Word: huang
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...September. In one frantic four-day period Chou En-lai abruptly canceled most of his appointments and the entire Politburo dropped from public view, possibly because its members had been summoned to an emergency session in Peking. China's military leaders also disappeared, including Chief of Staff Huang Yung-sheng, one of his deputy chiefs of staff, the chief of the air force, the First Commissar of the navy and at least twelve senior officers in the Peking military headquarters; they have not been seen since. After a British-made tri-jet Trident transport mysteriously crashed deep in Mongolia...
...transient member of Peking's team; even before the assembly session ends next month, he may return to Peking, where, among other things, he has been handling the prickly talks on the Sino-Soviet border dispute. China's permanent U.N. representative will be courtly Ambassador Huang Hua, the only member of the delegation with prior professional service in North America; since April he has been China's ambassador to Canada, a post that he will resign when he takes up his duties in New York. In all, five of Peking's delegates have held posts outside...
...delegation's ranking experts on the present U.S. leadership are Huang Hua and his deputy Chen Chu. Both have met Henry Kissinger in Peking...
Whom would Peking send to the U.N.? Conceivably, Chou himself might want to make the grand entrance. Huang Hua, Peking's Ambassador to Ottawa and one of its foremost American watchers, is a likely candidate for the delegation, but not for its leadership. Urbane, soft-spoken Chang Wen-chin, who heads the Peking Foreign Ministry's department of Western European and U.S. affairs, could be the man. But at week's end the leading possibility seemed to be Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Chiao Kuan-hua, a onetime journalist who speaks fluent English. Chiao has most recently been in charge...
...pieces of Chinese foreign policy back together after the Cultural Revolution. Less than three years ago, when the Red Guards were still running amuck, Peking simply had no conventional foreign policy. All 42 of its ambassadors round the world had been called home save for Chou's longtime lieutenant, Huang Hua. He was then Peking's man in Cairo, responsible for the Middle East and Africa...