Marxism–Leninism was the official state ideology of the Soviet Union and other ruling parties making up the Eastern Bloc as well as the political parties of the Communist International after Bolshevisation. Today, Marxism–Leninism is the ideology of Stalinist and Maoist communist parties around the world and remains the official ideology of the ruling parties of China, Cuba, Laos and Vietnam. As a political philosophy, it seeks to establish a socialist state to develop further into socialism and eventually communism, described as a classless social system with common ownership of the means of production, with full social and economic equality of all members of society. Marxist–Leninists espouse a wide array of views depending on their understanding of orthodox Marxism and Leninism, but they generally support the idea of a vanguard party, a communist party-led state, state-dominance over the economy, internationalism and opposition to capitalism, fascism, imperialism and liberal democracy. As an ideology, it was developed by Joseph Stalin in the late 1920s based on his understanding and synthesis of both orthodox Marxism and Leninism.
After the death of Vladimir Lenin in 1924, Marxism–Leninism became a distinct philosophical movement in the Soviet Union when Stalin and his supporters gained control of the party. It rejected the common notions among Western Marxists at the time of world revolution as a prerequisite for building socialism in favour of the concept of socialism in one country. According to its supporters, the gradual transition from capitalism to socialism was signified with the introduction of the first five-year plan and the 1936 Soviet Constitution. The internationalism of Marxism–Leninism was expressed in supporting revolutions in foreign countries (e.g. initially through the Communist International or through the concept of socialist-leaning countries after de-Stalinisation). By the late 1920s, Stalin established ideological orthodoxy among the Russian Communist Party (Bolsheviks), the Soviet Union and the Communist International to establish universal Marxist–Leninist praxis. In the late 1930s, Stalin's official textbook History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks) (1938) made the term Marxism–Leninism common political-science usage among communists and non-communists.
The goal of Marxism–Leninism is the revolutionary transformation of a capitalist state into a socialist state by way of two-stage revolution led by a vanguard party of professional revolutionaries drawn from the proletariat. To realise the two-stage transformation of the state, the vanguard party establishes the dictatorship of the proletariat (as opposed to that of the bourgeoisie) and determines policy through democratic centralism. The Marxist–Leninist communist party is the vanguard for the political, economic and social transformation of a capitalist society into a socialist society which is the lower stage of socio-economic development and progress towards the upper-stage communist society which is stateless and classless. It features public ownership of the means of production, accelerated industrialisation, pro-active development of society's productive forces (research and development) and nationalised natural resources.
Overview
In the establishment of socialism in the former Russian Empire, Bolshevism was the ideological basis for the Soviet Union. As the vanguard party who guide the establishment and development of socialism, the communist party represented their policies as correct. Because Leninism
was the revolutionary means to achieving socialism in the praxis of
government, the relationship between ideology and decision-making
inclined to pragmatism and most policy decisions were taken in light of
the continual and permanent development of Marxist–Leninist ideology,
i.e. ideological adaptation to actual conditions.
Within five years of the death of Vladimir Lenin (1924), Joseph Stalin completed his rise to power and was the leader of the Soviet Union who theorised and applied the socialist theories of Lenin and Karl Marx as political expediencies used to realise his plans for the Soviet Union and for world socialism. The book Concerning Questions of Leninism
(1926) represented Marxism–Leninism as a separate communist ideology
and featured a global hierarchy of communist parties and revolutionary
vanguard parties in each country of the world. With that, Stalin's application of Marxism–Leninism to the situation of the Soviet Union became Stalinism, the official state ideology until his death in 1953.
In Marxist political discourse, Stalinism, denoting and connoting the
theory and praxis of Stalin, has two usages, namely praise of Stalin by
Marxist–Leninists who believe Stalin successfully developed Lenin's
legacy and criticism of Stalin by Marxist–Leninists and other Marxists
who repudiate Stalin's political purges, social-class repressions and
bureaucratic terrorism.
As the Left Opposition to Stalin within the Soviet party and government, Leon Trotsky and Trotskyists
argued that Marxist–Leninist ideology contradicted Marxism and Leninism
in theory, therefore Stalin's ideology was not useful for the
implementation of socialism in Russia.
Moreover, Trotskyists within the party identified their anti-Stalinist
communist ideology as Bolshevik–Leninism and supported the permanent revolution to differentiate themselves from Stalin's justification and implementation of socialism in one country.
After the Sino-Soviet split of the 1960s, the Communist Party of China and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
claimed to be the sole heir and successor to Stalin concerning the
correct interpretation of Marxism–Leninism and ideological leader of world communism. In that vein, Mao Zedong Thought, Mao Zedong's
updating and adaptation of Marxism–Leninism to Chinese conditions in
which revolutionary praxis is primary and ideological orthodoxy is
secondary, represents urban Marxism–Leninism adapted to pre-industrial
China. The claim that Mao had adapted Marxism–Leninism to Chinese
conditions evolved into the idea that he had updated it in a fundamental
way applying to the world as a whole. Consequently, Mao Zedong Thought
became the official state ideology of the People's Republic of China as well as the ideological basis of communist parties around the world which sympathised with China. In the late 1970s, the Peruvian communist party Shining Path developed and synthesized Mao Zedong Thought into Marxism–Leninism–Maoism,
a contemporary variety of Marxism–Leninism that is a supposed higher
level of Marxism–Leninism that can be applied universally.
Following the Sino-Albanian split
of the 1970s, a small portion of Marxist–Leninists began to downplay or
repudiate the role of Mao in the Marxist–Leninist international
movement in favour of the Albanian Labor Party and a stricter adherence to Stalin. The Sino-Albanian split was caused by Albania's rejection of China's Realpolitik of Sino–American rapprochement, specifically the 1972 Mao–Nixon meeting which the anti-revisionist Albanian Labor Party perceived as an ideological betrayal of Mao's own Three Worlds Theory
that excluded such political rapprochement with the West. To the
Albanian Marxist–Leninists, the Chinese dealings with the United States
indicated Mao's lessened, practical commitments to ideological orthodoxy
and proletarian internationalism. In response to Mao's apparently unorthodox deviations, Enver Hoxha, head of the Albanian Labor Party, theorised anti-revisionist Marxism–Leninism, referred to as Hoxhaism, that retained orthodox Marxism–Leninism when compared to the ideology of the post-Stalin Soviet Union.
In North Korea, Marxism–Leninism was officially superseded in 1977 by Juche.
However, the government is still sometimes referred to as
Marxist–Leninist, or more commonly as Stalinist, due to its political
and economic structure. In the other four existing Marxist–Leninist socialist states, namely China, Cuba, Laos and Vietnam,
the ruling parties hold Marxism–Leninism as their official ideology,
although they give it different interpretations in terms of practical
policy. Marxism–Leninism remains the ideology of mostly anti-revisionist
Stalinist, Maoist and Hoxhaist as well as some de-Stalinised or
reformed non-ruling communist parties worldwide. The anti-revisionists
criticize some rule of the communist states by claiming that they were state capitalist countries ruled by revisionists.
Although the periods and countries defined as state capitalist or
revisionist varies among different ideologies and parties, all of them
accept that the Soviet Union was socialist during Stalin's time. Maoists
believe that the People's Republic of China became state capitalist
after Mao's death. Hoxhaists believe that the People's Republic of China
was always state capitalist and uphold the People's Socialist Republic
of Albania as the only socialist state after the Soviet Union under
Stalin.
History
Bolsheviks, February Revolution and Great War (1903–1917)
Although Marxism–Leninism was created after Vladimir Lenin's death during the regime of Josef Stalin
in the Soviet Union, continuing to be the official state ideology after
de-Stalinisation and of other Marxist–Leninist states, the basis for
elements of Marxism–Leninism predate this. The philosophy of
Marxism–Leninism originated as the pro-active, political praxis of the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party in realising political change in Tsarist Russia.
Lenin's leadership transformed the Bolsheviks into the party's
political vanguard which was composed of professional revolutionaries
who practised democratic centralism
to elect leaders and officers as well as to determine policy through
free discussion, then decisively realised through united action. The vanguardism
of proactive, pragmatic commitment to achieving revolution was the
Bolsheviks' advantage in out-manoeuvring the liberal and conservative
political parties who advocated social democracy without a practical plan of action for the Russian society they wished to govern. Leninism allowed the Bolshevik party to assume command of the October Revolution in 1917.
Twelve years before the October Revolution in 1917, the Bolsheviks had failed to assume control of the February Revolution of 1905
(22 January 1905 – 16 June 1907) because the centres of revolutionary
action were too far apart for proper political coordination. To generate revolutionary momentum from the Tsarist army killings on Bloody Sunday
(22 January 1905), the Bolsheviks encouraged workers to use political
violence in order to compel the bourgeois social classes (the nobility,
the gentry and the bourgeoisie) to join the proletarian revolution to overthrow the absolute monarchy of the Tsar of Russia.
Most importantly, the experience of this revolution caused Lenin to
conceive of the means of sponsoring socialist revolution through
agitation, propaganda and a well-organised, disciplined and small
political party.
Despite secret-police persecution by the Okhrana
(Department for Protecting the Public Security and Order), émigré
Bolsheviks returned to Russia to agitate, organise and lead, but then
they returned to exile when peoples' revolutionary fervour failed in
1907. The failure of the February Revolution exiled Bolsheviks, Mensheviks, Socialist Revolutionaries and anarchists such as the Black Guards from Russia.
Membership in both the Bolshevik and Menshevik ranks diminished from
1907 to 1908 while the number of people taking part in strikes in 1907
was 26% of the figure during the year of the Revolution of 1905,
dropping to 6% in 1908 and 2% in 1910. The 1908–1917 period was one of disillusionment in the Bolshevik party
over Lenin's leadership, with members opposing him for scandals
involving his expropriations and methods of raising money for the party. This political defeat was aggravated by Tsar Nicholas II's
political reformations of Imperial Russian government. In practise, the
formalities of political participation (the electoral plurality of a multi-party system with the State Duma and the Russian Constitution of 1906) were the Tsar's piecemeal and cosmetic concessions to social progress because public office remained available only to the aristocracy, the gentry and the bourgeoisie. These reforms resolved neither the illiteracy, the poverty, nor malnutrition of the proletarian majority of Imperial Russia.
In Swiss exile, Lenin developed Marx's philosophy and extrapolated decolonisation by colonial revolt as a reinforcement of proletarian revolution in Europe.[32]
In 1912, Lenin resolved a factional challenge to his ideological
leadership of the RSDLP by the Forward Group in the party, usurping the
all-party congress to transform the RSDLP into the Bolshevik party.[33]
In the early 1910s, Lenin remained highly unpopular and was so
unpopular amongst international socialist movement that by 1914 it
considered censoring him.[30]
Unlike the European socialists who chose bellicose nationalism to
anti-war internationalism, whose philosophical and political break was
consequence of the internationalist–defencist schism among socialists, the Bolsheviks opposed the Great War (1914–1918).
That nationalist betrayal of socialism was denounced by a small group
of socialist leaders who opposed the Great War, including Rosa Luxemburg, Karl Liebknecht and Lenin, who said that the European socialists had failed the working classes for preferring patriotic war to proletarian internationalism. To debunk patriotism and national chauvinism, Lenin explained in the essay Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism (1917) that capitalist economic expansion leads to colonial imperialism which is then regulated with nationalist wars such as the Great War among the empires of Europe. To relieve strategic pressures from the Western Front (4 August 1914 – 11 November 1918), Imperial Germany impelled the withdrawal of Imperial Russia from the war's Eastern Front
(17 August 1914 – 3 March 1918) by sending Lenin and his Bolshevik
cohort in a diplomatically-sealed train, anticipating them partaking in
revolutionary activity.
October Revolution and Russian Civil War (1917–1922)
In March 1917, the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II led to the Russian Provisional Government (March–July 1917), who then proclaimed the Russian Republic (September–November 1917). Later in the October Revolution, the Bolshevik's seizure of power against the Provisional Government resulted in their establishment of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (1917–1991), yet parts of Russia remained occupied by the counter-revolutionary White Movement of anti-communists who had united to form the White Army to fight the Russian Civil War
(1917–1922) against the Bolshevik government. Moreover, despite the
White–Red civil war, Russia remained a combatant in the Great War that
the Bolsheviks had quit with the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk which then provoked the Allied Intervention to the Russian Civil War by the armies of seventeen countries, featuring Great Britain, France, Italy, the United States and Imperial Japan.
Elsewhere, the successful October Revolution in Russia had facilitated the German Revolution of 1918–1919 and revolutions and interventions in Hungary (1918–1920) which produced the First Hungarian Republic and the Hungarian Soviet Republic. In Berlin, the German government and their Freikorps mercenaries fought and defeated the Spartacist uprising which began as a general strike. In Munich, the local Freikorps fought and defeated the Bavarian Soviet Republic.
In Hungary, the disorganised workers who had proclaimed the Hungarian
Soviet Republic were fought and defeated by the royal armies of the Kingdom of Romania and the Kingdom of Yugoslavia as well as the army of the First Republic of Czechoslovakia.
These communist forces were soon crushed by anti-communist forces and
attempts to create an international communist revolution failed.
However, a successful revolution occurred in Asia, when the Mongolian Revolution of 1921 established the Mongolian People's Republic (1924–1992).
As promised to the Russian peoples in October 1917, the
Bolsheviks quit Russia's participation in the Great War on 3 March 1918.
That same year, the Bolsheviks consolidated government power by
expelling the Mensheviks, the Socialist Revolutionaries and the Left Socialist-Revolutionaries from the soviets. The Bolshevik government then established the Cheka
(All-Russian Extraordinary Commission) secret police to eliminate
anti–Bolshevik opposition in the country. Initially, there was strong
opposition to the Bolshevik régime because they had not resolved the
food shortages and material poverty of the Russian peoples as promised
in October 1917. From that social discontent, the Cheka reported 118
uprisings, including the Kronstadt rebellion (7–17 March 1921) against the economic austerity of the War Communism imposed by the Bolsheviks. The principal obstacles to Russian economic development and modernisation were great material poverty
and the lack of modern technology which were conditions that orthodox
Marxism considered unfavourable to communist revolution. Agricultural
Russia was sufficiently developed for establishing capitalism, but it
was insufficiently developed for establishing socialism.
For Bolshevik Russia, the 1921–1924 period featured the simultaneous
occurrence of economic recovery, famine (1921–1922) and a financial
crisis (1924). By 1924, considerable economic progress had been achieved
and by 1926 the Bolshevik government had achieved economic production
levels equal to Russia's production levels in 1913.
Initial Bolshevik economic policies from 1917 to 1918 were cautious, with limited nationalisations of the means of production which had been private property of the Russian aristocracy during the Tsarist monarchy. Lenin was immediately committed to avoid antagonising the peasantry by making efforts to coax them away from the Socialist Revolutionaries, allowing a peasant takeover of nobles' estates while no immediate nationalisations were enacted on peasants' property. The Decree on Land
(8 November 1917) fulfilled Lenin's promised redistribution of Russia's
arable land to the peasants, who reclaimed their farmlands from the
aristocrats, ensuring the peasants' loyalty to the Bolshevik party. To
overcome the civil war's economic interruptions, the policy of War Communism (1918–1921), a regulated market,
state-controlled means of distribution and nationalisation of
large-scale farms, was adopted to requisite and distribute grain in
order to feed industrial workers in the cities whilst the Red Army was
fighting the White Army's attempted restoration of the Romanov dynasty as absolute monarchs of Russia.
Moreover, the politically unpopular forced grain-requisitions
discouraged peasants from farming resulted in reduced harvests and food
shortages that provoked labour strikes and food riots. In the event, the
Russian peoples created an economy of barter and black market to counter the Bolshevik government's voiding of the monetary economy.
In 1921, the New Economic Policy restored some private enterprise to animate the Russian economy. As part of Lenin's pragmatic compromise with external financial interests in 1918, Bolshevik state capitalism temporarily returned 91% of industry to private ownership or trusts until the Soviet Russians learned the technology and the techniques required to operate and administrate industries.
Importantly, Lenin declared that the development of socialism would
not be able to be pursued in the manner originally thought by Marxists.
A key aspect that affected the Bolshevik regime was the backward
economic conditions in Russia that were considered unfavourable to
orthodox Marxist theory of communist revolution. At the time, orthodox Marxists claimed that Russia was ripe for the development of capitalism, not yet for socialism.
Lenin advocated the need of the development of a large corps of
technical intelligentsia to assist the industrial development of Russia
and advance the Marxist economic stages of development as it had too few
technical experts at the time. In that vein, Lenin explained it as
follows: "Our poverty is so great that we cannot, at one stroke, restore
full-scale factory, state, socialist production".
He added that the development of socialism would proceed according to
the actual material and socio-economic conditions in Russia and not as
abstractly described by Marx for industrialised Europe in the 19th
century. To overcome the lack of educated Russians who could operate and
administrate industry, Lenin advocated the development of a technical intelligentsia who would propel the industrial development of Russia to self-sufficiency.
Stalin's rise to power (1922–1928)
As he neared death after suffering strokes, Lenin's Testament
(December 1922) named Trotsky and Stalin as the most able men in the
Central Committee, but he harshly criticised them. Lenin said that
Stalin should be removed from being the General Secretary
of the party and that he be replaced with "some other person who is
superior to Stalin only in one respect, namely, in being more tolerant,
more loyal, more polite, and more attentive to comrades". Upon his death (21 January 1924), Lenin's political testament was read aloud to the Central Committee,
who choose to ignore Lenin's ordered removal of Stalin as General
Secretary because enough members believed Stalin had been politically
rehabilitated in 1923.
Consequent to personally spiteful disputes about the praxis of Leninism, the October Revolution veterans Lev Kamenev and Grigory Zinoviev
said that the true threat to the ideological integrity of the party was
Trotsky, who was a personally charismatic political leader as well as
the commanding officer of the Red Army in the Russian Civil War and revolutionary partner of the dead Lenin. To thwart Trotsky's likely election to head the party, Stalin, Kamenev and Zinoviev formed a troika that featured Stalin as General Secretary, the de facto centre of power in the party and the country.
The direction of the party was decided in confrontations of politics
and personality between Stalin's troika and Trotsky over which Marxist
policy to pursue, either Trotsky's policy of permanent revolution or Stalin's policy of socialism in one country.
Trotsky's permanent revolution advocated rapid industrialisation,
elimination of private farming and having the Soviet Union promote the
spread of communist revolution abroad.
Stalin's socialism in one country stressed moderation and development
of positive relations between the Soviet Union and other countries to
increase trade and foreign investment.
To politically isolate and oust Trotsky from the party, Stalin
expediently advocated socialism in one country, a policy to which he was
indifferent. In 1925, the 14th Congress of the All-Union Communist Party (Bolsheviks) chose Stalin's policy, defeating Trotsky as a possible leader of the party and of the Soviet Union.
In the 1925–1927 period, Stalin dissolved the troika and disowned the centrist Kamenev and Zinoviev for an expedient alliance with the three most right-wing from the Bolshevik period, namely Alexei Rykov (Premier of Russia, 1924–1929; Premier of the Soviet Union, 1924–1930), Nikolai Bukharin and Mikhail Tomsky (leader of the All-Russian Central Council of Trade Unions).
In 1927, the party endorsed Stalin's policy of socialism in one country
as the Soviet Union's national policy and expelled the leftist Trotsky
and the centrists Kamenev and Zinoviev from the Politburo. In 1929, Stalin politically controlled the party and the Soviet Union by way of deception and administrative acumen. In that time, Stalin's centralised, socialism in one country régime had negatively associated Lenin's revolutionary Bolshevism
with Stalinism, i.e. government by command-policy to realise projects
such as the rapid industrialisation of cities and the collectivisation
of agriculture.
Such Stalinism also subordinated the interests (political, national and
ideological) of Asian and European communist parties to the
geopolitical interests of the Soviet Union.
In the 1928–1932 period of the first five-year plan, Stalin affected the dekulakization of the farmlands of the Soviet Union, a politically radical dispossession of the kulak class of peasant-landlords from the Tsarist social order of monarchy. As Old Bolshevik
revolutionaries, Bukharin, Rykov and Tomsky recommended amelioration of
the dekulakization to lessen the negative social impact in the
relations between the Soviet peoples and the party, but Stalin took
umbrage and then accused them of uncommunist philosophical deviations
from Lenin and Marx. That implicit accusation of ideological deviationism
licensed Stalin to accuse Bukharin, Rykov and Tomsky of plotting
against the party and the appearance of impropriety then compelled the
resignations of the Old Bolsheviks from government and from the
Politburo. Stalin then completed his political purging of the party by exiling Trotsky from the Soviet Union in 1929. Afterwards, the political opposition to the practical régime of Stalinism was denounced as Trotskyism (Bolshevik–Leninism), described as a deviation from Marxism–Leninism, the state ideology of the Soviet Union.
Political developments in the Soviet Union included Stalin
dismantling the remaining elements of democracy from the party by
extending his control over its institutions and eliminating any possible
rivals. The party's ranks grew in numbers, with the party modifying its organisation to include more trade unions and factories.
The ranks and files of the party were populated with members from the
trade unions and the factories, whom Stalin controlled because there
were no other Old Bolsheviks to contradict Marxism–Leninism. In the late 1930s, the Soviet Union adopted the 1936 Soviet Constitution which ended weighted-voting preferences for workers, promulgated universal suffrage
for every man and woman older than 18 years of age and organised the
soviets (councils of workers) into two legislatures, namely the Soviet of the Union (representing electoral districts) and the Soviet of Nationalities (representing the ethnic groups of the country).
By 1939, with the exception of Stalin himself, none of the original
Bolsheviks of the October Revolution of 1917 remained in the party. Unquestioning loyalty to Stalin was expected by the regime of all citizens.
Stalin exercised extensive personal control over the party and
unleashed an unprecedented level of violence to eliminate any potential
threat to his regime.
While Stalin exercised major control over political initiatives, their
implementation was in the control of localities, often with local
leaders interpreting the policies in a way that served themselves best.
This abuse of power by local leaders exacerbated the violent purges and
terror campaigns carried out by Stalin against members of the party
deemed to be traitors. With the Great Purge
(1936–1938), Stalin rid himself of internal enemies in the party and
rid the Soviet Union of any alleged socially dangerous and
counterrevolutionary person who might have offered legitimate political
opposition to Marxism–Leninism.
Stalin allowed the secret police NKVD (People's Commissariat for Internal Affairs) to rise above the law and the GPU (State Political Directorate) to use political violence
to eliminate any person who might be a threat, whether real, potential,
or imagined. As an administrator, Stalin governed the Soviet Union by
controlling the formulation of national policy, but he delegated
implementation to subordinate functionaries. Such freedom of action
allowed local communist functionaries much discretion to interpret the
intent of orders from Moscow, but this allowed their corruption. To
Stalin, the correction of such abuses of authority and economic
corruption were responsibility of the NKVD. In the 1937–1938 period, the
NKVD arrested 1.5 million people, purged from every stratum of Soviet
society and every rank and file of the party, of which 681,692 people
were killed as enemies of the state.
To provide manpower (manual, intellectual and technical) to realise the
construction of socialism in one country, the NKVD established the Gulag system of forced-labour
camps for regular criminals and political dissidents, for culturally
insubordinate artists and politically incorrect intellectuals and for
homosexual people and religious anti-communists.
Socialism in one country (1928–1945)
Beginning in 1928, Stalin's five-year plans for the national economy of the Soviet Union
achieved the rapid industrialisation (coal, iron and steel, electricity
and petroleum, among others) and the collectivisation of agriculture. It achieved 23.6% of collectivisation within two years (1930) and 98.0% of collectivisation within thirteen years (1941).
As the revolutionary vanguard, the communist party organised Russian
society to realise rapid industrialisation programs as defence against
Western interference with socialism in Bolshevik Russia. The five-year
plans were prepared in the 1920s whilst the Bolshevik government fought
the internal Russian Civil War (1917–1922) and repelled the external
Allied intervention to the Russian Civil War (1918–1925). Vast
industrialisation was initiated mostly based with a focus on heavy industry.
During the 1930s, the rapid industrialisation of the country
accelerated the Soviet people's sociological transition from poverty to
relative plenty when politically illiterate peasants passed from Tsarist
serfdom to self-determination and became politically aware urban citizens. The Marxist–Leninist economic régime modernised Russia from the illiterate, peasant society characteristic of monarchy to the literate, socialist society of educated farmers and industrial workers. Industrialisation led to a massive urbanisation in the country. Unemployment was virtually eliminated in the country during the 1930s.
Social developments in the Soviet Union included the
relinquishment of the relaxed social control and allowance of
experimentation under Lenin to Stalin's promotion of a rigid and
authoritarian society based upon discipline, mixing traditional Russian
values with Stalin's interpretation of Marxism. Organised religion was repressed, especially minority religious groups.
Education was transformed. Under Lenin, the education system allowed
relaxed discipline in schools that became based upon Marxist theory, but
Stalin reversed this in 1934 with a conservative approach taken with
the reintroduction of formal learning, the use of examinations and
grades, the assertion of full authority of the teacher and the
introduction of school uniforms. Art and culture became strictly regulated under the principles of and Russian traditions that Stalin admired were allowed to continue.
Foreign policy in the Soviet Union from 1929 to 1941 resulted in
substantial changes in the Soviet Union's approach to its foreign
policy.
In 1933, the Marxist–Leninist geopolitical perspective was that the
Soviet Union was surrounded by capitalist and anti-communist enemies. As
a result, the election of Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party
government in Germany initially caused the Soviet Union to sever
diplomatic relations that had been established in the 1920s. In 1938,
Stalin accommodated the Nazis and the anti-communist West by not
defending Czechoslovakia, allowing Hitler's threat of pre-emptive war
for the Sudetenland to annex the land and "rescue the oppressed German peoples" living in Czecho.
To challenge Nazi Germany's bid for European empire and hegemony, Stalin promoted anti-fascist
front organisations to encourage European socialists and democrats to
join the Soviet communists to fight throughout Nazi-occupied Europe,
creating agreements with France to challenge Germany. After Germany and Britain signed the Munich Agreement (29 September 1938) which allowed the German occupation of Czechoslovakia (1938–1945), Stalin adopted pro-German policies for the Soviet Union's dealings with Nazi Germany. In 1939, the Soviet Union and Nazi Germany agreed to the Treaty of Non-aggression between Germany and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, 23 August 1939) and to jointly invade and partition Poland, by way of which Nazi Germany started the Second World War (1 September 1939).
In the 1941–1942 period of the Great Patriotic War, the German invasion of the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa, 22 June 1941) was ineffectively opposed by the Red Army,
who were poorly led, ill-trained and under-equipped. As a result, they
fought poorly and suffered great losses of soldiers (killed, wounded and
captured). The weakness of the Red Army was partly consequence of the Great Purge (1936–1938) of senior officers and career soldiers whom Stalin considered politically unreliable. Strategically, the Wehrmacht's
extensive and effective attack threatened the territorial integrity of
the Soviet Union, and the political integrity of Stalin's model of a
Marxist–Leninist state, when the Nazis were initially welcomed as
liberators by the anti-communist and nationalist populations in the Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic, the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic and the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic.
The anti-Soviet nationalists' collaboration with the Nazi's lasted until the Schutzstaffel and the Einsatzgruppen began their Lebensraum killings of the Jewish populations, the local communists, the civil and community leaders—the Holocaust meant to realise the Nazi German colonisation of Bolshevik Russia. In response, Stalin ordered the Red Army to fight a total war
against the Germanic invaders who would exterminate Slavic Russia.
Hitler's attack against the Soviet Union (Nazi Germany's erstwhile ally)
realigned Stalin's political priorities, from the repression of
internal enemies to the existential defence against external attack. The
pragmatic Stalin then entered the Soviet Union to the Grand Alliance, a common front against the Axis Powers (Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy and Imperial Japan).
In the continental European countries occupied by the Axis powers, the native communist party usually led the armed resistance (guerrilla warfare and urban guerrilla warfare) against fascist military occupation. In Mediterranean Europe, the communist Yugoslav Partisans led by Josip Broz Tito
effectively resisted the German Nazi and Italian Fascist occupation. In
the 1943–1944 period, the Yugoslav Partisans liberated territories with
Red Army assistance and established the communist political authority
that became the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. To end the Imperial Japanese occupation of China in continental Asia, Stalin ordered Mao Zedong and the Communist Party of China to temporarily cease the Chinese Civil War (1927–1949) against Chiang Kai-shek and the anti-communist Kuomintang as the Second United Front in the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945).
In 1943, the Red Army began to repel the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, especially at the Battle of Stalingrad (23 August 1942 – 2 February 1943) and at the Battle of Kursk
(5 July – 23 August 1943). The Red Army then repelled the Nazi and
Fascist occupation armies from Eastern Europe until the Red Army
decisively defeated Nazi Germany in the Berlin Strategic Offensive Operation (16 April–2 May 1945).
On concluding the Great Patriotic War (1941–1945), the Soviet Union was
a military superpower with a say in determining the geopolitical order
of the world. In accordance with the three-power Yalta Agreement (4–11 February 1945), the Soviet Union purged native fascist collaborators from the Eastern European countries occupied by the Axis Powers and installed native Communist governments.
Cold War, de-Stalinisation and Maoism (1945–1980)
Upon Allied victory concluding the Second World War (1939–1945), the members of the Grand Alliance resumed their expediently suppressed, pre-war geopolitical rivalries and ideological tensions which disunity broke their anti-fascist wartime alliance into the anti-communist Western Bloc and the communist Eastern Bloc. The renewed competition for geopolitical hegemony resulted in the bi-polar Cold War
(1945–1991), a protracted state of tension (military and diplomatic)
between the United States and the Soviet Union which often threatened a
Soviet–American nuclear war, but it usually featured proxy wars in the Third World.
The events that precipitated the Cold War in Europe were the
Soviet and Yugoslav, Bulgarian and Albanian military interventions to
the Greek Civil War (1944–1949) on behalf of the Communist Party of Greece; and the Berlin Blockade (1948–1949) by the Soviet Union. The event that precipitated the Cold War in continental Asia was the resumption of the Chinese Civil War (1927–1949) fought between the anti-communist Kuomintang and the Communist Party of China. After military defeat exiled Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and his Kuomintang nationalist government to Formosa island (Taiwan), Mao Zedong established the People's Republic of China on 1 October 1949.
In the late 1940s, the geopolitics of the Eastern Bloc countries
under Soviet predominance featured an official-and-personal style of
socialist diplomacy that failed Stalin and Tito when Tito refused to
subordinating Yugoslavia to the Soviet Union. In 1948, circumstance and
cultural personality aggravated the matter into the Yugoslav–Soviet split (1948–1955) that resulted from Tito's rejection of Stalin's demand to subordinate the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
to the geopolitical agenda (economic and military) of the Soviet Union,
i.e. Tito at Stalin's disposal. Stalin punished Tito's refusal by
denouncing him as an ideological revisionist of Marxism–Leninism; by
denouncing Yugoslavia's practice of Titoism as socialism deviated from the cause of world communism; and by expelling the Communist Party of Yugoslavia from the Communist Information Bureau
(Cominform). The break from the Eastern Bloc allowed the development of
a socialism with Yugoslav characteristics which allowed doing business
with the capitalist West to develop the socialist economy
and the establishment of Yugoslavia's diplomatic and commercial
relations with countries of the Eastern Bloc and the Western Bloc.
Yugoslavia's international relations matured into the Non-Aligned Movement (1961) of countries without political allegiance to any power bloc.
At the death of Stalin in 1953, Nikita Khrushchev
became leader of the Soviet Union and of the Communist Party of the
Soviet Union and then consolidated an anti-Stalinist government. In a
secret meeting at the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, Khrushchev denounced Stalin and Stalinism in the speech On the Cult of Personality and Its Consequences (25 February 1956) in which he specified and condemned Stalin's dictatorial excesses and abuses of power such as the Great purge (1936–1938) and the cult of personality. Khrushchev introduced the de-Stalinisation
of the party and of the Soviet Union. He realised this with the
dismantling of the Gulag archipelago of forced-labour camps and freeing
the prisoners as well as allowing Soviet civil society greater political
freedom of expression, especially for public intellectuals of the intelligentsia such as the novelist Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, whose literature obliquely criticised Stalin and the Stalinist police state. De-Stalinization also ended Stalin's national-purpose policy of socialism in one country and was replaced with proletarian internationalism, by way of which Khrushchev re-committed the Soviet Union to permanent revolution to realise world communism.
In that geopolitical vein, Khrushchev presented de-Stalinization as the
restoration of Leninism as the state ideology of the Soviet Union.
In the 1950s, the de-Stalinisation of the Soviet Union was
ideological bad news for the People's Republic of China because Soviet
and Russian interpretations and applications of Leninism and orthodox
Marxism contradicted the Sinified Marxism–Leninism of Mao Zedong—his
Chinese adaptations of Stalinist interpretation and praxis for
establishing socialism in China. To realise that leap of Marxist faith
in the development of Chinese socialism, the Communist Party of China
developed Maoism
as the official state ideology. As the specifically Chinese development
of Marxism–Leninism, Maoism illuminated the cultural differences
between the European-Russian and the Asian-Chinese interpretations and
practical applications of Marxism–Leninism in each country. The
political differences then provoked geopolitical, ideological and
nationalist tensions, which derived from the different stages of
development, between the urban society of the industrialised Soviet
Union and the agricultural society of the pre-industrial China. The
theory versus praxis arguments escalated to theoretic disputes about
Marxist–Leninist revisionism and provoked the Sino-Soviet split (1956–1966) and the two countries broke their international relations (diplomatic, political, cultural and economic).
In Eastern Asia, the Cold War produced the Korean War
(1950–1953), the first proxy war between the Eastern Bloc and the
Western Bloc, resulted from dual origins, namely the nationalist
Koreans' post-war resumption of their Korean Civil War and the imperial war for regional hegemony sponsored by the United States and the Soviet Union. The international response to the North Korean invasion of South Korea was realised by the United Nations Security Council,
who voted for war despite the absent Soviet Union and authorised an
international military expedition to intervene, expel the northern
invaders from the south of Korea and restore the geopolitical status quo ante of the Soviet and American division of Korea
at the 38th Parallel of global latitude. Consequent to Chinese military
intervention in behalf of North Korea, the magnitude of the infantry warfare reached operational and geographic stalemate (July 1951–July 1953). Afterwards, the shooting war was ended with the Korean Armistice Agreement (27 July 1953); and the superpower Cold War in Asia then resumed as the Korean Demilitarized Zone.
Consequent to the Sino-Soviet split, the pragmatic China established politics of détente
with the United States in an effort to publicly challenge the Soviet
Union for leadership of the international Marxist–Leninist movement. Mao
Zedong's pragmatism permitted geopolitical rapprochement and
facilitated President Richard Nixon's 1972 visit to China which subsequently ended the policy of the existence to Two Chinas
when the United States sponsored the People's Republic of China to
replace the Republic of China (Taiwan) as the representative of the
Chinese people at the United Nations. In the due course of Sino-American
rapprochement, China also assumed membership in the Security Council of the United Nations. In the post-Mao period of Sino-American détente, the Deng Xiaoping government (1982–1987) affected policies of economic liberalisation that allowed continual growth for the Chinese economy. The ideological justification is socialism with Chinese characteristics, the Chinese adaptation of Marxism–Leninism.
Communist revolution erupted in the Americas in this period,
including revolutions in Bolivia, Cuba, El Salvador, Grenada, Nicaragua,
Peru and Uruguay. The Cuban Revolution (1953–1959) led by Fidel Castro and Che Guevara deposed the military dictatorship (1952–1959) of Fulgencio Batista and established the Republic of Cuba, a state formally recognised by the Soviet Union. In response, the United States launched a coup against the Castro government in 1961. However, the CIA's unsuccessful Bay of Pigs invasion
(17 April 1961) by anti-communist Cuban exiles impelled the Republic of
Cuba to side with the Soviet Union in the geopolitics of the bipolar
Cold War. The Cuban missile crisis
(22–28 October 1962) occurred when the United States opposed Cuba being
armed with nuclear missiles by the Soviet Union. After a stalemate
confrontation, the United States and the Soviet Union jointly resolved
the nuclear-missile crisis by respectively removing United States
missiles from Turkey and Italy and Soviet missiles from Cuba.
Both Bolivia, Canada and Uruguay faced Marxist–Leninist
revolution in the 1960s and 1970s. In Bolivia, this included Che Guevara
as a leader until being killed there by government forces. In 1970, the
October Crisis (5 October – 28 December 1970) occurred in Canada, a brief revolution in the province of Quebec, where the actions of the Marxist–Leninist and separatist Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ) featured the kidnap of James Cross, the British Trade Commissioner in Canada; and the killing of Pierre Laporte,
the Quebec government minister. The political manifesto of the FLQ
condemned English-Canadian imperialism in French Quebec and called for
an independent, socialist Quebec. The Canadian government's harsh
response included the suspension of civil liberties in Quebec and
compelled the FLQ leaders' flight to Cuba. Uruguay faced
Marxist–Leninist revolution from the Tupamaros movement from the 1960s to the 1970s.
In 1979, the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN) led by Daniel Ortega won the Nicaraguan Revolution (1961–1990) against the government of Anastasio Somoza Debayle (1 December 1974 – 17 July 1979) to establish a socialist Nicaragua. Within months, the government of Ronald Reagan sponsored the counter-revolutionary Contras in the secret Contra War
(1979–1990) against the Sandinista government. In 1989, the Contra War
concluded with the signing of the Tela Accord at the port of Tela,
Honduras. The Tela Accord required the subsequent, voluntary
demobilization of the Contra guerrilla armies and the FSLN army.
In 1990, a second national election installed to government a majority
of non-Sandinista political parties, to whom the FSLN handed political
power. Since 2006, the FSLN has returned to government, winning every
legislative and presidential election in the process (2006, 2011 and
2016).
The Salvadoran Civil War (1979–1992) featured the popularly supported Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front, an organisation of left-wing parties fighting against the right-wing military government of El Salvador. In 1983, the United States invasion of Grenada (25–29 October 1983) thwarted the assumption of power by the elected government of the New Jewel Movement (1973–1983), a Marxist–Leninist vanguard party led by Maurice Bishop.
In Asia, the Vietnam War (1945–1975) was the second East–West war fought during the Cold War (1945–1991). In the First Indochina War (1946–1954), the Việt Minh led by Ho Chi Minh
defeated the French re-establishment of European colonialism in
Vietnam. To fill the geopolitical power vacuum caused by French defeat
in southeast Asia, the United States then became the Western power
supporting the client-state Republic of Vietnam (1955–1975) headed by Ngo Dinh Diem. Despite possessing military superiority, the United States failed to safeguard South Vietnam from the guerrilla warfare of the Viet Cong sponsored by North Vietnam. On 30 January 1968, North Vietnam launched the Tet Offensive
(the General Offensive and Uprising of Tet Mau Than, 1968). Although a
military failure for the guerrillas and the army, it was a successful psychological warfare
operation that decisively turned international public opinion against
the United States intervention to the Vietnamese civil war, with the
military withdrawal of the United States from Vietnam in 1973 and the
subsequent and consequent Fall of Saigon to the North Vietnamese army on 30 April 1975.
With the end of the Vietnam War, Marxist–Leninist regimes were established in Vietnam's neighbour states. This included Kampuchea and Laos. Consequent to the Cambodian Civil War (1968–1975), a coalition composed of Prince Norodom Sihanouk (1941–1955), the native Cambodian Marxist–Leninists and the Maoist Khmer Rouge (1951–1999) led by Pol Pot established Democratic Kampuchea (1975–1982), a Marxist–Leninist state that featured class warfare to restructure the society of old Cambodia and to be effected and realised with the abolishment of money and private property, the outlawing of religion, the killing of the intelligentsia and compulsory manual labour for the middle classes by way of death-squad state terrorism. To eliminate Western cultural influence, Kampuchea expelled all foreigners and effected the destruction of the urban bourgeoisie
of old Cambodia, first by displacing the population of the capital
city, Phnom Penh; and then by displacing the national populace to work
farmlands to increase food supplies. Meanwhile, the Khmer Rouge purged
Kampuchea of internal enemies (social class and political, cultural and
ethnic) at the Killing Fields, the scope of which became crimes against humanity for the deaths of 2,700,000 people by mass murder and genocide.
That social restructuring of Cambodia into Kampuchea included attacks
against the Vietnamese ethnic minority of the country which aggravated
the historical, ethnic rivalries between the Viet and the Khmer peoples.
Beginning in September 1977, Kampuchea and the Socialist Republic of Vietnam
continually engaged in border clashes. In 1978, Vietnam invaded
Kampuchea and captured Phnom Penh in January 1979, deposed the Maoist
Khmer Rouge from government and established the Cambodian Liberation
Front for National Renewal as the government of Cambodia.
A new front of Marxist–Leninist revolution erupted in Africa between 1961 and 1979. Angola, Benin, Congo, Ethiopia, Guinea-Bissau Mozambique, Somalia and Zimbabwe
became Marxist–Leninist states governed by their respective native
peoples during the 1968–1980 period. Marxist–Leninist guerrillas fought
the Portuguese Colonial War (1961–1974) in three countries, namely Angola, Guinea-Bissau and Mozambique. In Ethiopia, a Marxist–Leninist revolution deposed the monarchy of Emperor Haile Selassie (1930–1974) and established the Derg government (1974–1987) of the Provisional Military Government of Socialist Ethiopia. In Rhodesia (1965–1979), Robert Mugabe led the Zimbabwe War of Liberation (1964–1979) that deposed white-minority rule and then established the Republic of Zimbabwe.
In Apartheid South Africa (1948–1994), the Afrikaner government of the Nationalist Party
caused much geopolitical tension between the United States and the
Soviet Union because of the Afrikaners' violent social control and
political repression of the black and coloured populations of South
Africa exercised under the guise of anti-communism and national
security. The Soviet Union officially supported the overthrow of
apartheid while the West and the United States in particular maintained
official neutrality on the matter. In the 1976–1977 period of the Cold
War, the United States and other Western countries found it morally
untenable to politically support Apartheid South Africa, especially when
the Afrikaner government killed 176 people (students and adults) in the police suppression of the Soweto uprising (June 1976), a political protest against Afrikaner cultural imperialism upon the non-white peoples of South Africa, specifically the imposition of the Germanic language of Afrikaans as the standard language
for education which black South Africans were required to speak when
addressing white people and Afrikaners; and the police assassination of Steven Biko (September 1977), a politically moderate leader of the internal resistance to apartheid in South Africa.
Under President Jimmy Carter,
the West joined the Soviet Union and others in enacting sanctions
against weapons trade and weapons-grade material to South Africa.
However, forceful actions by the United States against Apartheid South
Africa were diminished under President Reagan as the Reagan administration
feared the rise of revolution in South Africa as had happened in
Zimbabwe against white minority rule. In 1979, the Soviet Union
intervened in Afghanistan to establish a Marxist–Leninist state,
although the act was seen as an invasion by the West which responded to
the Soviet military actions by boycotting the Moscow Olympics of 1980 and providing clandestine support to the Mujahideen, including Osama bin Laden,
as a means to challenge the Soviet Union. The war became a Soviet
equivalent of the Vietnam War to the United States and it remained a
stalemate throughout the 1980s.
Reform and collapse (1980–1992)
Social resistance to the policies of Marxist–Leninist regimes in Eastern Europe accelerated in strength with the rise of the Solidarity, the first non-Marxist–Leninist controlled trade union in the Warsaw Pact that was formed in the People's Republic of Poland in 1980.
In 1985, Mikhail Gorbachev rose to power in the Soviet Union and began policies of radical political reform involving political liberalisation, called perestroika and glasnost.
Gorbachev's policies were designed at dismantling authoritarian
elements of the state that were developed by Stalin, aiming for a return
to a supposed ideal Leninist state that retained one-party structure
while allowing the democratic election of competing candidates within
the party for political office. Gorbachev also aimed to seek détente
with the West and end the Cold War that was no longer economically
sustainable to be pursued by the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union and the
United States under President George H. W. Bush joined in pushing for the dismantlement of apartheid and oversaw the dismantlement of South African colonial rule over Namibia.
Meanwhile, the eastern European Marxist–Leninist states politically
deteriorated in response to the success of the Polish Solidarity
movement and the possibility of Gorbachev-style political
liberalisation. In 1989, revolts began across Eastern Europe and China
against Marxist–Leninist regimes. In China, the government refused to
negotiate with student protestors, resulting in the Tiananmen Square attacks that stopped the revolts by force. The revolts culminated with the revolt in East Germany against the Marxist–Leninist regime of Erich Honecker and demands for the Berlin Wall
to be torn down. The event in East Germany developed into a popular
mass revolt with sections of the Berlin Wall being torn down and East
and West Berliners uniting. Gorbachev's refusal to use Soviet forces
based in East Germany to suppress the revolt was seen as a sign that the
Cold War had ended. Honecker was pressured to resign from office and
the new government committed itself to reunification with West Germany.
The Marxist–Leninist regime of Nicolae Ceaușescu in Romania was forcefully overthrown in 1989 and Ceaușescu was executed. The other Warsaw Pact regimes also fell during the Revolutions of 1989, with the exception of the Socialist People's Republic of Albania that continued until 1992.
Unrest and eventual collapse of Marxism–Leninism also occurred in Yugoslavia, although for different reasons than those of the Warsaw Pact. The death of Josip Broz Tito
in 1980 and the subsequent vacuum of strong leadership allowed the rise
of rival ethnic nationalism in the multinational country. The first
leader to exploit such nationalism for political purposes was Slobodan Milošević, who used it to seize power as president of Serbia and demanded concessions to Serbia and Serbs by the other republics in the Yugoslav federation. This resulted in a surge of Slovene and Croat nationalism in response and the collapse of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia in 1990, the victory of nationalists in multi-party elections in most of Yugoslavia's constituent republics and eventually civil war between the various nationalities beginning in 1991. Yugoslavia was dissolved in 1992.
The Soviet Union itself collapsed between 1990 and 1991, with a
rise of secessionist nationalism and a political power dispute between
Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin, the new leader of the Russian Federation.
With the Soviet Union collapsing, Gorbachev prepared the country to
become a loose federation of independent states called the Commonwealth of Independent States. Hardline Marxist–Leninist leaders in the military reacted to Gorbachev's policies with the August Coup
of 1991 in which hardline Marxist–Leninist military leaders overthrew
Gorbachev and seized control of the government. This regime only lasted
briefly as widespread popular opposition erupted in street protests and
refused to submit. Gorbachev was restored to power, but the various
Soviet republics were now set for independence. On 25 December 1991,
Gorbachev officially announced the dissolution of the Soviet Union,
ending the existence of the world's first Marxist–Leninist-led state.
Post-Cold War era (1992–present)
Since
the fall of the Eastern European Marxist–Leninist regimes, the Soviet
Union and a variety of African Marxist–Leninist regimes, only a few
Marxist–Leninist parties remained in power. This include China, Cuba, Laos and Vietnam.
Most Marxist–Leninist communist parties outside of these nations have
fared relatively poorly in elections, although other parties have
remained or became a relative strong force. This include Russia, where the Communist Party of the Russian Federation has remained a significant political force, winning the 1995 legislative election, almost winning the 1996 presidential election and generally remaining the second most popular party. In Ukraine, the Communist Party of Ukraine has also exerted influence and governed the country after the 1994 parliamentary election and again after the 2006 parliamentary election. However, the 2014 parliamentary election following the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the annexation of Crimea resulted in the loss of its 32 members and no parliamentary representation.
In Europe, several Marxist–Leninist parties remain strong. In Cyprus, Dimitris Christofias of AKEL won the 2008 presidential election. AKEL has consistently been the first and third most popular party, winning the 1970, 1981, 2001 and 2006 legislative elections. In the Czech Republic and Portugal, the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia and the Portuguese Communist Party have been the second and fourth most popular parties until the 2017 and 2009 legislative elections, respectively. Since 2017, the Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia supports the ANO 2011–ČSSD minority government while the Portuguese Communist Party has provided confidence and supply along with the Ecologist Party "The Greens" and Left Bloc to the Socialist minority government from 2015 to 2019. In Greece, the Communist Party of Greece
has led an interim and later national unity government between 1989 and
1990, constantly remaining the third or fourth most popular party. In Moldova, the Party of Communists of the Republic of Moldova won the 2001, 2005 and April 2009 parliamentary elections. However, the April 2009 Moldovan elections results were protested and another round was held in July, resulting in the formation of the Alliance for European Integration. Failing to elect the president, new parliamentary elections were held in November 2010
which resulted in roughly the same representation in the parliament.
According to Ion Marandici, a Moldovan political scientist, the Party of
Communists differs from those in other countries because it managed to
appeal to the ethnic minorities and the anti-Romanian Moldovans. After
tracing the adaptation strategy of the party, he found confirming
evidence for five of the factors contributing to its electoral success,
already mentioned in the theoretical literature on former
Marxist–Leninist parties, namely the economic situation, the weakness of
the opponents, the electoral laws, the fragmentation of the political
spectrum and the legacy of the old regime. However, Marandici identified
seven additional explanatory factors at work in the Moldovan case,
namely the foreign support for certain political parties, separatism,
the appeal to the ethnic minorities, the alliance-building capacity, the
reliance on the Soviet notion of the Moldovan identity, the
state-building process and the control over a significant portion of the
media. It is due to these seven additional factors that the party
managed to consolidate and expand its constituency. In the post-Soviet states, the Party of Communists are the only ones who have been in power for so long and did not change the name of the party.
In Asia, a number of Marxist–Leninist regimes and movements
continue to exist. The People's Republic of China has continued the
agenda of Deng Xiaoping's
1980s reforms by initiating significant privatisation of the national
economy. At the same time, no corresponding political liberalisation has
occurred as happened in previous years to Eastern European countries.
The Naxalite–Maoist insurgency has continued between the governments of Bangladesh and India against various Marxist–Leninist movements, having been unabated since the 1960s. In India, the Manmohan Singh government depended on the parliamentary support of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) which has led state governments in Kerala, Tripura and West Bengal. The armed wing of the Communist Party of India (Maoist) has been fighting a war against the government of India since 1967 and is still active in half the country. Maoist rebels in Nepal engaged in a civil war from 1996 to 2006 that managed to topple the monarchy there and create a republic. Communist Party of Nepal (Unified Marxist–Leninist) leader Man Mohan Adhikari briefly became prime minister and national leader from 1994 to 1995 and the Maoist guerrilla leader Prachanda was elected prime minister by the Constituent Assembly of Nepal
in 2008. Prachanda has since been deposed as prime minister, leading
the Maoists, who consider Prachanda's removal to be unjust, to abandon
their legalistic approach and return to their street actions and
militancy and to lead sporadic general strikes
using their substantial influence on the Nepalese labour movement.
These actions have oscillated between mild and intense. In the Philippines, the Maoist-oriented Communist Party of the Philippines and its armed wing, the New People's Army, have been waging armed revolution against the existing Philippine government since 1968 and are still participating in a low-scale guerrilla insurgency.
In Africa, several Marxist–Leninist states reformed themselves and maintained power. In South Africa, the South African Communist Party is a member of the Tripartite alliance alongside the African National Congress and the Congress of South African Trade Unions. The Economic Freedom Fighters is a pan-African, Marxist–Leninist party founded in 2013 by expelled former president of the African National Congress Youth League Julius Malema and his allies. Sri Lanka has had Marxist–Leninist ministers in their national governments. In Zimbabwe, former President Robert Mugabe of the Zimbabwe African National Union – Patriotic Front, the country's long standing leader, was a professed Marxist–Leninist.
In the Americas, there have been several insurgencies. In North America, the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA led by its chairman Bob Avakian organises for a revolution to overthrow the capitalist system and replace it with a socialist state. In South America, Colombia has been in the midst of a civil war which has been waged since 1964 between the Colombian government and aligned right-wing paramilitaries against two Marxist–Leninist guerrilla groups, namely the National Liberation Army and Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. In Peru, there has been an internal conflict between the Peruvian government and Marxist–Leninist–Maoist militants such as the Shining Path.
Ideology
Economy
The goal of Marxist–Leninist political economy is the emancipation of men and women from the dehumanisation caused by mechanistic work that is psychologically alienating (without work–life balance) which is performed in exchange for wages
that give limited financial-access to the material necessities of life
(i.e. food and shelter). That personal and societal emancipation from poverty
(material necessity) would maximise individual liberty by enabling men
and women to pursue their interests and innate talents (artistic,
industrial and intellectual) whilst working by choice, without the
economic coercion of poverty. In the communist society of upper-stage economic development, the elimination of alienating labour (mechanistic work) depends upon the developments of high technology
that improve the means of production and the means of distribution. To
meet the material needs of a socialist society, the state uses a planned economy to co-ordinate the means of production
and of distribution to supply and deliver the goods and services
required throughout society and the national economy. The state serves
as a safeguard for the ownership and as the coordinator of production
through a universal economic plan.
For the purpose of reducing waste and increasing efficiency, scientific planning replaces market mechanisms and price mechanisms as the guiding principle of the economy. The state's huge purchasing power replaces the role of market forces, with macroeconomic equilibrium not being achieved through market forces but by economic planning based on scientific assessment. The wages
of the worker are determined according to the type of skills and the
type of work he or she can perform within the national economy. Moreover, the economic value of the goods and services produced is based upon their use value (as material objects) and not upon the cost of production (value) or the exchange value (marginal utility). The profit motive as a driving force for production is replaced by social obligation to fulfil the economic plan. Wages
are set and differentiated according to skill and intensity of work.
While socially utilised means of production are under public control,
personal belongings or property of a personal nature that does not
involve mass production of goods remains unaffected by the state.
Because Marxism–Leninism has historically been the state ideology of countries who were economically undeveloped prior to socialist revolution, or whose economies were nearly obliterated by war such as the German Democratic Republic,
the primary goal before achieving communism was the development of
socialism in itself. Such was the case in the Soviet Union, where the
economy was largely agrarian and urban industry was in a primitive
stage. To develop socialism, the Soviet Union underwent rapid industrialisation with pragmatic programs of social engineering that transplanted peasant populations to the cities, where they were educated and trained as industrial workers and then became the workforce of the new factories and industries. Likewise, the farmer populations worked the system of collective farms
to grow food to feed the industrial workers in the industrialised
cities. Since the mid-1930s, Marxism–Leninism has advocated an austere
social-equality based upon asceticism, egalitarianism and self-sacrifice. In the 1920s, the Bolshevik party semi-officially allowed some limited, small-scale wage inequality to boost labour productivity in the economy of the Soviet Union. These reforms were promoted to encourage materialism and acquisitiveness in order to stimulate economic growth.
This pro-consumerist policy has been advanced on the lines of
industrial pragmatism as it advances economic progress through
bolstering industrialisation.
In the economic praxis of Bolshevik Russia, there was a defining
difference of political economy between socialism and communism. Lenin
explained their conceptual similarity to Marx's descriptions of the
lower-stage and the upper-stage of economic development, namely that
immediately after a proletarian revolution in the socialist lower-stage
society the practical economy must be based upon the individual labour
contributed by men and women
and that paid labour would be the basis of the communist upper-stage
society that has realised the social precept of the slogan: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs".
International relations
Marxism–Leninism aims to create an international communist society. It opposes colonialism and imperialism and advocates decolonisation and anti-colonial forces. It supports anti-fascist international alliances and has advocated the creation of popular fronts between communist and non-communist anti-fascists against strong fascist movements. This Marxist–Leninist approach to international relations derives from the analyses (political, economic, sociological and geopolitical) that Lenin presented in the essay Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism (1917). Extrapolating from five philosophical bases of Marxism, namely that human history is the history of class struggle between a ruling class and an exploited class; that capitalism creates antagonistic social classes, i.e. the bourgeois exploiters and the exploited proletariat; that capitalism employs nationalist war to further private economic expansion; that socialism is an economic system that voids social classes through public ownership of the means of production and so will eliminate the economic causes of war; and that once the state (socialist or communist)
withers away, so shall international relations wither away because they
are projections of national economic forces, Lenin said that the
capitalists' exhaustion of domestic sources of investment profit by way
of price-fixing trusts and cartels, then prompts the same capitalists to export investment capital to undeveloped countries to finance the exploitation of natural resources
and the native populations and to create new markets. That the
capitalists' control of national politics ensures the government's
military safeguarding of colonial investments and the consequent
imperial competition for economic supremacy provokes international wars
to protect their national interests.
In the vertical perspective (social-class relations) of
Marxism–Leninism, the internal and international affairs of a country
are a political continuum, not separate realms of human activity. This
is the philosophic opposite of the horizontal perspectives
(country-to-country) of the liberal and the realist
approaches to international relations. Colonial imperialism is the
inevitable consequence in the course of economic relations among
countries when the domestic price-fixing of monopoly capitalism has voided profitable competition in the capitalist homeland. The ideology of New Imperialism, rationalised as a civilising mission,
allowed the exportation of high-profit investment capital to
undeveloped countries with uneducated, native populations (sources of
cheap labour), plentiful raw materials for exploitation (factors for
manufacture) and a colonial market to consume the surplus production, which the capitalist homeland cannot consume. The example is the European Scramble for Africa (1881–1914) in which imperialism was safeguarded by the national military.
To secure the economic and settler colonies, foreign sources of
new capital-investment-profit, the imperialist state seeks either
political or military control of the limited resources (natural and
human). The First World War (1914–1918) resulted from such geopolitical
conflicts among the empires of Europe over colonial spheres of influence.
For the colonised working classes who create the wealth (goods and
services), the elimination of war for natural resources (access, control
and exploitation) is resolved by overthrowing the militaristic capitalist state and establishing a socialist state because a peaceful world economy is feasible only by proletarian revolutions that overthrow systems of political economy based upon the exploitation of labour.
Political system
Marxism–Leninism supports the creation of a one-party state led by a communist party as a means to develop socialism and then communism. The political structure of the Marxist–Leninist state involves the rule of a communist vanguard party over a revolutionary socialist state that represents the will and rule of the proletariat. Through the policy of democratic centralism, the communist party is the supreme political institution of the Marxist–Leninist state.
In Marxism–Leninism, elections are held for all positions within
the legislative structure, municipal councils, national legislatures and
presidencies.
In most Marxist–Leninist states, this has taken the form of directly
electing representatives to fill positions, although in some states such
as People's Republic of China, the Republic of Cuba and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia this system also included indirect elections such as deputies being elected by deputies as the next lower level of government.
Marxism–Leninism asserts that society is united upon common interests
represented through the communist party and other institutions of the
Marxist–Leninist state.
Society
Marxism–Leninism supports universal social welfare. The Marxist–Leninist state provides for the national welfare with universal healthcare, free public education (academic, technical and professional) and the social benefits
(childcare and continuing education) necessary to increase the
productivity of the workers and the socialist economy to develop a
communist society. As part of the planned economy, the Marxist–Leninist
state is meant to develop the proletariat's universal education (academic and technical) and their class consciousness
(political education) to facilitate their contextual understanding of
the historical development of communism as presented in Marx's theory of history.
Marxism–Leninism supports the emancipation of women
and ending the exploitation of women. Marxist–Leninist policy on family
law has typically involved the elimination of the political power of
the bourgeoisie, the abolition of private property
and an education that teaches citizens to abide by a disciplined and
self-fulfilling lifestyle dictated by the social norms of communism as a
means to establish a new social order. The judicial reformation of family law eliminates patriarchy from the legal system. This facilitates the political emancipation of women from traditional social inferiority and economic exploitation. The reformation of civil law made marriage secular into a "free and voluntary union" between persons who are social-and-legal equals; facilitated divorce; legalised abortion, eliminated bastardy ("illegitimate children"); and voided the political power of the bourgeoisie and the private property-status of the means of production.
The educational system imparts the social norms for a self-disciplined
and self-fulfilling way of life, by which the socialist citizens
establish the social order necessary for realising a communist society.
With the advent of a classless society and the abolition of private
property, society collectively assume many of the roles traditionally
assigned to mothers and wives, with women becoming integrated into
industrial work. This has been promoted by Marxism–Leninism as the means
to achieve women's emancipation.
Marxist–Leninist cultural policy modernises social relations among citizens by eliminating the capitalist value system of traditionalist conservatism, by which Tsarism classified, divided and controlled people with stratified social classes
without any socio-economic mobility. It focuses upon modernisation and
distancing society from the past, the bourgeoisie and the old
intelligentsia. The socio-cultural changes required for establishing a communist society are realised with education and agitprop (agitation and propaganda) which reinforce communal and communist values. The modernisation of educational and cultural policies eliminates the societal atomisation, including anomie and social alienation, caused by cultural backwardness. Marxism–Leninism develops the New Soviet man, an educated and cultured citizen possessed of a proletarian class consciousness who is oriented towards the social cohesion
necessary for developing a communist society as opposed to the
antithetic bourgeois individualist associated with social atomisation.
Teleology
The Marxist–Leninist worldview is atheist, wherein all human activity results from human volition and not the will of supernatural beings (gods, goddesses and demons) who have direct agency in the public and private affairs of human society. The tenets of the Soviet Union's national policy of Marxist–Leninist atheism originated from the philosophies of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831) and Ludwig Feuerbach (1804–1872) as well as that of Karl Marx (1818–1883) and Vladimir Lenin (1870–1924).
As a basis of Marxism–Leninism, the philosophy of materialism (the physical universe exists independently of human consciousness) is applied as dialectical materialism
(a philosophy of science and nature) to examine the socio-economic
relations among people and things as parts of a dynamic, material world
that is unlike the immaterial world of metaphysics. Soviet astrophysicist Vitaly Ginzburg
said that ideologically the "Bolshevik communists were not merely
atheists, but, according to Lenin's terminology, militant atheists" in
excluding religion from the social mainstream, from education and from
government.
Criticism
Marxism–Leninism has been widely criticised due to its relations with Stalinism, the Soviet Union and state repression in Marxist–Leninist states. Classical and orthodox Marxists were critical of Stalin's political economy and single-party government in the Soviet Union.
Italian left communist Amadeo Bordiga
dismissed Marxism–Leninism as political opportunism that preserved
capitalism because of the claim that the exchange of commodities would
occur under socialism and that the use of popular front organisations by the Communist International and a political vanguard organised by organic centralism were politically more effective than a vanguard organised by democratic centralism. American Marxist Raya Dunayevskaya dismissed Marxism–Leninism as a type of state capitalism because state ownership of the means of production is a form of state capitalism and single-party rule is undemocratic whereas the dictatorship of the proletariat is democratic, further arguing that the doctrine is neither Marxism nor Leninism,
but rather a composite ideology that Stalin used to expediently
determine what is communism and what is not communism for the countries
of the Eastern Bloc.
Trotskyists claim that Marxism–Leninism led to the establishment of a degenerated workers' state. Others such as philosopher Eric Voegelin
claim that Marxism–Leninism is in its core inherently oppressive,
arguing that the "Marxian vision dictated the Stalinist outcome not
because the communist utopia was inevitable but because it was
impossible".
Criticism like this has itself been criticised for philosophical
determinism, i.e. that the negative events in the movement's history
were predetermined by their convictions. Historian Robert Vincent Daniels
argues that Marxism was used to "justify Stalinism, but it was no
longer allowed to serve either as a policy directive or an explanation
of reality" during Stalin's rule.
In complete contrast, E. Van Ree argues that Stalin continued to be in
"general agreement" with the classical works of Marxism until his death.