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| | 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. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Soviet_Split
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| | 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. |
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http://home.mira.net/~andy/bs/bs3-1.htm
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| | 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. |
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http://www.marxist.com/TUT/TUT4-3.html
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| | [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. |
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http://www.cia.gov/csi/studies/winter98_99/art05.html
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| | 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." |
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http://www.ninehundred.net/~devvy/failure.html
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| | 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. |
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http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/china/peopleevents/pande06.html
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| | [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. |
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http://lists.econ.utah.edu/pipermail/marxism/2005-May/025993.html
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| | [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. |
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http://lists.econ.utah.edu/pipermail/marxism/2005-May/025978.html
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