Communist revolutions throughout history
The following is a list of communist revolutions
throughout history. Among the
lesser known revolutions, a number of borderline cases have been included which
may or may not have been communist revolutions. The nature of unsuccessful
revolutions is particularly contentious since one can only speculate as to the
kinds of policies that would have been implemented by the revolutionaries had
they achieved victory.
v The
creation of the short-lived Paris Commune in 1871, which was crushed within months by the French Army.
v The
1917 communist revolution in Russia, known as the October Revolution and a part of the Russian Revolution. It resulted in the victory of the Bolsheviks and the
creation of Soviet
Russia, the predecessor of the Soviet Union.
v The German
Revolution of 1918–19, led by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht,
which ended in defeat for the communists.
v The
creation of the short-lived Bavarian Soviet
Republic in 1919, which was defeated within a month by the German
army and Freikorps.
v The
creation of the Hungarian Soviet
Republic in 1919, led by Béla Kun, which
was defeated after five months.
v The Mongolian Revolution
of 1921 led by the Mongolian People's
Revolutionary Party, which defeated the Republic of China's
Mongolian puppet state and the White Guardsunder Baron Ungern with the
help of the Russian Red Army.
v The 1932
Salvadoran peasant uprising, known as La matanza (the slaughter), Pipil and
peasant rebellion led by Farabundo Martí.
v The Chinese
Revolution was final stage of the Chinese Civil War,
that resulted in the victory of the Communist Party of
China in China in 1949.
v The People's
Liberation War in Yugoslavia waged by
the Yugoslav Partisans under the command of Josip Broz Tito with Allied support against the invading forces of Nazi Germany and the
pro-Nazi Croatian Ustase. The victorious
partisans establish the Socialist
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
v The
Proclamation of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea in 1948, when the Soviet-backed Workers Party of
Korea, led by Kim Il-sung,
announced the formation of the state of the Democratic People's Republic of
Korea.
v The Cuban Revolution of 1959 was a nationalistic revolution led by Fidel Castro and Che Guevara which
overthrew former president Fulgencio Batista and instated a marxist-leninist socialist regime later on
in Cuba. Even though Batista had been elected for his first
term, he got himself into power for his second term through a coup d'état.
v Les Trois
Glorieuses of 1963
in Congo-Brazzaville, a successful coup d'état led by
the Confédération
générale aéfienne du travail and the Union de la
jeunesse congolaiseagainst Fulbert Youlou established the People's
Republic of the Congo.
v The Communist
Party of Indonesia's support for
President Sukarno, which
ended when Indonesian General Suharto removed
President Sukarno from power and defeated the Communist Party of Indonesia.
v The First Indochina War that resulted in the defeat of the French at the Battle of Dien Bien
Phu, 1954, and brought the Communist Party
of Vietnam under Ho Chi Minh to power
in North Vietnam. A
victory followed closely by the protracted guerrilla warfare-dominated Vietnam War (1957–1975),
which in turn led to the Fall of Saigon and the driving-out of occupying United States military forces there, and the unification of North and
South Vietnam by communist guerrilla forces into the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. The conflict drastically changed neighboring Laos and Cambodia.
v The Laotian Civil War resulting in the victory of the communist Pathet Lao/Lao
People's Revolutionary Party in Laos by 1975, eliminating a coalition government with anti-communists led to the establishment of the communist-administered Lao
People's Democratic Republic.
v The
victory of the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia in 1975,
establishing the agrarian socialist regime known as "Democratic Kampuchea," with Pol Pot as dictator. In 1979
it was overthrown by former allies: socialist neighbor Vietnam and
another communist party faction, reconstituted as the Kampuchean
People's Revolutionary Party and
establishing the People's Republic
of Kampuchea.
v The Malayan Emergency when the Malayan Communist
Party and communist guerrillas fought against, and were
defeated by, British and Malayan forces.
v Maoist-styled "Protracted
People's War" in the Philippines,
launched by the New People's Army in 1969 and continuing at present.
v The
overthrow of Emperor Haile Selassie I by Mengistu Haile Mariam who then set up one-party
Marxist-Leninist rule in Ethiopia by the
communist Workers' Party
of Ethiopiaestablishing the People's
Democratic Republic of Ethiopia, until
they were defeated and expelled by the democratic socialist Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Frontduring a subsequent civil war.
v The Saur Revolution that brought the People's
Democratic Party of Afghanistan to power
in Afghanistan. They
were overthrown by the mujahedin in 1992.[1]
v The
overthrow of Eric Gairy that
brought the New Jewel Movement to power in Grenada from 1979
until 1983, when they were deposed by a United States-led
invasion.
v The Nicaraguan Revolution that overthrew the dictator Anastasio Somoza
Debayle and brought the Sandinistas to power in Nicaragua from 1979
to 1990.
v The Salvadoran Civil War, FMLN (mainly composed of Marxist-Leninist guerrilla groups) fought against the U.S. backed military
government which suppressed the rebel movement by framing and mass murdering
alleged Marxist-Leninist revolutionaries (El Mozote massacre). The FMLN was inspired by the ideologies of Farabundo Martí andVladimir Lenin.
v The Internal conflict
in Peru comprised two rebellions by two different Marxist
organizations. One of several groups that calls itself the Communist Party of Peru, the Shining Path fought a
bloody war beginning in 1980 with successive Peruvian governments, both
democratic and authoritarian in nature, and independent paramilitaries
organized by the government known as Ronda Campesina.
The Shining Path attempted to enforce a particular brand of communism inspired
by the beliefs of Mao Zedong, the
leader of the People's Republic of China from 1949 to 1976. The Shining Path
opposed any form of democracy and committed numerous human rights violations.
Another organization, known as the Tupac
Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA),
named after an Incan warrior Tupac Amaru began
their own rebellion in 1982. The MRTA did not adhere toMaoism like the
Shining Path, claimed to be fighting for democracy, believed in a more
mainstream version of communism and modeled their movement on other left-wing
guerrilla groups in Latin America. The MRTA and Shining Path quickly became
bitter enemies and fought one another as well as the government of Peru. During
the war atrocities were committed on all sides, but mostly by the Shining Path
and the Peruvian military. Fighting goes on today with a small number of
Shining Path cadres, however the movement has mostly been crushed and only
operates in a very remote jungle region. Since the capture of Shining Path
leader Abimael Guzman, the
organization has lost most of its earlier support. The Tupac Amaru
Revolutionary Movement was largely destroyed in 1997 after the Japanese embassy
hostage crisis.
v The Communist
Party of Nepal (Maoist) fought a fairly successful
revolutionary war against
the autocratic King of Nepal. In
2006 peace was declared, and an agreement was reached that the Maoists would
join an interim government.
v In India, various Maoist-oriented factions (generally called Naxalites) have
waged armed struggles since the Naxalbari rebellion of
1967. Today, the most prominent Naxalite
group is the Communist
Party of India (Maoist).
Thank you
Chiran pun
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