Yang Shangkun

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Yang Shangkun
杨尚昆
4th President of the People's Republic of China
In office
8 April 1988 – 27 March 1993
PremierLi Peng
Vice PresidentWang Zhen
LeaderDeng Xiaoping
Preceded byLi Xiannian
Succeeded byJiang Zemin
Vice Chairman of the Central Military Commission
In office
State Commission:
20 June 1983 – 28 March 1993
Party Commission:
12 September 1982 – 19 October 1992
ChairmanDeng Xiaoping
Jiang Zemin
Secretary-General of the CCP Central Military Commission
In office
August 1945 – November 1956
Succeeded byHuang Kecheng
In office
July 1981 – November 1989
Preceded byGeng Biao
Succeeded byYang Baibing
Director of the Office of the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party
In office
24 October 1945 – 10 November 1965
ChairmanMao Zedong
Preceded byLi Fuchun
Succeeded byWang Dongxing
Member of the
National People's Congress
In office
21 December 1964 – 13 January 1975
ConstituencyPLA At-large
In office
25 March 1988 – 15 March 1993
ConstituencySichuan At-large
7th Mayor of Guangzhou
In office
March 1979 – September 1981
Preceded byJiao Linyi
Succeeded byLiang Lingguang
Personal details
Born(1907-08-03)3 August 1907
Tongnan, Chongqing, Sichuan, Qing Empire
Died14 September 1998(1998-09-14) (aged 91)
Beijing, People's Republic of China
NationalityChinese
Political partyChinese Communist Party (joined in 1926)
Spouse
Li Bozhao
(m. 1929; died 1985)
RelationsYang Baibing
Children3
Alma materShanghai University, Moscow Sun Yat-sen University
Yang Shangkun
Simplified Chinese杨尚昆
Traditional Chinese楊尚昆
Yang in 1940
Yang (right) with Nikolai Bulganin

Yang Shangkun (3 August 1907[1] – 14 September 1998) was a Chinese Communist military and political leader, president of the People's Republic of China from 1988 to 1993, and one of the Eight Elders that dominated the party after the death of Mao Zedong.[2]

Born to a prosperous land-owning family, Yang studied politics at Shanghai University and Marxist philosophy and revolutionary tactics at Moscow Sun Yat-sen University. He went on to hold high office under both Mao Zedong and later Deng Xiaoping; from 1945 to 1965 he was Director of the General Office and from 1945 to 1956 Secretary–General of the Central Military Commission (CMC). In these positions, Yang oversaw much of the day-to-day running of government and Party affairs, both political and military, amassing a great deal of bureaucratic power by controlling things like the flow of documents, the keeping of records, and the approval and allocation of funds.[2] Purged, arrested and imprisoned during the Cultural Revolution, he spent 12 years in prison but staged a comeback in 1978, becoming a key ally of Deng, serving as Mayor of Guangzhou (1979–81), and returning to the CMC as Secretary–General and also Vice Chairman (1981–89), before assuming the presidency.[2]

One of the earliest supporters of Chinese economic reform, Yang justified it with references to Vladimir Lenin and the New Economic Policy. However, he strongly opposed any form of political reform, and, despite his own suffering during the Cultural Revolution, actively defended the image and record of Mao. Together with his half-brother, General Yang Baibing, Yang Shangkun effectively controlled the PLA for the entire 1980s and into the early 1990s. Despite his initial hesitation, he went on to play a leading role in crushing the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests and was actually the one who planned and supervised the operations to clear the square and surrounding streets. Yang's downfall came in 1993, when he failed in his attempts to undermine the new leadership of Jiang Zemin and to retain control of the PLA, and was forced to retire by a coalition of Party elders, including Deng himself.

Early political and military activities[edit]

Yang was born to a land-owning family[3] in Shuangjiang, Tongnan County, near the city of Chongqing in Sichuan, and studied at Chengdu Higher Normal School and its affiliated secondary school in 1920–25, and then returned to Chongqing. His older brother, Yang Yingong[4] was one of the founding Executive Committee members of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in Sichuan, and influenced Yang Shangkun's ideological orientation. After joining the Communist Youth League in 1925, and the CCP in 1926, he enrolled in Shanghai University, where he studied politics.[5] Later in 1927 Yang traveled to the Soviet Union and enrolled at the Moscow Sun Yat-sen University, where he studied Marxist theory and techniques of political organization and mobilization.[2][3]

Yang was a member of a group of Chinese students who studied in Moscow and returned to China to take a leading role in the CCP, later known as the 28 Bolsheviks.[5] The Comintern sent Yang back to China to assist and support other pro-Comintern CCP leaders, including Bo Gu, Wang Ming, and Zhang Guotao, but Yang and some of the other 28 Bolsheviks, including Ye Jianying, Wang Jiaxiang and Zhang Wentian supported Mao Zedong instead. On his return from Moscow in 1931, Yang Shangkun started his military career in the Chinese Red Army, serving as Director of the Political Department in the 1st Red Army and moving around different battle areas under the command of Zhu De and Zhou Enlai. In January 1934, he was appointed Political Commissar of the 3rd Red Army, commanded by Peng Dehuai.[6]

Second Sino–Japanese War and Chinese Civil War[edit]

During the Second Sino–Japanese War Yang Shangkun was Deputy Secretary of the CCP North China Bureau and worked with Liu Shaoqi behind the Japanese lines. In January 1939, Yang became Secretary of the North China Bureau and worked with Zhu De and Peng Dehuai to cooperate with the military operations of the Eighth Route Army, including the Hundred Regiments Campaign. In 1941, Yang returned to Yan'an and worked as personal aide to Mao. In 1945, he became the Director of the General Office of the Party, as well as Secretary–General of the Central Military Commission, that was chaired by Mao himself. In these capacities, he was responsible for much of the day-to-day administration of the Party's military and political work, and carried out this duty with much success.[2]

In the subsequent Chinese Civil War 1949, Yang was Commander of the "Central Security Force" protecting the Party Center, and, in his roles as Director of the General Office and Secretary–General of the CMC, played a significant role in the ultimate Communist victory and the establishment of the People's Republic of China in 1949.[3]

People's Republic[edit]

After the founding of the PRC in October 1949 and until the outbreak of the Cultural Revolution in 1966, Yang Shangkun was one of very few CCP leaders who worked closely with Mao Zedong at Zhongnanhai on a daily basis. As the Director of the General Office and Secretary–General of the CMC, he oversaw much of the actual day-to-day work of most party activities and military affairs.[3] On the eve of the Cultural Revolution Yang was identified as a supporter of Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping, and was purged as a counter-revolutionary.[7] After being ejected from the Communist Party and removed from all positions, Yang was persecuted by Red Guards, who accused Yang of planting a covert listening device to spy on Mao, the same accusation shared by Deng Xiaoping.

Yang remained in prison until Mao died and Deng Xiaoping rose to power, in 1978. After Deng gained control of the military he recalled Yang, raised him to the position of general, and gave Yang the responsibility of reforming China's army, which Deng considered as larger than necessary and engaged in too many non-military activities. Deng raised Yang to the position of Vice Chairman of the Central Military Commission in order to give Yang the authority to complete these reforms (Deng was chairman). In 1982 Yang was also appointed as a full member of the Politburo.[8]

Yang had a close friendship with Deng and shared many of Deng's long-term economic goals, but was far less enthusiastic about the agenda of political liberalization promoted by other senior leaders favored by Deng, including Hu Yaobang, Zhao Ziyang, Wan Li, and Hu Qili. Yang justified his support of economic reforms by referencing Vladimir Lenin and the New Economic Policy, and he emphasized that the Communist Party should still enjoy overall control of the economy, even in private businesses, through the system of Party committees in all enterprises. He also always defended Mao Zedong as a great and historic leader, despite his own suffering at the hands of radical Maoists.

In the early 1980s, Yang explicitly backed the efforts of a foreign China historian, Harrison Salisbury, to compile an account of the Long March by conducting extensive interviews with surviving Long March participants. The resulting book, Long March: The Untold Story, has been praised by China scholars as an excellent synthesis of first-hand oral sources. Within China, many Chinese veterans asked why it took a foreigner to produce such a book.[9]

Presidency[edit]

In 1988, Yang was appointed President of the People's Republic of China replacing Li Xiannian. Under the conventions of the 1982 Constitution, the president's role was largely symbolic,[8] with formal executive power wielded by the General Secretary of the Communist Party and the Premier of the State Council. In practice, party and state leaders still deferred to paramount leader Deng Xiaoping, who, however, was not all-powerful, as he still had to compromise on some policies with other party elders such as Chen Yun and Li Xiannian.

Yang's role during the Tiananmen protests of 1989 caused a fundamental shift in China's political structure. Yang was at first sympathetic to the students and sided with General Secretary Zhao Ziyang in supporting them. As the Vice Chairman and Secretary-General of the Central Military Commission, he even praised Zhao's position by claiming that Zhao "Ziyang’s notion of pacifying the student movement through democracy and law is good and seems quite workable right now." Zhao's position was contested by Premier Li Peng and Party elder Li Xiannian, who wanted to use force to suppress the student demonstrations and engaged in an internal power struggle with Zhao to convince other senior leaders of their position.[citation needed]

After the hardliners gained the upper hand, Yang changed his position and supported the use of force to suppress student protestors. In May 1989 Yang appeared on Chinese television, where he denounced the student demonstrations as "anarchy" and defended the imposition of martial law on several areas of Beijing affected by the protests. Yang then mobilized and planned the suppression of the demonstrators, an operation in which several hundred protesters were killed on 4 June and subsequent days.[8] Yang's nephew, Yang Jianhua, commanded the highly disciplined 27th Group Army, which was brought into Beijing from Hebei to suppress the demonstrators.

Yang (first row, fifth from right) at Kim Il Sung's 80th birthday celebrations in 1992

Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, Yang Shangkun was hugely influential within the People's Liberation Army. Yang and his younger half-brother, Yang Baibing, purged China's military of any officers who had not sufficiently supported the government's violent crackdown on students. Yang then began an organized attempt to fill as many senior military positions as possible with his supporters, generating an attitude of resentment among other military elders, who accused Yang of attempting to dominate the army and possibly challenge Deng's authority by developing a "Yang family clique". When Yang resisted the rise of Jiang Zemin (who had been the Party secretary of Shanghai), whom Deng began to groom to succeed him as paramount leader, party elders, including Deng himself forced Yang to retire in 1993, along with some of his family.[7]

Later life[edit]

According to Voice of America, before Yang Shangkun died in 1998, he allegedly told army doctor Jiang Yanyong that the crackdown on 4 June had been the most serious mistake committed by Li Peng and the Communist Party in its history, a mistake that Yang believed he could not correct, but which he believed would eventually be corrected.[10]

Yang died on 14 September 1998, aged 91. His official obituary described him as "a great proletarian revolutionary, a statesman, a military strategist, a staunch Marxist, an outstanding leader of the party, the state, and the people's army." On 2001, the ashes of Yang and his wife were interred at a cemetery named after him in Tongnan District, Chongqing.[7][11]

Personal life[edit]

In 1929, he married Li Bozhao, a woman who participated in the Long March alongside Yang. They had three sons.[12]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ "族谱帮大忙,确定杨尚昆诞辰日为8月3日--中国共产党新闻--中国共产党新闻-人民网". Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 21 May 2017.
  2. ^ a b c d e Yang Shangkun (Yang Shang-kun) (1907-1998) in China at war: an Encyclopedia, edited by Xiaobing Li, pp. 512–514, ABC-CLIO, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d Eckholm 1
  4. ^ "Obituary: Yang Shangkun". The Independent. 15 September 1998. Archived from the original on 7 May 2022.
  5. ^ a b Xinhua
  6. ^ Domes 113
  7. ^ a b c Eckholm 1–2
  8. ^ a b c Eckholm 2
  9. ^ Teiwes 93–94
  10. ^ (Chinese) 镇压六四主将、党内斗争牺牲品杨白冰病逝 Voice of America 2013-01-17
  11. ^ "看完杨尚昆墓,再看看华国锋陵园,同样雄伟壮观,意义却各不相同". The Paper. 28 August 2020. Retrieved 11 December 2023.
  12. ^ "李伯钊(1911—1985)". Archived from the original on 15 September 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2017.

Sources[edit]

Political offices
Preceded by Chairman of the Guangzhou Revolutionary Committee
1979–1981
Succeeded byas Mayor of Guangzhou
Preceded by Secretary-General of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress
1980–1983
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the People's Republic of China
1988–1993
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Vice Chairman of the PRC Central Military Commission
1989–1993
Succeeded by
Party political offices
Preceded by Chief of the General Office of the Chinese Communist Party
1945–1965
Succeeded by
Preceded by
none
Secretary-General of the CCP Central Military Commission
1945–1956
Succeeded by
Preceded by Secretary-General of the CCP Central Military Commission
1981–1989
Succeeded by
Preceded by Leader of the Central Leading Group for Taiwan Affairs
1987–1989
Succeeded by
Preceded by First Vice Chairman of the CCP Central Military Commission
1989–1992
Succeeded by
Order of precedence
Preceded byas Chairman of the Central Military Commission
(2nd-ranked)
Orders of precedence in the People's Republic of China
(President of China; 3rd-ranked)

1988–1993
Succeeded byas Premier
(4th-ranked)