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Israel’s war on Iran- how would Trotsky have posed the question?

Following the US and Israel’s scandalous, unprovoked attack on Iran, we are republishing the following article, which was first written after the 12-Day War in June 2025. It remains every bit as true as then.

As it explains, communists must be absolutely clear on one thing: this is a predatory, imperialist war waged to subjugate or destroy Iran in the interests of US and Israeli capitalists. We say unequivocally: Hands off Iran! Down with Imperialism!Israel’s war on Iran- how would Trotsky have posed the question?

Stalin’s responsibility in the creation of Israel and its disastrous consequences

The Palestinian people were forcibly expelled from their homeland by Zionist armed militias in 1948, in an event which remains in their collective historical memory as the Nakba, or the Catastrophe. The Zionist project had always envisaged such a development, and all genuine revolutionary Communists had consistently been opposed to the Zionist ideology. Why then did Stalin abandon the position of one state for the two peoples, Palestinian and Jewish, and come out in support of partition in 1947, together with the subsequent setting up of a separate Jewish state?

Stalin’s responsibility in the creation of Israel and its disastrous consequences

Kenya Mau Mau uprising: when British imperialism conducted a colonial war of terror in ‘self-defence’

Throughout the self-proclaimed ‘civilised’ western world, the ruling classes have banded together to denounce Hamas’ attack on Israel on 7 October and have rallied around Israel’s ‘right of self-defence’ as it bombs Gaza to smithereens. But this is not the first time we have been told to accept a bloody war against an oppressed people in the name of the oppressor nation’s ‘self-defence’.

Kenya Mau Mau uprising: when British imperialism conducted a colonial war of terror in ‘self-defence’

Fifty years since Whitlam’s dismissal: lessons for revolutionaries today

On 11 November 1975, the democratically-elected Labor government under Prime Minister Gough Whitlam was forcibly dissolved by the British monarchy. This unprecedented ‘constitutional coup’, carried out by the obedient lackeys of British imperialism, was an unvarnished attack on democracy that starkly reveals the depths of hypocrisy to which imperialism is willing to sink, in order to defend its interests.

Fifty years since Whitlam’s dismissal: lessons for revolutionaries today