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Lin Biao

Lin Biao

林彪

1907–1971

  • Defense Minister
  • Mao's Designated Successor (1966–1971)

Biography

Military Genius and Loyal Subordinate

Lin Biao was born in 1907 in Hubei province and joined the Communist Party in 1925. He emerged as one of the most brilliant military commanders of the civil war era, leading the Northeast Field Army to decisive victories that secured Manchuria for the CCP and set the stage for the final defeat of the Nationalists. After 1949, he led the Chinese forces that intervened in the Korean War. Plagued by genuine ill health — a chronic sensitivity to light, water, and wind that kept him largely confined to his residence for years — he nonetheless became one of the most politically powerful figures in the PRC after Mao.

The Cultural Revolution and the Little Red Book

Lin Biao was the most enthusiastic institutional promoter of the Mao cult. As Defence Minister from 1959, he transformed the People's Liberation Army into a laboratory of Maoist ideological indoctrination, publishing the "Quotations from Chairman Mao" — the Little Red Book — for distribution throughout the military and eventually across the entire country. When the Cultural Revolution began in 1966, the PLA under Lin's control provided the organisational backbone for the Red Guard movement. At the Ninth Party Congress in 1969, Lin Biao was formally designated Mao's "closest comrade-in-arms and successor" and his status was written into the Party constitution — an unprecedented honour.

The Lin Biao Incident

By 1970–71, Mao had grown suspicious of Lin's power and ambitions. The exact sequence of events remains opaque, but on the night of 12–13 September 1971, Lin Biao, his wife Ye Qun, and their son Lin Liguo boarded a Trident jet at Beidaihe and fled. The plane crashed in the Mongolian steppe near Öndörkhaan, killing all nine people on board. The official account — that Lin was attempting to flee to the Soviet Union after a failed coup attempt against Mao — remains the standard narrative, though historians dispute its details. For weeks, the Chinese public was kept in the dark about the death of the man designated as Mao's successor.

Aftermath

The Lin Biao incident was a profound shock that shattered the credibility of the Cultural Revolution. If Mao's "closest comrade" had been a traitor, what did that say about the entire movement he had championed? The incident accelerated the rehabilitation of pragmatic officials including Deng Xiaoping and created political space for the Zhou Enlai–Kissinger diplomatic opening. Lin Biao was posthumously expelled from the Party and condemned as a traitor, counter-revolutionary, and would-be usurper. His image was systematically removed from official photographs and publications.

Related Events (9)

Chinese Civil War

The full-scale civil war that resumed in June 1946 ended in barely three years with one of the most dramatic reversals in modern military history. The Nationalist government — with superior numbers, American equipment, and control of China's major cities — was driven from the mainland by the People's Liberation Army. Three decisive campaigns in 1948–1949 destroyed the Nationalist field armies. On 1 October 1949, Mao Zedong proclaimed the People's Republic of China in Beijing. Chiang Kai-shek and the Nationalist government retreated to Taiwan, where the Republic of China continues to govern.

military

Liaoshen Campaign

The first of the three decisive campaigns of the Chinese Civil War. Between September and November 1948, Lin Biao's Fourth Field Army encircled and destroyed approximately 470,000 Nationalist troops in Manchuria, securing the entire northeast and — for the first time — giving the PLA numerical superiority over Nationalist forces nationally.

military

Pingjin Campaign

The last of the three decisive campaigns of the Chinese Civil War. Between November 1948 and January 1949, PLA forces encircled Fu Zuoyi's 500,000-strong Nationalist army in northern China: Tianjin fell after a 29-hour assault on 15 January 1949, while Beiping was peacefully transferred on 31 January without a shot fired — ending Nationalist control of all northern China and preserving the ancient capital intact.

military

Peaceful Liberation of Beiping

On 31 January 1949, General Fu Zuoyi surrendered Beiping to the People's Liberation Army without armed resistance, preserving the ancient capital's historical fabric and delivering a decisive blow to the Nationalist cause.

political

Crossing of the Yangtze River

The PLA's crossing of the Yangtze River in April 1949 shattered the Nationalist government's last major defensive line and opened the path to the capture of Nanjing, the Nationalist capital, effectively ending organised Nationalist resistance on the mainland.

military

Lushan Conference and Dismissal of Peng Dehuai

At the Lushan Party plenum, Defence Minister Peng Dehuai privately criticised the Great Leap Forward's failures in a letter to Mao; Mao made the letter public, had Peng labelled a "right opportunist," and dismissed him—silencing internal dissent at a critical moment.

political

Cultural Revolution Begins

From 1966 to 1976, Mao Zedong launched the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution, driven by a combination of genuine ideological conviction — fear of Soviet-style revisionism and capitalist restoration — and the political imperative to reassert control after the Great Leap Forward debacle, purging pragmatic rivals Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping. Red Guards mobilised to destroy the 'Four Olds' and attack intellectuals, officials, and perceived class enemies; the movement reached its radical peak in the January Storm of 1967. Across ten years and several distinct phases, an estimated one to two million people died from direct violence and tens of millions suffered persecution. The 1981 Party Resolution designated the Cultural Revolution a 'catastrophe' — the gravest historical error since the founding of the People's Republic.

political

Sino-Soviet Border Conflict

On 2 and 15 March 1969, Chinese and Soviet forces clashed on Zhenbao (Damansky) Island in the Ussuri River; fighting spread to the Tielieketi area of Xinjiang in August. The two sides offered irreconcilable accounts of the initial engagement: China maintains Soviet troops crossed into Chinese territory first; Soviet accounts characterise it as a premeditated Chinese ambush. At the height of the crisis, Soviet leaders reportedly discussed a pre-emptive strike on Chinese nuclear facilities, bringing the two powers close to war. The crisis was defused when Premier Kosygin and Zhou Enlai met secretly at Beijing Airport on 11 September 1969. The conflict's strategic legacy far outweighed its military scale: China accelerated its diplomatic opening to the United States, culminating in Nixon's 1972 visit, and fundamentally reshaped the Cold War triangular balance of power.

military

Lin Biao Incident

On 13 September 1971, Lin Biao — Defence Minister and Mao Zedong's designated successor enshrined in the Party constitution — died when his aircraft crashed near Öndörkhaan in Mongolia after fleeing China with his wife Ye Qun; all nine on board were killed. The official account holds that Lin's son Lin Liguo had plotted to assassinate Mao under the codename 'Project 571,' and that Lin fled after the conspiracy was exposed. Western scholars widely contest this narrative, arguing that Lin more likely fled as Mao's purge was closing in on him. The incident fundamentally undermined the Cultural Revolution's ideological legitimacy and marked a decisive turning point in the movement's decline from its radical peak.

political