Sino-Albanian split
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The Sino-Albanian split (Chinese: 中阿破裂, Pinyin: Zhōng-Ā pòliè) in 1978 saw the parting of the People's Republic of China (PRC) and People's Socialist Republic of Albania, which was the only Eastern European nation to side with the PRC in the Sino-Soviet split of the early 1960s. Although of little importance in world politics, it produced a major split in the Maoist movement, with many anti-revisionist groups choosing to side with Albania's more hardline stance, and other groups splitting over the issue.
The relations between the PRC and Albania had stagnated by 1970, and when the Asian Giant began to reemerge from isolation in the early 1970s, Mao Zedong and the other Communist Chinese leaders reassessed their commitment to Albania. In response, Tirana, led by Enver Hoxha, began broadening its contacts with the outside world. Albania opened trade negotiations with France, Italy, and the recently independent Asian and African states, and in 1971 it normalized relations with Yugoslavia and Greece. Albania's leaders abhorred the PRC's contacts with the United States in the early 1970s, and its press and radio ignored President Richard Nixon's trip to Beijing in 1972; depite this, Albania proposed the key resolution in the UN General Assembly which enabled the PRC to replace the Republic of China in the United Nations.
Albania actively worked to reduce its dependence on China by diversifying trade and improving diplomatic and cultural relations, especially with Western Europe. But Albania shunned the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe and was the only European country (with the exception of Andorra) that refused to take part in the Helsinki Conference of July 1975.
Soon after Mao's death in 1976, in the light of the removal of the Gang of Four, demonstrating a rejection by the new PRC leadership of the Cultural Revolution, Hoxha criticized the new leadership as well as the PRC's pragmatic policy toward the United States and Western Europe. The PRC retorted by inviting Tito to visit Beijing in 1977, and ending assistance programs for Albania in 1978.
The break with the PRC left Albania with no foreign protector. Tirana ignored calls by the United States and the Soviet Union to normalize relations. Instead, Albania expanded diplomatic ties with Western Europe and the developing nations and began stressing the principle of self-reliance as the keystone of the country's strategy for economic development.