Revolution and Chinese Foreign Policy |
Contents
The Ideology of | 19 |
Facing the Enemy | 36 |
Chinas Program for Revolution | 50 |
Chinese Support | 75 |
Endorsement of Revolutions | 81 |
lishing nationalist credentials Chinese foreign policy | 111 |
Selection of Targets for Revolution | 157 |
Support for Wars of National Liberation | 185 |
The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution | 199 |
The Cultural Revolution | 207 |
Conclusion | 247 |
Bibliographical Note | 255 |
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Common terms and phrases
30 Movement activities affairs Africa Afro-Asian analysis Angola anti-imperialist appeared areas Asian attempt Burma Chairman Mao Chinese Communist Chinese endorsement Chinese foreign policy Chinese policy Chinese press Chinese Revolution Chinese support colonial Communist Party Congo coup cultural revolution diplomatic relations domestic Dominican Republic economic endorsed as TR's endorsed by Peking enemy established example foreign revolutionary French Somaliland guerrilla ideology imperialism imperialist important independent countries Indonesian Army Jen-min jih-pao JMJP Kenya Laos Latin America leaders leadership Lin Piao lutionary major Malaysia Mao Tse-tung Mao's Maoist Marxism-Leninism ment military Moscow Mozambique munist national liberation nationalist Ne Win nese non-communist October official friendliness official hostility overthrow Peking Peking's People's political Portuguese pro-Peking reactionaries Régis Debray reports revo revolutionary model revolutionary movements revolutionary organizations September 30 Movement socialist South Vietnam Soviet Union statements strategy Sukarno support for wars Thailand Third World tion tionary united front wars of national