Peter Freedman wrote on May 2
nd, 2014 at 4:28pm:
The point I was making is that if Ho was a true Communist, why approach the most antiCommunist nation in the world?
I think the answer is simple. Ho was first and foremost a Vietnamese nationalist.
He turned Communist only when he realised the only other powers he could turn to were Russia and China.
I'm not saying he didn't support the principles of Communism. But in a strange way, I believe turning Red was a cloak of convenience for him. He was a great man, but also a very complex one.
I wonder though, if back then people in Ho Chi Minh's position "turned red". Politics at the time leaned much further to the left. In France during the 1930s the Popular Front, including the French Communist Party, formed government.
In the colonies, communism had formed the main resistence to the Japanese. The allies had included the Soviet Union. It was only after Yalta that the English-speaking world became devoutly anti-communist, and even during the McCarthy era, most intellectuals sympathised with communism. Many held on through the Soviet invasion of Hungary, then Czechoslovakia. In Australia, even the tame old Labor Party's affiliation with leftist unions kept it out of power for a generation with the succession of the DLP.
And Lenin had called the Australian Labor Party the party of monopoly capitalism.
I often wonder at what point a sensible person would have given up communist sympathies. The invasion of Hungary? Khrushchev's Speech on Stalin? The Soviet-Sino split? Russian tanks in Prague? The release of Solzhenitsyn's Gulag Archipeligo?
Many thought they could tame communism, and who knows? If things had been different, maybe they could have. However, if things in the West were as "Free" as FD argues, there may have been no need for the rampant secrecy and militancy of the Western communist parties.
A fantasy, perhaps. Personally, I think communism was lost before the Bolsheviks even defeated the Mensheviks for supremacy in the Russian party. From China to Cuba to Italy, everyone around the world tried to do communism a little differently, and ultimately, they all gave up.
Capitalism is a global syatem. It can be softened by government, but not rivaled. Capitalism prevailed simply because it
is.
Our own intelligence at the time could not possibly have predicted this, but they could have looked. The ultimate weakness of the old boy way of thinking is its inflexibility, its absolutism. Whenever it sees this in others, it goes in for the kill, and Fascists, communists, and US apologists are all guilty of this.