Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Was China to blame for
the Sino-Soviet split?
- The Taiwan crises of 1954 and
1958 increased tensions
between China and USSR
- Mao thought he was
superior to Khrushchev
when Stalin died
- Active Defence - said China wouldn't allow
Soviets to be aggressive towards them (even
though they were aggressive to Russia)
- 1966 Ussuri River dispute
- Chinese attack Russians
- Mao to Khrushchev - "you are a paper
tiger" (you're weak, moving away from
pure communist beliefs)
- 1964 - Khrushchev offered to concede Damansky Island
on the Ussuri River to avoid border trouble. Mao said
Russia had to give it to China because they felt intimidated.
This angered Khrushchev + he withdrew his offer
- Brezhnev (1964-1982)
made no attempt to
rebuild relations with
China
- N. Korea and N.Vietnam -
Russia went out of its way to
befriend these countries and
isolate China
- China's response =
did the same with
Albania and Romania
- Khrushchev's Secret Speech
(1956) - criticised Stalin
- Could be argued he purposefully
did this to provoke Mao
- Mao hated 'destalinisation'
+ criticised Khrushchev as
a revisionist
- It was the USSR that
cancelled the Sino-Soviet
agreement on atomic
cooperation (June 1959)
- Mao attacks Soviet Union as
revisionists, 1968 (particularly during
Cultural Revolution - 1966-76)
- 1967 Chinese Red Guards invaded
Russian embassy in Beijing
- increasing independent actions of the CCP
from the Soviets
- Khrushchev's policy of 'peaceful
coexistence' angered Mao
- Rivalry concerning
overlapping spheres of
influence in central Asia
(e.g Mongolia)
- Territorial disputes over 2738 mile shared border
- Soviets refused to share
nuclear secrets
- At the heart of the split was
China's struggle to become a
world power + the Soviet Union's
determination to prevent it