Zhou Enlai served as China's premier for twenty-six years — navigating Mao's purges, the Cultural Revolution, and the opening to Nixon while somehow remaining indispensable to a leader who destroyed everyone else around him. He was a revolutionary, a diplomat, a spymaster, and the most skilled political survivor of the twentieth century. Whether his survival required moral compromises that disqualify him from admiration remains China's most sensitive historical question.
This episode traces Zhou from his mandarin-class childhood through the revolutionary underground, the Long March, the diplomatic triumphs, and the Cultural Revolution years when staying alive meant watching colleagues be destroyed.
Zhou's elite education, his Paris years, and his role in the Communist underground
The Long March, the civil war, and the diplomat who represented China to the world
The Nixon opening, the Bandung Conference, and the diplomatic skill that earned global respect
Surviving the Cultural Revolution while Mao destroyed everyone around him — and the moral cost of survival
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