(“National Party”), a political party in China that initially (from 1912) played a progressive role and later (beginning in 1927) became the ruling party of the bourgeois-landowner reaction; its rule was overthrown by the Chinese people in 1949. The Kuomintang was founded in 1912 as a result of the merger of the Tung Meng Hui Alliance, led by Sun Yat-sen, with several organizations of the liberal bourgeoisie. This merger took place for the purpose of limiting the power of the president Yüan Shih-k’ai and strengthening the Chinese Republic created during the period of the Hsinhai Revolution. With the establishment of the military dictatorship of Yuan Shih-k’ai, the Kuomintang was banned on Nov. 4, 1913. Sun Yat-sen, who had emigrated to Japan, founded the Chinese Revolutionary Party there in 1914 (the Chunghua Komingtang). He and his supporters tried to continue the struggle for the liberation of China but failed to find the correct path for doing so. The attempts by Sun Yat-sen to reorganize the Kuomintang in 1918 and 1919 were unsuccessful. The way out of the impasse was found in collaboration between the Kuomintang and the Communist Party of China (CPC), which was created in 1921. In late 1923 and early 1924, with the active participation of the Chinese Communists and the Soviet adviser M. M. Borodin, who had been invited to China by Sun Yat-sen, the Kuomintang was transformed into a mass political party of the united revolutionary front. This party brought together the workers, the peasants, the urban petite and middle bourgeoisies, and individual feudal-comprador elements. The Communists entered the Kuomintang while maintaining the organizational, ideological, and political independence of the CPC. In January 1924 the First Kuomintang Congress approved a new program based upon Sun Yat-sen’s Three Principles of the People (nationalism, democracy, and prosperity). These principles were clearly anti-imperialist and antifeudal in direction. For the implementation of this program, Sun Yat-sen proposed three basic political lines: alliance with the USSR, alliance with the CPC, and support for the peasants and workers.
The creation of a united front based on collaboration between the CPC and the Kuomintang was one of the main prerequisites for the revolution of 1925–27 in China.
As the revolution developed and deepened, the right wing of the Kuomintang began to retreat from collaboration with the Communists. The counterrevolutionary activities of the rightist elements in the Kuomintang particularly intensified after the death of Sun Yat-sen on Mar. 12, 1925. In April 1927, Chiang Kai-shek and other right-wing Kuomintang leaders carried out counterrevolutionary coups in East and South China, and in May, June, and July of the same year, similar coups occurred in Central China. The Kuomintang became a counterrevolutionary party defending the interests of the landowners and the big bourgeoisie. A period of bloody terror began in China.
In the 1930’s the Kuomintang, relying on the support of the USA, Great Britain, and the other imperialist nations, conducted five major military campaigns against the revolutionary bases created under CPC leadership. At the same time, it carried out a policy of capitulation to imperialist Japan, which in 1931 had seized Northeast China, and in 1933–35 established actual control over certain regions of North China. The antinational policy of continuing the civil war and capitulating to Japanese aggression evoked the indignation of the Chinese people, and this swelled into the patriotic movement of Dec. 9, 1935, and the Sian events of 1936. These were accompanied by the arrest of Chiang Kai-shek by patriotic generals such as Chang Hsueh-liang. After this, the Kuomintang was forced to abandon the policy of instigating civil war and begin a war against Japanese imperialism. But even during the national liberation war of the Chinese people against the Japanese invaders in 1937–45, the Kuomintang leaders did not halt their struggle against the CPC. After the surrender of Japan and the end of World War II, in trying to eliminate the liberated regions and the armed forces led by the CPC, the Kuomintang started a nation-wide civil war in July 1946 with the support of American imperialism. But the Chinese people led by the CPC, in benefiting from the favorable international situation and the aid of all revolutionary forces throughout the world, defeated the Kuomintang army and on Oct. 1, 1949, proclaimed the creation of the Chinese People’s Republic. The remnants of the defeated Chiang Kai-shek clique fled to the island of Taiwan under the protection of American military forces and created the Taiwan Kuomintang. In the Chinese People’s Republic there is the Revolutionary Committee of the Kuomintang, which was formed in January 1948 by a group of Kuomintang leaders who opposed the reactionary policy of Chiang Kai-shek.
E. A. BELOV