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主题:关于毛的一本新书:《毛真的是恶魔吗?》 -- 细脖大头鬼

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  • 家园 关于毛的一本新书:《毛真的是恶魔吗?》

    不久前白宫联络处主任安妮塔·邓恩(Anita Dunn)在一次给中学生的演讲中不经意地提到特蕾莎修女和毛泽东两个人:

    “我要谈的第三个教训,实际上出自我非常喜欢的两位政治思想家,毛泽东和特雷莎修女。他们不是两口子常泡到一起(观众笑)。但是,我最欣赏的这两位,他们提出了一个简单观点,你可以自己决定,你可以不服(挑战),你有权说为什么不行啊,你可以想出办法做到前人做不到的事情。由你来选择,不是别人,就这么着了。1947年,毛泽东解放中国的计划受到党内同志的质疑,他们认为蒋介石和国民党占据了城市,有部队,还有空军,他们占据一切的优势。人家就说了,这仗怎么打啊,要突破所有的困难,你这样怎么能行呢,毛泽东说,你打你的仗,我会打我的。你们想想看……”

    特蕾莎修女没人去注意(这位天主教嬷嬷是个很有意味的忽略),但就因为毛她立刻成为众多媒体被攻击的焦点,甚至被称为白宫里的“毛派”。福克斯的Glenn Beck说这种言论令他感到吃惊,是“可悲”的。邓恩不得不辩解说,自己的例子只是要说明挑战传统智慧的重要性而已。外链出处关键倒不是在于毛成了奥巴马团队和福克斯之间的论战中的工具,而是再清楚不过得表明,毛其实已是一个敏感到不能再敏感的“意识形态”和政治正确的坐标。在这个大是大非面前,你必须立场鲜明,不能模棱两可。我知道这是美国的政治游戏规则所在,但与冷战时代不同在于,它已经从剑拔弩张的对抗性的“内外”“忠奸”之辩,走向另一个知识和文化的层面了。毛唤起福克斯右派们的不再仅仅是“红色警报”的记忆,而更是一种对人性、善恶、常识、自由、良知这样的道德文化的护卫感和自以为是的正义的本能了。

    “震惊”和“可悲”两个似乎情绪克制而态度礼貌的词,正是在这个意义上要比“警惕”、“愤怒”和“仇恨”更为内涵强烈。人类几千年的历史经验、19、20世纪漫长的殖民与反殖民血泪史、漫长的多样化的革命传统、历史的复杂性、人与人国与国之间斗争的残酷性,都被巧妙地“去政治化”了。共产世界与“自由世界”、野蛮民族与人类文明这样一些以前只要一提起就会引发高亢的辩论声浪的词汇,被迫化为烟尘,问题已经解决,高下立判、尘埃落定。那些逝去的人,似乎从来就没有生活过,因为他们在没有终结的历史中成为了可悲的牺牲品,失败者们都是小白鼠,而另一批自由主义的先贤们则改头换面,似乎永远都与我们有着一样的观念和思想,他们从来就与我们同在。完全好莱坞化的《达芬奇密码》正好说明了这一点:历史根本就没有什么秘密了,曾经最神圣也最难解的历史之谜变成了一个大学教授就可以搞定的令人无比欣快的“密码”,而达芬奇、耶稣、玛利亚这样的历史和传说中的人物甚至更容易理解——他们与住在大纽约的美国人是何其相似,甚至都还是女权主义者和同性恋呢。自称发现了历史规律和科学社会主义的的马克思主义者们也从来没有这么傲慢过:这里已经不再有什么“学说”和“实践”,所有的历史故事都是我们的故事。当然,自从人类开始讲故事以来,所有的故事都是有教化意义的,但从来没有我们现在的好莱坞故事这样让人对我们的政治和历史知识如此有信心,对我们的生活方式如此安于现状。

    正是在这个意义上,每当提起毛,恐怕西方人会在潜意识中翻腾起一个自创的新词:“反人类”。【不管是中文翻译,还是英文原文,我都觉得这个词是个现代人创造的词汇里面最可笑的。】

    汪晖曾提到一个词形容当下的政治文化:“去政治化的政治”。这个词含义很深,但浅表的理解是,在当下的全球文化中,阶级、国家、军事和左右的政治被刻意掩盖起来,甚至可以说被消解掉,表面上的不同政治倾向的对抗被模糊过去,文化的意义、程序正义的意义、普世价值的意义被无限地提升起来。毛不仅被看做是马克思主义、列宁主义和斯大林主义的威胁,而更被看做是对人类文明的威胁,对人性的威胁,对某种不可变更的、“人类可以找到的最不坏的”资本主义生活方式的威胁。

    亚里士多德说人是没长毛的巨口獠牙左奔右突的动物,而现代人不可理解的是,他说这种动物的本能不是做爱,却竟然是“政治”。 古老的政治对我们来说是黑色的、乖戾的、残忍的、神秘的、不可解的。这就像毛这样革命者的政治对安妮塔·邓恩来说只是个关于反传统的勇气的例证一样。那种与历史实践联系在一起的“政治”,是不必要的或者说“终结了的”。对邓恩来说,他是道德故事的主角,对Glenn Beck来说,他则是“可悲的”丑闻。“去政治化的政治”就是这样重新把亚里士多德的“政治观”轻松地抹去了,没长毛的动物的本能于是就回到了——做爱和作怪。

    Sigh,写到做爱与作怪,我终于回到本文题目里的新书了,而且我跑题跑得太远,也不想再介绍具体内容了。

    毫不奇怪,毛泽东永远是最热闹的话题,本来不想涉及这个雷区的。我不是毛派,也从不参加相关讨论。只是很长时间以来还是气不过像《毛泽东:鲜为人知的故事》这样文风恶劣的东西的盛行。据说此书是小布什的最爱之一,其恶劣影响可见一斑,它几乎可以说是促成在西方把毛定与希特勒、斯大林一样恶魔地位的关键性读物。这本书的内容大家再熟悉不过了,和那本《私人医生》一样几乎可以用毛的“做爱与作怪”来概括。有些人对历史和历史人物的诋毁和“去政治化的”卑污化,可以说在这些书里面达到了不可企及的最高峰。当对历史和政治人物的评价僵化到“恶魔”、“怪物”、“生性**”、“性欲**”、“反人类”等这样一些完全情绪失控的用语的时候,我们几乎就可以肯定:这里一定有很多事实、视野和知识被丢弃了。

    近来看到香港出了本英国的两位学者Gregor Benton和林春编的书《传记还是杜撰——海外学者评〈毛泽东:鲜为人知的故事〉》,是主要由西方学者撰写的对那本书的批驳性的文章。这里有章节介绍和比较长的前言后记,大家可以自己阅读。外链出处英文版《毛真的是恶魔吗?》(Was Mao Really A Monster? 2009)也刚刚出版,这里可以读到相关信息:外链出处

    我截取一点的Gregor Benton前言:

    統計大躍進中的死亡人數,對之提出譴責是正確和必要的。但對大躍進進行全面、正確的觀察也是絕對必要的,因為20世紀的歷史中充斥著類似的悲劇和罪行。說毛澤東比其他任何人都要殘忍,對大規模死亡無動於衷,有與認為中國是特殊的「東方專制主義」、中國人是沒有自我決斷能力的「黃螞蟻」的中國恐懼症論調唱和的危險。正如雲達忠所言,「很多人熱衷於相信關於中國的最壞說法,而這本書進一步堅定了他們的信念。心存偏見的讀者更會把中國革命視為自大狂們互相殘殺以及其他千百萬人慘遭殺戮的過程,而不是其他什麼。」白傑明也對書的作者無意中給人造成「東方人壞」的印象表示痛惜。

    事實上,要為近現代歷史上世界上最嚴重的死亡事件負責的,不只是毛澤東,大英帝國有過之而無不及。1896~1900年,在英屬印度有兩千萬人死於本可避免的饑荒和暴行。在1943年的孟加拉饑荒中,由於英國的冷漠與無能,六千萬人口中有超過三百萬人餓死,遠遠超過張戎、哈利戴提到的1960年中國的人口死亡比例。1943年的饑荒不過是英屬印度殖民地的一系列危機之一,它們共同導致千百萬人死去,而這些死亡本可避免。1845~1846年,在英國統治下的愛爾蘭,其人口死亡比例甚至更高。在澳大利亞,土著居民幾乎被滅絕。美國的印地安人也是如此。能夠與張戎、哈利戴估計的1960年中國的人口死亡相提並論的最新例證,就是今天發生在伊拉克的暴行。根據歐洲頂級醫學雜誌《柳葉刀》(The Lancet)的說法,由於美英兩國的入侵,截至2006年有65萬伊拉克人被殺死,幾乎都死於暴力。21

    該書寫作風格偏見的一個極端例證,就是他們把毛澤東描寫成中國的希特勒。22 他們把大躍進引發的饑荒所造成的後果,比作發生在奧斯威辛的對猶太人的滅絕,把毛澤東的人民公社等同於希特勒的集中營。這些類比反映出令人震驚的道德和歷史判斷能力的缺乏。在對猶太人的「大屠殺」中,八百萬歐洲猶太人中有六百萬人死亡,比例遠遠超過對大躍進中人口死亡率的最壞估計。奧斯威辛是希特勒「最後解決猶太人問題」的主要工具,而大躍進的本意是加速中國的工業化和農業生產。張戎、哈利戴完全不理解由於中國在國際上的嚴重孤立,中國共產黨人在1950年代晚期所面臨的困境。在張戎、哈利戴看來,大躍進是一個瘋子犯下的罪行。然而其他學者卻把大躍進看作是為動員農村富餘勞動力創建地方工業,改善農村基礎設施,實現國家自給自足而實行的一項基本合理的計劃,是解決因中國孤立所導致的危機的一種方式。大躍進之所以出現如此災難性的後果,不是由於想法是錯誤的,而是由於實施方式是錯誤的。與之相對照,「大屠殺」則是有意為之的野蠻行徑。

    至於《毛澤東:鮮為人知的故事》是一部好的傳記,還是一部諷刺漫畫書和宣傳品,或者兩者都有一點,或者兩者所佔比重有一方多一點,讀者們自會得出自己的結論。我希望本評論集中的這些文章能夠有助於他們作出判斷。也許會有人提出反對,說這裡選取的文章都對張戎、哈利戴抱有偏見,因而無助於客觀意見的形成。然而挑選的標準是完全公正的。文章中的傾向性,基本上準確地代表了專家評論中最有分量的觀點。與世界各地的商業媒體對這本書絲毫不加批判,甚至阿諛奉承不同,專業評論大都持反對意見。但讓人費解的是對於雪片般飛來的批評,兩位作者似乎沒有覺得有必要作出任何回應。對於許多針對他們的指控,如果他們能夠作出有系統的答辯,我們會很高興在這裡一同發表。但在相關批評首次出現兩年多來,並沒有看到他們的任何答辯。23

    此书与我上面唠叨的东西并不相合,我也不把它看成是对毛的辩护。我只是想说:

    傲慢和自得是很无聊的东西,特别是面对神秘的历史和诡谲的政治。逝去的人们已经冰冷,你的脏水伤害不到他们一根汗毛,污蔑到最后,受伤的只能是你自己。

    通宝推:桥上,爱吃吐司,卷心菜,穆莱特,
    • 家园 到现在为止任何贴我都点的通过,但再吵下去我觉得没有意义

      如果想吵架请另开新帖,吵架的帖子我不再支持,在适当的时候,也请版主考虑封帖。

    • 家园 反人类,嗯

      正是在这个意义上,每当提起毛,恐怕西方人会在潜意识中翻腾起一个自创的新词:“反人类”。【不管是中文翻译,还是英文原文,我都觉得这个词是个现代人创造的词汇里面最可笑的。】

      忽然想起最近看的一个桥段

      泰晤士报:《为什么非洲欢迎“新殖民主义”》

      中间一段

      Many see China’s engagement in Africa as a catastrophe for the continent. There is a widespread perception that saintly Britain had adopted this poor little girl called Africa and was busy saving her from hunger, war, disease and poverty. Suddenly big, greedy China, flashing huge deals and cheap goods, has seduced the girl and is leading her astray, even raping her. And to make it worse for Britain, ungrateful Africa sometimes feels that although Chinese intentions may not be entirely honourable, China at least treats her like a grown up.

      翻译过来据说是一朵奇葩

      很多人视中国插手非洲事务为非洲大陆的灾难。有一种广为流传的观念是,圣洁的英国绅士收养了非洲这个穷苦的小姑娘,拯救她脱离饥饿、战争、疾病和贫困。突然间,一个壮实而又贪婪的中国大汉进来插了一脚,用大买卖和便宜货勾引这个小姑娘,甚至要最终奸污她。而对于英国绅士来说,更另他们难以接受的是:非洲这个小姑娘对他的养育之恩一点也不领情,反而觉得虽然中国大汉对她的意图也并不高尚,但至少他把她当成年人看了。

    • 家园 【文摘】金小丁驳文英文版(7)

      17. Mao Compared with Hitler

      Finally, we discuss JC’s central theme in the book: Mao is at least as bad as Hitler. Based on JC’s book, we will show the following conclusions: (i) Mao did not invade many nations and kill their people en masse as Hitler did. (ii) There was no evidence that Mao intentionally killed millions of civilians under his rule as Hitler did. (iii) Mao had more serious political opponents than Hitler did, but he did not kill any one of them, while Hitler killed all of his. Hence, a person with a reasonable mind may not agree with JC’s comparison of Mao with Hitler. We now give a more detailed comparison between Mao and Hitler in these three aspects.

      (i) Their offence against other countries: Hitler invaded the major part of Europe in the WWII in which tens of millions of people perished.

      Let’s look at Mao’s record. Mao sent Chinese troops to Korea in the 1950s and Vietnam in the 1960s, invited by the North Korean and North Vietnamese governments to fight a superpower from thousands miles away. In 1962, China had a brief war with India, because “China had refused to recognize the boundary that had been delineated by the British in colonial times” (p. 486). “As border clashes worsened” (p. 486), Mao sent troops into India. Then after a quick victory, he ordered all the troops to return home in days. JC’s words also imply that China was adjacent to the British India (the boundary “had been delineated by the British in” 1903) well before Mao sent troops to Tibet in 1950. Hence Mao’s troops did not invade Tibet (it was the Ching Dynasty’s army who did so two hundred years earlier and made Tibet a part of China). In 1969, China clashed with the Soviet Union. On “a small uninhabited island . . . Chinese laid an ambush that left 32 Russians dead”, while “Russia’s claim to the island was far from established” (p. 570). During his reign Mao never annexed any piece of land into Chinese territory.

      (ii) Brutality against their subjects: Hitler intentionally killed millions of Jews, communists and leftists, homosexuals, Jehovah witnesses, Gypsies, and others.

      The last mass killing under Mao took place in 1950–51 and led to 700,000 executions. However, this was at the end of the civil war and during the Korean War. Many, if not most, victims were executed for their military roles as we explained in section 11. During his reign, many must have died in prisons, but no evidence suggests this was nearly bad as Gulag in the Soviet Union, as discussed in section 12. Millions of people died during the famine because of Mao’s mismanagement, but there was no proof of his intention or indifference to let people die, as seen in section 14. Several political campaigns, such as the Cultural Revolution, caused many deaths due to persecution or maltreatment, but no direct order came from Mao, as we argued in section 15.

      (iii) Treating political challengers: This is probably the most relevant comparison because both dictators’ personal responsibilities are irrefutable. There are few examples of how Hitler treated his political rivals because he hardly had any. But we do know that he ordered his fellow Nazi leader Roehn to be killed for alleged homosexual behavior and forced the best German general Rommel to commit suicide for his role in a suspected coup. Of course he also executed von Stauffenberg and his co-conspirators for the assassination attempt.

      Now let’s look at Mao’s record. According to the book, Mao’s first challenger was Chang Kuo-tao, who defected to the Nationalist side in 1938 (pp. 220-221). The second rival Wang Ming stayed in the CCP and even praised Mao after being defeated (p. 357), and later died in Russia in 1974. The third victim was Gao Gang, who committed suicide in 1954 (p. 405). The fourth un-cowed man, Peng De-huai “was put under house arrest” (p. 470) after his fight with Mao in 1959, and died of a rectum cancer in 1974 (p. 557). The fifth was Liu Shao-chi, who died in 1969 in much neglected conditions due to persecution (p. 556). The sixth, Lin Biao died in an airplane crash in Mongolia in 1971 (p. 582). The last one was Deng Xiao-ping to whom “Mao had had to give in and let him live in the comfort of his own home, among his family” (pp. 649-650) till his own death in 1976. None of his political challengers was executed. Nor were any of the co-conspirators associated with each case in this long list executed either. In the case of the most deadly and militant coup plot of Lin Biao, “incredibly, given that an attempted assassination – of Mao, no less – was involved, not a single person was executed” (p. 586).

      Among those cases, let’s look at “Mao’s persecution of the man he hated most” (p. 548), Liu Shao-chi. The “report, which was delivered to the Central Committee by Mao’s faithful slave, Chou En-lai, called Liu a ‘traitor, enemy agent and scab’, and recommended the death sentence. But Mao rejected it, as he did for Mme Liu. He preferred a slow, lingering death” (pp. 555-556). However, it was “in April 1969, when the 9th Congress convened”, and Liu’s “death came . . . on 12 November 1969” (p. 556). It was not very slow. On the other hand, Mme Liu, Wang Guang-mei’s “slow, lingering death” not only lasted 10 years under Mao, but has still not been completed today, nearly 40 years later. A little bit too slow. If Mao really wanted her dead, whatever form that took, her health after 10 years of prison would not have allowed her such longevity.

      Now let’s see how Mao obtained his evidence against Liu. “Mao had told it (Liu’s case team) he wanted a spy charge. . . . A large number of other people were imprisoned and interrogated, to try to turn up evidence against him. . . . Shi Zhe, who had interpreted for Liu with Stalin . . . was pressed to say that Liu was a Russian spy. . . American Sidney Rittenberg, . . . had known Mme Liu in the 1940s. Pressure was put on him to say that he had recruited her, and Liu, for American intelligence.” (p. 555). JC does not mention any torture being used. “The team . . . found itself in a Catch-22 situation, as concocting evidence could be as dangerous as failing to unearth it. On one occasion, the team claimed that Liu had wanted American troops to invade China in 1946, and that Liu had wanted to see President Truman about this. ‘Making such a claim’, Mao said, ‘is . . . to treat us like fools. America sending in troops en masse: even the Nationalists did not want that’” (p. 555). The result: Liu was not charged as a spy.

      JC does not show in any case Mao allowed his team use torture to obtain evidence or imposed his charge without evidence, though his evidence was often proven to be wrong.

      The points made in this section are sufficient to refute JC’s comparison of Mao with Hitler. In fact, it is easy to find counter-arguments to most, if not all, of JC’s claims in the entire book. It just takes careful reading and reasoning. We leave them as interested readers’ exercises, for fun.

      In revealing the numerous contradictions and inconsistencies in JC’s book, we do not need any specific knowledge or information regarding China. Now the question is: why cannot those Western journalists and those China experts see? It is hard to believe that none of them is capable of logic thinking, or has read the book carefully. The most plausible explanation is their profound pride and prejudice towards China.

      The first version, Aug. 7, 2005, the newest revision, Dec. 4, 2005.

      Appendix A:

      Jung Chang, the well-known story

      According to her bibliography Wild Swan, JC was sent to a rural area in the western Sichuan after her graduation from high school in 1969, an unfortunate fate shared by millions of Chinese youths that time. What made JC special is that she only stayed there 26 days. She was then transferred to the suburb of Chengdu by forging several documents, an act most Chinese youths would not even contemplate, especially those whose families were allegedly under “persecution”.

      While officially living in Chengdu suburb, JC stayed there only about one third of the time, during which she seldom joined other fellow city youths and peasants in farm work.

      In 1971, JC’s mother used her connection to bring her into a state owned firm in Chengdu, the best option a Sichuan youth could hope for that time.

      When the door of entering a university was opened in 1973, JC’s mother arranged a slot for her in the Sichuan University’s Department of Foreign Language, an ideal place particularly for those no good at science. Such behavior of “going through back doors” marked the beginning of the Communist corruption in China.

      As she graduated, JC’s mother helped her to get a job at the university by blocking her normal destiny --- returning to the company which sent heer to study.

      Finally, the opportunity of studying abroad came the first time in 1978, and JC’s mother used her influence to make the chance available to JC, who would not have been qualified otherwise.

      Appendix B:

      Miscarriage of the Chinese version of “Mao, the unknown story”

      Quoted from Wanwei web site 2006-04-23

      (http://news.creaders.net/china/newsViewer.php?language=gb2312&id=652625)

      · The Yuanliu Publisher in Taiwan has decided to cease its original plan of publishing the Chinese version of Jung Chang’s book, “Mao, the unknown story”.

      · The president of Yuanliu, Mr. Wang Rongwen says that the editor and authors cannot reach an agreement to modify the book to make its descriptions more neutral. He expects that the evidence in the book to be reliable, while that provided in Jung Chang’s book is insufficient to convince him.

      · The publication was originally planned to be around the end of 2005, later postponed to April and to May 2006.

      · Historian Li Yongzhong from Taiwan and bibliographer Hu Zhiwei from Hong Kong claim that the failure of the book’s publication “represents a victory of the true history over the false one”.

      · A fellow of Social Science Academy of China in Taiwan, Xu Zhuoyun says that the book is not an academic one, but was unfortunately regarded as such. He even considers the book basically garbage, and believes it is not necessary to publish garbage in order to protect the freedom of press.

      · The director of the History Institute of SSAC, Chen Yongfa says the relation between Jung Chang’s conclusions and her evidence is weak, hence the book cannot be treated as an academic work. He thinks of Jung Chang’s book “Mao” as “a popular book with academic background”.

    • 家园 【文摘】金小丁驳文英文版(1)

      貌似也是跟张阿姨的书类似,英文版先出来

      贴出来方便以后如果碰到鬼子吹捧张阿姨的时候拿出来五毛一下

      =========================================================

      A Critique of J. Chang and J. Halliday’s Book

      Mao, the Unknown Story

      Jin Xiaoding

      Introduction

      China’s economic development is one of the most significant events in recent times. It is at least partially the consequence of her social and political evolution/revolution in the past century. If the west wants to understand modern China, it is essential not to misunderstand her founder, Mao. However, the book of J. Chang (JC) and J. Haliday, Mao, the unknown story, is misleading the Western public into profound misunderstanding of Mao, China’s modern history and China itself.

      The central theme of the book is to condemn Mao as an evil monster, “as bad as or worse than Hitler”. This claim was immediately accepted by the western media. When the book was first published in UK in June 2005, it was hailed by all major media with great enthusiasm, involving many well known China experts from polity (e.g., C. Pattern, the last British governor of Hong Kong), journalism (e.g., J. Mirsky, the Time’s East Asia editor) and academia (e.g., M. Yahuda, the ex-chairman of the Department of International Relation, London School of Economics). According to these experts, everyone with a reasonable mind should be totally convinced by the book beyond any doubt. On this issue there is a rare harmony in which the voice of the Guardian is indistinguishable from that of the Daily Mail. Within one week, the book jumped to the top position of the non-fiction best selling list. Jung Chang has become the authority on the Chinese history. A person, who asked challenging questions during one of her seminars, was deemed by others as “an obvious Maoist” and could not finish his questions. Some western readers condemned a less complementary comment regarding the book on the Amazon web site as “ugly Chinese propaganda”.

      The supporters have such unlimited confidence partially because the book is supposedly the outcome of 10 years of intensive research, based on secret archives and hundreds of interviews in many countries. Unfortunately, a careful reader can see clearly that there are huge gaps between its sensational claims and vast references. Moreover, the evidence in the book often contradicts, rather than supports, the claims. This review will point out these contradictions and inconsistencies which may have escaped most Western readers’ eyes and been ignored by the Western media.

      To reveal the overall quality of the book, we take on its 17 major claims, which are evenly distributed across Mao’s life. Instead of picking up its weaknesses or minor points, we focus on those issues, which tarnish Mao’s character most and are praised most highly in the Western media as solidly proven. These issues are dealt within 17 sections:

      1. The Purge in the Ruijin Base, 2. Chiang Let the Reds Go (I)

      3. Chiang Let the Reds Go (II) 4. The Fake Battle at the Luding Bridge,

      5. Mao Carried through the Long March, 6. Mao Did Not Fight Japanese,

      7. The Trap for the New 4th Army, 8. Mao Sacrificed His Brother Tse-min,

      9. The Rectification Campaign, 10. Opium Sale,

      11. 3 Million Deaths in 1950-51, 12. 27 Million Deaths in Jails/Labor Camps,

      13. The Superpower Program, 14. 38 Million Deaths in 1958-61,

      15. 3 Million Deaths in 1966-76, 16. Mao’s Aim of the Cultural Revolution,

      17. Mao Compared with Hitler.

      This review has been sent to many Western media since early August 2005, but received no response. Nevertheless, it is not the only negative review on JC’s book. Four months after its first publication, critical voices began to emerge from outside of Europe. For instance, in an article in the New York Review, J. Spence of Yale University singles out two false stories in the book. In the New York Times, a former correspondent in Beijing N. Kristof reveals that one of alleged interviewees listed in the book, Zhang Hanzhi denies that she had ever been interviewed by the authors. An Australian H. McDonald reveals in The Age that a recent visit by reporters to Luding Bridge confirms the battle 70 years ago, which JC claims to be a complete invention. He quoted from T. Bernstein of Columbia University that "the book is a major disaster for the contemporary China field". Also, “Princeton's Perry Link have felt compelled to criticise" JC’s “factual errors and dubious use of sources”. Moreover, “many scholars point out that much of what Chang and Halliday present as a previously ‘unknown story’ has in fact been exposed long ago. . . . But no credit is given to these earlier writers”. In London Review of Books, A. Nathan of Columbia University provides plenty of evidence showing that “Chang and Halliday are magpies: every bright piece of evidence goes in, no matter where it comes from or how reliable it is”.

      This review differs from those of Western writers in two aspects. First, it shows the total fallacy of the book, instead of just a few inaccuracies. Secondly, it demonstrates the book’s major flaws without substantial references regarding Chinese history, only using the information of an elementary level. In fact the information and references mainly come from the book itself. In so doing, the review raises a further question: why did most media and experts in the UK fail to see these obvious inconsistencies and contradictions in the book? If it cannot be excused by the ignorance of Chinese history, it has to be explained by the profound pride and prejudice towards China.

      Although this review met absolute silence in the west, it has drawn some attention from overseas Chinese. One of the web sites, which published this review, Duowei, interviewed Jung Chang in New York in October 2005, and asked her my questions (see the article at: http://blog.chinesenewsnet.com/?p=3467, or the entire interview video at: http://www.berm.co.nz/cgi-bin/video/play.cgi?lz1JaUtTdSM). This is what Jung Chang said about this review: “I have read it, and read carefully. Some questions are quite good. I do hope to have opportunities to answer them. I think it is very important. However, there are many issues, I do not know either he did not understand English, or did not look at the references provided at the back of the book. There are many details, the origins of the figures, all in the back of the book. Among 800 pages, there are 150 pages of references, the sources of the references. One has to read those sources from the references. I think he either did not understand English, or did not read references carefully. I have looked at his questions, and can give easy answers to all of them”.

      In the interview, Jung Chang indeed responded to three of my 17 questions, namely, (2), (3) and (4). A reader can look at the paragraphs marked by * signs below, in each of the three sections to appreciate her “easy answers”.

      After the appearance of this review, Jung Chang’s brother, Pu Zhang (a translator for the Chinese version of the book), claims in October 2005 on the Duowei web site that, my Chinese translation seriously distorted JC’s words, and he would post the direct comparison of the original text and my translation on the web for readers to see the difference. However, despite readers repeatedly asked him to keep his promises, his English-Chinese comparison has not be seen anywhere so far.

      1. The Purge in the Ruijin Base

      JC’s first major accusation against Mao is that his purge in the Ruijin base, the first Red State in China, caused more than 350,000 deaths, or 10% of the total population. Her figure is grossly exaggerated because she assumes the reduction of 0.7 million in Ruijin’s population was the result of people either being killed in battles or dying of persecution under Mao. She ignores civilian deaths and emigration completely.

      From 1931–35, “the population of Red Jiangxi fell by more than half a million. . . . The fall in Red Fujian was comparable. . . . . Altogether some 700,000 people died in the Ruijin base” (p. 113). JC apparently deduces this figure from the population ratio of Red Jiangxi to that of Red Fujian. But from her “half a million” population reduction in Jiangxi, we should get Ruijin’s 700,000 population reduction, not deaths.

      Then, as “238,844 people in Jiangxi were counted as ‘revolutionary martyrs’, i.e., people who had been killed in wars and intra-party purges” (p. 114 fn), JC uses the population ratio again to get the total number of martyrs in the whole of Ruijin, which is 238,884×700,000/500,000 = 334,438. The rest of the reduction in population, 700,000 – 334,438 = 365,562, i.e., “More than half”, she concludes, “were murdered as ‘class enemies’, or were worked to death, or committed suicide, or died other premature deaths attributable to the regime” (pp. 113-114).

      This calculation is not professional. First, it ignores civilian deaths caused by the war, through killing, illness, economic hardship and starvation etc, which often account for a larger part of the loss of life in long lasting wars. During that period Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek launched five “annihilation expeditions” against Ruijin, one of which involved “half a million troops” (p. 125). At one time the Ruijin base “had been reduced to a mere several dozen square kilometers” (p. 103) from “50,000 sq. km” (p.104). So most of the area of the base had been occupied by Chiang’s army.

      Many people cooperated with the communists, even “children were used as sentries, and formed into harassment squads, called ‘humiliation teams’ to hound people into joining the army” (p. 110). Chiang’s army was not known for treating civilians with mercy. Even before the Red state came into existence, “tens of thousands of Communists and suspects were slaughtered” during Chiang’s campaign in 1927 (p. 47). Given all these factors, civilian deaths must have been significant.

      Secondly, JC’s calculation ignores emigration out of the Ruijin area, which should be expected after five annihilation expeditions in five years. Especially, we are told that Mao’s policy in the Red base ‘was to confiscate every last single thing’ (p. 111), and “China’s first Red state was run by terror and guarded like a prison.” (p. 113). In that case, people should have escaped from Mao’s hell when Chiang’s army liberated them five times. So the number of refugees must have been significant too.

      If we assume that the sum of civilian deaths and refugees together is roughly the same as the number of martyrs, there would be far fewer left who were “murdered as ‘class enemies’, or were worked to death, or committed suicide, or died other premature deaths attributable to the regime”. The number would be 700,000 – 334,438×2 = 31,124, less than 10% of JC’s figure.

      2. Chiang Let the Reds Go (I)

      JC’s second major discovery is to deny Mao’s contribution to the Red Army’s survival during the Long March. She argues that, it is Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek who let the Red Army go because he wanted an excuse to send his own army into Guichou and Sichuan. She gives no evidence for this. Instead, by her own account, Chiang did not need to use Mao’s army as his excuse because a strong Red Army had already been settled in Sichuan for nearly three years before Mao’s arrival.

      “There can be no doubt that Chiang let the CCP leadership and the main force of the Red Army escape”. “He wanted to drive the Red Army into these hold-out provinces, so that their warlords would be so frightened of the Reds settling in their territory that they would allow Chiang’s army in to drive the Reds out” (p.137).

      JC’s reference does support the well known fact that Chiang considered his entry into Sichuan as a beneficial by-product of his pursuit of the Red Army. But it does not imply Chiang let the Red Army escape. On the contrary, in the autumn of 1932, another CCP leader Chang Kuo-tao had “moved to northern Sichuan, where he built a new and bigger base within a year, and expanded his army to over 80,000. Kuo-tao was undoubtedly the most successful of all the Communists” (pp. 147-148). At the time of Mao’s arrival in Sichuan, Chang Kuo-tao’s 80,000 soldiers “were well fed, well equipped with machine-guns and mortars and ample ammunition, and superbly trained” (p. 163). On the other hand, Mao’s army “was down to some 10,000, . . . The surviving remnant was on the verge of collapse” (p.163).

      It seems odd that “the most successful” Chang Kuo-tao’s army of 80,000, after having settled down there for three years, still could not frighten the Sichuan warlords, and Chiang had to use Mao’s army which “was on the verge of collapse”. Why? Without an explanation one certainly has reasons to “doubt that Chiang let the CCP leadership and the main force of the Red Army escape”.

      * Facing this question in her interview with Duowei, Jung Chang replied: “This is a good question. But we have studied it already. When Chang Ku-tao entered Sichuan, he was in the north, Chiang Kei-shek indeed wanted to follow. But Sichuan had a regional defense system then, each region had its own warlord, not together, all divided. Chiang Kei-shek drove the Central Red Army from the south into Sichuan. He wanted to conquer the south, the west, the north, also conquer the warlord in the east.”

      Then, why did not Chiang Kai-shek drive Chang Kuo-tao from the north to the west, east and south, but had to drive the Central Red Army far away from Jiangxi? JC’s answer immediately leads to almost the same question again. It does not explain anything. Isn’t it too easy to “give easy answers” just like this?

    • 家园 【文摘】金小丁驳文英文版(2)

      3. Chiang Let the Reds Go (II)

      To deny Mao’s contribution in the Long March, JC offers another theory to explain why Chiang let the Red Army go: he did it to get his son back from Russia. JC’s evidence only shows that Chiang wanted his son back, but does not show he let the Reds go. On the contrary, she shows that for his same beloved son, Chiang was not even willing to release two unknown spies.

      According to JC, for Chiang Kai-shek’s decision of “letting the Reds go, . . . there was another, more secret and totally private reason. Chiang’s son Ching-kuo had been a hostage in Russia” (p. 138). “Chiang had devised a carefully crafted swap: the survival of the CCP for Ching-Kuo. It was not an offer that could be spelt out. He executed his plan in subtle ways” (p. 140).

      It was so subtle that no record was left for JC to prove that Chiang did it, or even intended to do so. The only evidence is that Chiang worried about his son and asked Moscow to let him back. No swap was mentioned anywhere, not even in Chiang’s diary. But there was another swap which was spelt out. According to JC, Chiang’s “sister-in-law, Mme Sun Yat-sen (nee Soong Ching-ling), who was another Soviet agent”, “speaking for Moscow”, spelt out a proposal of “swapping Ching-kuo for two top Russian agents who had recently been arrested in Shanghai. Chiang turned the swap down” (pp. 139-140).

      Since Chiang was unwilling to let two Russian agents go in exchange for his son’s release, it is unlikely that he let the Red Army of tens of thousands armed men escape. If he did, one would wonder what kind of agents could be so important. Actually, the “two top Russian agents” are the Chinese couple Niu Lan and his wife. JC does not even tell their names, though a dozen other Russian agents are named in her book. Why? Maybe JC has some “more secret and totally private reason”.

      * During her interview with Duowei, Jung Chang said: Chiang Kai-shek “wanted to trade the Reds’ survival for his son’s return. How did we get the references? There are many, many references. The first comes from the Russian Archive, how Chiang Kai-shek negotiated with the Russians. There are also many records in Chiang Kai-shek’s diary. Chiang Ching-kuo had an own account of the event, it contains such information as well. Moreover, as how Chiang Kai-shek let the Red Army go, there are many historical materials regarding the Long March, the telegraphs between the Kuomintang armies. We have given detailed explanations for all of them in the book.”

      Of course I have read all of these detailed explanations. Precisely because of this, I wrote: “JC’s evidence only shows that Chiang wanted his son back, but does not show he let the Reds go”. JC just repeats what she wrote in the book, but still fails to show any evidence of how Chiang let the Reds go. Why didn’t she simply quote one sentence from her “many, many references”, which indicates that Chiang let or wanted to let the Reds go? Isn’t this an easier answer than to list many, many circumstantial references?

      4. The Fake Battle at the Luding Bridge

      JC’s claim of the nonexistence of the battle at the Luding Bridge has been widely publicized in the west as a fatal blow to the Red Army legend. In the official account, the CCP and Red Army were close to destruction near the Dadu River. If they had failed to secure the Luding Bridge, they would have been eliminated. The Luding Bridge battle is famous for its historic significance, not the scale.

      Instead of disproving existing accounts, JC makes her claim mainly based on her interview with a 93-year-old woman. But, even according to that account, the Red Army did fire heavy weapons at the Bridge. JC does not explain why. Given the Reds’ limited ammunitions, it was unlikely they would have wasted them with no enemy in sight.

      According to JC, the battle at the Luding Bridge “is complete invention. There was no battle at the Dadu Bridge”. “There were no Nationalist troops at the bridge when the Reds arrived” (p. 159). A 93-year-old woman lived there at the time. “She remembered the Communists firing as ‘only Yin a shell, and Yang a shot’ --- a Chinese expression for sporadic. She did not remember her side of the river being fired on at all” (p. 159).

      JC does not clarify whether her definition of “Nationalist troops” includes the troops of Sichuan warlords which did not belong to the Nationalist regular army. Her source of reference suggests it does not. If so, her proof is flawed, because according to the official story, it was exactly the warlord’s army which defended the bridge.

      On the other hand, JC acknowledges that the Red Army “shelled and fired across the river at Luding on the opposite side” (p.159), and “there was a fire in the town itself, caused, most likely, by Red Army shelling” (p. 160). The Red Army could not have used their gunfire as fireworks because their ammunition was very scarce. Just a month later, without any serious battle, it had “lost all its heavy weapons, leaving it only with rifles, with an average of five bullets each” (p.163). Its heavy weapons would have been used only if absolutely necessary. JC does not explain why the Reds shelled at all.

      The shelling was unlikely due to a reconnaissance failure either. As “the bridge was not reduced to bare chains” (p. 160), sending a man over could have been done in a few minutes, probably more quickly than setting up the firing position. If it were a reconnaissance failure, the invention of the battle must have been used to cover it up. In that case, Mao, as one of the top commanders, was the cheated, not the cheater.

      The only possible explanation left for the shelling is that it was to fake a battle for propaganda purposes, as seemingly suggested by JC. In this case, the Reds did not need to fire at all, unless they had a video camera then. Moreover, they would not have undertaken extra efforts which make it more likely that the sham would be exposed. But they held “a celebration immediately afterwards”, presenting each of 22 fake heroes with “a Lenin suit, a fountain pen, a bowl and a pair of chopsticks” (p. 160). Then the myth could have been exposed easily by any of these specifically identified fake heroes.

      Furthermore, JC does not explain why the Nationalists did not expose this lie for 70 years. Their propagandists, not knowing Chiang’s plan to set the Reds free, should have no reason to keep the sham as an “unknown story”.

      Finally, who could benefit from this lie? According to JC, as Mao had just led the Red Army through a disastrous “2,000-kilometre detour” (p. 162), “a deep resentment grew towards Mao. . . . Everyone was furious with Mao” (p. 155). If Mao could have let the Red Army cross the Dadu River without firing a bullet, his image as a military genius and his popularity would have shot up the most. A fabricated battle could only have reduced his reputation, not enhanced it. Whoever made up the battle story was more likely Mao’s enemy, not his friends or himself.

      * In her interview with Duowei, she answered my question this way: “Many of his arguments are because he did not read our references, even not our texts”. She said that her main evidence is not from the 93 years-old lady, “the main references are written documents, one of them shows that the 22 Red Army soldiers crossed the bridge first, these 22 men did not suffer any injury, and held a ceremony after crossing. Each of them got a bowl and a pair of chopsticks, and a pen. . . . He did not read our references, not even the text, but made comments, I do not know why. We also conducted a lot of research on which Kuomintang army defended the bridge, and explain in details in the book. We find that this army was moved away from here before the Red Army arrived. There was a telegraph from that time. Our references contain the origin of the telegraph. He does not mention this at all, it is not reasonable. Answering such questions would waste too much time”.

      Sorry, it is exactly having read her text and reference sources, I could possibly write: “JC does not clarify whether her definition of ‘Nationalist troops’ includes the troops of Sichuan warlords which did not belong to the Nationalist regular army. Her source of reference suggests it does not. If so, her proof is flawed, because according to the official story, it was exactly the warlord’s army which defended the bridge”. From JC’s reply, we still cannot see “whether her definition of “Nationalist troops” includes the troops of Sichuan warlords”. Apparently, she does not want to waste her time to read a few words of my question, just “give easy answers”. But she said not only she had read my review, but also “read carefully”. “I do not know why”.

      JC emphasizes that her major evidence that no battle existed is no death. I indeed did “not mention this at all”, because it is simply not an evidence. Even if “these 22 men did not suffer any injury”, we can only doubt the intensity of the battle, but cannot rule out the possibility of its occurrence. The warlord army which defended the bridge was called “double gunners”, one rifle and one opium gun, lack of basic training and experience. The mere fact of no Red Army death cannot prove that the battle “is complete invention”.

      5. Mao Carried through the Long March

      JC’s other sensational allegation is that Mao was carried by a litter throughout the Long March. But none of her references suggests that Mao was carried regularly. The closest “evidence” is a statement by Mao himself which was published in one of the most authoritative and tightly controlled Chinese official presses.

      According to JC, from the start of the Long March, Mao, Lo Fu and Wang Jia-xiang formed a trio. “The trio traveled together, usually reclining on litters. . . For much of the Long March, including the most grueling part of the trek, most of them were carried.” (p. 144)

      Very oddly, for such a sensational accusation, JC does not provide any reference to support this particular sentence. Several questions arise. The first question is whether the trio of Mao had the power to obtain such a privilege. “Lo Fu, the only member of the trio who was in the Secretariat” (p. 145), said “I felt I was put in a position completely without power” (p. 144). It was even worse for Mao, who “was isolated and miserable” (p. 132). Before the Long March he was worried that he might be abandoned, and went everywhere he thought the Red Army might go, hoping to be picked up mercifully as he stood on the side of the road (p. 128). With such a position, Mao’s litter was less likely for his comfort, but due to the fact that “days before the planned departure, his temperature shot up to 41°C and he grew delirious with malaria” (p. 132).

      Another question is Mao’s desire to be carried. As the trio of Mao was plotting a coup in the Red Army (pp. 144–6), they should have been keen to boost their popularity. “Aversion to privilege was particularly strong in the army because many had originally been attracted to join by the lure of equality, which was the Party’s main appeal” (p. 77). It is unlikely that the trio of Mao could grab the leadership while lying in litters. Why didn’t the opponents complain about this? This would be possible only if they were also carried. But then it would be unthinkable that the Red Army could stick together and endure the hardship, e.g. in the swampland as JC describes (pp. 167 - 169).

      JC’s other evidence is the existence of a “charge --- Mao and the other leaders had ‘sat in sedan chairs’ all through the March” (p. 165). The only quoted part of this charge is ‘sat in sedan chairs’, without a subject. This reference comes from Mao’s arch rival Chang Kuo-tao, writing long after he defected from the Red Army to the Nationalists. Chang and Mao met in late June 1935 and departed in early August (p. 166). As indicated on the map of the book, they shared a common path only from Fubian to Maoergai, a minor fraction of the March. Chang’s charge of Mao sitting “‘in sedan chairs’ all through the March”, even if true, had to come from others’ testimony. Whose testimony? Neither Chang Kuo-tao nor JC gives any clue.

      The closest “evidence” of Mao being carried regularly is: “Mao himself told his staff decades later: ‘On the March, I was lying in a litter. So what did I do? I read. I read a lot.’” (p. 144). Mao’s words do not necessarily imply he was carried regularly. Let’s see how reasonable JC’s interpretation is. Mao’s words appear in his personal secretary Ye Zilong’s memoirs, published by The Press of the Central Archive (2000). It is one of the most authoritative and tightly controlled government presses. JC accuses the Chinese government of covering Mao’s secrets. But a crucial part of her story comes from an official press. Even if Mao’s loyalist Ye betrayed him, and the government was ahead of JC in denouncing Mao, it is hard to believe that such an accusation, according to JC’s interpretation, generates no awareness in China and remains an “unknown story”.

    • 家园 【文摘】金小丁驳文英文版(3)

      6. Mao Did Not Fight Japanese

      To discredit Mao among the Chinese, JC claims that Mao had no interest in fighting Japan, but only in starting a civil war against Chiang Kai-shek. But, her evidence shows that Mao’s strategy was the only feasible way for the Reds to fight Japanese effectively.

      In a chapter entitled: “Fight Rivals and Chiang --- Not Japan” (p.218), JC writes: “Mao had no strategy to drive the Japanese out of China” (p. 211). “He bombarded his military commanders with telegrams such as ‘Focus on creating base areas . . . . Not on fighting battles’ . . . all the time, Mao was urging them to stop fighting the Japanese and concentrate on taking over territory” (pp. 212-213).

      What if the Reds had followed an opposite strategy, i.e., fighting the Japanese head on? In August 1937 a war between the Japanese and Chiang’s armies broke out. “In Shanghai, 73 of China’s 180 divisions --- and the best one-third --- over 400,000 men, were thrown in, and all but wiped out. . . . The Japanese suffered much fewer, though still heavy, casualties: about 40,000” (p. 209).

      “At this time, the Chinese Red Army had some 60,000 regular troops” (p. 211). Let’s assume they were just as efficient as the best part of Chiang’s troops, although their equipment, supply and training were much inferior. Then, if they had fought the Japanese head on, they could hardly have inflicted on the Japanese more than 6,000 casualties before they were “all but wiped out”. That is less than one sixth of what Chiang achieved in Shanghai, certainly insufficient to defeat Japan. If Japan had secured its rear, Chiang’s force would most likely have not resisted much longer.

      Fortunately, the Reds followed Mao’s strategy. The result: “By mid-November (1937), the first new Communist base in the Japanese rear was formed, near Peking, called Jinchaji, with a population of some 12 million” (p. 213). “By January 1940, the 8RA, under Zhu De and Peng, had grown to at least 240,000 (from 46,000 at the beginning of the war). And the N4A, operating under Liu Shao-chi near Shanghai and Nanking, had tripled, to 30,000. A score of sizeable bases sprang up in the Japanese rear. The base of Jinchaji alone, only some 80 km from Peking, expanded to control a population of 25 million” (p. 225). This evidence suggests Mao indeed had a “strategy to drive the Japanese out of China”.

      7. The Trap for the New 4th Army

      According to JC, not only did Mao avoid fighting the Japanese, but he also set up his own troops, the New 4th Army with 9,000 men to be killed by Chiang Kai-shek in order to start a civil war. Instead of offering any evidence for this accusation, JC provides facts which suggest Mao had neither the incentive nor the ability to do so.

      During the Sino-Japanese war, Chiang’s army destroyed the head quarters of the N4A. JC explains why Mao wanted this to happen. In July 1940, Chiang called “the Red N4A to move out of the Yangtze region” (p. 233). “By December 1940, Xiang Ying’s group was the only part of the N4A south of the Yangtze. . . . . That month Mao set Xiang Ying’s group up to be killed by the Nationalist army, in the hope that the massacre would persuade Stalin to let him off the leash against Chiang” (p. 236). “Mao was asking Moscow to endorse him starting a full-scale civil war, in the thick of the Sino-Japanese War” (p. 234). According to JC, Mao achieved his plan by telling the N4A to take a path vetoed by Chiang earlier, but did not inform Chiang. “A much larger Nationalist force” did not know the N4A “was only passing through, and thought this was an attack. Fighting broke out . . . . During the most critical period of bloody fighting, the four days from 6 to 9 January, Mao claimed he received no communication” (p. 237). Thus, the N4A’s plea to call off the Nationalist encirclement did not reach Chiang before it was wiped out (p. 238).

      Let’s first look at how likely that Mao wanted “a full-scale civil war”. His main force, the 8RA of 240,000, “only some 80 km from Peking” and the N4A of 30,000 “near Shanghai and Nanking” were both “in the Japanese rear” (p. 225). Where was Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek? He had “moved his capital to Chongqing, further inland” (p. 223). If the Reds were let off the leash against Chiang, they would have to savage the Japanese first before reaching Chiang. Their arms were no match for Chiang either. While at the beginning of the war, Chiang had received “1,000 planes, plus tanks and artillery” from the Russians alone (p. 209), “the Communist 8th Route Army had had only 154 pieces of heavy artillery” even near the end of the war (p. 295).

      Secondly, let’s see if Mao’s communication break-down could have accomplished his plan. First, for anyone with military training, it is not difficult to distinguish whether a troop of 9,000 is moving to somewhere or attacking someone. JC’s story implies the Nationalist generals unable to do so. Moreover, `Mao’s plan would have failed if the Nationalist generals had sent an inquiry to the N4A before destroying them, or during “the four days” of “bloody fighting”. Even if the generals were so dumb headed, they must have informed the Generalissimo and asked his permission to slaughter this huge fellow Chinese army, unless their communications were also broken down. Since “the Generalissimo had vetoed” the N4A’s route earlier (p. 236), he would have realized what was going on immediately. If “Chiang was desperate to avoid a total civil war in the middle of the war against Japan” (p. 240), he certainly could have sent a cable to the N4A, as he did three days earlier (p.237), ordering them to stop, return or switch to another route etc, instead of authorizing his generals to “exterminate the Reds” (p.237). Then Mao’s plan would have definitely failed.

      After the event, Chiang was criticized by the governments of the U.S. (JC blames President Roosevelt’s informant, marine officer Evans Carlson,) and the UK (JC blames British ambassador Clark Kerr), as well as the Soviet Union (p. 241). JC argues that this is because Chiang “presented his case poorly” (p. 241). But most of the information JC presents now was available at that time, such as the N4A’s unauthorized route and Chiang did not receive their plea etc, though probably not Mao’s dubious radio breakdown. But Mao’s radio problem only concerns who should be blamed within the Reds, Mao or the N4A, not between the Reds and the Nationalists. Even if Chiang had used JC’s argument in his defense then, he would still have “presented his case poorly”.

      8. Mao Sacrificed His Brother Tse-min

      Even Hitler did not kill his family members. But Mao did, according to JC. She claims that Mao let his brother Tse-min be killed by Chiang Kai-shek in order to start a civil war. The only evidence is Mao’s failure to repeat his instruction to Chou Enlai asking Chiang for Tse-min’s release within two days during his nine months of imprisonment. This accusation is funny, and typifies JC’s contradictory style.

      “To stir up anti-Chiang fervor in the CCP, Mao cogitated another ‘massacre’ by the Nationalists. . . This time the sacrificial victims included his only surviving brother, Tse-min. . . . Tse-min had been working in Xinjiang. . . . In early 1943, Tse-min and more than 140 other Communists and their families . . . were imprisoned” (p. 259). “The CCP leadership collectively (in the name of the Secretariat)” (p. 260) told “the CCP liaison, Chou En-lai to ask for their release” (p. 259). “Two days later, on the 12th (February), Mao sent Chou a separate cable. . . . The release of the Xinjiang group was not on it. Chou, by now taking orders from Mao alone, did not raise the matter. . . Tse-min and two other senior CCP figures were executed on 27 September on charges of plotting a coup. But with so few deaths – only three – Mao was unable to cry ‘Massacre’. He did not make any announcement condemning the executions, either, as this might raise questions about whether the Communists were indeed guilty as charged” (p. 260).

      It is too funny to be treated seriously. Let’s consider an imagined conversation in a court:

      Prosecutor: Sir, I find Mao guilty of cogitating a massacre, sacrificing his brother T.

      Judge: What was his motivation?

      Prosecutor: He wanted to stir up anti-Chiang fervor.

      Judge: How did he do it?

      Prosecutor: He did it by not telling Chou to plea for T’s release.

      Judge: But he did it two days earlier. How did his failure to repeat kill T?

      Prosecutor: Chou then knew Mao wanted T dead, did not raise the matter with Chiang.

      Judge: I do not understand Chou’s thinking. Did Mao condemn the killing of T?

      Prosecutor: No, because this would reveal T was indeed guilty.

      Judge: If so, how could Mao use T’s death to stir up anti-Chiang fervor?

      Prosecutor: He expected Chiang to kill many more.

      Judge: But only 3 were killed. I do not see why Mao could have expected that.

      Prosecutor: Because other 140 communists were also guilty of plotting a coup.

      Judge: Do you mean that Chiang not only killed T legitimately, he was also entitled to kill many more?

      Prosecutor: Yes, sir.

      Judge: Then, why are you so sure that Mao could have saved T by his second order?

      If one believes in fair trials and hears this kind of conversation, he would most likely “raise questions about whether ” Mao is “indeed guilty as charged”.

      9. The Rectification Campaign

      During the Sino-Japanese war, many young and radical students flocked to Mao’s base in Yenan. To consolidate his political control and clean up this new blood from the Nationalist or Japanese territories, Mao launched the Rectification Campaign in 1942–1943. JC claims thousands of people died, as suspected Nationalist agents or spies. But she offers no references to support her claim of the number of death. The most famous victim, described by JC as Mao’s personal target, did not die during the Campaign. It is unlikely many suffered more than he did.

      During the Rectification Campaign, according to JC, “the number who perished was in the thousands, at least” (p. 257). No reference supporting this statement can be found in the book. To make a reasonable guess about the extent of loss of life, we may look at the most famous victim, Wang Shi-wei, personally targeted by Mao as “the champion of the young volunteers” (p. 250). After reading his article in Liberation Daily, Mao “slammed the newspaper on the desk and demanded angrily: ‘Who is in charge here? Wang Shi-wei or Marxism?’” (p. 251). It became more personal when Mao saw “Shi-wei’s enormous popularity. He said at once: ’I now have a target.’ He later complained: ’Many people rushed from far away to . . . read his article. But no one wants to read mine!’ ‘Wang Shi-wei was the king and lord master . . . he was in command in Yenan . . . and we were defeated’. . . He denounced him as a Trotskyist. . . . Trotsky, Shi-wei had said, was ‘a genius’, while Stalin was ‘an unlovable person’ who had ‘created untold countless evils’” (p. 252).

      Hardly anyone could have faced a more serious threat to his life than Wang. But he survived four years after the campaign, and was only killed in 1947, when the Nationalist army led by General Hu Tsung-nan forced the Reds to evacuate Yenan, not by Mao’s order. Given this typical example, one really needs evidence to believe “the number who perished was in the thousands”.

      Moreover, the Rectification Campaign should be seen in its historical context. As JC tells us, Mao’s moles played decisive roles in all ensuing major military campaigns, from Hu Tsung-nan in Yenan (pp. 312-318), Wei Li-huang in Manchuria (pp. 318-319), associates of Fu Tso-yi in Peking-Tianjin (pp. 319-320) to Liu Fei and Kuo Ju-kui in Huai-Hai (pp. 320-321). In strong contrast, “indeed, during the civil war, while the Nationalists were penetrated like sieves, they had virtually zero success infiltrating the Communists” (p. 258). The difference meant millions of lives or deaths. This probably could not have happened without the Rectification Campaign.

      By the way, JC’s does not give any evidence for her allegation that General Hu Tsung-nan was a communist agent, except for his apparent military blunders and earlier links to some communists in 1920’s. This leads to a strong protest by Hu’s son, Hu Wei-zhen, an Taiwanese representative in Singapore. According to JC’s brother Pu Zhang, JC’s reply is to ask Hu Junior to “provide the relevant evidence to show his father is not a red spy” (http://www2.chinesenewsnet.com/gb/MainNews/Opinion/2005_11_30_20_33_19_572.html). What kind of evidence can prove someone NOT a spy? From such an episode, one may suspect that, if it was not Mao, but JC who was in charge in Yenan that time, many young volunteers would be asked to “provide the relevant evidence to show” they are not spies, then, “the number who perished” would be indeed “in the thousands, at least”!

      10. Opium Sale

      JC accuses Mao of selling opium on a scale of $60 million in 1943 alone. The Western media is pleased to see Mao condemned as a drug lord. However, if JC’s number and her accounts of Mao’s heavy taxation in Yenan were true, Mao’s opium market would have had to cover a major part of China or even beyond. Unfortunately, there was no historical record about Yenan’s opium sale on such a scale.

      “In 1943 the Russians estimated Mao’s opium sales at 44,760 kg, worth an astronomical 2.4 billion fabi (roughly US$60 million at then current exchange rates, or some US$640 million today” (p. 287).

      In that year, Yenan “had accumulated savings . . . worth 250 million fabi. . . . . This sum was six times the official Yenan region budget for 1942” (p. 287). Hence, the opium sale in 1943 was almost 58 times (2.4billion×6/250million) the Yenan budget for 1942. Since the tax revenue should not be much higher than the budget, we have to conclude that the opium sale was 58 times the annual tax from Yenan region.

      At that time, according to JC, the Reds levied very heavy taxes in Yenan. “Sometimes . . . ‘almost equals the entire year’s harvest’; . . . For many, ‘there was no food left after paying the tax’” (p. 284). Hence, the region’s tax must be close to its entire disposable income. So Mao’s opium sale was equal to 58 times of Yenan people’s entire disposable income. But Mao did not sell opium in Yenan region, because “a drug-addicted peasantry was no use to him” (p. 290). So the money had to come from outside of Yenan.

      If the surrounding area of Yenan had the similar population density and income level, to get opium sales of 2.4 billion fabi, Mao had to suck in the entire disposable income from an area 58 times of Yenan, “which was roughly the size of France” (p. 284). 58 France is more than three Chinas! If Yenan’s average income was just one third of that of China, we still need all Chinese to spend their entire disposable income on Mao’s opium. Yenan had to be the Golden Triangle of China. This could not have remained as an “unknown story” at that time, not mention for 60 years till now.

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      11. Three Millions Deaths in 1950-1951

      At the beginning of the book, JC writes: “Mao Tse-tung . . . was responsible for well over 70 million deaths in peacetime” (p. 3). This is her main justification of comparing Mao with Hitler. We will examine each of the alleged death cases. Her first account of these 70 million deaths is three million deaths in 1950-51. In fact, this figure is grossed up from 0.7 million by JC’s arbitrary multiplication. These 0.7 million deaths, though a big loss of human lives, were related to the final stage of the civil war and the then on-going Korean War. It is questionable to classify them as deaths in peacetime.

      During the “campaign to suppress counter-revolutionaries” in 1950–51, “some 3 million perished either by execution, mob violence, or suicide” (p. 337). The calculation is explained in the footnote: 700,000 were executed, “those beaten or tortured to death . . . . would at the very least be as many again. Then there were suicides, which, based on several local inquiries, were very probably about equal to the number of those killed” (p. 337 fn). Hence we get 700,000×2×2 = 2.8 million, roughly 3 million, as claimed by JC. There is no explanation why “those beaten or tortured to death . . . . would at the very least be as many” as those executed. Her claim that suicides “were very probably about equal to the number of those killed” is based on “several local inquiries”, with no detailed information.

      To generalize an execution/killing ratio or a suicide/killing ratio from “several local inquiries” to the whole nation is hardly professional. Even if we apply this kind of generalization based on large samples, the result can be very unreliable. For instance, let us take 700,000 executions out of the total population of 550 million as a national ratio, and apply it to the “major target of Mao’s – the Roman Catholic Church” (p. 340). As “China had about 3.3 million Catholics at the time” (p. 340), we should expect at least a total number of execution of 700,000×3.3m/550m = 4,200. But JC assures us only “hundreds of Chinese Catholics were executed” (p. 340).

      It is also questionable to call all of 700,000 peacetime deaths. When the People’s Republic of China was established in October 1949, almost half of its territory had yet to be liberated. Military campaigns continued into 1950 and even 1951 in certain parts of China. The Campaign to Suppress Counter-revolutionaries and “the land reform in the newly occupied areas, where some two-thirds of China’s population lived” (p. 337) were closed related to the last stage of the bloody civil war. Many, if not most, of the 700,000 people were executed for their military actions during the war, and cannot accurately be described as victims in peacetime. In a large part of China, bandits existed since the time people could remember. Mao’s army cleaned them up almost instantly. Killing, unfortunately, was necessary to provide Chinese the “peacetime” then.

      Moreover, “China was hurled into the inferno of the Korean War on 19 October 1950” (p. 380). The war lasted three years till “an armistice was finally signed on 27 July 1953” (p. 394). During this period, especially at the early stage, Chiang Kai-shek in Taiwan called on his loyalists in the mainland to rebel against the Communists in every way possible to welcome the forthcoming liberation by the U.S. army and his own. Many answered, carrying out acts of subversive organization, propaganda, espionage, explosion, poison, arson, murder and even armed uprising etc. These acts also account for a significant part of these 700,000 executions.

      12. 27 Millions Deaths in Jails/Labor Camps

      JC’s second large group of Mao’s peacetime victims is those who died in Chinese government custody. The number is actually thrown out with a magic formula, in which the number of inmates and their annual death rate are not estimated professionally. Mao’s responsibility is not discussed, just assumed.

      During Mao’s 27 years rule, “the number who died in prisons and labour camps could well amount to 27 million” (p. 338). The proof: “China’s prison and labour camp population was roughly 10 million in any one year under Mao. Descriptions of camp life by inmates, which point to high mortality rates, indicate a probable annual death rate of at least 10 per cent” (p. 338fn). So 10m×10%×27 = 27 million.

      JC accuses Mao of killing a number of people x = a×b×c, where a = “China’s prison and labour camp population”, b = “annual death rate”, and c = the years of his rule. She does not explain why a = 10 million. Her justification of b = 10% is based on “descriptions of camp life by inmates”. If we apply this magic formula to Deng Xiao-ping, taking his reign as 1978–89, we get his responsibility for 12 million deaths. His successor Jiang Ze-min (1990-2003) gets 14 millions. JC does not show why Mao was responsible. It seems she simply blames Mao for every Chinese death whatsoever.

      13. The Superpower Program

      Throughout a large part of the book, JC repeated alleged that Mao started a secret “Superpower Programme” in 1953 and continued up to his death to pursue his dream of world dominance. This definitely sounds very alarming to the Western world, echoing the theory of “China threat”. But she does not provide any evidence such a program ever existed. The word program should mean an explicit plan, not someone’s hidden ambition. The word superpower did not even exist in the Chinese language in 1953.

      In Ch. 36, titled “Launching the Secret Superpower Programme”, we read: “in May 1953, Stalin’s successors in the Kremlin agreed to sell China ninety-one large industrial enterprises. . . . It was in effect Mao’s Superpower Programme. Its utterly military nature was concealed, and is little known in China today” (p. 396). Right after that, Mao forced through “collectivization of agriculture” and “ordered the nationalization of industry and commerce in urban areas, to channel every single resource into the Superpower Programme” (p. 412). During the Suez Canal crisis in 1956, Mao realized that the only thing he could offer Egypt were “small arms such as rifles”, and hence became “more impatient to speed up his Superpower Programme” (p. 425). Later he silenced dissent through the Anti-Rightist Campaign and launched the Great Leap Forward “to accelerate his Superpower Programme” (p. 444). In spite of the setback during the famine, “becoming a superpower had remained Mao’s dearest dream. This was partly why he had carried out the Purge – to install new enforcers who were more in tune with his demands. After this process was complete, he started to accelerate the Programme” (p. 573). Even to the Western world, “Mao began seeking relations with America, in order to gain access to Western technology for his Superpower Programme” (p. 601).

      Mao’s superpower ambition, even if it truly existed, is not the same as a program. According to Webster’s New World Dictionary, the word Program means: (i) “a proclamation”, which means “something that is proclaimed, or announced officially”; (ii) “a prospectus”, which means “a statement outlining the main features of a new work or business enterprise”, (iii) “a plan or procedure for dealing with some matter”. In one word, a program is something proclaimed, announced or stated explicitly regarding concrete features, objectives or procedures of certain undertakings. It is not something completely hidden in one person’s head but never expressed either in papers or in words.

      Within the whole book, we cannot find any record, written or spoken by Mao or his colleagues, referring to a Superpower Programme. Its name is dubious, because Mao maintained China belonged to the third world (p. 650) and would never seek to be a superpower (declared by Deng Xiaoping at UN in 1974). Even if he had a plan to become a superpower, he could hardly use that name. In fact, the word “superpower” did not exist in the Chinese language until the 1970s. How could Mao have “first outlined his Superpower Programme” in 1953 (p. 432)? If Mao used another name or just a code, what was it? “It”? “That”? “The Thing”? Without a name or even a code, how could Mao and his colleagues discuss and implement it?

      Without evidence of its existence, JC gives two examples as components of Mao’s Superpower Program. One is the “ninety-one large industrial enterprises” sold by the Soviet Union to China in 1953. She does not explain what kind of the “utterly military nature was concealed” in these hydro-power plants, dams, tractor factories, mines, steel mills, truck factories, oil refineries, machine-tool factories etc.

      Her other example is of course the atom bomb. Several nations have possessed such weapons before China and after. JC offers no explanation as to why China’s possession of them must be a part of a Superpower Program. She does remind us though that, “In March 1955 the US said it would use nuclear weapons under certain circumstances. Eisenhower very deliberately told a press conference on the 16th that he could see no reason why they should not be used ‘just exactly as you would use a bullet or anything else’. . . China seemed to be in real danger of a US nuclear strike” (p. 414). She does not mention that before Eisenhower, during the Korean War, General McArthur requested to drop 20+ atom bombs on Beijing and other Chinese cities, and his plan was only vetoed by President Truman after a long and hotly contested discussion. Nor does JC mention that, after Eisenhower and before China had its atom bomb, “JFK was ready to use nuclear bomb on China” too (The Independent 27 Aug. 2005). But she knows that “China seemed to be in real danger of a US nuclear strike” by “bombing and strafing more Nationalists-held islands”, which are within China’s own territory (p. 414). JC probably knows whether other nuclear nations faced the same nuclear threat. At the moment of its first bomb exploded, China pledged never to use nuclear weapons first. JC probably knows if other nuclear nations did the same. Does JC think they all have Superpower Programmes?

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      14. 38 Million Deaths in 1958 – 1961

      The famine is no doubt the biggest disaster to the Chinese people under the CCP and Mao in particular. JC is entitled to choose the highest estimated death toll to condemn Mao. But her claim that Mao intentionally made this famine cannot be substantiated by her evidence which suggests the opposite.

      JC writes: “Close to 38 million people died of starvation and overwork in the Great Leap Forward and the famine. . . . Mao knowingly starved and worked these tens of millions of people to death” (pp. 456–457).

      The number of deaths claimed in the book is not JC’s finding, but to insert the word “knowingly” is definitely her innovation. She gives no evidence that Mao knew that millions of people were dying and did not take actions to stop it. Her strongest argument is: “During the two critical years 1958–9, grain exports alone, almost exactly 7m tons, would have provided the equivalent of over 840 calories per day for 38 million people – the difference between life and death” (p. 457).

      The Chinese government had to make its export plans for 1958 and 1959 about one year earlier, mainly based on the grain production in 1957 and 1958 respectively. The bad news had not emerged then. Mao could not know that millions of people would die. The large scale of grain export in 1959 reflected Mao’s false estimate of the grain production one year earlier, which led him to “announce that the harvest figure for 1958 was more than double 1957’s” (p. 461), which he apparently believed. This unreliable estimate in turn was based on a nationwide misreporting. For example, as cited by JC, “in September (1958), People’s Daily reported that ‘the biggest rice sputnik’ yet had produced over 70 tons from less than 1/5th of an acre, which was hundreds of times the norm” (p. 446). Mao should be condemned for his bad judgment and responsibility for creating the political atmosphere conducive to such misinformation. He could also be blamed for not abolishing grain export contracts earlier, possibly in part due to his national pride. But these are different from “knowingly starved . . . tens of millions of people to death”.

      To judge whether JC’s word “knowingly” is valid, we should not underestimate the difficulty of getting accurate information at that time. A convincing example is related to JC herself. According to her autobiography, Wild Swans, her father was the minister of Sichuan’s Department of Propaganda (she coined a special name for her father’s unit, “Department of Public Affair”). His main job was to visit peasants and provide needed help. According to JC, 7 million people die in Sichuan during the famine. No one should know this better than her father. If he reported what he saw, it is extremely unlikely that he could hide it from his wife (another “Public Affair” official – propagandist) for more than a decade. It is even more unlikely that his wife could hide it from JC for the next three decades. However, in neither Wild Swans nor this book can one find any information that JC’s father knew about the famine in Sichuan. Even the figure of 7 million deaths, was told to JC more than a decade after her departure from China. If the top “Public Affair” official in the province did not know it, how could Mao in Beijing “knowingly starved . . . tens of millions of people to death”?

      In fact, it should not be so difficult for JC to prove her word “knowingly”. She could simply present evidence that the Sichuan government had reported to Beijing that people were starving to death and asked for urgent food relief, but got no immediate response. If JC claims the absence of such evidence was because of Mao’s terror, she should offer at least one example that Mao had punished anyone for asking food relief. Her story of Peng Dehuai (p. 468–70) does not fit here, because he did many other things, e.g., he “contemplated something akin to a military coup” (p. 464) and during the party congress in Lushan he publicly asked why he could not fuck Mao (p. 273 for a partial quote).

      Why does JC fail to give such evidence? The fact is, the Sichuan party leadership concealed millions of death in Sichuan very well. When the news of mass starvation reached Beijing, most famine stricken provinces saw their party bosses sacked for not reporting people’s suffering in time (Wu Zhifu of Henan, Zeng Xisheng of Anhui, Shu Tong of Shandong, Zhang Zhongliang of Gansu etc). The only exception is the Sichuan boss Li Jingquan who was promoted instead. Li put all the blames on his inferiors, at county or commune levels, accusing them of “knowingly starved . . . people to death”. Most people in Sichuan believe that Li just used them for scapegoats. The issue may be debatable. But it seems fair to say that if we use word “knowingly” on Li, the same has to apply to those local officials, unless their plea for help was ignored by the provincial authority. For the same reason, if JC accuses Mao of “knowingly starved . . . people to death”, the same charge must apply to Li and his colleagues, unless their plea for help was ignored by Beijing.

      For Li to conceal starvation and his own responsibility there was a crucial and necessary condition: the full cooperation of the Sichuan media, which was under the absolute control of the Department of “Public Affair” – Department of Propaganda, led by JC’s father. Let’s stop here.

      Moreover, for readers’ information, the death toll of 38 million is the highest among many widely varying estimates. It is, astonishingly, as high as the estimated total Chinese deaths during the Sino-Japanese war in 1937–45. To convince readers its validity, JC provides the death rates and population numbers, backed up by China Statistics Year Book 1983 in her references. However, neither of these data cited by her agrees with those published in the yearbook. Without telling readers those disagreements, JC argues, “The official statistics published in 1983 are recognized as partly defective, because local policemen understated the number of deaths in the years 1959-61” (p. 457 fn). If Chinese statisticians are professional, they should have corrected such obvious defects in the yearbook, unless JC proves the otherwise. JC does not explain how her “corrected” data come out, though the correction is not minor. For instance, her 1960 death rate is 4.34%, while the official one is 2.54%. This alone generates extra deaths of 12 million, almost one third of her total death toll.

      Furthermore, whatever the true figures should be, the abnormal deaths, as explained by JC (pp. 456–7 fn), include all deaths related but not directly caused by starvation or overwork, such as deaths caused by illness partially due to malnutrition, and those caused by various injuries and senile problems due to poor medical and social care. These deaths may account for a larger part of the “abnormal deaths” shown in statistic data, but were not considered “starved to death”, and did not draw immediate attention from the society and government. This is probably why there is no widespread evidence of large scale starvation in China, nearly compatible to JC’s claim. If we apply JC’s method to the Russian population data after the shock therapy, the abnormal death rate would be higher than those during China’s famine. Yeltsin could be blamed for genocide, as some Russians (unfairly) alleged.

      Finally, let us see how JC shows that Mao even intended to let tens of million people die. She wrote: “We can now say with assurance how many people Mao was ready to dispense with. . . . On 21 November 1958, talking to his inner circle about the labour-intensive projects like waterworks and making ‘steel’, and tacitly, almost casually, assuming a context where peasants had too little to eat and were being worked to exhaustion, Mao said: ‘Working like this, with all these projects, half of China may well have to die. If not half, one-third, or one-tenth --- 50 million --- die.’ Aware that these remarks might ssound too shocking, he tried to shirk his own responsibility. ‘Fifty million deaths’, he went on, ‘I could be fired, and I might even lose my head . . . but if you insist, I’ll let you do it, and you can’t blame me when people die’.” (p. 457 – 458)

      In her interview with BBC, Jung Chang uses this quotation to show that Mao knew that half of the population would die under his policy and he “deliberately” starved tens of millions of people to death. It is worthwhile to check where this sinister quotation comes.

      These words are taken from Mao’s speech in the politburo meeting in Wuchang, 21 November 1958. The honest translation including the context should be as follows:

      “Do not pursuit the vanity, and get a disaster. We should reduce the amount of our task. On the waterworks, the whole nation accomplished 50 billion cubic meters of earth in the last winter and this spring, but for this winter and the next spring, the plan is 190 billion, three times more. There are various other tasks, steel, iron, copper, aluminum, coal, transport, machinery, chemicals, how much labor and financial resource needed? Working like this, I am afraid that, half of China may well have to die. If not half, one-third, or one-tenth --- 50 million deaths. 50 million deaths, if you are not fired, at least I will be. Should we do so much? It is ok if you really want, but the principle is no death. If you insist, I cannot stop you, but I should not be killed when people die. Next year’s plan is to produce 30 million tons of steel, should we plan so much? Can we do it? How many people must work for it? Will people die? We should lower our tone in this meeting, cool the air down. The string of the Huchin (a Chinese instrument) should not be pulled too tightly. There is a risk of breaking down.”

      After seeing the true text, indeed, “we can now say with assurance how many people Mao was ready to dispense with.”

      15. Three Million Deaths in 1966-76

      The last occurrence of deaths on a large scale under Mao took place during the Cultural Revolution. JC adds three million to Mao’s record. Her number is not based on professional research. Her evidence points to Mao’s general responsibility for launching the Cultural Revolution, but not direct involvement or encouragement of violence and brutality, which caused most deaths in some, mostly remote, provinces.

      “In the ten years from when Mao started the Purge until his death in 1976, at least 3 million people died violent deaths. . . . The killings were sponsored by the state” (p. 569).

      The number of 3 million is much higher than the official estimate. JC’s main reference for this number was from an article published in China Spring, a fervent anti-Chinese government magazine in the U.S., not well known for its neutrality and objectiveness.

      There were 29 provinces/regions in China at that time. The worst case on JC’s list is Guangxi, where “killing claimed some 100,000 lives” (p. 566). To get a total 3 million nationwide we must have the same figure for all provinces following Guangxi. In JC’s second and third positions, however, we find Yunnan where some “seventeen thousand of them were executed or beaten to death, or driven to suicide”, and Inner Mongolia where “16,222 died” (p. 567). If we count every province except Guangxi with 20,000 deaths, the total number would be 0.66 million. The rest of the 2.34 million claimed by JC, have to remain her “unknown story”.

      Now let us consider Mao’s responsibility. JC’s No. 1 case of Guangxi indeed offers “the clearest illustration”, where “one faction refused to recognize the authority of Mao’s point man, General (Wei) Guo-qing” (p. 565). So the killing was mainly due to faction fighting. JC provides the following evidence for Mao’s attitude towards such violence. At the beginning of the Cultural Revolution, “Mao had Chou En-lai announce to a Red Guard rally on Tiananmen on 31 August (1966): ‘Denounce by words, and not by violence’” (p. 540). “In 1968, factional clashes with firearms had shown little sign of abating, despite a flood of commands from Peking. One man who was being conspicuously unruly was Kuai Da-fu, the Qinghua University student whom Mao had used to torment Liu Shao-chi and his wife. Kuai had by now become the most famous ‘leftist’ in the country, and he was determined to bring his opponents in the university to their knees. He ignored repeated orders to stop. . . Mao had to step in personally to get him to toe the line, and simultaneously made an example of him to send a warning to the whole country that faction wars had to stop” (pp. 564-5). Since Mao personally stopped his most favorite ‘leftist’ using violence in faction fighting, he would unlikely have supported other provincial leftists doing so. The real story was probably what JC tells us: “Mao had unleashed a dynamic that was undermining his own power. He had to abandon his attempt to identify factions as Left and Conservative, and called for all groups to unite. But his orders were ignored” (p. 564).

      According to JC’s evidence, Mao was guilty of miscalculation, without evil intention.

    • 家园 【文摘】金小丁驳文英文版(6)

      16. Mao’s Aim of the Cultural Revolution

      This issue is important as Mao considered the Cultural Revolution one of the two major achievements in his life. JC claims that Mao “had intended the Great Purge to install much more merciless enforcers” for his Superpower Program (p. 558), his real target “was the old enforcers who had shown distaste for Mao’s extremist policies. Mao aimed to get rid of them en masse” (p. 543). However, her evidence not only contrasts to her claim, but also supports Mao’s proclaimed aim of the Cultural Revolution, i.e., “a move to rid China of Soviet-style ‘revisionists’” (p. 570).

      In particular, we will show how her evidence demonstrates: (i) Mao did not need to replace merciful officials to enforce his plan for JC called Superpower Programme. (ii) Mao neither targeted merciful officials nor promoted merciless ones during the Cultural Revolution. (iii) Mao’s approach of mobilizing the masses to topple officials seriously damaged the very basis of any enforcement, and was totally unnecessary if his goal was “to install much more merciless enforcers”. (iv) JC believes that there was a pro-Russian faction within the Chinese government before the Cultural Revolution. We will explain each of these points in details below.

      (i) JC’s evidence shows Mao did not need the Cultural Revolution to “install much more merciless enforcers”, because there existed no serious resistance to his so called Superpower Programme at the top level. In 1964 Mao started his biggest project after the Great Leap Forward, the Third Front. “It cost an astronomical 200 billion-plus yuan, and at its peak it sucked in at least two-third of the entire nation’s investment. The waste it created was more than the total material losses caused by the Great Leap Forward” (p. 503). In spite of that, “Liu Shao-chi and Mao’s other colleagues put up no resistance to this lunacy. . . . For Mao to forgo deaths and political victimization seems to have been the best his colleagues thought they could expect – and enough to make them feel they might as well go along with him” (p. 504).

      (ii) If Mao’s aim was to replace merciful enforcers with merciless ones, he would have targeted the former and promoted the latter during the Cultural Revolution. But JC’s evidence shows the opposite. She first gives an example: one of the outspoken opponents of the Cultural Revolution was “Mao’s old follower Tan Zhen-lin, who had been in charge of agriculture during the famine (showing how far he was prepared to go along with Mao)” (p. 546). Later, JC puts it more flatly: “Mao did not differentiate between disaffected officials and those who were actually totally loyal to him and had not wavered even during the famine. In fact, there was no way he could tell who was which. So he resolved to overthrow them all first, and then have them investigated by his new enforcers” (p. 543). This is not the way to find merciless enforcers. If Mao could not “tell who was which” among his old followers after years of scrutiny, how could he trust those totally unknown rebels out of his party system? In fact, merciless enforcers were more likely to be thrown out first by rebels, who might have suffered under them for years. For instance, the Sichuan boss Li Jingquan and his associates (including “Public Affair” officials), who cooperated quite well to cover the famine, could not escape this time.

      (iii) Mao’s approach of mobilizing masses to push the party apparatus into chaos contradicts JC’s theory. If Mao’s goal was merciless enforcement, the last thing he wanted should have been to destroy the very basis of any enforcement, the authority of his government, without which no enforcers can enforce anything regardless of how merciless they are. Mao’s approach can only be consistent with JC’s theory if it was necessary “to install much more merciless enforcers”. Unfortunately, JC’s evidence convincingly rules this possibility out.

      JC shows Mao could get rid of his enemies without mobilizing masses. For instance, let’s consider “the first list of victims of the Great Purge, four big names described as an ‘anti-Party clique’: Mayor Peng, Chief of Staff Luo, Yang Shang-kun, the liaison with Russia and the tape-recording suspect, and old media chief Lu Ding-yi. Mao did not bother to come to the occasion”. The meeting “was actually chaired by Liu Shao-chi, who knew he was chairing an event that was ultimately going to bring him to ruin”. “Liu then asked all in favor to raise their hands. All did, including Mayor Peng and Liu” (p. 531).

      The Red Guards were involved in toppling the President Liu Shao-chi, but JC shows their contribution was merely nominal. After citing the words of Kuai Da-fu, who was the Rebel leader in condemning Liu, JC writes: “This is a good self-confession of how the Rebels really worked; they were tools, and cowards, and they knew it” (p. 550). To formally purge Liu, “Mao had Chou En-lai telephone Liu and tell him to stop meeting foreigners, or appearing in public, unless told to do so. That day, Mao wrote a tirade against Liu which he himself read out to the Central Committee two days later, in Liu’s presence, breaking the news of Liu’s downfall” (p. 548).

      “Out of his remaining top echelon, there came only one burst of defiance. In February 1967, some of the Politburo members who had not fallen spoke up, voicing rage at what was happening to their fellow Party cadres” (p. 546). “But these elite survivors were either devoted veteran followers of Mao’s, or men already broken by him. Faced with his wrath, they folded. . . . The mini-revolt was easily quelled” (p. 547). Masses were not needed against the challenge which involved some of the country’s top military leaders. Clearly JC cannot explain the essential feature of the Cultural Revolution.

      (iv) Now let’s look at how JC’s evidence supports a totally different goal of the Cultural Revolution, proclaimed by Mao himself, who “had presented the Cultural Revolution as a move to rid China of Soviet-style ‘revisionists’” (p. 570).

      “On 14 October 1964, Khrushchev was ousted in a palace coup. . . Within days, Chou was telling Soviet ambassador Chervonenko that it was Mao’s ‘utmost wish’ to have a better relationship. Chou requested an invitation to the anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution in Moscow on 7 November” (p. 510). “At the reception in the Kremlin on 7 November, . . . Soviet defense minister Rodion Malinovsky approached Chou. . . . Out of the blue, Malinovsky said to Chou: ‘We don’t want any Mao, or any Khrushchev, to stand in the way of our relationship’. . . . Malinovsky then turned to Marshal Ho Lung, China’s acting army chief: ‘We’ve got rid of our fool Khrushchev, now you get rid of yours, Mao’” (p. 511).

      Moreover, JC reveals secret moves within the Chinese leadership. In “February (1966), with the backing of Liu Shao-chi, Mayor Peng issued a ‘national guideline’ forbidding the use of political accusations to trample on culture and the custodians of culture. Moreover, he went further, and actually suppressed Mao’s instructions aimed at starting a persecution campaign. . . . As soon as he issued the guideline, Mayor Peng flew to Sichuan, ostensibly to inspect arms industries relocated in this mountainous province. There he did something truly astonishing. He had a secret tete-a-tete with Marshal Peng. . . . judging from the timing, and the colossal risk Mayor Peng took in visiting a major foe of Mao’s, without permission, in secret, it is highly likely that they discussed the feasibility of using the army to stop Mao. . . Marshal Ho Lung, the man to whom Soviet defense minister Malinovsky had said ‘Get rid of Mao’, soon also went to Sichuan, also in the name of inspecting the arms industries. . . . And there was more that was gnawing at Mao’s mind. It seems that Mayor Peng was contemplating getting in touch with the Russians, and may have thought of seeking Russian help to avert Mao’s Purge” (p. 528).

      After seeing JC’s evidence, one has hardly any choice but to view Mao’s “Cultural Revolution as a move to rid China of Soviet-style ‘revisionists’”.

      (v) The mass mobilization not only contradicts JC’s theory, it also fits Mao’s declaration of “denouncing those power-holders inside the Party pursuing a capitalist road”. Mao believed that the capitalism would benefit officials at expense of ordinary people. His proclaimed goal is also consistent with China’s reality today. Few people doubt China is capitalist, at least economically. The transformation was coincidently guided by the then No. 2 capitalist-roader Deng Xiao-ping (p. 553). Since Mao foresaw capitalist forthcoming, and even anticipated its top campaigner, it seems logical that he would launch the Cultural Revolution to prevent that from happening.

    • 家园 【文摘】金小丁:评张戎《毛,不为人知的故事》(下)

      12)囚犯死亡二千七百万

      这是张戎记在毛名下的7千万冤魂的第二个群体。她说在毛27年统治下“死在监狱和劳改场的可达2千7百万”。证明:“在毛统治下的任何一年,中国在监狱和劳改场的人数大约一千万。囚犯们对其生活的描述表明死亡率很高,可能每年10%” (338页)。所以,1千万×10%×27=2千7百万。

      每年一千万囚犯的数字怎么来的,没解释。哪里的囚犯描述的哪个年代的生活状况所得出的10%死亡率,也没解释。为什么毛要为所有这些囚犯之死负责,更没解释。显然张戎把所有不幸死亡的中国人都算在毛的帐上。照这个公式,若把1978-89年算作邓小平的统治期,他应为一千二百万人之死负责。要是这样对他不公平,也可以把前头的2百万推给华国锋,中间的7百万划给胡耀邦,最后3百万留给赵紫阳。反正无论谁当中国领导人,每天都得摊上两三千条人命。

      13)超级大国工程/计划(PROGRAMME)

      张戎宣告毛从1953年开始就一直醉心于称霸世界的梦想,并搞了一个秘密的超级大国工程/计划。这显然是张戎的西方朋友最想听的,因为她为“中国威胁论” 提供了有力的支持。可惜张戎没拿出一点有关这个工程/计划的证据。

      书中一章的标题是“启动秘密的超级大国工程” 。张戎在其中写道“1953年5月,斯大林在克林姆林宫的继任者同意卖给中国91个大型工业企业。. . . 这实际上是毛的超级大国工程。其完全的军事性质被掩盖了,而且至今在中国也几乎无人知晓” (396页)。此后,毛强迫实行“农业集体化” 并“命令城市工商业实行国营,以便把每一点资源都用于超级大国工程”(412页)。1956年苏伊士运河危机时,毛发现他能提供给埃及的只是“步枪等轻武器”,因而“更加急不可耐地要加速他的超级大国工程” (425页)。他通过反右消灭了不同意见,接着发动大跃进来“推动他的超级大国工程” (444页)。尽管大饥荒令其计划受挫, “成为超级大国仍然是毛的最大梦想。这也是他搞文革大清洗的部分原因-换上那些能跟上他步调的新的政策贯彻者。这个一搞完,他就开始加速超级大国工程” (573页)。甚至向西方世界,“毛开始寻求与美国拉关系,以求为他的超级大国工程获取西方的技术” (601页)。

      毛即使有超级大国的野心,也不等于有一个超级大国工程/计划(Programme)。按照Webster 新世界英语辞典的解释,Programme的意思是指明确写下来,宣布出来,或陈述出来的有关具体活动的方案和程序。它不是仅存在于某人脑袋里的,从未以书面或口头方式表达出来的想法。

      在整本书里我们看不到毛或其同事提到超级大国工程的任何记录。这个名字就挺怪。毛一直声称中国属于第三世界(650页),决不当超级大国(由邓小平1974年在联合国宣布)。即使他暗地里搞,也不太可能用这个名字。事实上“超级大国” 这个词到70年代才在中文里出现,毛怎么可能在1953年就“首次规划出他的超级大国工程” (432页)呢?

      如果毛用了别的什么名字,或某个代号,究竟是什么?“那东西” ?“那玩艺儿” ?如果连个名字甚至代号都没有,毛和他的同伙怎么讨论这个工程呢?更别提实施了。如果连这个也不知道,张戎的“不为人知的故事” 恐怕连天也不知吧?

      虽然没有存在的证据,张戎还是列出了毛的超级大国工程的两项内容。一个是1953年苏联卖给中国的91个工业项目。可她一点也没解释什么样的“军事性质被掩盖” 在这些水电站,拖拉机厂,矿山,钢铁厂,汽车厂,炼油厂,机械制造厂之类的企业里。也许在她看来中国人吃饭穿衣都是“完全的军事性质” 。

      张戎列举的第二个超级大国工程项目是原子弹。好几个国家在中国之前或之后发展了原子弹。张戎没讲为什么中国搞原子弹就是要当超级大国。可她没忘了告诉我们:“1955年3月,美国表示它会在某种条件下使用核武器。16日爱森豪威尔在记者招待会上非常明确地说他找不出任何理由不能‘象使用一般子弹或其他东西那样使用’它们。. . . 中国看来真有遭受美国核打击的可能” (414页)。

      张戎没提到的是,朝鲜战争中麦克阿瑟将军曾要求向北京等大中城市投掷二十几枚原子弹。该计划在经过多次激烈辩论之后被杜鲁门总统否决。还有1963年“肯尼迪总统准备对中国使用核武器” (英国《独立报》2005年8月27日)。

      张戎至少知道中国受到核威胁只是因为向其领土内“国民党占据的岛屿打炮” 而已(414页)。其他拥有核武器的国家,有没有受到过比中国更严重的核威胁?按张戎的观点,是否他们都搞了超级大国工程?

      14)饿死三千八百万

      张戎说,1958-61四年间,“近3千8百万人在大跃进和饥荒中饿死或累死。. . . 毛明明知道却让这几千万人饿死或累死” (456-7页)。

      她没有提供任何资料证明“毛明明知道” 大批人频临饿死而没采取措施拯救。她最有力的论据是:“在1958-59年关键的两年里,光粮食出口就几乎7百万吨,这些粮食可以给3千8百万人提供每天840卡路里,足以造成生死之别” (457页)。

      58-59年大饥荒刚露苗头,毛不可能“明明知道” 粮食出口会导致大量饿死人。59年的粮食出口合同基本上是根据58年的粮食估产与国外签约的。而58年的虚报产量造成毛错误地“宣告58年的产量是57年的两倍” (461页)。如张戎所述,当时浮夸盛行,《人民日报》曾报道过单产达到“正常水平一百倍”的新闻(446页)。看来毛对增产一倍的估计自己确实是相信的。毫无疑问他要为产生这种浮夸的政治风气负责,也要为59年未能及时发现饥荒并迅速取消粮食出口合同负责。当时中国的出口几乎只有粮食,取消合同在国际信誉上的损失和毛的民族自尊可能都有负面影响。但这跟“明明知道却让这几千万人饿死” 是两回事。

      要客观地判断毛是否“明明知道”,我们不应低估当时获取可靠信息的难度。一个现成的例子就与张戎有关。张戎在其自转《鸿》中介绍,她父亲是当时四川省委宣传部副部长。不过她把自己父母所在单位叫做 “公共事务(Public Affair)部” ,其父的主要工作是到农村访贫问苦。据她讲四川饥荒造成7百万人死亡。对此没人比她父亲更应该“明明知道”了。从饥荒到他去世的十多年里,很难想象他没把这些告诉也是“公共事务部” 官员的妻子,更难想象他妻子会在此后30年里对张戎隐瞒。可无论在《鸿》还是在这本书里,我们都找不到从她父亲那里获得的有关四川饥荒的任何信息。就连张戎那7百万的数字,也是她出国十多年后才听说的。如果一省之内专管农村“公共事务”的官员都没有“明明知道”的话,远在北京的毛怎么就一定“明明知道”呢?

      其实对张戎来说,证明毛“明明知道”应当轻而易举。她只须拿出证据,表明四川省委或“公共事务部”曾向北京汇报过大批农民频临饿死的情况并呼求紧急救济,而北京没有马上在力所能及的范围内采取措施。如果张戎把找不出这样证据的原因归咎于毛的残酷打压,她应该至少举出一个证据,表明毛曾制裁过哪怕一位向中央乞求救济粮的干部。她书里讲到的彭德怀不是恰当的例子,因为他干了许多别的事情,比如张戎认为他“考虑过某种类似军事政变的活动” (464页),而且在庐山会议上当众质问为什么他不能“操”毛(273页,片断引语)。

      为什么张戎提不出毛“明明知道”的证据呢?大概与四川省委成功地掩盖了四川的饥荒有关。其他严重饿死人的省的第一书记当时都被撤职,如河南的吴芝圃,安徽的曾希圣,山东的舒同,甘肃的张仲良。唯一的例外是四川的李井泉,反被提拔为西南局第一书记。李所以能瞒天过海的一个必要条件是对四川媒体的严密封锁。而控制这些媒体的顶头上司就是四川省委宣传部,即张戎父亲的“公共事务部” 。让我们就此打住吧。

      另外提一下,张戎的3千8百万饿死人数颇有争议。这跟1937-45年整个抗日战争中的中国人死亡数字基本相等了。为了让读者信服,张戎把国家统计局1983年出版的《中国统计年鉴》作为支持这一结论的参考资料。可是,无论死亡率还是总人口数,她的数字都与该统计年鉴不同。她没有告诉读者这些差异,只是提到“官方1983年发表的统计数据有问题,因为地方公安局低报了1959-61年的死亡数” (457页)。假如中国统计学家有起码的专业素养,这些低报现象应当已经被考虑进去了,除非有人能证明并非如此。张戎没有解释她的正确数字是怎么来的。差别可是不小,如60年的官方死亡率是2. 54%,她的是4. 34%。仅这一项就多“生” 出1千2百万饿死鬼。

      其实,按照张戎所解释的算法(456-7页),不论具体数字准确与否,那些人数应属“非正常死亡” ,并不等于饿死累死。比如受营养不良影响但主要因为其他疾病死亡的病人,受医疗护理条件影响本可多活几年却“提早”去世的老年人。这些人的死亡可能在事后的统计资料上占相当大的比例,但在当时却不被看成饥荒的牺牲品,因而没有引起政府与社会的高度重视。正因为如此,今天在中国找不到张戎宣称的那种世纪大灾难所应伴随的普遍案例。

      如果把张戎的逻辑用到俄罗斯震荡疗法后的人口数据上,非正常死亡率比中国饥荒时还高。她应该赞同苏共老党员的观点,判叶利钦种族灭绝罪。张戎“明明知道” 这是不公平的吧?

      最后,让我们看看张戎是怎么证明毛甚至有意让几千万人死亡的。她写道:“我们现在可以完全确定地说毛准备牺牲多少人的生命” (457)。“毛说:‘象这样工作,所有这些工程项目,中国可能要死一半人。不死一半,也要死三分之一,或者十分之一,死五千万人’。知道这话听起来太吓人,他想推卸责任。‘死五千万人’ ,他继续说,‘我可能要被撤职,甚至掉脑袋,. . . 但是你们若坚持,我就让你们搞,死人的时候可别怪我’ 。” (458)

      张戎所引毛的话出自1958年11月21日在武昌中央政治局扩大会议上的讲话。包括上下文的原话是这样的:

      不要务虚名,而得实祸。现在要减轻点任务,水利建设,去冬今春全国搞五百亿土石方,而今冬明春要搞一千九百亿土石方,多了三倍。还有各种各样的任务,钢、铁、铜、铝、煤炭、运输、加工工业、化学工业,需要多少人力财力,这样一来,我看起来,中国非死一半人不可,不死一半,也要死三分之一,或者十分之一,死五千万人。死五千万人,你的职不撤,至少我的职要撤,头也成问题。要不要搞那么多,你多了也可以,以不死人为原则。你们一定要搞,我也没有办法,但死了人不能杀我的头。明年3000万吨钢,究竟要不要定这么多?搞不搞得出?要多少人上阵,会不会死人?这次会议要唱个低调,把空气压缩一下。胡琴的弦不能拉得太紧,有断弦的危险”。

      看了原文,“我们现在可以完全确定地说毛准备牺牲多少人的生命”了吧。

      15)文革整死三百万

      张戎所说的7千万毛氏牺牲品中的最后一批,是死于文革的3百万。“从毛发动大清洗到他1976年死去的十年里,至少3百万人因暴力死亡。. . . 而这些屠杀是政府支持的” (569页)。

      她的3百万数字的主要参考文献,是《中国之春》,很难说是中立和客观的杂志。

      文革时中国有29个省市。张戎列出的死人最多的省份是广西,“10万人被杀” (566页)。要凑齐全国3百万的总数,其他各省死人数也得达到广西的水平才行。可张戎的第二和第三名,云南有“1万7千人被枪决,打死或被逼自杀”,内蒙有“16222人死亡”(567页)。让我们假设广西以外的各省死亡数都是2万,加上广西的10万,总共66万。张戎宣称的3百万里剩下的234万,又成了她的“不为人知的故事”了。

      现在让我们看看毛对死人应负的责任。张戎说死人最多的广西为我们提供了“最清楚的实例” (565页)。在那里两派武斗是由于其中的“一方拒绝承认毛任命的(韦)国清将军的领导” (565页)。那么毛对两派武斗是什么态度呢?据张戎说,文革一开始,“毛让周恩来在(1966)8月31日天安门红卫兵大会上宣布:‘要文斗不要武斗’”(540页)。“1968年尽管北京不断下令,各地武斗屡禁不止。其中特别不听话的是清华大学的蒯大富,毛曾用他来折磨刘少奇夫妇。蒯这时已成为全国最著名的‘左派’ ,决心要制服他在校内的反对者。他对上面多次指示置之不理,. . . 毛不得不亲自出面让他服从,同时把他当成例子来警告全国,武斗必须停止” (564-5页)。

      既然毛阻止他身边最器重的造反派武斗,怎么会支持广西云南内蒙那些边远省份的武斗分子呢?张戎自己也承认:“毛掀起的风暴冲击了他自己的权力。他不得不放弃区分左派与保守派的念头,号召各派大联合。可他的命令无人理睬” (564页)。按她这个说法,显然毛有发动文革之错,并无支持武斗之罪嘛。

      16)文革目的

      评毛功过必谈文革,因为他自己把文革作为一生两件大事之一。张戎认为毛“搞这场大清洗是为了换上对老百姓更无情的政策贯彻者”来推行他的超级大国工程(558页)。他的真正目标“是对毛的极端政策不满者。毛要把他们整个干掉” (543页)。可是她的证据不仅跟她的说法矛盾,而且还支持了毛自己宣称的文革目标:“从中国清除苏联修正主义”(570页)。

      (1)张戎的证据表明毛并不需要文革来“换上对老百姓更无情的政策贯彻者”,因为文革前在党内并不存在毛与“对毛的极端政策不满者”之间的尖锐矛盾。1964年毛开始了大跃进以后的最大项目,三线工程。“它的成本达到2千亿元的天文数字,在其高峰期它吸收了全国至少三分之二的投资。它所造成的浪费超过了整个大跃进时的物质损失”(503页)。

      尽管如此,“刘少奇和毛的其他同事对如此的愚蠢行为并没抵抗。. . . 只要毛不驱使人民大量死亡或搞政治迫害,看来就是他的同事们最好的指望了-并且足以使他们感到心甘情愿继续顺从下去” (504页)。这样看来毛根本没必要“换上对老百姓更无情的政策贯彻者”。

      (2)如果毛的目的是用“无情的政策贯彻者” 来换下对“极端政策不满者”,他应当在文革中提拔前者打击后者。可张戎描述的情况完全不是这样。

      张戎先举了一个例子,反文革的一员干将是“毛的老跟班谭震林,他在大饥荒时主管农业(可见他为追随毛能走多远)” (546页)。接下来她甚至说得更明确:“毛并不区分心怀不满的干部和那些彻底效忠于他哪怕在饥荒时期也没动摇过的人。事实上,他也分不出谁是谁,所以他决定先一锅端了,然后再让他的新政策贯彻者去调查区分” (543页)。

      这可不是挑选“无情的政策贯彻者”的好办法。假如毛经过对其部下的多年考查,还“分不出谁是谁” 的话,他能相信那些刚从党外突然冒出来的造反派替他挑选“无情的政策贯彻者”吗?实际上,“无情的政策贯彻者” 在文革中更可能被他们统治下受苦多年的造反派最先打倒。比如四川第一书记李井泉和他的同僚(包括“公共事务部”的),当年合伙躲过了大饥荒的责任,这次就没跑掉。毛若用文革的方式来选拔“无情的政策贯彻者” ,简直是成心跟自己过不去嘛。

      (3)张戎的文革理论更难解释毛发动民众捣毁党政系统的做法。

      如果毛的目的是用“无情的政策贯彻者”贯彻他的“极端政策”,他最忌讳的应当是破坏贯彻任何政策都不可缺少的必要条件:政府权威。没有这个什么样的贯彻者也无法贯彻任何政策,不论他们多么无情。挽救张戎理论的唯一可能是证明毛必须靠发动民众打倒政敌。可惜这个可能性也被张戎彻底排除了。

      张戎的证据表明毛无须民众帮忙就能打倒对手。比如,在打倒被称为“彭罗陆杨”反党集团的“大清洗的第一批受害者” 时,“毛都不屑出席” ,会议“其实是由刘少奇主持的,他知道他正在干的事最后将导致他自身的毁灭”。“刘要求所有赞成的人举手,所有的人都举了,包括彭真和刘少奇”(531页)。

      在刘少奇被打倒的过程中,红卫兵确实有些参与,但张戎证明他们的作用只是象征性的。在引用了蒯大富的一段话后,她写到:“这是红卫兵实际上怎样运作的很好的自我坦白;他们只是工具,胆小鬼,而且自己也清楚这点” (550页)。正式打倒刘的时候,“毛让周恩来打电话告诉刘停止见外宾或公开露面,除非接到指示。那天毛写了一篇指控刘的文章,两天后在中央委员会上宣读,公布了刘的倒台” (548页)。红卫兵根本没起任何作用。

      再看看毛与其他文革反对派的斗争。“在他剩下的最高领导层里,只有一次抗争。1967年2月,几个没倒台的政治局委员发表异议,对党内同僚的遭遇表示愤怒” (546页)。“但这些高层的幸存者或是毛长年的追随者,或是已经被他制服了的。在他的淫威面前,这些人退缩了。. . . 这个小型反叛被轻易压了下去” (547页)。在包括几位元帅的集体挑战面前,毛仍没用红卫兵帮忙。

      (4)现在看看张戎怎样用她的证据支持毛的说法,即文革的目的是反对苏联修正主义。她相信文革前在中共党内存在亲苏势力,并可能以政变方式夺权。

      1964年10月14日,赫鲁晓夫被宫廷政变赶下台。. . . 几天后周(恩来)告诉苏联驻华大使Chervonneko毛‘热切希望’改善关系。周希望受邀请参加11月7日十月革命纪念活动” (510页)。“在11月7日克里姆林宫的招待会上,苏联国防部长马林诺夫斯基对周说:‘我们不想再让毛或者赫鲁晓夫阻碍我们发展关系’ 。. . . 马林诺夫斯基接着又对中国的代理国防部长贺龙元帅讲:‘我们赶走了我们的笨旦赫鲁晓夫,现在轮到你们赶走你们的笨旦毛了’ ” (511页)。

      张戎接着谈到中共党内的秘密活动。1966年“2月北京市长彭真在刘少奇支持下提出‘指导全国的提纲’ 禁止用政治批判摧残文化和对文化的维护。更进一步,他事实上压制了毛想发动政治迫害的指令。. . . 等提纲一颁布,彭市长就飞到四川,名义上是视察那里山区的国防工业。在那他做了件真正让人震惊的事。他秘密地会见了彭德怀元帅。. . . 考虑到这个特殊的时间,他在未得允许的情况下秘密会见毛的主要对手所冒的巨大风险,很有可能他们讨论了用武力阻止毛的可行性。. . . 贺龙元帅,就是苏联国防部长马林诺夫斯基劝其‘赶走毛’ 的那位,不久也去了四川,名义上也是视察国防工业。. . . 还有更多的迹象令毛不安。彭市长似乎考虑与苏联人接触,而且可能想求苏联的帮助来避免毛的清洗” (528页)。 

       

      按照张戎的推论,当时中国确有发生亲苏政变的可能。如果这样,人们就很难怀疑毛的文革目的就是他自己所说的:“从中国清除苏联修正主义” (570页)。

      (5)与反对苏联修正主义紧密相连,毛宣称的文革目标是“打倒党内走资本主义道路的当权派” (541页)。这些目的不仅跟张戎的证据相符合,而且也可以解释张戎理论所不能解释的为什么毛要发动群众打倒大批老干部。因为按照毛所信奉的理论,如果资本主义复辟,不满意的是老百姓,得益的是掌权的。所以要防止资本主义就要靠老百姓造反来对抗党和政府。

      毛对资本主义的担心至少与中国今日的现实相符。大多数人都同意中国在经济上已成为资本主义,起码对老百姓的生活而言。而且关键的转型正是在文革时党内第二号走资本主义道路当权派的领导下完成的。

      我们可以不赞成毛对资本主义的抵制,但无法否认他对其可能复辟的预见是合理的。毛反对资本主义是肯定无疑的,对资本主义复辟的预见也被证明是准确的,连带领中国进入资本主义的主要领导人都算准了。那么他试图用文革来阻止资本主义复辟应该是合乎逻辑的。

      17)毛与希特勒相提并论

      最后,讨论一下张戎全书的主题:毛至少跟希特勒一样坏。我们从三个方面比较:对外国,对自己治下的人民和对政敌所造成的客观伤害及主观动机。

      (1)对外战争:希特勒侵略了大半个欧洲,导致五千万人死亡。

      毛的记录:50年代毛受北朝鲜政府邀请出兵朝鲜。60年代毛受北越政府邀请秘密出兵北越。两次出兵中国均在家门口与不远万里来保卫自由世界的国家作战,并在交战对方离开之前先期撤回中国。1962年毛出兵印度,因为“中国不承认英国人在殖民地时期所划定的边界” (486页)。速胜后几天之内,毛命令部队单方面全部撤回原边界线内。1969年中苏之间爆发冲突,在“一个无人居住的小岛上,. . . 中国军队的伏击造成32名苏军阵亡” ,而“苏方对该岛的主权是根据不足的” (570页)。在其整个统治期内,毛没有把一块土地纳入中国版图。

      (2)百姓生死簿:希特勒下令处死数百万犹太人,共产党和左翼人士,耶合华见证人,吉普赛人,同性恋者和其他“不适宜生存的人”。

      毛的记录:镇反杀70万,但相当大部分被杀者与解放战争和抗美援朝时期的军事和暴力行为有关(详见11节)。毛统治下监狱和劳改场犯人死亡可能数目不小,但这主要由于社会历史大环境造成,尚无任何证据表明毛负有个人责任(详见12节)。大饥荒可能造成了近千万人非正常死亡(并非饿死),毛应对导致饥荒的重要条件,即左倾浮夸的政治风气负责,但无证据显示毛知道灾情而见死不救(详见14节)。毛发动的文革可能造成近百万死亡(包括大量受迫害时正常死亡但被列为“受迫害致死”的)。张戎有证据表明这是毛的失误,无证据显示这是他的本意(详见15节)。

      (3)迫害政敌:这应是最有意义的比较,因为在这个问题上两个独裁者的个人责任皆无法推卸。可惜从希特勒那几乎找不到什么例子来比较,因为基本上没人有机会成为他的政敌。不过我们知道他下令枪杀了早期的纳粹党同伙劳恩,罪名据说是同性恋。他还迫使最优秀的德国将军隆美尔自杀,因为他被怀疑牵涉进一场未遂政变。当然,希特勒还杀了策划暗杀他的斯道芬伯格和他的同党。没有一个希特勒的政敌在纳粹德国寿终正寝的例子。

      毛的记录:根据张戎所述,毛当权后的第一个政敌张国焘,1938年叛逃到国民党方面去了(220-1页)。第二位王明被毛搞垮后曾留在党内,1974年死在苏联(357页)。第三位高岗1954年自杀(405页)。第四位硬汉彭德怀1959年挨批后“被软禁” (470页),1974年死于直肠癌(557页)。第五位刘少奇1969年在迫害中病死,几乎无人护理(556页)。第六位林彪1971年在外逃中死于飞机坠毁(582页)。对最后一位邓小平,“毛只能妥协,让他与亲人住在舒服的家里” (649-50页)直到毛自己去世。

      以上所有政敌里,没有一位被处死。也没有任何人因与毛的政敌牵连而被处死。即使是最你死我活的林彪一案,“包括策划暗杀毛本人这样的事都发生了,可让人难以相信的是,竟然也没有处决一个人” (586页)。

      让我们看看毛是怎样“迫害他最恨的人”(548页)刘少奇的。“毛的奴仆周恩来向中央作的报告把刘定为‘叛徒内奸工贼’ ,并建议判处死刑。但毛反对,正如他否决了刘夫人的死刑。他要的是慢慢地折磨致死” (555-6页)。可是,刘的罪名在69年4月的九大上宣布,而刘“死于1969年11月12日” (556页)。并不怎么慢 。而刘夫人王光美“慢慢地折磨致死” 过程不仅在毛统治下持续了10年,而且直到今天还没结束,快40年了。这也太慢了点。如果毛真想让她死,不管什么死法,10年牢狱后的健康状况也不会允许她享此长寿吧。

      再让我们看看毛是怎么给刘少奇按罪名的。张戎提到毛要把刘打成特务。“专案组发现自己处于进退两难之中,捏造证据与搞不出证据同样危险。有一次,专案组宣称刘在1946年希望美军入侵中国,还为此打算与杜鲁门总统见面。毛说:‘提出这种说法,是把我们当成傻子。让美军大规模入侵?连国民党也不会同意’ ” (555页)。结果,刘的特务罪名最终没能成立。

      张戎没有提出刘的哪个罪名是在没有证据的情况下按上去的,也没有提到刘的专案组用刑讯逼供过任何证人。当然,毛的个人偏见是造成刘少奇冤案的主要原因。但张戎的材料尚无法证明毛是故意诬陷。

      这一节的讨论足以否定张戎把毛与希特勒相提并论的说法。所以,张戎此书的基本结论,在有理智不带偏见的人看来,是完全站不住脚的。

      实际上,张戎书里自相矛盾之处远远不止这17点,本文只挑其中重要的点到而已。正如前言引述的几位西方学者所说,即使书中有些言之有据的观点,也都是别人早就提过的,而张戎大都没有说明,当成自己的原创了。除此以外,真正属于张戎的独创观点,都可以轻易驳倒。限于篇幅,不可能把这些无稽之谈一一列举,剩下的“打假”工作留给感兴趣的读者们,作为消遣。

      张戎此书的中文版预计2006年初面世,届时希望中国政府让它与国内读者见面,使大家都能欣赏一下西方最推崇的中国作家的真实水平。其实,最好能让张戎的《鸿》,李志绥的《回忆录》等书都在大陆公开发行。只有如此,中国人才能逐渐培养出鉴别真伪的能力。

      初稿于2005.8.7,现稿修改于2005.11.28.

      张戎简历:

      根据其自传《鸿》所述,张戎69年中学毕业后被分配到四川西部山区插队。但她在那只待了26天。期间所干过的较重农活是上山背柴,她自己感觉背了63公斤,而现场称量结果为2.25公斤。然后她以伪造证明的方式转到成都郊区。在此期间她三分之二的时间住在城里,在农村时也很少干农活。71年张戎母亲通过后门将其调入成都国营工厂。73年再经其母的关系进入四川大学外语系成为工农兵大学生。毕业后由于其母的积极活动得以留校任教。78年在其母干预下获得公费资助到英国留学。

      来源:作者赐稿 来源日期:2005-11-29 本站发布时间:2005-11-29

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