Divining China's course
Material type: TextPublication details: 2005Subject(s): In: Proceedings June 2005, pp. 52-56 (86)Summary: This article suggests that looking at America's own history may provide clues about what China will do in the future. In 1898 the US had regional and imperial ambitions in the Caribbean and the Pacific respectively. In dealing with Britain the U.S. used careful diplomacy rather than military competition to achieve its ends. Argues that the US position vis-a-vis China now is analagous to that of Britain with America a century ago.Item type | Current library | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Journal Article | Mindef Library & Info Centre On-Shelf | XX(18985.1) (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Not for loan | 18985-1001 |
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XX(18982.1) For compassion and country: unified assistance / | XX(18983.1) Transformation has limits | XX(18984.1) hit my virtual smoke | XX(18985.1) Divining China's course | XX(18986.1) The impending collapse of Arab civilization | XX(18987.1) North Korea: the deal that wasn't | XX(18988.1) Going in closer |
This article suggests that looking at America's own history may provide clues about what China will do in the future. In 1898 the US had regional and imperial ambitions in the Caribbean and the Pacific respectively. In dealing with Britain the U.S. used careful diplomacy rather than military competition to achieve its ends. Argues that the US position vis-a-vis China now is analagous to that of Britain with America a century ago.
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