May 28, 1927
Today's TASS Bulletin, no. 118, not for the press, contains a few dispatches of exclusively political importance. These dispatches are not kept concealed from public opinion because they may cause harm to the Soviet state or the Chinese revolution, but because they prove the faultiness of the official course and the correctness of the line of the Opposition. We cite only two especially striking telegrams:
Shanghai, May 24, TASS-The central political council in Nanking has decided to make Feng Yu-hsiang a member of the council.
That Chiang Kai-shek has made Feng Yu-hsiang a member of the council (for the time being, perhaps, without the consent of the "cautious" Feng Yu-hsiang), is now known to the whole world. But it must remain a secret to the Soviet workers. Why? Because Feng Yu hsiang has until recently been presented to us at home as a genuine "worker" or "peasant," as a reliable revolutionist, and so forth, that is, all the mistakes that were previously made with Chiang Kai-shek were again made with Feng Yu-hsiang. Now, for the last few weeks, all dispatches concerning the more than dubious conduct of Feng Yu-hsiang have been concealed. Why? To what end? Obviously, because some are waiting with the secret hope: perhaps he will not betray us after all! And if he does betray us, they will say: this completely verifies our prediction on the abandonment of the national revolution by the bourgeoisie. But now? Instead of warning the Chinese workers and the party, instead of stirring the masses of workers, peasants, and soldiers to adopt really revolutionary measures against the treason of the general, we keep still, we conceal the dispatches in our pockets. That will not help. The class logic of the revolutionary struggle cannot be concealed in one's pocket. 58'
The second telegram:
THE SITUATION IN HANKOW. Hankow, May 23, TASS
-The Central Committee of the Communist Party has proposed to the Hupeh League for
Strengthening the Revolutionary Front to set in order the relations between the workers
and the petty bourgeoisie. The Central Committee emphasized the necessity of increasing
discipline among the workers and of obedience to the decrees of the national government
and declared that the trade unions have not the right to arrest anyone, and must always
apply to the authorities when they consider the arrest of this or that person necessary.
This dispatch is even more important than the first. For every serious revolutionist, it
illuminates the whole situation and shows the absolute faultiness of the official line,
the downright disastrousness of this line, and the absolute correctness of the line of the
Opposition.
Just think: the trade unions in the territory of the Hankow government are arresting the
enemies of the revolution. This means that the trade unions, by the whole logic of the
situation, are forced to assume the tasks of the revolutionary soviets. Now what does the
Central Committee of the Communist Party do? It recommends to the trade unions to refrain
from nonlegal action, to submit to the "decrees" of the Wuhan authorities, and
in case of emergency, when a counterrevolutionist, a traitor, a conspirator has to be
arrested or shot, to apply respectfully to the authorities who, in all probability, are
related or allied to the conspirator. Is this not a mockery of the revolution, of its
needs and of its most elementary tasks? Instead of arousing the masses to settle with the
enemy right on the spot, the Wuhan government forbids it. Still more, it forbids it not in
its own name, but through the medium of the Communist Party. The Central Committee of the
Communist Party, in this case, plays the role of a political clerk to cowardly bourgeois
radicals and pseudoradicals, who tremble before the revolutionary masses and believe
together with Martynov that the revolution can be carried out through arbitration
commissions but not through the liquidation of the enemy by the masses. Isn't this
monstrous? Isn't this a mockery of the revolution?
It is noteworthy, besides, that the "Hupeh League for the Strengthening of the
Revolutionary Front" is given a special commission, namely, to set in order "the
relations between the workers and the petty bourgeoisie." These relations cannot be
set in order by a special league nor by special instruction, but only by a correct policy.
The soviets of workers and of semiproletarian city poor must be the broad organs of such a
daily revolutionary policy. If the trade unions are forced to assume the functions of
soviets, they will in certain cases almost inevitably leave out of consideration or injure
the legitimate interests of the city petty bourgeois. Thus, the absence of soviets also
hits the petty bourgeoisie and undermines its alliance with the proletariat.
Such is the situation in reality. The trade unions, driven forward by the masses, seek to
correct the errors of the Chinese and Moscow leadership and are proceeding to the
immediate liquidation of the enemy. The Central Committee of the Communist Party, however,
which ought to be the inspirer and leader of this summary liquidation, holds back the
workers, and calls upon them to increase their "discipline" (toward the
bourgeoisie), and to bow mutely before the connivance of the Hankow Kerenskys and
Tseretellis with the agents of imperialism, of the bourgeoisie, and of Chiang Kai-shek.
There is the Martynovist policy for you, not in words but in deeds!
A whole series of dispatches, especially from Tokyo, speak of the "crumbling" of
the Hankow government, of its impending downfall, and so forth. Of course such dispatches
must be taken with the greatest caution. These are the dispatches of an enemy, who awaits
the downfall of the revolution, hopes for it, is on the watch for it, and thinks up all
kinds of stories and lies. But the two above-mentioned dispatches, like many others of a
similar kind that arrive almost every day, compel us to recognize the fact that the
position of the Hankow government can become hopeless. If it prevents the workers and
peasants from putting an end to the counterrevolutionists, it will collapse. By its false
policy, the Central Committee of the Communist Party is accelerating its collapse. Should
the Hankow government crash under the assault of the workers', peasants', and soldiers'
soviets, we will surely not regret it. And it will collapse because it opposes the
creation of soviets. If the Hankow government is supported in this ruinous policy, if the
Chinese workers and peasants are restrained from immediately eliminating the enemy and
from building soviets, then the Chinese Communist Party is helping the Hankow government
to collapse in the shortest time, and to die an inglorious death, not at the hand of the
worker and peasant masses, but at the hand of the bourgeois reaction. What is more, with
such a policy the Hankow government, before it "collapses," will most probably
unite with Chiang Kai-shek- against the workers and peasants.
Is it not really time to understand this?
From Problems of the Chinese Revolution.