Nixon in China

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Nixon in China Page 48

by Margaret MacMillan

See also Kissinger, Henry as centre of policymaking, 64

  National Zoo (Washington), 147

  NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organization), 14, 105, 120

  NBC news, 267

  Nehru, Jawarhalal, 131, 160

  Discovery of India, 232

  Newsday (newspaper), 150, 196

  Newsweek (magazine) 196, 324

  New York Times, 150, 159, 160, 193, 289

  New Zealand, 310

  Nguyen Van Thieu, 255, 260, 264

  Nigeria, 176

  Ninth Party Congress, 29

  Nixon, Julie (daughter), 7

  Nixon, Pat (wife)

  arrival in PRC, 25

  background, 269

  death, 324

  personality, 269

  PRC trip (1972), 7, 21, 220, 268, 269, 270

  relationship with RN, 20, 270

  on RN–HK relations, 55–56

  RN’s comments on, 270

  sightseeing, 268–71, 299

  social duties, 147, 299–300, 304–5

  treatment by RN, 78

  Nixon, Richard and alcohol, 17

  anti-communism, 7, 8, 11, 79, 108

  appointment of HK as Secretary of State, 317

  approach to foreign affairs, 49, 57–59

  career, 64

  character and personality, 14–20, 62–63, 78

  Checkers scandal, 64

  and Chou En-lai, 17

  contempt for State Department, 60–64, 159–60, 167–68, 226

  death (1994), 324

  defeat by JFK, 9

  discussions with Chou En-lai, 95–96, 228–36, 247–48, 253–54, 262–63, 308–9

  early life and career, 9, 11, 17, 79

  and Eisenhower, 13 and father, 14

  and foreign affairs, 10, 11–14, 20

  and foreign policy, 48, 49

  hosting final Beijing banquet, 279

  insomnia, 17

  instructions to HK for Beijing trip (July 1971), 185–86

  and Lincoln Memorial demonstrators, 169

  ‘linkage’ as foreign policy tactic, 121–22, 256, 263

  meeting with Chou En-lai, 47–48

  meeting with Mao Tse-tung, 1–2, 8, 67, 70–77, 72, 74

  at Moscow summit (1972), 189, 313

  and mother, 14–15

  Nixon Doctrine (1970), 161

  preparation for shift in US–PRC policy, 162–63

  quotes, 78, 95

  re-election of (1972), 316

  relationship with wife, 20

  relations with HK, 48, 51–52, 54–56, 57–60, 74, 219–20

  resignation (1974) and aftermath, 317–18, 323–24

  and Roosevelt (Theodore), 13 run for California governor, 17, 18

  secrecy of, 159

  sightseeing in PRC, 275–77, 298–99

  similarities to HK, 60, 61

  tapes, 12, 58, 59, 78

  travels, pre-presidency, 12–13

  use of makeup, 64

  views on communism, 11

  views on State Department, 56

  views on Vietnam War, 119–20

  views on presidency, 11–12

  and Watergate scandal, 315–17

  and Wilson (Woodrow), 13

  youth, 15–16

  Nixon, Tricia (daughter), 7, 177–78

  Nixon Doctrine, 9, 161

  Nobel Peace Prize, 58, 264

  North Korea, 32

  North Vietnam, 32, 222, 255–56

  peace agreement with US (1973), 264, 314, 316

  relations with PRC, 105, 113, 136, 199–200, 228, 257–62, 263–64

  Shanghai communiqué, 331. See also Vietnam War

  Vietnam reunited (1975), 264 NSC. See National Security Council

  nuclear weapons, 9, 113, 129, 132, 135, 245, 285. See also Strategic Arms Limitations Talks (SALT)

  Nuclear Weapons and Foreign Policy (Kissinger), 54

  O

  Okinawa, 283, 284, 285, 286

  Oklahoma City, USS, 290

  opium trade, China and, 3

  Ottawa, 165, 167, 173

  Outer Mongolia, 126, 135, 137

  P

  Pakistan

  India-Pakistan crisis (1971), 187, 214–18, 219, 233

  Shanghai communiqué (1972), 294, 295, 331, 332

  as US–PRC secret channel, 171–73, 184

  Pakistan International Airlines, 188

  Palmerston, Lord, 13

  pandas, gift of, 147

  Paris, 170, 233, 259, 262, 264

  Paris Peace Conference (1919), 39, 85, 98

  Pathet Lao, 264

  Patton, George, 12

  Patton (film), 203

  Pearl Harbor (1941), 98

  Peking. See Beijing Peng Dehuai, 28, 29

  Peng Mengmin, 247

  People’s Daily (Chinese newspaper), 94, 113, 163, 171, 240, 319

  People’s Liberation Army, 23, 135, 140, 141, 201

  People’s Republic of China. See also Cultural Revolution; Great Leap Forward; Taiwan admittance to United Nations,210–14

  and Asian anti-Western movements, 105

  attacks on Quemoy and Matsu islands (1958), 130, 131, 245–47

  attitudes to US, 3–4

  betrayed by Paris Peace Conference (1919), 39, 85, 98

  and Chiang Kai-shek, 41

  Chinese Communist Party, genesis, 70

  Chinese Communist Party, suitability for governing, 99

  Chinese Communist Party established (1920), 85, 86

  civil war, 43, 99–100

  clashes on USSR–PRC border (164–69), 134–37, 138

  communist victory, 43

  confrontations with India (1962), 112–13, 115, 130, 136, 232, 234

  death of Mao, 320

  defence budget growth, 326

  diplomatic relations, 30–31

  economic growth, 321, 326

  embassies in, 32

  establishment, 69

  fear of major Soviet attack (1969), 137–41

  foreigners in, 30

  founding, 33, 43, 45

  growing tensions with USSR, 114, 115, 124–34, 234

  Guomindang–Communist alliance (United Front), 40, 86, 126–27, 242

  historical background, 2–3, 34–35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 68–70, 96–98, 231–32, 309

  invasion of Vietnam (1979), 265

  involvement in Korean War, 103–4, 129

  involvement in Vietnam War, 113, 136, 199–200, 228, 257–62, 263–64

  Japan invasion of China proper (1937), 43, 87

  Japan seizure of Manchuria (1931), 87

  and Kosygin’s peace attempts, 139–40, 144

  and Long March, 41–42

  opening talks with Canada, 164–67

  and Paris Peace Conference, 39

  power struggles (1973-76), 319–22

  proclamation of, 27

  recognized by UK, 31

  relationship with US, 6

  relationship with West, 2

  re-opening of diplomatic relations, 164, 167

  RN and US policy, 52

  Shanghai communiqué, 330–34

  signing of Sino-Soviet treaty 1950), 103

  testing of first nuclear weapon (1964), 113, 132

  Philadelphia Orchestra, 319

  Philippines, 105, 310

  Phnom Penh, 264

  ‘ping-pong’ diplomacy, 174–77

  Polo, Marco, 2

  Polo One (HK’s secret detour to China, 1971), 185

  Pol Pot, 264

  Pravda, 282

  press and TV See media relations Price, Raymond, 48, 57

  Prince Timahoe (RN’s dog), 150

  Q

  Qianlong Emperor, 34, 47, 73, 147

  Qiao Guanhua, 146, 157, 225, 228, 274

  HK sharing of US intelligence with, 236–37, 307

  illness and death (1983), 320, 322

  personal background, 293, 294

  Shanghai communiqué, 226, 254, 278, 294–98, 301–3, 305, 306

  Qin Empero
r, 69, 83, 276

  Qing dynasty, 34–35, 36, 37, 68, 71, 79, 241, 271

  Qongqing (earlier Chungking), 87

  Quemoy Island (Taiwan), 130, 131, 242, 245

  R

  Radford, Charles, 186

  Rather, Dan, 148

  Rawalpindi, 187, 197

  Reagan, Ronald, 213, 238, 289, 323, 324

  Realpolitick, 50

  Rebozo, Bebe, 19, 78, 150, 270, 310

  Red-Ass Saloon (US bar, Beijing),315

  Red Detachment of Women, The (PRC opera), 275

  Red Guards, 28, 44, 82, 107,114–15, 138, 194. See also Little

  Red Book

  Red Star over China (Snow), 69

  Republican Party, 54, 103, 104–5, 67, 313, 316, 318

  Republic of China. See Chiang

  Kai-shek; Guomindang;

  Taiwan

  Reston, James, 150, 193

  Rice, Condoleezza, 55

  Richard M. Nixon Memorial

  Library, 324

  Richardson, Elliot, 63, 121, 138

  Road Runner (Ron Walker’s code name), 204

  Robertson, Walter, 105

  Rockefeller, Nelson, 51, 54, 57, 183

  Rogers, William, 7, 25, 166, 182, 197, 198, 210, 220

  character and background, 62

  exclusion from RN–Mao Tse-tung meeting, 76

  isolation by State Department, 61–64, 161, 178, 186, 189, 197–98, 226–27, 286, 293, 298, 300, 306–7, 309–10

  relegation at RN and Mao Tse-tung meeting, 95

  Shanghai communiqué disagreement, 300–3

  suitability for State Department, 63

  tensions with HK, 48, 63, 64, 212, 293

  Roosevelt, Franklin D, 98

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 13

  Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 83

  Rumsfeld, Donald, 162

  Rusk, Dean, 111–12, 113 Russia. See Soviet Union

  Russo-Japanese War (1904–05),

  126, 135

  Ryckmans, Pierre (aka Simon Leys), 30

  s

  SALT. See Strategic Arms

  Limitations Talks San

  Francisco World’s Fair (1815),148

  Sassoon, Sir Victor, 304 Sato Eisaku, 285, 286–88, 310

  Scali, John, 20–21, 301

  Segretti, Donald, 303–4, 316

  Service, Jack, 252

  Sevareid, Eric, 153, 157

  Shandong, 35

  Shangai Industrial Exhibition (earlier Sino-Soviet Friendship Building), 305, 306

  Shanghai, 33, 35, 41, 85, 221, 224, 272, 304

  Shanghai Children’s Palace, 304

  Shanghai Revolutionary Committee, 304, 307

  Shawcross, Sir Hartley, 157

  Shen, James, 289, 314

  Shenyang, 36

  Siberia, 134

  Sihanouk, Prince (of Cambodia), 47, 163, 169, 200, 262

  Singapore, 310

  Six Crises, The (Nixon), 17, 73, 203

  Smedley, Agnes, 88

  Smith, Adam, 83

  Snead, Sam, 147

  Snow, Edgar, 69, 80, 82, 99, 114, 132, 171–72, 178, 184, 246

  socialism. See Marxism

  Somoza, Anastasio, 180

  South Vietnam, 232, 255, 260–61, 263, 310, 313

  fall of Saigon (1975), 264

  Provisional Revolutionary Government (1972), 332 Soviet Union

  Brezhnev Doctrine, 120 and Chinese Communist Party, 40

  clashes on USSR–PRC border (1964–69), 134–41

  explosion of first atomic bomb, 129

  growing tensions with PRC, 114, 115, 124–34, 234

  influence over Chinese Communists and Guomindang, 40, 86, 126

  invasion of Czechoslovakia(1968), 133, 160, 259

  and Kosygin’s peace attempts 139–40, 144

  role in India–Pakistan crisis (1971), 217–19

  Sino-Soviet treaty (1950), 103, 128

  US and SALT I agreement (1972), 313

  and Yugoslavia, 102

  Spencer, Herbert, 37

  Spirit of ‘76. See Air Force One

  Spock, Mr (TV and film character), 329

  Stalin, 67, 90, 91, 93, 102, 126, 127, 128, 129, 300

  Stanford University, 267

  State Department. See also Rogers, William changes in, 112

  HK dislike of, 48, 56, 60–64, 95, 159–60, 167–68, 226–27’, 300 isolation from policymaking, 21, 56, 60–64, 108, 159, 167–68, 170, 173, 186, 220, 226–27, 230, 307

  RN and HK contempt for, 60–64

  Stevenson, Adlai, 111

  Stilwell, General Joseph, 242

  St Laurent, Louis, 164

  Stockholm, 166 Stoessel, Walter, 167, 168

  Strategic Arms Limitations Talks (SALT), 15, 236, 237, 281 US–USSR agreement (SALT I, 1972), 189, 283, 313

  Strong, Anne Louise, 100

  Sukhodrev, Viktor, 57

  Summer Palace (Beijing), 34, 206, 271

  Summit Conference of Indo-Chinese Peoples (1970), 332

  Sun Yat-sen, 40, 83

  Supreme Court (US), Watergate conspiracy, 317

  Suzhou, 322

  Sweden, 166

  Syria, 120

  T

  table tennis championships,173–74, 176–77, 178

  Tainan Giants (Taiwan baseball team), 290

  Taipei, 241, 289

  Taiping Rebellion (1851–64), 81

  Taiwan

  alternative government on, 43

  attacks on Quemoy and Matsuislands, 130, 131, 245–47

  Chiang Kai-shek retreat to (1949), 43, 102, 241, 243 and Guomindang, 43

  importance to PRC, 127, 168, 178, 184–85, 191, 193, 207–10, 227–28, 240–54, 326–27

  internal revolt against Guomindang (1947), 241

  Japan takes possession of, 35, 241

  loss of China seat at UN,210–14, 289

  relations with US, 104, 112,173, 288–91, 326–27

  retention of China seat at UN, 105

  Shanghai communiqué (1972), 296–98, 300–1, 306, 333–34

  Taiwan Independence Movement,248

  Tanaka Kakuei, 288

  Tang dynasty, 231, 276

  Tang Wensheng (aka Nancy; Mao Tse-tung’s personal interpreter)73, 147, 188, 202

  Tashkent, 139

  Temple of Heaven, 31

  Test Ban Treaty (US–USSR,1963), 132

  Thailand, 310

  Third Front (PRC invasion preparation, 1964), 132, 133

  Thomas, Helen, 153

  ‘Three Hundred Percenters’, 30

  Three States period (China), 69

  Three Towers Reflecting the Moon(RNs villa, Hangzhou), 298 Tiananmen Square, 28, 32, 169,171, 320

  and Forbidden City, 27

  prepared for RN visit, 24

  pro-democracy crackdown (1989), 323, 325

  RN welcome in, 26

  Tianjin, 36–37, 39

  Tibet, 105, 215, 242

  Time (magazine), 21, 58, 108, 169, 196, 316

  Tokyo, 38

  Toronto, 165

  trade and exchanges: Shanghai communiqué (1972), 294,295–96, 334

  Treaty of Friendship, Alliance and Mutual Assistance

  (PRC–USSR, 1950), 103, 128

  Treaty of Nerchinsk (1689), 125

  ‘Tricky Dick’. See Nixon, Richard Trudeau, Pierre, 165–66, 173

  Truman, Harry S., 100, 260, 270

  creation of National Security Adviser, 51

  and Guomindang, 243

  and Korean War, 103–4

  relations with China, 99, 102, 111

  and Taiwan, 232, 243

  Truman, Margaret, 270

  U

  United Front, 86

  United Kingdom, 107, 114, 213, 280

  embassy destruction, 28

  embassy in PRC, 32

  history with China, 34

  recognition of PRC (1950), 31, 101–2, 164

  United Nations, 14, 104, 105, 191

  PRC admittance to, 111–12, 210–14


  United Nations Security Council Resolution, India–Pakistan ceasefire, 331

  United States of America. See also Vietnam War attack on Cambodia (1970), 169, 256

  attack on Laos (1971), 256

  attitudes to China, 3, 4

  and China in WWII, 3

  civil rights movement, 116–17

  cultural changes, 117–18

  defence of Quemoy and Matsu islands (1958), 245–46

  failure to hold Vietnam elections (1954), 232, 260

  fear of communism, 11

  freeze towards PRC (post-Second World War), 102–7

  Korean War (1950–53), 103–4

  McCarthy conspiracy theories, 108

  relationship with PRC, 2, 6

  relations with Japan, 283–88

  relations with UK, 280

  and SALT, 15

  Seventh Fleet, move into Taiwan Strait (1950), 243

  Strategic Arms Limitation Talks(SALT), 236, 237, 281

  support for Guomindang, 3–4, 98–99, 100

  US–USSR agreement (SALT I, 1972), 189, 283, 313

  War on Poverty, 116

  Ushiba Nobuhiko, 286

  USSR. See Soviet Union Ussuri river, 134, 135

  US Table Tennis Association, 176, 177

  V

  Vassar College, 322

  Viet Cong, 257

  Vietnam. See Indochina; North Vietnam; South Vietnam; Vietnam War relationship with China, 258

  Vietnam War, 6, 49, 58, 113, 118–21, 187, 199

  effect on US, 8–9

  effect on US-PRC relations, 4

  Shanghai communiqué (1972), 331

  signing of peace agreement (1973), 264, 314, 316

  Tet offensive (1968), 119

  unification (1975), 264

  Villa 18 (Diaoyutai), 47

  Vladivostok, 134, 238

  Voice of America (radio station), 160

  Voorhis, Jerry, 11

  W

  Wagner, Richard, 77

  Walker, Ron (code name Road Runner), 204–5, 224, 275, 324

  Wal-Mart, 296

  Walters, Barbara, 153, 309

  Walters, Vernon, 170, 259

  Wang Guangmei, 274

  Wang Hairong (Mao Tse-tung’s grand-niece), 202

  Wang Hongwen, 221

  Wang-tang mesdemoiselles. SeeTang Wensheng, Wang Hairon Warring States period (China), 69

  Warsaw, US–PRC contacts, 109, 143, 160, 161, 163, 167, 168, 169, 246

  Washington, George, 50, 83, 97, 225

  Washington Post, 316

  Watergate conspiracy, 6, 18, 159, 315–18, 324

  Watergate Special Prosecution Force, 286

  Water Margin, The (Chinese novel), 82

  West Berlin, 281, 283

  White, Theodore, 11, 150, 299

  Whiting, Allen, 113, 138

  Whittier High School (US), 269

  Wicker, Tom, 16

  Wilson, Henry, 14

  Wilson, Woodrow, 13–14, 50, 97–98

  Witke, Roxanne, 274, 275

  Woods, Rose Mary, 270, 307

  Woodstock (music festival), 117

  Woodward, Bob, 316

  World Table Tennis Championship(Japan, 1971), 174. See also ‘ping–pong’ diplomacy

 

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