Word: nehru
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Rise in Temper. Such chidings (like those of Nehru and Attlee) seemed neither to soften Chou's temper nor change his tune. Scarcely had U Nu left Peking last week for a tour of Manchuria when Chou launched a furious tirade at the U.S.-Formosa security pact. "A grave, warlike provocation!" he cried. If the U.S. did not withdraw from its "occupation" of Formosa, "it must take upon itself all the grave consequences...
From a lofty, flower-decked platform in New Delhi last week, India's Jawaharlal Nehru handed down a contemptuous rebuke to his own country's Communists. "Anti-India, antipeople, anti-progress," he called them, "dazzled by Russia and China, but ignorant of India. They are without moorings in the land of their birth. They are pledged to a policy of creating mental and physical conflicts. They indulge in a cult of disruption...
...Nehru added: "When I visited China, I refused to be swept off my feet . . . Our achievements are as great and our methods are much better." Neutralist Nehru was stepping back into his lesser-known role of Indian anti-Communist for the upcoming Andhra state elections. He was also reacting to the evidence that India's Communists are gaining...
Before his visit to Peking, Nehru often spoke glowingly of "absolute" Socialism as the answer to India's problems; he now refers to Red planners as "unrealistic reactionaries." Last week, still talking Socialism but less emphatically, Nehru announced that India would not now nationalize such private enterprises as the jute and textile industries, that India would welcome capitalists as "junior partners" in future state-run projects...
Answering Nehru. Since most of this reaction was predictable, the Chinese announcement raised the question of why Peking had gone out of its way to hand new ammunition to those who have been warning the free world against "peaceful coexistence" blandishments from the Red camp. The best explanation of the Chinese Communist motive lay in Asian politics. India's Nehru and others have recently been pressing the Chinese Communists to desist from subversive activities in other countries. The Reds will not-in a sense, cannot-drop their underground groups. To ease the pressure from Nehru they chose to publicize...