Today, China is widely known as North Korea's only ally on the world stage, a relationship that goes back decades as both countries forged a path as communist governments in the post-World War II period. Historically, both countries have advertised the relationship as being one of special closeness, based on shared political ideals and regional goals. Yet, as China has risen in global standing, its current position in relation to North Korea seems to be changing into a reluctant one, affected by global perceptions of North Korea, calls for Chinese global and regional leadership, and increased economic and political connections between China and other world powers like the United States.
In A Misunderstood Friendship, Zhihua Shen and Yafeng Xia contend that the history of the North Korea-China relationship is not so simply understood. Relying on newly declassified Chinese government documents and in-depth interviews with former North Korean and Chinese diplomats, this book reveals that the complexity, tension, and global sensitivities that currently plague the alliance between the two countries have in fact been a feature of the relationship from the beginning. Shen and Xia contend that China has always viewed the relationship as one of convenience, and further, that going forward the relationship will not play as large of a factor in Chinese foreign policy decisions as some experts or foreign policy officials in the region may believe. An in-depth study drawing on unprecedented archival access, this book covers exciting new ground in the history of Cold War Asia
Shen Zhihua (simplified Chinese: 沈志华; traditional Chinese: 沈志華; (this is a Chinese name; the family name is Shen.) is a professor of history at East China Normal University and adjunct professor at Peking University and Renmin University of China. Shen is an expert in the history of the Soviet Union, Sino-Soviet relations, and the Cold War. He is director of the Center for Oriental History Studies of the Chinese Academy of Sciences and honorary researcher at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. In 2011 Shen was public policy scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C.
An interesting read. I'm told that the primary author is a pro-western shill and wants China to pursue a policy that is anti-DPRK, so take that with a grain of salt.
The book contains information from Soviet as well as Chinese archives, so I appreciated the content for the factual information contained in it, especially as so much about the DPRK is shrouded in secrecy. It helped clear up the dynamic between the two countries during the early part of their journey, and how it wasn't always sunshine and rainbows, for various reasons both in and out of their control.
As the Sino-Soviet split damaged the communist movement significantly, it's interesting to see how Kim managed his alliances with both the USSR and China, as it reminded me of the period of Korea before the Japan annexation, how the officials pursued a similar strategy with competing western powers attempting to carve up Korea for their influence.
I'm docking it a star because it doesn't totally promise what it claims to in the title, not much about Kim and Mao's actual relationship is discussed, moreso their political dealings and what they said about each other publicly. But maybe that information isn't something that will ever come to light, unless Korea is finally free from American influence.