Primary Sources from Keston:
Graham, D. (1971, June 24). Moscow Prepares For Chinese Communist Jubilee. External Broadcasting Current Affairs Talks. broadcast, BBC.
Hayter, W. (1964, January 5). The Two Communisms.
Crankshaw, E. (1964, March 15). K v Mao: Secret Paper Clue In New Crisis. The Observer.
Crankshaw, E. (1963, September 8). Peking Unveils Real Struggle With Russia. The Observer.
Mauny, E. D., & Lawrence, A. (1963, October 10). The Sino-Soviet Dispute: Two Views.
Deutscher, I. (1961). Khrushchev Accuses Mao: “Inciting to World War.”
Primary outside of Keston:
Stearman (Ed.). (1969, August). US reaction to Soviet destruction of CPR Nuclear Capability. Office of the Historian.
Secondary Sources:
Vanbrandwijk, J. (1974). Perspectives on the Sino-Soviet Dispute. Humboldt Journal of Social Relations , 1(2), 140–143
Farley, R. (2017, March 6). Was the Sino-Soviet split borne of ideology or geostrategic consideration?. – The Diplomat. https://thediplomat.com/2017/03/was-the-sino-soviet-split-borne-of-ideology-or-geostrategic-consideration/
Keith, R. C. (2010). Revisiting Ideology’s Role in the Sino-Soviet Split. Diplomatic History, 34(3), 619–622. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-7709.2010.00877.x
Robinson, T. W. (1972). The Sino-Soviet border dispute: Background, development, and the March 1969 clashes. American Political Science Review, 66(4), 1175–1202. https://doi.org/10.2307/1957173