Enlai's charm offensive at the Afro-Asian Conference at
Bandung in 1955, did not survive policy changes inside China.
Mao Zedong, who had seemed to encourage freer political
comment with his slogan "Let a hundred flowers bloom, a
hundred schools of thought contend", was, as is usual with
Communist leaders in like circumstances, shocked and alarmed
at the response he evoked. He reacted with a fierce anti-
rightist campaign in 1957. The Chinese intellectual, again as
is usual, was caught by the rapid alternation of warm and cold
winds blowing from the centre. Chinese policies at home and
abroad grew more militant.
At the same time fissures began to appear in the monolith
of Sino-Soviet unity. Mao had come to acquire greater self-
confidence with the death of Stalin. He probably felt he had
Khruschev's measure, though he was disturbed by the content,
and the implications, of Khruschev's secret speech,
denouncing
Stalin, in 1956. He claimed that Soviet
achievements in space and rocketry meant, as he put it, that
now "the East wind prevails over the West". His tone with the
Russians grew more assertive and there were Chinese demands
for Soviet assistance with the creation of a Chinese fleet and
the provision of nuclear weapons. Khruschev was given no
warning of Chinese plans to bombard the off-shore island of
Quemoy (still garrisoned by Nationalists)
strains in the relationship, always latent, began to show,
the outside world. And
at home Mao pushed
pushed on,
even to
in 1958. The
regardless of his colleagues and of Soviet displeasure, into
the adventure, and disaster, of the People's Communes and the
Great Leap Forward.
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