With the death of Mao Zedong in September 1976, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) entered a new era in its development. Beijing initiated its transition from being a dogmatic and isolationist country, a self-perceived bastion of communist “purity”, towards becoming the realpolitik-oriented global power, as we know it today. These changes were followed with great attention by the communist parties of Italy and Yugoslavia, both hitherto harshly attacked by Mao’s China. The two parties, closely connected at that time, were eager to collaborate with the “new” Beijing, hoping to obtain an ally in their quest for undermining the Soviet hegemony within the international communist movement. Hence, when Yugoslavia managed to reestablish its relat...