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ID189332
Title ProperRevolutionary Origin of the CCP Commissar System
Other Title InformationHow it Differed from the Bolshevik Prototype
LanguageENG
AuthorZhou, Luyang
Summary / Abstract (Note)Comparative scholars have noticed that China's party–military relationship was more fused than the Soviet Union's. This article explores the historical origin of this difference. The author focuses on the understudied commissar system. Based on original Russian and Chinese materials, the author finds that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) commissar, unlike its Soviet prototype, was more dedicated to breaking the distinction between the revolution and the military. First, the CCP's political workers periodically campaigned against military bureaucracy, though they could not fully eradicate it. Second, in the regular operation of logistical affairs, the CCP's commissars strove to be super-fighters that could replace specialists and technocrats. Third, the CCP political workers had more direct participation in combat, often by their political skills. This made the Chinese Civil War a prototype of contemporary hybrid warfare. Differently, Soviet commissars confined their roles to political monitoring. They tended to leave other affairs to officers and specialists, while at the same time minimizing the change of the original structure of the Tsarist military. In short, the Soviet commissar was a supervisor, while the CCP commissar was a fighter.
`In' analytical NoteChina Review Vol. 23, No.1; Feb 2023: p.407-443
Journal SourceChina Review Vol: 23 No 1
Key WordsCCP Commissar Syste ;  Bolshevik Prototype


 
 
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