SOME REFLECTIONS ON MAO

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02913946
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RIPPUB
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13
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March 9, 2023
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September 28, 2020
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F-2016-01277
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January 31, 1972
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Approved for )(3) Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 0 DIRECTORATE OF INTELLIGENCE Intelligence Memorandum Some Reflections on Mao Con 31 January 1972 No. 0824/72 114 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 4 WARNING This document contains information affecting the national defense of the United States, within the meaning of Title 18, sections 793 and 794, of the US Code, as amended. Its transmissioo or revelation of its contents to or re- ceipt by an unauthorized person is prohibited by law. OROUP IXCLUIPTh F1101.4 AUTOMiTIC nonhr(ilowiNn AN() DICLAsSIFICATION Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY Direr;torate of Intelligence 31 January 1972 INTELLIGENCE MEMORANDUM Some Reflections on Mao 1. Any assessment of Mao Tse-tung begins with the obvious: he is a charismatic leader who has dominated nearly the entire history of Chinese Com- munism and who views the Chinese revolution as his own creation. One cf the original founders of the Chinese Communist Party in 1921, Mao has been its sole chairman since 3935. He has guided all impor- tant aZfairs of state since the founding of the Peo- ple's Republic in 1949. At 78, Mao can look back on a career in Caich he has been the Chinese Communists' principal ideologist, po- litical organizer, military leader, and government chief. Mao clearly con- siders himself a world historical figure, both in the Chinese context and in that of the Coomunist move- ment, where the Chinese claim that Mao ranks in the pantheon of Communist immortals on a par with Marx, Engels, Lenin, and Stalin. 2. Mao is, in a sense, a philosopher-statesman whose "thought," in his view, embodies the aspira- tions of the majority of Note: This memorandum was prepared by the Office of Current Intelligence and coordinated with the Office of National Estimates. (b)(3) (b)(3) WNENJL Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 Approved for Release 2018/08/29 002913946 (b)(3) the people and provides China with a sure guide to national greatness. But Mao is also a hard-bitten politician constantly preoccupied with military, po- litical, and economic realities not always easily reconciled with the major tenets of his ideology-- and with his own political survival as well. 3. For most of his tenure as a revolutionary and national leader, Mao has been able to stay on top and to adapt his vision of what China ought to be to objective circumstances. Since the 1958-60 Great Leap Forward era, the policies with which Mao has been most closely identified have in many ways hindered China's transformation into a modern in- dustrial state, and his own power interests and ideological predilections have often proved a major disunifying factor in Chinese politics. It i6 therefore possible tha' many of his ideas may not long survive him. Paradoxically, however, the lives of the Chinese people have been bound up with Mao's revolutionary vision for 22 years, and in a basic sense, no one can really replace him. Mao's Self-Portrait 4. In his December 1970 interview with Amer- ican journalist Edgar Snow, Mao characterized him- self as essentially a simple man who wished not to be remembered as China's "Great Leader, Great Helms- man" but rather as the "Great Teacher." This self- assessment is less humble than it sounds. By arro- gating to himself the title of the nation's "teacher," Mao is asserting that he knows better than any of his compatriots the path China should follow to achieve both the goals of national power and the "Maoist" vision of the good society--a selfless collectivity which will eventually surpass the advanced West with- out losing egalitarianism and revolutionary elan. His Political Style 5. We have some evidence of how Mao conducts himself from reports on small informal party meet- ings prior to and during the Cultural Revolution. -2- (b)(3) COlsTlettlEN-14-A.L proved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 --rryisrprrn444a These gatherings were, and presumably still are, the main arena of decision-making in China. Mao's talks frequently betrayed a didactic approach and a condescending air. Deliberately, he projected an image of a passionate, slightly humble, earthy, irascible, and shrewd man. As a good "teacher," Mao would often say that his "student-colleagues" could correct him if he were 'wrong. From what we know of such meetings, they were freewheeling, with hiuch blunt talk and ample policy debate in which opposition to Mao's view was indeed expressed, al- though rarely in terms personally insulting to Mao. 6. Nevertheless, Mao played more than the role of teacher and sometime pupil. His presence was in- timidating, and he was a formidable adversary, fight- ing cleverly and hard. Often he would employ sardonic humor and invective drawing on the strengths and weak- nesses, past and present, of his colleagues. On the whole, the record shows Mao as a master of attack, retreat, and counterattack--in effect, a guerrilla strategist--in party debates. In addition to the forcefulness of his personality, Mao used various stratagems: manipulating rivalries among his asso- ciates, attacking his enemies when he was politically secure, calling for his comrades to unite in a common cause when he was weak, and even threatening to with- draw from the political system to build a new revolu- tionary movement. 7. Thus, in inner-party circles Mao brought his will to bear not merely as an elevated "teacher" but as a political antagonist ready to confront his colleagues and to intervene actively in day-to-day decision-making. Although in December 1970 Mao told Snow that he formulates policy guide2ines and issues general directives leaving the details cf execution to others, it is likely that he still frequently in- terjects himself into the daily political process and attempts to exercise his personal authority in carry- ing out given programs. -3- Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 (b)(3) (b)(3) Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 7,-nrc1-4-f-F474.1arr tt T The Cult of Mao 8. A further illustration of Mao's personality and his political style is the manner in which he has employed his doctrine--"Mao Tse-tung Thought"-- and its attendant personality cult. As Mao has aged, he has been increasingly deified. In his 1970 con- versation with Snow, Mao deplored the slogans and other forms of worship carried to excess by the Red Guards. He said there should be a cooling down. But Mao acknowledged that, because a great deal of party power had been out of his control in the early 1960s, he had deliberately fostered the personality cult in order to stimulate the masses to dismantle the "anti-Mao" party bureaucracy. In short, Mao not only uses his personality cult as a device for en- suring his political survival but in effect claims that he does personify the unity and hopes of the na- tion. The Maoist Vision 9. Mao's "thought," about which the Chinese speak so often, is a complex thing. Somewhere in tha "collected works" is a passage suitable to sup- rt any cjiven policy. It is often contradicted by another passage. Certain recurring themes, however, do s;:and out. In general, Mao sees all social proc- esses in terms of struggle, conflict, and combat. The concept of the law of contradictions--the dia- lectical struggle between antithetical forces--is one to which he has given special emphasis. Mao sees China as progressing to its rightful place in the world by struggling constantly against its ene- mies abroad, and progressing toward ideal communism by struggling constantly against enemies within. He seems to feel that progress stops when struggle ends, and he is suspicious of the motives of those who appeal for periods of internal peace and social har- mony. Thus, ever since achieving power Mao has at- tempted--when the traffic would bear--to contrive conditions of tension and struggle in order to create the type of man, preserve the sort of values, and promote the processes that are essential for con- tinuing revolution. CONTITBENTIAL__ Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 10. Maoism also lays heavy stress on the crucial role of subjective factors in history, the role of the individual human will as a force capable of re- shaping the material, objective environment. This attitude is obviously linked to Mao's guerrilla ex- perience and to his conviction that men, not weapons, are the decisive factor in revolutionary war. Sub- jective emphasis carries over into Mao's prescriptions for modernizing China and is expressed in his almost mystical faith that China's mobilized masses can transform their world through collective, labor- intensive action. This also happens to be convenient theory for an underdeveloped, over-populated nation unable to motivate its people with substantial ma- terialrewards,and Mao implicitly acknowledged as much some years ago when he declared the fact that China was "poor and blank" was a revolutionary virtue. 11. These factors have led Mao to place a high value on ideological motivation--the "spiritual trans- formation" of men. In Mao's ultimate vision, the good society is one united by something approaching total consensus and marked by radical collectivism. To oversimplify, men will be "freer" because they have submerged their individual selfishness in a kind of mystical collectivism. To achieve this internalized consensus, however, blind obedience is not enough. Instead, the spiritual transformation of the entire Chinese people is to take place through the study of Mao's works, thought reform, and education through labor. 12. This emphasis on spiritual transformation is closely linked to a populist theme in Mao's "thought." For him, the masses of peasants and workers are the repository of the wisdom and inge- nuity which will enable China to forge ahead in its economic and technical development without heavy re- liance on specialists steeped in foreign knowledge and foreign theories (concessions being made in the fields of nuclear technology and advanced weaponry). In fact, in Mao's "thought" there is a definite anti- intellectual bias and a fear that a bureaucratic and -5- Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 Approved for Release 2018/08/29 002913946 C 0 N ri) -A - technical elite will undermine his populist revolution. This element of his vision was a major factor in Mao's effort during the Cultural Revolution to undo bu- reaucratic stratification by destroying respect for the special status of the party member or the special knowledge of the expert. The Cultural Revolution was a failure from most points of view, but Mao does not discourage easily and it may happen again. 13. Although Mao's emotional commitment to the idea of continuing revolution is strong, he realizes that everything is not possible at a given time and that one must therefore distinguish between stages. Although he may find it increasingly distasteful as he grows older, Mao has certainly been known to com- promise in both domestic and foreign policy when he finds it in his interest to do so. His imprimatur on the recent developments in Sino-US :c.lations, for example, shows that he can subordinate ideological considerations to the 1.,?.ed for a flexible diplomatic posture, in hopes of turning China's weakness into a strength in the triangular Sino-Soviet-US relationship. There is also no sign that Mao has lost his philosophic capacity to take the long view of China's destiny. His sardonic comment to Premier Kosygin in 1969 that Sino-Soviet polemics would be carried on for 10,000 years if necessary conveys Mao's sense that history will favor China, that "good" will triumph over "evil." Mao's Current Role 14. Mao remains the dominant political figure in Peking. Major changes in policy and personnel assignments require his approval, and no individual leader or combination of leaders appears able, or anxious, to overthrow him. But this is not the whole story. We now know, for example, that Mao's control over party affairs was seriously weakened in the early 1960s, and that he felt threatened prier to the Cultural Revolution because other leaders began to doubt the validity of his prescription for building a selfless and classless China. -6- (b)(3) (b)(3) Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 (b)(3) 15. Mao launched the Cultural Revolution to remove his dissident "revisionist" colleagues from power in the party, government, and military. In the process, he undermined the authority of the party, sat himself above the party as the incarnation of the will of the Chinese people, and came to rely on a small personal entourage of radical advisers. 16. Mao's victory over his opponents was signif- icant but far from complete. He intimated as much to Edgar Snow in December 1970 in acknowledging that the Cultural Revolution still continued in the form of the struggle for power at the national level. The struggle had been dramatically illustrated only a few months earlier by the purge of one of Mao's closest advisers, the radical Chen Po-ta. At the same time, Mao also indirectly admitted that he had serious res- ervations about the success of the Cultural Revolu- tion, particularly as it applied to the upper levels of the bureaucracy. This odd refusal to claim success suggests that Mao may feel that not all of those hold- ing the principal levers of power in the country today are entirely responsive to him. 17. The general failure of the Cultural Revolu- tion has been underscored by the upheavals in China's leadership since the "revolution" was formally declared to be over at the Ninth Party Congress in April 1969. A considerable amount of maneuvering and purging has occurred within the 25-member politburo formed at that congress. About 11 members seem to have been shunted aside, although a few of these may eventually resur- face. Some of the purges have involved relatively moderate civilian and military figures who were on record as opposing Maoist excesses in the Cultural Revolution, and their political demise may well have been instigated by Mao. But other victims, including Mao's chosen successor, Defense Minister Lin Piao, were in a broad sense members of Mao's entourage. It is possible that Mao--who has consistently recognized the necessity of periods of consolidation after up- surges of radical change--decided to sacrifice his -7- (b)(3) Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 -0:711-11-D-ENTIAL._ closest colleagues because their usefulness to him was over. Nevertheless, the downfall of these men has diminished Mao's prestige and may increase his own vulnerability to a later attack. 18. In short, Mao--for all his deification--is a political animal working amid shifting political sands to enhance his own power and make his will felt. For example, following the Cultural Revolution, Mao attempted to ensure his supremacy by rewriting China's party and state constitutions. Both the party constitution approved at the Ninth Congress in 1969 and a draft ritate constitution drawn up in 1970 speci- fied Mao's role as the personal ruler of the nation and, for the first time in any Communist constitution, named his successor. The latter provision, by denying the party its right to choose the next chairman, pro- vided the ultimate proof of Mao's contempt for the party. 19. Events since tho drafting of the two new constitutions, howeve.,� suggest that there has been strong resistance to Mao's hostility to the party. The draft state constitution has not yet been ap- proved, Mao's personal heir has been purged, and there have been clandestine reports that there is strong sentiment in Peking for some formula for a "colleotive leadership" as the best device for handling the succession to Mao and, at least implicitly, for restoring the legitimacy of the party. 20. The present drive to restore the party organization is almost certainly in part designed to reduce the excessive authority which the military acquired in civil administration as a result of the Cultural Revolution. As such, it may we'l have Mao's personal endorsement. He is, in fact, on record as early as 1967 in favor of a properly revitalized civilian party as a political instrument. Neverthe- less, the current propaganda emphasis on the party does not depict it merely as an instrument of Mao' will. Indeed, -8- ClircrrettiE4Nu-Lea,�: _Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 some cadres abroad were told to note that recent propaganda formulations on the role of the party designated Mao as "comrade Mao" rather than the more usual "Chairman Mao." 21. Even if it is assumed that Mao is not an all-powerful autocrat, we believe it would be a serious mistake to deny that he is still the man who makes the ultimate decisions in all key areas of China's domestic and foreign policy. Chou En-lai may be the chief architect of present Chinese policy toward the US, but his blueprint must have Mao's approval. Mao is a consummate politician who, if unable to hlve his way in all matters, is still able to retain considerable leverage by playing off op- posing groups against one another. Indeed, much of the leadership uncertainty in Peking today may stem from Mao's devotion to this tactic, which avoids the risks of provoking any direct challenge to his pre- eminence. A Final Word: Mao's Health 22. A major problem in assessing Mao's polit- ical situation is that we do not have an accurate reading on his health. Rumors in recent years that he is in poor health have not proved accurate, and we have serious reservations about diagnoses at long distance. Eyewitness accounts vary widely. In every public appearance he has made over the past two years, observers have described Mao as frail and tired looking. 23. On the other hand, Mao has given at least five personal interviews ove_ the past two years ranging from one and one half hours to five hours. His interlocutors have all commented that he appeared well briefed and well informed, that his mental faculties appeared normal, and that his reactions were lively. In some of the interviews, he showed some preoccupation with mortality, but this is prob- ably due more to his preoccupation with ensuring that the revolution should endure after his passing -9- comuti3E4s Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 CO2913946 Am, 4A=Mir Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 A than to morbidity or mental deterioration. He oc- casionally treats the subject of death with sardonic humor, as when he told Prince Sihanouk that he, Mao, "might soon be called to heavenly peace," adding with a laugh "for discussions only." 24. It seems reasonable to assume that Mao has his good days and bad day q and that his working schedule must be carefully regulated. Mao may not read as many position papers as he once did, and he may no longer be able to devote considerable energy to retaining control of the bureaucracy and keeping himself informed Past experience suggests, however, that it would be a serious mistake to under- rate his physical capacity for action and decision- making. After all, he launched the Cultural Revolu- tion at the age of 72, at a time when reports were widely circulating that his good days were fewer and fewer and that he was near death. 25. There has been a noticeable absence of references to Mao's "excellent health" in Peking propaganda in recent months. On the basis of past practice, this can be taken as a sign that his con- dition is good and that the regime is not particu- larly sensitive on this subject. -10- CONFIDENTIAL Approved for Release: 2018/08/29 002913946 (b)(3) (b)(3)