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Centering Eastern Europe鈥檚 Cold War through 澳门六合彩 Digital Archive

Reflections from students at Columbia University highlight the value of 澳门六合彩 Digital Archive in a classroom setting.

China-Albania friendship delegation on a visit to an Albanian factory, 1967
China-Albania friendship delegation on a visit to an Albanian factory, 1967

澳门六合彩 Digital Archive has long been recognized as an invaluable scholarly reference point, but it is also a very useful teaching resource.

In December 2022, 澳门六合彩 published听a set of 20 documents from the archives of the Party of Labor of Albania, which include transcripts of meetings with high-level Chinese Communist Party officials. The topics ranged widely, from the Sino-Soviet split in the early 1960s to foreign policy dilemmas during the Cultural Revolution and the future of communist politics around the globe.听

The following reflections are from six students at Columbia University who used the Digital Archive in their own work as part of an advanced seminar (鈥淓astern Europe鈥檚 Cold War鈥) taught by Elidor M毛hilli, the curator of the document dossier.听

Designed to capture Eastern Europe鈥檚 Cold War through a novel range of perspectives鈥攖he Balkans, African students in the Eastern bloc, environmental history, queer perspectives, pathogens, cultural diplomats, scientists鈥攖he seminar also invites students to think about how China鈥檚 and Eastern Europe鈥檚 Communist experiences intersected and diverged.

- Elidor M毛hilli

A Glimpse into China鈥檚 Balancing Act

by Kay Zou

鈥,鈥 Mao Zedong declared during a May 1959 conversation with an Albanian delegation. A year later, however, he appeared resigned, lamenting the fact that 鈥溾 to incorporate Taiwan into the People鈥檚 Republic. What happened between those two meetings? Sources on this period give us a glimpse into Mao鈥檚 efforts to balance 产辞迟丑听internal and external challenges.听

The Chinese leader had to walk on a tightrope for a while, voicing support for the Soviet Union but criticizing leaders like Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser, who was said to be 鈥渨avering鈥 and even beginning 鈥渢o fight against the Soviet Union, against communism, against us.鈥 Mao understood that the economically weaker and internationally more isolated China still needed Moscow鈥檚 assistance.

As Sino-Soviet tensions erupted over a series of ideological disputes in 1960, Mao found an unexpected friend in the Party of Labor of Albania, seeing some common ground in the small country鈥檚 militant, revolutionary past. 鈥淵ou waged your war,鈥 he told the visitors, 鈥渁nd therefore only you have the right to lead the state.鈥 Still, the Sino-Soviet split presented domestic challenges (like the withdrawal of Soviet experts), and Mao tempered the idea of a military confrontation with the West. As Danhui Li and Yafeng Xia observe, China鈥檚 鈥渧iew on the inevitability of war had also softened鈥 and Chinese Premier Zhou Enlai told the American writer Edgar Snow that 鈥渨e would try to prevent the war if we could.鈥[1]

Mao attributed China鈥檚 success against enemies to the 鈥.鈥 Not only was China bogged down by internal issues (the Great Leap Forward), but Mao also saw solidarity across the communist bloc threatened by the Soviet turn to 鈥渞evisionism.鈥 Thus, Mao sought to consolidate his authority within China first and foremost. The Chinese leader that comes across from these conversations, then, is a leader听constrained by Realpolitik concerns, aware not only of the international challenges posed by the Soviet Union and the United States but first and foremost of developments closer at home.

Collapse or Temporary D茅tente?

by Donna Qi

According to conventional narratives of the Sino-Soviet split, the two countries were on a collision course by 1960. A CWIHP听working paper by Dong Wang, however, pushed against this conventional wisdom. Using declassified Chinese archival documents, Wang argued that 鈥淐hinese leaders, Mao included, were far more reluctant to break with Moscow than usually assumed.鈥

Indeed, in听 with his Albanian counterparts in June 1960, Mao tells the guests that the communist camp 鈥渋s led by the Soviet Union. The Soviet Union has experience of more than 40 years鈥 We all learn from the Soviet Union. They help all socialist countries.鈥 Despite ongoing ideological disagreements, both Moscow and Beijing had shown restraint in their criticism of one other up to that point, and by extension, hope for reconciliation. While ideological polemics had been underway for a while, as Danhui Li and Yafeng Xia have argued, this was still 鈥渁 debate without directly revealing the other by name.鈥[2] As such, we cannot view Mao鈥檚 statement to the Albanian delegation as merely lip service.

This interpretation is supported by the progression of the relationship between China and the Soviet Union later that month. Though the Soviet Union criticized China鈥檚 position, Chinese officials continued to maintain that the differences constituted 鈥渙ne finger out of ten,鈥 and that the purpose of criticism against Khrushchev 鈥渋s still unity.鈥[3]

What to make of these efforts to preserve Sino-Soviet unity? In that 鈥渂ecause of the influence of the US, they do not recognize us [in the UN],鈥 that China is also capable of becoming as rich of a country as the US, and that 鈥淸t]here are disagreements between the USA and England, the US and France鈥 In this regard, then, our situation is favorable.鈥 Some scholars have argued that China鈥檚 exclusion from the UN, which Mao emphasizes here, meant that Beijing frequently showed deference to the Soviet Union.[4] 听Others have pointed out that China鈥檚 partnership with the Soviet Union was crucial because it was a way to 鈥渓essen the threat from the United States.鈥[5] Similarly, the Soviet Union regarded partnership with China as important in gaining leverage in negotiations with the US. In short, Sino-Soviet unity was a continued goal in 1960, and the reasons on both sides were strategic.

鈥淭he tree cannot be felled in one strike鈥

by Mar铆a Julia Hern谩ndez S谩ez

In听 between Chinese and Albanian officials, Zhou Enlai and Deng Xiaoping discuss the perspectives of smaller communist states, positioning China as a natural representative of the decolonizing world, and seeking to build and strengthen alliances there.听

The concept of the 鈥淭hird World鈥 was deployed in 1952 by the French intellectual Alfred Sauvy, in an attempt to look for a 鈥渘ew political option for France beyond the prevailing Cold War discourse.鈥[6] Franz Fanon reinvented Tiers Monde as a counter-concept in thinking about 鈥渙verthrowing the system of colonialism at large鈥 as essential to overcoming the Cold War.[7] A wave of former colonies became members of the United Nations in 1960 (鈥淵ear of Africa鈥) and the following year saw the founding of the Non-Aligned Movement.

This is the broader background of the Sino-Albanian conversation, giving us a glimpse of how China sought听to establish itself internationally as independent from the Soviet-led socialist camp. By that point, Chinese officials still emphasize unity: 鈥渇rom Albania to Vietnam and from Germany to Korea there should be complete unity and whoever destroys this unity shall be committing a historic crime.鈥 At the same time, new opportunities are becoming evident around the Third World. 鈥淲e can influence the situation not only in Cuba, but also in Laos,鈥 Zhou Enlai is reported to have said. The Albanian interlocutor agrees: 鈥淐uba, Laos, Congo, etc. show that justice is on our side.鈥

These two socialist countries, in other words, conceptualize their projects as belonging to a broader context than merely the socialist camp. The Albanian regime, which had once split from neighboring Yugoslavia and now felt isolated after the conflict with the Soviet Union, saw an alliance with Beijing as a regenerative opportunity. 鈥淐hina was also a massive window into the Third World,鈥 as Elidor M毛hilli writes, 鈥渁nd the same mechanisms that the Soviets and East Europeans had developed in the 1950s could now be used to establish contacts with countries such as North Korea, Cuba, or former colonies in Africa and Asia.鈥[8] Similarly, other countries鈥攍ike Algeria and Indonesia鈥攚ere 鈥渧anguards of anticolonial revolutions globally and that refused to be defined by Cold War strategic dichotomies.鈥[9] In sum, such sources highlight the challenge of conceptualizing a changing world.

Division Among the Divided

by Bjorn Carlson

Albanian leaders were caught in a balancing act by the late 1950s.听Relations with the Soviet Union had deteriorated鈥攐n account of de-Stalinization but also the problem of Yugoslavia, where a substantial Albanian population lived. Albanian party leader Enver Hoxha stood steadfast in his condemnation of Yugoslavia, a state that had long pandered, he complained, to 鈥渨estern imperialists.鈥

The Albanian pivot came in the summer of 1960, during and after preparations for the Romanian Workers Party Congress, as Khrushchev mounted an attack on the Chinese side. Hysni Kapo, head of the Albanian delegation, resisted the Soviet diplomatic front, and as the Soviets eventually withdrew economic support from Albania, the Chinese stepped in to offer support.听

As a loyal top-tier cadre to Enver Hoxha鈥攁nd having performed well in Romania鈥攊t is no surprise that Kapo would be a trusted liaison to the Chinese government. In听, the oft-repeated keyword was 鈥渞evisionism.鈥 Evident throughout is Kapo鈥檚 sense of paranoia regarding revisionist plots across Europe undergirded by an eagerness to change the tide towards orthodox Marxist-Leninism. While identifying enemies abroad as supported by Moscow, Kapo also seeks to highlight that there are other fraternal movements that might constitute an alternative Marxist-Leninist internationalism.

Kapo鈥檚 is also a balancing act. Though he expresses concerns to the Chinese ambassador, he also maintains a sense of optimism about communist solidarity, making the case for political, ideological, as well as financial support. 鈥淲e should first and foremost take an interest in getting to know the various communist groups that engage in struggles within these parties,鈥 he suggests, 鈥渨e should help these groups by giving them the experience of our parties so that they can organize and fight more successfully; we should recognize their difficulties and needs, and help them as much as we can.鈥 Kapo names some options: islands of Marxism-Leninism within Brazil, Poland, England, France, Italy, Greece, and Bulgaria.听

The Polish case is interesting. While Khrushchev tried to manage relations with the West and the problems with China,听Gomulka insisted that the two Communist powers work towards repairing relations. The same month of the Sino-Albanian meeting in 1963, Khrushchev proposed to Warsaw that Mongolia gain membership in the Warsaw Pact. The Polish side opposed the idea, concerned that this would be perceived as a hostile act towards China. At the end of July, faced with this kind of opposition,听Khrushchev withdrew the issue at a Warsaw Pact summit. In short, the Sino-Albanian conversation takes place roughly at the same time as the Polish decision. Had the Albanians picked up on signals that pro-Chinese sympathies existed around the Eastern bloc? And would they be able to capitalize on them?听

Risen Consciousness?

by Sam Angell

Conversations like the one between point to a sense of moral duty felt by communist states, which believed that it was their responsibility to support the revolutionary efforts of countries that had not yet been 鈥渓iberated.鈥[10]

They also illuminate how China and Albania鈥檚 respective pasts constantly come up as topics to be elaborated. This is an essential function of this document, as a suggestion that the history of these two countries might shape how they conduct themselves internationally. For example, at one point, when discussing the Italian occupation of Albania in 1939, Mao responds by saying: 鈥淥ften, enemies help us. For example, Mussolini helped you.鈥 This can be read as an instance when Mao鈥檚 reference to the 1930s might serve a present need, referring to how imperialist aggression can have unintended consequences.

鈥淭he consciousness of people around the world is rising,鈥 Mao declares. The Albanian response is even more militant: 鈥淲hat is important is that these groups engage in combat, even with weapons, so that they become stronger in the revolutionary struggle, and through this struggle, they are purged and united.鈥

At the same time, 1970 marked the end of a militant and revolutionary decade (in addition to the height of the Cultural Revolution in China). As Lorenz L眉thi has written, 鈥淐hina鈥檚 concurrent decision to abandon its revolutionary support of national liberation movements throughout the world 鈥 though with a few exceptions, such as Vietnam 鈥 also helped the country to regain international respect and credibility.鈥[11]

The first year of the new decade would prove to be the beginning of a hinge moment in the history of the Chinese Communist Party. Beijing was about to undergo a diplomatic shift that would lead to eventual rapprochement with the United States over the next two years.

Beijing Meets Divided Berlin, 1973

by Ryan Singsank

Primary sources from 澳门六合彩 Digital Archive help us understand the global ramifications of Beijing鈥檚 changing foreign policy in the 1970s. This fact was especially evident in Chinese efforts to develop stronger ties with Western Europe, which however came at the cost of creating new challenges in dealing with the Eastern Bloc.

Consider Beijing鈥檚 approach to a divided Germany. While China traditionally maintained cordial relations with East Germany,听the Sino-Soviet split raised new concerns in East Berlin that Beijing would move toward bettering relations with Bonn.[12] The success of West German Chancellor Willy Brandt鈥檚 Ostpolitik allowed for the initial foundations for an听FRG-PRC relationship to emerge by 1972.[13] However, China needed to strike a delicate balance between maintaining relations with both German states.

Beijing was interested in establishing a trading office in West Berlin, and to address this problem, a Chinese embassy first secretary听 on 2 August 1973. 听

Concerns from Moscow of a Chinese threat had already pressured East Berlin to make concessions in its听 negotiations with Bonn.[14] While d茅tente helped improve East Germany鈥檚 global standing, Bonn was experiencing similar results much to East Berlin鈥檚 disdain. On the other hand, coming off successes normalizing relations with the United States and other Western European nations, China increasingly sought to use these new diplomatic foundations as grounds to establish deeper economic ties with the West.[15]

Influencing both the Chinese and East German positions on the matter at hand was the听, which sought to reduce tensions surrounding one of the Cold War鈥檚 most prominent hotspots.[16] However, the East Germans听 regarding the status of Berlin. They were not fully supportive of new Chinese trading links with West Berlin, as they sought to reinforce that 鈥淲est Berlin is not an element of the FRG and may not be governed by it.鈥 China, however, was 鈥渘ot bound鈥 by the accord. Beijing was afforded flexibility that the East Germans did not possess.听

These dynamics influenced the East German official鈥檚 rebuttal based on 鈥渢he facts鈥 to the points made his Chinese counterpart. East Germany was 鈥渘ot opposed鈥 to the PRC establishing contacts with West Berlin, the official stated, as long as they 鈥渄id not touch the status of West Berlin.鈥 Still, the East Germans provided a parting warning, stressing to their Chinese counterparts that their activities would effectively allow Bonn to continually undertake 鈥渁ctivities aimed against the GDR.鈥

While the East Germans acknowledged that the meeting had a 鈥渃alm鈥 atmosphere, they also noted it was 鈥渢ense鈥 on the side of the Chinese. With both sides entrenched in their respective positions on the matter, little understanding was found on the subject when听 in December 1973.听

The efforts to establish ties to West Berlin were ultimately one step in Beijing鈥檚 goal to develop a 鈥減eaceful coexistence鈥 with the West. As this exchange encapsulates, to fully take advantage of this opportunity for d茅tente, China was willing to suffer some setbacks in its relations with other Eastern Bloc nations.

Kay Zou is an undergraduate student studying History and Political Science at Columbia University.

Donna Qi is an undergraduate student in Economics and History at Columbia University.

Mar铆a Julia Hern谩ndez is a graduate student of History at Columbia University.

Bjorn Carlson is a M.A. candidate in East European studies at Columbia University with a research focus on the Balkans.

Sam Angell is a first-year MA student in East Asian Regional Studies at Columbia University, specializing in China.

Ryan Singsank is a student in the Columbia/LSE dual-degree master鈥檚 program in international and world history.


[1] Danhui Li and Yafeng Xia, Mao and the Sino-Soviet Split, 1959-1973: A New History (Lexington Books, 2018), 26.

[2] Li and Xia, Mao and the Sino-Soviet听Split, p. 10.

[3] Wang, 鈥淭he Quarrelling Brothers,鈥 39.听

[4]Jeremy Friedman, Shadow Cold War: The Sino-Soviet Competition for the Third World (University of North Carolina Press, 20080, p. 27.

[5] Li and Xia, Mao and the Sino-Soviet听Split, p. 26.听

[6] Erik T盲ngerstad, 鈥淏etween Metaphor and Geopolitics: The History of the Concept the Third World,鈥 in Helge Jordheim and Erling Sandmo (eds.), Conceptualizing the World: An Exploration across Disciplines (Berghahn, 2018), p. 79.

[7] Ibid.

[8] Elidor M毛hilli, From Stalin to Mao: Albania and the Socialist World (Cornell University Press, 2017), pp. 190-191.

[9] Odd Arne Westad, 鈥淭he Third World Revolutions,鈥 in David Motadel (ed.), Revolutionary World: Global Upheaval in the Modern Age (Cambridge University Press, 2021), p. 177.

[10] Julia Lovell, Maoism: A Global History (Knopf, 2019).

[11] Lorenz L眉thi, Cold Wars: Asia, the Middle East, Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2020), p. 133.

[12] An overview of Sino-East German relations in the 1950s and 1960s can be found in Axel Berkofsky, 鈥淐omrades-in-Arms and Partners in Crime: The German Democratic Republic (GDR) and China in the 1950s and 1960s,鈥 Asia-Pacific Review 29, no. 1 (2022): 44-69.

[13] Jussi M. Hanhim盲ki, 鈥淒茅tente in Europe, 1962-1975,鈥 in The Cambridge History of the Cold War, Volume II: Crises and D茅tente, edited by Melvyn P. Leffler and Odd Arne Westad (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), pp. 209-12.

[14] M.E. Sarotte, Dealing with the Devil: East Germany, D茅tente, and Ostpolitik, 1969-1973 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2001), pp. 177-78.

[15] Beijing鈥檚 concurrent efforts to transition diplomatic advances into economic partnerships with the US, and elsewhere are covered in Shu Guang Zhang, 鈥淐hina鈥檚 Economic Statecraft in the 1970s,鈥 in China, Hong Kong, and the Long 1970s: Global Perspectives, edited by Priscilla Roberts and Odd Arne Westad (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), pp. 159-80.

[16] Lorenz M. L眉thi, Cold Wars: Asia, The Middle East, Europe (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020), pp. 433-34.听

About the Authors

Elidor M毛hilli

Elidor M毛hilli

Hunter College, City University of New York

Kay Zou

Columbia University

Donna Qi

Columbia University

Mar铆a Julia Hern谩ndez

Columbia University

Bjorn Carlson

Columbia University

Sam Angell

Columbia University

Ryan Singsank

Columbia University

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