ABSTRACT

Covering China's history, political economy, culture, military issues, and the U. S.-China relationship, this book presents a fascinating and multifaceted look at a country which is likely to be a major factor in U. S. foreign policy in the twenty-first century. It includes more than 28 articles on China published in The National Interest since 1995. The first in a series of readers drawn from The National Interest, the volume brings together in one place the analysis and insight of some of the leading scholars and practitioners concerned with the Sino-American relationship.China has been and is a particularly difficult subject for Americans, observes Owen Harries in his introduction. This volume tackles the hard questions. Will successful market reforms lead to the emergence of a prosperous liberal democracy or simply extend the life span of an authoritarian regime? Contributors address (and disagree about) whether Chinese culture and society can adapt to the norms of the free market and the open society. They examine whether growing economic disparities between the developed coastal regions and a backward interior threaten to unleash uncontrollable social unrest. They also consider whether or not ethnic and religious tensions among China's minority groups contain the seeds for China's disintegration. Are the United States and China destined to clash?Conclusions provided by the authors vary greatly. For some, China is a dangerous rival, a rapidly modernizing power with hegemonic ambitions to dominate East Asia. For others, China is a strategic partner and prospective ally. Contributors square off on issues of whether China's military poses a real threat or is a paper tiger; whether the future of Taiwan is to trigger a major war between Beijing and Washington or provide a model for peaceful accommodation of Chinese and American interests in the region; and whether containment or engagement is the sounder strategy for coping with a rising China.The distinguished

part |2 pages

Part 1: China, Asia, and America

chapter 1|18 pages

Living With China Zbigniew Brzezinski

chapter 2|14 pages

Remembering the Future

chapter 4|13 pages

China: What Engagement Should Mean

chapter 5|13 pages

Why Our Hardliners Are Wrong

chapter 6|15 pages

China: Getting the Questions Right

chapter 7|19 pages

The World Shakes China

part |2 pages

Part 2: Political Economy

part |2 pages

Part 3: Culture and Society

chapter 14|11 pages

Two Cheers for "Asian Values"

chapter 16|16 pages

China and the Quest for Dignity

chapter 17|4 pages

The New Mandarins

chapter 18|13 pages

Asia Tomorrow, Gray and Male

chapter 19|13 pages

City of Bad Omens

part |2 pages

Part 4: Military-Security Issues

chapter 21|11 pages

China's Hollow Military

chapter 22|9 pages

China's Military: A Second Opinion

chapter 23|4 pages

China's Military: Take 3

part |2 pages

Part 5: History and Historiography

chapter 25|6 pages

Communist Crowd Control

chapter 26|11 pages

China and the Historians

chapter 27|13 pages

Mao in History