The present regime of the new warlords of the Kuomintang remains
a regime of the comprador class in the cities and the landlord class in the countryside;
it is a regime which has capitulated to imperialism in its foreign relations and which at
home has replaced the old warlords with new ones, subjecting the working class and the
peasantry to an even more ruthless economic exploitation and political oppression. The
bourgeois-democratic revolution which started in Kwangtung Province had gone only halfway
when the comprador and landlord classes usurped the leadership and immediately shifted it
on to the road of counter-revolution; throughout the country the workers, the peasants,
the other sections of the common people, and even the bourgeoisie, [1]
have remained under counter-revolutionary rule and obtained not the slightest particle of
political or economic emancipation. Before their capture of Peking and Tientsin, the
four cliques of the new Kuomintang warlords, Chiang Kai-shek, the Kwangsi warlords, Feng
Yu-hsiang and Yen Hsi-shan, [2] formed a temporary alliance against
Chang Tso-lin. [3] As soon as these cities were captured, this alliance
broke up, giving way to bitter struggle among the four cliques, and now a war is brewing
between the Chiang and the Kwangsi cliques. The contradictions and struggles among the
cliques of warlords in China reflect the contradictions and struggles among the
imperialist powers. Hence, as long as China is divided among the imperialist powers, the
various cliques of warlords cannot under any circumstances come to terms, and whatever
compromises they may reach will only be temporary. A temporary compromise today engenders
a bigger war tomorrow.
China is in urgent need of a bourgeois-democratic revolution, and this revolution can
be completed only under the leadership of the proletariat. Because the proletariat failed
to exercise firm leadership in the revolution of 1926-27 which started from Kwangtung and
spread towards the Yangtze River, leadership was seized by the comprador and landlord
classes and the revolution was replaced by counterrevolution. The bourgeois-democratic
revolution thus met with a temporary defeat. This defeat was a heavy blow to the Chinese
proletariat and peasantry and also a blow to the Chinese bourgeoisie (but not to the
comprador and landlord classes). Yet in the last few months, both in the north and in the
south, there has been a growth of organized strikes by the workers in the cities and of
insurrections by the peasants in the countryside under the leadership of the Communist
Party. Hunger and cold are creating great unrest among the soldiers of the warlord armies.
Meanwhile, urged on by the clique headed by Wang Ching-wei and Chen Kung-po, the
bourgeoisie is promoting a reform movement of considerable proportions [4]
in the coastal areas and along the Yangtze River. This is a new development.
According to the directives of the Communist International and the Central Committee of
our Party, the content of China's democratic revolution consists in overthrowing the rule
of imperialism and its warlord tools in China so as to complete the national revolution,
and in carrying out the agrarian revolution so as to eliminate the feudal exploitation of
the peasants by the landlord class. Such a revolutionary movement has been growing day by
day since the Tsinan Massacres in May 1928. [5]
II.
REASONS FOR THE EMERGENCE AND SURVIVAL OF RED POLITICAL POWER IN CHINA
[6]
The long-term survival inside a country of one or more small
areas under Red political power completely encircled by a White regime is a phenomenon
that has never occurred anywhere else in the world. There are special reasons for this
unusual phenomenon. It can exist and develop only under certain conditions.
First, it cannot occur in any imperialist country or in any colony under direct
imperialist rule [7] but can only occur in China which is economically
backward, and which is semi-colonial and under indirect imperialist rule. For this unusual
phenomenon can occur only in conjunction with another unusual phenomenon, namely, war
within the White regime. It is a feature of semicolonial China that, since the first year
of the Republic [1912] the various cliques of old and new warlords have waged incessant
wars against one another, supported by imperialism from abroad and by the comprador and
landlord classes at home. Such a phenomenon is to be found in none of the imperialist
countries nor for that matter in any colony under direct imperialist rule, but only in a
country like China which is under indirect imperialist rule. Two things account for its
occurrence, namely, a localized agricultural economy (not a unified capitalist economy)
and the imperialist policy of marking off spheres of influence in order to divide and
exploit. The prolonged splits and wars within the White regime provide a condition for the
emergence and persistence of one or more small Red areas under the leadership of the
Communist Party amidst the encirclement of the White regime. The independent regime carved
out on the borders of Hunan and Kiangsi Provinces is one of many such small areas. In
difficult or critical times some comrades often have doubts about the survival of Red
political power and become pessimistic The reason is that they have not found the correct
explanation for its emergence and survival. If only we realize that splits and wars will
never cease within the White regime in China, we shall have no doubts about the emergence,
survival and daily growth of Red political power.
Second, the regions where China's Red political power has first emerged and is able to
last for a long time have not been those unaffected by the democratic revolution, such as
Szechuan, Kweichow, Yunnan and the northern provinces, but regions such as the provinces
of Hunan, Kwangtung, Hupoh and Kiangsi, where the masses of workers, peasants and soldiers
rose in great numbers in the course of the bourgeois-democratic revolution of 1926 and
1927. In many parts of these provinces trade unions and peasant associations were formed
on a wide scale, and many economic and political struggles were waged by the working class
and the peasantry against the landlord class and the bourgeoisie. This is why the people
held political power for three days in the city of Canton and why independent regimes of
peasants emerged in Haifeng and Lufeng, in eastern and southern Hunan, in the
Hunan-Kiangsi border area and in Huangan, Hupeh Province. [8] As for the
present Red Army, it is a split-off from the National Revolutionary Army which underwent
democratic political training and came under the influence of the masses of workers and
peasants. The elements that make up the Red Army cannot possibly come from armies like
those of Yen Hsi-shan and Chang Tso-lin, which have not received any democratic political
training or come under the influence of the workers and peasants.
Third, whether it is possible for the people's political power in small areas to last
depends on whether the nation-wide revolutionary situation continues to develop. If it
does, then the small Red areas will undoubtedly last for a long time, and will, moreover,
inevitably become one of the many forces for winning nation-wide political power. If the
nation-wide revolutionary situation does not continue to develop but stagnates for a
fairly long time, then it will be impossible for the small Red areas to last long.
Actually, the revolutionary situation in China is continuing to develop with the
continuous splits and wars within the ranks of the comprador and landlord classes and of
the international bourgeoisie. Therefore the small Red areas will undoubtedly last for a
long time, and will also continue to expand and gradually approach the goal of seizing
political power throughout the country.
Fourth, the existence of a regular Red Army of adequate strength is a necessary
condition for the existence of Red political power. If we have local Red Guards [9] only but no regular Red Army, then we cannot cope with the regular
White forces, but only with the landlords' levies. Therefore, even when the masses of
workers and peasants are active, it is definitely impossible to create an independent
regime, let alone an independent regime which is durable and grows daily, unless we have
regular forces of adequate strength. It follows that the idea of "establishing
independent regimes of the workers and the peasants by armed force" is an important
one which must be fully grasped by the Communist Party and by the masses of workers and
peasants in areas under the independent regime.
Fifth another important condition in addition to the above is required for the
prolonged existence and development of Red political power, namely, that the Communist
Party organization should be strong and its policy correct.
III. THE INDEPENDENT REGIME IN THE HUNAN KIANGSI BORDER AREA AND THE
AUGUST DEFEAT
Splits and wars among the warlords weaken the power of the White
regime. Thus opportunities are provided for the rise of Red political power in small
areas. But fighting among the warlords does not go on every day. Whenever the White regime
in one or more provinces enjoys temporary stability, the ruling classes there inevitably
combine and do their utmost to destroy Red political power. In areas where all the
necessary conditions for its establishment and persistence are not fulfilled, Red
political power is in danger of being overthrown by the enemy. This is the reason why many
Red regimes emerging at favourable moments before last April in places like Canton,
Haifeng and LuFeng, the Hunan-Kiangsi border area, southern Hunan, Liling and Huangan were
crushed one after another by the White regime. From April onward the independent regime in
the Hunan-Kiangsi border area was confronted with a temporarily stable ruling power in the
south, and Hunan and Kiangsi would usually dispatch eight, nine or more
regiments-sometimes as many as eighteen-to "suppress" us. Yet with a force of
less than four regiments we fought the enemy for four long months, daily enlarging the
territory under our independent regime, deepening the agrarian revolution, extending the
organizations of the people's political power, and expanding the Red Army and the Red
Guards. This was possible because the policies of the Communist Party organizations (local
and army) in the Hunan-Kiangsi border area were correct. The policies of the Border Area
Special Committee and the Army Committee of the Party were then as follows:
Struggle resolutely against the enemy, set up political power in the middle section of
the Lohsiao mountain range, [10] and oppose flightism.
Deepen the agrarian revolution in areas under the independent regime.
Promote the development of the local Party organization with the help of the army Party
organization and promote the development of the local armed forces with the help of the
regular army.
Concentrate the Red Army units in order to fight the enemy confronting them when the
time is opportune, and oppose the division of forces so as to avoid being destroyed one by
one.
Adopt the policy of advancing in a series of waves to expand the area under the
independent regime, and oppose the policy of expansion by adventurist advance.
Thanks to these proper tactics, to a terrain favourable to our struggle, and to the
inadequate co-ordination between the troops invading from Hunan and those invading from
Kiangsi, we were able to win a number of victories in the four months from April to July.
Although several times stronger than we, the enemy was unable to prevent the constant
expansion of our regime, let alone to destroy it, and our regime tended to exert an
ever-growing influence on Hunan and Kiangsi. The sole reason for the August defeat was
that, failing to realize that the period was one of temporary stability for the ruling
classes, some comrades adopted a strategy suited to a period of political splits within
the ruling classes and divided our forces for an adventurous advance, thus causing defeat
both in the border area and in southern Hunan. Comrade Tu Hsiu-ching, the representative
of the Hunan Provincial Committee, failed to grasp the actual situation and disregarded
the resolutions of the joint meeting of the Special Committee, the Army Committee and the
Yunghsin County Committee of the Party; he just mechanically enforced the order of the
Hunan Provincial Committee and echoed the views of the Red Army's 28th Regiment which
wanted to evade struggle and return home, and his mistake was exceedingly grave. The
situation arising from this defeat was salvaged as a result of the corrective measures
taken by the Special Committee and the Army Committee of the Party after September.
IV. THE ROLE OF THE INDEPENDENT REGIME OF THE HUNAN-KIANGSI BORDER AREA
IN HUNAN, HUPEH AND KIANGSI
The significance of the armed independent regime of workers and
peasants in the Hunan-Kiangsi border area, with Ningkang as its centre, is definitely not
confined to the few counties in the border area; this regime will play an immense role in
the process of the seizure of political power in Hunan, Hupeh and Kiangsi through the
insurrection of the workers and peasants in these three provinces. The following are tasks
of great importance for the Party in the border area in connection with the insurrections
unfolding in Hunan, Hupeh and Kiangsi: Extend the influence of the agrarian revolution and
of the people's political power in the border area to the lower reaches of the rivers in
Hunan and Kiangsi and as far as Hupeh; constantly expand the Red Army and enhance its
quality through struggle so that it can fulfil its mission in the coming general
insurrection of the three provinces; enlarge the local armed forces in the counties, that
is, the Red Guards and the workers' and peasants' insurrection detachments, and enhance
their quality so that they are able to fight the landlords' levies and small armed units
now and safeguard the political power of the border area in the future; gradually reduce
the extent to which local work is dependent on the assistance of the Red Army personnel,
so that the border area will have its own personnel to take charge of the work and even
provide personnel for the Red Army and the expanded territory of the independent regime.
V.
ECONOMIC PROBLEMS
The shortage of necessities and cash has become a very big
problem for the army and the people inside the White encirclement. Because of the tight
enemy blockade, necessities such as salt, cloth and medicines have been very scarce and
dear all through the past year in the independent border area, which has upset, sometimes
to an acute degree, the lives of the masses of the workers, peasants and petty
bourgeoisie, [11] as well as of the soldiers of the Red Army. The Red
Army has to fight the enemy and to provision itself at one and the same time. It even
lacks funds to pay the daily food allowance of five cents per person, which is provided in
addition to grain; the soldiers are undernourished, many are ill, and the wounded in the
hospitals are worse off. Such difficulties are of course unavoidable before the
nation-wide seizure of political power; yet there is a pressing need to overcome them to
some extent, to make life somewhat easier, and especially to secure more adequate supplies
for the Red Army. Unless the Party in the border area can kind proper ways to deal with
economic problems, the independent regime will have great difficulties during the
comparatively long period in which the enemy's rule will remain stable. An adequate
solution of these economic problems undoubtedly merits the attention of every Party
member.
VI.
THE PROBLEM OF MILITARY BASES
The Party in the border area has another task, namely, the
consolidation of the military bases at Five Wells [12] and Chiulung.
The Five Wells mountain area at the juncture of Yunghsin, Linghsien, Ningkang and Suichuan
Counties, and the Chiulung mountain area at the juncture of Yunghsin, Ningkang, Chaling
and Lienhua Counties, both of which have topographical advantages, are important military
bases not only for the border area at present, but also for insurrections in Hunan, Hupeh
and Kiangsi in the future, and this is particularly true of Five Wells, where we have the
support of the people as well as a terrain that is especially difficult and strategically
important. The way to consolidate these bases is, first, to construct adequate defences,
second, to store sufficient grain and, third, to set up comparatively good Red Army
hospitals. The Party in the border area must strive to perform these three tasks
effectively.
NOTES
[1] By the term "bourgeoisie", Comrade Mao Tse-tung means
the national bourgeoisie. For his detailed account of the distinction between this class
and the big comprador bourgeoisie, see "On Tactics Against Japanese Imperialism"
(December 1955) and "The Chinese Revolution and the Chinese Communist Party"
(December 1939).
[2] These four cliques of warlords fought together against Chang
Tso-lin and occupied Peking and Tientsin in June 1928
[3] Chang Tso-lin, who headed the Fengtien clique of warlords,
became the most powerful warlord in northern China after defeating Wu Pei-fu in the second
Chihli-Fengden War in 1924. In 1926, with Wu Pei-fu as his ally, he marched on and
occupied Peking. In June 1928, while retreating to the Northeast by rail, he was killed en
route by a bomb planted by the Japanese imperialists whose tool he had been.
[4] This reform movement arose after the Japanese invaders occupied
Tsinan on May 3,1928, and after Chiang Kai-shek openly and brazenly compromised with
Japan.
Within the national bourgeoisie which had identified itself with the
counter-revolutionary coup d'état of 1927, a section acting in its own interests
gradually began to form an opposition to the Chiang Kai-shek regime. The careerist
counter-revolutionary group of Wang Ching-wei, Chen Kung-po and others which was active in
this movement formed what became known as the "Reorganization Clique" in the
Kuamintang.
[5] In 1928 Chiang Kai-shek, backed by British and U.S.
imperialism, drove north to attack Chang Tso-lin. The Japanese imperialists then occupied
Tsinan, the provincial capital of Shantung, and cut the Tientsin-Pukow railway line to
check the northward spread of British and American influence. On May 3 the invading
Japanese troops slaughtered large numbers of Chinese in Tsinan. This became known as the
Tsinan Massacre.
[6] The organizational form of China's Red political power was
similar to that of Soviet political power. A Soviet is a representative council, a
political institution created by the Russian working class during the 1905 Revolution.
Lenin and Stalin, on the basis of Marxist theory, drew the conclusion that a Soviet
republic is the most suitable form of social and political organization for the transition
from capitalism to socialism. Under the leadership of the Bolshevik Party of Lenin and
Stalin, the Russian October Socialist Revolution in 1917 brought into being for the first
time in world history such a socialist Soviet republic, a dictatorship of the proletariat.
After the defeat of the 1927 revolution in China, the representative council was adopted
as the form of people's political power in various places in the mass revolutionary
uprisings led by the Chinese Communist Party and, first and foremost, by Comrade Mao
Tse-tung. In its nature political power at that stage of the Chinese revolution was a
people's democratic dictatorship of the anti-imperialist, anti-feudal, new-democratic
revolution led by the proletariat, which was different from the proletarian dictatorship
in the Soviet Union.
[7] During World War II, many colonial countries in the East
formerly under the imperialist rule of Britain, the United States, Prance and the
Netherlands were occupied by the Japanese imperialists. Led by their Communist Parties,
the masses of workers, peasants and urban petty bourgeoisie and members of the national
bourgeoisie in these countries took advantage of the contradictions between the British,
U.S., French and Dutch imperialists on the one hand and the Japanese imperialists on the
other, organized a broad united from against fascist aggression, built anti-Japanese base
areas and waged bitter guerrilla warfare against the Japanese. Thus the political
situation existing prior to World War II began to change. When the Japanese imperialists
were driven out of these countries at the end of World War II, the imperialists of the
United States, Britain, France and the Netherlands attempted to restore their colonial
rule, but, having built up armed forces of considerable strength during the and-Japanese
war, these colonial peoples refused to return to the old way of life. Moreover, the
imperialist system all over the world was profoundly shaken because the Soviet Union had
become strong, because all the imperialist powers, except the United States, had either
been overthrown or weakened in the war, and finally because the imperialist front was
breached in China by the victorious Chinese revolution. Thus, much as in China, it has
become possible for the peoples of all, or at least some, of the colonial countries in the
East to maintain big and small revolutionaq base areas and revolutionary regimes over a
long period of time, and to carry on long-term revolutionaq wars in which to surround the
cities from the countryside, and then gradually to advance to take the cities and win
nation-wide victory. The view held by Comrade Mao Tse-tung in 1928 on the question of
establishing independent regimes in colonies under direct imperialist rule has changed as
a result of the changes in the situation.
[8] These were the first counter-attacks which the people under
Communist leadership launched in various places against the forcer of the
counter-revolution after Chiang Kai-shek and Wang Ching-wei successively turned traitor to
the revolution in 1927 On December 11, 1927, the workers and revolutionary soldiers of
Canton united to stage an uprising, and set up the people's political power. They fought
fiercely against the counter-revolutionary forces, which were directly supported by
imperialism' but failed because the disparity in strength was too great. Peasants in
Haifeng and Luteng on the eastern coast of Kwangtung Province had started a powerful
revolutionaq movement during 1923-25 under the leadership of Comrade Peng Pai, a member of
the Communist Party, and this movement contributed greatly to the victory of the two
eastern campaigns launched from Canton by the National Revolutionary Army against the
counter-revolutionary clique headed by Chen Chiung-ming. After Chiang Kai-shek's betrayal
of the revolution on April l,, 1927, these peasants staged three uprisings in April,
September and October, and established a revolutionary regime which held out until April
1928. In eastern Hunan Province, insurrectionary peasants captured an area embracing
Linyang, Pingkiang, Liling and Chuchow in September 1927. At about the same time, tens of
thousands of peasants staged an armed uprising in Hsiaokan, Macheng and Huangan in
northeastern Hupeh Province and occupied the county town of Huangan for over thirty days.
In southern Hunan, peasants in the counties of Yichang, Chenchow, Lelyang, Yungheing and
Tzehsing rose in arms in January 1928 and set up a revolutionary regime, which lasted for
three months.
[9] The Red Guards were armed units of the masses in the
revolutionary base areas, whose members carried on their regular productive work.
[10] The Lohsiao mountain range is a large range running along the
borders of Kiangsi and Hunan Provinces. The Chingkang Mountains are in its middle section.
[11] By the term "petty bourgeoisie" Comrade Mao
Tse-tung means those elements other than the peasants-handicraftsmen, small merchants,
professional people of various kinds and petty-bourgeois intellectuals. In China they
mostly live in cities but there are quite a number in the countryside.
[12] Five Wells designates the villages of Big Well, Small Well,
Upper Well, Middle Well and Lower Well, in the Chingkang Mountains, which are situated
between Yunghsin, Ningkang and Suichuan in western Kiangsi and Lingheien County in eastern
Hunan.