Sino-Soviet Relations 1949-76
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- Created on: 05-06-15 08:24
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- Sino-Soviet Relations 1949-76
- 1949-56
- Mao and Stalin
- Mao respected Stalin
- Mao frustrated at Stalin's failure to support the communists in the Chinese Civil War
- Stalin was suspicious of Mao and feared he would adopt policies which would damage Soviet interests
- They both had a competing desire to be the leading power in Asia
- 1950 Treaty of Friendship, Alliance and Mutual Assistance
- Terms
- China accepted Soviet leadership of communist world
- Formed a military pact against capitalist nations
- China would receive economic and technical aid- $300 million
- China's sovereignty in Manchuria restored
- Mongolia remained in Soviet sphere of influence
- Why Mao and Stalin could work together
- Mao respected Stalin
- Mao had no other allies
- Mao and Stalin had common enemies
- Terms
- The Korean War 1950-53
- Stalin wanted to avoid direct military confrontation between the superpowers but didn't want the North to be defeated
- Mao was willing to send a volunteer force of 270,000 which allowed Stalin to achieve his objectives
- This was highly significant: Drained Chinas resources making it more dependable on the USSR and demonstrated expertise of Chinese troops persuading Stalin China was a useful ally
- The Korean War consolidated the relationship
- Mao and Stalin
- Deterioration of Sino-Soviet relations
- After Stalin
- Soviet Union increased amount of support to China- 116 fully equipped industrial plants constructed
- Aid for producing metal, prospecting oil, development of machine tools and manufacturing of locomotives
- 8000 chinese students invited onto advanced training courses in USSR
- Khrushchev signed agreement to give up Soviet territory in Lushun
- Seemed to be a positive working relationship between the two at the Geneva conference in 1954
- Personal mistrust
- Mao had little respect for Khrushchev
- To Mao, Khrushchev was nothing more than a timid bureaucrat
- The Secret Speech in 1956 deepened mistrust
- Mao argued that Khrushchev was a dangerous revisionist
- Tension over Taiwan
- Mao believed to liberate China he needed to gain control of Taiwan- the base of his nationalist opponents. Khrushchev refused to support this
- Taiwan Crisis 1954-55
- 1954 Mao began to bomb taiwan
- US quickly signed a Mutual Defence Treaty
- In public Khrushchev was supportive of China but privately he was clear he didn't want to jeopardise peaceful coexistence with US
- Taiwan Crisis 1958
- US provided matador missiles to defend Taiwan
- Mao bombarded Quemoy and Matsu in response in august 1958
- Khrushchev refused to support China and China was forced to back down
- The crisis showed that Khrushchev was unwilling to support Mao's attempts to conquer Taiwan and depend Mao's mistrust of khrushchev
- Nuclear Weapons
- China and the Soviet Union were also divided on Nuclear weapons
- Mao stated that he would happily see half the worlds population die in order to advance communism which alarmed Khrushchev
- Mao viewed Khrushchevs committmentto peaceful coexistence as a sign that he was a coward betraying communism
- Khrushchev was horrified by Mao's willingness to use nuclear weapons and refused to help China develop its own nuclear weapons
- Instead of giving China nuclear weapons Khrushchev proposed the establishment of a radio station to monitor US submarines but Mao saw this as patronising
- It was clear that a cat and mouse relationship had been created on the part of the Soviets
- Border Conflict 1969
- Military confrontation
- Conflict over 4406-kilometre Sino-Soviet border
- Had been some clashes over border in 1967
- Mao became more concerned in 1968, Brezhnev ordered Soviet troops into Czechoslovakia to overthrow the government as it had left the true path of communism
- Mao was afraid the Brezhnev doctrine might apply to China
- Fearing Soviet attack China built up forces
- Soviets , fearing war established a network of command centres to repel Chinese attack which convinced China they were preparing for War.
- Mao decided to adopt policy of 'active defence' which involved a pre-emptive attack
- 2nd March 1969 Chinese troops ambushed a Soviet patrol... Soviets threatened nuclear attack
- Defusing the Crisis
- Mid- September meeting between Chinese foreign minister and his Soviet equal at Beijing airport.
- Two sides assured that they had no intention of invading and agreed to maintain the existing border and avoid military clashes
- Military confrontation
- After Stalin
- Ideological rivals 1958-1966
- China's new direction
- 1958 Mao launched the Great Leap Forward
- It reflected growing ideological differences between the two
- It was an economic policy claimed to be superior to Soviet model
- It was based on the creative power of Chinese peasants over the technical expertise of Soviet advisors
- Khrushchev was frustrated by the criticism.
- The policy reflected Mao's increasing self-confidence and desire to replace Khrushchev
- In 1960 Khrushchev ordered the removal of 1390 Soviet experts from China and the cancellation of 257 joint technical projects
- The policy was a failure and caused a major famine, Mao refused Soviet offers of emergency supplies of grain and sugar
- 1958 Mao launched the Great Leap Forward
- Public dispute
- 1963 Open Letter of the Communist Part of the Soviet Union criticised China
- The letter argued that China was no longer on the true path to communism
- Mao responded saying that the Soviet Union had re-established capitalism
- Mao's refusal to compromise was based on a genuine ideological rejection of bureaucracy
- Moscow meeting 1964
- With Brezhnev now in charge talks were held in Moscow with China's foreign minister
- Talks were held during the 47th anniversary of the Russian Revolution
- The talks were unsuccessful
- China was increasingly unwilling to compromise: it had successfully tested a nuclear device and communist Albania had allied with China
- Powerful figures in the Soviet Government felt that Mao would soon be ousted
- Chinese domestic politics
- By mid 1960s Mao was determined to reassert his authority and eliminate his rivals
- In 1966 he launched the Cultural Revolution
- It was designed to purge 'Soviet Revisionists' from the Chinses government
- During this time Mao's anti-Soviet rhetoric intensified
- Mobs of student activists besieged the Soviet embassy in Beijing
- China's new direction
- US-Soviet relations
- Why did the US want better relations with China?
- Nixon wanted an end to US involvement in the Vietnam War
- Hoped relations with China would weaken USSR and strengthen US
- Nixon hoped to moderate China's influence and stop spread of communism in Asia
- Worried by the prospect of a Sino-Soviet war leading to Soviet dominance across Asia
- Allow US to focus its entire nuclear arsenal on the Soviet Union
- Why did China want better relations with US?
- Concerns over geopolitical position
- Tension with the Soviet Union, worried about attack
- Encircled by unfriendly states
- Relationship with India was hostile and Soviet Union showed India public support
- They Petroleum industry needed investment and US was the undisputed World leader
- Ping-pong diplomacy
- 1969 Nixon began secret talks with China
- January 1970 the Chinese and US ambassadors to Poland met. China wanted to arrange talked at a high level.
- April 1971 ping-pong teams met in tournament- US team invited to China
- Late 1971 Kissinger secretly visited Beijing for talks. It was agreed Nixon would visit in 1972
- The Week that changed the world
- Nixon visited China in 1972 showed bi-polar world was at an end
- Did not lead to a formal Sino-US alliance but was successful
- Both released a statement condemning 'Soviet Imperialism'
- The Shanghai CommuniqueSet out certain principles.
- No single power should dominate Asia
- US would not tolerate Soviet invasion of China
- Both develop closer educational and cultural links
- Trade increased from $5million in 1972 to $500million dollars by end of 1970s
- Impact on Soviet Union
- Nixon visit to China horrified Soviet leadership
- Forced USSR to cultivate better relationship with US (Moscow Summit 1972)
- Soviet leaders began to prepare for war on two fronts- diminished effectiveness
- Sino-US relations 1973-76
- 1975 Kissinger and Ford visited China but due to the Watergate Scandal, Ford was in a weaker position and was not able to compromise on important issues
- The meeting consolidated the link between the two rather than leading to a full normalisation of the Sino-US relationship
- Why did the US want better relations with China?
- 1949-56
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