The role of the nuclear factor in the Sino-Soviet split
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Hsü, Ling-chih
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Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
Andrei Gromyko, a veteran Foreign Minister of the USSR,
shocked the world last winter with a particular
revelation in his memoirs: the late Chairman Mao Zedong
of China had a plan to lure United States troops into
the heartland of China and then wipe them out with
atomic weapons made v/ith Soviet help. 1 We may question
the truth of Gromyko’s memoirs. The Chinese Foreign
Ministry has already done so. But the story of Sovietcooperation
in China's nuclear industry, both for
peaceful and military purposes, cannot be denied. It
is one that tells why the Soviets and Chinese became
close allies in the early 50s and why they drew apart
several years later. It is the contention of this
writer that the Sino-Soviet dispute cannot be fully
understood without giving due weight to the
disagreements the Chinese and Soviets had over nuclear
technology issues.
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Open Access
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