The Epoch Times: The CCP's Hate Propaganda
By Peter Zvagulis
Special to The Epoch Times Jul 07, 2005 Amnesty International in its 2005 China report concludes that, "there
was progress towards reform in some areas, but this failed to have a significant
impact on serious and widespread human rights violations perpetrated across the
country. Tens of thousands of people continued to be detained or imprisoned in
violation of their fundamental human rights and were at high risk of torture or
ill-treatment. Thousands of people were sentenced to death or executed, many
after unfair trials." None of this information is to be found in China's official newspapers. Instead, the communist-controlled
newspaper, The People's Daily, continues to glorify the regime's
"economic achievements" and publishes official speeches by President
Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao. Is this phenomenon something that is unique to China and the Chinese
Communist Party (CCP)? Even though my expertise derives from witnessing and
analyzing the collapse of the European communist regimes, it is not too
difficult to see the many similarities that, regardless of the cultural
differences, exist in China's communist system. Despite its economic
flexibility, China's communist regime has preserved all the traditional
totalitarian political characteristics. The other big communist powers are all
gone, but one is still causing suffering to the people of a great country with
rich cultural and spiritual traditions. The history of the twentieth century reminds us that hate propaganda can
bring enormous calamities to millions of innocent people. Communist hate
propaganda is rooted in their antagonizing dogma of class struggle, and intends
to justify state-sponsored mass violence against imaginary "enemies of the
people." China's communist leadership has persecuted many groups of people
during the decades of its dictatorial rule. Today it persecutes people with
independent opinions, Christians and other religious and ethnic minorities. In the last five years it has chosen the spiritual movement Falun
Gong as their main enemy. I believe that China and its people would enormously benefit by learning not
just from its own tragic history of communist rule, but also from the violent
totalitarian past of other countries, and by avoiding the mistakes that have
been made elsewhere. The lessons learned during the downfall of the communist
regimes in Europe can be applied to China. The disintegration of the communist
regimes was not always peaceful and it took time for the Western society to
acknowledge its own illusions and to react forcefully to the organized mass violence in former Yugoslavia. The lack of proper
international response contributed to destabilization in other regions and
created a window of opportunity for other perpetrators. The 1994 genocidal
events in Rwanda and Burundi are a tragic reminder of the complexity of regional
and international power-balance. Let's take a look at three examples from the recent and not-so-recent past.
It has been already more than three years that Slobodan Milosevic, former
Serbian president sits in his UN prison cell in Hague, the Netherlands, and
faces new evidence of the mass atrocities committed by his regime under his
leadership. Vukovar, Srebrenica and the names of many massacred and torched
towns in Kosovo will hound the deposed dictator until the end of his days, which
he most probably will see in prison.
On December 3, 2003 the UN International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) in the Tanzanian city of Arusha sentenced three Rwandan journalists for their role in fueling the genocide of 1994. Two of them, Ferdinand Nahimana, a
founding member of Radio Libre des Mille Collines (RTLM) and Hassan Ngeze, owner
and editor of the Hutu extremist newspaper, Kaguru, were sentenced to
life in prison. Jean-Bosco Barayagwiza, another executive at RTLM, received a
35-year sentence. Less than a month earlier, on November 6, the trial of four
former Rwandan ministers charged with genocide opened in Arusha. On May 1, 1945, Joseph Goebbels, Nazi propaganda minister, and his wife -
to escape the inevitable war-crimes trial - committed suicide in the
underground bunker of their leader, Adolf Hitler. Goebbels knew too well the
magnitude of his own crime - his hate propaganda was responsible for the death
of six million European Jews. What do these three examples have in common and what do they have to do with China's Communist Party? All these people were responsible for causing the
violent death and suffering of thousands and millions of innocent people. One of
the deadliest weapons of their crimes was hate propaganda. As powerful and they
were during their rule of terror, in the end all of them had to face truth and
justice. One would think these three examples should be sending a message
powerful enough to stop anyone involved in hate propaganda or even contemplating
it. Yet, we see that history seems to be repeating itself and that the CCP's
leadership does not appear to learn from the lessons of the past. Milosevic, before coming to absolute power, was a former communist
functionary trained in propaganda methods by his Soviet mentors. He and the
Rwandan culprits differ in their background but they are similar in their use of
methods and the consequences of their hate propaganda. Both Serbian and Rwandan
instigators used propaganda techniques that included the most destructive
elements of Goebbels's and Marxist-Leninist methods. They all followed the
advice that Goebbels gave to Nazi propagandists in his 1934 Nuremberg rally speech, that propaganda "must be creative" and use
"productive fantasy." Let's look at some examples. Some of them are relatively recent, some are
quite fresh. From July 1988 until March 1991, the Serbian daily, Politika,
run by Milosevic supporters, published a permanent column, "Echoes and
Reactions," spreading unrestrained hatred against non-Serbs. The name of
the mass crime that followed was "ethnic cleansing." In November 2004, the Epoch Times reported that schoolchildren in
China are forced to undergo hate indoctrination against Falun Gong. Because of
the CCP's imposed information blockade, the true scale of the repression against
Falun Gong can be only estimated. At the end of 1993 and in early 1994, Rwandan radio station RTLM broadcast a
series of hate programs in an effort to divide and polarize the country's
population. The Hutu majority was told that the Tutsi minority harbored
mysterious and diabolic plans against them. "Kill them, or they will kill
you!" was the bottom-line message of RTLM. On May 23, AFP reported from
Uganda that thousands of corpses pf the Rwanda genocide victims had washed up on
the shores of Lake Victoria. In June 2005, many people in the US and Europe were
surprised to receive repeated phone call with Chinese communist propaganda and
anti-Falun Gong slogans. The Falun Gong movement's information center reacted to this incident with
great concern that this intrusive campaign was just an element in a larger Falun
Gong purge undertaken by the communist regime. These concerns may be well
founded if we consider the track record and methods of the previous communist
persecutions in China and that the government-controlled newspaper, The
People's Daily, which usually avoids mentioning the movement's name, in its
July 5, 2005 issue alleged that Falun Gong had jammed government-owned satellite
transmissions. The CCP's paranoia with Falun Gong reminds me of the Soviet obsession with
"Western ideological diversions" that made the Soviet communists to
suspect Radio Free Europe and other Western broadcasters of being behind every
independent opinion in the USSR and behind almost every one of the many failures
of the Soviet system. The communist system cannot live without an enemy to fight
and to blame for its own shortcomings, and without someone to persecute, in
order to maintain its rule of terror and fear. The communists have the tactical advantage of playing the propaganda game as
they choose: they invoke or ignore the generally accepted rules and
international law as it suits them. They create the image of new enemies to
divert attention from their own failures. They have two versions of propaganda. One is intended for domestic use and
the other one is for foreign consumption. The CCP is trying to influence the
governments of other countries by using government-level contacts and to induce
action from below by using party and intelligence channels. The recent
propaganda phone call campaign in the US and Europe clearly fits the latter. In the 1950s, Chinese and Soviet communist propaganda ran several years-long,
well-orchestrated and relatively successful campaigns falsely accusing the UN
and Americans of using bacteriological weapons during the Korean War. Even the
International Red Cross and World Health Organization were not spared and were
portrayed as US-controlled spy agencies. The propagandists alleged that American
bio-weapons had caused smallpox outbreaks in some Korean provinces. The
consistent repetition of lies combined with repeated statements by communist
government officials had its effect on leftist intellectuals in Western
countries. Even some of the Western politicians started to ask questions about
the conduct of UN troops during the Korean conflict. Repetitious de-humanization of the intended victim are the main techniques of
hate propaganda. Slobodan Milosevic's regime labeled every opposing opinion as
"terrorist activity" and kept fighting against the
"terrorism" of the international community and searching for
"terrorists" inside the country. Rwandan perpetrators called their
Tutsi victims "cockroaches." Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels
instigated hatred against Jews. The Mass atrocities of all of the above regimes are well known.
The Nazi criminals were sentenced at the Nuremberg trial, the Rwandan and
Serbian culprits are still being tried by the UN courts. The only great
totalitarian power that still persecutes innocent people and whose crimes are
not yet fully accounted for is Communist China. The name of the "enemy" may vary from one communist country to
another but the rules of the game remain the same. Because the communist
propaganda does not match reality, they need scapegoats to justify their own
failures. Ideally, they choose an imaginary enemy outside the country and launch
a campaign, or "witch hunt" - a search for alleged agents of this
imaginary enemy inside the country. Over the course of its history, the CCP has
had many victims labeled as its "enemies." The current victim, and
hopefully the last one, is Falun Gong. The CCP's campaign against Falun Gong in some ways is similar to such
campaigns in the Soviet Union. One that lasted the longest was the Kremlin's
fight against the "Western ideological diversions." When in the 1960s
the Soviet leadership realized that every citizen could see that their slogans
about building a prosperous socialist society did not match reality, they
quickly blamed the failure on the "imperialist conspiracy." Yuri
Andropov, then head of the state security (the KGB), in 1967 created the
"Fifth Department" to combat the "ideological diversions."
Western media in general and Radio Free Europe in particular, were diabolized. The huge bureaucratic apparatus
had to prove their usefulness. State-controlled media unleashed defamation
campaigns against the personalities of Western broadcasters and analysts;
security forces persecuted listeners of the Western radio stations. The myth of outside conspiracy was so convenient for the communist regime
that it lasted almost to the end of the system. But the fate of this myth was
ironic. People enforcing the myth on the one hand believed in the power of the
alleged outside conspiracy, and on the other hand they believed that the
information coming from the Western sources was at least 99% truthful. Some of
the former party elite and security officials later confessed that they secretly
used Western broadcasts as their main source of information. Having seen the collapse of the Soviet communist system and the domino-like
end of the European communist regimes, I feel confident in saying that the end
of the CCP's rule in China is no longer in the distant future. The change is
coming at an increasingly accelerating pace. I hope that for the sake of the
Chinese people, the change comes sooner rather than later. The longer the CCP is
allowed to play its dirty games, the bigger will grow the gap between its
ideology and reality. Conversely, the shorter the lifespan of China's Communist
Party, the less will be the risk that tragedies like those in Yugoslavia and
Rwanda will repeat in Asia. If people's minds are obscured and divorced from reality for too long, the
awakening may be painful. Spreading truthful and independent information helps
the people to wake up and come back to reality. The recent resignations from the
CCP membership are clear signs of awakening. As soon as this phenomenon reaches
a sufficient momentum, we will be referring to the CCP in the past tense. Peter Zvagulis is an international affairs writer and former editor of Radio
Free Europe http://www.theepochtimes.com/news/5-7-7/30115.html
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