Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Third camp

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromThird camp Trotskyism)
Branch of socialism
This article is about the Trotskyst idea of a socialist Third camp. For the 'Third Camp' in Austrian politics, seeGerman nationalism in Austria.
Not to be confused withThird Position orThird Way.
icon
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Third camp" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(September 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Part of aPolitics series
Third camp
Part ofa series on
Trotskyism
Logo of the Fourth International

Thethird camp, also known asthird camp socialism orthird camp Trotskyism, is a branch ofsocialism that aims to oppose bothcapitalism andStalinism by supporting the organisedworking class as a "third camp".

The term arose early duringWorld War II and refers to the idea of two "imperialist camps" competing to dominate the world: one led by theUnited Kingdom andFrance and supported by theUnited States, and the other led byNazi Germany andJapan and supported byFascist Italy. It did have a predecessor in theTrotskyist opposition to the Stalin-led Soviet Union, however.

Origins of the term

[edit]

From the 1930s and beyond,Leon Trotsky and his American supporterJames P. Cannon described the Soviet Union as a "degenerated workers' state", the revolutionary gains of which should be defended against imperialist aggression despite the emergence of a gangster-like ruling stratum, the party bureaucracy. While defending the Russian revolution from outside aggression, Trotsky, Cannon and their followers at the same time urged an anti-bureaucraticpolitical revolution againstStalinism to be conducted by the Soviet working class themselves.

Dissidents in theTrotskyistSocialist Workers Party, witnessing the collaboration ofJoseph Stalin andAdolf Hitler in the invasion and the partition of Poland and the Soviet invasion of theBaltic states, argued that the Soviet Union had actually emerged as a new social formation, which was neither capitalist nor socialist. Adherents of that view, espoused most explicitly byMax Shachtman and closely following the writings ofJames Burnham andBruno Rizzi, argued that the Sovietbureaucratic collectivist regime had in fact entered one of two great imperialist "camps" aiming to wage war to divide the world. The first of the imperialist camps, which Stalin and the Soviet Union were said to have joined as a directly participating ally, was headed by Nazi Germany and included most notably Fascist Italy. In that original analysis, the "second imperialist camp" was headed by England and France, actively supported by the United States.[1]

Shachtman and his cothinkers argued for the establishment of a broad "third camp" to unite the workers and colonial peoples of the world in revolutionary struggle against the imperialism of the German-Soviet-Italian and the Anglo-American-French blocs. Shachtman concluded that the Soviet policy was one ofimperialism and that the best result for the international working class would be the defeat of the Soviet Union in the course of its military incursions. Conversely, Trotsky argued that a defeat for the Soviet Union would strengthen capitalism and reduce the possibilities for political revolution.[2]

With the demise of fascism in World War II and the emergence of Soviet-controlled governments in Central and Eastern Europe, the "three camps" conception was modified. The leading imperialist camp was held to be that of the chief capitalist powers (the United States, the United Kingdom and France), with the Soviet Union consigned to a second imperialist camp.

Over time, Shachtman's aggressive calls for the defeat of official communist nations' expansionism (the second camp) drifted rightward into support for thecapitalist nations (the first camp). That position has ledorthodox Trotskyist groups to declare it reactionary. However, some supporters of the three camps analysis split with Shachtman and continued to develop their analyses of the changing world situation.

Organizational support

[edit]

TheCongress Socialist Party of India also adopted a third camp position, with the slogan "We want neither the rule of London or Berlin; nor the rule of Paris or Rome; nor that of Tokyo or Moscow" (September 1939).[3]

A third camp position is held today by theWorkers Liberty groups,[4]New Politics[5] and by some in the multi-tendency Marxist organizationSolidarity in the United States as well as some in theDemocratic Socialists of America and theSocialist Party USA.

Other uses of the term

[edit]

More recently, a movement by theWorker-Communist Party of Iran and its leaders such asHamid Taqvaee andMaryam Namazie, together with groups includingLeft Worker-communist Party of Iraq, has emerged calling for a third camp opposingAmerican militarism andIslamic terrorism.[6] However, this is unrelated to the Trotskyist third camp theory[citation needed] as neither organisation comes from a Trotskyist background.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Shachtman, Max (1 May 1940)."Against Both War Camps — For the Camp of World Labor!".Labor Action. p. 1 – viaMarxists Internet Archive., and the May Day 1940 manifesto of theWorkers Party, the political offshoot of the SWP established by Burnham, Shachtman andMartin Abern in April 1940.
  2. ^A series of sharply critical articles and letters from Trotsky's debates with Shachtman was published posthumously under the titleIn Defense of Marxism. Cannon's polemics against Burnham and Shachtman are contained in the bookThe Struggle for a Proletarian Party.
  3. ^Stanley, Sherman (April 1940).India and the Third Camp – viaMarxists Internet Archive.
  4. ^"Workers' Liberty and the "Third Camp"".Workers Liberty. Archived fromthe original on April 16, 2013.
  5. ^Johnson, Alan (Summer 1999)."The Third Camp as History And a Living Legacy".New Politics.7 (3).
  6. ^"Third camp".

Further reading

[edit]

External links

[edit]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Third_camp&oldid=1270799413"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp