Sunday, January 13, 2013
Asymmetrical Warfare
There was no illusion of collaboration between Ottawa and the Assembly of First Nations on Friday. AFN is wholly dependent on Ottawa for its existence. They are collaborators by colonial design. They may see themselves as making the best of a bad situation, but they are not challenging the system of dominion.
As I noted in my editorial yesterday, there are ample lessons from other liberation movements that
illustrate the spectrum of tactics available in asymmetrical warfare.
Only the researchers, analysts and activists within the movement can
discern which to use, how and when.
What is clear, though, is that institutionally controlled negotiation
has failed. Not surprising given the market’s coup of modern states
worldwide.
If indigenous nations and civil society are to free themselves from
state and market domination, they will first need to free their minds
from orthodoxies of radicalism that limit their imagination. They will
also need to challenge their habitual assumptions about the prospects of
reform within the capitalist system.
The global war on democracy, the environment and First Nations — what
is often termed the Fourth World war — cannot be defeated if
useful tactics of resistance are ruled out in advance. There are many
roles involved in a liberation movement, and individuals must choose for
themselves which roles and tactics they are comfortable with.
As I noted in my essay Power of Moral Sanction, the challenge of
leadership is determining the mix, the timing and the emphasis of
various tactics as a movement matures. When done effectively, they
reinforce each other, and propel the movement forward.
Part of any
victorious movement, I should note, is a well-organized research,
analysis and intelligence gathering network that constantly informs the
movement’s organizers and educators. Without a built-in respect for this
network, no movement can succeed.