Chinese and Soviet Statements on Frontier Question.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Chinese and Soviet Statements on Frontier Question."

Transcription

1 Keesing's Record of World Events (formerly Keesing's Contemporary Archives), Volume 15, November, 1969 China, Soviet Union, Chinese, Soviet, Sino, Page Keesing's Worldwide, LLC - All Rights Reserved. Chinese and Soviet Statements on Frontier Question. The Chinese Government issued on May 24 a comprehensive statement setting out its views on the frontier question, in reply to the Soviet Note of March 29 [see page ], and offering to enter into negotiations on the problem. The Communist Party of China and the Chinese Government, the statement said, have always held that boundary questions should be settled by negotiations through diplomatic channels and that, pending a settlement, the status quo of the boundary should be maintained and conflicts averted. This was our stand in the past and remains our stand at present On the Chenpao Island question, the statement said: Chenpao Island has always been China's territory. Before 1860 the Wusuli [ussuri] river, where Chenpao Island is situated, was still an inland river of China. It was only after the Opium War in the 19th century when the capitalist Powers, one after another, imposed unequal treaties on China that the Wusuli river was stipulated as forming part of the boundary between China and Russia in the Sino-Russian Treaty of Peking of According to established principles of international law, in the case of navigable boundary rivers the central line of the main channel shall form the boundary line and determine the ownership of islands. Situated on the Chinese side of the central line of the main channel of the Wusuli river, Chenpao Island indisputably belongs to China and has always been under China's jurisdiction. The map attached to the Sino-Russian Treaty of Peking was drawn unilaterally by Tsarist Russia before the boundary was surveyed in And in 1861 China and Russia surveyed and marked only the land boundary south of the Hsingkai Lake but not the river boundary on the Wusuli and Heilung [Amur] rivers, and a red line was drawn on the attached map on a scale smaller than 1:1,000,000 only to indicate that the two rivers form the boundary between the two countries. The red line on this attached map does not, and cannot possibly, show the precise location of the boundary line in the rivers, still less is it intended to determine the ownership of islands. Hence it can in no way prove that Chenpao Island belongs to the Soviet Union. In fact, after the conclusion of the Sino-Russian Treaty of Peking, the two sides always took the central line of the main channel for determining the ownership of islands and exercised jurisdiction accordingly. This was also repeatedly borne out by letters from the frontier official of Tsarist Russia to the Chinese side. After quoting from two such letters the statement added: It should also be pointed out that Chenpao Island was originally not an island but a part of the bank on the Chinese side of the Wusuli river, which later became an island as a result of erosion by the river water. To this day Chenpao Island still connects with the Chinese bank at low water, and the river-arm to the west of the island has never become a waterway. Turning to the frontier question in general, the statement continued: Beginning from the fifties of the 19th century, Tsarist Russia colluded with the Western imperialist countries in pursuing the aggressive policy of carving up China. Within the short space of half a century it forced China to sign a series of unequal treaties by which it annexed more than 1,500,000 square kilometres of Chinese territory, an area three times that of France or 12 times that of Czechoslovakia. As examples of such treaties the statement cited the Treaty of Aigun (1858), the Treaty of Peking (1860), the Tahcheng Protocol (1864),

2 and the Ili Treaty (1881). After quoting passages from Marx, Engels, and Lenin condemning these treaties, it declared: There exists a boundary question between China and the Soviet Union not only because Tsarist Russia annexed more than 1,500,000 square kilometres of Chinese territory by the unequal treaties it imposed on China, but also because it crossed in many places the boundary line stipulated by the unequal treaties and further occupied vast expanses of Chinese territory. In the Pamir area Tsarist Russia occupied more than 20,000 square kilometres of Chinese territory in violation of the stipulations of the Protocol on the Sino-Russian Boundary in the Kashgar Region of Again, in the sector of the Wusuli and Heilung rivers the Soviet Government, in violation of the Treaty of Aigun, the Treaty of Peking, and the established principles of international law, has gone so far as to draw the boundary lines almost entirely along the Chinese hank, and in some places even on China's inland rivers and islands, marking as Soviet territory over 600 of the 700 and more Chinese islands on the Chinese side of the central line of the main channel, which cover an area of more than 1,000 square kilometres. With regard to the unequal treaties imposed on China by Tsarist Russia, the statement went on, the great Lenin always stood for their annulment. On Sept. 27, 1920, the Government of Soviets led by Lenin solemnly proclaimed that it declares null and void all the treaties concluded with China by the former Governments of Russia, renounces all seizure of Chinese territory and all Russian concessions in China, and restores to China, without any compensation and for ever, all that had been predatorily seized from her by the Tsar's Government and the Russian bourgeoisie. Furthermore, the Agreement on General Principles for the Settlement of the Questions between China and the Soviet Union signed on May 31, 1924, stipulates that at the conference agreed upon by both sides they are to annul all conventions, treaties, agreements, protocols, contracts, etc., concluded between the Government of China and the Tsarist Government and to replace them with new treaties, agreements, etc., on the basis of equality, reciprocity, and justice and to re-demarcate their national boundaries and pending such re-demarcation to maintain the present boundaries. In pursuance of the 1924 agreement, China and the Soviet Union held talks in 1926 to discuss the redemarcation of the boundary and the conclusion of a new treaty. Owing to the historical conditions at the time, no agreement was reached by the two sides on the boundary question, no re-demarcation of the boundary between the two countries was made, and no new equal treaty was concluded. The above facts, the statement commented, fully show that the treaties relating to the present Sino- Soviet boundary are all unequal treaties, that they should all be annulled, and that the Sino-Soviet boundary question remains an outstanding issue. In its statement the Soviet Government uttered the nonsense that the 1924 agreement did not consider the boundary treaties as being among the unequal treaties and that there was no talk of their being annulled. It went on to accuse the Soviet Government of having since 1960 directed Soviet frontier troops to push their patrol routes into Chinese territory, build military installations within Chinese territory, assault and kidnap Chinese border inhabitants, sabotage their production, and carry out all sorts of provocative and subversive activities. Since the founding of the People's Republic of China, the statement declared, the Chinese Government has satisfactorily settled complicated boundary questions left over by history and concluded boundary treaties with neighbouring countries such as Burma, Nepal, Pakistan, the People's Republic of Mongolia, and Afghanistan, with the exception of the Soviet Union and India. China does not have a single soldier stationed in any foreign country. China has no territorial claims against any of

3 her neighbouring countries, and has not invaded or occupied a single inch of territory of any foreign country. Today the Soviet Government is not only forcibly occupying the territories of other countries and refuses to return them, but has under new conditions advanced new theories for aggression the theories of limited sovereignty, of international dictatorship, and of the Socialist community. It has already turned some East European countries and the People's Republic of Mongolia into its colonies and military bases. It flagrantly sent several hundred thousand troops to occupy Czechoslovakia and brutally suppress the Czechoslovak people. It regards heroic Albania as a thorn in its flesh. It menaces Rumania and Yugoslavia. It has dispatched its fleet to the Mediterranean, trying hard to control the Arab countries by taking advantage of their difficulties. Its aggressive designs are even more ambitious, and its claws have stretched out even farther, than those of Tsarist Russia. As early as Aug. 22 and Sept. 21, 1960, the statement continued, the Chinese Government twice took the initiative in proposing to the Soviet Government that negotiations be held. Furthermore, on Aug. 23, 1963, the Chinese Government put forward to the Soviet Government a six-point proposal for maintaining the status quo of the boundary and averting conflicts. Sino-Soviet boundary negotiations finally took place in Peking in During the negotiations the Chinese side took the reasonable stand that the treaties relating to the present Sino-Soviet boundary should be taken as the basis for settling the boundary question. However, the Soviet Government not only wanted to keep under its forcible occupation the Chinese territory which Tsarist Russia had seized by means of the unequal treaties, but also insisted that China recognize as belonging to the Soviet Union all the Chinese territory which it had occupied or attempted to occupy in violation of the treaties, and as a result the negotiations were disrupted. The development of the Sino-Soviet boundary question to its present state is not the responsibility of the Chinese side. Nevertheless, the Chinese Government is still ready to seek an overall settlement of the question through peaceful negotiations, and is against resort to the use of force. The Chinese Government holds that it must be confirmed that the treaties relating to the present Sino-Soviet boundary are all unequal treaties imposed on China by Tsarist Russian imperialism. But taking into consideration the fact that it was Tsarist Russian imperialism which compelled China to sign these treaties and that large numbers of Soviet working people have lived on the land over a long period of time, the Chinese Government, out of the desire to safeguard the revolutionary friendship between the Chinese and Soviet peoples, is still ready to take these unequal treaties as the basis for determining the entire alignment of the boundary line between the two countries and for settling all existing questions relating to the boundary. Any side which occupies the territory of the other side in violation of the treaties must, in principle, return it wholly and unconditionally to the other side, and this brooks no ambiguity. The statement concluded: The Chinese Government maintains that what should be done is to hold negotiations for the overall settlement of the Sino-Soviet boundary question and the conclusion of a new equal treaty to replace the old unequal ones, and not to hold consultations for clarification on individual sectors of the Soviet-Chinese State border line. The Chinese Government hopes that the Soviet Government will make a positive response to the above proposals. The Soviet Government replied in detail in a statement of June 13, in which it also expressed readiness to enter into negotiations.

4 After welcoming the Chinese offer to negotiate, the statement said: The Soviet-Chinese frontier is the result of historical development over a long period. When the Russian State and China opened their relations with each other, they were separated by vast, sparsely populated or uninhabited expanses of semi-desert and taiga. At that time China's northern State boundary, for instance, was limited by the Great Wall of China, more than 1,000 kilometres to the south-west of the Rivers Amur and Ussuri. By the time Russians had settled on the reaches of the Amur in the first half of the 17th century Manchuria was a State independent of China and inhabited by people ethnically different from the Chinese. China herself lost her independence and became a part of the Manchurian State after the Manchus had seized Peking in Up to the end of the 19th century Manchuria remained a separate entity, a fief of the Emperors, where Chinese were not allowed to settle or to engage in economic activities. Late in the 17th century and early in the 18th century the Manchu rulers conquered Mongolia and imposed their rule on the Uighurs State in Eastern Turkestan. The Manchu-Chinese Emperors who oppressed the Chinese people actively pursued a predatory colonialist policy, annexing bit by bit the lands of other countries and peoples. The formation of the Chinese territory within its present frontiers was accompanied by the enforced assimilation of oppressed nationalities. Having taken shape many generations ago, the statement continued, the frontier between the Soviet Union and China reflected, and continues to reflect, the actual populating of lands by the people of these two States along natural demarcation lines, mountains and rivers. Throughout its length this frontier is clearly and precisely determined by treaties, protocols, and maps, such as the Treaties of Aigun (1858), Tientsin (1858), and Peking (1860), which retain their force as inter-state documents of both countries to this day. Denying that the map attached to the Treaty of Peking had been drawn up unilaterally, the Soviet statement maintained that the protocol on the exchange of maps had been signed and sealed by both Russian and Chinese representatives, and that this map showed Damansky Island as Russian territory. It also contested the assertion that under international law the frontier on border rivers automatically passed along the middle of the main stream, citing examples to the contrary, and pointed out that the Soviet-Chinese agreement of 1951 on navigation on frontier rivers said that the navigation of vessels of both sides on these rivers was effected along the main stream irrespective of where the line of the State frontier passes. During consultations in Peking in 1964, the statement went on, the Soviet side expressed its readiness to meet half-way the wishes of the Chinese side, which were concerned with the interests of the Chinese population along the banks of rivers, and to reach agreement on the demarcation of the frontier line between the U.S.S.R.and the People's Republic of China along the Rivers Amur and Ussuri on the basis of mutual concessions. Agreement was not reached at that time, because the Chinese representatives complicated the consultations by making unfounded territorial and other claims which questioned both the line of the existing frontier and all the treaties determining the Soviet-Chinese border. The statement denied the Chinese allegation that Russia had occupied over 20,000 square kilometres of Chinese territory in the Pamirs in violation of a protocol of This protocol, it contended, had nothing to do with the area referred to; the delimitation in the Pamirs had been carried out by exchanging Notes in 1894, and the line then laid down still existed. In reply to the Chinese contention that the Soviet Government had abandoned Lenin's policy on the frontier question, the statement said: Lenin's decrees cancelled all unequal and secret treaties concluded by Tsarist Russia with foreign States, including China. On July 25, 1919, the Government of the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist RepubLic addressed the Chinese people and the

5 Governments of Southern and Northern China and pointed out what particular treaties between Russia and Chinese were considered by the Soviet Government to be unequal. Treaties dealing with spheres of influence in China, with rights of extra-territoriality and consular jurisdiction, concessions on Chinese territory, and the Russian share of the indemnities imposed by imperialist countries on China after the suppression of the Boxer Rising were declared to be annulled. These proposals were confirmed in the Note of Sept. 27, The abolition of unequal treaties was Juridically recorded in the agreement on common principles for the settlement of questions between the U.S.S.R.and the Chinese Republic of May 31, Neither the appeal of 1919 nor the agreement between the Soviet Union and the Chinese Republic of 1924 contained, or could contain, indications that the treaties is laying down the present Soviet-Chinese borders were regarded as unequal or secret. Naturally there was no question of annulling or revising them. Until recently the leaders of the People's RepubLic of China had themselves stressed that the Soviet State had abolished unequal treaties with China. Mao Tse-tung stated at the seventh congress of the Communist Party of China in 1945, and repeated again on Dec. 16, 1949, that the Soviet Union was the first to denounce unequal treaties and conclude with China new equal agreements. On future negotiations the statement said: The Soviet Union proposes that the unanimity of the two sides on the undisputed stretches of the frontier be recorded; that an understanding be reached on individual disputed stretches of the frontier line through mutual consultations on the basis of treaty documents; that the two sides should proceed on the basis of the treaties in force, observing the principle of mutual concessions and the economic interests of the local population when delimiting the frontier line on stretches which have undergone natural changes; and that the agreement reached should be recorded by the two sides signing appropriate documents. The Soviet Government suggests that the consultations broken off in 1964 should be resumed in Moscow within the next two or three months. The Soviet Government expects the Government of the People's Republic of China to inform it shortly whether the above proposals on the date and place for the continuation of the consultations are acceptable to it. Following the incident of Aug. 13 on the Sinkiang border, the tension between the two countries increased in the second half of August to a point at which a Soviet attack on China was believed to be under consideration. Earlier reports had indicated that in March and April 1969 the Soviet Union attempted to obtain promises of support from the other Warsaw Pact countries in the event of war with China. Yugoslav sources reported on April 15 that at the meeting of the Political Consultative Committee of the Warsaw Treaty Organization on March 17 [see A] the Soviet Union had proposed that Mongolia should be brought into the alliance, thus allowing troops from its other members to be stationed on the Sino- Mongolian frontier, but had dropped the suggestion after Rumania and Czechoslovakia had strongly opposed it. Several Viennese newspapers reported on April 10 that the Bulgarian Foreign Minister, Mr. Ivan Bashev, had told Austrian journalists that intervention by the Warsaw Pact countries was conceivable if incidents on the Sino-Soviet border threatened the security of the Socialist camp. A Rumanian Government spokesman said on the same day that Rumania did not consider herself bound by Mr. Bashev's statement, and rejected any action or declaration inspired by considerations of a military nature. The Bulgarian Government denied on April 11 that Mr. Bashev had made the statement attributed to him. A Chinese Note of Aug. 19 alleged that in June and July the Soviet Government had been responsible for 429 border incidents; that Soviet gunboats had seriously threatened the safe navigation of Chinese

6 vessels on the border rivers; and that Soviet military aircraft had frequently intruded into China's airspace. Mass protest demonstrations by Chinese soldiers and civilians took place along both the Far Eastern and the Sinkiang frontier on Aug. 20. A statement issued by the Tass agency on Sept. 10 alleged that the Chinese had violated the Soviet frontier 488 times between June and the middle of August, and quoted diaries and official documents said to have been captured after the Goldinsky Island incident of July 8 and the Sinkiang border incident of Aug. 13 as evidence that both incidents had been planned beforehand by the Chinese authorities. The Soviet Press launched a violent anti-chinese propaganda campaign at the end of August. Half of the issue of Literaturnaya Gazeta published on Aug. 27 was devoted to articles on China, which alleged inter alia that over 25,000,000 Chinese had been exterminated between 1955 and 1965; that one concentration camp in Sinkiang contained 32,000 people; and that the Chinese leaders were repeating the cruel history of feudal despots who ruled by fire and sword. A long editorial in Pravda on Aug. 28 suggested that the expansionist ambitions of Peking might lead to a world-wide nuclear war. Pravda declared that the border provocations engineered by the Peking leaders are part and parcel of their political course aimed at accomplishing far-reaching great-power schemes. The Chinese leaders are undertaking these actions in an attempt to seek for a way out of the political and economic blind alley into which they have led the country. The policy of the Great Leap and its failure, the pogrom against the party and against the organs of people's power, and the establishment of the terrorist military-bureaucratic regime of Mao Tse-tung and his entourage in the course of the so-called Cultural Revolution have created in China an atmosphere of political crisis, and have done great harm to the country's economy. Diverting the anger of the masses of the people away from themselves and poisoning their consciousness with jingoistic passions that is what lies at the bottom of the rabid anti- Soviet campaign whipped up in Peking. The adventurism of the Peking leaders and the atmosphere of war hysteria which they are fomenting are complicating the entire international situation, the article continued. The methods of threats, blackmail, and provocations in relations with the Socialist and developing countries, increasing international tensions, making advances to the forces of imperialist reaction, issuing calls, not for peace, but for war all this is arousing the legitimate anxiety of many peoples and States. Not only in countries neighbouring on China, but in other countries as well, anxiety is being expressed over the expansionist ambitions of Peking. The military arsenals of the Maoists are filling up with more and more weapons. Yet a war, if it were to break out in present-day conditions, with the existing weaponry and lethal armaments and with modern means of delivery, would not spare a single continent. It was reported from Washington on Aug. 28 that information from Communist sources indicated that the Soviet Government was seriously considering a pre-emptive air strike against China's nuclear installations, and had sounded the other members of the Warsaw Treaty Organization, as well as the leaders of other Communist parties, on their attitude to such action. According to the Washington Evening Post, these reports had been passed on to the Press by Mr. Richard Helms, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, who had acted without the State Department's consent, and in Western diplomatic circles in Moscow they were received with scepticism. The Daily Telegraph stated on Sept. 1 that the source of the reports was apparently a letter which the Soviet Communist Party had sent to other Communist parties stating that Peking, not risking to begin a big war, is calculating on turning the Soviet-Chinese frontier into a bleeding wound. The Soviet Union cannot permit events to develop in such a way as to bring about protracted

7 frontier wars, and will undertake additional measures to safeguard the interests of the Soviet people and the frontiers of our country. The Soviet Union will continue its line for normalization of its relations with China and for solution of differences over the negotiating table. The central committee of the Chinese Communist Party issued on Aug. 23 a directive declaring that war with the Soviet Union might break out at any time, which was broadcast by loud-speakers in the streets of Peking. According to reports reaching Hong Kong on Aug. 29, large troop reinforcements were being sent to the border regions, air raid practices held in the cities, factories moved out of towns to the countryside, and the civilian population evacuated from a number of towns in Sinkiang. An Indian External Affairs Ministry spokesman said on Sept. 12 that the movement of nuclear installations from Sinkiang to remote areas of Tibet had begun about a year before, and had been speeded up in recent months. Following the death of President Ho Chi Minh, Mr. Chou En-lai flew to Hanoi on Sept. 4, returning to Peking on the following day. His failure to attend the funeral, which was criticized by Moscow Radio as disrespectful to President Ho's memory, was generally attributed to his wish to avoid Mr. Kosygin, who headed the Soviet delegation at the funeral; it was afterwards suggested, however, that he returned to Peking to consult Mao Tse-tung on North Vietnamese proposals for a meeting between them. Mr. Kosygin flew to Hanoi via Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, and Burma, avoiding Chinese territory, as did most of the other Communist leaders who attended the funeral. An exception was Mr. Maurer, the Rumanian Premier, who travelled via Moscow and Peking and had a brief meeting with Mr. Chou in the Chinese capital. President Ho's political testament, in which he appealed for the restoration of unity among Communist parties, was read at his funeral on Sept. 8 [see A]. The joint communique issued in Hanoi after Mr. Kosygin's visit, which was published on Sept. 11, said that the North Vietnamese leaders had assured him that the Vietnamese people, faithful to Ho Chi Minh's testament, and guided both by reason and by their hearts, will work for and contribute by deeds to the reestablishment of unity among the fraternal Communist parties. The communique on the visit of the Chinese delegation to the funeral, published on the same day, made no reference to this question. Mr. Kosygin left Hanoi for Moscow on Sept. 10, travelling by the route by which he had come. After reaching Dushambe (the capital of Tajikistan) on Sept. 11, however, he turned back and flew east to Peking, where he met Mr. Chou En-lai at the airport; their meeting was variously reported by unofficial sources to have lasted about an hour and four hours. Mr. Kosygin was accompanied by Mr. Konstantin Katushev (the member of the Communist Party secretariat responsible for relations with other ruling Communist parties) and Mr. Mikhail Yasnov (vice-president of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet), and Mr. Chou by Mr. Li Hsien-nien (a Vice-Premier who had headed the Chinese delegation at President Ho's funeral) and General Hsieh Fu-chih (a Vice-Premier and security Minister). The official Soviet communiqué said that they had met by mutual agreement and had openly explained their positions and held a conversation useful for both sides ; the Chinese communiqué, issued six hours later, said that they had had a frank conversation, but did not say that they had met by mutual agreement or that the talks had been useful. According to unofficial sources in Moscow, Mr. Kosygin put the following five-point peace plan before Mr. Chou at their meeting: (1) The two countries should agree to reopen border talks. (2) They should withdraw their troops from the border.(3) Troops on each side of the border should be instructed to avoid opening fire on each other.(4) Both countries should end attacks on each other in the Press and on the radio. (5) They should agree to work towards the restoration of trade and other economic ties. The

8 Chinese statement of Oct. 7,[see below] however, claimed that it was Mr. Chou who had proposed the holding of talks and the withdrawal of the armed forces of both sides from the disputed areas. Mr. Senzo Nosaka, chairman of the Japanese Communist Party, afterwards stated that a Soviet proposal for a meeting had been passed on to the Chinese Government by the North Vietnamese leaders. Other Communist leaders were also believed to have influenced the Chinese decision to agree to talks, including Mr. Nosaka himself, who had had close contacts with the Chinese leaders in the past, and Mr. Maurer. The route taken by Mr. Kosygin on his return journey, however, suggested that the Chinese agreed to talk only after he had left Hanoi. After the talks no further frontier incidents were reported, and the number of attacks on China published in the Soviet Press was greatly reduced, although anti-soviet propaganda continued unabated in China. In a speech on Sept. 30 Mr. Chou accused the Soviet Union and the United States of collusion in a bid to launch aggressive wars against our country, and said that China was developing nuclear weapons for self-defence. An editorial published in the leading Chinese newspapers on the same day in connexion with the 20th anniversary of the Communist revolution also accused the Soviet Union of plotting to launch wars of aggression, of employing nuclear blackmail against China, and of attempting to organize rebellions by the national minorities in the border areas. The Chinese Government announced on Oct. 7 that it had been agreed to hold talks on the border question. The statement said that the Chinese Government had consistently stood for a peaceful settlement of the Sino-Soviet boundary question through negotiations, and in its statement of May 24 [see above] had expressed its willingness to take the existing Sino-Soviet treaties as the basis for an overall settlement of the question, proposing at the same time that, pending a settlement, the status quo of the border should be maintained and armed conflicts averted. It was regrettable that at the time this stand of the Chinese Government did not meet with a due response from the Soviet Government, which in its statement of June 13 had defended Tsarist Russian imperialism and wilfully slandered China and had continued to carry out, ceaseless armed provocations along the entire Sino-Soviet border. Nevertheless, the Chinese Government had sent a delegation to the meeting at Poli (Khabarovsk) of the Joint Commission for Boundary River Navigation, and at the meeting the Chinese side had made great efforts and overcome numerous obstacles so that some agreements were finally reached. After the Poll meeting, however, the Soviet side had provoked a fresh incident of bloodshed on the Sino-Soviet border, had at the same time falsely counter-charged China with border provocations, and had insinuated that China intended to launch a nuclear war against the Soviet Union. The statement went on: China develops nuclear weapons for defence and for breaking the nuclear monopoly. The Chinese Government has declared solemnly on many occasions that at no time and under no circumstances will China be the first to use nuclear weapons. It is both ridiculous and absurd to vilify China as intending to launch a nuclear war. But at the same time China will never be intimidated by war threats, including nuclear war threats. Should a handful of war maniacs dare to raid China's strategic sites in defiance of world condemnation, that will be war, that will be aggression, and the 700,000,000 Chinese people will rise up in resistance and use revolutionary war to eliminate the war of aggression. The responsibility for the development of the Sino-Soviet boundary question to such an acute state does not at all rest with the Chinese side. The Chinese Government has never demanded the return of

9 the territory Tsarist Russia had annexed by means of the unequal treaties. On the contrary, it is the Soviet Government that has persisted in occupying still more Chinese territory in violation of the stipulations of these treaties and, moreover, peremptorily demanded that the Chinese Government recognize such occupation as legal. Precisely because of the Soviet Government's persistence in its expansionist stand, many disputed areas have been created along the Sino-Soviet border, and this has become the root cause of tension on the border. The Chinese Government has never covered up the fact that there exist irreconcilable differences of principle between China and the Soviet Union and that the struggle of principle between them will continue for a long period of time. But this should not prevent China and the Soviet Union from maintaining normal State relations on the basis of the five principles of peaceful coexistence. The Chinese Government has consistently held that the Sino-Soviet boundary question should be settled peacefully and that, even if it cannot he settled for the time being, the status quo on the border should be maintained and there should definitely be no resort to the use of force. There is no reason whatsoever for China and the Soviet Union to fight a war over the boundary question. Mr. Chou, the statement continued, at his meeting with Mr. Kosygin had proposed an agreement on provisional measures for maintaining the status quo on the border, for averting armed conflicts, and for disengagement. He had repeated this proposal in letters to the Soviet Government on Sept. 18 and Oct. 6, leading to the decision of both sides to hold the negotiations in Peking. The Soviet delegation to the talks, which arrived in Peking on Oct. 19, was headed by Mr. Vasily V. Kuznetsov, the First Deputy Foreign Minister, who had been Ambassador to China in , with Major-General Vadim A. Matrosov, Chief of Staff of border troops at the State security Committee (K.G.B.), as his deputy. The Chinese delegation was led by Mr. Chiao Kuan-hua, a Deputy Foreign Minister, with Mr. Chat Chengwen as his deputy. The talks opened on Oct. 20. (Soviet Embassy Press Department, London - Peking Review - Times - Daily Telegraph - Guardian - Le Monde - New York Times)(Prev. rep A.) Keesing's Worldwide, LLC - All Rights Reserved.

Dresden Meeting of East European Communist Leaders.

Dresden Meeting of East European Communist Leaders. Keesing's Record of World Events (formerly Keesing's Contemporary Archives), Volume 14, June, 1968 Czechoslovak, Soviet, Page 22744 1931-2006 Keesing's Worldwide, LLC - All Rights Reserved. Reactions to

More information

April 01, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'The Asian- African Conference'

April 01, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'The Asian- African Conference' Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org April 01, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'The Asian- African Conference' Citation: Report from the Chinese

More information

The Common Program of The Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, 1949

The Common Program of The Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, 1949 The Common Program of The Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, 1949 Adopted by the First Plenary Session of the Chinese People's PCC on September 29th, 1949 in Peking PREAMBLE The Chinese

More information

Who wants to be a. Expert on the Cold War?!

Who wants to be a. Expert on the Cold War?! Who wants to be a Expert on the Cold War?! Which statement describes the economic history of Japan since World War II? A: Japan has withdrawn from the world economic community and has practices economic

More information

CHAPTER I CONSTITUTION OF THE CHINESE SOVIET REPUBLIC

CHAPTER I CONSTITUTION OF THE CHINESE SOVIET REPUBLIC CHAPTER I CONSTITUTION OF THE CHINESE SOVIET REPUBLIC THE first All-China Soviet Congress hereby proclaims before the toiling masses of China and of the whole world this Constitution of the Chinese Soviet

More information

The Principal Contradiction

The Principal Contradiction The Principal Contradiction [Communist ORIENTATION No. 1, April 10, 1975, p. 2-6] Communist Orientation No 1., April 10, 1975, p. 2-6 "There are many contradictions in the process of development of a complex

More information

THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT

THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT MEANING OF THE NON-ALIGNED MOVEMENT According to Pandit Nehru, the Prime Minister of India, "The term was coined and used with the meaning of non-alignment with great power blocs

More information

April 04, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'Draft Plan for Attending the Asian-African Conference'

April 04, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'Draft Plan for Attending the Asian-African Conference' Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org April 04, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'Draft Plan for Attending the Asian-African Conference' Citation:

More information

Version 1. This 1960s Chinese song would most likely have been sung during the 1) Boxer Rebellion 2) Cultural Revolution

Version 1. This 1960s Chinese song would most likely have been sung during the 1) Boxer Rebellion 2) Cultural Revolution Name Global II Date Cold War II 31. The Four Modernizations of Deng Xiaoping in the 1970s and 1980s resulted in 1) a return to Maoist revolutionary principles 2) an emphasis on the Five Relationships 3)

More information

Communism in the Far East. China

Communism in the Far East. China Communism in the Far East China Terms and Players KMT PLA PRC CCP Sun Yat-Sen Mikhail Borodin Chiang Kai-shek Mao Zedong Shaky Start In 1913 the newly formed Chinese government was faced with the assassination

More information

China Borders: Settlement and Conflicts Selected Papers, by Neville Maxwell, Newcastle Upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars

China Borders: Settlement and Conflicts Selected Papers, by Neville Maxwell, Newcastle Upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars China Borders: Settlement and Conflicts Selected Papers, by Neville Maxwell, Newcastle Upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2014, pp. 289, 49.99 Mandip Singh * This book is a compilation of papers

More information

A Guide to. O.S.S./State Department Intelligence and Research Reports. China and India

A Guide to. O.S.S./State Department Intelligence and Research Reports. China and India A Guide to O.S.S./State Department Intelligence and Research Reports China and India A Guide to O.S.S./State Department Intelligence and Research Reports III China and India Edited by Paul Kesaris A MICROFILM

More information

February 28, 1973 Note on the Meeting with Comrade O.B. Rakhmanin, Deputy Head of International Department of CC

February 28, 1973 Note on the Meeting with Comrade O.B. Rakhmanin, Deputy Head of International Department of CC Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org February 28, 1973 Note on the Meeting with Comrade O.B. Rakhmanin, Deputy Head of International Department of CC Citation:

More information

March 27, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'Compilation of the Excerpts of the Telegrams Concerning the Asian- African Conference'

March 27, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'Compilation of the Excerpts of the Telegrams Concerning the Asian- African Conference' Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org March 27, 1955 Report from the Chinese Foreign Ministry, 'Compilation of the Excerpts of the Telegrams Concerning the

More information

August 04, 1971 Minutes of the Joint Meeting of the Central Committee and the Ministers Council

August 04, 1971 Minutes of the Joint Meeting of the Central Committee and the Ministers Council Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org August 04, 1971 Minutes of the Joint Meeting of the Central Committee and the Ministers Council Citation: Minutes of the

More information

International History Declassified

International History Declassified Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org March 10, 1965 Record of Conversation between the Chinese Ambassador to the Soviet Union Pan Zili and the North Korean

More information

January, 1964 Information of the Bulgarian Embassy in Havana Regarding the Situation in Cuba in 1963

January, 1964 Information of the Bulgarian Embassy in Havana Regarding the Situation in Cuba in 1963 Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org January, 1964 Information of the Bulgarian Embassy in Havana Regarding the Situation in Cuba in 1963 Citation: Information

More information

FOREIGN LANGUAGES PRESS PEKING 1964

FOREIGN LANGUAGES PRESS PEKING 1964 LETTER OF THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF CHINA IN REPLY TO THE LETTER OF THE CENTRAL COMMITTEE OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY OF THE SOVIET UNION DATED JULY 30, 1964 FOREIGN LANGUAGES PRESS PEKING

More information

JCC Communist China. Chair: Brian Zak PO/Vice Chair: Xander Allison

JCC Communist China. Chair: Brian Zak PO/Vice Chair: Xander Allison JCC Communist China Chair: Brian Zak PO/Vice Chair: Xander Allison 1 Table of Contents 3. Letter from Chair 4. Members of Committee 6. Topics 2 Letter from the Chair Delegates, Welcome to LYMUN II! My

More information

Vladimir Lenin, Extracts ( )

Vladimir Lenin, Extracts ( ) Vladimir Lenin, Extracts (1899-1920) Our Programme (1899) We take our stand entirely on the Marxist theoretical position: Marxism was the first to transform socialism from a utopia into a science, to lay

More information

Timeline Cambridge Pre-U Mandarin Chinese (9778 and 1341)

Timeline Cambridge Pre-U Mandarin Chinese (9778 and 1341) www.xtremepapers.com Timeline Cambridge Pre-U Mandarin Chinese (9778 and 1341) Timeline of Chinese history since 1839 Date 1644 1912 Qing Dynasty 1839 1842 First Opium War with Britain 1850 1864 Taiping

More information

GRADE 10 5/31/02 WHEN THIS WAS TAUGHT: MAIN/GENERAL TOPIC: WHAT THE STUDENTS WILL KNOW OR BE ABLE TO DO: COMMENTS:

GRADE 10 5/31/02 WHEN THIS WAS TAUGHT: MAIN/GENERAL TOPIC: WHAT THE STUDENTS WILL KNOW OR BE ABLE TO DO: COMMENTS: 1 SUB- Age of Revolutions (1750-1914) Continued from Global I Economic and Social Revolutions: Agrarian and Industrial Revolutions Responses to industrialism (Karl Marx) Socialism Explain why the Industrial

More information

Introduction to the Cold War

Introduction to the Cold War Introduction to the Cold War What is the Cold War? The Cold War is the conflict that existed between the United States and Soviet Union from 1945 to 1991. It is called cold because the two sides never

More information

Timeline of the Early Cold War. 1945: August 6 - United States first used atomic bomb in war. 1945: August 8 - Russia enters war against Japan

Timeline of the Early Cold War. 1945: August 6 - United States first used atomic bomb in war. 1945: August 8 - Russia enters war against Japan Timeline of the Early 1945: February 4-11 - Yalta Conference 1945: August 6 - United States first used atomic bomb in war 1945: August 8 - Russia enters war against Japan 1945: August 14 - Japanese surrender

More information

Write 3 words you think of when you hear Cold War? THE COLD WAR ( )

Write 3 words you think of when you hear Cold War? THE COLD WAR ( ) THE Write 3 words you think of when you hear Cold War? COLD WAR (1948-1989) ORIGINS of the Cold War: (1945-1948) Tension or rivalry but NO FIGHTING between the United States and the Soviet Union This rivalry

More information

The Cold War. Origins - Korean War

The Cold War. Origins - Korean War The Cold War Origins - Korean War What is a Cold War? WW II left two nations of almost equal strength but differing goals Cold War A struggle over political differences carried on by means short of direct

More information

THE COLD WAR ( )

THE COLD WAR ( ) THE COLD WAR (1948-1989) ORIGINS of the Cold War: (1945-1948) Tension or rivalry but NO FIGHTING between the United States and the Soviet Union This rivalry divided the world into two teams (capitalism

More information

Teacher Overview Objectives: Deng Xiaoping, The Four Modernizations and Tiananmen Square Protests

Teacher Overview Objectives: Deng Xiaoping, The Four Modernizations and Tiananmen Square Protests Teacher Overview Objectives: Deng Xiaoping, The Four Modernizations and Tiananmen Square Protests NYS Social Studies Framework Alignment: Key Idea Conceptual Understanding Content Specification Objectives

More information

World History (Survey) Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present

World History (Survey) Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present World History (Survey) Chapter 33: Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present Section 1: Two Superpowers Face Off The United States and the Soviet Union were allies during World War II. In February

More information

Chinese regulations ensured China had favorable balance of trade with other nations Balance of trade: difference between how much a country imports

Chinese regulations ensured China had favorable balance of trade with other nations Balance of trade: difference between how much a country imports Chinese regulations ensured China had favorable balance of trade with other nations Balance of trade: difference between how much a country imports and how much it exports By 1800s, western nations were

More information

CHRONOLOGY THE CHINESEMPIRE

CHRONOLOGY THE CHINESEMPIRE CHRONOLOGY THE CHINESEMPIRE 1848-1865 1890-1898 1895 1901 1905 1905-1908 1906 1911 Great Taiping Peasant Rebellion Peaceful reform movements Sun Yat-sen's first revolutionary attempt Boxer Rebellion Sun

More information

29. Security Council action regarding the terrorist attacks in Buenos Aires and London

29. Security Council action regarding the terrorist attacks in Buenos Aires and London Repertoire of the Practice of the Security Council 29. Security Council action regarding the terrorist attacks in Buenos Aires and London Initial proceedings Decision of 29 July 1994: statement by the

More information

Draft U.N. Security Council Resolution September 26, The Security Council,

Draft U.N. Security Council Resolution September 26, The Security Council, Draft U.N. Security Council Resolution September 26, 2013 The Security Council, PP1. Recalling the Statements of its President of 3 August 2011, 21 March 2012, 5 April 2012, and its resolutions 1540 (2004),

More information

WORLD HISTORY WORLD WAR II

WORLD HISTORY WORLD WAR II WORLD HISTORY WORLD WAR II BOARD QUESTIONS 1) WHO WAS THE LEADER OF GERMANY IN THE 1930 S? 2) WHO WAS THE LEADER OF THE SOVIET UNION DURING WWII? 3) LIST THE FIRST THREE STEPS OF HITLER S PLAN TO DOMINATE

More information

DEPART.HENT OF POLITICAL AND SECURirY COUNCIL AFFAIRS. COl~FIDENTIAL. 21 September 1956 NOTE ON THE CHINA- BURHA BORDER QUESTION

DEPART.HENT OF POLITICAL AND SECURirY COUNCIL AFFAIRS. COl~FIDENTIAL. 21 September 1956 NOTE ON THE CHINA- BURHA BORDER QUESTION J- DEPART.HENT OF POLITICAL AND SECURirY COUNCIL AFFAIRS COl~FIDENTIAL 21 September 1956 NOTE ON THE CHINA- BURHA BORDER QUESTION CONFIDmTIAL PSCA/PAD/56-50 21 September l956 NOTE ON THE CHlNA-BURMA OORDER

More information

The Hot Days of the Cold War

The Hot Days of the Cold War The Hot Days of the Cold War Brian Frydenborg History 321, Soviet Russia 3/18/02 On my honor, I have neither given nor received any unacknowledged aid on this paper. The origins of the cold war up to 1953

More information

OAU CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND COMBATING OF TERRORISM

OAU CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND COMBATING OF TERRORISM Downloaded on August 16, 2018 OAU CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND COMBATING OF TERRORISM Region African Union Subject Security Sub Subject Terrorism Type Conventions Reference Number Place of Adoption

More information

International History Declassified

International History Declassified Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org July 14, 1976 Consultation with Comrade O. B. Rakhmanin, Candidate of the CPSU CC and First Deputy Head of the International

More information

Historical Debates: The Cold War

Historical Debates: The Cold War Historical Debates: The Cold War Central Historical Question: Who was primarily responsible for the Cold War: The United States or the Soviet Union? Directions: Over the past decades historians have disagreed

More information

the Cold War The Cold War would dominate global affairs from 1945 until the breakup of the USSR in 1991

the Cold War The Cold War would dominate global affairs from 1945 until the breakup of the USSR in 1991 U.S vs. U.S.S.R. ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR After being Allies during WWII, the U.S. and U.S.S.R. soon viewed each other with increasing suspicion Their political differences created a climate of icy tension

More information

Section 6: China Resists Outside Influence

Section 6: China Resists Outside Influence Section 6: China Resists Outside Influence Main Idea: Western economic pressure forced China to open to foreign trade and influence Why it matters now: China has become an increasingly important member

More information

One war ends, another begins

One war ends, another begins One war ends, another begins Communism comes from the word common, meaning to belong equally to more than one individual. The related word, commune is a place where people live together and share property

More information

Modern World History Spring Final Exam 09

Modern World History Spring Final Exam 09 1. What was the goal of the Marshall Plan? A. to provide aid to European countries damaged by World War II B. to protect member nations against Soviet Union aggression C. to protect the United States economically

More information

September 21, 1956 Report, UN Department of Political and Security Council Affairs, 'Note on the China-Burma Border Question'

September 21, 1956 Report, UN Department of Political and Security Council Affairs, 'Note on the China-Burma Border Question' Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org September 21, 1956 Report, UN Department of Political and Security Council Affairs, 'Note on the China-Burma Border Question'

More information

Chapter 17 Lesson 1: Two Superpowers Face Off. Essential Question: Why did tension between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R increase after WWII?

Chapter 17 Lesson 1: Two Superpowers Face Off. Essential Question: Why did tension between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R increase after WWII? Chapter 17 Lesson 1: Two Superpowers Face Off Essential Question: Why did tension between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R increase after WWII? Post WWII Big Three meet in Yalta Divide Germany into 4 zones (U.S.,

More information

HUA KUO-FENG AND TITO FALSIFY HISTORY

HUA KUO-FENG AND TITO FALSIFY HISTORY FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 2, 1977 HUA KUO-FENG AND TITO FALSIFY HISTORY I am reading the reports of foreign news agencies which say that the talks between Tito and Hua Kuo-feng are continuing with great warmth

More information

2. The State Department asked the American Embassy in Moscow to explain Soviet behavior.

2. The State Department asked the American Embassy in Moscow to explain Soviet behavior. 1. The Americans become increasingly impatient with the Soviets. 2. The State Department asked the American Embassy in Moscow to explain Soviet behavior. 3. On February 22, 1946, George Kennan an American

More information

The CAESAR, POLO, and ESAU Papers

The CAESAR, POLO, and ESAU Papers The CAESAR, POLO, and ESAU Papers CAESAR Documents Document Title 1. The Doctors Plot 2. Death of Stalin 3. Germany 4. The Reversal of the Doctors Plot and Its Immediate Aftermath 5. Melinkov s Removal

More information

l. The status quo in Outer-Mongolia (The Mongolian People's Republic) shall be preserved;

l. The status quo in Outer-Mongolia (The Mongolian People's Republic) shall be preserved; Modern Japanese Diplomacy (2011 Winter) Reference Documents for October 14 1. Yalta Agreement [Date] February 11, 1945 [Source] Department of State [USA], The Department of State Bulletin, no.347, p.282.

More information

To understand how USA used financial aid to fight Communism in post-war Europe (Marshall Plan) Cold War develops. Aim:

To understand how USA used financial aid to fight Communism in post-war Europe (Marshall Plan) Cold War develops. Aim: Cold War develops Aim: To understand how USA used financial aid to fight Communism in post-war Europe (Marshall Plan) Imagine you were reading this at the breakfast table, have a conversation with your

More information

MODERN HISTORY 3 UNIT (ADDITIONAL) HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION. Time allowed One hour and a half (Plus 5 minutes reading time)

MODERN HISTORY 3 UNIT (ADDITIONAL) HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION. Time allowed One hour and a half (Plus 5 minutes reading time) N E W S O U T H W A L E S HIGHER SCHOOL CERTIFICATE EXAMINATION 1995 MODERN HISTORY 3 UNIT (ADDITIONAL) Time allowed One hour and a half (Plus 5 minutes reading time) DIRECTIONS TO CANDIDATES Attempt TWO

More information

April 25, 1969 Deputy Chief of the 1st Main Directorate of the Committee for State Security, 'Concerning Korean-Chinese Relations'

April 25, 1969 Deputy Chief of the 1st Main Directorate of the Committee for State Security, 'Concerning Korean-Chinese Relations' Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org April 25, 1969 Deputy Chief of the 1st Main Directorate of the Committee for State Security, 'Concerning Korean-Chinese

More information

T H E I N T E R N A T I O N A L L Y O N M O D E L U N I T E D N A T I O N S R E S E A R C H R E P O R T

T H E I N T E R N A T I O N A L L Y O N M O D E L U N I T E D N A T I O N S R E S E A R C H R E P O R T NOTE: THE DATE IS THE 1 ST OF APRIL, 1936 FORUM: Historical Security Council ISSUE: The Invasion of Abyssinia STUDENT OFFICER: Helen MBA-ALLO and Sandrine PUSCH INTRODUCTION Please keep in mind that the

More information

1. What nineteenth century state was known as the Middle Kingdom to its populace? a. a) China b. b) Japan c. d) Iran d.

1. What nineteenth century state was known as the Middle Kingdom to its populace? a. a) China b. b) Japan c. d) Iran d. 1. What nineteenth century state was known as the Middle Kingdom to its populace? a. a) China b) Japan c. d) Iran d. c) Ottoman Empire 2. Which of the following was a factor in creating China s internal

More information

Bell Work. Describe Truman s plan for. Europe. How will his plan help prevent the spread of communism?

Bell Work. Describe Truman s plan for. Europe. How will his plan help prevent the spread of communism? Bell Work Describe Truman s plan for dealing with post-wwii Europe. How will his plan help prevent the spread of communism? Objectives Explain how Mao Zedong and the communists gained power in China. Describe

More information

World War II. Part 1 War Clouds Gather

World War II. Part 1 War Clouds Gather World War II Part 1 War Clouds Gather After World War I, many Americans believed that the nation should never again become involved in a war. In the 1930 s, however, war clouds began to gather. In Italy,

More information

And The Republicans VIETNAM. BY Leonard P. Liggio. of it.

And The Republicans VIETNAM. BY Leonard P. Liggio. of it. VIETNAM And The Republicans The War In Vietnam. The Text of the Controversial Republican White Paper Prepared by the Staff of the Senate Republican Policy Committee, Washington,.D.C., Public Affairs Press.

More information

Ref. No.202/KCP-CHQ/2010 Date 22/09/2010

Ref. No.202/KCP-CHQ/2010 Date 22/09/2010 Ref. No.202/KCP-CHQ/2010 Date 22/09/2010 An Open letter to Revolutionary Party of South East Asia Manipur in Brief Manipur, one of the occupied seven States in India s North Eastern Region, is in deep

More information

Cold War Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Who was primarily responsible for the Cold War: The United States or the Soviet Union?

Cold War Lesson Plan. Central Historical Question: Who was primarily responsible for the Cold War: The United States or the Soviet Union? Lesson Plan Central Historical Question: Who was primarily responsible for the : The United States or the Soviet Union? Materials: Powerpoint Copies of Timeline Copies of Documents A-D Copies of Guiding

More information

World History Chapter 23 Page Reading Outline

World History Chapter 23 Page Reading Outline World History Chapter 23 Page 601-632 Reading Outline The Cold War Era: Iron Curtain: a phrased coined by Winston Churchill at the end of World War I when her foresaw of the impending danger Russia would

More information

Name: Date: Period: 20 th Century Political Event Historical Circumstances Extent to which this had a positive OR negative effect on global history

Name: Date: Period: 20 th Century Political Event Historical Circumstances Extent to which this had a positive OR negative effect on global history Name: Date: Period: THEMATIC ESSAY QUESTION Theme: Change [Political Events] Twentieth-century political events have had positive and negative effects on global history. Identify two 20th-century political

More information

Unit 7: The Cold War

Unit 7: The Cold War Unit 7: The Cold War Standard 7-5 Goal: The student will demonstrate an understanding of international developments during the Cold War era. Vocabulary 7-5.1 OCCUPIED 7-5.2 UNITED NATIONS NORTH ATLANTIC

More information

AGGRESSORS INVADE NATIONS SECTION 4, CH 15

AGGRESSORS INVADE NATIONS SECTION 4, CH 15 AGGRESSORS INVADE NATIONS SECTION 4, CH 15 VOCAB TO KNOW... APPEASEMENT GIVING IN TO AN AGGRESSOR TO KEEP PEACE PUPPET GOVERNMENT - A STATE THAT IS SUPPOSEDLY INDEPENDENT BUT IS IN FACT DEPENDENT UPON

More information

The Significance of the Republic of China for Cross-Strait Relations

The Significance of the Republic of China for Cross-Strait Relations The Significance of the Republic of China for Cross-Strait Relations Richard C. Bush The Brookings Institution Presented at a symposium on The Dawn of Modern China May 20, 2011 What does it matter for

More information

East Asia in the Postwar Settlements

East Asia in the Postwar Settlements Chapter 34 " Rebirth and Revolution: Nation-building in East Asia and the Pacific Rim East Asia in the Postwar Settlements Korea was divided between a Russian zone of occupation in the north and an American

More information

Notes, Memoranda and letters Exchanged and Agreements signed between the Governments of India and China

Notes, Memoranda and letters Exchanged and Agreements signed between the Governments of India and China Notes, Memoranda and letters Exchanged and Agreements signed between the Governments of India and China WHITE PAPER II Extracts September - November 1959 Ministry of External Affairs Government of India

More information

The Opium Wars and their Impact

The Opium Wars and their Impact The Opium Wars and their Impact In 1839 the Qing Emperor of China, rejecting proposals to legalise and tax opium, appointed viceroy Lin Zexu to solve the problem by completely banning the opium trade.

More information

Policy regarding China and Tibet 1. Jawaharlal Nehru. November, 18, 1950

Policy regarding China and Tibet 1. Jawaharlal Nehru. November, 18, 1950 Policy regarding China and Tibet 1 Jawaharlal Nehru November, 18, 1950 1. The Chinese Government having replied to our last note, 2 we have to consider what further steps we should take in this matter.

More information

Stalin died in He was hated all over eastern Europe and many people celebrated. After a short struggle for power, Nikita Khrushchev became the

Stalin died in He was hated all over eastern Europe and many people celebrated. After a short struggle for power, Nikita Khrushchev became the Nikita Kruschev Stalin died in 1953. He was hated all over eastern Europe and many people celebrated. After a short struggle for power, Nikita Khrushchev became the new ruler in Russia. Peaceful Co-existence

More information

Poland Views of the Marxist Leninists

Poland Views of the Marxist Leninists Encyclopedia of Anti-Revisionism On-Line * Anti-revisionism in Poland Poland Views of the Marxist Leninists First Published: RCLB, Class Struggle Vol5. No.1 January 1981 Transcription, Editing and Markup:

More information

D-Day Gives the Allies a Foothold in Europe

D-Day Gives the Allies a Foothold in Europe D-Day Gives the Allies a Foothold in Europe On June 6, 1944, Allied forces under U.S. general Dwight D. Eisenhower landed on the Normandy beaches in history s greatest naval invasion: D-Day. Within three

More information

April 23, 1955 Zhou Enlai s Speech at the Political Committee of the Afro- Asian Conference

April 23, 1955 Zhou Enlai s Speech at the Political Committee of the Afro- Asian Conference Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org April 23, 1955 Zhou Enlai s Speech at the Political Committee of the Afro- Asian Conference Citation: Zhou Enlai s Speech

More information

China Review. Geographic Features that. separate China/India. separates China & Russia. Confucian - - China s most influential philosopher (thinker).

China Review. Geographic Features that. separate China/India. separates China & Russia. Confucian - - China s most influential philosopher (thinker). China Review Geographic Features that separate China/India separates China & Russia dangerous flooding seasonal winds that bring large amounts of rain Confucian - - China s most influential philosopher

More information

Treaty of Good-Neighborliness and Friendly Cooperation between the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation

Treaty of Good-Neighborliness and Friendly Cooperation between the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation Treaty of Good-Neighborliness and Friendly Cooperation Between the People's Republic of China and the Russian Federation 2001/07/24 On July l6, 2001, President Jiang Zemin of the People's Republic of China

More information

Chapter 8: Political Geography. Unit 4

Chapter 8: Political Geography. Unit 4 Chapter 8: Political Geography Unit 4 Where Are States Distributed? Introducing political geography State an area organized into a political unit and ruled by an established government that has control

More information

The Singing Revolution Document Based Question (DBQ) Essay

The Singing Revolution Document Based Question (DBQ) Essay Subject: History The Singing Revolution Document Based Question (DBQ) Essay Aim / Essential Question Based on the documentary The Singing Revolution, were the Estonians justified in their claim of independent

More information

OAU CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND COMBATING OF TERRORISM

OAU CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND COMBATING OF TERRORISM OAU CONVENTION ON THE PREVENTION AND COMBATING OF TERRORISM The member states of the Organization of African Unity: Considering the purposes and principles enshrined in the Charter of the Organization

More information

LESSON OBJECTIVE. 1.) ANALYZE the effectiveness & morality of the British Royal Air Force bombing of German civilians

LESSON OBJECTIVE. 1.) ANALYZE the effectiveness & morality of the British Royal Air Force bombing of German civilians NAME: BLOCK: - CENTRAL HISTORICAL QUESTION - THE ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR: WHO IS PRIMARILY RESPONSIBLE FOR STARTING THE COLD WAR: THE U.S. OR S.U.? Pictured: Then-former British Prime Minster Winston Churchill

More information

July 29, 1954 Memorandum of Conversation, between Soviet Premier Georgy M. Malenkov and Zhou Enlai

July 29, 1954 Memorandum of Conversation, between Soviet Premier Georgy M. Malenkov and Zhou Enlai Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org July 29, 1954 Memorandum of Conversation, between Soviet Premier Georgy M. Malenkov and Zhou Enlai Citation: Memorandum

More information

THE IRON CURTAIN. From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic an iron curtain has descended across the continent. - Winston Churchill

THE IRON CURTAIN. From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic an iron curtain has descended across the continent. - Winston Churchill COLD WAR 1945-1991 1. The Soviet Union drove the Germans back across Eastern Europe. 2. They occupied several countries along it s western border and considered them a necessary buffer or wall of protection

More information

Revolution and Nationalism (III)

Revolution and Nationalism (III) 1- Please define the word nationalism. 2- Who was the leader of Indian National Congress, INC? 3- What is Satyagraha? 4- When was the country named Pakistan founded? And how was it founded? 5- Why was

More information

On 1st May 2018 on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Karl Marx, and on the 170th anniversary of the first issue of Il Manifesto of the Communist

On 1st May 2018 on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Karl Marx, and on the 170th anniversary of the first issue of Il Manifesto of the Communist On 1st May 2018 on the 200th anniversary of the birth of Karl Marx, and on the 170th anniversary of the first issue of Il Manifesto of the Communist Party, written by Marx and Engels is the great opportunity

More information

THE HISTORICAL RECORD

THE HISTORICAL RECORD Chapter Three THE HISTORICAL RECORD The People s Republic of China (PRC) has taken action contrary to important interests of the United States and the former Soviet Union on many occasions. In many case,

More information

The 2nd Sino-Japanese War. March 10, 2015

The 2nd Sino-Japanese War. March 10, 2015 The 2nd Sino-Japanese War March 10, 2015 Review Who was Sun Yatsen? Did he have a typical Qingera education? What were the Three People s Principles? Who was Yuan Shikai? What was the GMD (KMT)? What is

More information

Domestic policy WWI. Foreign Policy. Balance of Power

Domestic policy WWI. Foreign Policy. Balance of Power Domestic policy WWI The decisions made by a government regarding issues that occur within the country. Healthcare, education, Social Security are examples of domestic policy issues. Foreign Policy Caused

More information

FRANCE. Geneva Conference 1954

FRANCE. Geneva Conference 1954 FRANCE Geneva Conference 1954 Name Instructions: You are representing your country at the Geneva Conference convened in May 1954 to deal with the crisis in Indochina. In attendance are the Democratic Republic

More information

March 19, 1974 Report to Todor Zhivkov Regarding a Request for Arms Delivery to Cyprus in View of a Possible Greek Coup on the Island

March 19, 1974 Report to Todor Zhivkov Regarding a Request for Arms Delivery to Cyprus in View of a Possible Greek Coup on the Island Digital Archive International History Declassified digitalarchive.wilsoncenter.org March 19, 1974 Report to Todor Zhivkov Regarding a Request for Arms Delivery to Cyprus in View of a Possible Greek Coup

More information

Global History II Exam April NAME Period v. A

Global History II Exam April NAME Period v. A Global History II Exam April 11 2013 NAME Period v. A One similarity in the results of the revolutions led by Fidel Which communist nation is most closely associated Castro in Cuba and by the Sandinistas

More information

Modern World History - Honors Course Study Guide

Modern World History - Honors Course Study Guide Created 1-11 Modern World History - Honors Course Study Guide Unit I Absolutism 1. What was absolutism? How did the absolute monarchs of Europe in the 16 th and 17 th centuries justify their right to rule?

More information

Imperialism & Resistance

Imperialism & Resistance Imperialism & Resistance by Saul Straussman and Bridgette Byrd O Connor Military Tech plays a deadly role Clearly there were economic, political, religious, exploratory and ideological motives to justify

More information

General Overview of Communism & the Russian Revolution. AP World History Chapter 27b The Rise and Fall of World Communism (1917 Present)

General Overview of Communism & the Russian Revolution. AP World History Chapter 27b The Rise and Fall of World Communism (1917 Present) General Overview of Communism & the Russian Revolution AP World History Chapter 27b The Rise and Fall of World Communism (1917 Present) Communism: A General Overview Socialism = the belief that the economy

More information

6/7/2016 Outer Space Treaty. Outer Space Treaty

6/7/2016 Outer Space Treaty. Outer Space Treaty Outer Space Treaty Treaty on Principles Governing the Activities of States in the Exploration and Use of Outer Space, Including the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies Bureau of Arms Control, Verification,

More information

Factories double from Trans-Siberian Railway finally finished in More and more people work in factories

Factories double from Trans-Siberian Railway finally finished in More and more people work in factories World history Factories double from 1863-1900 Trans-Siberian Railway finally finished in 1916 More and more people work in factories o Terrible conditions, child labor, very low pay o Unions were illegal

More information

Chapter 33 Summary/Notes

Chapter 33 Summary/Notes Chapter 33 Summary/Notes Unit 8 Perspectives on the Present Chapter 33 Section 1. The Cold War Superpowers Face off We learned about the end of WWII. Now we learn about tensions that followed the war.

More information

20 Century Decolonization and Nationalism. Modified from the work of Susan Graham and Deborah Smith Lexington High School

20 Century Decolonization and Nationalism. Modified from the work of Susan Graham and Deborah Smith Lexington High School th 20 Century Decolonization and Nationalism Modified from the work of Susan Graham and Deborah Smith Johnston @ Lexington High School Global Events influential in Decolonization Imperialism Growing Nationalism

More information

The Arab Convention For The Suppression Of Terrorism

The Arab Convention For The Suppression Of Terrorism The Arab Convention For The Suppression Of Terrorism League of Arab States April 1998 Translated from Arabic by the United Nations English translation service (Unofficial translation) 29 May 2000 League

More information

Rosa Luxemburg The Accumulation of Capital and China

Rosa Luxemburg The Accumulation of Capital and China Rosa Luxemburg The Accumulation of Capital and China He Ping The Department of Philosophy, Wuhan University, China E-mail: heping@whu.edu.cn The greatest contribution of Rose Luxemburg s The Accumulation

More information

HISTORY: Revolutions

HISTORY: Revolutions Victorian Certificate of Education 2006 SUPERVISOR TO ATTACH PROCESSING LABEL HERE STUDENT NUMBER Letter Figures Words HISTORY: Revolutions Written examination Thursday 9 November 2006 Reading time: 3.00

More information

CONVENTION ON EARLY NOTIFICATION OF A NUCLEAR ACCIDENT* CONVENTION ON ASSISTANCE IN THE CASE OF A NUCLEAR ACCIDENT OR RADIOLOGICAL EMERGENCY*

CONVENTION ON EARLY NOTIFICATION OF A NUCLEAR ACCIDENT* CONVENTION ON ASSISTANCE IN THE CASE OF A NUCLEAR ACCIDENT OR RADIOLOGICAL EMERGENCY* V*in3/3~ INF International Atomic Energy Agency INFORMATION CIRCULAR TA fl- JTAeA- INFCIRC/336/Add. 5 ) I August 1990 / GENERAL Distr. ENGLISH CONVENTION ON EARLY NOTIFICATION OF A NUCLEAR ACCIDENT* CONVENTION

More information

I. The Russian Empire A. The Russian Empire traces its roots back to the principality of Muscovy, which began to expand in the 1400s. B.

I. The Russian Empire A. The Russian Empire traces its roots back to the principality of Muscovy, which began to expand in the 1400s. B. Unit 8 SG 2 Name Date I. The Russian Empire A. The Russian Empire traces its roots back to the principality of Muscovy, which began to expand in the 1400s. B. Ivan III (the Great) married Zoe Palaeologus,

More information