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The Causes Of The Sino-Soviet Schism 1927-1969

Essay, Research Paper


Causes and Elevation of the Sino-Soviet Schism 1927-1969


It can be argued that the most significant effect on foreign policy during the Cold


War, besides the arms race, was the schism and eventually antagonism between the USSR


and China. Some historians have argued that the schism between the USSR continued to


elevate throughout the Cold War. Alvin Z. Rubenstien, in his book “Soviet Foreign Policy


Since World War II” makes the argument that “The Sino-Soviet rift is more complex


today [Rubenstien wrote his book in 1985] than ever before.” (Rubenstien, 148) Some


historians argue that the schism has continued to grow long after the end of the 1960’s.


Other argue that the schism had reached its climax by 1965, when both nations almost


completely broke off relations with one another. By 1965 the schism between the USSR


and the Soviet Union was complete and it had become a policy between the two nations to


pursue antagonistic policies against one another. (Nogee, 256-61)


After the end of the second World War it was a goal of Stalin and the Soviet


Union to encourage, and even coordinate, the rise of communist regimes in other


countries. (Salisbury, 33-7) But this was not the case in China, where the Soviets were not


able to incite a communist revolution. Instead, Mao Zedong carried out a communist


revolution that was independent of Soviet influence. (Nogee, 199) This, of course,


irritated the Soviets and cause them to oppose the People’s Republic of China for about


the first fifteen years of its existence. Many historians feel that this was the first of the


many Sino-Soviet disputes- the mere fact that China was able to engender a communist


regime. (Simmons, 17)


In 1927 the Soviets had unsuccessfully tried to incite a communist revolution in


China, this attempt not only failed but brought the deaths of thousands of Chinese


communists and the expulsion of Soviets from China. After this failure the Soviets refused


to invest anymore time into the Chinese cause. The Soviets even joined the United States


in support of the nationalist (and anticommunist) government “in unifying their country


[China], improving their military and economic conditions.” (Warth, 56-9). Even after a


Mao, a communist, had taken power Stalin seemed reluctant to cut ties with the head of


the nationalist government, Chiang Kai-Shek. This reluctance of Stalin’s led China to


distrust the motives of the Soviet Union, espicially in the 1950’s when the USSR asked


China to help North Korea in the Korean War. (Westard, 36-7)


Some historians claim that the roots of the hostility between the Russian and the


Chinese an be traced back to the thirteenth and fourteenth century when Mongol Tartars


conquered most of Russia. During the nineteenth century Russian tsars conquered large


parts of China and imposed unfair treaties on the Chinese empire. (Salisbury, 48-50) With


this new information in mind, combined with the shaky start of Sino-Soviet relations, it


become more understandable that two neighboring nations, both with similar ideologies,


might not have completely affable relations.. The first indication of cooperation between


the USSR and communist China was in February 1950 when China and the Soviet Union


negotiated the Sino-Soviet Treaty of Alliance. A portion of this treaty dealt with a loan of


300 million dollars at one percent interest to the Chinese by the Soviets. This miserly loan


left the Chinese resentful. Only a few months before the loan was made to the Chinese the


Soviets had given a 450 million dollar loan to Poland at no interest. Moreover, the


Chinese needed the money to fight the Korean War, a conflict which Stalin had asked the


Chinese to support. Mao did not have complete confidence in the North Korean cause but


he finally consented his aid on behalf of Stalin and Kim Il Sung, the leaders of the North


Korean Communists. The Chinese had felt that the Korean War was a common struggle


with the Soviet Unions and the USSR’s attempt to profit (the USSR had charged 1%


interest on the loan) was uncalled for and an insult to the Chinese government. (Nogee,


261-5) There were a few reasons that the Soviet Union gave China such a scanty loan. In


some ways the USSR was still unsure on where they stood in China because they had not


engineered the rebellion there. This was also before China decided to help in the Korean


War and the USSR was unsure of the motives of China. They knew that they would not be


able to control China like they controled contries in the East European Bloc.


The schism between the USSR and China has occurred in three phases in the post-


Stalin Cold War period. The first phase is roughly 1956 to 1960. In this period the Soviets


and the Chinese were on relitivly good terms. Differences that arose between the two


nations were expressed in an understanding and receptive manner, however these cordial


relations began to deteriorate by the end of the 1950’s. From 1960 to 1964 the disputes


between the USSR and China escalated into a schism between the two countries. In the


final phase, which is 1964 onward, the two nations had split into separate “socialist


systems.” While the Chinese were never formally expelled from the world communist


camp, they did not feel that they were allied with the Soviet socialist camp. By the end of


the 1960’s China and the USSR had become rivals in the global political struggle.


(Westard, 51)


The first real signs of Chinese dissatisfaction came early in the reign of the


successor to Stalin, Nikita Khrushchev. Khrushchev had condemned the actions of Stalin


when he became the head of the Soviets state. China felt that this was damaging to the


Chinese communist cause, for Mao was developing his own “cult of personality” and


beginning to act in the manner that Stalin did. (Halle, 127-131) But these minor


disagreements were not enough to end the cordial relations of between Mao and


Khrushchev. In November 1957 the Soviets agreed to help the Chinese in making a


nuclear bomb. (Arabtov, 68-71) Relations bewteen China and Russia began to improve as


both nations began to trust one another again.


But events of 1958 soon strained relations between the USSR and China. In the


fall of 1958 the Chinese began to bombard the Nationalist held island of Quemoy. The


Americans, who supported the Chinese Nationalists, said that they would protect the


island of Quemoy with air and naval forces in the Pacific if the Chinese did not cease their


bombardment of the island. (Griffith, 61-2) The Soviets did give their verbal agreement to


back China against the United States but were very cautious. The Soviets had also


promised in 1957, with the development of the first Soviets ICBM (a missile that carries


nuclear warheads) and the launch of the Soviet satellite, Sputnik, the global balance of


power had shifted to favor the Soviets. Before the Chinese had began their bombardment


of Quemoy, they were convinced that the Soviets would be able to defend them. But the


Soviets soon caved in to American demands and withdrew their support. The Chinese


were infuriated. They were convinced that if the Soviets were more firm in their stance


against the Americans, the US would retreat. The Soviets had caused the Chinese to end


their bombardment of the island of Quemoy and give in to “capitalist” demands from the


United States and the Chinese Nationalists. (Simmons, 52-5) The bombardment of


Quemoy is seen as the first of many stumbling blocks in Sino-Soviet relations.


If the Chinese thought that the Soviets were too conservative, the Soviets


considered the Chinese far too hasty. In May 1958, the Chinese proposed a plan called


“The Great Leap Forward” which claimed that they had a formula to be the first nation to


ever to be fully communist. They decided that they would substitute mass enthusiasm and


total mobilization for the lack of material and technical resources. The Soviets felt that the


Chinese were far too hasty and the full “communization” of a nation took a long time. But


what the Soviets were even more afraid of was that the Great Leap Forward would be a


great success and that the Chinese would overtake the Soviets. (Griffith, 98-101) The


Soviets’ lack of support in the Great Leap Forward left the Chinese disappointed and


angry. They felt that they had been very loyal to the Soviets, espic

ially in the Korean War,


and they Soviets had reapyed their kindness by supporting the Americans and scoffing that


Chinese ambitions.


A further straining of relations came in 1959 when the Chinese outlined their


future objectives. The Chinese had laid claim to the Nationalist island of Formosa, they


wanted to conquer Tibet and adjust the Sino-Indian border their favor. The USSR also


had a few objectives in mind- they wanted to equal the United States as a world power


and avoid a possible conflict with the Americans. The Soviets visited China and asked the


Chinese to accept the “Two Chinas” formula, which basically said that the Chinese


communists should not try to conquer the lands of the American-supported Nationalists,


even though the Nationalists were very weak. Khrushchev also wanted to court India as


an ally, and when the Chinese tried to gain land along the Sino-Indian border, Khrushchev


chose to desert China and declare neutrality on the issue. (Simmons 62-7) The Chinese


were outraged. They felt that the Soviets, the so-called leaders of the communist


movement, had betrayed them again. The Soviets had supported democratic coutries


twice- once in the bombarment of Quemoy and now in Sino-Indian border disputes.


Tensions became even more heated in late 1959 when the USSR suddenly refused


to give the Chinese data for the construction of an atomic bomb, which was promised in


1957. Then, in the summer of 1960, some three thousand Soviet specialists left China and


destroyed all the blueprints of their projects. The Chinese claimed that these incidents


were evidence of bad faith on the part of the Soviets. (Westard, 86-9)


The Chinese had their revenge in April 1960, when the Russians held a celebration


for the 90th anniversary of the birth of Lenin. Prior to the celebration the Chinese wrote a


lengthy critique of the Russians called “Long Live Leninism.” In this critique they claimed


that they were the ones that truly followed Lenin’s communist tradition and the Soviets


had strayed from it. At the celebration, a debate over the critique quickly became a heated


argument and the communist parties gathered there were forced to take sides. While only


a dozen of the 81 parties took the side of the Chinese, the USSR was embarassed by the


incident. (Griffith, 115-8) “Long Live Leninism” set off a series of public battles between


China and the USSR. Good faith quickly soured and the spilt between the two nations


deepened.


Sino-Soviet relations took a nose-dive from 1960 to 1963. During this time many


attacks from both sides came in the form of conferences, the press, radio, and letters.


Albania, the only Chinese ally in Europe received harsh criticism from Khrushchev during


the Twenty-second Congress of the Soviet Party. The Soviets soon broke relations with


the Albanians just to spite the Chinese. The Chinese openly criticized Khrushchev’s


surrender to the United States during the Cuban missile crisis. China was also very angry


over the USSR’s tacit support of India during the Sino-Indian War. After a failure to


resolve differences in 1963 the Chinese wrote a scathing attack on Soviet foreign policy.


Soon the focus of criticism shifted from foreign policy to internal regimes. The Chinese


claimed that the USSR was turning into a imperial and capitalistic society and the Russians


claimed that China was turning into a military dictatorship. (Westard, 103-9) In some


ways, the Chinese began to criticize the Soviet policy because the Soviets regarded the


Great Leap Forward in the utmost contempt. Relations bewteen the two nations were


strained to the point of collaspe and any real cooperation bewteen the two nations was


unimaginable.


The Soviets also criticized the territorial ambitions of the Chinese. The Chinese


had many disputes over borders especially with India, Hong Kong, and Macao. They


asked the USSR why they were allowing these countries to stay in capitalist and


imperialist hands. The USSR responded by saying “The artificial creation of any territorial


problems in our times….would be tantamount to embarking on a very dangerous path.”


The two countries also accused each other of inciting border incidents. In the early 1960’s


China accused the Soviets of conducting “large-scale subversive activities” in the Chinese


province of Sinkiang. This is the province that borders the Soviet republics of Tadjikistan,


Kirghizia and Kazakhstan. The Chinese claimed that the Soviets coerced ten of thousands


of people into fleeing to the USSR. The Soviets in turn accused the Chinese of persecuting


Kazakhs and causing some 50,000 Kazakhs to seek refuge in the Soviet Union. These


sorts of unwarranted accusations caused great strife between the two nations. (Nogee,


270-5)


Many historians agree that it is difficult to pinpoint the exact time when each


country decided that the other constituted the greatest threat to it, but most historians feel


that the point was reached sometime in the mid 1960’s. Khrushchev began to plan for a


showdown with China very early in his regime, he had said in 1957 that “Conflict with


China is inevitable.” Had Khrushchev remained in power the Chinese would have been


expelled from the world communist movement as early as 1965, but Khrushchev’s


overthrow prevented him from taking action against the Chinese. In 1966 the Chinese


named the Soviet Union as their number one threat. (Salisbury, 85-9) In March of that


year the Chinese boycotted the Twenty-third Party Congress, the first time that they had


ever done so. The Chinese put out this statement concerning the boycott. “Russia….used


to be the center of the international working-class movement. Now however, the


leadership of China has become the centre of modern revisionism.” (Nogee, 278)


Now the schism bewteen the Soviet Union and China was complete. Both nations


severed ties with one another and cooperation in the near furture was not a likely


possibility. However, this did not mean that the USSR and China did not have


disagreements. The two nations continued to have disagreements and even confrontations


until the end of the Cold War, but this animosity was merely an extension of the hositility


caused by the Sino-Soviet rift. For example, in 1967 China jailed a Soviet officer who


refused to wear a badge bearing Mao’s portrait. The officer was put in an open truck and


paraded around in Bejing until the Soviets wrote a formal letter asking the Chinese to


return the officer to the USSR. Another tense confrontation came in 1969 when Chinese


troops attacked Soviet troops on the small island of Damansky. The Soviets relatiated by


invading a province of China, where they met heavy Chinese resistance. Both sided


incured heavy losses. These events may seem as if they were an escalation of the


Sino-Soviet schism, but in reality they were merely events that occured because of the


schism between China and the USSR. By 1965 the schism between China and the USSR


had become complete. After 1965 both nations continued to shape their foreign policies


owards each other in an antagonistic manner. Disagreements and confrontations between


the two nations were merely events that were following the trend that was layed out in the


late 1950’s and early 1960’s. The Chinese and the USSR pursued antagonistic policies


towards one another, a trend that was already set by 1965.


1. Arabatov, Georgeii The War of Ideas In Contemporary International Relations


Moscow, Progress Publishers (1973)


2. Griffith, William The Sino-Soviet Rift Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press (1964)


3. Halle, Louis J. The Cold War as History New York, NY Batnam Row Publishers


(1971)


4. Nogee, Joseph L. Soviet Forgien Policy Since World War II Pergamon Press (1981)


5. Rubinstein, Alvin Z., Soviet Forgien Policy Since World War II: Imperial and Global


Cambridge, MA Winthrop Publishers (1981)


6. Salisbury, Harrison E. War Between Russia and China New York, Batnam Books


(1970)


7. Simmons, Robert R. The Strained Alliance: Peking, Moscow and the Politics of the


Korean War New York, NY New York Free Press (1975)


8. Warth, Robert D. Soviet Russia in World Politics New York NY, Twayne Publishers


(1973)


9. Westard, Oddarne Brothers in Arms: The Rise and Fall of the Sino-Soviet Alliance


1945-1963 Standford University Press, (1991)

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