The Second General Conference
of the TDKP consisted of various sessions. It was held in a certain period of
time and was attended by the party organisations and forces. It ensured the
broadest representation of the party circles within the workers, labourers and
the youth. All the decisions of the conference were taken unanimously.
Our conference took place at a time, in accordance with many-sided developments
both in Turkey and in the world, when our party has arrived at a turning point,
when it has become an indispensable task for the party to renew and develop
its work both in the ideological-political and organisational-practical fields
and to overcome its shortcomings, when it orientated itself to renew and develop
its tactical platform and its practical-organisational work, and when the dictatorship
intensified its attacks on the party.
The agenda of the conference, which evaluated the developments after our party's
First General Conference which was held in February 1990, was as follows:
- International situation
and trends
- Developments in our country in accordance with international situation
- Our party's activities in the ideological-political and practical-organisational
fields.
Our conference arrived at the following conclusions:
On the international arena:
The First General Conference
of our party was held in a transition period when the revolutionary movement
of the proletariat and the oppressed peoples was still in the period of defeat
that it entered in the second half of the 1950s, when the destructive consequences
of this period was apparent, and when imperialism and the world reactionary
forces were carrying out a many-sided offensive campaign, uniting all their
forces and capabilities. However, this was also a period when all the factors
which were weakening the imperialist-capitalist system and deepening its general
crisis were developing.
The main characteristics of the period which have been experienced in the international
arena since our first General Conference are the sharpening of the fundamental
contradictions of the imperialist-capitalist system, the deepening of its general
crisis, and the developments which show that this system has been going towards
a new stage of its general crisis, towards a period of new wars and revolutions
and of fundamental ups and downs.
In the period following our party's first general conference what happened was
this:
a- The disintegration process of the capitalist-imperialist bloc led by the
USSR has been completed. This was presented in bourgeois-imperialist propaganda,
supported by revisionism, as the end of socialism and the ultimate defeat of
the struggle for revolution and socialism. In the member states of this bloc,
the most open forms and methods of capitalist exploitation and of the hegemony
of the bourgeoisie, the forms and methods that are not hidden under deformed
socialist forms, have become dominant in all fields of the social structure.
b- In Albania, which was the only socialist country in the world after the 1960s,
socialism was destroyed and capitalism was restored. All the destructive consequences
of the blow suffered by the revolutionary movement of the world proletariat
and the oppressed peoples in the second half of the 1950's have become more
apparent. Revolutionary positions and foundations in the international sphere
have been lost. This has also been the weakest period for the revolutionary
movement of the world proletariat and the oppressed peoples.
The above developments paved the way for an ever greater demagogic campaign
and for the many-sided offensive waged by imperialism and world reactionary
forces against the working class and the oppressed peoples and against the struggle
for revolution and socialism. The supremacy and ultimate victory of capitalism
was proclaimed. This victory was sanctified by revisionism and bourgeois socialism
which have been the internal basis for the defeat suffered by the world working
class and the peoples.
The disintegration of the imperialist bloc headed by the USSR, the collapse
of socialism in Albania, the loss of the last positions of the proletariat and
the peoples, and the fall of the movement to its lowest point, could not be
and was not the ultimate defeat of the struggle for revolution and socialism,
or the end of the fundamental contradictions of the capitalist system, or the
end of antagonistic class contradictions and of class struggle, or the beginning
of a period of universal harmony, peace and welfare. Since the second half of
the 1950s, when imperialism and world reaction struck the heaviest blow on the
revolutionary movement of the proletariat and the peoples, and when this movement
entered a period of defeat and retreat, the material basis for the victory of
revolution and socialism was not weakened; on the contrary, it continued to
develop and mature to such a greater extent that it cannot be compared with
the previous period.
Although the disintegration of the bloc headed by the USSR, which was the main
target for the demagogic propaganda carried out by imperialism and world reaction,
has created some opportunities for this or that imperialist state and monopolies,
it did not create a breathing space, not even temporarily, for the imperialist
system as a whole. On the contrary, it has been a factor paving the way to some
many-sided developments that have deepened the general crisis of the imperialist-capitalist
system. What happened with this disintegration was this:
- It put an end to a period when the capitalist world was divided into two camps,
both headed by a super-power fighting for world hegemony, and when inter-relations
and alliances between the imperialist states and monopolies were being shaped
by this division and struggle. The balance of power and the relations between
them have been turned upside-down. Despite the fact that the US, whose hegemony
has started to be shaken as a result of uneven development, is now the only
super-power of the capitalist world, Japan in the East and Germany and France
in West Europe have emerged as the main imperialist centres fighting for the
redivision of the world. Facts show that Russia is recovering over the ruins
of the USSR and advancing to be a part in this struggle, and that the fight
between the imperialist countries and between the international monopolist corporations
for the redivision of the world is intensifying and becoming more complex.
- Contrary to the claims of the bourgeois-revisionist circles, "joining
the Western bloc" has nothelped these countries to overcome their many-sided
crisis and enter a process of stable development which could have been an element
contributing to a new phase of progress in the world capitalist economy. On
the contrary, the crisis in these countries has deepened. They have moved towards
social disintegration and chaos, productive forces have been destroyed, and
all of their resources and social wealth have been looted by Western imperialist
countries and monopolies.
The Gulf War broke out immediately after all this imperialist propaganda about
capitalism entering a period of harmony, peace and progress where there is no
wars or class struggles. A vast area from the Balkans to the Caucuses, from
the Middle East to Africa, mainly the spheres of influence of the ex-USSR, has
become an arena for reactionary, religious, and even tribal wars provoked by
the imperialist states and monopolies.
Contrary to the claims of the bourgeois-imperialist circles, world capitalist
economy has not entered a period of steady growth and progress. While the process
of unstable and uneven development has deepened, the average rate of growth
over a five year period has continued to fall, let alone increase. Despite the
differences in each country, the periods between the cyclical crises has shortened,
the periods of crisis and recession have become longer, and their destructive
consequences have become heavier. Even the bourgeois-imperialist circles can
no longer negate this fact.
The retreat of the struggle of the world proletariat and the oppressed peoples
has encouraged imperialism to intensify its unbridled attacks. More frequent
cyclical crises and recessions with more destructive impacts, coupled with more
competition and struggle for the redivision of the world, have given some new
characteristics to this offensive. The imperialist states and monopolies and
their bases in other countries have widened their economic and political attacks
on a world scale to the following extent in order to shift the burdens of these
crises, recession and competition on to the working class and the mass of the
people:
a- Not only the backward countries but also small and weak advanced countries
are becoming arenas for the unlimited exploitation and hegemony of the international
financial capital; they are being put under the claws of new colonialist methods.
b- In addition to the backward countries, all the economic, political and social
rights and gains of the workers and labourers of the advanced countries are
also being usurped.
The intensification of exploitation, absolute poverty and the usurpation of
rights have become a part of the daily life of the workers and labourers of
the most advanced capitalist countries. In addition to the backward countries,
the increasing economic and political attacks of capital and the worsening living
and working conditions in the most advanced capitalist countries which are presented
as the societies of peace, harmony and welfare, have escalated anger, dissatisfaction
and the tendency to struggle among the workers, youth and other oppressed and
exploited strata. As is seen clearly in the examples of France, Italy, Belgium,
Spain and Germany, the dullness and silence of the workers' and labourers' movement
has been replaced by the biggest and most united mass resistance of the last
50 years and by a new mobilisation in the form of strikes and general strikes
together with street demonstrations and marches. Facts show that a new period
of mobilisation and awakening is developing in the ranks of the proletariat
of the advanced countries, which, qualitatively and quantitatively, constitute
the most advanced sections of the working class of the world.
In the ranks of the International Communist Movement, many-sided ideological,
political and organisational chaos and disintegration - which increased under
the circumstances when imperialism and world reaction, uniting all their forces,
launched a massive offensive campaign - were replaced by the process of reorganising
as an international movement and of overcoming weaknesses. The International
Communist Movement has taken some practical steps in overcoming the disintegration
in its ranks, with the gatherings in West Europe in 1993, in Quito in 1994 and
in Paris in 1995.
With the mobilisation in the movement of the proletariat and the oppressed peoples,
bourgeois and petit-bourgeois socialism and the remnants of revisionism (all
of which once openly declared the ultimate victory and supremacy of capitalism)
intensified their attempts to organise as an international movement and to impose
their bankrupt theoretical and organisational-practical platforms on the movement
after having renewed them. Our conference draws attention to the importance
of the struggle against these currents and to their intensified attempts, as
they are the ones who were responsible and the internal bases for the heaviest
defeat -which followed the greatest victories- suffered by the world proletariat
and the revolutionary movement of the oppressed peoples.
Our conference adopted our party's theses on the international situation and
trends, and highlighted the following facts:
- The previous period has ended and a new one has started.
- The imperialist-capitalist system has not entered a period of stability and
progress but one of chaos, conflicts and instability, and is advancing towards
a break up of one or more of its weakest chains.
- This process will be uneven in terms of its economic, political and social
aspects in general and of its reflections in each country in particular, and
will develop in ups and downs.
Having discussed the multiple impacts of the changes in the international situation
on our country, and the consequences and tasks brought forward by these changes
with regards to the revolution in our country and the working class struggle,
our conference draws particular attention to the following points:
The present dimension of the economic, political, military, etc. relations between
the countries comprising the links of the imperialist chain on the basis of
the high level reached by scientific and technological revolution and the internationalisation
of capital, the international situation and its trends, are continuing to have
an incomparably greater effect on the all economic, political and ideological
processes in our country, compared with those in the first half of this century.
This is particularly true if we bear in mind the increasing dependency of our
country on imperialism in every field and its level of capitalist development.
Despite the fact that at the present time, all the economic, political and cultural
links between countries (each one of which is a link in the imperialist chain)
have developed to an unprecedented degree, the uneven development of these countries
is continuing. The process experienced by the imperialist -capitalist system
as a whole has a different level of impact on each link in the chain. The processes
undergone by each country have different features and are affected differently
by the process experienced by the system as a whole.
Our country is one of the links of the imperialist-capitalist system whose general
crisis is deepening and which is moving towards a new stage of its general crisis.
As is the case in other links, not only the victory of the proletarian socialist
revolution but also of an uninterrupted genuine popular revolution, of the struggle
of the proletariat and the people of Turkey for their emancipation, would mean
a defeat for imperialism and the break up of one of the links of the imperialist
chain. Such a revolution must aim at uninterrupted transition to socialism and
must be led by the proletariat. Together with the alliance of the monopolist
bourgeoisie and the big land owners, which hold state power, imperialism is
the main basis of the world reactionary forces and so constitutes the main barrier
to revolution in our country and to the struggle of the working class and the
other oppressed classes for their emancipation. For this reason, what the deepening
of the general crisis of the imperialist-capitalist system and its move towards
a new stage of its general crisis mean is this:
- The barriers in front of the victory of revolution in our country, of the
struggle of the working class and the labourers for their emancipation, and
of the anti-imperialist democratic revolution, which is the necessary first
stage of this revolution, are weakening.
- The international allies of the proletariat and the revolution in our country
are getting stronger.
- The international situation and international factors do not have a consolidating
or stabilising impact on the present social system in Turkey but rather a weakening
and destabilising one.
Despite the fact that the international basis for the proletarian world revolution
has become more mature and more developed in the present time, a new rise of
the revolution will begin through a break in the imperialist chain at its weakest
links. Turkey is one of the links that feels most the impacts which cause the
imperialist-capitalist system to move towards a new stage of its general crisis.
Our conference highlights this fact which has a particular importance because
of the geopolitical situation of our country and draws attention to the dangerous
consequences of the narrow-mindedness of nationalist perspectives.
On Turkey:
Contrary to the claims of
the spokespersons of the ruling classes who are the extensions of imperialism
in our country, the changes that led to many-sided developments in the international
arena since our First General Conference, have not created new opportunities
for Turkey in the Balkans, the Caucasus, Central Asia or the Middle East. Nor
have they strengthened Turkey's international relations and its international
position. On the contrary, they played have promoted the elements of instability.
The following facts clearly demonstrate the correctness of this perspective:
- Under the conditions when the world was divided into two imperialist blocs
headed by the US and the USSR, and when the relations between the imperialist
states and between monopolies were shaped according to the struggle of these
blocs for world hegemony - despite the rivalry between them - Turkey was a forward
station for the Western imperialist bloc and got its support. However, this
situation has changed after the disintegration of the bloc headed by the USSR,
the upset of the inter-imperialist balance of power and the emergence of new
centres fighting for world hegemony. Turkey has become one of the countries
over which the struggle for hegemony between the imperialist states and international
monopolies has aggravated, since none of them has been able to secure ultimate
hegemony. Turkey is dependent on the US and on the international institutions
under the US control in terms of military and finance, and on Western Europe
in terms of foreign trade and indirect capital investments. Also, the fact that
Russia is recovering adds to the impasse of the ruling classes of Turkey with
regards to which imperialist focus they should serve and to what extent.
- For the imperialist states and the international monopolies fighting for world
hegemony, Turkey is important not only because of its resources, market and
economic potential, but also because of its geopolitical situation, being a
junction for the Balkans, the Caucasus and the Middle East, thus being an important
country for the hegemony over these regions and for expanding their sphere of
influence. Furthermore, these regions continue to be of a great importance for
the imperialist states and the international monopolies because of their natural
resources, mainly oil, as well as their markets and great economic potential.
They also continue to be the regions which are most effected by the changes
in the inter-imperialist balance of power and where the inter-imperialist struggle
for redivision has escalated.
- In terms of its economic and military potential as well as its geopolitical
situation Turkey is one of the largest and strongest countries in these regions.
- Another characteristic of these regions is the existence of different nationalities
and religions and the fact that the problems among them remain unresolved. These
problems get more complex as a result of conflicting interests of local bourgeois-feudal
groups and of the struggle for hegemony among them. Turkey is one of these countries,
with mainly the Kurdish national question. The imperialist states and international
monopolies continue to use these conflicts and contradictions in order to expand
and strengthen their sphere of influence and to weaken their rivals.
The 1990s have been years of unstability for the countries and regions surrounding
Turkey. The Middle East, the Balkans and the Caucasus have become the most unstable
regions in the world where the inter-imperialist struggle for the redivision
of the world has grown more acute, where the contradictions between the local
bourgeois groups have been manipulated and provoked by imperialist states and
monopolies, and where reactionary national wars and the wars between bourgeois
groups for hegemony have followed each other. Facts show that the inter-imperialist
struggle for the redivision of these regions is continuing, that this struggle
will have new features and will become more complex with the recovery of Russia,
and that instability will continue. And Turkey is one of the countries which
is at the centre of this ongoing chaos and of the whirlpool of these conflicts.
The outcome of the so-called imperialist plans and attempts of the ruling classes
of Turkey, to reach new opportunities and possibilities by being the regional
middleman and subcontractor of the main imperialist countries, international
finance capital groups and monopolies, basing everything on some historical
and cultural ties, has been a complete disappointment. Far from providing new
opportunities, these plans and attempts have aggravated the problems and the
impasse that the ruling classes were faced with, and has led to losses (the
fall in trade with Arab countries after the Gulf War) and new burdens (increased
military expenditure), as was seen in the Gulf War, Yugoslavia and the Caucasus.
Turkey's economic, military, political, etc. dependence on imperialism is increasing
day after day. As is suggested by the strategy experts of some "left"
circles, especially by those who act as advisers to the dictatorship, Turkey
has not been able to play an independent role in this region in the new conditions
that arose after the disintegration of the USSR and the Soviet bloc. It could
only play a certain role as a cat's-paw of this or that imperialist centre fighting
for world hegemony. While on the one hand, the imperialist countries, above
all the US, which are fighting to expand their sphere of influence in the Balkans,
the Caucasus and the Middle East, are striving to be more influential on Turkey,
they are, on the other hand, increasing the pressure on it to play a role in
line with their interests and their policies determined by these interests.
The following have been the consequences of Turkey playing such a role and following
a foreign policy in corresponding especially to US imperialism's aggressive
policies and its preferences.
- In addition to the problems - even in the form of embargo - with the US, to
which it is politically and militarily dependent and for which it is acting
as a servant, Turkey could not escape from the problems and threats of other
imperialist centres.
- It had to be pulled into the whirlpool of the increasingly acute struggle
for redivision waged by the main imperialist countries and monopolies.
- It was unable to avoid the deterioration of and instability in its relations
with its neighbours and with other regional countries. Nor could it avoid isolation.
- The anti-national and pro-imperialist nature of its foreign policy has intensified
and become more evident.
Our conference draws attention to the fight against the foreign policy of the
ruling classes and of their fascist dictatorship which is shaped according to
the interests and preferences of US imperialism in the region and which is pushing
our country into the whirlpool of inter-imperialist conflict in the region.
On the economic situation:
While being the most faithful
base for imperialism, mainly the US imperialism, and pursuing a foreign policy
accordingly, the ruling classes had a policy at home of destroying the final
remnants of the gains of the National Liberation War -which was a weak anti-imperialist
revolution- and of transferring the country into an area of exploitation for
imperialist states and monopolies where they have an unlimited hegemony in every
field.
Customs and other protectionist measures have been lifted and the subsidies
for agriculture and for the state owned enterprises have been pulled down. All
the barriers in front of the imperialist monopolies' transfers of profit and
their direct/indirect investments have been eliminated. Under the directives
of the IMF and the World Bank the economy continued to develop in the 1990s
in the direction of a typical colonial economy. The distraction in agriculture
has deepened; industrial enterprises, which are limited in numbers and which
constitute the basis of an independent economy, have been handed over to imperialist
monopolies; the leftovers have been left to die with no renewal of technology
and no investment; the control and hegemony of imperialist monopolies have become
stronger in the commercial sector too.
Although the 1990s were announced to be the years of a stable growth, of catching
up with the most advanced countries, and of breaking the chains of backwardness,
since our First General Conference the economy could not get out of the process
of a short-term recovery and growth followed by a stagnation and shrinking.
Moreover, in the last five years the average rate of growth fell below the averages
of the first and second halves of the 1980s, and its unstableness has deepened.
The country has entered in the heaviest economic crisis of the second half of
the century, which started in the financial sector in 1994 and spread immediately
into commercial and industrial sectors. Although a period of recovery began
in 1995, partly as a result of the shifting of all the burdens of the crisis
on to the working class and all other exploited and oppressed masses, all the
available data indicate that the economy is moving towards a new crisis.
The main economic indicators such as the rate of inflation, internal and external
debt, the level of total investments, foreign trade and the balance of current
account have shown a negative trend compared to those of the 80s. The economy
is on the verge of a financial bankruptcy as the payments of internal and external
debt and the interests on it can only be made through new loans and through
the selling of state enterprises for nothing to imperialist monopolies and their
local collaborators. While the proportion of productive investments decreases
unearned incomes continue to grow rapidly.
In addition to the poor of urban and rural areas, in all sectors of the economy
the situation of middle and small enterprises continue to deteriorate rapidly.
While some of them are dragged into bankruptcy, the suffocating yoke of finance
capital and monopolies on those which manage to survive has intensified further.
The peasants' movements in Adiyaman, Bursa, Malatya and Mugla, though developing
under the influence of big landowners and agricultural bourgeoisie, show that
dissatisfaction and anger is rising among the small and middle property owners,
that their orientation towards struggle, though not wide-spread and permanent
yet, is developing, and that the social basis of the dictatorship, imperialism
and the ruling classes among these strata has weakened. This is one of the characteristics
of the period we are going through. The Customs Union with the EU, the negative
consequences of which have not yet fully appeared, and the implementation of
the IMF and the World Bank programmes will worsen the destruction of small and
middle property owners and increase the suffocating oppression of imperialism
and monopolies.
The burning down and depopulation of the villages in Kurdistan have deepened
the destruction of agriculture and cattle-dealing, deteriorated the situation
of the peasantry and escalated migration to the towns. Millions of labourers,
mainly Kurdish peasants, had to migrate to big cities where there is a high
rate of unemployment and poverty and where they have no security for their future.
The army of unemployed and semi-proletarian masses is growing to an unprecedented
degree.
The pay rises implemented after the rise of the workers' movement with the 1989
strikes and demonstrations have been eroded through high inflation. This caused
the decline of real wages. Despite temporary fluctuations, the real wages of
the workers and all other labourers dropped throughout 1990s. The year 1994
was a turning point as it marked the beginning of a period of the sharpest decreases
and deterioration of real wages and of the living and working conditions of
the oppressed and exploited classes.
Turkey is entering a new period of an inevitable economic crisis and new offensives,
following a period of the most rapid rise in absolute poverty of the last fifty
years. This is one of the most significant characteristic of the period we are
passing through.
On the political situation:
The 1990s have been the
years when the mass and social basis of the ruling classes and of the fascist
dictatorship weakened, when the impasses and problems they were faced with in
the country deepened and their international relations deteriorated. The following
facts demonstrate this situation clearly:
Despite the demagogy about democratisation and liberalisation, no steps were
taken in the 1990s towards the recognition and constitutional guarantee of democratic
rights and freedom (nor towards the solution of Kurdish national question which
is an element of this). On the contrary, oppression and terror intensified and
became wide-spread. The dictatorship's apparatus for attacks and repression
have constantly been strengthened with ever increasing power. It has also become
clear that with all its establishments the parliament was not an instrument
of the realisation of bourgeois democracy, but on the contrary, it was a puppet
functioning to deceive people and to give a democratic appearance to the fascist
dictatorship. While the friction between the parties of the bourgeois system
are escalating, the "representative" establishments, with their political
parties, government and parliament are now more discredited than at any other
time in their history.
Although the aggravating friction between the bourgeois parties is being used
to divert the masses' attention from real problems, they also help expose, even
if only partially, their corruption and rottenness.
In the 1990s, the balance of power between the parties of the bourgeois system
changed such that it kept governmental crises and snap-elections constantly
on the agenda, which made even the Grand National Assembly non-functional. Despite
all the restrictions and anti-democratic election regulations, none of the bourgeois
parties was able to come out of the latest general elections with a level of
mass support big enough to enable them to establish the strong and stable government
which imperialism and the ruling classes wanted. None of these parties, including
the Welfare Party - one of the coalition partners - which increased its votes
by using anti-system rhetoric and religious motifs, have the mass support and
strength that could calm down the anger and dissatisfaction of the masses, and
that could unify all the reactionary forces around imperialism's and the ruling
classes' policy of attacking the people.
No matter how restricted the power and role of the parliament is in the political
life of the country, the developments mentioned above weaken the ruling classes
and the dictatorship, and aggravate their impasse. However, these developments
on their own do not paralyse or shake the instruments of political hegemony
of imperialism, monopolist bourgeoisie and big land owners. This is because
with its political parties, governments and other institutions, the existing
parliament is not the power that rules the country, even in appearance. The
real power that is ruling the country not only in practice but also in appearance
is the oligarchy consisting of imperialism, the monopolist big bourgeoisie,
the big land owners, generals, police chiefs and other administrative institutions
of the militarist-bureaucratic apparatus, all of which are interlinked and combined.
Our conference highlights this fact and defines it as foolishness to consider
the friction between the parties of the bourgeois system and the change in the
balance of power between them as an indication of a political crisis and of
a revolutionary situation.
Widespread corruption, decay and conflicts between different cliques are growing,
although this does not paralyse the state and its main instruments like the
army and the police organisation, which are the main instrument of the hegemony
of the ruling classes and imperialism. It can no longer be hidden that the police
and the army have close links with mafia, with gangs and with all sorts of scandals,
corruption, bribery, etc.
Scandals following one another and the unbridled terror of the offensive apparatus
of the dictatorship, above all the police forces who are given unlimited authority,
speed up the process whereby the masses can realise through their own experience
what the main functions of the state and other institutions really are, resulting
in the destruction of their reactionary prejudices with regards to these institutions,
especially among their awakening sections.
Another significant development is the growth of the dissatisfaction and anger
among the lower strata government employees whose living conditions are deteriorating
rapidly. They are getting organised as a separate force from the top strata
of the bureaucracy. The fact that public employees' movement is advancing and
orientating towards uniting with the workers' movement, though it does not include
the police and the army, is an indication of disintegration in the state apparatus,
and bears significance as it is afactor in the weakening of the dictatorship.
One of the most significant developments of the 1990s has been the weakening
of the masses' belief in the improvement of living and working conditions and
of democratic rights and freedom under the existing regime. Their disillusionment
with traditional bourgeois parties and the orientation towards new expectations
have escalated. Especially among the advanced section of the workers, the orientation
towards organising as a separate party has grown stronger. However, despite
this orientation, the disorganisation among the majority of the advanced workers
has not been overcome yet, and they are not yet organised in a revolutionary
workers' party. This is one of the reasons why the workers' movement has not
been able to enter a process of stable development, why the stagnation of the
movement in 1992-93 has not been overcome despite the mobilisations in 1994-95,
and why the open mass movement of the workers is at its weakest point of the
last ten years.
The reasons why the open mass movement of the workers and labourers and the
Kurdish national movement have been going through a new period of stagnation
and disorganisation since the middle of 1995 differ in some points from the
reasons for the stagnation in 1991-94. This is because in the former period
the living conditions of the working classes and the Kurdish labourers got worse
and did not show any improvement such as it did in 1990-91. Furthermore, government's
campaigns for "democracy" did not give rise to expectations and become
a factor blocking the mass movement. In fact, the open mass movement was blocked
mainly from within.
The policies of the traditional liberal "left" groups' and the trade
union bureaucracy have dragged the working masses into hopelessness. Terrorism
stemmed from the complete rottenness of the anarchistic "socialist"
currents. All these have played a liquidating role which resulted in the disorganisation
of the mass movement, the destruction of the relationship between the advanced
and the backward sections of the working people, and the provocation of the
political atmosphere and the masses.
The "work" of the Kurdish nationalist current which is based on the
enmity between the Turks and the Kurds and which has been reshaped since 1991
within the orbit of the inter-imperialist struggle for their interests, has
had a two-sided effect. Firstly, it has pushed Turkish labourers into a position
that is exposed to the provocative activities of capital. Secondly, it has been
a factor turning the growing dissatisfaction and tiredness among the Kurdish
population into hopelessness. The organisations of the advanced workers struggling
under such circumstances were not able to counter all these negative factors
or to minimise their destructive consequences. In spite of the fact that the
break away of the labouring masses from the system deepened in 1995-96, these
factors that feed and strengthen each other gave rise to the stagnation of the
open mass movement, and to a disorganising hopelessness among the lower strata
of the population.
Terrorist attacks, actions on behalf of the youth, irresponsible attacks and
looting by the "left" as was experienced on the May Day, and their
consequences, provocative activities against trade union platforms, bureaucratic
structures of the unions, etc., all these had a negative effect that destroyed
the morale of the masses. All these were used by the dictatorship to usurp the
positions gained de-facto by mass struggle (for example massive illegal demonstrations),
to intensify its attacks and to create more fascist laws.
The stagnation of the mass movement is not an absolute phenomenon. Possibilities
and conditions are continuing to develop and ripen for the mass movement to
enter a new period of ascendance that may also include explosions, to develop
as a united struggle of all the oppressed and exploited classes, and to overcome
the factors that destroy and push backward the workers' and labourers' movement.
Despite the constant strengthening of the dictatorship's apparatus for attacks
and repression and the intensification of oppression and terror, the scope of
the democratic rights which are used in practice continued to expand in accordance
with the rise and fall of the mass struggle. Turkey is going through a period
where the living and working conditions of the oppressed and exploited classes
are deteriorating rapidly, where none of their immediate economic and political
demands are being met, where dissatisfaction, anger and the tendency for struggle
are growing among the masses. On the other hand, the ruling classes and the
government are intensifying their economic and political offensive and watching
for the right moment to implement new packages of attacks. The present conditions
show that the economic and political attacks of the monopolist big bourgeoisie
and the big land owners, supported by imperialism - above all by the IMF and
the World Bank - will intensify, and the living and working conditions of all
oppressed and exploited classes will become worse. This will inevitably cause
the growth of dissatisfaction, anger and the orientation to struggle among the
masses, and the sharpening of the contradictions between the ruling classes
and those who are ruled, and between labour and capital.
In Turkey, although the struggle between revolution and counter-revolution,
between labour and capital, and between the oppressed and exploited classes
and the alliance of imperialism and the ruling classes is not yet at the level
of a final settling of accounts, the current process is approaching this level.
This development is not in the form of a straight line, but of rises and falls.
All these facts prove the importance and urgency of the creation of the united
front for the struggle and resistance of the masses. In contrast to the right
and "left" opportunist groups, our party does not consider the question
of unity as one of "unity of the left" or as "an alliance between
the left groups". These groups which do not have any links with the working
class and its movement, and the "unity" or "alliance" among
them do not play a unifying and advancing role for the movement. On the contrary,
they play a weakening and liquidating role because of their platforms and their
understanding of action. Our party's primary policy with regards to unity is
the creation of the united struggle of the broad masses of workers and of a
Labour (and Popular) Front with the workers at its centre, as well as the creation
a single party of the working class. Existing workers' platforms, trade unions
and other social organisations are the instruments to achieve this at present.
In creating a strong front for the struggle against the attacks of capital and
the dictatorship, in repulsing these attacks and advancing in the direction
of emancipation, the party is the fundamental weapon of the working class. Our
conference draws attention to the daily movement of the working class and to
the task of giving maximum assistance to the preparation and organisation of
the masses - above all the working class - for the revolution, the task of rebuilding
of the mass party which will have the ability use to the full all the necessary
instruments and opportunities to this end and which will embrace the majority
of the awakening sections of the working class, and the task of rebuilding the
organisation of communist workers with iron discipline.
After assessing our party's activities in all fields since the First General
Conference, our conference came to the following conclusions:
The TDKP has been loyal to the cause of the emancipation of the proletariat
in late 1980s and early 1990s when all the destructive consequences of the defeat
that the revolutionary movement of the world proletariat and the oppressed peoples
began to suffer in the second half of the 1950s appeared clearly, when the period
of defeat and retreat was continuing, when imperialism and reactionary forces
intensified their offensive, and when the revolutionary movement of the proletariat
and the peoples fell to its lowest point. Our party drew attention to the fact
that the victory of imperialism, the bourgeoisie and their bases in every country
and the defeat suffered by the proletariat, the peoples and the struggle for
revolution and socialism were temporary, and that the general crisis of the
imperialist-capitalist system has deepened and has been moving towards a new
stage at the time when it was proclaiming its final victory. The TDKP did not
allow any jolt or any currents of imperialism and capital with a socialist mask
to appear in its ranks even in a period when all the currents, organisations
and parties which claimed to be revolutionary and socialist, were shaken, disorganised
and disintegrated under the increasing repression and attacks of imperialism,
the bourgeoisie and all shades of revisionism in our country and in the world.
In such a period, in February 1990, it held its First General Conference and
unanimously adopted the resolution to fight against the many-sided attacks of
imperialism and all shades of revisionism, to defend all the historical gains
of the world proletariat and to continue the struggle until the ultimate emancipation
of the working class. It fought against bourgeois and petit-bourgeois non-working
class tendencies which emerged in its ranks and did not allow them to divert
the party from its path. It learnt lessons from its mistakes and its practice
and struggled sincerely to fulfil its responsibilities not only for the working
class of our country but also for the working class of the world.
The TDKP placed at the centre of its activities the maximum level of help to
the development of the level of the leadership, consciousness, organisation
and struggle of the working class and gave special importance to the youth,
despite all the weaknesses and shortcoming of this section of society, as they
represent the future. It has distinguished itself from other currents and organisations
in every field with its position in and relations with the mass movement, especially
the workers' movement. Our party has become the only current which carried out
activities among the workers and which has the potential to advance the workers'
movement, while all other currents claiming to make the revolution and establish
socialism moved towards bourgeois liberalism or individual terrorism.
What prevented our party from renovating and making the necessary changes in
time in the relations between its slogans and forms and methods of organisation
and the struggle in accordance with the changes in the conditions and according
to the development of the workers' movement, were the reflections of bourgeois
liberalism in various fields, above all on organisational discipline, and the
practical opportunism in its ranks which represented the so-called underground
work of the traditional left. This so-called underground work of the traditional
left has no links with the workers' movement and with its needs. Instead, these
elements hid behind the excuse of secrecy and security, and did not have the
courage to make the change and development in their way of thinking, living
and working that is required by the needs of the workers' movement. Our party
did not have the ability to use to the full all the possibilities and instruments
developed both by the progress in the workers' movement and by the activities
it carried out.
Moreover, these possibilities were paralysed as a result of these tendencies
and weaknesses in our organisation. These tendencies had opportunity to develop
in recent years when the dictatorship's attacks intensified on our party and
were able to be effective due to the delay in the rebuilding and renovation
of the party, and when extraordinary measures had to be taken in order to minimise
losses under these conditions.
The changes in conditions, the level of development of the tendency especially
among the advanced workers to organise as a separate class, the outcome of the
activities carried out by our party so far and its position and influence in
the workers' movement, all these have proved that the agitation and propaganda
and organisational activities which - despite the mistakes and weaknesses -
advanced our party's work, and the organisations, positioning of the cadres
and the relations between the forms and instruments that it used in carrying
out these activities have become obsolete. It has become inevitable that we
renew and develop these activities with new forms and instruments. It was not
possible to achieve this transformation through some partial changes, while
keeping the old organisation and old perspective. It could only be achieved
through rebuilding our party in every field -legal and illegal- and purifying
and renewing its forces. Our conference approves all the decisions of the Central
Committee taken with this perspective and the steps taken in practice by our
party. It draws attention to the decisive relation between the rebuilding of
our party, the renovation of its activities in all fields according to the changes
in conditions, and the ability that all the party forces will show in overcoming
their weaknesses and mistakes, and most importantly, between the renovation
of the working class and the youth with fresh forces and an iron discipline.
Not only in countries like Turkey where a fascist dictatorship reigns but also
in the most democratic and stable bourgeois republics, the revolutionary party
of the working class has to have a sound clandestine organisation in order to
secure the continuation of its activities, the future of the workers' movement,
and the development of assistance to and influence on this movement with a revolutionary
line which is not restricted by (bourgeois) laws.
In addition to the maximum use of the legal possibilities and the consolidation
of the work in this field, one of the most important tasks of the day is the
rebuilding and consolidation of the illegal organisation which has the features
required to meet the needs of the workers' movement. This is necessary for the
continuation of the activities of preparing and organising the revolution and
for its success. What is needed is not a so-called illegal organisation which
has no links with the workers' movement, which is far from meeting the needs
of this movement, and which has become degenerated and become an aim instead
of an instrument (for the revolution). What is needed is an illegal organisation
with thousands of links, which is sound and capable of utilising all instruments
and possibilities and of organising and directing the struggle for revolution
and socialism in the face of the fierce attacks of counter-revolutionary forces.
While utilising the possibilities in legal field to the full, another fundamental
task facing the conscious sections of the working class, above all the organised
forces of our party, is to become perfect in illegal work, to strengthen the
clandestine organisation and to encourage the awakening sections of the working
class to organise in that organisation.
Contrary to the suggestions of the right and "left" wing of the traditional
"left", which stand on a completely liquidationist platform today,
legal and illegal organisation and work do not exclude or alternate each other.
On the contrary, they constitute the unity of two different aspects of a single
aim, complementing and strengthening each other. It is not possible to help
the workers' movement develop and to build a sound and constantly strengthened
clandestine organisation by turning one's back on the present tasks to advance
the level of consciousness, organisation and struggle of the workers' movement,
on the most effective instruments and forms of this work, and consequently,
on the movement itself.
On the basis of organising revolutionary work based on factories and advancing
this work, our conference draws attention to the importance of strengthening
and giving full support to the organisation of the working class in the open-legal
(economic-political) field, to supporting and consolidating the open / legal
workers' press which is one of the most influential instruments of organising
and advancing the struggle of the working class, and to using it effectively
in the daily work that must be carried out energetically in this field.
Our conference, which has passed resolutions on the questions of organisation,
women, culture, youth, overseas organisations and the national question, expresses
its belief that all party organisations and forces, advanced workers, and the
youth will sincerely and with great sacrifice carry out the decisions of the
Second General Conference of the TDKP.