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Instead they witness the growth of forces which seem to look back to a more restricted society which forces women into purdah, uses terror to crush free thought and threatens the most barbaric punishments on those who defy its edicts. In countries like Egypt and Algeria the liberals are now lining up with the state, which has persecuted and imprisoned them in the past, in the war it is waging against Islamist parties. But it has not only been liberals who have been thrown into disarray by the rise of Islamism. So too has the left. It has not known how to react to what it sees as an obscurantist doctrine, backed by traditionally reactionary forces, enjoying success among some of the poorest groups in society. Two opposed approaches have resulted. The first has been to see Islamism as Reaction Incarnate, as a form of fascism. This was, for example, the position taken soon after the Iranian revolution by the then left wing academic Fred Halliday, who referred to the Iranian regime as 'Islam with a fascist face'.2 It is an approach which much of the Iranian left came to adopt after the consolidation of the Khomeini regime in 1981-2. And it is accepted by much of the left in Egypt and Algeria today. Thus, for example, one Algerian revolutionary Marxist group has argued that the principles, ideology and political action of the Islamist FIS 'are similar to those of the National Front in France', and that it is 'a fascist current'.3 Such an analysis easily leads to the practical conclusion of building political alliances to stop the fascists at all costs. Thus Halliday concluded that the left in Iran made the mistake of not allying with the 'liberal bourgeoisie' in 1979-81 in opposition to 'the reactionary ideas and policies of Khomeini'.4 In Egypt today the left, influenced by the mainstream communist tradition, effectively supports the state in its war against the Islamists. The opposite approach has been to see the Islamist movements as 'progressive', 'anti-imperialist' movements of the oppressed. This was the position taken by the great bulk of the Iranian left in the first phase of the 1979 revolution, when the Soviet influenced Tudeh Party, the majority of the Fedayeen guerrilla organisation and the left Islamist People's Mojahedin all characterised the forces behind Khomeini as 'the progressive petty bourgeoisie'. The conclusion of this approach was that Khomeini deserved virtually uncritical support.5 A quarter of a century before this the Egyptian Communists briefly took the same position towards the Muslim Brotherhood, calling on them to join in 'a common struggle against the "fascist dictatorship" of Nasser and his "Anglo-American props"'.6 I want to argue that both positions are wrong. They fail to locate the class character of modern Islamism or to see its relationship to capital, the state and imperialism. Continued at Link
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Jump To Comment: 1 2 3 4GET THIS SWP CRAP OF INDYMEDIA.
CHRIS HARMAN IS A FUCKING BOLLOX
Jesus!
SO why don't you and the rest of the good old boys on the House for Un-American Indymedia Committee Board burn some books somewhere else?
I'll read what I want, thanks
hey 'I hate SWP'
if you have a problem with the article then why not write a quick review of it for the comments section rather then just complaining about the SWP posting it. Or if you worried about SWP domination of the news feed write an article about some struggle going on here and post it (there is lots of stuff not covered and far too little stuff specifically on Ireland and specifically written for this thread). After all the whole point of open publishing is that people can post stuff you don't agree with, there is little point in complaining when they do so!