ABSTRACT

This book analyzes when, how, why, and to what effect China has used its armed forces in recent decades to coerce other actors in the international system.

Over the past 20 years, China’s international status as a “great power” has become undeniable. China’s “peaceful rise” has included substantial investments in military modernization and an increasingly assertive regional posture. While China has not waged war since 1979, it has frequently resorted to what the U.S. State Department has referred to as “gangster tactics” – threats, intimidation, and armed confrontation – to advance its strategic aims. This volume illuminates the ways in which China has employed its military and paramilitary tools to coerce other states, and examines the motivations and specific foreign policy objectives that China has pursued using force short of war. The study presents new analysis of an original dataset on coercive actions undertaken by China’s armed forces, taking into account the political objectives pursued and the environmental contexts in which these operations occurred. It also presents a series of expert case studies addressing the most consequential examples of China using force to coerce in recent decades. The volume contributes to a more historically informed, empirically based understanding of great power competition.

This book will be of much interest to students of Chinese security and foreign policy, strategic studies, Asian politics and International Relations.

chapter 1|12 pages

To Win Without Fighting

Coercion in China's Military Strategy

chapter 2|15 pages

China's Military Coercion

Patterns and Rationale

chapter 4|19 pages

China Goes to War

Signaling and Intervention in Korea, India, and Vietnam

chapter 5|37 pages

One China, or Else

Military Escalation and Signaling in the Taiwan Strait

chapter 6|29 pages

China and Japan

The Return of Rivalry

chapter 7|27 pages

Conquering the Commons

Coercion in the South China Sea

chapter 8|38 pages

On the Precipice

Crisis and Confrontation on the China-India Border

chapter 11|10 pages

Conclusion