Really though? By the time this policy emerged, Kruschev the revisionist had risen to power and was preparing the way for the USSR to liberalize. Mao was correct in preventing the integration of China into the USSR or it would have been subject to the same devastation as Russia once the Republic was dissolved. By maintaining a balance of powers, China was able to resist being absorbed into the USSR and avoid being couped and dominated by the West. The USSR destroyed itself.
The issue was more Cambodia, Vietnam, Afghanistan and where ever else they undermined local socialist forces. But the USSR did create its own hangmen, when they reintroduced liberalism and did de-kolkhoziation
Chinese foreign policy back then is something a lot of people have trouble with. For what it’s worth, I think there’s a realpolitik answer to why China did it - they knew the USA would intervene on the side of the compradors in any and all conflicts in China’s region if the conflict was socialists vs compradors, and that meant the USA could establish a foreard deployment of activated military. If China intervened on behalf of the revolutionaries, the USA would redouble it’s involvement and China couldn’t defeat the USA. So the solution was to take the board position that the USA would normally inhabit, preventing the USA from entering the theater. By intervening on behalf of the compradors, the USA had no pretext for intervention and China ended up with a forward deployed activated military presence AND significant influence over the governments.
This interpretation is congruent with their approach to capitalism as well, taking up the position that the USA would normally inhabit in exploiting workers by freely allowing Western capitalists to get rich off of exploited Chinese citizens. This resulted in China occupying the space the USA would normally be in and also giving China significant control over the means of production while also making it impossible to spin a narrative that China needs to be destroyed for its behavior.
So the solution was to take the board position that the USA would normally inhabit, preventing the USA from entering the theater. By intervening on behalf of the compradors, the USA had no pretext for intervention and China ended up with a forward deployed activated military presence AND significant influence over the governments
This makes no sense, especially considering that the US did intervene in at least two of the mentioned cases.
It makes sense. It just doesn’t mean it worked or worked in all cases or even that it would work long term. China abandoned this era of its foreign policy likely because it wasn’t theoretically sound, but if you’re going to say it makes no sense then you’re going to have to provide some supporting argument.
yeah very fair points and it’s not materialist of me to engage in historical counter-factualising, just really upsetting how subjectively “good” things looked for international socialism in the mid 20th century and how badly we’ve fallen.
I think the problem is that in the mid 1900s, things actually weren’t good for international socialism, it’s just that it wasn’t widely understood. The USSR was struggling to propagate it’s own internal revolution. Remember, Lenin didn’t want Stalin to take over but there was literally no one better for the job. Stalin, for all the good he did, went on a purging spree and STILL failed to secure the revolution against the counter revolutionaries. That means that by the mid 1900s the vanguard of the first successful revolution was already falling apart, and China not only saw it but called it out.
The USSR vanguard also made a ton of mistakes that hadn’t been fully understood by the 1950s including religious persecution and economic bloc isolation. China’s revolution was an incredible advance in not just Leninist vanguardism but in elucidating dialectical materialism itself. And China made huge mistakes that needed to be analyzed and corrected. And by that time we’re talking the end of the mid 1900s.
Meanwhile the USA was for the first time seeing an ascendant Black Power movement and American Indian Movement, which they promptly crushed and co-opted.
Meanwhile Europe was busy doing Social Democracy to pull the wind from the sails of workers movements and the die hard communists were still confused about materialism, dialectics, and the like. European communist movements, including the Cuban revolution (as it was led by European colonists, albeit true revolutionaries and traitors to their European heritage), were arguing that all forms of queerness were liberal bourgeois perversions.
And in Africa, while the decolonization movement was energized, it was clearly wrong in its strategy and tactics because by the beginning of the end of the 1900s Europe had reasserted its neocolonial hold over the continent.
I guess what I’m saying is that maybe their was revolutionary zeal in mid 20th century but things were not actually good. And we’re now in a situation where the revolutionary zeal is way more subdued, but the periphery is once again reasserting itself. This time, however, it seems like the European war machine is floundering in ways never before thought possible and its racking up loss after loss without much to show for it. And that, to me, feels more hopeful than anything else. Instead of the Soviet perspective of building a better system to compete with the imperialists, China has shown us that it’s possible to participate exploit the contradictions in imperialism to create conditions that imperialism simply cannot resolve and, thus, cause it to self-destruct.
The question is really whether this kind of long-term strategy is even realistic when you have a global empire that is aggressively trying to start wars and create chaos everywhere.
While this remains an open question, the theory is relatively strong. Wars destroy productive forces. That’s not just what they do, it’s a major component of their purpose. The USA military destroys productive forces. However, China’s productive forces were built using USian and European capital, and the outputs of China’s productive forces are the foundation of the West’s economy. Destroying China’s productive forces destroys the West’s capital and destroys the West’s commodity sources.
This is relatively new in history. It remains to be seen if these conditions will stop a war. If a war starts, it remains to be seen if these conditions will change the revolutionary conditions in the West sufficiently to bring about revolutionary defeatism at a large scale.
Mao developed the Three Worlds Theory to distance China from the first (US and the USSR) and the second (developed countries of the Global North) worlds
Don’t you mean ‘the first (US and the developed countries of the Global North) and the second (the USSR and the rest of the Warsaw Pact) worlds’?
The Chinese government knows that a offensive political strategy will have american carriers arriving at their shores in two days max, so they try to “uphold international law” to give the americans less leeway to attack and possible have more cards to deal with the taiwan issue.
The only thing that I’ve read anywhere that I respect is from Vijay Prashard. A super tldr is that it’s mixed.
China really needs to be more proactive in its foreign policy. Losing three south Asian Ally’s to US proxies is not a good look.
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this policy is probably the thing most singularly responsible for the coming collapse of global civilisation btw
Really though? By the time this policy emerged, Kruschev the revisionist had risen to power and was preparing the way for the USSR to liberalize. Mao was correct in preventing the integration of China into the USSR or it would have been subject to the same devastation as Russia once the Republic was dissolved. By maintaining a balance of powers, China was able to resist being absorbed into the USSR and avoid being couped and dominated by the West. The USSR destroyed itself.
The issue was more Cambodia, Vietnam, Afghanistan and where ever else they undermined local socialist forces. But the USSR did create its own hangmen, when they reintroduced liberalism and did de-kolkhoziation
Chinese foreign policy back then is something a lot of people have trouble with. For what it’s worth, I think there’s a realpolitik answer to why China did it - they knew the USA would intervene on the side of the compradors in any and all conflicts in China’s region if the conflict was socialists vs compradors, and that meant the USA could establish a foreard deployment of activated military. If China intervened on behalf of the revolutionaries, the USA would redouble it’s involvement and China couldn’t defeat the USA. So the solution was to take the board position that the USA would normally inhabit, preventing the USA from entering the theater. By intervening on behalf of the compradors, the USA had no pretext for intervention and China ended up with a forward deployed activated military presence AND significant influence over the governments.
This interpretation is congruent with their approach to capitalism as well, taking up the position that the USA would normally inhabit in exploiting workers by freely allowing Western capitalists to get rich off of exploited Chinese citizens. This resulted in China occupying the space the USA would normally be in and also giving China significant control over the means of production while also making it impossible to spin a narrative that China needs to be destroyed for its behavior.
This makes no sense, especially considering that the US did intervene in at least two of the mentioned cases.
It makes sense. It just doesn’t mean it worked or worked in all cases or even that it would work long term. China abandoned this era of its foreign policy likely because it wasn’t theoretically sound, but if you’re going to say it makes no sense then you’re going to have to provide some supporting argument.
yeah very fair points and it’s not materialist of me to engage in historical counter-factualising, just really upsetting how subjectively “good” things looked for international socialism in the mid 20th century and how badly we’ve fallen.
I think the problem is that in the mid 1900s, things actually weren’t good for international socialism, it’s just that it wasn’t widely understood. The USSR was struggling to propagate it’s own internal revolution. Remember, Lenin didn’t want Stalin to take over but there was literally no one better for the job. Stalin, for all the good he did, went on a purging spree and STILL failed to secure the revolution against the counter revolutionaries. That means that by the mid 1900s the vanguard of the first successful revolution was already falling apart, and China not only saw it but called it out.
The USSR vanguard also made a ton of mistakes that hadn’t been fully understood by the 1950s including religious persecution and economic bloc isolation. China’s revolution was an incredible advance in not just Leninist vanguardism but in elucidating dialectical materialism itself. And China made huge mistakes that needed to be analyzed and corrected. And by that time we’re talking the end of the mid 1900s.
Meanwhile the USA was for the first time seeing an ascendant Black Power movement and American Indian Movement, which they promptly crushed and co-opted.
Meanwhile Europe was busy doing Social Democracy to pull the wind from the sails of workers movements and the die hard communists were still confused about materialism, dialectics, and the like. European communist movements, including the Cuban revolution (as it was led by European colonists, albeit true revolutionaries and traitors to their European heritage), were arguing that all forms of queerness were liberal bourgeois perversions.
And in Africa, while the decolonization movement was energized, it was clearly wrong in its strategy and tactics because by the beginning of the end of the 1900s Europe had reasserted its neocolonial hold over the continent.
I guess what I’m saying is that maybe their was revolutionary zeal in mid 20th century but things were not actually good. And we’re now in a situation where the revolutionary zeal is way more subdued, but the periphery is once again reasserting itself. This time, however, it seems like the European war machine is floundering in ways never before thought possible and its racking up loss after loss without much to show for it. And that, to me, feels more hopeful than anything else. Instead of the Soviet perspective of building a better system to compete with the imperialists, China has shown us that it’s possible to participate exploit the contradictions in imperialism to create conditions that imperialism simply cannot resolve and, thus, cause it to self-destruct.
this is really well argued im too drunk to give a proper response but i appreciate it
Truly
While this remains an open question, the theory is relatively strong. Wars destroy productive forces. That’s not just what they do, it’s a major component of their purpose. The USA military destroys productive forces. However, China’s productive forces were built using USian and European capital, and the outputs of China’s productive forces are the foundation of the West’s economy. Destroying China’s productive forces destroys the West’s capital and destroys the West’s commodity sources.
This is relatively new in history. It remains to be seen if these conditions will stop a war. If a war starts, it remains to be seen if these conditions will change the revolutionary conditions in the West sufficiently to bring about revolutionary defeatism at a large scale.
TLDR: China is more naive when it comes to the US empire and its desires than the USSR
Very interesting and concise , thank you
Don’t you mean ‘the first (US and the developed countries of the Global North) and the second (the USSR and the rest of the Warsaw Pact) worlds’?
deleted by creator
The Chinese government knows that a offensive political strategy will have american carriers arriving at their shores in two days max, so they try to “uphold international law” to give the americans less leeway to attack and possible have more cards to deal with the taiwan issue.