CREEPING END
OF THE MAO ERA
By
Prof. M.L. Sondhi
Nagpur Times, Oct. 14, The Mail, Oct. 17, Navhind, Oct. 19,
1975
Recent news
despatches from Peking pose the question whether, from the
standpoint of the main political forces in Communist China,
we are already in the post-Mao period. Although it is
difficult to prophesy how long Mr. Mao Tse-tung will
continue to be the reference point of Chinese ideological
conformity, a tentative analysis can be offered of the
disintegrative elements which are leading to the inexorable
dismantling of the structure and balance of power which Mao
as the idolised leader could reinforce with revolutionary
ardour. The issue may be discussed under five heads:
Chou’s
Absence
Mr. Mao
Tse-tung’s leadership role in China was greatly strengthened
by his two essays “On Practice” and “On Contradiction”, and
many intra-party factions coalesced around his vision of
perpetual struggle. Mao’s anarchistic contribution to
imported Marxism has, however, been a major obstacle to the
institutionalisation of political behaviour. The Maoist
elite does not possess a set of normative rules for the
resolution of factional conflicts.
The
legitimisation of authority has had as its source the
honorific propaganda given to Mao’s theoretical genius. The
ephemeral role of any normative rules in the short shrift
received by both Liu-Shao-chi and Lin Piao does not only
point to the lack of an essential political skill in Maoist
politics; it also shows two significant episodes as parodies
reflecting the hierarchical context of China with its lack
of meaningful party solidarity.
Mr. Chou
En-lai’s characteristic “realism” and his diplomatic
qualities of moderation and expediency have helped to solve
awkward political problems not only in foreign policy but in
the important field of dissent-management and control on the
domestic front. Chou’s emphasis on practical
decision-making rather than doctrinal obsessions was pivotal
in providing political insurance against the elements of
fantasy articulated in the demands of people like Mao’s
wife, Chiang Ch’ing or the blandishments of a glorious
revolutionary future on the part of Wang Hung-wen. With the
“withering away” of this source of political insurance, the
anarchistic propensities of the Maoist regime may spring
into action with a grave weakening of the ranks of the
party.
In the current
atmosphere of ping-pong diplomacy, wishful thinking has
replaced analysis on the part of several well-known experts
of Chinese political society in western countries. These
writers maintain that there is a solid brickwork of Maoism
in the face of mounting evidence that Chinese leadership is
facing inexorable disintegration. By ignoring the tides and
currents of disruptive forces in China they have developed
an iron framework in which their historical understanding is
based on the immortality of Mao.
Mao’s Failure
The
plain fact is that the internecine struggle for power in the
Chinese Communist Party will sharpen now that Mr. Chou En-lai
can no longer be regarded as the “natural” successor to the
octogenarian Mao. If the supreme arbiter of ideology had
stepped down when Chou Teh, Chou En-lai or even Lin Piao had
been in a position to remould the structure and balance of
power within the party to achieve coherence and rational
order, the prospects for institutionalisation of factions in
the Chinese Communist Party and for developing a political
willingness to resolve conflicts non-violently would have
vastly improved. Teng Hsiao-ping is singularly unqualified
to play the leadership role of dissent-management in the
party.
Chairman Mao
Tse-tung has severely limited opportunities for political
manoeuvring against the outflanking devices being used by
those who pay verbal tributes to his theoretical innovations
but are plotting crude violence as the means to succession
in the higher echelons of the party and Government. Mao’s
plans to transform the Chinese Man have failed in their
objective because, although he is the symbol of the age for
the 800 million Chinese, he has himself sapped the
foundations of his country’s political structure. He has
failed to solve the contradiction inherent in his own
leadership succession and is now eking out an existence
during which his vast moral and political power is not being
channelled in any discernible way.
The most
significant thing about China’s Third World orientation is
that Mao Tse-tung personally carried out with marked
intensity his summit diplomacy with Asian, African and Latin
American leaders. His legendary personality has fulfilled
the role of a champion of the interests of the Third World
mainly because he has the image of a charismatic
revolutionary. By contrast any of his successors in Third
World diplomacy would find it difficult to use ritualistic
phrases without inducing a somnolent repose in his Third
World visitors.
The Big Two
It is difficult
to believe that the ensuing factional struggle in China, and
the fact that Chau En-lai has to keep completely aloof from
the major diplomatic efforts, will not have a negative
effect on the much-heralded Sino-American rapprochement. A
climate of uncertainty has been created, and in the
difficult times ahead there may be signs of mounting concern
in both Washington and Peking. Ambivalence, which was a help
with Chou En-lai as the foreign policy helmsman, may turn
out to be highly disruptive in the case of unresolved issues
with policymakers not inclined to compromise and adjust.
It is hard to
see an innovative change in Sino-Soviet relations while the
possibility of further exacerbation of polemics between
Moscow and Peking appears to be a real one. Those who will
take the place of giantsized leaders like Mao and Chou will
hardly have the opportunity to develop a consensus to create
opportunities for Chinese diplomacy by giving up anti-Sovietism.
Such moves would make them fearful for their own survival.
Indian decision-makers must set themselves the task of
discerning the basic features of the post-Mao era. There is
an important and continuous relationship between domestic
and foreign policy. There is no simple formula for tackling
the outstanding issues between New Delhi and Peking. India
must keep in mind the chronology of Peking’s coercive
actions against the Tibetans and the infringement of
friendly relations with India. At the same time India must
make every effort to discover Chinese motives and intentions
to
discover
the scope for further developments towards peace.