US-China Relations (3rd Ed)

Home > Other > US-China Relations (3rd Ed) > Page 60
US-China Relations (3rd Ed) Page 60

by Robert G Sutter


  Root-Takahira agreement, 27

  one China, one Taiwan policy, 105

  Ross, Robert, 175

  one China policy, 4

  Ross, Wilbur, 269

  one country, two systems, 260

  Rubio, Marco, 160, 224

  Open Door Notes, 24–25

  Russia, 23, 25, 27, 28, 119, 154, 162

  Open Door policy, 24, 29

  opium trade, 19

  Sanders, Bernie, 160

  Opium War of 1839–1842, 18, 19

  SARS virus, 138

  Saudi Arabia, 85

  Pakistan, 85, 87, 131, 176, 276, 277

  Scarborough Shoal, 229

  Panama Canal Treaty, 74

  secrecy in US China policy, 8, 69–71, 102

  pan Asia approach in US policy toward

  September 11, 2001, terrorist attack on

  China, 77–90

  America, 93, 110, 121

  Panay incident, 32

  Shanghai Communiqué, 71

  Parker, Peter, 19

  Shantung lease-hold, 18, 29–30

  Pearl Harbor, 37, 175

  Shultz, George, policy toward China,

  Pelosi, Nancy, 98, 103, 134

  77–90

  Pence, Michael, 267

  Sigur, Gaston, 77, 79

  permanent normal trade relations (PNTR),

  silk road plans, 233, 276–277

  94, 103, 104, 105, 186

  Sino-British Joint Declaration of 1984, 260

  Philippines, 157, 229, 230, 231, 268

  Sino-Soviet alliance, 40, 52, 54, 56

  political dissent in China, 250–252

  Sino-Soviet split, 58–59, 59, 66

  prison labor and Chinese exports to the

  Snow, Edgar, 43, 68

  United States, 130

  Soong, Mayling, 34

  processing trade, 188, 195

  South China Sea, 4, 151, 152, 154, 156,

  proliferation of weapons of mass

  157, 158, 163, 213–214, 227, 229–231,

  destruction (WMD) and US-Chinese

  233–236, 268. See also Chinese

  relations, 1, 131, 176

  maritime disputes; East Asian maritime

  Index

  329

  disputes

  Taiwan Strait crisis of 1995–1996, 94, 103,

  Southeast Asia and China, 275. See also

  115–116, 169, 216

  Association of Southeast Asian Nations

  Tangshan earthquake, 72

  (ASEAN); South China Sea

  Tang Shao-yi, 27

  South Korea, 151, 275

  Terranova, Francisco, 19

  Soviet Union, 40, 46, 54, 58, 95; and Yalta

  terrorism, 1, 122, 127, 176, 258

  Conference of 1945, 46; maneuvering

  Tet offensive 1968, 63

  during change in US-China-Soviet

  Thailand, 268

  relations 1969-1989, 62, 80, 88–89,

  Three No’s, 105

  165–168

  Tiananmen crackdown, 8, 91–102, 186,

  “special state-to-state relations,” 106

  241, 251

  Stalin, Joseph, 24, 40

  Tibet, 93; and issues in US-Chinese

  “state capitalism” in China, 187, 195–196

  relations, 5, 93, 100, 130, 134, 151,

  state control of information in China,

  240, 242, 256–257; and the uprising

  252–254

  and crackdown in 2008, 130, 243

  state-owned enterprises (SOEs), 187

  trade, 6; and China, 188–190; issues in US

  Stilwell, Joseph, 41, 42, 45

  politics 2015–2017, 159, 194–204,

  Straight, Willard, 27–28

  207–208; issues since the Cold War,

  Straits Exchange Foundation (SEF), 220

  132, 134, 163, 194–204, 207–208; US

  Stuart. Leighton, 48

  deficit with China, 6, 134, 194–195

  Sudan, 5, 6

  Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual

  Sun Yat-sen, 30

  Property Rights (TRIPS), 198

  Syria, 4, 5, 6, 162

  Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP), 153, 159,

  223, 280

  Taft, William, 24, 28

  treaty ports, 15, 19, 20

  Taiping Rebellion, 20

  Treaty System, 13, 19, 20

  Taiwan, 1, 47, 60, 213–226, 275; and US

  Tribute System, 13, 18

  elections debates 2016, 224–225;

  Truman, Harry, 24, 47–48, 50–52

  Eisenhower policy toward, 53–54;

  Trump, Donald, 3; and human rights, 244;

  issues after Tiananmen, 92, 93, 169;

  and Xi Jinping, 4, 162–164, 266; crisis

  issues in contemporary US-Chinese

  over North Korean nuclear weapons,

  relations, 5, 8, 175, 214–226; issues in

  182–183, 266; election campaign

  normalizing US-Chinese relations,

  issues, 159, 160–161, 186, 204; policy

  69–71, 74–77, 167, 215; issues in

  in the Asia-Pacific region, 266–270,

  Reagan’s pan Asia policy, 77–90;

  280; policy toward China, 3–5, 147,

  issues in Trump administration, 3, 4,

  150, 161–164, 204, 212, 236, 266;

  150, 161, 163; issues in US-Chinese

  policy toward Taiwan, 3, 150, 161, 162,

  relations 1989–2000, 94, 103, 115–116;

  225–226

  issues in US-Chinese relations

  Tsai Ing-wen, 157, 161, 182–183, 214,

  2000–2017, 133–134, 151, 175,

  217, 222

  177–179

  Twenty-One Demands, 18, 24, 29

  Taiwanese-American lobby groups, 100

  two Chinas policy, 105

  Taiwan independence and self-

  determination, 84, 105, 216, 217, 240,

  Uighur Muslims, 257–258

  242

  Umbrella Movement, 259

  Taiwan Relations Act, 8, 75, 109–110

  United Nations, 60; and peacekeeping, 1

  Taiwan Strait crisis of 1954–1955, 54–55

  Unocal, 133

  Taiwan Strait crisis of 1958, 56

  US-China Communiqué of 1978, 74, 75

  330

  Index

  US-China competition in the Asia-Pacific

  Vance, Cyrus, 74, 80, 167

  region, 151–158, 267

  Vatican relations with China, 256

  US-China economic issues, 132–133, 134,

  Venezuela, 5

  147, 155, 185–208

  Versailles Peace Treaty of 1919, 18, 29

  US-China military ties and security

  “victim mentality” and China, 7, 274

  interests in the 21st century, 131, 148,

  Vietnam, 88, 88–89, 167, 268; Chinese

  165, 169–183

  invasion of, 75, 167; territorial disputes

  US-China security interests against the

  with China, 229, 230, 231, 233–234;

  Soviet Union 1969–1989, 165–168

  US war in, 56, 57, 59, 63–64

  US-China security interests following

  Tiananmen and the Cold War 1989-

  Wallace, Henry, 44–45

  2000, 165, 168–169

  Wang-hsia Treaty of 1844, 19

  US-China strategic and economic

  Ward, Frederick Townsend, 20

  dialogues, 2

  Washington Conference of 1921-1922, 18,

  US Congress, 42; and policy toward China,

  24, 30

  42, 75, 77, 90, 93, 95, 97, 108–110,

  Watergate scandal, 71

  128–136, 168, 215; impact of the 110th

  “wedge strategy,” 55–56

  Congress, 134, 135

 
Wilson, Woodrow, 18, 24, 29

  US debates over China policy: late

  Wolfowitz, Paul, 77, 79, 82

  1970s–early 1980s versus 1990s, 75,

  World Bank, 192

  93, 95, 96–102, 107–110; 2014–2017,

  World Health Assembly (WHA), 220

  154, 155–156

  World Trade Organization (WTO) and

  US differences with China, 6–7, 8–9, 143,

  China, 94, 103, 104, 105, 186, 200

  147–148, 159–160

  US election campaign 2016 and China, 3,

  Xi Jinping, 2; and Barack Obama, 148,

  147, 150, 159–161, 186

  157–158, 174, 200, 212, 266; and

  US failure in China, 40–48

  Donald Trump, 4, 150, 162–164, 266;

  US intelligence monitoring Soviet missile

  and economic influence in Asia—

  launches from Chinese sites, 168

  strengths and weaknesses, 276–277;

  US international decline, 270

  and human rights, 244; and policy

  US leadership in Asia, 5, 32, 37, 40,

  shortcomings in Asia, 275–276; and

  50–51, 152, 278–281

  policy toward the US, 145, 153–155,

  US media and China, 77, 91–92, 169

  170, 174, 266; and Trump

  US public opinion and China, 16, 77,

  administration, 3–4

  91–92, 160, 215

  Xinjiang, 5, 130

  US-Republic of China defense treaty, 53,

  54, 74, 75

  Yalta Conference of 1945, 38, 46

  US-Soviet arms control, 74

  Ye Jianying, 69

  US Special Trade Representative (USTR),

  Yellow Sea, 151

  202

  Yuan Shih-kai, 27

  US State Department reports on human

  rights in China, 246, 249

  Zhou Enlai, 43–44, 55, 59, 62, 66, 67

  US strengths and shortcomings in the Asia-

  Zhu Rongji, 105

  Pacific region, 278–281

  Zimbabwe, 5, 6

  Zoellick, Robert, 125

  values and US-Chinese relations, 6–7, 14,

  ZTE, 157

  77, 153, 237–264

  About the Author

  Robert G. Sutter has been professor of practice of international affairs at the Elliott School of International Affairs (ESIA) at George Washington University since 2011. He also directs the ESIA Bachelor of Arts in International

  Affairs program, involving more than one thousand students.

  A PhD graduate in history and East Asian languages from Harvard Uni-

  versity, Sutter taught full-time at Georgetown University (2001–11) and part-

  time during the previous thirty years at Georgetown, George Washington,

  and Johns Hopkins Universities and the University of Virginia. He has pub-

  lished twenty-one books, more than two hundred articles, and several hun-

  dred government reports dealing with the United States, China, and contem-

  porary Asian and Pacific affairs. His most recent, newly published book is

  The United States and Asia: Regional Dynamics and Twenty-First Century

  Relations (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015). The fourth edition of his book Chinese Foreign Relations: Power and Policy Since the Cold War (Rowman

  & Littlefield) was published in 2016.

  Sutter’s government career (1968–2001) involved work on Asian and

  Pacific affairs and US foreign policy. He was for many years the senior

  specialist and director of the Foreign Affairs and National Defense Division

  of the Congressional Research Service. He was also the national intelligence

  officer for East Asia and the Pacific at the US government’s National Intelli-

  gence Council, the China Division director at the Department of State’s

  Bureau of Intelligence and Research, and a professional staff member of the

  Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

  331

  Document Outline

  Contents

  1 Introduction

  2 Patterns of US-China Relations Prior to World War II

  3 Relations during World War II, Civil War, Cold War

  4 Rapprochement and Normalization

  5 Tiananmen, Taiwan, and Post–Cold War Realities, 1989–2000

  6 Pragmatism amid Differences during the George W. Bush Administration

  7 Barack Obama, Donald Trump, and Xi Jinping

  8 Security Issues in Contemporary US-China Relations

  9 Economic and Environmental Issues in Contemporary US-China Relations

  10 Taiwan and East Asian Maritime Disputes in Contemporary US-China Relations

  11 Issues of Human Rights in Contemporary US-China Relations

  12 Outlook

  Notes

  Selected Bibliography

  Index

  About the Author

 

 

 


‹ Prev