Hostile foreign forces
Hostile foreign forces is a term used by the Chinese Communist Party to refer to external threats to its political system. The term is also used in Taiwan in regards to the Anti-Infiltration Act to refer to the CCP and the government of the People's Republic of China.
History
The earliest mention of the term dates back to 6 December 1948, when the People's Daily translated an article from a Russian writer commemorating the 10th anniversary of Joseph Stalin's History of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union , which used the term "hostile class forces". In the 1950s, all references to this term in People's Daily and other state media came from this origin. In his essay titled On the Correct Handling of Contradictions Among the People in 1957, Mao Zedong spoke repeatedly about the "hostile class", arguing it was necessary to "clearly distinguish between ourselves and the enemy, and between right and wrong". In this view, "hostile forces" referred to those that outside the definition of "the people". During the Cultural Revolution, "hostile forces" referred to the internal enemies of the CCP, opponents of Mao, as well as those who were against socialism around the world.During the period of reform and opening up, the term was used by CCP hardliners to warn against the destabilization of the political system. Top CCP leader Hu Qiaomu wrote on People's Daily on 6 October 1978: "The socialist society, as a nascent system, has not yet been consolidated, and we must devote considerable power in dealing with hostile forces at home and abroad." He continued by saying, "the hostile forces opposing the Party and opposing socialism could possibly appear behind the mask of the right, or behind the mask of the left." The term was particularly used in the aftermath of the 1989 Tiananmen square protests and massacre. On 4 June 1990, in the first anniversary of the protests, People's Daily wrote regarding the protests: "The purpose of the hostile forces at home and abroad in manufacturing this storm was to overthrow the leadership of the CCP, to subvert the socialist system, and turn China into a vassal of the capitalist developed countries". It was also used after the persecution of Falun Gong in 1999. People's Daily wrote on 26 July 1990 that "the emergence and spread of Falun Gong is a political struggle for the masses and for position between hostile forces at home and abroad and our Party".
In 2025, the Hong Kong Office for Safeguarding National Security used the term in the context of foreign journalists reporting on the Wang Fuk Court fire.
Description
The term has frequently been used by Chinese state media and Chinese authorities to raise allegations of foreign interference, including towards the protest movements in Hong Kong. It has also been used to describe the United States and its allies. The term has also been used by nationalist accounts on social media against liberal domestic media, social organizations and individuals. Regarding "hostile forces", CCP General Secretary Xi Jinping said in 2022:The Counterespionage Law of the People's Republic of China that passed in 2014 describes "hostile organizations" as "organizations that are hostile to the people's democratic dictatorship and the socialist system of the People's Republic of China and endanger national security" as determined by the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of State Security.