Showing posts with label Chinese Communist Party. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinese Communist Party. Show all posts

Friday, March 21, 2008

The Chinese Military History Museum

March 20, 2008

Today I decided to take a second trip to the Chinese Military History Museum (or more accurately, the Military Affairs Museum of the Chinese People's Revolution) which is located on the western side of Beijing. I wanted to refresh my memory about the exhibits and take a few more pictures for this blog (see my Flickr site for all the pictures).

To get to the subway, I had to take a taxi from my house. On the way down, I got into an interesting conversation with my driver who asked me what I thought about the recent protests (or riots depending on which perspective you’re taking) in Tibet. I said I didn’t trust the Chinese government’s reports and wish I had more information about what was going on. I didn’t doubt that there was violence on both sides, but said the government had all the firepower and should be careful how they handled these protests. Being a good Chinese citizen, he tried to defend the government’s actions. He said, the Tibetans were causing a lot of disorder, burning and looting. I went back to my point about the Chinese government’s lack of credibility, especially in the eyes of the international community, but I don’t think I persuaded him. Before we could get any further in our discussion, I was at the subway station.

The Military History Museum looks from the outside like a piece of Soviet-inspired architecture and inside it’s appropriately dim and dreary until you get to the exhibits. Today, entrance was free and there were crowds of schoolchildren traipsing past the exhibits.


The purpose of this museum is pretty clear, at least to an American who is cynical about these kinds of things, and that is to instill pride in the People’s Liberation Army (PLA), Chinese Communist Party (CCP), and China in general. The third floor which is about the People’s Liberation Army today is one big propaganda ad, full of glowing, colorful displays of shiny weaponry and smiling soldiers and politicians contributing to China’s development. Perhaps it’s appropriate that the gift shop is located on that floor! After leaving that exhibit, who wouldn’t want to buy a medal with Mao’s picture on it, or a shiny tank made out of bullet casings!

The first two floors, which is where I spent most of my time, is more interesting. The display, particularly the socialist realist artwork, are still meant to instill nationalist pride (as you can see from the pictures) but there is more attention to history in the form of photos, documents and other artifacts. The first floor tells the story of how the CCP and the PLA developed after the split between the CCP and KMT in 1927 up to the Japanese invasion of China in 1937. The second floor continues the story of China’s (meaning the CCP’s!) resistance against the Japanese, and the civil war between the CCP and KMT that ends with the CCP’s victory in 1949.

There are several things I took away from this visit:

One is that the displays drive home the fact that the CCP and the PLA developed hand in hand. The party and the army, politics and the military, were one (and you could say the same about the KMT). All the important CCP leaders after 1949 had their formative experience in the PLA. Conversely, the PLA was not just a military machine. It played an important role in the CCP’s ideological and social campaigns to recruit support from the peasantry. This close relationship between the party and army is still important to understanding the CCP today.

Second, the exhibit gives you an appreciation for how long, arduous and precarious the process of building an organization like the CCP was. When the CCP began to strike out on its own in 1927, it’s survival was by no means guaranteed. There was infighting among its own members (something only hinted at in the displays), attempts by the KMT to eliminate the CCP, the Long March which decimated the Communist forces, the Japanese invasion, and then the KMT again. One nightmare after another. Yet the CCP was able to overcome all these obstacles and grow stronger in the process. Even for hardened cynics like myself, the displays do inspire admiration for what CCP leaders were able to accomplish in the face of incredible odds. I can only imagine what the Chinese feel after leaving the museum.

Third, keep in mind that this is a military museum and thus it leaves out much of the social and cultural changes taking place during this very turbulent period. As I said earlier, the PLA (or Worker and Peasant Red Army as it was initially called) was as much a military force as it was an organization for carrying out the ideological and socioeconomic experiments of the CCP in the countryside. In this sense, the CCP was built to “win the hearts and minds” of the peasantry and did so much more successfully than the U.S. troops ever were able to do in Iraq.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

China's top leadership group is revealed at the end of the 17th Party Congress

Publish Post

October 24, 2007

Monday, October 22 was one of those major events in Chinese Communist history. It marked the conclusion of the 17th Chinese Communist Party Congress when China's top leaders for the next 5 years were chosen. Above is a picture of the leaders lined up on the stage at the Great Hall of the People, the building to the west of Tiananmen Square. The head honcho is Hu Jintao (5th from the left) who holds the most important positions: General Secretary of the Party, Chairman of the Party Military Commission, and President.

Below Hu is a group of 8 other guys who make up the Political Bureau (or Politburo) Standing Committee. These are the most powerful policymakers in the country with the final say on major policies. They include Wu Bangguo the head of the National People's Congress (4th from the right), Premier Wen Jiabao (4th from left), Jia Qinglin (3rd from the right) the head of the People's Consultative Congress, Xi Jinping (2nd from right) the head of the Party Secretariat and the vice-president, and Li Keqiang (2nd from left) the executive vice-premier.

The last two are the most interesting because they are slated to be the top two leaders five years from now. Xi is slated to succeed Hu as the top leader in 5 years, while Li Keqiang will replace Wen as premier, although none of this is written in stone.

What would be equivalent of the Politburo Standing Committee in the U.S.? Something like having President Bush, VP Cheney, Speaker of the House Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader, the Supreme Court Chief Justice, as well as the future prez (Hilary Clinton?) and vp (Barack Obama?) together in one body. And they would all be from the same political party.

This Party Congress was pretty tame as party congresses go. There were few surprises and most political observers got the final lineup right before it was announced on Monday. This suggests that there was little backroom infighting and no major power struggles in deciding who the top leaders would be. It was a smooth, predictable affair, something the Hu and the Party wanted the year before the 2008 Olympics.