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| Korean Workers' Party | |
|---|---|
| Korean Name | |
| McCune-Reischauer | Choson Rodongdang |
| Revised Romanization | |
| Hangul | 조선 로동당 |
| Hanja | 朝鮮 勞動黨 |
The Korean Workers' Party (KWP) is the ruling party of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), commonly known as North Korea. It has held absolute power in the DPRK since 1945, and in that time has had only two leaders, Kim Il-sung ( 1945- 1994) and his son, Kim Jong-il, (since 1994). The party is widely viewed by foreigners as Stalinist and is the closest thing to a traditional Stalinist ruling party in the world today. However, the KWP claims to have its own distinct ideology ( Juche) which it considers to be a further development of " Marxism-Leninism."
The first Korean Communist Party was founded in Shanghai in 1921 by a small group of radical students led by Yi Tong-hwi , who in 1918 had tried to organise a Korean Socialist Party in KhabarovskKhabarovsk (population 582,700) is the capital city of the Khabarovsk Krai, Russia, some 30 km from the Chinese border. In Chinese, the city is also known as Bl Khabarovsk was founded in 1858 as a military outpost Khabarovka (named after a Russian explore. At about the same time a Korean section of the Russian Bolshevik PartyFor other usage of the initials CPSU see CPSU (disambiguation). The Communist Party of the Soviet Union ( Russian: was the name used by the successors of the Bolshevik faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party from 1952 to 1991, but the wordin was organised in IrkutskIrkutsk #x301 , the chief town of the Irkutsk Oblast, is the most important place in Siberia, being not only the largest centre of population and the principal commercial depot north of Tashkent, but a fortified military post, an archbishopric of the Russ. The Shanghai and Irkutsk groups attempted to merge, but soon splintered into factions and disintegrated.
The second Communist Party of Korea (CPK) was founded in 1925Centuries: 19th century 20th century 21st century Decades: 1870s 1880s 1890s 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s Years: 1920 1921 1922 1923 1924 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 See also 1925 in aviation 1925 in film 1925 in literature 1925 in mu by radical Koreans who had escaped to the Soviet UnionThe Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR ( Russian: ; tr. Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik (SSSR) also called the Soviet Union ( ; tr. Sovetsky Soyuz , was a state in much of the northern region of Eurasia that existed from 1922 until 1 from their homeland which had been occupied by Japan. The occupation regime had banned communist parties under the Peace Preservation LawThe Peace Preservation Law ( Chian-ijih was passed in Japan in 1925 as a mechanism for the Imperial family to entrench itself against a growing left wing. It forbade conspiracy or revolt against the kokutai or national essence, of Japan, and effectively c (see History of Korea). The party's first leaders were Kim Yong-bom and Pak Hon-yong . Kim Il-sung did not join the party until 1931. In the 1930s the party, in alliance with the Communist Party of China, conducted guerilla operations in the mountains of northern Korea against the Japanese and Kim became one of the party's guerilla leaders.
Pak Hon-yong , leader of the Communist Party of Korea, had been a prisoner of the Japanese and became active in Seoul upon his release so the Soviet occupation forces had little contact with him. He had also been connected with the Comintern in the early 1930s a link that made him appear untrustworthy in light of the Great Purge of 1936-1938 in which many Comintern officials were liquidated. After his years as a guerilla leader, Kim Il-sung had moved to the Soviet Union (where historians believe his son Kim Jong-il was born in 1942) and become a Captain in the Red Army. His battalion arrived in Pyongyang just as the Soviets were looking for a suitable person around whom a Communist Party could be built in North Korea and Kim was seen as an ideal candidate.The Soviet Red Army liberated northern Korea from the Japanese Army in August 1945. Most members of the Korean Communist Party were in southern Korea which was occupied by the United States and there were very few Communist cadre s in the Soviet occupied zone. The practice of the Soviets in most countries it occupied after World War II was to rely on the domestic Communist Party to transform the occupied state into first a pro-soviet and then a Soviet style socialist state but this was initially difficult in what became North Korea because of the lack of a strong domestic Communist presence. The Soviets began to rely largely on exiled Communists who returned to Korea at the end of World War II as well as ethnic Koreans who were part of the large Korean community in the USSR and therefore Soviet citizens.
On October 13, 1945 the North Korea Bureau of the Communist Party of Korea was established. Though technically under the control of the Seoul based CPK, the North Korean Bureau was in fact under the control of the Soviet occupation forces (termed the Soviet Civilian Authority). The first chairman of the Bureau was Kim Yong-bom who had been sent to Korea by the Comintern in the 1930s to conduct underground activity. Kim Il-sung was a member of the Bureau at its founding and replaced Kim Yong-bom as chairman in December, 1945.
In late spring of 1946 the "North Korea Bureau" formally became the Communist Party of North Korea with Kim Il-sung as leader. Pak Hon-Yong's party was renamed the Communist Party of South Korea. This freed the North Korean Communists from any control by a Communist Party whose headquarters was in US controlled territory, it also reflected the hardening of the Cold War by marking the intention of the Soviets to create a separate state in North Korea rather than work with the Americans to create a joint administration throughout the peninsula.
Korean Communists who had been exiled in China formed their own party, the New People's Party or Sinmindang on February 16, 1946 with Kim Tu-bong as leader. There was also a Democratic Party which had been formed in November 1945 but whose leader was arrested by the Soviets for "contacts with South Korean reactionaries" and replaced by a covert Communist operative.
On July 22, 1946, following the same united front formula that was used in the Soviet satellites in the "people's democracies" of eastern Europe (see for example People's Republic of Poland), the Communist Party of North Korea joined with the New People's Party, the Democratic Party and the Party of Young Friends of the Celestial Way (supporters of an influential religious sect) to form the United Democratic National Front which put all of North Korea's parties under the "leading role" of the Communists and forced other legal political parties to relinquish their independence while maintaining the fiction of political pluralism.
Then, on July 29, 1946, probably as a result of Soviet encouragement, the New People's Party and the Communist Party of North Korea held a join plenum of the Central Committees of both parties and agreed to merge into a single entity. A founding conference was held on August 28-30 where the united party adopted the name North Korean Workers' Party. The new party had a membership of more than 170,000 with 134,000 coming from the old Communist Party and 35,000 from the New People's Party. The first chairman of the party was Kim Tu-bong though Kim Il-sung remained head of the North Korean Provisional People's Committee (the provisional government which replaced the Soviet Civil Authority earlier that year) and was also deputy chairman of the new party. The real control of the party remained in Kim Il-sung's hands, however, with Kim Tu-bong essentially being a figurehead. Kim Il-sung remained head of the government when the provisional government gave way to a new People's Assembly of North Korea in 1947.
In the south a similar merger took place in 1946 creating the South Korean Workers' Party which was banned by the Americans but nevertheless enjoyed a degree of public support and ran a network of illegal committees across the country. In 1947, the SKWP launched a guerrilla campaign against the South Korean regime. As repression against the Communists under the anti-Communist regime of Yi Sung-man (known in the west as Syngman Rhee) most of the leaders of the SKWP moved to Pyongyang and directed their activities from there.
The NKWP held its Second Congress on March 27, 1947 which paved the way to the formal declaration of a separate North Korean state and also issued pronouncements which hinted at an impending war.
In 1948, both North and South Korea formally established themselves as states, the former as the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and the latter as the Republic of Korea. They both claimed the entire peninsula as their jurisdiction and both claimed Seoul as their capital.
In June 1949 the North and South Korean parties were merged into the Korean Workers' Party with Kim Il-sung as party chairman with the Pak Hon-yong, who had been leader of the South Korean Workers Party as well as the earlier Communist Party of Korea, becoming the deputy chairman.
The first five years of the KWP's rule were dominated by the Korean War. By October 1950 United Nations forces had occupied most of the DPRK and the KWP leadership had to flee to China. Had the U.N. commander, U.S. General Douglas MacArthur, not threatened to advance to the Chinese border and provoked Chinese intervention, Korean Communism would have been extinguished at that point. But in November, Chinese forces entered the war and threw the U.N. forces back, retaking Pyongyang in December and Seoul in January 1951. In March U.N. forces retook Seoul, and the front was stabilised along what eventually became the permanent "Armistice Line" of 1953. The KWP was able to re-establish its rule north of this line.