COMINTERN
Jane Degras, ed., The Communist International: 1919-1943 Documents
London: Frank Cass & Co., Ltd, 1971, Vol. 1, p. 396.
In the colonial countries with an oppressed native peasant population the
national liberation movement is composed either of the entire population,
as for example in Turkey, in which case the struggle of the oppressed
peasantry against the landlords inevitably begins after the victory
of the liberation struggle; or the feudal landlords are allied with
the imperialist robbers, and in these countries, for example India,
the social struggle of the oppressed peasants takes place at the same
time as the struggle for national liberation.
[MC5 adds: After Lenin died, simpleton Trotskyists attempted to blame
Stalin and Mao for all alliances of the proletariat with the national
bourgeoisie. Yet while Lenin was alive, Trotsky himself signed off on
numerous statements backing alliance with the national bourgeoisie, and
in this case we see the COMINTERN of Lenin support alliance even with
feudal lords. Thus to say that Stalin and Mao invented the alliance with
the national bourgeoisie is a jealous lie by the representatives of the
labor aristocracy who seek to use the proletariat for their own purposes.]