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dc.contributor.authorTeiwes, Frederick C.
dc.contributor.authorSun, Warren
dc.date.accessioned2023-04-18T23:44:51Z
dc.date.available2023-04-18T23:44:51Z
dc.date.issued2023-04-19
dc.identifier.issn2653-4037
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2123/31114
dc.description.abstractThis Working Paper is a draft chapter for a book on the poorly understood CCP elite politics of the early post-Mao period, tentatively entitled Hua Guofeng, Deng Xiaoping, and the Dismantling of Maoism. Conventional wisdom pictures the period up to the December 1978 Third Plenum as a struggle between Hua and Deng, reflecting neo-Maoist v. reformist tendencies, and won by Deng at the plenum. In fact, there was broad consensus between them, Hua was more proactive in key areas, and there is no evidence of anything approaching a power struggle. This paper, however, deals with an area where elements of accepted views of Deng hold up. In essence, Deng held both the foreign policy and particularly PLA portfolios, notably where they concerned the crucial relationships with the US, Soviet Union, Japan, and Vietnam. In external relations Deng was broadly regarded to have performed brilliantly, while Hua was thought a mere cypher. Overall, Hua was clearly secondary in external relations, but he took the bold step of initiating relations with revisionist Yugoslavia, made the most telling proposal in the high-level negotiations with the US, and deeply impressed dominant European leaders Margaret Thatcher and Helmut Schmidt. Deng’s foreign policy outlook was deeply influenced by Mao, he could push Mao’s “horizontal line” concept to counterproductive extremes, almost losing the Sino-Japanese Peace Treaty, and rather than brilliantly negotiating US normalization, the Chinese side was slow to grasp the outcome that was always there. Most significant, and revealing of the underlying dynamic of CCP politics, was the war against Vietnam. This was truly Deng’s war, opposed by not only Hua, but also by a broad array of senior civilian and PLA officials, including surviving marshals. This was essentially the first time since his return to work in 1977, in contrast to persuading his colleagues through intense effort, that Deng simply asserted his authority. Neither here or elsewhere, was argument decisive as it had generally been under Hua’s leadership to that point. What was decisive was Deng’s enormous prestige as the most outstanding of the surviving “old revolutionaries” who achieved the success of 1949. It was the same factor that allowed Deng’s quiet coup against Hua at the turn of 1979-80, with no significant resistance from Hua or anyone else, and with no explanation being made in any official forum until well after the fact.en_AU
dc.language.isoenen_AU
dc.rightsCopyright All Rights Reserveden_AU
dc.subjectChinaen_AU
dc.subjectDeng Xiaopingen_AU
dc.subjectMao Zedongen_AU
dc.subjectForeign Policyen_AU
dc.subjectMilitary Policyen_AU
dc.titlePRC Foreign and Military Policy, 1977-81: Shades of Mao, the Imprint of Dengen_AU
dc.typeWorking Paperen_AU
dc.relation.otherChina Studies Centre
usyd.facultySeS faculties schools::Faculty of Arts and Social Sciencesen_AU
usyd.departmentDiscipline of Government and International Relationsen_AU
workflow.metadata.onlyNoen_AU


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