Chinese Military Strategy in the Third Indochina War: The Last Maoist WarRoutledge, 2007年4月16日 - 256 頁 This well-researched volume examines the Sino-Vietnamese hostilities of the late 1970s and 1980s, attempting to understand them as strategic, operational and tactical events. The Sino-Vietnamese War was the third Indochina war, and contemporary Southeast Asia cannot be properly understood unless we acknowledge that the Vietnamese fought three, not two, wars to establish their current role in the region. The war was not about the Sino-Vietnamese border, as frequently claimed, but about China’s support for its Cambodian ally, the Khmer Rouge, and the book addresses US and ASEAN involvement in the effort to support the regime. Although the Chinese completed their troop withdrawal in March 1979, they retained their strategic goal of driving Vietnam out of Cambodia at least until 1988, but it was evident by 1984-85 that the PLA, held back by the drag of its ‘Maoist’ organization, doctrine, equipment, and personnel, was not an effective instrument of coercion. Chinese Military Strategy in the Third Indochina War will be of great interest to all students of the Third Indochina War, Asian political history, Chinese security and strategic studies in general. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 83 筆
... the Third Indochina War The last Maoist war Edward C. O'Dowd Chinese Strategic Culture and Foreign Policy Decision-making Confucianism, leadership and war Huiyun Feng Chinese Military Strategy in the Third Indochina War The last.
... leadership, this study shows that the fundamental cause of their problems was the Maoist ideology that in 1979 permeated the PLA. The 165th Division, like all other PLA divisions, had followed the Maoist line, holding the requisite ...
... leadership of the Vietnamese Communist Party. In the Second Indochina War (1959–75), the North Vietnamese communists and their supporters in the South fought the United States and the Republic of Vietnam to unify the Vietnamese nation ...
... Leadership, courage, and training are at the heart of an army's effectiveness. In addition to these, the Maoist PLA had a political motivation system – an ideology – and the institutions that made it effective in every unit down to the ...
... leaders had shaped the PLA as a political tool and then used it to refashion society. As a result, the PLA had distributed its political cadre throughout the country to create Maoist factories, Maoist farms, and Maoist culture groups ...
內容
3 | |
11 | |
Narrative | 31 |
Explorations | 109 |
Conclusion | 157 |
Principles of the political work system | 167 |
Principal duties of the political commissar | 169 |
Notes | 170 |
Bibliography | 205 |
Index | 229 |