
“Writing
only a few years after the end of the second world war and witnessing
on every hand the active preparations for another on an even more
gigantic scale, it is not necessary to emphasise that war is
literally an issue of life and death for men, women and children in
every part of the globe. Nor is it necessary to prove at length that
another war may be immeasurably more destructive of life and the
means of sustaining life than were the wars from which the human race
has suffered already during the present century. Everybody who takes
even a casual interest in news of the atom and hydrogen bombs and
other weapons of mass destruction of cities and peoples has received
some impression of the agonising fate that may be in store for all
the centres of civilisation if the Powers again come into armed
conflict.” (From Socialist Party and War, June 1950).
Ten
years ago the writer stood on a Socialist Party platform in a North
London suburb, flourishing a copy of the "Bulletin of Atomic
Scientists." The atomic scientists had written with concern –
many with disgust – about the horrible effects of the weapon
(conceived in 1942), which in desperate haste, the American
Government was developing in an attempt to maintain its atomic
supremacy – the "Hydrogen Bomb."
Few
stopped to listen. People did not want to hear about nuclear weapons
or war or politics. They had had their fill. The piteous agonies of
the people of Hiroshima and Nagasaki were relatively unknown and
their import not understood. Such knowledge tormented only an
insignificant few who lacked the resources to make known all the
terrors of the past and the perils of the future. Others even more
knowledgeable, such as the Labour Cabinet, under Mr Attlee, whose
representative was present at the bombing of Nagasaki, quietly
arranged the making of a British atomic bomb – thereby smoothing
the way for nuclear weapon development under the Conservatives. The
so-called Communists who in 1945 had called for further attacks on
Japan, were engaged in nullifying the Western monopoly of atomic
striking power by a hypocritical "Ban the Bomb" campaign.
Later,
in 1954, the tragic incident of the Japanese fishermen aroused the
anger of millions in Japan and stirred many thousands in other
countries to protest. In Britain information about the nature of
atomic weapons was gradually assimilated and after a number of false
starts, the National Campaign for the Abolition of Nuclear Weapon
Tests came into being. From it, in 1958, sprang the Campaign for
Nuclear Disarmament (CND). Long before the emergence of the
anti-nuclear movement, members of the Socialist Party had become
aware of the problems associated with nuclear warfare and weapon
tests. Did the use or testing of nuclear weapons make it necessary to
modify our political standpoint in any way? Must we deal with the
nuclear menace first in order to make the world safe for Socialism?
Much discussion ensued and in this article, therefore, we put forward
a point of view which is neither a dogmatic response to a new
situation nor a hastily conceived compromise designed to gain
political support.
As
there are still a number of "Campaigners" who are
attempting to change Labour Party policy, it may be useful to comment
briefly on the Labour Party's actions in the past. In its history it
has supported several major wars; it was in office when the atomic
bombs were dropped on Japan. It has supported the testing of nuclear
weapons and in fact, is committed to the use of hydrogen bombs in an
"all-out" war.
Those
who support the Labour Party – which is alleged to have been
struggling for Socialism and the "Brotherhood of Man" –
are now reduced after fifty-four years of "Socialist"
thinking and re-thinking, to seek CND support on grounds which, were
the issues not so tragic, would be laughable. After having played a
vital part in the making and using of atomic weapons they have the
effrontery to claim a sympathetic hearing from "Campaigners"
on the grounds that a minority of the Labour Party are now wholly or
partly opposed to nuclear weapons – and this is supposed to be a
"Socialist" Party!
In
1950, the writer recalls asking a Labour Party member how he could
reconcile his party's support of atomic weapons with its professed
concern for human brotherhood. After a very apologetic defence, his
parting words were. "Ah! Wait for the Conference! We'll show the
right-wingers!" Every year we have heard the same pathetic tale.
Now, when pressure from CND and elsewhere has made an anti-nuclear
weapon vote a possibility at the Labour Party Conference, the
Parliamentary Labour Party is considering ways to avoid implementing
such a decision! It is a tragedy that so many well-meaning people
spend their lives attempting to build a more sensible world through
the Labour Party. If they pondered deeply they would see that in the
early days of this century, when Labour Party supporters chose to
disregard the sounder theoretical (and therefore more practical)
position of the Socialist Party, the path was taken which eventually
led to Labour Party support of the trench massacres, the deliberate
saturation bombing of working class dwelling areas, the atomic
bombings, nuclear weapons and their testing and other chemical and
bacteriological weapons. May we say to those young people who seek to
use the Labour Party as an instrument of social change, that the
problems which now confront us are, in fact, the result of the
allegedly more practical policies of those parties prepared to
administer capitalism. It would be quite illogical to assist those
who bear a share of the responsibility for a world where our innocent
children play in the shadow of deadly rockets, as yet unaware of the
insidious strontium in their bones.
Do
not fall under the spell of left-wing orators who one minute talk
feelingly of a world socialist community and who, in the next breath,
admit that the Labour Party is hardly 'socialist’.
Whenever
the deeds of the Labour Party give rise to dismay among its active
minority, wherever there is the possibility that numbers way break
away, there always appears to be on hand, a 'militant' left-wing
leader to challenge' the leadership, to thunder against capitalism or
"the Establishment" and to give fresh hope to the doubtful.
When,
however, it is time for voting, it is not unknown for these
'militants' to seek support for the Party whose policy they had
bitterly opposed!
We
do not question their sincerity. We merely point out that this kind
of action is inevitable while these left-wing leaders give their
support to parties which are prepared to administer capitalism.
What
is required is not a trust in leaders and their promises but an
attitude of self-reliance and a determination on the part of ordinary
people to understand the nature of world
problems. ..continued next page 10
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