A Proposal Concerning the General Line of the International Communist Movement
The Letter of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China in Reply to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union of March 30, 1963.
Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1963
June 14, 1963
The Central
Committee of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Dear Comrades,
The Central
Committee of the Communist Party of China has studied the letter of the Central
Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union of March 30, 1963.
All who have the
unity of the socialist camp and the international communist movement at heart
are deeply concerned about the talks between the Chinese and Soviet Parties and
hope that our talks will help to eliminate differences, strengthen unity and
create favorable conditions for convening a meeting of representatives of all
the Communist and Workers' Parties.
It is the common
and sacred duty of the Communist and Workers' Parties of all countries to
uphold and strengthen the unity of the international communist movement. The
Chinese and Soviet Parties bear a heavier responsibility for the unity of the
entire socialist camp and international communist movement and should of course
make commensurately greater efforts.
A number of major
differences of principle now exist in the international communist movement. But
however serious these differences, we should exercise sufficient patience and
find ways to eliminate them so that we can unite our forces and strengthen the
struggle against our common enemy.
It is with this
sincere desire that the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China
approaches the forthcoming talks between the Chinese and Soviet Parties.
In its letter of
March 30, the Central Committee of the C.P.S.U. systematically presents its
views on questions that need to be discussed in the talks between the Chinese
and Soviet Parties, and in particular raises the question of the general line
of the international communist movement. In this letter we too would like to
express our views, which constitute our proposal on the general line of the
international communist movement and on some related questions of principle.
We hope that this
exposition of views will be conducive to mutual understanding by our two
Parties and to a detailed, point-by-point discussion in the talks.
We also hope that
this will be conducive to the understanding of our views her the fraternal
Parties and to a full exchange of ideas at an international meeting of
fraternal Parties.
(1) The general
line of the international communist movement must take as its guiding principle
the Marxist-Leninist revolutionary theory concerning the historical mission of
the proletariat and must not depart from it.
The Moscow
Meetings of 1957 and 1960 adopted the Declaration and the Statement
respectively after a full exchange of views and in accordance with the
principle of reaching unanimity through consultation. The two documents point
out the characteristics of our epoch and the common laws of socialist
revolution and socialist construction, and day down the common line of all the
Communist and Workers' Parties. They are the common programme of the
international communist movement.
It is true that
for several years there have been differences within the international
communist movement in the understanding of, and the attitude towards, the
Declaration of 1957 and the Statement of 1960. The central issue here is
whether or not to accept the revolutionary principles of the Declaration and
the Statement. In the last analysis, it is a question of whether or not to
accept the universal truth of Marxism-Leninism, whether or not to recognize the
universal significance of the road of the October Revolution, whether or not to
accept the fact that the people still living under the imperialist and
capitalist system, who comprise two-thirds of the world's population, need to
make revolution, and whether or not to accept the fact that the people already
on the socialist road, who comprise one-third of the world's population, need
to carry their revolution forward to the end.
It has become an
urgent and vital task of the international communist movement resolutely to
defend the revolutionary principles of the 1957 Declaration and the 1960
Statement.
Only by strictly
following the revolutionary teachings of Marxism-Leninism and the general road
of the October revolution is it possible to have a correct understanding of the
revolutionary principles of the Declaration and the Statement and a correct
attitude towards them.
(2) What are the
revolutionary principles of the Declaration and the Statement? They may be
summarized as follows:
Workers of all
countries, unite; workers of the world, unite with the oppressed peoples and
oppressed nations; oppose imperialism and reaction in all countries; strive for
world peace, national liberation, people's democracy and socialism; consolidate
and expand the socialist camp; bring the proletarian world revolution step by
step to complete victory; and establish a new world without imperialism,
without capitalism and without the exploitation of mall by man.
This, in our view,
is the general line of the international communist movement at the present
stage.
(3) This general
line proceeds from the actual world situation taken as a whole and from a
class analysis of the fundamental contradictions in the contemporary world,
and is directed against the counter-revolutionary global strategy of U.S.
imperialism.
This general line
is one of forming a broad united front, with the socialist camp and the
international proletariat as its nucleus, to oppose the imperialists and
reactionaries headed by the United States; it is a line of boldly arousing the
masses, expanding the revolutionary forces, winning over the middle forces and
isolating the reactionary forces.
This general line
is one of resolute revolutionary struggle by the people of all countries and of
carrying; the proletarian world revolution forward to the end; it is the line
that most effectively combats imperialism and defends world peace.
If the general
line of the international communist movement is one-sidedly reduced to
"peaceful coexistence", "peaceful competition," and
"peaceful transition" this is to violate the revolutionary principles
of the 1957 Declaration and the 1960 Statement, to discard the historical
mission of proletarian world revolution, and to depart from the revolutionary
teachings of Marxism-Leninism.
The general line
of the international communist movement should reflect the general law of
development of world history. The revolutionary struggles of the proletariat
and the people in various countries go through different stages and they all
have their own characteristics but they will not transcend the general law of
development of world history. The general line should point out the basic
direction for the revolutionary struggles of the proletariat and people of all
countries.
While working out
its specific line and policies, it is most important for each Communist or
Workers' Party to adhere to the principle of integrating the universal truth of
Marxism-Leninism with the concrete practice of revolution and construction in
its own country.
(4) In defining
the general line of the international communist movement, the starting point is
the concrete class analysis of world politics and economics as a whole and of
actual world conditions, that is to say, of the fundamental contradictions in
the contemporary world.
If one avoids a
concrete class analysis, seizes at random on certain superficial phenomena, and
draws subjective and groundless conclusions, one cannot possibly reach correct
conclusions with regard to the general line of the international communist
movement but will inevitably slide onto a track entirely different from that of
Marxism-Leninism. What are the fundamental contradictions in the
contemporary world? Marxist-Leninists consistently hold that they are:
the contradiction between the
socialist camp and the imperialist camp;
the contradiction between the
proletariat and the bourgeoisie in the capitalist countries;
the contradiction between the
oppressed nations and imperialism; and
the contradictions among
imperialist countries and among monopoly capitalist groups.
The contradiction
between the socialist camp and the imperialist camp is a contradiction between
two fundamentally different social systems, socialism and capitalism. It is
undoubtedly very sharp. But Marxist-Leninists must not regard the
contradictions in the world as consisting solely and simply of the
contradiction between the socialist camp and the imperialist camp. The
international balance of forces has changed and has become increasingly
favorable to socialism and to all the oppressed peoples and nations of the
world, and most unfavorable to imperialism and the reactionaries of all
countries. Nevertheless, the contradictions enumerated above still objectively
exist.
These
contradictions and the struggles to which they give rise are interrelated and
influence each other. Nobody can obliterate any of these fundamental
contradictions or subjectively substitute one for all the rest.
It is
inevitable that these contradictions will give rise to popular revolutions,
which alone can resolve them.
(5) The following
erroneous views should be repudiated on the question of the fundamental
contradictions in the contemporary world:
a) the view which
blots out the class content of the contradiction between the socialist and the
imperialist camps and fails to see this contradiction as one between states
under the dictatorship of the proletariat and states under the dictatorship of
the monopoly capitalists
b) the view which
recognizes only the contradiction between the socialist and the imperialist
camps, while neglecting or underestimating the contradictions between the
proletariat and the bourgeoisie in the capitalist world between the oppressed
nations and imperialism, among the imperialist countries and among the monopoly
capitalist groups, and the struggles to which these contradictions give rise;
c) the view which
maintains with regard to the capitalist world that the contradiction between
the proletariat and the bourgeoisie can be resolved without a proletarian
revolution in each country and that the contradiction between the
oppressed nations and imperialism can be resolved without revolution by the
oppressed nations;
d) the view which
denies that the development of the inherent contradictions in the contemporary
capitalist world inevitably leads to a new situation in which the
imperialist countries are locked in an intense struggle and asserts that
the contradictions among the imperialist countries can be reconciled, or even
eliminated, by "international agreements among the big monopolies";
and
e) the view which
maintains that the contradiction between the two world systems of socialism and
capitalism will automatically disappear in the course of "economic
competition", that the other fundamental world contradictions will
automatically do so with the disappearance of the contradiction between the two
systems, and that a "world without wars", a new world of
"all-round co-operation", will appear.
It is obvious that
these erroneous views inevitably lead to erroneous and harmful policies and
hence to setbacks and losses of one kind or another to the cause of the people
and of socialism.
(6) The balance of
forces between imperialism and socialism has undergone a fundamental change
since World War II. The main indication of this change is that the world now
has not just one socialist country but a number of socialist countries forming
the mighty socialist camp, and that the people who have taken the socialist
road now number not two hundred million but a thousand million, or a third of
the world's population.
The socialist camp
is the outcome of the struggles of the international proletariat and working
people. It belongs to the international proletariat and working people as well
as to the people of the socialist countries.
The main common demands
of the people of the countries in the socialist camp and the international
proletariat and working people are that all the Communist and Workers' Parties
in the socialist camp should:
Adhere to the Marxist-Leninist
line and pursue correct Marxist-Leninist domestic and foreign policies;
Consolidate the dictatorship of
the proletariat and the worker-peasant alliance led by the proletariat and
carry the socialist revolution forward to the end on the economic, political
and ideological fronts;
Promote the initiative and
creativeness of the broad masses, carry out socialist construction in a planned
way, develop production, improve the people's livelihood and strengthen
national defense;
Strengthen the unity of the
socialist camp on the basis of Marxism-Leninism, and support other socialist
countries on the basis of proletarian internationalism;
Oppose the imperialist policies
of aggression and war, and defend world peace;
Oppose the anti-Communist,
anti-popular and counter-revolutionary policies of the reactionaries of all
countries; and
Help the revolutionary
struggles of the oppressed classes and nations of the world.
All Communist and Workers' Parties in the socialist camp owe it to their
own people and to the international proletariat and working people to fulfil
these demands.
By fulfilling these demands the socialist camp will exert a decisive
influence on the course of human history. For this very reason, the
imperialists and reactionaries invariably try in a thousand and one ways to
influence the domestic and foreign policies of the countries in the socialist
camp, to undermine the camp and break up the unity of the socialist countries
and particularly the unity of China and the Soviet Union. They invariably try
to infiltrate and subvert the socialist countries and even entertain the
extravagant hope of destroying the socialist camp.
The question of what is the correct attitude towards the socialist camp is
a most important question of principle confronting all Communist and Workers'
Parties.
It is under new historical conditions that the Communist and Workers'
Parties are now carrying on the task of proletarian internationalist unity and
struggle. When only one socialist country existed and when this country was
faced with hostility and jeopardized by all the imperialists and reactionaries
because it firmly pursued the correct Marxist-Leninist line and policies, the
touchstone of proletarian internationalism for every Communist Party was
whether or not it resolutely defended the only socialist country. Now there is
a socialist camp consisting of thirteen countries, Albania, Bulgaria, China,
Cuba, Czechoslovakia, the German Democratic Republic, Hungary, the Democratic
People's Republic of Korea, Mongolia, Poland, Rumania, the Soviet Union and the
Democratic Republic of Vietnam. Under these circumstances, the touchstone of
proletarian internationalism for every Communist Party is whether or not it
resolutely defends the whole of the socialist camp, whether or not it defends
the unity of all the countries in the camp on the basis of Marxism-Leninism and
whether or not it defends the Marxist-Leninist line and policies which the
socialist countries ought to pursue.
If anybody does not pursue the correct Marxist-Leninist line and policies,
does not defend the unity of the socialist camp but on the contrary creates
tension and splits within it, or even follows the policies of the Yugoslav
revisionists, tries to liquidate the socialist camp or helps capitalist
countries to attack fraternal socialist countries, then he is betraying the
interests of the entire international proletariat and the people of the world.
If anybody, following in the footsteps of others, defends the erroneous
opportunist line and policies pursued by a certain socialist country instead of
upholding the correct Marxist-Leninist line and policies which the socialist
countries ought to pursue, defends the policy of split instead of upholding the
policy of unity, then he is departing from Marxism-Leninism and proletarian
internationalism.
(7) Taking advantage of the situation after World War II, the U.S.
imperialists stepped into the shoes of the German, Italian and Japanese
fascists, and have been trying to erect a huge world empire such as has never
been known before. The strategic objectives of U.S. imperialism have been to
grab and dominate the intermediate zone lying between the United States and the
socialist camp, put down the revolutions of the oppressed peoples and nations,
proceed to destroy the socialist countries, and thus to subject all the peoples
and countries of the world, including its allies, to domination and enslavement
by U.S. monopoly capital.
Ever since World War II, the U.S. imperialists have been conducting
propaganda for war against the Soviet Union and the socialist camp. There are
two aspects to this propaganda. While the U.S. imperialists are actually
preparing such a war, they also use this propaganda as a smokescreen for their
oppression of the American people and for the extension of their aggression
against the rest of the capitalist world.
The 1960 Statement points out:
"U.S. imperialism has become the biggest international
exploiter."
"The United States is the mainstay of colonialism today."
"U.S. imperialism is the main force of aggression and war."
"International developments in recent years have furnished many new
proofs of the fact that U.S. imperialism is the chief bulwark of world reaction
and an international gendarme, that it has become an enemy of the peoples of
the whole world."
U.S. imperialism is pressing its policies of aggression and war all over
the world, but the outcome is bound to be the opposite of that intended--it
will only be to hasten the awakening of the people in all countries and to
hasten their revolutions.
The U.S. imperialists have thus placed themselves in opposition to the
people of the whole world and have become encircled by them. The international
proletariat must and can unite all the forces that can be united, make use of
the internal contradictions in the enemy camp and establish the broadest united
front against the U.S. imperialists and their lackeys.
The realistic and correct course is to entrust the fate of the people and
of mankind to the unity and struggle of the world proletariat and to the unity
and struggle of the people in all countries.
Conversely, to make no distinction between enemies, friends and ourselves
and to entrust the fate of the people and of mankind to collaboration with U.S.
imperialism is to lead people astray. The events of the last few years have
exploded this illusion.
(8) The various types of contradictions in the contemporary world are
concentrated in the vast areas of Asia, Africa and Latin America; these are the
most vulnerable areas under imperialist rule and the storm centers of world
revolution dealing direct blows at imperialism.
The national democratic revolutionary movement in these areas and the
international socialist revolutionary movement are the two great historical
currents of our time.
The national democratic revolution in these areas is an important component
of the contemporary proletarian world revolution.
The anti-imperialist revolutionary struggles of the people in Asia, Africa
and Latin America are pounding and undermining the foundations of the rule of
imperialism and colonialism, old and new, and are now a mighty force in defense
of world peace.
In a sense, therefore, the whole cause of the international proletarian
revolution hinges on the outcome of the revolutionary struggles of the people
of these areas who constitute the overwhelming majority of the world's
population.
Therefore, the anti-imperialist revolutionary struggle of the people in
Asia, Africa and Latin America is definitely not merely a matter of regional
significance but one of overall importance for the whole cause of proletarian
world revolution.
Certain persons now go so far as to deny the great international
significance of the anti-imperialist revolutionary struggles of the Asian,
African and Latin American peoples and, on the pretext of breaking down the
barriers of nationality, color and geographical location, are trying their best
to efface the line of demarcation between oppressed and oppressor nations
and between oppressed and oppressor countries and to hold down the
revolutionary struggles of the peoples in these areas. In fact, they cater to
the needs of imperialism and create a new "theory" to justify the
rule of imperialism in these areas and the promotion of its policies of old and
new colonialism. Actually, this "theory" seeks not to break down the
barriers of nationality, color and geographical location but to maintain the
rule of the "superior nations" over the oppressed nations. It is only
natural that this fraudulent "theory" is rejected by the people in
these areas.
The working class in every socialist country and in every capitalist
country must truly put into effect the fighting slogans, "Workers of all
countries, unite!" and "Workers and oppressed nations of the world,
unite!"; it must study the revolutionary experience of the peoples of
Asia, Africa and Latin America, firmly support their revolutionary actions and
regard the cause of their liberation as a most dependable support for itself
and as directly in accord with its own interests. This is the only effective
way to break down the barriers of nationality, color and geographical location
and this is the only genuine proletarian internationalism.
It is impossible for the working class in the European and American
capitalist countries to liberate itself unless it unites with the oppressed
nations and unless those nations are liberated. Lenin rightly said,
The revolutionary movement in the advanced countries would actually be a
sheer fraud if, in their struggle against capital, the workers of Europe and
America were not closely and completely united with the hundreds upon hundreds
of millions of "colonial" slaves who are oppressed by capital.
[Lenin, "The Second Congress of the Communist International", Selected
Works, Foreign Languages Publishing House, Moscow, 1952, Vol. II, Part
2, pp. 472-73.]
Certain persons in the international communist movement are now taking a
passive or scornful or negative attitude towards the struggles of the oppressed
nations for liberation. They are in fact protecting the interests of monopoly
capital, betraying those of the proletariat, and degenerating into social
democrats.
The attitude taken towards the revolutionary struggles of the people in the
Asian, African and Latin American countries is an important criterion for
differentiating those who want revolution from those who do not and those who
are truly defending world peace from those who are abetting the forces of
aggression and war.
(9) The oppressed nations and peoples of Asia, Africa and Latin America
are faced with the urgent task of fighting imperialism and its lackeys.
History has entrusted to the proletarian parties in these areas the
glorious mission of holding high the banner of struggle against imperialism,
against old and new colonialism and for national independence and people's
democracy, of standing in the forefront of the national democratic
revolutionary movement and striving for a socialist future.
In these areas, extremely broad sections of the population refuse to be
slaves of imperialism. They include not only the workers, peasants,
intellectuals and petty bourgeoisie, but also the patriotic national
bourgeoisie and even certain kings, princes and aristocrats, who are patriotic.
The proletariat and its party must have confidence in the strength of the
masses and, above all, must unite with the peasants and establish a solid
worker-peasant alliance. It is of primary importance for advanced members of
the proletariat to work in the rural areas, help the peasants to act organized,
and raise their class consciousness and their national self-respect and
self-confidence.
On the basis of the worker-peasant alliance the proletariat and its party
must unite all the strata that can be united and organize a broad united front
against imperialism and its lackeys. In order to consolidate and expand this
united front it is necessary that the proletarian party should maintain its
ideological, political and organizational independence and insist on the
leadership of the revolution.
The proletarian party and the revolutionary people must learn to master all
forms of struggle, including armed struggle. They must defeat
counter-revolutionary armed force with revolutionary armed force whenever
imperialism and its lackeys resort to armed suppression.
The nationalist countries which have recently won political independence
are still confronted with the arduous tasks of consolidating it, liquidating
the forces of imperialism and domestic reaction, carrying out agrarian and
other social reforms and developing their national economy and culture. It is
of practical and vital importance for these countries to guard and fight
against the neo-colonialist policies which the old colonialists adopt to preserve
their interests, and especially against the neo-colonialism of U.S.
imperialism.
In some of these countries, the patriotic national bourgeoisie continue to
stand with the masses in the struggle against imperialism and colonialism and
introduce certain measures of social progress. This requires the proletarian
party to make a full appraisal of the progressive role of the patriotic
national bourgeoisie and strengthen unity with them.
As the internal social contradictions and the international class struggle
sharpen, the bourgeoisie, and particularly the big bourgeoisie, in some newly
independent countries increasingly tend to become retainers of imperialism and
to pursue anti-popular, anti-Communist and counter-revolutionary policies. It
is necessary for the proletarian party resolutely to oppose these reactionary
policies.
Generally speaking, the bourgeoisie in these countries have a dual
character. When a united front is formed with the bourgeoisie, the policy of
the proletarian party should be one of both unity and struggle. The policy
should be to unite with the bourgeoisie, in so far as they tend to be
progressive, anti-imperialist and anti-feudal, but to struggle against their
reactionary tendencies to compromise and collaborate with imperialism and the
forces of feudalism.
On the national question the world outlook of the proletarian party is
internationalism, and not nationalism. In the revolutionary struggle it
supports progressive nationalism and opposes reactionary nationalism. It must
always draw a clear line of demarcation between itself and bourgeois
nationalism, to which it must never fall captive.
The 1960 Statement says,
Communists expose attempts by the reactionary section of the bourgeoisie to
represent its selfish, narrow class interests as those of the entire nation;
they expose the demagogic use by bourgeois politicians of socialist slogans for
the same purpose. . . .
If the proletariat becomes the tail of the landlords and bourgeoisie in the
revolution, no real or thorough victory in the national democratic revolution
is possible, and even if victory of a kind is gained, it will be impossible to
consolidate it.
In the course of the revolutionary struggles of the oppressed nations and
peoples, the proletarian party must put forward a programme of its own which is
thoroughly against imperialism and domestic reaction and for national
independence and people's democracy, and it must work independently among the
masses, constantly expand the progressive forces, win over the middle forces
and isolate the reactionary forces; only thus can it carry the national
democratic revolution through to the end and guide the revolution on to the
road of socialism.
(10) In the imperialist and the capitalist countries, the proletarian
revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat are essential for the
thorough resolution of the contradictions of capitalist society.
In striving to accomplish this task the proletarian party must under the
present circumstances actively lead the working class and the working people in
struggles to oppose monopoly capital, to defend democratic rights, to oppose
the menace of fascism, to improve living conditions, to oppose imperialist arms
expansion and war preparations, to defend world peace and actively to support
the revolutionary struggles of the oppressed nations.
In the capitalist countries which U.S. imperialism controls or is trying to
control, the working class and the people should direct their attacks mainly
against U.S. imperialism, but also against their own monopoly capitalists and
other reactionary forces who are betraying the national interests.
Large-scale mass struggles in the capitalist countries in recent years have
shown that the working class and working people are experiencing a new
awakening. Their struggles, which are dealing blows at monopoly capital and
reaction, have opened bright prospects for the revolutionary cause in their own
countries and are also a powerful support for the revolutionary struggles of
the Asian, African and Latin American peoples and for the countries of the
socialist camp.
The proletarian parties in imperialist or capitalist countries must
maintain their own ideological, political and organizational independence in
leading revolutionary struggles. At the same time, they must unite all the
forces that can be united and build a broad united front against monopoly
capital and against the imperialist policies of aggression and war.
While actively leading immediate struggles, Communists in the capitalist
countries should link them with the struggle for long-range and general
interests, educate the masses in a Marxist-Leninist revolutionary spirit,
ceaselessly raise their political consciousness and undertake the historical
task of the proletarian revolution. If they fail to do so, if they regard the
immediate movement as everything, determine their conduct from case to case,
adapt themselves to the events of the day and sacrifice the basic interests of
the proletariat, that is out-and-out social democracy.
Social democracy is a bourgeois ideological trend. Lenin pointed out long
ago that the social democratic parties are political detachments of the
bourgeoisie, its agents in the working-class movement and its principal social
prop. Communists must at all times draw a clear line of demarcation between
themselves and social democratic parties on the basic question of the
proletarian revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat and liquidate
the ideological influence of social democracy in the international
working-class movement and among the working people. Beyond any shadow of
doubt, Communists must win over the masses under the influence of the social
democratic parties and must win over those left and middle elements in the
social democratic parties who are willing to oppose domestic monopoly capital
and domination by foreign imperialism and must unite with them in extensive
joint action in the day-to-day struggle of the working-class movement and in
the struggle to defend world peace.
In order to lead the proletariat and working people in revolution,
Marxist-Leninist Parties must master all forms of struggle and be able to
substitute one form for another quickly as the conditions of struggle change.
The vanguard of the proletariat will remain unconquerable in all circumstances
only if it masters all forms of struggle--peaceful and armed, open and secret,
legal and illegal, parliamentary struggle and mass struggle, etc. It is wrong
to refuse to use parliamentary and other legal forms of struggle when they can
and should be used. However, if a Marxist-Leninist Party falls into legalism or
parliamentary cretinism, confining the struggle within the limits permitted by
the bourgeoisie, this will inevitably lead to renouncing the proletarian
revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat.
(11) On the question of transition from capitalism to socialism, the
proletarian party must proceed from the stand of class struggle and revolution
and base itself on the Marxist-Leninist teachings concerning the proletarian
revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat.
Communists would always prefer to bring about the transition to socialism
by peaceful means. But can peaceful transition be made into a new world-wide
strategic principle for the international communist movement? Absolutely not.
Marxism-Leninism consistently holds that the fundamental question in all
revolutions is that of state power. The 1957 Declaration and the 1960
Statement both clearly point out, "Leninism teaches, and experience
confirms, that the ruling classes never relinquish power voluntarily." The
old government never topples even in a period of crisis, unless it is pushed.
This is a universal law of class struggle.
In specific historical conditions, Marx and Lenin did raise the possibility
that revolution may develop peacefully. But, as Lenin pointed out, the peaceful
development of revolution is an opportunity "very seldom to be met with in
the history of revolutions".
As a matter of fact, there is no historical precedent for peaceful
transition from capitalism to socialism.
Certain persons say there was no precedent when Marx foretold that
socialism would inevitably replace capitalism. Then why can we not predict a
peaceful transition from capitalism to socialism despite the absence of a
precedent? This parallel is absurd. Employing dialectical and historical
materialism, Marx analyzed the contradictions of capitalism, discovered the
objective laws of development of human society and arrived at a scientific
conclusion, whereas the prophets who pin all their hopes on "peaceful
transition" proceed from historical idealism, ignore the most fundamental
contradictions of capitalism, repudiate the Marxist-Leninist teachings on class
struggle, and arrive at a subjective and groundless conclusion. How can people
who repudiate Marxism get any help from Marx?
It is plain to everyone that the capitalist countries are strengthening
their state machinery--and especially their military apparatus--the primary
purpose of which is to suppress the people in their own countries.
The proletarian party must never base its thinking, its policies for
revolution and its entire work on the assumption that the imperialists and
reactionaries will accept peaceful transformation.
The proletarian party must prepare itself for two eventualities--while preparing
for a peaceful development of the revolution, it must also fully prepare for a
non-peaceful development. It should concentrate on the painstaking work of
accumulating revolutionary strength, so that it will be ready to seize victory
when the conditions for revolution are ripe or to strike powerful blows at the
imperialists and the reactionaries when they launch surprise attacks and armed
assaults.
If it fails to make such preparations, the proletarian party will paralyze
the revolutionary will of the proletariat, disarm itself ideologically and sink
into a totally passive state of unpreparedness both politically and
organizationally, and the result will be to bury the proletarian revolutionary
cause.
(12) All social revolutions in the various stages of the history of
mankind are historically inevitable and are governed by objective laws
independent of man's will. Moreover, history shows that there never was a
revolution which was able to achieve victory without zigzags and sacrifices.
With Marxist-Leninist theory as the basis, the task of the Proletarian
party is to analyze the concrete historical conditions, put forward the correct
strategy and tactics, and guide the masses in bypassing hidden reefs, avoiding
unnecessary sacrifices and reaching the goal step by step. Is it possible to
avoid sacrifices altogether? Such is not the case with the slave revolutions,
the serf revolutions, the bourgeois revolutions, or the national revolutions;
nor is it the case with proletarian revolutions. Even if the guiding line of
the revolution is correct, it its impossible to have a sure guarantee against
setbacks and sacrifices in the course of the revolution. So long as a
correct line is adhered to, the revolution is bound to triumph in the end.
To abandon revolution on the pretext of avoiding sacrifices is in reality to
demand that the people should forever remain slaves and endure infinite pain
and sacrifice.
Elementary knowledge of Marxism-Leninism tells us that the birth pangs of a
revolution are far less painful than the chronic agony of the old society. Lenin rightly said
that "even with the most peaceful course of events, the present
[capitalist] system always and inevitably exacts countless sacrifices from the
working class". [Lenin, "Another Massacre", Collected Works, FLPH, Moscow, 1961, Vol. V. p. 25. ]
Whoever considers a revolution can be made only if everything is plain
sailing, only if there is an advance guarantee against sacrifices and failure,
is certainly no revolutionary.
However difficult the conditions and whatever sacrifices and defeats the
revolution may suffer, proletarian revolutionaries should educate the masses in
the spirit of revolution and hold aloft the banner of revolution and not
abandon it
It would be "Left" adventurism if the proletarian party should
rashly launch a revolution before the objective conditions are ripe. But it
would be Right opportunism if the proletarian party should not dare to lead a
revolution and to seize state power when the objective conditions are ripe.
Even in ordinary times, when it is leading the masses in the day-to-day
struggle, the proletarian party should ideologically, politically and
organizationally prepare its own ranks and the masses for revolution and
promote revolutionary struggles, so that it will not miss the opportunity to
overthrow the reactionary regime and establish a new state power when the
conditions for revolution are ripe. Otherwise, when the objective conditions
are ripe, the proletarian party will simply throw away the opportunity of seizing
victory.
The proletarian party must be flexible as well as highly principled, and on
occasion it must make such compromises as are necessary in the interests of the
revolution. But it must never abandon principled policies and the goal of
revolution on the pretext of flexibility and of necessary compromises.
The proletarian party must lead the masses in waging struggles against the
enemies, and it must know how to utilize the contradictions among those
enemies. But the purpose of using these contradictions is to make it easier to
attain the goal of the people's revolutionary struggles and not to liquidate
these struggles.
Countless facts have proved that, wherever the dark rule of imperialism and
reaction exists, the people who form over ninety per cent of the population
will sooner or later rise in revolution.
If Communists isolate themselves from the revolutionary demands of the
masses, they are bound to lose the confidence of the masses and will be tossed
to the rear by the revolutionary current.
If the leading group in any Party adopt a non-revolutionary line and
convert it into a reformist party, then Marxist-Leninists inside and outside
the Party will replace them and lead the people in making revolution. In
another kind of situation, the bourgeois revolutionaries will come forward to
lead the revolution and the party of the proletariat will forfeit its
leadership of the revolution. When the reactionary bourgeoisie betray the
revolution and suppress the people, an opportunist line will cause tragic and
unnecessary losses to the Communists and the revolutionary masses.
If Communists slide down the path of opportunism they will degenerate into
bourgeois nationalists and become appendages of the imperialists and the
reactionary bourgeoisie.
There are certain persons who assert that they have made the greatest
creative contributions to revolutionary theory since Lenin and that they alone
are correct. But it is very dubious whether they have ever really given
consideration to the extensive experience of the entire world communist
movement, whether they have ever really considered the interests, the goal and
tasks of the international proletarian movement as a whole, and whether they
really have a general line for the international communist movement which conforms
with Marxism-Leninism.
In the last few years the international communist movement and the national
liberation movement have had many experiences and many lessons. There are
experiences which people should praise and there are experiences which make people
grieve. Communists and revolutionaries in all countries should ponder and
seriously study these experiences of success and failure, so as to draw correct
conclusions and useful lessons from them.
(13) The socialist countries and the revolutionary struggles of the
oppressed peoples and nations support and assist each other.
The national liberation movements of Asia, Africa and Latin America and the
revolutionary movements of the people in the capitalist countries are a strong
support to the socialist countries. It is completely wrong to deny this.
The only attitude for the socialist countries to adopt towards the
revolutionary struggles of the oppressed peoples and nations is one of warm
sympathy and active support; they must not adopt a perfunctory attitude, or one
of national selfishness or of great-power chauvinism.
Lenin said, "Alliance with the revolutionaries of the advanced
countries and with all the oppressed peoples against any and all the
imperialists--such is the external policy of the proletariat." [Lenin,
"The External Policy of the Russian Revolution", Collected Works, 4th
Russian edition, State Publishing House for Political literature, 1949, Moscow.
Vol. XXV, p. 69.] Whoever fails to understand this point and considers that the
support and aid given by the socialist countries to the oppressed peoples and
nations are a burden or charity is going counter to Marxism-Leninism and
proletarian internationalism.
The superiority of the socialist system and the achievements of the
socialist countries in construction play an exemplary role and are an
inspiration to the oppressed peoples and the oppressed nations.
But this exemplary role and inspiration can never replace the revolutionary
struggles of the oppressed peoples and nations. No oppressed people or nation
can win liberation except through its own staunch revolutionary struggle.
Certain persons have one-sidedly exaggerated the role of peaceful
competition between socialist and imperialist countries in their attempt to
substitute peaceful competition for the revolutionary struggles of the
oppressed peoples and nations. According to their preaching, it would seem that
imperialism will automatically collapse in the course of this peaceful
competition and that the only thing the oppressed peoples and nations have to
do is to wait quietly for the advent of this day. What does this have in common
with Marxist-Leninist views?
Moreover, certain persons have concocted the strange tale that China and
some other socialist countries want "to unleash wars" and to spread
socialism by "wars between states". As the Statement of 1960 points
out, such tales are nothing but imperialist and reactionary slanders. To put it
bluntly, the purpose of those who repeat these slanders is to hide the fact
that they are opposed to revolutions by the oppressed peoples and nations of
the world and opposed to others supporting such revolutions.
(14) In the last few years much--in fact a great deal--has been said on
the question of war and peace. Our views and policies on this question are
known to the world, and no one can distort them.
It is a pity that although certain persons in the international communist
movement talk about how much they love peace and hate war, they are unwilling
to acquire even a faint understanding of the simple truth on war pointed out by
Lenin.
Lenin said,
It seems to me that the main thing that is usually forgotten on the
question of war, which receives inadequate attention, the main reason why there
is so much controversy, and, I would say, futile, hopeless and aimless
controversy, is that people forget the fundamental question of the class
character of the war; why the war broke out; the classes that are waging it; the historical and
historico-economic conditions that gave rise to it. [Lenin, "War and
Revolution", Collected Works, 4th Russian edition, SPHPL,
Moscow, 1949, Vol. XXIV, p. 362]
As Marxist-Leninists see it, war is the continuation of politics by
other means, and every war is inseparable from the political system and the
political struggles which give rise to it. If one departs from this
scientific Marxist-Leninist proposition which has been confirmed by the entire
history of class struggle, one will never be able to understand either the
question of war or the question of peace.
There are different types of peace and different types of war.
Marxist-Leninists must be clear about what type of peace or what type of war is
in question. Lumping just wars and unjust wars together and opposing all of
them undiscriminatingly is a bourgeois pacifist and not a Marxist-Leninist
approach.
Certain persons say that revolutions are entirely possible without war.
Now which type of war are they referring to--is it a war of national
liberation or a revolutionary civil war, or is it a world war?
It they are referring to a war of national liberation or a revolutionary
civil war, then this formulation is, in effect, opposed to revolutionary wars
and to revolution.
If they are referring to a world war, then they are shooting at a
non-existent target. Although Marxist-Leninists have pointed out, on the
basis of the history of the two world wars, that world wars inevitably lead to
revolution, no Marxist-Leninist ever has held or ever will hold that revolution
must be made through world war.
Marxist-Leninists take the abolition of war as their ideal and believe that
war can be abolished.
But how can war be abolished?
This is how Lenin viewed it:
. . . our object is to achieve the socialist system of society, which, by
abolishing the division of mankind into classes, by abolishing all exploitation
of man by man, and of one nation by other nations, will inevitably abolish all
possibility of war. [Ibid., p. 363]
The Statement of 1960 also puts it very clearly, "The victory of
socialism all over the world will completely remove the social and national
causes of all wars."
However, certain persons now actually hold that it is possible to bring
about "a world without weapons, without armed forces and without
wars" through "general and complete disarmament" while the
system of imperialism and of the exploitation of man by man still exists. This
is sheer illusion.
An elementary knowledge of Marxism-Leninism tells us that the armed forces
are the principal part of the state machine and that a so-called world without
weapons and without armed forces can only be a world without states. Lenin
said:
Only after the proletariat has disarmed the bourgeoisie
will it be able, without betraying its world-historical mission, to throw all
armaments on the scrap heap; and the proletariat will undoubtedly do this,
but only when this condition has been fulfilled, certainly not
before. [Lenin, "The War Program of the Proletarian
Revolution", Selected Works, FLPH, Moscow, 1952, Vol. I, Part
2, P. 574.]
What are the facts in the world today? Is there a shadow of evidence that
the imperialist countries headed by the United States are ready to carry out
general and complete disarmament? Are they not each and all engaged in general
and complete arms expansion?
We have always maintained that, in order to expose and combat the
imperialists' arms expansion and war preparations, it is necessary to put
forward the proposal for general disarmament. Furthermore, it is possible to compel
imperialism to accept some kind of agreement on disarmament, through the
combined struggle of the socialist countries and the people of the whole world.
If one regards general and complete disarmament as the fundamental road to
world peace, spreads the illusion that imperialism will automatically lay down
its arms and tries to liquidate the revolutionary struggles of the oppressed
peoples and nations on the pretext of disarmament, then this is deliberately to
deceive the people of the world and help the imperialists in their policies of
aggression and war.
In order to overcome the present ideological confusion in the international
working-class movement on the question of war and peace, we consider that
Lenin's thesis, which has been discarded by the modern revisionists, must be
restored in the interest of combating the imperialist policies of aggression
and war and defending world peace.
The people of the world universally demand the prevention of a new world
war. And it is possible to prevent a new world war.
The question then is, what is the way to secure world peace? According to
the Leninist viewpoint, world peace can be won only by the struggles of the
people in all countries and not by begging the imperialists for it. World peace
can only be effectively defended by relying on the development of the forces of
the socialist camp, on the revolutionary struggles of the proletariat and working
people of all countries, on the liberation struggles of the oppressed nations
and on the struggles of all peace loving people and countries.
Such is the Leninist policy. Any policy to the contrary definitely will not
lead to world peace but will only encourage the ambitions of the imperialists
and increase the danger of world war.
In recent years, certain persons have been spreading the argument that a
single spark from a war of national liberation or from a revolutionary people's
war will lead to a world conflagration destroying the whole of mankind. What
are the facts? Contrary to what these persons say, the wars of national
liberation and the revolutionary people's wars that have occurred since World
War II have not led to world war. The victory of these revolutionary wars has
directly weakened the forces of imperialism and greatly strengthened the forces
which prevent the imperialists from launching a world war and which defend
world peace. Do not the facts demonstrate the absurdity of this argument?
(15) The complete banning and destruction of nuclear weapons is an
important task in the struggle to defend world peace. We must do our utmost to
this end.
Nuclear weapons are unprecedentedly destructive, which is why for more than
a decade now the U.S. imperialists have been pursuing their policy of nuclear
blackmail in order to realize their ambition of enslaving the people of all
countries and dominating the world.
But when the imperialists threaten other countries with nuclear weapons,
they subject the people in their own country to the same threat, thus arousing
them against nuclear weapons and against the imperialist policies of aggression
and war. At the same time, in their vain hope of destroying their opponents
with nuclear weapons, the imperialists are in fact subjecting themselves to the
danger of being destroyed.
The possibility of banning nuclear weapons does indeed exist. However, if
the imperialists are forced to accept an agreement to ban nuclear weapons, it
decidedly will not be because of their "love for humanity" but
because of the pressure of the people of all countries and for the sake of
their own vital interests.
In contrast to the imperialists, socialist countries rely upon the
righteous strength of the people and on their own correct policies, and have no
need whatever to gamble with nuclear weapons in the world arena. Socialist
countries have nuclear weapons solely in order to defend themselves and to
prevent imperialism from launching a nuclear war.
In the view of Marxist-Leninists, the people are the makers of history. In
the present, as in the past, man is the decisive factor. Marxist-Leninists
attach importance to the role of technological change, but it is wrong to
belittle the role of man and exaggerate the role of technology.
The emergence of nuclear weapons can neither arrest the progress of human
history nor save the imperialist system from its doom, any more than the
emergence of new techniques could save the old systems from their doom in the
past.
The emergence of nuclear weapons does not and cannot resolve the
fundamental contradictions in the contemporary world, does not and cannot alter
the law of class struggle, and does not and cannot change the nature of
imperialism and reaction.
It cannot, therefore, be said that with the emergence of nuclear weapons
the possibility and the necessity of social and national revolutions have
disappeared, or the basic principles of Marxism-Leninism, and especially the
theories of proletarian revolution and the dictatorship of the proletariat and
of war and peace, have become outmoded and changed into stale
"dogmas".
(16) It was Lenin who advanced the thesis that it is possible for the
socialist countries to practice peaceful coexistence with the capitalist
countries. It is well known that after the great Soviet people had repulsed
foreign armed intervention the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the
Soviet Government, led first by Lenin and then by Stalin, consistently pursued
the policy of peaceful coexistence and that they were forced to wage a war of
self-defense only when attacked by the German imperialists.
Since its founding, the People's Republic of China too has consistently
pursued the policy of peaceful coexistence with countries having different
social systems, and it is China which initiated the Five Principles of Peaceful
Coexistence.
However, a few years ago certain persons suddenly claimed Lenin's policy of
peaceful coexistence as their own "great discovery". They maintain
that they have a monopoly on the interpretation of this policy. They treat
"peaceful coexistence" as if it were an all-inclusive, mystical book
from heaven and attribute to it every success the people of the world achieve
by struggle. What is more, they label all who disagree with their distortions
of Lenin's views as opponents of peaceful coexistence, as people completely
ignorant of Lenin and Leninism, and as heretics deserving to be burnt at the
stake.
How can the Chinese Communists agree with this view and practice? They
cannot, it is impossible.
Lenin's principle of peaceful coexistence is very clear and readily
comprehensible by ordinary people. Peaceful coexistence designates a
relationship between countries with different social systems, and must not be
interpreted as one pleases. It should never be extended to apply to the
relations between oppressed and oppressor nations, between oppressed and
oppressor countries or between oppressed and oppressor classes, and never be
described as the main content of the transition from capitalism to socialism, still
less should it be asserted that peaceful coexistence is mankind's road to
socialism. The reason is that it is one thing to practice peaceful coexistence
between countries with different social systems. It is absolutely impermissible
and impossible for countries practicing peaceful coexistence to touch even a
hair of each other's social system. The class struggle, the struggle for
national liberation and the transition from capitalism to socialism in various
countries are quite another. thing. They are all bitter, life-and-death
revolutionary struggles which aim at changing the social system. Peaceful
coexistence cannot replace the revolutionary struggles of the people. The
transition from capitalism to socialism in any country can only be brought
about through the proletarian revolution and the dictatorship of the
proletariat in that country.
In the application of the policy of peaceful coexistence, struggles between
the socialist and imperialist countries are unavoidable in the political,
economic and ideological spheres, and it is absolutely impossible to have
"all-round co-operation".
It is necessary for the socialist countries to engage in negotiations of
one kind or another with the imperialist countries. It is possible to reach
certain agreements through negotiation by relying on the correct policies of
the socialist countries and on the pressure of the people of all countries. But
necessary compromises between the socialist countries and the imperialist
countries do not require the oppressed peoples and nations to follow suit and
compromise with imperialism and its lackeys. No one should ever demand in the
name of peaceful coexistence that the oppressed peoples and nations should give
up their revolutionary struggles.
The application of the policy of peaceful coexistence by the socialist
countries is advantageous for achieving a peaceful international environment
for socialist construction, for exposing the imperialist policies of aggression
and war and for isolating the imperialist forces of aggression and war. But if
the general line of the foreign policy of the socialist countries is confined
to peaceful coexistence, then it is impossible to handle correctly either the
relations between socialist countries or those between the socialist countries
and the oppressed peoples and nations. Therefore it is wrong to make peaceful
coexistence the general line of the foreign policy of the socialist countries.
In our view, the general line of the foreign policy of the socialist
countries should have the following content: to develop relations of
friendship, mutual assistance and co-operation among the countries in the
socialist camp in accordance with the principle of proletarian
internationalism; to strive for peaceful coexistence on the basis of the Five
Principles with countries having different social systems and oppose the
imperialist policies of aggression and war; and to support and assist the
revolutionary struggles of all the oppressed peoples and nations. These three
aspects are interrelated and indivisible, and not a single one can be omitted.
(17) For a very long historical period after the proletariat takes
power, class struggle continues as an objective law independent of man's will,
differing only in form from what it was before the taking of power.
After the October Revolution, Lenin pointed out a number of times that:
a) The overthrown exploiters always try in a thousand and one ways to
recover the "paradise" they have been deprived of.
b) New elements of capitalism are constantly and spontaneously generated in
the petty-bourgeois atmosphere.
c) Political degenerates and new bourgeois elements may emerge in the ranks
of the working class and among government functionaries as a result of
bourgeois influence and the pervasive, corrupting atmosphere of the petty
bourgeoisie.
d) The external conditions for the continuance of class struggle within a
socialist country are encirclement by international capitalism, the
imperialists' threat of armed intervention and their subversive activities to
accomplish peaceful disintegration.
Life has confirmed these conclusions of Lenin's.
For decades or even longer periods after socialist industrialization and
agricultural collectivization, it will be impossible to say that any socialist
country will be free from those elements which Lenin repeatedly denounced, such
as bourgeois hangers-on, parasites, speculators, swindlers, idlers, hooligans
and embezzlers of state funds; or to say that a socialist country will no
longer need to perform or be able to relinquish the task laid down by Lenin of conquering
"this contagion, this plague, this ulcer that socialism has inherited from
capitalism".
In a socialist country, it takes a very long historical period gradually to
settle the question of who will win--socialism or capitalism. The struggle
between the road of socialism and the road of capitalism runs through this
whole historical period. This struggle rises and falls in a wave-like manner,
at times becoming very fierce, and the forms of the struggle are many and
varied.
The 1957 Declaration rightly states that "the conquest of power by the
working class is only the beginning of the revolution, not its
conclusion".
To deny the existence of class struggle in the period of the dictatorship
of the proletariat and the necessity of thoroughly completing the socialist
revolution on the economic, political and ideological fronts is wrong, does not
correspond to objective reality and violates Marxism-Leninism.
(18) Both Marx and Lenin maintained that the entire period before the
advent of the higher stage of communist society is the period of transition
from capitalism to communism, the period of the dictatorship of the
proletariat. In this transition period, the dictatorship of the proletariat,
that is to say, the proletarian state, goes through the dialectical process of
establishment, consolidation, strengthening and withering away.
In the Critique of the Gotha Programme, Marx posed the question
as follows:
Between capitalist and communist society lies the period of the
revolutionary transformation of the one into the other. There corresponds to
this also a political transition period in which the state can be nothing
but the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat. [Marx
and Engels, Selected Works, FLPH, Moscow, 1955, Vol. II, pp.
32-33.]
Lenin frequently emphasized Marx's great theory of the dictatorship of the
proletariat and analyzed the development of this theory, particularly in his
outstanding work, The State and Revolution, where he wrote:
. . . the transition from capitalist society--which is developing towards
communism--to a communist society is impossible without a "political
transition period", and the state in this period can only be the
revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat. [Lenin, Selected
Works, FLPH, Moscow, 1952, Vol. II, Part 1, p. 289.]
He further said:
The essence of Marx's teaching on the state has been mastered only by those
who understand that the dictatorship of a single class is
necessary not only for every class society in general, not only for the proletariat which
has overthrown the bourgeoisie, but also for the entire historical
period which separates capitalism from "classless society",
from communism. [Ibid., p. 234.]
As stated above, the fundamental thesis of Marx and Lenin is that the
dictatorship of the proletariat will inevitably continue for the entire
historical period of the transition from capitalism to communism, that is, for
the entire period up to the abolition of all class differences and the entry
into a classless society, the higher stage of communist society.
What will happen if it is announced, halfway through, that the dictatorship
of the proletariat is no longer necessary?
Does this not fundamentally conflict with the teachings of Marx and Lenin
on the state of the dictatorship of the proletariat?
Does this not license the development of "this contagion, this plague,
this ulcer that socialism has inherited from capitalism"?
In other words, this would lead to extremely grave consequences and make
any transition to communism out of the question.
Can there be a "state of the whole people"? Is it possible to
replace the state of the dictatorship of the proletariat by a "state of
the whole people"?
This is not a question about the internal affairs of any particular country
but a fundamental problem involving the universal truth of Marxism-Leninism.
In the view of Marxist-Leninists, there is no such thing as a non-class or
supra-class state. So long as the state remains a state, it must bear a class
character; so long as the state exists, it cannot be a state of the "whole
people". As soon as society becomes classless, there will no longer be a
state.
Then what sort of thing would a "state of the whole people" be?
Anyone with an elementary knowledge of Marxism-Leninism can understand that
the so-called "state of the whole people" is nothing new.
Representative bourgeois figures have always called the bourgeois state a
"state of all the people", or a "state in which power belongs to
all the people".
Certain persons may say that their society is already one without classes.
We answer: No, there are classes and class struggles in all socialist countries
without exception.
Since remnants of the old exploiting classes who are trying to stage a
comeback still exist there, since new capitalist elements are constantly being
generated there, and since there are still parasites, speculators, idlers,
hooligans, embezzlers of state funds, etc., how can it be said that classes or
class struggles no longer exist? How can it be said that the dictatorship of
the proletariat is no longer necessary?
Marxism-Leninism tells us that in addition to the suppression of the
hostile classes, the historical tasks of the dictatorship of the proletariat in
the course of building socialism necessarily include the correct handling of
relations between the working class and peasantry, the consolidation of their
political and economic alliance and the creation of conditions for the gradual
elimination of the class difference between worker and peasant.
When we look at the economic base of any socialist society, we find that
the difference between ownership by the whole people and collective ownership
exists in all socialist countries without exception, and that there is
individual ownership too. Ownership by the whole people and collective
ownership are two kinds of ownership and two kinds of relations of production
in socialist society. The workers in enterprises owned by the whole people and
the peasants on farms owned collectively belong to two different categories of
laborers in socialist society. Therefore, the class difference between worker
and peasant exists in all socialist countries without exception. This
difference will not disappear until the transition to the higher stage of
communism is achieved. In their present level of economic development all
socialist countries are still far, far removed from the higher stage of
communism in which "from each according to his ability, to each according
to his needs" is put into practice. Therefore, it will take a long, long
time to eliminate the class difference between worker and peasant. And until
this difference is eliminated, it is impossible to say that society is
classless or that there is no longer any need for the dictatorship of the
proletariat.
In calling a socialist state the "state of the whole people", is
one trying to replace the Marxist-Leninist theory of the state by the bourgeois
theory of the state? Is one trying to replace the state of the dictatorship of
the proletariat by a state of a different character?
If that is the case, it is nothing but a great historical retrogression.
The degeneration of the social system in Yugoslavia is a grave lesson.
(19) Leninism holds that the proletarian party must exist together with the
dictatorship of the proletariat in socialist countries. The party of the
proletariat is indispensable for the entire historical period of the
dictatorship of the proletariat. The reason is that the dictatorship of the
proletariat has to struggle against the enemies of the proletariat and of the
people, remold the peasants and other small producers, constantly consolidate
the proletarian ranks, build socialism and effect the transition to communism;
none of these things can be done without the leadership of the party of the
proletariat.
Can there be a "party of the entire people"? Is it possible to
replace the party which is the vanguard of the proletariat by a "party of
the entire people"?
This, too, is not a question about the internal affairs of any particular
Party, but a fundamental problem involving the universal truth of Marxism-Leninism.
In the view of Marxist-Leninists, there is no such thing as a non-class or
supra-class political party. All political parties have a class character.
Party spirit is the concentrated expression of class character.
The party of the proletariat is the only party able to represent the
interests of the whole people. It can, do so precisely because it represents
the interests of the proletariat, whose ideas and will it concentrates. It can
lead the whole people because the proletariat can finally emancipate itself
only with the emancipation of all mankind, because the very nature of the
proletariat enables its party to approach problems in terms of its present and
future interests, because the party is boundlessly loyal to the people and has
the spirit of self-sacrifice; hence its democratic centralism and iron
discipline. Without such a party, it is impossible to maintain the dictatorship
of the proletariat and to represent the interests of the whole people.
What will happen if it is announced halfway before entering the higher
stage of communist society that the party of the proletariat has become a
"party of the entire people" and if its proletarian class character
is repudiated?
Does this not fundamentally conflict with the teachings of Marx and Lenin on
the party of the proletariat?
Does this not disarm the proletariat and all the working people,
organizationally and ideologically, and is it not tantamount to helping restore
capitalism?
Is it not "going south by driving the chariot north" to talk
about any transition to communist society in such circumstances?
(20) Over the past few years, certain persons have violated Lenin's
integral teachings about the interrelationship of leaders, party, class and
masses, and raised he issue of "combating the cult of the
individual"; this is erroneous and harmful.
The theory propounded by Lenin is as follows:
a) The masses are divided into classes;
b) Classes are usually led by political parties;
c) Political parties, as a general rule, are directed by more or less stable
groups composed of the most authoritative, influential and experienced members,
who are elected to the most responsible positions and are called leaders.
Lenin said, "All this is elementary."
The party of the proletariat is the headquarters of the proletariat in
revolution and struggle. Every proletarian party must practice centralism based
on democracy and establish a strong Marxist-Leninist leadership before it can
become an organized and battle-worthy vanguard. To raise the question of
"combating the cult of the individual" is actually to counterpose the
leaders to the masses, undermine the party's unified leadership which is based
on democratic centralism, dissipate its fighting strength and disintegrate its
ranks.
Lenin criticized the erroneous views which counterpose the leaders to the
masses. He called them "ridiculously absurd and stupid".
The Communist Party of China has always disapproved of exaggerating the
role of the individual, has advocated and persistently practiced democratic
centralism within the Party and advocated the linking of the leadership with
the masses, maintaining that correct leadership must know how to concentrate
the views of the masses.
While loudly combating the so-called "cult of the individual",
certain persons are in reality doing their best to defame the proletarian party
and the dictatorship of the proletariat. At the same time, they are enormously
exaggerating the role of certain individuals, shifting all errors onto others
and claiming all credit for themselves.
What is more serious is that, under the pretext of "combating the cult
of the individual", certain persons are crudely interfering in the
internal affairs of other fraternal Parties and fraternal countries and forcing
other fraternal Parties to change their leadership in order to impose their own
wrong line on these Parties. What is all this if not great-power chauvinism,
sectarianism and splittism? What is all this if not subversion?
It is high time to propagate seriously and comprehensively Lenin's integral
teachings on the interrelationship of leaders, party, class and masses.
(21) Relations between socialist countries are international relations of a
new type. Relations between socialist countries, whether large or small, and
whether more developed or less developed economically, must be based on the
principles of complete equality, respect for territorial integrity, sovereignty
and independence, and non-interference in each other's internal affairs, and
must also be based on the principles of mutual support and mutual assistance in
accordance with proletarian internationalism.
Every socialist country must rely mainly on itself for its construction.
In accordance with its own concrete conditions, every socialist country
must rely first of all on the diligent labor and talents of its own people,
utilize all its available resources fully and in a planned way, and bring all
its potential into play in socialist construction. Only thus can it build
socialism effectively and develop its economy speedily.
This is the only way for each socialist country to strengthen the might of
the entire socialist camp and enhance its capacity to assist the revolutionary
cause of the international proletariat. Therefore, to observe the principle of
mainly relying on oneself in construction is to apply proletarian
internationalism concretely.
If, proceeding only from its own partial interests, any socialist country
unilaterally demands that other fraternal countries submit to its needs, and
uses the pretext of opposing what they call "going it alone" and
"nationalism", to prevent other fraternal countries from applying the
principle of relying mainly on their own efforts in their construction and from
developing their economies on the basis of independence, or even goes to the
length of putting economic pressure on other fraternal countries--then these
are pure manifestations of national egoism.
It is absolutely necessary for socialist countries to practice mutual
economic assistance and co-operation and exchange. Such economic co-operation
must be based on the principles of complete equality, mutual benefit and
comradely mutual assistance.
It would be great-power chauvinism to deny these basic principles and, in
the name of "international division of labor" or
"specialization", to impose one's own will on others, infringe on the
independence and sovereignty of fraternal countries or harm the interests of their
people.
In relations among socialist countries it would be preposterous to follow
the practice of gaining profit for oneself at the expense of others, a practice
characteristic of relations among capitalist countries, or go so far as to take
the "economic integration" and the "common market", which
monopoly capitalist groups have instituted for the purpose of seizing markets
and grabbing profits, as examples which socialist countries ought to follow in
their economic co-operation and mutual assistance.
(22) The 1957 Declaration and the 1960 Statement lay down the principles
guiding relations among fraternal Parties. These are the principle of
solidarity, the principle of mutual support and mutual assistance, the
principle of independence and equality and the principle of reaching unanimity
through consultation--all on the basis of Marxism-Leninism and proletarian
internationalism.
We note that in its letter of March 30 the Central Committee of the
C.P.S.U. says that there are no "superior" and
"subordinate" Parties in the communist movement, that all Communist
Parties are independent and equal, and that they should all build their
relations on the basis of proletarian internationalism and mutual assistance.
It is a fine quality of Communists that their deeds are consistent with
their words. The only correct way to safeguard and strengthen unity among the
fraternal Parties is genuinely to adhere to, and not to violate, the principle
of proletarian internationalism and genuinely to observe, and not to undermine,
the principles guiding relations among fraternal Parties--and to do so not only
in words but, much more important, in deeds.
If the principle of independence and equality is accepted in relations
among fraternal Parties, then it is impermissible for any Party to place itself
above others, to interfere in their internal affairs, and to adopt patriarchal
ways in relations with them.
If it is accepted that there are no "superiors" and
"subordinates" in relations among fraternal Parties, then it is
impermissible to impose the programme, resolutions and line of one's own Party
on other fraternal Parties as the "common programme" of the
international communist movement.
If the principle of reaching unanimity through consultation is accepted in
relations among fraternal Parties, then one should not emphasize "who is
in the majority" or "who is in the minority" and bank on a
so-called majority in order to force through one's own erroneous line and carry
out sectarian and splitting policies.
If it is agreed that differences between fraternal Parties should be
settled through inter-Party consultation, then other fraternal Parties should
not be attacked publicly and by name at one's own congress or at other Party
congresses, in speeches by Party leaders, resolutions, statements, etc.; and
still less should the ideological differences among fraternal Parties be
extended into the sphere of state relations.
We hold that in the present circumstances, when there are differences in
the international communist movement, it is particularly important to stress
strict adherence to the principles guiding relations among fraternal Parties as
laid down in the Declaration and the Statement.
In the sphere of relations among fraternal Parties and countries, the
question of Soviet-Albanian relations is an outstanding one at present. Here
the question is what is the correct way to treat a fraternal Party and country
and whether the principles guiding relations among fraternal Parties and
countries stipulated in the Declaration and the Statement are to be adhered to.
The correct solution of this question is an important matter of principle in
safeguarding the unity of the socialist camp and the international communist
movement.
How to treat the Marxist-Leninist fraternal Albanian Party of Labor is one
question. How to treat the Yugoslav revisionist clique of traitors to
Marxism-Leninism is quite another question. These two essentially different
questions must on no account be placed on a par.
Your letter says that you "do not relinquish the hope that the relations
between the C.P.S.U. and the Albanian Party of Labor may be improved", but
at the same time you continue to attack the Albanian comrades for what you call
"splitting activities". Clearly this is self-contradictory and in no
way contributes to resolving the problem of Soviet-Albanian relations.
Who is it that has taken splitting actions in Soviet-Albanian relations?
Who is it that has extended the ideological differences between the Soviet
and Albanian Parties to state relations?
Who is it that has brought the divergences between the Soviet and Albanian
Parties and between the two countries into the open before the enemy?
Who is it that has openly called for a change in the Albanian Party and
state leadership?
All this is plain and clear to the whole world.
Is it possible that the leading comrades of the C.P.S.U. do not really feel
their responsibility for the fact that Soviet-Albanian relations have so
seriously deteriorated?
We once again express our sincere hope that the leading comrades of the
C.P.S.U. will observe the principles guiding relations among fraternal Parties
and countries and take the initiative in seeking an effective way to improve
Soviet-Albanian relations.
In short, the question of how to handle relations with fraternal Parties
and countries must be taken seriously. Strict adherence to the principles
guiding relations among fraternal Parties and countries is the only way
forcefully to rebuff slanders such as those spread by the imperialists and
reactionaries about the "hand of Moscow".
Proletarian internationalism is demanded of all Parties without exception,
whether large or small, and whether in power or not. However, the larger
Parties and the Parties in power bear a particularly heavy responsibility in
this respect. The series of distressing developments which have occurred in the
socialist camp in the past period have harmed the interests not only of the
fraternal Parties concerned but also of the masses of the people in their
countries. This convincingly demonstrates that the larger countries and Parties
need to keep in mind Lenin's behest never to commit the error of great-power
chauvinism.
The comrades of the C.P.S.U. state in their letter that "the Communist
Party of the Soviet Union has never taken and will never take a single step
that could sow hostility among the peoples of our country towards the fraternal
Chinese people or other peoples". Here we do not desire to go back and
enumerate the many unpleasant events that have occurred in the past, and we
only wish that the comrades of the C.P.S.U. will strictly abide by this
statement in their future actions.
During the past few years, our Party members and our people have exercised
the greatest restraint in the face of a series of grave incidents which were in
violation of the principles guiding relations among fraternal Parties and
countries and despite the many difficulties and losses which have been imposed
on us. The spirit of proletarian internationalism of the Chinese Communists and
the Chinese people has stood a severe test.
The Communist Party of China is unswervingly loyal to proletarian
internationalism, upholds and defends the principles of the 1957 Declaration
and the 1960 Statement guiding relations among fraternal Parties and countries,
and safeguards and strengthens the unity of the socialist camp and the
international communist movement.
(23) In order to carry out the common programme of the international
communist movement unanimously agreed upon by the fraternal Parties, an
uncompromising struggle must be waged against all forms of opportunism, which
is a deviation from Marxism-Leninism.
The Declaration and the Statement point out that revisionism, or, in other
words, Right opportunism, is the main danger in the international communist
movement. Yugoslav revisionism typifies modern revisionism.
The Statement points out particularly:
The Communist Parties have unanimously condemned the Yugoslav variety of
international opportunism, a variety of modern revisionist "theories"
in concentrated form.
It goes on to say:
After betraying Marxism-Leninism, which they termed obsolete, the leaders
of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia opposed their anti-Leninist
revisionist programme to the Declaration of 1957; they set the League of
Communists of Yugoslavia against the international communist movement as a
whole, severed their country from the socialist camp, made it dependent on
so-called "aid" from U.S. and other imperialists.
The Statement says further:
The Yugoslav revisionists carry on subversive work against the socialist
camp and the world communist movement. Under the pretext of an extra-bloc policy,
they engage in activities which prejudice the unity of all the peace-loving
forces and countries.
Therefore, it draws the following conclusion:
Further exposure of the leaders of Yugoslav revisionists and active
struggle to safeguard the communist movement and the working-class movement
from the anti-Leninist ideas of the Yugoslav revisionists, remains an essential
task of the Marxist-Leninist Parties.
The question raised here is an important one of principle for the
international communist movement.
Only recently the Tito clique have publicly stated that they are persisting
in their revisionist programme and anti-Marxist-Leninist stand in opposition to
the Declaration and the Statement.
U.S. imperialism and its NATO partners have spent several thousand millions
of U.S. dollars nursing the Tito clique for a long time. Cloaked as
"Marxist-Leninists" and flaunting the banner of a "socialist
country", the Tito clique has been undermining the international communist
movement and the revolutionary cause of the people of the world, serving as a
special detachment of U.S. imperialism.
It is-completely groundless and out of keeping with the facts to assert
that Yugoslavia is showing "definite positive tendencies", that it is
a "socialist country", and that the Tito clique is an
"anti-imperialist force".
Certain persons are now attempting to introduce the Yugoslav revisionist
clique into the socialist community and the international communist ranks. This
is openly to tear up the agreement unanimously reached at the 1960 meeting of
the fraternal Parties and is absolutely impermissible.
Over the past few years, the revisionist trend flooding the international
working-class movement and the many experiences and lessons of the
international communist movement have fully confirmed the correctness of the
conclusion in the Declaration and the Statement that revisionism is the main
danger in the international communist movement at present.
However, certain persons are openly saying that dogmatism and not
revisionism is the main danger, or that dogmatism is no less dangerous than
revisionism, etc. What sort of principle underlies all this?
Firm Marxist-Leninists and genuine Marxist-Leninist Parties must put
principles first. They must not barter away principles, approving one thing
today and another tomorrow, advocating one thing today and another tomorrow.
Together with all Marxist-Leninists, the Chinese Communists will continue
to wage an uncompromising struggle against modern revisionism in order to
defend the purity of Marxism-Leninism and the principled stand of the
Declaration and the Statement.
While combating revisionism, which is the main danger in the international
communist movement, Communists must also combat dogmatism.
As stated in the 1957 Declaration, proletarian parties, "should firmly
adhere to the principle of combining. . . universal Marxist-Leninist truth with
the specific practice of revolution and construction in their countries".
That is to say:
On the one hand, it is necessary at all times to adhere to the universal
truth of Marxism-Leninism. Failure to do so will lead to Right opportunist or
revisionist errors.
On the other hand, it is always necessary to proceed from reality, maintain
close contact with the masses, constantly sum up the experience of mass
struggles, and independently work out and apply policies and tactics suited to
the conditions of one's own country. Errors of dogmatism will be committed
if one fails to do so, if one mechanically copies the policies and tactics of
another Communist Party, submits blindly to the will of others or accepts
without analysis the programme and resolutions of another Communist Party as
one's own line.
Some people are now violating this basic principle, which was long ago
affirmed in the Declaration. On the pretext of "creatively developing
Marxism-Leninism", they cast aside the universal truth of
Marxism-Leninism. Moreover, they describe as "universal Marxist-Leninist
truths" their own prescriptions which are based on nothing but subjective
conjecture and are divorced from reality and from the masses, and they force
others to accept these prescriptions unconditionally.
That is why many grave phenomena have come to pass in the international
communist movement.
(24) A most
important lesson from the experience of the international communist movement is
that the development and victory of a revolution depend on the existence of a
revolutionary proletarian party.
There must be a revolutionary party.
There must be a revolutionary party built according to the revolutionary
theory and revolutionary style of Marxism-Leninism.
There must be a revolutionary party able to integrate the universal truth
of Marxism-Leninism with the concrete practice of the revolution in its own
country.
There must be a revolutionary party able to link the leadership closely
with the broad masses of the people.
There must be a revolutionary party that perseveres in the truth, corrects
its errors and knows how to conduct criticism and self-criticism.
Only such a revolutionary party
can lead the proletariat and the broad masses of the people in defeating
imperialism and its lackeys, winning a thorough victory in the national
democratic revolution and winning the socialist revolution.
If a party is not a proletarian revolutionary party but a bourgeois
reformist party;
If it is not a Marxist-Leninist party but a revisionist party;
If it is not a vanguard party of the proletariat but a party tailing after
the bourgeoisie;
If it is not a party representing the interests of the proletariat and all
the working people but a party representing the interests of the labor
aristocracy;
If it is not an internationalist party but a nationalist party;
If it is not a party that can use its brains to think for itself and
acquire an accurate knowledge of the trends of the different classes in its own
country through serious investigation and study, and knows how to apply the universal
truth of Marxism-Leninism and integrate it with the concrete practice of its
own country, but instead is a party that parrots the words of others, copies
foreign experience without analysis, runs hither and thither in response to the
baton of certain persons abroad, and has become a hodgepodge of revisionism,
dogmatism and everything but Marxist-Leninist principle;
Then such a party is absolutely incapable of leading the proletariat and
the masses in revolutionary struggle, absolutely incapable of winning the
revolution and absolutely incapable of fulfilling the great historical mission
of the proletariat.
This is a question all Marxist-Leninists, all class-conscious workers and
all progressive people everywhere need to ponder deeply.
(25) It is the duty of Marxist-Leninists to distinguish between truth and
falsehood with respect to the differences that have arisen in the international
communist movement. In the common interest of the unity for struggle against
the enemy, we have always advocated solving problems through inter-Party
consultations and opposed bringing differences into the open before the enemy.
As the comrades of the C.P.S.U. know, the public polemics in the
international communist movement have been provoked by certain fraternal Party
leaders and forced on us.
Since a public debate has been provoked, it ought to be conducted on the
basis of equality among fraternal Parties and of democracy, and by presenting
the facts and reasoning things out.
Since certain Party leaders have publicly attacked other fraternal Parties
and provoked a public debate, it is our opinion that they have no reason or
right to forbid the fraternal Parties attacked to make public replies.
Since certain Party leaders have published innumerable articles attacking
other fraternal Parties, why do they not publish in their own press the
articles those Parties have written in reply?
Latterly, the Communist Party of China has been subjected to preposterous
attacks. The attackers have raised a great hue and cry and, disregarding the
facts, have fabricated many charges against us. We have published these
articles and speeches attacking us in our own press.
We have also published in full in our press the Soviet leader's report at
the meeting of the Supreme Soviet on December 12, 1962, the Pravda Editorial Board's article of January 7, 1963, the speech of the head of the
C.P.S.U. delegation at the Sixth Congress of the Socialist Unity Party of
Germany on January 16, 1963 and the Pravda Editorial Board's
article of February 10, 1963.
We have also published the full text of the two letters from the Central
Committee of the C.P.S.U. dated February 21 and March 30, 1963.
We have replied to some of the articles and speeches in which fraternal
Parties have attacked us, but have not yet replied to others. For example, we
have not directly replied to the many articles and speeches of the comrades of
the C.P.S.U.
Between December 15, 1962 and March 8, 1963, we wrote seven articles in
reply to our attackers. These articles are entitled:
"Workers of All Countries, Unite, Oppose Our Common Enemy!",
"The Differences Between Comrade Togliatti and Us",
"Leninism and Modern Revisionism",
"Let Us Unite on the Basis of the Moscow Declaration and the Moscow
Statement",
"Whence the Differences?--A Reply to Thorez and Other Comrades",
"More on the Differences Between Comrade Togliatti and Us--Some
Important Problems of Leninism in the Contemporary World",
"A Comment on the Statement of the Communist Party of the
U.S.A.".
Presumably, you are referring to these articles when towards the end of
your letter of March 30 you accuse the Chinese press of making "groundless
attacks" on the C.P.S.U. It is turning things upside down to describe
articles replying to our attackers as "attacks".
Since you describe our articles as "groundless" and as so very
bad, why do you not publish all seven of these "groundless attacks",
in the same way as we have published your articles, and let all the Soviet
comrades and Soviet people think for themselves and judge who is right and who
wrong? You are of course entitled to make a point-by-point refutation of these
articles you consider "groundless attacks".
Although you call our articles "groundless" and our arguments
wrong, you do not tell the Soviet people what our arguments actually are. This
practice can hardly be described as showing a serious attitude towards the
discussion of problems by fraternal Parties, towards the truth or towards the
masses.
We hope that the public debate among fraternal Parties can be stopped. This
is a problem that has to be dealt with in accordance with the principles of
independence, of equality and of reaching unanimity through consultation among
fraternal Parties. In the international communist movement, no one has the
right to launch attacks whenever he wants, or to order the "ending of open
polemics" whenever he wants to prevent the other side from replying.
It is known to the comrades of the C.P.S.U. that, in order to create a
favorable atmosphere for convening the meeting of the fraternal Parties, we
have decided temporarily to suspend, as from March 9, 1963, public replies to
the public attacks directed by name against us by comrades of fraternal
Parties. We reserve the right of public reply.
In our letter of March 9, we said that on the question of suspending public
debate "it is necessary that our two Parties and the fraternal Parties
concerned should have some discussion and reach an agreement that is fair and
acceptable to all".
************
The foregoing are our views regarding the general line of the international
communist movement and some related questions of principle. We hope, as we
indicated at the beginning of this letter, that the frank presentation of our
views will be conducive to mutual understanding. Of course, comrades may agree
or disagree with these views. But in our opinion, the questions we discuss here
are the crucial questions calling for attention and solution by the
international communist movement. We hope that all these questions and also
those raised in your letter will be fully discussed in the talks between our
two Parties and at the meeting of representatives of all the fraternal Parties.
In addition, there are other questions of common concern, such as the
criticism of Stalin and some important matters of principle regarding the
international communist movement which were raised at the 20th and 22nd
Congresses of the C.P.S.U., and we hope that on these questions, too, there
will be a frank exchange of opinion in the talks.
With regard to the talks between our two Parties, in our letter of March 9
we proposed that Comrade Khrushchev come to Peking; if this was not convenient,
we proposed that another responsible comrade of the Central Committee of the
C.P.S.U. lead a delegation to Peking or that we send a delegation to Moscow.
Since you have stated in your letter of March 30 that Comrade Khrushchev
cannot come to China, and since you have not expressed a desire to send a
delegation to China, the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China has
decided to send a delegation to Moscow.
In your letter of March 30, you invited Comrade Mao Tse-tung to visit the
Soviet Union. As early as February 23, Comrade Mao Tse-tung in his conversation
with the Soviet Ambassador to China clearly stated the reason why he was not
prepared to visit the Soviet Union at the present time. You were well aware of
this.
When a responsible comrade of the Central Committee of the Communist Party
of China received the Soviet Ambassador to China on May 9, he informed you that
we would send a delegation to Moscow in the middle of June. Later, in
compliance with the request of the Central Committee of the C.P.S.U., we agreed
to postpone the talks between our two Parties to July 5.
We sincerely hope that the talks between the Chinese and Soviet Parties
will yield positive results and contribute to the preparations for convening
the meeting of all Communist and Workers' Parties.
It is now more than ever necessary for all Communists to unite on the basis
of Marxism-Leninism and proletarian internationalism and of the Declaration and
the Statement unanimously agreed upon by the fraternal Parties.
Together with Marxist-Leninist Parties and revolutionary people the world
over, the Communist Party of China will continue its unremitting efforts to
uphold the interests of the socialist camp and the international communist
movement, the cause of the emancipation of the oppressed peoples and nations,
and the struggle against imperialism and for world peace.
We hope that events which grieve those near and dear to us and only gladden
the enemy will not recur in the international communist movement in the future.
The Chinese Communists firmly believe that the Marxist-Leninists, the
proletariat and the revolutionary people everywhere will unite more closely,
overcome all difficulties and obstacles and win still greater victories in the
struggle against imperialism and for world peace, and in the fight for the
revolutionary cause of the people of the world and the cause of international
communism.
Workers of all countries, unite! Workers and oppressed peoples and nations
of the world, unite! Oppose our common enemy!
With communist greetings,
The Central Committee of
the Communist Party of China
June 14, 1963
EDITOR'S NOTE: Underlining is by MPP