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What Went Wrong in Moscow and Beijing
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16654 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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10 / 1989 |
3,508 Words |
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Brian Crozier Brian Crozier founded the Institute for the Study of Conflict
and directed it until 1979. He is now a writer on
international security affairs. |
The repressive massacre on Tiananmen Square in June was an illuminating variation on a theme by Mao Zedong: "Power grows out of the barrel of a gun." That, too, is how power is maintained when the people rise against a self-perpetuating tyranny.
Whether the order to the People's Liberation Army (PLA) to fire on the people was given by the old and ailing Deng Xiaoping, or merely in his name by Premier Li Peng or the head of the security service, Qiao Shi, is of minor importance. The point is that in China, as in the Soviet Union, communism is in deep, perhaps terminal, crisis.
Elsewhere, too, the god of the godless has failed. In Poland, voters crossed out the names of party candidates to vote for Solidarity trade unionists. In Hungary, the party has embarked on the ultimately suicidal course of sharing power with noncommunists. But in the final analysis, the fate of communism will be determined by its two giant centers of power--China and the Soviet Union.
There is an enlightening contrast between Deng and Mikhail Gorbachev. The errors they have made are equally serious, but contradictory. The paramount leader of the People's Republic of China (PRC) freed the economy but banned free speech; the Soviet president failed to get the economy moving but allowed the critics to point out his failure. In both regimes the point at issue is the legitimacy of the Leninist party's monopoly of power. Can the Leninist state survive when the infallibility of the party is flagrantly in question? For 72 years in Moscow, for 40 years in Beijing, the party was always right--even when it was demonstrably wrong. When the "line" changed, as it often did, the
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