Sino-Soviet split - Polsearch
About us  |  Why use us?  |  Press  |  Contact us

 

Topic: Sino-Soviet split


  
 Sino-Soviet split - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
But in June 1960, the split became public, at the congress of the Romanian Communist Party, when Khrushchev and China's Peng Zhen openly clashed.
The Chinese also chose to raise the issue of the Sino-Soviet border, which was the result of nineteenth century treaties imposed on the weakened Qing Dynasty by Czarist Russia.
In July 1971, Henry Kissinger secretly visited Beijing and laid the groundwork for President Richard Nixon's visit to China in February 1972.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Soviet_Split   (2877 words)

  
 The Colonial Revolution and the Sino-Soviet Split
The desperate support of the bureaucracy for the bourgeois counter-revolution in so-called Republican Spain was dictated by the frantic fear of the rising of the Russian proletariat.
Within the ranks of the Communist parties, however, the shocks and upheavals of the Stalinist world, the 20th Congress, Hungary, the new splits between Stalinist states, above all the split betweeen Russia and China, open the way at a later stage for the decisive transformation of the relations within these parties.
This is the background on which, in one country after the other, there has been the continual upheaval of national upsurge and revolution against imperialist domination and national oppression.
http://www.marxist.com/TUT/TUT4-3.html   (13603 words)

  
 [No title]
Mao, "Second Speech to Second Session, Eighth Party Congress," 17 May 1958, as cited in Allen S. Whiting, "The Sino-Soviet Split," in Roderick Macfarquhar and John K. Fairbank (eds.), The Cambridge History of China, Vol.
For years, most senior US Kremlinologists and policymakers remained hesitant to accept intelligence judgments that Sino-Soviet discord was growing.
66, as cited by William Taubman, "Khrushchev vs. Mao: A Preliminary Sketch of the Role of Personality in the Sino-Soviet Split." Wilson Center (Issues 8-9, Winter 1996/1997), p.
http://www.cia.gov/csi/studies/winter98_99/art05.html   (7429 words)

  
 The Sino-Soviet Split
Ted Hill, Victorian State Secretary of the Party, supported the Chinese position.
But as the split became inevitable, the majority of the CPA leadership sided with the Soviet Communist Party.
He was able, in August 1963, to leave the CPA and establish a pro-Chinese Communist Party of Australia (Marxist-Leninist), with the support of Flo Russell, Clarrie O’shea and a significant number of Communist Party members prominent in the trade union movement in Victoria.
http://home.mira.net/~andy/bs/bs3-1.htm   (9092 words)

  
 DEADLY FAILURES IN INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS AND DEFENSE UNPREPAREDNESS
In Canada the conflict thesis is French Separatist, in the U.S.A. it is racial, in Ireland it is Protestant vs. Catholic, in Rwanda it is tribal, Tutsi (mostly Christian) versus Hutu (mostly Animist).]
The Sino-Soviet split hoax, along with the war in Vietnam, has been used to force the isolation of America on the international scene." [Today, the U.S.A. almost stands alone in opposing a second five-year term for Boutros-Ghali as Secretary General of the United Nations.]
You can order his books through Emissary Publications, 503-824-2050.
http://www.ninehundred.net/~devvy/failure.html   (4331 words)

  
 The American Experience Nixon's China Game People & Events Sino-Soviet Border Disputes
While China favored continued aggression towards "imperialist" nations, the USSR began to consider "peaceful coexistence" with the United States.
Luckily, the border crisis was defused diplomatically in September 1969, when Soviet Premier Kosygin flew to Beijing for high-level border talks with Premier Chou Enlai.
Faced with the disastrous prospect of war on two fronts, Beijing began to see improved relations with the United States as the best way to safeguard China's security.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/china/peopleevents/pande06.html   (614 words)

  
 [Marxism] Sino-Soviet Split
Cuba had negotiated a large rice-for-sugar long-term contract with China and everything was humming right along when Cuba publicly refused to side with China as against the USSR on some point of dispute.
My memory tells me there was a classic example of Chinese and Soviet power politics in the early 1960.
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/pipermail/marxism/2005-May/025993.html   (121 words)

  
 [Marxism] Sino-Soviet Split
I am interested > in any books or articles that discuss the circumstances in which the > Sino-Soviet split took place, and an objective appraisal of the decisions > made by both of those governments.
However, it should also be noted that the roots of the split that took place in the early 1960s weren't exclusively ideological.
The earlier polemics should be read at face value.
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/pipermail/marxism/2005-May/025978.html   (291 words)

 About us   |  Why use us?   |  Press   |  Contact us

 Copyright © 2006 Polsearch.com Usage implies agreement with terms.