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
8 - Sino-American Relations in the Wake of Tiananmen, 1989–1991
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
On the basis of current scholarship and previously untapped Chinese sources, this chapter provides a deeper analysis of how Deng Xiaoping, then China’s paramount leader, handled relations with the US in the wake of the Tiananmen crackdown. Deng had a tough job of balancing between Conservatives and Reformers in China’s leadership circle. Deng wanted to ‘keep the US door open’, without showing any softness in dealing with Washington. Deng’s foreign policy directive, ‘avoiding the limelight, and getting some things done’, saved Communist rule in China. Had the Bush Administration been tougher on China after the Tiananmen crackdown, it might have delayed China’s economic rise, but it wouldn’t have brought down the Chinese Communist regime.
Keywords: China; United States; Deng Xiaoping; George H. W. Bush; Western sanctions; Reform and Opening up
Soon after Nixon’s China trip, there was a lull in Sino-American relations from 1972 to 1978. Richard Nixon’s initial opening to China was followed by a period in which the projected normalization of diplomatic ties between the two powers was allowed to languish. By the spring of 1978, the Jimmy Carter administration had become more enthusiastic about establishing formal diplomatic relations with Beijing. At the time, Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping was eager to proceed with normalization in order to enlist Washington to oppose the Soviet Union. But more importantly, China would be able to get access to Western science and technology for his “Reform and Opening up” policy. On December 15, 1978, President Carter announced the agreement on the establishment of diplomatic relations between the US and China. This relationship was premised primarily on US-China shared opposition to the Soviet Union (Mann 1998, 78–95; Kissinger 2011, 348–76).
During the 1980 presidential campaign, Ronald Reagan suggested on several occasions that if elected president, he would restore ‘official relations’ with Taiwan. When Reagan took office in January 1981, China became one of the principal battlegrounds for infighting within the new administration. After a year and a half of diplomatic maneuvering between the two sides, China and the United States signed the August 17, 1982, communique, restricting US arms sales to Taiwan.
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- Chapter
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- Sino-American RelationsA New Cold War, pp. 241 - 260Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2022