The Fall of Khrushchev Cause and Effect Essay
The Fall of Khrushchev
A look into causes of Khrushchev's fall from power.
# 4215
| 825 words
| 3 sources
| 2001
|

Published
on Feb 12, 2003
in
History
(Leaders)
, International Relations
(Cold War)
, International Relations
(Non-U.S.)
, Political Science
(Political Theory)
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Description:
This paper explains how the fall of Khrushchev was caused by the failure of his foreign policy in China, and not by domestic factors.
From the paper:
"Nikita Khrushchev's fall from power came, not as a result of domestic factors, but because of the failure in his China policy. After Stalin's death, Mao Zedong had, once again, attempted to move China away from the control of Moscow. To gain domination over China again, Khrushchev planned to use the war in Vietnam in the same way Stalin had used the Korean War: to bring China into conflict with the United States, thus forcing China into the Soviet camp."
From the paper:
"Nikita Khrushchev's fall from power came, not as a result of domestic factors, but because of the failure in his China policy. After Stalin's death, Mao Zedong had, once again, attempted to move China away from the control of Moscow. To gain domination over China again, Khrushchev planned to use the war in Vietnam in the same way Stalin had used the Korean War: to bring China into conflict with the United States, thus forcing China into the Soviet camp."
Cite this Cause and Effect Essay:
APA Format
The Fall of Khrushchev (2003, February 12)
Retrieved December 11, 2019, from https://www.academon.com/cause-and-effect-essay/the-fall-of-khrushchev-4215/
MLA Format
"The Fall of Khrushchev" 12 February 2003.
Web. 11 December. 2019. <https://www.academon.com/cause-and-effect-essay/the-fall-of-khrushchev-4215/>