I’m excited to share with you my convo with Kavita Krishnan, Promise Li and Romeo Kokriatski on why the idea of multipolarity needs to be understood & critiqued, and why the left cannot abandon anti-authoritarianism and internationalism.
You can find the episode wherever you listen to podcasts.
Kavita Krishnan is an Indian Marxist and Feminist who used to be a politburo member of the Communist Party of India (MarxistโLeninist) Liberation who made news a few months ago when she resigned over Ukraine. Promise Li is a US-based Hong Konger organizer and part of the Left diaspora collective Lausan. Romeo Kokriatski is a Ukrainian-American journalist, managing editor of the New Voice of Ukraine and co-host of the Ukraine Without Hype podcast.
Promise is also a returning guest of the pod, and Romeo’s been on a few times as well.
Due to Russia’s ongoing bombardments of Ukraine, Romeo’s power went out towards the end of the episode so we had to continue without him.
Slava Ukraini.

Mentions and Recommendations:
- My piece for Lausan Collective: The periphery has no time for binaries
- Majoritarian State: How Hindu Nationalism is Changing India by Angana P. Chatterji, Thomas Blom Hansen and Christophe Jaffrelot (Kavita) –
- Money Power and Financial Capital in Emerging Markets: Facing the Liquidity Tsunami by Ilias Alami (Promise)
Regular updates on India can be found on The India Cable
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Credits:
Host: Joey Ayoub
Producer: Joey Ayoub
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Music: Rap and Revenge
Main theme design: Wenyi Geng
Episode design: Joey Ayoub
Transcript via Antidote Zine:
The fact that the left uses this language, completely shutting its ears to the fact that it has acquired a very dangerous meaning, is really alarming.
Kavita Krishnan: Iโm Kavita KrishnanโIโm a Marxist feminist activist in India. For thirty years I belonged to the Communist Party of India โ Marxist Leninist. Recently Iโve had a break with that, a few months ago. Ukraine was the catalyst in that break. Iโll talk about that more in the interview.
Promise Li: Iโm Promise Li, originally from Hong Kong; I live in Los Angeles now. Iโm involved in various movements, most recently as part of a Hong Kong diaspora leftwing group called Lausan Collective, engaged in international solidarity work with movements in Hong Kong and also China. Iโm part of other groups, especially socialist groups in the US like Solidarity and, more recently, the Tempest Collective. I also do some tenant organizing in Chinatown in Los Angeles and in various other movement spaces as well.
Romeo Kokriatski: Iโm Romeo Kokriatski, the managing editor of the New Voice of Ukraine, one of Ukraineโs only English-language newspapers. Iโve been a Marxist since I was twelve years old, and Iโve managed to claw my way up a traditional media ladder. I also host a podcast called Ukraine Without Hype; it comes out around every two weeks and we discuss the biggest headlines of the week in Ukraine, in English.
Joey Ayoub: For those who donโt know, what is multipolarity? It sounds quite fancy. Why is it a thing that still exists as a concept that folks, especially on the left, are actually willing to defend? And why are we challenging that?
RK: Multipolarity is an evolution of the bipolar world where initially the United States and the Soviet Union were the two global hegemonsโafter the fall of the Soviet Union, of course, that left just the United States and a โunipolarโ world. But due to a combination of the inexorable march of history and some poor mistakes by the US government, the US state has lost some of this unipolar hegemonic status in the world, especially following the disastrous and immoral โwar on terror.โ As a result, other powersโnotably China and Russiaโbegan gaining some of the prominence that the US once solely held. This is the concept we call multipolarity: a world defined by multiple imperial cores instead of just one.
I like to point out that theyโre still imperial cores. Weโre still talking about countries that want to be empires, or that are empires currently, exerting influence on their neighbors, on their surroundings, and on the globe as a whole. When you break up that hegemonic control into several different parts it just makes it that much harder to organize around and tackle, because these different poles can co-opt resistance. This is what we see very often especially in leftwing defenses of multipolarity: that these separate imperial cores co-opt resistance to American imperialism and promote imperialism of a non-US variety.
PL: One thing thatโs important to note is that this faith in multipolarity rests on this understanding of how imperialism works globally. A lot of folks feel that imperialism is mainly vested in the US and the West as geopolitical actors that exert influence over other countries, completely ignoring the fact that global finance exists. International monetary, financial, and other economic organs exist, and we live in a world where more and more nation-states are being recruited as part of this deepening phase of neoliberalism in which more and more things are being privatized, neoliberalized.
There is a lot of research in what people are calling โnew state capitalism studies,โ Marxist political economy, and other adjacent discourses where weโre looking at mid-sized and regional actors. Letโs leave out China for now, even. There are other nation-states not easily aligned to the different powers, traditionally considered part of the BRICS blocโBrazil, Russia, India, China, South Africaโand as an alternate political power to the US and the West. But thatโs completely false. A lot of these states are being recruited as victims of the IMF world order, but the national ruling elites in a lot of these countries, especially in the Global South, are working in hand with the Western capitalist ruling class to exploit the working class and other marginalized populations of the Global South.
Our task as socialists, anarchists, leftists, progressives, is to unearth and find these interconnections between nation-states, between different capitalist ruling classes, to see how theyโre finding new ways to exploit their own workers. Thatโs what is missing when we place our faith in multipolarity. By placing faith in multipolarity as it exists today, weโre really only placing faith in a certain new permutation of how global capitalism works.
KK: After these excellent introductions and explanations of what the concept of multipolarity has meant all this while, what Iโd like to add is some observations about the way in which that term now has taken on meanings that are not widely acknowledged at all. I would say that these are the dominant ways in which this term is now used.
I have been observing for some time that in Mr. Putinโs and Xi Jinpingโs articulation, and in the articulations of the Modi regime in India and various other far-right and authoritarian forces, they say we want a multipolar world not a unipolar world. They say that universal or widely-accepted standards of democracy and human rights are a Western imposition,a unipolar imperialist imposition. So the fight for sovereignty and for anti-imperialism means a rejection of these universal standards.
Mind you this doesnโt apply to small countries, it applies to poles. It doesnโt apply to sections of people or nationalities or anything. It applies to the big powers and to aspiring big powers. What theyโre saying is: you get to do what you please, and no one has the right to question you. You can define democracy as good governance. You can define democracy as majoritarianism. You can define human rights as happiness. You can do what you like, and no one should have the right to question you.
This should have always been an alien discourse. It springs from realismโfrom the Kissinger school. So I cannot understand when and how this became a part of left language. The fact that the left uses this language, completely shutting its ears to the fact that it has acquired a very dangerous meaning, is something really alarming to me.
RK: What these states mean is they want to be able to do whatever they want and they donโt want anyone to criticize them. Iโve noticed that this gets melded into rejecting Western influence or pushing back against US liberal capitalist values. Which, as you noted, Kavita, completely destroys the universality of the values that we all hold and are trying to build a world around. That melding, that confusion of having to reject everything the United States does and wanting to commit atrocities against populations without hearing people complain about itโthese two things get confused to the point where Iโve seen people argue that human rights are not a leftist value or shouldnโt be part of the conversation when weโre talking about building a progressive world, because this is a Western concept.
Which is ridiculous. As far as I understood, human rights apply to humans and not a particular nationality or ethnic group. But because of this confusion and its use and promulgation by very well-known fascists like Aleksandr Dugin in Russia, it has become one of the scarier trends on the left in the past ten years.
The discourse of multipolarity actually prevents us from adequately understanding our political conditions in order to fight back against capitalist authoritarian forces, because a lot of leftists have chosen one side of this binary instead of understanding that authoritarianism is manifesting itself in different forms.
JA: A lot of folks who would be otherwise progressive (defending reproductive rights, LGBTQ rights, maybe even open borders) have values they would defend โat homeโ in the US, in India, in Europe, or wherever, but as soon as you cross the border, or you go to a certain part of the world that is filtered through this campist binary, the same people adopt conservative, even far-right politics. It can feel very contradictory.
Why do you think that is? In your experience, why do you think folks still adopt those binaries, if they canโt intellectually defend them?
PL: In my experience, especially organizing in the US, thereโs a sense of guilt: being in the imperial core, being white, being American. So Americansโ international analysis ends up being overshadowed by this politics of guilt and is not actually listening to voices on the ground, nor making a clear assessment of political economy or of how power works in the international arena. Thereโs an urge to center the fact that people in the Global South can govern themselves, and somehow this turns into an uncritical allegiance to these governments and identifying these governments with the people.
Another discourse Iโve heard in recent years is that we canโt call states in the Global South authoritarian even when they are authoritarian, because thatโs a racist code word. I think itโs an interesting phenomenon where leftists especially in the West refuse to see and understand critical minorities, especially other leftistsโtheir counterparts in these regionsโwho are actually doing the work to call these regimes out and to label these regimes for what they are. They place what they see as racist, and what they see as an imposition from the West, over the voices of actual communists, Marxists, and other leftists on the ground.
The US definitely weaponizes the discourse of authoritarianism, orientalizing states like China and other countries in the Global South as if the US is some sort of perfect liberal democracy superior to the values of these crude authoritarianisms. This is obviously false. But the way to address this binary is not to simply side with the other part of the puzzle, but to look at how thereโs an uneven rise of authoritarianisms. Itโs important to talk about authoritarianism in its unevenness, especially in the last couple of years. We canโt reduce the rise of someone like Trump in an imperfect liberal democracy to the phenomenon of Xi Jinping, Putin, etcetera. Bolsonaro is not the same as Trump, and Trump is not the same as Xi Jinping.
This might seem like arguing over wording, but I do think it is important from a movement perspective. I donโt think a lot of people in the West understand that itโs nearly impossible to build independent organizations at all, to fight in any arena of civil society in a public and open way, when you get to countries like China, Russia, Egypt, and so on. Thatโs markedly different from the arena of struggle we have in the US and in certain European countries in the West. Thatโs not to say there are countries in the West that are somehow โbetter,โ but to recognize the actually-existing phenomenon of authoritarianism is diverse, uneven. It produces different kinds of far-right movements and regimes that require different tactics, different analyses. Thereโs no one-size-fits-all model in terms of how we can address these different authoritarian actors. This is the real conversation we should be having.
The discourse of multipolarity actually prevents us from adequately understanding our political conditions in order to fight back against capitalist authoritarian forces, because a lot of leftists have chosen one side of this binary instead of understanding that authoritarianism is manifesting itself in different forms that require different kinds of pluralistic movements to fight. That should be the start of the conversation. A lot of the left, especially in the West, is not there.
JA: Weโre talking with someone from Hong Kong and someone from Ukraine, so I feel itโs almost cruel to explore this, but this is what we see. I mostly work in English, French, and Arabic, so I mostly see it in this part of the world. In SWANA or the Arab-majority world, there are certain tendencies that are similar to this, but they come from a different position. The conclusions are sometimes the same, although they often tend to veer towards helplessness, hopelessness, cynicism, maybe apathyโso not wholeheartedly endorsing Russia but also saying, โWe donโt have a dog in this fight.โ
Those kinds of arguments come from a very specific positionality, usually from helplessness, because most of the Arab world is simply not democratic, and even the few examples that have some type of democracy are extremely imperfect, to put it very mildlyโLebanon, Tunisia, and so on.
From your experience, Kavita, are there some interesting differences between the Indian left and the US left? And between the Hong Kong left and the Chinese left, for that matter, Promise? And maybe the Ukrainian left and the Russian left, if you want to entertain it that way, Romeo. What are some interesting similarities or differences between different lefts?
KK: Promise was very sharp in explaining how there is guilt and hesitancy in the USA, we shouldnโt say the things that our government is saying, and all of that. But I think that there is a different way we could look at the problem: as a problem of the global left. And while there are differences in position, the basic faultline, the basic fallacy, is something shared in common. A lot of people are talking about the problem of the West making everything all about itself, the left in America making America the source of evil everywhereโof course thatโs coming from guilt. But that doesnโt explain why itโs almost worse in the Global South.
The problem in the Global South is that the left is not a tiny segmentโyes, itโs a minority; it has different levels of moderate electoral success. But in a country like India it has a pretty large audience compared to that in most countries of the West, so the harm these kinds of attitudes do is substantial. When the rare few consistent democratic voices in a given country legitimize the idea of the โlesser evilsโ of Putin and Xi and say we have to pull our punches thereโthis is the better part of the left that Iโm describing! Thereโs also the other part which openly says China and Russiaโs rise is excellent, cheerleading for those countries.
There is a problem with the left losing its moorings, in the sense that the left should have its moorings not in these macro-formulas. The idea should be simple: that you support struggles against the ruling classes anywhere, against oppressors anywhere. Why is that hard? Why would you measure out how much solidarity to give, and give less solidarity against what you think of as an โanti-USโ power? Why would you invest even to the smallest degree in the survival of oppressive regimes anywhere, invading imperialisms anywhere?
Itโs almost like a George Bush style โwith us or against us.โ The bad faith actors on the left in India are openly saying โYouโre a CIA agentโ and so on. But if you subtract those, and you look at reasonably good faith people on the left, they also look sad and regretful, and if you are critical of the kind of authoritarianism that there is in China for example, where there isnโt room for struggle and for movements, what they think is that basically you are for liberal democracy, and if you are for liberal democracy then you canโt be on the left, you are not socialist.
This is, to my mind, the farthest you can get from leftism. That is a reactionary value, that there are siloed โcivilizationsโ that are fundamentally different. This is a fascist idea. The fact that it is repeated as some sort of progressive ideology is obscene.
Look, all of us, in all our countries, in the struggles we wage, are fighting to achieve rights which we would call rights in the terms of liberal democracy. All those rights have been won by struggles. They havenโt been given by some liberal regime. Many rights have been won by struggle, especially in India. Civil liberties is something the left has struggled for. The idea of a socialist democracy is very simpleโwhatever youโre struggling for beyond this has to be better, more democratic than this. It cannot be that you destroy these achievements and then build socialism from anew. That is where the problem comes.
I donโt have a simple answer, because I know that in Marxist-Leninist terms you donโt build on the old state; you destroy the old state and then you build the new. That is where the basic problem arises: the idea that whatever democratic rights are won, whatever democratic institutions are in place, somehow the minute you have a socialist revolution anywhere (and we are very far from that everywhere in the world right now), all democratic rights have to go down, they donโt count. Having rights is bourgeois and all of that. So you create something else and call it democracy.
Itโs similar to the discussion in India which prevailed for a long time (and still does on the left) saying that feminism is bourgeois, that we are Marxists and thatโs good enough. Feminism is bourgeois? Well, not really. These terms were also used at a time when Marxist feminism itself was a huge and competing forceโthen they could say thereโs bourgeois feminism and then thereโs ours, the Marxist movementโs. But itโs not like that anymore. Thereโs something basic here that is flawed.
RK: For me, one of the clearest examples of this very strange mindset is the support of these authoritarian regimes by people who identify as LGBT, people who are openly trans, or openly homosexual. Theyโll turn around and say, โWell, China is doing this, itโs better than the US, their COVID policy is better, theyโve limited homelessness,โ and so on. Itโs absurd because these are people who donโt have rights in most of the countries that theyโre praising. The second they cross that border, there is a high chance they will be arrested if they publicly act the way they act in the West.
You want to destroy your own rights? How do you imagine this happening?
JA: I see resonances of that; Iโve experienced it in Lebanon, and I know itโs an issue in the wider Arab-majority world. I know Palestinian feminists have to deal with this among Palestinians. They say weโll deal with womenโs rights after liberation from Israeli occupation, and weโll deal with queer rights after that too.
Those arguments have always ended up serving the ruling class, the state, the oppressor. Itโs really absurd at this point. I remember a Twitter thread where someone argued that one of the few truly trans-friendly countries in the world is North Korea. I found that incredible. This wasnโt even someone anonymous, but a journalist in the US. Iโm just using this as an example, but weโve seen these things. Even in QatarโI was baffled during the FIFA world cup that there were some folks actually saying we cannot hold Qatar to the same standards for its treatment of migrant workers and LGBTQ rights and so on. Those arguments were perfectly aligned with openly homophobic, transphobic, racist arguments being made by supporters of the Qatar regime who would be considered on the right.
Obviously, the people who get erased are queer Qataris and migrant workers in Qatar, as if they donโt exist.
RK: In fact a Qatari spokesperson was talking to a Western newspaper about the human rights criticism of his government, and his exact words were: you cannot judge us by your Western standards, weโre a different civilization. This is, to my mind, the farthest you can get from leftism. That is a reactionary value, that there are siloed โcivilizationsโ that are fundamentally different. This is a fascist idea. The fact that it is repeated as some sort of progressive ideology is obscene.
JA: Sisi himself in Egypt has also said such things, and itโs really weakened the campaign to support Egyptian political prisoners, as we saw recently with the COP in Cairo and the calls to #FreeAlaa and everyone else. Because that argument has become something near hegemonic. The universalism of human rights before that, with all the flaws of universalism, has receded. I canโt help but feel this is also a way neoliberalismโneoliberal thinking, atomizationโhas been internalized and reified in โourโ spaces.
PL: I want to briefly build on this discussion, this relationship between the left and other progressive movements of marginalized identitiesโLGBTQ movements, feminist movements, student movements, and so on. And also the notion of socialist democracy, which is a term that should be more discussed. Not social democracy, but revolutionary socialist democracy. What does it mean to imagine socialism as a political system of governance? That isnโt about a one-party system. It isnโt about one enlightened vanguard thrusting its ideals upon others and putting its mold on other movements, but actually a socialist organization and socialist movement that respects the autonomy of different marginalized struggles.
This is going back to what Kavita was saying about how our goal shouldnโt be to abandon the few important advances of bourgeois democracyโitโs actually to extend and maximize them. Bourgeois democracy actually doesnโt guarantee these democratic freedoms. We need socialist democracy to guarantee these freedoms. To bring it back to multipolarity, this is interesting to contrast with the fact that adherents of leftwing multipolarity accuse us of being bourgeois liberals, but in reality their theoretical framework is the one banking on capitalism. Letโs face it: multipolarity is just capitalism. Itโs capitalist competition by different states. To them, these national capitalisms are โgood thingโ about bourgeois democracy; these are what we should be defending. This is a completely perverse logic. Itโs taking a step backwards. Itโs defending vestiges of feudalism and fascism, of the perversity that comes especially as we enter late capitalism.
Whatโs important is Western leftistsโ inability to see and recognize the autonomy of marginalized struggles that donโt neatly fit in the mold of national, state-centered governance in these capitalist regimes. For them, the agency of people of the Global South can only be centered on capitalist governance and embodied in the form of a nation-state. While in reality there are all these different struggles going on that socialists should be also learning more about and learning how to relate to.
I wanted to just touch on one talking point from the campists that Iโve heard a lot: that by criticizing the governance of Global South regimes, weโre actually saying people in the Global South canโt run a country on their own. But why is running a political system reduced to that specific mode of politics? Why isnโt mutual aid on the ground a type of governance, a type of actual self-activity of existing people on the ground? Why isnโt an LGBTQ movement advocating for reforms, creating safe spaces for themselves? Student movements and feminist movements are challenging state power in their own right. Why arenโt these seen as rigorous literal systems of governance, as ways of living? And why is that kind of privilege, so to speak, only reserved for capitalist elites, the ruling classes of these nation-states who in reality should be the locus of our struggle, who movements should always be struggling against?
I firmly believe, as a socialist, a Marxist, whatever, that whenever the revolution comes, movements must continue. Movements, beyond any mass party or socialist organization, must continue as a counterweight to whatever post-revolutionary system can come to exist. These are things that are not addressed, not centered when we use the rubric of multipolarity, over learning form existing struggles of people on the ground.
If you stand with victims of imperialism, you have to stand with victims of all imperialism. Ukraine is a long term colonial victim of greater Russian imperialism, and it continues to be today. Thatโs what theyโre fighting, so you want them to win. Simple.
KK: To think that we canโt hold the countries of the Global South or other nations to the same standardsโhow is that anti-racism? Ask someone who is part of struggles in the Global South. Iโve been arguing for some time that itโs in fact racist to not take us seriously, those people in these countries who want democracy, who want rights, who are fighting against authoritarian tendencies.
Iโll give you one example which has riled me a lot in recent years. A previous ambassador to India from (of all countries) Germany was in Delhi, and he decided to pay a visit to the national headquarters in Napur of the main fascist organization here, the RSS. The SS in that is not coincidental. This is an organization set up in the 1920s, directly inspired by the fascist movements in Europe. Their foundational leader said so. They said we need to do with Muslims in India what Germany has done with its Jews. The point is, he visited the officeโand that wasnโt all. He was photographed paying homage to, bowing down to, offering flowers to a statue of one of these founders, a guy who said Hitler is a good guy and we need to be like him.
I found this so appalling. When he was questioned on it, his answer was very telling. He said the RSS is โpart of the mosaic that is India,โ and heโd only gone there to understand. What does that say? Thatโs an orientalist understanding, that this is a โmosaic.โ Are you going to say that the KKK is part of the mosaic of America? Would you go visit a neo-Nazi outfit in Germany and offer flowers there and shake hands there, and say itโs part of the mosaic of Germany? You wouldnโt. You are willing to say that in India because you are looking at India as a cultural space above politics, in a way that is civilizational and therefore cannot be the same as โourโ countries. Thatโs racism, not antiracism.
This example shows that itโs not just the left that does this, but when it doesโwhen the left thinks in the same way as the ambassador from Germany, what does that say? The left ends up looking at states rather than people. Itโs almost saying that the state equals the people. Itโs not making a distinction between a state and what its people are struggling for.
I see that example most clearly in Ukraine. On the left, if you speak about Ukraine they will say Zelenskyy is this-and-that, he is bringing neoliberal policies there and so on. Heโs selling Ukraine on Wall Street and so on. I have two responses to that. The first is that of course Zelenskyy represents the government, an elected leaderโand then there are people, who are not the same as a government. But second, and equally important I think, is that itโs up to the people of Ukraine to decide what struggles they are going to prioritize and when. What Zelenskyy is doing in the economy is nothing exceptional. Itโs what the government of India is doing. Itโs what governments all over the world are doing. There are critics of it in Ukraine. The workers of Ukraine may be up against draconian labor laws, or the withdrawal of labor protections. But they are the same workers fighting in the Ukrainian army against an invasion. If the country survives, of course there will be room for all these other struggles.
I find it really strange when the left starts doing this kind of flattening. If your government has been equated with you, what are you left with? You want people to be listening to you and to others in the struggle rather than taking the word of your government for what you represent, right?
RK: Thatโs exactly right. And it is racist. Itโs a dismissal of the experience of Ukrainian leftists to say that we โagreeโ with the liberal-democratic, bourgeois EU-ification of our country, that everyoneโs on board, that everyone in Ukraine wants the same thing. Obviously thatโs false. Anyone who has ever met a single other human in their life should know that you put three humans in a room and youโll get ten opinions. We are a naturally quarreling and bickering bunch. In Ukraine, we will argue and bicker even over things that we agree on.
Especially when it comes to Zelenskyyโs economic politics, the only reason you donโt see more pushback, and part of the reason this is going on, is because we are in a war. I have many comrades who are currently fighting on the front lines, in Bakhmut, in Soledar, and the reason theyโre doing that instead of protesting labor laws is because if the country does not exist, all of these arguments would be naught. Russia wants to genocide us. They want to kill us all. It is not the priority to protest against the reduction in labor protections because weโre currently trying to avoid being genocided. People who are dead cannot argue for their rights, as authoritarians around the world have well learned.
This shorthand substitution of a nation-state for the people who live in it is absolutely something Iโve seen and been subjected to. As you said, Kavita, it is incomprehensible. Because most of the progress weโve made as the left has been via non-state resistance to government policy. In the United States too, thatโs the majority of labor rights, thatโs the majority of LGBT rights. All of that has specifically been won by movements explicitly resisting what the state is trying to do. When you remove the intellectual space for that to occur, you are consigning entire swathes of people as unworthy of the rights you hold.
JA: When we talk about the fetishization of the state, it divides the world into โspheres of influence.โ I literally think of it like the board game Risk. Some British leftists for example have literally said that in the โcontestโ between America and Russia in Ukraine (which is how they would frame it), we have to be sensitive to Russiaโs โsphere of influence.โ It comes from a very realpolitik, conservative, even isolationist worldview. Socialism for me and fascism for you. Or democracy for me and fascism for you. Itโs bizarre.
But itโs a tendency thatโs very common, going back thirty, forty, fifty yearsโis it still a hiccup from the Cold War? Is it just a reification, a recycling of that sort of binary, but instead of two we now have four or five or six? Or is something else happening? Let me phrase it this way: is there any class analysis in that sort of framework? And if there isnโt class analysis, what makes it left? Iโm against class reductionism, we should be intersectional. But if there isnโt class analysis, what is it?
PL: To go through a few โgood faithโ arguments made by defenders of multipolarity that Iโve heard: no, itโs not that socialism is somehow crystallized in these nation-states; itโs that having more nation-states allied with each other, and not just having the US as a single dominant power, opens up the conditions for revolutionary struggle more. All these different imperialists will have less power, so thereโs more room for progressive movements to come up. Romeo has of course already attacked the logic of this.
Another thing Iโve heard is justifying the logic by saying, โLook at all the decolonization movements after World War Two.โ As in, World War Two, because of all these imperialists fighting each other, opened up space for decolonization and anti-colonial movements to emerge. Butโdid you forget about World War Two? Do you not understand what happened in those wars? There were class-based workers movements that took advantage of what they could to restore and promote anti-colonial change. But itโs ridiculous to call for a return to the conditions of something like World War Two in order to somehow unlock the potential for decolonization. No, as leftists we stand behind decolonization and anti-colonial movementsโwe donโt call for multipolar conflict in order to unlock those struggles. As Kavita was saying, thatโs purely a world of formulas and dogmas. That leads us further into destruction.
Even for people who are victims of the far right in India, for instance the Muslim community, the idea is that America is killing Muslims. They donโt even know how many Muslims Putin has killed or displaced. No clue at all. The left has a real job here, to counter misinformation and propose ways we can actually help.
Iโm going to flag this last example because it was recently in the news: Lulaโs victory in Brazil. Obviously, yeah, the PT beating Bolsonaro is good. Thatโs great. Iโm glad Bolsonaro didnโt win. And Iโm sure there are a lot of progressive reforms under Lulaโs regime. We have yet to see what type of administration heโll have. Itโs a very broad coalition. But thatโs all to say: the victories in Brazil or Chile do not automatically translate to whatโs happening in movements in China, or Iran, or Russia, where antiwar and feminist movements and workers movements are being crushed. When we talk about multipolarity, we canโt just say, โLook at Lula, look at Brazil.โ Literally the point of multipolarityโIโm thinking on the same terms as them nowโis that you have to take all the poles together. You canโt just point and say, โThat poleโs doing well!โ
What about Chinese movements, Iranian movements, Russian movements, Ukrainian movements? You canโt ignore that. Thatโs just bad faith analysis. We need a balance sheet as socialists, as Marxists. We canโt just bank on the victories that we like and ignore the other ones. This is the model theyโre promoting: theyโre saying that multipolarity somehow strengthens movements throughout the world, and empirically speaking that is not true.
KK: For the left, this is a strange kind of choice, to present our choices in terms of international positioning, as a choice between multipolarity or unipolarity. That is itself a false, bad-faith way of putting it.
Whenever America acts imperially in any way, you would support people fighting against that. You want those who are fighting against American imperialism to win. Now, unless you think that the regimes of Russia or China are being attacked by American imperialism and therefore you need them to survive and fight, why on Earth would you have any degree of investment in their survival? Iran as well, by the way. In India there are sections of the left that are absolutely silent on Iran, during the movement in Iran right now, because what happens if the movement achieves its goals and gets rid of the Islamic Republic? That would be regime change!
If you stand with victims of imperialism, you have to stand with victims of all imperialism. Ukraine is a long term colonial victim of greater Russian imperialism, and it continues to be today. Thatโs what theyโre fighting, so you want them to win. Simple. For the left, the assumption of this kind of choice means relieving yourself of the responsibility to stand in meaningful solidarity with those struggling.
Let me give you an example from the organization I just parted with. Theyโre not the obvious ones who say Putin is wonderful and Ukraine is Nazi or whatever. What they say is, โBut Kavita, what other position can we take? We already said we stand with Ukraine.โ And I say that is a formal position which youโre backing with an analysis that says Russia and Ukraine are both bleeding while the war is benefiting America, so the war should end, we want peace. How is peace going to be achieved? Through negotiations. And what are negotiations going to mean? You wonโt say anything about that. It means Ukraine giving up whole swathes of territory. And its peopleโwhat happens to its people?
What would meaningful solidarity look like? It could look like what you do in terms of meaningful solidarity with Palestine, for instance. My comrades would also ask, โWhat can we do beyond issuing a statement?โ Well, what do we do in terms of Palestine? We campaign to tell people information about whatโs happening there, and we campaign against disinformation, against Israeli propaganda. We do that, in active terms. So why would we not do that about Ukraine?
Also, this isnโt an issue or a debate just inside the left. In India, the entire public sphere is absolutely saturated with Russian propaganda. Not just on the far right and left. Even for people who are victims of the far right in India, for instance the Muslim community, the idea is that America is killing Muslims. They donโt even know how many Muslims Putin has killed or displaced. No clue at all. The left has a real job here, to counter misinformation and propose ways we can actually help. One big way is to engage in the information war in India on behalf of Ukraine.
What we were saying earlier about the idea of civilizational values and how you canโt impose the same standards on Qatar or India or whateverโthat also is exactly what these fascists, the multipolarists, are saying right now. Thatโs what they mean by multipolarity. Unipolarity means universal values. Multipolarity means that you canโt impose your ideas of equality on us! And in fact, values of equality are an elite imposition even in your own country, so the movements against that imposition are wonderful movements in your country. When the left thinks in these terms they donโt realize that theyโre saying exactly what not just the far right in Qatar says, but what the far right across the world says.
RK: In the Indian example, one of the RSSโs big things has been pushing and promoting the idea that caste is something foundational to Indian society. You would never have a leftist that openly agrees that castes are good. But that is what you are saying if you are a leftist who says we should have a multipolar world and support the Global South or non-US hegemons against the US. What you are in effect saying, at least in the case of India, is: โI think caste is good and we should have a caste-based society in India.โ For Russia, what youโre saying is: โI believe that we should kill all LGBT people.โ For China, youโre saying, โI believe everyone should be Han and speak Mandarin and there shouldnโt be any dialects.โ
When you look at the actual results, the practical meaning implied by supporting this concept of a multipolar world, is that youโre just supporting fascism. Youโre just supporting every single fascist policy that every single fascist regime is trying to impose on their own populations. From that perspective it becomes obviously absurd to even imagine that this can somehow be a progressive idea or create space for decolonial and socialist movements. How does promoting fascist policy open space for Marxism? Iโve never been too clear on that.
This is something I really wanted to bring up in the case of Ukraine. When the war started, journalists and media personalities in Ukraine were deluged by media requests from India. In the beginning we were very happy to do them; obviously the war was just starting, we needed to start making sure the Ukrainian narrative has space, that the information space is not immediately dominated completely by Russian propaganda. So we started talking to these Indian media outlets, and we very quickly realized that not only were the Indian media that spoke to us not interested in interrogating the causes behind this conflict, or critically analyzing why the full-scale invasion occurred, or how Ukraine is a victim of imperialist aggression for hundreds of years. Instead they just wanted to have the picture of a Ukrainian and a Russian screaming at each other.
As Ukrainians we were not interested in that. Thereโs now an unspoken agreement with every single media personality and journalist in Ukraine that we donโt talk to Indian stations at all. We see that their information space uncritically repeats Russian propaganda and Russian claims, without any analysis, and if there is a Ukrainian counterpoint itโs not presented in a way that centers Ukraine as the victim of aggression. Itโs simply placed as โWell, this person disagreesโโwhich brings an equality to this conflict which does not exist. Russia and Ukraine are not equal subjects in the mysterious war that has just appeared.
Thatโs another thing Iโve noticed, not only but primarily in leftist spaces: the idea that war just descended. It came out of nowhere. There was no war and then the cloud of war, like a thunderstorm or a hurricane, lowered onto Ukrainian territory. No. War is not weather. War is not the mysterious reverberations of the ether or anything like that. It is a specific action taken by humans against other humans. โUkraine is bleeding; Russia is bleedingโฆโ Russia isnโt bleeding, Russia attacked. Russia invaded. What do you mean Russia is bleeding? They can stop bleeding any time by leaving and not shooting us. Then we donโt have a reason to shoot them. Itโs very simple.
It drives me insane the way people treat war as some kind of atmospheric disturbance instead of concerted human action. This applies to quite a number of other things, Iโve noticed, in the wider world as well beyond war. LGBT oppression, religious oppression. These are all very often presented as things that are unavoidable or a consequence of nature, instead of human agency. I donโt know how these beliefs propagate on the left or how they maintain coherency. On the slightest analysis it is prima facia absurd.
We need to look at these interconnections, such that โneither Washington nor Beijingโ is not just unrealistic or idealistic, but actually the most practical way to fight multipolar imperialism and capitalism. We need to link these struggles together.
KK: I want to quickly comment on what Romeo mentioned about India. First about the television: itโs not just you guys. I, and several others like me, have stopped going on mainstream Indian television since 2015, because this is exactly what you describeโjust not about Ukraine and Russia. What they want is someone who is Muslim and a hateful Hindu, or someone who is anti-Modi and someone who is pro-Modi screaming at each other, with the anchor sitting in judgment and periodically turning the bad guy silent (and the bad guy is us), and lecturing them. Thatโs of course not new.
But the other thing about caste that you mentionedโthat is so central. When I began reading Dugin, I found that Dugin quite centrally and repeatedly says that anti-hierarchy ideology is something we need to dislodge, and in those passages he uses the terms of the caste system of India. He quotes other previous fascists like Julius Evola to say that today the world is in what is called Kali Yuga. Kali Yuga in Hindu terms means a catastrophic overturning of the correct hierarchies, of the good order of society, where the oppressed castes rule, where women are on top. Thatโs the catastrophe. And he uses that term!
I kept trying to ask people in India: how can you not be interested in this? How can it not bother you that part of Indian fascist language is now being incorporated into a global fascist language, the kind that Steve Bannon listens to, the kind that others in between Dugin and Bannon are listening to and using?
JA: The phrase regime change was mentioned earlierโIโve found the discourse around that term very interesting, because what is a revolution? The Haitian and French revolutions were regime changes, the Russian revolution 1917 was a regime change. The Arab Springโs main slogan was โThe People Want the Downfall of the Regimeโ (Ash-shab yureed isqat an-nizam), and this was not meant metaphorically.
When people took to the streets in Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain, Syria, Iraq (and now in Iran more recently, but thatโs a different context), what they were calling for when they say โWe want the downfall of the regimeโ is not metaphorical. In Iran they are literally saying โDeath to the Dictator.โ They are not saying this as a figure of speech. They are saying death to the dictator. They are saying regime change. They are saying the current regime needs to go.
When Ukrainians say that Putin has to go, he cannot stayโฆthe hesitancy is palpable. The silences are palpable. Itโs almost like if he goes, our worldview cannot be sustained. This is what Iโm trying to get at. There seems to be a sense of fragility. The current world order already feels fragile. Obviously there are climate-related fears, and anxieties of thing falling apart and catastrophes, and at least part of the story is that we need some sense of stability. We want license to stop thinking about it. Thatโs dangerous.
I wanted to get into two final points. Iโm very interested in hearing your thoughts: what do you see as the role of diasporas in all of this? Weโve seen the Palestinian diaspora, when it is active organizing around the question of Palestine and the occupation, colonization, apartheidโit tends to be very reactive. When Israel is launching bombing campaigns or assassinating journalists and all of that, then maybe they take to the streets and protest. Itโs reacting to current events. The Indian diaspora that Iโve become familiar with in the UK and the US has gone to the right and far-right; many are BJP nationalists. Weโve seen this with Trumpโs association with the BJP and the Indian diaspora in the US.
How do you reconcile with the role of the diaspora? In my case I am now part of the diaspora; Promise, you are as well. Where do you see these dynamics fit in with the conversation weโve been having?
PL: A very clear reason why Hong Kong, Chinese, Tibetan, and Uighur diasporas (and other diasporas from the Xinjiang region) are important is people canโt do things. We canโt organize independently, openly, publicly that much any more. Hong Kong is a new site and victim of that. We are entering a new stage where any minor protest or dissent expressed online (not even on the streets anymore) could trigger national security laws.
That means diaspora is a very important site for organizing, for rebuilding an oppositional movement. Thinking in terms of the left, the Chinese government has very unique experience in terms of silencing independent movements. Theyโve been in a position where they were a rising anti-colonial and worker-centered movement, and they know exactly what it means to suppress that. Since Tienanmen theyโve become very smart in doing that with minimal public bloodshed. They very strategically take out organizers and labor struggles. Silence and disappear a couple people; you donโt need mass killings like Iran or Russia. You do just enough so that there is not a movement. I donโt think people understand how effective it has been in doing that.
So the idea of an independent movement-oriented left has really died out, for generations. Itโs contained into very small minorities. People donโt even know what it means to be on the left in that sense. When you say โleftโ in Hong Kong, people will usually think you mean the government. Just discursively thereโs a lot of stuff you have to dig through. For people itโs just liberalism and communism (which is authoritarianism). The diaspora is an important space where people, especially from China and from Hong Kong, get exposed to different struggles. One example that is brewing is Chinese international student participation in the recent labor strikes in the University of California system, which is the largest higher-ed strike in US history.
What does it mean for these students to be exposed to new kinds of movement traditions, to new communities of struggle? How does that reshape their own political consciousness, and what can these people bring back? These are questions the diaspora can be thinking about. And this provides the groundwork for us to start thinking about going back to the problem of action, what Kavita was saying just now about comrades asking, โWhat can we do, actually?โ about Ukraine or Russiaโpeople ask the same things about China. โOh, we canโt do anything because of Sinophobia and US-China tensions, what can you suggest, what can we actually do?โ To which I suggest a bunch of stuff that people like to ignore.
Some of these things include looking at the intersections of international capital. Where do US and Chinese capital intersect? A very concrete example is highrise super-gentrifying housing development projects in places like New York that are bankrolled by loans from Chinese state capital. Thatโs a concrete site of intervention, where Chinese and US capital and developers, Chinese banks, are coming into contact, and thereโs nothing abstract about it. This is a movement to build around, to energize diaspora communities (which are often not very leftwing) into the left, to bridge those struggles with leftwing struggles, anti-gentrification struggles.
Another example is the Chinese international student strike. What does it mean to think about the intersections of these different struggles? The usual response to this is that it isnโt very realistic. But in order to fight capitalism in its totality, in its many interconnections, we do need to look at these interconnections, such that โneither Washington nor Beijingโ is not just unrealistic or idealistic, but actually the most practical way to fight multipolar imperialism and capitalism. We need to link these struggles together.
The truth is, weโre always linking struggles together. This is just an excuse. Whenever we do organizing, itโs not like weโre only going to talk about race and not housing. We never do that. Why canโt we do the same when it comes to different nation-states intersecting together, different capitalist classes intersecting together? The diaspora here has a very critical role in terms of bridging all of these things and taking not only new political traditions back home to re-energize things, but to continue the struggle abroad. Because again, one โgoodโ thing about globalization is that now Chinese state power isnโt just contained within the mainland. Itโs about its investments abroad, and how it draws power from all these different sites abroad.
These are concrete opportunities to put Chinese diaspora in conversation with Indigenous people fighting Chinese-funded agribusinesses in Brazil and the Amazon. Thereโs an explosion of possibilities that arenโt abstract. Itโs in fact very highly concrete. And the diaspora becomes the key motor in bridging these connections together.
How can you not look at this in terms of geopolitics? Is it a coincidence that so many regimes in this neighborhood are actively Islamophobic? Is there no connection between them? Can you find no way of thinking about this beyond your specific national case?
RK: I grew up in both the South Asian diaspora community in the US as well as the post-Soviet or Ukrainian diaspora communities, and a lot of these tendencies Iโve seen develop throughout my lifetime. As you mentioned, Joey, a lot of the Indian diaspora communities areโwe can call them conservative, I suppose, to be polite. At the very least they push forward candidates that have been endorsed by the BJP; they very often attend temples which are funded by the BJP or RSS; and historically there has been the trend of migrant communities becoming more conservative as their status in their new country solidifies. As they gain more social acceptance, they often start ossifying and barring the way to other immigrants, which will necessarily push them right.
For the Desi community in particular, what Iโve seen is the BJP and a whole homegrown industry of Hindu con men (to be very impolite about it), these gurus and spiritual guys who come over and see money-making opportunities. Because one of the biggest things that migrant communities abroad face is they have a homesickness, basically: youโre alienated from your home nation, the food is different, the money is differentโ
Our power went out.
JA: We thought this might happen. Romeo is in Kyiv. Letโs see what weโre going to do. Itโs okay.
There is this argument on the left: โWe can deal with this criticism later, we can deal with this weakness, this critique, after liberationโ (whatever that means). What do you make of that argument? How have you, in your experiences, responded? What do you do with that?
I wanted to slowly wrap up, but what do you do with that argument, Kavita and Promise?
PL: My response to this isnโt very original: if the left doesnโt take the initiative to critically reflect on our own history, our past and our present, and our mistakes and errors, weโre going to repeat the same mistakes in the future. If we genuinely want to transform society and transform reality and build a better world, then we need to take ownership and account for those mistakes. If we donโt do it, the rightwing is going to do it. And itโs socialism or barbarism. This is what it means to know when to draw the line, when movements have turned all the way to the right for things we shouldnโt support. I think the left should be critical and reflective of when certain movements or regimes are unsalvageable and we need to rebuild again.
Saying โthis is not the time to critiqueโ means thereโs never a right time to critique. The US is always going to take advantage of unrest to try to โdo regime change,โ to stir things up against a regime and promote its own agenda. That risk is always going to be there. The logical conclusion of the campistsโ argument is that we donโt do anything, that we have no praxis, no plan for revolution, for solidarity. That, to me, is completely anti-internationalist. We need to find ways to empower existing movements that are happening on the ground, because while people on the Western left are busy sitting there, there are existing movements, there are people doing stuff on the ground.
The task for the Western left isnโt to judge whether this is the right timing or not to support these struggles, itโs to look at how we can support these struggles in the best way possible so as not to reproduce Western imperialist rhetoric while at the same time empowering these struggles to actually take power, to challenge power on their own terms and together with us.
This rhetoric of โnow is not the time to critiqueโ has historically made room for disaster among the left. This is a classic Stalinist tactic. โOh, itโs Western capitalism, we canโt talk about our internal errors.โ The logical conclusion of that is that anyone who raises these internal errorsโif we donโt have a culture of helpfully talking through themโare going to be cast out as enemies and excluded, killed, and weโll be repeating exactly the same mistakes that weโve seen in the twentieth century. And why would we want to do that, as the left?
The left needs a balance sheet of our failures and mistakes of the pastโand also our successes. And to choose very carefully what we should keep amplifying and extending, and what we should drop and forget, and leave in the dustbin of history.
KK: In India, it has been really hard for me. Iโm still in the process of trying to understand why there was so much hostility, even on the best of the Indian left, towards taking what should have been an intuitively, perfectly normal position of solidarity for Syria, Ukraineโpeopleโs movements, basicallyโwithout ifs, buts, and all kinds of strange calculations.
The barrier is on two counts. One is that the left itself is really not comfortable confronting the history of Ukraine in particular. That would mean having to confront, in specific details, the legacy of Stalinism. And while parts of the left, like the party I was with, will say, โWe do not defend Stalinโs crimesโ (or what they call โmistakesโ), thereโs no willingness to discuss which mistakes. What are you calling the mistakes? How big were those mistakes? Who were the victims of those mistakes? This is not about your relationship with Stalinโs history. This is about what happened to people who were harmed by those policies and decisions and crimes.
Likewise in China now. The party I was with just carried a long critique of the Chinese Communist Partyโs latest party congress document. It says a lot of things about human rights violations and this and thatโall of that. But what is the conclusion? โChina is moving away from socialism and is growing into capitalism,โ and thereโs a sarcastic line about โcapitalism with Chinese characteristics.โ What does that mean?
It really is not about your assessment of how socialist or not-socialist it is. Thatโs your problem! What you should be worrying about is what happens to the people who are affected by this regime. How socialist you think it is or isnโt is like talking about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. That is neither here nor there! Where is your assessment of the harm that is done? What can you do to support those people harmed by this regime?
And itโs not just inside China. China is funding and enabling the Myanmar military. In India, Islamophobia is boiled up by the fact that you have it in Myanmar, you have it in China. Those who talk about geopoliticsโhow can you not look at this in terms of geopolitics? Is it a coincidence that so many regimes in this neighborhood are actively Islamophobic? Is there no connection between them? Can you find no way of thinking about this beyond your specific national case? These are the questions that we need to ask.
Iโm wondering what would happen if we could bring into this conversation good-faith people (letโs not bring in the outright bad-faith Vijay Prashads and so on) who are in a more honest place but are taking these positions and imagining that these are the correct positions? What if we were to bring them into a conversation? I have failed, inside India, to bring them inside this conversation. But what if there were an attempt on the part of people thinking about this beyond India to come and say, look, we want to hear from you about the struggles that you are very legitimately waging in India, and then beyond that we would also like to speak to you about how you see those struggles in connection with the world. We are reading things youโve written and we have some questions about them, and we can have a civil conversation about this which may move the needle forward a little bit. Thatโs the only thing I can think of which may help to dislodge ourselves from this really damaging place the left is stuck in.
Just one last thing: my Trotskyist friends in other countries talk about โStalinistโ parties in the Global South. But these are not obsolete parties. These are parties that are leading very important, genuine struggles. So you have to take them seriously. You canโt just write them off as out-dated parties that are so obsolete that they donโt count. We have to think about how to reach out to them, how to make them think about what theyโre saying.
JA: Thanks for that. This is a hopeful note to end this fascinating conversation on. This was a fantastic chat, and Iโm sure weโll do something again soon.
KK: Thank you! It was great meeting everyone here, at least virtually.
PL: Thank you so much.
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