Definition
Engagement in or the activities involved in a war fought by small groups of irregular soldiers against typically larger regular forces.Guerrilla warfare is a form of irregular warfare in which a small group of combatants, such as paramilitary personnel, armed civilians, or irregulars, use military tactics including ambushes, sabotage, raids, petty warfare, hit-and-run tactics, and mobility to fight a larger and less-mobile traditional military.
Marx and Engels were experts on military history and noted many cases of the use of guerrilla warfare: by the American South in the Civil War, by Spaniards and Tyrolians and Prussians against Napoleon, by Poland and the Caucasus against Imperial Russia, Pegu (Burma) against the British Empire, etc. But when Lenin wrote his classic paper, Guerrilla Warfare, in 1906, he did not quote Marx and Engels because they had not written in depth on the topic.
Lenin |
"the acts of individuals isolated from the masses, which demoralize the workers, repel wide strata of the population, disorganize the movement and injure the revolution."
Analyzing the 1905 revolution in Russia, Lenin finds that there was a certain point where guerrilla warfare was not only useful but inevitable:
"Guerrilla warfare is an inevitable form of struggle at a time when the mass movement has actually reached the point of an uprising and when fairly large intervals occur between the 'big engagements' in the civil war."
For Marx, Engels, and Lenin, the question of guerrilla war is simply tactical - is it an effective form of warfare or not? As Lenin puts it,
"A Marxist bases himself on the class struggle, and not social peace. In certain periods of acute economic and political crises, the class struggle ripens into a direct civil war, i.e., into an armed struggle between two sections of the people. In such periods a Marxist is obliged to take the stand of civil war. Any moral condemnation of civil war would be absolutely impermissible from the standpoint of Marxism."
Mao Tse-Tung |
Like Lenin, Mao considers the involvement of the masses of the working people to be essential: "Because guerrilla warfare basically derives from the masses and is supported by them, it can neither exist nor flourish if it separates itself from their sympathies and co-operation." If the actions of guerrilla warfare are "contrary to the true interests of the people," it is "easy to destroy because they lack a broad foundation in the people."
In agreement with Lenin, whom he quotes, Mao considers that guerrilla warfare is counter-productive when it is "unorganized and undisciplined."
In agreement with Lenin, whom he quotes, Mao considers that guerrilla warfare is counter-productive when it is "unorganized and undisciplined."
Writing about The Political Problems Of Guerrilla Warfare, Mao hoped that the victories of socialist countries against fascism would lead to a new era of peace: "It is to be hoped that the world is in the last era of strife. The vast majority of human beings have already prepared or are preparing to fight a war that will bring justice to the oppressed peopled of the world. No matter how long this war may last, there is no doubt that it will be followed by an unprecedented epoch of peace The war that we are fighting today for the freedom of all human beings, and the independent, happy, and liberal China that we are fighting to establish will be a part of that new world order."
The most famous guerrilla warrior of the second half of the Twentieth Century, Ché Guevara, describes the successful Cuban revolution in his essay on Man and Socialism in Cuba:
"Then came the stage of guerrilla warfare. It was carried out in two different environments: the people, an as yet unawakened mass that had to be mobilized, and its vanguard, the guerrilla, the thrusting engine of mobilization, the generator of revolutionary awareness and militant enthusiasm. This vanguard was the catalyst which created the subjective condition necessary for victory."
Ché Guevara |
Up until now, guerrilla warfare has been an integral part of the classic picture of revolution based on violence, beginning with the American Revolution and the French Revolution and stated clearly in the Communist Manifesto.
However, the view of revolution as warfare must be changed if we are to achieve a culture of peace in the 21st Century (the "epoch of peace" mentioned above by Mao Tse-Tung). In particular, we need to go beyond 1) the use of enemy images; and 2) the use of violence.
New methods of revolutionary change need to be developed in the 21st Century that is more powerful than violence and that do not have the same negative consequences. See, for example, the development of active nonviolence.
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