For further elaboration of these points see Michael Yahuda, " Problems of Continuity in Chinese Foreign Policy," Asian Affairs, October 1977.
2.
For a careful survey of China's performance in the UN see Samuel S. Kim, "Behavioural Dimensions of Chinese Multilateral Diplomacy," China Quarterly No. 72. December 1977.
3.
In Peking Review No. 45, 1977, p. 11.
4.
Peking Review, Special Supplement to No. 15, 1974.
5.
" Chairman Mao's Theory of the Differentiation of the Three Worlds is a Major Contribution to Marxism-Leninism " in Peking Review No. 45, 1977.
6.
See the statement of February 28, 1974, by Huang Hua, then China's permanent representative in the United Nations to the Security Council, in China Quarterly No. 58, April/June 1974, Chronicle and Documentation pp. 427-428.
7.
See Peking Review No. 49, 1977, pp. 28-29.
8.
S. See note 5.
9.
"The Constitution of the Communist Party of China," Peking Review No. 36, 1977. The quotation is from p. 17.
10.
Thus in the course of 1977 Chairman Hua himself found time to receive and hold discussions with no less than'eight such delegations.
11.
Mao Tse-Tung , " On New Democracy," SW Vol. II, pp. 346-347.
12.
The ensuing discussion on Angola and Chile is based upon my understanding of talks with Chinese officials in Peking.
13.
See Jonathan Pollack, "Peking's Nuclear Restraint," International Herald Tribune, 16 April 1976.
14.
China: A Reassessment of the Economy, A compendium of papers submitted to the Joint Economics Committee, Congress of the United States, July 10, 1975.