On the SWP and the Vietnam Antiwar Move­ment

From an unnumbered Socialist Workers Party Internal Information Bulletin , “Material on the Kirk-Kaye Split,” dated July 1966. Dick Fraser addressed this 13 December 1965 letter from Seattle, Washington to the SWP Political Committee. In February 1966 he was censured by an SWP National Committee (NC) Plenum for circulating the letter to non-NC members. The SWP leadership then began an “investigation” of the Kirk-Kaye tendency, precipitating its split from the SWP in April 1966.

Continued from left column

This task was undertaken by the left wing of SDS [Students for a Dem­ocratic Society], PL [Progressive Labor Party], the May 2nd Move­ment and other non-Trotskyist currents, but especially by the Spar­tacist and Bulletin forces. Our youth move­ment resisted and disrupted the attempts to draw general radical, socialistic conclusions, and became in fact the right wing of the con­fer­ence, in objective pro­gram­matic alliance with the established peace addicts on the “Peace Only” issue, and no amount of compensatory righteousness over the “withdrawal” versus “negotiate” issue can obscure this fact.

The party and youth are thoroughly isolated in their irrational resistance to the universal desire among mili­tant sectors of the antiwar move­ment to reach out to the civil rights move­ment. A high point of the convention was the powerful and mili­tant plea of the delegation from the Mississippi Freedom Dem­ocratic Party for a recognition of the unity of purpose between the antiwar move­ment and the civil rights move­ment. Ignoring this plea the SWP rejected this alliance for supposed “tac­ti­cal” con­sid­era­tions, but it is clear that the chief reason is the party position on black nationalism, i.e., Negroes should keep their move­ment separate from whites, and Negro goals are not yet the busi­ness of the peace move­ment.

2. The Unity Splitters

The party and youth under the hypocritical slo­gan of “unity” of the peace move­ment raised the demand for a single mem­ber­ship organ­iza­tion as the central vehicle for the struggle against the war in Vietnam. This demand proved to be the vehicle to amaze, appall, demoralize and disrupt the con­fer­ence.

Irrespective of the merits of the proposal, the experience of the previous weekend at the Bay Area Conference demonstrated conclusively that this demand was a divisive rather than a unifying issue, and that the main mili­tant tendencies in the antiwar move­ment would not go along with it under any circumstances. To continue to press this issue at the Washington Conference indicated a preconceived plan on the part of the party and youth to divide and splinter the move­ment while shouting “unity.”

This organ­iza­tional demand cannot find accept­ance. It is an organ­iza­tional gimmick which would tend to freeze part of the move­ment at the present stage and force other sections back to a previous stage of devel­op­ment. The tac­ti­cal stupidity of this proposal for a centralized national organ­iza­tion stems from its unreality; it is totally out of tune with the mood of the newly radicalized youth who have a healthy mistrust of centralized organ­iza­tions and of becoming over-concerned with problems of organ­iza­tional structure, except to maintain some local autonomy—until they have found out for sure where they are going polit­ically.

To make matters worse, the proposal itself is entirely without objective polit­ical merit because it is maneuveristic and violates the principle of the united front, the cornerstone of our mass work.

3. The United Front

As against Stalinist attempts to subject inde­pen­dent organ­iza­tions to a single minimum issue or program, or all embracing organ­iza­tion, Trotsky enunciated over and over again the principle of the united front of different organ­iza­tions, which were free to maintain their autonomy and independence. To subordinate inde­pen­dent organ­iza­tions to a single minimum program and per­ma­nent organ­iza­tion is people’s frontism.

A stated motivation of the policy of a new peace-only national mem­ber­ship organ­iza­tion is the aim of cutting off the devel­op­ment of SDS in a socialist direction.

The reality of antiwar politics is that it has pushed the left wing of the SDS into the forefront of socialist politics. The left wing of SDS today represents the most important, largest and most mili­tant radical youth move­ment in the U.S., rapidly moving towards an open socialist program.

Our youth move­ment, an essentially con­ser­va­tive organ­iza­tion, instead of welcoming this devel­op­ment and encouraging it, views it competitively with alarm and hostility. They fear it and are jealous of it. Feeling that they do not have the ideological or polit­ical equipment to compete with it, they want to maneuver it out of existence. Our youth say, in effect, to the SDS, “Socialism is not your busi­ness—you are only rightwing peaceniks. Dissolve your­selves in a single issue peace move­ment. You can be useful there. But leave socialism to our move­ment, which is ordained to be the only young socialist organ­iza­tion in the country.”

The approach of the youth and party leaders to the SDS and other leftward developing currents has a childish-sectarian nature not seen in the radical move­ment for decades, but returning now with a vengeance.

At the Washington Conference, the National Coordinating Committee issued proposals which contained the essence of the principle of the united front. As opposed to this, the party and youth exploded a frantic 4-day factional assault around the Stalinistic demand for a national mem­ber­ship organ­iza­tion, on the spurious grounds that they represented the “masses” or the “inde­pen­dents.”

The NCC, understandably indignant but anxious to prevent a split, revised its proposals closely in accordance with the specific demands of the youth move­ment, retaining only the basic unity front struc­ture rather than the totally unacceptable national mem­ber­ship organ­iza­tion for inde­pen­dents.

However, the party and youth forces were arro­gantly deaf to the concessions of the NCC and blindly pressed on towards virtual split. A new policy of attack, raid and the hell-with-everyone-else has replaced Trotsky’s united front for action.

4. Defeat

The party and youth went into the con­fer­ence with very little real knowledge of the composition, polit­ical character or mood of the antiwar move­ment. They were steeped in fanciful pre­conception and errors, but they had the opportunity to learn something about the real move­ment. They rejected the chance. They didn’t even attend the con­fer­ence proper, except when and where their petty organ­izational proposal could be pushed. The great moments, the polit­ical discussions and mood, the discussion in the various workshops, the evidence of leftward trends, all this they missed, as they raced around organizing essentially a counter-con­fer­ence which in the end turned out to encompass only themselves and a few bewildered followers.

All that the party and youth participants can report about the Washington Conference is what was done and said in their various sectarian cau­cuses.

When one after another of their previous allies publicly dissociated themselves from our youth move­ment and denounced it, the party and youth forces were soundly defeated. Refusing to abide by majority decision they convoked a pre-planned dismal rump convention which set a goal of creating the new organ­iza­tion they had been unable to sell at the con­fer­ence. Like the Stalinists of by-gone days, our troops incurred the wrath of an originally friendly mass move­ment and managed only to capture themselves. The disgrace is now part of the SWP’s public record.

III. Significance

1. Intervention and the “Holding Operation”

The young activists pledged at the last SWP con­vention that they would cease their sectarian, do-nothing, abstentionist policy. The various minori­ties urged them to inter­vene in the living move­ment—to inter­vene ideologically and polit­ically.

The present disruptive organ­iza­tional “inter­ven­tion” is the diametric opposite of the polit­ical inter­ven­tion needed, and merely constitutes another form of the “holding operation” wherein all non-trade-unionistic areas of struggle are regarded as historically unimportant and thereby fair game for contemptuous raids and any old policy.

2. The Political Direction of the Present Current

What is revealed in this episode is a rapid move­ment towards reformism by the youth leadership. The youth move­ment is an essentially petty-bourgeois formation without serious connection with the working class either theo­ret­ically through Marxism or directly through contact or organ­iza­tion. It has now broken out of its precarious con­di­tion of total iso­la­tion and insulation from the mass move­ments of its time, and come into contact with the essentially middle class antiwar move­ment. Its con­ser­va­tism on the draft question, its reluctance to become the champions of the NLF, its refusal to face programmatic questions all demonstrate an affinity with the more con­ser­va­tive layers of the peace move­ment.

Sensitivity to the con­ser­va­tive elements of a middle class move­ment has apparently impelled the youth group itself in a rightward direction with great speed, at the very time that the major sectors of the move­ment are moving rapidly leftward.

Inasmuch as the youth nationally represents the principal base of the party, the velocity of this petty-bourgeois, essentially reformist, current tends to sweep the party along with it.

3. What Is the Source of Policy?

The policies which led to the Thanksgiving disaster were the subject neither of SWP convention debates nor documents, and discussion cannot be summarily refused because the issues were “decided by the convention.” Furthermore, the peace move­ment policy has not been recorded in any com­pre­hen­sive form in any PC minutes. The source of policy in this matter is not precisely clear.

On the contrary, during Comrade Dobbs’ tour stop in Seattle, we reported our local activity and line in the antiwar move­ment (which have, inci­den­tally, met with considerable success), in both public and closed branch discussions. We stated that our emphasis has been the broad polit­icalization of the move­ment towards rev­olu­tion­ary socialism, con­nect­ing it with the civil rights move­ment, the colo­nial revolution, and seeking a relationship with the pro­le­tar­iat.

Comrade Dobbs indicated no point of dis­agree­ment with this policy whatsoever, and it appeared that our local approach corresponded to the major­ity decision of the convention: to polit­icalize and radicalize the antiwar move­ment. Yet two days after Comrade Dobbs’ visit, the youth organizer received a letter from the youth national office that included a criticism of local work for being against the “national policy” of peace only.

What evidently happened in the party was that some branches were actually mobilized as factions in the local peace organ­iza­tions before the rest of the party—or Seattle alone!—was informed of the line.

Who is responsible for our single-issue-national-mem­ber­ship organ­iza­tion program? The NC as a whole has a right to know.

The present crisis of policy is sufficiently acute to warrant an immediate special plenum of the NC to begin to extricate the party, and if possible the youth from a dangerous drift in both organ­iza­tions.

I request an immediate poll of the NC on the holding of a special January plenum.

If the PC has any inclination to begin undoing the momentous harm that has been done both to the party and youth and to the antiwar move­ment, I believe it should adopt the following emergency propositions:

1. To require the national leaders of the youth to disband their National Caucus of Independent Vietnam Committees to set up a new national organ­iza­tion.

2. To issue directives to all SWP branches to do everything in their power to prevent the youth from carrying out its threat to begin to promote its national organ­iza­tion in the local Vietnam com­mit­tees, a threat, which if carried out, will plunge these com­mit­tees into turmoil on subordinate organ­iza­tional questions and result only in the deeper iso­la­tion and disgrace of the youth, the weakening of the com­mit­tees, and an open door for the Du Bois clubs to leadership of the antiwar move­ment.

3. To instruct all branches contemplating or executing disciplinary measures against comrades as a result of this situation, to hold such actions in abeyance until the whole situation has been reviewed by the party.

I am sending under separate cover, the minutes of an all-night meeting of the dele­gates from the South to the Washington Conference which are essential reading material for all NC members. The occasion for the meeting was as follows: the dele­gates from the South were bewildered by the political chaos created largely by the party and youth organ­iza­tional program. Many wanted to leave for home. An all-night meeting was held at which Staughton Lynd was assigned by the NCC to attempt to get them to stay on.

Although some NC members may have had access to this document, I think it should be sent out to all members.



The policy of the PC in the antiwar move­ment had its final result at the Thanksgiving Conference in Washington. Here the party and youth carried on an unprincipled, disruptive and polit­ically reformist struggle against the entire left wing of the antiwar move­ment. They disrupted the con­fer­ence around tertiary organ­iza­tional demands and ended in iso­la­tion and national disgrace. They established an indelible and deserved record for polit­ical con­ser­va­tism and dead-end factionalism. They also emerged as the only tendency present able to ignore and snub the civil rights move­ment.

This episode constitutes a polit­ical catastrophe for the SWP of a magnitude never before experienced by American Trotskyism. If immediate steps are not taken to counteract the effect of this performance, the reaction to it will render the party and youth as contemptible among honest mili­tants as was the CP during its worst days. This can be prevented only by an abrupt change of policy and a public repudiation of the course followed by the party and youth in the antiwar move­ment during the past three months.

The party and the youth entered the con­fer­ence armed with two “principles”:

1. To imprison the antiwar move­ment in the U.S. in the single issue of peace in Vietnam.

2. To manufacture a centralized national mem­ber­ship organ­iza­tion of the inde­pen­dent com­mit­tees on a Peace Only program, to supersede the present united front arrangement.

I contend that such “principles” are alien to rev­olu­tion­ary program and tac­ti­cally impossible to imple­ment given the actual composition and mood of the living antiwar move­ment.

I. The Programmatic Problem

1. Can the Peace Move­ment Stop the War?

The policy of the PC is based upon an unproved and unfounded assumption that the war can be stop­ped by mass peace pressure on the government. This is an illusion unworthy of revolutionists.

The Militant has been saturated with this line for many weeks. Comrade Halstead’s articles constantly refer to the “millions of lives” which are at stake in the decision of the peace move­ment on the “single” versus the “multi-issue” question.

The Nov. 29 Militant editorial of “The Antiwar Conference” gives the line fairly clearly. “The war in Vietnam cannot be ended solely by the activities of local com­mit­tees. A powerful national move­ment will have to be built.”

This concept is even more emphatically stated in a fantasy called “A Draft Perspective for the Antiwar Move­ment.” After advocating the single-issue-national-mem­ber­ship-organ­iza­tion policy, the Draft concludes: “We are convinced that an organ­iza­tion can be built in this country on the basis of the program outlined above, that can be the decisive factor in bringing an end to the genocidal war in Vietnam.”

Comrade Britton, in a youth communication, describes this Draft as one “passed by the Washington Heights CEWV, an upper Manhattan community-based committee in collaboration with individuals, mainly our comrades, in the other New York com­mit­tees listed. It has been circulated in the New York antiwar move­ment to serve primarily an education function in preparation for the Washington convention....Hopefully, the rep­re­sen­ta­tives at the November 18 meeting will approve this statement or a modified version of it....”

The PC, having utterly failed to make a general analysis of the politico-economic conjuncture for the SWP convention, has the totally false impression that the capitalist class has no fundamental stake in this war, and would pull out of it in response to a little more pressure.

While it is true that some of the lackey-columnists close to the administration are assigned to give that impression, it is only a ruse. The ruling class is desperately attempting to create large new investment opportunities and views South Vietnam as a key to the exploitation of East Asia and India. Furthermore, it regards Vietnam as essential to its preparations for an eventual war with China.

This war is fundamental to the economic and polit­ical interest of U.S. cap­ital­ism. No powerful national “Withdraw the Troops” move­ment alone can stop this war.

2. How Can the War Be Ended?

The Militant says, “Bring the GIs Home.” But this only raises another question—how? The party and youth line is that an enlarged peace move­ment can do it by nationally directed pressure and agitation.

In reality, a more tangible and quicker possibility for the withdrawal of U.S. armed forces from Vietnam could be accomplished if the National Liberation Front can drive them into the China Sea. This is the active rev­olu­tion­ary solution to the question. But there is no hint of recognition in our literature that this is the most favorable alternative.

The party and youth leave it to others who are bolder to be partisans of the NLF, others who may lack something in program, theory or experience, but make up for it in the rev­olu­tion­ary spirit of solidarity so dismally absent from the pages of the Militant .

It is doubtful that this war can be ended on domestic initiative by any­thing else than the pro­le­tar­ian revolution. However, short of such a basic explosion, the only force on U.S. soil capable of pressuring the capitalist government out of Vietnam is the pro­le­tar­iat, in the course of its prosecution of the class struggle. To promise and advocate any­thing else is to sow an opportunist illusion.

The Negro move­ment represents that section of the pro­le­tar­iat which is presently in motion and has the initiative. The virile youth move­ment linking up with the Negro move­ment would together comprise a formidable force, agitating sections of the pro­le­tar­iat into action.

Out of this process will emerge a new fused and regrouped rev­olu­tion­ary party composed of radicals from the socialist, antiwar, and civil rights vanguard organ­iza­tions. The appearance and maturing of this devel­op­ment—the process of a fused vanguard stim­ulat­ing the working class into struggle at the point of production—are the only polit­ical realities that Johnson & Co. can respect.

No matter how radical the slogans and broad the composition of the peace move­ment, it will be polit­ically ineffective until it links with the Negro radicals and the working class. To a Trotskyist, under cap­ital­ism, “There Is No Peace!”

3. Towards Coalition Politics

If a “properly organized” peace move­ment can stop a war, then we have been erroneously fighting Stalinism and pacifism on this issue for 30 years. And if we were correct then, and are still correct now with the new “tac­ti­cal” line because times have changed, then the PC is indeed guilty of the old revi­sion­ist habit of reversing a principle because of supposed tac­ti­cal necessity.

This “tac­ti­cal” excitement is a new shocker in SWP practices. Has the party forgotten that the tenacity with which previous peace move­ments clung to reformism was rooted in part in the liberal-Stalinist compulsion to isolate war and peace from the other great social problems? And don’t they similarly isolate civil rights from the questions of war and peace, poverty, imperialism?

The upshot of this traditional limitation of the antiwar move­ment to peace only and the civil rights move­ment to civil rights only has been the incar­cera­tion of both move­ments inside the Dem­ocratic Party, for only the interrelation of all the great social problems makes it possible to identify cap­ital­ism as the cause of any of them and lay the groundwork for inde­pen­dent anti-capitalist polit­ical action.

Now that for the first time in the modern era, mili­tant antiwar youth and mili­tant southern Negroes are seeking to broaden the concept and scope of both the antiwar and civil rights move­ments by integrating their aims and directing an appeal to the pro­le­tar­iat, the party and youth claim that such youth are sectarian splitters of the united peace front!

The capitalist class is profoundly fearful of the possibility of the Negro move­ment identifying itself with the colonial revolution and linking up with the antiwar move­ment around the issue of Vietnam. Every time a Negro leader opens his mouth on Vietnam or colonialism, the entire capitalist press rakes him over the coals with a line quite similar to that of the party and youth: “It’s all right for Negroes to build their own move­ment on their own grievances, but you only injure the cause of civil rights by taking positions on other social problems, because that will alienate your supporters.”

What they mean is that a break from the Dem­ocratic or Republican parties would be the next logical step and this must be prevented at all costs.

Larry Laughlin, one of the prominent co-chairmen of the mili­tant Berkeley VDC [Vietnam Defense Committee], said in his speech to the Seattle committee three weeks ago: “We are disillusioned with protest. We are going to enter politics. We are going to run radical candidates on the twin issues of war and civil rights. We plan a frontal attack on the Dem­ocratic Party which is calculated to break it up. We consider it our duty to shake-up the labor move­ment to a realization of labor’s responsibilities.”

It is quite true that this is not the whole story, that there is a lot of confusion about what a “frontal attack on the Dem­ocratic Party” means, and that for many it includes running candidates in the Dem­ocratic primaries. And, to be sure, danger of coa­li­tion politics exists. However, the proposed treatment prescribed by the party and youth does nothing to counteract coa­li­tion politics.

The party and youth claim that if we permit issues other than peace to enter into the present move­ment the Stalinists will utilize the circum­stances to take the move­ment into the Dem­ocratic Party. This argument not only stands the thing on its head, but fails to grapple with the reality.

In the first place, the antiwar move­ment is going into politics whether we like it or not, and its only chance to avoid the trap of people’s frontism is not to avoid politics, but precisely to relate the war question to the other social problems and create an over-all anti-capitalist polit­ical philosophy.

The newly radicalized elements, many of them polit­ically naive, are still people moving rapidly left­ward who desperately require the inter­ven­tion of rev­olu­tion­ary socialists on the big polit­ical questions to aid their devel­op­ment.

In so far as the youth move­ment is successful in confining the move­ment to peace only, it will insure a strong devel­op­ment of people’s frontism, because a move­ment which is orientated exclusively to the peace issue inevitably winds up supporting “peace” Democrats.

II. Tactics and Organization Forms

1. A Radical Peace Move­ment and a Conservative Youth Move­ment

The “single” vs “multi-issue” position of the party and youth is not only wrong polit­ically, but tac­ti­cally blind, revealing a complete lack of knowledge of the actual polit­ical con­di­tion of the move­ment, which is far more sophisticated and advanced than the party and youth comprehend.

The party and youth have now been active in this move­ment for a few months, and in some cases a few weeks. Yet they presume to dictate to the move­ment a scheme for stopping the war which has no plausible chance for success and which the antiwar mili­tants had two years ago, but have now discarded, realizing that they must integrate the antiwar move­ment with the colonial revolution, the Negro struggle, economic problems of the working class—in short, make a class-struggle inter­na­tion­alist move­ment of it. The party and youth demand that they return to their polit­ical infancy of two years ago and wait for the masses to catch up.

Those who have led the antiwar move­ment during the past two years in protest marches and dem­on­stra­tions are now coming to the realization that the White House and Pentagon are impervious to any amount of protest or public opinion, intend to stay in Vietnam until every square foot of soil has been churned by bombs, every leaf of foliage laid to waste and every man, woman and child murdered, if necessary. The ruling class is clearly prepared to go to any lengths of domestic policing and terror to prevent obstruction of the war. The antiwar mili­tants now understand that something more basic than even powerful single-issue routine protest must be organized.

The Washington Conference represented objec­tively an attempt by newly radicalized youth to begin reaching general anti-capitalist conclusions derived from the past two years of protest. Even the newest CEWVs [Committee to End the War in Vietnam] are ripe for rev­olu­tion­ary conclusions. The rapid leftward devel­op­ment of large sections of this move­ment clearly opened up the perspective for the creation of a mass rev­olu­tion­ary youth move­ment in this country.

The main and only responsibility of the rev­olu­tion­ary socialists at this con­fer­ence was to attempt to broaden and deepen and generalize the anti-capitalist sentiments—to raise the polit­ical level of the move­ment.