PEOPLE'S CHINA

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CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7
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R
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32
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December 14, 2016
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April 4, 2001
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9
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Publication Date: 
December 1, 1950
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REPORT
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people S 4+ %q C11iina December 1, 1950 China's Voice at World Peace Congress Kuo Mo-jo The "Sun of Happiness" Is Rising In Tibet Yu Shah Into the Boots of Japanese Imperialism C. C. Fang 11 Supplement: Statements on the Illegal MacArthur Report and Diplomatic Notes on Tibet Vol. II RES I RiCTED 10009-7 Appr lease 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 People's China 41, Yang Shih Ta Chieh, Peking, China This journal appears on the 1st and 16th of each month in both English and Russian. Entered as first-class printed matter at the General Post Office of North China, December 20, 1949. CONTENTS Peace Will Conquer War .................................. Free Tibet from the Imperialist Intrigues ................... ARCHIVE Vol. 2, No. 11 EDITORIALS Manifesto to the Peoples of the World ..................... 5 SPECIAL ARTICLES China's Voice at World Peace Congress Kuo Mo-jo ........ 6 The "Sun of Happiness" is Rising in Tibet Yu Shah ......... 8 Into the Boots of Japanese Imperialism C. C. Fang 10 Victory on the Cotton Front Su Tuan ......... 12 CULTURAL FRONT Our Writers at the Peace Congress ......................... 14 PICTORIALS PLA Marches into Tibet ................................... 15 Aid Korea, Protect Our Fatherland ! ....................... 1S FEATURES Transformation of a Mill Chow Hsueh-sheng. 19 Why Chang Yi-yuan Volunteered for Korea Chiao Yu-jen ..... 22 Chinese and Koreans Fought the Japanese Too Chang Chao ...... 24 A Letter from a Returned Student P. W. Lin ........ 26 CURRENT CHINA November 11 - 25, 1950 .................................. 27 NEW SUBSCRIPTION RATES: To meet the requests of our readers, subscription rates to People's China, effective from this issue, are reduced as follows: 6 months one year (post free) U.S.S.R . ............................................... Rbls. 7.00 Rbls. 13.00 India .................................................. Rs. 4.5 Rs. 8.00 U.S.A. and Canada ..................................... US $2.00 US $ 3.50 U.K. 9/- 17/- Hongkong .............................................. HK $7.00 HK $13.00 ~~} All present subscriptions will be extended pro rata. =fq/ y _2A __- ' itl by the Foreign Languages Press, 26, Kuo Hui Chieh, Peking, China. Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Ayf roved For Release 2 %/(J? - J2-00457R007100Q100097 1950 Vol. t, No. ecem er 1, PEACE WILL CONQUER WAR The Second World Peace Congress at Warsaw has given mankind an historic programme of action to defend peace. By their establishment of the World Council of Peace, by their manifesto and proposals to enable the United Nations to fulfil the hopes placed in it by the peoples, and by their call to end the war in Korea, these representatives of 80 nations have manifested the resolute demand for peace of all people of good will. No government that sincerely wants peace for the people can refuse to support these just, reason- able and feasible demands. Backed by the over 500 millions who signed the Stokhoom Peace Ap real, these demands repre- sent the vital interests of all mankind. The Chinese people have expressed their firm support, for the activities and resolutions of the World ? Peace. Congress, They are ready to work under the leadership of the World Peace Council. Over. 223.000,000 of them have signed the peace ;appeal. They demand their place at the U.N. pre- cisely to enable it to fulfil its work for peace. In face of, the grave threats to peace in Asia, they have given substantial testimony of their will to peace. The. flames of war already lick the borders of China. The U.S. imperialists have invaded Korea. Their wanton #lestructivenesr and atrocities, and the atrocities of their puppets and allies - for which they and their British and other satellites cannot escape responsibility - sicken the conscience of mankind. The U.S. imperialists have seized the Chinese, island of Taiwan and sent their fleet, re- inforced by their accomplices, to protect the remnant Chiang Kai-shek clique there; U.S. planes have violated China's. northeastern frontiers to bomb and strafe. the people. America also interferes against the democratic movement in Viet-Nam. China knows that these are all parts of a single strategic plan to smash the national liberation move- ments in the colonies and semi-colonies, to attack the vital centres of human freedom and achieve American world domination. The Cl inepe people have therefore reacted to these threats to peacein the Far East with resolute major contribution to the cause of action. In' a peace and to check the spread of war, the Chinese people's volunteers fighting alongside the deathless patriots of Korean People's Army have already given pause to the armies of the U.S. gangsters who have run amok in. Korea. The PLA is now marching to liberate Tibet, re-unite it with the mother country, and prevent it'from ever again being used as'a nest of imperialist intrigue or a springboard of aggres- sion against the rest of China or the USSR. Steps to liberate Taiwan, solemn warnings to the French colonialists against further outrageous -intrusions across the Viet-Nam-China border, full support of the Soviet Union's note on the illegal release of Japanese war 'criminals by MacArthur and the in- tensified activity of the whole people in peaceful construction - all these are part of the contribution of the Chinese People's Republic to the fight for peace, to defeat any aggression and preparations for aggressive war. As the frustrated warmongers are forced the more fully to expose their vile purposes to the world, and as they extend the scope of their adventurist acts, it becomes ever more clear that the fight against aggression is the fight for peace. Unless the flames of war are smothered, wherever they are kindled they will spread. 'The present action of the Chinese volun- teers is of crucial importance for peace throughout the world. They have thwarted the insolent attempt of the warmongers to use the Hitler method of attacking their victims one by one while preventing the peace-loving forces by lies, threats and blackmail from giving timely aid to each other. It is not to be imagined that either the Korean or the Chinese people will permit themselves to be thrust back into the bloody hell of colonialism. The Japanese fascists suffered catastrophe in their at- tempt to subjugate these countries. But if the lesson of history is not enough for their U.S. succes- sors, they will certainly get some'further practical instructions of the type they have already received. Before they further rouse the anger of the great 475,000,000 Chinese people, let the U.S. imperialists pause at the thought that, unless they withdraw now, and permit a peaceful settlement of the Korean ques- tion, they have already committed several scores of thousands of their troops to a protracted war in Korea. ? And it would be as well for the U.S. satel- lites in Downing Street and elsewhere to consider whither their servility to their American masters is leading them. The Chinese volunteers and the $PA are in the front line of the struggle for world peace. If the U.S. aggressors were to succeed in their adventure here, they would be encouraged to try the same tech- nique in any other place of their own choosing. But the initiative is in the hands of the peace forces. This is the message of the Warsaw Con- gress, inspired by the calm confidence+ of Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China, and their refusal to be diverted from their peaceful purposes by repeated provocations of the warmongers around Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 200Y~gpf-3~lA- p 2-00457R007100010009-7 their borders. This is the forebearance of strength born of confidence in the millions of men and women who detest war and who want to build, not destroy. With this mighty support the World Peace Con- gress speaks with authority, reinforcing the con- fidence of partisans of peace the world over. "Let us join our efforts and demand an end to the war which is devastating Korea today and which threatens to set the whole world aflame tomorrow! It is useless to wait for peace - peace must be won!" Peace can be won by the united strength and initiative of the peoples. Peace shall be won. The Trumans, Churchills, Attlees and Bevins know well the attractive force of such an appeal to the reason, conscience and vital interests of man- kind. That is why they strove so hard and so basely to prevent the holding of this congress for peace. But the will of the people for peace cannot be thus frustrated. The Congress was held with even greater publicity for its aims in Warsaw. The effort for peace, however, must be sustained. It must not be thought that a victory for the peace forces on one front alone will deter the warmongers. Fevereishly re-arming the remnant forces of fascism in Western Germany and Japan, they are preparing new adventures in Europe as well as in Asia. But each new victory for peace serves to mobilise and con- solidate the peace forces. The peace front headed by the great Soviet Union is already stronger than the imperialist camp. Each new victory for peace will still further increase that superiority until the unleashing of another world war becomes too risky a gamble even for such inveterate gamblers as those of Wall Street. ' Free Tibet from Imperialist Intrigues The greatest elation has been aroused through- out China by the news of the progress made in the liberation of Tibet. The Tibetans themselves show their joy by the enthusiastic support, they give to the People's Liberation Army on its march to Lhasa. At long last, Tibet will be freed from imperialist interference and exploitation. Balked of their prey, the imperialists are making last minute attempts to obstruct this act which will complete the liberation of continental China. The hos- tile moves by the Anglo-American bloc in recent weeks in regard to Tibet have naturally been co-ordinated with- the other campaigns of slanders and aggres- sions, by the American warmongers in Korea, Tai- wan, Viet-Nam and elsewhere fir Asia. Even to the Roof of the World, Washington pursues its now well advertised plot of encirclement against the Chinese People's Republic. The American imperialists have instigated one of their pocket satellites - El Salvador - to bring what they call the "question" of. Tibet before the United Nations. NQ words need be wasted on the Salvadorean "proposals," if only because such an attempt flagrantly violates Articles II of the United Nations Charter prohibiting intervention in the internal affairs of sovereign states. One may recall, however, that this is not the first time the ruling clique of El Salvador has conspired against the' Chinese people for the sake of a few dollars. In 1934, the El Salvador marionettes "recognised" the Japanese puppet state of "Manchukuo" and describ- ed this outrageous act as "purely a matter of busi- ness, an outgrowth of El Salvador's acute need of new `markets for her coffee." In effecting the liberation of Tibet, the Central People';s Government is exercising its sovereign rights over its own territory. It will, therefore, tolerate no interference in this from any quarter. It Approved For Release 2001/12/04 is of course not surprising that the aggressive Anglo-American bloc shows their fangs over libera- tion of an area which these, blood-thirsty warmongers were aiming to develop as a base for renewed aggres- ,sion against China, but it would be most regrettable if any Asian nation laying claim to independence of action, should be so misled as to attempt to obstruct the Chinese people in fulfilling their sacred task of emancipating Tibet. As the Central People's Government of China showed by its patience -in awaiting the Tibetan peace delegates, it appreciates the fact that be- cause of its proximity, India naturally desires to see peace reign in Tibet, but equally, India should appreciate the fact that the speedy liberation of Tibet from the orbit of imperialist intrigues will, in the first place, guarantee security and peace in Tibet. China is, therefore, reluctant to believe that India might lend herself to the sinister Anglo-Ameri- can influences now working against the legitimate interests of the Chinese people. We cherish the friendship that has been develop- ing with the Indiaq people who are also struggling for complete elnancipation from imperialist intrigues. If China hopes and believes that India' will not be- come, in regard to Tibet, a cat's paw of the Anglo?- American imperialist bloc against Chnia, it is be- cause the Chinese people have faith in the value of the costly lessons that both peoples have learnt from the oppressidhs of the imperialists. It is also because the Chinese people believe that India will understand that it is to their mutual interests, as it is of all 'Asian nations and progressive peoples, that imperialism should be ended forever in Asia. All those truly desirous of peace will hail the heroic PLA marching to fulfil its historic mission oflibera- tion in the very heart of Asia which will deprive the imperialists of yet another base of the projected encirclement of, China CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 20 1V 'S I 82-00457R007100010009-7 MANIFESTO TO THE PEOPLES OF THE WORLD -- Adopted by the Second World Peace Congress in Warsaw -- W a r 'threatens mankind - children, women and men. The United Nations is not justifying the hopes, placed in it by the peo- ples of maintaining peace and tranquillity. The lives of people and the achievements of human culture are in danger. The peoples are willing to hope that the United Nations will resolutely turn back to those principles on which it was created after the Second World War in order to ensure freedom, peace and mutual respect among nations. But the peoples of the world rely still more upon themselves, upon their own determination and good will. It is clear to every sensible person that whoever states that "war is inevit- able," slanders mankind. In reading this message of the Second World Peace Congress in War . saw,- adopted on behalf of the peoples of SO countries, remember that the struggle for peace is your own vital in- terest, know that hundreds of millions of champions of peace unite to stretch out their hands to you and call upon you* to take part in. the roost noble.. ? struggle ever waged by mankind, firmly . confident of its outcome. It is useless to wait for peace - peace must be won. Let us unite our efforts and demand the termination of the war which is devastating Korea today and which threatens to set the whole world aflame tomorrow. Let us oppose the attempts to kindle war again in Germany and in Japan. 'In unity with 500 million people who have signed the Stock- holm peace appeal we demand : Prohibition of the atomic weapon, universal disarmament and control over these measures. It is tech- nically possible to secure strict control over universal dis- armament and destruc- tion of atomic .weapons. All that is necessary is the will to do it. Let us compel the adoption of laws which make war propaganda a punish- able offence. Let us present our pro- posals for the defence of peace - drawn up by the Second World Peace Congress - to members of our parliaments, to, our governments and to the United Nations. United, the peace forces in all coun- tries are strong enough, the voices of the people of the world ate loud enough to insist on bringing about the meeting of representatives of the Five Great Powers. The Second World Peace Congress has proved more forcefully than ever before that people from all parts of the globe can agree among themselves in spite of differing viewpoints to -avert the disaster of war and ' to maintain peace. Let governments act in the same way and. the cause of peace will be saved.' Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457ROOr7100010009-7 Approved For Release 200 i- jlp lg%UeflW,&2-00457R007100010009-7 CHINA'S VOICE AT WORLD PEACE CONGRESS Our Chinese delegation and the delegations of other countries of the East have travelled over 10,000 kilometers in order to reach Europe. Originally, we intended to go to Sheffield and shake hands with the British people. This was not possible. However, we are now welcomed in Warsaw. Even in the East we have heard about the exist- ence of some kind of "iron curtain." However, on our way from Siberia to Eastern Europe we saw no iron curtain. It is only over the English Channel that we eventually discovered it. The British government in fact has prevented the peoples of various countries from meeting the British people. The British government, because it is afraid of peace, has put obstacles in the way of the peace movement. There is, however, nothing strange about this action from the viewpoint of the peoples of the East. Indeed, at present, in our part of the world, the aggressive bloc headed by Ameri- ca'n imperialism has passed beyond the. stage of simply creating obstacles in the way of the peace cause to the direct violation of peace itself, from war cries to aggression itself. The adventurous aggressive war of the American imperialists in Korea. has already approached the Chinese-Korean frontier. The United States of America, simultane- ously with its aggression in Korea, seized our island of Taiwan. Its planes have in addition invaded our Northeast, the coastal areas of Shantung Province, and Shantung Province itself, wantonly strafing and bombing our territory. The United States of America openly interferes in the national liberation struggle of the peoples of Viet-Nam, the Philippines and other countries in Southeast Asia and ruthless- ly suppresses this struggle. "Favours" of the "Good American Friends" The American imperialists whn are all the while planning aggression and interference in the internal affairs of other states, hypocritically declare that other states are carrying out aggression. Thus, they presumptuously assert that the Koreans are carry- ing out aggression, on Korea, that the Chinese are carrying out aggression on the Chinese island of Taiwan. Thus, the American imperialists set'them- selves up as the "saviours of peace." They call their aggression moral assistance, and their establishment of world domination-a; favour. Mo-jo Thus, if you are speaking of the defence of peace and security, they also speak of the f`defeence of peace and security." If you are speaking of fighting for freedom and democracy, they also speak of "fighting for freedom and democracy," and in so doing they contend that only their freedom and demo-- Messrs. Truman and Acheson recently stated, - didn't they-that they were good friends of the peoples of the East. You see, they claim that not only Are they good friends but great saviours of the peoples of the East as well! For 50 years our country was the victim of the continuogs aggression of Japanese imperialism. After eight years of a strenuous defensive war, we finally succeeded in routing the Japanese imperial- ists. In the early part of the difficult Anti-Japanese War, the first and only country to help us was the Soviet Union. What= was the United States of America doing then? During that period, it traded with the Japanese, selling them huge quantities of scrap metal, petrol, cotton and equipment, thereby enabling the Japanese to massacre our people and causing us inestimable losses in manpower and pro- perty. This is what the "good American friends" call a "great favour." After . Japan's surrender, the Chinese people longed for peaceful construction. But the American imperialists supported the Kuomintang gangsters in every way. They did everything to help Chiang Kai-shek, providing him with planes, guns, tanks, warships, dollars and equipment, and American mill- ,tart' surplus material. They secured, with Chiang Kai-shek's help, special privileges on land, sea and in the air which grossly violated our sovereignty. They manoeuvred Chiang Kai-shek into unleashing a civil war and dooming the Chinese people to four more years of sufferings. This indeed was what the "good American friends" call a "great favour." And now, is it not the "good American friends" who still support Chiang . Kai-shek? Is it not these same "good American friends who, having been routed on China's mainland, grabbed our island of Taiwan and advanced their so-called defence line to the Taiwan . Strait? - Japanese imperialism is our sworn enemy. Nevertheless., protected and nurtui-dd by the "good American friends," Japanese imperial- ism is rapidly 'reassuming its warlike countenance. This is what the "good American friends" call .a by Kuo Mo-jo, head of the Chinese Peace Delegation. "great favour." Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 20ftC''.rtk82-00457R007100010009-7 Lording it over the United Nations, the United States of America, converting the United Nations into its ,owns private domain, is utilising the United Nations as a' mask for its own criminal actions. The United States supports the Chiang Kai-shek re- presentative in the United Nations as the representa- tive of the Chinese people, although he is not sup- ported by a single Chinese. The United States stubbornly refuses to grant the People's Republic of China the right to send the legal representative of the Chinese people to the United Nations. This is what the "good American friends" call a "great favour." Of course, the "good American friends" may arrogantly say, "We respect the use of demeepatic methods. for settling questions, all United Nations decisions are based on the principle of the sub- ordination of the minority to 'the majority." All right, then. If we take figures, however, we shall easily expose the American voting machine. The total population of states which are members of the United Nations is 1,850 millions. If the decision of the majority is to be respected, is it not necessary while voting to take' into, account the size of the population represented by the vote? . Yet Chiang Kai-shek's delegate, who'represents only himself and a handful of.reactionaries, has a vote in the United Nations whereas the' 475 million people of the Chin- ese People's Republic have none. And this is called tie democratic metho d for settling questions. The American imperialists desecrate the United Nations. Thus, by their criminal aggressive actions in, Korea they have made of the United Nations flag a rag to hide their shame. This is indeed a monstrous insult to 1,850 million people. American aggressive troops have already cross- ed the 38th Parallel, seized Pyongyang and Wonsan and approached the bank of the Yalu River. Ameri- can planes daily bomb peaceful towns and villages in North Korea, machine-gunning the civilian population -old people,-women and children. More- over, they have repeatedly crossed the Yalu River, and barbarously bombed and strafed our Northeast and Shantung Province. This is precisely what the "good American friends" call a "great favour" to the peoples of the East. Naturally, we speak here of the American im- perialists and not of the American people. The American people are as peace-loving as the peoples of other countries, as peace-loving as the Chinese (Continued on Page 30) STATEMENT OF CHINESE PEACE DELEGATION The Chinese Delegation at the close of the with the people of all other countries in the World Peace Congress has made the following statement : The Second Peace Congress has emerged with a victory of tremendous historic signi- iicance. it fly mani:iested, the solid deter- mination of all the people of good will to defend peace and the unity and consolidation of the world camp of peace. In the Congress, two thousand and more delegates have freely and widely exchanged opinions on the defence of world peace and have jointly worked out a resolution for will further broaden the world camp of peace and serve, as a powerful guarantee that peace yvill defeat war. The Chinese people firmly support the gress and its appeal to the United Nations. They firmly support the Congress resolutions on the banning of atomic weapons and carry- ing out of the general armaments reduction, on the prohibition of war, propaganda, on the strengthening and increasing of economic on the, fixing of a definition of aggression. The people of China are willing to work under the leadership of the World Peace Council just fight to stop war and defend peace. We maintain that the aggressive war'-of the United States government in Korea must be stopped immediately. The invading forces and the Korean question should be solved the Korean people. MacArthur by the majority of the.delegates to the Peace Congress vividly expresses the Taiwan fully conforms with the hopes and desires of the people in China as well as in Only participation of representatives of the People's Republic of China, with its popula- tion of 475 millions, in the United Nations will peace and security. After the Congress, we believe the- world peace movement will enter a new stage. The people of various countries should follow the spirit of this Congress and unite as one in their common struggle. Peace is sure to conquer war. Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 20017! P+F,(YPefl[R,42-OO457R6071 OOO1 OOO9-7 The "Sun' of Happiness" is Rising in Tibet Yu Shah There is an ancient parable in a Tibetan scrip- ~ure that foretells of the coming of a new life out of the far north, a life without exploitation, injus- tice, sorrow or fear. People will live in plenty and this new life will spread over the whole world and then there will be no war. The sun of happiness, it says, will shine forth over the land and the club of sorrow will be cast forever into the waters. Sorrow and oppression have indeed been the lot of the Tibetan people. Tibet is not the Shangri- la of romancers. It is a land of serfs, of Voverty and illiteracy. Nomad 'cattle breeding and, in the south, agriculture are the principal pursuits. Modern industry is almost non-existent and the abundant natural resources hardly touched. Because of its position, it has long been the target of im- perialist oppression and intrigue. And foreign interference helped to hol,back the fore@s of pro- gress. Over #he past two centuries, British imperialism Pad, more recently, American imperialism have worked and schemed to wrest this part of China from its mother country; they imposed their influence there with, the aid of backward forces and in recent years prepared to use it. as a base for their designs on China and the Soviet Union. Yet, despite all their efforts, the close unity of Tibet with the rest of China has withstood all trials. lend now Tibet is being re-united with its mother- land. What some British' geographers call "the Dead Heart of Asia" is pulsing with renewed life. The Chinese People's Liberation Army is over- Tming seemingly impossible difficul- ties and bringing liberation and a new life to the ~iibetan people. The Tibetan people are taking their future ipto their own hands and, ridding themselves of the vicious influence of British and Ameri- can imperialism. As early as 461 A.D., the marriage of the Tibetan ruler to a princess of China drew the two kingdoms close.- To this day in Lhasa stands a pillar of stone on w hick is carved the treaty made between the rulers of Tibet and China in the eighth century, "uniting their kingdoms." When Kublai Khan, successor to the legendary Genghis Khan, became Em- peror of China in the 13th century, Tibetans were ranked as second of the four classes of sub- jects in China. He entrusted the administration of Tibet to the head lama of the monastery of Sa-Kya. The tile of "Dalai" Lama, given to the political head of the Buddhist church, is in fact a Mongol title. But the central Chinese government controlled the collec- tion of taxes through its ambans, or local governors, and endorsed the appointment of the Dalai Lama. In modern tunes, , a number of international agreements embody the, recognition of China's sovereignty in Tibet. Both Britain and Tsarist Russia, for example, acknowledged Tibet to be part of Chink when they signed the agreement of 1907. Even at the Conference of Simla in 1913, when the British forced the Chinese delegation to sign a draft agreement involving serious encroachment on China's sovereignty in Tibet, the British dared not declare the severance of Tibet from China. And though the Chinese government was under Yuan Shih-kai who had treacherously accepted the notorious 21 Demands of the Japanese imperialists, yet it dis- avowed its representatives and did not ratify the Simla draft agreement, so great was the anger of the Chinese people. On the founding of the Republic of China, Dr. Sun Yat-sen declared immediately that the Tibetan people were among the five major nationalities of China, and Tibet remained part of China even I e~R[!M '~~g{{U'CAN during the corrupt rule of Chiang 'Kai- shek. The present Dalai Lama was appointed by gov- ernment and arrived in Lhasa in 1940, accompanied by a Chinese: escort. In a letter to the Chinese Gov- ernment in 1945, the British For- eign Minister clear- ly recognised that in international law Tibet is part. of China. Represent atives of Tibet were present at the People's Political Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 +~ I1 IIII11II`I I~ I~ 11.JIi,LLIILILLL~-l1 L ilLi I _ Map of Southwest China Showing Tibet Approved For Release 20g,' {bfE*;ooc&wR82-00457R0071.00010009-7 Consultative Conference in Peking in 1949. They ,took part in the declaration of the People's Republic of China and in the drawing up of the Common Pro- gramme which instructed the new People's , Govern- ment to "liberate all the territory of China and ac- complish the task of unifying China." It is not only politically that the Tibetans are linked with China. Communication in economic, cultural and religious life has never been inter- rupted. Caravans cro$s the deserts and mountain I ranges with hides from inner Tibet to the provinces of ' Sikang, Sinkiang and Chinghai to receive in exchange. cloth, tea and other goods. Many Tibetan lamas live in Sikang, Szechuan and other provinces. The Chinese and Tibetan languages have much in common, Buddhism found its way along the routes from Tibet and spread through. China. In fact, Tibet has never been isolated from the rest of China. The reputation for isolation that -Tibet still- has in foreign countries results from the deliberate political policy adopted in the 19th cen- tury as a defence', against the grasping hands of foreigners, particularly the British. It was an isolation from foreign intrusion alone. British Intrigues Hitler learned much from the methods of the British, imperialists towards countries which they wished to grab. In Tibet, too,. ever since Warren Hastings began to push British interests, after the conquest of India and Burma, British imperialism used all its armoury of wiles and brutality to subdue the area. It sent din armies, made offers of trade, fomented si strife among various groups of Buddhist priests and, above all, strove to foster in Tibet an antipathy towards China, using reactionary circles to put forward demands for so-called "independence." In 1790, the Gurkhas of Nepal, who had invaded Tibet- with British encouragement, were driven out by a joint force of Chinese and Tibetans. It was clear to the 1Tibetans that, they were now to be exposed to all kinds of new pressures. They agreed to close their frontiers and allow all foreign ques- tions to be dealt with directly by the ambans. By the end of the 19th century, despite all their efforts, including military invasion in 1888, Britian only succeeded in annexing Sikkim and Bhutan, south of the Himalayas. But in 1904, taking advan- tage of the Russo-Japanese War, British troops under Colonel Younghusband invaded in strength, well knowing that now the Manchu government in Peking was too weak to protect the Tibetans. The Tibetans put up a stiff resistance. They. fought heroically with their matchlocks and spears, but could not withstand the British guns. Killing, pillaging and burning their way forward, destroying many monasteries, the British expedition arrived in Lhasa, travelling by routes carefully spied out for them by missionaries, explorers and merchants. Large quantities of invaluable curios and precious removed to grace the residences of the British colon- ialists in India. But the Tibetans were never subdued. The ' expedition could not maintain itself in Lhasa. Britain was forced in 1906 to renounce the "treaty" imposed (Continued on Page 31) PROCLAMATION ON TIBET Here is the main part of a proclamation issued jointly by the Southwest Military and Administrative Committee and the PLA South- west Military Command on Nov. 9, 1950: "With serious concern for the people of Tibet, who have suffered long years of oppres- sion under the American and British imperial- ists and Chiang Kai-shek's reactionary govern- ment, Chairman Mao Tse-tung of the Central People's Government and Commander-in-Chief Chu Teh of the People's Liberation Army ordered the PLA troops to enter Tibet for the purpose of assisting the Tibetan people to -free themselves from oppression forever. "All the Tibetan people, including all lamas, should now create rt solid unity to give the PLA adequate assistance in ridding Tibet of imperialist influence and establishing re- gional self-government for the Tibetan people. They should, at the same time, build fraternal relations, on the basis of friendship and mutual help, with other nationalities within the coun- try and together construct a new Tibet within New China. "With the entry of the PLA into Tibet; the life and property of Tibetan lamas and people will be protected. Freedom of religious belief will be safeguarded, and lama temples will be protected. Assistance will be rendered to the Tibetan people in the direction of deve- loping their educational, agricultural, pastoral, industrial and commercial enterprises, and their living conditions will be improved. No change will be made in the existing admini- strative and military systems of Tibet., The existing Tibetan troops will become a part of the national defence forces of the People's Republic of China. All lamas, officials and chieftains may remain at their posts. Matters relating to reforms in Tibet will be handled completely in accordance with the will of the Tibetan people and by means of consultation between the Tibetan people and the Tibetan leaders. Pro-imperialist and KMT officials, concerning' whom there is definite evidence that they had severed relations with the im- perialists and KMT and who will not carry out any sabotage or put up resistance, may remain at their posts irrespective of their past history.s' articles, as the London Times described later, were rwsa?+-!aw..ar4!.+wf~~w.f.' .ug.!r~!.waa.w!a+.wfow*.r~,~ Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 18 Approved For Release 2006,k1e,82-00457R007100010009-7. Into the Boots, of Japanese. Imperialism C. C. Fang When Japanese imperialism capitulated to the United Nations in 1945, the Asian peoples had high hones of achieving their just demands for national liberation. They had contributed no small measure, of blood and treasure to that victory. The older imperialist Powers - Britain, France and the Nether- lands - were too exhausted to resume immediately their "White Man's Burden." But no sooner had the instrument of Japanese surrender been signed than Asia found that the representatives of Wall Street had stepped into the jack-boots of Japanese imperialism. In South Korea, the Philippines, Indo-China, Indonesia and Malaya, the great hope of early liberation was shattered by imperialist repressions financed, co-ordinated and, to a large extent, armed ,by the U.S.A., But, like their Japanese predecessors, the Americans concentrated their major effort against China and, like them too, it was here that they suffered their biggest defeat. The U.S.- sponsored Chiang Kai-shek regime was, in U. S. Secretary of State Acheson's own words, "repudiated by the Chinese people." The establishment of the Central People's Gov- ernment an October 1, 1949, ended that chapter of American intervention in China. The people's nation-wide victory pmashed the immediate U.S. hope of dominating China's strategic bases and re- sources through the hands of its KMT puppet. The events of the last year, however, have shown that American imperialism is loathe to give up the major aim in Asia. Thus, the record of post-war U.S. imperialism in regard to China is well worth- ,while recapitulating at this stage because it reveals some of the typical methods of American imperial- ism. It shows with what malevolent cunning and doggedness it has pursued its aims and why the de- feat of its favourite lackey has now. forced it to carry out its aggression openly with its own troops and such of its satellites as it can muster. By V-J Day, the democratic elements in China led by the Chinese Communist Party - the backbone. of the resistance movement - had grown into a powerful force in a territory with a population of over 100 millions.' It was, therefore, clear to the reactionaries that imperialist rule could only be restored over all. China, if the Chinese Communist Party were destroyed together with the Eighth Route and New Fourth Armies and their auxiliaries - the armed forces of the people. ,)'he Choice is Ours-- Acheson In the U.S. State Department's White Paper of August, 1949, Acheson mentions three alternatives .for U.S. policy towards China in this post-war period: "(1) it could have pulled out lock, stock and barrel; (2) it could have intervened. militarily on a major scale' to assist the Nationalists destroy the Communists; (3) it could, while assisting the Nationalists to assert their authority over as much of China as possible, endeavour to avoid a civil war by working for a compromise between the two sides." The U.S. chose the second alternative under the guise of the third. In grder "to destroy the Corn- munists" - who at the 'time of the Japanese sur- render led the population of an area stretching from the Northeast to Central China and a considerable part of South China and Hainan Island-it was necessary to move. the Chiang Kai-shek troops as quickly as possible to take over major centres direct from the Japanese and "inherit" these bases for the coming all-out offensive against the popular forces. Time was against them, so the Americans had re- course to a characteristically base political trick. The Liberated Areas were invited tot a conference to "discuss matters of national importance." U.S. Ambassador Hurley himself flew to Yenan to press the invitation. But, as Chiang Kai-shek later made clear, this invitation was a gesture aimed only to gain time for deployment of his attacking, troops. The failure of negotiations, which he could of course P 413_-~, i;.~4u 21-1 ;tF ~ ~:,Eii __" 1. Picture Gallery of a Warmonger Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 20PAmy'9'SC 82-00457R007100010009-7 ensure, would be the pretext for launching his "puni- tive expedition" against fhe' Liberated Areas. . Eager to explore every method , off, achieving a peaceful development for China,. the Chinese Com- munist Party, while by no means blind to the re- actionaries' deceptions, accepted the invitation. On August 25, 1945, it published its statement on how peace could be achieved, and a few days later Chair- man Mao Tse-tung himself flew to Chungking. Thus the reactionaries' bluff was called and Chiang and his American masters were forced to expose them- selves' to the Chinese people in all their hypocrisy. Chiang raised one transparent excuse'after an- other to prevent agreement being reached, and the negotiations dragged on from August 28 to October 10. During these seven weeks, the United States as- sisted Chiang Kai-shek to mobilise 800,000 troops into positions for the offensive against the People's Army. The entire U.S. Air Transport Command and all its available naval vessels in China were diverted to taking KMT troops to Central, North and North- east China. The New 6th Army, the. 94th Army, the 74th Army, and the 93rd Army were immediate- ly rushed from various points in South and South- China to Shanghai and Nanking, thence to west North and eventually to Northeast China. A. C. Wedemeyer, then U.S. Commander-in-Chief in China, boasted that "this has been the greatest movement of troops by air in history." Actions Louder Than Words--Acheson Before the negotiations in Chungking were 1 nal- ly broken off, the initial batch of the KMT troops had been moved to the various war fronts. Troop movements continued into the next year. In early November, 1945, 31 American naval transports took KMT troops to Chingwangtao in North China; U.S. naval vessels and marines covered the landing of the KMT 8th Army at Tsingtao - the first move in the attempted 'liquidation of the people's forces in Shantung; the KMT 53rd. and 54th Armies were flown in Julie, 1946, to Northeast China. Thus in nine months alone' from September, 1945 to June, 1946, over 540,000 KMT troops were deployed for battle by American transports and most of the troops were American armed and trained. But this was not all. American units themselves landed in force at Tsingtao, Chefoo, Weihaiwei and later at Shanghai and Tientsin. U.S. forces extend- ed. their operations to Nanking and other major cities as, well as along important sections and at junctions of the Shanghai-Nanking and Peking-Sui- yuan. Railways. A large American force with trains, planes and artillery virtually controlled Peking. U.S. officers were attached to all of Chiang Kai- shek's' forward units in the capacity of "advisers." Including naval forces and marines, the U.S. forces participating in the civil war on Chiang Kai- shek's side numbered over 113,000 men. More American troops were deployed in China after the end of the war with Japan than at any time when the battle against the Japanese fascists was at its height. And yet throughout this early period of preparation for civil war, the Americans were telling the world that they were "mediating" between the Liberated Areas and the Chiang Kai-shek dictatorship, that they had no intention of "getting involved" and so forth. The U.S. war-time Chief-of-Staff General Mar- shall was at this time in charge of this "mediation" in China. It was he who authorised the turning over of huge U.S. war surplus stores to' Chiang and the despatch of new arms from the United States. It was he who negotiated the Truce Agreement be- tween the People's Armies and the KMT which ex- cluded from its operations the Northeast where the U.S. had assisted Chiang to move up an over- whelmingly large and well equipped force. Marshall helped to drag out Chiang's phoney peace and truce negotiations for months while U.S. armaments and supplies poured in for the KMT armies. The U.S. imperialists calculated that once the people's forces were destroyed in the Northeast, the KMT could make short work of the People's Army south of the Great Wall. The Americans correctly estimated the strategic importance of the Northeast, but it was not the People's Army, but Chiang Kai-shek who was kicked out of the Northeast. This defeat was deci- sive for the outcome of the People's War of Libera- tion. 1. Seldom in the whole history of imperialism has a power poured out so much treasure and suffered so resounding a defeat. In the few years between the Japanese surrender and Chiang's expulsion from (Continued on Page 29) By Lit Si-an Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 200RIINM'S l fl 82-00457ROO7100010009-7 Victory on the Cotton Su Tuan With steady gains reported all along the nation's economic front, the rehabilitation and development of the cotton industry was to he expected. Never- theless, the speed and degree of rehabilitation have been impressive even for New China. Set goals have been met and even surpassed. Just as the People's Government successfully solved the much mooted problem of China's food shortages, by encouraging production among the enthusiastic liberated peasan- try, so has it tackled the problem of raising produc- tion in the cotton industry. Results have been so encouraging that the day is now in sight when each one of China's 475 millions will have enough to wear. According to the latest estimates, 700,000 tons of ginned cotton have been harvested this autumn. The goal set by the government early in 1950 for this year was 650,000 tons. Figures for the present year outstrip the average yield for the five years preceding the Anti-Japanese War when the area planted to cotton was largest. This means that China's textile mills are in the main assured of adequate supplies of raw materials. And this will also reduce urban unemployment. It was in April of this year - at the time wheh the cotton planting season was about to start- that the All-China Federation of Labour called for emergency help for 100,000 jobless workers in Shang- hai. One reason for this unemployment was the difficulties which the textile mills, the most important Shanghai industry, faced through lack of raw materials. Many of the spinning and weaving shops which once worked day and night were forced to operate on reduced shifts.. Some mills suspended operations altogether. This distressing situation was not peculiar to Shanghai. Textile mills in other cities faced the same problem. Of the 5,200,000 spindles which China has, about 4,200,000 were then in operation. But the ginned cotton was far from sufficient to feed all these spindles. The cotton `industry, like other Chinese indus- tries, was until recently semi-colonial in nature in its dependence on foreign sources for raw, materials and markets. Figures in the following table show how China in the past depended on foreign cotton, ehiefly American, to run its textile industry. YEAR IMPORT Metric Tons 1931-36 (annual average) ...... 139,739.33 1937-45 ...... 78,620.00 1946-48 ,, 164,046.53 1949 ...................... 51,627.40 In the early part of 1950, a small amount had to be imported until New China's first cotton harvest Front could be gathered. This year, with the cotton harvest estimated at. 700,000 tons, the problem of an adequate supply of raw cotton is nearing solu- tion. This means that. the textile mills, as well as a number of other industries connected with spin- ning and weaving, can face the future on a sound basis. With the foreign exchange saved as a result of the sharp reduction of cotton imports, it will be possible to purchase machines to speed up the coun- try's industrialisation. When the. Central People's Government drew up its over- all plan for agricultural pro- duction at the beginning of 1950, many people thought that the target of 650,000 tons of ginned cotton was too high. To fully appreciate what the completion and over- fulfilment of this target means, the results must be viewed against the terrible destruction which war brought to the cotton-growing areas and the deliberate KMT-planned disasters, such as the breaching of dykes. ` During the five years immediately preceding the Anti-Japanese War, the average cotton output was approximately 638,000 tons per year. But it drop- ped steadily until 1949 when the total harvest was only 425,000 tons. This was due, first of all, to' the dumping of imported cotton and the resulting low price for home-grown cotton. For one pound of cotton in 1936, a peasant could buy 11 pounds of millet. But this ratio fell drastically in the years from 1938 to 1943 until it reached 1:5. At this 'point, it was simply not worth the farmers' while to plant cotton. After the Japanese surrender in 1945, the KMT threw the market wide open to the Americans. The. bureaucratic capitalists, moreover, bought whatever cotton the peasants still grew at arbitrarily low prices. The result was that the area planted to cotton shrank rapidly. Another reason for the sharp decrease in the size of the cotton-growing area was the food short- age caused by the protracted war. Without enough grain to eat, the peasants had'to reducethe area planted to cotton so that more food could be raised. In addition to all this, there were war-time shortages of manpower and draught animals, fre- quent floods, droughts and plagues of pests. Then, too, there was a breakdown . of trade between the countryside and the cities. It was, therefore, not strange that the total cotton yield as well as the output per hectare diminished each year. In Shensi, for example, the cotton-growing area was reduced by 65 per cent during the past five years. Approved For Release 2001/12/04; CIA-RDP82-004578007100010009-7 In the new society emerging after liberation we have an altogether different situation. Targets set by the overall national plan were increased by the local governments and then expanded further by the farmers themselves at the time of sowing. The harvested areas for cotton this year is estimated at around 3,373,000 hectares, or 12 per cent above. the government target. Why has there been this victory? Why have the farmers been enthusiastic about growing cotton? Why, for example, has the cotton area in Hopei Province increased from 660,000 hectares last year to 980,000 this year? And why has the area planted to.cotton in Northeast China increased by 280 per cent since liberation - larger than the record cotton. area under Japanese occupation? The reasons for the the victory are found in the following factors: (1) the War of Liberation being practidally com- pleted, peasants have been released from war-time duties. With land reform already carried out in the old liberated areas and rent reduction in the newly liberated areas, peasants have shown a new zeal for production.' And this enthusiasm has raised their production levels. (2) In addition to the general enthusiasm and higher political consciousness resulting from the government's overall policy, the Central People's Government has paid special attention to the estab- lishment of a reasonable ratio between cotton and grain prices in order to raise. the peasants' interest in planting cotton. The planting of cotton has been made more profitable than the planting ' of grain. In some areas, contracts were drawn up between farmers and state trading companies, whereby the former were guaranteed manufactured goods in advance of payment against the cotton harvest. The government has also announced that cotton, as well as grain, can be used to pay agricultural taxes-in- kind. (3) In sharp contrast to the KMT, the People's Government l}as seriously tackled the water con- servancy problem. The anti-flood campaign was on a vast scale. In building dykes and canals alone, 360,000,000 cubic metres of earth were moved. Corn- ssoAOO suo,ooo roved_For,Release 20f/'G C 82.00457R0p7100010009-7 petent water conservancy work has gone a long way in securing the present cotton harvest. Then, too, the People's Government set up more special experimental farms and nurseries for culti- vating selected cottdn seeds; it provided farmers with insecticides, sprayers and fertilisers, imported good quality seeds and distributed them to all cotton areas. The equivalent in value of 30,000 tons of grain was invested'ih such undertakings. (4) Lastly, the cadres and Party members as. signed to work in cotton areas worked at their jobs tirelessly. In key areas they organised teams of experts to direct, the farmers in cotton growing, they utilised' newspapers and pamphlets to praise model cotton-growers and publicise various planting experiences, They patiently convinced the peasants of the need and advantages of growing cotton. The results have indeed been striking. The broad cotton belts in the vast basins of the Yellow and Yangtse Rivers, on the great plains of the Northwest, and in Northeast China, are a delight to the eyes of a -cotton farmer. The average yield per hectare is expected to come close to the best pre- war level of 194 kilograms of raw cotton per hectare. Some 16.4 per cent of the total area under cot- ton has been planted with the' long' staple variety, which previously was always imported from abroad. This has now been introduced into every cotton- growing area in China. Though achievements on the cotton front have been great, there is still a big task ahead before supply can wholly, satisfy demand. For the demand for cotton is rising steadily as the living conditions of the people improve. The increased demand for cotton is shown on -the example of the Northeast where 800,000 bolts of cloth were used in 1947, 1,200,000 in 1948, and 3,200,000 in 1949. In 1950, it has been estimated that the people of the North- east will want over 9,000,000 bolts of cloth. To produce one bolt of cloth, 5.25 kilos of raw cotton are needed. The population of the Northeast is about one-twelfth of the total population. Thus, if the people's demands in the Northeast are taken as a standard, at least 600,000 tons of ginned cotton will be needed to supply the textile industry alone. If other uses for cotton, such as medical and chemical uses, padded clothes ' and quilts, and so on, are taken into consideration., at least 900,000 tons of ginned cotton will be needed to meet these needs. As it is, the present 760,000 tons of ginned cotton will, generally speaking, be adequate to keep the country's textile industry running for a whole year. Btit naturally more than just this is needed. And this goal,{ too, is within reach. A Three-Year Plan has already been worked out laying special emphasis on the selection of seeds and on increasing the yield in every unit area. By 1953, cotton experts expect that China will not only be in a position to fully meet her own needs, but will have a surplus for export to meet the needs of others. Approved For Release 2001/12/04 CIA-RDP82-Q0457R007100010009-7 14 Approved For Release 20d%'MWSCII4A82-00457R007100010009-7 Our Writers at the Peace Congress In the field of literature a poet, essayist, novelist, playwright, critic and translator of the first order; in the field of science - a highly regarded historian and archaeologist; a daring revolution- ary, a skilled organiser, an eloquent orator noted for the beauty of his language and his diction -such is Kuo Mo-jo, a man of parts, the leader of China's delegation to both the First and Second World Peace Congresses. A non-party member of the Peo- ple's Political Consultative Con- ference that founded the People's Republic, Kuo Mo-jo was im- mediately appointed to the post of Vice-Premier of the Central Peo- ple's Government. It was` an ap- pointment that, among other things, reaffirmed the age-old re- gard that China has for literature. Kuo Mo-jo was born in Szechuan in 1892, and received a strictly classical early education, but as soon as he had the choice, he de- cided to take up the study of medical science. He went to Japan, and it was while he was studying anatomy there that he began to read Heine, Turgeniev, Spinoza and Goethe and started to write and translate. He never followed his profession, though he graduated as a doctor, but threw himself into literary work and the lively art controversies of the day. Art for the People The literary Creation'Society he founded was dedicated at first to "art for art's sake." But he soon saw through this self-deception and became one of the staunchest pro- tagonists of "art for the people." The Creation Society thereafter exerted a considerable influence over the .youth of. the- day. s At this time, he_p'ublished The Goc(dess,.his first colkection of poems ,(1921) , and many prose writings and tran- slations including Faust (1920). In 1923, the Great Revolution swept him up in its tide. He took part in the Northern Expedition as a director of revolutionary pro- paganda. Then the Chiang Kai- shek counter-revolution and terror forced him to escape abroad, and for the next ten years he lived in Japan. Under the watchful eyes of the Japanese police, he turned his political activities into a new sphere. j He translated Marx's Critique of Political Economy and German Ideology. These studies gave him a deeper understanding of the materialist conception of his- tory and aided him in his work Researches into Ancient Society. Seeking further source material, he probed into the hieroglyphs on an- cient oracle bones and bronzes, del-' ving deeper than any of his con- temporaries into the structure and character of ancient Chinese society. Then came the Japanese invasion of China in 1937. Kuo Mo-jo im- mediately returned home to take his place in the leadership of the People's United Front against the aggressor. As Director of the Cul- tural Bureau of the Political-Minis- try, he saved many treasures of China's cultural heritage and en- couraged and organised the patrio- tic efforts of writers and artists. It was at the time when defeat- ism and reaction finally complete- ly dominated the KMT and split the United Front that he produced his series -of six. historical plays, including Chu Yuan, that infused a ,new quality into contemporary theatrical art and heartened all progressives in the KMT-control- led areas. In 1943, he published two new profound books: The 'Bronze Age and the Ten Critiques of the philosophers of the Chow and Ching times, Confucius, Men- cius, Mo-tse, ' Chuang-tsu and others. Returning in 1945 from a visit to the Soviet Union, he arrived in Chungking in time to takk part in the peace negotiations between the KMT and the Chinese Communist Party. He also participated in the January 1946 All-Party Political Consultative Conference that met to formulate the terms of peace. Fight for Peace Leading the great mass rally in Chungking that celebrated the holding of this conference and its work for peace, Kuo Mo-jo, together with other democrats, was attacked by KMT thugs. When the KMT launched the civil war, he again succeeded in escaping to Hongkong, from whence he reach- ed the Liberation Areas. Follow- ing the formation of the People's Government, he was concurrently appointed Chairman of the Cultural and Educational Committee of the Government, President of the Academia Sinica, and was elected Chairman of the All-China Associa- tion of Writers and Artists. He has taken part in many inter- national conferences, served his people on many special commis- sions. He recently led the people's mission to fighting Korea. And he still finds time to inspire and per- sonally encourage many of the young writers and artists of New China. On this latest mission of peace to the Second World Peace Con- gress, he his been accompanied by the novelist Pa Chin, noted for his short stories and for his long trilogy on the break-up of the big family system, the search of ardent young intellectuals grown out'of such a family for the truth, and their merging with the revolu- tionary workingclass. Three.poets_ also comprise part of the delega=tion: Emi Sjao, who is internation- ally known as a partisan of peace; Feng Nai-chao; and Yuan Shui-poi, who is also a song and ballad writer of great popularity. Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 ApprpVor Re1,e?,~p14/ q,82-OJ34~Af100010009-7 The PLA started its lot) ir--awaited march into Tibet in October to help the Tibetan people rid themselves of imperialist oppression and institute regional self-government. Tibetans of the SikangTibet plateau welcome the PLA. As their banners show, they 1?,leris:e themselves to i rcc the People'; Army every possible support. Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 PIA mcn fnawc equipment across a ,~e% r %%hilt '1"0 i- bvim, hui]l_ 'T'ibetan Hamad i:u~~uae'o to i Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 2001/12/04: RDP -004 Lamas welcome the I'I A, an aim, w}urh respects their religious freedom, customs and habits. tvw+ their native " ? "? y?n P tho 1'Ia~. ' _-r< ?:,r (L inrt.it, liberated on O&?tohct 15). Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 App.ti F jK; Or]V6tt4`-ftf2-V`ft @ JQpP-7 udents of the College for Mongolians and Tibeta "The American and KMT bandits shall not take the land from me!" says a peasant volunteer in suburban Peking. Workers of the Peking Farm Tool factory sign a letter to Chairman ! io, ali'eriiig their aid 1., Korea. V Peking voice their determination to go to resist the American aggressors in Korea. Students of the People's University in Peking,' give a rousing send-Off to a volunteer. Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 2 0. 9 6P82-00457R00710001 QQ 7 Transformation of a Mill Over the gate the signboard says, "China Textile Corporation, Tientsin No. 2 Factory." From the road you can hear the hum of machinery, the rattle of looms and whir of spindles. Looking through the gate, you catch an occasional glimpse of a woman worker-for most of the..s'tate-owned plant's 5,000 workers are women - scurry- ing across the courtyard in her white apron. But what attracts your attention most is a huge board, placed just inside the gate, and painted on it lines that curve upward, lines that mean more cotton from each of the 98,040 spindles, more cloth from each of the looms, ? and beside it the notice board on the wall, crammed with cartoons,' challenges and competi- tion results-. "No. 2 Team beats No. 7 by 50.17 yards to 49.10" and "Honour Model Worker Liu." You go up to the board. Those figures up there. You , would scarcely believe it possible if you'd stood on the same spot less than two years ago, when Tientsin's liberation was already certain and the workers were organising to pre- vent KMT looting and damage. And if you'd been there thirty years be- fore, in 1919, when the factory, founded by the Northern Warlords, was first opened, you'd have said those curving lines and the state- ments they make were preposter- ous, a nonsensical dream. Yet those figures-that rise of cloth from 40 yards to 46.96 yards on the same' loom in the. same time - . were made by some of the very same men and women who endured thirty years of near-slavery, who loitered. and slacked and sabotaged in reprisal against harsh, oppres- sive conditions. It was in 1936, that the factory was,sold, :to :the Japanese. Condi- tions under the, Northern Warlords, rulers of the Hopei plains, had been bad. Under the Japanese they were worse.. The new super- visors were more skilled in indus- Chow Hsueh-sheng trial technique and industrial ex- ploitation. They could, detect de- fective work at a glance. They didn't hesitate to pay the workers wages which would only keep them for ten days out of the month, and drive theft to cover the other twenty days' expenses. Nor did they hesitate, when the workers turned to theft as the only way out, to have their guards search them as they went off work and to torture anyone found stealing, even to the extent of having trained dogs tear their underwear down and standing them, men' and women, naked at the factory gate. Nine years later, in 1945, the factory fell into the hands of the Kuhmintang. There were three months of idleness before produc- tion started again, months during which the workers had to fend for themselves, Then production began again, yet with an accompanying oppression worse than any they had experienced under the Japanese. For now they were under bureau- crats who knew nothing of indus- try, whose only concern was for profits, and whose only method to get production out of mill workers was to set them under secret ser- vice agents, petty racketeers and gang bosses - all hired not for any technical knowledge they had, but for their experience in "controlling" workers and extracting more yard and cloth, more work, from them by threats and terrorism. The company trade union was only an- other extension of this, another means to control the workers in the interests of a bureaucratic manage- ment devoted to quick profits and speculative markets. ? The workers themselves counted for nothing. In sickness they were neglected, in trouble they were" dis-_ regarded. Useful as creators of wealth, they were carefully pre- vented from sharing in their own creation. And lest there should be any semblance of unity between 19 staff and workers to threaten the disunity upon which corruption thrived, the divisions between staff - whose rolls were padded with the management's friends, relatives and . political off-siders - and woker?s were encouraged and nur- tiired. The one group rode to and- from work in a specially-provided bus. The other walked. The one could enter and leave the plant freely. The other, going and com- ing, must stop and be subjected to an ignominious search. The one looked down on the workers as dirty manual labourers. The other con- temptuously named the staff the bosses' "dog legs." If management had any policy, it was : "Divide and, rule. Give nothing. Get what you can." From this calculated chaos the fac- tory was liberated b the PLA on January 15, 1949. Liberation Brings Stability To bring in order, however, was not. easy. Fears and suspicions deliberately spread by KMT ele- ments in the months before libera- tion had to be allayed. Some said, "New officials will be like any former other officials. What dif- ference will you find between KMT and the Communist? What does either care for the worker?" On January 16, the day after the PLA entered the plant, meetings were held throughout the factory. Activists, PLA representatives and Communist Party members talked ,to groups of workers, explaining the all-important task of putting the factory to work again. The co-operation of many was won. Next day, most reassuring and set- tling sight of all, thick black smoke. coiled up' from the tall factory chimney once more. The first. round had been won. .. With work resumed, production had .to be raised. Urgent and in- evitable"yas reorganisation of the factory was, temporarily and for Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 20014,62=00457R007100010009-7 the sake of production, no basic authorities they would use high- changes in personnel or operation sounding phrases, ' while to the were made. Only those few whose workers they would say, _ "Those crimes had been gross and serious PLA bumpkins, they can't do were dismissed. The rest stayed. without the likes of us.", They But such. oppression of the found excuses to transfer, Politic- workers could not continue. Wage ally active workers to old and inequities were adjusted by com- worn-opt machines, and when their puting wages in terms of `corn- output fell, they would hold them flour, the staple food, so that up to ridicule. If such a worker the average worker's wage rose protested, they would accuse him from the equivalent of 90 cat- of violating "labour discipline." ties of corn-flour a'month to ago. By subterfuge, certain of the Moreover, to provide incentive, supervisors edged back into their wages were tied to output, and as old positions of dominance over the production increased, pay-checks workers. The workers themselves, grew fatter. The old trade union were confused. There was a strong of the factory was dissolved im- undercurrent of dissatisfaction. mediately and replaced by one "How," one of the workers asked, democratically organised and elect- "can we be liberated with these old ed, and the union was able to give fellows still in charge?" emergency welfare relief to any A mass movement against the worker in need of it. reactionary f(wemen and super- The effect of these measures was visors was then started, a move- felt at once. They brought to No. 2 ment, however, directed along the Mill a hitherto unknown stability lines of criticism and re-educatiYin. within a . few weeks. And this Workers were encouraged to raise stability, in turn, was the first step criticism at a whole series of meet- in the transformation of the mill ings held by every department. The from a bureaucratic' capitalist con- results were' cer, u to a New Democratic enter- hopeful. Most prise. Overcoming Obstacles of the reaction- ary elements agreed to The next step was to raise the change their workers' political and technical ways, and went level. This was imperative if real of f together productive energies were. to be with some of the activists to released and the factory 'was to attend training classes in basic work in harmony. In May, five Marxism, the class derivation of months after Liberation, the textile their 'old concepts, working style mill began to introduce the system and New Democracy. of democratic factory management, At the same time, five workers, designed tp meet these needs, with well-liked by their fellow-workers the organisation of a management and each with 20 or more years of committee to which the workers experience, were promoted to be elected their own representatives. technicians in charge of certain Many difficulties faced the new departments. The mill's engineers committee. They came firstly gave them special training courses from the activities of the rag-tag in their new duties. And these reactionary elements through whom promotions from among their own bureaucratic capital had..oneo, ruled group, coupled with the attack on the workers. , In order to preserve the old forces, were a great en- the enterprise as an integral couragement to other workers. whole at the time of Liberation, the Of all the old supervisors, only government policy had allowed one refused to admit his mistakes. many of these elements, reactionary He was sent home for two months foremen and supervisors, to remain to reconsider the matter thorough at their old posts. It was not long ly. When he returned, however, he before some of them began slyly still clung to his old ways, and the to sabotage production. To the mill had no option but to dismiss him. Immediately, production in the department he' once controlled went up by one yard per loom per work shift. Division Among Employees Another major obstacle which faced the committee was the divi- sion between the technical and clerical staff on the one hand and the workers on the other. These two groups had to be brought together. Technique could no more be divorced from labour than theory from practice. The KMT's counter-revolution- ary propaganda had had more effect on the staff than on the workers. The staff felt more reas- sured after Liberation, but anta- gonisms between the two groups persisted, though the forms they took were different. While in the old days the workers looked on these people as the bosses' "dog legs or "orderlies," the staff's con- tempt for the workers was now tempered a little by fear. ""The workers may have become thelead- ing class, but what do they know about mathematics or any of the sciences ?" some thought to them- selves. Others thought opportun- ism more profitable, flattering the workers, accepting all their sugges- tions, even the unwise ones. Be- cause of this, the factory inspec- tion system grew very lax and production suffered. To overcome these divisions, staff members and workers were brought together in small groups to talk out their differences. Activists, Party and trade union representatives stressed that the technical staff was really part of the broad working class and would be accepted by that class once their attitudes changed. Joint meetings of technicians, supervisors and workers considered production 'problems,. and mutual respect increased. Some of the staff were astonished at the valuable suggestions workerg made on the basis of their long practical ex- perience. - The workers, for their part, were grateful for suggestions from the staff which improved pro- duction methods, many of which led to better working conditions and higher incomes. Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release t /(% C A4-AQP82-0Q457ROO71 oQQ J Q.o lg-7 21 By May, 1950, when the three- don't. And the women workers - of the Com- month city-wide production drive they shout `lazy bones' at you, if munist Party was ipaugurated, the growing unity you don't give their work frequent and New De- between staff and workers 'was and careful' inspection." mocratic Youth evident. Even backward workers League, and As the workers came to feel more five repre- were drawn into the. production and more that the factory was drive, which not only raised the theirs, they developed a sharper s e n t a t i v e s elected among general political level of all. the interest in the activities of the to a real re- quick to the workers. workers but also led b ecame Th _ ey leaders. At monthly lease of latent initiative and crea- notice any evidences of bungling, tiveness among," them. negligence or incompetence and meetings, dir- ector and top Throughout the preceding they criticised immediately, lest the officials of the, mill reported month, , the factory was busy with set-back affect overall production. to a large number mill of elected preparations. Production norms Workers now understood the prac- workers' representatives. These in were Worked out in. detail, not tical value of mathematics, science turn reported se the entire factory simply for departments and sec- and technical training and demand- And through these could these tions but for each machine. In- ed that facilities be made available personnel. dividual and collective targets were for them to study these subjects meetings l. the A dethro cri~ agreed upon through group discus- and raise their technical level. ticise their own shortcomings and sions. Competition regulations Many new classes were opened for could receive the criticisms of the were outlined. All those surpassing them with highly skilled workers rank-and-file. Here was a channel a given norms were to be awarded and technical experts as teachers, for democratic control, making of yellow flags while those with still At a later stage in the the many little groups, each with its campaign, private interests, one working unit higher achievements were to be the workers developed a system of with united aim and united honoured red flags. A sum equal signing inter-departmental con- wrength. to 20 per cent of the factory tracts for the delivery of semi- payroll was set' aside for special processed goods. These 'contracts, monetary awards. - specifying the quality, quantity And, that big board inside the The main emphasis of the cam- and time of delivery, minimised de- factory's gate, it means many paign was placed upon rationalis- lays caused by lack of materials, things, not just production in- ing production in such a way as to and better planning was possible. creases. It means the workers save labour, cut costs and raise In terms of heightening the have come to understand that in quality. lluring the drive, the workers' political consciousness, this state-owned plant they are workers proposed a total of thirty- uniting all sections of the factory the masters, and democratic factory four major rationalisations which and developing democratic manage- management is management by the save the factory large sums ' of ment, the campaign was a success. workers. It means that workers money. One worker suggested that In terms of hard statistics, too, it and technicians, supervisors and worn-out spindles be turned upside. was a success. Cloth production, clerks, are working as one body, down, given a special finish and be for example, which in April, a he artificial divisions and old used again, thus making use of month before the campaign, reached hand tstilhe are breaking down. old thousands of high-speed steel spin- 143,57$ bolts, rose to/ 155,840 bolts means that labour is no longer a ales which might otherwise have by July. In the same period, the heavy task forced on ? men and been cast away. Others suggested percentage of first-grade Moth in- women with whips and clubs,, but certain improvements in the looms creased from 97,62 to 98.49. While a conscious act of creation to be which resulted in higher quality average production per loom in taken up with enthusiasm. cloth. KMT days never exceeded 40.5 From, this time on, to see workers yards per loom for a 1,0-hour, shift, As you turn from the board to and technicians talking over tech- it reached 46.96 yards in July, 1950. leave, some of the workers are nical problems was. `a common.. ' The production drive, spearhead- going off shift. One, Lao Chen, sight. Supervisors found workers ed in the factory by. the Democratic calls out across the courtyard. no longer resented' inspection of , Management Committee, also had' . "Are you leaving? Wait!, I'm the effect of strengthening the going too." , Together you go out their output. On the con iciest whole system of democratic man- of the gate. "Hey", he exclaims, wo ors now demanded the strictest agement. The committee adopted "don't you notice anything?" "Well inspection, for otherwise how could its present form -13 members, ?" "Why, they don't search us their work qualify for ari award? comprising the factory director, any more! You remember the One tgchniclan , amazed at the three engineers, a representative former days, every morning and change, said, "Why, you'd be from. the Tientsin Military Admini- evening? But we've put an end hated for inspecting before Libera- stration Council, the chairman of to that too. Buddha, they say, tion. After Liberation, activists the factory's trade union, two must, have incense, but man must remonstrate, ith you if you secretaries of the factory branches have dignity." Approved For Release 2001/'12/04,: CIA-RDP92-00457R007100010009-7 22 Approved For Release 20011PI10P, A-00457R007100010009-7 why Chan Yi uan Volunteered For 9 Y Korea Chiao Yu-jen The courtyard of the big cement what they turned out in a year. So combined," he told me and added, works not far from Peking was when Peking.was liberated, we re- "Do you see my point of view now?" alive with moverpent. One -shift fused to leave with the KMT, he asked; "In our neighbourhood, of workers was clocking on and ex- though we didn't really expect a new textile factory is going up. changing quips with others who much change. We were too much There is no question of starvation were coming off work. The huge in. the dark, and unemployment now. More and chimney belched a thick brown "But this time, things turned out more workers will get new jobs." smoke. A train fully loaded with different. About the middle of "What about "No bags of cement whistled shrilly as your wages?" bags ofd em. December, a military man dressed question," he said, "I live much in plain cotton-padded clothes turn- better now. With the wage I earn To Chang Yi-yuan, it was part ed up at our factory. He told I can buy two and half times the of his everyday life. I could see, us to keep the factory in good goods that I could before. It is not as he had shown me round, that he order and gave us an hour's poll- only enough to feed my family of knew this placeinside out and loved +;,...i .-.. ,,wU~ ua+tcu i+uu wuy lie x,ttu how we began to learn what was to save a little." volunteered to fight in Korea and happening. He told us starva- He took me to his home, ten he had paused before he replied. tion and unemployment would minutes' walk from the factory, "It's not easy for me to tell never trouble us again. He said one of a row of neat brick cottages you," he finally answered. "I think we were the masters of the factory that was formerly reserved for the -you'll only fully understand if I tell now. It was all strange to us at technicians and higher office you something of my life in the first, workers. ' Formerly, the. csianual past. That,.and our life today, is "By April 15 last year, produc- workers had to live in hovels in the what decided- me." He deliberated tion was going ahead. Many of nearby village. as he looked around the works. k h our wor ers w o had been dismiss- The management has built SO "I've been here ever since it was ed by the KMT returned to the new dwellings for married workers built by the Japs ten years ago. factory. This impressed me more and, in addition, there are special Same kilns, same boiler, same than anything else. `The Com- quarters for unmarried workers, buildings and even many of the munists are not telling lies, they with a canteen and bathrooms. ??^e n B t wh t di e me . u a a ffer nce aivn nc wnnlr T +1,nn-1,+ now: . "Ten years ago, we were recruit- No. 1 Kiln Chang Yi-yuan's wife who made us ed by the Japanese not as workers, "On May Day last year, the mili- a meal, including meat and food but slaves,, real slaves. All the tary representative called on us to made of good flour. The house was foremen and skilled workers were restore the No. 1 kiln which had neat and cosy with a dining room Japanese, let alone the technicians. lain idle for five years. I got my that is also used as a. living room, They beat us. .We earned starva- brigade together and we volunteer- a bedroom and a kitchen. He told toin wages, scarcely enough to keep ed for the job. I really don't know me that the rent, electricity and alive. But there was no choice. where I drew my courage. But you 'piped water were all free of charge. "Before see, we turned out a smart job. On In addition, the management had I .d here I was a July 1, the kiln started to work. suplied them with furniture. year in, year out, tenant. I drudged me drudged for the landlord e Four kilns working all together! As I entered the door, his little I couldn't t save av a -The Japanese never' dared to try, son aged about eight was leaning was all catty gram. So, you see, i yet we did it. What a marvel! against a table, reciting lessons. the same; a slave the e We all felt as though we had been Chang told me his son was studying farm or 'in, the factory. When I - school, into the future I could see re-born." at the primary jointly run nothing but 'darkness. Chang Yi-yuan smiled proudly. by the factory and the railway "Then He led. me round the No. 1 kiln and centre. Schooling is free.. I noticed the KMT came. For us it gave e a piece of coloured glass. a new. coat hanging on the wall of was just the same as before if not , Through the holes of the kiln I saw worse. Those, gangsters didn't the raw meal squirting. "By know what they were doing at all. the end of this month, we will have They spoiled the machines and produced in this factory in 11 turned everything into mess. Half months as much cement as was the workers were sacked. It takes turned out in four years and three us one month today to produce months by the Japanese and KMT the living room. Chapg bought it 1a'st month out. of his savings.' He later took me to the factory clinic where both the workers and their families enjoy free medical care, to the co-operative where they can buy daily necessities at Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 a - Approved For Release ft6titiOt:giitg~DP82-00457ROO7100010009-7 .,reduced prices, the small library and their club, all built since libera- tion, Chang told me. he factory dramatic group was well-known in the surrounding villages. It has even given performances of two plays, written.'by the workers them- selves, in the Peking Working People's Palace of Culture. Warrior's Heart "Do you see now why I; volun- teered? he " asked. "Under the KMT. no man in his right mind would volunteer to fight. But I've got, something to fight for now. I'm a free, man. If I die to keep war away from my country, I'll die proudly. "Mind you, it took me seine time to decide. I did not give much thought to what was happening in Korea till recently. I did not think it was my: business. . And I just could not believe the Americans were so inhuman. "But then they crossed the 38th Parallel and more and. more evid- ence came of how they were wiping out old and young, men, woman and children. ' I heard of the attacks on,our own Northeast, my blood began to boil. "Even then, I still thought my place was here in the factory, pushing `up production. I've been elected a model worker. Our cement has helped to rebuild the railways all the way from Mukden to Canton, Much of the materials used to widen and beautify the roads in Peking and build new seweys come from, here. I'mnot :I youngster and, I thought, so long a~ my production chart goes up, I'm doiflg my share. ",Then the, America,lis started knifing towards our borders. We rfiad? the statement of our Foreign Ninister Chou?En-lai and discussed it. We began to realise how serious things were. "We held a meeting. in our fac- tory. I know all the lads. I know what goes on in their minds. Feng cheng-sheng, who is a young .Com- munist, was first to get up and speak. `The factory belongs to us, workers. It is our rice-bowl,' he said. 'The whole country is ours. here , is, this fighting going to end? Shall we wait till they start what we all 'have, and what we ar today, our life, work, studies, train- ini, our homes, are all due to Chair- man Mao Tsi-tung and the Com- munist Party. As a Communist,,it is my duty to go to Korea. We must, stop the fighting there. We must have peace to build up Our country.' "Su Shang-wu of the boiler de- partment spoke next. His life was a hard one in the old days. He was a, poor peasant. The landlord put his mother and brother in prison and only let them out on condition Su went into the army. Su said, 'I've been beaten and insulted enough. We can't have the old kind of life back again. It breaks my heart to see what they're doing to the Koreans. I know how to handle a gun, and a machine grin too, and other weapons. I'm a good shot. And if I die, I'll die willingly to safeguard our new, good life.' "Next came young Tsao Yang. He had been the most cunning draft dodger I've ever known. 'I used to run away from any, fight- ing,' he admitted. 'But this time I want to run right into it. I. never want to have hide agaili. I know what I'm doing. I want to go, even if I have to get killed so that the American money bags are kept out.' "What impressed me most was when our foreman, Yang Mou, got up. , He's 31 and has eight people in his family dependent on him. All the bitterness of his past life came out as he spoke and you could hear a pin drop. He had been a child worker in a knitwear factory. At 18, he was conscripted into the Japanese puppet police force. He ran away and finally became an apprentice fireman in our bailer room. He once fell asleep through overwork and was handcuffed, made to kneel on a piece of wood and hold another piece of wood above his head while a Japanese lashed his bare back with a, whip, threatening from time to time to shoot him. "Yang said quietly, 'I would rather die myself now, so that my family can remain free, so that all our workers and our factory can be protected, so that all our people can be protected. I think all work- ers, even those that have not volun. teered for individual considerations, have the same opinion.' "I tell you it shook me, I went Home and that night I could hardly sleep.. I kept thinking of the grand life that we were beginning to live and how it was all threatened by the American imperialist war. "In. the morning I read in the paper the statement of all the de- mocratic parties of the country. That settled it for me. I told my wife I wanted to go to Korea. To my joy, she said she understood. She even seemed proud of me. She said she. would find work in the textile. mill and keep the home going. I went straight to the -trade union centre and registered as a ,.,:volunteer,." Not everyone in this factory has volunteered to go to Korea. Some have over-riding family or other good reasons. And not all that volunteered will be able 'to get awa'. But I had found the answers to the question that was in my mind when I went down to this important cement works - what made. up the fine spirit of this factory, with its unusual ? production record, its model workers, its large number of volunteers. Slogans around the fac- tory that expressed this spirit caught my attention as I took a final look round. In the boiler room was the pledge: "We will work in with the kilns to achieve our new targets. We guarantee not a single drop of oil will be wasted. No breakdowns, major or minor." In the courtyard was a sign: "The kilns are our can- nons, the' mills our machine guns. The faster they turn, the more the enemy trembles," and at the gate, the slogan that is now a common sight everywhere in China: "STOP THE AMERICANS, HELP THE KOREANS AND SAFEGUARD OUR Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 24 Approved For Release 2001/fk8f LA-MfA 00457R007100010009-7 Chinese and Koreans Fought the Japanese Too Chang Chao This Js not the first time that Korean and Chinese patriots have battled together against invaders of their countries. Their joint guerrilla warfare was a thorn in the side of the Mikado's armies throughout the 1931-45 Japanese invasion of China. After Korea was annexed by the Japanese in 1905, thousands of Korean patriots and revolutionaries found sanctuary in China. And when the imperial armies pushed on into Mukden on Sept. 18, 1931, those in the N orthcast were among the first to take up arms in defence of their adopted country. In those first few months they joined the revolt of the Chinese population of the Chientao district; they cutthe Tunghwa-Kirin Railway. At tai- yuan, they destroyed the Japanese police headquarters. But in those early days, the Northeast guerrillas were poorly organised and ` had little military knowledge. Betrayed by the KMT government, they suf- fered heavy defeats. Some detach- ments were wiped out to a man. Those that tsurvived were forced to separate into small groups based in remote areas - the Forest and Mountain Detachments. It was out of these unco-ordinat- ed bands that the Chinese Com- munist Party forged the heroic Anti-Japanese United Democratic Armies (the AJUDA) and gradual- ly enrolled the masses of the people in a widespread rear organisation and reserve for mobile guerrilla warfare. By the 'end of 1932, the movement had recovered from its early defeats. It became a force that pinned down large enemy forces until the day of Japan's final defeat. A year after its formal inauguration in 1936, the AJUDA had ? three Route Armies 90,000 strong, in which the Korean patriots 'played an outstanding role. Kim II-sung was once a Divisional Commander. Kim Tze was Political Com- missar of the Third Route Army. Many other divisional commanders and commissars were also Koreans. The famous Rock Guerrilla Detach- ment, predecessor of the First Route Army based in Liaoning Province, was led by Li Hung-kwang, an outstanding Korean Communist who later met his death in battle. As the First Route Army, with Li as its Chief-of- Staff, it inflicted heavy punishment- on the Japanese in the Po Li River area. Its fame- spread. Many Northeast railway workers joined it and became noted experts at railway demolition work. On more than one occasion it carried opera- tions up to the very walls of Mukden, the main Japanese-held city, and finally became so trouble- some to the invaders that the im- perial staff in the autumn of 1937 decided to destroy it in a major campaign with over 7,000 crack troops. The First Route Army suffered heavily, but 400 survivors broke through the encirlement and re- treated to the banks of the Yalu River on Korea's border. From this new base, aided by tough Chinese and Korean lumbermen of. the Changpai forests, it interfered con- tinually with ' Japanese, timber shipments and permanently en- gaged a large Japanese punitive force. It was from among the men of this Army that General Kim Il- sung in 1936 led his Sixth Division to carry the struggle over the border into North Korea. When Yang Ching-yu, commandet of the First Army, was killed in action, the Army rallied around General Kim Il-sung. The First Army was in being and harassing the Japan- ese to the end of the war. Under General Kim's leadership, under- ground revolutionary work was organised in the vital centres of Japanese rule in Korea so that when the Soviet Armies launched their liberation offensive, against the Japanese in Northeast China and Korea, the Korean people's movement was able, along with the Northeast volunteers, to give sub- stantial assistance to the Soviet forces and establish the people's rule in the liberated areas. In Kirin's eastern mountains, Korean revolutionaries formed the basic core of the East Manchurian Guerrilla Detachment. Later, joined with the guerrilla detach- ments which had been forced to retreat from central area of North- east China, they formed the Second AJUDA Route Army, a force that became noted for its intrepid raids on Japanese communications. It was the fear of this close and effec- tive co-operation between the two peoples that decided the Japanese command to wipe out the whole guerrilla area. On the basis -of its notorious "Three-All Policy" of "Kill All, Burn All, Loot A111" villages suspected of hiding guer- rillas were razed to the ground. The men folk were killed or driven off to slave labour on the northern Approved For Release 2001/1'2/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 2 11 5: CLU P82-00457R007100010009-7 fortifications. Women and children were herded into stockaded con- centration camps? or sold as slaves to factories or houses of prostitu- tion. On the approach of Japanese troops, whole villages fled from their homes.to the hills and forests. The guerrillas, however, were ineradicable, for they were the im- mortal people. They turned re- treats into advances. _ Hard pressed in China, in 1.943, with their gallant commander And political commissar killed, the ' 2nd Army despatched the Korean comrades under their commander Ching Tse-tseng into Korea, where they engaged the Japanese garrisons until the end of the war. Thousand: of Koreans were among the more than 160,000 fighters of the AJUD~A units and militiamen who, after 14 years of constant battle, co-operated in the advance, of the Soviet Armies against the Japanese and celebrated V-J Day under victorious arms. When the war ended, many of those Korean com~ades ieturned to their own liberated land while others planned to stay in the North- east. Under the People's Govern- ment, they received their share of land under the land reform and began their lives anew. But still another trial awaited them. The United Democratic Armies of the Northeast and the People's Government were in effective con- trol of the strategic Northeast. The Kuomintang, aided and insti- gated by the Americans, poured in tropps by ship and plane to wipe out the people's forces and restore the Chiang dictatorship. The peo- ple's forces fought back. Chinese and Korean guerrillas put on their uniforms again. In the ensuing War of Liberation, 'Koreans and Chinese fought side by side on every major 1 battlefield of the. Northeast and many Korean demo- crats later 'aided the PLA on its victorious advance from North to South China. Throughout Korea and China and in Northeast China especially, this comradeship-in-arms of - the two peoples has left an ineffaceable tradition. "We two peoples are as close as lips and teeth," say the peasants of the Yalu valleys. The legendary tales of the campaigns are common to* both sides of the border. The people of the North- east are as proud of their. Korean heroes as of their own. If the American invaders in Korea still want to know what kind of people they are trying to sup- press, they would do well to read the history of the campaign of the AJUDA. Its fighters, men and women, gave countless examples of heroism. Many of the girl fighters whose tragic story is told in the film "Daughters of China" were Koreans. The Korean heroine Kim Tong-san could lay mines as well as she could sew. She derailed many enemy trains. Now shg is a labour heroine in production. Out- numbered ten to one, the Korean commander Li Kwang-lin and his men fought to their last bullet and then with their bare hands until not a man remained alive. Name- less, because all her family had been wiped out by the Japanese, a Korean girl singer and, dancer of the Chientao region People's Enter- tainment . Troupe fell into the Japanese hands. Even under threat of death, this eight-year-old child refused to betray her friends and perished shouting the slogan "Down with the Japanese im- perialists!" The battles against the Japanese invaders and the U.S.-supported Chiang, Kai-shek clique were by no means the only time Korean and Chinese democrats fought side by side. Korean revolutionaries, like the Korean people in general, have for centuries regarded China with a special feeling of kinship. Since 25 the enslavement of their own coun- try by Japan, they have looked to China's liberation as the herald of their own. Korean revolutionaries took part in the overthrow of the Manchu dynasty,, in the Northern Expedition of the Great Revolution in 1925-27 and in the struggles of the Agrarian Revolution. But it was in the joint battles against the Japanese and Chiang-American forces that they built up those especially close relations of mutual regard 'that have become an exam- ple of revolutionary international- ism in the Asian peoples' struggle for freedom from a common im- perialist foe. These two peoples have learned well the lessons of those times. Fourteen years of struggle taught them the need and invincibility of unity. Peasants of the Yalu River valleys say: "If the lips are gone, the teeth will suffer from the cold." So the people of the Northeast needed no urging when the new invasion of Korea threatened the freedom of their neighbours and their own hearths and homes. Followed by the rest of the Chinese people, they have volunteered in their tens of thousands for service with the Korean People's Army. Such are the present opponents of the American invaders in Korea. They will not be cowed by atrocities, such as the U.S. forces and their puppets are now. perpe- trating. They have been steeled in battles with a foe just as atrocious. In addition, the guerrillas of yes- terday are now armed with weapons as good as those of their enemies. But neither technique nor terror will decide this war. The men behind the weapons will do that. The joint struggles of the Korean and Chinese people in the past show the quality of the, fighters who man the jets and rocket-guns that are decimating the latest invaders of Asia's main- land. Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 2001x-00457R007100010009-7 A LETTER FROM A RETURNED STUDENT Dear Editor, This morning I volunteered to fight against the American in- vaders in Korea. Thousands have volunteered before me and still more will do so in the future. Many are already fighting on the battlefront. I am one of the many students who have recently returned from the United States. _ I always loved my country, but never have I loved it so much as I do now, after having seen the many wonderful changes which have taken place during my absence. The first people I met in New China were a group of sailors on the tugboat that took me from the freighter. to the wharf at Taku Bar. How they welcomed me back! They said to me, "We are con- structing a new country. Here is your chance. Make good use of what you have learned in the university." Then they went on to tell me about their. life after liberation. "Yes," remarked one sailor, "you will be surprised to find how many things have changed in so short a time." ' "I have an extremely large family to support," said another, "but now even our family can live happily. . . . You know," he co4i- tinued, "this month we decided to unload twice as much as before and we.are working doubly hard to overfulfil our target." One of the sailors handed me a book on the history of the Chinese revglution. "This is our textbook. Besides the literacy classes, we read and discuss this book and have ses- sions of criticism and self-criticism to improve our political conscious- Hess." On the train from Taku Bar to Tientsin, I sat next to an old peas- ant and his grand-daughter. All the way he kept commenting on the crops on both sides of the track. "See how well the kaoliang has grown. A few more rainless days and this will surely be a bumper crop. The PLA have done it again, you know," he said to me. "They cleared away the ruins of the Kl1tT fortresses, ploughed the field, dug an irrigation canal, and planted the seeds - all in three days. . . " Fearing that perhaps I wasn't interested, his grand-daughter ex- plained, "Grandpa used to curse the troops -the Japs, the Amer- icans, the KMT gangsters, and a lot of others whose names I don't remember. But how he loves to talk about the PLA !" The old man smiled and went on: "Why shouldn't I talk about the PLA? Several years ago, I was one of the coolies drafted to work on this road. Now I ride on it -a thing I wouldn't even dare dream of before. Last winter in the land reform my two sons each got five snow of land. Now we are doing fine. We can afford to go to Tientsin to see your Third Uncle - he's doing well as a factory hand in the No. 7 Mill of the China Tex- tile Corporation. Eh, can I talk too much about our liberators?" Here in Peking the transforma- tion is remarkable. I have a feel- ing that the whole city pulsates with new life. The cadres who work harder than everyone else live more simply than others. Then there are the workers who work from morning till night in every part of the city clearing away the rubbish left through decades of neglect. New streetcars . . . new roads . new people. Above all, there was the mammoth October 1st parade in which the whole city joined to celebrate the National Day. Can there be any doubt that a new country has been born? As a newcomer to Peking, I con- stant ' ly feel the urge to ask my- self: Was it like this before? Have I ever seen a Chinese city without ;a single beggar as today in Peking? Have I ever picked up a newspaper and read. articles by high ranking officials which go into serious ,and detailed self-criticism as in the People's Daily? I could go on indefinitely asking myself such questions. And the answer- always a simple NO. 'A's for the "American way of life" I witnessed, my main impres- sions are of jobless young men sit- ting on park benches, weary-look- ing workers reading comic strips in subways, drunks inside a bar hovering around a television set watching some stupid or corrupt- ing program, and schoolboys gossip- ing to each other about Superman and western cowboys. Today no people are so hated by the Chinese as the American im- perialists. Ask the man on the street what he thinks of the Ameri- can invaders and he will tell you in no uncertain terms. Often you will find he himself or his friends or relatives have suffered through American business dealings, bombs' or troops. But even more i~ his hatred directed against the Ameri- can imperialists for the fact that they will not let us alone to get on with our peaceful construction. Three months -of life in New China -have -given me a new strength and new faith in my coun- try. Like all my countrymen, I feel now that this country is ours. No one is going to destroy it. We will fight for the beautiful future be- fore us. Dear Editor, I am leaving for the Korean front in a few days. There I may fight Will, Bob and other American boys whom I knew as friends in the States. But do I hesitate? No. I'll fight them to the bitter end, so long as they serve as the tools of an imperialism Which threatens to plunder and enslave our country. Sincerely ;yours, P. W. LIN Peking, Nos'ember 16, 1950. Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Approved For Release 2 S Q R14P82-00457R007100010009-7 CURRENT CHINA Nov. 11- 25,'1950 M World Peace Congress The Chinese delegation to the ,World Peace Congress in. Warsaw 'issued on Nov. 24 a statement on behalf of their country, pledging full support for the Congress Mani- 'fest9, the new World Peace Council and its proposals to the U.N. The five proposals of the Chinese people's peace mandate were sub- 'mitted to the Congress by Kuo Mo- jo, head of the Chinese delegation, .in his warmly applauded speech to the Congress on Nov. 18. The Congress proceedings have been widely publicised in China. ',Democratic parties. and ponular organisations all sent greetings to the Congress and also protested to the British government which pre- 'vented the Congress from being ,held in Sheffield. The collection of signatures for ,the Stockholm appeal, which wound up in China on the day of the open- ing of the Congress: reached a total of 223,739.545 or ove- 47 per cent of the whole population of China. ,,Service. Teams for Ka-'ea Accusation meetings against the American aggressors have been held by people in factories, villages, schools and institutions throughout v China. Letters are pouring in to ;the editorial offices of the leading newspapers from workers, profes- sore, housewives, wounded soldiers and returned students from. the U.S.A. From their own ex- periences, they denounce U.S. brutalities witnessed during the KMT days and expose the aggres- sive nature of American imperial- ism. Meanwhile, non-combatant ser- , vice teams of blood donors, stret- cher bearers, nurses and enter- `tainers are, being organised by workers and students in Peking, Changchun `and other places for volunteer duties in Korea. The Chinese People's Committee for World Peace and against Approved Wu Hsiu-chuan in New York Wu Hsiu-chuan, special de- legate of China to the U.N. meeting, arrived in New Yoi1'kk on Nov. 24, with his adviser Chiao Kuan-hua and seven members of the delegation. The Chinese delegate will be present to discuss his coun- try's charge of American aggression in Taiwan and also the Soviet charge of U.S. aggression against China. On arrival Wu expressed the hope that China's charge "will receive just treatment in the Security Council. If so, it will be helpful to peace and security in the Pacific and in Asia." French . Air Intrusions During the 61 days from Sept. 1 to Oct. 31, a total of 120 French planes intruded into China's terri- torial air on 50 occasions in the region of the frontier areas of the three provinces of Kwangtung, Kwangsi and Yunnan, bordering on Viet-Nam, says a statement by the .spokesman of the Ministry of For- eign Affairs published on Nov. 23. French land forces made 13 incur- sions into Chinese territory during the same period. According to in- .complete data, 33 Chinese citizens were killed and 20 severely injured by the raiding of French planes and attack of the French land forces. The statement also revealed that between Dec.-14, 1949, and Aug. 31, 1950, French land forces crossed into Chinese territory on 25 occa- sions while the French air forces made 18 incursions. There were 37 casualties, over 14 of which were fatal. The spokesman stated that the French government must bear full responsibility for these savage acts; that the Chinese people's defence forces have been ordered to deal heavy counter blows to the intruders and that the government has lodged a firm protest with the French government, reserving the right to demand compensation for the losses sustained and to make other relevant demands. INTERNATIONAL American Aggression is daily re- ceiving coiAributions for the KPA and the Chinese people's volun- teers-huge numbers of gift parcels containing towels, socks, gloves, cigarettes, soap and otter articles. Young Pioneers of Nan- king are contributing their pocket money to buy a tank for the volun- teers. Japanese War Criminals The Chinese People's Government has received from the Soviet Government a copy of its Nov. 19 Note to the U.S.A. protesting against the unwarranted release of arch-war criminal Mamoru Shige- mitsu. Foreign Minister Chou En-lai in a statement issued on Nov. 23 supported the just stand of the Soviet government. He stated that the 'U.S. government will to held fully responsible for all consequences resulting from MacArthur's unauthorised release of Japanese war criminals. Tsai Chang, president of the All- China Federation of Democratic Women, cabled French Premier .Plevin 'protesting against the illegal trial of Mme. Cotton, , Vice- .,Chairman of the World Peace Con- gress and Chairman of the WIDF. Young people in the major cities of China marked World Youth Day on Nov. 10 and International Students' Day on Nov. 17 with intensified activities against U.S. aggression and in defence of world peace. For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 28 Approved For Release 2001 -00457ROO7100010009-7 Patriotic Emulation Drive A nation-wide patriotic emula- tion drive is surgfng through the factories of China. The campaign, initiated by model worker Chao Kuo-yu of the No. 3 Machine Tool factory, is the workers' answer: to American aggressions in Korea and the Northeast. In Northeast China, the 200,000 railway workers have pledged themselves to fulfil all transport assignment under all conditions. Responding to the challenge, workers of the Mukden Tele-cam- munications Administration have guaranteed speedier and more ac- curate service under all conditions. Workers in a Tientsin electric furnace shop have overfulfilled their production plan for the year by 7 per cent two months ahead of schedule. Together with other Tientsin workers, they have written to Chairman Mao expressing their deep anger at America's aggres- sions and their determination, to do their part to defeat the enemy. The coke furnace workers of Taiyuan have created a new record by completing 180 per cent of their production schedule for October. They have challenged other fac- tories in Taivuan to-a friendly corn- petition. The Shanghai Electrical Appliances Plant fulfilled this year's production plan for trans- formers by the end of October. It has now already overfulfilled the plan by 11 per cent. Here and There The All-China "Conference on Dramatic Arts opened in Peking on Nov. 25 to discuss the reform of the Chinese classical opera. An Exhibition of Theatrical Art open- ed on the same day. A movement is spreading through the universities in ' Peking to boy- cott the "Voice of AmericiV' as' a source of rumours` and slanders. Meanwhile, Lavrenyev's play Voice of America has had its first per- formance in Peking. A Soviet cultural delegation led by N. Golosen, Vice-President of the Arts Committee of the Council of Ministers of the USSR, and R. Gulainoz, Vice-Ohairman of the Council of Minister of the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic, arrived in China on Nov. 21 to exchange experiences with Chinese workers in the fields of literature and art. Stalin's article Concerning Mar- xism in Linguistics was discussed here recently at a p eethig spon- sored by the Academia Sinica. #Land Reform Under Way During the slack farming season in the nextfew months, land reform --including the taking over of land from the landlord and distributing it among the peasantry-will take place over 'a big part of China, including a total rural population of over 100 million people. Preparations are well under way, as shown in the reports from two major areas. East China In the four and a half months since-the-new Land Reform Law, cadres both in the countryside and towns have worked hard to master its principles and pre- pare to apply it. It has been received with the deepest ap- proval and. enthusiasm. Experiments in 370 hsiang (each comprises several villages) have provided valuable experi- ence of the problems likely to arise. Peasant associations, the executive organs for the carry- ing through of land reform, have been playing a leading part in building up a broad anti- feudal united front. Not only farm labourers and poor peas- ants, but middle peasants, poor intellectuals and all other demo- cratic elements are drawn-in. Land reform committees to guide the work have been set up in each administrative unit, from the county upwards, with representatives of all democra- tic classes and parties. People's tribunals are established to ad- minister justice, should any die- hard landlord attempt to sabo- tage. A telephone network links every county with the higher administrative organs. Over 100,000. cadres are ready to weigh in, .: after intensive .training in policy and practice, including both local cadres, familiar with their localities, and experts in the details of policy and the law. University and middle school students of Shanghai, Nanking, Hangchow and other cities have enlisted by the thousand to join in the work during their winter vacation. Actors, drama .teams, writers, cartoonists and trou- badours from all centres in the area are preparing to join the villagers and play their part in helping the peasantry to ward off the 3,000 years of landlord oppression. By March, 1951, some 50 million rural folk will have the first experience of the great benefits of this movement. Added to the parts of East China where land reform has al- ready been completed, this will mean that between 80 to 86 per cent of the rural population in East China will be free of the restrictive feudal landownership system. Northwest China In the newly liberated North- west, land distribution will take place in an area with 7,600,000 people, mainly in the fertile Central Shensi plain and part of . Kansu and Ningsia. Peasant associations in the area have grown to it total membership of 800,000. They have gained strength in the course of establishing social order and applying social re- forms during the past months, including wiping out the KMT remnants, exposing local despots and reducing rents. Some 15,000 cadres-young intellectuals as well as peasant leaders -have completed one to three months' training, studying the relevant laws and policy, in- cluding the Decisions Concern- ing the Differentiation of Class Status in the Countryside. . Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 --------------------------------------------------------- Approved For Release 2P : M1.P82-00457R007100010009-7 INTO THE BOOTS OF JAPANESE IMPERIALISM (Contsnuea from t'aye 11) the mainland from 1945 to 1949, the American im- perialists lavished over US$6,000,000,000 on the Chiang regime. It was'the Pentagon's plan to equip 75 divisions of Chiang Kai-shek's forces by 1950. ,The United States had fully armed 64 divisions,. 18 special road police columns, 20 security police regi- ments, and one paratroop corps before the end of January, 1947. Under a single agreement of June 28, 1946, the U.S. undertook to furnish Chiang with over a thousand planes, 7,000 field guns and other military equipment. And as late as November, 1949, under a secret agreement with the Chiang remnants on Taiwan, the U.S. was still undertaking to furnish equipment for five divisions of puppet troops, together with 16. war vessels, radar equipment and additional planes while another US$150,000,000 of "economic aid" was granted. More Kicks Than Halfpence --Acheson Such "assistance," however, had to be paid for. And Chiang, in his turn, was lavish with property and rights of. the Chinese people. Under the Sino- American, Treaty of Friendship, Commerce and Navigation of November 4, 1946, the Americans were given a stranglehold on China's economy, through their control of customs' legislation, rights of inland navigation, and of investment. U.S. control was further extended to China's air through arrange- ments for the extension of U.S. air lines under the Sino-American Air Transport Agreement. Military bases dominating China and threatening the USSR were also pledged to, the. U.S. So far as he was able, Chiang Kai-shek obediently turned China into a colony of the USA, putting its vast resources of manpower, and natural wealth at their disposal to further? their aggressive expansionist schemes of .world domination in Asia. These vast imperialist schemes, however, were overturned by the democratic Chinese people. Despite the aid of their U.S. advisers, the 8,000,000 American equipped troops -of Chiang Kai-shek were routed by the People's Liberation Army in 'a series of brilliant campaigns. Huge quantities of U.S. arms were cap- tured to equip the people's forces. The American imperialists no longer bother to maintain the fiction of their non-intervention in the civil war in China. Acheson in his notorious White Paper excuses his own failure by opining that "the failure of the Chinese Nationalist Government . . . does not stem from inadequacy of American aid." He admits that the Chiang regime was too rotten to save. It "had lost the popular support," Acheson sags euphemistically. He might have added that the Chinese people repudiated the Chiang regime as it was a corrupt tool of American imperialism. As Acheson wrote to Truman on July 30, 1949, 29 was beyond the control of the Government of the United States." If the American imperialists had drawn the logical conclusion from the catastrophe in China, they would indeed have "pulled out lock, stock and barrel." But the logic of the imperialists is not the logic of the people. Their defeat has set them seeking new, and even more adventurous means of regaining their lost posi- tions in Asia. Realising that the Central People's Government enjoys the fullest confidence and support of the people and has established a strong, efficient and stable regime that prevents the success of any plots initiated inside continental China, the U.S. 'expan sionists have reverted to the old imperialist policy of encirclement. This was tried, and failed, against the young USSR, but, given a new name today - "containment" - it is now being tried again, this time against a vast area that. includes no less than half the world's population. With this aim in view, the American imperialists have helped to establish a string of puppet regimes around China's borders - the Syngman Rhee clique in Korea, the Yoshida Government in Japan, Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan, the "phantom Emperor" Bao Dai in Indo-China, Phibul Songramm in Siam and Quirino in the Philippines. The Place to Begin is Korea - Acheson Developing this strategy and in an attempt to strengthen and even advance these exterior lines, the U.S, launched the attack on the Korean people on June 25, through the hands of its puppet Syng- man Rhee: Two days later, it announced that its Seventh Fleet had been despatched to prevent the liberation of Taiwan by the Chinese People's Army. Their defeats in Korea increased the desperation of the Wall Street imperialists. They became even more open and reckless in adventures which previous- ly they had tried to camouflage. They did not even trouble to get a U.N. "resolu- tion" to cover their intervention in Taiwan, and their aggression becomes daily more open. Ameri- can news agencies report that in addition to the 250 U.S. tanks sent to Chiang Kai-shek on Taiwan (reported on Jan. 3, 1950), further supplies includ- ing air force units have been sent and large numbers of "retired" American, officers are arriving together with some 4,000 Japanese experts under the com- mand of the war criminal Hiroshi 'Nemoto, recently released :by MacArthur.. MacArthur, who appears to consider himself imperialist America's Man of Destiny in Asia, already speaks of Taiwan as "an integral part of. American defence in the Pacific." But in addition to these provocative acts of occupying an island province that is by history and solemn international, agreements indisputably re- garded as Chinese, the Truman Administration has now carried its aggression in Korea up to the very borders of China and beyond. A spokesman of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Chinese People's Government has listed no less than 88 plus 28 viola- Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 the ominous result of the civil war in China 8o Approved For Release 2001-00457R007100010009-7 tions of the air frontiers of the People's Republic of China between November 10 and 14. In these raids, bombs and' machine-gunning have killed and wounded scores of Chinese citizens and destroyed considerable property. Thee statements of American commanders and official spokesmen have become more and more provocative and aggressive. A spokesman of MacArthur expresses doubts whether the Yalu is really the natural boundary between Korea and China; MacArthur himself talks darkly about the volunteers from China having a "bomb- free base.' a We have seen that Marshall, once again recalled to active planning in the U.S. headquarters, and other U.S. warmongers know well the importance of the northeastern provinces- to China's economy and security. General Wedemeyer, after Marshall's. de- parture from China, stressed this again when in his report to Truman of September, 1947, he proposed that these Chinese provinces be detached and placed under the trusteeship of the U.S.-doininated United Nations. This report was suppressed at the time for fear of the unfavourable reactions of world opinion, but the American ambitions it too brazenly expressed have, far from being suppressed, been encouraged in the highest circles among Wall Street's agents in Washington. The Progress of Imperialism - Acheson Today the movements of American expansion in Asia are making the Chinese people and political commentators throughout the world recall to mind the dictums first expressed in the notorious Tanaka Memorial to the Japanese Emperor that was dis- closed in 1927: "to conquer the world, Japan must first -conquer Asia; and to conquer Asia, Japan must first conquer China; to conquer China, Japan must first conquer Manchuria; to conquer Manchuria, Japan must first conquer Korea. . ." It requires no great effort of imagination to read America for Japan and see how the cap fits. ,: The U.S. imperialists in the post-war world have shown themselves to be the arch enemy of the Chin- ese people. They have not scrupled to: use the most reactionary, corrupt and bloody instruments in their attempts to dominate China. In their new attempt to interfere and retard China's peaceful construction by direct aggression against Taiwan and the Northeast, they-have once again called to aid the putrid rem- nants of the Chiang regime and the foulest reaction- aries in Asia and -among the Japanese fascists. E The fact that imperialist America still attempts to disguise her aggressions . against Taiwan, Korea and China's Northeast with the cloak of illegal U.N. decisions cannot deceive the Chinese people who are grown wise to such' deceptions. They have already solemnly warned these aged Caesars seeking Asian empires. Warnings, however, have failed to make the aggressor pause. Chinese volunteers fighting in the ranks of the KPA have already dealt heavy blows to the aggressor. This has had a somewhat sobering effect on the warmongers. IM U more such lessons are needed, there is no doubt that the Korean and Chinese people, supported by the mighty democratic peace camp, headed by the Soviet Union, will know what to do. CHINA'S VOICE AT WORLD PEACE CONGRESS (Continued from Page 7) people. But they are oppressed and threatened by the American imperialists. Enough of this-we will say no more about these "great favours," for they are countless and we could not record them all. But, for the sake of comparison, let me also men- tion something of our impressions of the Soviet Union. Immediately after the victory of the Great October Revolution, the Soviet Union voluntarily proclaimed null and void all unequal treaties con- cluded with China by the tsarist government and showed constant sympathy for our people's libera- tion struggle. On the very day following the found- ing of the People's Republic of China in 1949, the Soviet Union established friendly relations with her. Subsequently, a Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship, Alliance and Mutual Assistance was concluded for the purpose of jointly preventing imperialist aggres- sion in. the East, for the joint defence of world peace and security and for unreserved mutual assistance in the economic and cultural fields on the basis of equality and reciprocity. Are these comparisons not clear enough? The Soviet Union helps the Chinese people while the United States of America helps the butcher, Chiang Kai-shek.- The Soviet Union united with China to prevent the revival of Japanese imperialism, while the United States goes all out to revive this im- perialism in order to attack us. The Soviet Union helps us in our peaceful construction 'while the United States seizes our island of Taiwan, invades our neighbours, threatens our security and destroys peace in Asia to prevent our peaceful construction. The Soviet Union in every way supports the seating of our delegates to the United Nations. The United States hampers it in every way. At the United Nations Generl Assembly, the Soviet Union submits peace proposals while the United States utilises the United Nations for effect- ing aggression. The Soviet Union is changing nature with the help of atomic energy, whereas the United States threatens the entire human race with the atom bomb. We Chinese people love peace. The fact that 223,500,000 people in China have already signed the Stockholm Appeal testifies to this. But precisely be- cause we love peace, we resolutely oppose aggression. The American imperialists are rendering all-out assistance to Chiang Kai-shek. Although they have suffered defeat in- China, they do not want to turn this lesson to good account. They continue as before to threaten peace in the East and West. We peoples of the East, defending the cause of peace, do not yield to the aggressors. We cannot step aside and Approved For Release 2001/12/04: CIA-RDP82-00457R007100010009-7 Hi 'z .8i Hi Approved For Release 20PROP/DE' remain indifferent to the sufferings of the Korean people. For the purpose of defending Asia and world peace, we must carry the struggle against American aggression to a successful conclusion. The Chinese people fully support the convoca- tion of the Second World Peace Congress. The Chinese delegation fully agrees with the proposals contained in the report made by the president of the Permanent Committee of the World Peace Congress, Joliot-Curie, particularly those concerning the United Nations. This agency, set up after the Second World War for safeguarding peace and the security of nations, has now become a screen behind which aggressors violate peace. The United Nations Charter has come to mean just so much paper. The principle of una- nimity in the Security Council is also undermined. This is precisely why the United Nations has lost its prestige. We hope that the United Nations will be able to regain its prestige, to free itself from the domination of the American imperialists, and that it will work justly and conscientiously for the benefit and security of peace-loving peoples the world over instead of doing just the opposite. To achieve this, it is necessary to observe the United Nations Charter, the principle of the una- nimity of the five great Powers, and to repeal all unlawful decisions which violate the Charter and the unanimity principle. Representatives of the five great Powers must include the legal representa- tive of the 475 million people of the Chinese People's Republic, not a pseudo-representative who is the representative of the Kuomintang gang and a mere handful of people. We hope that the United Nations will be able speedily to take the necessary steps to achieve this purpose. If eventually the United Nations is unable to justify these hopes, we shall not stand by with folded arms and watch peace throughout the world being threatened and violated. We Chinese people want to take more effective measures to safeguard world peace and the security of nations together with the British, American, French, Italian, Soviet, Polish, Viet-Namese, Korean, Mongolian and all other peace-loving peoples of the world. The Chinese people have instructed our delega- tion to put forward five proposals at this Congress. These are: 1. To end the aggression of the United States and other countries in Korea; to demand the with- drawal of all the troops of foreign aggressors from Korea; to realise a peaceful settlement of the Korean question which is the central problem in the present struggle for world peace. 2. To demand an immediate end to all and every interference by the United States in the libera- tion of Taiwan Island by the Chinese people. 3. To demand that MacArthur be branded a war instigator. He is the main organiser of aggres- sion in the Far East and the main instigator for converting the war in Korea into world war. :82-00457R007100010009-7 31 4. Resolutely to oppose the use of atomic weapons and other types of weapons of mass annihilation, and to demand that the government which is the first to use atomic weapons be regarded as a war criminal, and be punished. 5. To demand that all states simultaneously reduce armaments, to establish effective control of this program; and to suggest that the peoples of the various countries render mutual assistance in econo- mic and cultural construction under conditions of peaceful co-existence. The fate of Hitler, Mussolini, and Tojo is still fresh in our memory. Although those who cultivate the fascist plague have a short memory, the peoples of the world have not forgotten. Those who oppose the people are always punished by the people, and those whose crimes against the people are doubly grave will be doubly punished. Those who, at one and the same time, want to pursue the criminal ambitions of both Nazi Germany and Mikado Japan will receive from the people a punishment as great as that meted out to Nazi Germany and Mikado Japan combined. For a lasting world peace ! Down with the instigators of another war and imperialist aggressors! . Long live the great unity of the peace-loving peoples of all countries ! THE "SUN OF HAPPINESS" IS RISING - IN TIBET (Continued from Page 9) on the local authorities in Tibet by Colonel Young- husband's bayonets and to begin negotiations with the central government in China. By the Anglo- Russian agreement of 1907, Britain undertook not to interfere in Tibet's internal affairs or to try to secure concessions or privileges there and to conduct her relations with Tibet in future only through China. Of course, this did not stop Britain from con- tinuing her intrigue. She took advantage of the infant Chinese Republic after the 1911 Revolution and later of the corrupt Kuomintang regime to extend her position in Tibet. She erected telegraph lines, took control over the postal service, kept gar- rison troops at Gyangtze and Yatung and from 1936 onwards stationed a political mission perman- ently in Lhasa. For the people, the result was heavier taxes, higher prices and the maintenance in. position of the most reactionary rulers. In 1947, Britain formally transferred to India her so-called "rights and obligations" with respect to Tibet. But an Englishman still heads the political mission in Lhasa which is now described as an Indian mission. America Takes a Hand In Asia, as in Europe, the American and British imperialists manoeuvred for post-war pickings - even while the Soviet Union was pouring out its life and blood to defeat the fascists. In Tibet, while Amer- ican imperialism left most of the dirty work to their British satellites, it also began to take a direct hand. Approved For Reli .e?1I/U-Tt,UDP82-00457R007100010009-7 32 Approved For Release 201 Agents of the Office of Strategic Services were sent into Tibet during the war to study and make aerial surveys of the territory. In 1943, the Tibetan authorities, at the instigation of the British and Americans, suddenly inaugurated a "Bureau of Foreign Affairs," making it the sole channel of con- tact for all diplomatic bodies in Lhasa. Both the British mission and the American military mission in Lhasa immediately moved in on this "Bureau." ,The Chinese officials who were now expected to work through the new channel found themselves in a difficult situation. As the Chinese People's Liberation Army began to gain victories, the imperialists increased their efforts to cut Tibet off from China. In November. 1947, the imperialists instigated the Tibetans to send out a mission from Lhasa ostensibly to develop trade with the U.S.A. and Great Britain. Though the great powers had confirmed at the end of the war that Tibet was part of China, this "trade mission" on its arrival in India was accorded the reception usually reserved for diplomatic per- sonnel. It made contacts with American and British officials and made its way to Hongkong. There the American consulate took the unprecedented step of issuing them with visas on the basis of their own, and not Chinese, passports. The "mission" was received royally in the United States and stayed for over a year there and in. Great Britain. The Kuomintang's weak protest at this gross infringement of Chinese sovereignty was brusquely brushed aside and the puppet "mission" returned to Tibet with an aura of independent status. It is perhaps worth noting, as a passing reflection on the importance of its trading activities, that Tibet's total annual foreign trade amounts to no more than two million U.S. dollars. On July 8, 1949, the Chinese officials were ex- pelled from Tibet. The Chinese government wire- less station in Lhasaand Chinese schools were closed down. All Chinese officials and residents were order- ed to leave Tibet forthwith. When the news was allowed to come out on July 22, it was accompanied by lurid and contradictory stories of "a Communist revolt." However, as early as February, information had already leaked out in the British press that a plan to "save Tibet from Communism" was being worked out in Tibetan monasteries; and some time after the event, the London Times frankly admitted the truth that allegations of a Communist plot were made to cover up the new moves "to shake off Chin- ese control." New British and American agents began to make their appearance in Tibet. Towards the end of the year came the much publicised mission of a certain Lowell Thomas, an American "radio com- U0457R007100010009-7 mentator," bringing with him valuable gifts for Tibetan officials. The value of Thomas' protestations that his was purely the adventurous expedition of a keen explorer may be assessed from several interesting facts. On his way out, he had a talk about his mission with General MacArthur in Tokyo. On its way back from Lhasa, the Thomas party was met in Silguri, on the Indian-Chinese border, by a military plane despatched by the American Embassy in Delhi, and the American Vice Consul Bisbee went to accompany them. Back in New York, Thomas delivered himself of some rather curious remarks for a non-political explorer. "What the rulers of Tibet want to know," he said on October 17, 1949, "is whether they can get help from the United States now, or in the event of a Communist invasion. If they can get help, they want two things - advisers on guerrilla warfare and more modern weapons." Reports began to appear in the American press about preparations in the U.S.A. to recognise Tibet as a sovereign and independent state and support its application for membership of the U.N. In February, a Tibetan delegation set out for Peking to negotiate the peaceful liberation of Tibet, but "According to all sources of information," writes the Peking People's Daily, "while the Lhasa delegates were in India, the British High. Commissioner in New Delhi, Sir Archibald Nye, and other imperialist elements did their best to persuade the delegation against reaching agreement with the Central Peo- ple's Government." It was, therefore, not surprising that the Tibetan delegation was unable to secure visas to pass through Hongkong. Nor is it strange, though somewhat ludicrous, that at the U.N. tiny El Salvador, a client state of the U.S.A., should suddenly embrace the cause of the distant giant Tibet. Thus up to the last moment the imperialists and their satellites have continued their intrigues against Tibetan liberation. In this context, the Central People's Government has expressed China's surprise and regret that the Indian Government should reproach it for taking action that will finally liberate the whole of its main- land territory and free Tibet from foreign imperial- ist interference and oppression. In October, in accordance with the principles of the Common Programme of the PPCC, the People's Liberation Army began its advance into Tibet. As in other areas inhabited by national minorities, the strictest respect for local customs is being observed. Regional autonomy, equality for all nationalities and religious freedom is assured to the people. For Tibet the long night is ending. The sun of happi- ness will shine forth over the land! je, - A Approved For Release 2 1/ag/Q4 iG P -d0457R007100010009-7 M L ~ i r- 11