A Conflict Perpetuated: China Policy During the Kennedy Years

A Conflict Perpetuated: China Policy During the Kennedy Years

by Noam Kochavi
A Conflict Perpetuated: China Policy During the Kennedy Years

A Conflict Perpetuated: China Policy During the Kennedy Years

by Noam Kochavi

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Overview

The first comprehensive account of China policy during the Kennedy years, this study profiles John F. Kennedy as a man whose inner struggles and disparate characteristics made for an unpredictable foreign policy. While he was often a hostage to the Cold War, to constrictive perceptions of the domestic climate, and to the image of a predatory China, Kennedy recognized Washington's finite capacity to shape events on the China Mainland. With the possible exception of a preventive strike against China's nuclear installations, he was also reluctant to run the risk of a military confrontation with Beijing. On the eve of his assassination, Kennedy may have even contemplated a China policy departure during his second term.

A calm appraisal of China's capabilities and intentions constituted the distinguishing feature of revisionist thinking during the Kennedy years. The disjointed revisionist effort settled, in late 1963, on a pedagogic course, which still implied a search for American primacy. The revisionist approach did ultimately facilitate the transformation of bilateral relations in the early 1970s. From a shorter-range perspective, however, the Kennedy era only added fuel to the fire of Sino-American confrontation. The Limited Test Ban Treaty accentuated the sense of encirclement and vulnerability in Beijing's psyche, and clouds gathered ominously over Vietnam. Kennedy does bear some responsibility for the bilateral impasse, as he personified a decisionmaker so obsessed with the objective of deterrence as to overlook the security dilemma: nonetheless, Mao's preference for a radical course, independent of Kennedy's conduct, contributed as well. Neither side was yet ready for a breakthrough.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780275972165
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 01/30/2002
Series: International History
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.75(d)
Lexile: 1680L (what's this?)

About the Author

Noam Kochavi is an Lecturer at the Department of International Relations, Hebrew University of Jerusalem./e A specialist in U.S.-Asian relations, he received his PhD in American History in 1999 from the University of Toronto, where he studied with Ronald W. Pruessen, and his MA in International Relations and China Studies from the Hebrew University.

Table of Contents

Introduction
The Eisenhower Legacy: Consequential Brinkmanship
The Kennedy Team's China Prism Prior to the Assumption of Power
1961's Emerging Patterns: Stillborn Initiatives, Linkage Politics, and Alliance Politics
Mist Across the Bamboo Curtain: Washington's View of China's Internal Crisis, 1961-1962
The Sino-Indian War and the Failure of the "New Pacific Community"
Chinese Shadows, Korean Ghosts, and Entanglment in Southeast Asia
From Puzzled Prudence to Bold Experimentation: The Sino-Soviet Split and the Strategic Triangle
Fork in the Road: Between a Surgical Strike and a Conditional "Containment Without Isolation"
Summary and Conclusion
Bibliography

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