1st Edition

China and the Three Worlds: A Foreign Policy Reader A Foreign Policy Reader

By King Chen Copyright 1979

    This title was first published in 1979

    Introduction I. Theory and Perceptions of the Three Worlds 1. On Policy 2. A Powerful Weapon to Unite the People and Defeat the Enemy 3. China the Three Worlds 4. Chariman Mao's Theory of the Three Worlds 4. Chairman Mao's Theory of the Differentiation of the Three Worlds Is a Major Contribution to Maxism-Leninism II. Sino-American Rapprochement 1. The Joint Cummunique 2. Why Did Our Country Accede to Nixon's Request for a Visit 3. The 'Kumming Documents' 4. Necessary Compromises III. International Opposition to The Superpowers' Hegemonism 1. Oppose the Two Superpowers 2. The Warsaw Treaty Organization: Soviet Social-Imperialism's Tool for Aggression 3. What Does the Situation Show One Year after the European Security Conference? 4. Defense of National Independence and Second World Countries 5. Soviet Social-Imperialists Covet Southeast Asia: The 'Asian Collective Security System' Is a Pretext for Expansion 6. Soviet-US Behind-the-Scenes Dealing 7. The Midddle East: A Bew Round of Soivet-US Contention 8. The Middle East: Soviet Vexation 9. Big Exposure of Soviet Revisionists' Colonial Expansion (in Angola) 10. Soviet Military Intervention Provokes World Indignation: Horn of Africa 11.Soviet-US Conention in Lation America 12. Latin America Forges Ahead in the Struggle against Imperialism and Hegemonism 13. Soviet Social Imperialism: The Most Dangerous Source of World War IV Problems with Socialist Countries 1. Problems with Indochina, Albania, and Yugosalvia 2. Why Does Moscow Resort to Liw and Slanders over Kampuchea-Vietnam Armed Conflict? 3. Statement on Explusion of Chinese Residents by Vietnam V. Energy, Economic, and Maritime Issues 1. Behind the So-called 'Enery Crisis' 2. Third World Struggle against Hegemony in the Economic Sphere 3. What Motivates 'Economic Cooperation'? 4. Maritime Hegemonic Features Fully Exposed: Soviet Social-Imperialism 5. Another Struggle Against Hegemonism: U.N. Conference on the Law of the Sea VI. Taiwan and Normalization 1. Taiwan and Peking-Washinton Relations 2. Vance's Visit to Peking and Normalization 3. Sino-American Relations 4. Tawan and Normalization VII. Modernization and Foreign Relations 1. Speed Up Socialist Economic Construction 2. The Relationship between China and Other Countries 3. Self-Reliance and Making Foreign Things Serve China 4. Speed Up the Modernization of National Defense