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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper discusses three significant events in 1966, one political, one social, and one economic. The events explained are: the attempt of the Japanese CP to engage other nations in establishing a united front against the U.S. escalation of the war in Vietnam, the founding of the National Organization for Women and the airline strike. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PG1966.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Japanese CP (Japanese Communist Party) leaders visited China, Vietnam and Korea for the purpose of organizing a united anti-imperialist front to defend Vietnam. Initially, the group intended to include the
USSR in their efforts (Elbaum, 2004). Deng Xiaoping, Beijing mayor Peng Zhen and other communist party leaders in China agreed with and supported the group (Elbaum, 2004). Their major
leader, Mao, did not agree that China should join the group and successfully blocked Chinas participation (Elbaum, 2004). Subsequently, various national delegations were meeting at a disarmament conference in
Japan (Elbaum, 2004). Japan was promoting the CPCs (Communist Party of China) line, which seriously strained the relationship between the JCP and the CP (Elbaum, 2004). At the same time,
the CPSU invited the CPS to participate in the Twenty-Third Congress, which was scheduled for the latter part of March (Elbaum, 2004). The Chinese refused to attend the conference, in
fact, they made their refusal very public attacking the CPSU (Elbaum, 2004). The Chinese communist party then broke off relations completely with the CPSU (Elbaum, 2004). The Chinese actions, first,
refusing to participate in the attempt to form a united front against imperialist America, publicly refusing to attend the conference, and then breaking off party-to-party relations, severed all relations between
the two powers for years to come (Elbaum, 2004). In April, Peng Zhen was purged and in the months coming, Mao and the PLA took steps that led to
the initiation of the Cultural Revolution in China (Elbaum, 2004). Analysts have suggested that it was at this time that Mao decided he would rather be associated with the U.S.;
he identified the USSR as the primary and most threatening enemy of China rather than the U.S. imperialism (Elbaum, 2004). However, the actions Mao would take over the next months
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