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‘Peaceful Coexistence’ and the Sino-Soviet Split
1989One of the most important issues leading up to the public clash between the Soviet Union and China related to conflicting interpretations of ‘peaceful coexistence’. Zhou Enlai’s diplomacy of the ‘five principles of peaceful coexistence’ was predicated in the Geneva-Bandung strategy to avert US penetration of Asian politics and to establish a stable ...
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The Sino-Soviet Split: Borkenau's Predictive Analysis of 1952
The China Quarterly, 1983At a meeting of the Association for Asian Studies in March 1961, Professor Bernard Morris read a paper on Sino-Soviet relations which began as follows:Almost a decade ago, the late Franz Borkenau wrote that a profound conflict between the communist regimes of Russia and China is in the long run as certain as anything in politics.
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The Great Leap Forward, the People's Commune and the Sino-Soviet Split
Journal of Contemporary China, 2011Utilizing recently available Chinese and Russian archival sources and pertinent media reports, this article attempts to unravel the truth on the connection between the Great Leap Forward/the People's Commune Movement and the Sino-Soviet split. It aims to address the following questions: what are the actual divergences between China and the Soviet Union
Zhihua Shen, Yafeng Xia
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The Sino-Soviet split: Cold War in the communist world
Cold War History, 2009Lorenz M. Luthi, Princeton, NJ, Princeton University Press, 2008, xvii+375 pp The Sino-Soviet split was a momentous event in Cold War history that has attracted the attention of scholars for two ge...
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Ideological dilemma: Mao's China and the Sino-Soviet split, 1962–63
Cold War History, 2010This paper uses new archival and other documents in analysing the interactions between Chinese domestic politics and international politics and the impacts on Sino-Soviet relations from early 1962 to July 1963. The article proposes a more coherent theoretical approach to the study of the Sino-Soviet split and in particular the role of ideology during ...
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The Monolith Cracking: American Response to the Sino-Soviet Split, 1961-1963
2020Scholars interested in Sino-Soviet-US triangular relations have generally been contending that during the early 1960s, the John F. Kennedy administration had committed itself to the wedge strategy – namely, to exacerbate the increasingly furious Sino-Soviet dispute – of which the American pursuit of the Limited Test Ban Treaty was a crucial part ...
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From Old Left to New Left: The FBI and the Sino–Soviet Split
International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence, 2019The dichotomy between foreign and domestic intelligence is a false one. Drawing jurisdictional distinctions between the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI; the intelligence service within the Uni...
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Economic dimensions of the Sino–Soviet alliance and split: introduction to the special issue
European Review of History/Revue Europeenne D'Histoire, 2023Tao Chen
exaly
Independent thinking: Japanese civil society and the open Sino-Soviet split, 1962–64
2004The precursor to the incredible explosion in Japanese concern with the Sino-Soviet rift that occurred during 1963 was the aftermath of two events dating from late October 1962: the Sino-Indian border war and the Cuban Missile Crisis. In the wake of these incidents, Moscow and Beijing began direct verbal attacks on each other and engaged in increasingly
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