CA PROPAGANDA PERSPECTIVES

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CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5
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S
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75
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November 11, 2016
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August 4, 1998
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1
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September 23, 1969
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 25X1 C1 Ob Next 1 Page(s) In Document Exempt Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 TWENTY YEARS OF DISSENT IN CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY 1949 October-- 1954 a) Proclamation of People's Republic of China and flight of armies of CHIANG Kai-shek to Taiwan which left the vic- torious MAO Tse-tung in possession of the China mainland but not entirely in possession of its inhabitants. b) MAO's molding of the CCP to the point where dissent be- came dangerous reached its fine point in the years between 1949 and 1954. Maoist cleansing of party ranks -- called "rectification" -- resulted in the outright killing of 800,000 opponents of his regime. MAO admitted to that num- ber of victims in his February 1957 speech on contradictions (although the figure may be low). Killings were carried out on the grounds that the regime opponents were "enemies of the people." 1955 KAO Kang and JAO Shu-shih, dissented from MAO's policies and were tried in secret proceedings conducted by LIU Shao- ch'i and TENG Hsiao-p'ing. Following Stalin's tactics, MAO and his prosecuting lieutenants "proved a long history of dissent and conspiracy"on part of the accused. KAO, JAO and the seven men who fell with them (similar to the anti- party group purge in the USSR in 1957) have never reappeared. KAO, the CCP says, "committed suicide." 1956 December 1957 February -- 1958 In a Peking Jen-min Jih-pao (Peoples' Daily - CCP newspaper) article covering Politburo discussions came a second attack on "the fiction of no tension between leaders and led." Dis- agreements sufficiently serious to be the subject of Polit- buro discussions are difficult to disguise. a) In a February 1957 speech MAO opened the door for non- communist criticism of the CCP in an attempt to win over dissenting Chinese intellectuals. This is the famed "hundred flowers and hundred schools of thought" line which was launched for MAO by CHOU En-lai in 1956. b) Dissenters within the as "harmful to the cause in its criticism as well some of MAO's own in the ch'i,were included among party openly criticized this line of socialism;" the CPSU was violent and there were even indications that CCP leadership, including LIU Shao- the dissatisfied. c) MAO never admitted that the CCP dissidents to his line were correct in their dire predictions of damage to party unity. He simply halted criticism in practice, supported it theoretically and in the "hundred flowers" revival in 1961 permitted "debate" only on academic subjects. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 1958 -- The Great Leap Forward conceived by MAO was a failure by 1960 the fall of 1958. The commune distribution system was based on the fallacy that psychological and spiritual in- centives could be substituted for material incentives as the principal stimulus for production. This fallacy was a target for criticism outside the CCP and China as well as inside the CCP. Some of the dissenters in the CCP were Politburo members including PENG Te-huai and CHTEN Yun. The latter had been eased out of any real role in the CCP by September 1959, if not before. PENG's fate (following) was more dramatic. 1959 a) Marshal PENG Te-huai, China's Defense Minister in 1959, was the leader of an "anti-party" group in the Politburo who had written a letter to Moscow criticizing the Great Leap Forward. His second sin was to resist CCP control of the Army and the establishment of an "enormous untrained militia." His third was to protest the growing breach with Moscow, chief supplier of Chinese modern weapons. b) PENG was arrested, underwent intensive reindoctrination and finally wrote a "confession" divulging his wrong doings to the CCP. He was replaced as Minister of Defense by LIN Piao and most of his followers (including Army Chief of Staff Genern1 HUANG K'o-ch'eng) were removed from their party/government positions. 1961 The growing Sino-Soviet rift became open knowledge in 1961 with the withdrawal of Soviet technicians from China. There was dissension within the CCP over China's stand against Khrushchev's policies even in the Politburo. (This dissent was part of Defense Minister PENG's crime.) The most notable of the other dissenters was Politburo alternate member CHANG Wen-t'ien: his disappearance from the scene since that time can apparently be explained because of his opposition to the anti-Soviet views of MAO and his more tractable lieutenants. 1962 The CCP initiated a long-term campaign to combat the deterior- Early ation of party morale. Demoralization in the ranks of the CCP was a result of the four years of privation connected with the Great Leap Forward. Implicit in this campaign itself was criticism of Chairman MAO since he was the architect of the policies. 1962 a) CH'EN Yi, Foreign Minister of the CPR, in a series of August -- speeches during this period placed great stress on "subver- September sion" in China. b) During the same period two Secretariat members were dropped: General HUANG K'o ch'eng, former PLA Chief of Staff under the 2 Approved For Release 1999/09/021 CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 already purged (1959) Marshal PENG Te-huai and General T'AN Cheng, whose department in the Secretariat was be- lieved by China watchers to have failed to curb Army crit- icism of the CCP. 196)4 At the Third National Peoples Congress held in Peking, December -- Premier CHOU En-lai's speeches on internal matters clearly 1965 indicated continued CCP concern over popular apathy and January disillusionment with party programs. (In part this was a hangover from the Great Leap Forward period.) In the same speech CHOU attached signs of capitalism as evidenced in private plots and livestock. 1965 a) The United Front Work Department chief, LI Wei-han was Spring summarily dismissed. The Department he had headed was party organization responsible for working with intellec- tuals. b) The Minister of Culture, SHEN Yen-p'ing and several vice ministers were dismissed. It is believed by China observers that they had failed to bring the intellectuals into line. SHEN's past work was said to have "weakened the class strug- gle." 1965 LO Jul-ching, Chief of Staff of the Peoples' Liberation November Army, disappeared from the scene as the PLA was apparently readied for its role in the Cultural Revolution. 1965 -- 1969 Shanghai newspapers launched an attack on WU Han, non- Communist Vice Mayor of Peking and the opening gun in the Cultural Revolution -- now in its third tumultuous year -- was fired. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : dA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 LE MONDE, Paris 28 August 1969 Soviet Source Says 25 Million Chinese Were Exterminated Between 1955 and 1965 Literaturnaya Gazeta, the Soviet Writers' Union weekly, devotes half of this week's issue to a series of articles on China and the effects of Maoism. You find the inevitable denunciations of Peking's "anti-Soviet hys- teria," but the main body of the dossier deals with the internal situation in the Chinese People's Republic. Everybody is in on the act, humorists and car- toonists as well as reporters and photographers. There are even some documents of.alleged Chinese origin, whose authenticity only Literaturnaya Gazeta can vouch for, such as the letter from a Peking high school student called Chuo Yang, on the way out to the country after completing his secondary studies, who writes: "Like all my comrades, I belonged to the Red Guard. We thought we were making the revolution, that we were doing the right thing. But now, most of the young people's eyes have been opened. Many people no longer believe in Mao Tse-tung. But there are still a lot of people who believe in him, and who do not understand that he is the cause of all China's troubles." This recurrent theme of "China's troubles" is backed up with reams of statistics. We learn, for example, that "more than 25 million people" were exterminated in the decade from 1955 to 1965, that 30 million more were dis- placed, and that there are 32 thousand people in the Takla-Makan concentration camp in the Sinkiang desert. A Power Struggle Among the Present Leaders With the same abundant seasoning of figures, the Soviet writers' weekly explains that "the spiritual food of the Chinese people" today consists of almost nothing besides the works of Mao Tse-tung, of which 3,126,000,000 copies have already been printed. The cult of Maoism is illustrated with selected examples, including two texts singing the praises of the Chinese chairman pub- lished under the title of "Ave Mao," and an item noting that all the gold dust produced in the Nanking and Suchow workshops is now being used to gild busts of Mao and to print the titles on his Little Red Book. In such a context, political anPlysis is scarcely concerned with nuances. The writers' weekly accuses Peking of "repeating the cruel history of the feudal despots who ruled by fire and sword." And yet, everything is not all that simple in Chinese politics. Literaturnaya Gazeta says that "we should not take serious- 1y everything Peking tells us about the alleged unity among the Chinese rulers We are witnessing a complicated and largely secret struggle for power between two major. opposing cliques, a struggle between two clans, that of Mao and his wife, Chiang Ching, and that of Lin Piao and his wife, Yeh Chun." You can glimpse the horizons opened up.to future historians and chroniclers .by the hy- pothesis of this summit struggle for power among the leaders of the Chinese Communist Party. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Without searching for over-subtle meaning in these propaganda texts, we can note that they give the Soviet reader a double picture of China. First they are shown a "monstrous" country, subject to an intolerable regime, one that runs against nature, thrust by its leaders into a manner of life that is the anti- thesis of the aspirations of the Soviet people. While it is de rigeur to make a distinction between the "good" Chinese people and the "bad" Maoists, it is by no means certain that the general Soviet public will notice this nuance, and con- tinue to rain it its racist feelings' which aro all too ready to crop out again. The second image is that of a China by no means as powerful as it claims to be, weakened by its tribulations, and consequently far less formidable than the USSR might once have feared. This theme is relatively new, but it has al- ready been mentioned once, just after the 13 August Sino-Soviet incident on the Sinkiang border. At that time, an editorial in the Defense Ministry journal, Krasnaya Zvezda, said that Peking's mobilization campaign in anticipation of a possible war with the USSR posed no serious threat to the Soviet people. "It goes without saying," the Defense Ministry editorial went on, "that there is a very great distance between the inflammatory statements of the Peking adventurers and their real capacities.1! Some observers concluded from this that Moscow is trying to keep the fear of China created by the border incidents and the way they have been handled from generating panic among the people. LE MONDE, Paris 28 August 1969 CPYRGHT !IN 11E3144'11A AIRE SOVIiTIQUE AFFIONIEI CUE VIINT-CINQ MILLIONS DE CIIINOIS on tit EXTEIIMIS EMU 1955 ET 19651 De notre correspondent particulier ALAIN JACOB lnoscou, I aout. ? to Lnera- tort de statistiques. On apprend par ' fournayd Gazeta, hebdomadalre de exemple quo < plus de vingt-cinq l'Union des Ocrivains sovietiques, millions de personnes ? ant ete ex- consacre cette semaine la mottle terminees pendant Ics decennia qui a de son numero a une seri? d'arti- precede l'annee 1965, quo trente cies sur la Chine et les allots du cadres millions oat Ott; deplacees, manisme. On y retrouve les ine- quo trente-deux mill? detenus pet:- I vitables denonciations de rhyste- pleat le camp de concentration de rte antisovietique a de Pekin, mats:, Takla-Makan, dans le desert au l'essentiel de co dossier est consa- Sinkiang. cre a la situation interieure en Re- publique populdire chinoise. Chacun tine lutte entre y a apporte sa contribution, humo- rLstes et caricaturistes aussi bien les dirigeants actuels que journalistes et phtotographes. On y trouve memo divers docu- Avec tine memo abondance de manta dorigine chinoise ? chiffres, le journal des ecrivains ' dont on no petit quo laisser sovietiques explique quo la ? nour- Literatournaya Gazeta le soi at de la riture spirituelle du peuple chinois ? n n'est plus guere compose? aujour- garantir l'authenticite, telle la d'hui quo des ceuvres de Mao Tee- lettre dun lycoen de Pekin, Van toting publieles en 3 126 millions Tchouo-yang, qui, en route pour d'exempIaires. Le culte du maoisme les campagnes au terme de ses etu- est illustre a l'aide d'exemples choi- des secondaires, ocrit : ? Comme Mus mes camarades, fait partie sis, tels deux textes a la gloire du t des gardes rouges. On cfoyait faire presiden chinois publies sous le titre Ave Mao, Cu cette informa- la revolution, on croyalt bier, Mire. lion selon laquelle touts la poudre Male Cr present, les yeux de la plu- d'or produite par les . ateliers de part des jeunes se sont ouverts. Beaucoup de gens ne croient plus a Nankin et de Soutchou est desormais Mao The-toting. Mais ii y en a en- employee a darer les bustes de Mao core asses qui y croient et qui no at les titres .de see recueils de cita. comprennent pas qu est la cause dons. de bus les rnalheurs de la Chine. Dans un tel contexte .. Ce theme des .Appriomeci r opRelesseaW nuances. Chine a est developpe a grand ran- Le journal accuse les diri-) geants ae esin de ? repeter loire cruelle des despotes feodaux qui gouvernent par le feu et par l'epee a. Tout n'est pas simple co- pendant dans la politique chinoise, estime la Literatournaya Gazeta, qui affirme qu' ? on no dolt pas pren- dre au serieux tout co quo Pekin laconic au sujet de l'unite qui exis- terait parmi les gouvern ants chi- nois... On fassiste a une lutte com- plexe, essentiellement secrete, entre les deux principaux groupes adver- ses, une lutie entre deux clans, ce- lui de Mao et de sa femme Sien Sin, of celui de Lin Pico et de sa femme E. nun.. On entrevoit quels hori- zons ouvre a de futurs chroniqueurs l'hypothese de cette lutte au som- met de la direction du parti corn-, muniste chinois... Sans chercher une signification trop subtile ft ces textes de propa- gande, on peut relever qu'ils don. neat une double image de la Chine au lecteur sovietique. D'abord cello d'un pays ?monstrueux ? soumis a un regime intolerable, contre na- ture, pousse par see dirigeants vers un mode de vie aux antipodes des aspirations du peuple sovietique s'il est de rigueur de faire lcr. dis- tinction entre le ? bon ? peuple chi- b? gAVE)17140I3Rif quo d'U.R.S S en general continue a tenir compte de cette nuance et ft refrener des sentiments de ra- cisme trop prets ft. renaitre. La seconde image est cella d'une Chine finalement mains puissante qu'elle no pretend l'etre, affaiblie par see epreuvei et, on consequence, sans doute moths redoutable quo no pourrait le craindre l'U.R.S.S. Co theme est relativement nouveau, male ii avail deja ete mention,16, en particulier au lendemain cident sino-sovietique du 13 doUt dans le Sinkiang. On avait, en effet, releve ft cette opaque un editorial du journal du ministers de la de- fense Krasnaya ZveScla affirmant qua les campagnes de mobilisation de Pekin en vue d'une guerre pos- sible avec l'U.R.S.S. tie constituaient pas en realite use menace serious? pour le peuple sovietique. ? II va sans dire, ajoutait le journal des militaires sovietiques, quo la dis- tance est fres grande entre les dEi- clarations bruyantes et les possibi- Ines reelles dos oven fullers de Pe- kin. ? Certains observateurs en avalent conclu qu'on souhaitait evi- ter a Moscou quo le sentiment de ? pour de la Chine . cree par la serie. des incidents de frontier? et or l'exploit,g4an?qui en a ete faite. 00060G Uzlirelus ou mains en panique dans la population. THE CHIN.MC.RIMIF or Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 July ,-- September 1969 CHINA'S GRAIN RESERVES CPYRGHT The general reader of Tho China Quarterly may well think it an imposi- tion to be treated to a public debate on so technical a subject as Chin's grain stocks. May I as his indulgence in vlow of the importance of the issue raised by Kang Chao (The China Quarterly, No. 37 (January-March 1969), pp. 139-140). The question of the size and move- ment of the national stockpile is indeed an integral part of any assess- ment of China's grain policy. Unfortunately Kang Chao does not define his use of the term stock- pile or state reserve. Properly defined, it can only refer to that amount of grain which is kept in government storage beyond the normal stock in the pipeline. In a country in which different grains are harvested at different times of the year, substantial quantities are bound to lie in godowns in various parts of the country. They do not necessarily form part of a genuine carry-over. It is perfectly possible that 12.69 million tons of "grain reserves" existed in mid-summer 1953 and 28.84 million tons in mid-summer 1957?the time of the statistical change-over from one crop year to the next?but they were not necessarily more than tem- porary stocks; nor need the apparent increase in "grain reserves" by 16.15 million tons reflect anything more than an early harvest of summer grains in the altogether favourable year 1957. The "grain reserves" which, according to Viscount Montgomery's account, were completely exhausted by the end of September 1961? and well they might be after two man-made disasters following the Great Leap Forward?are unlikely to have been in the same category as those quoted for mid-summer 1953 and "1957. Difficult though it is, we must try to compare like with like. In estimating the likely size of government carry-over stocks, it is worth recalling that some four-fifths of China's consumers produce most of the grain they need. Let us assume that present gross supplies of grains (and potatoes in grain equivalent) for human consumption total, say, 150 million metric tons equal to, say, 170 kilos of milled grain (at 80 rather than 85 per cent. average milling rate) per head per year. Against this, the requirements of the consumers living outside grain self-sufficient areas are unlikely to amount to more than, say, 25 million metric tons per annum, or 2 million tons per month, equal to about one-sixth of total grain supplies for human consumption. Only in very exceptional circumstances will the government have to meet any of the needs of the self-suppliers; its normal concern will be with the regular flow of grains to those who are not self-suppliers. To prevent any breakdown in this flow, the government ought to be able to draw at any time on a minimum reserve of, say, 5 million tons or 10 weeks' supply for those who are not self-suppliers. A stockpile of 10 million tons or 20 weeks' supply would entail a capital investment in grain storage facilities which a country such as China would probably deny itself?except when laying in a strategic reserve designed to meet . eventualities other than those arising in peacetime. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A00050006994,CHT ? As to China's programme of grain imports, this?like the storage programme?ought to be related to the needs of the non-self-suppliers. As Professor Ta-Chung Liu rightly points out, the Chinese Government spends roughly 30 per cent. of its annual foreign exchange earnings on the purchase abroad of. say. 5 to 6 million tons of wheat and flour every year. It does this so as to meet the needs, for a period of 10 to 12 weeks, of those who are not producing the grain they eat; or, to put it in another way, tome 25 to 30 million Mute depend entirely on foreign grain supplies throughout the year. This is a problem of such magnitude that it can hardly be solved by squeezing every member of the country's 125 million cultivators' families to the tune of 75 calories or so a day. Policies other than those of the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution would have to be introduced if a rate of saving even as modest as that of 3 to 4 per cent. of the daily diet were to be extracted from every one of China's vain prriiiiiri.rs /mad their familloa. W. KLATT. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 2 roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT THE IMPACT OF THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION ON THE CHINESE COMMUNIST PARTY MACHINE CHARLES NEUHAUSER After more than two years of intense activity, a good deal of first-class melodrama, and an enormous outpouring of rhetoric, the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution continues to baffle most observers?and it it would appear most Chinese as well. No two students of the Chinese scene seem to agree entirely on what has thus far happened, or on just why it has happened. Nor is the evidence available to those outside the Chinese mainland in any way conclusive; it is at best contradictory, and often misleading. Too much has happened, and too quickly, to form a wholly coherent picture of events. And we are of course much too close to those events to see them in full perspective. One problem is that a great many forces, pressures and problems have come together to produce the present upheaval. Another is that the main protagonists in China appear to be reacting more or less on an ad hoc basis to pressures and currents released by the Cultural Revolution itself?pres- sures that may have been by no means fully expected and that can be only dimly perceived by observers abroad. Nevertheless, certain aspects of the convulsion do appear to be of major importance and can perhaps be isolated for a tentative examination. One such aspect is the Chinese Communist Party organization itself. For it seems reasonably certain that problems within the party were a major precipitating factor in bringing on the Cul- tural Revolution,' and that the party machine has been a principal victim of the "revolution." The party has suffered a trauma easily the equal of the Long March, but one from which it is unlikely to recover as quickly or with such elan. Indeed, a better parallel may be the confusion and debilita- tion caused by the abortive insurrectory movement that accompanied and followed the break with the KMT in the late 1920s. We should, however, be clear about one thing at the outset: the party as such has not been under attack at any time in the course of the Cultural' Revolution. No attempt has been made to deny its central legitimizing role as the "vanguard of the proletariat" and the font of political authority in" China. Rather, it is the party machine, the organizational command struc- 'For an examination of some of these problems, see Charles Neuhauser, "The Chinese Communist Party in the 1960s: Prelude to the Cultural Revolution," The China Quarter- ly, No. 82 (September-December 1967). Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CI ? fl? I pproved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060 CPYRGHT 466 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY ture, that has been battered out of recognition in the past two years. But it is of course true that in any real political sense the two are inseparable. Political authority has flowed down from the chairman, the Politburo and the Central Committee through the organizational machine to the levels where policy is translated into practice. And an attack on the party machine of the scope and intensity of that which has just taken place must not only undermine the morale of party members but also greatly reduce the stature of the party itself in the eyes of the general populace, and to some extent at least bring into question the very legitimacy of the party as the arbiter of Chinese political and social life. The attack has been devastating. Of the 11 members and alternates on the Politburo who were politically active in 1965, 8 have fallen by the way- side. Of 11 politically active members of the Central Committee Secretariat, only 3 have survived, and none appears to be performing secretarial work. Of 10 known directors of Central Committee departments and bureaus, only one appears to be active. The Central Committee itself has been equally hard hit. Some 63 mem- bers of the Central Committee promulgated in 1958 were politically active in 1965; of these, 34 (52%), have been shunted aside, vilified and in many cases "dragged out" and disgraced since the summer of 1966. Another 9, or 14%, have been under severe Red Guard attack and apparently are or have been in deep political trouble. Of 72 politically active alternate mem- bers of the Central Committee, the figures are 27 (or 38%) and 29 (40%) respectively. While some of these people will no doubt survive the Red Guard assaults or will later be rehabilitated, the scope of the attack can be com- pared only to that directed against the 1934 Central Committee of the Soviet Party, which in the years of the Great Purge lost some 70% of its members2?although in China the destruction has for the most part been merely political rather than physical. At middle levels the picture is bleaker still. Only 9 (20%) of the 45 provincial party 1st and 2nd secretaries known to be active in 1965 can be identified today. Of these, many appear in supernumerary roles, and relatively few seem to be performing meaningful political activities. The provincial party committees themselves have not existed as organized, ac- tive bodies since February 1967. The same is probably true of the regional party bureaus, of which nothing has been heard since early 1967. Principal party secretaries in the regional bureaus have without exception been shunted aside or "dragged out" and disgraced. At hsien and municipal and at hsiang, commune and district levels, the situation is probably not much different, although all party committees may not have been formally "dis- solved" as at the provincial levels. Information regarding the basic levels is spotty and contradictory. It is 'Leonard Shapiro, The Communist Party 01 the Soviet Union (New York: Vintage Books, 1960), p.416. 01-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-IR0P79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000i0M1111-5 CHARLES NEUHAUSER 467 here, of course, that the vast bulk of party membership is tp be found. Fragmentary information suggests that party committees and cells in fac- tories have been hard hit. Lane committees and party fractions in produc- tion brigades and work teams have probably suffered much less in terms of actual Red Guard assault. Brigades and teams have been formally ex- empted from Red Guard attack,8 but directives from the center apparently no longer carry the weight they once did. Moreover, with the party's com- mand channels short-circuited at the provincial and hsien levels, basic-level cadres are probably largely inactive or are operating with the sketchiest of instructions?a situation that in some ways may resemble that of outlying guerrilla groups during the anti-Japanese war. Natural leaders probably remain in command in the rural areas, but this is precisely because they are natural leaders and not because they have .the weight of the party be- hind them. At the lower levels, particularly in the rural areas, the full impact of the Cultural Revolution may not have been felt until well into 1967?particu- larly during the upsurge in "revolutionary activity" that took place in April - and May of that year. But at the middle and upper levels of the party ap- paratus, the damage had already been done. The assault on the party ma- chine reached its climax in December 1966-January 1967, and despite bit- ter arguments about so-called "false seizures of power" in the course of the "January revolution," essentially little more than mopping up operations appear to have taken place at these levels since that time. ? In February, with the demise of the provincial party committees, local power passed into the hands of the People's Liberation Army (PLA)?es- sentially to the regional and district military commanders. In most cases it still remains there. The PLA has also assumed many of the party's func- tions in propaganda work and is performing at least part of the party's former supervisory role in the economic sphere. But this is clearly an un- natural situation. That it has persisted for over a year is a measure of the enormous difficulties caused by the breakdown of the party machine and the resulting fragmentation of institutions of political authority and block- age, of many normal channels of political communication. The year 1967 has seen a number of experiments designed to bring a degree of order out of the present chaos through the establishment of new political and ad- ministrative institutions. But these experiments, tenuous and hesitant at best, have very largely been vitiated by powerful forces pressing for still more "revolution." Nevertheless, in the wake of the turn toward moderation that began in September 1967, a new emphasis on "party-building"?which implies at least a partial rebuilding of the party machine and the rehabilitation of many party cadres?has been apparent. Thus far this effort does not appear to have gone very far. Precisely because it presages a return to normality Ven-min (IMIP), March 13, 1967. f,,VIV,10) Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : ciA4079701194A000i50006b001- ? - oved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001- CPYRGHT 468 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION A'Nq THE PARTY it is opposed by those "revolutionaries" who in the past two years have acquired a stake in, and an emotional commitment to, continued ferment; and because it portends a rehabilitation of cadres shunted aside n the Cultural Revolution, it poses a political threat to some of those political leaders who orchestrated and supported the attack on the cadres in the first place. Yet although the effort at party-building is likely to be slow and painful, it may be possible already to perceive the shape of things to come. 'While it is clear that some portion of the Red Guards will eventually be drawn into the party, nevertheless at the lower levels a considerable proportion of pre-1966 party members are likely to survive or be rehabilitated. In form, the party structure probably will not look much different from the way it did in the past, although a degree of streamlining and pruning is likely. Never- theless, the Cultural Revolution has exacerbated rather than rooted out di- visions within the party, and resentments born in the turbulent events of the past two years will be extremely hard to overcome. Above all, party morale has been shattered and cannot easily be repaired, while the party's claim to unchallenged political authority and political infallibility has at least to some degree been damaged. In these very important respects the consequences of the past two chaotic years are likely to be very great in- deed and will almost certainly plague Chinese political life for years to come. It seems increasingly evident as more material comes to light in the course of the Cultural Revolution that for several years prior to its begin- ning Mao had felt the Chinese revolution was losing steam, that there was the distinct possibility that "revisionism" of the sort espoused by the post-Stalinist Soviet Union was a threat not only within the international Communist movement but also within China itself, and that the revolution- ary ideals for which he had long fought were in danger of becoming lost or downgraded as the Chinese Communist Party became enmeshed in the difficult job of nation-building. Both old party members who had fought against the KMT and newer recruits who had joined the party since 1949 had failed to sufficiently "transform their world outlook": their priorities were wrong. And because this was so, there was a danger that the party would become increasingly divorced from the "masses," whose untapped "revolutionary enthusiasm" remained high. Mao apparently felt that his plans for releasing this revolutionary po- tential were being blocked by powerful figures within the party who felt his ideas were anachronistic. Moreover, the party bureaucracy, growing over the years, had itself become a deadweight, with bureaucratic methods stifling revolutionary initiative. It would seem that Mao was at least partly right on both counts, but the important thing is that he believed himself to be thwarted, and felt that something had to be done about it. This meant shaking up the party and removing a number of its important leaders. This Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 oved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79ORYNA0W050006000 -5 CHARLES NEUHAUSER . 469 surely was a prime aim of the Cultural Revolution from the start. That start can probably be dated from September 1965, when Mao gave the signal at an acrimonious work session of the Central Committee for a strong attack in the cultural field against revisionism. But parallel to the well-known attacks on literary figures that followed this meeting there also developed a campaign directed at hsien-level party committees, the first such concerted and extended campaign to involve party organizational questions since 1962. Criticism of hsien-level party committees reached floodtide in early 1966, but interestingly enough died away abruptly just when the grow- ing clamor against Wu Han and Teng T'o indicated unmistakably that the Peking Party Committee was in deep trouble. The central charge against the hsien committees was that they had be- come divorced from the masses?that party members had failed to "trans- form their world outlook," had succumbed to bureaucratic inertia, and would in consequence have to submit to open criticism at mass meetings in which large numbers of non-party persons would participate. This in itself was unremarkable, but along with the usual Maoist slogans a number of other, rather different ideas were introduced into the discussions in the party press. One was that to eradicate problems at the hsien level, party members would have to supervise their subordinates more closely and take into account specific local conditions and special situations in implementing party directives4?in effect, hsien committees were told to act with greater bureaucratic efficiency and pragmatism. One len-min Iih-pao article went so far as to suggest that the problem was not "transformation of world out- look" at all, but rather the need for better understanding of work condi- tions and modern scientific procedures.3 Moreover, the press reported that the idea of open criticism of party members by non-party masses was strongly resisted.? Furthermore, in the course of the campaign a new hero was introduced for emulation?one Chiao Yu-lu, a hsien party secretary and the first emulation hero not to have a PLA background. All of this suggests that the campaign was less a Maoist initiative than a rear-guard action on the part of the party bureaucracy to protect itself in the face of growing pressure. This episode suggests several conclusions; first, that problems involving the party organization were at issue from the earliest days of the Cultural Revolution; second, that there was con- siderable resistance within the party machine to ideas of uninterrupted rev- olution that would sacrifice the rather pragmatic tasks of nation-building to less clearly focused ideological concerns; and third, that while "waving the Red Flag" of reform of party organizational methods, important ale. 'See, for example, "Vigorously Promote Three Major Styles of Work, Strengthen Basic-Level Development of the Party," JM/P, February 8, 1966, in Survey o/ the China Mainland Press (SCMP), No. 3643, pp. 1 if. "The 'Leap,' Something to be Learned," IMI!', January 17, 1966, in SCMP, No. 3628, 101)i. 7-8- "Correctly Sum Up Historical Experience, Wipe Out Individualistic Thoughts," 1MIP, February 13, 1966, in SCMP, No. 3648, p.8. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A00050006000 CPYRGHT 470 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY ments within the party apparatus?who apparently had some control of the Central Committee's own journal, fen-min Iih-pao?were evidently will- ing and able to fight to protect party prerogatives, particularly with regard to non-party intrusion into party affairs. These divisions and tensions became at once more apparent and acute following the fall of P'eng Chen in May 1966. P'eng's political demise led quite aaturally to omplete ahake.up of the Peking party municipal or- ganization, into which Mao was later to claim "you could not drive a pin." If this were all, however, the implications for the party machine as a whole would not necessarily have been very great or immediate. In fact, because cultural issues were at least formally involved in the protracted dispute that ended in P'eng's fall, a thoroughgoing purge of the party's propa- ganda, educational and cultural "systems" also could not be avoided. This was a move of cardinal importance, and it had major consequences almost at once. The purge was conducted through the medium of "operation teams" which carried out on-the-spot "investigations" of accused individuals and attempted to lead struggle sessions against them in a manner reminiscent of the land reform program of the late 1940s and early 1950s. This was only ostensibly a concession to Maoist principles, for the "operation teams" were directly controlled by the party apparatus, and Liu Shao-ch'i and Teng Hsiao-p'ilig apparently took a direct hand in running them.7 These teams were opposed?often in pitched battle?by less well-organized groups of students responsive to appeals that had begun to appear in the official press calling for unbridled revolutionary ferment. - Two issues were at stake here. One involved the question of how the purge was to be conducted?that is, was it to remain entirely an operation run by the party secretariat or was the secretariat to be bypassed, at least in part, in favor of direct action by the "masses," who were in turn respon- sive to and probably manipulated by forces anxious to shake up the bureau- cratic machine?principally Mao himself. The second issue involved the question of who exactly was to be purged. Although some kind of purge could not be avoided, if it could be kept within carefully controlled bounds the damage could be limited. This apparently was what Liu Shao-ch'i and Teng Hsiao-p'ing attempted.8 There was nothing subtle or indirect about the battles over the conduct of the "operation teams"; the issues were now out in the open. But the course of events had raised the stakes, which were now nothing less than who was to control the party and how it was to be run. Yet at the same time the conflict was personalized, and in such a situation Liu's prestige was no match for Mao's. At the 11th Central Committee Plenum in August 1966 both Liu and Teng were downgraded and removed from effective "Thoroughly Criticize Our Institute's Operation Team in Carrying Out the Anti. Bourgeois Movement on the Cadre Question," Cheng./an Kung-she, April 16, 1967. 'Materials from the Investigations into Teng Hsiao-p`ing's Criminal Activities," Hung Chl (Aviation Institute Red Guards), May 5, 1967. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 proved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79ORYKA6W0500060 -5 CHARLES NEUHAUSER 471 ? power, although no formal censure was publicly pronounced. But by noilw' the struggle had greatly expanded. To this point it had been a contest of giants, in which Liu Shao-ch'i, Teng Hsiao-p'ing and Peng Chen ha 4 been principal protagonists. Now a-much wider range of characters was invnived. Liu and Teng's closest associates would of course be pushed aside, but the episode of the "operation teams" had undoubtedly deepened Mao's sus- picion of the entire party apparatus, which would now have to bear the consequences of his distrust. The slogan "95 percent of Party cadres are good or comparatively good" had been incorporated into the 16-point decision issued by the 11th Plenum, but it was clear almost at once that it would be honored more in the breach than in the observance. Yet in light of both the size of the impending house- cleaning and of the events of the spring and early summer, it was also clear that the party apparatus could not be trusted to purge itself; hence the Red ? Guards, successors to the semi-organized bands that had hauled the "opera- tion teams" in May, June and July. But the Red Guards were a heterogene- ous group, composed mainly of youngsters, many of whom were not party members, and initially at least loosely organized and relatively loosely con- \ trolled. Moreover, the undifferentiated call to hit at "persons in authority," which now began to be heard, was certain to create a good deal of con- fusion in itself. Under these conditions, the forthcoming struggle was bound to be a messy affair. It should not be thought, however, that the attacks on "persons in au- thority" were a wholly spontaneous manifestation of "revolutionary fer- ment." Mao and those in his immediate entourage on whom he relied moved quickly to channel and direct the Red Guard movement. The extra- ordinary number of meetings at which Red Guard groups were addressed and admonished by major leaders was one aspect of this effort. Another was the establishment of the Small Group for the Cultural Revolution of the Cen- tral Committee, which clearly was given the task of overseeing and coordinat- ing Red Guard activities. Theoretically subordinate to the Central Com- mittee, this body was soon speaking with an independent and highly au- thoritive voice.? Its members were all almost entirely dependent on Mao's personal patronage and at this stage at least could be considered extensions of his personality." Measures to control Red Guard activities were varied. The Red Guards were given permission to use the railways and the state telegraphic net- work for at ,best nominal charges.11 This was a virtual necessity as Red 'For example, directives issued by the central authorities were signed by this body as well as the Central Committee, the State Council and the Military Affairs Commission. lovang Sheng, however, had been active in party work and may have had some well- placed adherents at lower levels. "Evidence for this is found in later references to these privileges contained in official documents, e.g., the central directive issued on June 6, 1967, Shou-ta Hung-wei-ping, June 9, 1967. 4'4 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 :CIAR marloraWrnu4,4, " ? ? ? , Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 472 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY CPYRQHT Guard activities expanded, but it placed the "rebels" in a dependent re- lationship to the central authorities, who could revoke these privileges at any time, and provided a degree of leverage of Red Guard actions.0fficial permission was needed for major demonstrations against "persons in au- thority,"12 which meant that Red Guard targets had to be officially approved in advance either by authorities on the spot or by the Small Group in Peking. Red Guard newspapers were published on state and party 'presses, using state stocks of newsprint,1? which meant that at least a degree of control could be exercised over what was printed in these papers. Above all, after an initial period of permissiveness, fairly strict controls were es- tablished over the collection, collation and distribution of "black materials" ?documented charges of wrongdoings to be brought against Red Guard targets.14 Much of this material could only have come from archives un- available to the general public; if some of it was "manufactured" for the occasion?as was almost certainly the case?this could only be done by persons with a detailed knowledge of high-level party affairs, which would rule out nearly all the Red Guards themselves. Moreover, leaders of the major Red Guard organizations were undoubtedly in close behind-the- scenes contact with members of the Small Group for the Cultural Revolu- tion, and transmitted instructions from them down to lower levels through an increasingly elaborate organizational structure. Nevertheless, anomalies were certainly not uncommon. Discipline in the hastily organized Red Guard groups was by no means as well-enforced as in traditional mass organizations, much less as in the party itself. Forged "black materials" were put in use, although usually this probably involved lower-level targets." Unplanned disputes between local "authorities" and militant Red Guards, or between Red Guard groups themselves, frequently escalated, involving peripheral figures and no doubt occasionally leading the central authorities to approve new targets for attack only after the attacks had in fact already begun. In other instances, important leaders in Peking were clearly divided over the question of whether or not the assault on a given individual should be pursued or curtailed." However, these disputes generally involved party figures whose duties did not directly impinge on the management of the party machine. By and large, party secretaries, members of central party organs, and members of lower-level bodies con- "Denial of this permission by local and provincial officials was later considered "proof" of counterrevolutionary activity. See "Accusingly Reveal the Shanghai Muni- cipal Committee's Activity of Planning and Organizing to Surround the Red Guards," handbill, n.d. "Red Guard publications sometimes directly acknowledge use of party and govern- ment presses. "Central Directive issued January 13,1967, Pei-ching P'ing Lun, 1967. "Ibid. "Chou En-hal, for example, frequently attempted to head off attacks on individuals associated with the State Council. Cf. also the reversal of the attack on Hsiao Hue in January 1967. Approved For Release 1999/09/0i CI roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-0a9Rgi0150006000 CHARLES NEUHAUSER 473 cerned with party affairs?the backbone of the party apparat?were fair game. Confusion among the Red Guards and their mentors was 'mirrored by an equal confusion among those under attack. It would be hard to over- estimate the shock, anger and dismay felt by party cadres at all levels as the Red Guard attacks widened. In Sian, for example, cadres accustomed to defending and protoottn4 party prerogatives and tha avidity of the party organization felt that the Red Guard attacks on leading party bodies could only be counterrevolutionary." This undoubtedly was a typical re- action. Precisely because the attacks were so widespread, because the Red Guard targets were generally members of the leading locn1 party organs, because the Red Guards themselves stood outside the regular party struc- ture, and because the most militant "rebels" were frequently led by "out- siders" from Peking," the Red Guard movement appeared to be a sinister effort to destroy party prestige and authority and to sweep away entirely the party as an institution. The reaction of the local cadres was violent and extremely hostile. Militant Red Guards were attacked, beaten up and jailed. By October, Mao himself admitted that the movement was largely misunderstood in the provinces, and he called on leading party provincial figures to cooperate with the Red Guards even though they and their sub- ordinates understood the Cultural Revolution only imperfectly." But if individual middle-level cadres reacted instinctively to what they felt to be a challenge to party prerogatives and prestige, most upper-level party bureaucrats in the provincial,- regional and important municipal bu- reaus felt that they understood what was happening all too well. They were the immediate targets of the Red Guard attacks, and they moved to protect ? themselves as best they could. For them the central question was no longer that of outside interference in party affairs or the rationalization of bureau- cratic procedures; it was simply self-preservation. Utilizing the resentment felt against the Red Guards at all levels of the party machine, and probably drawing on a resentment of "outsiders" felt by wider circles of the local populace, the provincial party chieftains organized Red Guard groups of their own, responsive to their own orders and ready to defend the party organs under attack by the militants sent out from Peking. Some "rebel" groups were declared counterrevolutionary.20 Many soon found themselves virtually under siege. 7 This counterattack was surprisingly strong and sustained; it appears to have virtually stalled the Cultural Revolution for several months. In essence it appears to have been an instinctive reaction to an overwhelming chat. "Andrew Watson, "Embattled Armies," Far East Economic Review, April 1967, p. 231. "Revolutionary Masses in Canton Regard their Reception of Revolutionary Young Fighters as a Glorious Political Task," Narplang Jilt-pars, November 19, 1966, in SCMP, No. 3828, p. 9. "Mao's Speech to die October 1967 Work Conference of the Central Committee," handbill, n.d., partly reproduced in remittal, November 7, 1966. 161Cwelyang radio, June 1, 1967. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 :.Cl 17- ? ? 'Apprbved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT 474 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY lenge on the part of provincial party officials; there is no evidence it was centrally directed in any sense. But this show of strength sealed the fate of more than the individual party bureaucrats who organized the counter- attack. When the impasse was broken at the beginning of 1967, the target was not so much individuals within the party as the party machine itself. The call to "seize power," sounded on January 1, 1967, was in effect a signal to dismantle the party structure. The Red Guard methods of attack were primarily propagandistic. Hand- bills, wall posters and unofficial newspapers kept up a drumfire of violent criticism of chosen targets. This written propaganda was supplemented by mass meetings, demonstrations, occasional "invasions" of party and state offices, and confrontations with the targets of attack at struggle meetings held under Red Guard auspices. This program put leading party officials under considerable pressure, but it was insufficient actually to dislodge them from their entrenched positions. In any event, the removal of major officials required authorization from Peking.21 So long as regional provin- cial and other local officials remained in office, they kept the most important levers of political authority and administration in their own hands. In their official capacities they could organize Red Guard forces of their own and solve the logistical problem?food, housing and the like?of keeping them in the field. They could, moreover, encourage factory workers and others to make excessive demands on Peking for higher wages and other ameni- ties.22 But to remove these officials wholesale was to invite chaos, for they played a crucial role in administering both the state and the party. Hence. the stalemate in the autumn of 1966. Mao's solution to this dilemma was drastic. The Gordian knot was cut at the provincial level, where resistance to the Red Guards had been con- centrated in the period following the 11th Plenum. Both provincial state governments and provincial party committees ceased to exist in any mean- ingful sense. Regional party bureaus apparently also vanished at this time. But while provincial state functions were generally taken over by the mili- tary after a brief hiatus, the short circuit in the party chain of command was allowed to persist. It has not yet been repaired. The "January revolution" of course encompassed far more than an as- sault on provincial "organs of power." But it worked differently in Peking than in the provinces, and differently when applied to state organs than to party organs. In Peking, no assault was launched against either the State Council or the Central Committee as such, although members of both groups fell from power in considerable numbers. Individual ministers and vice. premiers came under attack for "counter-revolutionary" activities, usually within their own ministries. A few members of the State Council?most ? "Few such decisions have evidently been published, but there are numerous refer- ences to central directives on personnel questions in Red Guard publications. "It seems likely that this is how the "economism" issue arose. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CI roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060 01-5 CPYRGHT CHARLES NEUHAUSER 475 notably Chou En-lai himself?escaped unscathed; several other ministers were severely attacked but managed to remain in position; still more were shunted aside." But in no case was a ministry itself "dissolved." The work of the ministries went forward, although under adverse conditionEk for un- questionably a considerable number of lesser functionaries fell to Red Guard assaults, and ministerial functions were frequently affected by Red Guard disruptions within the ministries themselves. Several ministries, particularly those dealing with transportation and communications, were "taken over" by the PLA in February, but work has apparently gone on under loose military supervision. Party organs in the capital were even harder hit. There have been no re- corded announcements of the "dissolution" of central party organs, but no official has been identified performing party functions since January 1967. Subordinate bureaus of the Central Committee seem uniformly inactive. Only one director of a party bureau appears to have survived the on- slaught;24 it is likely that some lesser functionaries within the bureaus have also survived, but it is hard to believe that they have much meaningful work to perform. The party's organizational bureau may be hors de combat en- The party secretariat has not fared? much better. Three secretaries still appear in public, but never in connection with their secretarial functions. None has been identified as a party secretary since January 1967. In fact, virtually no party official was publicly identified in a strictly party role? not even as a member of the Central Committee?between January and October 1967. Nor can the state provincial organs be identified after January 1967, al- though no formal "dissolution" was ever announced. A considerable num- ber of provincial governors were attacked and presumably deposed as "among the small handful following the capitalist road," but minor func- tionaries probably continued during January to perform their tasks?large- ly by rote, since it is unlikely that many instructions were transmitted down from Peking. Nevertheless, confusion?or even a considerable degree of chaos?must have attended state business at the provincial level through- out the month. Since the state ministries continued to function in Peking and presumably at lower levels as well, direct-line communications remained relatively unaffected in this sphere. However, some working form of state authority at the provincial level was obviously necessary if decisions made in Peking were to be implemented, or if even routine administrative work was to be performed over any period of time. These considerations almost certainly played a major part in the decision to bring the PLA into the Cultural Revolution, a decision announced on January 23.25 In February, following this move, military control commissions were set up in virtually "Lin Piao can scarcely'be considered a subordinate of Chou's, although the Defense Ministry is theoretically subordinate to the State Council. "Ta'ai Cleang, a relatively unimportant figure. "Central Directive of January 21, 1967, TunOang-hung, January 31, 1967. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 oved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001 CPYRGHT 476 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY every province in China.20 These commissions took over the task of civil administration in the provinces, supplanting the provincial governors and supervising the work of state provincial functionaries, many of whom un- doubtedly continued to carry on their normal duties. Control commissions may also have been established in the very few provinces that established Revolutionary Committees formally reeognized by Peking, although in these cases direct administrative responsibility, if not political power, apparently rested with the Revolutionary Conunittccs. In many respects this situation resembled that which obtained in the years immediately following the Conununist takeover, when military con- trol commissions also ran provincial affairs. But in this case there is one major difference: there are no provincial party committees to check on the work of the control commissions. The provincial party committees were formally dissolved.27 References to them after January 1967 invariably speak of "former provincial party committees." No individual has been identified performing strictly party work on the provincial level. Since January, no communication from the central authorities has been addressed to a pro- vincial party committee: addressees are invariably regional and district military commands, military control commissions, and, where they exist, provincial revolutionary committees." A similar situation appears to exist with regard to municipal party corn- mittees. The regional party committees and party committees at the hsien ? also do not appear to be functioning, but here the situation is not so dear cut." Many hsien committees may have been dissolved, but this does not appear to have been quite so formal a process as that which took place at the provincial level. But certainly, so far as can be observed from a distance, no significant work is being performed by either regional or hsien commit- tees. In any event, in a party organized in the way it was in China prior to 1967, a complete break in the party chain of command would render organs at a lower level ineffective and organs at a higher level impotent. Not all members of the various provincial committees were disgraced in January, although virtually all provincial first secretaries active in 1965 were condemned. Several second and third secretaries showed up as mem- bers of Revolutionary Committees or "preparatory groups" late in 1967; "No announcement of the establishment of these bodies was made at the time, al- though frequent references to the commissions soon began to appear in official and Red Guard publications. "See, for example, "Record of the Seizure of Power," Kuangchou Hung-wei-ping, February 17, 1967. "Red Guard publications, as well as wall posters, carry the texts of many of these directives, including addresses. "Regional Bureaus were organs of the Central Committee and therefore theoretically inviolable. Power was "seized" in the "organs directly under" the several bureaus?i.e., in the various administrative departments of the bureaus themselves. Since January 1967 the Regional bureaus appear to have been totally bypassed. Reorganization of the subordinate administrative units now seems to have begun, but the bureaus themselves still have no real political significance. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001 -5 CPYRGHT 477 CHARLES NEUHAUSER but they appeared to play supernumerary rather than leading rule:, ;La these bodies. Still more former members of the provincial committees are apparently politically inactive. The consequences of "seizure of power" began to be felt almost immedi- ately. The Red Guards took their role as "revolutionary successors" very seriously, and in many places apparently attempted to step into ;the shoes of the party cadres they had displaced. This came close to being an un- mitigated disaster on two counts: first, untrained youths proved inade- quate replacements for experienced party bureaucrats, and second, the numerous and fragmented Red Guard groups, prone to disputes from their inception, now began to quarrel bitterly over division of the spoils. The Center soon found it necessary to remind the "rebels" of the virtue of humility and discipline. Since the Red Guards could not perform administrative and supervisory tasks by themselves?and in many cases probably not at, all?it was soon clear that many of the cadres so recently shunted aside would have to re- turn to the job. But this raised new problems. First, the cadres themselves were reluctant to resume their old posts; they had just been through the mill, and did not wish to repeat the experience. Second, the "rebels" were not anxious to see them return, since this meant that newly won power and authority would have to be shared. Full of revolutionary rectitude, they claimed that only those who had "rebelled" from the first deserved re- habilitation. Again the Center was obliged to press the line that most cadres were comparatively good, that mistakes could be repeated and corrected, 'and that it made little difference when an individual cadre had first seen the light. A further complication arose from the first tentative and rather makeshift efforts to rebuild a viable administrative structure in the provinces. From the first, Peking saw military rule as a temporary expedient to be replaced by something that would invite the active cooperation, support and partici- pation both of a sufficient number of former cadres to ensure efficient ad- ministration and of the vast majority of the revolutionary rebels. Not sur- prisingly, this reconciliation of old and new?the vehicle for which was the Revolutionary Committee?was difficult to achieve. In the wake of the "January revolution," bodies calling themselves "Rev- olutionary Committees" sprang up all over China at all levels. Most of these bodies were soon accused by militant Red Guards of being nothing but a false front behind which party "power-holders," who had engineered false "seizures of power," continued to operate. In many cases there was prob- ably more than a grain of truth in these charges, but the party officials in- volved soon discovered that they were merely operating in a vacuum. Real power now rested in the hands of the military control commissions, who received and implemented instructions and directives from Peking,.bypass- ing the "sham" Revolutionary Committees and allowingL1WW LW 17 ic? vat Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CI Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT 478 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY the vine. Only in Heilungkiang, Shantung, Shensi, Kweichow and in the autonomous municipality of Shanghai did Ped;: recognize authentic Rev- olutionary Committees. Below the provincial level, authentic Revolutionary Committees were nonexistent. In form, these new bodies were "triple alliances," that is, they inoluded representatives of the Red Guards (who first had to form a "great alliance" of smaller individual Red Guard groups which could not send repreienta- tives directly to the Revolutionary Committees), "old cadres," and the mili- tary. In practice, the military probably had a commanding voice in these bodies, ruling indirectly rather than directly as in the case of the military control commissions.3? But from the start there were anomalies. In Shang- hai, the leading figure in fact as well as in form was Chang Ch'iin-chiao, an authentic "rebel" and a member of the Central Committee's Small Group for the Cultural Revolution." Even more interesting, in Heilungkiang, the first province to establish a Revolutionary Committee, the leading figure was P'an Fu-sheng, an "old cadre" and provincial first secretary before the "seizure of power." P'an and Wei Kuo-ch'ing in Kwangsi were the only provincial first secretaries to survive the January onslaught without signi- ficant loss of power or status." In the remaining provinces former provin- cial secretaries were also included as members of the new committees, but they were lesser figures and probably performed little more than symbolic roles as examples of reconciled cadres. Minor functionaries who had form- erly worked in the party provincial committees probably continued to per- form similar tasks within the new Revolutionary Committees, but the fre- quent appeals in February and March for "old cadres" to come forward and declare for the Cultural Revolution suggests that persons in this cate- gory were not very numerous. The Revolutionary Committees, insofar as they were more than merely a facade behind which the military made the major decisions, were pri- marily administrative organs, replacing the former provincial governorates. Many tasks formerly performed by the provincial party committees no longer had such meaning, in any event. Internal party administration ob- viously was out of the question; the major task of supervising and carrying out propaganda work had very largely passed to the PLA and in some re- spects to the Red Guard organizations. Supervision of the work of the pro- vincial organs of central ministries could not have been very meaningful; "The precise relationship of the military to the early Revolutionary Committees is not entirely clear. P'an Fu-sheng in Heilungkiang, and Chang Ch'iin-ehiao in Shanghai, quickly assumed the posts of political commissar to the leading military command in their respective areas. P'an has been closely associated with military figures since Janu- ary 1967, and PLA personnel have played important roles in both areas. The East China Fleet command has been increasingly important in Shanghai in recent months. Wei Kuo-ch'ing acted only as PLA political commissar until the formation of the Kwangsi "preparatory group" in December 1967. "The Shanghai situation has in many respects been unique. "Both Chang Ktto-hua in Tibet and Wang En-mao in Sinkiang were commanders of their respective military regions and had troops at their disposal. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP7t131114Aq00500060001-5 CHARLES NEUHAUSER 479 in the economic sphere this responsibility was shared with the PLA.88 Moreover, the very few Revolutionary Committees in existence in the early months of 1967 had come into being very suddenly; members of the new bodies had clearly been co-opted from above in the heat of the 4:n1-lent. A great deal of sorting out had to be done, particularly with regard to the participation of Red Guard representatives on the committees, for the sud- den formation of "revolutionary great alliances" had papered over rather than removed deep-seated differences among the various Red Guard groups. Indeed, the very existence of the new committees, and more important, the prospect that additional committees would be formed in other provinces, exacerbated these differences and in fact so envenomed the disputes be- tween Red Guard organizations that as a practical matter the formation of workable "revolutionary great alliances" was in most places out of the question. Red Guard groups argued over which individuals were to become "revolutionary" representatives on the Revolutionary Committees, bow many representatives from one group as compared to another should be included, and whether or not some Red Guard groups should be represented at all. These arguments were by no means merely academic. They quickly degenerated into free-for-ails, and then into planned, pitched battles. This sort of fighting fed upon itself, making reconciliation still more difficult. The question of "who are our friends, who are our enemies" took on a very immediate meaning. To these intractable problems was added the continuing issue of the rec- onciled cadres. The Red Guards were not alone in resenting the possible return of relatively large numbers of former party officials and function- aries to important posts. Those cadres *ho had early thrown their lot with the "rebels" in hope of winning preferment and rapid advancement were, not surprisingly, resentful of the line advanced in February and March that most cadres were comparatively good no matter when they had first re- belled. And to these problems there was soon added a new issue: As the military took charge in the provinces they handled the Red Guards rough- ly in the interest of rapidly restoring order. Many Red Guards were ar- rested; Red Guard activities were restricted and "rebel" privileges with- drawn; and some Red Guard groups were suppressed outright.84 Moreover, the military were making the real decisions at the provincial level. In ef- fect, military regional and district commanders and their subordinates had become a new set of "persons in authority." This combination of circumstances produced irresistable pressures from below?pressures, in any case, that Mao and his radical friends in Peking were happy to exploit. In February, retreat had proved to be a tactical maneuver; by April, revolution was rampant again. Interestingly enough, the signal for the new lurch to the left was the introduction of the first pub. "See n. 25. "Wall poster reports suggest that this action was especially severe in Tibet. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA- roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001 CPYRGHT 480 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY lie attacks on Liu Shao-ch'i, and the central issue on which these attacks turned was the question of Liu's approach to the cadre question. "Slavish mentality" and unquestioning obedience to orders were roundly condemned. In practice, this meant that the attempt to rebuild the new administrative structure in the provinces had to all intents and purposes been abkindoned. Indeed, with the new upsurge in revolutionary activity this was very largely an impossibility. Moreover, atill another complicating factor had beip added to the provincial situation. Red Guard attacks were now being directed against the military authorities who were locally in power. The PLA com- manders, taking a page from the books of the discredited party leaders, be- gan to organize and encourage some Red Guard groups who would support the regional and district commands." Clashes between these groups and the more militant Red Guards, who were still manipulated from Peking, very quickly overshadowed the disputes among he militants themselves. These clashes were the central political fact of the spring and summer, but the underlying issue remained the same: who was to hold power and how was that power to be exercised. Yet for all the fury of the struggle? in July and August the confusion, disruption and factional fighting reached heights that surpassed the chaos of the "January revolution"?very little really changed. A Peking Municipal Revolutionary Committee was formed in May, and a single provincial Revolutionary Committee and six "prep- aratory groups" were set up in the summer, but these bodies were clearly dominated by the military men already running the respective provinces involved; they were in large degree Military Control Commissions writ large.86 Furthermore, although important PLA figures came under severe Red Guard attack between April and September, prior to August there was no concerted effort to disrupt the military chain of command as the party had been disrupted in January. Even when the brief, across-the-board assault on the PLA was inaugurated following the Wuhan incident, the consequences to the military establishment were comparatively few. Ch'en Tsai-tao, the Wuhan Military Commander, was dismissed together with his immediate subordinates. Apparently a number of commanders of the military districts immediately adjacent to Wuhan were also sacked, but those men were at once replaced by others of similar background brought in from other mili- tary regions." There was no effort made to "dissolve" either the affected regional or district commands; a shuffling of personnel sufficed. Indeed, "In the spring of 1967, militant Red Guard groups began to attack their opponents for having the support of local military commanders. "This situation was obvious in Tsinghai, where military figures were clearly in com- mand. In Peking, although Hsieh Fu-chih, chief of the new Revolutionary Committee, was a member of the State Council, the situation apparently did not change appreciably from that which had existed since February 1967, whee lbe Peking garrison took over the municipality. "Commands were apparently shaken up in the Hupeh, Henan, Hunan and Kiangsi military districts. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01d9444%500060001-5 481 CHARLES NEUHAUSER the assault on the military establishment was almost wholly abortive. The unprecedented apology to the PLA made by leading members of the Small Group for the Cultural Revolution early in September suggests, that the Maoist radicals soon recognized that they could not take on the army as they had the party; and PLA resentment and distrust of unbridled "revolu- tionary" activity almost certainly was a major factor in the sudden decision to curtail that activity in September." The downturn In "revolutionary" activity was accompanied by a new ef- fort to deal with the consequences of the "January revolution"?that is, the consequences of the virtual dismemberment of the party. With one con- spicuous exception, the methods employed closely resembled those of the previous February; in a sense it could be said that the work of repairing China's administrative and political structure was picked up where it had been left off at that time. As in February, a major effort was made to recon- cile and rehabilitate "old cadres," to tame the Red Guards, and to form new Revolutionary Committees. Former party cadres were again urged to step forward, declare for the Cultural Revolution, and take up new duties. Implicit in this appeal was the fact that few cadres had done so in Febru- ary, and fewer still in the intervening months. But from the Red Guard point of view, what was important was that many cadres who had been politically impotent for nearly a year were likely' to regain a measure of authority. Many of these men had scores to settle; moreover, competition for posts and positions would be intensified. These were volatile issues, and indeed the whole question of what to do about the Red Guards was very probably an explosive one. If they were ? allowed to remain active, the job of reconstruction and rehabilitation would be immeasurably more difficult; if they were sidelined, large numbers of militants would be alienated, and, more important, their political demise would be virtually an open admission that the Cultural Revolution had run its course. Even more important?critically important?the "rebels" had close connections with leading members of the Small Group for the Cultural Revolution in Peking, and although this group had been weakened in Sep- tember,8? it apparently could still prevent any move to defuse the Red Guard movement as a whole. Thus, only half-hearted efforts were made to tame the Red Guards. Little real attempt was made to curb or end Red Guard privileges, and, unlike February, virtually no troublesome Red Guard organization was declared counterrevolutionary.40 However, some effort was made to end Red Guard disputes by putting high priority on the rapid ? formation of "revolutionary great alliances," and the PLA was ordered to help in this procc,s." "See the September 5, 1967 speech by Chiang Ch'ing, in bCMP, No. 4I69, pp. I U. "The weakening was effected by the political demise of Wang Li and Kiang Feng. "An exception was the "May 16 Corps," but this shadowy organization was not a major Red Guard group. "See Central Directive of September 5, 1967, in SCM?, No. 4026, p.1. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CiA-ROFT, A-Pp 6-fflrniraregfea;tr-19-94/09/02.6.IA-RDP79-01194A000 CPYRGHT 482 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY But the "revolutionary great alliances" were merely the first step in the formation of the "triple alliances"?that is, in the formation of Revolu- tionary Committees. This was made the first order of business.42 Never- theless, progress in this direction was extremely slow, and this in itself is a measure of the continuing difficulties that beset the task of rehabilitation. By February 1968, only six additional provincial Revolutionary Committees had bean set up, and only four additional "preparatory groups" bad been formed. The pace has subsequently quickened somewhat; by mid-April an additional nine Revolutionary Committees had come into existence, In near- ly every case the formation of these bodies has apparently been preceded by elaborate negotiations, almost certainly both in the province itself and in Peking. These negotiations are not conducted publicly, but Red Guard comments on specific situations, while highly polemic, give some idea of the issues involved. The central question seems to be political patronage? the issue that has plagued provincial administration since the "January revolution." In the provinces themselves, disputes appear to center around questions involving the relative merits, importance and prerogatives of in- dividual Red Guard organizations, and, perhaps more important, around the thorny problem of getting both "rebels" and "old cadres" mutually to accept new provincial leaders. In Peking, the problem is to decide just who those leaders are to be. Until February the decision had been to accept the military figures al- ready running the various provinces as the dominant figures in the new Revolutionary Committees?a decision in effect to postpone more basic political choices. Nearly all of these military men have been under some form of Red Guard attack for months, but even more bitter disputes may center around lesser figures drawn from among the rehabilitated cadres and the Red Guard organizations. Yet even when Revolutionary Commit- tees come into existence, disputes continue. Virtually every such provincial committee?both those formed recently and those that came into being early in 1967?appears to be under attack from without and racked by strains from within. It is unlikely that similar bodies at lower levels, where the committee-forming process has gone on somewhat more rapidly since September, are immune to these pressures and strains. In the past several months these troubles have apparently intensified. Radio broadcasts in the affected provinces have become increasingly shrill in denouncing "factional" disputes, which are frequently said to extend into "leadership bodies." In late January and early February, Wen Hui Pao was especially stern in condemning "factional crimes" which have inter- fered with the functioning of the Shanghai Revolutionary Committee, but it is clear that such difficulties are not confined to Shanghai alone." For example, some kind of dispute between Cheng Kuo-hua, head of the "IMP. December 31, 1967. "The Wen Hui Pao editorials were reproduced by major Peking papers and given national significance. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 ved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-02114914E0011500060001- CHARLES NEUHAUSER 481 Szechwan "preparatory group," and Liu Chieh-ting, chief "rebel" repre- sentative and number three man on the group, may be one cause for the long delay in the formal establishment of a Revolutionary Committee in that province." Moreover, as the process of consolidation and rehabilitation goes on, differences between "rebels" co-opted into leadership organs and those on the outside tend to increase. As early as May 1967, warnings rare issued to "revolutionaries" who had been elevated to leadership positions not to assume the officious airs and bureaucratic ways of the party officials they had displaced. The Shantung Revolutionary Committee actually issued a code of behavior designed to correct such abuses.45 Still more important, "rebels" in responsible positions now have something to protect. They and the Revolutionary Committees are apparently being criticized by Red Guard groups who have either been squeezed out in the formation of the new com- mittees or who feel that they are under-represented on them. Nearly all provincial Revolutionary Committees appear to be under pressure of this sort,4? and as it continues leading "rebel" figures such as Chang Ch chiao, head of the Shanghai Revolutionary Committee, find themselves less and less spokesmen for "revolutionary" interests and more and more con- servators of the status quo.47 The glue holding all these disparate forces together still appears to be the military, but the PLA has itself tended to become a participant in, rather than an arbiter of, the political infighting. Moreover, an army of less than three million can scarcely perform the administrative and political func- tions of a party of 20 million indefinitely. It is in this context that the ten- tative steps toward restoration of a functioning party machine must be viewed. For the major way in which the recent effort at rehabilitation dif- fers from that of February is that on this occasion not only are individual cadres to be reconciled, but apparently the party machine is, at least in part, to be rehabilitated as well. Since late November increasing emphasis has been placed on the task of "party-building," which is now said to be an integral part of the "strategic plan" introduced by Mao in September. 48 Leading figures are again being identified by their party titles; discussion of the party's central role in Chinese political life is again being emphasized. "Party-building" itself was listed as a major task in the 1968 New Year's Day len-min Jih-pao editorial. Much of the discussion of the party's role and functions in the official press "In D^^ember, Liu was apparently downgraded?he dropped several places in official. I. reported name lists?and seldom appeared in public with Chang Kuo-hua. In Febru- ary he was restored to his number three ranking. "Peking radio, June 22, 1967. "Kweichow, Heilungkiang and Inner Mongolia radio broadcasts have denounced at- tempts to undermine the authority of their respective Revolutionary Committees. "Shanghai has taken the lead in denouncing "anarchism and factionalism" and in fact sounds much, more anxious about these phenomena than does Peking. "The issue was first discussed at length in a series of Wen Hid Pao editorials. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A00050006 001-5 CPYRGHT 484 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY and radio has been remarkably vague and general, but several salient points titand out. One is that the long-postponed 9th Party Congress will ap- parently he held," at which time a new party constitution will apparently tic adopted and such leading "renegades" as Liu Shao-ch'i, Tcng lisiao-p'ing and P'eng Chen will be formally excluded from high office.5? A second is that party cadres are eventually to form the "core and backbone" of the Revolutionary Conunittecs---which means that the party's bureaucratic structure will have to be restored in fact if not in name." A third is that party officials in the military will probably play an extremely important part in the task of "party-building."62 A fourth is that while considerable numbers of Red Guards will obviously be allowed to enter the reconstituted party, they will not be brought in en masse but will have to undergo a thorough screening; former party cadres will also have to be screened, but it is apparently contemplated that reasonably large numbers will survive this process." Finally, the party bureaucracy will be streamlined.64 It should be emphasized that this scenario represents less a fully accepted program of action than it does the pious hopes of those elements in the na- tional leadership that have been pressing most strongly for a restoration of order and rationality and an end to unbridled "revolution." While some general consensus has probably been reached at the Center with regard to an eventual reconstitution of party life, a program that so obviously assumes the virtual end of the Cultural Revolution certainly cannot be popular with large numbers of "revolutionaries," nor with those elements at the Center who are most closely bound up with them. Transfer of real political power to party factions within the Revolutionary Committees must deeply upset many activists who quite naturally expect that, should it occur, the score will be settled wholesale by embittered "old cadres"; some efforts are ap- parently under way to reassure "revolutionaries" on this matter." But this question is merely the symptom of a more basic problem, namely, who will have control over the screening process when "party-building" really gets under way. If the Red Guards are to have a real voice in the process of rehabilitating party cadres, the process of rebuilding the party machine may be delayed indefinitely. While this is not likely to occur, the issue probably has not been settled definitely, almost certainly because the central leaders in Peking themselves cannot agree on the matter." Some "AFP, February 17, 1967. "Ibid. "IMP, October 21, 1967. "Since the first of the year, frequent references have been made in official media to the role of military party committees in "party-building." ? "Kweiyang radio, February 27, 1968. "Harbin radio, January 16, 1968. "Mao-Study" classes now being held all over China under PLA auspices are at least partly designed to reconcile Red Guards to reconciled cadres. ? "In the autumn of 1967, wall posters claimed Mao had stated that Revolutionary Committees were to be set up throughout the country by February. AFP, November 24, 1967. Approved For Release 1999/09/02: GI Api:sroved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79iMabg0500060001-5 CHARLES NEUHAUSER * 485 straws in the wind have begun to appear, however. In February Revolu- tionary Committees were acting up in Hupeh, Hopeh and Honan, apparent- ly without the usual, laborious, prior negotiations at the provincial level." Although the Henan and Hupeh committees are dominated by military figures, both include prominent party officials who were under very severe Red Guard attack at the height of the "revolutionary" movement. And in Hopeh the situation is even more interesting: The new committee is headed by Li lisuelpfeng, former head of the party's North China Regional Bureau and successor to P'eng Chen as First Secretary of the Peking Party Commit- tee. Both he and his deputy, Liu Tzu-hou, were disgraced in late 1966; Liu Tzu-hou was "dragged out" and paraded by Red Guards in early 1967. Their rehabilitation hardly seems a victory for "revolutionary activists." These recent rehabilitations are spectacular because they resurrect men who had not simply faded into political limbo, but who had been quite clearly disgraced. Yet while this development is almost certainty of con- siderable significance, it probably is not decisive. The level of violence and disruption is still high in nearly all areas of China, and the arguments over place and position as well as over the future of the Cultural Revolu- \ tion still go on." Furthermore, for all the recent smoke about' rehabilitation of cadres, there still appears to be very little fire: positive information in- dicating that much has yet really been accomplished in this direction is lacking. Also, there is as yet no sign that the party chain of command has in any way been restored; nor is there any indication that 'preliminary steps have been taken to prepare for the 9th Party Congress. However, articula- tion of a restored organizational structure for the Young Communist League appears to have advanced rapidly since February.5? Nevertheless, on the basis of what has in fact occurred in the past few months, some speculation about the future shape of events is probably in order. In the first place, if the party is to form the "core and backbone" of the Revolutionary Committees, a party structure not noticeably different from that which previously existed is bound eventually to emerge from the rubble. This process has not yet really begun, but the outcome is not really in doubt. The crucial issue is the staffing of the structure. Here, too, changes may not be as great as once seemed likely. Since in both February and September the fires of revolution were banked at least in part because it was generally recognized in Peking that the administrative costs of continued ferment were too high, the argument for experience and "No "preparatory group" had been previously established in Hopeh. Hupeh and Honan are less clear-cut eases. "The fall of Acting Chief of Staff Yang Ch'eng-wu in late March seems to be in some way related to problems within the Revolutionary Committees. His purge was followed by a general attack on "rightists" and "double-dealers" who had "wormed their way" Into the committees. This was accompanied by a denunciation of a tendency toward "reversal of verdicts"?te? indiscriminate rehabilitation of cadres. "Harbin radio, March 2, 1968. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CI Ap oved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT 4136 THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY administrative ability is likely to carry considerable weight as the party bureaucracy is restaffed. Many old faces are likely to reappear in high posts, although there may be some transfer of party personnel from jobs in the state bureaucracy to party work. At middle levels, the need for experience will probably also play an important role, but perhaps not quite ao many cadres will return to the jobs they previously held. It seems quite,possible that there :nay be room for some upward mobility at this level, end oecond, and third-raaing officials may inherit important posts. In any event this twents a teanonable11iy Imt it is no more than timt, At the basic levels, the situation is even more obscure. A considerable number of cadres in the rural areas probably have survived the Cultural Revolution relative- ly unscathed, but it is at this level that the greatest infusion of Red Guards is likely to occur. Perhaps a fairly high personnel turnover can be ex- pected in urban areas, but here again we enter the area of pure speculation. Those leading party figures who have been assigned major roles as vil- lains in the course of the Cultural Revolution almost certainly can be counted out of the picture permanently. Those who have been denounced by name in official publications (as opposed to Red Guard papers and wall posters) or in radio broadcasts are clearly beyond the pale. It is most likely that such thoroughly reviled figures as Liu Shao-ch'i, Teng Hsiao-p'ing (neither of whom have yet been denounced by name), P'eng Chen and T'ao Chu will not even be given roles as "teachers by negative examples," but will be excluded entirely from public life.?? If the recent events in Hopeh and Hupeh are any indication of what is to come, however, at least a few officials disgraced and humiliated by Red Guard attacks at the height of the Cultural Revolution will finally be rehabilitated?although they may be demoted and given lesser responsibilities. Far fewer of the Red Guard rank and file are likely to be admitted to party ranks than seemed likely several months ago." Many, but by no means all, of those Red Guard leaders who have been co-opted into the various Revolutionary Committees are likely to survive," but their relative standing vis-a-vis "old cadres" and, at least temporarily, military figures on the committees is by no means settled. And the same is true of those relatively few party cadres who threw in their lot with the Red Guards and thereby earned the title of true "leftists." The battles on these issues are quite clear- ly still going on. There have been enough twists and turns in the Cultural Revolution to make all predictions hazardous, but if the picture just outlined has much validity it is surely a picture of Thermidor. This is not to say that Mao from the start has been conducting a charade and that many of the party. "A wall poster claim, but likely to bo true. '1Wa1l posters claim that Hsueh Fu-chih made a statement along these lines in No- vember 1967. "Two "revolutionary" members of the Shansi Revolutionary Committee were ap- parently dropped from that body in February. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CI roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001 CPYRGHT CHARLES NEUHAUSER 487 peraonnel apparently disgraced in the paat two years were never in any real trouble at all. It seems quite likely that circumstances?primarily the sustained and unexpected resistance to the Chairman's initiatives?have pushed Mao onto paths he did not originally expect to travel, but the battles of the Cultural Revolution have been real battles, and the victims real victims. Mao won most of the early battles, but only by escalating the war, and the consequences of hie victories have boon eo grave, and the complica- tions they have engendered so extensive, that in the end they have not been victories at all. It is hard to believe that there are not very considerable strains within the central leadership in Peking at present. These strains may account in part for the slowness and hesitancy of the reconstruction process. One major aspect of this process, "party-building," is beset by disputes in- volving such questions as whether or not revolutionary enthusiasm or prag- matic administrative qualities ought to be a primary qualification for high party office, and whether or not non-party masses ought to endorse the qualifications of party cadres. But these were the questions at issue when the Cultural Revolution began. We have come full circle. Yet even if we assume that these questions will be settled with a certain degree of compromise and adjustment, according to the general terms out- lined above, there remain several major issues regarding the relationship of the party bureaucracy to the other elements of the Chinese Communist system. The most important of these involves the future relationship of the party to the state bureaucracy and to the military establishment. Neither problem is new, but both are likely to arise in acute form in the aftermath of the Cultural Revolution. Strains involving the interrelation- ship of the state and party bureaucracies are almost certain to arise in the Revolutionary Committees. These are administrative organs, supervising many of the functions and services previously performed by the provincial governorates; yet they are increasingly responsible for such ostensibly party-controlled functions as supervision of propaganda, and they have ap- parently taken under their wings such party-controlled organizations as the Young Communist League. Moreover, party fractions are to be the "core and backbone" of the committees. There is bound to be a confusion of functions here surpassing anything seen in the past.58 In the central minis- tries, however, the situation is different. These organs have continued to function in the past year, while the party apparatus has been out of busi- ness; party supervision and control for all practical purposes has ceased. Reassertion of that control is not likely to be easy; furthermore, Chou En- lai, who today appears to be a more powerful figure than ever within the inner policy-making group, is unlikely to be overawed by any successor to Teng Hs;ao-p'ing, as he may on occasion have been in the past. It is pos- sible, but by no means certain, that he may resist a full reassertion of party. gpmeenommommollmosni.e. "Cf. Franz Schumann, Ideology and Organization in Communist China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 190), PP. 810 if. Approved For. Release 1999/09/02 : CI ? 48a THE CULTURAL REVOLUTION AND THE PARTY control over areas within the purview of the State Council. Problems involving party-PLA relationships are obvious. The Cultural Revolution has certainly not disposed of the old professional-political of- ficer dichotomy, and in some respects the professional wing of the PLA has been strengthened. Former commissars whose ties were primarily to the party rather than the army have nearly all long since left the scene; most of the commissars now active appear to be largely the creatures of the several military region and district commanders." And those are the men who in most cases are still running China's provinces. Moreover, no officer known to be a member of the PLA's General Political Department has appeared in public in the past several months." Yet it is the party committees within the various military commands that will bear the major burden of "party-building," for this is the only party "system" in any sense operative; rather than having been destroyed outright, it has merely been atrophied." In this situation, professional military problems are likely to get a sympathetic hearing initially, but it is hard to believe that as the new party structure is articulated, politics will not attempt to reassert itself over the gun." Beyond these problems there is the even more fundamental question of party morale. The Great Leap Forward certainly had a deleterious?indeed, virtually traumatic?effect on large sections of the party; it seems likely that the Cultural Revolution will have an ultimate effect many times greater on party morale at all levels. Thus far cadres have shown a great, although perfectly natural, reluctance to "step forward" and resume their tasks. Even after the Cultural Revolution is concluded, not many are likely to perform with much enthusiasm or initiative. And animosities engendered in the course of the "revolution" are likely to linger for years. These animosities may prolong the "revolution" itself for some time to come, but the job of picking up the pieces once it is over is likely to be arduous in the extreme. The party organizational structure will probably be restored, but in this sense it is safe to say that the Chinese Communist Party will never be the same again. "Most of these men appear to have made a career in the PLA rather than in the party bureaucracy. When commanders and commissars appear together, pride of place is given to the commander. "Hsiao Hua, head of the GPD, fell in late August 1967. This entire development has interesting implications with regard to Lin Piao's relationship to the PLA. "Frequent references to military party committees began to appear in official media early this year. There has still been no mention of other party organs. Of course the army chain of command, to which the military party committees are related, has re- rnained intact throughout the Cultural Revolution. "This may have been a factor in the fall of Yang Ch'eng-wu. CHARLES NEUHAUSER is a research analyst for the Central Intelligence Agency, Washington,D.C. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 . c,IA-RIDP79t CURRENT HISTORY s4p.Raweil9gepr Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 The recent upheavals of "the cultural revolution" have made it harder than ever to get reliable statistics on China. This economist reviews the available facts and concludes that "Beneath all the shouting and pushing, there is the unresolved problem of feeding and clothing the millions. . . . The cultural revolu- tion has in the last two years moved to the issues of the people's livelihood.. ? Communist Ohina: The Economy and the Revolution BY JAN S. PRYBYLA ' Professor of Economics, Pennsylvania State University OMMUNIST CHINA has published only one statistical manual: a slim, ? retrospective volume. entitled Ten Great Years, covering the years 1949-1958.' The figures for 1949-1952 are not very re- liable because of the modest state of statistical science in the country at that time. The, data for 1953-1957 (the First Five-Year Plan period) are probably the best of the lot, but even here numerous technical difficulties arise. Figures for 1958 (the first year of the "great . leap forward," 1958-1960) were so exagger- ated and fanciful that even the Chinese later., declared them to be totally misleading. No ' comprehensive statistics have been published since 1959. Since 1966, the information blackout has been complete. One could go ' so far as to say that the amount of quantified, information emanating from Peking in the. last three years would fit comfortably on a sizable postage stamp. . For a while (1961-1965) the Mainland prcss carried much interesting discussion about the economy. Here and there one could pick up a suggestive datum, a hint on what was going on in the fields of agriculture, industry and trade. After 1965, this type of reportage was replaced by inspirational articles extolling the thoughts of Chairman Mao Tse-tung. The language of these es- says has become frozen by Maoist ritual. 'For, a time, a study of the provincial press yielded; some valuable information on leadership at- , titudes, since it was one of the principal media through which instructions from the ` center were relayed to local authorities'. In 1967, the export of provincial newspapers .witts banned. The Communist party's theo- ' Approved For Release 1999/09/02 ? retical organ 'Hung Chi (Red Flag) ceased publication on November 23, 1967. In 1967 and early 1968, Red Guard wall posters could. 1.be resorted to in order to gain some idea as' to the progress of events, but this source more :often than not was contradictory and sensa-1 '.sationalist. In any event, curbs were put on: ? ? foreign correspondents' jotting'. down items, from this .wall literature. ?. Businessmen and tourists supplied some news but, here again, the information was of liMited value. Travel routes were at ? all I times strictly controlled, exception being: -made for Communist sympathizers and others. :whose? conclusions about China had been ar- rived at beforehand. ? Following, the out- :break of the "cultural revolution," the num- her of foreign visitors ? in China declined sharply. . . ? :? There is; therefore, a serious' problem here. Although Western economists have been . trained by Stalin's .secrecy complex to deal, 'With this sort of censorship, the thoroughness of the informational .blackout is unparalleled. in the history of any modern nation. The figures used in the present article arc Western .estimates?informed guesses?based on tid- bits of news issuing from the Mainland. 'SOME GENERAL PRINCIPLES A number of general principles about the ?Chinese economy should be kept in mind. The designation, "planned economy," does ,not apply to China.. Like the rest of Chinese society, .the economy in the past 19 years has been run by a series of short-term expedients, . typically assuming the . form of mass cam- paigns. The only period which fits the des-' ignation of Planning is 1953-1957. Commu. CIA-R DP79-01194A000500060001 -5 CPYRGHT ApOr6liteds FtWiRtiltrifsWif 19 gf04)461 ? in various ways, among which po4 icy disagree- ments within the top leadership should cer- tainly be included. The major stages of shift-1 ing policy were the rehabilitation period 1,(1949-1952), the First Five-Year Plan ; (1953-1957), the liberal interlude (late ' ; 1956-1957), the great leap forward (1958- 1960), the period of retrenchment and re- building (1961-1965), and the great pro- letarian cultural revolution (1966 to the 'present). Each stage contained a number of 'minor substages, some of them mutually con- tradictory.'Each stage also revealed policy' :shifts horn right to left and back again de- :pending on whether emphasis was placed on \ :economic calculation or ideological euphoria.' The cultural revolution, for example, shows ' at least seven such swings in the revolutionary , pendulum. To some extent, these move- ments are consciously directed by the leaders on the theory of alternating tension and re- laxation. Increasingly, however, the swings appear to be spontaneous and uncontrollable. ? Like other underdeveloped economics, the Chinese economy is not fully integrated. There is a considerable clement of localism and local self-sufficiency in the mechanism. To sonic extent this is a legacy of the past which the Communists have tried to eradi- cate. On the other hand, not a few measures taken by the Communists since 1958 have tended to encourage local economic auton- omy. The interesting point about this is that ? it enables the economy to withstand upheav- als at the center, to keep on functioning lo- cally in spite of confusion at the top.i The Chinese economy is "aidless." It has never received any grants from abroad and the last long-term (Soviet) loan was received in 1954. China's external economic contacts are based on cash (mostly hard cash) pay- ments and short-term credits for the purchase abroad of specified items. Two-thirds of the country's trade is presently carried on with "capitalist" powers. At least since 1961, the Chinese economy has not been "Marxist-Leninist" in the Stal- inist sense. In the *U.S.S.R. and Eastern Eu- rope the Stalinist economic priorities were? and to some extent still are?heavy industry, light industry, agriculture. China's official priorities after 1960 have been: agriculture, light industry, heavy industry. This depar- ture from the orthodox pattern was largely dictated by the urgent need to feed and clothe a rapidly increasing population.' aiA_TREypintiogifsaiku8166.66615 e,conomy one must constantly ear in min the cultural gap between Western and Chi- nese conceptions of life. It is difficult enough' to understand the workings of totalitarian , systems when one has not been exposed to them directly and for corisiderable periods. It is even more difficult to graspthe elusive qualities of a totalitarian system imposed on ,a society whose values are very different from , ours, and whose language loses more than the usual share of meaning in translation. There is no civil or criminal code in China today, nor are there any codes in other areas of law.: The whole body of Chinese Communist law' takes up just 600 pages of rather large print,' 3and most of the "laws" are, in fact, admin- istrative decrees, many of them applying ret- rospectively. The General Code of Laws of the Ch'ing Dynasty made it a criminal of- fense to "do what you ought not to do." The Chinese, moreover, have a capacity for !separating the public from the private face, so that noisy expressions of obeisance on the part of private individuals must at all times ' be viewed not only in the context of a sys- tem of fear but in the light of a special ethic which existed long before Mao and Marx. AGRICULTURE ' At the end of December, 1966, the cultural revolution was extended to economic life. Red Guards and Maoist workers' formations ("revolutionary rebels") were ordered to take over offices, factories and farms. At this juncture, the upheaval in the "superstruc- ture" (politics and cultural life) invaded the "base" (the economy) . Since that time, there have been several shifts to the left and right, but the important point is that the revolutionary turmoil is now common to both political and economic life and directly af- fects the growing of grain and the making of steel.' 1 Scc Jan S. Prybyla, Why Lommunist s Economy Ilas Not Collapsed After Two Years of ' Cultural Revolution," in J. S. Prybyla (cd.), Communism at the Crossroads (University Park, ? Pa.: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1968). 2 Albert P. Blaustein, Fundamental Legal DOM ? meat: of Communist China (South Hackensack,', ? N.J.: Fred B. Rothman & Co., 1962), and F. Ka- linychev, "Democrdcy and Legality," lavestia, February 12, 1967, p. 4. , Jan S. Pryby!a, "The Economic Cost," Prob.- terns of Communism, March-April pa, pp. 1,43. Appr uvwd vr Rulvabw -1999/09/02 . qIA-RDP79-011 ?4A000500060001-5 ECPYI4GHT CPYRGHT A p p rovOeff gri 131%Igag.estip9j09102r:Z-1A4RIDP7s9-049:4A060500tredtel trancous matter is discarded, China's funda.? ; mental problem is seen to be what it has always been: how to feed and clothe a grow,' I lug population. The economic answer to 1 this problem lies in modernization, that is, [ the breaking out of the limits imposed on productivity by traditional, methods of pro- duction, and the application of modern sci- ence and technoloxy to the economic process. 1There are various ways in which this can be ? done. However, because the margin between food and mouths to feed is extremely narrow, I 1,the range of options is for all practical pur- (poses restricted to one: the development of !agriculture. During the relatively pragmatic period, 1961-1965, the Chinese Communists recognized this constraint and applied them- selves to promoting agriculture and indus- tries directly serving agriculture, including I ight industries supplying the peasants with consumer goods. The importance of this sector is, of course, further enhanced by the , fact that .about 80 per cent of the Chinese ,people derive their living directly from the soil. Help from abroad must for the time !being be ruled out. There are two hard figures to go on. The first is the 1953 population figure of 583 mil.? lion, the second? is the grain output figure for ,1957 which reads 185 million metric tons. ,Both figures seem reasonable and they have been repeatedly endorsed by official China. The rate of natural population increase since? 1953 is subject to dispute. Estimates range from 1.4 to 2.5 per cent per annum.' If the lower rate is taken, China's population in 1957 would be 615 million. The 2.5 per cent rate is probably too high. Taking a more reasonable rate of, say, 2 per cent per" annum, the 1957 population would be 631 'million. Assuming a 1957 population of 615 'million and a domestic grain output of 185 I in 1957 works out at 0.3 tons. If the 2 per munist China Produce?" The China Quarterly, , UTC (707 million) and the higher grain avail- ability figure 4205- million tons), the per capita grain availability in 1967 works out , 0.29 tons. If the higher population figure takee (770 million) together with the,; grain figure (205 million tons), the! is a per capita grain availability of 0.27. All this may sound involved, but the con- t hision is simple; per capita grain availability I a China MIS prnetivally the titanel WV ns kt 1957, and this on the most favorable as- tumptions. There appears to have been no.. visible improvement., It should be noted, of ourse, that the' fact that the Chinese ClOra... mmists have managed to keep up with popu. 4ttion growth is in itself tin achievement not ' Aimed by ell underdeveloped countries. On : .,the other hand, the result should be qualitied :least in three ways. ? The 1967 harvest was exceptionally good; , ? ,Irt 'fact the cultural revolution has so far un- :rolled in good weather, unlike the great leap ? ,trorwartl. There are indications that in the iast two .years water conservancy projects have been neglected and that there has been. an increase in illegal chopping down of trees .by peasants.. One is inclined to assume 'that, !:the Chinese have not yet won their age.longl. ! battle against the elements, and that any seri..., ons adverse. change in weather is likely to affect agricultural output much the same; way is it did in the past onitu distribution in 1957 was probably, ?better .than in 1967. One of the known cf i'feets of the cultural revolution has been .the ..disrttption of rail transport. It is possible,' ,...therefore ,:that local shortages of grain have developed and. that this may, 'turn, have :repercussions on labor productivity and the Iwodurtion of livestock. ? There have been reports of widespread theft flout storage bins and of distribtt- ? million tons, the per capita grain availability 4 R. M. Field, "How Much Grain Does Corn L. D Tretiak, cent rate is assumed, the per capita grain 'Population Picture," Far Eastern Economic Re- ary-March, 1968, pp. 105-107; . ailability in 1957 would be 0.29 tons. ? view, April 4, 1968, p. 14. Now, if we assume that the average rate of5 The 1957 figure for population is based on t he 1953 census The 1957 figure for grain output population increase from 1953 to 1967 was Is from Ten Gr.cat Years, ( 1.4 per cent per year, China's population in ; guages Press, 1960), p. 119. The 1967 grain graal- ? 1967 would be 707 million (and 770 million, , fire:: ;.'eli estimatesn7P0a .t tii(;'1:aDoafwaca!,tsi ilo'n?). F. :if the 2'per cent per annum rate is assumed).- Revolution," in An .-Economic Profile of IlLinlamnid. filtraco(nWgraesshsinfg, jvoolliti Eco;r4,ch Committee, CPYRGHT Western estimates show that grain output in cRenzwist: .1967 was 190-200 millidn metric tons.5 To ? Intelligence Congress, Quarterlyp'EcOnmeic , .. . a`t Tit% ffoVitT Korea, Hone Kong, April, 1968, p. this must be added 5 million metric tons of see the article by Thomas Dow, Jr., in ti issue. fnurptlrloet?lclemis: .1mpulted u,iairt, giving either 195 or 9fli cussion of M:i'nnias:1:1Pbc1:in'aPs. p93oPuYaotfo Approved For Release 1999/09/C)2 : CIA 3 ? -RDF'79-01.194A000500060001-5 Ap$Pc:YAgilqr Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500061?)CI1R-HT tin(.(1' grain to peas.mts by oflieials opprised :to the M.toist line. It is also ilossible that the quality of storage has stiffered and that, there- fore, loss of g-rain: in storage has been higher than in 1957. One could validly object that grain avail- ability is only one measure of food supply, and that titPre Other commodities which should be taken int() account. The United Nations Pond and Agrictiltural Organization , and other agencies have tried to quantify the problem in fare of nflicial Chinese silence, but ? the results are at best tentative. It is pos. kible to say, for example, that rice output, r'which was 86.8 million metric tons in 1957, . + J./reached about 88 million tons in 1966, that , ...seybeatts, which were at 10 million tons in 11957, reached perhaps 11 million tons in 1966, i.and that is a31.4 : It is possible that the crease in the output of grain crops and .other.. i',.e.rops was due in part to increased per acre yields--which would be reasonable in view of.' -the increased application of chemical ford- ?IJlizers?but the evidence at this stage is ratheC. `.ttaicertitin. t- The .overall contittsitm which emerges is a per capita .grain availability of .0.3 ,,.tnetric tons or thereabouts represents a satis- factory present level, but that it will be in- . treasingly difficult to maintain this level in the future unless (a) a determined effort is .-made to raise per acre yieltls, extend the cul- tivated area and 'keep floods and droughts in ;:check, and. (b) the natural population in.: :crease is brought under control. This de-. :t?Inands some hard thinking unhindered by dialectical mysticism. There seems to be, . - 'frankly, very little room left for the kind .of ? = ideological calisthenics Which the Chinese' ' :have enjoyed for the last three years. A final note about clothing, .which means ; ;iprimarily cotton. The Chinese these days. 'are not given to conspicuous consumption in the matter' of 'apparel. The millions are drably but cleanly dressed. Cotton output appears at present to be inadequate to cover :anything but the most modest requirements of domestic consumers and state exports. ; Total cotton production in 1957 Was 1.64 ml!- llon , metric tons. .By 1966, it had probably' :declined to 1,3 million tons.' If, as the Chi- nese claim, cotton output in 1967 was better than in the ,previous year (let ,us assume a . 20 per cent improvement), it may now ' be., roughly back.wherC it was in 1957.' And sriin this area too, there is littic. room left for ideo;ogical revivalism., There is, 'rather an urgent need for economic rational- by, as Mao's Communist opponents have re- peatedly said. !FOREIGN TRADE I: China's foreign commerce is the one sector ! about which the outside world has relatively reliable information, simply,because it is pos- ' sible to get at trade figures issued by China's partners. The country's total imports and exports are in the $344 billion range, which is not very much by world standards, but is crucial for China. Again, thorn of interest- ing but somewhat irrelevant incidentals, for- ':.eign trade is important for the Chinese be- ' cause it enables them to get chemical /era- lizers and chemical plants and some Indus- trial equipment which they lack, as well as svIteat to fill the gap between inadequate and mum nutritional standards. The chemi- cals, plants and wheat come overwhelmingly :from the Western industrial countries and ...japan. Australia, Canada, Argentina and France are the major wheat suppliers. A tons of imported wheat costs the Chi-. ese $50460 million in hard currencies, so' .:..that the annual expenditure on this item runs. ?- these days into some $2504300 million. ? Since the wheat deals are settled in cash tor on a short-term credit basis, the Chinese . 'have to be very careful about their foreign -.exchange reserves and about the way their: 'trade balance shapes Up each year. What :China's foreign exchange (i.e., hard currency , reserve) position is at present, is anybody's guess, but there are clues. ? The Chinese have at all times scrupulously :.settled their foreign debts, even in the face' of unfraternal provocation by the Soviets. - They have paid promptly. and in full, thus: .esiablishing for tIzemselves a good name, if .not a credit rating, in the world. Mainland China today has DO outstanding debts, except the usual short-term ones, which are settled hi the normal way. To pay for essential imports, The Chinese have made a determined effort to promote, ! exports of agricultural commodities (e.g.,. rice) and light industry products (e.g., cotton fabrics, cement, simple consumer goods).? ? China's foreign trade balance (commodity . account) has usually been in slight surplus. ??????????*.-11.1. Jones, op: cit., p. 94 and Economist Intel- Unco op. cit., Annual Supplemtnt 1968, 5.' Cf., China Netes Analysis, (Hong Kong), ' No. 691, January 12, 1968, pp. 1-7, . . Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5- A CPYRGHT CPYRGHT SO OT-11 I" I In this way, a small inflow of foreign cur- rencies has been assured over the years. An important source of foreign exchange , has been China's trade with Hong Kong. ! The Chinese supply most of the goods and services (including water) which the Hong ; I Kong population needs daily and buy very little from the colony. The surplus is settled by Hong Kong in pounds sterling. Invisible payments (I.e., the services ac.%1 ,count), such as freight and insurance and the ; servicing of loans, are settled by hard cur- rency remittances from overseas Chinese. It I is estimated that overseas Chinese remit about !,$150. million to Mainland China every year, although the amount has no doubt fluctuated and has probably dropped to half that sum in each of the last three years. In some years, recourse has been made by the Chinese to bullion sales, especially of., silver. From 1959 to 1962, China sold in London' about $50 million worth of bullion,: and there have been no sales since. In 1965 ' , . and 1966, the Chinese bought some gold in - !,London, possibly as a hedge against the ex- pected devaluation of the British pound, in? ,' .which China's foreign exchange reserves are: Mainly held. China did not join in the rush ' on gold at the end of 1967 and in early 1968.? 1. Since the early 1950's, but especially after the break with the Soviet Union, the Chinese,' have extended credits to various non-Com- munist developing countries. Most of these; loans have been tied to the delivery of Chi- nese-made goods, although there have been few instances of emergency foreign ex- change loans. As a rule, the loans are inter- est-free and directed to specific projects in the beneficiary countries. ; One of the disturbing side effects of the 'cultural revolution has been a decline in Chi- nese exports and a concurrent rise in imports, resulting in a trade deficit of some $50 mil- lion in 1966 and about $200 million in 1967. ;The drop in exports is probably traceable in ' the first place to disruption in Chinese ports and confusion on the railroads, and also to ; production problems in industry. Less sig- ' !nificantly, the cultural goings-on have' strained strained China's relations with a number of trading partners, including Hong Kong. Because of the continuing need to import ; wheat (in 1968 wheat impOrts are likely to exceed 6 million tons), there is here again no rocnr: for ideological exuberance. Most West Asss sig.'s, , European countries are eager to tra c WI 1 Mainland China. Whether their eagerness will be rewarded depends to a considerable extent on China's ability to put her own house in order quickly. Even Mao Tse-. Tung, in his brief spells of economic ration- ality, has come around to this view, A Red Guard poster in Canton quoted him as saying that this nationwide disorder, including military clip order, is to occur for the very last time. 'After that, the nation will return to peaceful order, ' and the world will once more be in the hands, of revolutionary rebels: The Central Govern- ' ment this time deliberately allows the existence of this nationwide disorder.? There is a non sequitur in this (Le., the revo- lutionary rebels are the agents of disorder), but it is at least more sober than the state- ment made by Wu Fa-hsien, Commander of. .the 'Air, Force, in August, 1967: "in imple- menting Chairman Mao's directives we must ,completely disregard? whether we understand them or not."'? INDUSTRY Industry, as well as agriculture, has been plagued throughout 1967 and the better part. of 1968 by problems of labor discipline. The - authority of professional managers and local government officials in charge of plants, of-, ; flees and farms has been undermined, and in numerous instances the professionals have ' , been replaced by- inexperienced mixed com- mittees of workers, rehabilitated cadres and the military. In addition, the workers have ,been torn by factional disputes, some siding with the Maoist revolutionary rebels, others ? with the anti-Maoist Officials. By the latter part of 1967, the original issues had become blurred; personal vendettas appear to have I been at least .as important and frequent as ideological positions in causing clashes in factories and offices. The summer months of 1967 were especially violent, and bloody; armed clashes were reported daily from most J. S. Prvbyla, "Communist China's Foreign Exchange," .'iteen's Quarterly, Winter, 1965, PP. 51 9-527 ; Economist Intelligence Unit, op. cit., (Annual Supplement, 1968), p. 11; China Trade Report, monthly issues. :.0 Quoted in Union Research Service (Hong -Kong), January 19, 1968, p. 80 from Red Guards . (October 23, 1967) a newspaper edited by the Red Guard Combat Unit of the 4th Field Army, 'Red Guard Canton General Headquarters. 10 Quoted in L. D. Tretiak, "Less Fighting Talk," Far Eastern Economic Review, January 11, ? ,1968, p. 46. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : GIA-RDP79-0 1 1 94A000500060001 -5 CPYRGHT in d u s triklyppft veldt's the RiaqbAceivirlys9/ now on this side, now on that.11--Nstances of absenteeism and resort to go-slow tactics , have often been mentioned in press, radio land wall poster reports. ? ; It seems fairly clear that industrial pro- . duction was little affected by the early ideo-1 'logical and power struggle phases of the cul-! fural revolution in 1966: One gets the im- I iression that output of most major industries ?in that year was somewhat better than in ' 1965, although this is exactly what it says: an impression. The Chinese have published 's no industry-wide production figures, and*, ,Western estimates are based on scattered in- formation from various plants and localities ' and on the general tenor of the reports. It is possible that in 1966 China produced about 10 million tons of crude oil (1.5 million in , 1957, and about 8 million tons in 1965), per-' i ? haps 40 million tons of iron ore (16 million , , tons in 1957), perhaps as much as 12 14tons of steel (up a million tons. from 1965), and about 250 million tons of coal and lignitel (130 million tons in 1957, and perhaps 210 million tons in 1965).12 The figures, to re- peat, are informed guesses and the most one can say is that in 1966 there was no discern- , ible evidence of an industrial crisis, and , probably some improvement. The picture changed radically in 1967, , after the cultural revolution was carried into the economy. A new note of urgency and ,worry was struck in Mainland reports, side, by side with the usual references to "great ,upsurge" and "unprecedented achievements.", 'A socialist recession appears to have devel- oped rapidly, gathering momentum as the troubled months dragged on. The situation' ' seems to have deteriorated further in 1968, as :the longer-term effects of the cultural up- heaval began to be felt, chief among them ; the lack of competent leadership at the plant, level, and worker restlessness. ? The signs pointing to a deteriorating situa-, 'tion in industry may be summed up as fol.,. , lows: ; 1. In the winter of 1967-1968 a serious coal shortage developed partly because of fights, skirmishes, riots and strikes in coal mines. At the Lungmen colliery in Loyang,' for example, "civil war" had raged for sit Months prior to February, 1968. Similar trouble had apparently hit the Fushun col- lieries in Liaoning Province, a major source of coal for the key Anshan steel works. Fact 0012'' 11sria.4RdeaRNWEnzizaes1 in the coa lames ' row Frfiegfille! I VI9A00106D110 6 ' almost wholly dependent on coal fpr the run- ning of her industry and railroa4; shortages. in this sector were bound to h4e adverse , repercussions throughout the industrial econ- 2. There have been practically spo reports in 1967 and the first half of 1968 from some :4 China's most important industVal areas of Szechwan and Kansu. Even during the cul- tural revolution, when information of any kind was scarce, good performance would have been praised to the skies as a manifesto-, tion of the inspirational power of Mao Tse- tung's thought. A similar, information black-.) out was imposed on the once much vaunted.. Taching Oil fields. For about two years pre-. arious to 1967, Taching and the "Taching spirit were the themes of a mass propaganda ,1 campaign illustrating the economic benefits to be derived from Mao study. It is an in,' teresting comment on the sort of data one ! gets out of China these days that, in spite, ;of millions of words written on the subject of Taching, the field's exact location is not, known to this day. , 3. Anarchism, factionalism, groupism, sec.; tarianism, "mountain-topism," and all the .? other sins attributed to those who oppose the'. cultural revolution, have been mentioned in connection with the Anshan steel works and in the steel city of Wuhan. A month after the installation of a Municipal Revolutionary.' Committee in Wuhan (March, 1968) "acute: class struggle" was still being talked about on' , the radio and in the press. 4. Urgent calls to "make revolution thrift- fly" were being broadcast in the spring and: summer of 1968. These appeals were ad- dressed primarily to factories and farms. 5. Railroad transportation has been seri- ously disrupted in 1967 by strikes, sabotage ; and pitched battles between warring factions of railroad workers and between workers and ,students. Particularly disturbing for the Chi,' nese has been the paralysis which gripped tho ir,rrinrit railway junction of Chem:- 11 Sec for example, reports from the Chinese press in 'Union Research Service, January 16, 1968, p.57 11. 12 Ten Great Years ? also Arthur G. Aslibrook, "Main Lines of Chinese Communist Economic Policy," in An Economic Profile of Mainland )China, Vol. I, p. 25; IL M. Field, "Chinese Coin. Imunist Industrial Production," in op. cit., Apperv; dix C, Table 9. 13 China News Analysis, No. 697, January 23, 1960, pp. 1-7; ' ' CM(t1PrrRGHT Approved For Release 1999109/0? : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 6' `16' rftitig IDbecn reported, in vel e anguage. 6. Most analysts seem to? agree that the' crucial chemical industry has been affected by disruption in supplies and by labor disci- pline problems. Almost complete silence has surrounded the cement and construction in. dustrics for months. It is reasonable to assume that one of the major issues In dispute between the Maoists and their opponents?between romantic, guerrilla Communists and the party and gov- ernment bureaucrats, technicians, and man- : agers in charge of the day-to-day conduct of ' economic affairs?has been and remains to-, this day the question of economic incentives..., Beneath all the shouting and pushing, there.: , is the unresolved problem of feeding and clothing the millions. The Maoist utopians believe that increases: in production and productivity are a func-i tion of the political will, that asceticism and ' unshakable political faith can literally move' ;mountains, that apparently insuperable prob- lems can be solved if only the spirit is willing.1 ' Material incentives, the normal human de- sire for a better life now, are seen by these{ people as dangerous manifestations of petty, i bourgeois flabbiness. The Communist pragmatists deny this and' see in it an invitation to disaster. The di- ;viding line between the two groups is per., haps not clear, but it is there.. From a vio.; lent struggle at the top of the Communist: pyramid, the cultural revolution has in the: oljr: cui'lktrnIPIVAft?159666* b b t25 CPYRGHT peop e s hve oo , as increasmg y e. ? IP 1 cornea question of physical survival. The gap between minimum material needs and availabilities is still being met partly by mi- ported grain, but more and more by a leftist philosophy of poverty which finds in destitu- tion and self-denial the supreme human vir- tue. ? The trouble is that avail the Slightest maul. festation of empiricism, in the state of China's present madness, is branded las Soviet-type revisionism. The time to reverse gear is now : no longer an academic question; it is an abso- lute necessity if so-called socialism in China . Is to survive, and beyond that, if China is not to plunge once again into bitter interne.';: eine warfare. CHINA REPORTING SERVICE ? 18 September 1968 PYRGFIT "Bump Doubted 1 PEKING'S CLAIMS of "bum- I per" harvests of early rice have ' been received with considerable doubt by some qualified agri- cultural observers. They point out that the term "bumper" does not rank very high on the scale of past Chinese harvest claims and may be an attempt to cover up a 'mediocre, if not poor, crop. Conspicously absent, so far, has been any comparison with previous years. And unlike last y ar's early r harv t claims, 14 Colina MacDougall, "Nothing to Boast About," Far Eastern Economic Review, April 25, 1968, pp. 221-223. jan S. Prybyla is coauthor of World Ten.: Istons: Conflict and Accommodation (New 'York: Appleton-Century-Crofts) and co- feditor of From Underdevelopment to Al. , finance: Western, Soviet and Chinese Views , ! (New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts) !Economic Systems: Market, Contmand and., His forthcoming books include Comparative. Changing Custom (New Yeti:: Appleton.' Century-Crofts) , and The Political Economy k) , , Communist China (Scranton, Pa.: Inter- national Textbook Company). CPYRGHT r Crop Clams 1 1 ? no mention has been made of expanded acreage or increased unit yield. Additionally, pro- vincial reports on the early rice vest have been similarly ue and stressed successes of ous communes and brigades her than province-wide in- ases. hese observers believe that a year's actual production of y rice, because of severe ather and other problems, is newhat below the 1967 crop. ice is the staple food for st of the Chinese people. rly rice harvests in South and ntral China and the central- th coastal regions ? where ar 0 usually account for about 15 percent, or 25 to 30 million metric tons of China's total an- nual grain production. Floods, Frost, Drought New China News Agency (NCNA) claimed that "bumper" rice crops had been collected in Kwangtung, Kiangsi, Chekiang, ?Hunan, Hupch, Anhwei and Kiangsu provinces and in Shang- hai municipality. These main early rice growing areas to- gether account for about 80 percent of early rice production. Although NCNA &tinted the "bumper" early rice crops fol- lowed good harvests throughout it /tidal uni ro, Appro vest!or vws Gutayaisimmoggit ed seed germination in some areas in Kiangsi, Hunan, Hunch, 5:.techwan and Anhwei pro- mnces." NCNA added that "part of the early rice in Kwang- tung, Fukien, Kiangsi and Hunan provinces suffered as a result of Nods" (see chart). Although NCNA glossed over the severe weather problems, Kwangtung, the most important early rice ?province, suffered drought and frost at the time of spring transplanting plus tor- rential rains, serious flooding and a lack of sunshine during normal grain filling and matur- ing stages. Worst In Memory Earlier, official provincial radio broadcasts had reported that the summer floods in some provinces this year were the worst in living memory. In Kwangtung province alone, for instance, more than 100,000 : tptirppirweght?ztAcpoesIckg618914T4 tze o bat e on( s. , Drought conditions were also reported by the official press from Inner Mongolia, Heilung- kiang, Shantung and Honan pro- vinces, mainly in the northern part of China (see chart). Along with the absence of harvest comparisons with pre- vious years, there was also a conspicuous silence on expanded acreage or increased unit yield, Indicating that there was little, if any, acreage increase over 1067. Although NCNA also reiter- ated the claim of "bumper" harvest g of winter crops, ob- servers 'believed they were no I better than the mediocre 1967 harvests. In 1967, China's total early and late rice production was estimated at 86,400,000 metric tons. Taken together, the latest harvests of winter crops and early rice seem to have definitely fallen below those of last year. SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST 18 September 1968 . . . SEVERE rains, floods, frost and drought have hurt crops in mainland China. Farm Problems Pla ONE OF THE most serious and persistent economic prob- lems for China's leaders is how to increase the populous nation's agricultural productivity. The acuteness of the problem becomes evident when it is rea- lized that agriculture in China accounts for almost 50 percent of the national income, employs about 80 percent of the labor , force and provides a major pro- , portion of the country's exports. Additionally, the size of the ilyearly harvest vitally affects ! consumption, industrial produc- tion, capital investment, rev- enue, foreign and retail trade and other economic variables. An estimated 11 percent of , China's land area is now cul- tivated, and about 40 per- cent of it is probably double- cropped. The total sown area is roughly equal to that in the , United States. However, almost all tilled land is located in the eastern half of the country, where there are sizable areas with 50 percent or more of the land under cultivation. These areas include nearly all of the North China Plain and the valley of the lower Yangtze below'Wuhu as well as parts of the Manchurian Plain and the Szechwan Basin. The amount , of land in cultivation in the rest of eastern China _varies_ widely. Approved For Relea : But it generally averages below 1 30 percent, and it typically oc- curs in sinuous and relatively narrow bands along the river valleys and on the immediately 1 adjacent slopes. i New Lands Opened 1 The cultivated area of China has fluctuated within relatively narrow limits during the past 15 years. Although new land has been brought into cultivation it apparently has not been suf- ficient to offset the losses caused by greatly expanded urban and industrial areas, as well as the construction of a large number of reservoirs, and a number of physical factors such as saliniza- tion and erosion. Most of the new land has been opened in Northeast China and in Sinkiang by state farm 1 and military resettlement pro- jects. Although a potential for opening new land for cultivation , remains, most land that is not ' already in use is in marginal agricultural area. Aridity, al- titude, short growing season, and other physical factors discour- age farming there. A reluctance of the Chinese Communists to invest in costly, large-scale land reclamation ,projecis ails! has limited the ex- se 1999/09/02 ::CIA-RDP7 .? we Chin 41 pansion of land under cultiva- tion. Most plans for significant Increases in agricultural output, therefore, have been geared to Improving yields. :1 Basic Problems The further expansion of irrigation and multiple cropping may increase output. However, a substantial improvement in agricultural productivity ap- pears to depend more on the greater use of chemical fer- tilizers and the use of improved seed. Basic to all plans for increas- ed agricultural production is the need for better land manage- ment and coordination of the land and water conservancy programs. Rice Dominates South The most significant division in China is that which separates the rice-growing southern pro- vinces from the northern pro- vinces that specialize in wheat and small grains. Within these two broad groups a large variety of other crops is grown. Rice is dominant almost every- where in South China, where about 35 to 80 percent of the cultivated land is irrigated. In tio151 Itatit56rdtro 1--5 Approved For MsItelfterift9 .1i4J1113 011:11 rillikeRDPf7erattS4A0010500060001-5 (from Chinese Communist press and radio as indicated) "In medical and health work, put the stress on rural areas" Mao Tse-tung, quoted by NCNA, January 15, 1969. During the Cultural Revolution, in an attempt to correct the imbalance between town and country in the field of medical care, the Chinese authori- ties launched a drive to move doctors and nurses from urban to rural areas. As a consequence, urban hospitnls were left short-staffed and standards de- clined. In addition, the number of so-called "barefoot doctors" increased, but many of these poorly trained doctors do not know their limitations and have consequently endangered their patients lives. The cooperative medical care system intended to improve rural medical facilities is already suffering from shortages of drugs and a mediocre serv- ice. The regime has made a sustained attempt to discredit the "bourgeois"' attitudes of city doctors and to reform their outlook and doctors have been subjected to political indoctrination and even physical harassment. Various disruptions during the Cultural Revolution have also caused short- ages of drugs and a decline in standards of public health. In an attempt to overcome difficulties caused by lack of facilities in rural areas and the desire of many doctors to return to the cities, the authorities, with some assistance from Army doctors, have emphasized the use of Mao's thought as a medical aid. The opening shot in the latest campaign to send medical personnel away from the urban areas and into the countryside came before the beginning of the Cultural Revolution in an instruction from Mao Tse-tung in June 1965 which said: "Urban hospitals should retain some doctors who have graduated for one or two years and who are not very ex- perienced. All the others should go to the countryside." By March 1968 this already sweeping directive had been extended by the Central Committee, with the instruction that all 1966-67 graduates from med- ical schools were to go to the countryside. This provoked a strong reaction from the young graduates concerned, many of whom resisted it on the basis of Mao's June 1965 directive - only to be?told that Mao's ideas were "lively, Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 flexible and changeable, and should not be interpreted too narrowly." Available evidence suggests that these directives have been rigorously applied and Chinese urban hospitals have lost virtually all their trained doctors and that the nursing staff and trainee doctors are doing what they can to cope with this unprecedented situation. Certainly there is abundant evidence of a massive influx of medical personnel into the rural areas. The New China News Agency (NCNA) on December 7, 1968 reported that in Heilungkiang over 3,600 medical personnel had recently settled in rural areas and that over the past two years over 8,400 had done the same. Kweiyang Radio on December 8 said that thousands of public health workers had gone to settle in the rural areas of Kweiyange NCNA on December 12 stated that in Kiangsi 11,000 medical workers had already settled in rural and that 10,000 more would soon be going. Canton Radio on January 4, 1969 reported that so far 5,000 medical workers in Kwangtung had gone to rural areas and that "in some cases whole units have been moved to the countryside." Travelers -from China reported in January 1969 that because so many trained nurses had been sent to rural areas, patients in Canton's hospitals were required to enlist the help of relatives to look after them. In one Canton hospital, it was reported in December that, about one third of the staff had been sent to the countryside and therefore treatment was only available to outpatients from 7:30 until 12:00. In October travelers reported that 50 per cent of the staff at the Canton Peoples Hospital had received a directive to proceed to rural areas. "Barefoot Doctors" In addition to the dispatch of trained medical personnel from the cities to the rural areas, the Cultural Revolution has witnessed a great increase in the numbers of the so-called "barefoot doctors." The People's Daily of September 14, 1968 and Red Flag No. 3 both published a joint "investigation report" entitled: "The orientation of revolution in medical education as seen from the growth of 'barefoot doctors.'" It described the organization of medical facilities at commune and brigade level and made suggestions for the reorganization of medical education. This report described "bare- foot doctors," as mainly young peasants with education up to junior middle- school level, who have been trained in a variety of basic medical practices either by two month courses at commune health clinics or on the job with the help of commune doctors. After two years experience they are said to be able to prescribe about 100 medicines, perform acupuncture, cure measles, pneumonia, pleurisy and diagnose appendicitis. During the Cultural Revolu- tion the number of "barefoot doctors" has increased. 2 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 The People's Daily and Red Flag. articles proposed that in the future, medical schools should take their students from among the "barefoot doc- tors" and other rural health workers who will return to the countryside after training. Cooperative medical care A further measure - cooperative medical care - intended to improve the medical facilities in rural areas was described in the People's Daily of December 5, 1968 as something new which has emerged during the great proletarian Cultural Revolution. The paper described how this scheme has been organized in Loyuan com- mune, Hupeh Province. On the basis of actual medical expenses in the past it was decided that each person should pay an annual cooperative medical fee of one yuan. In addition each production team should pay 10 fen (cents) from its collective welfare fund for each member who subscribed to the med- ical service. Except those suffering from chronic ailments, each commune member should pay 5 fen for every treatment and be given free medicine. Canton Radio reported that a similar system had been established in Kwangtung. There, each person was to pay 25-30 fen a month, forwarded twice a year by the production team to the collective where any deficiency would be made up from the collective welfare fund. The members were each to have a card entitling them to medical treatment at the brigade public health center. The cooperative system has also been inaugurated in several areas. The system however seems to have come up against obstacles. Travelers reported in December 1968 that at one Kwangtung commune the system had been started but that most farmers had not joined and if they were sick would see private doctors. This was said to be because the new system suffered from a chronic shortage of drugs and that the service was very mediocre. Army aid Two communes, one near Peking and the other in rural Kwangtung, have both been "helped" by the PLA to establish a cooperative medical system according to NCNA on January 15, 1969 and Canton Radio on January 11, 1969. It was not clear whether PLA help was necessary because of opposition to the scheme or because there was such a shortage of qualified medical per- sonnel that only the Army could provide the necessary medical expertise. The "revolutionization" of urban medical staffs Along with the drive to send medical personnel away from the cities in order to improve the situation in the rural areas during the Cultural Revolution there has also been a sustained attempt to discredit the "bour- geois" outlook of medical practitioners who wished to "stay in big hospitals Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : dIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 and become great doctors" (Canton Radio, November 6, 1968). Many doctors have accordingly been required to spend much valuable time in Mao-study. Travelers from CarrtOn reported in early 1968 that it was common to see a line of outpatients waiting for up to two hours outside a hospital while doctors read from the "little red book;" at the People's hospital in Canton it was reported in September 1968 that the staff had to study Mao from 8:00 until 8:30 every morning. Other doctors have been criticized and humiliated. In Canton hospi- tals, according to travelers reports, so many doctors and other medical staff have been "struggled" against that Worker-peasant teams had taken over the running of the hospitals. In the Kwangtung Provincial People's Hospital all cleaning work was carried out by doctors under criticism according to reports in October. The doctors wore labels around their necks reading "Guilty of manslaughter by negligence during medical treatment." In another Kwangtung hospital patients reported that 12 of the 16 doc- tors previously employed in the obstetric ward and outpatients section were assigned to the rural areas, and were replaced by six school drop-outs who are expected to learn the profession by experience and observation. In the same hospital the nurses and cleaning staff have also been interchanged, in accordance with a directive calling for the "re-education" of trained medical staff. Doctors who tried to point out the harm unskilled treat- ment could to to patients were criticized. When the staff of the Kwangtung People's hospital were informed that they were required to go to rural com- munes for farm work by April 30, many doctors protested at the number of patients who would be neglected if they went. They, too, were criticized. Shortages of medicines Disruptions in the pharmaceutical industry and of the transport system during the Cultural Revolution resulted in an acute shortage of medicines in many areas. In Kwangtung in early 1968 it was reported by travelers that drugs had been short since late 1967, especially supplies of strepto- mycin, penicillin, chloromycetin and tetracyclin. In May 1968 a shortage of medicines was reported in Tientsin. Drugs were reported to be in short supply in Kwangtung, especially in Canton, from July until October 1968. Travelers in September said that due to the serious shortage, patients at Canton city hospitals were advised to attend hospitals for treatment until supplies returned to normal. Decline in public health during the Cultural Revolution The Cultural Revolution has also apparently contributed to a decline in public health standards: refuse and nightsoil collections were curtailed and rubbish was allowed to pile up in the streets. Mass meetings, rallies Approved For Release 1999/09/6 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 and long marches assisted the spread of infectious diseases. Reports of epidemics of cerebral and spinal meningitis have been numerous. Shanghai Radio on January 21, 1968 published a notice on sanitation with particular emphasis on meningitis prevention methods. An Australian student who visited China in early 1968 saw a Peking general hospital notice board listing precautionary measures to be taken against type-B meningitis. Travelers from Kwangtung reported in early 1968 that since the beginning of 1967 type-B meningitis had been evident in Kwangtung hav- ing been spread by individuals participating in the movement to "exchange experiences." The disease was also reported, by travelers in May 1968, in Kiangsu where the death rate was rising because of shortages of doctors and drugs. Mao's thought as an aid to medicine On April 18, 1960, the Central Committee issued a directive on health work in which it was stated: "It is wrong to regard health work as a piece of isolated work. Health work is vital because it benefits production work and study." In the spirit of this directive the authorities have sought to stress the political aspects of health work and the importance of putting Mao's thought in command. Many of the city doctors and medical staff sent to rural areas have encountered difficulties in coping with the lack of facili- ties and in changing their "bourgeois" desires to remain in city hospitals where they feel their talents would be put to better use. The emphasis on the use of Mao's thought as a medical aid is designed to overcome such doubts and difficulties. The New China News Agency on December 4, 1968 reported that in Kansu, a rural medical team had "performed a caesarian section with only six artery forceps and one scalpel," and that "a throat specialist of another team successfully extracted a stone weighing 12 gr. and measuring 5 mm. in diam- eter, from the bladder of a commune member." The report added: "All this proves that Mao Tse-tung's thought, once grasped can work wonders." NCNA on December 10, 1968 broadcast a People's Daily report on a tu- mor operation in which it stated: "The concept of 'incurable diseases' is not in line with the thought of Mao Tse-tung." 5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Medical personnel who, thus inspired, have undertaken risky and dan- gerous tre44:tments are acclaimed by the press and radio. Army doctors have featured prominently in such exploits and are evidently serving a propaganda purpose in being specialists in the impossible. On January 30, 1969, NCNA reported that doctors and nurses at Hsinhua Hospital attached to Shanghai No. 2 Medical College recently saved the life of Chou Teh-ming, a worker whose heart had stopped beating for 23 minutes after an electric shock. On arrival at the hospital the patient received cardiac massage and artificial respiration but he did not respond. He was then given an injection of adrenaline despite "bourgeois conventions and old medical 'textbooks?" which rule this out in cases of electric shock because it causes strong contractions which may go into uncontrollable fluttering and result in death. Twenty-three minutes after the patients heart had stopped, it started to beat again. Five minutes later he took his first breath. Sining Radio on December 5, 1968 carried an account of an operation by an army mobile medical team on a commune member suffering from a tumor of the liver. Although the team were "understaffed and insufficiently equipped," they determined to overcome all obstacles with the help of Mao's thought. First they cabled the hospital for instructions on how to handle the op- eration and having received them, the team prepared for the operation. "Lacking anesthetics, the team consulted the masses about measures for anesthetizing the patient.... On September 23 the teams studied Chairman Mao's quotations.... They were thus much encouraged. Members of the team took their pre- arranged positions and carried out the surgery while Chairman Mao's quotations set to music were sung.... The operation ended successfully." On November 3, 1968 NCNA acclaimed a PLA medical team using new acupuncture techniques on deaf mutes at the Liao Yuan school for deaf mutes. They tried an important acupunture point formerly called a "forbidden point" by specialists, because to insert the needle that far "would endanger life." After acupuncture for half a month 32 of the 157 deaf mutes could shout "Long live Chairman Mao." Hofei Radio on December 5, 1968 reported that the Anhwei Provincial hospital had accepted a post-natal cardiac ailment complicated by fibril- lation. On her second day in hospital her heart stopped. The medical personnel on duty applied heart massage and artificial respiration for 25 minutes with no success. The medical staff feared to perform open- heart massage on such a frail patient fearing that she would die, but "the workers propaganda team and revolutionary leading group organized everyone to study Chairman Mao's teachings on ridding oneself of weak thinking and repudiate Liu Shao- chi's line of having experts manage hospitals." 6 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Open-heart massage was then carried out successfully. Peking Radio on April 7, 1968 reported that PLA dispensers with no advanced medical training had operated on a child's crushed hand keeping politics in command. People's Daily on July 9, 1968 in a report on a Shanghai hospital stated: "Quite a few nurses can do appendectomy and hernia surgery. In the neurosurgery department there are some nurses who ... as a result of being steeled in practical work have mastered the surgery of removing brain tumors which formerly could only be done by doctors who had had special training and a long period of experience." 7 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Excerpts from China Mainland Media ' June-Nov 1968 Revealing Regime Treatment of Scientists Warning To China's Nuclear Scientists. Chien San-chiang, Director of the Institute of Atomic Energy of the Chinese Academy of Sciences since 1958, has been denounced as a "capitalist- roadar and secret enemy agent" who must be "toppled." (Canton Red Guard newspaper, Red Flag Bulletin, No. I, June 1968.) This attack on Chien, one of China's leading nuclear scientists who, although he studied and worked abroad between 1937 and 1948, has since held a number of political as well as scientific posts, reflects the changed official attitude towards scientists and technicians seen in Mao's recent instructions on technical training (Peking Radio, July 21) and in reports on the experiences of the Shanghai Lathe Plant in adopting new training procedures. The emphasis in technical training is now to be on practical labor at ordinary factory or agricultural worker level as opposed to theoretical research which is said to divorce intellectual workers from the masses. Foreign influences and revisionist views such as those attributed to "China's Khrushchev" (Liu Shao-chi) are to be resisted. The relevance of the latest instructions to scientists has been clearly underlined. On July 21, the People's Daily, commending an investi- gation report on the Shanghai Lathe Plant prepared by the New China News Agency. and Wen Hui Pas, urged scientific research departments and "leading units" to read it carefully as a "sharp weapon for further criticizing and repudiating" Liu Shao-chi's i'counterrevolutionary revisionist line in science and technology." Wen Hui Pao warned on July 26 that the situation in scientific and technological circles was "not satisfactory," and complained that "some people" sought to put work first, indulged in personal ambition, relied too heavily on foreign textbooks and conventions, and did not move beyond the library or laboratory. They did not intend to follow the direction indicated "long since" by Mao for science and technology. The newspaper also complained that a "number of so-called experts, extremely politically reactionary and completely ignorant in their work," had "usurped leader- ship over science and technology." And in research bureaus, the strata were "strictly defined" and the "newly emerging forces," (presumably the revolutionary workers), were sup- pressed. In short, the structure of scientific and technological depart- ments had become a "hotbed for the breeding of revisionist intellectual aristocrats." Wen Hui Pao warned on July 26 that some scientific and technological units had abandoned the task of "consolidating and expanding" revolutionary great alliances and three-way alliances. Instead of struggling against Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 "capitalist-roaders," they were divided by !'civil wars." A Special Edition of Materials (published jointly by two Canton revolutionary groups and recording Chou En-lai's meeting on April 20-21, with representatives from the National Defense Scientific Commission, the Military Control Commis- sion, the Seventh Ministry of Machine Building and the Chinese of Sciences), dlsclosed that the "violent struggle of the Seventh Ministry of Machine Building was connected with the factionalism of the Scientific Commission." Both those departments are thought to be eeneerned with China's nuelear program. Wen Hui Pao laid down certain tasks for scientific and technological circles. They were to "combine revolutionary mass criticism and repudiation 'with the purification of the class ranks, with the task of struggle-criticism-transformation in individual units and with the rectification of the party organization, and carry mass criticism and repudiation through to the end." This sterner attitude contrasts with that revealed in the 16-point decision of the Chinese Communist Party Central Committee on the Cultural Revolution, adopted on August 8, 1968, which laid down that during the cultural crevolution, "the policy of unity-criticism-unity should be con- tinued toward those scientists, technical personnel, and working people; so long as they are patriotic and work ac- tively without opposing the party and Socialism, and so long as they have no improper association with foreign countries. Those scientists and technical personnel who have made contributions would be protected. Assistance may be rendered in the gradual transformation of their world outlook and work methods." (NCNA, August 8, 1966) "Red v. Expert" campatzn continues. Laboratories have also become a target of the new wave of the "Bed versus Expert" battle now being waged in China. In 1963-65 during the period of recovery from the three previous years,necessity caused greater reliance on expertise, but currently the emphasis on the leading role of workers has given rise to a new prestige for "Redness." Consequently pur- .chases of technical equipment and money spent on proper research facili- ties in 1963-64 are now being condemned as bourgeois and counterrevolu- tionary. Eight workers at a silk weaving mill. in SOochow, Kiangsu province,-. who wrote a report on their investigations at the mill',s,laboratory China News Agency (NCNA) on October 31, 1968), said that since it was 'set up in 1963, the laboratory had been controlled by a "handful- of capitalist roaders and reactionary bourgeois teChnical:authorities" who believed in "letting experts rut the plant"i Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 6 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 "These fellows were so free with money that they bought a good deal of apparatus blindly, regardless of whether it was needed or useful." The workers also condemned the "appalling extent to which the labora- tory laced itself above the masses," and concludiull "The laboratory staff have gone down to do produc- tive work on the shop floor where they are being reedu- cated by the workers." The story of the laboratory at Chuchou Tientsin Locomotive and Rolling Stock Works was told by Changsha Radio (October 30). This laboratory was established in 1958 at which time it was quite simple and in regular touch with the workers. But in 1964, encouraged by official emphasis on "expert- ness," the "reactionary bourgeois technical authorities" spent 8,000 yuan on "a fine-looking laboratory" in the main building of the works and they also built a second laboratory. "These persons also made a big thing of buying instru- ments, trying several of the same kind at one time." The laboratory personnel were "gravely divorced from production, sitting around in their laboratories and going in for so-called creation, invention, scientific research and theorising? They always reckoned themselves superior to the workers." The report ended: "The laboratory staff must take it in turns to do production and steel workers must take it in turn to work in the laboratory." Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CJA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 EAxpN rot _ con- A.s to48,1Y ror.Keleaselu99/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT Victory for Maoism in Past Decade? If the opening of the Ninth Congress marks a victory for Maoism over China's more prag- matic theorists, the events of the past decade?the "hundred flowers" campaign, the abortive eco- nomic "great leap forward" and the development of the ideo- logical dispute with the Soviet Union (all of which reflect Mao's guiding hand) were largely responsible for the disturbed political climate which forced its continual postponement. In August, 1966, Mao told the Central Committee: "We have been preparing for a congress for many years; in all likelihood it will be held at a suitable time next year". However, he clearly had great difficulty in making sure of majority support for his views, and the formation of the new organs of power, the revolutionary committees, was continually delayed by factional disputes, so that they were not completed at the highest administrative level until September, 1968. Even today less than half of the provinces claim to be "all-Red", with revolu- tionary committees at all levels. These difficulties may have been the reason why Hsieh Fu-chih laid down in 1967 that the congress should start from national level, with the party com- mittees being formed afterwards at the provincial and county levels?a reversal of the old pattern in which provincial con- gresses came before the main event. It means that the top party organs are no longer supported by a broad-based pyramid of reliable local organisations. The fact that many local broadcasts still refer to persisting factional disputes, the prevalence of the theory of "many centres" and continuing support for Liu Shao-chi's policies, indicates that there are many problems ahead in rebuilding the party at the lower levels. NEW YORK TIMES 19 May 1969 CPYRGHT JAPANESE .TUDY FINDS CHINA' S GROWTH RATE STUNTED BY 3 YEARS OF TURMOIL and other Asian tAddelb 4ftek By PETER GROSE 4154,1146o Mt Nor 'Pork Votes WASHINGTON, May 18? Asian analysts see the economk legacy of the Cultural Revolu- tion in Communist China as a' stunted growth rate, a sharp' decrease in the supply of. trained specialists required WI industrial development and a decision to gamble that moral' inspiration can supplant ma- terial incentives throughout so-' These conclusions are drawn in an exhaustive survey of the Chinese mainland economy pre- pared by the Japanese Foreign Ministry and made available here. Even if the political turmoil that has gripped China for three years now subsides, the wou d have completed training 1967-68 if schools and tech-, by hinese Communist officials report states the economic and, more jr.p.ortan,t in the re- During Communist China's mil first five-year plan, 1953-57. the economy grew at an annual tate of 8.9 percent. This Was the I eyday of Chinese econom- ic growth, benefiting from large-, seek Soviet aid. ,The second half of 1968 saw' the tart of a return to normal ocon)mic activity,' after the conf isiOn of the purge of the governing bureaucracy launched by Ctiairman Mao Tse-tung, but, the ,cale of industrial and agri-: culttral production last year: is itimated at only slightly1' ? above the levels of 1965. , Or e of the most striking ef- fects of the Cultural Revolu- tion detailed in the 76-page re-:, port is the loss to the economyi of 400,000 specialists who Included in this estimate are 90,000 teachers, 50,000 doctors and 140,000 industrial techni- cians whose skills would be considered crucial to an ex- panding economy. ' "As a long-range forecast, 'the reform of the school system and the strong tendency toward 'being red rather than expert' are considered likely to have adverse effects in the future on the training and supply of technical specialists," the Japa- nese report said. "The slighting of basic research will have, particularly great effects ini matters of military technology." The Japanese analysis, in- tended primarily for scholars and economic policy planners in Tokyo,? draws on data supplied firite.inh can be gnIr morrtffar r NPAIVIsNecilYdVd c itio 4114V9115 4 per cent annually. SI! ? he. r ilti rAl rtwOlu.' mates an o n take part le t visits to the mainland. It is believed to be more thorough than any similar analysis pre- pared in the West. Tokyo, like Washington, does not recognize Communist China but, unlike the United States, Japan conducts and is trying to enlarge trade with the main- land Chinese. In both 1967 and 1968, Japan carried on the larg- est trade of any non-Communist nation with Communist China. Though the supply of physi- cal resources for industrial de- velopment is considered ample,, Ithe capital investment available to exploit those resources is de- ficient, according to the Jap- anese analysis. "Internal investment in 1965 was only slightly over the amount of 1956," the report said. "There are no figures for 00060004 ter the Cultural Revolution, but judging from Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT tne fact that basic construction came to almost a complete standstill, the decrease in amounts of Investment must have been very large. "Coupled with the low pro- ductivity in the agricultural sector, and in view of the esti- mate of six months to one year for industrial production to re.' gain the level of before the Cul- tural Revolution, an increase in the investment level can hardly be expected for some time to come. "The basic problems of the Communist Chinese economy are: (1) Low productivity of ag. riculture is limiting the develop- ment of industry, and () In. ,creasing the size of the work force keens the problem of un. employment constantly un- solved," Unable to push forward rapid economic development through capital and technical invest4 ment, the Japanese analysts stated, Chinese authorities "groped for a reform of human nature through the Cultural Revolution u a method of 'set. tling the economic problem." ' "The material incentive poll. cy, introduced after 1962, was criticized as 'revisionist,' and in its place mental incentive was emphasized," the report said. 'Participation of the masses in ?the management of enterprises was promoted. As a result os Ithis, nobility of . the spirit looming to be stressed more than scientific and rational judg- ment." THE ECONOMIST MAY 17, 1969 China CPYRGHT Small hops forward FROM A CORRESPONDENT Mao has had his congress. But there Is little evidence that this formal victory; means' a retUrn to the economies' of the 1958 Great Leap Forward. The ;'olci maoist goals remain:'the cult of the commune, of self-sufficiency,"' of of decentralisation of industry, of , as against material incentives. But th< reckless urgency and naive optimism with which they were once pursued seem' to have gone?perhaps, now. that Mao is 75,' gone for good. The economic disruptions wrought' by the cultural revolution never, matched those of the great leap, but there has been a' toll. The recovery in industrial pro- duction during the 'early, '196os was actually accelerated in 1966, despite the initial launching of the cultural reyolution, but in 1967 output probably "fell by between to and 20 per cent: ' The slide has since been halted,- but' even on' the most generous interpretation industrial Production at the end of 1968 was, reckoned to be little higher than in z 965; and only some 50 per cent higher 'than in 1957. ' ' . ? `" True,' agricultural production' has been blessed by good weather and spared the. full impact of the cultural revolution. Many China-watchers now reckon that the population numbers no . more than. roughly 720 million and that annual grain, output in the past four years. has, reached. 190 Million to 2oa?million tons.? ? These figures imply. ; that increased availability of fertilisers and agricultural machinery has more than, offset blunders in managemenk and that r.1,;,,n v-rvy have been, able to use part of its imports of western , wheat since 1964 to rebuild its depleted reserves. In this period China has also, restored. its reserves of hard foreign. exchange, . perhaps by now to nearly .$i,000 million, the equivalent of eiglit months' imports.from the West. But, on any estimate, grain output per bead; is still below ,the 1957 level. Moreover,: Ch:na has. now had seven good, harvest yea -s ;, and its crops tend to, suffer from bad weather three . years in every. ten. ; I si the recent spate of national cam- paigns, the most important include,: a massive movement of people back: to the c.ou ltryside (perhaps a. fifth of the 'urban pop ala.tion . ,over . the next few years),; the . transfer of, responsibility for basic edu ation and health programmes in twat arez s to the ,brigade or commune level the decentralisation of factories producing fertilisers, pumps and farm, machinery.; and the narrowing of wage .differentials in both industry and agriculture.'; AA 'this his, a very ,maoist .ring. But; in r resent eircurnstances, the 'redistribut- ing of population and the 'decentralising of selected industries make 'some economic sense. Even before' the cultural' revolu tion compounded the difficulties, the crea.. tion of .new jobs in the cities was laging behi id the increase in their pOpulations'; and' an underemployed. urban popula- tion' costs more to? maintain than a rural one. And, at a time when the weakening of administrative 'machinery and the drop in ? it dustrial production. must 'have cur.: tailed the, Central government's' ability to. mobliSe 'resources; it makes ? 'budgetary! sense to shift some of the burdens of social, welfa Wand capital investment, on to the shouiders- of, loCal authorities. '? Moreoverp there is no sign thaCthe decentralisation.," of industry is being 'purctHrorlelf.velr CPYRGHT although new factories are being set up, as well as existing ones handed over, back- yard furnaces are evidently out. The campaign I to squeeze wage differ- entials has gone farthest in industry. The elimination of bonuses and reduction . of skill differentials has evidently' meant a real drop in income for many workers.. In agriculture, the giving of points for cor- rect political thinking has beenintroduced, but this is apparently being applied, with some flexibility. There is no hard evi- dence that it ,will have serious disincenl tive effects...... ??, Far more ?ominous are the reports corn- ing from the, countryside of a renewed emphasis .on, communes and brigades rather. than , on the smaller production teams ; of.consolidations at all three levels into larger units; of payments in kind in lieu of a portion of wages; and, worse still, of ' interference with private plots and with the marketing of the peasants' sideline" production. There are two 'qualifying factors, how- ever. First the new emphasis on the brig- ade'and commune may in practice merely mean' making. these units financially cap- able of running the newly decentralised schools; and clinics.' There have been reports of brigades taking a larger slice of the ' income of 'production teams (t3 per cent instead of 7 per cent, ' it one instance). But there have been no . signs of the brigade or commune again becorn-' ing the basic' rural accounting unit. Second, the other reports of more radical socialisation ?drives have been confined to a few provinces, and usually only to. a few communes or counties. These reports suggest experimental sc:-..emes;not national campaigns.. 'By Chinese standards it all suggeSts that, for the present, the maoists, are being allowed., only, to 'tinker ',with not to leap in without .testing, the Approved For Release 1999/09/02 CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 LAporNgsFor Release1999/06D.CtlIA-RDP79-01194A00050006000V9YRGHT 23 June 1969 CPYRGHT The doubtful existence, of a ne hina itteports from Peking agree ?that a new atmosphere! is about" in the Chinese capital. The cultural revolution has not been ended by the ninth party congress and may never now be for. malty wound up, since the evil spirit of capitalism will always be, abroad. But for the ordinary people the political load has been lightened. Foreigners find that shop assistants are more polite; the train journey, can be accomplished without the loudspeaker blaring out the thoughts of Mao set to mimic or otherwise; and if there are any Political' posters left in Peking they flap unre- garded 'on out-of-the-way walls. The cymbals', and gongs, that herald yet another demonstration . are no longer, heard. All this might suggest a new start in I China. Are not ambassadors going back ; to their posts after more than two years' absence? Does?this not mean that China is resuming its contacts with the outside world? Such assumptions are altogether too sanguine. A new. China of some kind may be taking shape after the ninth party et:ingress:but its outline is not , visible ? and its existence must remain in doubt. The truth is that the long-awaited ninth party congress told us yery little, offered no prospects, and thus far has given birth to nothing. As simple proof of this one might take the daily English bulletin of the official New China News Agency. In the eight weeks since the congress ended "the headlined items in this bulletin have been as follows: 13 'dealing 'in retro- spect with the congress itself and the campaign for unity in China; 17 attacks or angry notes ? exchanged , with the Russians, .and other attacks were on the United States (3), India and Bulgaria (1 each). Occasions of support were one each for Vietnam, Albania and Tenzer' nia. 'On 11 occasions no items of news was worth headlining. That is to say not one single promi. nent item has dealt with current events in China, or future events, or economic plans, or anything to suggest that internal conditions have taken ,a new turn. Nor was there anything in the congress itself that promised change. Where the eighth party congress in 1956 invited delegates from all over the communist world, the ninth had none; where the eighth published all the speeches in a volume of 1,000 pages, the ninth has given only the text of Lin Piao's report and the revised constitu- tion : where the eighth set' forth future economic plans. the ninth offered a justification and a defence of the cul- tural revolution future.plans. ?PtlapEitntitinFetritelea . . , . SE By Richard Harris STATE .OF DISARRAY It seems almost as if tnese wings can Wait while Chairman Mao, after all the effort of the past three years, satisfies himself that China has' been saved for a doctrine .which is now precisely laid down, even to the hyphens : Marxism- Leninism-ao Tsetung '? M' thought ". One recalls Lin' Piao's rernark 'early in the cultural revolution thatt" Chairman Mao's experience in passing through many events is more profound than that of .Marx& Engels and Lenin.' ?No one can surpass Chairman 'Mao in' his rich revolutionary experience ". Nevertheless the abiding, impression is that China is still in a 'fair state ?of disarray. The theme of unity pro- claimed at the congressls being pressed energetically and with an almost anx- ious forgiveness. There begins to .seem no limit to those who, if they show the right 'attitude, can work their.w.ay hack Into thejold. .".Those who committed :serious Mistakes but are not i?ncor- irigible'! ! Should be kindly treated;. ." those ? 'Who committed the errors characteristic Of the capitalist-roaders in 'power but are not, absolutely unrepen- tant ?4 is another category that would seem to collect. those who fell through the mesh of the first definition. One of the difficulties is ?that those who were the. first to declare for revolutionary Maoism resent taking back into the ranks those they criti- cized; nevertheless they are 'told that they should '! warmly -welcome those comrades who have caught upfrom behind ". The gatherings,, at which this campaign of reconciliation and unity is being pressed s provincial.'party conferences "at which? some kind of accommodation Is 'being hammered out between the old party organization ?and the new revolutionarsre? committees. What will come out of it it is impossible to, say. "Unity ,in sonic units is not ctinsolidated". ? we read; ? elsewhere bourgeois factionaligrn ',' is as rampant as ever; revolutionary :committees still have to be told that 'it is. -" positively impermissible to consider,. Well-inten- tioned criticism ? from' the masses As sabotage by the?cnemy". The divisions in the country, in the centres of political power at least, seem as bad, if not as violent, as they were during the cultural revolution. If the revolutionary committees Which are, supposed to be the, Maoist rcpresenta- iioet ?r el ArT loggerheads h.ys ve ntrid llOti success of the .cultural revolution in substituting for a corrupted bureau- cracy dedicated revolutionaries In the image of Chairman Mao. ? ? Flow ihn f hInn rillorl rnnnyr ;? Well not by the Chinese Communist. Party at least ", said one close student to whom I put. the question in Hong- ;kong a few weeks ago. Certainly at the centre 'this seems to be true. China's 'inner cabinet must now be regarded as the standing committee of the political bureau in which Mao, Lin Piao and Chou En-lai are the awkward triutrivi- rate backed by Ch'en Po-ta, Mao's faithful secretary and spokesman, and K'ang Sheng, the shadowy, ex-Comin- tern, ex-intelligence chief. Three. men over 70, two in their sixties. There is an obvious gap between these five and the ?rest, of the political bureau, 'made up mostly of army officers who have been picked by Lin Piao, plus Mrs. Mao and Mrs. !Lin. It does not look a body to compare in ex perience .and , homogeneity 'with the men who formed the old politieal bureau. ? " The Same iS true of the'central committee. The committee elected at the eighth party. congress. in 1956 were men of long revolutionary experience in party,: army and government; 'men whose positions for the ?'most part gave them power. The new central committee Is very different. Almost half .of the total of regular' 'and alternate members are .military," many of, them men of' power in the military regions and' :revolutionary, committees . they heard, .but not possessed of power at the centre by their membei:ship, of the central committee.. The rest iS made up 'of survivors Of the old Committee?too ,old and too ineffective in some cases to represent a Ihreat-together With .battle 'heroes, 'Tibetan liberated serfs, revolu- tionary 'ballet idancers and model, peas- ants, members of -a ,Maoist chorus to fill up the back of the stage. ' : ? ? ' So an oligarchy at the centre of Mao, Lin and Chon,li:as'''Sertiehow ,to hold the loose reitis that -reach .out to the provincial reVolutiOtiary committees and the refurbished provincial party organization.. Coaxing'. and,' exhorting rather than sharp orders promptly obeyed Will, be the Manher' .of rule in' Mao's new China?bin then the cul- tural revolution revealed how much this had. been true' of Mao's old China 'too. It will not be exceptional or, necessarily disastrous. The imPulse: to .unity,'?,will iernain :strong in China where it has been Inculcated for centuries past,. ? An 94A6005000400044 nor any politi, cal foundation;' had such a conceit 3 . cpApowed For Release 1999/09/02: existed the opposition to Mao would have swept him aside long before 1966. Thus the' struggles that continue at lower levels are struggles for power at the provincial level as, the old 'cadres and the new rebels cornpete. Whatever leaders emerge will certainly go on paying tribute to Mao and his thoughts while firmly adapting Mao's instruction to the conditions Of their own area' and the realities they face as rulers.. ? NOTHING, STANDARDIZED As for the transformation of society that Mao dreams 'about there is little that can be said for the moment. The gulf between town and country, be- tween intellectual and peasant, between ruling bureaucrat and obedient masses, YOMITITRI , Tokyo . 20 February 1969 R ALITYwasin By' Edward Neilan 'Cl CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 ? CPYRGHT will not have been obliterated by three years of shouting, still less by the millions of discontented secondary school and university graduates who have been "sent to the , countryside ". New plans for education, reshuffling the structure of communes, the approved size of .the private plot, revising the ? peasants work points, self-help in a new health service?on all these fragments of information come from different parts of the,.Qountry and the only conclusion is that nothing is yet stan- dardized. The probability is that noth- ing 'ever will be standardized while a man Who 'dislikes inttitutions: and has no real idea of' how they function stands alone at the centre insisting that he and, he alone tnust ' be the symbol and the guide of the new China. .rf CPYRGHT .7t1 AIS.2ND?RAT ornmunIst unina s economy, for all the regime's propaganda trumpeting about its dynamism, is Asia's prime- stretcher case. In this 20th year of commu- nist rule on the mainland, there is not even the slightest hint 'available that China's present leaders have come up with a 'solution to the problem of the nation's plodding economy: "The Thoughts of Chairman Mao Tse-tung" have perhaps motivated some Workers at low, er lets but there are no,. clues In production figures to suggest that the chairman's pep talks have obtained results beyond short-term hypnosis. , Communist China's economiC stagnation is all the more shocking when viewed from the free world's second biggest pro- ducer in terms of gross national product (GNP). 1 The result is that Communist China, which looks very strong and foreboding on 'the map, is really a second-rate power. It simply does not have the econ noinic'wherewithal to .be other- Wise. ; These considerations are in-, Creasingly important ,as more and more discussions are being held on the future of Asia, the US role in Asia, and the con- cepts of one, two or three Chinas. Communist China's economic, growth is expected to creep along at an unspectacular four, Percent: for the next few' years,. according to a report by the japanese Foreign Ministry. I The Japanese report concurs with information available in }Tong Kong to the effect that a measure of political stability is returning to China after the tumultuous cultural revolution. But its agricultural produc- tion in 1968 is believed to have 'fallen short of the 1907 level of 2,000,000 tons, This is due partly to floods and drought in different parts of the country' last June 'and July and to the shortage of fertilizer. Industrial output is estimated to have dipped by 10 to 15 per cent last year. Some comparisons and trade figures help reveal ,the plight of China's economy. One example is steel output. China's production is around 12,000,000 tons annually or about one-fifth of Japan's pro- duction. Annual oil consumption figures ard revealing also. Per capita usage of oil in China is eight to 1 gallons, compared to 1,800 gallons per capita in the US, 800 gallons in the So- viet Union and 200 gallons in -Japan. ' China's modest -progress in 'industry, furthermore, has been mostly borrowed from abroad: Complete "turn-key" plants have been set up but these have apparently not made a demonstrable effect on the eco, nomy. The World Bank estimated China's per capita income In 1966 at $95. That's below the figures for such countries as Cambodia, Ceylon and Thailand, Nationalist China, by con- trast, had a per capita income of $189 for 1966 and $209 for 1967. China's foreign -trade declin- ed in 1968 for' the second straight year, a development directly traced to the cultural revolution. The Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO), 'survey, Ing Communist China's trade with its most important non. communist trading partners, noted a 17.8 percent decline in China's total trade in the first six months of 1968. Exports fell by 1:3.5 percent and imports dropped by 22.1 perat in that period. The treed for the last half of 1968 suggests no upturn. Trade with communist coun- tries also has slowed. UN figures show that trade be- tween the Soviet Union and Communist China in 1908 fell to five percent of its peak level in 1950. Less aid to No'rth' Vietnam. Peking's cutback of aid to North Vietnam 'has been wide- ly interpreted as an indication of China's, displeasure at Ha, noi's participation in the Paris, peace talks. But it is- entirely possible, in view of the sober. production figures for. last year, that the cuts were made partly. out of necessity. . And what about food? The problem to end all prob- lems?population growth?keeps increasing no matter what pro4 grams Peking tries. The dif& culties in feeding 750 million people are Sharpened by domes- tic production sluggishness and the trolde imbalance that is growing as China imports food,' The question arises-of China's long-range potential for eco-, nomic power and political, strength. But the answer does not come easily. It could be. that China, is .involved in downward spiral with whicli the present regime cannot cope:t All of these, points loom as important in realistic evalua-J tions of China's future, botW politically and economically. Questions such as these arise: , Can the free world afford to' bring China back into the world? Conversely-, can it afford. I not to? These questions about the' future potential of China can! be debated another day. On the firmer ground of pre-', sent-day realities, the verdict' has to be that Communist China now is a second-rate power with fourth-rate eco- nomic management.?CNS, Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : 1A-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 BALT IN 4 May 1ted For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP7901194A000508R09i-.p cgo joins edpntheon9 9 igrevolEs n. snover By PETER T. KUMPA CPIRGHT !-fon Kon"k N the early, conspiratorial ays ? communism, party congresses were held so that opposing factions could slug it ott and decide the next stage of the revolt), tion. In recent years, ruling parties have staged elaborate congresses to give mes chanical approval to major decisions al. 'ready reached by a small inner circle o career bureaucrats and theoreticians. The ninth national congress of. the Chinese Communist party apparently had elements of the old and the new. Becauge of the time involved (24 days); the rumor-proof secrecy (no one discov? ered in which building meetings were held) and the visible preparations, whick seemed to have anticipated a shorte ? , meeting, it is reasonable to conclude tha there was disagreement. The untidy state of the party just before the tongresi virtually guaranteed conflict. ; ? As the congress publicly produced ex achy what was expected of it, it could bc , described as staged. There was mon i planning evident, however, in the nois3\ celebrations of hundreds of. millions o Chinese this past week in the sweaty hysterical spectacle that ancient lanc produces. Mao exalted The hoarse throats and the. hypnotic . chanting slogans that marked the `victon' ?ry" of the congress were largely saluting , .. the one man who still dominates China ?? ; with his will and personality. He is Mao ?! Tse-tung, at 75 the deified father-figure of-: the country. ' ? 4 Mr, Mao was continued as the leader, ? the party chairman. Better still, the con- gress elevated him officially to the same , exalted philosophical rank a5 Marx and', Lenin, a promotion that the Chinese can , take pride in, and the rest of the Coin-, munist ruling parties (except the Albani- ans) can reject. The congress gave China a new faith. It was not called "Z?laoisrn," which would be too simple and undignified. Rather it was called "Marxism-Leninism-Mao Tse tung thought." .And it confirmed Lin - Piao, the quiet military strategist With .the heavy eyebrows, the most faithful conduit of Chairman Mao's ideas, as his successor. ? More of. the same Disposed of was a no Disposed (IT eleatesils999109lina cd41 1 2,1a 79-0 party during the cultural revolution. ,The Neal fami was avertea by the bureau plunged China Into 'economic despair..' For the future, the congress promised China me of what it has hod during the. past sevcral years. The cultural revolu- tion was "victorious" but not yet ended. Massive :ampaigns of ideological educa- tion were going to be dosed out as cures .for all tilt country's This wr s all that was produced in three sober, la .gely 'sterile communiques, the new and somewhat vague constitution and finaLy the list of 279 names that comprised a new central committee., Egalitarian dream ? The ccngress .was, of course, much more then that. With gale winds of change I lowing through China, it ap-; peered to be one of the'last, great scenes, in the second revolution of Mao Tse-tung. Nearly 29 years before, Chairman Mao' had proclaimed the People's Republic of: China, th fruit of a guerrilla revolution. and civil war, for Which he could thank hated fol eign invaders and a softened and corroded Nationalist' opposition. Though Chairman Mao led it, that was a revolutior from below, relying on Ehe messes o millions of posir or disaffected Chinese. 'A corn )rex man, Chairman Mao has simple but utopian goals. Not only has he worked t) restore China to its ancient greatness but he was also driven by the dream of an egalitarian China, free front the hated exploitation of the past?a land where tit( worker and peasant would be as culturc d as the intellectual who would also do m mual labor., ' Hatred had driven Chairman Mao to despise rr andarins of any persuasion. He considered them a ? bureaucracy out of touch will, the people, snooty intellectuals quoting classics, seeking special pay and special pn.vileges. 'Slum bid on "great leap" Success in guerrilla war, in mass edu- cation anc in propaganda techniques had convinced Chairman Mao that he could "remold the majority into new men." He believed hat subjective will could be turned int) objective force. With some- thing like 500,000,000 backward, supersti- tious peasants living barely above sub- sistence in a tired land, China profited by a Mao preaching the impossible. Chairmai Mao's techniques worked un- til the "g-eat leap forward" when's Mr. Kompa oltiof of The knee Hoag Kong Bureau.. . . _ policies to pull China slowly back togeth- er. Chairman Mao never admitted his error but fought back to wipe out exactly What he feared would ruin his purist dreams. ' . Peasants were thriving with their nri- vete plots, private pigs and private mar- kets. Workers were getting incentive pay rather than laboring for the ideological glory. The party was full'of experts and managers, drifting from Chairman Mao's Idealized contact with the masses. Chair- man Mao never saw nor wanted to sea that China was progressing, ?just, as he never cared to see Russian progress. All he could sea was his egalitarian: vision. being destroyed by his old comrades irt arms. , ; . Party defeated By 1962, he was-striking back. Wlaat'tho outside world saw as a conflict between., ideologues and, pragmatists was the be- ginning of Chairman Mao's accond reps- lution. By 1966, Chairman Mao alone carefully ripped off the head of the party he had built and slashed .at its innards; using Red Guard students and his mass techniques of rebellion. 'The giant party of 18,000,000 members that controlled every aspect of Chinese life fought back, but in the end it fell ?defeated. Down went most of its leaders, Liu Shao.chl and others, denounded as traitors. History was rewritten to Show. they had opposed .Chairman Mao foe years, when all they had done in fact was' to jolly him along. ci ? Chairman Mao had to call in Lin Pia, and.. the army to maintain order. Tho; military is still there, on farm and in, factory, to put down resisting "class enc.: rnies.' The chairman had to entice back, cadres, who finally restored some sembl, ance of administration through the; "three-way" revolutionary committees,. .along with the military and some of the revolutionaries. But it took two long' years. ? I Rebuilt in Mao's fashion ? The process was to toughen "millions"' of Chairman Mao's "heirs of the revolu- tion. The price was a setback in Indus.' N9400005000600 Odliefti on for. e country's youth and the planting ot vage rivalries aecp unna's labric. it cost Chairrnrin Tann tohnfounr, ft-lift% +1-in illegality of the , th congres.s legitimized the new rulers. . itirnoci fn nrnarnniin CPYRGH4 p-p-roved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP70511WAICT00500060001-5 intellectuals had In.him: Still the more difficult task was the' rebuilding of the party, for nothing elsd has been able to run China's 700,000,0001 people. The rebuilding has to. be done' from the top. The congress was the he ginning of that process, but it Is 1)64 done in Chairman Mao's' way. This will not be easy, for the congress showed it could agree on honoilng Its old loader but' nothing else. , It 'said nothing about education, , agrk culture, health or industry. For its Polit. burn, it could not even agree on a peck= lag order below Chairman Mao and Mr..: Lin. Prescribing more and more Mao.' study, it seemed as if , the 75-year-old leader had decided to start all ?vet' again to convince the country of the righteous.. THE klialNIOMIST 3 .Ma.y 1969 . a 0; CPYRGHT and the FAIn 1111) ness of his ways: Time, it seems,, has caught up with a figure as heroic as Chairman Mao hag b2en for his China. His ideas are essenj 'tinily rooted in the past. He talks of modernization, but he opposes just' what China needs: the experts to run a modern 'economy. Chairman Mao's ideal of pond,' eally loyal workers who think and Intel.? lectuals who work just is not good enough. Undoubtedly, Chairman Mao wit's' told this behind the closed doors of the ninth congress. From what was said; publicly, he is not convinced. . ? Communist China therefore faces an' uncertain unstable future. Chairman Mao's heirs today are a group of un- known, inexperienced, unsophisticated military men. And it is too Late to have A. third Maoist revolution.. men The great man and his chosen heir' naturally came.out,on top again at China' ninth party congress?but there was quite a bit of a dust-up' ? in the lower ranks of the communist hierarchy Almost everything about . China's.ninth 'party Congress predictably, Maoist. ? Lin Piao's political.report; 24,000 words long, which was published on Monday; was a 'catalogue of ;familiar Maoist'themes, from . the need for Ceaseless'classi?.! ? struegle at?home to strong support for revolution abroacli.:-The::::: inew party constitution; essentially sliC same ? as earlier arafty; versions; .a. Maoist prescription. for an antk-bureancratiCi4 bureaucracy. And, the me%) pt Y leadership; selected last j week, was similarly dominated by, Mao and ilis'.men:?"i :f which men they would be was anything but' predictable. ? : The publication of the membership roste'r Tor Peking's neWv?;; .; central committee ended' the' mYstery.4bout -the. p'rolongationl . , :iof, the congress to 24 days. .Nine of these days were Fvidently occup by y a complex and controversial election process. Instead of the expected' routine translation of the 176-man ; congress presidium into the central committee, the new.. ;Icentral committee emerged as a greatly enlarged body of 17o full members and 109 alternates which .did not even include" ,? 36 members of the presidium. And the most startling thing., about the new central committee was that for the first time in, Chinese communist history it was presented, not according. to rank, but, except for Mao and Lin, in the Chinese equiva, lent of alphabetical order. Both the increased size and the" unhicrarehical order suggest 'that the selection 'of the corn- ?' mince was ,marked by serious disputes which could be resolved, ' in no other way, ? But the unprecedented omission or ranks may also be a Maoist innovation to promote a " democratic " party style.: This explanation gained ,credibility on Monday. when the central;cOmmittce,. in its first plenary session, elected. A new, politburo., And, lo' and behold, the politburo was in :non-rank order. ? I ' . CPYRGHT Approved For Keiease 1 uuu/uu/uz : L;ii-KUV(U-U11U4AUWOD0060001-5 2 Appro The politburo'also confounded:China-watchers by...depart:?. vediFpro-M, ear ill999/0321/Cf2r:4-1A011:0h7,91201.1(94400 like an established leadership. Four provincial representatives !were ?acIcled to the ,group, three Military commander* from !Nanking; Shenyang .and Anhwei, plus the ,little-known depufy chairman of the Honan revolutionary Cominittee Who had n.q 'even made it on to the presidium, Among the leaders, who'...`: were booted downstairs were the foreign minister, Chen two economic planners and three top-ranking soldiers... ? The results of the considerable changes in the politburo antr,. the central committee are to strengthen the clasped hands of: Mao `and his constitutionally. designated successor, Lin Piao.'". ,The surprisingly small standing committee of the politburo,. surrounds the pragmatic prime. minister, Chou En-lai, .with ;the 'cultural revolutionary inner. core of Mao, Lin; Chen: Po-ta and Kang Sheng. (What was` it that made Mao ,stop',' ? short of including his wife?) In the full politburo, nine, out of; ;25 arc full-blooded cultural revolutionaries and nine of the' ten ;military members can be considered political comrades of Mad and Lin. ' The central committee membership in itself does not look overwhelmingly Maoist. Some 40 per cent are military 'and about a quarter arc old cadres. Assuming that the 4o....odd unknowns are most, likely s' to be revolutionary types, the Maoists would constitute 'up to one-third:. But given the unwieldy "size of the committee, its membership is not likely to mtake much difference. The politburo wilr be stronger than ever and the politburo is, a ?secure Mata instranent.: , What will the Maoists use their 'enhanced ,pdider'to?,do Lin Piao's political report .did not Make,this clea.r,:eiteept4 of course? for ?continuing to saturate the Chinese people' with Mad Tsetung thought (Mao's name is now denuded of its hyphen, apparently to make 1..it an equal partner in the triumvirate,: Marxism-Leninism-Mao Tsetung. thought) The ':wide dissemination of Mao Tsetung thought," .said Lin, was "the most significant achievement of the great proletarian cultural .revolution.', ? .?? , If' the full', flush of the cultural revolution is now over? anid the congress 'doe's signify an. end of some sort-=---the struggles which it stirred up arc not. Lin juggles the same con- . tradictOry instructions that the Maoists have been issuing for 'over two years; Felass struggle mist continue; the proletariat :Must criticise the bourgeoisie and fight anti-Maoists on the left and the right; the ranks must be purified and the 'party must keep on "getting rid of the stale and taking in the fresh." But at the same time Maoists must catry out a conciliatory policy towards their enemies, particularly old cadres and intellectuals, most of whom can be re-educated. But again, "we must for ever remember this .lesson : Whoever opposes chairman Mao, whoever ? opposes Mao Tsctung thought, at .any time and under any circumstances, shall be 'condemned and punished by the whole party and, the whole nation." And. 'what if the class enemies stir Up trouble again ? " Just arouse the masses and strike them down. again. In other words, strike up another cultural revolution. :Lin's is not a dove-like statement.' But apart from its revolutionary rhetoric,. it provides few concrete guidelines to. policy. On economics, Lin sounds a moderate note, asserting that revolution should not replace production though it must command it. And while he uses the slogan "new leaps 3500060001-5 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01.194A000500060001-5 3 r ; i,,,r ; ; ? 11,i r,' HW,e11,1' 5?8119R81111 Approved FiltrA9tifrafeedaa5i914,9bOX:eGIATBRIIRIZOrcOotlili4ggi0 :model:. Curiously, Lin'sparcs hardly a word for what would ,logically seem to have deserved a central place in the speech : the reconstruction of the party. He makes no attempt to ,resolve ,the crucial Auestions of whether thc 'party will 0,ton- stitUte an apparatus , distinct ?from the revolutionary com- mittecs? and whether an ?effort will be made to overeoni9 Military dominance at the local level. ? ,? , On foreign affairs, 'Lin employs similar revolutionary language' and balances, similar contradictions between the need to struggle and a will!ngness to coexist peacefully. He, is much More bitter ,?in 'his :attacks on the apostate Russians than on the Americans. But in his one discussion of specific 'policy he reveals that the Chinese have already had some exchanges with the Russians about their border problems? started by a Kosygin telephone call to Peking?and arc con- sidering a Soviet proposal for *hat. are described as con- sultations. ', ?:?? ;,: ' ? mall its massive, text, the Lin Piao report says little that is .new and settles none of the basic problems raised by the, ',cultural revolution.. As a statement of general principle, it is in the Maoist style, for Mao does.not choose to concern him- r,t elf with detail, A more:pirogrammatic policy document may be produced by: a national .people's, congress which is Tunipitied to .be, in wOrks,' But :?..with' the leadership 'gripped pi' mpg ,..of its administrators and planners' there may be:,nothing tuOnoral #peratiyea'issuing.out of Peking for som4 ;irric to '-? Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 4 China is at present in the grip of ar unprecedentedly crucial moment of the ?sharp struggle between two lines: L struggle between the line of Marxism Leninism and proletarian international .m and the line of anti-Marxist Mao- 'm and bourgebis nationalism, betweer t le Chinese Republic's socialist develop raent and the anti-socialist developmen of China. In the latter half of 1966, relying or nilitary units which he had deludec and on the hungweiping and tsaofar organizations that had been set up b3 dtceit and under pressure brought to bear by him, Mao Tse-tung used the screen of "cultural revolution' to launcl; a n anti-communist anti-popular counter r wolutionary military coup and estab lish a personal reactionary military dic tatorship. At the close of July 1967 he s !nt paratroops and warships to strike at the bloody_ retribution against the working people of Wuhan. He followed nis up by sending the 40th and 47th a:mies and another five divisions against tele revolutionary workers and revolt:. t.onary military units in Canton, caus? i g enormous bloodshed among the revolutionary masses with such heavy v eapons as artillery, tanks and so forth, 'lb this day Mao Tse-tung, constantly uses armed force against Communists a ul working people now in one place nnw in another. As a result, in the surn. mer of 1967 a situation began to emerge hi China which could cause the counter revolutionary military coup to develop into an anti-people's civil war. An unparalleled tragedy has over- t ken the Communist Party and the Ic ng-suffering Chinese people in conse- q ience of the counter-revolutionary c Imes of Mao Tse-tung and his group. The gains of the Chinese revolution are threatened with total annihilation. The building of socialism ' in China faces complete collapse. THE sit 19 fgE , ? 0 -0 ? ? ? WA1lease 1999/09/02 : C14\-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Organ of Canadian Communist Party . CPYIGHTiffp fl Cctillgan11 .,7 rou gilnlloor=ro ollo by WANG MING CPYRGHT fallft02 1100-2 11??Calf The author of this work, Wang Ming, is a veteran of the Communist Party of China and of the Chinese people's struggle for socialism. He was a member of the central leadership of the party through the years of arduot4s and perilous underground struggle against the bloody repression by which Chiang Kai-shek tried to destroy the Party physically by murdering scores of thou- sands of the finest sons of the working class.,---thousands of them by beheading in public without even the pretence of a trial. From January 1931 until January 1935 Wang Ming was the First Secretary of the Party under* the illegal party name of Chen Shao-pl. In January 1935, in the course of the famous Long March. Mai Tse-tung became First Secretary and Wang Ming was assigned to the position of representative of the Central Commit- tee of the Communist Party of China to the Communist Inter- national. In that capacity he participated actively in the prepara- tion of George Dimitrov's famous report to the 7th World Con- gress and he was elected by the Congress of the Executive Com, mittee. Wang Ming worked as the representative of the Chinese Party in the world centre of the Comintern until that body dis- solved in 1943. After that he continued, by decision of the leader- ship of the Chinese Party, to be its representative in Moscow. He negotiated and arranged the details of the decisive assistance that was extended to the Chinese revolution by the Soviet Union. Throughout those years he continued to be an active member of the leadership of the CPC and he was re-elected to its Central Committee at its 8th Congress in 1956. While, constitutionally, Wang Ming is a full member of the Central Committee of the CPC, he is not able to play an active role in the Central Committee of the Party in China today. Those who read this document will readily understand why. ' Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 In domestic policy the Maoists are doing their utmost to drag China onto the dismal road of political reaction, economic chaos, cultural retrogression and poverty. In foreign policy they use all their resources to drag China onto the reactionary and dangerous road of hostility for the Soviet Union and other socialist countries, split the world corn- monist and working-class movement, subvert the national liberation, social- progressive and democratic movements and also the world peace movement, and provoke another world war. At the same time thousands upon thousands tit Communists and Young Communist Leaguers, workers, peasants and intellectuals, officers and men of the PLA and of the public security forces, and foremost youth and juveniles have selflessly risen against the Maoist counter-revolutionary military coup and Mao Tse-tung's personal dictatorship. They have risen in defence of Marxism- Leninism, the Communist Party and the legal state authority, in defence of the gains of the Chinese revolution and the cause of socialism. In contrast to Mao Tse-tung and his group they aim to put China, in domestic policy, on the bright road of political freedom, economic fluorescence, cultural progress and a happy life, and, in foreign policy, on the road to win progress, world security, on the road of friendship, co-operation, al- Hance and mutual assistance With the Soviet Union and other socialist coun- tries, the road of unity and co-operation with the world communist and working- class movement and with the national liberation, social-progressive and democ- retie movements, the road of concerted struggle with all the peoples for world peace, to avert another world war. At the very outset of the so-called "cultural revolution" Mao Tse-tung and his group had openly proclaimed that it was a life and death struggle be- tween two roads, between two classes, between two lines. Countless facts show that the anti-communist, anti-Soviet, anti- popular counter-revolutionary Maoist group is indeed a "handful of people in authority taking the capitalist road," that they are in fact championing the interests of the bourgeoisie and pursu- ing a reactionary, bourgeois policy. The leaders and cadres of the Party, a state, military and mass organizations h who are in the front ranks of the anti- t Maoist revolutionary struggle are the P real revolutionaries who are following a the socialist road, and they are indeed e championing the interests of the work- A ers, peasants and intellectuals and pur- s suing a proletarian revolutionary policy. L Approved For Releas Judging by indisputable facts and o the basis of my own experience gaine in the struggle against the thought an policy of Mao Tse-tung in the course o decades, I should like first and foremos to say that the blame for the presen catastrophic state in which the CPC an China now find themselves devolves pr manly on Mao Tse-tung, on his though and policy and his extremely self-cen tred, extremely careerist, criminal cal culations. At first Mao Tse-tung and his grou shifted and dodged, claiming that Ma Tse-tung was accomplishing only a "cul tura' revolution," whose purpose was to "safeguard the dictatorship of the pro- letariat," "safeguard the socialist sys tern," and "avert the restoration of capi talism." They said that the "cultural revolution" was aimed only at a "hand- ful of persons in authority in the Party taking the capitalist road" and "cham- pions of the bourgeois reactionary line," only against "counter-revolutionary revi- sionists," "traitors" and so on. However, facts are stronger than de- magogy. They cannot be twisted. Let us see what Mao Tse-tung is really doing. TEN MAJOR CRIMES COMMITTED BY MAO TSE-TUNG IN CHINA 1. He is trying to expunge Marxism- Leninism from the minds of the Com- munists and working people of China and replace it with the anti-Marxist, anti-Leninist thought of Mao Tse-tung. He insists that the "thought of Mao Tse-tung must ,capture all ideological positions," that the "thought of Mao Tse- tung are the highest instructions in all spheres of life," that the "thought of Mao Tse-tung are the absolute autho- rity" and so forth. At the same time he declares that Marxism-Leninism is "ob- solete" and trumpets that "the world has entered a new epoch?the epoch of the thought of Mao Tse-tung?' n sale of his sinister anti-Marxist, anti- d Leninist "thought" in China and abroad, d everything he is doing proves that in f effect he is using the screen of Marxism- t Leninism to destroy Marxism-Leninism. t Actually he is replacing Marxism-Lenin- d ism with the anti-Marxist, anti-Leninist i- reactionary "thought" of Mao Tse-tung. ? 2, He is smashing the Comnumist . Party of China and preparing to re- place it with an essentially anti-Corn- munist party which will be "Communist" o in name only. In a tatzupao written by him person- ally on August 5, 1966 he proclaimed the slogan "open fire at the headquart- ers," which was the signal for the rout - of the CPC. He crushed the CC CPC that ,was elected by the 8th Congress Of the CPC. According to reports from vari- ous sources, of the 174 members and al- ternate members of the CC CPC nearly four-fifths have been subjected to re- pression. All the members of the Poli- tical Bureau of the CC and its Standing Committee as well as of the Secretariat of the CC, elected prior to the 11th Ple- nary Meeting of the CC, with the excep- tion of Mao Tse-tung and a few persons from his group, have been brutally per- secuted on the basis of all sorts of false accusations. They include the Deputy Chairman of the CC Liu Shao-chi, Chu Teh, Chen Yun, the General Secretary of the CC Teng Hsiao-ping, members of the Political Bureau Peng Teh-huai, Ho Lung, Chen Yi, Peng Chen, Tan Chen. un, Lu Fu-chun, Lieu Po-cheng, Tung Pi- wu, Li Hsien-nien, Li Ching-chaure alter- nate members of the Political Bureau Ulanfu, Chang Wen-tien, Lu Ting-yi, Po Yi-po, members of the CC Secretariat Wang Chia-hsiang, Tang Cheng, Teng Tzu- hui, Huan Ke-cheng, Lo Tui-ching, Tao Chu, Wang Jen-chung, Liu Ning-i, Li Hsueh-feng, alternate members of the ? CC Secretariat Yang Shang-kun, Hu Chiao-mu and Liu Lan-tao. All these comrades were without foundation an. of "counter-revolutionaty revision- ism," branded "traitors" and "elements against the three" ("elements opposing Mao Tse-tung, the Party and socialism") and subjected to cruel repression, per- secution and insults. Of these some were "defiled," others "defeated," still others "overthrown," arrested, killed, declared as deserving to be "burnt alive," slan- dered, insulted or publicly humiliated. Premier of the State Council Chou En- lai, who was also Deputy Chairman of the CC until the 11th Plenary Meeting of the CC, was likewise repeatedly de- clared by the hungweipings as deserving W4bAolyabtfino tiosy_gao Chu, who He has banned the reading of Marxist- Leninist literature. He burns progres- sive Marxist-Leninist literature. He calls Marxism-Leninism "revisionism" or "dog- matism." Earlier he had called Marxist- Leninists "dogmatists," now he calls hem "counter-revolutionary revisionists" nd persecutes and destroys them. He as made the persecution and destruc- ion of Marxist-Leninists ideologically, olitically, organizationally, spiritually nd physically the principal means of radicating Marxism-Leninism in China. though at times he is compelled to use uch an authoritative term as Marxism- eninism as an honourable_ 7i.9 Vi 1 e 1999/09/02 CIA-R15113 CPYRGHT, wee elected 4FANIRKUSt Bureau and of its Standing Committee at the 11th Plenary Meeting of the CC, has been subjected to brutal repression, while Nieh Hung-chen, Hsueh Hsiang- chen and Yeh Chien-ying, who were elec- ted members of the Political Bureau, have fallen into disfavour. Mao Tse-tung is destroying Party committees and CPC cells of all levels. Wherever it has been, possible he has sent hungvvelpings, Cm- fans, the military and the police mercilessly to smash territorial bureaus of the CC CPC, provincial, municipal, district, county and regional Party com- mittees, and Party cells at workshops, factories, 'mines, transport organizations and rural production teams, and also brutally to persecute and destroy lead- ing functionaries and cadres of the Party committees. The ,persecution and physical annihi: lation of Party leaders, cadres and rank- and-file members has become Mao Tse- tung's main means of destroying the CPC. Mao Tse-tung and his group have dealt our Party, a severe blow such as the International imperialists, the Peiyang warlords or the Kuomintang of Chiang Kai-shek and Wang Ching-wei could not Inflict in the course of decades. But they have not been able to destroy the Party, which has nearly 25 million members and enjoys tremendous prestige and the all-round support of the working class and the whole people. Although in issuing orders and instruc- tions for all sorts of sinister actions Mao Tse-tung still demagogically uses the name of such an authoritative organ as the CC CPC, it is nothing more than what is correctly described in a Chinese proverb, which says: "Where the skin is lost what is the hair to cling on to?" Since Mao Tse-tung has already routed the Communist Party of China and its leading organs?the CC and its Political Bureau?how and on what grounds can he still call himself Chairman of the Military Committee of the CC CPC? Since these organs of the CPC have, in effect, ceased to exist, on what grounds does Mao Tse-tung commit acts of vil- lainy in their name? What right does Mao Tse-tung have to use the name of the CC CPC to guide the so-called "Group for Cultural Revolution Affairs at, the CC CPC" to all sorts of anti-communist, anti ? popular, counter - revolutionary crimes? Who gave Mao Tse-tung the right to convene the so-called 11th and 12th "plenary meetings of the CC CPC"? No matter how much he tries to use the signboards "CPC" and "CC CPC" to e niA211P9Mihcc,iivilPFalt-igt. tray him as an anti-Communist from head to toe. His group is inconte itabky an anti-Communist clique. He 3ends every effort to destroy the CPC as a genuine Marxist-Leninist, revoluti nary Party of the working class, a Party tha t emphatically opposes the reacti )nari thought and policies of Mao Tse-tting in general, and his counter-revolutionari military coup masked as a "eulturd re- volution" in particular. He plans to organize a false Com.' munist Party of his supporters to sup- ersede the former real CPC. A campaign to "prepare" for the so-called "9th Con- gress of the CPC" was conductec for this purpose last year. Actually these were not preparations for the 9th Con- gress of the CPC but only preparations for an assemblage of anti-Commuilsts, of Maoists. The decision of the so-called "12th Ex. tended Plenary Meeting of the CPC" was published recently in Peking. Thi: , as everybody knows, was a plenary meeting withbut the participation of the, ever- whelming majority of members an I al- ternate members of the CC CPC, In- stead, it was attended by members of Oe so-called "Group for Cultural Revo- lution Affairs," representatives of the hungweipings and tsaofans, of the pro- vincial "revolutionary committees" and of military leaders favoured by Mao Tse- tung. Incidentally, ,Mao Tse-tung grant, ed all of them the "right of a casting vote" of members of the CC CPC. The decision stated that the so-called '9th Congress of the CPC" would be corwen- ed in the immediate future. On the one hand this decision proclaimed that dele- gates to this "congress" must be those who were utterly devoted to Chairman Mao and to his thought, those who had shown this devotion? in the course of the "cultural revolution," i.e., those hung- weipings, tsaofans and military who had been particularly vicious. On the oilier hand, it was announced that there we uld be another purge of Communists, Yong Communist Leaguers, foremost worlars, intellectuals and peasants at every ofice, factory and educational institution, in every people's commune and in el,ery family. Moreover, the draft of the so: called "New Rules of the CPC" to be submitted for endorsement to the com- ing "9th Congress" have been circulated. This is a monstrous anti-Communist and anti-democratic document. Mao Tse-tung's notorious thesis of "removing the old and absorbing the new," which has been given wide pub- CPYRGHT fty in recen9OO1 moniPs and has now been formally included in the above- mentioned "draft Rules," is a cynically, frank admission of the fact that he is preparing to make away completely with the real Communist Party of China and replace it with a new false Communist Party, which he plans to use to further his personal aims. All this irrefutably proves that the so-called "9th Congress of the CPC" will be, in fact, a gathering of Mao Tse-tung's toadies even though a small group of leading functionaries and cadres of the CPC are to be allow- ed to attend in order to hide its real face with the purpose of misleading the Chinete people and public opinion abroad. But their participation cannot in the least change its true, anti-Com- munist nature. "Delegations" from for- eign pseudo-Communist parties will most certainly attend this gathering.' It will, indeed be a conclave of traitors and renegades of all hues, who together sign an anti-Communist, anti-Soviet, anti-popular tune under the direction of Mao Tse-tung. ? A new Maoist anti-Marxist, anti-Lenin- ist, reactionary party, "Communist" in name but anti-Communist in substance is to be formed at this gathering. Mao Tse-tung reckons that this is the only kind of party which he can use as a blind tool to prop up his tottering im- perial throne and pursue reactionary domestic and foreign policies. He cal- culates that this is the only kind of party that can be used as an obedient tool for the continuation of the sinister work he has bequeathed to Lin Piao, the successor he has himself appointed. Judging by reports from various sour- ces, after this false Communist Party 'is formed Mao Tse-tung plans to follow the example of his predecessor and teach- er?the Judas Trotsky?to set up an anti; Communist, counter-revolutionary Mao: ist "International." I am' deeply con- vinced that not only Chinese Commun- ists and the Chinese people but also? Communists and their friends through-' out the world take a firm stand against these machinations of Mao Tse-tung. 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 3. He has smashed state organs of the, democratie dictatorship of the people and is replacing them with the machin- ery of his personal reactionary military dictatorship. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : cIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CpYRQHT CPYRGHT Approved For ReleaseA999/09/09 ?__CalA,R79_4111-94A000500060001-5 Mao Tse-tung tried to use the slogan of the destruction of the old bourgeois state machine as a pretext for crushing the constitutional state organs of peo- ple's power in China. He has completely paralyzed the higher legislative body? the National People's Congress and its Standing Committee, both of which had been elected in accordance with the Constitution, The Chairman, Deputy Chairmen, members of the Standing Committee and most of the deputies of the NPC have been savagely persecuted on all sorts of false accusations levelled at them by Mao Tse-tung. To all intents and purposes, the State Council, which is the highest organ of executive 'power in China, has also been paralyzed. More than two-thirds of the Premier's deputies have been relieved of their posts or arrested, and the remain- ing deputies have been slandered and attacked by the hungweipings and tsao- fans. With the exception of the Defence Ministry and a few other offices, the min- istries and state committees subordina- ted to the State Council were placed under the control of hungweipings and tsaofans and then an integrated mili- tary control was established over them. Allany high-ranking officials of the State Council and Ministries have been killed, wounded, baited until they lost their health or subjected to other repressions in the form of unbearable, humiliating or health-destroying hard labor. Provincial a.nd lower people's con- gresses and people's councils have been made away with, and legal organs ? people's courts and people's procura- tor's offices of all levels?have likewise ceased to function. Their heads and cadres have been either persecuted or physically destroyed. The exceptions are the members of the national bourgeoisie in all legislative and executive bodies. They have not been touched at all by Mao Tse-rung. Mao Tse-tung has elected to liquidate .the Party backbone and foremost repre- sentatives of non-Party people in organs as the cardinal means of destroying these organs of power. In planting so- called "rc -)Ititionary committees," Mao Tse-tung counted on creating a weapon r of his personal military dictatorship. s Their paramount task is to persecute and annihilate Communists,. Young Communist Leaguers, revolutionary e servicemen and foremost workers, pea- r, ? sants and intellectuals. As soon as a so-called "revolutionary committee" m ai set up, hungweipings led by the ch2ip- man of the "revolutionary committe publicly smashed the signboards of the local CPC committee and of the peopl es committee. This was followed by the publicati r, of notices ordering all officials of lora Party organizations and Communists a well as cadres of the organs of powe to register at the "revolutionary con mittee" within three days and await far- ther sanctions. Arrest, exile, imprisca ment or murder awaited many of thost who registered and also those who cd not register but were later discovered,? Communists who headed provincial or other local Party organizations or people's committees and charged wi h being "counter-revolutionary revision, ists," "traitors" or "Soviet spies" we T brutally executed at public rallies n many localities where so-called "rev> lutionary committees" were 'formed. A .e these not typical features of an an 1- communist coup of any, cout?ter-revol tion? ' The key role in the "revolutionary committees" is played by military peop e whom Mao Tse-tung still manages to delude. The so-called 'Leftist element:" (hungweipings and tsaofans) are men- ly their assistants, while the few form r Party and administrative cadres who have been recruited with the help of the "tripartite alliance" slogan play tt e role of supernumeraries. In spite cf Mao Tse-tung's having proclaimed the, slogans of "struggle against the dictato ship of the bourgeoisie" and "defence cf the dictatorship of the proletariat," a I his actions prove the reverse,: behind the screen of "defending the dictator- ship of the proletariat" he is destroy- ing the people's power and replacing it with his personal reactionary Military dictatorship. 4. He is inflicting harm on the People's Liberation Army, splitting its ranks and employing it as a blind tool for his own personal ends directed against the Party and the people. Mao Tse-tung has 'used part of the PLA as an instrument of the counter- evolutionary coup and reactionary per- onal military dictatorship, concentrated art of the PLA on seizing power from Communist Party and the people's gov- rnment, killing Communists, workers, easants and inteljectuak; part of the PLA against another pan and ordered the PLA to pursue his re. actionary policy of "three supports" and "two military measures."** He' utilized the abolition of military ranks as a means for isolating in one blow the marshals, generals and officers who held no military posts from any contact with the arty, Mao Tie-tung has purged and persecuted marshals, generals, officers and sergeants of the PLA. Of the nine marshals, all except Lin Piao have been subjected to brutal persecution and indignities and some, for example, Marshals Peng' Teh-huai and Ho Lung, have even been arrested. The number of generals and admirals of the army, navy and air force re- moved from their posts and persecuted, runs, according to incomplete data, from 70 tO 80. According to information from various sources, among those pur- ged are four Deputy Defence Ministers, the Chief of the General Staff and seve- ral of his Deputies, Chief of the Opera- tional Department of the General Staff and his Deputy, Chief of the Central Political Administration and two of his Deputies, three Deputy Commissars of the Public Security Forces,' three Deputy Commanders, the Commissar and First, Deputy Commissar of the Navy, the Commander, four Deputy Commanders and three Commissars of the Artillery, seven Deputy Commanders, the Commis- sar and two Deputy Commissars of the Air Force, Commander of the Armored Forces and his Deputy, three Deputy Commanders and Deputy Commissar of the Railway Forces, Deputy Commander, *Three supports: "support of the1. Lefts," meaning support of the hung- weipings and tsaofans, "support of in- dustry" and "support of agriculture", which means the establishment of mili- tary control over the country's entire economy. **Two military measures: "military administration," which signifies the es- tablishrnent of a military regime in the cities and countryside, In factories, offi- ces and educational establishments to watch the workers, peasants, intellee- tuals and students and persecute them: "military training", which means that the entire population, young and old, is forced at the point of the bayonet "to study Mao Tse-tung's thought" and that military drill is introduced in schools and higher educational establishments, Approved For Release 199.9/09/02': CIA4RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT of_ the, r.n oVediFtir Re! elaS Aiti-Aircrafgtilitn, five Deputy Chiefs, the Commissar and Deputy Commissar of t1-1. Central Administration of the Logistics Service, and so on. Still more commissars and political workers were persecuted among the me- dium-rank and junior officers. More than half of the personnel in the General Staff and the Central Political Adminis- tration of the PLA have been removed from their posts and persecuted; the removal and persecution of the corn- panders of the Peking Military Area and the Peking garrison was even reported on two occasions. The facts show that Mao Tse-tung and Lin Piao not only carried through a mass purge, persecuted and annihipted the higher commanders and commissars and also the command- ers and political workers of all ranks in the former First, Second and Third Field Armies?, which they have always regard- ed as an alien body, but they also pur- ged, persecuted and annihilated, group after group, the higher commanders, commissars, commanders and political workers of the former Fourth Field Army whom Mao Tse-tung and Lin Piao did not trust or who Chiang ,Ching ,thought did not obey her orders. They are ruthlessly purging the corn- munist backbone of the PLA and are 'planning to replace wholesale the cadres 'of Communists and members of the Young Communist League in the PLA with the new men tried and tested in the course of the "cultural revolution". All this is being done to make it easier for Mao Tse-tung, Lin Piao and Chiang Ching to usurp all the power in the PLA and to convert, in a conspiratorial way, the People's Liberation Army, crea- ted and led by the Communist Party, into their personal anti-communist hord, es directed against the people. They have already set up special army units directly subordinated to the "headquarters of Mao Tse-tung". It is only with the help of these units that Communists, the population and "un- reliable" detachments of the PLA are suppressed and the "revolutionary com- mittees" in the localities are protected. All this demonstrates the fear of Mao Tse-tung and his supporters in face of the dissatisfaction mounting in the army. Indeed, the commanders, politi- cal workers and soldiers of the PLA will not be able to tolerate for long the pre- sent situation. Sooner or later they will rise up to fight against Mao Tse-tung and his group, for the restoration of a i ? genuine Chinese Communist Party and I the building of socialism in China. e51969L09102g GlAmtRilW7g9n0111 tion; he has disbanded the Young Com- munist League of China and is replac- ing it with the reactionary organiza- tion of hungweipings. On the one hand, Mao Tse-tung has disbanded the Young Communist Lea- gue and the Young Pioneer Organization and is brutally persecuting the leaders of the YCL and the Young Pioneers, their functionaries and YCL members. On the other hand, utilizing the military and the police as the leading core and back- bone of command, he has by coercion ,and deception compelled part of the university students and secondary and elementary school pupils to organize in - hungweipings and to play the part of the storm detachments in villifying, hounded, insulting, beating up, arrest- ing and killing people and in arranging arson?all according to his wishes?to act as small fry, as bullies who shed their blood to stage the "rebellion" and the seizure of power he wanted. He has compelled millions of young' people and children to waste their valu- able time, to drop their studies, to' undergo moral corruption and to lose .their health and life. He has committed a grave crime, crippling the growing generation of the Chinese people. He has wounded the soul of tens of millions of fathers and mothers anxious for the fate of their young sons and daughters. Those whom Mao Tse-tung and his group wanted abused and insulted were abused and insulted on their orders by the hungweipings at their assemblages. Those whom Mao Tse-tung and his group wanted purged or ousted from office were, on their orders, marked down by the hungweipings, who, at their rallies and demonstrations demanded that they be purged or ousted from office. Those whom they wanted beaten up, were, on their orders; beaten up by the hungwei- pings. Those whom they wanted to ar- rest, on their orders were arrested by the hungweipings. Those whom they wanted to kill, on their orders were kill- ed by the hungweipings. The books they. wanted to burn and the historical monu- ments they wanted to destroy, on their orders were burned and destroyed by the hungweipings. But all these actions, committed by them through their puppets, just as the "campaign to rectify style" and other false "mass movements", staged by Mao Tse-tung in the past, are demagogically pictured by them as a result of apply- ng the "line of the masses", that is, "the me from the masses ? to the masses", c as some kind of "big democracy" of he masses, as a "real mass movement" 9414t00651100600111124sscs." But all their demagogy cannot deceive anyone. When the hungweipings were sent to commit their infamies, Mao Tse-tung and his group repeatedly and openly declared that no one, no institution or organiza- tion, including military institutions, had the right to interfere in the actions of the hungweipings or stop them, because the hungweipings were the "little initia- tors" and "the vanguard" which was carrying out the "cultural revolution" under the personal guidance, the per- sonal organization and personal leader- ship and command of Mao Tse-tung. Similarly, the hungweipings, too, often shouted that Mao Tse-tung was their "supreme commander-in-chief," that they were the "guards commanded by Chiang Ching." ' Replacing the Young Communist Lea- gue and Young Pioneer Organization, by hungweipings and hunghsiaopings, Mao Tse-tung thereby wanted not only to abolish the assistants and reserve of the Communist Party, but also to abolish the most politically conscious, the most organized vanguard of the youth and children, the vanguard richest in revo- lutionary traditions, in order to make the young people and children easily sus- ceptible to his fraud and convert them into his personal reactionary tool for any crime. Today many hungwelping detach. meats have escaped this control and millions of young people have become aware of the criminal character of the "cultural revolution" and the reaction- ary nature of Mao Tse-tung's "thought." The Mao Tse-tung group is brutally sup- pressing them, sending millions of young men and women to remote areas and to the countryside in order that they should not be able to raise a rebellion against Mao Tse-tung and his group in the cities under the selfsame slogan "a rebellion is a just cause!" But this does not save the situation, because they can raise an anti-Mao "rebellion" not only...in the cities to- gether with the masses of workers, but also in the villages, together with the peasant masses. There is no doubt what- soever that China's younger generation cannot,tolerate for long the present situa- tion. It will necessarily rise up more and more to struggle against the baneful regime of Mao Tse-tung and his group, for a bright future for themselves and their country. 6. He is attacking the working class and splitting its ranks. He has disband- d the All-China Federation of Trade Unions. Mao Tse-tunz is breakine up the Party Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CA-RDI;79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 and his group? The aiin pursued by Tse-tung in splitting the working c is, on the one hand to ? of the working class?the Chinese Com- munist Party. He has disbanded mass organizations of the working class?the All-China Federation of Trade Uni and trade unions of all levels, is brut persecuting the leaders, functiona and rank and file of the trade union Mao Tse-tung is openly advocatin reduction of Wages. He has abolis plactoratfia and bonuses. Ha opanly C for lowering the living standard of workino class to that of the rural po lation. pn the pretext of "the strug against I counter-revolutionary eco mism," he is against improving the 1 of factory and office workers, is arresti and killing all who advocate an i provement in the life of factory and lice workers. Ignoring the difficult living conditio of the workers, he pursues the so call "combination of industry, agricultu and military affairs," compelling t workers, in addition to their jobs, engage also in agriculture and under military drill. He has sent to each i dustrial, mining and transport ente prise military units for permanent b leting in order to institute military co trol over the workers and other c ployees and bring military, pressure t bear on them. Before their shift start workers and other employees are force to recite and sing "quotations" in fron of Mao Tse-tung's portrait. This is calle "asking Chairman Mao for directives; at the end of the shift, they also recit and sing "quotations"?"report to Chai man Mao about their work for the day. Military men make use of every free minute to compel the workers and other employees "to study Mao Tse-tung thought," depriving them of an possib lity of resting. By coercion and deception he force part of the workers and other employee to organize into so-called tsaofans, t attack the overwhelming majority of th workers and other employees at fac tories, mines and on transport as con servatives and reactionaries, to rebe against them and capture power. from them. This splits the unity of the work ing class and causes conflicts in their ranks. On many occasions Mao Tse-tung has falsely proclaimed that "in conditions of the dictatorship of the proletariat there are no grounds within the work- ing class for necessarily splitting into two irreconcilably hostile camps." But the question is asked, who split theworking class into two irreconcilably hostile camps? Was it not Mao Tse-tung Mast; He, as before, adheres to the crro- _ lass neous division of the middle peasants into three sections: higher, average and lower, constantly compelling and pro- yoking the so-called poor and lower middle peasants to hound the so-called average and higher middle peasants; he is wrongly ousting the well-to-do middle peasants from the middle-peasant ranks and deititying them as The main tvpro? sentatives of capitalism in the country- 'side. All this is ruining the internal soli- darity of the peasants, undermining their labor enthusiasm and impeding the de- velopment of socialist agriculture. He, far from abolishing the system of the food tax, far from establishing single rational rates and purchase prices of farm produce, even decided to raise the food tax, increasing thereby the burden borne by the peasants. Moreover, he is also applying the notorious "combina- tion of industry, agriculture and mili- tary affairs" compelling the peasants, in addition to farming, to engage in indus- trial production and undergo military drill. He sent military units for per- en- manent billeting in the countryside in of order to institute military control and ut supervision over the work and life of ass the peasants. Members of peasant fami- at. lies, men and women, aged and young, ri- are forced every day to waste much on time in memorizing "quotations" and ss "studying" Mao Tse-tung's thought, rob- g's bing the peasants of rest after arduous le, work. SS On the pretext of fighting against. he "counter-revolutionary revisionism" he is to rejecting the system of workday units, st 'based on the principle of payment ac- cording to work done, and also material p. incentives?rewards for increasing pro- . a- duction. Under the cover of the noto- rious slogan of "reliance on one's own forces," the state does not render the ? necessary financial, economic and tech- ? nical assistance to collective farming a- ? which was just getting under way, as- c, sistance to the peasants who lead a ? wretched and hard life. As a result of Mao's pursuing this entire wrong policy ? China's agriculture, as hitherto, is ex- ? tremely backward and the life of the f peasants remains poor and hard. But the working peasants cannot tolerate such a situation for long. They necessarily will rise up more and more I to resolute mass struggle against Mao Tse-tung for improving their material and cultural standards. 8. He is destroying cillture and educa- tion, destroying the cultural heritage, persecuting and annihilating the intelli- gentsia. or ? ons ing class from being a solidly-knit and ally united foremost leading force in China's ties political and social life and, on the other, s. to prevent the working class from acting g a as a solidly-knit and ' united force hcd against the counter-rovolutionary au, mill- tary coup of Mao Tsimung. the Recently, under the demagogic slo- Pu? sans that the "working class must lead 81e everything" and "the Proletariat must no- ife exercise its dictatorship in the entire ng superstructure, including all the spheres in, of ideology and culture," Mao Tse-tung of_ has forcibly organized so-called "work- ers' brigades for the propaganda of Mao Tse-tung's thought." Actually these are ns a kind of detachment of storm troop- ed ers who act merely as assistants of mili- re tary units in suppressing the intelligent. he sia, hungweipings and other student to .youth; they have nothing in common go either with the "leadership of every- thing by the working class" or with the r. dictatorship of the proletariat. This v re of Mao Tse-tung is foul mockery e ideas of scientific communism abo e leading role of the working cl d the dictatorship of the prolctari Though Mao Tse-tung resorts to va s methods of blackmail and decepti an attempt to rally the working cla der the banner of "Mao Tse-tun ought" to support his reactionary ru e facts show that the working cla China wishes to rally only under t anner of Marxism-Leninism so as ht unitedly against the anti-Marxi m ao Tse-tung's thought" and the an mmunist, anti-proletarian Mao grou . He is persecuting the working pc ts and is ruining socialist constru n in the countryside. ao Tse-tung is shifting rcsponsibilit the ? failure of the people's corn nes in the countryside onto rural c s and the peasants. Since 1962, h er the guise of the "movement to ialist education," has been effectin tal persecution of the peasants ed the "four purges" (that is, "purg ideology, purge of politics, purge o anizations and purge of the ccono- .). the course of the so-called "cultura lution" he has even further stepped the endless indignities, arrests and ng of the cadres and members of 1 people's communes, has broken up Party, Young Communist League administrative organizations of the pie's communes, production teams, and SO On_ tu 71 - th th an s, ou t un th e th of " b fig a is co i? 7 s san tio e for mu die ? und soc bru nam of org my' In revo up rura the and peo Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT ? Approved For Relea To "defend the absolute authority of Mao Tse-tung and of Mao Tse-tung's thought," he is destroying the precious national cultural heritage . accumulated and preserved in China throughout the milleniums; he is also seeking to wipe out the influence of progressive foreign culture. He is burning Marxist-Leninist literature published in China and other countries, destroying progressive books of national and foreign origin. He is destroying the works of classics and contemporary writers and artists: novels ?from Cervantes, Balzac and Ibsen to Leo Tolstoy, Gorky and Sholokhov; poems?from Homer, Dante and Heine to Whitman, Hikmet and Neruda; musi- cal compositions ? from Mozart and Beethoven to Tchaikovsky and Shosta- kovich; the works of Shakespeare, Gogal and Tagore, paintings of Leonardo da 'Vinci; Rembrandt, Picasso and Siquei- ros?all this is regarded by Mao Tse- tung as objects which have to be des- troyed. He prohibits the showing of plays and films of different countries in China. Even Chaplin's films and Paul Robeson's records have been placed under a strict, ban by him. He is destroying the works of the classics and contemporary writers and artists of China: poems ? from Chu Yuan, Tao Yuan-ming, Li Po, Tu Fu, Po Lu Fang-weng to Hsiao San and. Ai Ching; novels ? from Lo Kuang- chung, Shih Nai-an, Wu Chen-en, Tsao Hsueh-ching to Ting Ling, Lao She and Chao Shu-li; plays -- from Kuang Han- ching, Wang Shih-fu to Mei Lan-fan, Tien Han and Tsao Yu; musical compositions ? from Yu Po-ya, Tsai Wen-chi, Chi Kang to Nieh Erh, Hsi Hsin-hai and Huo Lu-ting; paintings = from Su Tung- pe, Chen Pan-chiao to Chi Pai-shih and Hsu Pei-hung; works on history ? from Ssuma Chien, Ou-yang Hsiu to Lu Chen- you and Hou Wai-lou ? all this is re- garded by Mao Tse-tung as objects which have to be destroyed. All plays and films, which have not been revised by Chiang Ching and do not extol Mao Tse-tung have been banned by him. Artists beloved by the entire peo- ple like Chou Hsin-fang, Yan Hui-chu and Pal Yang are persecuted by him. He has dug up the graves of ancient Chinese thinker Confucius, the national hero Shih Ko-fa, the world renowned t painter Chi Pai-shih, the well-known I leader of the CPC and man 'of letters Chu Chiu-po, burned the memorial se 1999/09/02 . CIA-RDP79-01194A000500080001-5 , museum of the hero of the Tai Ping establishments and to turn all higher, , revolution Li Hsiu-chen and destroyed special and military-political schools . the monument to the great revolutiom into short-term courses (from a few ary democrat Sun Yat-sen and the monu- months to a year) of the Kanda type ment to the world-renowned poet Push- that existed from the close of the 1930s kin to' the beginning of the 1940s in Yenan. , Mao Tse-tung is destroying Buddhist He forces young people and children and Taoistic temples and pagodas which to read less and even not to read at all. are of great cultural and artistic value, He has instructed all educational insti- tutions to replace scientific and literary desecrating and destroying Moslem mosques. He has inflicted on ,the Chinese text-books with his book of "Quotations" nation losses in the sphere of culture and "Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung." which are incalculable and irreparable. Under the guise of "struggle against Already in the beginning of the so.' authorities" he brutally, persecutes pro- called cultural revolution the hungwei- minent intellectuals in all fields of pings acting on Mao Tse-tung's orders knowledge. He mercilessly baits philoso- burned text-books on various subjects and named their former teachers and phers; historians, economists, lawyers, medical workers, mathematicians, che- employees of educational institutions mists, physicists, biologists and other "counter-revolutionary black bandits" scientists and specialists in social and and "revisionists"; they humiliated them natural sciences. Under the pretext that in all manner of ways, subjected them literary and art workers of the 1930s to public dishonor and beatings and as- sassinated them. As a result studies in followed the so-called "Wang Ming line" China's educational establishments cant and the trends in Russian literary criti- not be resumed to this day. This situa- cism and that the literature and art of China were not in accord with the tion is exactly what Mao Tse-tung had planned. Only in such a situation can thought of Mao Tse-tung, all CPC WE- he, on the one hand, direct a great mass cials and prominent non-party literary of the hungweipings into the army (ac- and art workers of the period from the cording to available information 500,000 1920s to 1960s inclusive were dubbed have already been sent there) and thus . "counter-revolutinary revisionists" and gradually change the composition of the "counter-revolutionary black bandits"; officers and rank-and-file of the PLA, and, they were subjected to arrests, beatings on the other, send servicemen into edu- and humiliation, forced to march cational institutions of all levels so that through the streets wearing dunce caps henceforth prim., ly only two subjects, condemned to hard labor or killed. , "Mao Tse-tung's thought" and military' Under the slogan "seize all the posi. training, should be taught. tions of public opinion," Mao Tse-tung This discloses his great fears of in- routed newspaper and magazine offices tellectuals and of knowledge. That is throughout the country, and arrested, why he not only persecutes and exter. humiliated and exiled to hard labor or minates the best part of the Chinese killed newsmen. More than 500 news- intelligentsia, but also pursues a policy papers and magazines have been closed of stupefying the people thus prevent- down. ing the younger generation of China from To prevent the intellectuals from of- becoming knowledgeable people and fering him organized resistance, he dis- turning them into a crowd of fools.\ solved and routed the All-China Federa- Knowing only Mao Tse-tUng and his tion of Literary and Art Circles, the All- thought they can become no more than i China Association of Educational Work- the blind tools of ,Mao Tse-tung and his ers, the All-China Journalists' Associa- group and would be ready to fulfil all tion and other mass professional and their wishes and suffer any sacrifice for scientific organizations of 'the intelIec- their sake. tuals. In destroying culture and the cultural Under the slogan of struggle against heritage in annihilating the intellectuals the "counter-revolutionary revisionist ( system of education" he, in effect, stop- and enforcing the policy of stupefying ned the work of all educational in,stitu- the people Mao Tse-tung has committed ions in the country. Mao Tse-tung harsh- incomparably greater crimes than Chin' y persecutes and annihilates education- Shih-Huang-ti (first emperor of the Chin alists, he has burnt the bulk of the text- dynasty) who in the 3rd century B.C. buried alive/ several books and decided greatly to shorten burned books and b he period of study in all prinpati. which Confucianists f hp AIJAQ Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CI4-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT a?ne lp?n91r9219A.15PkaER.Pits?dinig9. 4 ore ly in some regions inhabited by national uch minorities, the leaders, cadres and the 3rd masses of the Han people* have been find rallying together with the national Tse- minorities for joint resistance against hih. Mao Tse-tung. the 10. He does everything to protect the national bourgeoisie and co-operates an with domestic and external reaction. According to Mao Tse-tung's theory of the "new democratism," the bourgeoisie is eir a class which exercises dictatorship jointly with the workers, peasants and re- the petty bourgeoisie. In his explanation dal of the national flag of the CPR?red with nd five stars?he says that the bourgeoisie iii- is ao equal member of society just as al the working class, peasantry and the a petty bourgeoisie. Therefore he attach- ch es particular significance and grants n, special privileges to the national bour-. si- geoisie in the spheres of policy, econo- ct my and social status. ns In the economic sphere, immediately after the country's liberation Mao Tse- al tung acceeded to the demands of the ei- national bourgeoisie and allowed them er to retain capital and profits, thus foster- ing the development of capitalism. In d 1956, after the establishment of the 0- joint state-private administration of in- d dustry and trade he decided to pay an t- annual five percent guaranteed profit to d the capitalists for a period of 5-7 years. S In 1962, upon the expiration of this d term, Mao Tse-tung decided to prolong s, the payment of profits for another five years. This period has also expired and he has once again decided to continue paying out profits for another . . . 10 ' years. At the same time the administration of all state-private enterprises in effect remained in the hands of the capitalists. Occupying the posts of directors, mana- ? gers, engineers and so forth, capitalists receive salaries several times higher than those paid to other people hold- ing the same jobs. Prior to the adoption of the Constitution, at the time when the so-called new democratic policy was being put through, representatives of the bourgeoisie made up a considerable part of the People's Political Consultative Conference. A considerable number of them also held the posts of heads and their deputies in the Central People's cursed byqPpeop for all tunes. romped For Rele the 20th century there are many m intellectuals in China and they are m wiser than the intellectuals of the century B.C.; they will assuredly appropriate ways of punishing Mao tung, the present, second Chin S Huang-Ti, this most despotic of all despots in China's history. 9. He conducts a barbarous great-H chauvinistic policy with regard to national minorities and annihilates th revolutionary leaders and cadres.. Following the traditions of the ?actionary regimes of Chinese feu emperors, the Peiyan warlords a Chiang Kai-shek, Mao Tse-tung uses m tary-police forces to decimate nation minorities; he steadfastly enforces policy of great-Han chauvinism whi finds its expression in discriminatio disparagement, repressions, forcible as milation or resettlement and disrespe for the faiths, customs and traditio of the national minorities. At the outset of the so-called cultur revolution he sent numerous hungw ping detachments from Peking to Inn Mongolia, Sinkiang, Ningsia, Chingha Tibet, Kwangsi, Yunnan, Kweichow an other regions inhabited by national rain. rifles where they destroyed temples an mosques, insulted the believers, commi ted murders and arson, "rebelled" an seized power. He used military unit deceived by him to annihilate cadres an ordinary citizens ? Mongols, Tungkang Chuangs, Tibetans, Tais, Miaos an _others. Mao Tsc-tung arrests and perse cutes Party, administrative and military leaders of the Mongol, Uighur, Tung kang and other peoples. He tests atomic and hydrogen bombs in regions inhabi tea the national minorities, caring little for their health or lives. lie dispatched military units consist- ing of national minorities to Canton to attack the workers and the troops re- maining loyal to the revolution, and in- cited them to fratricidal slaughter mak- ing cat's paws of other people to be able to fish in muddy waters. These crimes of Mao Tse-tung are alien to Marxist-Leninist national policy and a betrayal of proletarian interna- tionalism. They evoked not only vigorous resistance and armed struggle of the national minorities, but also opposition to his reactionary policy and compas- sion for the national minorities on the part of those local Party and administra- tive workers and servicemen of the Han people Who adhere to the Marxist-Lenin- *There are more than 50 nations and nationalities In the CPR. The Han na- tion accounts for over 90 percent of the total population. 116999MgV9r9cilind the State Ad.! ministrative Council, in its ministries and committees. On top of that they had a fairly large number of official posts in the consultative councils and administrative bodies in all major, med- ium and small towns. The national bourgeoisie retained a very important place in China's politi- cal life even in the period of the social. 1st revolution and the building of social. ism and after the Constitution was adopted. Statistics show that out of approximately 1,260 deputies of the National People's Congress (NPC), the country's highest organ of power, 260 were representatives of the bourgeoisie. It is common knowledge that deputies of the NPC are not elected by a direct vote. Nominally they are elected at pro- vincial meetings of people's representa- tives. In fact, however, they are all selected by Mao Tse-tung. As a result of this selection the national bourgeoisie which numbers less than a hundredth part of the country's population held over a fifth of the seats in the NPC, while the workers, peasants and the petty bourgeoisie comprising over 90 perecent of the population had less than four-fifths of the seats. There is a fairly large number of the bourgeoisie occupying posts of deputy. chairman and members of the Standing Committee of the NPC. In the State Council and its ministries and state com- mittees many of the heads and deputies are from the bourgeoisie. Moreover, they hold an even larger number of important posts in the People's Congresses anci People's Councils in all towns. For ex. ample, Jung Yi-jen, a big capitalist, who annually gets over 3,000,000 yuan in pro- fits, is a deputy of the NPC and member of its Standing Committee; he is deputy of the Shanghai Municipal People's Con- gress and deputy-mayor of Shanghai. . In the course of the so-called cultural re olution workers? peasants and the intellectuals had been and are being subjected to brutal repressions on the part of the hungweipings, tsaofans, the army and the police, and only the na- tional bourgeoisie continues to live as before, and as before receives profits and ,exploits the people. Foreign corres- pondents after visiting China and seeing the lite of the Chinese bourgeoisie, !un- animously agree that in the China which is living through the so-called "cultural revolution" the bourgeoisie is the sole flourishing and contented class. It is not surprising, therefore, that the bourgeoi- sie, in the cotarso of all its major con- ferences, has always sent telegrams of 8 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 11; Approved For Releas greetings to Mao Tse-tung calling him "beloved father and teacher" and thank- ing him for his profound solicitude and all-round care. As regards the facts of Mao Tse-tung's connivance with internal and external reaction there are more than enough of them. We shall only mention some of the more striking ones. Mao Tse-tung had an exceptionally high opinion of LI Chi.shen. After the formation of the CPR Li Chi-shen was appointed Deputy Chairman. of the Standing Committee of the NPC. What sort of a man was Li Chi-shen? He was a notorious hangman. After Chiang Kai-shek had betrayed the revolution of April 14 (1927) in Shanghai, Li Chi- shen on' April 15, 1927 betrayed the revolution in Canton and in the course of three days executed more than 5,000 Communists, revolutionary workers and students. Therefore, at a solemn recep- tion on the occasion of the formation of the CPR a veteran Party member upon seeing Li Chi-shen and others of his ilk, hit the table with his hand and exclaimed: "This is an outrage! Old revolutionaries are valued less than non-revolutionaries, and non-revolution- aries are valued less than counter-revo- lutionaries." Mao Tse-tung is on friendly terms with Li Tsung-jen, he made Li Tsung-jen his honoured guest and the guest of all the country. What sort of man is Li Tsung- jen? He is also a notorious hangman who together with Wang Ching-wei betrayed the revolution of July 15, 1927 in Wuhan. Within a few days they executed tens of thousands of Communists and other revolutionary workers and students. He is war criminal No. 2 who had replaced Chiang Kai-shek as president in order to bring the anti-communist, anti-popular, counter-revolutionary civil war to a con- elusion. A loyal flunkey of U.S. imperialism he fled to the United States after the de- feat of the Kuomingtang in the civil war and stayed there for 15 years. Upon Li Tsung-jen's return to China in 1965, Mao Tse-tung organised official welcomes and receptions in his honour in Peking .and other cities at which Li Tsung-jcn widely propagandised the slogan "td fight against imperialism it is necessary to fight against revisionism" which he had brought from the United States. In fact, Mao Tse-tung made him his adviser for anti-Soviet, anti-communist and anti- I popular affairs. Mao Tse-tung admired Chang Tung. sung. What sort of a man. is Chang s CPYRGHT e 1999/09/02 : rIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 Tung-sung? Chang Tung-sung taught the notorious history of Western philosophy His book "History of Western Philo- sophy" praises to the skies the reaction- ary-idealistic philosophers of the west. Marx's name is mentioned on the very last page. "As regards the philosophy of K. Marx," it is stated in the book, "it simply merits no discussion. For only the insane can balleVa In his phil000phy." At a joint meeting of 'the leaders the central ministries and committees held a few days prior to the official proclamation of the CPR, someone, sud- denly informed Mao Tse-tung: "Chang Tung-sung has arrived!" A joyous smile spread across Mao Tse-tung's face and he said for all to hear: "That's great! That's great! Chang Tung-sung has also arrived! He is a veteran of the Peiyang and Yanchiu groups and on top of that he is a prominent professor. Since he has come to us he at least should be given the post of member of the Cen- tral People's Government Council." I told him there and then: "Chairman Mao! This man still needs to be looked into. The veterans of the Pciyan and Yanchiu groups had not only always opposed the Communist Party but even the Knomingtang at the time when it was still participating in the revolution." Several days later the name of Chang Tung-sung was on the list of members of the Central People's Government Council. A short while later public se- curity organs discovered that he and his son were American spies and had a secret radio station in their home specially for maintaining contact with the U.S. secret service. On November 25, 1965 Jenmingjihpao published an account of how Mao-Tse- tung and his wife congratulated the writer Anna Louise Strong, propagan- dizer of Mao Tse-tung's thought in the U.S,A. on her birthday and publish- ed a group photograph. The newspaper mentioned that all the Americans on the photograph were friends of Mao Tse- tung and Chiang Ching. The past of some of these people is still unclear. Among them were L. Early and Ep- stein who, as is well known, were advis- ers and friends of Chiang Kai-shek and his wife Sung Mei-ling and have now become the advisers and friends of Mao Tse-tung and Chiang Ching, Mao ITse-tung is striking a secret dip- omatic deal with the U.S. imperialists. The Chinese and American ambassadors have already had 134 meetings in War- aw. Both sides have made the subject of their talks a complete secret from the Chinese and American peoples and from . the world public. A U.S. State Depart ment representative frankly admitted that Washington and Peking have been maintaining direct contact ever since the Geneva Conference of 1954 and that although the U.S.A. has no official diplo. matic relations with Washington, the successes that have been achieved at ,tho %Yoram tolke by for stimuli those achieved by Britain and other countries who have diplomatic relations with Pe- king. It is clear from the above that the secret diplomatic deal between China and the United States has already at- tained considerable scope and level. Such are the 10 principal crimes com- mitted by Mao Tse-tung withih the country.- These crimes are proved by incontrovertible facts. These crimes cannot be refuted by any verbal aril- flees of Mao Tse-tung and his group. These 10 crimes demonstrate with especial clarity and precision that Mao Tse-tung is engaged not in some kind of a "cultural revolution." but in an armed counter-revolution, an anti-communist counter-revolutionary military coup dir- ected against the people. Even at the time when the vaunted "cultural revolu- tion" was only getting under way, Marxists-Leninists of all countries point- ed out that the so-called "great prole- tarian cultural revolution," launched and led by Mao Tse-tung personally, far from having anything to do with either the proletariat or culture, or the revolution, was indeed spearheaded against the pro- letariat, against culture, against revolu- tion; far from having anything in com- mon with Marxism-Leninism; it was spearheaded against Marxism-Leninism; far from resembling in any way the policy of a Communist Party and a socialist state, it was spearheaded against the Communist Party and social- ism. The entire course of subsequent events has increasinglydemonstrated the absolute correctness of such an' appraisal. Comrade L. I. Brezhnev, General Sec- retary of the Central Committee of the CPSU, in his speech at a meeting with electors on March 11, 1967, already con- cretely pointed out: "The legend about the 'proletarian cultural revolution' is merely clumsy camouflage of a policy alien to Marxism-Leninism." "This looks more like a reactionary coup." In his speech on September 8 of the same year at a brotherhood meeting in Budapest he once again noted: "What has been named the 'cultural revolution' by the Mao Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 9 A rn Fnr Rplpacp cicicanci/f19 ? CIA-R111D7A-C11 1 ise-tung grotP woultcr e more correct to call counter-revolution." Subsequent events in China have fully corroborated the exceptional correctness of this Marxist-Leninist evaluation. These 10 crimes also demonstrate very clearly that the aim of the so-called "cultural revolution" effected by Mao Tse-tung and his group is not "to safe- guard the dictatorship of the proletar- iat," but, on the contrary, to abolish people's rule in China; not "to safeguard the socialist system," but, on the' con- trary, to undermine the foundation for building socialism in China. These 10 crimes show with exceptional clarity and precision that the object against which the "cultural revolution" is spearheaded is not "a handful of Party persons in authority taking the capitalist road" and not "carriers of the bourgeois reaction- ary line," not "counter-revolutionary revisionists" and not "traitors," but, on the contrary, it is the Marxist-Leninist Chinese Communist Party which unites in its ranks about 25 million members; it is the Young Communist League of China which unites in its ranks about 30 million members; it is the All- China Federation of Trade Unions which unites in its ranks over 20 million mem- bers; it is the millions of leaders, cadres and activists of Party, adminis- trative, military and various other insti- tutions and organisations, including schools, higher educational establish- ments, industrial, agricultural and tran- sport enterprises; it is the majority of the workers, peasants and intelligent- sia of the entire country. According to incomplete data, the number of people persecuted, arrested and physically an- nihilated by Mao Tse-tung and his group in the course of the "cultural revolution" exceeded five million long ago. And, lastly, these 10 crimes prove with exceptional clarity and precision that indeed the so-called "handful of persons in authority taking the capital- ist road" and "carriers of the bourgeois reactionary line" are no one else but Mao Tse-tung himself and his group! The facts show, and all recognise, that the anti-communist and anti-popular Mao Tse-tung group consists only of a . few people. And among them the per. son closest and most trusted by Mao Tse-tung is his wife Chiang Ching. That 'is why Mao Tse-tung is forced himself openly to praise her as the only person who really understands well, propagates and applies Mao Tse-tung's thought in 'general and his thought in the sphere CPYRGF,1T cutAnnnsnnnAnnni _s . of literature and art in' particular:That is why he has appointed her formally the deputy, and actually, the chief of the so-called "group for cultural revolution affairs and commander-in-chief of hungweipings. That is why he artificially put her in the third place, so far after Lin Piao, in the Mao heirarchy. And that is why public opinion in China and for- eign observers unanimously agree that Chiang Ching remains the only person Mao Tse-tung could really trust in everything. Here indeed is a handful of persons! iitted 10 such are breaking y, the people's unions, Young so on and whoal bourgeoisie The persons who coir crimes, the persons who up the Communist Part government, the trade Communist League, and are protecting the nation politically and economically ? are not really take th y the bourgeoi day they abuse he name of th the CPC, the ilitary Commit- nmittee of the these the persons who e capitalist road and carr reactionary line! To this , and take cover behind, te Central Committee of Council of State, the M tee of the Central Cor CPC, are sending troops to suppress ancants and intel- g Party, admin dies and crush lministering the I annihilate workers, peas lectuals, to attack leadin- istrative and military bo their cadres; they are ac "Group for Cultural Revolution Affairs e of the CPC," the hungwei- of the Central Committe under whose command pings and tsaofans daily and everywhere ted and killed eally the "per. the men who insulted, beat up, arres people. Are not these r sons in authority"? Are committed 10 such crimes not real visionists and his group have hi, Teng Hsia- s they fabricat- counter-revolutionary re traitors to t, revolution? That Mao,Tse-tung and tacked on to Liu Shao-c ping and others the label ed, such as "a handful of Party persons in authority taking the capitalist road" and "carriers of the bourgeois reaction- ary line," is a political trick with con- cealed aims. ? These aims are, first, to blame Liu and Teng for the- various mistakes and crimes committed by Mao Tse-tung over a number of years in home and foreign policy and thereby make Liu and Teng the scapegoats. Second, Liu and Teng were for many s years colleagues of Mao Tse-tung and know of the many crimes and unseemly secrets of Mo Tse-tung in internal and f international 'affairs; that is why Mao is r trying to liquidate Liu and Teng as s living witnesses. Third, another still more, important aim is to tack on to Liu Shao-chi, Teng Hsia-ping and Tao Chu labels of "Party persons in authority taking the capital- ist and on this pretext to liqui- date Liu, Teng and Tao themselves and then arbitrarily tack on a label of "sup- porters of Liu, Teng and Tao" to all per- sons whom Mao Tse-tung and his group intend to persecute. The real objective of their call?nec- essarily to link together "big criticism" of the "top Party person in authority taking the capitalist road" with the cam- paign of "struggle, criticism and trans- formation" in all the country's institu- tions and organisations, is to utilise the slogan 'of "struggle against the handful of Party persons in authority taking the capitalist road" as a screen and pretext for persecuting and destroying Party cadres in all institutions and organisa- tions throughout the country. By decision of the unlawful so-called "12th Plenary Meeting of the Central Committee of the CPC," Liu Shao-chi was removed from all the Party and state posts he held and "expelled from the Party for ever" on the basis of absolu- tely false accusations entirely fabricated by Mao Tse-tung himself. Mao Tse-tung followed this up by another, wider, still more slanderous campaign in the press? radio and at meetings and rallies all over the country under the slogan of "launching a struggle of unusual scale and depth against the top traitor, top scab and top spy of the Kuomingtang, imperialism and Soviet revisionism, Liu Shao-chi, and his supporters in all the localities." This once again most clearly reveals "the tiger's aspect and snake's soul" of Mao Tse-tung as an unprece- dentedly bestial and absolutely brazen plotter. Communists and other upright people throughout the world are raising their wrathful and just voice. in protest against such foul persecution by Mao Tse-tung of the Vice-Chairman of the Central Committee of the CPC and Chair- man of the Chinese Pt20, .-'S Republic Comrade Liu Shao-chi, Mao Tse-tung acted in a similar way during the so-called "campaign to rectify style," started in February 1942. Making use of the military power he usurped in he Party and the difficult international ituation during the early period of.the Hitlerite attack on the Soviet Union, Mao Tse-tung began this campaign which ormally was called the "campaign to ectify three styles" (that is, the Party tyle, style of education and literary ? Approved For Release 1999/09/02 :LIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT Approvcd For Rcicasc 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000600060001-6 style); actually it was a campaign of "four antis" (that is, anti-Leninist anti- Comintern, anti-Soviet and anti-Party). For what purpose did Mao Tse-tung need that campaign? In preparing it and in the course of conducting it, Mao ?Tse- lung himself repeatedly said that by car- rying out the campaign he wanted to achieve three aims: 1) to replace Lenin- ism by Maoism; 2) to write the history of the Chinese Communist Party as the history of Mao Tse-tung alone; 3) to elevate the personality of Mao Tse-tung above the Central Committee and the entire Party. Why did he have to do it? He himself replied: this would give him two opportunities: first, to capture the chief leading place in the Party leader- ship and all power in the Party in his own hands; second, if he already has taken the first place in the Party leader- ship, .no one should ever be able to ? oust him. To achieve these ends he did the fol- lowing in this campaign: 1) he declared Leninism to be Russian Marxism suit- able only for leading the Russian revo- lution and unsuitable for leading the world and the Chinese revolution; 2) de- clared that the leadership and assistance, of the Communist International to the CPC was entirely wrong; 3) declared that the all-round support given by the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks) and the Soviet Union to the Communist Party of China and to the Chinese Revolution was not only "invalid" and "ineffective" but even ."harmful"; 4) accused the entire Party of "non-recognition of Maoism" and of "loyalty to Leninism and the Commun- ist International" and of "adherence to the CPSU(B) and the Soviet Union?' And who was to blame for all this? Mao Tse-tung held that the blame lay with all the leaders and important cadres of the Party who had studied in the Soviet Union and spread the influ- ence of Leninism, the Comintern, the CPSU(B) and the Soviet Union in China. Their main representatives were Wang Ming, Ching Po-ku, Chang Wei-tien, Wang Chia-hsiang, Kai Fang, Yang Shang-kun, Chu Jul and others. And who was to blame for supporting these Comintern men? Mao Tse-tung held that these were Chu-Teh, Chou En-lai, Hsien Ying, Teng Fa, Peng Teh-huai, Ho Lung and others. And who was the "top man" to blame? Mao Tse-tung held that this was Wang Ming. According to his statement, Wang Ming was the "main representative of _Russian Marxism and the line of the, pp Comintern in the Communist Party of China." Wang Ming was the "principal adherent and defender of the CPSU(B) ,and the Soviet Union in China." Wang Ming was the "principal foe of Maoism in the CPC." But how was the struggle against Wang Ming to be waged and finked with the struggle against the absolute majority of the leaders, Party cadres and members? For this Mao Tse.tung artificially div. ided the entire Party into two groupings ?the "dogmatic" and "empiristic" and at the same time united them as one target of his attack. He placed all the Communists who, had studied in the Soviet Union or engaged in ideological and political work and also those who ? socially originated from the intelligent- sia into the so-called "pro-Soviet and dogmatic Wang Ming grouping. All the Communists who engaged in practical work orrwho were of ?working-class and peasant social origin he placed into the so-called "empiristic grouping." At the same time he declared that the empiris- tic grouping was a "captive and assist- ant" of the dogmatic grouping. Moreover, Mao Tse-tung held that in order to write the history of the CPC as the history, of Mao Tse-tung alone it was necessary not only not to recognise the, services bf Leninism, the Comintern, the CPSU(B) and the Soviet Union in the history of the CPC and the Chinese Revolution. It was necessary to deny that any leader, any Party functionary or member had rendered any service to the CPC and the Chinese revolution. Ac- cording to Mao Tse-tung's statement, it was particularly necessary: 1) to deny the services rendered by Chu Chiu-po in the struggle against Right opportunist Chentuhsuism and also the services of the extraordinary August Conference of the CPC (1927) which approved in its decisions this struggle and the services of the Comin- tern leadership which Was the direct sponsor of this conference and to pro- claim the line of the August CPC Con- ference to be a "Chuchiupoist Left Opportunist line"; 2) to deny the services rendered by Wang Ming in the struggle against the Left adventurist line of Li Li-san and also the services of the 4th Plenary Meeting of the Central Committee of the CPC, sixth convocation (January 1931), and the Presidium of the Execu- tive Committee of the Comintern (May 1931) which approved this struggle in their decisions and to declare the line of the 4th Plenary Meeting of the CPC Central Committee a "Left opportunist line of Wang Ming"; ' 3) to deny the services rendered by Wang Ming in putting forward the pol- Icy of the anti-Japanese national united front and the services of the 7th Com- intern Congress which approved this policy in its decisions and to declare this policy of the anti-Japanese nationai united front, a "Right-wing capitulatory line of Wang Ming." According to Mao Tse,tung's state, ment, if the services of other persons is the history of the CPC and the Chinese revolution were recognised then "there would be no Maoism," "the history of the CPC as the history of Mao Tse-tung alone would be impossible" and there would be no "especially high and un- shakeable place of Mao Tse-tung in the CPC." In keeping with his conspirator- ial plan, Mao Tse-tung first of all struck the main blow at Wang Ming?not only ideologically, politically, organisationally and morally, but also physically (at the beginning of this campaign Wang Ming had already been gravely poisoned by toxic preparations). Mao Tse-tung also struck blows of dif? 1"4-tent severity at the absolute majority of the leaders, cadres and Party mem- bers. Employing diverse methods of deception, slander, threats and coercior compelled all of them to admit thal Nary were either dogmatists or em'pir. icists, that is, "captives and assistants of the dogmatists" and that, of course, all without exception carried out the above mentioned so-called "Left" or "Right" line of Wang Ming. Moreover, by similar methods and cruel torture he compelled a considerable part of the Communists and YCL ,members to Con- fess that they were "traitors," "counter- revolutionaries" and "spies of the Kuo- mintang, the imperialists and the Soviet Union." Many of those who did confess to being such criminals were arrested or killed or committed suicide. This con- tinued for more than three years. As a result of this campaign, the 7th Plenary Meeting of the CPC Central Committee, 6th convocation (April 1945), under the pressure of Mao Tse-tung adopted a "Resolution on Some Histor- ical Questions of the CPC." This was the first official document falsifying the history of the CPC in accordance with Mao Tse-tung's concepts. Following this the Rules, adopted by the 7th Congress of the CPC (April-May, 1945), forcibly Included recognition of Mao Tsetung's thought as the only guiding ideas of the CPC. Moreover, Mao Tse-tung succeeded in capturing the top leading post (at the 1st Plenary Meeting of the CPC Central Committee, 7th convocation, he .I- '-'I,.'- 3.1 Approved For Releas for the first time was "elected" Chair- man of the Central Committee) and all power in the Party, in creating a cult of his personality, and establishing his per- sonal dictatorship in the CPC which relied 'mainly on the support of army After the 7th Congress and until the so-called cultural revolution, for more than 20 years, Mao Tse-tung constantly conducted campaigns under, different names. But their chief content, chief aims, chief methods and chief objects of attack in the main were the same as in the first "campaign to rectify style" of 1942-45. The fist "campaign to rectify style" was a rehearsal of the so-called cultural revolution. The various campaigns which followed it, were to one or another extent direct preparatory measure& for the "cultural revolution." During this time in view of the many fundamental mistakes and repeated failures and de- feats of Mao Tse-tung's home and for- eign policy and especially in view of the obviously reactionary and counter- revolutionary nature of these campaigns and the "cultural revolution," even men who were closest and most loyal to Mao Tse-tung as, for example, Liu Shao- chi, Hu Chiao-mu, Tan Chen, Tao Chu, Lo Yui-ching, Ho Chang-kung, Peng Chen, Lu Ting-i, Chou Yang and othcrs, one after another became his enemies and victims. These facts graphically show that Mao Tse-tung, notwithstand- ing his frenzied terror and perfidy, is today even more isolated and is in a really unprecedented desperate position. Similarly Mao Tse-tung has slyly branded Peng Teh-huai, Ho Lung, Lo Jui- ching and others as "army persons in authority taking the capitalist road," not only to utilise this as the pretext, for persecuting them but also in order to be able arbitrarily to brand as "sup- porters of Peng, Ho and Lo" any military leaders and army cadres whom he intended to persecute. Similarly, as early as 1962 Mao Tse- tung ordered Chi Pen-yu to write an article slandering as "traitor" the na- tional hero of the T'ai P'in revolution Li Hsiu-cheng who heroically perished at the hand of the national traitor Tseng Kuo-fan; thereby Mao Tse-tung initiated the so-called "campaign of struggle against traitors." Following this, Chu Chiu-po, well-known . ldader of the Chinese Communist Party who heroic- t ally perished singing the "Internation- a ale" at the hand of butcher Chiang s Kai-shek, was classed among the pa "traitors." Next a list of "traitors" was b CPYR9HT e 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 compiled which inclUded more than their own real visage of anti-communist, 2,700 leaders and important cadres of anti-popular, anti-Marxist and anti- Party, administrative, military educa- socialist counter-revolutionaries. tional and mass organizations whom he It is because the slogan of struggle had long ago planned to destroy. against the so-called "handful of Party In reali y, o these persons are the persons in authority taking the capital- flower of the Chinese people, the finest 1st goad," put forward by Mao Tse-tung sons and daughters of the, Communist for plotting purposes, has such an in. Party of China, worthy fighters of the groat am), oaf Werld COITIMISAlift1 W110 tricate and perfidiously treacherous aantarit that ha and ilia palm Mimi), have been reared in the spirit of the repeat that this slogan indicates "the great doctrine of Marxism-Leninism, main direction of the struggle" in the who have for decades been tried and vaunted "cultural revolution." They tested and schooled in revolutionary openly extol this slogan as the "great battles against international imperial- strategic plan" of the so-called "cultural ism and internal reaction. Such criminal revolution" elaborated by Mao Tse-tung actions, falsification of the "corpus delic- well in advance. ti," slander of upright people with the In the course of the "cultural revolu- object of elevating himself and tramp- tion" Mao Tse-tung issued so-called ling upon others?these are Mao Tse- "latest instructions" such as "we mnst tung's favourite foul ways and perfidious fight egoism and criticise revisionism," methods. "combat clannishness" and so forth as Fourth, Mao Tse-tung deliberately and the main trend in continuing the "Cul- with great pomp pictures the counter- tural revolution" in an attempt to reduce revolutionary military coup, effected by the steadily mounting discord and split himself and directed within the country within the Maoist group and, in particu- against the Communist Party and the lar, among the hungweipings and tsao- people and also against the Soviet Union fans; to charge cadres of Party, adminis- and the international communist move- tration, military and mass organizations merit, as struggleor "seizure of pow- of all levels who oppose Mao Tse-tung er'' between his group and the so-called with "revisionism" and also "egoism" in "supporters of Liu and Teng." Similar- ly, the general movement of resistance order to have an additional pretext for ' slighting or persecuting them; to use in the entire Party and the entire coun- the bugbear "egoism" against non- try, aroused by his counter-revolution- party workers, peasants and intellec- ary military coup, he also deliberately tuals inasmuch as in their case it was pictures as a struggle for "seizure of more convenient than the bugbear power" between the so-called "support- "revisionism." But the main thing was ers of Liu and Teng" and "supporter that he aimed to use these slogans to of Mao and Lin," thereby trying to mis- mask what for the entire nation were lead the people of h' ry an the increasingly evident ugly features of world progressive opinion, to prevent the counter-revolutionary military coup, them from divining the essence of Mao which he was accomplishing for the sake Tse-tung's counter-revolutionary mili- of his own extremely egoistic, careerist tary coup. interests and those of his wife and other Fifth, one of the artifices frequently employed by Mao Tse-tung is that he members of his group. not only abuses in the vilest terms the Developments upset his expectations. They showed that the louder Mao Tse. various abominable crimes actually tung called for a struggle against committed by himself, but even shifts "egoism" and "clannishness" the clearer the blame for them onto the victims of he revealed the substance of these sl- his attacks and persecution in order to gans and the more obvious it became distort the truth and to mix black with white. . that none other than Mao Tse-tung was the egoist No. 1 and that his group In other words, it is because Mao Tse- personified premier clannishness found- tung himself and his group arc really ed, besides, on an abuse of state power. the notorious handful of persons in What, according to his explanations, authority taking the capitalist road, the does the "struggle against egoism" carriers of the bourgeois reactionary mean? That "unselfishness" should me, it is because they themselves- are triumph. What does "unselfishness" he counter-revolutionary revisionists mean? "The loftiest unselfishness means nd traitors that they, like a thief who boundless devotion to Chairman Mao." houts "stop thief!", fraudulently re- And what does "devotion" mean? It ackste the labels of these crimes onto thc means "stowing to defend to the last s of others in order to conceal breath Chairman Mao's status as th Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01174701500560001-5 12 I - CPYG1711 Approved For Release 1iiV/M121-: CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT Therefore, despite the fanfare sur- rounding the publication of these slo- gans, he failed to stimulate the lauded "great unity of the whole country" or the notorious "unity of the,three sides" and he failed to reduce the split and conflicts among the hungweipings and tsaofans. All he did Was to increase the split and the bickering among the forces forming his immediate rnainsta); moreover, all he achieved was that those in whom political consciousnes:, Party conscience and a sense of justic still live' are rising against Mao Tsceun g and his group, who arc committing an/ crime for the sake of their egoisti: interests., The soalled "Group for Cultured Revolution Affairs of the CC CPC" cor- sisted of 17 persons handpicked by Mae Tse-tung. Twelve of them have beet. subjected to repression, and only five arc left. Even people like Wang Li, Kuala Feng, Chi Pen-yu, Mu Hsin and Ling Chieh, who had displayed exceptiona. zeal in the "cultural revolution," fume. themselves in disfavour, and today one after another they are declared to be "counter-revolutionary black bandits' who have opposed the "thought" of Mac Tse-tung, the "Group for Cultural Revo lution Affairs" and Chiang Ching. Yang Cherewu, Acting Chief of thc PLA General Staff and commander of the Peking Military District, Yu Li-chin who was recently appointed Political Commissar of the Air Force, and Fu Chun-pi, commander of the Peking Garrison, have likewise been declared "double-dealing counter-revolutionaries" who had opposed Mao Tse-tung, the "Group for Cultural Revolution Affairs" and Chiang Ching. These facts best of all bear out the aforesaid. No matter what cunning Mao Tse-tune and his group resort to in their dema. gogy and no matter what masks they put on, whether it be the "cultural rev? lution," Marxist-Leninist "Leftist" verb iage, the slogan "struggle for power of two groups" or any other new screer which they may yet conjure up, they cannot hide the truth about their anti- Communist, anti-popular counter-revolte tionary military coup. -The ten crime: committed by their hands are ten indictments which they themselves have inscribed. ? ' 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 FIVE MAJOR CRIMES COMMITTED BY MAO TSE-TUNG IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 Foreign policy is a continuation of domestic policy. Let us now see what 'crimes Mao Tsa?tung has committed in the sphere of international policy. L He frenziedly attacks the Soviet Union and other socialist countries. He organised a siege of the embassies and other diplomatic offices of the U.S1.S.R., Bulgaria, Hungary, the German Democratic Republic, Czechoslovakia and Mongolia in China, insulted the leaders of these countries and caused the manhandling and baiting of diplo- mats and members of their families. Like the Peiyan warlords and Chiang Kai-shek he in effect does not recognise the Mongolian People's Republic as an independent state, openly threatens its sovereignty and lays claim to its terri- tory. He persists in his frenzied opposi- tion to joint action with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries in the rendering of assistance to the Viet- namese people in order to repulse United States aggression, and seeks to under- mine the Vietnamese people's bonds of friendship with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries, thereby encour- aging U.S. imperialism to keep escalat- ing the war of aggression in Vietnam. He spreads slanderous rumors, insulting and undermining the prestige of the Korean People's Democratic Republic;e t hereby encouraging provocations against the KPDR by aggressive United States troops and the South Korean puppets. Besides bringing 'trade and economic pressure to bear on Cuba after the manner of the U.S. imperialists, he -engages in subversive activities against the Communist Party and revolutionary 3overnment of Cuba. He openly pro-. elaims his intention of "demolishing" the U.S.S.R. and other socialist coun- cries, constantly fans anti-Soviet hysteria China and fosters hostility for the soviet Union. Mao Tse-tung savagely attacks the CPSU and the Soviet Union because the reat Communist Party of the Soviet nion, founded and reared by Lenin, as the longest history, the most exten- ive experience; the most imposing chievements and the greatest prestige, because the great Land , of Soviets, ? created by Lenin and embodying Marx- ism-Leninism, is the world's first social- 1st country with the longest history, the most impressive achievements and the greatest might, because led by the CPSU thee Soviet Union is indeed the mightiest and most reliable mainstay of the world 'revolution and of world peace, that it is indeed the most edur- ing and consistent revolutionary bastion. of the struggle ? against imperialist cli eues and reactionaries of all the capitalist countries headed by the U.S.A. Mao Tse-tung has turned frenzied an I-Sovietism into his banner of strug- gle against Marxism-Leninism, against the Communist and Workers' Parties, ag inst socialism and communism, against the world revolution and peace in order to gain the approval and un- derstanding of the imperialist clique heeded by the U.S.A. and obtain .the po sibility of collaborating with it. nother reason for the violence of his att icks on the Soviet Union and the CP43U is that the Great October Revolu- tion has witnessed its 50th anniversary. Th Great October Socialist Revolution' am. its brilliant achievements in the budding of socialism and communism ' over the past 50 years have opened the vis a of a bright future for all mankind. This is the greatest force inspiring the wo -king class and all other working pee pie throughout the world. It is the greatest force inspiring the CPC and the Chinese people, who are at present afil cted by a great tragedy. Through furious anti-Soviet campaigns Ma) Tse-tung seeks to rupture the long- est blished, traditional friendship and? fra ernal relations between the Corn.. mu list Parties and peoples of China and the Soviet Union. He is beset by a har- ros ing fear that the Chinese Commun- ists and the Chinese people will learn of lhe immense achievements, which the So s iet people, led by the CPSU, have attained in the course of the fulfilment of the new Party Program and the de- cisbns of the 23rd CPSU Congress, in the building of communism, in the struggle, for world peace and in render- ing support to the communist and wor king-class movement in different- coustries and to the national liberation and social-progressive movement in , Asia, Africa and Latin America. Ha is exceedingly afraid that the Chinese Communists and the Chinese. peo7le will learn that the material and cult rral life of the Soviet people is stea lily improving, that they are gradu- llly moving from the principle of "from eacl according to his ability, to each' leeexding to his work" to the principle Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 13 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 'of "from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs," in other words, that they are moving towards a prosperous and happy life under com- munism. Mao Tse-tung is extremely afraid that if the Chinese Communists and the Chinese people learn the truth in all these (Aiestions they will see Weimar the gross absurdity and perniciousness of the 'so-called "thought of Mao Tse- tung" apd of his policies. They will then inevitably and unanimously demand that China take the correct Marxist- Leninist road of socialist construction and of the struggle for peace, which has been followed by the Soviet Union. After appreciating all this they will rise with greater determination, on a larger scale, in a more organised manner and in greater unity against Mao Tse-tung and his "thought," against the counter- revolutionary coup of Mao Tse-tung and his group. That is precisely why anti- Sovietism has become the focal point of Mao Tse-tung's foreign policy and the core of his policy at home. The armed provocative attack of the Mao Tse-tung clique on Soviet frontier guards of March 2 on Soviet territory on the Damarisky Island in the Ussuri river and in this connection the new anti-Soviet racket in China and abroad 'accompanied by outrageous territorial claims to the U.S.S.R. are not accidental events. Internally, they .represent an at- tempt by Mao Tse-tung to distract the attention of the Chinese people from the incredible and growing difficulties of a political and economic character aris- ing out of the consequence of the so- called "cultural revolution," as well as the preparation for the carrying through of the so-called "Congress of the CPC" in an atmosphere of exceptional anti- Soviet, anti-communist hysteria. Externally, this armed provocation and anti-Soviet propaganda ballyhoo re- presents an act of assistance to the anti- Soviet, anti-Communist sorties of the ruling circles of the ,U.S.A. and of the German Federal Republic, in particular in regards to the Bonn venture to carry through presidential elections in West Berlin of March 5 and even more so serves as an encouragement to the re- vanchist claims of Bonn to reshape the map of Europe. It also represents an attempt to interfere with the Interna- tional Conference of Communist and workers parties which aims to achieve the strengthening of the unity of the world communist and workers' move- ment and the unity of action of all anti- imperialist forces. Approved For Releas Simultaneously these facts clearly show the absurd, shameful, adventurst and dangerous point , reached by the anti-Sovietism and anti-Communism of Mao Tse-tung. 2. He venomously attacks the Marxist- Leninist Communist and Workers' par- ties of all countries. Ha goes to extremes to intensify his splitting and subversive activities against the overwhelming majority of , the militant contingents of Communists in different countries, organises a fifth column to combat Communist and Workers' parties, openly slanders them, calling them "counter-revolutionary re- visionist" parties, and publicly proclaims his intention of "destroying" them. He has slandered the Karlovy Vary Confer- ence which was attended by representa- tives of 24 Communist and Workers' parties, calling it a "conference of scabs and traitors," and he has called the leaders of each of these parties "a hand- ful of traitors and scabs." The Budapest Consultative Meeting, attended by rep- resentatives of 66 Communist and Workers' parties, has been named by him "the Budapest farce," while the parties which attended it have been called a "handful of traitors and scabs." In Western Europe he concentrates his attacks mainly on the largest and most influential Communist parties. He not only maliciously attacks Comrade Waldeck Rochet and other leaders of the French Communist Party but also slan- ders the late Maurice Thorez, the great fighter for communism. He not only maliciously attacks Comrade Luigi Longo and other leaders of the Italian Com- munist Party but also slanders the late Palmiro Togliatti, who was another great fighter for communism. At the same time he fiendishly attacks the heroic Communist Party of Spain and its glorious leader Comrade Dolores Ibarruri, a party which is in the fore- front of the struggle against fascism. He intensifies subversion and splitting activities against the Communist parties of the U.S.A., Canada and Latin America as well as against the Communist par- ties of the Arab countries. He makes a special effort to split and undermine the. communist movement in Asian coun- tries neighbouring on China. The Com- munist Party of Indonesia which came under the influence of Mao Tse-tung's "Leftist" and reactionary ideas, suffered a tragic defeat as a result of which mil- lions of Communists and non-Party i workers, peasants and intellectuals suf- fered horribly. Mao Tse-tung drew no lesson whatever from this.. Instead, he imputed the blame to the leaders of the Communist Party of Indonesia, who died heroically. He ceaselessly engages in splitting and subversive activities against the Communist parties of India and Ceylon, causing enormous difficulties in their work, In this easie of the Communist 'Party of Japan, which, urged Mao Tse- tung to create a united front of struggle against U.S. imperialism and came out against the Maoist anti-Soviet "united front," he did not confine himself to open slander and splitting and subver- sive activities. He organised Chinese residents in Japan into hungweiping gangs in order to manhandle Japanese Communists and attack and destroy the? building housing the Society for Japan- ese-Chinese Friendship; he bribes hooli- gans and Trotskyite elements to attack offices of the Japanese Communist Par- ty. In Peking, acting on his instructions, hungweipings beat up and seriously in- jured alternate member of the Presi- dium of the CC CPJ Itiro Sunama, cor- respondents of the CPJ newspaper, as well as Japanese students. Moreover, he openly proclaims his intention to "de- molish" the CPJ and calls for the liqui- dation of top leaders of the CPJ, com- rades Sandzo Nosaka and Kenclzi Miyamoto. Thus, Mao Tse-tung mouths "Leftist" verbiage about a "world revolution" but in fact engages in splitting and subver- sive activities with the object of "de-. molishing" the foremost contingents heading the revolutionary movement in different countries; he speaks of a "struggle against the imperialist clique and reactionaries of all countries head- ed by the' U.S.A." but does exactly what 'the U.S. imperialists and all reaction- aries want but cannot do. A striking example in this respect is his attitude towards the Alevelopments in Czechoslovakia. He and his group level dirty slander and fabrications at the Soviet Union and other socialist countries as well as against the healthy forces in the Communist Party of Czech- oslovakia and among the Czechoslovak people, thereby directly and openly pouring grist on the mill of U.S. and West German imperialism and of the counter-revolutionary and anti-socialist forces within Czechoslovakia. 3. He plans ,to split and undermine the national liberation movement in Asia, Africa and Latin America, pursu- ng a policy of openly pressuring the developing countries of Asia and Africa. e 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 CPYRGHT - Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 He does his utmost to split and under- mine the Afro-Asian unity movement and the movement for solidarity of the peoples of Asia, Africa and Latin Amer- ica in the joint struggle against imper- ialism, colonialism and neo-colonialism. _He is, in fact, helping to put into effect the imperialist design of crushing the countries of Asia, Africa and Latin America one by one. He Makes eVery &OA to underniine the friendship and unity of the national liberation and social-progressive movements of Asia, Africa and Latin America with the Soviet Union and other socialist coun- tries as well as with the international 'communist movement, thereby seeking to isolate the national liberation and social-progressive movements in Asia, %Africa and Latin America and deprive them of the all-round assistance of the socialist countries and the international communist movement. Mao Tse-tung keeps talking about support and assist- ance for the national liberation move- ment in Asia, Africa and Latin America, but no sooner does U.S. imperialism undertake aggression against any Asian, African or Latin American country than he, in effect, sides with U.S. imperialism. When Vietnam was made the target of armed aggression by U.S. imperial- ism, instead of taking joint action with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries to help the Vietnamese people repulse this aggressor, Mao Tse-tung directed his efforts towards slander and provoking a rupture of the Vietnamese people's friendly relations with the Soviet Union and other socialist coun- tries in order to isolate the Vietnamese. Similarly, in 1962 when Cuba was , con- fronted with armed aggression by U.S. imperialism, instead of taking joint steps with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries to defend the Cuban revolution, Mao Tse-tung concentrated on slander and on provoking a severance of the Cuban people's friendly relations with the Soviet Union and other social- ist countries in an effort to force Cuba into isolation and thereby help U.S. imperialism to smash her. When the Arab states were subjected to U.S. imperialist stage-managed Is- raeli aggression, instead of taking joint steps with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries to help the Arab states, Mao Tse-tung directed his efforts towards slander and provoking the breaking off of the Arab countries' friendly relations with the Soviet Union and other socialist countries in order to isolate them and thereby facilitate U.S. and Israeli aggression, At a time when the vast majority of countries have applied economic sanc- tions to the South African Republic, which, created by the British imperial- ists and colonialists, proclaimed barbar- ous apartheid as its policy at home, Mao Tse-tung acts at one with the U.S. and British imperialists. He has used this ' opportunity to promote trade with the South African Republic, Mt only pur- chasing chromium ore from that racial. ist Government but selling it armaments and munitions, thereby helping in the repressions against the indigenous popu- lation of the South African Republic. In effect, he sides with the white racialists, vivid testimony of this being his vitriol- ic outpourings against Martin Luther King, the late leader of the civil rights movement, of the movement against poverty and against the U.S. war of ag- gression in Vietnam. This man, who enjoyed the respect and affection of all American Negroes, was called by Mao Tse-tung "a tool in the service of the reactionary ruling groups'in the U.S.A." During the "cultural revolution" 'Mao Tse-tung still further intensified his policy of pressure founded on barbar- ous great-power chauvinism with ,re- gard to developing Asian and African countries, which had recently shaken off imperialist rule. The reactionary "thought" of Mao Tse-tung is exported by compulsion with the help of Chinese diplomatic representatives and technical experts to countries like Nepal, Cambo- dia and Ceylon. Mao Tse-tung forces citi- zens of other countries to wear badges with his portrait, infringes upon the sovereignty of other states, and inter- feres in the internal affairs of other countries, thereby giving rise to inter- state conflicts and development that seriously harm relations between states. Vis-a-vis India he not only frequently provokes armed frontier conflicts but proclaims his intention to organize arm- ed uprisings in India with the purpose of overthrowing the Indian Government. In Burma he organizes Chinese resi- dents into hungweiping gangs in order to provoke armed conflicts and blood- shed; in addition, he is hatching out Plans for an armed invasion across the Burmese frontier and the organization of armed uprisings to overthrow the Burmese Government. Protesting against Mao Tse-tung's interference, through Chinese diplomats, in their internal af- fairs African countries like Dahomey, the Central African Republic and Bu- rundi have already broken off diploma- tic relations with China. In Kenya and Tunisia, as well, Mao Tse-tung has used Chinese doplomats for openly circulat- ing documents discrediting the govern- ments of these countries and propagat- ing the reactionary "thought" of Mao Tse-tung. This has brought diplomatic relations between China and these coun- tries to the brink of rupture. The policy pursued by Mao Tse-tung with regard to developing Mian and African countries is fully in line with the Great-Han "Celestial Empire" policy of the Chinese feudal emperors. Its sub- stance is that a foreign state must be- come either a vassal of the "Celestial Empire" or its enemy. Having become the victims of Mao Tse-tung's insults, the Asian and African countries have replied to him by word and action that they have no desire to be vassals of . Mao Tse-tung. 4. He plans to provoke a U.S.-Soviet and world war. At the Moscow International Meeting in 1957 he openly pressured for a nuclear war, which would destroy from one-third to half of mankind. In documents at-. tacking the world communist movement, published in April 1960, he continued to call for a nuclear war, which could destroy the entire world. He constantly shouts that the "atomic bomb is a paper tiger," that the "hydrogen bomb is a paper tiger," that atomic and thermo- nuclear war is not "terrible at all." The purpose of all this is to demora- lize the world anti-war movement and instigate a world war. He constantly comes out against any action taken by the Soviet Union and other socialist ' countries on the international stage to relax international tension, avert a world war and secure peaceful co-exist- ence and peaceful conditions for the building of communism and socialism. His objective is to undermine world peace. He slanderously accuses the lead- enship of the Soviet Union of "modern revisionism," of "capitulating to U.S. imperialism," of "U.S.-Soviet collabora- tiob in order to rule the world together." The motive underlying these accusations is that in upholding the interests of the Soviet people and of all mankind, the leadership of the Soviet Union does not accept his mad proposals for the un- leasing of a U.S.-Soviet and world war. The main reason for Mao, Tse-tung's constant displeasure with the U.S. rul- ers is that, being aware that by starting a thermonuclear war against the U.S.S.R. they would be signing their own death warrant, they do not dare to begin a, Approveri-Enr-Release 1999/09/02 ? 9IA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 01-.1 CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5 thermonuclear war against the U.S.S.R; Therefore, while the presidential cam- Tse-tung is preparing? Were he prepar- paign in the U.S.A. was under way in in for a war against imperialism he 1964, Mao Tse-tung openly called upon would have never started a counter- the American people to vete for the revolutionary military coup, which was leader of the "hawks" Goldwater, who internally directed against the Corn- shamelessly urged war against the munist Party and the people and exter- U.S.S.R., a world war. Inasmuch as Mao nally against the Soviet Union and the Tse-tung's plan to provoke a U.S.-Soviet international Communist movement, as thermonuclear wilr cum be ballad a means of preparing for war. On the to this day, he has turned his hopes on contrary, considering that he regards some local war growing into a U.S.- the anti-Soviet, anti-communist, anti- Soviet and world war, popular counterrevolutionary coup as a For that reason he welcomes the U.S. preparation for an international war, it war of aggression in Vietnam and wants is clear that his entire activity not only it to continue as long as possible and does not foreshadow some sort of inter- acquire the largest possible scale. He national war against the U.S. imperial- welcomed the frontier conflict between ism, but, on the contrary, is designed India and Pakistan and opposed the to promote the anti-Soviet, anti-com- agreement on the cessation of hostili- munist plans of the U.S. imperialistsand to curry favor with them with ex- ties and a peaceful settlement of the dif- ferences between the two countries. For pressions of loyalty. that reason he came out against the In recent years he has been extending Tashkent talks and the agreement that a hand of friendship to the neo-nazi and was signed there. He welcomed Israel's militarist ruling circles in West Ger- war of aggression against the Arab many. In the sphere of commercial and states, a war inspired by U.S. imperial- economic relations with China, the a halt of the F.R.G. has already surpassed Britain and ism, and was opposed to - Israeli forces and a cease-fire as preli- France and now holds first place among the European countries. The West Ger- minary steps towards abolishing the consequences of the aggression and re man Government is co-operating with storing peace in the Middle East. - Mao Tse-tung in the armaments field He does not give up' hoping that the and is sending specialists to help him imperialists should continue fanning the expand the war industry, particularly t flames of local wars in many parts of the production of nuclear weapons and r the world and that in the long run they rockets. According to reports from dif- f would flare up into a raging conflagra- erent sources, Mao Tse-tting and Bonn tion of a U.S.-Soviet and world war. But are intending to establish closer politi- his hope that local wars would develop cal ties. It is common knowledge that into a world war have still not materia- co-operation between Mao Tse-tung and lized and now he is endeavouring to in- Bonn rests on anti-Sovietism, anti-corn- cite it himself. He has already turned munism, disruption of peace in Europe the Sino-Indian border into a major and Asia and incitement of a world war. base from which he can stir up inter- Hence it is vital. that the Chinese national tension and provoke military people and peace supporters in all coun- incidents between _states whenever he tries should keep a vigilant eye on Mao wants to. He is trying to create a simi- Tse-tung's intrigues. In the current situa- lar situation on the Sino-Burmese and tion when fie is beset by increasing dif- Sino-Nepalese borders. He has repeated- %ficulties and has to face ever gloomier ly announced his intention of annexing prospects Mao Tse-tung, spurred On by the Mongolian People's Republic and his extreme selfishness and extreme na- seizing part of Soviet territory and car- tionalistic fanaticism can really plunge ried out acts of provocation on the Sino- China into a reactionary and adventuris- Soviet. and Sino-Mongolian borders. In tic international wars. the future such provocations might in- Why is Mao Tse-tung so impatient to crease in scale and become more num- provoke a U.S.-Soviet and world war? erous. Because he views it as a means of at. He has frankly stated that one of the taming his extreme individualistic and aims of the so-called cultural, revolu- selfish aims. He believes that if he would tion is preparation for an international , succeed in provoking a U.S.-Soviet and - war and that one of the aims of the 'world war, he would not only attain his hungweiping movement is likewise pre- goal of "killing two birds with one paration for an international war. What stone," but would also see his dream of is this international war for which Mao "winning twice on one stake" come true. What he means by "killing two birds with one stone" is that he wants a, war in which while destroying the U.S.S.R. and the international commun- ist movement, both 'deeply hated by him, the U.S.A. would also be destroyed to- gether with other states whom he deep- ly envies for having a higher level of economic and scientific development. His dream of "winning twice on one stake," if it were to come true, would permit him to spend the remainder of his years enjoying the longed-for life of a sovereign and ruler of that part of China's territory where, according to his imagination, "there would still be people," while at the same time he would make an attempt to realize his age-old dream of becoming the "master of the world" and instituting his rule over it on the ruins left in the wake of a world thermo-nuclear war. 5. In the economic sphere he is sever- ing all ties with the world socialist system and transferring them to the capitalist camp. This, above all, is clearly seen in the changes that have taken place in China's foreign trade. In 1950, right after the country's liberation, China's foreign trade still bore the old semicolonial features: 74 percent was with the capi- talist countries of which 50 percent fell to the share of the imperialist states, while the share of the socialist countrie and the U.S.S.R. was 26 and 23 percent respectively. By 1959, China's foreign trade had undergone radical changes: all' foreign comme,rce with capitalist coun- tries 'dropped' to 32 percent of which ,the imperialist states accounted for 23 percent, at the same time trade with socialist countries went up to 68 per- cent including 60 percent with the U.S.S.R.. Here we have a clear manifes- tation of the distinguishing feature of the foreign trade of a socialist country. But by 1967, the situation in China's* foreign trade became evdn worse than in 1950: commerce with the non-social- ist countries went up to 80 percent in- cluding 57 percent with imperialist states, while trade with socialist coun- tries fell to 20 percent of which only 7 percent was with the U.S.S.R. Today China's chief trading partners are not only Britain and the countries of the British Commonwealth ? Canada, New Zealand and Australia ? not only Japan and West Germany but also the U.S.A. which Mao Tse-tung daily showers with Invectives and curses but with which he has established economic ties through Hongkong. Thus, in the sphere of foreign economic relations China has once again become dependent on im. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01190b00500060001-5 16 In the begiar?0Ye ?r e ea g the 1960s, prepar- ing to curtail economic ties with so- cialist countries Mao Tse-tung launched intensive propaganda of such thoughts as "reliance on one's own forces" and "rejection of outside assistance." Today facts show that they were a pretext for severing foreign economic ties with the world socialist system and going over to the capitalist camp. He views as necessary economic co'operation with the capitalist world as part of his plat- form of "reliance on one's own forces," and economic ties with the world social- ist system as unnecessary "outside assis; tance." All this is striking indication of the fact wihat in the sphere of foreign policy, *it as in the sphere of domes- tice policy, Mao Tse-tung has taken the road of political and economic rap- prochement with the bourgeoisie direct- ed against the proletariat and the work-, jag people, that he is supporting capi- talism and is against socialism. Such are the five principal crimes actually committed by Mao Tse-tung in the international sphere. There are in- disputable facts proving these crimes, and they cannot be disproved by what- ever dcmogagy Mao Tse-tung and his group may resort to. The crimes of Mao Tse-tung and his group in international affairs just as in China's internal affairs, merely play into the hands of imperial- ist circles and reactionaries in all coun- tries headed by the U.S.A. Therefore they have been welcomed in imperialist countries with unfeigned pleasure. For- mer U.S. President Johnson, former State Secretary Dean Rusk, former De- fence Secretary Robert ,McNamara re- peatedly spoke in favor of hastening the adjustment of U.S.-Chinese relations and establishment of U.S. co-operation with Mao Tse-tung in the Far East. A conference of U.S. specialists On the Far East frankly declared that the White House is staking on Mao Tse-tung because his victory in the cultural revo- lution would be in the interests of the U.S.A. Expressing hopes for the estab- lishment of co-operation with Mao Tse- tung, the U.S. Government has not only permitted U.S. publishers to issue Mao Tse-tung's "book of quotations" and sell them in the U.S.A., but has also sanc-. tioncd their ,export, thus helping Mao Tse-tung to spread his "book of quota- tions.". It is universally known that Spain's fascist secret police and the neo-nazi West German secret service more than anything else fear the publications of the Spanish and German Communist Parties or any other Communist litera- it , i amt o . Nonetheless, they do not ban the anti- Soviet and anti-communist propaganda materials put out by Mao Tse-tung. On the contrary they help spread these materials and even frequently reprint them. All this leaves no doubt as to who are Mao Tse-tung's friends today and against whom their joint efforts are directed. ? No matter how Mao Tse-lung and his group shift and dodge and no matter what screen they set up around them- selves ? whether it be the slogan of. "struggle ,against modern revisionism" or the slogans "spur the world revolu- tion" and "support the national libera- tion movement," and no matter what double-dealing they engage in under the the mask of "we are against the U.S.S.R. and against the U.S.A." in order to ca- mouflage their anti-Sovietism and their make-believe struggle against U.S. im- perialism, no matter what old and new intrigues they may employ to conceal their activity ? they cannot cover up the real character of their anti-Soviet, anti-communist and man-hating crimes in international affairs. The five crimes ,they have committed, are five indict- meats written with their own hand. CPYRGHT Inasmuch as such 10 major crimes inside the cduntry and 5 major crimes in international affairs were perpetuated on the initiative, under the personal supervision and on instructions of Mao Tse-tung, he has become not only an enemy of the Communist Party of China but also the common enemy of the in- ternational communist movement. He has become not only the enemy of the Chinese people, but the common enemy of the entire progressive and peace- loving humanity. Mao Tse-tung spares no effort to com- mit every kind of infamy chiefly for the sake of achieving his extremely egois- tic goals, namely while he lives he wants to preserve his unlimited imperial rule in China and to prevent anyone from overthrowing his power. And when he will leave this world nobody will be able to make him pay for the terrible crimes he committed during his life- time.'Yet facts show that his intentions are not destined to materialize and that everything will be totally unlike his ex- pectations Mao Tse-tung is aware Of his real position and realizes the dangers aris- ing from his hostility towards the Com- munist Party of China and the interna- tional communist movement, towards the whole Chinese nation and all pro- gressive and peace-loving mankind. He can be likened ,with a coward whO is a e y night and try- ing to dispel his fright by whistling. He requires a daily dose of sedatives. And so on his instructions Chinese news- paper editors daily give a great deal of space to articles describing how the Changs, Wans, Lis and Chaos throughout. their country "dearly " love Chairman Mao," how they are "devoted to Chair- Mao" and wish him "long, long years." They also publish other stereotype eulogies, which can only evoke a feeling of disgust and loathing. This is supple- mented by false reports allegedly corn- ing from abroad that in all countries citizens ,A, B, C, D, etc. "dearly love Mao Tse-tung," that they are "devoted to Mao Tse-tung," and his "thought" and that they wish him "innumerable years of life." All this is just as shameless and absurd as his personal deificatitict as the "sun," or all the all-seeing and omnipotent "living god". All this is just, as comical and ridiculous as his claims that his "thoughts" are a talisman Ca- pable of "miraculously and imme?dia- tely transforming any wish into reality," and that his "Three Old Articles," "Book of Quotations" and "Selected Works" are a "Magic Encyclopaedia" or "sacred books." MI this is by no means a sign of his strength, but of his extreme weakness. It shows his mor- bid fear and desperation of a person held in a vice of difficulties at home and abroad, of ti'man abandoned by his near ones and associates, a man who in solitude faces a dismal future. ' No matter what Mao Tse-tung invents or does to ele'vate or praise himself, to deceive or soothe himself, historical, facts prove that only one destiny awaits a man such as Mao Tse-tung is today, and that destiny is inevitable defeat, which neither charlatanism, incanta- tions, demogogy, slander, nor resort to killings, arson "rebellions," "capture of power" or other like methods can avert. Such is the irr;:vocable law,of historical development. And such will be the inevi- table end of Mao Tse-tung, of his "thought"?and of his policy. Why has Mao Tse-tung fallen so low? It is by no means an unexpected pheno- menon but the inevitable outcome of the natural evolution of the thought and policy of Mao Tse-tung over the decades. All this has its ideological and theoreti- cal as well as historical and social roots. But these questions have to be studied separately. , Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : C1A-RDP79-01194A000500060001-5