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MAO AND LINCOLN
By
Henry C K Liu
Part
1: Demon and deity
Part II: The Great
Leap Forward
not all bad
This
article appeared in AToL on
April1, 2004
Most
of the mass movements initiated by Mao Zedong were successful in
changing old ideas and reshaping Chinese society. Even the Great Leap
Forward, for which Mao is vilified, was successful in important areas,
and estimates of 30 million deaths are wildly exaggerated. Bad weather,
famines and the US trade embargo caused most of the deaths. Today's
neo-liberal globalization has inflicted far more death and suffering
than the Great Leap.
Mao
understood that the pernicious power of Confucianism was permeating
Chinese society and hindering its advancement, so he tried to combat it
by launching mass movements, culminating in the Great Proletarian
Cultural Revolution in 1966. But even after a decade of enormous social
upheaval, tragic personal sufferings, fundamental economic dislocation
and unparalleled diplomatic isolation, the Cultural Revolution failed
to achieve its goal even with serious damage to the nation's physical
and socio-economic infrastructure and to the prestige of the Chinese
Communist Party (CCP), not to mention the decline of popular support
and near total bankruptcy of revolutionary zeal among even loyal party
cadres.
Imperial
monarchy cannot be restored in modern China. Once a political
institution is overthrown, all the king's men cannot put it back
together again. Nor would that be desirable. Yet the modern political
system in China, despite its revolutionary clothing and radical
rhetoric, is still fundamentally feudal, both in the manner in which
power is distributed and in its administrative structure.
In
Chinese politics, loyalty is always preferred over competence. The
ideal is to have both in a minister. Failing that, loyalty without
competence is preferred as being less dangerous than competence without
loyalty - the stuff of which successful revolts are made. For socialist
China, loyalty is to the socialist cause. It is imperative that leaders
remain loyal to the socialist ideal. Confucianism (Ru Jia), by
placing blind faith in a causal connection between virtue and power,
has remained the main cultural obstacle to modern China's attempt to
evolve from a society governed by men into a society governed by law.
The danger of Confucianism lies not in its aim to endow the virtuous
with power, but in its tendency to label the powerful as virtuous.
In
order to change Chinese feudal society toward communist social
order, which is understood by communists as a necessary goal of human
development, Mao Zedong developed specific methods out of Leninist
concepts that rendered special characteristics to Chinese communism,
its strengths and shortcomings. These methods, above all the system of
organized mass movements, stress the change of social consciousness,
ie, the creation of new men for a new society, as the basis for
changing reality, ie, the mode of production. The concept of the mass
politics, relevant in Chinese political thought from ancient time,
plays a role as important as that of the elite cadre corps within the
party.
Mao's
mass line
The
mass movement as an instrument of political communication from
above to below is peculiar to Chinese communist organization. This
phenomenon is of utmost importance in understanding the nature and
dynamics of the governance structure of the CCP. The theoretical
foundation of mass movement as a means of mediation between the will of
the leaders and the people pre-supposes that nothing is impossible for
the masses, quantitatively understood as a collective subject, if their
power is concentrated by a party of correct thought and action. This
concept comes out of Mao's romantic yet well-placed faith in the great
strength the masses are capable of developing in the interest of their
own well-being. So the "will of the masses" has to be articulated by
the masses and within the masses, which the CCP calls the "mass line".
Mao's
mass-line theory requires that the leadership elite be close to
the people, that it is continuously informed about the people's will
and that it transforms this will into concrete actions by the masses.
From the masses back to the masses. This means: take the scattered and
unorganized ideas of the masses and, through study, turn them into
focused and systemic programs, then go back to the masses and propagate
and explain these ideals until the masses embrace them as their own.
Thus
mass movements are initiated at the highest level, announced to
party cadres at central and regional work conferences, subject to cadre
criticism and modification, after which starts the first phase of mass
movement. Mass organizations are held to provoke the "people's will",
through readers' letters to newspapers and rallies at which these
letters are read and debated. The results are then officially discussed
by the staff of leading organs of the state and the party, after which
the systematized "people's will" is clarified into acts of law or
resolutions, and then the mass movement spreads to the whole nation.
The
history of Chinese politics is a history of mass movements. Mass
movements successfully implemented Land Reform 1950-53; Marriage Reform
1950-52; Collectivization 1953 - the General Line of Socialist
Transformation (from national bourgeois democratic revolution to
proletarian socialist revolution); and Nationalization 1955 (from
private ownership of industrial means of production into state
ownership). The method used against opposition was thought reform
through "brainwashing" (without derogatory connotation), which is a
principle of preferring the changing of the consciousness of political
opponents instead of physically liquidating them.
Mao's
mass movements succeeded until 1957
The
Hundred Flower Movement of 1957 was launched on February 27 by Mao
with his famous four-hour speech, "On the Correct Handling of
Contradictions among the People", before 1,800 leading cadres. In it,
Mao distinguished "contradiction between the enemy and ourselves" from
"contradiction among the people", which should not be resolved by a
dictatorship, ie physical force, but by open discussion with criticism
and counter criticism. Up until 1957, the mass-movement policies of Mao
achieved spectacular success.
Land
reform was completed, the struggle for women's emancipation was
progressing well, and collectivization and nationalization were leading
the nation into socialism. Health services were a model of socialist
construction in both cities and the countryside. The party's
revolutionary leadership was accepted enthusiastically by society. By
1958, agricultural production almost doubled from 1949 (108 million
tons to 185 million tons), coal production quadrupled to 123 million
tons, and steel production grew from 100,000 tons to 5.3 million tons.
The
only problem came from bourgeois intellectual rebellion. On May 25,
1957, Mao expressed his anxiety at a session of the Standing Committee
of the Politburo, and gave his approval to those who warned against too
much bourgeois liberty. That afternoon, Mao told cadres at a Conference
of Communist Youth League that "all words and deeds which deviate from
socialism are basically wrong". At the opening session of the People's
Congress on June 26, Zhou Enlai initiated the "counter criticism"
against the critics. Mao's call for open criticism was serious and
genuine, but the discussion he had conceived as a safety valve reached
a degree of intensity he had not anticipated. Mao overestimated the
stability of the political climate and underestimated the residual
influence of Confucianism.
Crossroads:
Soviet model or independent path
Against
this background, the CCP stood at the crossroads of choosing
the Soviet model of development or an independent path. Economy
development was based on three elements:
Build
up heavy industry at the
expense of agriculture.
Establish
an extensive system of
individual incentives by means of which productive forces could be
developed from a conviction that the superiority of socialist modes of
production would be vindicated by a visible rise in living standards.
The
acceleration of the socialist
transformation of society in order to create the precondition required
by the CCP for establishing a socialist order.
Two paths were opened to the CCP leadership in 1958:
1. Consolidation
2.
Pushing
forward toward permanent revolution.
Mao was forced by geopolitical conditions (the
abrupt withdrawal of
Soviet aid and the US Cold War embargo) to overcome the lack of capital
through mobilization of China's vast labor reservoir. The strategy was
to connect political campaigns to production campaigns. Under pressure
from orthodox Leninists within the party apparatus, with the failure of
the "Hundred Flower Movement", Mao concluded it was impossible to
create a socialist consciousness through a gradual improvement of
material living conditions; that consciousness and reality had to be
changed concurrently and in conjunction through gigantic new efforts at
mobilization.
This led to the Anti-Rightist Campaign of 1957-58,
followed by "Three
Red Banners" in the spring of 1958, initiating simultaneous development
of industry and agriculture through the use of both modern and
traditional methods of production under the "General Line of Building
Socialism". It was to be implemented through a labor-intensive
development policy by a "Great Leap Forward" and by establishing a
comprehensive collectivization by establishing "People's Communes".
Great Leap Forward succeeded in many areas
The Great Leap Forward (GLF) was not a senseless
fantasy as many in the
neo-liberal West and some in China have since suggested in hindsight.
It called for the new system of "Two Decentralizations, Three
Centralizations and One Responsibility". By this was meant the
decentralized use of labor and local investment; central control over
political decisions, planning and administration of natural investment
capital; one responsibility meant every basic unit to account for
itself to its supervising unit.
The GLF was successful in many areas. The one area
that failed
attracted the most attention. It was the area of back-yard
steel-furnace production. The technological requirement of steelmaking,
unlike hydro-electricity, did not lend itself to labor-intensive mass
movements. Yet steel was the symbol of industrialization and a heroic
attempt had to be made to overcome the lack of capital for imported
modern mechanization. The attempt failed conspicuously, but its damage
to the economy was overrated. The program did not operate year-around,
and did not disrupt farm harvests.
The real test, however, was in the People's
Commune. Favorable weather
conditions produced high yields in 1958 in the experimental communes.
True to Confucian cultural behavior pattern, this led to a rush
nationwide to follow suit, even though almost everywhere the
fundamental preconditions for successful operation were absent. Most
did not have adequate administrative offices, nurseries, canteens, old
people's homes, hospitals, etc, institutions necessary for successful
communal life. In other places, the local leadership took the
transition to communism at face value and severed all connection with
supervising organs in the name of the withering away of the state.
Disorder grew into chaos within months.
During the Wuhan Party Plenum of December 1958,
Marshal Peng Dehuai
criticized the overextended commune program, leading to the plenum
initiating a readjustment of the "Three Red Banners" policy.
Concurrently, the Central Committee approved "the wish of Comrade Mao
Zedong not to stand again as a candidate for the chairmanship of the
PRC [People's Republic of China] after the end of his term in office".
Liu Shaoqi was elected as head of state by the second People's Congress
on April 27, 1959, and became heir apparent after Mao in the party.
Mao, criticized, vowed to lead new peasant
revolt
In the fateful Lushan Conference of July 2-August
16, 1959, Marshal
Peng shifted his criticism from policy to the person of the leader. On
July 23, Mao, in an emphatic speech, rejected the reproach of his
critics and declared, with justification, that the Great Leap Forward
and the People's Commune had brought about more advantages than
disadvantages. Mao threatened an open split: "If we deserve to perish I
shall go away, I shall go to the countryside and lead the peasants to
overthrow the government. If you of the PLA [People's Liberation Army]
will not follow me, then I shall find a new Red Army. But I believe
that the PLA will follow me."
On August 16, 1959, Peng and his followers were
condemned as an
"anti-party clique" by a resolution passed by the Eighth Plenum. On
September 17, Peng was dismissed as defense minister. Peng died in 1974
and was rehabilitated posthumously in 1978, after Mao's death.
In late 1959, several natural disasters and bad
weather conditions were
reported in the press. Floods and drought brought about the "three
bitter years" of 1959-62. After 1962, the economy recovered, but the
politic was shifting toward a struggle against revisionism, which
brought on the Cultural Revolution four years later.
There would have been no deaths in the 1961-62
famines if not for the
US embargo.
Reports of severe natural disasters in isolated
places and of bad
weather conditions in larger areas appeared in the Chinese press in the
spring of 1959, after the Wuhan Plenum in December 1958 had already
made policy adjustments based on the technical criticism of Peng Dehuai
on the People's Communes initiative. In March 1959, the entire Hunan
region was under flood, and soon after that the spring harvest in
southwestern China was lost through drought. The 1958 grain production
yielded 250 million tons instead the projected 375 million tons, and
1.2 million tons of peanuts instead of the projected 4 million tons. In
1959, the harvest came to 175 million tons. In 1960, the situation
deteriorated further. Drought and other bad weather affected 55 percent
of the cultivated area. Some 60 percent of the agricultural land in the
north received no rain at all. The yield for 1960 was 142 million tons.
In 1961, the weather situation improved only slightly.
US embargo caused millions to starve
In 1963, the Chinese press called the famine of
1961-62 the most severe
since 1879. In 1961, a food-storage program obliged China to import 6.2
million tons of grain from Canada and Australia. In 1962, import
decreased to 5.32 million tons. Between 1961 and 1965, China imported a
total of 30 million tons of grain at a cost of US$2 billion (Robert
Price, International Trade of Communist China Vol II, pp
600-601). More would have been imported except that US pressure on
Canada and Australia to limit sales to China and US interference with
shipping prevented China from importing more. Canada and Australia were
both anxious to provide unlimited credit to China for grain purchase,
but alas, US policy prevailed and millions starved in China.
The University of Wisconsin's Maurice Meisner, whom
many consider to be
the dean of post-World War II Chinese scholarship, presents three
related ways of looking at the alleged 20 million to 30 million deaths
caused by the Great Famine begun in the late 1950s under Mao's tenure
in The Deng Xiaoping Era and Inquiry into the Fate of Chinese
Socialism 1978-1994 (New York, Hill and Wang, 1996). One, it was a
horrible miscalculation. Two, it was the end of famines on this scale
(famines had been occurring for the previous few centuries off and on
in China about every generation or so). In other words, it brought this
horrible historical pattern to an end. Or, three, it was a horrible
miscalculation, while also afterward bringing this pattern of famine
every generation of so to an end, thus saving millions from a similar
fate.
It is now the common perception in the West that 30
millions starved to
death as a result of Mao's launching of the Great Leap Forward. Is it
true or is it again a result of manufactured history? An article from
the Australia-China Review contains a noteworthy refutation of the
widely accepted figures of tens of millions of deaths caused by the
GLF. The following is excerpted from this article, "Wild Swans and
Mao's Agrarian Strategy" by Wim F Werthheim, emeritus professor from
the University of Amsterdam, one of the best-noted European China
scholars:
But the figure amounting
to tens of millions ... [lacks] any historical basis. Often it is
argued that at the censuses of the 1960s "between 17 and 29 millions of
Chinese" appeared to be missing, in comparison with the official census
figures from the 1950s. But these calculations are lacking any
semblance of reliability. At my first visit to China, in August 1957, I
had asked to get the opportunity to meet two outstanding Chinese social
scientists: Fei Xiao-tung, the sociologist, and Chen Ta, the
demographer. I could not meet either of them, because they were both
seriously criticized at that time as rightists; but I was allowed a
visit by Pang Zenian, a Marxist philosopher who knew about the problems
of both scholars. Chen Ta was criticized because he had attacked the
pretended 1953 census. In the past he had organized censuses, and he
could not believe that suddenly, within a rather short period, the
total population of China had risen from 450 [million] to 600 million,
as had been officially claimed by the Chinese authorities after the
1953 census. He would have [liked] to organize a scientifically
well-founded census himself, instead of an assessment largely based on
regional random samples as had happened in 1953. According to him, the
method followed in that year was unscientific.
For that matter, a Chinese expert of demography, Dr Ping-ti Ho,
professor of history at the University of Chicago, in a book titled Studies
on the Population of China, 1368-1953, Harvard East Asian Studies
No 4, 1959, also mentioned numerous "flaws" in the 1953 census: "All in
all, therefore, the nationwide enumeration of 1953 was not a census in
the technical definition of the term"; the separate provincial figures
show indeed an unbelievable increase of some 30 percent in the period
1947-1953, a period of heavy revolutionary struggle. (p 93-94) My
conclusion is that the claim that in the 1960s a number between 17
[million] and 29 million people was "missing" is worthless if there was
never any certainty about the 600 millions of Chinese. Most probably
these "missing people" did not starve in the calamity years 1960-61,
but in fact have never existed.
Globalization causes more death, suffering
than Mao
Neo-liberal globalization has caused poverty
for three-quarters of the
world's population, which brings it to more than 3 billion. At least 3
percent of these victims die prematurely of starvation, bringing it to
90 million, mostly children who died from malnutrition. That
statistical evidence is more scientific than the alleged 30 million
deaths in China. Anti-China neo-liberals dismiss the lack of evidence
with the arguments that "totalitarian" governments are "guilty" by
their very nature.
While Mao headed the CCP, leadership was based
on mass support; and it
is still. The chairmanship of the CCP is similar to the position of
pope in the Roman Catholic Church, powerful in moral authority but
highly circumscribed in operational power. The Great Leap Forward was
the product of mass movement, not of a single person. Mao's leadership
extended to the organization of the party and its policy-formulation
procedures, not the dictation of particular programs.
To describe Mao as a dictator merely reflects
an ignorance of the true
workings of the Chinese Communist Party. The failures of the Great Leap
Forward and the People's Communes were caused more by implementation
flaws rather than conceptual error. Bad luck and a US embargo had also
much to do with it. These programs resulted in much suffering, but the
claim that 30 million people were murdered by Mao with evil intent was
mere Western propaganda.
Without Mao, the Chinese Communist Party would
not have survived the
extermination campaign by the Nationalists. It was Mao who recognized
the invincible power of the Chinese peasant. It is proper that the
fourth-generation leaders of the PRC are again focusing on the welfare
of the peasants.
In Europe, the failure of the revolutions of
1848 led to World War I,
which destroyed all the monarchal regimes that had successfully
suppressed the democratic revolution six decades earlier. The full
impact of Mao's revolutionary spirit is yet to be released on Chinese
society. A century from now, Mao high-minded principles of mass
politics will outshine all his neo-liberal critics. Like US president
Abraham Lincoln, Mao Zedong will be remembered in history as a great
leader; and unlike Lincoln, Mao will be remembered also as a great
revolutionary.
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