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Peking and Taipei

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2009

Extract

Until recent events so rudely contradicted them, the Nationalists officially regarded Mao Tse-tung et al. as a puppet government whose strings were pulled from Moscow; the Communists, for their part, have found it equally convenient to look at the Nationalists as a rebellious local government suffering under American “occupation.” However, in spite of the often renewed vows of one side to eliminate the other a sporadic dialogue has gone on between Peking and Taipei. This is not so surprising when one remembers the many short honeymoons which have occurred during the oft-renewed marriage of political convenience between the Nationalists and the Communists.

Type
Formosa
Copyright
Copyright © The China Quarterly 1963

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References

1 Dictionary of Modern Chinese Names, or Who's Who in Modern China, compiled under supervision of Japanese Foreign Office (Tokyo: Konan Shogan, 1957), p. 188.Google Scholar

2 Shan, Tseng, 04 2, 1961, to Austrian Communist Party Congress.Google Scholar

3 Kyodo News Agency, 01 1961.Google Scholar