people's war
{{Short description|Maoist military strategy}}
{{for|the term's use in the historiography of World War II in the United Kingdom|Angus Calder#The People's War}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}
{{Infobox Chinese
|order=st
|s={{linktext|人民战争}}
|t={{linktext|人民戰爭}}
|p=rénmín zhànzhēng
|w=Jenmin chancheng
|y=Jànman zíncàang
|xej= ژٌ مٍ جً ﺟْﻊ
}}
{{Maoism sidebar|expanded=concepts}}
People's war or protracted people's war is a Maoist military strategy. First developed by the Chinese communist revolutionary leader Mao Zedong (1893–1976), the basic concept behind people's war is to maintain the support of the population and draw the enemy deep into the countryside (stretching their supply lines) where the population will bleed them dry through guerrilla warfare and eventually build up to mobile warfare. It was used by the Chinese communists against the Imperial Japanese Army in World War II, and by the Chinese Soviet Republic in the Chinese Civil War.
The term is used by Maoists for their strategy of long-term armed revolutionary struggle. After the Sino-Vietnamese War in 1979, Deng Xiaoping abandoned people's war for "People's War under Modern Conditions", which moved away from reliance on troops over technology. With the adoption of "socialism with Chinese characteristics", economic reforms fueled military and technological investment. Troop numbers were also reduced and professionalisation encouraged.
The strategy of people's war was used heavily by the Viet Cong in the Vietnam War. However, protracted war should not be confused with the "foco" theory employed by Che Guevara and Fidel Castro in the Cuban Revolution of 1959.
Overview
{{more citations needed section|date=June 2009}}
=In China=
File:Simple guerrilla organization.svg
In its original formulation by Chairman Mao Zedong, people's war exploits the few advantages that a small revolutionary movement has—broad-based popular support can be one of them—against a state's power with a large, professional, well-equipped and well-funded army. People's war strategically avoids decisive battles, since a tiny force of a few dozen soldiers would easily be routed in an all-out confrontation with the state. Instead, it favours a three-phase strategy of protracted warfare, with carefully chosen battles that can realistically be won.{{citation needed|date=October 2024}}
In phase one, the revolutionary force conducting people's war starts in a remote area with mountainous or forested terrain in which its enemy is weak. It attempts to establish a local stronghold known as a revolutionary base area. As it grows in power, it enters phase two, establishes other revolutionary base areas and spreads its influence through the surrounding countryside, where it may become the governing power and gain popular support through such programmes as land reform. Eventually in phase three, the movement has enough strength to encircle and capture small cities, then larger ones, until finally it seizes power in the entire country.{{citation needed|date=October 2024}}
Within the Chinese Red Army, the concept of people's war was the basis of strategy against the Japanese, and against a hypothetical Soviet invasion of China. The concept of people's war became less important with the collapse of the Soviet Union and the increasing possibility of conflict with the United States over Taiwan. In the 1980s and 1990s the concept of people's war was changed to include more high-technology weaponry.{{citation needed|date=October 2024}}
Historian David Priestland dates the beginning of the policy of people's war to the publication of a "General Outline for Military Work" in May 1928, by Chinese Central Committee. This document established official military strategies to the Chinese Red Army during the Chinese Civil War.{{cite book |last1=Priestland |first1=Davis |title=The Red Flag: A History of Communism |date=2009 |publisher=Grove Press |location=New York |page=253 }}
The strategy of people's war has political dimensions in addition to its military dimensions.{{Cite book |last=Russo |first=Alessandro |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1156439609 |title=Cultural Revolution and Revolutionary Culture |date=2020 |publisher=Duke University Press |isbn=978-1-4780-1218-4 |location=Durham |pages=36 |oclc=1156439609}} In China, the early People's Liberation Army was composed of peasants who had previously lacked political significance and control over their place in the social order.{{Cite book |last=Russo |first=Alessandro |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1156439609 |title=Cultural Revolution and Revolutionary Culture |date=2020 |publisher=Duke University Press |isbn=978-1-4780-1218-4 |location=Durham |pages=36–37 |oclc=1156439609}} Its internal organization was egalitarian between soldiers and officers, and its external relationship with rural civilians was egalitarian. Military success against an adversaries with major material advantages (in Mao's experience, the Nationalist forces and the invading Japanese army), required weakening the adversary through attrition and strengthening one's own forces through accumulation, a method which could only succeed if the guerilla army had the people's support.{{Rp|page=9}} As sociologist Alessandro Russo summarizes, the political existence of peasants via the PLA was a radical exception to the rules of Chinese society and "overturned the strict traditional hierarchies in unprecedented forms of egalitarianism."{{Cite book |last=Russo |first=Alessandro |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1156439609 |title=Cultural Revolution and Revolutionary Culture |date=2020 |publisher=Duke University Press |isbn=978-1-4780-1218-4 |location=Durham |pages=37 |oclc=1156439609}}
== Other usage in Chinese rhetoric ==
In 2014 Party leadership in Xinjiang commenced a People's War against the “Three Evil Forces” of separatism, terrorism, and extremism. They deployed two hundred thousand party cadres to Xinjiang and launched the Civil Servant-Family Pair Up program. Xi was dissatisfied with the initial results of the People's War and replaced Zhang Chunxian with Chen Quanguo in 2016. Following his appointment Chen oversaw the recruitment of tens of thousands of additional police officers and the division of society into three categories: trustworthy, average, untrustworthy. He instructed his subordinated to “Take this crackdown as the top project,” and “to preempt the enemy, to strike at the outset.” Following a meeting with Xi in Beijing Chen Quanguo held a rally in Ürümqi with ten thousand troops, helicopters, and armored vehicles. As they paraded he announced a “smashing, obliterating offensive,” and declared that they would “bury the corpses of terrorists and terror gangs in the vast sea of the People's War.”{{cite magazine |last1=Khatchadourian |first1=Raffi |title=Surviving the Crackdown in Xinjiang |url=https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2021/04/12/surviving-the-crackdown-in-xinjiang |magazine=The New Yorker |access-date=15 April 2021}}
In February 2020, the Chinese Communist Party launched an aggressive campaign described by the Xi Jinping as a "people's war" to contain the spread of the coronavirus.{{cite news |url= http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-02/10/c_138771533.htm |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20200228213901/http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2020-02/10/c_138771533.htm |url-status= dead |archive-date= February 28, 2020 |title=Xi stresses winning people's war against novel coronavirus |first1=Huanchi |last1=Xie |date=20 February 2020 |work=Xinhua News Agency |quote=Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee, on Monday stressed resolutely winning the people's war of epidemic prevention and control with firmer confidence, stronger resolve and more decisive measures.}}
=Outside China=
Mao's doctrine of people's war influenced various Third World revolutionary movements including the Naxalites and the Shining Path.{{Cite book |title=Mao's Little Red Book: A Global History |date=2013 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-05722-7 |editor-last=Cook |editor-first=Alexander C. |location=Cambridge |pages= |chapter=Introduction}}{{Rp|page=9}}
From 1966 to 1970, Syria was indirectly ruled by the neo-Ba'athist and totalitarian regime of General Salah Jadid, which actively promoted the ideas of Marxism–Leninism and the Maoist concept of People's War against Zionism, which was expressed in its huge support for leftist Palestinian fedayeen groups, granting them considerable autonomy and allowing them to carry out attacks on Israel from Syrian territory.{{Cite book |last=Meininghaus |first=Esther |title=Creating Consent in Ba'thist Syria: Women and Welfare in a Totalitarian State |publisher=I.B. Tauris |year=2016 |isbn=978-1-78453-115-7 |location=London |page=75}}{{Cite book |last=Keegan |first=John |title=World Armies |publisher=Gale |year=1983 |isbn=0-8103-1515-7 |edition=2nd |location=Detroit, MI |page=562}} Just a few months after the coming to power, Jadid's regime completed the formation of the Palestinian paramilitary Ba'athist group called al-Sa'iqa, which carried out attacks on Israel from Jordanian and Lebanese territory, but was completely under the control of the neo-Ba'athist regime in Syria.{{Cite journal |last=Kerr |first=Malcolm H. |date=1973 |title=Hafiz Asad and the Changing Patterns of Syrian Politics |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40201173 |journal=International Journal |volume=28 |issue=4 |pages=689–706 |doi=10.2307/40201173 |issn=0020-7020 |jstor=40201173|url-access=subscription }}
In non-communist states such as Iran, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps used the protracted people's war against Ba'athist Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war.[https://www.jcs.mil/Portals/36/Documents/History/Monographs/Iran_study_complete.pdf Guarding History: The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Memory of the Iran-Iraq War]. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230817151454/https://www.jcs.mil/Portals/36/Documents/History/Monographs/Iran_study_complete.pdf|date=August 17, 2023}}.
List of people's wars
{{More citations needed section|date=July 2023}}
Conflicts in the following list are failed and successful wars labelled as people's wars by Maoists, and also both failed and ongoing attempts to start and develop people's wars. In addition to the conflicts in the list, there also have been conflicts not primarily led by Maoists or seen as people's wars, but had Maoist groups involved within them who viewed the conflicts partly as such, including the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine (Arab–Israeli conflict) and the Communist Party of Burma (Myanmar civil war).
class="wikitable sortable" |
Date
!Conflict !State !Rebel group !Deaths !Result |
---|
1 August 1927 – 7 December 1949
|{{flagcountry|Republic of China (1912-49)}}
|13 million+ killed |Communist victory |
2 April 1948 – 21 September 1988
|Communist insurgency in Myanmar |{{flagcountry|Union of Burma}}
|3,000+ killed |Government victory |
1 November 1955 – 30 April 1975
|{{flagcountry|South Vietnam}} |War zone C {{small|(1966–72)}} |1,326,494–4,249,494 killed |Communist victory |
23 May 1959 – 2 December 1975
|{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Laos}} |20,000–62,000 killed |Communist victory |
1961 – 1979
|{{flagcountry|Nicaragua}} |North Caribbean Coast Autonomous Region |30,000+ killed |Communist victory |
{{circa|December 1962}} – 3 November 1990
|Communist insurgency in Sarawak |{{flagcountry|Malaysia}} |North Kalimantan Communist Party
|400–500 killed |Government victory |
1965 – 1983
|Communist insurgency in Thailand |{{flagcountry|Thailand}}
|6,500+ killed |Government victory |
18 May 1967 – present
|{{flagcountry|India}} |Communist Party of India (Maoist) |14,000+ killed since 1996 |Ongoing |
17 January 1968 – 17 April 1975
|{{flagcountry|Khmer Republic}} |275,000–310,000 killed |Communist victory |
29 March 1969 – present
|Communist rebellion in the Philippines |{{flagcountry|Philippines}} |Communist Party of the Philippines |40,000+ killed |Ongoing |
12 September 1972 – present
|{{flagcountry|Turkey}} |Communist Party of Turkey/Marxist–Leninist
| |Ongoing |
1972 – 1974
|{{flagcountry|Brazil}}
|90+ Maoists killed |Government victory, failed to develop a people's war |
1976 – 1996
|{{flagcountry|Spain}} |Communist Party of Spain (Reconstituted) | |84+ killed |Government victory, failed to develop a people's war |
1977 – present
|Maoist insurgency in Afghanistan (including the Soviet–Afghan War and the anti-Taliban insurgency) |{{flagcountry|Afghanistan}} |Liberation Organization of the People of Afghanistan | |120+ Maoists killed (only the ALO) |Ongoing |
17 May 1980 – 2000
|{{flagcountry|Peru}} |Communist Party of Peru–Shining Path
|70,000+ killed |Government victory, People's war ended in defeat, unable to establish communist state. |
25 January 1982
|{{flagcountry|Iran}} |Union of Iranian Communists (Sarbedaran) |300+ killed |Government victory, failed to develop a people's war |
1 June 1993 – present
|Maoist insurgency in Ecuador |{{flagcountry|Ecuador}} |Communist Party of Ecuador – Red Sun | |Ongoing |
1993 – 2021
|Maoist insurgency in Bangladesh |{{flagcountry|Bangladesh}} |Purbo Banglar Communist Party |1,200+ killed |Government victory |
13 February 1996 – 21 November 2006
|{{flagcountry|Kingdom of Nepal}} |Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) |17,800+ killed |
2008 – present
|Maoist insurgency in Bhutan |{{flagcountry|Bhutan}} |Communist Party of Bhutan (Marxist–Leninist–Maoist) | |Ongoing |
See also
References
= Citations =
{{Reflist}}
= Sources =
{{refbegin}}
- VK Shashikumar. [http://www.ibnlive.com/article.php?id=6871§ion_id=3# Red Terror: India under siege from within], CNN-IBN, March 16, 2006.
{{refend}}{{Clear}}
{{Maoism}}
{{Marxist & Communist phraseology}}
Category:Cold War history of China
Category:Ideology of the Chinese Communist Party
Category:Military history of the People's Republic of China