China\'s Quest. The History of the Foreign Relations of the People\'s Republic of China - John Garver

(Steven Felgate) #1

228 { China’s Quest


showed up at the Yunnan border, they were refused entry by Chinese border
personnel, and China refused to discuss further Naga requests for support.^94

What Were the CCP’s Objectives?

Figure 8-3 illustrates the components and geographic spread of Beijing’s rev-
olutionary quest over the entire period from 1961 to 1976. Other than in the
case of Vietnam, where China circa 1978 began documenting its generous
support for North Vietnam as a way of demonstrating Hanoi’s subsequent
ingratitude and insincerity, Beijing has released virtually no documentary
material regarding exactly why China undertook the revolutionary quest of
the 1960s. This episode continues to be one that the CCP finds embarrassing
and best left undiscussed. In this situation, speculation is more appropriate.
A broad strategic vision or objective must have underlain an effort of
this scope and duration. The CCP gave strong material and political sup-
port in the 1960s and 1970s to communist parties and movements in nine
Southeast Asian countries: Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia, Thailand, Malaya and

TAIWAN

VIETNAM

SINGAPORE

CAMBODIA

BURMA

EAST
PAKISTAN
LAOS

BHUTAN

NEPAL

THAILAND

BRUNEI

PHILIPPINES

MALAYSIA

INDONESIA

CHINA

INDIA

PACIFIC
OCEAN

Bangkok

Vientiane

Saigon

Manila

Phnom
Penh

Taipei

Jakarta

Kuala
Lumpur

Rangoon

Hanoi

Hong Kong

Singapore: Powerful pro-
Communist movement based
in Chinese language schools
and labor unions; oppose entry
into Malaysia.

ailand: CPT training facilities
in China; CPT begins armed
struggle in 1961; VOPT radio,
1962–1979.

Burma: 1962: China begins support of
CPB Insurgency; recruits Kachin ghters
in Guizhou. 1967: PLA advisors and Red
Guard “volunteers” dispatched. 1968: Large
scale thrust into North Burma.

Laos: 1962: Pivotal role in de facto
partition into west and east zones
plus “neutralization”.

South Vietnam: 1960: Endorses VWP resumption
armed struggle. 1962: Re-arm Southern forces;
crucial role re “trails” via Laos and Cambodia.
Cambodia: 1962: Patronize Pol Pot faction of
KCP; support but restrain from attacking
Sihanouk; persuade Sihanouk to tolerate “trails”.

North Kalimantan: 1964: North Kalimantan
Liberation League formed. 1965: NKCP formed.

“Malaya”: CPM resumes armed
struggle in 1961 with US$100,000/year
CCP subsidy; VOPM radio, 1969–1980.

Indonesia: PKI training facilities
in China support Sukarno’s
“Confrontation” with Malaysia,
1963–65; 1965: arming of PKI militia.

F IGU R E 8-3 The PRC’s Revolutionary Push in Southeast Asia
Free download pdf