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Deng: Seeking Middle Ground


Article # : 11763 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 4 / 1987  1,753 Words
Author : Harold C. Hinton
Harold C. Hinton is a professor of political science and international affairs at the Institute for Sino-Soviet Studies, George Washington University. His latest book is Korea under New Leadership: The Fifth Republic. Several of his books will be published soon, including China's Long Ascent: The Foreign Policy of a Dissatisfied Power.

       A Marxist-Leninist party is the most effective machine ever devised for creating and perpetuating totalitarian political power. The Chinese Communist Party, the largest political party in the world, is essentially no different from others of its category. Ideology can be reinterpreted, even explained away if necessary, but the power of the party and its control over its people, once acquired, can last forever.
       
        To most senior Chinese communists, the year 1956 appears in retrospect as a brief but golden age. Mao Tse-tung was more equal than his colleagues but not yet rampant. The Communist Party apparatus (or bureaucracy) basically ruled the country. Its patron was Mao's heir apparent, Liu Shaoqi, and its working head was the dynamic if diminutive Deng Xiaoping. Premier Zhou Enlai, an extraordinarily capable and flexible leader, effectively underpinned party rule with his state bureaucracy. China had largely shaken off Soviet tutelage, but Sino-Soviet relations were not yet in a state of conflict.
       
        Beginning the following year, Mao, for complex reasons of his own, upset this relatively happy applecart. He dragged his colleagues and spurred his countrymen into one frantic and disastrous "mass campaign," the Great Leap Forward, and then, after a pause for recovery, into another, the Cultural Revolution. After the unadmitted collapse of the Cultural Revolution in late 1968, Zhou Enlai, with the able support of Deng Xiaoping after 1973, skillfully put the country and its foreign relations more or less together again. But Zhou and Mao both died in 1976, and their positions, or at least their titles, passed to an interim successor, Hua Guofeng, who showed intermittent Maoist ... (1933 of 10856 Characters)
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