Apr 17, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today:

1. April 1776: When America opened ports to the world

There were, indeed, “but two sorts of men in the world, freemen and slaves,” John Adams concluded. For the first time in world history, slavery became conspicuously wrong, requiring therefore a defense, an explanation that ultimately created racism as a modern ideology. 

A map shows the West Indies and Caribbean, 1732

As the Trump administration imposes the military closure of the ports of Iran, part of its wider neo-colonial war against the peoples of the Middle East, it is notable that 250 years ago last week, on April 6, 1776, the Continental Congress, the revolutionary government of the American colonies, announced that its ports would be open to world trade rather than just to the ships and merchants of imperial Great Britain. 

It was a declaration as consequential as any battle of the American Revolution, and one that speaks with unexpected directness to the present.

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Trotsky once wrote of the world imperialist system that with the Russian Revolution  “the chain broke at its weakest link.” “But,” he added, “it was the chain that broke, and not only the link.” A similar observation could be made about the American Revolution in 1776. It destroyed the mercantilist system and monarchical world where it was weakest, at its very outer edge. But the results were nonetheless momentous. As Marx wrote to Lincoln in 1864, “the American War of Independence initiated a new era of ascendancy for the middle class,” giving birth to “the idea of one great Democratic Republic.” It was then and there that “the first Declaration of the Rights of Man was issued, and the first impulse given to the European revolution of the eighteenth century.”  

It seems that the conflicts that shaped one era have a way of resurfacing in another. The tyrannical power that the revolutionary generation of 1776 confronted in monarchy and its mercantilist system has, in our own time, reappeared in new and grotesque forms. The Trump administration has erased the line between public office and private enrichment with a brazenness that would have impressed even the most predatory of the old Crown monopolists—a government in which the president’s family openly profits from tariffs he imposes, from cryptocurrency ventures he promotes by executive decree and from foreign governments seeking access to his favor. US “trade policy” now reproduces features of the mercantilist logic the Revolution dismantled: that slices of the world are to be seized through war for the personal enrichment of the American oligarchy, or else be destroyed so no one else can have them. 

Behind all of this lurks the attempted resurrection of something the Founders would have recognized immediately—the aristocratic principle: the claim that public office is simply an extension of private property, that wealth confers the right to rule, that inherited and accumulated fortune is its own justification, and that the distinction between the great man and the commoner is natural and permanent. It is a system that once again holds labor, the working class, in contempt. 

These attributes are not the personal qualities of Donald Trump, but the characteristics of a diseased and exhausted social order that has long outlived its historically progressive role. Just as the monarchical system of the 18th century had become an intolerable fetter on the development of society—and was swept aside not by the wishes of great men but by the objective logic of history—so too the decayed capitalism of our own time is creating the conditions for revolutionary upheaval. The force that will carry this forward is the international working class, the true heir to the emancipatory traditions of 1776, 1789, 1865, 1917, and indeed all that is progressive in history. It is a powerful weapon in the hands of the working class.

2. Pentagon drafts plans for military assault on Cuba

The Pentagon is planning a military operation in Cuba to topple the Castroite government in Havana, according to a USA Today report published Wednesday.

Sources familiar with discussions told the newspaper that the White House has issued a direct order to ramp up preparations for action against the island, marking a dangerous escalation in Washington’s long-standing campaign to reassert colonial domination across the hemisphere.

These preparations follow a series of increasingly explicit threats by Donald Trump. Standing next to a woman wearing a “DoorDash grandma” T-shirt at the White House on April 13, Trump spoke in the language of a gangster talking about a drive-by shooting, declaring that the United States “may stop by Cuba” after concluding its war of aggression against Iran. Two weeks earlier, he similarly said that “Cuba is going to be next” for military intervention.

Such statements are not idle rhetoric. They are the public expression of advanced war planning that is already underway. The same administration that is posturing as alternately escalating and de-escalating its war against Iran is, in reality, using negotiations as a tactical cover.

In the case of Iran, diplomatic maneuvers buy time to mobilize the necessary resources for the next phase of US operations: securing control over the Strait of Hormuz and Iran’s vast oil and gas reserves, by whatever means necessary, including the open threat of annihilating Iranian society.

A similar strategy appears to be unfolding in relation to Cuba. Limited contacts with the Castro family, alongside carefully calibrated concessions—such as the decision to allow a single ship carrying Russian oil to dock with at most a two-week supply—could suddenly give way to a devastating military intervention against a country of roughly 8 million people whose economy and armed forces are already in shambles.

The humanitarian situation inside Cuba is catastrophic. Decades of the genocidal US economic blockade—intensified through an oil embargo since January—have resulted in daily blackouts lasting for hours, alongside severe shortages of drinking water, food, and medical supplies. The economy has effectively ground to a halt, with workers frequently unable to report to their jobs due to lack of transportation, electricity, or basic necessities.

Internationally, tensions are mounting. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stated during a visit to China that Moscow would continue providing assistance to Cuba and expressed hope that the United States would not return to the era of “colonial wars.” A Russian tanker, the Universal, is currently sailing in the North Atlantic and is expected to reach Cuba within approximately 15 days. Analysts have identified it as the likely next fuel shipment to the island.

Washington, for its part, has indicated that such shipments will be permitted only on a “case-by-case” basis—another lever of pressure in its escalating campaign. 

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Cuba occupies a position of immense strategic importance for US imperialism. Its proximity to Florida, its control over key Caribbean shipping lanes and its potential use as a military base all contribute to its significance. Washington has repeatedly invoked allegations that China and Russia maintain signals intelligence facilities on the island to justify its aggressive posture.

Executive Order 14380, issued in January 2026, declared a national emergency over Cuba and threatened punitive tariffs against any country supplying it with oil. This move effectively forced Mexico, Cuba’s primary supplier after the US intervention cut off Venezuelan exports, to halt shipments.

The current offensive is codified in what has been termed the “Trump Corollary” to the Monroe Doctrine, outlined in the 2025 National Security Strategy. This doctrine reasserts US dominance over the Western Hemisphere by denying rival powers access to “strategically vital assets,” including ports, military bases and natural resources.

Framed in openly expansionist terms—akin to Hitler’s “Greater Germany”—the administration has advanced the concept of a “Great North America,” stretching from Greenland to the equator through a program of recolonization.

The objective is not merely geopolitical control but the dismantling of all social gains associated with the working class and national liberation struggles of the 20th century, including the 1959 Cuban Revolution that led to vast nationalizations and basic social and labor rights. 

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Already, the Cuban regime has implemented sweeping measures to open the economy to foreign investment and has actively courted wealthy Cuban exiles in Miami—the very social layers that have historically supported terrorist attacks and coup attempts against the island.

In this context, the continued role of pseudo-left organizations to mischaracterize the regime and thus US imperialism’s actions is particularly pernicious. The Morenoite Left Voice, affiliated with the so-called Permanent Revolution Current, claims that the Cuban government continues to be a bureaucratic workers’ state that retains a “socialist character” and merely needs to be pressured by the working class to adopt more democratic policies. It warns of “capitalist restoration” in the absence of greater mass participation, thereby promoting the illusion that the existing regime can be reformed in a progressive direction.

Within the United States, Left Voice calls for opposition to Washington’s policies through appeals to union bureaucrats and activist networks dominated by the Democratic Party. These proposals are designed not to mobilize the working class independently but to subordinate it to the very institutions of the capitalist state responsible for imperialist aggression.

This mirrors the role played by revisionist tendencies in the 1960s, which hailed Fidel Castro’s movement as a model for socialist revolution and denounced the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) as “ultra-left” and “sectarian” for rejecting this characterization. The Socialist Workers Party, led by Joseph Hansen, promoted the Cuban revolution as the “acid test” for Trotskyism, arguing that a petty-bourgeois guerrilla movement had established a workers’ state.

In opposition, the Socialist Labour League, the British section of the ICFI, defended the fundamental principles of Marxism. It insisted that conscious revolutionary leadership by the working class is indispensable, that Cuba represented a negative confirmation of the Theory of Permanent Revolution and that Hansen’s empiricism amounted to an adaptation to bourgeois and non-proletarian forces.

Today, as the United States prepares for a new colonial war against Cuba, these lessons assume urgent relevance. It is not long before Trump speaks of turning Cuba into the 52nd state—having already proposed the annexation of Venezuela as the 51st. The implications of this war must be grasped in their full historical and political significance.

3. US blockade of Strait of Hormuz deepens conflicts between major powers

Washington’s blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has been in force since Monday in what marks a major escalation of the war against Iran. The attempt by US forces to halt all tanker traffic to and from Iranian ports aims to compel Tehran to accept sweeping concessions to American imperialism, while also cutting across the interests of China, which relies on cheap oil from Iran and the broader Gulf region for much of its energy imports.

US Vice President JD Vance made clear Tuesday that the US war of aggression is aimed at restructuring the Middle East. He declared at an event that President Donald Trump was not interested in “small deals” but was seeking a “grand bargain” with Iran, which would see the US treat Iran “economically like a normal country.” Trump and Vance want to roll back the clock to before 1979, when the Iranian Revolution ended US imperialism’s financial and military dominance over the country of 93 million people.

Trump’s statements since the beginning of the war demonstrate that American imperialism will resort to the most ruthless barbarism in order to secure its preeminence over the world’s most important energy-exporting region. He vowed to bomb Iran “back to the stone ages” and made the genocidal threat on 7 April that an “entire civilisation” could be wiped out. The US/Israeli bombardment of Iran was conducted with indiscriminate bloody-mindedness, as shown by the destruction of a girls’ school on the first day of the war, killing over 160 children. Independent investigations and on-the-ground reports following last week’s ceasefire revealed that even when the US claimed to be hitting military targets, the collateral damage to surrounding civilian infrastructure and residential buildings was extensive.

In an interview this week with Fox Business, the war criminal Trump menaced Iran with further war crimes if it refuses to bow to American imperialist dictates. Speaking like a mafia don, Trump said, “If I pulled up stakes right now, it would take them 20 years to rebuild that country. And we’re not finished...We could take out every one of their bridges in one hour...every one of their power plants.”

Trump speaks for American imperialism, which has never forgiven the Iranian people for the 1979 revolution that toppled the US-funded Shah’s repressive dictatorship. His concern is not with Iranian “terrorism,” let alone the democratic rights of the Iranian people. Rather, as David North put it when summing up the historical relationship between US imperialism and Iran in a recent lecture given at Berlin’s Humboldt University, it all boils down to “oil, geopolitical influence, and the class interests of American capitalism.” 

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Home to the world’s fourth-largest oil reserves and second-largest natural gas reserves, Iran exported between 80 and 90 percent of its oil to China. Beijing has benefited from cut-price Iranian oil over recent years due to the brutal sanctions imposed on the country by Trump during his first term in office, when he unilaterally abrogated the UN-backed nuclear accord with Tehran in 2018. In 2021, China signed a 25-year strategic partnership with Iran that included major investments in Iranian infrastructure in exchange for $400 billion worth of oil for the Chinese economy. Washington now hopes that what its sanctions could not accomplish can be achieved through brute military force, but the first six weeks of this war have demonstrated that even the world’s most powerful military cannot overcome the impact of American imperialism’s protracted decay.

Prior to the war, China was receiving some 1.4 million barrels of oil per day from Iran and over 5 million barrels per day from the Gulf region as a whole. Although the US blockade does not directly hinder exports from other Gulf states to China, the region’s output has been hit sharply by the war, threatening global economic disruption. China reportedly has oil reserves able to cover 5 months of demand, but long-term reductions in supply could seriously weaken its already fragile economy. Moreover, the prospect of a global economic recession, raised this week in a report by the IMF, would mean a decreasing market for Chinese exports, which the Stalinist regime in Beijing relies upon to maintain economic growth.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov stated during a visit to Beijing Wednesday that Moscow could offset any oil shortfalls for China resulting from the war in the Middle East. However, this assertion is more than dubious. Pipelines between Russia and China are reportedly already operating at full capacity, and Russia lacks the tankers needed to substantially increase its approximately 2 million barrels of oil per day reaching China. Russia would have to more than double its present exports to China to offset entirely Iranian oil exports and partially cover the decline from other Gulf nations. 

Faced with the aggressiveness and criminality of American imperialism unparalleled since the Nazi regime during World War II, Beijing has responded to the US blockade by holding out the prospect of a stable “multi-polar world” in which the interests of all states are respected. According to a Xinhua report, Xi told Lavrov that Beijing and Moscow should “strengthen multilateral cooperation, firmly uphold and practice multilateralism, join hands to revive the authority and vitality of the UN, engage in closer coordination and cooperation within the frameworks of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and BRICS countries, and promote the development of the international order in a more just and reasonable direction.”

This modern-day version of the Soviet Stalinist bureaucracy’s policy of “peaceful coexistence” has even less of a basis in the realities of world capitalism today than it did during the 20th century, when it led to the Stalinists’ liquidation of the Soviet Union in a failed bid to integrate Russian capitalism into the imperialist world order. Under the would-be dictator Trump, American imperialism is fully committed to waging a third world war to defend its global hegemonic position amid its accelerating economic decline. Trump’s blood-curdling threats to wipe out Iranian civilization testify that American imperialism is not simply going to peacefully accept an expansion of Chinese and Russian influence under the banner of “multilateralism” at its expense.

4. Iran war brings massive price and profit gouging

As workers around the world are hit with the ever-worsening consequences of the US war on Iran—crippling rises in petrol and gas prices, food price hikes and the growing threat of food shortages in poorer countries—major corporations and banks are raking in increased profits to the tune of hundreds of billions of dollars.

First in line to benefit from the profit bonanza, as could be expected, are the oil companies. But the flow of increased money extends across the board. 

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Apart from the oil producers, trading firms which deal in oil, food, metals and other necessary commodities, largely dominating global markets, are already cashing in. The Wall Street Journal reported that the Swiss commodities trader Gunvor said it had already made as much money in the first quarter of this year as it did in all of 2025 when it made a profit of $1.6 billion. Others will be experiencing a similar boost. 

Also not surprisingly, US arms manufacturers have been cashing in. On the first day of the US attack on Iran major firms recorded a rise in their total market value of up to $30 billion.

The profit and price gouging extends across the US economy under conditions where, according to a recent article in the New York Times, corporate profits “have reached a record share of the US economy.” Corporate America intends to keep it that way.

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Major US banks have also been cashing in on the opportunities generated by the war. The six major US banks reported collective profits of $47.6 billion for the first quarter, much of it generated because market volatility provided conditions for significantly profitable trading. 

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JPMorgan led the way in absolute terms with a 13 percent increase in profits, over the same period last year, to $16.5 billion, with market jitters being characterized as a “gift to trading desks.” Goldman Sachs reported a 19 percent increase in profits to $5.6 billion. Citigroup reported a 42 percent profit surge and Morgan Stanley’s profits rose 29 percent.

The combined increase in the profits from the trading desks of the major banks is estimated to be the highest in 12 years. 

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The banks have benefited from the relaxation of regulations under Trump. Bank of America chief financial officer Alastair Borthwick said the bank was “encouraged by the work the administration is doing,” as it bought back $7.2 billion of its own stock in the quarter, the highest level in four years. The Trump regime is moving to reduce the amount of capital the banks must hold as a reserve, freeing up money for trading and buybacks.

The overall sentiment on Wall Street is that the profit bonanza will continue, at least for now, with the S&P 500 passing the 7,000 mark for the first time on Wednesday. Inflation profiteering fueled by the war is one factor. Another is the wave of mass layoffs, hitting tens of thousands of workers in many cases, especially in the high-tech industries. 

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Giant corporations and banks are feeding on death, destruction and the impoverishment of the working class the world over. This makes it urgently necessary for workers and youth to draw the sharpest political conclusions.

The war on Iran itself is not the product of the individual Donald Trump, but is driven by the historic crisis of imperialism, of which he is the most grotesque personification.

Likewise, the obscenity expressed in the present day economic and financial system is not the product of the individual greed of the ruling oligarchs, though that exists in abundance. It is a product of the capitalist system itself, the objective logic of which, as Marx explained 150 years ago, is the creation of fabulous wealth at one pole of society and poverty, misery and degradation at the other.

Today the necessity for its overthrow and the establishment of socialism is not confined to the pages of Das Kapital but is being written large in the language of daily life.

5. US war on Iran exposes bankruptcy of Mélenchon's France Unbowed party

Since February 28, 2026, the United States and Israel have waged a war of aggression against Iran. Trump publicly threatened to exterminate Iranian civilization, in remarks of an undeniably Nazi character. Tens of thousands of Iranian civilians have been killed or wounded. The nuclear site at Natanz and the famous Golestan Palace have been struck. The war has set the entire Middle East ablaze and is shaking the world economy.

In the face of this, Jean-Luc Mélenchon and his France Unbowed (LFI) party has not called on the millions of workers who vote for LFI to strike or protest against the war. They confined themselves to lamenting the violation of international law, while remaining silent on workers’ struggles in Iran and on Washington’s political maneuvers to manufacture a crisis there before it launched the war.

Mélenchon's inaction in the face of the war has the same roots as his silence on the intrigues Washington used to prepare it. It stems from the class character of LFI: a populist and anti-Marxist party, born out of the bourgeois Socialist Party (PS), whose founder explicitly rejects a policy oriented towards the working class and the socialist revolution. In L'Ère du peuple, published in 2014 as he founded LFI, Mélenchon declared that the entire left was dying: “The harm is well advanced. It will not be repaired with clever explanations to distinguish the true left from the false.” He called for burying the foundations of Marxism: “Here, it is the people that takes the place formerly occupied by the ‘revolutionary working class’ in the left’s project. The citizens’ revolution is not the old socialist revolution.”

These conceptions primed LFI to serve as a political instrument of French imperialism to block a mobilization of the working class against the war in Iran and the genocide in Gaza, and against the global social and economic crisis that flows from the catastrophes in the Middle East. 

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The full social power of the working class in France, Europe, the United States, and the Middle East must be mobilized to stop imperialist governments who are committing crimes of historic gravity. This is not an abstract political question.

In December 2025, before the demonstrations backed by Washington and Tel Aviv erupted, a wave of strikes swept through Iran, objectively indicating the possibility of such a mobilization. These strikes had deep causes. Years of US sanctions had ravaged the Iranian economy, causing persistent inflation and a continuous fall in workers’ living standards. The war waged by Israel and the United States against Iran in June 2025 had further aggravated this situation, disrupting oil exports and deepening the economic crisis.

Thousands of oil, gas, and electricity workers demonstrated on 10 December in Tehran outside parliament. Steelworkers struck in Shadegan on 8 December, and more than 5,000 workers at the key South Pars refineries had walked out on December 8-9. Workers at the Middle East Sugar company in Shush followed suit during the second half of December, as did railway workers in Lorestan, Zagros and Andimeshk.

Mélenchon and LFI, like the entire French media and political establishment, were silent on Iranian workers’ struggles. Instead, they latched onto a movement that began at the end of December with demonstrations by bazaar merchants, centered on the fall of the Iranian currency and the collapse of the Iran’s Ayandeh bank. It was not by accident that Mélenchon ignored the strikes while focusing on this second movement. A working-class, internationalist policy would have required supporting the strikes, explaining what was at stake, and calling on workers in France to support them and to mobilize against the policy of war, sanctions, and genocide being waged in Gaza, against Iran, and throughout the Middle East. Mélenchon does not practice this kind of politics.

The popular demonstrations in Iran testify to the dead end of a religious power trying to manage a developed society without gagging it. A people like ours always watches with sympathy the popular insubordination that asserts the right to a dignified life. However, in expressing its support, the Mossad seeks to inflame tensions among Iranians.

This declaration exemplifies Mélenchon’s political method. It mentions the Mossad’s intervention only to minimise its significance, relegating it to the role of an external factor that “inflames” Iranians, rather than explaining the way imperialism and Zionism intervened in this movement. In doing so, it suppresses the essential fact: Washington deliberately engineered the economic crisis that triggered these demonstrations and then tried to exploit it politically to achieve regime change.

Two weeks later, on January 13, the Wall Street Journal wrote: “The harbinger that everything was about to collapse in Iran did not come from the anger of the opposition in the country, or from the frustrated hopes of young people eager for personal freedoms. It came from the collapse of a bank. At the end of 2025, the Ayandeh bank, run by regime insiders and saddled with nearly $5 billion in losses, had gone bankrupt.”

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated publicly on 5 February, 2026, before the Senate Banking Committee: “What we did was create a dollar shortage in the country. That ended quickly and gloriously in December, when one of Iran's largest banks collapsed. The central bank had to print money, the Iranian currency went into free fall, inflation exploded, and so we saw the Iranian people in the streets.”

Trump has since admitted to having attempted to arm the demonstrators by sending weapons via Kurdish nationalists in the region. This confirms that the fascist in the White House sought to transform protests into a pro-imperialist armed insurrection. His policy does not aim to defend the democratic rights of Iranians. 

From the very start of the movement, however, it was already clear that NATO and Israeli leaders were aggressively intervening to try to steer it. Mossad officials had publicly expressed their support for the demonstrations; former CIA director Mike Pompeo tweeted: “Happy New Year to every Iranian in the streets. Also to every Mossad agent walking alongside them.” These forces were monitoring and directing the movement from its outset, precisely because Washington had engineered the financial crisis that provoked it.

This information was available as Mélenchon was hailing the movement. His tweet of January 1 treated it straightforwardly as a popular affirmation of the right to dignity, without warning workers that Washington and Tel Aviv had deliberately triggered and were actively steering the movement.

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As the Iranian regime crushed armed attacks targeting its police and internal security forces, Mélenchon applauded the movement. In his post of January 14, headlined, “You are right to be afraid!”, he lumped together bazaar merchants ruined by the US Treasury and insurgents linked to the CIA and Mossad as actors in a “citizens’ revolution.” 

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It is revealing that Mélenchon described the December-January movement as a “citizens’ revolution” the central concept from his own 2014 book. The “citizens’ revolution,” by definition, transcends classes and unites “the people” against power. It does not ask which social classes or political forces organize and direct a movement. It need not ask who engineered the dollar shortage, who triggered the banking collapse or which Mossad agents marched among the demonstrators. Mélenchon deliberately suppressed these facts, which were nonetheless accessible, thereby depriving his readers of the information necessary to analyze the ongoing movement and to oppose the war that was being prepared.

The bankruptcy of this position becomes glaring in light of subsequent events. The genocidal forces carpet-bombing Iran and threatening to exterminate its civilization had instigated and supported from the very beginning the movement that Mélenchon presented as a quest for human dignity. To present this operation as a movement for dignity is to whitewash imperialism using pseudo-left language. 

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Mélenchon adopted an apparently critical posture after the start of the war on February 28, but in reality continued his previous policy. While observing on X that a war of aggression is the “negation of all international law,” he proposed to workers that they trust not the class struggle but Macron’s diplomacy in the face of the aggression against Iran: “Faced with the mounting danger, now more than ever law and the United Nations are France’s only means.” 

In his tweet, Mélenchon denounced Ayatollah Khamenei—the head of the Iranian regime, killed along with his family in an American-Israeli strike—as “the butcher of the Iranian people.” This formulation, at the very moment when the most powerful military state in the world was carpet-bombing Iran, deserves comment.

It is true that the Iranian regime had suppressed by force the movement instigated by Washington and sentenced opponents to death. But calling Khamenei “the butcher of the Iranian people” at the moment of his death in American-Israeli strikes is to cover for imperialism. The biggest butcher of the Iranian people resides in the White House: it was he who threatened to exterminate Iranian civilization, bombed civilian sites, and organized the economic collapse that led up to the war. He has for this purpose the active complicity of the French state, which placed its Istres base and its Persian Gulf bases at Washington’s disposal.

Mélenchon’s statements do not mention these facts. They do not mention the tens of thousands of civilians killed, nor the families of regime officials who bear no direct responsibility for the regime but are nonetheless struck by bombs. The asymmetry between Mélenchon’s severity toward the Iranian regime and his silence on Washington’s crimes and French complicity amounts to pro-imperialist hypocrisy. 

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LFI’s response to the war against Iran vindicates the irreconcilable opposition of the International Committee of the Fourth International (ICFI) to the pseudo-left tendencies oriented to the political establishment. Mélenchon uses his influence not to organize the working class’s resistance to imperialist war and the continuous reduction of its living standards under Macron, but to subordinate it to the framework of the capitalist nation-state.

Mélenchon was a member of the Organisation communiste internationaliste (OCI), Pierre Lambert’s party, which broke with the ICFI in 1971 to support Mitterrand’s bourgeois PS. His trajectory—from the OCI to the PS for more than 30 years and finally to LFI—produced not a revolutionary workers movement, but a faction of the capitalist establishment that drapes itself in radical language in order to contain mass opposition.

The war against Iran provides the most recent and damning demonstration of this. Only the intervention of workers into the historical process can stop this war. The task is to prepare the mobilization of the working class: to build the rank-and-file organizations capable of opposing the war, to unify workers’ struggles internationally, and to prepare workers to wrest power from the war-making capitalist oligarchies.

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The Parti de l'égalité socialiste (Socialist Equality Party), the French section of the ICFI, puts forward the following demands, on the basis of which it calls on workers, youth, and progressive layers among intellectuals to give it their support:

— Stop the war against Iran and the genocide in Gaza!

— French troops out of the Middle East!

— Not a euro, not a soldier for the wars of imperialism!

— For an international movement of the working class against war and for socialism!  

6. Research demonstrates that enhanced instruction in genetics can reduce racist conceptions among students

It is well-established science that the concept of race is a social construct not a biological reality. Genetic variation within “racial” groups is greater than between them, thus refuting claims there is any scientific basis for claims that there are fundamental racial differences. Yet racism, in various forms, persists in the modern age under capitalism, as a weapon employed by the ruling class to divide and oppress the working class. What role does inadequate education in genetics play in perpetuating the concept of racial difference, and the superiority of one “race” over another, in the face of scientific knowledge to the contrary?

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Genetic essentialism is a form of psychological essentialism, which is an early-developing bias in humans. Psychological essentialism is observable across human cultures and refers to the belief that members of a social category share an unobservable and internal essence that determines their traits. People who endorse genetic essentialism believe that such essences are genetic, which leads them to believe that same-race individuals are genetically homogeneous, that races are nonoverlapping genetic groups, and that most racial differences are therefore determined by genes.

Essentialist beliefs are socially dangerous and a biological misconception. For example, genetic essentialist beliefs about race facilitate intergroup hostility, support for eugenic policies, discrimination and disinterest in cross-racial friendships.

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“The problem is that the basic genetics education that the US public receives is a risk factor for the development of genetic essentialism during adolescence,” he writes. “Because basic genetics education does not discuss patterns of racial similarity in the human genome, and because it does not discuss the multifactorial basis of complex human traits, students are never exposed to information that explicitly counters genetic essentialist views about race.” 

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To test the hypothesis that teaching a more complex view of genetics and inheritance could effect a reduction in genetic essentialism and, by consequence, racism, Donovan and his associates designed and carried out a series of scientifically controlled experiments with middle and high school students and teachers from six US states. “Participating teachers received 40 hours of professional development to learn how to implement the humane genomics intervention and how to align their Mendelian and molecular genetics curricula with basic genetics.”

To randomize the effects of teaching basic genetics versus humane genomics, half of each class was taught the two modules in that order (basic genetics first followed by genomics) and the other half in reverse order. The researchers took care to avoid any biasing factors which might imply a preferred result, such as implications that genetic essentialist beliefs are socially unacceptable. 

At each stage of the program—before the start of instruction, after the first module, and at the end— students were tested to gauge their understanding of the subject. They were measured with regard to a number of parameters: 

“… (a) basic genetics knowledge, (b) knowledge of genomics, (c) belief in the genetic discreteness of racial groups, (d) genetic attributions for complex human traits, (e) environmental attributions for complex human traits, (f ) belief in racial genetic essentialism, (g) belief in social constructionism, (h) colorblind racial beliefs, and (i) emotional response to instruction.” 

The results were clear.:

The results of the first model fully supported each component of the humane genomics hypothesis. Relative to basic genetics, classrooms that received humane genomics instruction had greater knowledge of genomics and less belief in genetic essentialism. Humane genomics classrooms also had less belief in racial discreteness and lower genetic attributions for complex human traits. Furthermore, humane genomics classrooms had greater environmental attributions. All effects were reproduced in the second half of the crossover trial. 

In the subsequent analysis, the resulting data “was explored [regarding] whether students gravitated toward racial colorblindness or social constructionism.” These are two alternative concepts of race. “People who believe in the former [racial colorblindness] contend that racial discrimination is no longer a problem or that it can be ignored because race is not socially important, or real. By contrast, constructionism contends that race is a social concept and that racial disparities are caused by prejudice, discrimination, and institutional racism.” According to the authors, colorblindness tends to be associated with genetic essentialism. 

The study found that “[w]hereas there was no effect of genetics instruction on racial colorblindness, there was a positive effect of humane genomics instruction on belief in social constructionism after the first and second rounds of instruction.” 

Based on this result, the researchers “… contend that the ideal instructional sequence to reduce genetic essentialism is to introduce students to the models of Mendelian genetics and then move beyond these models and highlight their limitations using a humane genomics curriculum.” Furthermore, they recommend that “[c]oherent learning experiences that are implemented repeatedly can create enduring changes in how people view the world. Several humane genomics learning experiences spread over many years of biology instruction will be needed to reduce the prevalence of genetic essentialist beliefs.” 

This study is a valuable contribution to our understanding of the role of education design in developing a correct, scientific view of how racist conceptions are, if inadvertently, reinforced by an insufficient course of study in genetics. Furthermore, it demonstrates that racist attitudes are learned and are not in any way innate. However, it does not, and did not attempt to address the underlying social, economic and political factors that promote racism, which is a tool of class oppression used to divide and subjugate the working class under capitalism. 

Racism and other forms of discrimination, such as those based on religion or sex, did not begin with capitalism. They are inherent in class society as tools employed by the elite to divide and subjugate the oppressed classes. Education alone cannot overcome the ill effects which are products of the objective economic interests of the ruling class in defending its social position. It is precisely those interests that are driving the Trump administration’s assault on science and historical truth. Discrimination of all kinds can be definitively eradicated only with the elimination of class society.  

It is in fact because of this study’s value that the lead author, Brian Donovan, is one of the many scientists targeted by the Trump administration and his scientific career destroyed. The study was initially supported by a grant to Donovan from the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF). Based on this study, Donovan was awarded this year’s Elizabeth W. Jones Award for Excellence in Education by the Genetics Society of America, recognizing someone who has helped the public better understand the science of DNA. The article in STAT cited above chronicles the long struggle by Donovan to build his research team and carry out the investigation. 

Despite the high praise the study received, last April, both of Donovan’s National Science Foundation grants were terminated, part of a mass cancellation of science education awards. The NSF’s justification was that the grants “no longer effectuate administration priorities.” Donovan and his team at the University of Colorado were left without jobs. They were not alone. The Trump administration massively slashed grants for science education, accounting for 40 percent of the agency’s terminations and 65 percent of funding cuts. In spite of his groundbreaking research and the high regard with which he is held by many in the field, his quest for an academic position has also been fruitless. He is now studying to become a nurse. 

Both Democrats and Republicans are carrying out major assaults on education and science as part of their drive to increase the wealth of the super-rich oligarchy and to prepare for world war. 

7. Thailand’s right-wing government formally takes power

Thailand’s new government was formally sworn in on April 6, two months after the February 8 general election. The Bhumjaithai Party (BJT) secured a parliamentary majority through a coalition with Pheu Thai (PT) and a number of small conservative and military-aligned parties.

The coalition government led by Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul, who is one of Thailand’s wealthiest politicians, is no more stable than its predecessors. Years of court rulings, Senate interventions, backroom deals, and military influence have eroded even the semblance of a democratic façade that took shape after the formal end of the most recent military junta in 2019. 

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The new cabinet, in which the BJT holds 31 positions and Pheu Thai holds nine, is unmistakably pro-business and pro-military. It includes Lieutenant General Adul Boonthumjaroen as defense minister and Police Lieutenant General Rutthapol Naowarat as the justice minister. The economic ministries have been handed to an assortment of trusted corporate and bureaucratic figures.

The new government faces the worst economic conditions since the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997. Global shocks from the US/Israeli war on Iran portend a significant economic contraction with declining investment and tourism, rising inflation and the destruction of jobs.

With total trade equivalent to more than its annual GDP, Thailand is one of the most vulnerable in the region to the ongoing energy crisis, with the World Bank predicting the country’s economy will grow by only 1.3 percent this year as a result.

The Strait of Hormuz is a vital source of resources for Thailand including oil, liquefied natural gas (LNG), and fertilizer. Diesel has risen from 23 to 52 Thai baht per litre, the Asian spot LNG price has risen from 350-420 baht per MMBtu to about 680 baht, and urea, the main fertilizer used, has risen from 17,500 baht to just under 24,500 baht a tonne.

The government has no solution but to foist the new economic burdens on working people. Household debt, already among the highest in Asia relative to GDP with 86.7 percent, leaves millions highly vulnerable. 

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Political tensions and border clashes last year were seized upon by the Thai conservative elites to force out the previous Pheu Thai government and to brand social opposition as “unpatriotic.” Anutin was only able to form a minority government with the support of the People’s Party, which claimed to offer a democratic alternative to the country’s conservative establishment dominated by the military and monarchy.

The appointment of Adul as defense minister is significant. He previously served as deputy defense minister in Anutin’s first cabinet. His military career was spent in the lower Isan border area with Cambodia, where he was made commander of the 2nd Army Area in 2023. Adul retired from the army in 2024 and retains close connections to the military top brass.

In his policy statement, Anutin pledged to increase the number of volunteer soldiers by 100,000 and to cancel or suspend the 2001 Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) 44 with Cambodia—an agreement tied to negotiations over the shared maritime boundary. The MOU and similar agreements ostensibly established guidelines for resolving the border dispute between the two countries stemming from France’s colonization of Indochina over a century ago. 

Last year during the conflict that began in May, more than 640,000 people were displaced near the land border between Thailand and Cambodia, with military clashes resulting in over a hundred soldiers and civilians killed.

Pheu Thai, which has long postured as a party of reform, is completely discredited. Over the past two decades, it has twice been ousted by military coups. In 2010, sustained mass protests Pheu Thai’s “Red Shirt” were violently suppressed by the military which gunned down protesters in the streets, killing nearly 100.

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Last August, a second Pheu Thai prime minister, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, was removed from office by the Constitutional Court over “ethical violations” based on the claim that she had criticized the military’s handling of the border dispute with Cambodia. Now under conditions of economic crisis, Pheu Thai functions as a junior partner to the right wing BJT in the name of the “national interest.”

Pheu Thai has been appointed the key ministries of agriculture, education and labor. In other words, it has been charged with suppressing unrest among farmers, students and the working class, under conditions of spiralling costs of living, mounting debt, and deepening social inequality.

All of the capitalist parties, including Pheu Thai and the People’s Party, have proven utterly incapable of meeting the democratic aspirations and pressing social needs of the masses of ordinary working people. The right-wing Anutin government will not hesitate to resort to police state measures in an attempt repress any social opposition. 

8. After 2 votes in favor, UAW bureaucracy denies strike approval to student workers at Columbia University

On Tuesday, the Student Workers of Columbia-United Auto Workers (SWC-UAW), which covers over 3,000 student workers at Columbia University in New York City, announced that the UAW leadership rejected its request for strike approval.

The SWC membership had voted by 91.5 percent to authorize a strike last month, 1,129 to 105. They voted 82.2 percent in favor of starting the strike on April 23. Over a hundred members wrote letters urging Region 9A Director Brandon Mancilla and UAW President Shawn Fain to authorize their strike.

In an email to the membership, the SWC wrote, “This does not mean we cannot strike this semester, but it does mean that we would not get strike pay from the UAW should we go on strike to win some or all of our demands.”

The UAW bureaucracy has twice now rejected their democratic vote. Student workers must organize to impose their decision, with or without the approval of corrupt and unaccountable bureaucrats! Columbia student workers should form independent rank-and-file strike committees to prepare a struggle themselves and to demand full strike pay, which is paid out of their own dues money.

Columbia student workers should appeal to the working class throughout New York City and beyond for support and solidarity. Graduate workers at Harvard University, also organized in the UAW, have already set a strike deadline of April 21.

Will Lehman

Will Lehman, a rank-and-file autoworker and candidate for UAW president, responded to the UAW’s decision by declaring: “Your fight against intolerable learning, living and working conditions at Columbia University, which the Trump administration has made a central target of its efforts to establish a presidential dictatorship in the United States, will resonate powerfully with workers across the globe. Power must be seized from the bureaucracy and placed in the hands of the rank and file so that we can fight for a politically conscious movement of workers together.” 

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Student workers should reject with contempt the argument that their demands are “too political.” The prospect of a political strike terrifies management at Columbia, because it would pose a serious challenge to the status quo: The Trump-Columbia partnership, Columbia’s collaboration with US imperialism, and the staggering disparity between the multi-billion-dollar assets of the university and the paltry wages and benefits it gives student workers in one of the most expensive cities in the world.

As the World Socialist Web Site wrote: “The union bureaucracy, bound by a thousand threads to the political establishment, primarily through the Democrats, functions as the corporate oligarchy’s industrial police force… The more powerful the potential for a mass movement, the more openly and shamelessly the union bureaucracy attempts to disrupt it.”

In Michigan, UAW leadership has kept 1,300 Nexteer Automotive workers on the job for nearly two weeks after workers rejected a sellout contract by 96.2 percent. When workers asked why a strike had not been called, UAW officials said it was “illegal” to walk out under the terms of the contract.

At the University of California, UAW leadership kept 40,000 academic workers on the job for nearly three weeks without a contract after 93.3 percent of workers voted to strike. It refused to set a strike date and ultimately rammed through a contract without a fight.

At Columbia, the UAW bureaucracy committed student workers to a no-strike clause in their first contract. Student workers at Columbia have now been working without a contract since June 30, 2025.

It is high time to revive the old union slogan, “No contract, no work!” But this cannot happen without confronting the union bureaucracy, a parasitic layer full of figures like Mancilla and Fain who siphon six-figure salaries off workers’ dues while doing everything in their power to demobilize the fighting strength of the working class. 

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In a recent article in the Columbia Daily Spectator, SWC president Grant Miner remarked nervously about “undue scrutiny from parties which are not a part of our community and not a part of our bargaining… people from outside of the University who don’t have, frankly, the best interest of either the union or the University at heart.”

The UAW’s denunciation of unstated “outside parties,” long used as part of a red-baiting strategy to cut workers off from socialist militants, reflects the extreme nervousness about their ability to keep a lid on the situation and enforce the UAW’s no-strike dictate.

Fain and the rest of the UAW apparatus fear that the Trump Administration could use a strike as the impetus to reverse a 2016 National Labor Relations Board ruling that gave governmental sanction to student workers unions, thereby jeopardizing their dues base. They are also fearful that a movement of student workers, opposing not only poverty-level wages but also the fascistic assault on immigrants and genocidal wars, can serve as a nucleus for a broader offensive of the working class far beyond what the union bureaucracy can control.

In New York City, 34,000 building workers are poised to strike next week. Next month, the contract expires for 40,000 transit workers, raising the prospects for a strike that could cripple the city.

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The working class is the only social force with the potential to bring down the Trump administration, stop the war against Iran, and end social inequality, but it cannot do so without breaking free of the shackles imposed by the union bureaucracy and building independent organizations controlled directly by the rank and file. Columbia student workers: Do not let the UAW bureaucracy sabotage your struggle. Seize the initiative, build rank-and-file committees and get involved with the International Youth and Students for Social Equality today.

9. Reject the Writers Guild of America sellout contract!

The World Socialist Web Site urges members of the Writers Guild of America to reject the tentative agreement with the Alliance of Motion Picture and Television Producers by the widest possible margin in voting from April 16 to April 24. This is not a “contract” but a slave charter, surrendering key positions without even the pretense of a fight.

The contract contains huge givebacks on healthcare, accepts sub-inflation pay increases and has no meaningful AI protections. The union did not even seek a strike authorization vote before springing the contract a full month before the expiration of the old one. It is dealing far more ruthlessly with the strike of its own staffers than with management: cutting off healthcare and taking punitive measures against them.

Not only the current struggle, but future ones are at stake. The four-year deal moves WGA workers off the schedule of SAG-AFTRA, who are also currently in contact talks. This splits the industry and allows management to divide and conquer.

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A growing “Vote No” movement has formed among rank-and-file writers. They reject claims that there is no alternative, considering unprecedented levels of wealth.

But this opposition must be organized. Writers and other workers in the entertainment industry must be organized, with a particular appeal to SAG-AFTRA members, and support must be built across the entire working population. Rank-and-file committees must be organized to build a movement from below, freeing writers from the straitjacket of the WGA bureaucracy and taking the initiative to build a broader movement. 

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The Writers Guild leadership presents the four-year deal as necessary to stabilize a health plan it says is close to insolvency. The deal would add $321 million to the plan, but $41 million of this is obtained by cutting benefits and shifting money from other union funds, including parental leave.

For decades, the “Guild Shop” model provided a basic level of security in a highly unstable freelance industry, with employer-funded benefits helping offset irregular work. The new agreement breaks with this model. Writers who previously had fully covered healthcare will now face higher premiums, deductibles and out-of-pocket costs.

For a family of four, these changes mean thousands of dollars in new annual expenses. This is effectively a cut in real income, especially for lower-paid writers already struggling with high living costs in cities like Los Angeles and New York. 

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Under the deal, writers receive a 1.5 percent raise in the first year, followed by 3 percent annual increases, provocative numbers that fail to keep pace with inflation.

The 2026 agreement does not stop the use of AI to slash jobs. It allows studios to use writers’ work for training through union-approved deals, without giving individual writers the right to refuse. AI can still be used in early stages such as outlines and concepts, letting studios reduce the role of writers and lower pay.

Loopholes around “source material” remain: The 2026 deal allows studios to work around it indirectly, especially through early-stage AI use and ownership control. Disclosure rules are weak, making it difficult to verify how AI is used. At the same time, any financial gains from licensing may not go directly to writers. In practice, the deal regulates AI use while leaving the main threats to jobs, pay and creative control intact.

The agreement does include limited improvements, such as minimum standards for “page-one” rewrites and expanded eligibility for guaranteed second steps. But enforcement is weak, and the long-standing practice of unpaid “shadow rewrites” remains largely untouched. 

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These tensions are unfolding alongside major industry consolidation. The proposed merger between Paramount Skydance and Warner Bros. Discovery creates a media giant with unprecedented control over film and television production. This reduces the number of buyers for scripts, weakens writers’ bargaining power and allows studios to impose lower rates and stricter terms.

Streaming platforms further reinforce this shift. Viewership data is tightly controlled, reducing transparency and weakening residual payments. At the same time, short-term contracts, “mini-rooms” and other forms of contingent work are becoming more common, deepening the “gig-ification” of writing work. 

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The defense of democratic and social rights is bound up with the defense of culture. Corporate America is carrying out a massive vandalism operation, laying off tens of thousands of cultural workers and millions across all industries. AI is being used not only to eliminate writers and actors, but to undermine genuine independent artistic expression.

In its place, the corporations hope to have made-to-order, homogeneous, machine-produced content aimed at the highest possible margins and the lowest common denominator. A related goal is to deaden the public’s senses, as a way to deal with a growing mass movement as it develops against dictatorship and inequality. Media consolidation is cementing a framework where a handful of huge corporations, integrated with the state, are working to censor critical voices.

The union bureaucracy everywhere is doing its best to disrupt this movement in order to avoid disrupting its connections with management and the political establishment. This latest sellout follows the cancellation of the strike in Los Angeles of 70,000 teachers and school workers, as well as the struggles of New York City nurses, Kaiser Permanente nurses, San Francisco educators and others. 

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The fight against this agreement is inseparable from the broader struggle of the working class against austerity, censorship and authoritarianism. Writers are not alone! Teachers, nurses, logistics workers and others are confronting the same attacks and the same apparatus of suppression. A unified movement, built from below and across industries, can break this stranglehold and open the way for a genuine defense of jobs, living standards and artistic freedom. 

10. German government prepares frontal attack on healthcare

The German government is planning the most comprehensive attack on public healthcare since Reich Chancellor Otto von Bismarck introduced statutory health insurance in 1883.

In this, Bismarck was reacting to the growth of the officially banned Social Democratic Party (SPD), which under August Bebel advocated a Marxist program. By protecting workers in the event of illness, and later also with pensions, Bismarck sought to weaken the influence of the SPD and prevent a revolutionary development.

After the November Revolution of 1918, and again after the Second World War, Germany’s statutory health insurance system was further expanded. Through income-based contributions and the free co-insurance of family members, low-income wage earners could also access relatively good healthcare, even if it never reached the level of care of the wealthy privately insured.

This is now over. The squandering of hundreds of billions of euros on war and rearmament and the boundless enrichment of billionaires and multimillionaires can no longer be reconciled with equitable social compensation. The defense of health, pensions and other social rights requires nothing less than a social revolution. 

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Central is the attack on free family co-insurance. For the time being, it is only to be abolished for spouses who have no children under 7 years of age and no relatives in need of care. In the future, a contribution of 3.5 percent of the family income is to be levied. Children, pensioners, caring relatives and parents of children under age 7 will remain co-insured for the time being. But once the ice is broken, the cuts will continue.

A further focus is directed against the chronically ill and the elderly, who regularly rely on medication. For them, the 50 percent increase in co-payments means a considerable financial burden. Instead of €5 to €10, they will in future have to pay €7.50 to €15 for each individual medication. Many will not be able to afford this, will fall ill more often and die earlier.

Another austerity measure, the effects of which can only be guessed at so far, is the capping of hospital expenditure. From now on, expenditure on nursing staff is not to grow faster than the income of the health insurance scheme, and the refinancing of contractually agreed pay increases is to be curtailed. This will further exacerbate the catastrophic situation in hospitals and the miserable working conditions of nursing staff, which were already unbearable during the COVID pandemic. 

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Other austerity measures also show the inhumane brutality with which the government is acting. For example, the free skin cancer screening previously available every two years is to be abandoned. This does not save the health insurance any money, since cancer treatment is much more expensive than the relatively simple screening. But many cancer patients will die earlier and thus relieve the pension and social security funds—which is likely the actual purpose of the austerity measure.

No one should underestimate the aggressiveness with which the government is proceeding against social achievements and democratic rights in order to realize its rearmament and war plans. It unconditionally defends the Israeli war crimes in Gaza, the West Bank, Iran and Lebanon and acts against anyone in Germany who criticizes them. It supports the goals of Trump’s war against Iran, even though the US president has threatened to bomb the country with its 90 million inhabitants “back to the Stone Ages.”

A government that endorses such war crimes is also capable of any atrocity against its own population. 

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The resistance against the government’s social devastation can only come from those affected themselves. It requires the independent mobilization of the international working class based on a socialist program directed against war, social cuts and capitalism.

11. Australia’s National Defence Strategy outlines military build-up for war against China

Australia’s 2026 National Defence Strategy (NDS), released yesterday, is a statement of the Labor government’s complete commitment to US-led wars globally, and above all to Washington’s advanced preparations for a catastrophic war against China.

The NDS has been accompanied by a commitment to increase military spending by $53 billion over the coming decade, on top of record defense expenditure of almost $60 billion this financial year.

As significant as the size of the outlay is the focus of the NDS and an associated “Integrated Investment Program” on the acquisition of missiles, drones and other weaponry of a plainly offensive character. That is in line with Labor’s 2023 Defence Strategic Review, which called for every branch of the military to be overhauled, with the aim of “impactful projection” and strike capacity, above all in the Indo-Pacific. 

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The entire build-up is occurring as part of a deepening of the US-Australia alliance. That includes the establishment of a vast naval precinct in Perth, Western Australia, which will function as one of the main US maritime bases adjacent to the strategically critical Indian Ocean, and the transformation of the north of the continent into a launching pad for aerial operations far into the Indo-Pacific, including by US B-52 bombers, which can carry nuclear weapons. 

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

Bogdan Syrotiuk in 2015

"Peace for the world! Down with war!" 

Apr 16, 2026

Headlines at the World Socialist Web Site today: 

1. Rohingya refugees among 250 feared dead in boat capsize

An overloaded fishing trawler carrying hundreds of Rohingya refugees and Bangladeshi nationals has capsized in the Andaman Sea, in what is one of the deadliest maritime disasters in the region in years. Around 250 people—men, women and children—are missing and feared dead after the vessel, which left from Teknaf in southern Bangladesh and was bound for Malaysia, went down around April 9.

The trawler was routed along a well-known sea lane towards Malaysia, a primary destination for Rohingya seeking to escape the squalor of Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar camps, where many have lived for years after being driven from their homes in Myanmar. According to UN agencies, the boat was grossly overcrowded and ill-equipped for the open sea when it encountered rough conditions and capsized in the Andaman Sea, close to the Indian Andaman and Nicobar archipelago.

The tragedy only came to light by sheer chance. On April 9, a Bangladesh-flagged tanker, the M.T. Meghna Pride, spotted people clinging to drums, logs and debris and rescued nine survivors—eight men and one woman, three Rohingya and six Bangladeshi nationals. They were later handed to the Bangladesh Coast Guard and police in Teknaf. 

One survivor, identified in local reports as Rahela Begum, a Rohingya woman, described drifting “two days and one night” in the sea, clinging to a piece of wood until she lost consciousness. When she awoke, she saw the tanker looming over her. She has no idea what became of the hundreds of others who shared the boat. 

Rafiqul Islam, another of the ⁠survivors, told Reuters that they had been at sea for four days. In an attempt ​to avoid naval patrols, the crew forced passengers into cramped storage compartments meant for fish and nets. “There was hardly any ​oxygen,” he said, adding that at least 30 people died from suffocation before the boat capsized. He estimated that there were about 240 people still onboard at the time, including ​women and children. 

Despite the scale of the catastrophe, there is no evidence of a serious, sustained, multinational search-and-rescue operation to find the missing. A Bangladeshi official declared that the sinking occurred outside the country’s territorial waters, implying it had no responsibility for broader search efforts. 

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UN data indicate that between January and early November 2025 alone, over 5,100 Rohingya attempted dangerous sea journeys from Myanmar and Bangladesh, with nearly 600 reported dead or missing. Many voyages go unrecorded, meaning the true toll is far higher.

The largely Muslim Rohingya in Myanmar have been a persecuted minority for decades. Since formal independence in 1948, military and civilian regimes alike have systematically stripped them of basic democratic rights, culminating in the 1982 citizenship law that effectively rendered them stateless “foreigners” in their own homeland. 

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Between 2012 and 2015, over 110,000 Rohingya and impoverished Bangladeshis embarked on rickety boats towards Thailand and Malaysia, producing the so-called “boat people” crisis that governments across the region responded to with pushbacks and detentions.

The decisive turning point was 2016–17. After a smaller operation in late 2016, the Myanmar military used attacks by Rohingya militants in August 2017 as the pretext for vast “clearance operations”: village burnings, massacres, mass rape and landmines seeded along escape routes. 

Médecins Sans Frontières estimates that between August and December 2017, some 655,000–700,000 Rohingya fled to Bangladesh, with MSF documenting at least 6,700 Rohingya killed. Those who fled joined earlier arrivals, creating the largest concentrated refugee population in the world. 

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Bangladesh, which is not a party to the Refugee Convention, labels Rohingya merely as “forcibly displaced Myanmar nationals” and openly insists on eventual “repatriation,” despite the fact that the military responsible for the violence holds power in Myanmar and the country has plunged into a broader civil war.  

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Conditions of uncertainly, poverty and exploitation are what awaits those who reach Malaysia. Like Bangladesh, Malaysia is not party to the Refugee Convention and has no asylum law. Rohingya and other asylum seekers are simply “illegal immigrants” under the Immigration Act, and can be subject to arrest, caning, indefinite detention and deportation. 

The UNHCR registers refugees and issues cards, but these have no firm legal effect: even card holders can be detained or deported, and access to detention centres for monitoring has been repeatedly curtailed.

Most Rohingya in Malaysia live “in the shadows,” packed into substandard housing on the margins of Kuala Lumpur and other cities. They have no legal right to work, forcing them into informal, low-paid and hazardous jobs in construction, plantations, restaurants and factories. Children are barred from public schools and rely on under-resourced community learning centres.

Public opinion, stoked by the media and political establishment, has turned sharply hostile, particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic. Rohingya are denounced as disease carriers and job thieves. The state has turned away boats and mounted immigration “crackdowns” that sweep refugees into detention. 

The plight of Rohingya is an acute expression of a global crisis. Worldwide, more than 100 million people are displaced, driven from their homes by war, repression, economic collapse and climate catastrophe—processes rooted in the mounting crisis of global capitalism. The working class internationally has a responsibility to defend the basic democratic rights of refugees to asylum and to oppose the vilification of some of the world’s most vulnerable people, which is exploited by governments to justify persecution, dire poverty, imprisonment and the use of the military to bar entry.

2. Ukraine’s Zelensky in Berlin: Germany escalates its war offensive against Russia

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky was received Tuesday with military honors outside the Chancellery in Berlin. The imposing scene, featuring dozens of uniformed and armed soldiers, underscored the character of the visit. Snipers were positioned on the surrounding rooftops to provide security for the first German-Ukrainian government consultations in 20 years. The focus of the meeting was the signing of a new “strategic partnership” between Germany and Ukraine.

Then on Wednesday, the Ukraine Defence Contact Group (UDCG) met in Berlin. German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius, together with his British counterpart John Healey, welcomed NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and Ukrainian Defence Minister Mykhailo Fedorov to the 34th ministerial meeting of the UDCG. Other participants joined the meeting online. The focus was on coordinating the NATO offensive in the war in Ukraine and expanding military support for Kyiv.

Both events illustrate the aggressiveness with which German imperialism is driving the war against Russia. The official propaganda that the war is about defending democracy and freedom was a lie from the outset. The NATO powers systematically provoked the Russian invasion—through the continued eastward expansion of the military alliance right up to the Russian border and the transformation of Ukraine into a military outpost against the nuclear-armed power Russia.

With the escalation of the conflict in the Middle East and Donald Trump’s open threats of annihilation against Iran—which German Chancellor Friedrich Merz cynically justified as “diplomatic war tactics”—all pretences are now being dropped in the war in Ukraine as well. Merz and Zelensky visited arms factories together and agreed on measures to return fit-for-service Ukrainian men in Germany to the front line.

It must be stated openly: de facto, Germany is once again at war with Russia—and is continuing a disastrous historical tradition. In the 20th century, German imperialism twice attempted to subjugate Russia militarily, committing appalling crimes in the process. Today, the ruling class is making a third attempt. As in both world wars, Ukraine is a central battlefield.

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Today, the German ruling class is again pursuing the goal of removing Ukraine and other states formerly part of the Soviet Union from Moscow’s sphere of influence and bringing them under the control of a European Union dominated by Berlin. In 2022, the then Social Democratic Chancellor Olaf Scholz declared that Ukraine’s integration marked a “starting point” for closer European integration—including the states of the Western Balkans, Moldova and, in the long term, Georgia. 

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Regarding Russia, it is not only economic interests—particularly in raw materials—but also a historical thirst for revenge that is driving the escalation. While all parties in the Bundestag (German parliament) essentially support the course of war and rearmament, the Socialist Equality Party (SGP) warned of this development from the outset. As early as 2014, we stated:

History is returning with a vengeance. Almost 70 years after the crimes of the Nazis and its defeat in World War II, the German ruling class is once again adopting the imperialist great power politics of the Kaiser’s Empire and Hitler... In Ukraine, the German government is cooperating with the fascists of Svoboda and the Right Sector, which stand in the tradition of Nazi collaborators in the Second World War.

This warning has been confirmed. Germany is now at the forefront of Ukraine’s military rearmament—including support for far-right and fascist forces within the state and military apparatus.

At the same time, this policy is exacerbating tensions between the imperialist powers themselves, particularly between Germany and the United States. From the perspective of the German bourgeoisie, the struggle for supremacy in Europe and over Ukraine is ultimately part of the preparation for a future confrontation with Washington as well.

The only way to prevent the catastrophe of a Third World War is to build an international socialist movement of the working class—in Russia, Ukraine, Germany, across Europe, in the US and worldwide—against war and its root cause: the capitalist system.

3. War powers resolution blocked in the Senate as 10,000 more US troops head to the Middle East

On Wednesday, the US Senate defeated a Democratic Party-sponsored war powers motion aimed at bringing a resolution to the chamber floor calling for the withdrawal of US forces from the war against Iran on the basis that the war was not authorized by Congress.

The procedural vote failed 52-47 on a motion to discharge a resolution moved by Senator Tammy Duckworth of Illinois from committee. The vote permits the Trump administration to continue its illegal war against Iran without any congressional oversight.

This was the fourth attempt by the Democrats to posture as opponents of Trump’s warmongering, while they know full well that the resolutions will be blocked by the Republican majority, and while they continue to vote for trillion-dollar military budgets. 

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The text of Duckworth’s resolution sought, “To direct the removal of United States Armed Forces from hostilities within or against the Islamic Republic of Iran that have not been authorized by Congress.” The resolution does not declare the war illegal, criminal, or a violation of US and international law. Instead, it accepts the framework of the war and argues that Congress has been incorrectly excluded from the decision-making about launching the war and how to conduct it. 

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A similar charade was under way in the US House of Representatives on Wednesday with Democrats introducing articles of impeachment against Secretary of War Pete Hegseth for “unauthorized war against Iran,” “targeting of civilians,” “obstruction of congressional oversight,” “abuse of power” and several other items. The motion is universally recognized as dead on arrival, given the Republican majority in the House. Even if it were passed, a two-thirds vote in the Senate would be required to remove Hegseth from office.

Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson dismissed the impeachment motion as an effort to make headlines and said Hegseth will “continue to protect the homeland and project peace through strength.” 

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While the Trump administration is publicly talking about diplomacy, the military posture tells a different story. Media reports say that another carrier strike group and additional amphibious and Marine forces are moving into the region, with tens of thousands of troops already there from the first phase of the war. 

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The Washington Post reported on Tuesday that the US is sending more than 10,000 additional troops to the Middle East before the end of April. Quoting unnamed current and former US officials speaking on condition of anonymity, the Post reported that the aircraft carrier USS George H. W. Bush and the ships escorting it, including 6,000 troops, are on the way to the region.

Another 4,200 troops from the Boxer Amphibious Ready Group and its embarked Marine Corps task force, the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, are also expected to arrive in the next two weeks.

This buildup is unmistakable evidence that the Pentagon is preparing for a resumption of military operations, regardless of the negotiations. As was the case before the start of the war, the force posture points to a second phase of war rather than de-escalation.

The same pattern is unfolding in Lebanon, where Israeli strikes continue while talks are underway. Reporting over the last 24 hours showed continued attacks in southern Lebanon, including strikes that killed medical workers, alongside Hezbollah rocket fire and the possibility of new Israeli buffer-zone plans.

In both Iran and Lebanon, the US and Israel are pursuing negotiations as a mechanism to buy time to allow for the mobilization of military personnel and hardware and escalate the wars in pursuit of their imperialist and annexationist objectives. 

4. Democratic Congressman Eric Swalwell resigns amid #MeToo-style sex scandal

On Tuesday, April 14, Eric Swalwell, a seven-term congressman from California’s Bay Area, resigned his seat in the U.S. House of Representatives. With remarkable speed, Swalwell went from front-runner in the race to become the next governor of America’s most populous state to political pariah, denounced by Democrats and Republicans alike.

On Friday, April 10, the San Francisco Chronicle and CNN ran lurid accounts by four women accusing Swalwell of sexual abuse. One of the four, a former staffer who has not been identified, claimed that Swalwell raped her on two occasions when she was intoxicated, once in 2019 and again in 2024. The other three accused the then-congressman of sending them sexually explicit and salacious social media posts.

Within hours of the appearance of these reports, which Swalwell claimed were fabrications, his campaign managers and Democratic and trade union endorsers abandoned him and called on him to end his gubernatorial campaign. These included leading Democratic figures, such as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senator Adam Schiff. 

Two days later, on Sunday, April 12, Swalwell announced the suspension of his campaign for governor. While calling the specific allegations against him false, he apologized to his family and acknowledged “mistakes in judgment,” evidently acknowledging that he had had extra-marital affairs.

By then 50 former staffers had issued a public letter calling on him to resign from Congress, and numerous lawmakers from both parties followed suit, threatening to expel him if he refused. The House Ethics Committee announced a probe, and the Manhattan District Attorney’s office launched a criminal investigation.

Appearing on NBC’s Meet the Press on Sunday, Pramila Jayapal, chair of the House Progressive Caucus, said she would vote to expel both Swalwell and Texas Republican Tony Gonzales from the House of Representatives. Gonzales had been under investigation by the Houses Ethics Committee after having admitted to having a sexual relationship with one of his staffers, who subsequently committed suicide.

Jayapal said, “I think that this is very important that we believe women, and that we show people across the Capitol and across the country that we will not accept this kind of behavior.”

Here you have the totally undemocratic ethos of the #MeToo movement spelled out in all its crudity. Whatever one thinks of Swalwell, and the World Socialist Web Site has no brief for this run-of-the-mill capitalist politician, there is no presumption of innocence, no trial of fact and no due process. The ethos of the #MeToo witch-hunters is guilty as accused!

Swalwell’s political demise cleared the way for the removal of another congressman, Republican Tony Gonzales of Texas, who had already announced he would not run for reelection after admitting to an affair with one of his staff. The woman, who was married with children, committed suicide. Gonzales resigned from Congress under pressure from both parties, shortly after Swalwell did so.

Press accounts claim that billionaire Tom Steyer, who closely trailed Swalwell among Democrats running in the June 2 “jungle primary,” would be the most likely beneficiary of Swalwell’s removal. Steyer has already spent $110 million on his own campaign, far more than all other candidates combined, Democratic and Republican.

 Former Democratic leader in the state legislature Willie Brown, a long-time power broker in the party, told USA Today on Tuesday that the Democrats would benefit from the Swalwell exposure coming before rather than after the June 2 primary, when Swalwell and a Republican would likely have emerged as the two candidates going forward to the general election. According to the newspaper, “Brown speculated that opposing candidates in both parties knew about Swalwell’s alleged misconduct, but only Democrats wanted it to come out before the primary.” 

*****

The use of such scandals is invariably associated with a shift to the right in capitalist politics. Swalwell was a well-publicized critic of Trump, particularly in his second impeachment over the failed January 2021 coup. He was a constant presence on cable networks and social media since Trump returned to the White House, denouncing his ICE raids against immigrants and other dictatorial moves. His removal likely means a Democratic governor in California more cooperative with the Trump administration. 

*****

Republican Congressman Gonzales had also run afoul of the Trump White House, occasionally voting against Trump’s policies and criticizing the most extreme anti-immigrant measures. His district covered the vast rural area along the Rio Grande, from El Paso almost to the Gulf of Mexico.

The swift removal of these congressmen is in sharp contrast to the blockade by the Trump administration—and the Biden administration before it—of any serious investigation into the Jeffrey Epstein affair. The convicted sex trafficker died in his Manhattan prison cell in 2019, under circumstances that suggest murder rather than suicide. 

For seven years since then, and for nearly two decades before his death, Epstein served as both a financial agent and pimp to billionaires, capitalist politicians and even British royalty. Despite the public denunciations by hundreds of former victims, not a single person, other than the deceased Epstein, has ever been prosecuted.

Last Thursday, in a particularly bizarre scene, First Lady Melania Trump gave a surprise press statement denouncing claims on social media relating to her past association with Epstein. She denied that she had been one of Epstein’s victims, or that Epstein had introduced her to Donald Trump, appealed for a congressional hearing to take the testimony of the victims and left without answering questions from the startled press corps.

5. The political lessons of Mamdani’s first 100 days

The weekend’s campaign-style events were supplemented with a new city-run website touting Mamdani’s accomplishments in his first 100 days: $1.2 billion secured for universal childcare, $9.3 million secured in worker and small business restitution and 100,000 potholes fixed. 

While Mamdani was busy patting himself on the back for initiatives like “fixing a bump on the Williamsburg Bridge,” a critical analysis of the last three-and-a-half months of the standard bearer for the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) sheds a different light on the content of the supposed “new era” ushered in on January 1.

Speaking on his accomplishments before an audience of supporters on Sunday, Mamdani did not dare to highlight the most important political initiative of his term thus far: his alliance with President Donald Trump. Mamdani has continued what he calls a productive relationship with the man he correctly characterizes as a fascist, meeting with Trump at the White House for a second time on the eve of the criminal war in Iran. 

Mamdani and Trump two days before the US launched strikes in Iran

In two addresses Sunday, speaking well over 5,000 words, Mamdani not once uttered the name “Trump.” He made zero references to the war in Iran, and managed just one fleeting mention of ICE. The omissions are not an accident. Mamdani, playing up his “democratic socialism” before an audience overwhelmingly hostile to Trump, would rather avoid dwelling on the blossoming partnership with the leading advocate of world war and dictatorship. 

Despite his reticence on the subject, Mamdani’s collaboration with Trump is extremely significant. Mamdani and the Democratic Socialists of America are put forward as the “left” alternative to the pro-business and pro-war politics of the Democratic Party establishment and the fascist politics of the Republicans. Mamdani himself was elected on the basis of left-wing appeals to address the affordability crisis and take on a system dominated by an oligarchy.

In the first months of the Mamdani administration, the strain on the working class is not abating; on the contrary, it’s reaching a breaking point. Trump’s criminal war in Iran is the latest catalyst. The administration is determined to make the working class pay for the unfolding disaster. Trump has requested $200 billion in supplemental war funds specifically for Iran, and roughly $1.5 trillion in military spending next year—a World War III budget. Beyond the inevitable cuts to social services to pay for war, the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz has already led to major increases in energy prices and will reverberate into all aspects of the economy. And an expansion of the war would have catastrophic consequences for the working class everywhere.

Alongside the war crimes in Iran, Trump is continuing to eviscerate democratic rights within the United States. Trump’s immigration Gestapo operates without constraints. ICE agents in New York City have arrested three times as many people in the first month and a half of 2026 as they did in the same period a year ago. Meanwhile, Trump is preparing the narrative that midterm elections—if they happen at all—are illegitimate and can be overturned.

Reflecting on his first hundred days in an interview with POLITICO, Mamdani made clear that none of the crimes of the Trump administration are impediments to deepening their alliance. “The president and I disagree on many things in public and in private,” Mamdani said in the interview. “We do, however, agree on one thing, which is a love for New York City. And that love, it is one that allows for our relationship to be a productive one, and allows for the city to know that it will not simply be affected by threats.”

David North, the chairperson of the World Socialist Web Site and of the Socialist Equality Party, responded on X, “If Mamdani were transported back to the 1930s as mayor of Berlin, he would say: ‘Hitler is the leader of the Nazis, but he loves sauerkraut and so do I.’”

The main political function of Mamdani’s alliance with Trump is to disorient those who are becoming radicalized and looking to (democratic) socialism for an alternative. Mamdani offers the poison that productive relationships can be forged with fascists, cutting workers and youth off from an orientation to the independent mobilization of the working class and a genuine struggle for socialism.

Instead, Mamdani and the DSA present a watered-down version of “sewer socialism,” offering minor reforms and managerial efficiency palatable to business interests and the political establishment. Even then, under conditions of a deepening crisis of American capitalism, with a ruling class turning towards dictatorship and war, Mamdani’s appeals to the ruling class and their political servants are able to yield very little.

*****

Meanwhile, Wall Street bonuses reached a record $49.2 billion last year, up 9 percent year over year, according to a report from the City Comptroller. The bonuses reflect an increase in Wall Street profits by more than 30 percent last year, to over $65 billion.

This staggering social inequality is coinciding with the beginning of an upsurge among workers and a political radicalization accelerated by the Trump administration. Already this year, nurses in New York City struck at three major hospital systems for 41 days. Next week may see the 34,000 building service workers walk off the job. A similar number of transit workers are nearing a contract deadline in May. And Mamdani will come into direct conflict with city workers later this year when DC37 and other union contracts expire.

For the working class to make real gains in improving living conditions, in defending democratic rights and resisting imperialist war, sharp lessons must be drawn from the Mamdani administration’s first 100 days. Mamdani and DSA represent the interests of an upper-middle-class layer dissatisfied with the status quo, not seeking to put an end to the horrors of capitalism, but a more comfortable life within it for those already living in privileged circumstances (the upper middle class). Mamdani’s fraudulent “socialism” must be rejected. The decisive question is building a movement that doesn’t seek to pressure the Democratic Party but politically breaks from it; one that aims not to more effectively organize oligarchic rule but fights for workers’ control; and one that rejects collaboration with the would-be dictator in the White House, instead mobilizing the strength of the working class internationally to fight fascism, dictatorship and war.

6. European states refuse to join in US blockade of Straits of Hormuz targeting Iran

European governments have rejected the Trump administration’s demands that they join the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz that Trump declared Sunday, after announcing a ceasefire last week in his war of aggression against Iran. A far-reaching and historic breakdown of European relations with the United States is underway.

At the same time, the European bourgeoisies’ response is marked above all by cowardice and hypocrisy. Not only is a blockade itself an act of war, but closure of the Strait of Hormuz would cut off essential oil, gas and fertilizer supplies to Europe and the entire world. Yet none of the European governments have dared denounce the blockade, call to end it, call to stop the war, or end military and financial assistance to the US government.

Instead, reflecting the outlook of the corrupt capitalist oligarchies they represent, Europe’s governments continue to discuss a naval intervention in the Persian Gulf—though this would face the same Iranian missile threat that have so far dissuaded the US Navy from assaulting Iran’s coast. Britain and France are convening a summit meeting on Friday of an alliance of 40 countries to prepare a naval mission to the Strait of Hormuz, coordinated independently of Washington.

“This strictly defensive mission, which is separate from the belligerents, will be deployed as soon as the situation permits it,” said French President Emmanuel Macron. He called for “a solid and durable solution to the Middle East conflict via the diplomatic road, a solution that would allow the region of a robust framework so everyone can live in peace and security.” He went on to denounce “the nuclear and ballistic activities of Iran as well as its destabilizing actions in the region.” 

Macron’s lies are staggering. The essential threat to peace and security in the Middle East comes not from Iran, which did not initiate this war or any of the other wars launched against it, but from Washington and the war of extermination launched by America’s fascist president. As for peace in the Middle East, Paris is complicit in undermining it, by consistently stressing Macron’s friendship with the Israeli government amid its genocide in Gaza. 

In Germany, Defense Minister Boris Pistorius responded, “This war is not our war, we did not start it … What does Donald Trump want a handful of European frigates in the strait of Hormuz to accomplish, when even the powerful US Navy could not do so?” Chancellor Friedrich Merz’s office issued a statement that Trump’s war against Iran “has nothing to do with NATO.”

Merz’s statement is a pathetic dodge, in that it is clear that Trump’s war with Iran and in particular his blockading of the Strait of Hormuz is cutting off key energy supplies to Europe. This follows the destruction of Germany’s Nordstream pipeline to Russia after US President Joe Biden threatened that it would be destroyed. This consistent US policy, by directly threatening to cut off Europe’s energy supply, most definitely “has to do with NATO.”

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer told BBC Radio: “We’re not supporting the blockade and all of the marshalling diplomatically, politically and capability... that’s all focused, from our point of view, on getting the Strait fully open.” He added, “whatever the pressure—and there's been some considerable pressure—we’re not getting dragged into the war. That’s not in our national interest, because I’m not going to act unless there’s a clear, lawful basis and a clear thought-through plan.”

*****

One basic contradiction marks the European governments’ policy. When the US government takes war measures targeting them, they retaliate not against the United States, but against Iran and the Middle East. Underlying their collaboration with Trump is not only personal cowardice but, above all, objective imperialist interests. The European powers are intervening to defend their own military bases and profits extracted from the Middle East, and to maintain financial ties to Wall Street as well as their NATO military alliance with US imperialism.

The cost of the war in lives and the catastrophic economic impact of the conflict on millions of workers’ jobs and the purchasing power of the entire population are of little concern to Macron, Starmer and the leaders of other capitalist governments across Europe. They are far more concerned with salvaging the domination of the Middle East by world imperialism, increasingly threatened by the initial failure of Trump’s war, than the well-being of the working people of Europe or the world.

Despite the European powers’ refusal to challenge the most reactionary elements of US imperialist foreign policy, the rift between Washington and its European NATO “allies” is continuing to widen and grow more explosive by the day. 

*****

While US threats of an energy cutoff visibly pose a mortal threat to Europe’s economy, such financial moves pose an equal threat to the US economy. European investors hold an estimated total of $8 trillion in US assets—Treasury bonds, stocks and corporate bonds—equivalent to 24 percent of the US sovereign debt. If European investors dumped their US Treasury bonds, either due to increasingly low returns on US dollar assets or as retaliation for US tariff or energy threats, it could trigger a massive crisis of the $38 trillion US sovereign debt and a surge in US interest rates. 

The explosive conflicts between the NATO imperialist powers again illustrate the fundamental contradiction of the capitalist system, between world economy and the nation-state system, that the great Marxists of the 20th century identified as the source of the two world wars in that century. The critical 21st century task for the workers is to stop capitalism’s accelerating plunge into global war and genocide by developing an international movement in the working class against imperialist war, and to take power out of the hands of the capitalist oligarchy and establish socialism.

7. Venezuelan workers protest persistent poverty amid privatizations and US corporate deals

An economic crisis marked by widespread hunger and disease continues for Venezuelan workers, even as Chavista officials boast of how “sexy” the country has become for foreign investors. This grotesque coexistence of deepening social misery alongside an unrestricted courtship of transnational corporations defines the current stage of Venezuela’s crisis.

Even as executives from Chevron and Shell parade through the halls of government and oil production again surpasses 1 million barrels per day—amid high global oil prices—workers continue to live in extreme poverty.

There is no contradiction here. A decade of shock therapy vastly worsened by US sanctions and enforced through low wages by the Chavista government has produced the conditions for the superexploitation of millions of Venezuelan workers. 

*****

As part of measures to attract foreign investment, the state oil company PDVSA is implementing reduced access to subsidized gasoline while expanding gas stations offering premium fuel. This gasoline is sold exclusively in US dollars at $3.79 per gallon—far beyond the reach of most Venezuelans, who are paid in rapidly depreciating bolivars.

These policies are fueling growing unrest. A coalition of trade unions and student organizations launched a protest last Thursday demanding wage increases. An estimated 2,000 participants attempted to march to the Miraflores Presidential Palace but were violently blocked by anti-riot police. Security forces deployed tear gas and detained five protesters. It marked the largest anti-government demonstration since the January 3 US military raid in which President Nicolás Maduro was abducted and transferred to a New York City prison. 

*****

This protest followed another significant mobilization on Wednesday. Hundreds of students and workers from the Universidad Central de Venezuela marched through Caracas demanding wage increases. They denounced that their salaries have not increased in four years and officially amount to about $1 per month, supplemented by approximately $190 in bonuses. Teachers have announced plans to strike on April 22, indicating that broader sectors are preparing for sustained struggle.

Another protest is planned this Thursday in front of the US embassy, with organizers declaring their intention to demonstrate before “those who truly rule in Venezuela.”

Interim President Delcy Rodríguez has responded with a combination of repression and empty promises. Last week, she appealed to workers for “patience” in a televised address, pledging a “responsible” increase in the minimum wage on May Day so as not to fuel inflation. Framed in such terms, any increase is widely expected to be negligible. The minimum wage, unchanged since 2022, stands at 130 bolivars—approximately $0.27 per month

*****

Against this backdrop, the transformation of Venezuela into a semi-colony has become increasingly explicit. President Donald Trump has repeatedly praised Rodríguez while his administration advances a broader project of hemispheric domination, described in terms of a “Greater North America” extending from Greenland to the equator.

As part of this agenda, the Pentagon has escalated near-daily missile strikes on small boats across the eastern Pacific and Caribbean—claiming without evidence that they are “narco-traffickers”—killing at least 173 innocent fishermen, since September. Caracas has issued no denunciation of these cold-blooded killings.

Rodríguez is acting openly as a tool of US corporate interests. This posture can only intensify popular opposition among workers who have endured more than a decade of devastating US sanctions, repeated coup attempts, and, most recently, direct military violence.

At a recent investor forum in Miami—a city long regarded in Caracas as a center of far-right exile politics and coup plotting—Rodríguez openly presented Venezuela as a semicolonial supplier of oil and critical minerals. She emphasized the country’s vast reserves and low production costs, highlighting renegotiated prices and reduced taxes and royalties designed to attract foreign investors.

These overtures have been matched by concrete policy shifts. The Chavista administration has not opposed Trump’s executive order requiring that Venezuelan oil revenues be deposited into US Treasury accounts and managed entirely by the US government. This extraordinary arrangement effectively strips the country of sovereign control over its primary source of income.

*****

The economic restructuring has proceeded rapidly. Following the earlier passage of legislation on crude oil, the Chavista-controlled Congress last week unanimously approved a law privatizing gold and other “strategic minerals.” The law removes exclusive state control and establishes a framework for 30-year concessions to private corporations, with royalties that can be paid “in kind”—that is, effectively not at all. Shipments of gold and minerals are already departing Venezuelan ports under these arrangements. 

The emphasis on economic restructuring also signals the indefinite postponement of elections overseen by Washington, under the fraudulent banner of a “democratic transition.”

Jorge Rodríguez, head of Congress and brother of the interim president, confirmed this orientation in a recent interview. “Venezuela is becoming quite sexy from the point of view of foreign investment opportunities,” he declared. When asked when elections will take place, he replied: “What matters most right now is the economy. It is necessary for the Venezuelan economy to advance toward such dynamism that the population feels that this entire process was worthwhile.”

For the working class, however, the reality is starkly different. The “dynamism” celebrated by officials and investors translates into intensified exploitation, declining real wages, and the dismantling of social rights. 

8. Censorship of artist Basma al-Sharif continues: Germany’s foreign ministry reprimands Goethe-Institut for showcasing her work

State censorship efforts are once again being directed against an artist with Palestinian roots. Foreign Minister Johann Wadephul’s (Christian Democratic Union, CDU) ministry has reprimanded the Goethe‑Institut for allowing a work by Basma al‑Sharif to be shown in an exhibition in Lithuania.

The Goethe‑Institut is a non‑profit cultural institution that operates worldwide to promote the study of the German language and international cultural exchange. It is funded primarily by the German government.

The exhibition in question, shown from October 2025 to March 2026, was a collaboration between the Contemporary Art Centre Vilnius (CAC), the Goethe‑Institut and the Academy of Arts in Berlin. It was curated by the CAC under a title that is particularly resonant given the wars currently raging: Bells and Cannons–Contemporary Art in the Face of Militarisation.

As part of the exhibition, al‑Sharif’s installation Deep Sleep was shown. This meditative, dreamlike video was shot in 2024 in abandoned ruins in Malta, Athens and Gaza. It links these locations to convey the destruction in Gaza to the viewer. Colourful, flickering lights; sun, earth, stone, rock, sky and water flood the scenes, accompanied by rhythmic sounds of waves, bells and footsteps. The installation closely aligned with the exhibition’s theme, which alludes to the historical practice of melting down church bells during the First and Second World Wars to manufacture cannons and ammunition.

Al‑Sharif has been demonised by the government as an antisemite and an Israel‑hater because, in view of the genocidal actions of the Israeli armed forces in Gaza, she posted pro-Palestinian content on her Instagram account, including a call to boycott Israel. Because she referred to the State of Israel as a “Zionist entity,” she has been accused of “denying Israel’s right to exist.”

Goethe‑Institut officials stated they regretted not having been aware of these posts, claiming they were incompatible with its values. The German foreign ministry, which provides the bulk of the institute’s funding, made it clear that “greater diligence is necessary in the planning and conception of events with cooperation partners, and this is also expected by the foreign ministry.” This is coded language for censorship and repression.

*****

Further attacks on Basma al‑Sharif are already under way. She has been invited to the internationally respected Osnabrück European Media Art Festival (EMAF), where her award‑winning short film Morning Circle is due to be screened in late April, alongside her participation in a panel discussion.

On March 30, the city of Osnabrück announced that “intensive discussions” had taken place with festival organisers, who nevertheless continued to support al‑Sharif. The city subsequently distanced itself from relevant parts of the program and Lower Saxony's  Minister‑President Olaf Lies (SPD), withdrew his patronage of the festival. However, funding from the city and the state government remains intact. 

9. Coalition leader’s speech: Australian ruling elite turns to anti-immigrant poison

The Coalition leader called for the reversal of the nominally non-discriminatory immigration program that has existed since the formal end of the blatantly racist White Australia regime in the 1960s.

10. Democrat Abdul El-Sayed seeks to contain anti-war opposition during Michigan university campaign tour

While the overwhelmingly young crowd of students and workers was no doubt drawn to El-Sayed’s rally by opposition to the Gestapo-like operations of Immigration Customs and Enforcement (ICE) officers and the fascist Trump administration’s broader attacks on democratic rights and social institutions, the perspective offered at the rally was a political dead-end.

El-Sayed, who was born in Detroit of Egyptian immigrant parents, previously ran for the Democratic nomination for governor in 2018 with the backing of Senator Bernie Sanders, losing to Gretchen Whitmer. He has headed public health departments in Detroit and Wayne County.

After the announcement by Democratic Senator Gary Peters that he would not seek reelection this year, El-Sayed entered the race for the Democratic nomination to succeed him. His campus tour is a calculated intervention by a faction of the Democratic Party—along with its pseudo-left satellites—to corral the growing leftward movement of students within the framework of capitalist electoral politics.

In his Senate campaign, El‑Sayed has positioned himself as the “left” candidate in a three-way Democratic primary set for August 4, against US Representative Haley Stevens and State Senator Mallory McMorrow. Polling by Emerson College in late January 2026 showed McMorrow at 22 percent, Stevens at 17 percent and El‑Sayed at 16 percent among Democratic primary voters, with a huge 38 percent still undecided, leaving the race wide open.

Former Representative Mike Rogers is expected to be the Republican nominee. Rogers narrowly lost a Senate contest to Democrat Elissa Slotkin, a former CIA agent, in 2024. 

*****

At the Ann Arbor rally, addressed by El-Sayed, Piker and Representatives Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) and Summer Lee (D-PA), the speeches were most notable for what they avoided. While denouncing the militarism and outright criminality of the Trump administration, the speakers made no mention of capitalism or socialism, although Piker calls himself a “Marxist-Leninist” and Tlaib and Lee are both members of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA). 

Everything was carefully edited to focus only on the primary in August and the general election in November. Toward this end, the content of nearly all the speeches emphasized El-Sayed’s supposed trustworthiness. “He’s someone I don’t have to call and check on,” Tlaib stated, adding, “if he’s elected, I know I won’t have to watch him,” and voters won’t have to pressure him constantly to “do the right thing.”

*****

None of the speakers made any reference to the death of Danhao Wang, a Chinese national and U-M researcher who committed suicide following intense questioning by federal agents last month, or the role played by the U-M administration in condoning and covering up the incident.

Yousef Rabhi, a Washtenaw County Commissioner, DSA member and Democratic candidate for Ann Arbor mayor, also spoke ahead of El-Sayed. Screaming out a speech peppered with expletives, Rabhi denounced Trump while stating, “We need to take this country back!” But from whom?

*****

When it was finally El-Sayed’s turn to speak, the “progressive Democrat” had just as little to offer as the preceding speakers. While emphasizing that ICE is not reformable and must be abolished, El-Sayed only presented one path to oppose fascism and war: vote for the Democratic Party, which is facilitating the rise of fascism and US imperialism’s wars abroad.

Publicly, El-Sayed expresses rhetorical opposition to US imperialism’s Middle Eastern wars as matters of flawed military and political procedure and presidential overreach. Behind this anti-war appearance, El-Sayed aligns himself with the Democrats’ imperialist foreign policy consensus, citing both the US-NATO war against Russia in Ukraine and the US-NATO bombing of Serbia in 1999 as examples of positive exercises of US military power. 

In line with the politics of imperialism, El-Sayed’s gestures in support of expanding healthcare and social spending are of a limited reformist character that do nothing to challenge or undermine the capitalist system, the source of inequality, war and authoritarianism pressing down on workers and youth.

The droning chorus of statements praising El-Sayed as a steadfast and reliable political representative is true only in the sense that he will be firm in his allegiance to the capitalist politics of the Democratic Party and the ruling elite, which are presently rushing to provide political cover for Trump’s war against Iran.

In an interview with the DSA-linked publication Jacobin, El-Sayed emphasized that winning in Michigan would “suggest a way forward in the rest of the country,” meaning he had a strategy for rebranding the Democratic Party. While insisting he could “speak truth to power,” El-Sayed promised the ruling class that his proposals—single‑payer healthcare, limited debt relief, modest taxation of the wealthy—would not fundamentally threaten their wealth, property or control of the state. 

Like DSA member Zohran Mamdani, who won the New York City mayoral election as a Democrat in 2025 on a platform of limited social reform, opposition to the US-Israeli-led genocide of Palestinians in Gaza and resistance to Trump’s authoritarianism, and now leads a program of cuts to social spending and political alliances with the fascist in the White House, El-Sayed offers no serious alternative to the right-wing politics of the Democratic Party. 

11. Trump DOJ seeks to erase January 6 convictions of Proud Boys, Oath Keepers ringleaders ahead of 2026 elections

While Trump’s pardons and commutations last year shortened or ended the sentences of the convicted, they did not erase the actual felonies from their records. If these motions are granted and the charges dismissed, they will effectively wipe away the criminal judgments in the most serious January 6 cases.

Tuesday’s motion claims that dismissal of the convictions is “just under the circumstances” because the “United States has determined in its prosecutorial discretion that dismissal of this criminal case is in the interests of justice.” In other words, it is in the interests of the Trump administration, and the financial oligarchy it represents, that fascist militia leaders face no consequences for their criminal actions. 

*****

The DOJ’s motion is a warning to the working class. Under conditions in which Trump and the Republicans are widely hated, the aspiring dictator is summoning and preparing the same paramilitary elements that heeded his violent call to action some five years ago.

Trump is already moving to disrupt the midterm elections and make it difficult for workers and their families to vote. He has called for a federal takeover of elections and has demanded that states send voter rolls to the DOJ which are then shared with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for alleged “citizenship checks” aimed at removing voters. At least 12 states, including Alaska, Arkansas, Indiana, Louisiana, Mississippi, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas and Wyoming, have already sent lists to the federal government.

Trump has repeatedly called for eliminating vote by mail, castigating it as inherently fraudulent, and is also trying to pass the SAVE Act, an anti-voter legislation aimed at imposing bureaucratic hurdles to proving citizenship in order to vote.

In the last month, Trump has deployed Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) thugs to airports to harass, kidnap and detain workers. War Room host and former White House adviser Steve Bannon has repeatedly called on Trump to deploy the immigration Gestapo to polling locations.

That Trump is in a position to pardon his fascist foot soldiers and disrupt the midterm elections is entirely the fault of the Democratic Party. On the day of the attack, then President-elect Joe Biden implored Trump to go on television and appeal to these fascists to halt their rampage.

Trump did no such thing, but this did not prevent Biden and the Democrats from calling for a “strong Republican Party” in the aftermath of the attack. Throughout Biden’s presidency, his attorney general, Merrick Garland, stalled efforts to prosecute Trump for the coup. Taking the measure of the Democrats’ unwillingness to prosecute Trump and his co-conspirators, Republicans, and even sections of the pseudo-left, adopted Trump’s lie that the greatest injustice that occurred on January 6 was not the storming of the Capitol and the attempt to overthrow the election but the prosecution of some of Trump’s fascist foot soldiers.

Throughout Biden’s presidency, the Democrats did everything in their power to downplay the danger of dictatorship and rehabilitate the Republican Party. This was done in order to advance their shared class interests, namely prosecuting the US-NATO proxy war against Russia in Ukraine, the genocide in Gaza and eliminating all public health and mitigation measures concerning the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.

12. United Kingdom:  Workers at Cummins turbo components plant in Huddersfield reject insulting pay offer tied to strings

The Unite union received a mandate for strike action at the start of April. Contrary to its media briefings that “escalating strike action will be announced in the coming days”, no dates have been confirmed.

13. After Amazon worker dies at Troutdale, Oregon warehouse, management ordered employees to work around the body

A worker died at Amazon’s PDX9 fulfillment center in Troutdale, Oregon, on Monday, April 6. For more than an hour after his collapse, employees at the facility say that management ordered them to continue working around his body. The death went unreported for a week before the online investigative outlet, the Western Edge, broke the story on April 13.

The worker, 46 years old, was employed as a “tote runner,” which involves gathering stacks of yellow plastic bins, loading them onto a cart and hauling them along warehouse corridors for other workers to fill. According to multiple employees who spoke to the Western Edge on condition of anonymity, the facility recently reduced the number of tote runners, increasing the physical burden on those who remain.

The unidentified man collapsed on the second level of the loading dock. A 911 call placed at 1:55 p.m. captured a worker describing what he found: the man had extensive blood coming from his head and was “very blue looking.” A second caller asked the dispatcher for instruction on how to operate a defibrillator.

A worker identified as Sam, whose name was changed by the Western Edge to protect her from retribution, has CPR training and asked her supervisor for permission to assist a woman who was already performing chest compressions. The supervisor refused. “It has to be management or a safety team,” Sam was told. “Please get back to work.” Sam pressed further. The supervisor reportedly replied, “Just turn around and not look. Let’s get back to work.” 

*****

One worker on social media corroborated the story. “This is my site. This was a tote runner that worked FHD [who] was an older gentleman who suffered cardiac arrest likely from heat and over exertion. Fell down, hit his head. Was given CPR on site [and] by the time the ambulance came he had already passed. Our hearts and prayers go out to this person’s family. It’s been truly sad around the facility.”

Workers also commented on Amazon’s internal messaging app, one noting that, “Amazon was given a 16 billion dollar tax cut to invest in AI and robotics so they can cut 600,000 jobs. Do you think Amazon cares about safety?” 

*****

PDX9 has long been among the most dangerous of Amazon’s facilities. A 2019 investigation by the outlet Reveal found it had the highest injury rate of 23 major distribution centers examined. In 2018, more than a quarter of all workers at the site had sustained injuries on the job.

The trend continued during the start of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, when Amazon’s refusal to provide proper protective equipment caused at least 100 infections, making it the fourth-largest workplace outbreak in Oregon at the time. In August 2021, a second outbreak at PDX9 had infected 345 workers, the highest total of any workplace in Oregon, surpassing even overwhelmed medical centers. 

*****

The death at PDX9 also exposes the role of the Democratic Party in setting up America’s industrial slaughterhouse. The facility was built using $9.6 million in tax breaks granted by the Port of Portland and the city of Troutdale in 2017, and total public subsidies extended to Amazon for its Oregon expansion reached $213.1 million. At the time, Oregon Governor Kate Brown called the facility’s opening “a celebration.”

The deaths at Amazon are part of America’s industrial slaughterhouse. Last April, autoworker Ronald Adams Sr. was killed at the Stellantis Dundee Engine Plant when an overhead gantry crane activated without warning. A year later, MIOSHA has not released the results of its investigation, and the United Auto Workers (UAW) has worked alongside management to suppress the case.

Under the Trump administration, OSHA’s enforcement capacity is being gutted further. Proposed budgets slash inspection staffing, freeze new rule making, including a heat illness prevention standard that could have applied to facilities like PDX9 and replace enforcement with voluntary compliance by employers. Workers cannot rely on these agencies, which have never protected them.

The defense of workers’ lives at Amazon and every other workplace requires workers themselves to organize. The WSWS urges Amazon workers to build rank-and-file safety committees, genuinely democratic organizations of, by and for workers on the shop floor, to fight back against unsafe working conditions and to conduct their own investigations when workers are injured or killed. 

14. Labour peer George Robertson demands UK welfare spending cull to fund “warfighting readiness”, accusing Treasury of “vandalism”

“We cannot defend Britain with an ever-expanding welfare budget,” Robertson said.

15. Australia:  Labor intensifies assault on disability funding ahead of May budget

The cuts to the National Disability Insurance Scheme target those with so-called “mild” or “moderate” needs, who will be stripped of supports or face drastic reductions.

15.  After shutting down JBS strike in Greeley, Colorado, UFCW pushes through contract 30 cents better than management’s initial offer

Over the weekend, the United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Local 7 ratified a new contract for 3,800 workers at the JBS beef processing plant in Greeley, Colorado. The deal runs retroactively from July 2025 through April 2028.

The agreement addresses none of the workers’ demands which led to a powerful three-week strike. It was the largest US meatpacking strike in more than 60 years. Workers at the plant account for more than 6 percent of all US beef processing.

The UFCW bureaucracy, after isolating the strike as much as possible, shut it down on April 4 without a deal. The present contract was announced a week later, giving workers little time to study and discuss among themselves before voting.

Local 7 President Kim Cordova hypocritically declared: “These workers stood together on the picket line for three weeks because they knew their worth and refused to be disrespected. Today, that sacrifice has been rewarded.” Cordova claimed that the “contract is significantly different [from the company’s last offer]. It is material.”

In fact, JBS spokesperson Nikki Richardson said in a press release that it “reflects the same economic framework JBS USA presented in its Last, Best and Final offer.”

Instead of a meager 60 cent per hour raise in the first year of the contract, JBS and Local 7 agreed to a 70 cent increase, an improvement of only 10 cents over the initial offer. During the second and third years of the contract, the initially proposed 30 cent increases were likewise raised by 10 cents to 40 cents per hour.

Assuming that plant employees work an eight hour day—even though most shifts actually have fewer hours—each worker would only receive an additional $5.60 per day before taxes during the first year of the agreement. After the second and third year increases, JBS Greeley workers would see an aggregate $12 increase per day, only 40 cents more than the current average price of a meal at a Colorado McDonald’s. 

*****

The Trump administration is preparing for a renewed offensive in its genocidal war against Iran and is expecting the trade union apparatus to fall into line as it demands harsh discipline on the factory floor. The UFCW, in the latest Greeley agreement, has thus dutifully played its assigned role.

At the same time that Local 7 reached its agreement with JBS, the United Teachers of Los Angeles, Associated Administrators of Los Angeles and SEIU Local 99 also reached a last-minute agreement with the Los Angeles Unified School District to block a strike of more than 70,000 school workers.

This all makes the formation of independent rank-and-file committees an urgent necessity for workers both in the US and internationally. The trade union apparatus acts as nothing more than an appendage of the corporations, pacifying worker resistance and ensuring that obscene profits remain unimpeded in the midst of escalating war and dictatorship.

17. Australia:  Labor intensifies assault on disability funding ahead of May budget

The cuts to the National Disability Insurance Scheme target those with so-called “mild” or “moderate” needs, who will be stripped of supports or face drastic reductions. 

18. The socialist answer to the housing crisis

Land and property have become asset vehicles for funneling billions of pounds from the working class—those who produce society’s wealth—to the billionaires. 

19.  Workers Struggles: Africa & Europe

Africa

Liberia: 

Union ends rubber workers’ stoppage without resolving owed benefits

Nigeria: 

Judiciary workers in Abia State strike over pay and conditions continues into fourth week

Union suspends strike by resident doctors

South Africa: 

Ongoing pay strike by workers at CJA Telecommunications in Pretoria threatens to spread
 
Former Extended Public Works Programme workers protest for jobs and unpaid benefits'
 
Europe

Belgium:

Postal workers in wildcat strikes against deteriorating working conditions

France:

Confectionery workers in Perpignan strike for pay increase

Netherlands:

Tens of thousands of government officials strike over pay freeze and staff shortages

United Kingdom:

Academic staff at London university walk out over job cut threat

Passenger support staff at a London airport set to walk out over pay

Bus drivers at east London company to hold further stoppages over fatigue fears

Further strike by teachers at London’s Great Ormond Street Hospital over sacking of union representative

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

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.