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ae orker Party USA Se. Ime., dally exexept Semdey, 23 58 Leonquin 6-708. Coble “ , OE. 1h HL, Row Fork, H. ¥, SUBSCRIFTION RATES: atx months, 38; twe months, 1: . New York City. Foreign: ome pine maa 38 per year; 15 cents ner month. s . . Support the Heroic Irish Masses! | ‘ | HE heroic struggle of the unemployed and employed workers in Belfast, which began with a demonstration of 10,000 unemployed for more relief, and developed into a strike in the Harlan and Wolff shipyards; a sioppage of | street railway and bus service and electric service, accom- panied by barricade fighting in the streets with masses of workers defending themselves against 3,000 police and two regiments of British places upon the American working-class the urgent task of supporting in every possible way the struggle of the Irish masses against perialism and its agents—the capitalists and 18th H., Adéress and Published by the Comprodaity Publishin, co |. XY. Tetephs By mall everywhere: Om. Betengh of Manhatten yix_momthe. 44.50, troops, British im- landlords in Treland and their governments. The mass struggle in Belfast shows that the workers in the North, | cut off from the agricultural South by the division of Iyeland into the Orange Protestant government of the Southern Free Si world economic crisis which h five Northern counties, and the increases the suffering as a result of the ‘as hit Ireland with special force. The conditions of the workers and peasants in the North and South have become unbearable. The stubborn battles of the Belfast workers show clearly the need for the unity of the exploited masses of the North and South, led by the working-class in alliance with the peasantry headed by the Irish Workers Revolutionary Groups (Commynists). The organization need of the moment. give all possible as: of a Communist Party in Ireland is the most vital The Communist Party of the United States must, ance to this task. DE VALERA, who came into office with a demagogic program for in- dependence and social reforms, has been giving way steadily to British imperialism and attempting to confine the struggle to mere parliamentary forms. De Valera uses the government machinery against the working- class. He uses the secret police spy system and the reactionary senate of ‘ capitalist and landlord representatives against the working-class and poor veasantry. The state hinery is used to break strikes. It is used to carry through evictions of workers.’ The small farmers are forced to pay the current land annuity assessments under the threat of eviction and arrest, De Valera’s promises to “abolish unemployment relief for unemployed industrial workers and agricultural laborers. On the other hand, the new tariffs have raised the cost of living for the masses. ‘The burden of the British imperialist offensive is placed upon industrial workers, poor farmers and agricultural laborers. have brought no The professions of frier dship of Wall Street imperialism for Irish liberation is nothing but pretense behind which American imperialism tries to use the struggle ci the oppressed and poverty-stricken Irish masses 8 & weapon in its conflict with Great Britain, American imperialism itself is in no small me2sure responsble for the misery of the Irish workers Y ITS robbery of the American working class it has cut off the mar- ket here for Irish linen. By its restrictions on immigration it has con- demned hundreds of thousands of Irsh workers and peasants to imprison- ment within the British Empife. By its creation of permanent mass unemployment, by its policy of wage cuts and starvation unemployment relief, it has made it impossible for the usual remittances to be for- warded to relatives in Ireland. The industrialization program of the Free State government has col- | lapsed. In the North of Ireland, in the Belfast district alone, it is es- | timated that there are 100,000 unemployed. Ford’s factory in Dublin is closed. Work on the electrification projects has ceased. Danish bacon and dairy products, as a result of the Britfsh imperialist offensive, are replacing Irish commodities in the English market, All these factors, developing against the background of the worst | world economic crisis in the history of capitalism, have had the effect of turning the attention of the toiling section of the Population, of both | the. North and South, to the necessity for organization and militant | struggle against British imperialism and its aids—the capitalists and landlords and their governments. JAMES CONNOLLY’S revolutionary program for the unity and freedom | of Ireland uncer the leadership of the working-class, and for which British imperialism executed him following the uprising on Easter Sun- day, 1916, still lives in the program of the Irish Workers’ Revolutionary Groups and in the ever growing unity, breadth and militancy of the struggles of the Irish workers and peasants of the North and South. While De Valera consults with J. H, Thomas, the betrayer of the English and Irish workers, while De Valera maneuvers with the state department of Wall Street imperialism, while he offers the Irish masses the choice of an Irish capitalist-landlord government and the exchange of British imperialist domination for that of Wall Street, mass poverty, unemployment and actual starvation spread throughout the industrial centers and the countryside While De Valera and his capitalist-cler advisers discourage and | Wider distribution is planned for Suppress the rising struggles of the masses, Cosgrave organizes his White this one, fascist army and attacks the supporter of the national reyoultionary | Call upon your local union to or- program. | der this phlet so that every : member of your organization shall The Irish Workers Revolutionary Groups (Communists) and their z. hey Pe paper “The Workers Voice” today constitutes the only force that is rallying the Irish masses of the North and South for unity and revolu- tionary struggle against British imperialism and the native exploiters and | Oppressors of the masses—the Irish capitalists, clergy and landlords. j Trish liberation can be accomplished only under the leadership of the working-class, headed by its Communist Party. It is necessary, and the only way in which our revolutionary solidarity with the struggles of the Irish workers and peasants can be proved, to organize wide, substantial, material and political support among American workers for their struggles, for the defense of the worker prisoners of British imperialism, for support of their families F basic importance is the organization of material support for the Irish Workers Revolutionary Groups and their paper—the “Workers Voice,” the only expression and guide in Ireland of the Fevolutionary struggles of the masses. In this period when capitalist stability has come to an end; when there is in all imperialist circles the most strenuous attempts to set up the united imperialist front for a war on the Soviet Union; in view of the rapdly sharpening antagonisms between American and British imperial- ists shown by the wars fomented in South America by American and | British imperialist conspirators, the heroic struggles of the Irish workers and peasantry are of basic importance to the international working- clags—and especially to the American working-class which includes such a huge percentage of workers of Irish birth and descent Communist Party members must) make special efforts to organize wide circles of support for the rising revolutionary Struggles of the Irish masses, of which the Belfast struggle is the forerunner, among the vast | number of Irish-American workers in the United States, How the Socialists Supported Imperialist War of 1914-18 “Trade Unions Do Not Want to Endanger ; Defence of Country” “The trade unions must reject all responsibility for the outbreak of the strike and for its extension de- spite the zealous efforts of certain circles to place the responsibility ‘and let them place the interests of the German people as a whole over .their own ambitions and arrogant. aims, and let a clear-sighted gov- ; ernment ensure that solely the in- |Pamphlet on Insurance and Role of A.F.L. UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE AND THE A. F. OF L. The Fight of the Rank and File in the Am- erican Federation of Labor for Unemployment Insurance and Relief. Yssued by the New York A. F. of L. Trade Union Committee for Un- employment Insurance and Relief. Price 3 cents. “All these concentrated attacks by these labor ‘chiefs’ on the un- employment insurance movement did not, of course, siop the suf- fering of the workers in this coun- try. Consequently, the sentiment for government unemployment in- surance continued to grow — and grow especially among American Federation of Labor members, “A flood of letters and resolu- tions beat against Green and the officials of the American Federa~- tion of Labor. They decided to shift their ground a little, and to present some makeshift unemploy- ment insurance plan in order to confuse the issue and defeat real unemployment insurance. Hence the decision of July 22, 1932.” With these Words, the excellent new pamphlet, Unemployment In- surance and the A. F. of L., issued by the New York A. F. of L. Trade Union Committee for Unemploy- ment Insurance and Relief, cor- rectly sums up the change of front exhibited by William Green and his officials toward the whole ques- tion of unemployment insurance And now with the publication of the pamphlet, comes word that Green has-appointed a committee to draft an unemployment insur- ance bill, to be offered — not, of course, to the Federal government for any possibility of immediate action, but to the various state | legislatures for endless haggling and delay. | TIMELY BOOKLET No booklet could be more timely | or more important for the working class than this statement on the fight. of the rank and file in the | American Federation of Labor for unemployment insurance and relief. Formed in New York City on Janu- ary 27, 1932, at a conference re- presenting 19 A. F. of L. unions, the Committee has for the past 10 months organized vigorously | | and wisely the struggle of workers | in the A. F. of L. to secure unem- ployment insurance and relief. Now with the coming conference _ in Cincinnati, on Nov. 22 and 23, it_ becomes of increasing import- | ance that every member of every | Jocal union and labor organization should participate in the fight for | unemployment insurance and re- lef. The Committee asks all A. | F. of L. local unions and affiliated organizations to elect rank and file delegates to the conference which will be held in Cincinnati simul- taneously with the A. F. of L. con- vention, This conference will elect | @ large delegation which will pre- sent the demnads of the rank and file members of the American Fed- eration of Labor before the con- vention, It is proposed that the workers | in this delegation present the Workers’ Unemployment Insurance Bill and demand that the Amer- ican Federation of Labor go on record favoring this bill, and carry on a campaign for its adoption by the United States Congress, | SPREAD PAMPHLET The best preparation for this | Cincinnati conference and the im- | portant work to be done there is | to spread this pamphlet, Unem- | ployment Insurance and the A. F. | of L., by the million over the Uni- ted States. The first pamphlet is- sued by the committee was sold out to the last copy, and an even real it and participate in the fight | for unemployment insurance and immediate relief. The material in the pamphlet and its presentation have been carefully prepared, with | the help of the Labor Research As- sociation, and it is one that you can give to every member of your | union, whatever his present polit- ical views, and be sure of his in- terest and attention. The price of the pamphlet for organizations is $2 per hundred copies. Order from the New York Amer- ican Federation of Labor Trade Union Committee for Unemploy- ment Insurance and Relief, at 799 phan Room 336, New York ty. October Issue of the “Communist” Contains Important Editorial | ‘The editorial in the October issue | of “The Communist” (Bolsehvik Fire Against Opportunism!) is an ex- tremely important one for our Party. It is reprinted trom the “Communist International” magazine, No. 16. The editorial takes up a resolution which was submitted by Comrade Humbert Droz to the Twelfth Plenum of the Executive Committee of the Com- munist International, Although the author of the resabutfon recognized it as being oppc -unist, nevertheless it is submitted 1o public criticism, for the reason that, as the editorial states, “we are confronted here with a new international right opportunist plat- form at a period of a new political turn of the Communist vanguard,”— “an international platform which ts a direct continuation of that struggle against the general line of the Com- upon them. The trade unions do not want to endanger the defense of the country; their whole attitude since the outbreak of the war is an earnest proof of this. Let those cir- cles whoin reality bear the respon- sibility for the destruction of our internal peace after their attitude in view of the fruits of their action terests of the German people as a whole be aimed at. If that is done } then this first mass strike in Ger- many will be the last. Should this not be done then the future will be | overcast for us all,” | “Correspondence of the General | Commission of the Trade Unions” of Germany on February 2, 1918, i i munist International which the rights and conciliators carried on at that time of the turn from the second period to the third periog in 1928-29.” This article must be used by the Communist Party as an instrument in the struggle against the main danger which faces our Party today, right opportunism and sectarianism. yy NX COMPOSITION OF THE WORLD COMMITTEE ALLY WORKER, NEW YORK, FRIDAY, OCLOBER 1, 1932 COOLIDGE AIDS HIS PALS SEAL, AND | jel] CHARGE T { abr ee an:! —By Burck prrercainns mee PUT IN SOME} { AUR tN THAT { eLAT Tt reel cALun a ee ttOOUER { Burm&- The World Committee for the Fight Against Imperialist War All. Countries Represented on Body Chosen at Amsterdam; Plan Broad Anti-War Work The Amsterdam Congress deci- ded to seb up a permanent world committee, the task of which is to continue and extend the work com- | menced by the Congress. The first | task of this committee is to popu- larize the results of the Congress to the greatest possible extent and to rally all its supporters in the anti-war front. The Committee consists of repre- sentatives of all countries and re- presentatives of groups and organ- izations which actively take part in the fight against imperialist war, The tasks of the World Commit- tee for the fight against the im- perialist war are as follows: 1, Broadcast popularization of the Manifesto and of the results of the Congress. 2. Organization’ of constant mutual information on the war preparations and the concrete counter-actions against these pre- parations and against imperialist war. 3. Systematic and timely ex- posure and combating of chauvin- ist and nationalist incitement and calumnies in the newspapers and in public against the anti-war movement and the Soviet Union, as well as against all attempts to split the united anti-war front. WIDE UNITED ANTI-WAR FRONT 4, Collaboration in the rallying of all forces of the toiling masses and all fighters against imperial- ist war, no matter to what party and organizations they belong, in the anti-war front. 5. The Committee shall as far as possible get into contact with all countries which had no represent- atives at the Congress or whose representatives were prevented from attending the Congress, and also assist the campaign against im- perialist war in these countries, 6. Collaboration in the organt- zation and carrying out of anti- war meetings and demonstrations ou a national scale and in the con- solidation and extension of anti- war comunittees which already exist in the various countries. 7. The Committee, in particular its members who are organized in the trade unions, must devote the . greatest attention to the initiating of a broad anti-war work in the trade unions of the workers and employees as the most important mass organizations. 8, In the event of a further in- tensification of the danger of war the Committee shall seize the in- itiative, in agreement with the an- ti-war committees of the various countries, to convene a new World Anti-War Congress, The composition of the World Committee, consisting of 141 mem- bers, which was elected at the final session of the World Con- gress, is as follows: France | Henri Barbusse, Romain Roll na Paul. Signac, Victor Marguerite, Francis Jourdain, Gaston Bergery, Julien Racamond (red trade un- ionist), Tillon (red trade unionist), Lapierre (reformist trade unionist), Robert Laplange (reform. trade unionist), Augustin Hamon, Poupy (Socialist. Action), Vassailles (Pea- sant), Guy, Jerrame (A. R.A.C.), Senac (Combattant Rep.), Marcel Cachin, Mme. Duchesne, Camille Dahlet (Autonomist, Alsace), Ser- ret (L.T.E. Educational Worker), Maurice Serre (Student), Paul Vai- Uant-Couturier (Author), Bernard Lecache, Germany Prof, Albert Einstein, Heinrich | Mann, Clara Zetiin, Willi Munzen- berg, Dr. Helene Stoecker, General a. D. y. Schoenaich, Henschke (B. V.G,, Berlin), Kurt Muller (Build- ers. Union), H. Schiermacher (En- gine Driver), Katharina Riemen- schmidt (socialdem. factory coun- cillor), Johannes Nau (Peasant), Paul. Peschke (Red Trade Union Opposition). Soviet Union Maxim Gorki, J. Schwernik, Her- tha Stassowa. England Tom Mann, Alex Gossip, Regi- nald Bridgeman, F, T. Woodroofe (Railway worker), Murphy (Sea- man), A. B. Moffat (red miner), Havelock Ellis, Bertrand Russell. U.S. A. Theodore Dreiser, John Dos Pas- Sos, Prof. Dana, Sherwood Ander- son, Fr. Borich (Red Miners’ Un- ion), Gardner (Negro), Mother Bloor, Emanuel Levin (Veteran), ‘Upton Sinclair, William Simons. Ireland Peader O'Donnell, Mrs. Charlotte Despard, J. Larkin: jun, + Belgium Frans Masereel, Jaquemotte, ++++.. (reform, Miner), ‘christian worker), (Flemish). Holland De Visser, Jan Keessen, Van Dalsun, Jansen (reformist trade unionist), Neter, Henriette Roland- Grimonpont Norway Egede Nissen (Postal official), Eugen Johansen (reformist trade Sweden Karin Hermelin (Editor), Engel- brekt Anderson (Dock worker). Martin Andersen: Borgland (Seamen's Union), 2 i Poland ski, Nesterenko (West Ukrainia), Krimski (West White Russia), Italy Guido Migoli, Germanetto, mioli (Socialist). Austria Ca- Karl Kraus. Switzerland Cadalbert (Railwayman), Nicole (Socialist). Leon Spain Francesco Galan, Valle Inclan, Commandant Franco. Czechosloakia Prof. Nejedly, Krejear, Doctor Smeral, Kaplitzky (Legionar), Ha- dek (Red Trade Union), Lutowski (reformist trade unionist), J. Mal- tocha (Peasant, Slovakia), Chalus (Peasant Carpatho Ukraine), Dr. Hugo Hecht. Turkey Ferdi, Karim Sadi. Yugoslavia Dr. Kesmann (Croat). Rumania Dobrogeanu Gherea, Cosat Foru. Macedonia Prof. Vlachow. China Madame Sun Yat Sen, Koyen. dia Ing Patel, Rata Singh (Hindustan Gadar Party), Saklatvala. Japan | Sen Katayama, Mido (Seamen). Africa Koujate (Negro). Indonesia Asis. Latin America General Sandino. Australia Jean Devanny. Representatives of Women and Youth of Munition Factories | and International Organizations Traute Holz (Women Karin Michaelis (Women) Traute Holz (Women), Elsa Paulsen (Wo- men), Hahn (Youth), Ondrias (Youth), Pritzel (Sport), Dr. Boen- heim (Physicians), Hugo Graf (In- ternational of Ex-Servicemen), Al- bert Walter (International Seamen and Herbor Workers), A represen- tative of the workers of the Krupp firm (Eseen, Germany), A repre- sentative of the workers of the Kuhlmann works, Paris, A rep- resentative of the workers of the Skoda works, Pilsen (Czechoslov- kia), A representative of the work- ers of Vickers, Ltd., London, A re- presentative of the workers of a Polish munition firm. The representatives of Belgium, Austria, Hungary, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, Switzerland, Yu- goslavia, Rumania, Bulgaria and Greece, as well as the representa- tives of the above-mentioned five 33 | involved in the Logan A Visit to Scottsboro By WILLIAM L. PATTERSON. (General Secretary of the Inter- national Labor Defense.) LEFT WASHINGTON after a visit with the nine Negro boys Jircle case, the case in which Police Officer Kennedy, known as a Negro hater and baiter, was killed after an at- tempt to terorize @ group of unof- fending Negro workers. My desti- nation was Chattanooga, where T meant to visit the families of the Scottsboro boys. I travelled Jim- Crow all the way. The families of the boys are hopeful and courageous, They ex- pressed great faith in the Interna- tional Labor Defense, and said they felt now that their boys were go- ing to be set free. On the way to Kilby Prison we had to stop at a filling station operated by a white man. He asked me who the members of our group wore, and when I told him he ex- pressed great sympathy, and told the mothers he hoped their boys would get out. The mothers were greatly heartemed by this unexpect- ed sign of good will, coming as it did from a white man and a Southerner. T KILBY PRISON we were told that visiting time was 45 min- utes. The prison guards were hos- “tile and insulting. They refused entrance to a white man, a mem- ber of the LL.D. defense organiza- tion, who accompanied us. They told him it was “Nigger Day” and he couldn't come in. Our group was asked: “Who do you niggers want,to see?” We told them we had come to see the Scottsboro boys. There was some consultation among the guards, and finally we were told that we couid go in. We marched through a lit- tle iron gate that led into a corri- dor, and then past a series of iron gates until we-reached the stair- way leading to the death cells. Here we were stopped. A guard approached our escort. “Have you searched these niggers?” He asked. We were searched. Finally we were permitted to talk to the boys. To me, who had never seen them before, the sight of them | was a complete surprise. Pictures of them, their faces swollen and sullen, their looks furtive and suspicious, had not prepared me for the clean-cut, courageous boys I met and talked to in Kilby Prison. ‘They were dressed in coarse but clean duck, the uniform of the prison. ‘They looked fine ahd intel- ligent. The Weems kid, in particu- lar, was a fine looking boy, straight and tall. He and Powell seemed particularly bright. They told me they hoped, if they got out, to be able to get some schooling. All the boys struck me as being naturally intelligent, and not at all the sul- len, hopeless lot the N.A.A.C.P. re- ports, and to tell the truth, the early pictures, had prepared me for. All conversation with them took place through the grating that cov- ered the bars, and in the presence of surly and hostile guards. The boys @omplained that their food was getting worse, and one of the guards had told them “They are making an awful fuss about you niggers up North. But we are go- ing to burn you, anyhow.” Andy Wright had been shown a clipping, reporting the arrest of his mother in Belgium, where she had gone to address a mass meeting of workers in behalf of her boy. Andy Wright had resented the slur cast upon his mother, and had shouted back at the guard, whereupon he had been placed in solitary confinement. "HE GUARDS listened to all that was said. At the end of 20 min- utes they cut us short and ordered us out, although we ‘still had 25 minutes to stay according to prison regulations. “Tell our comrades we have faith that they will get us out”, was the last words of the The World As Seen (Concluded from yesterday) ‘The revolutionary struggle of the international proletariat has reached a higher stage. A tre- mendous responsibility rests upon the Communist International. Hence at the present juncture there must be a determined struggle against all Right opportunist stand- points and social democratic in- fluences in the ranks of the Com- munist Parties, a struggle against all capitulatory and liquidatory trends, and against the underesti- mation of revolutionary tasks and revolutionary possibilities. Precise- ly for this reason there must be & determined struggle against the sectarian “left-wing” theories (especially in questions of trade union tactics), which hinder the struggle for the conquest of the cratic and reformist workers for the revolutionary Precisely for this reason the procla- munition works, shall be nominated according to the proposals of the national committees of these coun- , tries which proposals are to be sub- mitted to the Bureau of the World Committee. The World Committee held its inaugural session in Amsterdam after the conclusion’ of the World Congress and decided to set up a permanent Secretariat with its seat in basa ™ eae he World. Breas conse ot 22 Toeoaes Communist’ Parties of Germany, Poland, China and Japan. These bear the greatest responsibility of the fate of the revolutionary world movement and eee bis bates support from the international pro- . They stand in the line of Boys in Kilby Prison | boys to us. We were hustled out | into the street. Back in Atlanta, we organized Scottsboro defense meetings. A Negro owner of a theatre there do- nated the place free of charge for a Scottsboro concert. At one of our meetings a white worker spoke, who had formerly been a member of the Ku Klux Klan, He said that he now understood the situation in the South. “The white landlords and mill owners put the nigger in a bar- rel, and tell the white worker to sit on top of the barrel and keep the nigger there. The nigger squirms and twists, and pretty soon the white worker's foot slips off the nigger’s head, and he falls down into the barrel where the nigger is. Then the bosses and mill owners say, ‘Now we have got two damn fools in the barrel.” He ended his story by saying that if the Negro and the white man in the barrel didn't help each ether get out, they would both stay there. ( * From Atlanta T went to Bitming- hham and took three of the Wright sisters to see Roy Wright, who is | confined in the Birmingham county | jail We learned there that the | persistent efforts of the I. L. D., had resulted in winning better prison conditions for Eugene Wil- liams, who is to be transferred out of the death house at Kilby—where he had been kept although he is } no longer under death sentence— to the Birmingham county jail. Our visit at Birmingham ran par- allel to our Kilby Prison experi< ences. It was raining, and we stood | in a long line exposed to the rain, and waited while the police ex- | amined and searched each visitor. The white member of our group again was refused admittance, on the grounds that it was “Nigger ‘ing day.” He came out, after being refused entry, and spoke to me in line. After he had left a Negro came up to me and said: “That white boy could have passed if he had gotten in line and not said anything.” He asked whom I wanted to see. I was suspicious and said I didn’t know. He later went into the prison and said some~ thing to the captain of the guards, When I got to the door the guard grabbed me and took me to the captain, I asked: “What’s this for?” and the captain said, “You'll find out in a minute what it’s all about.” The captain said: “What nigger did you want to see?” [ was not sure I heard him, and I said: “Huh?” “Who the Hell you saying ‘huh’ to?” he shouted. Tsai “I want to see Roy Wright.” He half rose in his chair, “Git!” he said venomously. “But what's this for?” I asked. “You get out of town”, the of- ficer shouted, “and don’t you ever come back here.” LEFT, and walked about in the rain for a while. The Negro stoolpigeon was following me. Later I joined the Wright sisters at our appointed meeting place, and learned that they had been per- mitted only five minutes with their brother. The guards had told them that the crowd was so large they had better come back later. When they came back they were not admitted. I organized a few meet ings in Birmingham and then re- turned to Chattanooga. There I was shadowed all after- noon by a plain clothes man. T managed to duck him, and finally went to the office of the I. L. D. where I had been long expected. They were greatly excited to see me, and told me that the chief of the “Red Squad” had been to see Mrs. Williams, and had told her he knew this “Nigger Red” was in town, and that if he didn’t look out they would find his dead body Situation } by ‘Pravda’| G *¥ thanks to the watchfulness of E toiling masses and their readiness to defense, that the Sov- iet Union has succeeded up to the present, with the aid and support of the international proletariat, in warding off the raid of the. inter- yentionists on its frontiers. But the danger of military interven- tion on the Soviet Union has not lessened, and the preparations are continuing. The proletarians of the capital= ist countries have not shown them- selves strong enough, in the period of intervention and war tions just passed, to prevent the transport of arms for the war against the Chinese people and for the attack on the Soviet Union, ‘The Communist Parties of the cap- italist countries now set themselves Against im) ti-Soviet intervention, against fase cism and reaction, against the of+ fensive of capitalism, for the overe tional in the present period of de= veloping class struggle. The proletariat of prepara- -