Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Note on Transliteration
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: US-China Relations at a Historic Crossroad
- Part One Background and Lost Voices
- 1 From Admirer to Critic: Li Dazhao’s Changing Attitudes toward the United States
- 2 Legacy of the Exclusion Act and Chinese Americans’ Experience
- 3 Disillusioned Diplomacy: US Policy towards Wang Jingwei’s Reorganized National Government, 1938–1945
- Part Two Did America Lose China?
- 4 Lost Opportunity or Mission Impossible: A Historiographical Essay on the Marshall Mission to China, December 1945–January 1947
- 5 Negotiating from Strength: US-China Diplomatic Challenges at the Korean War Armistice Conference, 1951–1953
- 6 Mao Zedong and the Taiwan Strait Crises
- Part Three Rapprochement and Opportunities
- 7 Media and US-China Reconciliation
- 8 Sino-American Relations in the Wake of Tiananmen, 1989–1991
- 9 Jiang Zemin and the United States: Hiding Hatred and Biding Time for Revenge
- Part Four Did China Lose America?
- 10 China’s Belt-Road Strategy: Xinjiang’s Role in a System without America
- 11 The East and South China Seas in Sino-US Relations
- Conclusion: The Coming Cold War II?
- Index
9 - Jiang Zemin and the United States: Hiding Hatred and Biding Time for Revenge
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Table of Contents
- Note on Transliteration
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: US-China Relations at a Historic Crossroad
- Part One Background and Lost Voices
- 1 From Admirer to Critic: Li Dazhao’s Changing Attitudes toward the United States
- 2 Legacy of the Exclusion Act and Chinese Americans’ Experience
- 3 Disillusioned Diplomacy: US Policy towards Wang Jingwei’s Reorganized National Government, 1938–1945
- Part Two Did America Lose China?
- 4 Lost Opportunity or Mission Impossible: A Historiographical Essay on the Marshall Mission to China, December 1945–January 1947
- 5 Negotiating from Strength: US-China Diplomatic Challenges at the Korean War Armistice Conference, 1951–1953
- 6 Mao Zedong and the Taiwan Strait Crises
- Part Three Rapprochement and Opportunities
- 7 Media and US-China Reconciliation
- 8 Sino-American Relations in the Wake of Tiananmen, 1989–1991
- 9 Jiang Zemin and the United States: Hiding Hatred and Biding Time for Revenge
- Part Four Did China Lose America?
- 10 China’s Belt-Road Strategy: Xinjiang’s Role in a System without America
- 11 The East and South China Seas in Sino-US Relations
- Conclusion: The Coming Cold War II?
- Index
Summary
Abstract
Shortly after the Chinese government clamped down on the Tiananmen democracy movement, Western nations led by the United States imposed a range of sanctions on China. Sino-American relations plunged to a nadir since Nixon’s historic visit to China in 1972, making China the counterweight of the Soviet Union. Deng Xiaoping picked Jiang Zemin to be the core of the next generational leadership. Jiang employed successful strategies such as deepening economic reform, making concessions in human rights, and hiding strength to deal with the US. Sino-American relations were mostly stable and cordial in the Jiang era. However, Jiang continued to privately view the US as China’s biggest enemy and became more assertive and forceful than Deng during clashes with the US.
Keywords: Jiang Zemin, Sino-American relations, Hiding hatred and biding time, WTO, Reform period
In Chapter 8 of this book, Yafeng Xia discussed in detail Deng Xiaoping’s efforts in maintaining a tie with the United States while not weakening the Party’s rule in China in the aftermath of the Tiananmen incident. In this chapter, I focus more on Jiang Zemin’s handling of Sino-US relations during Deng Xiaoping’s last years and beyond when Jiang was the de jure ‘core’ of the CCP leadership. In fact, with the retaining of some of Jiang’s supporters in the powerful Standing Committee of the Politburo, Jiang’s power penetrated deep into the first term of Hu Jintao (2002–2007).
Just one year after the outbreak of the pandemic in 2019, Sino-US relations witnessed a freefall, plunging to a nadir not seen since the Tiananmen massacre in 1989 when the George Bush administration and its European allies swiftly imposed a wide range of penalties, from military and economic sanctions to the termination of high-level contacts. Major polls showed that most Americans had unfavourable opinions of China, which was a drastic change from prior polls (Gallup Poll, 2021). In China, while the aftermath of the Tiananmen incident sealed the political career of former general Party secretary Zhao Ziyang, it marked the beginning of the era of Jiang Zemin, then the Party secretary of Shanghai and a new protégé of Deng Xiaoping.
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- Sino-American RelationsA New Cold War, pp. 261 - 290Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022