SINO-SOVIET RELATIONS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
20
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 23, 2001
Sequence Number: 
3
Case Number: 
Content Type: 
REPORT
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PDF icon CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8.pdf612.38 KB
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Approved For Release x,(301/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8 ~r SING-SOVIET RELATIONS I. The Sino-Soviet relationship has deteriorated to such an .extent over the past ten years that we can describe the present situation as one of virtual divorce on grounds of incompatibility. A. In fact, from its inception the alliance between the USSR and China bore many of the marks of a mere marriage of convenience. 1. There were many signs that the marriage would be most unhappy. 2. The partners had different backgrounds, they necessarily had different outlooks on major problems, and, as has become increasingly clear, their personal interests were ultimately incompatible. B. To be sure, the Soviets and the Chinese were for a few years-on relatively intimate terms. 1. This was particularly so during the mid-1950's when cooperation in nuclear and missile technology was at its height. C. The romance began to fade in the late 1950's. 1. The Soviet leaders soon demonstrated a pronounced reluctance to assume?the high D xcno' _ , ~,Y ~ %F'RO. Approved For Release 2001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8 Approved For Rele~ 2001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827AOOA5A0020003-8 risks entailed in the aggressively bellig- erent policies tailored to China's aims and needs. 2, The Chinese, enraged by this unfaithfulness, this "sell-out", retaliated with all the bit- terness of a woman scorned. 3. They openly accused the Soviets of the most treacherous and perverse kind of adultery, and named the US as corespondent. D. There is not much chance that memories of old intimacies, or the prospect of new ones, will retie the marriage bonds. E. The two partners are now at odds on virtually every matter of importance to Communist states. F. Party, economic, military and even state relations between them have dwindled to the smallest possible minimum--and still be said to have relations at all. II. The Two countries now can be regarded as engaged in a head-on struggle for leadership of the entire movement. A. Because both regimes are headed by dedicated Communists, the dispute has been co ~ hed in doctrinal terms; each. attempts to prove the heresy of the other by quoting from the scriptures of Marxism-Leninism. xrwo xrilcii ?. ?i~v.~_. -- ? ~ ~' ~ --Approved For Release 2001%05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8 'Approved For Releas~001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A0005~020003-8 B. This debate in dialectics has led some observers to believe that the argument was merely an "ideological" one, simply a matter of "counting the number of angels--or devils--that would fit on the head of a pin." C. Nothing could be farther from the truth. The dispute, fundamentally, is one of deep national antagonisms, a power clash of opposing national interests. This is recognized by both sides and is expressed by their leaders in private. D. Some examples: 1. Chou En-Lai told that the dispute between the Soviet Union and China was actually a deep-rooted and permanent conflict of national interests. Chou told that t~~ATINTL Soviet Union wished to prevent China from becoming a great power. He had a list grievances--Soviet failure to help the Chinese gain control of Manchuria at the end of World War II, the withdrawal of Soviet scientists and technicians from China in 1960, Moscow's failure to give economic aid--particularly food--in recent years during China's severe shortages. xr.Ro X E R O ,- X ER O~ ~^^~--- -~-m ~ nr ~ rcr r.~~rv;.,_. ....,. ~~,,. ~_....._ Approved For Release 2001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8 Approved For Release ?~D01/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8 STATI NTL 2. Another example, This one, Soviet Sergei Mikoyan told that the Soviet leaders, among them his father Anastas Mikoyan, felt that the dispute with China was irreconcilable, and that the struggle would be a protracted one. STATI NTL 3. Another Soviet example. A high Soviet leader, told his hearers that the present dispute is not a matter of theoretical argument. He said that it was a struggle for power and influence in Communist parties and governments worldwide. He said that the Chinese had been meddling in the affairs of other Communist countries. III. I do not want to leave the impression that doctrinal or ideological issues are not an important part of the dispute. I do want to make the point that these doctrinal quibbles have tended to obscure the real argument--diametric differences over basic policies and interests. Couching the dispute in doctrinal terms has enabled the Chinese to pretend to be more Communist than the Soviets, and at the same time to XrR~r ~r ~ r ~._., ~rrzn - ,~ ri ^r Approved For Release 2001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A00050b020'~'03-8 Approved For Release X01/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8 demand the right to lead the world movement. To give an example; Computers use binary symbols in their arguments--Communists use ideology, A. You see, the Chinese made a real try--beginning in 1950 shortly after Stalin's death--to get for themselves an equal voice in the establishment of bloc policies. They wanted this so that Sino- Soviet bloc policies would support Chinese interests. 1. Actually, they never made it, But they created so much fuss and distracted the attention of the various Communist parties enough so that they caused a real split in the Communist world. As a result, two centers of doctrinal truth emerged and an opening was made for a multiplicity of interpretations by Communist parties and governments. No longer one monolithic way. B, This has campaunded the problem that has haunted Saviet leaders ever since Stalin's death. 1. Soviet policy makers, and the Chinese as well, now must take into account the interests of their satellites when they try to impose political and economic policies. The sheep no longer follow the commands of the shepherd blindly. ~~, '~ ..~ xr:rz~- - _.. ~n~v ~,,.,_ _.- xrRo Approved For Release 2001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A00050002~003-8 Approved For Release.~p01/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A00050~0003-8 2. There are recent, and well publicized, examples: Rumania--refusal to subordinate its overall economic development CEMA planning. Also, its subsequent independent behavior; 0 Cuba--refusal to soften its militant revolutionary plans for Latin America and its attempts to gain regional control of Communist parties there (remember Cuba's total economic dependence on the Soviet Union), North, Vietnam--talking out of both sides of its mouth as it trys to get military and economic support from both China and the Soviet Union. IV. We have now seen ten years of bitter history in the Sino-Soviet dispute. In the time that is available this morning it would be impossible for me--and probably boring for you--to cover this in detail. Instead, within the broad framework I have just sketched out, I will try to explore the depth of the dispute by looking carefully at three or four of the key areas in the conflict. After that, I will offer a brief appreciation of the current situation, and follow that with a short discussion of some of the a implications of the break-up of the Sino-Soviet partnership, Approved For Release~001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A00050,~,20003-8 V. One of the areas in which an early Soviet action vitally affected Chinese interests was the drastic Soviet cutback in 1960 of military aid and technical assistance. This left deep wounds which are still open. A. In the summer of 1959, Khrushchev decided to make his now famous visit to the United States and to Camp David. This was his "peaceful coexistence" phase; you remember Chinese leaders correctly viewed this as an imminent danger to their interests. They responded by spilling out some of their simmering differences with the Soviet Union. They began a whispering campaign among Bloc parties with the aim of bringing pressure on the Soviet Union for a change of course. 1. The Soviets chose to strike back. At a meeting of all the ruling Communist parties at Bucharest in June 1960, the Soviet leaders organized a "surprise assault." They charged the Chinese with failure to follow the Soviet lead and urged the other delegates to tell the Chinese to fall in line. This whole operation was a flop. The Chinese refused to be cowed and they refused to knuckle under. -7- xrno+ xrRO. ~xrao' Approved For Release 2001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8 Approved For Release-.~01/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A00050~020003-8 2. Khrushchev saw that stronger steps were needed. He knew that the Chinese needed Soviet aid badly. He thought that all he would have to do would be to suspend aid and the Chinese would fall right into line. (Like suspending your wifers allowance.) In August 1960, without warning, he pulled out the Soviet technicians then in China-- about 1300 of them, At the same time, he canceled about 150 contracts for heavy industrial and military projects. a. The Soviets made no effort to soften the effects of the abrupt withdrawal and many technicians walked off with project blueprints. b. At one major hydro-electric project, for example, only one Soviet generator was ever delivered, and it was so seriously damaged when the Chinese attempted to install it themselves that one Chinese official later commented that the whole dam might as well be blown up. c. This treatment did not get the desired results, however. The Chinese acted like - xrRrl~l ~xrRO~ ;x~ao'. .x?~ Approved For Release 2001/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A000500020003-8 Approved For Release-,~,(301/05/17: CIA-RDP79T00827A00050Q0~0003-8 Chinese on this occasion--not like chastised Communist cadres. They merely got more grim and determined about facing the Soviets down. B, What Khrushchev did accomplish, however, was to give the Chinese a nasty setback on their industrial and military development programs. China's economic plans had assumed continuing Soviet technical help and the pullout therefore collapsed Peking's entire timetable for industrialization. 1. The full extent of this planned-for aid program has never been revealed by the Chinese or the Soviets. We know, however, that it was a comprehensive and significant program. 2. It aimed at giving China the capability of producing a broad range of modern weapons, including nuclear weapons; deliveryvehicles such as jet bombers and guided missile sub- marines; and air defense weapons, such as surf ace-to-air missiles and supersonic fighters. 3. China probably would have been producing all these items, in the early 1960's, if the Soviet Union had not renounced its commitments. N~~z~. ,~.~ ~, xrao' ~- __- _-__. c