There are many compelling arguments against guerrilla warfare as a strategy to fight war, occupation, genocide. Not the least of which is that too many civilians get killed & it can become a substitute for building a massive social movement. It’s a strategy long disputed, including against the English occupation of Northern Ireland, against dictators in Latin America, against the Israeli occupation of Palestine, & more recently against the occupation of Kashmir, the Syrian Arab Spring uprising, & the genocide of the Rohingya in Burma. In Burma, the Arakan Salvation Army was not so much a guerrilla force as a self-defense organization for unarmed civilians sustaining genocide. The same was true of many guerrilla groups coming out of the Syrian Arab Spring uprising. It is not a question of opposing the use of arms against an oppressive military force but of what is the most effective method in the particular conditions of war, occupation, & genocide. Sometimes arms are necessary, so it is also not a question of condemning those who take up arms even when it may not be the most effective method. The distinctions between the oppressed & the oppressor are not altered one iota by the methods chosen to stand against tyranny.

This leads us to the suicide bomb attack today in Pulwama, Kashmir, where 42 CRPF Indian special forces troopers were killed. Antiwar activists from the oppressor countries like the US or India have to deal with this issue all the time. We do not applaud the deaths of soldiers–even special forces who are trained psychotics–because they leave families behind. But we also do not treat them as martyrs since that does not just compromise with military occupation but capitulates to it. They are not martyrs; they are occupying marauders responsible for the deaths, disabilities, disfigurement, & terrorizing of civilians. There can be no equivocation on that score.

But now we see Indian Assadists & even so-called socialists engaging in an orgy of nationalist hysteria over the deaths of their “beloved Jawan” & calling for tributes & protest rallies in their honor. Indian Assadist Feroze Mithiborwala is leading the braying chorus of nationalists calling for tributes. This comes as no surprise since during the 2016 Indian Army rampage in Kashmir where thousands of civilians were injured & killed, he referred to unarmed Kashmiri protesters as “angry mobs” & reproached Kashmiri youth for arson, looting, destruction of public property, & attacks with rocks on the Indian occupying army of 700,000 soldiers. It was a shameful & detestable defense of occupation cloaked in a sustained scolding of Kashmiri Intifada.

The response to the deaths of soldiers should not be to excoriate Kashmiris or impugn their freedom struggle but to demand the Indian government withdraw its troops & end the occupation. If you don’t get that, your identification with the Assad & Modi regimes more than makes political sense & is only worthy of condemnation.

(Photo from scene of Pulwama attack from Reuters)

Human rights activists oppose persecution whatever form it takes but only Assadists & right wing Christians actually believe the persecution of Christians is of international scope or even comes close to the persecution of Muslims. Assadists & nationalists are also the only ones calling for tributes to Indian soldiers killed in Kashmir & referring to them as martyrs.

Making this world suitable for human beings to live & love in requires young people forging uncompromising & democratic leadership. Omniscient gurus don’t cut it. Part of that process is exposing & weeding out misleaders who compromise principles to maintain their stature. The best leaders do not strive to rise above others but only to rise with the oppressed & they never sell others down the river to feather their own nests.

Given her own Assadist politics, it makes perfect sense that Rania Khalek would promote Tulsi Gabbard. Gabbard’s politics incorporate all of Khalek’s capitulations, especially Islamophobia, anti-Semitism, & Zionism. Khalek hasn’t yet taken up Hindutva nationalism but if there’s a podcast in it for her, she’ll start making pilgrimages to India.

My acceptance of veterans as fellow antiwar activists may seem at odds with my opposition to the role of ‘retired’ FBI, CIA, Pentagon, & State Department officials in the antiwar movement. But the differences are considerable. Most veterans come to the antiwar movement in their youth & because of their experience with war. The ‘retired’ officials all came after their retirements with comfortable pensions & after a lifetime of service to US militarism in the ranks of its leadership.

I don’t buy the political metamorphoses of Ray McGovern, Ann Wright, Colleen Rowley, & all the rest of them & I certainly don’t think the leadership of the antiwar movement should be handed over to them when their politics are libertarian & they all support the Assad & Putin regimes. But especially since McGovern admitted in a Mother Jones interview that their organization Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity actively collaborates with active duty FBI, CIA, Pentagon, & State Department officials. Their misleadership may have everything to do with the fact that the antiwar movement which once mobilized millions now is lucky to get a few thousand out nationwide at a time when the US has wars going on in Iraq, Syria, Afghanistan, Yemen, Somalia, Libya & is saber-rattling against Venezuela.

Call me sectarian, but I’ll be damned if I’ll march behind ‘retired’ spies & war criminals & call them my leaders.

It is estimated there are at least 5-million Syrian refugees, 6.2 million Syrians, including 2.5 million children, who are displaced within Syria, & up to 560,000 Syrians who were killed by Syrian, Russian, Israeli, Turkish, & US-coalition bombing. Will the antiwar movement led by “retired” FBI, CIA, Pentagon & State Department officials please tell us again how this is a victory for democracy rather than the slaughter of a revolution?

(Photo from February 2014 is a man with an infant saved from rubble after a Syrian regime airstrike in Aleppo, by Hosam Katan/Reuters)