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Deng Xiaoping: The Soldier

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2009

Extract

Deng Xiaoping's attempt to modernize and professionalize the People's Liberation Army (PLA) will surely be remembered as one of the most important components of his historical legacy. Yet, ironically, Deng's military activities formed a decidedly minor part of his career. Deng received no formal military training, and Chinese Communist sources have very little to say about his military contributions before 1980; most of what was reported comes from his enemies and is difficult to corroborate. What has been written after 1980 has a suspiciously hagio-graphic ring and is also difficult to confirm.

Type
Deng Xiaoping: An Assessment
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1993

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References

1. See, for example, Ping, Shen, “Forever adhere to Chairman Mao's line on army-building: criticize Deng Xiaoping's revisionist fallacies on army-building,” Hongqi, August 1976, pp. 49Google Scholar.

2. For example, Qunzhang, Yang, Deng Xiaoping: Xinshiqi jianjun sixiang yanjiu (Beijing: Liberation Army Publishing House, 1989)Google Scholar.

3. Nie's career paralleled Deng's precisely for a time: both studied in France, worked at the Renault factory, and then left for Moscow and the University of the Toilers of the East. However, Nie then transferred to the Red Army Academy.

4. See Benjamin Yang's “The making of a pragmatic Communist: the early life of Deng Xiaoping, 1904–49,” in this issue, for a fuller treatment of this episode.

5. For example, by William Whitson, arguing that Deng's Soviet training and time with Feng Yuxiang were formative experiences. See The Chinese High Command (New York: Praeger, 1973) p. 123CrossRefGoogle Scholar. As noted above, Deng did not study the military during his year in the USSR and there is no evidence that he was otherwise exposed to it. His time with Feng was very brief, and spent in indoctrination of cadets.

6. Ibid. p. 158.

7. Ibid. p. 376.

8. According to Article 15, “The Chinese People's Liberation Army and the people's militia are the workers' and peasants' own armed forces led by the Communist Party of China; they are the people's own armed forces.” See Beijing Review, 24 January 1975, p. 15, for the complete text.

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35. Quoted in Der Spiegel (Hamburg), 21 11 1977, p. 189Google ScholarPubMed.

36. “Chairman Mao's great banner guides our struggle forever,” Hongqi, September 1977.

37. Translated in FBIS-CHI, 11 January 1978, pp. E1–3.

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44. See Bullard, Monte, China's Political-Military Evolution: The Party and the Military in the PRC, 1960–1984 (Boulder: Westview Press, 1985.)Google Scholar

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46. See, e.g. Jiefangjun bao, 27 November 1988, p. 1; AFP, 24 October 1988, p. 30, in FBIS-CHI, 24 October 1988, p. 30.

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50. Cheung, Tai Ming, “General offensive: Yang's protégés fall as army shake-up continues,” Far Eastern Economic Review (Hong Kong), 10 12 1992, p. 14Google Scholar, details a summary of these changes.

51. See, e.g., Huaqing's, Liu 18 August 1989 speech to the Sixth Plenary Session of the navy's Sixth Party Committee, carried in Renmin ribao, 19 08 1989, p. 2Google Scholar. The proposal for greater army-Party separation was attributed to Zhao Ziyang, former CCP General Secretary and CMC Chairman, following his purge after 4 June. For further analysis see David Shambaugh, The soldier and the state in China: the political work system in the People's Liberation Army,” The China Quarterly, No. 127 (09 1991), pp. 527568CrossRefGoogle Scholar.