1st Edition

China and the Soviet Union A Study of Sino–Soviet Relations

By Aitchen K. Wu Copyright 1950
    452 Pages
    by Routledge

    452 Pages
    by Routledge

    China and the Soviet Union, first published in 1950, is written by a Chinese former diplomat and university professor, and calls on his many years of experience to provide an even-handed analysis of Sino-Russian relations. It ranges back to 1618 for some much-needed historical background, but the major part of Wu’s examination of the diplomatic relations between the two countries deals with the Soviet Union since 1918.

    Part 1. China and Tsarist Russia: 1618–1917  1. Introduction  2. Early Diplomatic Relations Between Russia and China  3. Russia’s Relations with Outer Mongolia  4. Russian Expansion to the Amur  5. Construction of the Chinese Eastern Railway  6. Russia’s Relations with Chinese Turkistan (Sinkiang)  Part 2. China and the Soviet Union: 1918–1930  7. Sino-Soviet Relations During the Russian Revolution  8. Prelude to the Resumption of Sino-Soviet Relations (1918–1924)  9. White–Red Contests in Outer Mongolia  10. Controversies Over the Sino-Soviet Conference  11. Severance of Sino-Soviet Relations  12. The Sino-Soviet Crisis of 1929  Part 3. China and the Soviet Union: 1931–1950  13. Resumption of Sino-Soviet Relations, December 12, 1932  14. Mongolian People’s Republic  15. Sale of the Chinese Eastern Railway  16. Soviet Influence in Chinese Turkistan (Sinkiang)  17. Soviet Attitude Towards the Sino-Japanese Conflict  18. Soviet-Japanese Relations  19. Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship and Alliance, August 14, 1945  20. Rise of the Chinese Communist Party  21. Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship, Alliance and Mutual Assistance, February 14, 1950

    Biography

    Aitchen K. Wu