浪花直播

The Sino-Soviet Alliance, 70 Years Later

Seventy years since the Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship, Alliance, and Mutual Assistance, a wealth of documentation shows the rise and dramatic fall of a critical Cold War relationship.

Mao at Stalin's side on a ceremony arranged for Stalin's 71th birthday in Moscow in December 1949

February 14, 2020, marks 70 years since a major Cold War turning point: the conclusion of a treaty of alliance between two communist giants, the Soviet Union and the People鈥檚 Republic of China.

The Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship, Alliance, and Mutual Assistance shook up global geopolitics and the balance of power between the two Cold War camps. Cooperation and close relations between the USSR and the PRC, however, were ultimately short-lived. The Sino-Soviet split from the early 1960s through the mid-1980s likewise had a dramatic effect on the global Cold War.

Thousands of primary source documents published by the 浪花直播 Center鈥檚 History and Public Policy Program depict the evolution of Sino-Soviet relations, from the aftermath of World War II to the collapse of the Soviet Union. The documents come from archives in both Russia and China, as well as dozens of other countries in Asia, Europe, and North America.

This collection charts the bumpy road to the signing of the Sino-Soviet alliance in February 1950.

Drawn largely from Soviet records, it begins with correspondence between about a potential visit by Mao to the Soviet Union. It then turns to a flurry of correspondence and exchanges between the Soviets and the Chinese Communist Party in early 1949 鈥 including a , to Xibaipo, China 鈥 that coincided with an irreversible turn in the trajectory of the Chinese Civil War.

Following Mikoyan鈥檚 meetings with Mao, for further discussions about Soviet-Chinese relations. After the establishment of the People鈥檚 Republic of China in October 1949 and the formal exchange of diplomatic relations between the new regime and the Soviet Union, the Chinese and Soviets continued to arrange Mao鈥檚 long anticipated visit to Moscow.

The collection concludes with many reports and records of conversations stemming from Mao鈥檚 eventful sojourn to the Soviet Union. On , Stalin indicated that he did not want a Sino-Soviet alliance, leaving the new Chinese leader frustrated (and, reportedly, humiliated). But Stalin soon changed tact, and Zhou Enlai and other Chinese leaders joined Mao in Moscow and hammered out the details for the Sino-Soviet Treaty of Friendship, Alliance and Mutual Assistance, over several weeks. The treaty was concluded on February 14, 1950.

This Digital Archive collection picks up the documentary record following the conclusion of the treaty negotiations, and offers many examples of Sino-Soviet cooperation over a nearly 10-year period.

The majority of the files from the period 1950-1953 concern the : coordination between Moscow and Beijing (and Pyongyang) over China鈥檚 intervention; Chinese efforts to gain Soviet military and economic assistance in light of the conflict on the Korean Peninsula; and discussions about how best to bring the conflict to an end. In August-September 1952, Zhou Enlai paid another visit to Moscow to confer with Stalin. back to Beijing form a substantial part of the collection.

, the Soviet ambassador in Beijing, make up the majority of sources for the period covering the mid- and late 1950s. In over a Soviet proposal to establish a joint Chinese-Soviet submarine flotilla. Mao, according to the Chinese record of the meeting, accused Yudin of 鈥渘ever trust[ing] the Chinese!鈥 Mao went on to say that 鈥淵ou only trust the Russians!  [To you] the Russians are the first-class [people] whereas the Chinese are among the inferior who are dumb and careless.鈥

Mao continued to debate the proposal and broader tensions in the Sino-Soviet relationship .

The collection also includes several files on , as well as many documents on various stressors on the Sino-Soviet relationship (such as the Taiwan Strait Crisis, the Sino-Indian border dispute, and tumult in Hungary and Poland).

Dating the exact start of the split between China and the Soviet Union (and the unraveling of their economic, diplomatic, and military cooperation) is an inherently tricky matter.

But this collection shows the Sino-Soviet alliance in turmoil from the very early 1960s: over the ; over a in 1962; and over Khrushchev鈥檚 handling of the , to name only a few. The from the PRC and the cancelling of offered other strong signals that the honeymoon was over.

Documents from the late 1960s and 1970s depict relations between China and the Soviet Union in light of the ; the fought between the two countries in 1969; China鈥檚 courting of the United States and countries in Western Europe; and the with members of the eastern bloc.

The collection includes many examples of Chinese and Soviet officials meeting with Romanians, Albanians, North Koreans, Vietnamese, and other members of the socialist bloc to discuss Sino-Soviet relations. It also shows the lengths, which both China and the Soviet Union went, to curry favor with nations in the communist world, as well as in the Third World or the Global South.

This final collection on Sino-Soviet relations in the Digital Archive shows the attempts made by Chinese, Soviet, and other international figures to achieve a modus vivendi between the two countries and put almost 15 years of bitter acrimony behind them. The Sino-Soviet 鈥渞approchement鈥 coincided with the immense economic, political, and diplomatic changes pursued by both China and the Soviet Union in the 1980s. The collection includes diary entries from from February through May 1989, as well as reconstructions of the in May 1989. These meetings took place as students and workers protested in Beijing, and just days before the brutal Tiananmen Square crackdown.

Other Digital Archive Collections of Note

The  浪花直播 Center's Digital Archive features a . This collection includes all of the documents in the preceding four collections, plus a few more that did not fit neatly into the above categories. Four other collections related to Sino-Soviet relations are also of interest:

  • ,

The first two show how Soviet involvement in a borderland area of China shaped the overall relationship between the two countries, sometimes for better and sometimes for worse. The collection on the 1969 border conflict shows the relationship at its most dangerous moment. And the final collection on 鈥淚nterkit鈥 offers insights into an organization created by the Kremlin to coordinate Soviet-bloc analysis of, and policy toward, China from 1967 until the mid-1980s.

浪花直播 Center Publications on Sino-Soviet Relations

History and Public Policy Program

A global leader in making key archival records accessible and fostering informed analysis, discussion, and debate on foreign policy, past and present.   Read more

History and Public Policy Program

Cold War International History Project

The Cold War International History Project supports the full and prompt release of historical materials by governments on all sides of the Cold War.   Read more

Cold War International History Project