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Topic: Sino-Soviet split


  
 Sino-Soviet split - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Relations between the Chinese Communist Party and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union broke off, as did relations with the Communist parties of the Warsaw Pact countries.
By 1964, Mao was asserting that there had been a counter-revolution in the Soviet Union, and that capitalism had been restored.
The Chinese government took an ambivalent view of Gorbachev's reform program, which led ultimately to the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of Communist Party rule in 1991.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Soviet_Split   (2877 words)

  
 The Sino-Soviet Split
Although the content of the split was national differences (the interests of the Chinese bureaucracy as opposed to the interests of the Soviet bureaucracy), the form was a struggle over differences in political perspective (the political line of Mao Zedong as opposed to the political line of Khrushchev).
The split manifested itself in the national parties of the Communist movement around the world in tendencies reflecting different phases in the historical development of the bureaucracy.
At the time of the international split in the Communist Parties, Maoism was clearly identifiable as a left tendency.
http://home.mira.net/~andy/bs/bs3-1.htm   (9092 words)

  
 The Colonial Revolution and the Sino-Soviet Split
The rationalisation of the split by 'ideological' considerations was a means to try and gain support within the Communist Parties, on a world scale.
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.
The Communist parties would be split from top to bottom.
http://www.marxist.com/TUT/TUT4-3.html   (13603 words)

  
 [No title]
In October, Dulles told the NSC that the Soviets were apparently working to confront the Chinese with the unanimous condemnation of all the world's Communist parties.
Organizationally, the SSSG drew in Chinese and Soviet experts from OCI, FDD, FBIS, and the Office of [Economic] Research and Reports (ORR).
By 1961, Esau studies were able to detail how a flood of Soviet and Chinese documents, clandestinely acquired in 1960, clearly established that Moscow and Beijing were openly quarreling and acknowledging that their relationship had become badly estranged.
http://www.cia.gov/csi/studies/winter98_99/art05.html   (7429 words)

  
 DEADLY FAILURES IN INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS AND DEFENSE UNPREPAREDNESS
The Sino-Soviet split payoff to the Communist World, as a hoax, is sufficiently great to make the deception a major foundation - - if not cornerstone of Sino-Soviet foreign policy.
I concluded that the Sino-Soviet conflict, as a hoax, was one of the highest payoff strategies of the entire communist world movement in its then 200 plus year history.
The Sino-Soviet split, as a hoax, is one the highest payoff operations of the entire world communist movement since its very beginning."
http://www.ninehundred.net/~devvy/failure.html   (4331 words)

  
 The American Experience Nixon's China Game People & Events Sino-Soviet Border Disputes
When the Soviets invaded Czechoslovakia in 1968 and Moscow claimed the right to intervene in other Communist states to "protect" them from anti-Communist influences, the Beijing leadership began to fear that China would be next.
Soon the ideological differences took on national dimensions, as both the Chinese and Soviets vied for territory and control of Communist satellite states.
During the early years of the Cold War, most Americans looked on China and the Soviet Union as a two-headed monster, separate nations but essentially the same Communist beast.
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
However, it should also be noted that the roots of the split that took place in the early 1960s weren't exclusively ideological.
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.
The earlier polemics should be read at face value.
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/pipermail/marxism/2005-May/025978.html   (291 words)

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