The (North) East is Red
"Mao and Chou En-lai were great leaders. Your Nehru was not."
The year was 1966. The Cultural Revolution was at its peak, and both the Naxalbari upris-ing as well as the great offensive by the Burmese Communist Party were still a year away, when Thuingaleng Muivah and Thinoselie Medom Keyho of the Naga National Council (NNC) led 300 Naga rebel fighters to China for weapons and training. While the rebel rank and file learnt the rudiments of guerrilla warfare, the Chinese put Muivah and Thinoselie through an intensive course in "Ideology" and "People´s Warfare" at the College of Diplomacy, Beijing, where dozens of foreign revolutionary leaders underwent ideological orientation at that time.
The instructors at the elite college soon enough recognised which of the two Naga rebel chieftains was more receptive to "Marxism-Leninism and Mao Tse Tung Thought". More than 20 years later at Oxford, Li Feiyu, a teacher at the College of Diplomacy recalled, "Thinoselie was a soldier. His interest in politics was very limited, while Muivah was very bright."