Nepal Maoists Open Strategic Offensive in People's War 
Revolutionary Worker #1254, October 10, 2004, posted at http://rwor.org

On August 31, 2004, the Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) announced the opening of a 
strategic offensive in the People's War.

This exciting news came right after Nepal's Prime Minister Deuba returned from a 
five-day trip to India where much of the discussion centered on stepping up Indian 
intervention in Nepal with the backing of the United States.

A press statement from the CPN (Maoist) said that the decision to launch the strategic 
offensive was made at a recent 10-day meeting of the party's Central Committee, led by 
Chairman Prachanda. The meeting was held "in a base area in the countryside, in a 
convention hall specially decorated with banners and canopies" protected by "a special 
security cordon of the People's Liberation Army" with "the full assistance of the 
broad masses of people."

The People's War in Nepal began in 1996 and from the very beginning, the CPN (Maoist) 
conceived of their revolution as a "protracted war" that goes through stages--from the 
strategic defensive, to strategic equilibrium, to the strategic offensive.

Mao's theory of "protracted people's war" recognized that in semi-colonial, 
semi-feudal countries like Nepal, the revolutionary forces start out weak and small 
compared to the government forces and that to engage in all- out military battles 
would only lead to getting crushed. But by avoiding decisive tests of strength and by 
waging guerrilla warfare, the revolutionary forces can defeat and weaken the 
government forces in smaller battles and through a protracted process, gain popular 
support, increase in strength and numbers, and extend their control. Building rural 
base areas and establishing military control and political authority in ever larger 
parts of the countryside allows the revolutionaries to surround the cities from the 
countryside and eventually seize country-wide political power.

After the initiation of armed struggle in Nepal, there was a relatively long period of 
the "strategic defensive"--where the revolutionary forces were weaker than the enemy 
and had to accumulate strength over a protracted period of time on the basis of 
guerrilla warfare. The military struggle then reached the stage of "strategic 
equilibrium"--where the two sides were relatively equal, neither was able to 
decisively destroy the other and the fighting was increasingly characterized by 
larger-scale mobile and positional warfare. At this point, the CPN (Maoist) analyzed 
that the entire society recognized the existence of two different states in the 
country, each with its own army and institutions.

The decision to enter the stage of a strategic offensive means that the Maoists in 
Nepal have now determined that they are able to make their immediate aim the decisive 
destruction of the enemy's armed forces, the seizure of power, and the establishment 
of the rule of the people throughout the country.

The Maoist forces in Nepal now control 80 percent of the countryside, where they have 
established base areas and new people's power. Revolutionary forms of government 
control much of the countryside--where new revolutionary institutions run daily 
life--from the distribution and farming of land, education, taxes, the building of 
roads and latrines and the running of people's courts. The fact that the government 
has lost control in the countryside is a widely recognized fact. And the strength of 
the Maoists has increasingly been felt in the cities as well.

For a week, beginning on August 7, Kathmandu was isolated by a military blockade 
called by the CPN (Maoist) and the United Revolutionary People's Council, the united 
front organization under the party's leadership that is the embryo of the future 
people's government. Strikes by the Maoist-led trade union also closed down the 
country's biggest and most hated companies. The strength of the Maoists was 
demonstrated by their ability to stop most vehicular traffic in and out of the 
nation's capital, which has a population of 1.5 million.

In the past, the PLA has enforced blockades on district capitals, especially in the 
western region, which has been a Maoist stronghold. But this was the first time such a 
blockade was imposed on the capital. The BBC reported, "They got a massive response 
and huge publicity without a single bomb or landmine on a highway." The World to Win 
News Servicereported: "Traffic into and out of the `capital was from several thousand 
vehicles a day to about 150 in the first days, and all of those were either military 
or under tight Royal Army escort. Certainly the Maoists could not issue an order so 
completely obeyed even by the biggest transport companies if they hadn't built up much 
military strength and badly weakened the armed forces and authority of the enemy. But 
the will they imposed on the government and companies was clearly that of an enormous 
and growing part of the people. That is the `secret' reason why the blockade succeeded 
even though there were no major military clashes."

This blockade and broad support for strikes called by the All Nepal Trade Union 
Federation (Revolutionary) were part of the process of weakening the reactionary 
regime and preparing people in the cities to rise up when the party judges the time 
ripe for urban insurrection in connection with successfully surrounding the cities 
from the countryside. During the blockade, other embargoes were carried out in nearby 
Eastern districts within the Kathmandu valley. And a contingent of the 5th Brigade of 
the People's Liberation Army took action against the Royal Army in the Sindhupalchok 
district, which is also not far from Kathmandu.

When the People's War started in 1996, they did not have a People's Army. They started 
out with small fighting groups of five or six people, armed with very primitive 
weapons--some single shot rifles and Khukuri knives. Over the first five years, the 
guerrillas built up their fighting capacity by carrying out guerrilla actions against 
police posts and hated local reactionaries. They were able to capture weapons from 
government forces and step by step build up larger fighting units--from squads to 
platoons, and then later brigades and companies. Successful military actions created 
freedom for the guerrillas to expand their influence and authority--and as police and 
reactionaries were run out of villages, a power vacuum was created, making it possible 
for the establishment of a new "people's power" and eventually base areas under the 
control of new revolutionary government institutions.

In 2001 the CPN (Maoist) announced the establishment of the People's Liberation Army, 
which reflected a leap from mainly guerrilla forces to a regular revolutionary army. 
Now, with the announcement of the strategic offensive, the party has announced that 
the People's Army will grow to three divisions. This means that in addition to the 
previously existing Eastern and Western divisions organised by the PLA under the 
party's leadership, there will be a PLA division in the country's central 
region--which is where the regime's capital is located and its economic, political and 
military power is focused.

In addition to the PLA's current three divisions, nine brigades and 29 battalions the 
party announced that it will raise a people's militia of 100,000 members organized 
into companies under the leadership of the PLA at the district and regional level. The 
party also announced a new plan "to provide defensive and offensive training to the 
broad masses of people to fight tunnel warfare against foreign intervention." In the 
wars against the U.S. in Korea and Vietnam, the use of tunnels to protect soldiers and 
civilians and spring surprise attacks was an important way of neutralizing enemy air 
power.

Documents from the Central Committee meeting warned of direct intervention by India, 
backed by the United States and the press statement pointed to the arrest of several 
leading comrades of the CPN (Maoist) in different cities in India as one sign of this.

When Nepal's Prime Minister Deuba went to New Delhi in September, along with a 
66-member entourage, the People's War in Nepal was the main item on the agenda. The 
Indian government agreed to give the Nepali royal regime three light advanced 
helicopters, 20,000 INSAS rifles, 15,000 7.62 mm Self-Loading Rifles (SLR), 5,000 
machine guns of various calibers, 800 trucks and jeeps, 100 Mine Protected Vehicles 
(MPVs), bullet-proof jackets, helmets, land mines, barbed wire and other war material. 
India will also provide military trainers and the idea of sending Indian troops to 
intervene directly in Nepal is being openly debated in the Indian press.

According to an official joint statement, the Nepali and Indian prime ministers also 
discussed the need for an extradition treaty between the two countries and agreed to 
finalize it in October. India is currently holding CPN(M) leaders Mohan Baydhya, C. P. 
Gajurel and other leaders and members. At this time it is illegal for India to 
extradite them to Nepal, but Indian authorities have already kidnapped other Nepali 
Maoists and handed them over to the royal regime.

The Kathmandu-based daily Himalayan News Service reported on September 10: "The U.S. 
Ambassador to Nepal, James F. Moriarty, today said his country was working closely 
with India to ensure that Maoists do not get outside help and are never able to take 
over the capital." Moriarty also said, "India has a big role to play in resolving the 
Maoist problem. Considering the military assistance and diplomatic help it has 
provided to Nepal, I conclude that Maoists will not be allowed to take over Kathmandu."

One commentary in South Asia Intelligence Reports , referring to the blockade on 
Kathmandu, said: "That week exposed the vulnerability of the Deuba Government and its 
capacity to govern. India sent strong signals to assure Kathmandu that it would not 
allow the Nepalese state to collapse."

Meanwhile, the threat of increased intervention by the United States is very real. 
Washington is supplying Nepal with 20,000 M-16s, as well as night-vision and 
communication equipment, and special-forces counterinsurgency training. U.S. aid to 
the Nepalese royal regime has almost doubled, from $22 million to $40 million this 
year. American soldiers have been conducting joint training exercises in Nepal with 
the Royal Nepalese Army. Earlier this year, the Himalayan Times quoted an American 
official who said that a U.S. Congressional delegation was in Nepal as part of a 
mission to collect information about the country's civil war and the whole of South 
Asia. And the U.S. has put the CPN (Maoist) on their "terrorist list"--laying the 
basis for even more intervention and the criminalization of international support for 
the struggle in Nepal.

A strategic offensive by the Maoists in Nepal will mean a big jump in the level of 
military battles, the danger of direct foreign intervention and a situation that could 
lead to a decisive struggle over who will hold political power in Nepal.

Articles from the A World to Win News Service were used in writing this article.



---------------------------------
This article is posted in English and Spanish on Revolutionary Worker Online
http://rwor.org
Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654
Phone: 773-227-4066 Fax: 773-227-4497




                
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