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  • Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Who Said That?

    The language of politicians can be remarkably similar from country to country, even when the cultures of countries are as disparate as those of United States and China. Read quotes from Richard Nixon, Mao Tse-tung, and Chou En-lai and figure out who said what. 
     

  • The Nixon Visit poster image canonical_images/feature/china_visit_canon.jpg XXX Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    The Nixon Visit

    A brief essay on the historic trip President Nixon took to China from February 21-28, 1972).

  • Richard M. Nixon poster image canonical_images/feature/china_nixon.jpg XXX Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Richard M. Nixon

    For Richard Milhous Nixon, the trip to 1972 Beijing would be the journey of a lifetime. He would be the first U.S. president to go to China.

  • Henry A. Kissinger poster image canonical_images/feature/china_kissinger_canonical.jpg XXX Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Henry A. Kissinger

    An unlikely celebrity who drew fire from across the political spectrum, Henry Kissinger is widely recognized as one of the great American statesmen of the twentieth century. 

  • Mao Tse-Tung poster image canonical_images/feature/china_mao_canonical.jpg XXX Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Mao Tse-Tung

    It lasted only an hour, but the unscheduled meeting between Chairman Mao Tse-tung and Richard Nixon was the highlight of the president's February 1972 mission to China. 

  • Chou En-Lai poster image canonical_images/feature/china_enlai_canonical.jpg XXX Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Chou En-Lai

    Premier Chou En-lai was Communist China's first and longest-serving leader. Chou won many admirers at home and abroad but he was not beyond using extreme methods to advance the Chinese Communist cause
     

  • Establishment of the People’s Republic Of China poster image canonical_images/feature/china_peoples_republic_canonical.jpg XXX Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Establishment of the People’s Republic Of China

    With the defeat of Japan by Allied troops in 1945, fighting between the Communists and Nationalists flared once more, and soon China was engulfed in a bloody, all-out civil war. 

  • Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Sino-Soviet Border Disputes

    It took a virtual war between China and the Soviet Union for Washington to realize how deeply divided the Communist superpowers actually were -- and how that division might be played to America's advantage.

  • Ping-Pong Diplomacy poster image canonical_images/feature/Nixon_Ping_Pong_canonical.jpg XXX Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Ping-Pong Diplomacy

    On April 10, nine players, four officials, and two spouses stepped across a bridge from Hong Kong to the Chinese mainland, ushering in an era of "Ping-Pong diplomacy." 

  • Shanghai Communiqué Issued poster image canonical_images/feature/china-communique-canonical.jpg XXX Article
    Nixon's China Game | Article

    Shanghai Communiqué Issued

    On February 27, 1972, the United States and China issued a joint communiqué, the culmination of Nixon and Kissinger’s historic week-long visit to the People’s Republic.

  • Timeline
    Nixon's China Game | Timeline

    Timeline

    A comprehensive chronology of U.S.-China relations.

  • In His Own Words poster image canonical_images/feature/garvey_ownwords_canonical.jpg XXX Article
    Marcus Garvey: Look for Me in the Whirlwind | Article

    In His Own Words

    Read the words of Marcus Garvey on his organization, the Universal Negro Improvement Association; his Black Star Line venture into commercial shipping; and his 1925 arrest.