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Chinese Culture and History
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The People's Republic Of China 中华人民共和国 |
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Source :U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
Source key :AR
Program :ARMY AREA HANDBOOKS
Program key :AR ARMAN
Update sched. :Occasionally
ID number :AR ARMAN CHINACH1.05
Title :CHAPTER 1.05: THE PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA
Data type :TEXT
End year :1994
Date of record:04/19/1994
Keywords 3 :China |
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On October 1, 1949, the People's Republic of China was formally
established, with its national capital at Beijing. "The Chinese
people have stood up!" declared Mao as he announced the creation
of a "people's democratic dictatorship." The people
were defined as a coalition of four social classes: the workers,
the peasants, the petite bourgeoisie, and the national-capitalists.
The four classes were to be led by the CCP, as the vanguard of
the working class. At that time the CCP claimed a membership of
4.5 million, of which members of peasant origin accounted for
nearly 90 percent. The party was under Mao's chairmanship, and
the government was headed by Zhou Enlai (周恩来 1898-1976) as premier
of the State Administrative Council (the predecessor of the State
Council).
The Soviet Union recognized the People's Republic on October
2, 1949. Earlier in the year, Mao had proclaimed his policy of
"leaning to one side" as a commitment to the socialist
bloc. In February 1950, after months of hard bargaining, China
and the Soviet Union signed the Treaty of Friendship, Alliance,
and Mutual Assistance, valid until 1980. The pact also was intended
to counter Japan or any power's joining Japan for the purpose
of aggression.
For the first time in decades a Chinese government was met with
peace, instead of massive military opposition, within its territory.
The new leadership was highly disciplined and, having a decade
of wartime administrative experience to draw on, was able to embark
on a program of national integration and reform. In the first
year of Communist administration, moderate social and economic
policies were implemented with skill and effectiveness. The leadership
realized that the overwhelming and multitudinous task of economic
reconstruction and achievement of political and social stability
required the goodwill and cooperation of all classes of people.
Results were impressive by any standard, and popular support was
widespread.
By 1950 international recognition of the Communist government
had increased considerably, but it was slowed by China's involvement
in the Korean War. In October 1950, sensing a threat to the industrial
heartland in northeast China from the advancing United Nations
(UN) forces in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North
Korea), units of the PLA--calling themselves the Chinese People's
Volunteers--crossed the YaluJiang (鸭绿江) River into North Korea in
response to a North Korean request for aid. Almost simultaneously
the PLA forces also marched into Xizang to reassert Chinese sovereignty
over a region that had been in effect independent of Chinese rule
since the fall of the Qing dynasty in 1911. In 1951 the UN declared
China to be an aggressor in Korea and sanctioned a global embargo
on the shipment of arms and war materiel to China. This step foreclosed
for the time being any possibility that the People's Republic
might replace Nationalist China (on Taiwan) as a member of the
UN and as a veto-holding member of the UN Security Council.
After China entered the Korean War, the initial moderation in
Chinese domestic policies gave way to a massive campaign against
the "enemies of the state," actual and potential. These
enemies consisted of "war criminals, traitors, bureaucratic
capitalists, and counterrevolutionaries." The campaign was
combined with party-sponsored trials attended by huge numbers
of people. The major targets in this drive were foreigners and
Christian missionaries who were branded as United States agents
at these mass trials. The 1951-52 drive against political enemies
was accompanied by land reform, which had actually begun under
the Agrarian Reform Law of June 28, 1950. The redistribution of
land was accelerated, and a class struggle landlords and wealthy
peasants was launched. An ideological reform campaign requiring
self-criticisms and public confessions by university faculty members,
scientists, and other professional workers was given wide publicity.
Artists and writers were soon the objects of similar treatment
for failing to heed Mao's dictum that culture and literature must
reflect the class interest of the working people, led by the CCP.
These campaigns were accompanied in 1951 and 1952 by the san fan
(三反 or "three anti") and wu fan (五反 or "five anti")
movements. The former was directed ostensibly against the evils
of "corruption, waste, and bureaucratism"; its real
aim was to eliminate incompetent and politically unreliable public
officials and to bring about an efficient, disciplined, and responsive
bureaucratic system. The wu fan movement aimed at eliminating
recalcitrant and corrupt businessmen and industrialists, who were
in effect the targets of the CCP's condemnation of "tax evasion,
bribery, cheating in government contracts, thefts of economic
intelligence, and stealing of state assets." In the course
of this campaign the party claimed to have uncovered a well-organized
attempt by businessmen and industrialists to corrupt party and
government officials. This charge was enlarged into an assault
on the bourgeoisie as a whole. The number of people affected by
the various punitive or reform campaigns was estimated in the
millions. |
| The Transition to Socialism, 1953-57 |
The period of officially designated "transition to socialism"
corresponded to China's First Five-Year Plan (1953-57). The period
was characterized by efforts to achieve industrialization, collectivization
of agriculture, and political centralization.
The First Five-Year Plan stressed the development of heavy industry
on the Soviet model. Soviet economic and technical assistance was
expected to play a significant part in the implementation of the
plan, and technical agreements were signed with the Soviets in 1953
and 1954. For the purpose of economic planning, the first modern
census was taken in 1953; the population of mainland China was shown
to be 583 million, a figure far greater than had been anticipated.
Among China's most pressing needs in the early 1950s were food
for its burgeoning population, domestic capital for investment,
and purchase of Soviet-supplied technology, capital equipment,
and military hardware. To satisfy these needs, the government
began to collectivize agriculture. Despite internal disagreement
as to the speed of collectivization, which at least for the time
being was resolved in Mao's favor, preliminary collectivization
was 90 percent completed by the end of 1956. In addition, the
government nationalized banking, industry, and trade. Private
enterprise in mainland China was virtually abolished.
Major political developments included the centralization of party
and government administration. Elections were held in 1953 for
delegates to the First National People's Congress, China's national
legislature, which met in 1954. The congress promulgated the state
constitution of 1954 and formally elected Mao chairman (or president)
of the People's Republic; it elected Liu Shaoqi (刘少奇 1898-1969)
chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress;
and named Zhou Enlai premier of the new State Council.
In the midst of these major governmental changes, and helping
to precipitate them, was a power struggle within the CCP leading
to the 1954 purge of Political Bureau member Gao Gang (高岗) and Party
Organization Department head Rao Shushi (饶漱石), who were accused of
illicitly trying to seize control of the party.
The process of national integration also was characterized by
improvements in party organization under the administrative direction
of the secretary general of the party Deng Xiaoping (邓小平 who served
concurrently as vice premier of the State Council). There was
a marked emphasis on recruiting intellectuals, who by 1956 constituted
nearly 12 percent of the party's 10.8 million members. Peasant
membership had decreased to 69 percent, while there was an increasing
number of "experts" , who were needed for the party
and governmental infrastructures, in the party ranks.
As part of the effort to encourage the participation of intellectuals
in the new regime, in mid-1956 there began an official effort
to liberalize the political climate. Cultural and intellectual
figures were encouraged to speak their minds on the state of CCP
rule and programs. Mao personally took the lead in the movement,
which was launched under the classical slogan "Let a hundred
flowers bloom, let the hundred schools of thought contend"
(百花齐放 百家争鸣). At first the party's repeated invitation to air constructive
views freely and openly was met with caution. By mid-1957, however,
the movement unexpectedly mounted, bringing denunciation and criticism
against the party in general and the excesses of its cadres in
particular. Startled and embarrassed, leaders turned on the critics
as "bourgeois rightists" (右派分子) and launched the Anti-Rightist
Campaign. The Hundred Flowers Campaign , sometimes called the
Double Hundred Campaign (双百方针), apparently had a sobering effect on
the CCP leadership. |
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