Would definitely make strange bedfellows, but as I understand it Mao was one of the first rulers to recognise the fascist junta in Chile.
I understand that he went further and even supported the regime with loans and did not give refuge in the Chinese embassy to left-wing opponents of the regime. Now I understand that the Chinese were not alone in this, other countries refused to grant refuge too and many lives were lost due to this. But why would Mao act like this? Why would you turn your back on communists trying to escape a fascist regime?
Because Mao stroke a deal with the US in the 70s and China de facto sided with imperialism against the democratic block.
We've had threads that go in detail on that, search this forum a bit.
Soviet cogitations: 16
Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 17 Nov 2011, 12:25 Ideology: Marxism-Leninism New Comrade (Say hi & be nice to me!)
Mao went so ultra-left during the late-60s that he ended up full circle on the ultra-right in the 1970s
deeman1916 wrote:Not really. Mao's "struggle" against the USSR had begun during the Stalin period, in opposition to Marxism-Leninism. Mao welcomed the rise of Khrushchev but fell out with him when the latter refused to help turn China into a competing superpower. Even Soviet revisionist publications, at least during the Brezhnev period, ascribed Mao's "defense" of Stalin to opportunism rather than actual conviction. The Albanians likewise held the view that Mao's "leftism" was fraudulent: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sino-Albanian_split
Soviet cogitations: 16
Defected to the U.S.S.R.: 17 Nov 2011, 12:25 Ideology: Marxism-Leninism New Comrade (Say hi & be nice to me!)
Well yeah Mao was a total egomaniac and did have a recurring problem with Titoist tendencies, and his criticisms of Stalin are mostly related to that. However on the whole I think there is plenty of evidence throughout his writings that he did genuinely admire Stalin and mostly attempt to follow his guidance. I wouldn't take the "70-30" thing too seriously:
Quote: http://www.marxists.org/reference/archi ... wv5_67.htm When talking about his ultra-leftism I meant the Cultural Revolution foreign policy analysis of the USSR being a "Hitlerian Neo-Tsarist Social-Fascist Imperialist Bourgeois Dictatorship" which logically necessitated an alliance with the "liberal democracies" of the west, which is where the ultra-rightism comes in. Now I know Albania had largely the same analysis of the USSR and didn't ally with the west, but that would be a result of Yugoslavia simultaneously being friends with both the USA and the USSR, so allying with either bloc would've meant allying with Tito which obviously Hoxha was never gonna do. If Tito had been purely pro-Soviet and anti-West though it may well have been a different story |
Alternative Display:
Mobile view
|
||||||