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The AKP was “consistently pro-Chinese” during the 1970s.[414] Eric S. Einhorn reported that The AKP continued its close attention to events in China and its regular communications with the Chinese Communist Party.” The Chinese party sent congratulations to the AKP early in 1978 on the Norwegian party’s fifth anniversary. In the Spring of 1978, an AKP youth and student delegation visited China and “met with Chinese officials in several cities.”[415] AKP Chairman Paal Steigan visited China and Kampuchea in 1979, being in the latter country shortly before the Vietnamese invasion.

The changes in China following Mao Tse-tung’s death did not alter the AKP’s loyalty to the Chinese party and regime. It supported China in its short armed conflict with Vietnam in 1979, and denounced the invasion of Kampuchea by Vietnam in that same year. It attacked the military activities of both the United States and the USSR, and “continued attention was directed to Soviet-Norwegian disputes.”[416]

Marian Leighton wrote in 1987 that a recent book on the AKP by a member of the organization had said “that constant squabbling characterized the AKP during the early 1980s. A good deal of the squabbling may have involved the role of women in the organization, because at the parry’s congress in December 1984, women captured the leadership.” Leighton cited an article in the official Communists’ paper Klassekampen to the effect that the “anti-Soviet AKP has taken the lead in making a six-hour workday the watchword from start to finish as a women’s issue within the labor movement. The AKP also has had great and decisive significance for important campaigns in the battle to save jobs.”[417]

A December 1984 press conference of the AKP “emphasized that it continues to advocate armed revolution and a dictatorship of the proletariat.”[418]

There is no doubt that the Norwegian AKP was the most important of the Scandinavian Maoist parties. The Danish Trotskyist leader and historian Mads Bruun Pedersen noted that “Norway … has a special place in Scandinavian Maoist history. The Norwegian Maoist movement has always been the leader party” in Scandinavia.[419]

Similarly, Eric S. Einhorn wrote that the AKP “had more lasting strength than the Danish KAP,” and added (in 1992) that “That movement continues to survive as the … Red Electoral Alliance which is the catch-all for radical socialists to the left of the significant Socialist Left Party and which holds some local government posts.”[420]

The Swedish Communist League (Marxist-Leninist)

Maoism in Sweden emerged as one result of a long factional struggle within the Swedish Communist Party between so-called “modernizers” and orthodox pro-Soviet elements. This conflict ended in 1967 with the victory of the “modernizers.”

John Logue has described the culmination of the internal dispute among the Swedish Communists. He wrote that “With the popularity of their course confirmed, the modernizers moved to a programmatic and organizational restructuring of the party at its twenty-first congress in 1967. A new party program was adopted that incorporated some criticism of the socialist countries as well as pledging the party’s allegiance to parliamentarism. In its membership statutes, the party renounced democratic centralism; henceforth, lower-level party organs were not obligated to abide by the decisions of high-level party bodies. Membership was open to all those who supported the party’s program. Structurally, the party returned to its form prior to its bolshevization during the early 1920s. Symbolically, it changed its name as well from Sveriges Kommunistiska Parti (Sweden’s Communist Party) to Vansterpartiet Kommunisterna (VpK) (Left Party-Communists).”[421]

Logue has also noted the impact of these decisions of the Swedish Communists insofar as Maoism was concerned. He wrote that “The first Marxist-Leninist party developed in Sweden with the formation of Kommunistiska Forbundet Marxist-Leninisterna (KFML) (Communist League, Marxist-Leninists) during the immediate aftermath of the VpK’s ratification of its revisionist line at its 1967 congress. The VpK youth went over to the Marxist-Leninists en masse in 1970.”[422] The initials of the new group were KFML.

The KFML was established at a congress on June 23—25, 1967. Its Chairman was Bo Gustafasson, “a young academic.”[423] The defection of the VpK’s youth group to the KFML took place just before the 1970 elections, at which time it changed its name from the Leftist Youth Federation to the Marxist-Leninist Battle League (MLK).

One of the early activities of the KFML was to participate in the 1970 election. However, it did very poorly, receiving only 0.4 percent of the total vote.[424] But the Maoists did not thereafter concentrate much of their attention on electoral politics. In the late 1960s and early 1970s the Swedish movement against the Vietnam War was largely led by Maoists.

The KFML dominated the principal organization in that field, the United National Liberation Front Groups (DFFGs), from the mid-1960s on. According to Gunnar Wall, writing in the U.S. Trotskyist periodical Intercontinental Press, this was because the Social Democrats “took a generally pro-U.S. position,” and the VpK “presented a pacifist line.” As a consequence, “The Maoists took advantage of the lack of competition to construct the movement according to their own sectarian interest. The DFFGs were built on the basis of individual membership, and admittance could be gained only by accepting a far-reaching political discipline, the primary objective of which was to eliminate any criticism of the leadership. … The Maoist conceptions of the character of the Vietnamese revolution, people’s war, the ceasefire accords, and many other things were all promoted in the name of the DFFGs.”

With the signing of a supposed “peace agreement” in Vietnam in 1973, the Maoists began to alter the nature of the anti-war movement. The DFFGs “declared that it intends to transform itself into a ‘front against the superpowers’ since the ‘main contradiction has shifted’ and Vietnam can no longer be said to represent a flashpoint.’”[425]

In 1973 the KFML changed its name, taking the title of the traditional Communist Party, Swedish Communist Party (SKP).[426] At that time, its membership was estimated at about 2,000 and it claimed to have 100 local organizations.[427]

The party continued to be of some consequence in the Swedish far Left. This was indicated by the observation of Gerry Foley in Intercontinental Press, in reporting on a splitaway of pro-Moscow elements from the VpK in 1977. “Before the split, the Swedish CP was just big enough to be a significant minority in the working class. In such conditions, a sectarian binge by the splitters could quickly take them far out into the sectarian wilderness, where they would have to compete with Maoists scarcely less numerous than they.”[428]

The SKP continued to be loyal to the Chinese, even after the changes in China following the death of Mao Tse-tung. In January 1977 the party sent a message to Hua Kuo-feng on the first anniversary of Chou En-lai’s death. Four months later, a delegation of the SKP, headed by its Chairman Toland Pettersson visited China and were given a banquet by Hua Kuo-feng, where the Chinese leader “lauded the party for its progress in recent years and for its opposition to monopoly capital and the two hegemonic powers, the Soviet Union and the United States, especially Soviet social imperialism.”[429]

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414

Einhorn, 1978, op. cit, page 185.

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415

Einhorn, 1979, op. cit, page 191.

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416

Einhorn, 1980, op. cit, page 197; see also SED, Dokumentation 1980, pages 122—123.

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417

Marian Leigh ton, in Yearbook on International Communist Affairs, 1987, Hoover Institution, Stanford, Calif., pages 575—576.

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418

Marian Leighton, in Yearbook on International Communist Affairs, 1986, Hoover Institution, Stanford, Calif., page 542.

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419

Letter to author from Mads Brunn Pederson, 1992, op. cit.

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420

Letter to author from Eric S. Einhorn, 1992, op. cit.

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421

John Logue, 1992, op. cit, page 258.

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422

Ibid., pages 269, footnote #29.

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423

World Strength of the Communist Party Organizations, Bureau of Intelligence and Research, State Department, Washington, DC, 1968 edition, page 45.

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424

World Strength of the Communist Party Organizations, 1971 edition, op. cit, page 53.

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425

Gunnar Wall, “Swedish Maoists Shelve Defense of Vietnam,” Intercontinental Press, September 23, 1974, page 1198.

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426

Bertil Haggman, in Yearbook on International Communist Affairs, 1978, Hoover Institution, Stanford, Calif., page 204.

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427

Ibid., page 206.

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428

Gerry Foley, “Split in Swedish CP Over TDeStalinization, ” Intercontinental Press, March 12, 1977, page 289.

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429

Haggman, 1978, op. cit, pages 206—207.