The Strange Connection: U.S. Intervention in China, 1944-1972Bloomsbury Academic, 1992年3月23日 - 264 頁 This book provides an analysis of American intervention in China from World War II to the rapprochement Richard Nixon began in 1972. One of the major themes of the work is that the United States should avoid judging China by Western standards. The United States learned this after twenty-eight years of attempting to impose its own standards of democratic, representative government on China. Alexander also contends that the United States acted against its own interests when it supported the Nationalists and that the United States accused the Chinese Communists of aggressive policies in East Asia when, in fact, they did not pursue aggressive policies. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 11 筆
... Liu Shaoqi and Deng Xiaoping . Liu was first vice chairman of the Chinese Communist party's central committee and , upon easing Mao out of the job in December 1958 , had become state chairman or the chief official of the People's ...
... Liu Shaoqi proposed reestablishing the Chinese alliance with the Soviet Union be- cause of the Vietnam War escalation . Concentration on Vietnam would doom the domestic program Mao had in mind and lock China into the Soviet system . He ...
... Liu Shaoqi , Mao's real target , was a patron of Peng . In the summer of 1965 Mao and his wife , Jiang Qing , laid ... Liu Shaoqi , could be implicated as well . Wu Han recanted on December 30 , admitting he had failed to use Mao's ...
內容
The United States Begins to Meddle in China | 1 |
Hurley Arrives Stilwell Departs | 11 |
The Dixie Mission | 17 |
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