Gradually, the forces of moderation, led by Zhou Enlai and Deng
Xiaoping, resurfaced and prevailed, especially after Mao’s death at the
age of 82 in 1976. After a brief power struggle against extremist
elements led by Mao’s widow and a faction known as the Gang of Four,
the moderate and more practical Deng Xiaoping emerged as China’s new
leader. Since then, China has progressed in both the fields of foreign
policy and economy.
In foreign policy, China's more moderate
image led to its acceptance as a member of the United Nations in 1971.
This put increased pressure on the United States to recognize the
communist government in China. The Chinese communists, in turn, wanted
better relations with the West to act as a counterbalance against the
Soviets. In 1972, President Nixon visited China and started the long
road towards normalizing relations between the two nations. A major
stumbling block was America’s support of the Nationalist government of
still ruling the island of Taiwan. The communist government on the
mainland insisted that its relations with Taiwan were an internal
Chinese affair and that the United States should cut relations with and
support for the government there. In 1978 the United States agreed to
most of China's demands, although it informally maintained economic and
diplomatic relations with the government on Taiwan. Other erstwhile
enemies, notably Japan, also normalized diplomatic and economic
relations with mainland China during this period.
Economically,
Deng Xiaoping, instituted significant economic reforms known as The
Four Modernizations (agriculture, industry, science and technology, and
military) which provided farmers and factory workers incentives to work
harder. Farmers were allowed to keep small plots for growing surplus
food which they could sell, while factory workers could also do
business on the side as long as they did not hire (and thus exploit)
employees in the capitalist manner. To many hardliners, these reforms
seemed too capitalistic in spirit. However, they helped lift China's
economy dramatically in the following decades. As Deng put it, he did
not care whether a cat was black or white as long as it caught mice.
China's
growing prosperity brought demands for more political rights and power
for the common people, which Deng was not willing to grant.
Unfortunately, this contrast between economic progress and the lack of
corresponding political progress created tensions in Chinese society,
much like the tensions in Soviet society caused by more political
rights but the lack of economic progress. In 1989, massive
demonstrations demanding more political rights spread across many
Chinese cities. After several weeks of indecision, the aging leaders
brutally suppressed the movement at Taiananmen Square in Beijing and
reestablished a harsh and repressive rule.
Since then, China
has rapidly emerged as a major economic force facing both new
opportunities in economic and diplomatic affairs and challenges in its
political policies at home. Much of what will happen hinges on what
sort of new leadership would take the helm when the last of China's
first generation of Communist leaders finally passes on.