15(7)“Development in China and Burma’s Attitude toward Recognition of China,”1948-1949,National Archives of Myanmar,15/3(21)-57;“Fortnightly Report of the Burmese Embassy at Nanking for the Period Ending15 th November 1948,”1948,National Archives of Myanmar,12/9-605.
16(1)“Telegram From American Embassy in Rangoon to the Secretary of State,”June 13,1949,RG 84,Records of the Foreign Service Posts of the Department of State,U.S.Embassy in Burma,Classified General Records,1945-1961,Box6,National Archive II,College Park,MD.
17(2)“Development in China and Burma’s Attitude toward Recognition of China,”1948-1949,National Archives of Myanmar,15/3(21)-57.
18 (3) Selected Important Documents Since the Founding of the People’s Republic of China, vol. 1, Central Literature Publishing House, 1992, pp. 20-21; “Development in China and Burma’s Attitude toward Recognition”, The Burma Foundation, vol. 1, 1992, pp. 20-21. of China,” 1948-1949, National Archives of Myanmar, 15/3(21)-57.
19(4) “Development in China and Burma’s Attitude toward Recognition of China,” 1948-1949, Nationa Archives of Myanmar, 15/3(21)-57.
20(5) “Recognition of New Regime in China”, November 20, 1949, in Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru, Second Edition. Series, vol. 14, Part I, pp. 513-514; “To Thakin Nu”, December 1, 1949, in Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru, Second Series, vol. 14, Part I, pp. 501-503.
21 (1) “Development in China and Burma’s Attitude toward Recognition of China,” 1948-1949, National Archives of Myanmar, 15/3(21)-57.
22(2) Declassifying Diplomatic Documents: Archives of the People’s Republic of China on the Establishment of Diplomatic Relations (1949-1955), China Pictorial Press, 2006, pp. 358-361, 367-374.
23 (3) Richard Butwell, U Nu of Burma, p. 172; Maung Aung Myoe, In the Name of Pauk-Phaw: Myanmar’s China Policy Since 1948, p.14; “‘People’s China’ sells quickly, the second issue published yesterday”, People’s Daily, 17 January 1950.
24(4) “Economic Cooperation Agreement between the Govt. of the United States of America and the Govt. of the Union of Burma, “1950, National Archives of Myanmar, 11/8(26)-16; Matthew Foley, The Cold War and National Assertion in Southeast Asia: Britain, the United States and Burma, 1948-62, New York: Routledge, 2010, pp. 87, 91; Robert H. Taylor, General Ne Win: A Political biography, p. 143; Richard Butwell, U Nu of Burma, p. 172; Chicago Daily Tribune, June
6, 1950, p. 6; “Preparing for a full-scale war of aggression in Asia, U.S. arms imports into Southeast Asia intensify, arming and training the Thai army and transferring ships to the Burmese government”, “U.S. empire intensifies economic aggression against Burma, causing anxiety and discontent in Burmese business circles”, People’s Daily, 14 November, 31 December 1950.
25(5) Summary of the Work of the Embassy in Burma for the National Day Celebrations, October 11-October 31, 1950, in the Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China, File No. 117-00038-02(1).
26 (1) “Telegram from American Embassy in Rangoon to the Secretary of State,” October 12, 1950, RG 84, Records. of the Foreign Service Posts of the Department of State, U.S. Embassy in Burma, Classified General Records, 1950-1952, Box 10, National Archive II, College Park, MD; “Telegram From American Embassy in Rangoon to the Secretary of State, “November 1, 1950, RG 84, Records of the Foreign Service Posts of the Department of State, U.S. Embassy in Burma, Classified General Records, 1950-. 1952, Box 10, National Archive II, College Park, MD; Views of the Foreign Minister of Burma on the Remarks of our Ambassador to Burma at a Meeting of the Local Chinese Communities and our Handling of the Situation, 23 October 1950 – 3 November 1950, in the Archives of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China, File No. 105-00067-02 ( 1).
27(2) In February 1897, Britain forced the Qing government to sign the Annex to the Sino-Burma Treaty (the Annex to the Continuation of the Commerce Clause on the Sino-British Dian-Burma Boundary), the second paragraph of which provided for the “perpetual lease” of the Mengmao Triangle to Britain, which in turn handed over the area to independent Burma in 1948. See also Xie Shufu, “From the Pema Incident to the Banghong Incident: The History of the Sino-Burmese Border,” Yunnan Social Science, No. 4, 2000.
28(3) On June 18, 1941, in order to ensure the smooth flow of the Yunnan-Burma highway, the Chinese government was forced to exchange letters with the British government and demarcated the “undefined boundary” in the southern section of the Sino-Burma border, which was the “1941 Line”.
29(4) Shen Zhihua, “China’s Approach to Land Boundary Disputes in the Cold War Era”, Twenty-first Century, June 2014.
30(5) “Map of Burma prepared by Chinese,” 1950, National Archives of Myanmar, 15/3(10)-3; “Chinese “Goodwill Mission”, 1951, National Archives of Myanmar, 15/3 (31)-39; “To Thakin Nu”, December 30, 1950, in Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru, Second Series, Vol. 15, Part II, New Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1994, p. 546;” To Thakin Nu, “February 8, 1951, in Selected Works of Jawaharlal Nehru, Second Series, Vol. 15, Part II, pp. 547-550; “Telegram From American Embassy in Rangoon to the Department of State,” May 4, 1951, RG 84, Records of the Foreign Service Posts of the Department of State, U.S. Embassy in Burma, Classified General Records, 1950-1952, Box 10, National Archive II, College Park, MD; Maung Aung Myoe, In the Name of Pauk-Phaw: Myanmar’s China Policy Since 1948, p. 42; Chi-shad Liang, Burma’s Foreign Relations: Neutralism in Theory and Practice, p. 71.
31(6) Feng Yue: “The Historical Process of the China-Burma Border Problem Settlement (1954-1961)”, Nanyang Studies, No. 3, 2014.
32 (7) Qin Yihui, “Several International Events During the Retreat of Li Mi’s Troops into Burma (1950-1954)”, Humanities and Social Sciences, vol. 14, No. 4, December 2002; Hu Lizhong and Zhang Shaoduo, “The Activities of the Remnants of the Kuomintang Army on the Yunnan-Burma Border and the Beginning and End of the First Retreat from Taiwan (1950-1954)”, Shi Lin, No. 5, 2011. .
33 (1) Zhou Enlai’s Texts since the Founding of the People’s Republic of China, vol. 1, Central Literature Press, 2008, pp. 593-594; “KMT Aggression in Burma”, 1950-1953, National Archives of Myanmar, 12/6-499; Maung Aung Myoe, In the Name of Pauk-Phaw: Myanmar’s China Policy Since 1948, p. 34.
34(2) Robert H. Taylor, General Ne Win: A Political Biography, p. 134; “KMT Aggression in Burma,” 1950-1953, National Archives of Myanmar, 12/6-499.
35 (3) “Telegram from American Embassy in Rangoon to the Department of State”, May 5, 1951, RG 84, Records of the National Archives of Myanmar, 12/6-499. the Foreign Service Posts of the Department of State, U.S. Embassy in Burma, Classified General Records, 1950-1952, Box 10, National. Archive II, College Park, MD; “Memorandum of Conversation,
”May 8,1951,RG 84,Records of the Foreign Service Posts of the Department of State,U.S.Embassy in Burma,Classified General Records,1950-1952,Box10,National Archive II,College Park,MD;Kenton Clymer,“The United States and the Guomindang(KMT)Forces in Burma,1949-1954:A Diplomatic Disaster,”The Chinese Historical Review,Vol.21,No.1(May 2014),p.27.
36(4)“Memorandum of Conversation,”October 18,1951,RG84,Records of the Foreign Service Posts of the Department of State,U.S.Embassy in Burma,Classified General Records,1950-1952,Box10,National Archive II,College Park,MD.
37(5)“Review of U.S.Foreign Policy and Foreign Relations,”1952,National Archives of Myanmar,12/9-22.
38(6)“Request Made by the Chinese Embassy to Prevent Effectively the Activities of Pro-KMTs,”October 6,1952,National Archives of Myanmar,15/3(21)-210.
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