Jul 15, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Perspective: The ICE murders in Maine and Texas and the lessons of Minneapolis 

A father and daughter at a happy time and a beloved father celebrating a birthday: Joan Sebastian Guerrero and Lorenzo Salgado Salgado Araujo

On Monday morning, at the corner of Pool and Hill streets in the small city of Biddeford, Maine, Joan Sebastian Guerrero, a 26-year-old worker from Colombia with a valid work permit, Social Security number and active asylum claim, was murdered by federal immigration agents. Neighbors heard as many as seven gunshots ring out around 7:15 a.m. Eyewitness video shows agents pulling Guerrero out of his bullet-riddled vehicle, dropping him on the concrete and handcuffing him as he bled from his head.

His last words, according to witness Daniel Boucher, were, “I tried to stop.” Guerrero’s partner and his 3-year-old daughter, “wearing Bluey pajamas,” with a “pink rolling backpack,” according to the Portland Press Herald’s account, watched from the sidewalk as he bled out and died. His body remained handcuffed on the pavement for five hours.

The lie that has now become standard issue for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), that the victim had “weaponized his vehicle,” fell apart within hours. That was the story the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) first gave Senator Angus King, the same story told about Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, murdered in Houston six days earlier as he drove his co-workers to a construction site. When witnesses and video demolished that pretext, ICE retreated to the claim that Guerrero had “attempted to flee the scene” and that the officer fired “fearing for public safety.”

This second lie is, if anything, more sinister than the first. It abandons even the pretense of a threat. It is a public declaration that federal agents may gun down anyone, anywhere, for supposedly trying to drive away—an assertion of the right to murder. 

*****

These murders raise critical political issues. It is now over six months since ICE agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renée Good in her car in south Minneapolis and just under six months since Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agents gunned down Alex Pretti as he sought to protect a woman being assaulted by the agents. These murders came amidst a violent federal occupation of the Twin Cities that provoked weeks of protests, culminating in demonstrations in January involving tens of thousands in downtown Minneapolis. The call for a general strike against ICE became the central demand.

Confronted with a movement of the working class demanding the expulsion of ICE and the prosecution of the killers, the Democratic Party and the trade union apparatus worked systematically to shut it down. Governor Tim Walz mobilized the National Guard and state police against protesters. The trade union bureaucrats ordered workers to obey no-strike clauses in their contracts, converting the demand for a general strike into a “day of action.”

When the visible federal presence in Minneapolis was reduced through a deal between Walz and the Trump administration, the Democrats and their pseudo-left apologists proclaimed victory. The World Socialist Web Site warned against these complacent pronouncements. The paramilitary forces were being redeployed and the drive to dictatorship was being stepped up. That warning has been completely vindicated.

The agents withdrawn from Minneapolis street corners were dispersed as part of a nationwide occupation. ICE has been deployed to the nation’s airports and more than 40 states, reaching towns that previously had not suffered a federal enforcement presence. Meanwhile, a $45 billion detention buildout proceeds. The military occupation of American cities continues, with more than 2,600 National Guard troops in Washington D.C., 1,500 in Memphis—where a Guard soldier shot and killed 20-year-old Tyrin Johnson this month—and more in New Orleans.

The Posse Comitatus Act, which for nearly 150 years barred the military from domestic law enforcement, is a dead letter. On Tuesday, House Speaker Mike Johnson defended the Pentagon’s request for an additional $350 billion, on top of a record $1.1 trillion budget, by declaring: “We’re fighting communism on our very own shores.”

Meanwhile, the killers remain under Department of Justice protection. Good’s killer and Pretti’s killers are free and uncharged. Only this week did Minnesota prosecutors finally obtain evidence federal authorities had withheld for half a year, prompting Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty, a Democrat, to thank her “federal partners” for helping “promote public trust.”

The Democrats’ toothless “reforms” of immigration enforcement were advanced to contain the popular movement and rehabilitate the deportation apparatus, not dismantle it. Before the killings, the Democrats had funded Trump’s mass deportation operation without meaningful conditions. Once the protests receded, they dropped even their token reform proposals. 

*****

Now, confronted with two more corpses, the Democrats are playing off of the identical script. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer declared Tuesday that “the killings won’t stop until we stop the impunity that Trump and Republicans want to preserve.” He knows that impunity is bipartisan. It was Schumer and the Democratic leadership who engineered the cynical maneuver that cleared the way for nearly $70 billion in additional money for ICE and the Border Patrol through 2029. This is the money that hired, armed and dispatched Guerrero’s killers. 

Maine’s congressional delegation issued a joint letter appealing to the Department of Homeland Security’s own inspector general for a “comprehensive, transparent, and expedited investigation.” The letter does not demand the identification or arrest of the killer, does not call for a halt to ICE operations, does not even condemn the killing, which it describes euphemistically as a “fatal shooting involving” ICE personnel. Its stated concern is that “timely and factual answers” provide “closure” and ensure that future operations are conducted “safely” and “lawfully.”

Maine’s Democratic Attorney General Aaron Frey knows the name of Guerrero’s killer but is withholding it from the public, announcing only that the officer has been placed on leave.

A particularly foul role is played by Bernie Sanders, who has said nothing about either murder. His silence follows from his embrace of Trump’s anti-immigrant framework. Sanders has repeated the nationalist claim that without borders “you don’t have a nation” and praised Trump for having “done a better job” than Biden in securing the border. His role, like that of the Democratic Party’s entire nominal left, is to legitimize the deportation apparatus and block an independent movement of the working class against it.

The determination to fight exists in Biddeford, in Houston, in Minneapolis and throughout the country. What is required is an independent organization and program. Every official channel is a mechanism for strangling the movement while the machinery of terror is expanded and perfected for use against the entire working class.

The erection of a police state goes hand in hand with the waging of wars of conquest, as in Iran, to steal oil and other resources, including new sources of cheap labor. The cost is imposed on the working class, in the form of skyrocketing prices and the destruction of healthcare, education and jobs. State repression is the inevitable response to the mounting resistance of workers.

*****

The defense of democratic rights falls to the working class. It requires the fight for socialism and the reorganization of economic life to serve social needs, not the wealth of the oligarchs and their wars. 

 

2. Chilean state terrorist and death squad leader freed from ICE custody as victims’ families cry for justice

Among the "worst of the worst"... really.

Nearly six months after his arrest by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents, former Chilean intelligence officer Armando Fernández Larios is living comfortably at home in a South Florida gated community, awaiting an August 5 appearance before an immigration judge on his deportation proceedings.

Fernández Larios was quietly released on parole in March, despite the Department of Homeland Security having posted his name and mug shot on its website entitled “Arrested: The worst of the worst.” The site is designed to cherry pick individual cases to cast all of the hundreds of thousands of immigrants being arrested and deported as violent criminals, even though only one out of 20 has been convicted of a violent crime, and three-quarters of them have no criminal record whatsoever.

“Worst of the worst,” however, is an epithet that is decidedly appropriate as a description of the former Chilean secret police agent. He is one of the principal architects of the first act of state-sponsored terrorism in the history of the US capital, murdering two people with a car bomb.

He is wanted in connection with multiple homicides both in his own country, Chile, and in neighboring Argentina. He is still remembered and reviled as one of the most murderous and sadistic members of Pinochet’s repressive apparatus, which tortured and slaughtered tens of thousands of workers, students and other perceived opponents of the dictatorship. And relatives of his victims continue to clamor for him to be brought to justice, even half a century after his terrible crimes.

How is it that the doors to the Krome Detention Center swung open for the convicted murderer and terrorist, while tens of thousands of working mothers, fathers and their children, whose sole “crime” is to be immigrants, remain locked up under abysmal conditions in for-profit concentration camps like Krome? 

*****

The fate of Fernández Larios remains to be seen, but his release from ICE detention is in line with the decades of protection offered by the US government, leaving intact the the extraordinary impunity enjoyed by one of the surviving participants in some of the most notorious crimes of the Pinochet era.

What was behind his arrest, brief detention and speedy “humanitarian” release? The most likely explanation is that he was “collateral damage” in a frenzied anti-immigrant crackdown by an agency that increasingly resembles an American Gestapo. With the Trump administration reportedly demanding 2,000 arrests daily, ICE agents are grabbing anyone and everyone they can, including many immigrants with the legal right to be in the country.

It is highly improbable that his arrest reflected any change in policy in relation to his crimes and those of the Pinochet dictatorship. Washington is pursuing a policy of promoting and installing regimes across Latin America that defend and even celebrate the repression and mass murder carried out by the continent’s most savage dictatorships. This includes Milei in Argentina, Kast in Chile, Fujimori in Peru and De la Espriella in Colombia.

3. Workers swelter at worksites and in factories, as new heat wave moves across the United States

Some US locations have already seen the highest temperatures ever recorded, as a heat dome moves east, creating unhealthy and dangerous conditions at workplaces and factories that lack adequate cooling.

4. At least 30 people dead in Thailand bar fire

The violation of fire safety measures was not an isolated case, but indicative of widespread practices in Thailand where public welfare is subordinated to private profit.

5. Unifor springs sell-out tentative agreement on Ford Canada workers over two months ahead of contract expiration

Unifor President Lana Payne announced late Saturday evening that the union had reached a tentative agreement for a new three-year contract with Ford Canada more than two months before the union’s current contracts expire with Ford and with the two other Detroit Three automakers—GM and Stellantis.

The sudden announcement included no information about the contents of the agreement apart from its three-year duration, and none has been divulged in the three days since. The Unifor bureaucracy even abandoned its standard practice of holding a post-agreement press conference.

Ratification meetings are now being convened for the July 17-19 weekend. The union apparatus intends to corral Ford workers into the ballot booths to vote “Yes” to the tentative agreement literally minutes after giving them an entirely self-serving and deceptive “Highlights” summary of its terms.

Workers should be under no illusion. If the union apparatus feels compelled to use such flagrantly anti-democratic methods, it is because it is attempting to ram through a massive sellout.

*****

The global auto industry is being reorganized at autoworkers’ expense and with the support and complicity of the nationalist and pro-capitalist trade unions. Unifor in Canada, the UAW in the US and the auto unions in Europe are all complicit in job cuts, production speed-up, plant shutdowns, and attacks on worker rights. During the same week that Unifor announced its tentative agreement with Ford, Germany’s Volkswagen, where the IG Metall union controls a majority on the automaker’s supervisory board, revealed plans to slash up to 100,000 jobs across its global operations and close four sites in Germany.

Corporations are deploying AI, automation and restructuring as instruments of a class war strategy: slashing labor costs and extracting ever greater profits from workers to sustain a crisis-ridden financial system, while governments divert social wealth to rearmament and war. 

*****

Over the past four decades, Unifor has trampled on all the militant traditions of earlier generations of autoworkers and evolved into little more than a cheap-labor contractor for the Detroit Three. Ever since the Canadian Auto Workers (CAW), Unifor’s predecessor, split from the UAW on a thoroughly nationalist basis in 1985, the unions on both sides of the Canada-US border have systematically pitted workers against each other, whip-sawing jobs and conditions back and forth across the border, in the name of defending “Canadian” and American jobs.” As the globally mobile automakers have launched a sustained onslaught on the working class, transforming what was once one of the best-paying and secure industrial jobs into a precarious, multi-tier low-wage industry, Unifor and the UAW have offered their services as corporatist “partners” to the relevant executives and national governments, while whipping up poisonous Canada and American nationalism.

Thus the UAW is a champion of Trump’s “America First” trade war, while Unifor cheers for a “Team Canada” based on the supposed common interests of workers and the corporate executives and capitalist oligarchs who profit from their exploitation. 

*****

Already, the struggle to build rank-and-file committees among autoworkers has taken root in auto plants in the United States, with committees rallying workers at Nexteer and other auto parts companies to defeat UAW sellout agreements.

This movement is exemplified in the campaign of Will Lehman for the presidency of the United Auto Workers in the membership vote to be held later this year. A rank-and-file Mack Trucks worker from Pennsylvania, Lehman is running in the UAW on a socialist program to abolish the union bureaucracy and place power back in the hands of workers on the shop floor.

Lehman opposes the nationalist-protectionist policies of both the UAW and Unifor, which divide workers, for the benefit of the auto bosses, and corral them behind their “own” governments in trade war and the developing global war.

Lehman is a leading representative of the International Workers Alliance of Rank-and-File Committees, which exists to coordinate workers’ struggles around the world in opposition to the globally organized auto corporations. The IWA-RFC fights to unify autoworkers in Canada with their fellow workers in the US, Mexico and internationally, alongside all workers entering into struggle amid the skyrocketing cost of living due to the criminal US/Israeli war on Iran. This organizational form expresses the reality of the class struggle today, which unfolds across national borders and cannot develop outside of a frontal assault on the dictatorial power exercised over society by the financial oligarchy, opposition to imperialist war, and the fight for the reorganization of social and economic life to meet the needs of the vast majority, not provide greater profits for the few.

6. The brainchild of Barack Obama: Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness: An Almost History of America

The series suffers from this sponsorship from birth. The rot is not in this sketch or that one; it lies in the central conception and the assumptions that go along with that. A history of America underwritten by the man who presided over the world’s most predatory imperialist power for eight years was never going to be permitted to discover or uncover anything of significance. 

It is revealing and rather pathetic that individuals like David, who has some brains and a sense of humor, seem to genuinely believe that Obama—the initiator of “Terror Tuesday” and “kill lists,” the president, frankly, of the intelligence agencies—is the apotheosis of civilized behavior and political sagacity. This WSWS perspective from 2017 effectively sums up Obama’s period in office: “Obama's legacy of war, repression and inequality.” 

7. Wildfires signal Europe’s third heatwave in 6 weeks as 14,000 excess deaths reported

Six of Europe’s leading oil companies made $21.7 billion in profits in the first quarter of 2026, 43 percent higher than last year.

8. United Kingdom: Burnham backs Labour’s brutal anti-immigration bill on day he becomes uncontested party leader

On the day Burnham secured the party leadership, he assisted outgoing Labour Prime Minister Starmer in pushing through vicious anti-immigration policies. Burnham will take over from Starmer on Friday and oversee their enforcing.

9. Australian government threats to defund universities that fail to suppress anti-genocide dissent

Labor is stepping up a witch-hunting atmosphere against opponents of the mounting Israeli assault on the people of Gaza.

10. Facing debacle in Iran, Trump threatens to attack Iranian power plants and bridges

US President Donald Trump threatened Tuesday to destroy Iran’s power plants and bridges, as the United States reimposed its naval blockade of Iranian ports and bombed the country for a fourth day.

“We’re going to hit them very hard tomorrow night. We’re going to hit them very hard the night after, and then next week it gets really bad for them, because next week comes the power plants. Next week comes the bridges,” Trump told Fox News. “We’re going to knock out all their power plants. We’re going to knock out all their bridges unless they get to the table and negotiate.”

The deliberate destruction of civilian infrastructure is a war crime under international law. In April, Trump threatened to bomb Iran “back to the Stone Ages.” In June he posted that the United States might be “forced to militarily complete the job,” and that if that happened, “the Islamic Republic of Iran will no longer exist!”

Trump’s genocidal threats to destroy Iranian civilization, and his renewed attacks, are a testament to the deepening crisis of the war. Trump has achieved none of the war’s objectives, from overthrowing the Iranian government to controlling the Strait of Hormuz.

*****

The Trump administration claims that it can wage war again because it had a pause. The White House maintains that the June “ceasefire” ended the earlier hostilities and that its July 10 letter to Congress restarted the 60-day clock of the War Powers Resolution.

The response in major pro-war publications demonstrates the degree of the crisis gripping the Trump administration. 

*****

Establishing US control over the Strait of Hormuz would require a massive escalation. Holding the strait would take a ground war, military analysts told the Associated Press Tuesday. “It’s very difficult to envision any scenario where you could satisfactorily secure the Strait of Hormuz absent ground forces,” said Jason Campbell of the Middle East Institute, a former Pentagon official—an operation, he said, that would require tens of thousands of troops, months of preparation and “very high costs.”

The forces such an operation would draw on are in place. The Abraham Lincoln and George H.W. Bush carrier groups, the assault ships Tripoli and Boxer with thousands of Marines aboard, and more than 20 warships in all are on station, with more than 50,000 US troops in the Middle East—by the military’s own account its largest force in the region since the 2003 invasion of Iraq. 

11. A revealing comment from former IMF chief economist

Reports from global institutions, such as the International Monetary Fund, generally try to present the state of the world capitalist economy in the most favorable light, albeit with increasing difficulty.

But every so often an insight is gained into the discussion which goes on behind closed doors that presents a truer picture of the state of affairs.

Such is a recent op-ed piece published in the New York Times last week by the former IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, who stepped down in June. The article was published in the wake of the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook update.

It described the global economy as being caught in the “crosscurrents of war and technology.” It said there was a “modest slowdown” in global growth—to 3.0 percent in 2026 and 3.4 percent in 2027, compared to the average of 3.5 percent in 2024-25. The slowdown reflected the effect of the war in the Middle east which had been partially offset by investment in AI technology.

“Global economic activity and the outlook are being shaped by two major forces, pushing in opposite directions … First is the negative supply shock induced by the war in the Middle East. Second is the ongoing positive technology shock manifesting in accelerated momentum of the global technology cycle, in no small part driven by advances in and deployment of artificial intelligence (AI) tools.”

This characterization, based on the assertion that war and the development of AI technology are pushing in opposite directions is, to say the least, extremely short-sighted. While AI has the potential to bring enormous advances in the productivity of labor, its development within the framework of the profit system and deepening global conflicts is intensifying all the contradictions of global capitalism.

In the first place, the “success” of AI, which depends on its capacity to generate a sufficient rate of return on the trillions of dollars being invested, requires the slashing of costs and the elimination of potentially millions of jobs—a process that has already started with the mass layoffs in the US high-tech sector.

Secondly, the development of AI, far from acting as a counterweight to the effects of war, is at the very center of the struggle being waged by the US to maintain its dominance of the global economy against its rivals, above all China.

The projections of the IMF update for only a “modest” decline in global growth became outdated almost as soon as they were issued because these calculations “assume that the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz begins in mid-July, with conditions broadly returning to the prewar state of affairs by March 2027.”

These assumptions have been effectively blown out of the water with the escalation by the Trump regime of the military attacks on Iran amid the clamor from all sections of the US political establishment that he “finish the job.”

Even on the assumption of a return to “normal,” the IMF forecast growth in the advanced economies is just 1.7 percent in 2026 and 1.8 percent in 2027, with world trade volume growth slowing from 5.0 percent in 2025 to 3.5 percent in 2026.

And it warned that “AI hype and exuberant financial markets could … sow the seeds of macro-financial instability.”

Freed from the constraints imposed by his official position as the IMF’s chief economic spokesman, Gourinchas set out a more accurate assessment of the situation in his op-ed piece. He said his term, starting with the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, followed by Trump’s “volley of tariffs” and then the war in the Middle East, had posed the challenge of managing the economic fallout of wars.

“Too often,” he wrote, “these shocks are viewed as isolated disruptions. They are not. They are interconnected symptoms of a deeper fragmentation reshaping the global economy. This fragmentation, both geopolitical and geoeconomic, risks ushering in what could become a new age of war. One defined not necessarily by constant military confrontation but by a persistent undercurrent of strategic economic rivalry and coercion and rising economic insecurity. And yes, also increased risks of actual wars.” 

*****

The analysis of this “paradox” was provided more than 100 years ago by the leader of the Russian revolution, Lenin, in his work Imperialism, published amid World War One. There he detailed that the very dynamic of capitalism meant that any equilibrium, which provided the basis for peace at one point, must inevitability give rise to war at another because of the changes in relations between the major powers which disrupt the previous equilibrium.

The realities of the capitalist system, he wrote, meant that “general alliance of all the imperialist powers” was nothing more than a “truce” in periods between wars. “Peaceful alliances prepare the ground for wars, and in their turn grow out of wars; the one conditioning the other, producing alternating forms of peaceful and non-peaceful struggle on one of the same basis of imperialist connections and relations within world economic and world politics.” 

*****

Gourinchas called for a “course correction” based on a “more cooperative system built on shared rules and continued integration.”

But in the next sentence he noted that developments are proceeding in the opposite direction.

“Increasingly, the world’s superpowers are searching for strategic advantages, identifying choke points, adopting inward-looking policies and increasing military expenditures, all in the name of resilience and sovereignty.”

Gourinchas could offer no solution to the deepening crisis, save for a vacuous appeal to return to the supposed “ideals” of the IMF for cooperation contributing to growth and shared prosperity, because there is none within the framework of the of capitalist profit and nation-state system.

There is no realistic and viable solution to the deepening crisis of global capitalism as it plunges towards a new world war outside of the perspective of socialist revolution—the taking of power by the working class to open the way for the reconstruction of the world economy on socialist foundations.

12. German government expands surveillance and police state measures

The German government is swiftly pressing ahead with the construction of a police and surveillance state. At the center of this stands the so-called “Security Package 2.0” and the amendment of the Federal Police Act. Both greatly expand the powers of the security authorities and are directed against the vast majority of the population.

The new Section 98e of the Code of Criminal Procedure (StPO) allows investigative authorities to network existing police databases and search them automatically for connections. The Federal Bar Association criticized that this would allow far-reaching movement and personality profiles to be created. 

The new section also permits biometric data, such as photographs from criminal proceedings, to be automatically compared with publicly available images from the internet, allowing a person’s whereabouts to be determined within a short space of time. The analysis software in question could include the controversial Gotham system from the US company Palantir, which state police forces in Hesse, North Rhine-Westphalia, Bavaria and Baden-Württemberg are already using. 

Palantir was co-founded by the American right-wing extremist and JD Vance supporter Peter Thiel. The company has never made a secret of its hostility to democracy and is therefore subject to massive public criticism. Critics assume that under the draft law, the data used for biometric matching could also be transmitted to private providers and abroad. This is the basis for mass surveillance of the entire population.

In several cities, AI-supported video surveillance is already underway. In Frankfurt am Main, a pilot project for biometric real-time facial recognition has been launched; in Mannheim and Heidelberg, the police are using intelligent video analysis; in Hamburg, it is being trained; and in Berlin, the General Security and Order Act was correspondingly tightened at the end of 2025. 

*****

These massive attacks on fundamental democratic rights coincide with Germany’s vast rearmament program and the escalation of the war against Russia. To finance both, draconian cuts are being made to health, care, pensions and education. At the same time, jobs are being destroyed on a massive scale in the factories, forcing hundreds of thousands into unemployment. Popular opposition to this is growing. The government and the establishment parties’ only response to this is the curtailment of fundamental democratic rights and the criminalization of any opposition. 

13. Cyclosporiasis outbreak sickens thousands in Michigan and across the US

Nearly 7,000 people have been sickened and 141 hospitalized, while the federal apparatus that would trace the outbreak to its source has been dismantled by the Trump administration and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

14. Brigham and Women’s Hospital nurses return to work in Boston without a contract

The largest strike of healthcare workers in Massachusetts history has ended for now, on management’s terms.

15. WSWS begins posting highlight clips from webinar on the American Revolution

On June 25, the World Socialist Web Site hosted an extraordinary panel of eminent historians at a webinar to mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the American Revolution.

The full webinar, “The American Revolution and Its Place in History: From the War Against Monarchy to ‘No Kings,’” can be accessed at wsws.org/1776.

Here is another clip:

 

16. Free Ukrainian socialist and anti-war activist, Bogdan Syrotiuk!

Bogdan Syrotiuk in 2015

"Peace for the world! Down with war!" 

Jul 14, 2026

 Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Perspective: US resumes bombing and blockade of Iran: Mobilize the working class against the war!

The United States has resumed open warfare against Iran. Over the past week, American forces have bombed hundreds of targets across the country, reimposed a naval blockade on a nation of 90 million people, and declared the right to continue the onslaught indefinitely. What is unfolding is a new stage of a war of conquest—aimed at the destruction of Iran as an independent state, the seizure of the Strait of Hormuz and the transformation of the world’s most important energy corridor into an American toll road. 

Under the June 17 agreement, the United States had lifted its blockade of Iranian ports in exchange for 60 days of safe passage for ships through the strait. The “ceasefire” lasted barely three weeks. Trump declared it finished on July 8, the final day of the NATO summit in Ankara, where the imperialist powers pledged to raise military spending toward 5 percent of GDP and celebrated Ukraine’s deep strikes into Russia. 

On Friday, Trump threatened that “the U.S. Military is ready, willing, and able, for a one year period of time, subject to extension, to completely decimate and destroy all areas of Iran.” Beginning Saturday night, US forces struck more than 300 targets across Iran in three consecutive nights. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps responded by declaring the strait, through which one-fifth of the world’s daily oil supply normally passes, “closed until further notice.”

Then, on Monday morning, Trump announced the reimposition of the naval blockade of Iran and, in an interview with radio host Hugh Hewitt, declared: “We’re going to hit them very hard tonight, and we’re going to hit them hard tomorrow. And there’s not a damn thing they can do about it.” The United States, he wrote on Truth Social, “will be reimbursed, at the rate of 20% on all cargo shipped” through the strait.

These developments confirm the warning issued by the World Socialist Web Site on June 15 that any ceasefire with US imperialism would be the prelude to further war. “The end of this stage of the war does not mean the end of the war,” we wrote. “The 2026 ceasefire framework will pave the way for the war that follows.”

The renewed onslaught is the product of the failure of US imperialism to achieve its aims. Trump launched his attack on Iran in February to topple the government in Tehran, dismantle Iran’s nuclear program, break its armed forces and take the Strait of Hormuz. After 136 days, none of these goals has been achieved.

*****

A blockade is an act of war, and its logic leads toward invasion. How does the Trump administration intend to carry out the occupation of the Strait of Hormuz? Such an operation would require a massive deployment of ground troops and casualties far beyond those already imposed on American forces throughout the Middle East.

A further warning must be made. On June 10, the journalist Seymour Hersh reported that Trump had asked whether it “was doable” to use low-yield nuclear weapons against the underground factories where Iran builds its missiles. Given the desperate situation confronting US imperialism, the use of nuclear weapons cannot be excluded.

Nor is Iran the final target. The war on Iran is one front in a developing world war that threatens humanity with catastrophe. It proceeds alongside Israel’s ongoing slaughter in Gaza, its violence in the West Bank and its bombardment of Lebanon, which has killed 4,322 people since March. NATO is escalating its proxy war against Russia in Ukraine, and all factions of the American ruling class are united on the need to confront China.

No faction of the political establishment opposes the predatory aims of the war. There is criticism only of its results. Both Democrats and Republicans condemned the deal in June as too favorable to Tehran. In a June 22 Wall Street Journal op-ed, former Vice President Mike Pence wrote that the agreement “smacks of the kind of appeasement” Trump had rejected in his first term, urging that “Mr. Trump should let the armed forces finish the job.” 

*****

The Democratic Party is a party of Wall Street and the military. Its leaders have tactical conflicts with the administration over how the war has been fought, but they are united on its aims: US domination of the Middle East and stepped-up preparation for conflict with nuclear-armed China. They have worked systematically to exclude opposition to the war from their opposition to Trump and to suppress the antiwar sentiment of the population.

The complaint is not that Trump waged a criminal war of aggression, assassinated a head of state and his family members during diplomatic talks, and killed thousands of Iranians. It is that the war has not yet succeeded in achieving its ends.

*****

The war is equally lawless at home. Under the War Powers Act, a president who commits forces to hostilities has 60 days to obtain congressional authorization or withdraw them. Trump has converted this restraint into a perpetual-motion machine for illegal war. As the deadline approached, he signed the June 17 ceasefire and notified Congress that hostilities had “terminated,” supposedly rendering the 60-day clock, in the administration’s telling, a dead letter.

War abroad and dictatorship at home are not two policies, but one. A government that claims the right to destroy a country of 90 million cannot tolerate democratic rights among its own population—above all when that population is paying for the war through surging prices and a massive decline in living standards.

But this points to the force that can stop it. The working class—in the United States, in Iran, throughout the Middle East and internationally—has no interest in this war and every interest in ending it. Workers all over the world must be mobilized against US imperialism’s offensive against Iran, as the spearhead of an international anti-war movement directed against the capitalist system that produces war.  

2. Maine father murdered by immigration Gestapo, prompting protests

Less than one week after Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents murdered construction worker Lorenzo Salgado Araujo in Texas, the immigration Gestapo shot and killed another immigrant worker Monday morning in Biddeford, Maine.

The victim has been identified by neighbors as Joan Sebastian Guerrero, a 26-year-old originally from Colombia, according to the Maine Immigrants’ Rights Coalition and Presente! Maine. Nelson Elias, a neighbor of Guerrero, told the Portland Press Herald that the young man had a wife and daughter. After hearing the shooting, Elias stepped outside his house, located across the street from where it occurred, and saw Guerrero’s wife crying while holding her daughter’s hand. 

Videos and eyewitness testimony indicate that immigration agents pursued Guerrero through downtown Biddeford in unmarked vehicles, rammed the passenger side of his white sedan and surrounded it with their weapons drawn. After agents fired at least six shots, footage shows them pulling his limp body from the driver’s seat, allowing his wounded head to strike the pavement and shackling his wrists behind his back as he lay dying. 

The young father was not even the target of the warrant the agents were attempting to execute, according to Maine Senator Angus King, citing a phone call from Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin. 

Federal officials have already offered conflicting accounts of the killing. Shortly after the shooting, Senator King said the Department of Homeland Security had told his office that Guerrero had tried to hit immigration agents with his vehicle. Hours later, however, ICE issued a written statement that made no claim that Guerrero had attempted to strike or run over an agent. It stated only that he “attempted to flee the scene” and that an officer, purportedly “fearing for public safety,” opened fire.

The disappearance of the initial allegation is highly significant. ICE’s official statement does not identify any immediate threat to an agent or member of the public that could conceivably justify deadly force. By its own revised account, Guerrero was shot for attempting to drive away.

Witnesses said the father was still alive when agents pulled him from the vehicle. “He was bleeding profusely from the head,” Biddeford resident Daniel Boucher told the Portland Press Herald. “He was talking. He said, ‘I tried to stop.’”

*****

As in the other murders carried out by ICE agents, Guerrero’s killers have yet to be identified, much less arrested. Federal immigration agents have been given virtual immunity to kill workers, while their victims are posthumously smeared as criminals and threats. In capitalist America, armed agents of the state can gun down a worker in broad daylight and remain anonymous and free, protected by official lies, withheld evidence and investigations designed to produce no charges.

The killing of the 26-year-old Colombian father is the 11th fatal shooting by federal immigration agents since Trump returned to the White House. At least 54 more people have died while in ICE custody, while more than 63,000 immigrants are presently imprisoned throughout the administration’s expanding network of federal and for-profit concentration camps.

The killing provoked an immediate eruption of anger in Biddeford, a working-class city of roughly 23,000 people located 18 miles southwest of Portland. Hundreds of residents poured into the streets, marching through downtown Biddeford and denouncing ICE as murderers.

Built around the enormous textile mills powered by the Saco River, Biddeford drew generations of Irish, French Canadian and other immigrant workers. Although the mills have largely been converted into apartments and commercial space, health care, education, construction, retail and service industries now employ much of the city’s population.

3. Department of Justice investigating UAW President Shawn Fain: The crisis of bureaucracy deepens

The US Department of Justice (DOJ) has convened a federal grand jury and subpoenaed the court-appointed monitor overseeing the United Auto Workers as part of a criminal investigation into the monitor’s findings that UAW President Shawn Fain “abused the authority of his office” to gain favors for his fiancée and her sister and retaliated against a UAW official for opposing it.

According to a Bloomberg story published Sunday, Fain was informed of the probe on June 18 by a Jenner & Block attorney representing the UAW Monitor’s office, nearly a month before workers learned of its existence. Reuters confirmed the investigation after a review of internal union documents.

The DOJ launched the probe into allegations that Fain pressured Vice President Rich Boyer to secure a cash bonus benefiting his fiancée, Keesha McConaghie, an employee at the UAW-Stellantis National Training Center, and to intervene in his fiancée’s sister’s workers’ compensation claim against Stellantis. He then allegedly retaliated against Boyer by stripping him of his duties as chief Stellantis negotiator on charges that Monitor Neil Barofsky found to be “unsupported, unfounded and exaggerated,” and that “Fain knew were false when he made them.”

The revelations have deepened the crisis within the UAW bureaucracy, which is facing growing rank-and-file opposition, including massive rejections of UAW-backed contracts at Nexteer, Dana and other parts suppliers. It has raised the possibility that Fain will face formal corruption charges under conditions in which a real opposition to the bureaucracy has emerged.

Will Lehman, a Mack Trucks worker and socialist, was nominated to run for union president during last month’s UAW Constitutional Convention in Detroit on a program of abolishing the bureaucracy and transferring power to the rank-and-file workers on the shop floor.

*****

Fain’s central claim is that Monitor Barofsky “has a political grudge against me because the UAW took an anti-war stance about what was happening in Gaza.” This is a myth. The actual incident Fain is referring to was a confrontation in February 2024 in which Barofsky forwarded Fain a letter from the Anti-Defamation League critical of a symbolic and toothless ceasefire resolution adopted by the UAW.  

This claim of persecution of Fain is being amplified by Labor NotesJacobin and the pseudo-left media as evidence that a two-year federal corruption investigation is driven by pro-Zionist animus against a fearless champion of Palestinian solidarity.

Fain’s real attitude was on display during the January 2024 UAW Community Action Program (CAP) conference, when the apparatus assembled to endorse Joe Biden for re-election. Three UAW delegates stood up and chanted “Ceasefire now!” calling for an end to Israel’s genocide in Gaza. They were dragged out of the hall by Capitol police as Fain stood by and watched.

During the University of California strike in the spring of 2024, tens of thousands of academic workers walked out to oppose the US-backed genocide in Gaza and police crackdowns on campus protests. The UAW bureaucracy repeatedly delayed calling the strike despite overwhelming votes for action, then limited it to just 2,000 workers at a single campus.

*****

Far from persecuting Fain, Barofsky has gone out of his way to prop him up. The court-appointed Monitor issued his charges against Fain in a status report filed with U.S. District Judge David Lawson on June 25, one week after the convention concluded. Fain, like the other candidates, was required to attest that he had not engaged in fraudulent or corrupt conduct—something the Monitor knew was untrue and could be the basis for disqualifying him from the election.  

Barofsky also oversaw the 2022-23 UAW elections, the first direct membership vote in UAW history, and ignored the mountain of evidence presented by Lehman of the deliberate voter disenfranchisement, which led to Fain being elected with the votes of only 6 percent of the membership. 

The federal oversight of the UAW—which began after the exposure that top UAW bureaucrats were taking corporate bribes and embezzling dues money—was never designed to produce genuine democratic accountability. Its aim was only to manage the apparatus’s public image and install a leadership acceptable to the corporations and the capitalist state.

The faction fight between Fain, Boyer and Secretary-Treasurer Margaret Mock does not reflect any principled differences. It is a struggle over positions and access to vast resources—the UAW’s $1.3 billion strike fund, its billion-dollar asset portfolio, its network of retiree healthcare funds and training centers, and the lavish careers they sustain for a bloated layer of overpaid officials. All parties are equally implicated in the betrayal of UAW members.

This bureaucratic infighting has been brought to a boil by something the Monitor’s reports deliberately never mention: a growing revolt of the rank and file against the apparatus as a whole. Fain has sought to use Boyer as a scapegoat for the sellout of Stellantis workers which the entire bureaucracy is responsible for. In a June 2024 letter, Boyer admitted that both he and Fain and his entire staff were aware that the claim that all temporary workers—known as “supplemental employees” (SEs) at Stellantis—would be converted to full-time under the 2023 agreement was a lie. 

*****

The WSWS warned from the outset that Fain’s election would change nothing of substance. When he was sworn in as president in March 2023, the WSWS wrote, “Fain is not the expression of rank-and-file revolt against the UAW apparatus. Rather, he is the defensive reaction of the apparatus and the ruling class to a growing movement from below.” 

*****

Will Lehman is leading autoworkers on genuine socialist principles

Lehman, the Mack Trucks worker and socialist, was nominated for UAW president for a second consecutive time at the 2026 Convention, on a program to abolish the bureaucracy and transfer power directly to workers on the shop floor. What the Fain scandal demonstrates is what Lehman told workers at the outset of his campaign: “This bureaucracy can’t be reformed. It must be abolished.” 

4. US measles cases near their worst level since 1991, met with official silence

In just half the time of last year, the United States has reproduced its worst measles outbreak in 35 years, a catastrophic milestone met with official silence. The nation recorded 2,231 confirmed measles cases as of the July 9 update by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), 97.5 percent of the 2,289 infections reported for all of 2025, itself the highest full-year total since 1991. The country crossed the 1,000-case threshold in under two months, a mark it did not reach until nearly May of last year. With the CDC warning that summer travel and large events will drive further cases in the coming months, the 2025 record is certain to fall at the next weekly update.

Yet there are no congressional hearings, no emergency briefings, no presidential addresses....

*****

The geography of the disease maps onto the places where immunity has collapsed. South Carolina leads with 670 cases in 2026, the tail of an Upstate outbreak that began in October 2025 and grew into the largest outbreak in the US in more than three decades, reaching 997 cases concentrated in Spartanburg County before the state declared it over in April. Utah has climbed to 516 cases, with kindergarten MMR coverage at just 88.6 percent. Texas has confirmed 182, most inside federal detention facilities, including some 130 at a single U.S. Marshals Service site in Hudspeth County and the first publicly reported cases at the ICE family detention center in Dilley, tying the epidemic directly to immigration policy. Florida has reached 141 amid conspicuous under-reporting by its health department, and further clusters are active in Virginia, Pennsylvania, Arizona and Washington. 

This vulnerability is the structural result of declining rates of childhood immunity. National kindergarten coverage for the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine fell from 95.2 percent in 2019–20 to 92.5 percent in 2024–25, a fifth consecutive year below the 95 percent herd-immunity threshold, leaving roughly 286,000 kindergartners unprotected as the exemption rate reached a record 3.6 percent. Only 10 states and the District of Columbia still meet the 95 percent target; Idaho has fallen to a national low of 78.5 percent.

*****

Measles is ancient, and its danger reaches beyond the acute illness. It induces immune amnesia, erasing up to 73 percent of a survivor’s immune memory and leaving them exposed to other infections for months or years, so falling coverage endangers far more than the primary infection. The disease is also, uniquely, tameable. The durable immunity first documented in the 19th century became the conceptual root of herd immunity, the very principle current policy is dismantling. Before the vaccine era began in 1963, the United States endured roughly 500,000 cases a year, driven to zero by elimination in 2000; worldwide, measles vaccination has since saved more lives than any other vaccine, an estimated 94 million since 1974. 

*****

The virus spreading today is the same one conquered decades ago, and the remedy is the same cheap, highly effective vaccine that achieved elimination in 2000. The science has not changed; what has been withdrawn is the will to use it. An agency that would treat this as the emergency that it is would be holding hearings and mobilizing resources, not changing the subject to food dyes. The genuine defense of public health requires the independent political mobilization of the international working class, for whom these policies are a measure of life itself. The loss of elimination status in November 2026 measures how far the social right to collective protection has already been rolled back, and what it will take to reverse it. 

5. Indian prime minister’s Pacific tour focuses on military issues

Over the past week, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi carried out a three-nation visit to Indonesia, Australia and New Zealand to bolster strategic and economic ties in the Indo-Pacific. The heavy emphasis of Modi’s trip on military collaboration and developing supply chains for critical minerals are closely connected to the accelerating US-led war drive against China. 

India’s strategic partnership with US imperialism and military ties are directed above all against Beijing, as is the Quadrilateral Security Dialogue or “Quad”—a security pact involving the US, India, Australia and Japan. India remains a key element of the Pentagon’s planning for war with China, even though the US Indo-Pacific Command based in Hawaii was renamed last month to the US Pacific Command, suggesting a shift away from Indian Ocean and India.

While it remains an integral part of the US-led military build-up against China, the Modi government is also determined to project India on the world stage and to ruthlessly pursue its strategic and economic interests. India’s longstanding relations with Russia, including the purchase of arms, came into collision with the US, which imposed a 50 percent tariff last year on Indian imports for its continued purchases of oil and weapons. 

*****

While small anti-Modi protests took place in Australia and New Zealand, the political and media establishments in all three countries made no mention of Modi’s own right-wing, anti-working class measures nor his long history of vicious, sectarian attacks on India’s minorities, particularly Muslims.  

6. Australia: Oppose the sellout union agreements at WSU! Build rank-and-file committees!

The WSU management is trying to push through new 2026–30 enterprise agreements that will facilitate more job destruction, further real pay cuts and increased workloads.

7. Australia Post CEO escalates “Post 30” restructuring drive

Paul Graham threatened workers that the next four years will be a “battle for our lives,” in which the business must be radically restructured or “die on the vine.” 

8. US Steel electrician Mitcheal Nelson electrocuted at Granite City Works

Mitcheal N. Nelson, a 62-year-old electrician, was electrocuted early Saturday morning at US Steel’s Granite City Works in southwestern Illinois.

Nelson, a member of United Steelworkers (USW) Local 1899 from Bridgeton, Missouri, had reportedly worked at the plant for 14 years. According to the Madison County coroner’s office, Nelson and two other employees were working on a transformer that malfunctioned during a storm. Nelson was attempting to shut it off when he was electrocuted.

Emergency responders were called at 4:53 a.m. on July 11. Nelson was pronounced dead at 6:20 a.m. after lifesaving efforts. An autopsy found the preliminary cause of death was electrocution, with toxicology results pending. No other injuries were reported.

*****

US Steel issued a perfunctory statement claiming that “safety is our top priority” and promising to cooperate with investigations. The USW said its safety coordinator, local representatives, Health and Safety Department, Emergency Response Team and union leadership had mobilized to support the family and Local 1899. It added, “There will be a comprehensive investigation.”

Workers can place no confidence in an investigation controlled by the company, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) or the USW apparatus. US Steel has a financial interest in limiting the investigation to the immediate circumstances of Nelson’s death while concealing any role played by deferred maintenance, inadequate staffing or management decisions. OSHA penalties are generally a negligible cost of doing business, while the USW operates joint labor-management safety committees with US Steel and subordinates safety to the continued profitable operation of the mills. 

*****

Nelson’s death follows other documented fatalities at the mill, which is more than 130 years old. 

9. New Zealand government restricts access to emergency housing for homeless people

Internal documents obtained by TVNZ under the Official Information Act and publicly reported last month, revealed that New Zealand’s Ministry of Social Development (MSD) is systematically denying emergency housing to people in the dire and desperate circumstances.

A letter sent to regional managers within MSD explained that their job performance would be graded based on whether they met the government’s “reduction targets” for the number of people receiving unemployment benefits and the number receiving emergency housing support.

When it took office at the end of 2023, the National Party-led government set a target to reduce the number of people in temporary emergency housing by 75 percent. The number of households in state-funded emergency housing, typically motels, dropped from 3,141 in December 2023 to 471 two years later.

Reducing access to emergency housing is one component of a sweeping austerity program designed to make the working class pay for the increasingly severe economic downturn, exacerbated by the ongoing, illegal US war against Iran.

The government does not keep records of where people go once they leave emergency housing, or when they are denied access to it, but numerous organizations have highlighted an increasing number of people living on the street.

*****

In a further indication of the worsening crisis, RNZ reported on July 9: “Data from Health New Zealand shows the number of homeless people being hospitalized has doubled in six years… from just under a thousand in 2018/19 to close to 2000 in 2024/25.”

The denial of emergency housing goes hand-in-hand with the government’s plan to give police sweeping new powers to criminalize the very homelessness it is creating. It intends to pass legislation that will empower police to issue “move on” orders against people as young as 14 who are begging, rough sleeping, or attempting to “inhabit a public place.” Those who breach an order face fines of $2,000 or three months’ imprisonment. 

*****

Whoever wins the November election, the crisis will continue to deepen. Whatever tweaks a Labour government makes around the edges of the emergency housing policy will not fundamentally alter the ruling class’s program of austerity and war. The working class can only defend its interests by building its own party, independent of all the capitalist parties, based on a socialist and internationalist program that fights to put an end to the capitalist system that produces poverty, homelessness and war.

10. Historical falsification as war propaganda: The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung declares Russia chiefly responsible for World War I

Germany’s leading conservative daily, the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (F.A.Z.), published an article in May headlined “Russia’s role in the First World War reassessed” by historian René Schlott.

The piece is based on an essay published in 2025 by Viennese philosopher of law Joachim Dolezik in the Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft (Journal of Historical Science), titled “Historiographical Debates on the July Crisis and the Question of Responsibility for the Outbreak of War in 1914.” As the subheading to Schlott’s article notes, Dolezik “goes beyond Christopher Clark and seeks the primary guilt with Russia.” Instead of the German Reich (Empire), it is the Tsarist Empire and France that are declared the truly responsible parties for the “seminal catastrophe of the 20th century.” Germany is presented as a power that was merely defending itself.

This reinterpretation is no accident. It comes at a time when the German government is rearming for a war against Russia on a scale not seen since the Nazis. The history of German imperialism is being rewritten because it is preparing a new war in the present.  

11.  Budget cuts at Berlin’s universities—Archaeology Department at Humboldt University set to close

“What gets cut with money saved? Research, education, the present day!”—with this chant, more than 200 students, faculty members, and museum staff gathered on June 4 in front of the main building of Berlin’s Humboldt University (HU). They were demonstrating against the planned closure of the Institute of Archaeology, which offers not only Classical Archaeology but also the Archaeology and Cultural History of Northeast Africa program—a program that is unique in Germany. 

 

*****

On June 17, the Faculty Council of the Faculty of Cultural, Social, and Educational Sciences at HU decided to close the institute as part of its budget cuts. On Instagram, the student council and the institute explain what this means: 

With today’s decision to close the Institute of Archaeology, the faculty has chosen to bury a tradition spanning more than 200 years at the Humboldt University of Berlin and is sending a clear message: against academic diversity, against expertise in cultural studies, and against solidarity with the so-called “minor disciplines.” Today, archaeology at HU is being laid to rest. Who will be next?

*****

The IYSSE, which in June once again won three seats in the HU Student Parliament, is the only campus group to declare that resistance to the austerity measures can only succeed if it is linked to the struggle against war and the militarization of universities.

Appeals to university administrations, the Senate, or the federal government are doomed to failure. Instead, students and faculty must turn to the working class and build independent rank-and-file committees that coordinate militant actions nationwide and internationally with workers in other sectors. Only a socialist program that calls for the expropriation of large corporations and banks and the redirection of their profits toward education and social infrastructure can stop and reverse the cuts.

12. Romania’s political crisis clears the road for the fascist AUR

Romania’s ruling establishment is engulfed in an escalating political crisis. As democratic forms of rule are breaking down internationally and fascist forces are being elevated from the United States to Italy, the oligarchic regime constructed in Romania by the former Stalinist bureaucracy is struggling to maintain its democratic façade.

The grand coalition government headed by Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan fell on May 5 after a no-confidence motion supported by the post-Stalinist Social Democratic Party (PSD) and the fascist Alliance for the Union of Romanians (AUR). President Nicușor Dan has since failed to assemble a majority for what he calls a “pro-Western” government. His latest nominee, former National Liberal Party politician Adrian Veștea, failed to win confirmation in parliament on June 22. 

*****

Dan wants to avoid early elections, which could produce an electoral collapse of the former coalition partners. Calls for his impeachment, first advanced by AUR, have now been taken up by sections of the PNL. 

*****

The roots of the present crisis lie in the presidential election of late 2024. Călin Georgescu, a figure previously little known outside the state bureaucracy and far-right circles, unexpectedly won the first round. 

His elevation resulted from deepening inequality, the cost-of-living crisis and job destruction, which placed mounting pressure on millions of Romanian workers abroad who support relatives at home. Politically disenfranchised, many registered a protest vote for Georgescu or AUR.

These were also the only major political forces permitted a wide platform from which to express anything construed as opposition to the war in Ukraine. Any questioning of the demand for the “military defeat of Russia” is denounced by the media as “Russian propaganda.” AUR and Georgescu exploited this suppression of antiwar sentiment to channel social anger into reactionary nationalism, religious obscurantism and support for Trump.

Although Georgescu was immediately presented as a product of Russian “hybrid warfare,” his campaign was openly embraced by the MAGA movement. Elon Musk and Steve Bannon promoted his cause, while US Vice President JD Vance used the Munich Security Conference to denounce the annulment of the election. Both Georgescu and AUR maintain extensive connections with MAGA politicians and businessmen.

Georgescu and AUR are part of an international phenomenon: the elevation by the ruling class of fascist forces in preparation for confrontation with the rising struggles of the working class.

*****

AUR has deliberately cultivated an image as an heir to the interwar fascists of the Iron Guard, one of the most criminal organizations in European history. At the same time, it functions as a parliamentary front groomed for public respectability. Behind it, from smaller far-right organizations to paramilitary networks, stands more than a century of the Romanian bourgeoisie’s fear and hatred of the working class.

The prospect of an AUR government is now routinely presented as inevitable. The unstated reality is that ever less separates the outright fascists from the mainstream establishment.

Dan exemplifies this process. He built his image as a respectable politician of the “center” and won the 2025 election largely because of mass opposition to Simion. But as a self-described conservative, he has increasingly sent signals to the far right.

In December, he decorated Second World War veteran Ion Vasile Banu and praised him for having fought “with dedication for the liberation of Bessarabia.” This referred to Banu’s participation in Nazi Germany and Marshal Ion Antonescu’s war of extermination against the Soviet Union. Banu served in the 13th Infantry Division, which participated in atrocities against the civilian population, including the Odessa massacre. 

Dan’s alliance with Moldovan President Maia Sandu has also normalised discussion of a “union” between Romania and Moldova. Such a move would mean the absorption of a sovereign country by a NATO member despite broad opposition among Moldovan workers. It would have explosive implications for Russian-speaking regions and Transnistria and could become a direct pretext for war with Russia.

*****

The danger posed by AUR cannot be fought through support for Dan, the PSD, the PNL or the USR. These forces created the social devastation on which the fascists feed, suppressed opposition to war and nationalism and are now adopting ever more openly the program and historical symbols of the far right.

The struggle against fascism is inseparable from the struggle against austerity, militarism and war. It requires the independent political mobilization of the Romanian working class, united with workers throughout Europe and internationally, on the basis of a socialist and internationalist program.

13. United States: The New School lays off 90 faculty and staff

The Democratic Party, which runs New York City, is a political party of Wall Street and war. It represents the same class interests that lie behind the austerity program at The New School. Rejecting this reactionary organization includes a break with the pseudo-left politicians in and around the Democratic Party. New York Democratic Mayor Zohran Mamdani, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA), is presently implementing a policy of austerity in the city and has remained silent on the ongoing university layoffs and restructuring.

14. From impunity to amnesty: The fascist right’s war on accountability in Chile

In late June 2026, Johannes Maximilian Kaiser Barents von Hohenhagen, president of the National Libertarian Party (PNL), former deputy, and YouTube personality turned political operator, announced the introduction of legislation that would grant a blanket pardon to all military and police personnel convicted of crimes committed during the 2019 social uprising.

Flanked by convicted Carabineros captain Pablo Carvajal as he turned himself in to serve a seven-year sentence for blinding a protester, Kaiser declared that the uniformed personnel “did not go out of their own free will to repress” but were following orders, and that it was “unacceptable” for police to be imprisoned while “criminals received lenient sentences or pardons from the previous government.”

The bill has already secured the backing of José Antonio Kast's Republican Party, whose deputies, including Sebastián Zamora, the former Carabinero acquitted of throwing a 16-year-old off the Pío Nono Bridge and now a Republican congressman, have lined up to support it. The Pinochetist Independent Democratic Union (UDI) has offered only procedural objections, insisting pardons be granted “case-by-case”, while affirming that most of the convicted should be freed.

The push for amnesty is the culmination of a process decades in the making: the systematic shielding of Chile's repressive apparatus from any form of legal accountability. To understand what is being proposed, one must examine the forces behind it, the pattern of acquittals that has already gutted the prosecution of state violence, and the deep institutional corruption that the amnesty seeks to permanently bury and, critically, to license for the future. 

*****

Johannes Kaiser, born in 1976 into a landowning family expropriated during the Popular Unity government, represents a political type increasingly familiar across Latin America: the social media demagogue who fuses economic libertarianism with open nostalgia for military dictatorship. His trajectory mirrors that of Argentine President Javier Milei, with whom his brother Axel Kaiser maintains close personal and ideological ties. Where Milei rants against the “political caste,” Kaiser rants against the “lumpen” and the “troglodytes” who supposedly threaten Chilean civilization. 

*****

This is not abstract nostalgia. Kaiser directed and financed a 2019 documentary calling for the “urgent and prompt” release of Miguel Krassnoff Martchenko, an agent of the infamous National Intelligence Directorate serving over 1,000 years for kidnapping, torture, and murder. During his 2025 presidential campaign, he pledged to pardon dictatorship-era convicts over 80 years old. He has also raised the prospect of proscribing the Communist Party.

Kaiser's economic program—crafted by advisers trained in the Austrian School under Jesús Huerta de Soto in Madrid—promises what he euphemistically calls a “cure” for the country: privatizing Codelco, slashing public spending by 4.5 to 5 percent of GDP, reducing the number of ministries to nine, and eliminating 200,000 public sector jobs. His brother Axel, who runs the Fundación para el Progreso and has served as an adviser to Argentina’ President Milei, anchors this project within the Atlas Network, the US-based libertarian infrastructure that has coordinated the spread of far-right economic programs across Latin America. The two brothers jointly inaugurated the Fundación Faro with Milei in November 2024; a think tank designed explicitly to train candidates and propagate the “cultural battle” of the libertarian right.

The Kaiser phenomenon is thus not a fringe aberration but a coordinated political project with international backing, fusing economic shock therapy with the rehabilitation of military dictatorship and the systematic dismantling of legal accountability for state violence. 

*****

The Kaiser amnesty bill must be understood in this full context: not as an isolated proposal but as the logical endpoint of a process that spans the acquittals of police violence, the military's espionage against those who expose its crimes, and the institutionalized corruption that has drained billions from the public treasury over two decades.

The forces driving this agenda are not merely seeking to close the books on past crimes. They are constructing a legal and political architecture in which the repressive apparatus can operate with guaranteed impunity going forward. The Kast government has already moved to militarize the borders, deploy troops against immigrant communities, criminalize protest through the State Security Law, and slash social spending while cutting corporate taxes. These measures will generate resistance, and the amnesty signals to the Carabineros and military that when that resistance is met with violence, there will be no legal consequences. 

*****

The working class cannot place any faith in this process. The pseudo-left parties that governed under Boric—the Broad Front and the Communist Party—helped build the police state infrastructure that Kast is now extending. They passed the Ley Naín-Retamal that courts now use to acquit police shooters. They normalized relations with the fascist right in the name of “republicanism” and “dialogue.” Their calls for “case-by-case” review of pardons are a fig leaf for the same capitulation.

What is required is not the reform of the repressive apparatus but its dismantling. The Carabineros, the military intelligence services, and the secrecy laws that shield them are instruments of class rule. They cannot be democratized; they must be replaced by organs of workers' power. The struggle against impunity is inseparable from the struggle against the capitalist state itself—and the Kast-Kaiser project is a sharp warning that the ruling class will not hesitate to deploy the most reactionary forces at its disposal to defend its crumbling order. 

15. Britain’s healthcare workers must demand Israel release Gaza’s Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya

Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya 

NHS FightBack supports the stand taken by healthcare workers across Britain mobilizing in support for Dr. Hussam Abu Safiya, medical director of Gaza’s Kamal Adwan hospital. We echo the demand that he is released immediately from Israel’s Rakefet interrogation center, where he is being tortured and faces death.

Speaking last week, Nasser Odeh, Abu Safiya’s lawyer, visited him on July 2 at the Rakefet interrogation facility in Nitzan Prison, northern Israel. He said Abu Safiya was brought to the meeting shackled by his hands and feet and accompanied by masked prison guards. He bore fresh, severe injuries to his head, around his eyes, and on his ears and neck—to the extent that Odeh initially struggled to recognize him. He was struggling to breathe and speak and was in a state of distress.

Extremely weak, Abu Safiya told Odeh, “This is the last time you’ll see me… they brought me here to kill me”. He added, “I’m living in hell. The mind can’t imagine what I go through every day. I think someone has decided to kill me.”

16. 6.5 million young people in Türkiye not in employment, education or training

Türkiye’s official statistics cannot hide the fact that the country is experiencing one of the sharpest and most devastating forms of the global youth unemployment crisis.

17. WSWS begins posting highlight clips from webinar on the American Revolution

On June 25, the World Socialist Web Site hosted an extraordinary panel of eminent historians at a webinar to mark the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence and the American Revolution.

The full webinar, “The American Revolution and Its Place in History: From the War Against Monarchy to ‘No Kings,’” can be accessed at wsws.org/1776.

Here is another clip:

 

18. Workers Struggles: The Americas

Argentina:

Protest at National Atomic Energy Commission headquarters opposes layoffs of government research institutions

Chile:

President Kast sends police against protesting public health workers

Canada:

Oxfam workers entering fifth week of strike
 
Striking Bank of Canada security staff oppose deployment of scab labor 

Dominican Republic:

Massive protests against new penal code

United States:

Service Employees International Union scraps planned rally by 1,500 Syracuse, New York senior care workers
 
American Crystal Sugar workers in Moorhead, Minnesota demonstrate over failed negotiations as contract deadline nears
 
Milwaukee coffee shop workers strike against private equity owner
 
 

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.