Chairman Mao’s directive for
building stable base areas in the Northeast was an extremely important strategic
principle for winning complete victory in the liberation war in the Northeast.
At that time the enemy in that region was extremely powerful; not only were
there imperialist and feudal forces and the bureaucrat capitalist class which
was working hand in glove with imperialism, but Chiang Kai-shek had dispatched
300,000 troops to occupy Chinchow, Shanhaikuan and other strategic strong
points. Only by building stable base areas was it possible for us to reverse the
situation in which the enemy was powerful and we were weak and, in the face of a
powerful enemy, enable our Party and our army to persevere in the revolutionary
war, gradually amass strength, expand our ranks in the course of fighting, and
prepare for the future shift to the counter-offensive, wage strategic decisive
battles, completely wipe out Chiang’s troops in the Northeast and win overall
victory in the revolution.
Taking the Right opportunist
stand, Lin Plao appraised the situation of the class struggle from an idealist
point of view so that he failed utterly to see that the main contradiction at
that time had already changed from one between the Chinese people and the
Japanese aggressors to one between the Chinese people and U.S. imperialism and
its running dogs the Kuomintang reactionaries, and he cherished illusions about
Chiang Kai-shek, the enemy of the people. Consequently, he did not implement
Chairman Mao’s directive to build stable base areas in the Northeast but
actively pursued the capitulationist line of Liu Shao-chi and loudly proclaimed
about "the Northeast going along with the rest of the country to the new stage
of peace and democracy." Right up to November 1946 when Chiang Kai-shek had
already unleashed all-out civil war and was frenziedly attacking the Liberated
Areas, Lin Piao still did not put the centre of gravity of the work on building
base areas in the cities and vast rural areas comparatively remote from the
centres of Kuomintang occupation, but went and waged "roving rebel warfare."
Fully Mobilize the Masses
Following the historical
materialist concept that the people are the motive force in the making of
history, Chairman Mao pointed out that "mass work will be the centre of
gravity of our Party’s work in the Northeast" and that "if we rely firmly
on the masses, we shall overcome all difficulties and reach our goal step by
step." Because the revolutionary war is a war of the masses, it can he waged
only by mobilizing the masses and relying on them. Chairman Mao’s line for
guiding the war is based on faith in the masses and reliance on them to wage a
people’s war. By relying firmly on the masses we will always win. This is a
truth repeatedly confirmed in the practice of revolutionary war in China.
Building armed units of the
masses is basic to consolidating base areas. Chairman Mao placed particular
stress on "building armed units of the masses." Because of the extremely
reactionary nature and cruelty of the Kuomintang reactionaries and their
possessing powerful counter-revolutionary forces, without armed struggle neither
the proletariat nor the people would have any standing at all in China and it
would be impossible for the revolution to triumph. This experience was paid for
in blood. "Thus the establishment of a base area is first and foremost a
matter of building an armed force." (Mao Tsetung: Problems of Strategy in
Guerrilla War Against Japan) This is a major question concerning the
survival of base areas. Chairman Mao’s concept of people’s war is to arm the
broad masses under the leadership of the Party. This needs a people’s army to
serve as the backbone force in waging revolutionary war and as the main
instrument for striking at the enemy troops, and also armed units of the masses
— the people’s militia — organized on a wide scale to directly co-ordinate with
the army in battle so that there is a body of armed forces made up of regular
troops, regional troops and people’s militia fighting in co-ordination. To arm
the masses in the base areas as quickly as possible, Chairman Mao directed that
a considerable part of the regular troops be distributed among the military
sub-areas to organize people’s militia and self-defence forces so as to make our
areas secure, co-ordinate with the field armies and smash the Kuomintang
reactionaries’ attacks.
Mobilizing the masses to settle
accounts with traitors and doing a good job in land reform were an important
part of the mass work in the base areas of the Northeast. Chairman Mao clearly
pointed out that "mass work consists in arousing the masses for struggles to
settle accounts with traitors and in launching campaigns for rent reduction and
wage increases and campaigns for production." Later the Party Central
Committee again emphatically pointed out that "the land question in the
Liberated Areas is the most basic historical task of our Party at present." In
order to fully mobilize and organize the peasants in the Liberated Areas, the
old relations of production had to be changed completely and the peasants freed
from the feudal system of land ownership. Hence, we must under the leadership of
the Party thoroughly settle accounts with the traitors, wipe out the bandits and
establish democratic political power, and at the same time land reform had to be
carried out, the system of feudal exploitation eliminated and the peasants’
demand for land satisfied so that they could see that the Party and the
democratic government represented their interests and shared a common destiny
with them. In this way the masses would wholeheartedly support the revolution,
join in and support the revolutionary war as masters and fight to the end for
victory in the revolution. But Lin Plao stubbornly resisted the directive of
Chairman Mao and the Party Central Committee for land reform. He repeatedly
advocated peaceful land reform, with the result that for a while the hands of
the masses were tied, land reform was obstructed and sabotaged and the building
of the base areas adversely affected.
An important link in
consolidating and developing the revolutionary base areas was to conscientiously
implement the Party’s policies and unite with all the forces that can be united
with. Our people’s war carried out from the revolutionary base areas was in fact
a peasant war under the leadership of the vanguard of the proletariat, the
Communist Party. To win victory, a peasant war must not only have the leadership
of the Communist Party but must also unite with and strive to win over as great
a force as possible to take part. Hence establishing a solid worker-peasant
alliance and. uniting the people around the Party were crucial to winning
victory in the revolution. To this end Party policies must be conscientiously
implemented and all forces that could be united must be united to take part
together in building base areas. But Lin Piao did all he could to distort the
Party’s policies and vigorously push Liu Shao-chi’s opportunist line which was
"Left" in form but Right in essence, and he encroached on the interests of the
middle peasants, urban industrial and commertial circles, seriously disrupted
unity in the revolutionary ranks and obstructed the consolidation and expansion
of base areas in the Northeast.
Carrying Forward the
Revolutionary Spirit of Hard Struggle
To build base areas in the
Northeast, particularly in the cities and vast rural areas comparatively remote
from the centres of Kuomintang occupation, natural, economic, cultural and
transport conditions were quite harsh and there were numerous difficulties to be
overcome. This demanded that we must go there to work and struggle to overcome
these difficulties and be more eager to go where the difficulties were greater.
At that time, the Northeast had just been liberated from Japanese imperialist
enslavement and the remnants of Japanese invaders, puppet troops and traitors
had not yet been thoroughly wiped out so that quite a number of people
temporarily could not see the difference between the Communist Party and the
Kuomintang. This made it imperative for us to go deep among the masses, go to
the poor and show concern for their well-being and wholeheartedly serve the
people. When large numbers of our cadres and troops sent by the Party first
arrived in the Northeast, they had to make investigations and study, acquaint
themselves with the place and the people there, integrate themselves with the
people and strike roots among them. Then they had to train large numbers of
activists and cadres from among the masses and spread the idea of building base
areas and mobilize all forces to undertake this great task. As several hundred
thousand of our troops had rapidly moved into the Northeast, they had to carry
on production when not fighting or doing their regular work so as to lessen the
burden of the people and provide more material resources for the war. All this
could be accomplished only through hard struggle. That was why Chairman Mao
repeatedly exhorted: "We must thoroughly clear away all ideas . . . of
winning easy victories through good luck, without hard and bitter struggle
without sweat and blood." This was an important condition for: building
stable base areas in the Northeast and swiftly smashing the wild attacks of the
Kuomintang reactionaries.
Loving comfort and pleasure, Lin
Plao feared hardship and spent all his time in the cities. He had no liking for
the arduous task of building base areas in the countryside, nor was he willing
to send cadres there to do the work. Because he was loath to leave the cities
our main forces for a long time were deployed along the trunk communication
lines fighting a war of attrition with the enemy which resulted in uncalled-for
losses to our troops.
The creation of armed
revolutionary base areas is a great strategic concept put forth by Chairman Mao
by integrating the universal truth of Marxism-Leninism with the concrete
practice of the Chinese revolution. The war we waged was not a purely military
action. but a people’s war waged by mobilizing the masses, organizing the masses
and relying on the masses. It was precisely under the guidance of Chairman Mao’s
revolutionary line that we gradually built and expanded the revolutionary base
areas and laid the foundation for the Chinese Revolution to grow from small to
big and advance from victory to victory.
Peking Review No. 6, February 7,
1975
(abridged)
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