Mar 24, 2026

In full: the following is the text of a lecture delivered by World Socialist Web Site International Editorial Board Chairman David North at Humboldt University in Berlin, Germany, on March 24, 2026.

American imperialism and the oppression of Iran

On February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel, without even a formal declaration of war, launched a massive attack on Iran, striking military bases, government facilities and cities across the country. Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was killed in the initial assault, along with numerous other officials and an unknown number of civilians. Schools, hospitals, and cultural heritage sites were damaged or destroyed.

Within days, the United States had dropped 5,000-pound bunker-buster bombs on Iranian missile sites along the Strait of Hormuz. A US submarine torpedoed and sank the Iranian frigate IRIS Dena in the Indian Ocean, a vessel the Pentagon knew to be unarmed, as it was returning from a multinational naval exercise that required participating ships to carry no ammunition. Eighty crew members were killed. It was the first ship sunk by an American submarine since World War II.

As of this lecture, the war has been underway for more than three weeks. More than 1,500 people have been killed in Iran, including at least 160 in an American missile strike on a girls’ school. Over 4,000 civilian buildings have been damaged. In self-defense, Iran has responded with missile and drone strikes across the Gulf region, hitting targets in Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The Strait of Hormuz, through which one-fifth of the world’s oil ordinarily flows, has been effectively closed. Oil prices have surged past $110 a barrel. The International Energy Agency has described the situation as the “greatest global energy security challenge in history.” Twenty thousand seafarers are stranded in the Gulf. International shipping has ground to a halt.

President Trump has demanded Iran’s “unconditional surrender.” He has threatened to strike Iran’s nuclear plants and power grid. He has declared that regime change “will happen.” The United States Defense Secretary has said the military will not relent until “the enemy is totally and decisively defeated.” American intelligence’s own assessments, meanwhile, have concluded that Iran’s alleged long-range ballistic missile threat to the United States is unfounded, with such capabilities requiring development until at least 2035.

The attack was launched on the very night that Omani mediators reported major progress in nuclear negotiations and that Iran had agreed, in principle, to zero out its enriched uranium stockpile. Iran’s foreign minister had publicly stated that a “historic” agreement to avert war was “within reach.” The United States chose war over a negotiated settlement.

The danger of a widening conflagration is not hypothetical, but rather an active variable in the calculations of every government on earth.

The historical parallel that imposes itself is not the Gulf War of 1991 or the invasion of Iraq in 2003, but August 1914. The First World War began as a regional conflict in the Balkans and expanded, through the logic of alliances, imperial rivalries and miscalculation, into a global catastrophe that destroyed four empires and killed 20 million people.

The mechanisms of escalation in the present crisis are no less dangerous. The interconnection of the Iran war with the conflicts in Ukraine, the South China Sea and the broader US confrontation with both Russia and China means that a single incident—a stray missile striking a NATO member, a naval confrontation in the Gulf, an attack on a nuclear facility—could trigger a chain of events that no government has the capacity to control. The working class and all of humanity confront a situation that Trotsky described so prophetically on the eve of World War II. The ruling class “now toboggans with closed eyes toward an economic and military catastrophe.”

This war is “a crime against peace,” the first and most fundamental charge in the indictment brought against the Nazi leadership at the International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1945–46. Of the 22 defendants tried at Nuremberg, 13 were found guilty of waging wars of aggression. Eleven were hanged on October 16, 1946. Hermann Goering, Hitler’s second-in-command, escaped the noose by swallowing cyanide hours before his scheduled execution.

The chief American prosecutor at Nuremberg, Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson, opened the trial with words that remain the most authoritative statement of the principle that international law binds the powerful no less than the powerless. “The privilege of opening the first trial in history for crimes against the peace of the world imposes a grave responsibility,” Jackson declared. “The wrongs which we seek to condemn and punish have been so calculated, so malignant, and so devastating, that civilization cannot tolerate their being ignored, because it cannot survive their being repeated.”

Jackson insisted that the law established at Nuremberg could not be applied selectively. “While this law is first applied against German aggressors,” he wrote, “the law includes, and if it is to serve a useful purpose it must condemn aggression by any other nations, including those which sit here now in judgment.” And he stated, with a bluntness that indicts the entire subsequent history of American foreign policy, “Any resort to war—to any kind of a war—is a resort to means that are inherently criminal. An honestly defensive war is, of course, legal. But inherently criminal acts cannot be defended by showing that those who committed them were engaged in a war, when war itself is illegal.”

By the standard Jackson articulated and the Tribunal enforced, the war against Iran is an aggressive war, launched without provocation, without authorization from the United Nations Security Council, without a declaration of war by the US Congress, and in violation of the United Nations Charter, which prohibits the use of force against the territorial integrity of any state. Iran had not attacked the United States. It posed no imminent threat to the United States. It was in the process of negotiating a comprehensive agreement.

The European imperialist powers are entirely complicit in this crime. Their differences with Washington, to the extent that they exist, are of a purely tactical character. The European Union issued a statement on March 1 that did not condemn the US-Israeli surprise attack but instead denounced Iran’s retaliatory strikes as “inexcusable.” The European Council “strongly condemned Iran’s indiscriminate military strikes” while calling only for “maximum restraint” and the “protection of civilians”—language addressed to both sides as though the aggressor and the victim of aggression were morally equivalent. Germany’s Chancellor Merz described Iran as a “major security threat” and argued that decades of diplomacy had failed. France deployed its aircraft carrier to the region to “protect French interests.”

For four years, these same European governments have denounced what they call Russia’s “unprovoked war” against Ukraine—a war that was, in fact, hardly unprovoked, having arisen directly out of the relentless eastward expansion of NATO and the systematic effort to transform Ukraine into a forward base of operations against Russia. But let us accept, for the sake of argument, the Europeans’ own framing. They have invoked international law, the sanctity of sovereignty and the inviolability of borders. They have imposed sweeping sanctions on Russia and supplied Ukraine with tens of billions of dollars in weapons. Yet confronted with an indisputably unprovoked war launched by their principal ally against a nation of 91 million people—a war that has killed more than 1,500 civilians, closed the world’s most important shipping lane, and threatens nuclear catastrophe—they have not uttered a single word of opposition. The “rules-based international order” has been exposed, once again, as a euphemism for the right of the imperialist powers to make war on whomever they choose.

It is necessary to address the narrative that has come to dominate virtually all public discussion of this war—on both the right and the left. That narrative holds that the war against Iran is to be explained primarily, and in some versions exclusively, as the product of Israeli and Zionist influence over American foreign policy. According to this account, the United States has no independent interest in conflict with Iran, was manipulated or coerced into the war by Benjamin Netanyahu and the Israeli lobby, and would pursue an entirely different course in the Middle East if freed from this malign influence.

This interpretation has been advanced most aggressively by figures on the nationalist right. Tucker Carlson, the most influential voice in this camp, declared on March 3, 2026: “This happened because Israel wanted it to happen. This is Israel’s war. This is not the United States’ war.” Carlson went further, asserting that “The United States didn’t make the decision here. Benjamin Netanyahu did.”

Colonel Douglas MacGregor, former adviser to the Secretary of Defense, has argued in the same vein. Speaking two days before the war began, MacGregor stated, “I think he recognizes that he has not much choice. We have to understand who put him into the White House and the enormous power and influence of the Israel lobby and the Zionist billionaires in the United States that contribute to it.” In a post on social media after the war began, MacGregor asked, “For what? So Israel that started this insane war can drag Americans into a wider regional conflict?”

This narrative has been largely accepted, with varying degrees of sophistication, by the left-liberal opposition as well. Jeffrey Sachs, the Columbia University economist, has described the war as driven by “two malignant narcissists, Netanyahu and Trump,” and frames the conflict primarily as an Israeli project for “Greater Israel” and regional hegemony. Figures such as Max Blumenthal and Chris Hedges, and organizations like CodePink, which adopted the slogan “We won’t die for Israel’s war,” have framed the conflict in essentially the same terms as the nationalist right, that is, as a war fought for Israel, not America.

There is no question that the Israeli lobby is real and that it expends immense resources to influence American policy. There is also no question that Israel has sought this war for decades, that Netanyahu provided the intelligence on Khamenei’s location that made the February 28 strike possible, and that the Israeli regime, which has practiced genocide in Gaza and whose character is increasingly and unmistakably fascistic, bears enormous responsibility for the catastrophe now engulfing the Middle East.

The World Socialist Web Site has been second to none in its opposition to the Israeli state, an opposition that dates back to 1948, when the Fourth International opposed the formation of the state of Israel. The struggle, ideological and political, waged by Marxism against Zionism dates all the way back to the 1880s. Trotsky himself described Zionism as the promotion of a reactionary utopia, with potentially catastrophic consequences. His warning has been realized.

However, the explanation of the war as not only primarily but even solely a product of Zionist influence is profoundly wrong—not only as a historical analysis, but as a political perspective. It leads, whether its proponents intend it or not, to an apology for and even alignment with American imperialism. If the problem is Israeli influence, then the solution is to remove that influence and replace it with a “good” foreign policy that defends genuine “All-American” interests. Foreign policy becomes a matter of hygiene—of purging a foreign contaminant from an otherwise healthy body politic. This perspective is closely related to the reactionary, and essentially antisemitic, tradition that asserts a fundamental distinction between healthy and productive Christian capitalism and parasitic, usurious, Jewish-dominated finance capital. It is no accident that Carlson’s commentary has migrated, within days, from criticism of Israel’s foreign policy to conspiracy theories about Jewish control of the American state.

In the case of the present war, the Israel-centric narrative detaches the conflict from any coherent historical, geopolitical, socioeconomic and class analysis of its origins, causes, and aims. It essentially abandons imperialism as an analytical framework. It entirely ignores the long and pernicious role of British, German and finally American imperialism in the oppression of Persia-Iran. The issue of oil—the material foundation of the entire conflict—is pushed into the background. It totally disconnects this war from the protracted struggle waged by the United States against Iran since 1979, aimed at reversing the results of the Iranian Revolution, which has included vicious financial sanctions, military attacks, the use of proxies—Iraq and Israel, as well as the Gulf States—and, finally, the past 35 years of wars waged by the United States and its NATO allies across the Middle East, North Africa and Central Asia.

Moreover, the Israel-centric interpretation severs the link between this war and the ongoing preparations of the United States for war against Russia and China. As the World Socialist Web Site has stressed, the aim of the United States is to abolish all the residual traces of the social and democratic revolutions of the 20th century, and to reorganize the world under the hegemonic control of the United States. This project is driven not simply by evil intentions, let alone the madness and criminality of Donald Trump, but by the imperatives of American capitalism to reverse the protracted deterioration of the global financial position of the United States through war.

Trump himself was brought to power by the American ruling class. His presidency is the product not of a popular insurgency but of the deliberate decision by dominant sections of the financial oligarchy to install in the White House a figure willing to employ the methods of the criminal underworld in the conduct of both domestic and foreign policy. The Epstein affair, in which a vast section of the financial and political elite is implicated in crimes of the most sordid character, offers a glimpse into the social milieu from which this administration emerged.

The war against Iran is being conducted by a government that is itself the expression of the terminal degeneration of American bourgeois democracy. Inseparably connected to the global imperatives of American capitalism is the use of war as a means of violently suppressing domestic working class opposition to the ruling capitalist oligarchy and the entire structure of capitalist exploitation.

The war in Iran, which followed the attack on Venezuela and the ongoing efforts to strangle Cuba, neither of which is related to Zionist interests, has developed against the backdrop of the fascistic paramilitary violence of ICE, which has included the murder of American citizens and the brutal persecution of the immigrant population. The logic of this war is not merely the logic of the Israeli lobby. It is the logic of imperialism in its epoch of historical crisis.

To demonstrate this, one must review the actual history of the American relationship with Iran, a history that long predates the modern Israeli state and that is rooted not in Zionist machinations but in oil, geopolitical control and the class interests of American capitalism.

To understand why the United States has been waging war—economic, covert, and now openly military—against Iran for nearly half a century, one must begin not with ideology but with geography. Iran sits at the intersection of three critical zones of the world economy: Central Asia, South Asia and the Persian Gulf. It possesses the world’s fourth-largest proven oil reserves and the second-largest natural gas reserves. Moreover, Iran commands the northern shore of the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow passage through which, prior to the current war, approximately 20 percent of the world’s oil supply transited daily.

No serious strategist in Washington has ever failed to understand this. The struggle over Iran has never been, in its essence, about terrorism, about nuclear weapons, about human rights or about Israel. These have all served as pretexts, rationalizations and instruments. The fundamental issue has always been who controls the oil resources of the Persian Gulf, and on what terms.

The imperialist powers grasped this long before the United States entered the scene. Britain began extracting Iranian oil in 1908 through the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, which became the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company and, eventually, British Petroleum. For the first half of the 20th century, Iran was effectively a British semi-colony. Its oil wealth was extracted by a foreign corporation, its politics were shaped by the British embassy and its sovereignty was nominal.

Germany, too, recognized Iran’s strategic importance. Under the Kaiser, German capital competed for influence in Persia as part of the broader rivalry with Britain, a rivalry that contributed to the outbreak of the First World War. During the Second World War, the Nazis cultivated relations with Reza Shah Pahlavi, whose germanophile tendencies alarmed the Allies sufficiently to justify the Anglo-Soviet invasion of 1941. The British seized the southern oil fields; the Soviets occupied the north. Iran’s sovereignty was, as so often, dispensed with when it conflicted with great-power interests. It was into this arena of inter-imperialist competition that the United States entered during the Second World War—and it has never left.

This is not a secret. The 2025 National Security Strategy of the United States stated it with unusual candor: “America will always have core interests in ensuring that Gulf energy supplies do not fall into the hands of an outright enemy, and that the Strait of Hormuz remain open.” That single sentence, written by Trump’s own national security apparatus, demolishes the claim that the United States has no independent interest in a war against Iran.

The strategic importance of Iran to American imperialism was recognized not in 1979, and not in 2001, but during the Second World War. In November 1943, Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin convened at the Tehran Conference—the first meeting of the Big Three—in the capital of Iran. The choice of location was itself significant. Iran had been jointly invaded and occupied by Britain and the Soviet Union in August 1941, and it served as the critical supply corridor through which American Lend-Lease material reached the Soviet front.

At Tehran, the three leaders issued a joint declaration pledging to respect Iran’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity, and promising economic assistance after the war. But the conference also forced Roosevelt to confront a reality that would shape American grand strategy for the next eight decades, that whoever controlled Iran controlled the gateway to the richest oil reserves on earth.

The first great-power confrontation of the Cold War did not occur in Berlin or Korea. It occurred in Iran. Under the wartime occupation agreement, all Allied forces were to withdraw from Iran within six months after the end of hostilities. The United States and Britain withdrew on schedule.

The Truman administration, which had adopted a posture of “toughness” toward the former wartime ally, treated the Iranian crisis as a test case for the emerging doctrine of containment. The United States pressured the Soviet Union through the newly created United Nations Security Council—one of the first issues the body ever considered—and through direct diplomatic confrontation. Under combined pressure, the Soviets withdrew in May 1946.

The significance of this episode cannot be overstated. Iran was the first arena in which the United States asserted its will against the USSR and prevailed. It established the pattern—the defense of Western access to Persian Gulf oil as a core strategic imperative—that has governed American policy in the region ever since. And it established Iran as an American client state, a status that would be formalized and deepened over the next three decades.

The critical episode in the history of US-Iran relations, the one that explains everything that followed, occurred on August 19, 1953, when the CIA and British intelligence overthrew the democratically elected government of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh and reinstalled the Shah as Iran’s absolute ruler.

Mossadegh’s offense was that he had nationalized Iran’s oil industry. Since 1908, the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company had extracted Iran’s oil wealth while paying the Iranian government a fraction of the revenue. When Mossadegh moved to reclaim national control of this resource, Britain imposed an embargo and blockade and then turned to the United States for assistance in removing him from power.

The Eisenhower administration, presented with the opportunity by the British and motivated by both Cold War fears and the desire of American oil companies to gain access to Iranian concessions, authorized the CIA to execute the coup. The operation, codenamed Ajax, was led by Kermit Roosevelt Jr.—grandson of Theodore Roosevelt and cousin of the CIA agent Archibald Roosevelt Jr., who would later surface as an adviser to David Rockefeller at Chase Manhattan Bank. Some 300 people were killed in the fighting in Tehran.

In the coup’s aftermath, the Shah consolidated absolute power. The secret police, SAVAK, was created with CIA and Israeli Mossad assistance. Major General Norman Schwarzkopf Sr., father of the Gulf War commander, was sent by the CIA to train the security forces that would enforce the Shah’s rule. Oil was reorganized under a new consortium in which five American companies now shared the spoils alongside the renamed British Petroleum, Shell and French interests. The crushing of Iran’s democratic experiment had served its purpose. American capital now had direct access to Iranian oil.

The claim that the United States has “no interest” in conflict with Iran is refuted not only by the historical record but by the US government’s own classified and published strategic documents, which have identified Iran as a critical American interest, and as a threat, continuously since the 1950s.

The documentary trail begins immediately after the 1953 coup. NSC 5402/1, the first comprehensive statement of US policy toward Iran after Mossadegh’s overthrow, established the framework. Iran was to be maintained as a pro-Western client state, its military supported, its oil flowing to Western markets. By 1958, NSC 5821/1, adopted by the Eisenhower National Security Council, stated the matter with characteristic bluntness. It stated, “Iran’s strategic location between the USSR and the Persian Gulf and its great oil reserves make it critically important to the United States that Iran’s friendship, independence and territorial integrity be maintained.” The document authorized the employment of American armed forces to protect Iran’s territorial integrity and political independence.

From 1953 until 1979, the Shah served as Washington’s “Gendarme of the Persian Gulf”—the phrase used in American strategic doctrine following the Nixon Doctrine of 1969, which held that regional allies, rather than American ground forces, should police the developing world on Washington’s behalf. Between 1970 and 1978, the Shah ordered $20 billion worth of American arms—what one member of Congress called “the most rapid build-up of military power under peacetime conditions of any nation in the history of the world.” Iran became the single largest customer for US arms exports. Grumman, Bell Helicopter, Northrop, Rockwell International and dozens of other American defense contractors made billions from the relationship. By 1973, an estimated 3,600 American technicians were working on arms-related projects inside Iran, with the number projected to reach 25,000 by 1980.

Chase Manhattan Bank, under David Rockefeller, syndicated more than $1.7 billion in loans for Iranian public projects, approximately $5.8 billion in today’s dollars. The Chase balance sheet held over $360 million in direct loans to Iran and more than $500 million in Iranian deposits. The financial, military and intelligence relationship between the United States and the Shah’s regime was not a diplomatic alliance in the ordinary sense. It was a system of imperial extraction and control, lubricated by arms sales and banking profits, enforced by a secret police trained by the CIA, and justified by the Cold War.

SAVAK, the instrument of internal repression, was notorious. It operated with what the record describes as a “loose leash” to employ torture against suspected dissidents. Hundreds of people were executed for political reasons during the Shah’s final two decades in power. Thousands were imprisoned. And the population of Iran knew that the Shah’s power rested not on any domestic legitimacy but on the 1953 coup and the continuing support of the United States.

The American relationship with the Shah did not exist in isolation. It was embedded in a broader Western alliance in which the major European powers, and particularly the Federal Republic of Germany, were willing and profitable partners. Under Chancellors Adenauer, Erhard and Kiesinger, the West German government cultivated close relations with the Shah’s regime. Germany was a major trading partner and investor in Iranian infrastructure. The West German government received the Shah with the full honors of a democratic ally, despite his well-documented record of political repression, torture and murder. The Shah was anti-communist, he had oil to sell, and that was sufficient.

The complicity of the German state in the Shah’s dictatorship was clearly exposed on June 2, 1967, when the Shah visited West Berlin during the chancellorship of Kurt Georg Kiesinger—himself a former member of the Nazi Party. Students and exiled Iranians organized a protest near the Deutsche Oper, where the Shah was attending a performance of Mozart’s The Magic Flute. Agents of SAVAK, the Shah’s secret police, operating under the protection of the Berlin police, attacked the demonstrators with wooden staves.

The police then launched what the journalist Sebastian Haffner described as “a cold-bloodedly planned pogrom of a type which remained an exception even in the concentration camps of the Third Reich.” The conservative Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung concluded that the police had “without any serious necessity responded with the planned brutality one associates with newspaper reports from fascist or semi-fascist countries.”

During the assault, 26-year-old student Benno Ohnesorg—married, with his wife expecting their first child, and attending his first political demonstration—was cornered in a courtyard. Three policemen held him while plainclothes detective Karl-Heinz Kurras shot him in the back of the head. Ohnesorg was unarmed. He had attacked no one. Hospital records were falsified, and an attempt was made to conceal the bullet wound. Kurras was tried and acquitted. It was not the West Berlin police chief’s methods that were anomalous; Erich Duensing had been a staff officer in the Wehrmacht under Nazi Germany.

The murder of Benno Ohnesorg became the catalytic event of the German student movement and the broader radicalization of 1968. But for the purposes of this lecture, its significance lies elsewhere. It demonstrated that the Shah’s apparatus of repression operated not only inside Iran but on the streets of Western capitals, with the active complicity of Western governments. The dictatorship that the United States had installed in 1953 was maintained not only by American arms and American money but by the collaborative support of the entire Western imperialist alliance.

When the revolution came in January-February 1979, it represented one of the most devastating strategic defeats suffered by American imperialism in the postwar era, comparable in its consequences, though not in its form, to the loss of China in 1949. In a matter of weeks, the United States lost its most powerful regional ally, its principal intelligence platform overlooking the Soviet Union’s southern border, its largest arms customer, its gendarme of the Persian Gulf, and the cooperative framework through which American and British capital extracted Iranian oil wealth. The entire architecture of American power in the Gulf region, painstakingly constructed since 1946, collapsed.

The revolution was driven by decades of accumulated grievances against the Shah’s autocracy, his SAVAK secret police, the vast corruption of the royal court, the dislocations produced by rapid but uneven modernization and the suffocating inequality of a society in which oil wealth enriched a tiny elite while millions lived in poverty. But the United States was inseparable from the Shah in the Iranian popular consciousness. The 1953 coup was a living memory. The tens of thousands of American military and corporate personnel in the country were a visible daily presence. The revolution, whatever its internal dynamics, was inevitably experienced as a liberation from American domination.

It is this loss—not any subsequent Iranian action—that explains the 46-year campaign of hostility that followed. The United States has never accepted the outcome of the Iranian Revolution. Every subsequent policy—the support for Iraq in the Iran-Iraq War, the destruction of Iran’s navy, the shooting down of a civilian airliner, the decades of sanctions, the assassination of Soleimani, the bombing of nuclear facilities and now the full-scale war of 2026—has been directed toward a single goal: reversing the strategic defeat of 1979, either by bringing Iran back under American control or by destroying its capacity to function as an independent state.

The Carter Doctrine of 1980, announced in the wake of the revolution and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, declared that any attempt by an outside force to gain control of the Persian Gulf region would be regarded as an assault on the vital interests of the United States and would be repelled by military force. This doctrine has never been rescinded. In January 2002, Bush designated Iran part of an “Axis of Evil,” at a moment when Iran was actively cooperating with the US against the Taliban. The 2006 National Security Strategy warned that “all necessary measures” would be taken against Iran. The 2017 strategy named Iran alongside North Korea as a rogue state. The 2025 National Security Strategy, as noted earlier, designated Iran an “outright enemy” and identified Gulf energy as a core American interest. The 2026 National Defense Authorization Act, passed with bipartisan congressional support, named Iran as a US adversary.

Iran has been among the top five most-referenced countries in every strategy document since 2006. This is not a function of any single president or party, and it is not a product of the Israeli lobby. It is an institutional consensus of the American national security state, maintained across four decades, rooted in the material interests of American capitalism in Persian Gulf energy resources and regional military hegemony.

The geopolitical and economic interests that drive US policy toward Iran are hidden from the American people. In the imperialist narrative that dominates the US media, Iran is cast as the ruthless aggressor against a blameless America. According to this narrative, Iranian “terrorism” began with the unprovoked seizure of the US embassy in Tehran and taking of hostages in November 1979.

The immediate trigger for the hostage crisis that formalized the US-Iran rupture deserves close examination, because it reveals the class interests that drove American policy from the very beginning.

After the Shah fled Iran in January 1979, President Carter initially refused to admit him to the United States. Carter wanted to establish relations with the new government and was warned by his own embassy staff that admitting the Shah would endanger American diplomats in Tehran. The chargé d’affaires, Bruce Laingen, explicitly warned that the risk of the embassy being overrun was high. Carter himself, at a key meeting, asked his advisers what they would tell him to do “after the embassy was overrun”—acknowledging that he understood the likely consequence.

What changed Carter’s mind was not humanitarianism but a sustained lobbying campaign organized by David Rockefeller, chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank. Rockefeller’s team called the operation “Project Eagle.” He mobilized Henry Kissinger, who chaired a Chase advisory board; John J. McCloy, a future Chase chairman and adviser to eight presidents; Archibald Roosevelt Jr., a Chase executive and former CIA agent whose cousin had orchestrated the 1953 coup; and Richard Helms, former CIA director and former ambassador to Iran. The overlap between the CIA network that had installed the Shah in 1953 and the banking network that lobbied to protect its investment in his regime was not coincidental. It was the same network.

Rockefeller’s financial interest was direct and substantial. Chase held over $1 billion in Iranian assets. The new Iranian government was demanding the return of these assets. A withdrawal of that magnitude could have created a liquidity crisis for a bank already struggling with financial difficulties. Rockefeller had every reason to prevent the normalization of US-Iranian relations.

Carter was also misled about the Shah’s medical condition. He was told the Shah was near death and could only be treated in New York. The examining physician subsequently confirmed that neither claim was true. The treatment could have been provided anywhere, including Mexico, where the Shah was already residing. On October 21, 1979, Carter admitted the Shah. Twelve days later, the embassy was seized.

After the seizure, Chase’s actions further inflamed the crisis. The bank refused to accept a $4 million interest payment from Iran on its due date, then unilaterally declared the Iranian government in default on the entire loan without consulting the other banks in the syndicate, and seized Iranian accounts. The White House was not informed in advance. The Special Coordination Committee rushed to the Situation Room to deal with a crisis that a private bank had escalated on its own initiative.

The hostage crisis became the founding grievance of American hostility toward Iran. But its proximate cause was a decision driven by the financial interests of American capital—specifically, the determination of Chase Manhattan Bank and its chairman to protect billions of dollars in assets tied to the fallen Shah.

Within a year of the revolution, Iraq invaded Iran in September 1980, and the United States sided with the aggressor. The Reagan administration determined that Iraq’s defeat would be contrary to US interests in the Persian Gulf. A National Security Decision Directive of November 1983 made the objective explicit, to project American military force in the Gulf and protect oil supplies.

On December 20, 1983, President Reagan dispatched Donald Rumsfeld to Baghdad as his special envoy. Rumsfeld met with Saddam Hussein for 90 minutes, and the two men shook hands for the cameras—a handshake that became one of the iconic images of American foreign policy. At the time of Rumsfeld’s visit, the United States was secretly aware that Iraq was using chemical weapons against Iranian soldiers on an almost daily basis. There is evidence that the battlefield intelligence provided by the US helped Iraq calibrate its gas attacks more effectively. Rumsfeld did not raise the issue of chemical weapons with Saddam. Full diplomatic relations between Washington and Baghdad were restored 11 months later.

The Reagan administration removed Iraq from the State Department’s list of state sponsors of terrorism in 1984—the same year it placed Iran on that list. The US Senate Banking Committee subsequently documented that the Reagan and George H. W. Bush administrations authorized the sale to Iraq of dual-use items, including chemical precursors and biological agents such as anthrax and bubonic plague. The administration also engineered the sale of Bell helicopters, ostensibly for civilian use; Saddam’s military used them to attack Kurdish civilians with poison gas in 1988.

When the US Senate unanimously passed sweeping sanctions against Iraq in response to the gassing of the Kurds, the White House killed the measure. The United States defended Saddam Hussein’s use of chemical weapons until the very day Iraq invaded Kuwait in August 1990.

As Saddam Hussein should have foreseen, his collaboration with US imperialism did not protect him against US reprisals after he transgressed against American oil interests in Kuwait. Eventually, Hussein’s life ended at the end of an American rope.

In 1987, the US launched Operation Earnest Will to escort Kuwaiti tankers—Kuwait being one of Iraq’s principal financial backers—through the Persian Gulf. In April 1988, the US launched Operation Praying Mantis, the largest American naval engagement since World War II, which destroyed a significant portion of Iran’s navy. Three months later, the USS Vincennes shot down Iran Air Flight 655, a civilian airliner on a scheduled route to Dubai, killing all 290 passengers and crew. The United States never formally apologized. The commanding officer was later awarded the Legion of Merit.

Alongside the military violence, the United States waged a parallel war of economic destruction that has been continuous and cumulative since 1979.

The Clinton administration imposed a comprehensive trade embargo in 1995–96 and introduced secondary sanctions—the first attempt to dictate the commercial behavior of third countries. The decisive escalation came in 2010–12, when the Obama administration leveraged the dominance of the dollar to compel countries to reduce their Iranian oil imports or lose access to the American financial system. Iranian oil exports fell from 2.2 million barrels per day to 860,000. The economy contracted by 6.6 percent in 2012. The rial collapsed. Inflation reached 45 percent.

The 2015 nuclear deal, the JCPOA, produced a brief reprieve: 12.5 percent GDP growth in 2016. Then Trump withdrew from the agreement in 2018, despite Iran’s compliance, and reimposed everything. Oil exports collapsed by over 60 percent. The rial fell from 37,000 to the dollar to over 120,000. Per capita GDP dropped from $8,000 to $5,000 between 2012 and 2024. By 2024, 57 percent of Iranians were experiencing malnourishment. Seven million were going hungry.

US sanctions on Iran are, by the Congressional Research Service’s assessment, “arguably the most extensive and comprehensive set of sanctions that the United States maintains on any country.” They target every major sector of the Iranian economy. As one sanctions researcher observed, “Economic sanctions make authoritarian regimes more authoritarian.” The sanctions eroded Iran’s middle class while strengthening the security state.

This war marks an irrevocable turning point. The world that existed before February 28, 2026, is gone. The criminality of the entire “rules-based international order” has been laid bare for the world to see. An entire nation has been subjected to saturation bombing by the world’s most powerful military, in an act of unprovoked aggression, while the “international community” watches in silence or offers its complicity.

Consider the historical trajectory. When Nazi Germany bombed the Basque town of Guernica in April 1937, the horror reverberated around the world. Picasso painted his masterpiece in response. When the Luftwaffe bombed Rotterdam in May 1940, killing nearly 900 people, it was denounced as an act of barbarism that shocked civilized opinion. Today, the United States and Israel are conducting a sustained aerial campaign against Iranian cities—more than a thousand civilians killed, thousands of buildings reduced to rubble, a girls’ school obliterated—and the response of the so-called democratic world is to condemn Iran for firing back.

This is not a matter of warning about World War III, as though it were some future eventuality that might still be averted by appeals to reason or the election of better leaders. We are witnessing its rapid intensification. Ukraine, Gaza, Venezuela and Iran are not separate conflicts. They are fronts in a single global war being waged by American imperialism and its allies to reorganize the world under their hegemonic control, to abolish the residual traces of the social and democratic revolutions of the 20th century, and to crush, by force, any state or movement that resists subordination to the dictates of Washington and Wall Street.

We live in a world that Lenin, Luxemburg, Liebknecht and, above all, Trotsky would understand very well. The same contradictions they analyzed—between the global character of the productive forces and the nation-state system, between the social character of production and the private appropriation of wealth, between the drive of each imperialist power to dominate and the impossibility of any single power achieving unchallenged hegemony—are driving the world toward catastrophe with the same remorseless logic they described a century ago.

The struggle against war is an international question. It cannot be waged only within national boundaries, and it cannot be entrusted to any existing government. No amount of protest, however massive, directed at the existing capitalist states will stop the drive to war. The mass demonstrations of 2003 did not stop the invasion of Iraq. The worldwide outcry against the genocide in Gaza did not stop it. Appeals to the “rules-based order” will not stop the bombing of Iran. They will not stop the relentless escalation toward nuclear war.

The decisive question—the only question that ultimately matters—is the development of revolutionary leadership in the international working class. This is not a new insight. It was the central conclusion drawn by Leon Trotsky from the catastrophes of the first half of the 20th century, and it has lost none of its force. In the founding document of the Fourth International, the Transitional Program of 1938, Trotsky wrote:

All talk to the effect that historical conditions have not yet “ripened” for socialism is the product of ignorance or conscious deception. The objective prerequisites for the proletarian revolution have not only “ripened”; they have begun to get somewhat rotten. Without a socialist revolution, in the next historical period at that, a catastrophe threatens the whole culture of mankind. The turn is now to the proletariat, i.e., chiefly to its revolutionary vanguard. The historical crisis of mankind is reduced to the crisis of the revolutionary leadership.

That assessment, written on the eve of the Second World War, defines with even greater precision the crisis of the present moment. The objective conditions for the overthrow of capitalism are not merely ripe, they are, as Trotsky warned, beginning to rot. The alternative is not reform or revolution, but revolution or catastrophe. The task of building the revolutionary leadership of the working class—the International Committee of the Fourth International and its sections—is the urgent, overriding, and inescapable political task of our time.

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. Trump sends ICE thugs into major airports, threatens National Guard deployment ahead of 2026 midterms

It is unclear exactly why some of the airports were chosen. While several, such as Atlanta’s airport, are among the busiest in the country and have experienced significant delays during the more than six-week partial government shutdown, others are comparatively small and have not faced the same level of disruption.

Atlanta News First reported Monday from Hartsfield-Jackson that even after the arrival of ICE agents, “lines still remain long.” Traveler Michael Montisano summed up ICE’s presence: “They’re here, they’re not helping,” adding that he did not expect them to because they are not “trained” to provide airport security. Video from throughout the day shows the agents milling around and menacing passengers at the various airports.

Speaking in Nashville, Trump made clear that the operation had nothing to do with alleviating long security lines. Instead, he used the airport crisis to demand that Democrats back his attempts to disenfranchise voters. “Don’t make any deal on anything unless you include voter ID,” he said, adding, “The most important part of Homeland Security is voter ID and proof of citizenship.”

Combining anti-immigrant racism and attacks on transgender people, Trump grunted, “[The Democrats] are holding it up because they want to take care of illegal immigrants coming into our country, they want to take care of criminals that are in sanctuary cities, they want to take care of transgender for everybody, literally the mutilization of our children. Men in women sports. But what they don’t want to do is give us anything to do with citizenship for voting or voter ID.”

He further demanded that Republicans “weld” the SAVE America Act directly into DHS funding legislation. In other words, Trump is using the airport crisis to force through a voter suppression law designed to disenfranchise millions ahead of the 2026 midterms.

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Speaking from Newark Liberty International Airport, Senator Cory Booker made clear that “Democrats want to fund TSA” and were demanding immediate funding for the agency, while also calling for the removal of ICE agents from airports. Booker was obliged to acknowledge the deep hostility felt by broad layers of the population toward ICE, an agency identified with raids, detentions and killings. But he stopped far short of calling for its abolition. Instead, the Democratic response remained within the framework of cosmetic reform: demands that ICE “abide by civil rights,” “use warrants” and “don’t kill people with no accountability.” He said nothing about Trump’s threats to deploy ICE agents to polling stations, nothing about the National Guard threat, and nothing about the broader drive toward dictatorship. 

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Lessons must be drawn. The failure of Trump’s January 6, 2021 coup was not due to any principled or determined resistance from the Democratic Party or the trade union apparatus. Its failure lay above all in the inexperience, confusion and ineptitude of Trump’s paramilitary allies, including the Proud Boys, Oath Keepers and Three Percenters, who were unable to secure hostages, seize the ballots and consolidate control of the Capitol. In the aftermath, the Democrats worked to contain and suppress mass opposition, channeling everything back behind the institutions of the capitalist state.

Their central line after the failed coup was the construction of a “strong Republican Party” in the name of “national unity,” including waging war against Russia in Ukraine and supporting Israel’s genocide in Gaza. Trump and his principal co-conspirators were never held politically or legally to account in any serious way for the attempt to overturn the election. He was allowed to return to the White House and resume the same conspiracy under conditions far more advanced than in 2021.

Since returning to office, Trump has continued to insist that he did not lose the 2020 election, threatened to stay in office past 2028, and has already overseen confirmed seizures of election materials in Georgia, where the FBI took ballots, voter rolls and tabulator tapes from Fulton County, and in Puerto Rico, where federal officials seized voting machines and related data. In Arizona, the FBI has subpoenaed election audit records. Trump’s threat to send National Guard troops into airports comes amid the ongoing military occupation of Washington D.C., where the Guard deployment was already extended through the end of 2026 and is now reportedly under consideration for continuation through early 2029, to the end of Trump’s term.

Under conditions of historic unpopularity, intensified by war, rising prices and mass deportation operations that have provoked outrage among workers, students and immigrant communities, Trump and the financial oligarchy he represents know that they cannot rely on a genuinely democratic process. Hence, the SAVE America Act is aimed at stripping millions of their voting rights through forced re-registration, citizenship checks and the integration of election procedures with the DHS apparatus, giving the administration another weapon to target those it regards as politically hostile.

The task facing workers and youth is not to place their faith in the Democrats, who have again demonstrated that they will not mount a serious struggle against dictatorship and war. It is to turn to the working class, the only revolutionary social force in capitalist society, and build a mass movement independent of both big business parties to drive the fascists and their agents out of the airports, the neighborhoods and Washington itself.

2. Despite “postponing” attacks on power plants, Trump expands preparation for Iran invasion

Iran’s foreign minister has directly rejected Trump’s claims. “There are no talks with the United States,” he stated. “President Trump’s statements are an attempt to lower energy prices and buy time for military plans.” This assessment corresponds to the objective reality. The five-day pause announced by Trump aligns not with any credible negotiating timetable but with the arrival of Marine and naval assets in the theater and the further “softening up” of Iranian defense, with US and Israeli strikes on Iran continuing during the five-day period. 

Nor can Kharg Island be treated as the only, or even the main, option under consideration. The very discussion of “taking the island” is bound up with other, more expansive operational concepts: a coastal seizure aimed at physically controlling approaches to the Strait of Hormuz, including major port areas; or deep inland raids on nuclear sites, such as Isfahan or Natanz, requiring thousands of troops and extended occupation of Iranian territory. 

The Washington Post reported last week that the administration is seeking $200 billion from Congress to fund the war, a supplement that would bring this year’s direct military spending above $1 trillion. For comparison, at the peak of the Iraq occupation, when 170,000 American soldiers were on the ground, annual war spending reached $144 billion. The Iran war has not yet involved ground troops, and the administration is already demanding more.

This war is part of a plan to re-establish American global hegemony through global war. The $200 billion supplemental is not the cost of a limited war. It is the down payment on an escalating global war directed ultimately at China, which purchases 37.7 percent of all crude oil passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

All of this is unfolding within the framework of complete illegality. The United States has launched a war of aggression—the crime for which Nazi leaders were prosecuted at Nuremberg. The systematic assassination of Iran’s political and military leaders constitutes a campaign of extrajudicial killing prohibited by the laws of armed conflict.

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What is being revealed is a complete breakdown of the mechanisms of democracy. A president launches an illegal war, murders the leaders of a country, threatens a war of annihilation against a nation of 90 million people—and there exist no mechanisms within the political establishment capable of opposing, let alone stopping, this ever-expanding war. 

3. UNAC/UHCP rams through sellout for tens of thousands of Kaiser Permanente nurses

The United Nurses Associations of California/Union of Health Care Professionals (UNAC/UHCP) has announced the ratification of its agreement with Kaiser Permanente on March 20. This follows the expiration of the previous contract on September 30, 2025 and an open-ended strike launched on January 26, 2026.

That strike, embracing tens of thousands of healthcare workers in California and Hawaii, was abruptly shut down by the union bureaucracy on February 24, on the basis of claims that “significant movement” had been achieved, even as no concrete agreement was presented. It was not until March 11, more than two weeks later, that the details of the tentative agreement were finally released.

This sequence of events constitutes a calculated betrayal. Workers were ordered back on the job without the most basic democratic right to review, discuss or vote on a contract, because one did not exist. The blackout of information was a deliberate tactic to isolate the rank and file and create the conditions for the imposition of a fait accompli.

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The actions of the UNAC/UHCP bureaucracy were a political intervention aimed at derailing a broader process of working class radicalization. The convergence of struggles across industries raised the objective possibility of a far wider confrontation, developing toward a general strike. It is precisely this danger that the union apparatus moved to preempt.

The content of the ratified agreement confirms this assessment. Far from representing a victory, the contract entrenches the very conditions that provoked the strike, while strengthening the corporatist framework that binds the union to management.

At its center is the preservation of the Labor Management Partnership, which remains fully intact. This structure institutionalizes the subordination of workers’ interests to the financial and operational imperatives of Kaiser Permanente. It is a mechanism through which the union bureaucracy has been transformed into a co-administrator of cost-cutting and “efficiency” measures.

4. Impact of Iran war on global economy intensifies daily

As the US war on Iran nears the completion of its first month and deepens by the day, its effects on the global economy are intensifying.

In the recent period central banks and governments have sought to overcome major economic storms by throwing money at the problems, amounting to trillions of dollars. This has led to an unprecedented growth of debt while at the same time lifting the wealth of the financial oligarchs to unprecedented heights.

But in the growing crisis set off by the war, that “solution” is not possible. As is being increasingly pointed out, central banks may be able to print money, but they cannot print molecules.

5. Plane-truck crash at LaGuardia Airport kills two pilots

An Air Canada Express passenger jet with 76 people on board crashed into a firefighting truck that was crossing the runway as the plane landed late Sunday night at LaGuardia Airport in New York City. The pilot and co-pilot were killed when the cockpit of the plane, a Bombardier CRJ-900, sheared off under the impact of the collision. One pilot has been identified by relatives as Antoine Forest. The name of the other pilot has not yet been released, but both were based in Montreal, Quebec.

Remarkably, the two firemen in the truck survived, as did all 72 passengers and two flight attendants. The forward flight attendant, Solange Tremblay, was strapped into a seat that was ejected from the plane on impact and traveled some 300 feet. She suffered a broken leg and other injuries, but survived.  

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It appears from preliminary reports of communications between the control tower, two planes and the firetruck, that a single controller was handling both takeoff and landing and ground traffic along and across the runways. Normal practice is to separate the duties of directing planes in the air and overseeing the movement of ground vehicles, but late at night, with the acute shortage of air traffic controllers, one controller may be doing both jobs. 

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Secretary of Transportation Sean Duffy sought to downplay the shortage of air traffic controllers. “As our airports go, LaGuardia is a very well-staffed airport,” he said. “We are a couple controllers short in total but it is a very well-staffed airport.”

Actually, press reports said that LaGuardia has four vacancies out of 37 ATC positions, a shortfall of more than 10 percent. Seven graduates of the Federal Aviation Administration’s air traffic control academy in Oklahoma City are receiving training at LaGuardia, but are not yet prepared to handle the job on their own.

The flight from Montreal to LaGuardia was operated by Jazz Aviation LP, which is an Air Canada subcontractor and the second-largest regional air carrier in Canada. There is no indication of malfunction in the plane, although one passenger told the New York Times that flight attendants had warned of a possible emergency landing as the plane was descending. The passengers escaped by climbing onto the wings of the plane and then jumping down to the tarmac.

Several passengers interviewed by local media called the two pilots heroes and credited their efforts with limiting the crash. “They did everything they can to save us and they didn’t save themselves and they couldn’t save themselves,” Rebecca Liquori, a nurse said. Another passenger, Clément Lelièvre, credited the pilots’ “incredible reflexes” for saving the lives of the passengers, saying that the pilots braked forcefully just as the plane’s wheels touched down.

6.  ICE agents appear in The Pitt episode “5:00 P.M.”—“What can we do?”

Since our last comment on The Pitt January 28, the HBO Max medical drama has continued to attract large audiences, averaging roughly 12 million US viewers per episode across various platforms by mid-February, a 50 percent jump over Season 1. It has collected added honors, including a Directors Guild of America award for best direction of a drama (Amanda Marsalis) and an award for outstanding performance by an ensemble at the 2026 Actor Awards (formerly the Screen Actors Guild Awards).

An episode involving ICE agents (“5:00 P.M.”) that aired March 19 has drawn wide attention. It is another indication of the broad-based opposition to the Trump administration and its drive toward dictatorship, including its vicious anti-immigrant witch-hunt. 

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In general, critics welcomed the Pitt episode. One at AV Club wrote, “‘5:00 P.M.’ rightly depicts ICE as thugs who are tearing apart families and communities, terrorizing American cities, and making hospitals less safe with their presence. In a season full of social issues, it’s a welcome, full-throated condemnation of one of the existential threats of our time. No one is safer when ICE is around.” 

Various commentators on social media argued that the horror and the ripple effect of ICE agents appearing in a healthcare facility were well depicted. A vocal subset, however, felt that the show sanitized ICE by having too few agents, too much restraint and even presenting the agency’s willingness to bring an injured detainee to the hospital.

One of the critics complained, “This was literally a nice portrayal of ICE. They never would take someone to the ER, they would let them be in pain/bleed out. Also they would have arrested everyone in the room, not just Jesse.”

The creator and executive producer R. Scott Gemmill has commented that the episode was most likely written around mid-2025, before things had “escalated” beyond what the writers could have imagined. “In retrospect, I think we could have pushed a little harder.”

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Gemmill has said in interviews that the episode was written with the possibility in mind that the ICE situation might “go away” and the episode might not resonate by the time it aired. That this seemed a plausible scenario reflects a certain amount of wishful thinking and the view that the current political situation is an aberration that will correct itself.

In any event, the writers and creators deserve credit for what they produced, imagery and drama that will remain in the minds of the millions who watched the episode. It contributes to the intensifying atmosphere of opposition and resistance.

7. Australia:  ABC workers to strike for the first time in 20 years

Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) journalists and staff will strike for 24 hours, starting at 11 a.m. on Wednesday, after voting by 60 percent overall to reject a three-year, below-inflation pay rise offer. It is the first combined strike by ABC journalists and technical and production staff since 2006.

The government-funded network, which reaches up to 13 million people weekly through its television, radio and digital services, employs about 4,400 people, including about 2,000 in news, its largest division, but has suffered repeated funding and job cuts for decades.

With Australia’s inflation rate at 3.8 percent in January, and forecast to reach 5 percent this year due to the impact of the US-Israeli war on Iran, ABC management has offered only annual wage increases of just 3.5 percent, 3.25 percent and 3.25 percent, and a one‑off $1,000 payment that excluded casual staff.

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The fact that Wednesday’s walkout is the first combined national strike of MEAA and CPSU members in two decades speaks volumes. It shows a determination to fight the low pay and poor working and employment conditions facing ABC workers as the direct outcome of these past betrayals. 

8. BP Whiting lockout continues towards second week

Almost 900 workers at the BP Whiting refinery in northwest Indiana remain on the picket lines after being locked out by the oil giant on March 19. BP’s “last, best and final offer” was nothing less than a declaration of war against the oil workers, with the company demanding job cuts, reductions in pay and free rein to introduce AI-based automation and further job cuts down the line.

With an output of around 440,000 barrels per day, the refinery is the largest inland facility in the country and the largest in the Midwest, refining crude from Canada and Texas delivered via pipeline.

Workers at the refinery are overwhelmingly united in their opposition to BP’s demands. They voted by 98.3 percent to reject it, with a 94 percent turnout. Locked-out workers are receiving widespread support from the local community who are supporting the pickets and expressing solidarity with their struggle by dropping off food and other supplies.

Workers expressed concern not only for the attacks on their own jobs and living standards but for the environmental impact of the contract proposals and the lockout. The Whiting refinery is adjacent to residential neighborhoods and has a history of violating federal air quality standards. According to workers, BP intends to eliminate the entire Environmental Department at the refinery.

Workers noted that the refinery is over 100 years old and that their long experience gives them a much deeper understanding of how to avoid serious problems that might be missed by engineers and other salaried workers, who are not as close to the actual conditions at the plant. They say this is all the more true given BP’s preference for quick fixes that maintain the refinery’s output. Management’s attempts to keep up output during the lockout creates a real danger of equipment damage or catastrophic failure.

As if to drive the point home, on Monday a massive explosion rocked the Valero refinery in Port Arthur, Texas. No injuries were reported as of this writing, but this is the second major incident at a US refinery in the last six months, following an explosion at a refinery in the Los Angeles area last October..

9. Australian health workers denounce Labor’s backing for US-Israeli war against Iran

“In my workplace we’re using outdated, sometimes broken equipment. Meanwhile billions go to the military. I’ve heard nothing from the unions—no statements, no leaflets, nothing opposing the war.”

10. Workers and youth in South Australia speak out against war and major parties in the state election

“If all of these parties support the war, then the election has no meaning. What are we voting for? No one is even raising the question of war, so people don’t get a chance to have their voice heard.”

16. The Riyadh statement: Türkiye, Azerbaijan and Arab regimes legitimize US-Israel war on Iran

The foreign ministers of Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Pakistan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Syria, Türkiye and the United Arab Emirates held a summit in Riyadh on Wednesday, March 18, titled the “Consultative Ministerial Meeting of the Foreign Ministers of a Group of Arab and Islamic Countries on Iranian Aggression,” and condemned Iran, which is under illegal assault by the United States and Israel.

In the meeting’s final statement, the ministers “affirmed their condemnation and denunciation” of Iran’s attacks on US targets in Arab countries under the right to self-defense and declared that “such attacks could not be justified under any pretext or in any manner whatsoever.”

The statement, which distorts the truth, called on Iran to respect “international law, international humanitarian law and the principles of good neighborliness,” and to put an end to “the escalation.” The ministers signaled their intention to join the war against Iran by declaring that they would adopt the “necessary legitimate measures ... to halt the Iranian heinous attacks on their territories.”

This shameful statement, which bears witness to the reactionary nature of the pro-imperialist regimes across the region, not only fails to condemn the unlawful, unprovoked imperialist war waged by the United States and Israel against Iran but also fails to even mention the aggressor by name and instead blames Iran. This statement provides political justification and active support to the Trump administration, which is making criminal threats against Iran’s energy infrastructure and preparing for a ground operation, using the closure of the Strait of Hormuz as a pretext.

By allowing the United States to use their military bases and airspace, these regimes have aided and abetted the killing of dozens of high-ranking Iranian officials, the bombing of civilian infrastructure—including hospitals and schools—and the killing of more than 1,000 civilians, at least 210 of whom were children.

The gap between Ankara’s support for the war—as evidenced by its signing of this statement, which is an expression of its subservient allegiance to US imperialism—and the sentiments of the people is so vast that the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs has still not been able to publish the statement on its Turkish-language website or social media accounts.

According to a survey conducted by Asal Research in 26 provinces following the US-Israel attack on Iran, 96 percent of participants did not support the war. According to more recent research by Areda Survey, when asked, “Is there a legitimate reason for the war launched by Israel and the U.S. against Iran?”, 94.7 percent of respondents answered “no.”

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The Turkish bourgeoisie’s deep financial and military-strategic ties to imperialism are dragging Türkiye—along with Israel’s open ally Azerbaijan and collusive Arab regimes—into a reactionary, disastrous war against Iran alongside the United States.

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The war against Iran is escalating at a time when discontent and spontaneous strikes are on the rise among the working class due to rising living costs and eroding wages in Türkiye. As the Erdoğan government prepares for war in cahoots with the Trump administration, this is accompanied by the suppression of opposition at home. The recent arrests of Mehmet Türkmen, chairman of the independent rank-and-file union BİRTEK-SEN, on baseless charges of “inciting the public to hatred and hostility,” and of BirGün newspaper columnist İsmail Arı on charges of “publicly disseminating misleading information,” are part of this campaign of repression.

The escalating US-Israeli war against Iran and the collaborationist nature of the Riyadh statement reveal that the anti-war sentiments prevailing among workers and youth in Türkiye, the Middle East, and around the world can only find political expression on the basis of a revolutionary socialist program against imperialism. 

11. The Philippines: National transport strike as Iran war creates economic crisis

On March 19, tens of thousands of jeepney and bus drivers, joined by workers and transport workers across the Philippines, launched a two-day nationwide strike. The sharp increase in the price of oil and basic commodities is creating the conditions of a social catastrophe and are triggering immense levels of anger. Elite politics, with its rival factions and geopolitical orientations, has been profoundly destabilized.

Another two-day strike starting this Thursday was announced yesterday by the No To Oil Price Hike Coalition.

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Since Washington launched its criminal war of aggression against Iran on February 27, pump prices in the Philippines have surged—diesel up 17.28 pesos per liter, kerosene up 32.35, gasoline nearly 7.48. Behind these numbers lies immense human misery. Fuel prices govern the cost of everything. When diesel rises, so does the price of every kilogram of vegetables, fish, and rice that is trucked or shipped to market. Electricity rates in Manila—already raised 64 centavos per kilowatt-hour by Meralco electricity corporation in early March—are forecast to jump a further 16 percent in April. The Department of Economy, Planning and Development has projected that headline inflation will surge to between 6.3 and 7.5 percent in March and accelerate again in April, a level that would wipe out the gains of the past two years.

For the mass of Filipino workers and poor, there is no cushion. Food and non-alcoholic beverages already consume 37 percent of average household expenditure. The official poverty threshold for a family of five is P13,873 ($US230) a month—and the official statistics agency itself conceded last year that the food component of that threshold, P63.87 per person per day, is “insufficient.” The poorest Filipinos, those already living on the margin between bare subsistence and destitution, are now being pushed over the edge.

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The Philippines is among the most petroleum-dependent and energy-insecure economies in Asia. It has a single functioning oil refinery—the Petron facility at Bataan—capable of meeting only 40 percent of the country’s fuel requirements. The rest is imported as finished petroleum products from the regional hubs of South Korea, China, Malaysia, and Singapore. Yet this regional supply chain is overwhelmingly dependent upon oil that transits the Strait of Hormuz. South Korean and Singaporean refiners source approximately 70 to 80 percent of their crude from the Gulf states. Malaysia's refineries draw heavily on the same supply routes.

China alone constitutes a partial exception: Beijing has diversified its crude imports toward Russia—which became China’s single largest crude supplier in 2024 at 2.17 million barrels per day—and maintains strategic reserves estimated at 120 days of imports. Russian crude reaches China via pipelines and Arctic tanker routes. The Chinese refined products that account for roughly a quarter of Philippine imports are therefore only partially exposed to the disruption ravaging the rest of Asia’s energy supply.

The strategic significance of this fact has not been lost on sections of the Philippine ruling class. China is the sole major source of refined petroleum that does not depend entirely on the strait that Washington’s war has now closed to orderly commerce. The oil shock has made the calculus explicit in a way that years of diplomatic maneuvering had obscured: the Philippines cannot afford a confrontation with Beijing. The peso, driven down by oil import costs and investor anxiety, broke through the P60-per-US dollar barrier on March 19, a historic low, and the Bangko Sentral intervened to prevent a complete freefall. Finance Secretary Frederick Go warned that if oil prices remain elevated, the Monetary Board will likely raise interest rates as early as April. Economists calculate that growth—which had already slowed to 4.4 percent in 2025—will take further hits from each month the war continues.

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The Iran war has compressed into weeks a set of contradictions that were years in the making. The Philippines is locked into a US war alliance that is economically devastating it. Its only source of refined petroleum that does not transit the Strait of Hormuz is from China. But Washington is preparing to go to war against China, dragging Manila behind it, and sections of the Philippine military, acting at Washington’s behest, are working to sabotage the diplomatic efforts of Manila’s own foreign ministry to preserve a relationship with Beijing.

The peso is at a historic low. Electricity prices are about to jump 16 percent. The transport strike brought workers into the streets. But the organizations that claim to lead them—BAYAN, PISTON, the Makabayan bloc—offer as a way forward a set of appeals addressed to the very government and the very system responsible for the catastrophe. The decisive political question posed by all of this is not whether the Marcos government will cap fuel prices or review EDCA. It is whether the Philippine working class—alongside workers in the United States, in Iran, in China, in every country being dragged toward war—will build the independent political organization capable of putting an end to the capitalist system that produces imperialist war, oil shocks, and poverty wages. 

12. IG Metall union suffers losses in works council elections

The IG Metall union has suffered losses in many car plants in works council elections that began at the start of March. Even though it still commands a majority in the large plants, the dominance of the trade union apparatus has been shaken.

Results at Volkswagen, the largest German car corporation, show the incipient rebellion of the workforce particularly clearly. In all German plants in 2022, IG Metall still held 93 percent of all works council seats, according to its own evaluation. In 2026, the figure is only 85 percent, 304 out of a total of 359 works council posts.

It is remarkable that IG Metall lost even more votes at VW headquarters in Wolfsburg. Here, the chair of the general works council, Daniela Cavallo, led the IG Metall list. Only 58 percent of the roughly 60,000 employees took part in the election—a historically low figure. IG Metall received 26,000 votes, 74 percent of the valid votes and less than half of those eligible to vote. Compared to the last election in 2022, this is a loss of more than 10 percentage points.

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Shortly before the polling stations closed, VW boss Oliver Blume announced the destruction of 50,000 jobs across the entire group in collaboration with IG Metall and its works council reps. At the beginning of the week, a study drawn up by McKinsey on behalf of VW was then leaked to the press recommending that of the group’s 10 plants in Germany, only two should remain: VW in Wolfsburg and Audi in Ingolstadt.

The leaked McKinsey proposal serves “as a beacon for the workforce,” writes stock market magazine Der Aktionär.

In this situation, workers’ rejection of IG Metall works councils and officials is growing. Their cronyism with managers and shareholders is hated. But this opposition was only partially expressed in the works council elections.

Why? Because most workers do not feel represented by the opposition lists that stood and mistrust the entire system of legally regulated “co-determination” supposed to provide “worker representation” on various company committees. And in most cases, this is absolutely justified. Opposition lists frequently emerge from internal struggles within the apparatus. This is currently all the more often the case, as the number of full-time works council posts is falling along with the reduction in the workforce. 

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Where workers actually turned against the IG Metall apparatus, the latter struck back with utmost severity. At Bosch in Schwäbisch Gmünd, for example, the slate put forward by the “Free Metalworkers” (Freie Metaller), which, supported by production workers, led a rebellion against the local IG Metall apparatus, was not even allowed to participate in the election.

The IG Metall apparatus, however, would not have been able to defend its dominance in the plants once again, despite all reprisals, if it were not slavishly supported by various pseudo-left groups.

These criticise individual aspects of IG Metall policy but sharply reject all attempts to seriously oppose the apparatus. For them, the apparatus is the trade union and the trade union the supposed representative of workers—even if in reality it has long been the opposite.

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This year’s works council elections demonstrate the urgency of a new political perspective in order to fight against the IG Metall apparatus and the co-managers sitting in the works councils, a perspective that points beyond the framework of the company and capitalism.

The decimation being carried out in the car industry is part of a comprehensive attack on workers all over the world. Mass job reductions, wage decreases and cuts to social benefits are taking place everywhere in order to drive up profits and pass the consequences of the capitalist crisis onto the workers.

Under President Donald Trump, the USA has declared war on the world in order to defend its dwindling economic hegemony by military means. It has attacked Iran and threatens to destroy the country of 90 million inhabitants. The German government under Friedrich Merz is placing the Ramstein air base at its disposal for this and is preparing to participate in the war itself in order to guarantee the “freedom of navigation.”

The escalation of the war drives up prices and will result in further social cuts to collect the costs for rearmament and war. At the same time, the trade war is expanding. The burden is borne by workers on both sides of the Atlantic through mass dismissals, and wage and social cuts.

The IG Metall bureaucracy and its works council reps are responsible for implementing these attacks. And for this they are paid handsomely, which is why they take such vehement action against any opposition.

The apparatus not only knows every legal and dirty trick, it also has huge resources at its disposal. The “largest single trade union in the world” has an annual income of €600–650 million and assets (including reserves and real estate) in the multiple billions. The apparatus financed by this is the main obstacle to defending jobs and wages. It must be disempowered.

Workers in the German car and metal industries should take the American autoworker Will Lehman—who is running for the presidency of the US autoworkers’ union UAW (United Auto Workers)—as a role model. Like IG Metall in Germany, the UAW works most closely with the corporations and the government and supports Trump’s trade war and war policy. 

“This bureaucracy cannot be reformed,” Lehman states clearly. “It must be abolished.” His programme focuses on transferring power from the apparatus to the workers on the shop floor through a network of rank-and-file committees. This is the only way to end the policy of “social partnership” with the corporations and replace it with a strategy of class struggle. This is the only way to reject the poison of nationalism, which divides workers across borders, and mobilise the industrial power of workers in defence of democratic rights and against war.

Will Lehman is a socialist and member of the Socialist Equality Party (SEP), the sister party of the SGP in Germany. The International Committee of the Fourth International initiated the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees (IWA-RFC) on May 1, 2021.

The attacks on the rights and conditions of workers are global. The strategy of the corporations can only be broken through cross-border coordination. The allies of autoworkers in Germany are the autoworkers in the US and the whole world. The worldwide building of rank-and-file committees and their networking is the task of the hour.

13. Starmer government refuses parliamentary vote on UK involvement in Iran war

On Monday evening, UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer convened an emergency COBRA meeting to discuss the expanding war on Iran and its devastating impact on the economy. The meeting was attended by the chancellor, foreign secretary, energy secretary and the governor of the Bank of England.

COBRA meetings are convened to respond to national emergencies. The latest was the third since the US-Israeli onslaught on Iran began almost a month ago. It took place as the claims of the crisis-ridden Labour government that Britain is not participating in the war on Iran have unraveled.

Last Friday, the government designated military action against Iran “collective self-defense.” This allows strikes against Iranian missile systems threatening shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, not just missiles directly threatening British personnel or allies. It replaced a policy, supposedly operative since March 1, allowing the US to use British bases only for a “specific and limited defensive purpose.”

Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi warned that London’s actions “will definitely be considered as participation in aggression… we reserve our inherent right to defend the country’s sovereignty and independence.”

President Donald Trump later issued an ultimatum on his social media platform threatening to wipe out the infrastructure upon which 90 million Iranians depend.

A government statement on Sunday confirmed that Britain would do nothing to prevent such an attack. Sky News broadcaster Trevor Phillips asked government minister Steve Reed, “What is the government’s position on this 48-hour deadline? Are we saying to the Americans, ‘No, don’t do this because this is escalating the situation,’ or are we simply standing on the sidelines waiting to see what happens?”

Reed replied, “I think you need to ask President Trump about the things that President Trump is talking about.”

*****

The Starmer government can only proceed in backing the US against Iran because it relies on the support of a Parliament that acts even more firmly than in 2003 as a single party of imperialist war.

On Monday afternoon, Starmer appeared before Parliament’s Liaison Committee of MPs. The main criticism of Starmer was from MPs demanding an even more aggressive military posture and that he commit to a rapid escalation of military spending.

For the last month, a substantial section of the US’s heavy bomber fleet has been operating from the Royal Air Force Fairford base in Gloucestershire, launching strikes against Iranian targets. Yet Starmer maintained a straight face as he told the committee that “This is not our war, and we are not getting dragged into this war.” He had maintained “a divide” between Britain and Washington over this, and UK military bases were only being used “for the purposes of collective self-defense.”

*****

Declared opposition to the war has come from a tiny minority of MPs and is led by Jeremy Corbyn—the figurehead of the Stop the War Coalition and leader of Your Party, who centers his bankrupt program on futile appeals to complicit governments to oppose war.

On March 4, Corbyn put forward the Military Action (Parliamentary Approval) Bill, a private member’s bill, co-sponsored by just 11 MPs, which has no chance of being passed in a 650-seat chamber stuffed with warmongers. Parliament’s own website notes that the Second Reading of the Bill is not scheduled to take place until April 17, “although the House of Commons is not expected to be sitting on that date”!

Nowhere in a Bill of just 81 words does it even refer to the war on Iran, let alone describe it as illegal. It merely requests that there be “parliamentary approval for the deployment of UK armed forces and military equipment for armed conflict; to require parliamentary approval for the granting of permission by Ministers for use of UK military bases and equipment by other nations for armed conflict; to require the withdrawal of that permission in circumstances where parliamentary approval is not granted.”

14. Defend and help free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk! Please add your name to our petition! 

The fight for the Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist's freedom is an essential component of the struggle against imperialist war, genocide, dictatorship and fascism.