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  • The Cino-Soviet-US triangle

    can anyone recomend be some books on Cino-soviet-US relations between 1945-1991??

    I have looked on amazon, but there dosn't seem to be to much stuff lookiong at that relationship specificly.



    ty
    eimi men anthropos pollon logon, mikras de sophias

  • #2
    IIRC, it's Sino, not Cino...
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    • #3
      That may be the reason you're having trouble finding stuff.
      12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
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      • #4
        probably

        So, anybody know any?
        eimi men anthropos pollon logon, mikras de sophias

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        • #5
          No, but I agree that this is a very interesting Issue.

          IMO, the split led to the fall of the SU, later on.
          urgh.NSFW

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Azazel
            No, but I agree that this is a very interesting Issue.

            IMO, the split led to the fall of the SU, later on.
            Thats interesting, would you like to explain further your opinion?

            Personaly, the Soviet-sino split was a great example of the splits in Socialist ideology. I mean, there are so many interpretations of how to spread marx's ideas, and even more so many interpretations on what he actually meant. Really, the USSR and PRC seemed to miss the point of co-operation.

            Another group of Communists would have probably united the PRC and USSR is a 'Peaples Federated Republic' or something - as communism is internationalist.
            eimi men anthropos pollon logon, mikras de sophias

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            • #7
              I'd recommend Kissinger's "Diplomacy". It goes well beyond Sino-Soviet-Us relations during the period, but gives a very good understanding of what was going on.

              Also, "A Preponderance of Power" by Melvyn P. Leffler goes in depth about the early US approach to both the USSR and Communist China.

              You'll have a hard time finding a book on that subject that isn't overly specific (Sino-Soviet rift) or overly broad (Cold War history). I'd try to pin down a good all around Cold War history and read that, then decide what particular events interest you the most.

              What I have studied were books about particular events or periods, rather than a broad compendium.

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              • #8


                The Sino-Soviet-US love triangle.
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                Long live teh paranoia smiley!

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by The Andy-Man


                  Thats interesting, would you like to explain further your opinion?

                  Personaly, the Soviet-sino split was a great example of the splits in Socialist ideology. I mean, there are so many interpretations of how to spread marx's ideas, and even more so many interpretations on what he actually meant. Really, the USSR and PRC seemed to miss the point of co-operation.

                  Another group of Communists would have probably united the PRC and USSR is a 'Peaples Federated Republic' or something - as communism is internationalist.
                  States don't work together over broadly shared ideology, they work together because they have common interests (this was the mistake the US made at the beginning of the CW they thought the USSR & China were going to work closely together). The USSR (and the US) believed that they, the Soviet Union, were the Communist champions in the world and China should toe the line. China didn't want to play second fiddle to anyone.

                  Also China and the Vietnamese are traditional rivals, so China eventually cutoff USSR supplies going through China to Vietnam. The Russian had to ship everything in after that.

                  Sort of like France and the US today, the US sees itself as the leader of the free world. But France wants to assert its foreign policy independence. Or like the Ba'athist parties in Syria and Iraq: they split in the 50's because each saw themselves as the true leader of the movement.
                  Last edited by ahenobarb; March 18, 2003, 14:31.

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by ahenobarb


                    States don't work together over broadly shared ideology, they work together because they have common interests (this was the mistake the US made at the beginning of the CW they thought the USSR & China were going to work closely together). The USSR (and the US) believed that they were the Communist champions in the world and China should toe the line. China didn't want to play second fiddle to anyone.

                    Also China and the Vietnamese are traditional rivals, so China eventually cutoff USSR supplies going through China to Vietnam. The Russian had to ship everything in after that.

                    Sort of like France and the US today, the US sees itself as the leader of the free world. But France wants to assert its foreign policy independence. Or like the Ba'athist parties in Syria and Iraq: they split in the 50's because each saw themselves as the true leader of the movement.

                    I agree entirley, states co-operate through interests, not ideology. But communism is specificly an internationalist ideology, and i think the original idea of 'world communism' meant that 2 communist nations are one nation, if you see what i mean.
                    eimi men anthropos pollon logon, mikras de sophias

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by The Andy-Man



                      I agree entirley, states co-operate through interests, not ideology. But communism is specificly an internationalist ideology, and i think the original idea of 'world communism' meant that 2 communist nations are one nation, if you see what i mean.
                      The original idea did mean that, but it was a false assumption. Check out "A prepondance of power" if you're interested in how that presumption came about. It may be a bit thick (cir. ~400 pags), but its a good read.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by ahenobarb


                        The original idea did mean that, but it was a false assumption. Check out "A prepondance of power" if you're interested in how that presumption came about. It may be a bit thick (cir. ~400 pags), but its a good read.

                        400 pages thick, bah! I laugh a 400pages


                        I don' think it was a false assumption, its just very rarley has a (true) communist actually been in charge of a cummunist nation
                        eimi men anthropos pollon logon, mikras de sophias

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by The Andy-Man



                          400 pages thick, bah! I laugh a 400pages


                          I don' think it was a false assumption, its just very rarley has a (true) communist actually been in charge of a cummunist nation
                          Yikes! I'll leave that hot potato alone.

                          Enjoy the book, it's really good.

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                          • #14
                            lots of books by white guys.

                            if you want something on sino-soviet relations from the chinese point of view, as well as more info about china, try Mao's China and the Cold War by Chen Jian.
                            B♭3

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Q Cubed
                              lots of books by white guys.

                              if you want something on sino-soviet relations from the chinese point of view, as well as more info about china, try Mao's China and the Cold War by Chen Jian.
                              Here's a good white guy book on the same subject.

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