History
Communist China
The founding of the People's Republic of China was announced in Beijing by Mao Zedong
on October 1, 1949. While the first years saw an impressive economic restoration, much of the
progress was lost when by the end of the 1950's the policies of the so-called Great Leap
Forward were enacted. The Great Leap Forward was attempted on two fronts: in agriculture
and in industry.
In the area of agriculture, the Great Leap Forward concentrated on massive irrigation
projects and the formation of huge so-called People's Communes, with the total
collectivization of agricultural production. Collectivization went so far that there wasn't even
any cooking done anymore at private households. Alas, contrary to the howling communist
prognoses, the new system was utterly unproductive. There were no incentives for ordinary
farmers to show any special eagerness to increase production, or even just to keep it at former
levels.
At the same time, while large-scale projects were favored in agriculture, industry, and especially
heavy industry, was decentralized. While before, the state had favored large industrial
complexes, the directive of the day during the years of the Great Leap Forward was
decentralization, epitomized in the proliferation of backyard steel furnaces where useful
instruments, such as household utensils, were melted into useless metal pebbles.
As if the effects of the Great Leap Forward weren't disastrous enough, China in 1959 and
1960 experienced a series of serious floods and droughts, leading to severe famine with
millions of Chinese starving. Many of the policies of the Great Leap Forward were thereafter
abandoned, fist of all the decentralization of the steel industry. The system of the People's
Communes lingered on, and it was revived during the Cultural Revolution a few years later,
principally because it had the personal backing of Mao Zedong.
The Cultural Revolution was launched by Mao Zedong in 1966, initially probably because
he wanted to get rid of rivals in the hierarchy of the Communist Party, such as Liu Shaoqui.
Mao used his support within the general population to confront party officials whom he either
considered insufficiently loyal to him, or whom he considered lacking in revolutionary fervor.
The pretext for the Cultural Revolution at first were alleged counterrevolutionary tendencies
among intellectuals but soon the scope of the attacks widened to include any bureaucracy and
authority, with the exception, of course, of Mao Zedong.
Many of the initial events of the Cultural Revolution were directed by Mao Zedong's wife,
Jiang Qing. However, after the first Red Guard groups had been formed by Beijing
university students, the situation soon got out of hand. Red Guard bands were moving against
authorities on any level, and destroying, throughout the country, religious and historic sites in
great numbers. For the four years of the Cultural Revolution, from 1966 to 1970, practically
all universities and schools in the country were closed.
The first year of the Cultural Revolution, from 1966 to 1967, was the most chaotic as the
Red Guard were virtually free to attack whomever they wanted. Initial targets were low and
mid-level officials and party cadres, but soon even the highest officials, except Mao and very
few people in his immediate surrounding, became fair targets. However, once Mao's
competitors in the highest party echelon were purged, even Mao wished for an more orderly
course of the Cultural Revolution. Therefore, in 1967, the Chinese People's Liberation
Army was declared the vanguard of the Cultural Revolution. Defense minister Lin Biao rose
to become the second most powerful man in China, after Mao Zedong, and was officially
designated Mao's chosen successor.
Nevertheless, by 1971, Mao viewed with discomfort the deep penetration of all aspects of
public life by officers of the PLA. When it became apparent that Mao was to demand
self-criticism from senior PLA leaders, defense minister Lin Biao, according to official reading,
plotted an attempt on Mao's life. The circumstances of what exactly happened on September
13, 1971 have never been fully clarified. The standard explanation is that Lin Biao and his
family attempted to flee on board of a Trident jet to Russia, but the jet allegedly didn't carry
enough fuel and crashed in Mongolia.
Mao Zedong died on September 9, 1976. His initial successor was Hua Guofeng who had
been prime minister after the death of Zou Enlai in January 1976. Hua Guofeng had been a
compromise candidate, acceptable to both the radical and pragmatist faction of the CCP,
principally because he lacked his own power base.
Other eras in the history:
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