Word: tito
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...profit from trade and the U.S. could have hostages against their safety in Chinese Communist diplomats here? ¶The Chinese are basically anti-foreign and will grow to hate Moscow string-pulling. So there is always the chance that China's Boss Mao Tse-tung will become another Tito. It might help to have an ambassador around to encourage him. ¶As the sole provider for Japan's deficits, the U.S. taxpayer would benefit financially if Japan could resume her oldtime brisk trade with the Chinese mainland. ¶Communist China will inevitably apply for China's seat...
...find themselves whipping posts and not listening posts. How can businessmen or missionaries have any security there? ¶As Mao's visit to Moscow indicates, he has shown no sign of wavering from the international Communist line. If he does set out to become a Tito, recognition can just as well wait until that happy day. ¶To recognize Mao would be to abandon America's friends in China-not only the Nationalist government, but all anti-Communist elements...
...leadership of world Communism been so rent by fear and division. No leaders of Western Communism had yet been ousted (see below), but behind the Iron Curtain heads fell fast & furiously. Prime focus of the Comrades' trouble in the Russian satellite countries was Yugoslavia Heretic Marshal Tito, who continued to defy Moscow. But it was also a great year for purges inside Russia, where Georgy Malenkov, the Kremlin's rising star, quietly disposed of the last followers of his old rival, the late Andrei Zhdanov...
...freedom and organization that had to be fought out in the politicians' arena. Some of the politicians were of a familiar parliamentary type: Wilson, Franklin Roosevelt, Clemenceau. Some were soldier-politicians: Chiang Kaishek, Kâmâl Atatürk. Some were agitators and conspirators: Lenin, Stalin, Tito, Mao Tse-tung. One, Gandhi, was a saintly organizer. Some-Mussolini, Hitler-were pure dynasts, dealing with dark power drives deep in the spirit...
Western observers, who had been closely watching the evolution of the Moscow-Peking Axis (TIME, Dec. 19)-and who had spent a lot of time wondering whether or not Mao might turn Tito and break with Moscow-could only speculate about the consequences of the Moscow meeting. All the West knew with certainty last week was that the two most successful living Communists, masters of almost a quarter of the earth's land and more than a quarter of its people, had met, and that both were sworn enemies of the West. That was quite enough to know...