(en) An Anarchist Communist Reply to ?Rojava: An Anarcho-Syndicalist Perspective? by Anarkismo Editors Group - Anarkismo.net

REVOLUTIONARY SOLIDARITY WITH THE PEOPLES' STRUGGLE ---- This text is a response to the 
article Rojava: An Anarcho-Syndicalist Perspective by K.B, recently published on the Ideas 
and Action website of the North America-based Workers Solidarity Alliance (WSA). In the 
article, there is an attack on the Rojava revolution in the Middle East, an event in which 
the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) has played a key role. ---- This response is not 
published in bad faith or with ill intentions towards the writer or their organisation 
but, rather, in order to clarify and share our thinking regards the question of anarchist 
support both for national liberation movements and what is, for us, a very important and 
inspiring struggle playing out in the Middle East. The aim is to have a frank, and 
comradely, debate that takes us all forward.

CONTEXT FOR CRITICAL SUPPORT

The PKK and its projects have attracted attention not just for the Rojava revolution ? 
where a substantial part of the PKK programme is being implemented. The PKK has also 
attracted world attention for its heroic battle against the murderous ultra-rightwing 
forces of the ?Islamic State?/ISIS, particularly in battles in Syria.

The PKK originally stood for an independent Marxist state for the Kurdish people, to be 
created through means like armed struggle. Over the last 10 years, however, the PKK has 
significantly shifted from this project, explicitly adopting core elements of ?democratic 
confederalism? ? an approach derived from the late, anarchist-influenced, writer Murray 
Bookchin. In 2005, the jailed PKK leader Abdullah ?calan said:

The democratic confederalism of Kurdistan is not a State system, it is the democratic 
system of a people without a State... It takes its power from the people and adopts to 
reach self sufficiency in every field including economy.[1]

The issue of the relation of anarchists and syndicalists to movements like the PKK ? 
movements that are not explicitly, or even thoroughly, anarchist ? is a matter of 
controversy. A substantial section of the anarchist movement, particularly the large 
platformist and especifista network around Anarkismo.net, has supported the PKK, although 
not uncritically.

LOGIC OF SUPPORT

In summary of our general orientation, we support struggles against oppression in 
principle, and this includes struggles against national and racial oppression.

Concretely, this means taking a side with people in struggle against oppression, and 
defending their right to choose approaches we might not agree with. In the case of 
national liberation struggles, this means we defend the right of colonised peoples to 
resist and overcome imperialist repression of projects of liberation by means of 
political-economic forms, such as independent liberal democratic or state-socialist 
statehood, that we see will ultimately fail to fully emancipate proletarians and peasants. 
This is an issue of principle: opposing oppression, and taking sides with the oppressed. 
Therefore we do not take a ?purist? position that seems to be neutral, but that in 
practice equates oppressed and oppressor as equal evils.

This should not, however, be misunderstood to mean a blanket endorsement of every position 
or action or current taken in such struggles; we do not accept the position that refuses 
to make any criticisms, or take any independent position, on the basis that only ?the 
oppressed? can decide, or on the grounds that ?solidarity? demands silence. Obviously only 
the oppressed can decide, but the oppressed are not politically or socially homogenous, 
and all struggles are internally contested and imperfect. Solidarity is about comradely 
assistance; it is not about closing dialogue or excusing errors.

In concrete terms, we do not support every organised current in struggles against 
oppression. The closer an organised current is to our positions, the more we support them 
and show solidarity; and at the same time, there are some political positions that are 
simply unacceptable. In terms of strategy and tactics, there is a sliding scale, and this 
means we prioritise, in practice, relations with some groups over others, and deliberately 
do not establish any relations at all with others.

Further, while showing solidarity, and providing concrete assistance, we do not 
?liquidate? our politics or our project, becoming uncritical supporters, or donor 
organisations. Our aim is, simply, to align with struggles against oppression, while also 
aiming to influence those struggles. Only anarchist-communism offers the conditions for a 
reconstruction of human societies that will enable a complete resolution of various social 
evils, including various types of oppression.

Therefore, in our solidarity, we also engage in politics as an independent force that 
seeks some influence. Engagement is an issue of strategy; its precise forms depend on 
context and are therefore issues of tactics. But centrally, in our engagement, we retain 
our political independence and critique, and do not abandon our principle (strategy and 
tactics). Concretely, there are some practical issues around which we can cooperate 
directly with specific organised currents and offer solidarity (even if only at the level 
of raising awareness); then there are various struggles within the struggles of the 
oppressed, in which we can take sides; but we aim at all times to propose, and win 
influence for, our methods, aims and projects.

We will summarise the concrete applications of this approach to the specific case of 
Rojava in the conclusion, but for now, briefly: in the fight against the Islamic State/ 
ISIS, and against the national oppression of the Kurds, the Anarkismo.net network aligns 
itself with fighters against these forces. Secondly, the PKK?s partial embrace of 
anarchism lends additional grounds for support: for all its limitations, the PKK project 
is one that in some respects aligns with anarchist ideals. It is far from a top-down 
authoritarian regime in the making, in the mould of, for example, Mao?s Red Army. In this 
respect, critical support for the PKK is similar to the critical support many anarchists 
have for the Zapatistas (EZLN) in Mexico. The issue is not whether the PKK is 100% 
anarchist ? it is certainly not ? but rather, whether the PKK is fighting on the right 
side, and secondly, whether there are elements of the PKK programme that anarchists can 
gladly support.

In short, this approach to support and solidarity ? and even alliances ? does not proceed 
from the position that anarchists can only ever engage with forces that are purely, 
unambiguously anarchist. Rather, the logic is that anarchists stand with the oppressed 
against the oppressors ? without renouncing their differences with other currents. And the 
logic is also that anarchists should engage with movements that are, if not completely 
anarchist, at least in some ways closer to our goals.

Politics is a messy situation, based on debate, conflict and compromise. It is not about 
waiting for perfect movements and perfect moments, but about trying to navigate ? again, 
without liquidating our politics ? a more complicated reality, marked by partial gains and 
messy struggles.

THE ARGUMENT REPUDIATING SUPPORT

By contrast the article in Ideas and Action takes another stance. It portrays the PKK in 
the worst possible light, as ?authoritarian,? ?patriarchal? and ?ethno-nationalist,? and 
goes to the extent of raising several serious charges against ?calan. The political 
conclusions drawn by the author ?K.B.? are clear: anarchists should distance themselves 
from the Rojava revolution and the PKK.

So, this is partly a judgement that the PKK and its project is neither against oppression, 
nor in any sense compatible with anarchist goals. But it tends to follow a larger line of 
reasoning in a sector of the anarchist movement that routinely dismisses everything that 
is not purely anarchist ? and in practice, confines itself only to engaging with other 
anarchists. If this approach is correct in pointing to the dangers of uncritically 
supporting non-anarchist movements, it responds in such a manner that it cuts itself from 
engaging any movement, and taking any really concrete position on most immediate struggles 
? in favour of general slogans and appeals that have not much concrete application.

USE OF EVIDENCE

Regrettably, many of the claims made by ?K.B.? do not derive from a balanced engagement 
with the evidence. While the author is extremely sceptical of the credentials of the PKK, 
he or she is far more credulous whenever the evidence paints the PKK in a poor light. The 
most notable example is the assertion that ?calan is a ?rapist.? A closer examination of 
the sources used reveals only links to a Turkish ultra-nationalist website hostile to the 
PKK ? and a book attacking ?calan. Yet even the author of this book provides no evidence 
except what he admits are ?rumours? without confirmation.

This is a fairly unfortunate way of arguing ? scouring the internet for unfounded and 
defamatory claims by dubious sources, and accepting these uncritically. On other points, 
too, the writer ?K.B.? makes statements that have no factual basis. The PKK and its allied 
structures are presented as narrowly ?ethno-nationalist.? Nationalism is an ideology 
aiming at multi-class unity and class society: in its Marxist and now its democratic 
confederalist phases, the PKK never really fitted this mould.

If ?ethno-nationalist? is taken to mean the PKK is narrowly, exclusively, Kurdish, this 
too will not wash with what is taking place in Rojava. Rojava is not only about the 
liberation of Kurds: ?K.B.? even quotes a statement by the Kurdish Anarchist Forum (KAF), 
in the article itself, which points to a more complex picture. The KAF states clearly that 
the Movement of the Democratic Society (Tev-Dem) in Rojava has the involvement of many 
people ?from different backgrounds, including Kurdish, Arab, Muslim, Christian, Assyrian 
and Yazidis?[2].

So, this is by no means the narrow, even xenophobic, PKK that ?K.B.? wishes to expose ? 
but in fact misrepresents. On the contrary, however, ?calan and other PKK militants [3] 
present democratic confederalism as part of the liberation of all peoples of the Middle 
East ? not just the Kurds ? and have come to reject nationalism itself strongly.

SIDESTEPPING SOME FACTS

The author ?K.B.? also wishes to present the PKK as somehow a ?patriarchal? (that is, 
male-dominated) movement. The main evidence given is the prominent role of men in 
leadership positions. But there is more to a movement?s position on women?s liberation 
than a head count. Despite operating in a context in which the subordination of women is 
actively promoted by many forces ? not least the Islamic State/ISIS ? the PKK has 
nonetheless actively promoted equality for women in its armed forces, structure and 
ideology. Invoking the demand for women?s liberation in Rojava to be carried out by some 
sort of ?autonomous? women?s movement is abstract, since such a movement does not exist; 
it is also misleading, in that to the extent that any force is fighting for women?s 
liberation in Rojava, it is the PKK.

The PKK pioneered the movement for women?s liberation in Kurdistan, and it is a fact that 
those areas where the PKK does not have a major presence are very patriarchal, whereas 
those where the PKK has a presence are not. This is not a coincidence. It is because the 
PKK sees the domination of women as closely linked to other forms of exploitation and 
oppression and believes that the struggle against women?s oppression, therefore, must be 
at the heart of any progressive struggle ? in this case for the liberation of the Kurds 
and, ultimately, of the popular classes of the Middle East.

?K.B.? then stresses that the PKK were originally Marxist-Leninist, or at least influenced 
by this approach in the 1970s and 1980s. That may indeed be the case, but one question to 
be asked is whether that is currently the case. The Zapatistas, too, came from a Maoist 
approach; Mikhail Bakunin himself was originally a Slavic nationalist. The past is not 
always a good guide to the present, especially when other aspects of the past are ignored.

People and organisations change politically and it is irrelevant what they were: it is 
what they say now and what they do now that matters. The PKK has also changed in many 
ways; this too is part of its past. The PKK has critiqued its past, trying to change its 
politics, and in these critiques [5] they are sometimes brutally honest about their own 
past flaws. This is very promising and shows political maturity.

How many movements ? including anarchist ones ? honestly reflect on what is or has been 
wrong with them and use this to improve? So, while the PKK were not perfect, and still are 
not, they have reflected and changed ? it will not do to show they were Marxist-Leninist 
thirty years ago, as if nothing has changed.

DIFFERENCES IN METHOD BETWEEN THE TWO LINES

It is in invoking a demand for a new, autonomous, women?s movement in Rojava that ?K.B.? 
reveals an important part of her or his methodology. Situations are not engaged as they 
are; they are engaged by what the militant would like them to be, which usually means a 
fairly abstract schema of demands and programmes. Thus, regardless of the actual PKK 
record, regardless of the context, regardless even of what the women in the PKK and in 
Rojava do, there is an answer ready-made: form movement type X. This does not deal with 
the complex realities, and makes it very hard to grapple with this reality, when all 
answers exist before any grappling takes place.

At another level, the methodology also reveals itself: if something is not purely 
anarchist, it is deemed beyond support. The problem is that most major movements today are 
not anarchist, or purely anarchist. To say anarchists can never work with other currents ? 
nationalists, Marxist-Leninists, liberals etc. ? simply means saying that anarchists will 
not engage with anyone at all, besides other anarchists.

But since most people are not ? whether we wish it or not ? anarchists, this means the 
anarchists will isolate themselves, and do so proudly. This does not solve, but instead, 
compounds, the isolation of the anarchists. It cuts off audiences and potential anarchist 
influence.

ALIGNMENTS IN CONCRETE BATTLES

A third problem is that of taking sides in key battles. Not every battle requires 
anarchists to take sides, but some do.

Whatever the limitations of the forces that led the anti-apartheid struggle, for example, 
they were progressive compared to the apartheid regime; they were movements fighting 
against a monstrously oppressive system and, for all their limits, were in this sense 
infinitely preferable to that system. In such fights, anarchists surely cannot remain 
neutral, as if there was no difference at all between oppositional popular forces, like 
trade unions and community movements, and the apartheid regime. To have suggested 
otherwise would betray a serious loss of perspective.

Likewise, consider the situation of the PKK and allied structures: from the start, in all 
of its incarnations, the PKK has fought against the severe national oppression of the 
Kurds in Iraq, Iran, Syria and Turkey. Kurds from the popular classes are oppressed as 
workers and peasants, but as Kurds they face additional oppression. The fight against that 
oppression is progressive, and is surely an important fight that any anarchist can support.

This does not mean blank cheque endorsement of the PKK; it simply means that even if the 
PKK etc. were ethno-nationalist, but were fighting for an end to national oppression, 
anarchists should and could still support that fight ? critically, of course ? simply 
because the Kurds are oppressed as a people, and anarchists oppose all forms of 
oppression. To the extent the PKK has come closer to anarchism, the grounds for critically 
supporting it are further expanded.

In fact, while we do not think that anarchists should set conditions for their support for 
popular struggles for national liberation, it should also be noted that the PKK have, in 
addition to their rejection of nationalism, also rejected the state ? clearly stating that 
?the nation-state can never be a solution? [4] ? and see women?s liberation as being 
irrevocably tied to the abolition of the state.

These dimensions completely disappear in ?K.B.?s? article: the PKK emerges as villains as 
sinister as any other regime; it is almost as if Kurdish ?ethno-nationalism? is an 
invention, rather than a response ? problematic as it is ? to Kurdish oppression. And to 
make the case further, the author then discovers in the PKK only ills, and nothing worthy 
of support.

CRITICAL (NOT BLIND) SUPPORT

None of this means blindly supporting the PKK. We disagree with the purism of the ?K.B.? 
article, but we do not go to the opposite extreme, liquidating our politics. We would 
agree that anarchists should not liquidate our politics behind any non-anarchist force ? 
becoming cheerleaders and blind supporters, or silencing our criticisms or closing down 
our independent activities. However, whereas ?K.B.? seeks to do this by isolating the 
anarchists from other forces, we seek to do this by engaging, as an independent current, 
with other forces.

This does mean making our own views clear, pushing our own project, and seeking our own 
influence. Such influence cannot come from purist isolation, nor can it come from 
liquidationist cheerleading. It entails critical engagement: we are with the PKK and the 
Rojava revolution against the forces of the Islamic State/ISIS, of Turkey and of Western 
imperialism, but we are also not a PKK auxiliary.

Therefore, despite our disagreements with ?K.B?s? position, we in fact agree that there 
are points he or she raises that are worth soberly engaging.

?K.B.? notes that there are parallel ? and potentially rival ? structures and projects in 
Rojava and contestation around these. By some accounts ? including a document that 
basically forms the Constitution of Rojava [6] ? there are two types of systems/structures 
in place based on what seem to be diverging ideas that are running concurrently. One 
structure is a type of representative parliament with something akin to a cabinet; the 
other being democratic confederalism of a sort based on assemblies, councils and communes. 
There does also appear to be the possibility of tension arising between these two types of 
systems going forward too, if Rojava survives.

So there is a faction in Rojava politics, including in the leadership of the Democratic 
Union Party (PYD), that want what amounts to a state structure ? rather than the more 
radical PKK vision. In practice they are trying to implement representative democracy 
based on a parliament, with basic human rights, where an executive will have quite a lot 
of power, but tactically they can?t call it a state as it appears the idea of democratic 
confederalism is widely held as an ideal amongst many Kurds.

But it is also still possible that Rojava could become a system based on democratic 
confederalism because assemblies, councils and communes do exist (and because clearly 
there are also people that want this). So it doesn?t seem to us that we should close our 
eyes to the fact that such tensions and possibly conflicting outcomes do exist and will 
exist as part of any revolution. Which one will gain the upper hand if Rojava survives, 
though, is open to question and depends on which forces gain the upper hand in the 
process, if they are not all wiped out by ISIS or the pashmerga (the armed units of the KRG).

CONCLUSION

The best outcome in any world would be global anarchist revolution. But the mighty forces 
required do not currently exist; nor will they come to exist if anarchists insist on 
keeping their hands too clean, failing to engage real world moments and movements.

Realistically, the best outcome in the real world Rojava would be the victory of 
democratic confederalism, opening up space for further changes, and inspiring rebels 
elsewhere. The second best would be a PYD-led state, and the third best would be a victory 
of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), which is to the right of both the PKK and PYD. 
The KRG is a fully-fledged state (although not internationally recognised) that is corrupt 
and overtly authoritarian. At the worst end of the spectrum would be the victory of the 
Syrian dictator, Assad, and the worst outcome would be the victory of the Islamic State/ ISIS.

There is no real anarchist contender in this battle, and no prospects for an anarchist 
pole of attraction while anarchists do not engage with forces like the PKK. Kurdish and 
Turkish anarchists have involved themselves, and so too, in a more modest way, have groups 
linked to Anarkismo.net.

?K.B.?s? article suffers from the fact that it is written in a kind of vacuum. It is 
written as if some sort of pure anarchism is the only thing that can be supported which ? 
considering that any anarchist society is a very distant prospect at best and will have to 
be forged and shaped in the reality of struggle, and may differ in some ways from the 
ideal vision ? is a view divorced from reality. So the article is written based on what 
exists in the writers head and not what is happening in reality ? which is what we as 
anarchists and social revolutionaries have to deal with if we and our ideas are to have 
any relevance in progressive popular struggles.

Under the current circumstances of ISIS invading Kobane, even if democratic confederalism 
is defeated in Rojava internally by PYD elements and they implement a state, that state 
(from what we have read of the PYD) would be better than the other options that are real 
possibilities, being ISIS, Assad, or the KRG.

If applied, for example, to South Africa and apartheid the position on Rojava presented by 
this article, therefore, would amount to saying something like ?we don?t support the UDF, 
FOSATU or COSATU and definitely not the ANC because they are not anarchists?, and that 
would have amounted to saying, ?who really cares if the apartheid state wins because there 
is no struggle for anarchism?.

The position presented in the article is thus flawed and divorced from reality. While it 
might sound radical in writing, its weakness is that it presupposes the existence of a 
perfectly libertarian and revolutionary subject and premises any support for popular 
movements on this non-entity instead of acknowledging that the actually existing working 
class ? and its movements ? is full of contradictions and that anarchists need to meet it 
where it is if our ideas and practices are to have any relevance.

The struggle for the national liberation of the Kurds should be supported as a matter of 
principle as they are an oppressed people and, even if they don?t achieve democratic 
conferderalism, a PYD-led state would still be some gain (like 1994 was in South Africa) 
because the other possible outcomes are horrendous.

Naturally, the struggle for Kurdish liberation, if not accompanied by a massive 
reconstruction of the economy and of social life along the lines of workers? 
self-management and community control, will lead to a situation of incomplete national and 
gender liberation for the Kurdish masses if economic and social inequalities are not 
resolved at the same time as those of political power.

Such a strictly political solution (i.e. if parliamentary models triumphed over democratic 
confederalism) could give rise to a new Kurdish elite. Something which could be compared 
to the democratic transition that occurred in South Africa in 1994 and, while not ideal, 
would certainly constitute a massive advance for the Kurdish working class ? just as it 
was for the South African working class.

We agree with ?K.B.? that it is precisely in the self-activity of the grassroots masses 
and women of the PKK and allied structures that the most promising prospects for struggle 
in the direction of complete liberation lie. However, it would be a mistake to reject or 
refuse support to organisations like the PKK on the grounds that they are flawed. Of 
course they are. That is not the issue, the issue is whether anarchists align with ? and 
try to influence ? actual real world movements and struggles, as a matter of principle 
(because these struggles are just), as a matter of practical politics (because without 
engagement, anarchists will remain isolated) and as a mode of analysis (which grapples 
with situations, rather than hammering them into pre-set schemas).

That is ultimately where the deep difference in the two lines ? ours and that of ?K.B.? ? 
lies. We reject notions that insist anarchists must never support national liberation 
struggles ? or that they only do so under certain conditions ? while we also make it clear 
that we simultaneously reject nationalism. What is needed, therefore, to ensure the full 
national and class liberation of the Kurdish masses and to guard against the ascendency of 
an oppressive Kurdish elite, which would oppose the full liberation of the Kurdish working 
class under the guise of narrow nationalist interests, is a Kurdish working class-centred 
struggle ? on a working class programme ? against national oppression, capitalism, the 
state and women?s oppression simultaneously. The PKK?s programme of democratic 
confederalism, to us, represents steps towards such a programme. It is not enough, but it 
is a start we can engage.

In summary, applying our general approach, we can say of the battle for Rojava: we support 
the struggle for the national liberation of the Kurds, including the right of the national 
liberation movement to exist; second, we oppose the repression and threats meted out by 
forces ranging from the Islamic State, to Iraq, Syria, Turkey and their Western and 
Eastern allies; our support moves on a sliding scale, with Kurdish anarchists and 
syndicalists at the top, followed by the PKK, then the PYD, and we draw the line at the 
KRG; in practical terms, we cooperate around, and offer solidarity (even if only verbal) 
on a range of concrete issues, the most immediate of which is the battle to halt the 
ultra-right Islamic State and defend the Rojava revolution; within that revolution, we 
align ourselves with the PKK model of democratic confederalism against the more statist 
approach of the PYD models, and, even when doing so, aim at all times to propose and win 
influence for our methods, aims and projects: we are with the PKK against the KRG, but we 
are for the anarchist revolution before all else.


Notes:

[1] 
http://www.freemedialibrary.com/index.php/Declaration_of_Democratic_Confederalism_in_Kurdistan

[2]. http://www.anarkismo.net/article/27301
[3]. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pRsw5s28jxY
[4]. http://www.pkkonline.com/en/index.php?sys=article&artID=204
[5]. http://www.pkkonline.com/en/index.php?sys=articles See especially the articles on 
?Democratic Modernity: Era of Woman?s Revolution?; ?Killing the dominant male?; 
?Capitalism and Women?; ?Women?s situation in the Kurdish society?; ?The Nation-State Can 
Never Be a Solution?; ?Briefly On Socialism?; ?The Kurdistan Woman?s Liberation Movement?; 
and of course ?Democratic Confereralism?
[6]. http://civiroglu.net/the-constitution-of-the-rojava-cantons/