Tibet: An Unfinished Story

Tibet: An Unfinished Story

by Lezlee Brown Halper, Stefan Halper
Tibet: An Unfinished Story

Tibet: An Unfinished Story

by Lezlee Brown Halper, Stefan Halper

Hardcover

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Overview

Tibet's enduring myth, animated by the tales of Himalayan adventurers, British military expeditions, and the novel, Lost Horizon, remains an inspirational fantasy, a modern morality play about the failure of brutality to subdue the human spirit. Tibet also exercises immense "soft power" as one of the lenses through which the world views China.

This book traces the origins and manifestations of the Tibetan myth, as propagated by Younghusband, Madam Blavatsky, Himmler, Acheson and Roosevelt. The authors discuss how, after WW2, Tibet— isolated, misunderstood and with a tiny elite unschooled in political-military realities —- misread the diplomacy between its two giant neighbours, India and China, forlornly hoping London or Washington might intervene. China's People's Liberation Army sought nothing less than to deconstruct traditional Tibet, unseat the Dalai Lama and "absorb" this vast region into the People's Republic, and Lhasa succumbed to China's invasion in 1950.

Drawing on declassified CIA and Chinese documents, the authors reveal Mao's collusion with Stalin to subdue Tibet, double-dealing by Nehru, the brilliant diplomacy of Chou en Lai and how Washington see-sawed between the China lobby, who insisted there be no backing for an independent Tibet, and Presidents Truman and later Eisenhower, who initiated a covert CIA programme to support the Dalai Lama and resist Chinese occupation. It is an ignoble saga with few, if any, heroes, other than ordinary Tibetans.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199368365
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 04/01/2014
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.70(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Lezlee Brown Halper M.Phil (cantab.), PhD (cantab.) is a Research Associate at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. She is a Tibet scholar who has extensively travelled in and written about South Asia. She first visited Tibet in 1997. Professor Stefan Halper D.Phil (oxon.), PhD (cantab.) is Director of American Studies at the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge. Halper is a Life Fellow of Magdalene College, Cambridge. He first visited Tibet in 1997. He has served in the White House and the US Department of State and has written extensively on US foreign policy and US-China relations.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on transcription
Prologue
Introduction
PART I
1. Earliest Beginnings in the Western Imagination
2. Sir Francis Younghusband: Soldier, Visionary, Romantic
3. British and Nazi Versions of the Tibetan Image
4. Stilwell, the Burma Hump, and the Office of Strategic Services (OSS)
5. The First Truman Administration
6. The Iron Triangle: the China Lobby, the Red Scare, and the Catholic
Church
7. Truman and India
8. Tibetan Independence: Resting upon a Three-Legged Stool
9. The Matter of Tibet's Status
10. Lowell Thomas in Tibet
11. Major Douglas Mackiernan: A Tragic Incident
12. 'The Bearded Khampa': Tibet's Paul Revere
13. 1950: The PLA Invades Korea and Tibet
14. Nehru's Non-Alignment, the Korean War, and Tibet
15. The Dalai Lama and Henderson's Plan
16. Mr Nehru … Again
17. Formosa: The Unsinkable Aircraft Carrier
PART II
18. The Eisenhower Era
19. Pakistan: A New American Ally
20. The Panchsheel Agreement: An Indo-Chinese Condominium
21. Nehru's Bid for Global Prominence
22. NSC Directive 5412: Structuring CIA Operations
23. Mobilizing Religion
24. Meanwhile, a World Away…
25. Gyalo Thondup: A Mystery Wrapped in an Enigma
26. Washington's Covert Program in Tibet
27. The South Asian Rubik Cube
28. The Dalai Lama Leaves Tibet
29. Tibet and the United Nations
30. The Dalai Lama, Nehru, and the Chinese: A Difficult Mix
31. Conclusion
32. Postscript
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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