from Krupp, or to purchase railway material from the
Steel Syndicate, etc.
We repeat that we do not by any means
consider Lansburgh's figures to be perfect; but we had to
quote them because they are more scientific than Kautsky's and
Spectator's, and because Lansburgh showed the correct way to
approach the question. In discussing the significance of
finance capital in regard to exports, etc., one must be able
to single out the connection of exports especially and solely
with the tricks of the financiers, especially and solely with
the sale of goods by cartels, etc. Simply to compare colonies
with non-colonies, one imperialism with another imperialism,
one semicolony or colony (Egypt) with all other countries, is
to evade and to obscure the very essence of the
question.
Kautsky's theoretical critique of
imperialism has nothing in common with Marxism and serves only
as a preamble to propaganda for peace and unity with the
opportunists and the social-chauvinists, precisely for the
reason that it evades and obscures the very profound and
fundamental contradictions of imperialism: the contradictions
between monopoly and free competition which exists side by
side with it, between the gigantic "operations" (and gigantic
profits) of finance capital and "honest" trade in the free
market, the contradiction between cartels and trusts, on the
one hand, and non-cartelized industry, on the other, etc.
The notorious theory of "ultraimperialism,"
invented by Kautsky, is just as reactionary. Compare his
arguments on this subject in 1915, with Hobson's arguments in
1902.
Kautsky: ". . . Cannot the present
imperialist policy be supplanted by a new, ultraimperialist
policy, which will introduce the joint exploitation of the
world by internationally united finance capital in place of
the mutual rivalries of national finance capitals? Such a new
phase of capitalism is at any rate conceivable. Can it be
achieved? Sufficient premises are still lacking to enable us
to answer this question."* [Die Neue Zeit, April 30,
1915, p. 144.]
Hobson: "Christendom thus laid out in a few
great federal empires, each with a retinue of uncivilized
dependencies, seems to many the most legitimate development of
present tendencies, and one which would offer the best hope of
permanent peace on an assured basis of inter-Imperialism."
Kautsky called ultraimperialism or
superimperialism what Hobson, thirteen years earlier,
described as interimperialism. Except for coining a new and
clever catchword, replacing one Latin prefix by another, the
only progress Kautsky has made in the sphere of "scientific"
thought is that he gave out as Marxism what Hobson, in effect,
described as the cant of English parsons. After the Anglo-Boer
War it was quite natural for this highly honourable caste to
exert their main efforts to console the British
middle class and the workers who had lost many of their
relatives on the battlefields of South Africa and who were
obliged to pay higher taxes in order to guarantee still higher
profits for the British financiers. And what better
consolation could there be than the theory that imperialism is
not so bad; that it stands close to inter- (or ultra-)
imperialism, which can ensure permanent peace? No matter what
the good intentions of the English parsons, or of sentimental
Kautsky, may have been, the only objective, i.e., real, social
significance Kautsky's "theory" can have, is: a most
reactionary method of consoling the masses with hopes of
permanent peace being possible under capitalism, by
distracting their attention from the sharp antagonisms and
acute problems of the present times, and directing it towards
illusory prospects of an imaginary "ultraimperialism" of the
future. Deception of the masses--there is nothing but this in
Kautsky's "Marxian" theory.
Indeed, it is enough to compare well-known
and indisputable facts to become convinced of the utter
falsity of the prospects which Kautsky tries to conjure up
before the German workers (and the workers of all lands). Let
us consider India, Indo-China and China. It is known that
these three colonial and semicolonial countries, with a
population of six to seven hundred million, are subjected to
the exploitation of the finance capital of several imperialist
powers: Great Britain, France, Japan, the U.S.A., etc. Let us
assume that these imperialist countries form alliances against
one another in order to protect or enlarge their possessions,
their interests and their "spheres of influence" in these
Asiatic states; these alliances will be "interimperialist," or
"ultraimperialist" alliances. Let us assume that all the
imperialist countries conclude an alliance for the "peaceful"
division of these parts of Asia; this alliance would be an
alliance of "internationally united finance capital." There
are actual examples of alliances of this kind in the history
of the twentieth century, for instance, the attitude of the
powers to China. We ask, is it "conceivable," assuming that
the capitalist system remains intact--and this is precisely
the assumption that Kautsky does make--that such alliances
would be more than temporary, that they would eliminate
friction, conflicts and struggle in every possible form?
It is sufficient to state this question
clearly to make it impossible for any reply to be given other
than in the negative; for any other basis under capitalism for
the division of spheres of influence, of interests, of
colonies, etc., than a calculation of the strength of
the participants in the division, their general economic,
financial, military strength, etc., is inconceivable. And the
strength of these participants in the division does not change
to an equal degree, for the even development of
different undertakings, trusts, branches of industry, or
countries is impossible under capitalism. Half a century ago
Germany was a miserable, insignificant country, as far as her
capitalist strength was concerned, compared with the strength
of England at that time; Japan was the same compared with
Russia. Is it "conceivable" that in ten or twenty years' time
the relative strength of the imperialist powers will have
remained unchanged? Absolutely inconceivable.
Therefore, in the realities of the
capitalist system, and not in the banal Philistine fantasies
of English parsons, or of the German "Marxist," Kautsky, "interimperialist"
or "ultraimperialist" alliances, no matter what form they may
assume, whether of one imperialist coalition against another,
or of a general alliance embracing all the
imperialist powers, are inevitably nothing more than a "truce"
in periods between wars. Peaceful alliances prepare the ground
for wars, and in their turn grow out of wars; the one
conditions the other, giving rise to alternating forms of
peaceful and non-peaceful struggle out of one and the same
basis of imperialist connections and relations within
world economics and world politics. But in order to pacify the
workers and to reconcile them with the social-chauvinists who
have deserted to the side of the bourgeoisie, wise Kautsky
separates one link of a single chain from the other,
separates the present peaceful (and ultraimperialist, nay,
ultra-ultraimperialist) alliance of all the powers
for the "pacification" of China (remember the suppression of
the Boxer Rebellion) from the non-peaceful conflict of
tomorrow, which will prepare the ground for another "peaceful"
general alliance for the partition, say, of Turkey, on the day
after tomorrow, etc., etc. Instead of showing the
living connection between periods of imperialist peace and
periods of imperialist war, Kautsky presents the workers with
a lifeless abstraction in order to reconcile them to their
lifeless leaders.
An American writer, Hill, in his A
History of Diplomacy in the International Development of
Europe notes in his preface to the following periods in
the recent history of diplomacy: 1) the era of revolution; 2)
the constitutional movement; 3) the present era of "commercial
imperialism."* [David Jayne Hill, A History of the
Diplomacy in the International Development of Europe,
Vol. 1, p. x.] Another writer divides the history of Great
Britain's "world policy" since 1870 into four periods: 1) the
first Asiatic period (that of the struggle against Russian
advance in Central Asia towards India); 2) the African period
(approximately 1885-1902): that of the struggle against France
for the partition of Africa (the "Fashoda incident" of 1898
which brought her within a hair's breadth of war with France);
3) the second Asiatic period (alliance with Japan against
Russia), and 4) the "European" period, chiefly anti-German.*
[Schilder, op. cit., p. 178.] "The political skirmishes of
outposts take place on the financial field," wrote the "banker,"
Riesser, in 1905, in showing how French finance capital
operating in Italy was preparing the way for a political
alliance of these countries, and how a conflict was developing
between Germany and Great Britain over Persia, between all the
European capitalists over Chinese loans, etc. Behold, the
living reality of peaceful "ultraimperialist" alliances in
their inseverable connection with ordinary imperialist
conflicts!
Kautsky's obscuring of the deepest
contradictions of imperialism, which inevitably becomes the
embellishment of imperialism, leaves its traces in this
writer's criticism of the political features of imperialism.
Imperialism is the epoch of finance capital and of monopolies,
which introduce everywhere the striving for domination, not
for freedom. The result of these tendencies is reaction all
along the line, whatever the political system, and an extreme
intensification of existing antagonisms in
this domain also. Particularly intensified become the yoke of
national oppression and the striving for annexations, i.e.,
the violation of national independence (for annexation is
nothing but the violation of the right of nations to
self-determination). Hilferding rightly notes the connection
between imperialism and the intensification of national
oppression. "In the newly opened up countries," he writes, "the
capital imported into them intensifies antagonisms and excites
against the intruders the constantly growing resistance of the
peoples who are awakening to national consciousness; this
resistance can easily develop into dangerous measures against
foreign capital. The old social relations become completely
revolutionized, the agelong agrarian isolation of 'nations
without history' is destroyed and they are drawn into the
capitalist whirlpool. Capitalism itself gradually provides the
subjugated with the means and resources for their emancipation
and they set out to achieve the goal which once seemed highest
to the European nations: the creation of a united national
state as a means to economic and cultural freedom. This
movement for national independence threatens European capital
in its most valuable and most promising fields of exploitation,
and European capital can maintain its domination only by
continually increasing its military forces."* [Finance
Capital, p.487.]
To this must be added that it is not only
in newly opened up countries, but also in the old, that
imperialism is leading to annexation, to increased national
oppression, and, consequently, also to increasing resistance.
While objecting to the intensification of political reaction
by imperialism, Kautsky leaves in the shade a question that
has become particularly urgent, viz., the impossibility of
unity with the opportunists in the epoch of imperialism. While
objecting to annexations, he presents his objections in a form
that is most acceptable and least offensive to the
opportunists. He addresses himself to a German audience, yet
he obscures the most topical and important point, for instance,
the annexation of Alsace-Lorraine by Germany. In order to
appraise this "mental aberration" of Kautsky's we will take
the following example. Let us suppose that a Japanese is
condemning the annexation of the Philippines by the Americans.
The question is: will many believe that he is doing so because
he has a' horror of annexations as such. and not because he
himself has a desire to annex the Philippines? And shall we
not be constrained to admit that the "fight" the Japanese is
waging against annexations can be regarded as being sincere
and politically honest only if he fights against the
annexation of Korea by Japan, and urges freedom for Korea to
secede from Japan?
Kautsky's theoretical analysis of
imperialism, as well as his economic and political criticism
of imperialism, are permeated through and through,
with a spirit, absolutely irreconcilable with Marxism, of
obscuring and glossing over the fundamental contradictions of
imperialism and with a striving to preserve at all costs the
crumbling unity with opportunism in the European working-class
movement.
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