ABSTRACT

This title was first published in 1979. The "reopening" of China in 1971 by President Richard Nixon has already been regarded as a turning point of China's foreign policy and international politics. It has facilitated the reestablishment of Peking's diplomatic relations after the Cultural Revolution, broadened the dimension of China' s international political, economic, and cultural activities, and promoted China's campaign against hegemonism of the superpowers. Its impact on China' s relationships with the outside world, particularly the United States and Third World countries, is immeasurable. This volume explores the the "three-world" theory is China's (Mao Tse-tung's) new concept of world politics after the Sino-American rapprochement. This concept, originally developed from the Soviet "twocamp" theory of 1947, has an immediate connection with Peking's "intermediate zone" theory of 1964.

chapter |61 pages

Introduction

Edited ByKing C. Chen

part I|59 pages

Theory and perceptions of the Three Worlds

part II|55 pages

Sino-American rapprochement

chapter 1|6 pages

The Nixon-Chcu Shanghai Communiqué*

Edited ByKing C. Chen

chapter 3|31 pages

The “Kunming Documents”*

Edited ByKing C. Chen

chapter 4|6 pages

Necessary Compromises (Excerpts)*

part III|86 pages

International opposition to the superpowers’ hegemonism

chapter 1|11 pages

Oppose the Two Superpowers

chapter 11|5 pages

Soviet-U.S. Contention in Latin America*

Edited ByKing C. Chen

part V|39 pages

Energy, economic, and maritime issues

part VI|18 pages

Taiwan and normalization