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The Origins of the Second United Front: The Comintern and the Chinese Communist Party

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Extract

The role of the Comintern in the formation of the second Chinese Communist Party-Kuomintang (CCP-KMT) united front has long been the subject of debate. Scholars have long recognized that an understanding of Moscow's role during the pivotal year and a half prior to the Xian Incident, and especially of possible conflict between the Comintern and Mao Zedong over the issue of a united front with Chiang Kai-shek, was essential to an evaluation of subsequent CCP-Soviet relations. This article is a contribution to our understanding of this important problem.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1988

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References

1. For example, Robert North found no discrepancies between the Comintern and CCP over the united front during 1935 and 1936. North, Robert C., Moscow and the Chinese Communists (Stanford: Stanford University Press, second edition, 1963), pp. 176–77.Google Scholar Charles McLane argued that Soviet and CCP attitudes towards the inclusion of the KMT in the united front both changed at about the same time after February 1936. McLane, Charles B., Soviet Policy and the Chinese Communists, 1931–1946 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1958), p. 74.Google Scholar Lyman Van Slyke likewise found no discrepancies between the Comintern and CCP during 1935 and “closely parallel policies” between them in 1936–with the exception of the Guangxi-Guangdong revolt of mid 1936 and the Xian Incident in December. Mao must have generally agreed, Van Slyke concluded, with what the Comintern wanted the CCP to do. Van Slyke, Lyman P., Enemies and Friends, The United Front in Chinese Communist History (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1967), pp. 6364.Google Scholar

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21. This explains the grandiose claims about CCP strength made by various speakers during the Seventh Comintern Congress. See, Documents of the Communist International, pp. 363, 367, 373, 378.Google Scholar

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26. Yuzhang, Wu “Autobiography,” p. 19.Google Scholar The Jiangsu Provincial Library in Nanjing has a nearly complete run of Jiuguo shibao. The extent of Comintern control over Jiuguo bao was indicated by an incident which occurred in November 1935 when the Comintern secretly dispatched Wu Yuzhang to Paris to oversee the operation of the paper. When the French Government prohibited publication of the paper shortly after Wu's arrival, Wu found it necessary to cable the Comintern and request permission to change the name of the paper and begin publication anew under the name Jiuguo shibao (National Salvation Times). Moscow authorized the new name and the paper resumed publication on 9 December 1935.

27. Qing, Xiang, “8–1 Manifesto,” pp. 105106.Google Scholar

28. Xiaoping, Gu, “Review of research,” p. 78.Google Scholar One source, however, claims that the manifesto arrived in China substantially earlier. Chen Lou, who was active at that time in the communist underground organization at Qinghua University, says that his organization received a copy of the 8–1 manifesto in mid August, reproduced it, and distributed it on the Qinghua campus. “Guanyu 8–1 xuanyan chuxian yu Zhongguo nei de shijian” (“Regarding the appearance of the 8–1 manifesto within China”), Dangshi ziliao congkan (Compendium of Materials on Party History), No. 4 (1981), p. 116.Google Scholar

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39. Historically Important Meetings of the CCP, pp. 153–55.Google Scholar

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41. Huiyi Chen Tanqiu (Remembering Chen Tanqiu) (Wuhan, Hubei: Huazhong gongcheng xueyuan, July 1981), p. 118.Google Scholar

42. Yang Zhihua and Zheng Tongquan were among those attacked. Kong Yuan, who was not a member of Chen Yun's group, but had been one of the regular Comintern delegation, was also criticized by this investigating committee. Kong Yuan, “Tanqiu tongzhi zai Mosike de rizili” (“Comrade Tanqiu's days in Moscow”), in Remembering Chen Tanqiu, p. 121.Google Scholar

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46. Kukushkin, , “Comintern and the United Front,” p. 398.Google Scholar

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50. The Jiangsu Provincial Library has a nearly complete run of Hongse zhonghua.

51. The term hanjian is usually translated into English as simply “traitor.” Such a rendering overlooks, I believe, the strong racial overtones which the character han has carried in modern Chinese history, racial connotations which have frequently played an important role in China's politics, for instance in the efforts to overthrow the Qing dynasty. To use an English word, “traitor” which is more narrowly political and which lacks such racial overtones, fails to convey the emotionally powerful qualities of the word hanjian.

52. Hongse zhonghua, 29 01 1936.Google Scholar Wu Sangui was the general in command of the Ming forces resisting Manchu inroads at the end of the Ming dynasty who switched loyalties in 1643, after Li Zicheng's forces had occupied Beijing, and let the Manchu armies enter China in exchange for high office and honours. Zhang Bangchang was one of the last prime ministers of the Northern Song dynasty. In 1126 when the Jin “barbarians” took the capital of Kaifeng they put Zhang on the throne as an emperor through whom they ruled. Li Wan was a high civil official who helped the Jin consolidate their rule. Chin Kwei was a prime minister of the Song dynasty who helped bring about the execution of the able general Yue Fei.

53. Tingfu, Jiang, Jiang Tingfu huiyilu (Memoir of Jiang Tingfu), Zhuanji wenxue congkan, No. 48 (Taibei, 03 1979), pp. 9596.Google Scholar See also Jiang's letters to Shi, Hu in, Hu Shi laiwang shuxin xuan (Selected Correspondence of Hu Shi), Vol. II (Beijing: Zhongguo shehui kexueyuan jindaishi yanjiusuo, 05 1979), pp. 261–62.Google Scholar

54. Regarding the He-Umetsu agreement see, Materials on the North China Incident, pp. 151–53.Google Scholar Regarding Zhang Zuobin's peace plan, see pp. 272–73.

55. Qun, Zhang, “Ren waijiaobuchang de huiyi” (“Memoir of my duty as foreign minister”), Zhuanji wenxue (Biographical Literature), Vol. 31, No. 6 (12 1977), p. 51.Google Scholar

56. Shengqing, Yang, “Xian shibian qian Guo Gong liangdang de chongxin jiechu” (“Renewed KMT-CCP contacts prior to the Xian Incident”), Dangshi tongxun (Bulletin of Party History), No. 2 (1983), pp. 914.Google Scholar

57. Regarding Chen's 1934 appointment see, Kai-shek, Chiang, Soviet Russia in China (Taibei: China Publishing Co., 1969), p. 77.Google Scholar

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59. Qing, Xiang, “Comintern and CCP,” pp. 2021.Google Scholar

60. Shengqing, Yang, “Renewed contacts,” p. 11.Google Scholar

61. See, Kai-shek, Chiang, Soviet Russia, p. 73.Google Scholar

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66. Xiaoceng, Chen, “Xian shibian qian yi nian Guo Gong liangdang guanyu lianhe kang Ri wenti de yi duan jiechu”Google Scholar (“Contacts between the KMT and the CCP regarding the question of anti-Japanese unity in the year before the Xian Incident”), Wenshi ziliao xuanbian (Selection of Literary and Historical Materials), national ed., No. 71. Xiaoceng, Chen, “Xian shibian qian Guo Gong liangdang tanpan de pianduan huiyi” (“Partial recollection of the talks between the KMT and CCP before the Xian Incident”), Dangshi yanjiu ziliao (Research Materials on Party History), No. 3 (1981), pp. 1419.Google Scholar Chen Xiaoceng himself believed that Song Ziwen was Ceng's key backer and the main figure pushing talks with the CCP. The evidence that he himself presents, however, points towards Chen Lifu as the eminence grise behind the 19351936Google Scholar negotiations–as do many other sources. According to Chiang Kai-shek, Zhou Enlai also sent a letter to Chen Lifu on 1 September 1935 after his meeting with Ceng in Hong Kong. Chen Lifu gave a copy of this letter to Kitts who provides a full translation of its text.

67. Regarding the Eastern Expedition, see, Junshi huodong daji (Record of Military Activities) (Beijing: Zhanshi chubanshe, 1983), pp. 4445.Google ScholarDehuai, Peng, Peng Dehuai zishu (Autobiography of Peng Dehuai) (Beijing: Renmin chubanshe, 1981), p. 211.Google ScholarXinghua, Zhu, “Hongjun dongcheng shi wei jianji” (“Brief account of the beginning and end of the Red Army's eastern expedition”), Yan'an daxue xuebao (Yan'an University Journal), No. 1 (1983).Google Scholar The order of 15 January 1936 launching the offensive is in Vol. 7 of Zhonggong dangshi cankao ziliao (Reference Materials on CCP History), pp. 354–55.Google Scholar This compendium is published by the Party History Instruction Office of the Political College of the Chinese People's Liberation Army. No date or place of publication given.

68. Writing in 1964, Don Gillen incorrectly concluded that the CCP expected to unite with, rather than overthrow, Yan Xishan when it launched the Eastern Expedition. His basis for reaching this conclusion, however, were statements from the Comintern's International Press Correspondence. Gillen did not have access to the CCP's own orders regarding the Eastern Expedition and could not, therefore, have been aware of the discrepancy between those orders and the Comintern's line. See, Gillen, Donald G., “‘Peasant nationalism’ in the history of Chinese Communism,” Journal of Asian Studies, Vol. 23, No. 2 (03 1964), p. 273.Google Scholar

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80. Mingdong, Shang, “Song Qingling yu di er ci Quo Gong hezuo de shixian” (“Song Qingling and the realization of the second period of KMT-CCP co-operation”), Renmin ribao (People's Daily), 24 01 1983, p. 7.Google Scholar

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82. Braun, , Agent, pp. 168–69.Google ScholarDelyusin, L. P., Comintern i Vostok (Moscow, 1969)Google Scholar; cited in Benton, , “Second Wang Ming line,” p. 67.Google Scholar

83. Shengqing, Yang, “Renewed contacts,” p. 10.Google Scholar

84. Xiaoceng, Chen, “Partial recollection,” p. 15.Google Scholar Zhou also brought letters addressed to Song Ziwen, Feng Yuxiang, Sun Ke, and Tan Zhen.

85. Shengqing, Yang, “Renewed contacts,” pp. 1011.Google Scholar According to Chen Xiaoceng, Lu's plan consisted of four points. The contents of this four point plan were, however, the same as Yang Shengqing's six-point proposal–with the significant exception that Chen's plan includes a provision for the CCP's suspension of the policy of confiscating landlord's property. See, Xiaoceng, Chen, “Partial recollection,” pp. 1314.Google Scholar

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97. Communist International, Vol. XIII, No. 9, p. 590.Google Scholar Cited in Kukushkin, , “Comintern and the United Front,” p. 404.Google Scholar Regarding Moscow's reaction see also, McLane, , Soviet Policy, pp. 7475, 78Google Scholar, and Van Slyke, , Enemies, pp. 64, 70.Google Scholar

98. “CC CPC Resolution on the Contemporary Political Situation”; cited in Kukushkin, , “Comintern and the United Front,” p. 400.Google Scholar

99. Zedong, Mao, Selected Correspondence, pp. 7071.Google Scholar

100. This was from a “programme article” by Wang Ming carried by Communist International, Vol. XIII, No. 9 (1936), p. 588.Google Scholar Cited in Kukushkin, , “Comintern and the United Front,” p. 403.Google Scholar

101. Qing, Xiang, “Comintern and CCP,” pp. 2122.Google ScholarShengqing, Yang, “Renewed contacts,” pp. 1112.Google Scholar

102. Qing, Xiang, “Comintern and CCP,” p. 22.Google Scholar

103. Shengqing, Yang, “Renewed contacts,” pp. 1112.Google ScholarQing, Xiang, “Comintern and CCP,” pp. 2122.Google Scholar

104. The 25 August statement is in Reference Materials on CCP History, Vol. 7, 423–27.Google Scholar

105. Qing, Xiang, “Comintern and CCP,” p. 22.Google Scholar

106. Kai-shek, Chiang, Soviet Russia, p. 78.Google Scholar

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108. See, Wylie, Raymond F., The Emergence of Maoism, Mao Tse-tung, Ch'en Po-ta and the Search for Chinese Theory (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1980).Google Scholar

109. According to Otto Braun, the Politburo sent Deng Fa to Moscow in April 1936 to negotiate the terms of Soviet assistance to the Chinese Red Army. Agent, pp. 170–71.Google Scholar

110. See, Kukushkin, , “Comintern and the United Front.”Google Scholar