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Washington's China The National Security World, the Cold War, And the Origins of
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Washington's China The National Security World, the Cold War, And the Origins of Globalism (Culture, Politics, and the Cold War) Hardcover - 2006

by James Peck


From the publisher

Why did the United States go to such lengths, not merely to contain the People's Republic of China, but to isolate it from all diplomatic, cultural, and economic ties to other nations? Why, in other words, was American policy more hostile to China than to the Soviet Union, at least until President Nixon visited China in 1972? The answer, as set out here, lies in the fear of China's emergence as a power capable of challenging the new Asian order the United States sought to shape in the wake of World War II. To meet this threat, American policy-makers fashioned an ideology that was not simply or exclusively anticommunist, but one that aimed at creating an integrated, cooperative world capitalism under U.S. leadership - an ideology, in short, designed to outlive the Cold War. In building his argument, James Peck draws on a wide variety of little-known documents from the archives of the National Security Council and the CIA.

Details

  • Title Washington's China The National Security World, the Cold War, And the Origins of Globalism (Culture, Politics, and the Cold War)
  • Author James Peck
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Publisher University of Massachusetts Press
  • Date October 30, 2006
  • ISBN 9781558495364