While international attention focuses on ceasefire frameworks, Israel is openly advancing plans for a permanent expansion of its control over Gaza, writes RAMZY BAROUD
DESPITE the fact 39 per cent of US adults today now hold a positive view of socialism, to take seriously the ideas of Lenin is still to risk ridicule. Is he not, people will ask, the author of an obsolete and oppressive state socialist model? One that — even if his corpse is still on display in Moscow — was definitively entombed three decades ago?
In truth, Lenin is more relevant now than at any point since the end of the cold war. Waging what seemed like a hopeless struggle against the tsarist regime in Russia, it was the ruin caused by the first world war that provided him with a political opening — to rally to his side those who knew that “reform” was a lost cause and to confront his enemies.
To do this required the construction of solidarity between the working class and the peasantry, for Russia was not a fully industrialised country like England or Germany. If proletarian revolution were to happen, it paradoxically could not rely solely on the proletariat.
JOHN REES replies to Claudia Webbe
ISAAC SANEY points to the global stakes involved in defending the Cuban revolution against imperialism and calls for resistance
BEN CHACKO welcomes a masterful analysis that puts class struggle back at the heart of our understanding of China’s revolution
Corbyn and Sultana’s ‘Your Party’ represents the first attempt at mass socialist organisation since the CPGB’s formation in 1921, argues DYLAN MURPHY


