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Volumn , Issue 153, 1998, Pages 1-30

China's Militarized Interstate Dispute Behaviour 1949-1992: A First Cut at the Data

(1)  Johnston, Alastair Iain a  

a NONE

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EID: 0031752701     PISSN: 03057410     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1017/s0305741000002964     Document Type: Article
Times cited : (61)

References (86)
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    • note
    • This was the assessment of a number of foreign policy analysts with whom I spoke in Beijing and Shanghai during a research trip to China from January to July 1996. The official line was that the relative public silence from states in the region indicated basic agreement with China that Taiwanese "flexible diplomacy" had gone far enough and was threatening regional stability. Internally, however, many analysts concluded that the only positive outcome, from China's perspective, was that it had increased the credibility of future threats to use force.
  • 2
    • 0347304887 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This is not a unique world view among the major powers. China's version of sovereignty converges in many places with that espoused by Gaullists in France and Republicans and isolationists in the United States. The reason the U.S. has not ratified international treaties governing the rights of women and children, the reason why Jessie Helms opposed American ratification of the treaty on genocide and the Chemical Weapons Convention, the reason why Bob Dole once claimed that UN peacekeeping activities were "out of control," and the reason the U.S. is in arrears in its financial obligations to the UN is precisely the fear in some quarters in the U.S. that international institutions and obligations impinge on its sovereignty and autonomy.
  • 3
    • 0347304886 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In one conversation I had with a highly placed strategic analyst in PLA in July 1996 he concluded that the concept of a security dilemma was probably not well understood at the top. Thus they are less sensitive to the interactive, and possibly counterproductive effects of China's military modernization programme. The same, of course, could be said about American and Soviet leaderships through most of the Cold War, with the exception perhaps of Gorbachev. The Clinton administration's drive to develop and deploy ballistic missile defences that might also undermine China's fragile deterrent is another example of inattention to unintended consequences (Chinese nuclear modernization) that could, in the end, reduce American security.
  • 4
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    • Steve Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus and behavior: assessments from a perspective of conflict management," World Politics, No. 2 (1978), p. 391.
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    • Chan, S.1
  • 5
    • 0347304881 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Figure 1 provides a simplification of the major decision stages that foreign policy decision makers face in conflicts with other states. Once a conflict has emerged, it may develop to a level of acuteness where it constitutes a crisis. Once in a crisis, decision makers must decide whether or not to use force. Once they have decided to use force, they must then decide what level and spatial/temporal scope of force to use. A particular scope of force may then change the crisis situation such that escalation is required or termination of the crisis becomes possible.
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    • New York
    • Jonathan Wilkenfeld, Michael Brecher and Sheila Moser, Crises in the Twentieth Century, Vol. 2: Handbook of Foreign Policy Crises (New York, 1988). Chinese definitions of conflict and crisis are somewhat more abstract than those used by Western scholars. Strategic analysts at the National Defence University define a conflict as a situation where interstate differences and disparities in interests are handled differently by different states such that these different roads to resolution do not lead to unanimity. Under these conditions a crisis is a situation of mutual resistance. See Gao Jinxi and Gu Dexin, Guoji zhanlue xue gailun (Introduction to International Strategic Studies) (Beijing: National Defence University Press, 1995), pp. 158-59.
    • (1988) Crises in the Twentieth Century, Vol. 2: Handbook of Foreign Policy Crises , vol.2
    • Wilkenfeld, J.1    Brecher, M.2    Moser, S.3
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    • Beijing: National Defence University Press
    • Jonathan Wilkenfeld, Michael Brecher and Sheila Moser, Crises in the Twentieth Century, Vol. 2: Handbook of Foreign Policy Crises (New York, 1988). Chinese definitions of conflict and crisis are somewhat more abstract than those used by Western scholars. Strategic analysts at the National Defence University define a conflict as a situation where interstate differences and disparities in interests are handled differently by different states such that these different roads to resolution do not lead to unanimity. Under these conditions a crisis is a situation of mutual resistance. See Gao Jinxi and Gu Dexin, Guoji zhanlue xue gailun (Introduction to International Strategic Studies) (Beijing: National Defence University Press, 1995), pp. 158-59.
    • (1995) Guoji Zhanlue Xue Gailun (Introduction to International Strategic Studies) , pp. 158-159
    • Jinxi, G.1    Dexin, G.2
  • 9
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    • See n. 31 for a detailed list of the categories in these two variables
    • See n. 31 for a detailed list of the categories in these two variables.
  • 10
    • 0346776207 scopus 로고
    • Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan, Correlates of War Project, 1 July
    • There is acertain arbitrariness in this kind of coding. Disputes almost invariably involve more than one issue and states often have a number of goals when entering a dispute. But, to the extent that the historical documentation is available, it is often fairly obvious how these goals are ranked by decision makers. Given the number of MIDs coded for all countries from 1815 to 1992 (N = 2042), and given the general credibility of Correlates of War data sets in the field of quantitative international relations, I think it is fair to assume that coding instructions were rigorous and coding errors were random across all cases and thus are random for the Chinese cases as well (e.g. that they cancel each other out on balance). The process of coding is described in Daniel Jones, "Preliminary user's manual: militarized interstate disputes" (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan, Correlates of War Project, 1 July 1991).
    • (1991) Preliminary User's Manual: Militarized Interstate Disputes
    • Jones, D.1
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    • Varieties of the Chinese military experience
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    • John K. Fairbank, "Varieties of the Chinese military experience," in Frank Kierman and John K. Fairbank (eds.), Chinese Ways in Warfare (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 1974), p. 7; Thomas Cleary (trans.), Mastering the Art of War: Zhu Geliang and Liu Ji's Commentaries on the Classic By Sun Tzu (Boston, 1989), p. 20.
    • (1974) Chinese Ways in Warfare , pp. 7
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    • Michael Pillsbury, "Strategic acupuncture," Foreign Policy, No. 41 (1980/81).
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    • Strategic doctrine
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    • Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Gerald Segal and William Tow (eds.), Chinese Defense Policy (London: Macmillan, 1984), p. 4; Edward S. Boylan, "The Chinese cultural style of warfare," Comparative Strategy, Vol. 3, No. 4 (1982), p. 345.
    • (1984) Chinese Defense Policy , pp. 4
    • Bok, G.T.E.1
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    • The Chinese cultural style of warfare
    • Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Gerald Segal and William Tow (eds.), Chinese Defense Policy (London: Macmillan, 1984), p. 4; Edward S. Boylan, "The Chinese cultural style of warfare," Comparative Strategy, Vol. 3, No. 4 (1982), p. 345.
    • (1982) Comparative Strategy , vol.3 , Issue.4 , pp. 345
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    • 0042684072 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Strategy and national psychology in China
    • Howard L. Boorman and Scott A. Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," The Annals, No. 370 (1967), p. 152; Wang Jiandong, Sunzi bingfa sixiang tixi jingjie (A Clarification of the Structure of Thinking in Sun Zi's Art of War) (Taipei, 1976), p. 77.
    • (1967) The Annals , Issue.370 , pp. 152
    • Boorman, H.L.1    Boorman, S.A.2
  • 27
    • 0347935099 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • Chinese Conflict Calculus
    • Chan1
  • 28
    • 0003805547 scopus 로고
    • Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • (1975) The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence
    • Whiting, A.1
  • 29
    • 0347304829 scopus 로고
    • Peking's military calculus
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • (1964) World Politics , vol.16 , Issue.2 , pp. 287-301
    • Bobrow, D.1
  • 30
    • 0347304875 scopus 로고
    • Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s
    • Samuel S. Kim (ed.) Boulder: Westview Press
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • (1984) China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era , pp. 215-234
    • Godwin, P.1
  • 31
    • 0345767610 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Strategic doctrine
    • Segal and Tow
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • Chinese Defense Policy , pp. 3-17
    • Bok, G.T.E.1
  • 32
    • 0039765804 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy
    • Lin, C.-P.1
  • 33
    • 0042684072 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • Strategy and National Psychology in China , pp. 143-155
    • Boorman1    Boorman2
  • 34
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    • New York: Oxford University Press
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • (1969) The Protracted Game: A Weich'i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy
    • Boorman, S.A.1
  • 35
    • 0042684147 scopus 로고
    • Deception in Chinese strategy
    • New York: Praeger
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • (1973) The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s , pp. 313-337
    • Whitson, W.1
  • 36
    • 70349682395 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See Chan, "Chinese conflict calculus"; Allen Whiting, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence, (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1975); Davis Bobrow, "Peking's military calculus," World Politics, Vol. 16, No. 2 (1964), pp. 287-301; Paul Godwin, "Soldiers and statesmen in conflict: Chinese defense and foreign policies in the 1980s," in Samuel S. Kim (ed.), China and the World: Chinese Foreign Policy in the Post-Mao Era (Boulder: Westview Press, 1984), pp. 215-234; Georges Tan Eng Bok, "Strategic doctrine," in Segal and Tow, Chinese Defense Policy, pp. 3-17; Chong-pin Lin, China's Nuclear Weapons Strategy; Boorman and Boorman, "Strategy and national psychology in China," pp. 143-155; Scott A. Boorman, The Protracted Game: A Weich' i Interpretation of Maoist Revolutionary Strategy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1969), and "Deception in Chinese strategy," in William Whitson (ed.), The Military and Political Power in China in the 1970s (New York: Praeger, 1973), pp. 313-337; and Adelman and Shin Chih-yu, Symbolic War. They all, in various ways, point to the Chinese exercise of military force as an example of a strategic tradition capable of maintaining a rational balance between limited political ends and limited, and generally defensive, military means. Contemporary Chinese analysis of the PRC's strategic behaviour essentially stresses the same characteristics. Indeed, it embodies an intensely ethno-racialist stereotyping of the Chinese approaches to conflict. It is a political mantra in most open Chinese analyses that the Chinese people are a uniquely peace-loving people; that China has historically rarely invaded other states (the exceptions being when it was ruled by ethnically non-Chinese, such as the Mongol Yuan dynasty or the Manchu Qing dynasty); that the PRC has never occupied "one inch" of another state's territory; that the PRC has never invaded another state except to "teach it a lesson" as part of a just counterattack against prior aggression; and that the PRC prefers to use political rather than military means to resolve disputes.
    • Symbolic War
    • Adelman1    Chih-yu, S.2
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    • 0346674280 scopus 로고
    • A note on foreign policy decision-making in the Northern Sung
    • For dissenting views on traditional China see Anthony William Sariti, "A note on foreign policy decision-making in the Northern Sung," Sung Research Newsletter, No. 8 (1973), p. 5; Carl-A. Seyschab, "The 36 strategems: orthodoxy against heterodoxy," in C.-A. Seyschab, A. Sievers and S. Synkewicz (eds.), Society, Culture and Patterns of Behavior (Bonn: Horlemann, 1990); and Johnston, Cultural Realism. For a dissenting view of PRC crisis behaviour see Gerald Segal, Defending China (London: Oxford University Press, 1985). Segal looks at nine cases of the Chinese use of force from 1949 to 1985 and argues that there were no obvious patterns, that China demonstrated strategic and tactical flexibility and a willingness to use whatever amount of force necessary to achieve a wide range of political ends. One problem with the study is that it "selects on the dependent variable": that is, by focusing only on crises in which force was used it is hard to determine the kinds of conditions that led ordidn't lead to the use of force in the first place. This also makes it difficult to compare China's dispute behaviour with that of other states.
    • (1973) Sung Research Newsletter , Issue.8 , pp. 5
    • Sariti, A.W.1
  • 38
    • 0346674308 scopus 로고
    • The 36 strategems: Orthodoxy against heterodoxy
    • C.-A. Seyschab, A. Sievers and S. Synkewicz (eds.) Bonn: Horlemann
    • For dissenting views on traditional China see Anthony William Sariti, "A note on foreign policy decision-making in the Northern Sung," Sung Research Newsletter, No. 8 (1973), p. 5; Carl-A. Seyschab, "The 36 strategems: orthodoxy against heterodoxy," in C.-A. Seyschab, A. Sievers and S. Synkewicz (eds.), Society, Culture and Patterns of Behavior (Bonn: Horlemann, 1990); and Johnston, Cultural Realism. For a dissenting view of PRC crisis behaviour see Gerald Segal, Defending China (London: Oxford University Press, 1985). Segal looks at nine cases of the Chinese use of force from 1949 to 1985 and argues that there were no obvious patterns, that China demonstrated strategic and tactical flexibility and a willingness to use whatever amount of force necessary to achieve a wide range of political ends. One problem with the study is that it "selects on the dependent variable": that is, by focusing only on crises in which force was used it is hard to determine the kinds of conditions that led ordidn't lead to the use of force in the first place. This also makes it difficult to compare China's dispute behaviour with that of other states.
    • (1990) Society, Culture and Patterns of Behavior
    • Seyschab, C.-A.1
  • 39
    • 0004308681 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • For dissenting views on traditional China see Anthony William Sariti, "A note on foreign policy decision-making in the Northern Sung," Sung Research Newsletter, No. 8 (1973), p. 5; Carl-A. Seyschab, "The 36 strategems: orthodoxy against heterodoxy," in C.-A. Seyschab, A. Sievers and S. Synkewicz (eds.), Society, Culture and Patterns of Behavior (Bonn: Horlemann, 1990); and Johnston, Cultural Realism. For a dissenting view of PRC crisis behaviour see Gerald Segal, Defending China (London: Oxford University Press, 1985). Segal looks at nine cases of the Chinese use of force from 1949 to 1985 and argues that there were no obvious patterns, that China demonstrated strategic and tactical flexibility and a willingness to use whatever amount of force necessary to achieve a wide range of political ends. One problem with the study is that it "selects on the dependent variable": that is, by focusing only on crises in which force was used it is hard to determine the kinds of conditions that led ordidn't lead to the use of force in the first place. This also makes it difficult to compare China's dispute behaviour with that of other states.
    • Cultural Realism
    • Johnston1
  • 40
    • 84876867860 scopus 로고
    • London: Oxford University Press
    • For dissenting views on traditional China see Anthony William Sariti, "A note on foreign policy decision-making in the Northern Sung," Sung Research Newsletter, No. 8 (1973), p. 5; Carl-A. Seyschab, "The 36 strategems: orthodoxy against heterodoxy," in C.-A. Seyschab, A. Sievers and S. Synkewicz (eds.), Society, Culture and Patterns of Behavior (Bonn: Horlemann, 1990); and Johnston, Cultural Realism. For a dissenting view of PRC crisis behaviour see Gerald Segal, Defending China (London: Oxford University Press, 1985). Segal looks at nine cases of the Chinese use of force from 1949 to 1985 and argues that there were no obvious patterns, that China demonstrated strategic and tactical flexibility and a willingness to use whatever amount of force necessary to achieve a wide range of political ends. One problem with the study is that it "selects on the dependent variable": that is, by focusing only on crises in which force was used it is hard to determine the kinds of conditions that led ordidn't lead to the use of force in the first place. This also makes it difficult to compare China's dispute behaviour with that of other states.
    • (1985) Defending China
    • Segal, G.1
  • 42
    • 0006816122 scopus 로고
    • New York: Columbia University Press
    • See Thomas J. Christensen, Useful Adversaries: Grand Strategy, Domestic Mobilization and Sino-American Conflict 1947-1958 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996); Chen Jian, China's Road to the Korean War (New York: Columbia University Press, 1994).
    • (1994) China's Road to the Korean War
    • Jian, C.1
  • 43
    • 0347935064 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • I want to emphasize that dispute proneness says nothing in particular about intentions, that is, it does not equal "aggressiveness," nor does it say anything about whether or not China initiated these disputes. It is simply a measure of the number of disputes that China has become involved in, regardless of which state started the dispute. Thus these data should not be interpreted as "China is the second most aggressive major power in the international system" or something such as that.
  • 44
    • 0347304833 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This datum refers to the number of MIDs that start in that particular year, not the total number that start and are ongoing from earlier years.
  • 45
    • 0347304836 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The vertical axis is the total number of disputes per country in each decade.
  • 46
    • 0346043520 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The average number of MIDs per year drops dramatically in the 1990s to 0.3 for the PRC, the lowest of all the major powers plus India. France replaces China as the second most dispute-prone major power from 1990 to 1993 after the U.S. with an average of 2 MIDs per year, compared to 2.6 for the U.S. Since there are only three disputes in this decade for China, however, these data should not be given too much weight as indicative of trends for the rest of the decade.
  • 47
    • 0347304835 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Most of those coded "regime" involved disputes with Taiwan in the mid-1960s. Thus one could plausibly recode these as territorial disputes, as the Taiwan issue was in some sense a dispute over sovereign control of the island. Moreover, Chinese uses of force against Taiwan were not designed to overthrow the Kuomintang since the PLA was simply incapable of doing so. Finally, Chinese military conflicts with KMT forces would not have occurred had China not claimed Taiwan as Chinese territory. The number of disputes coded "regime" is small, however, and does not change the analysis dramatically.
  • 48
    • 0347304834 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The hostility levels are: no militarized response (1), threat of force (2), display of force (3), use of force (4), interstate war (5). The categories of actions are: threat to use force (1), to blockade (2), to occupy territory (3), to declare war (4), to use nuclear weapons (5), alert (6), mobilization (7), show of troops (8), show of ships (9), show of planes (10), fortification of border (11), nuclear alert (12), border violation (13), blockade (14), occupation of territory (15), seizure of material or personnel (16), clash (17), other use of military force (18), declaration of war (19), tactical use of nuclear weapons (20), interstate war (21).
  • 49
    • 0346674277 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Although these are categorical data and technically ought not to be averaged, since they do reflect an interval-like increase in violence I did not see much danger in averaging them.
  • 50
    • 0346674279 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • A difference of means test was significant at the p = 0.012 level, meaning that China's higher-than-average hostility levels is unlikely to be random.
  • 51
    • 0347304837 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The difference of means test was significant at the p = 0.0 level, meaning that the United States' lower-than-average difference in average hostility levels is unlikely to be random.
  • 52
    • 0346674310 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Per cent refers to the percentage of China's MIDs in which China escalated to a level similar to, higher than, or less than its opponent.
  • 53
    • 0346043554 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The scale captures the vast difference between very low levels of threat to use force (e.g. a threat to blockade would have a violence score of 4 (action code 2 × hostility level 2)) versus the use of weapons of mass destruction in all-out interstate war (action code 21 × hostility level 5 = violence level 105). The actual numerical boundaries or values of this metric have no intrinsic meaning other than that they allow one to differentiate statistically and more accurately between very low levels and very high levels of violence. This allows more fine-tuned comparisons within and across states in their dispute behaviour.
  • 54
    • 0347935063 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • For China, t value = 3.23 and is significant at the p = 0.002 level, meaning that China's score deviates upward from the mean in a way that is unlikely to be random. For the U.S., t value = - 4.1 and is significant at the p = 0.000 level, meaning that the U.S. score deviates below the mean in a way that is unlikely to be random.
  • 55
    • 0003097234 scopus 로고
    • The diversionary theory of war: A critique
    • Manus I. Midlarsky (ed.) Boston: Unwin Hyman
    • Jack S. Levy, "The diversionary theory of war: a critique," in Manus I. Midlarsky (ed.), The Handbook of War Studies (Boston: Unwin Hyman, 1989).
    • (1989) The Handbook of War Studies
    • Levy, J.S.1
  • 57
    • 0347304831 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The data in the graph stop in 1982 because this is where World Handbook data stop
    • Protest data were taken from World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators III, 1948-1982. The data in the graph stop in 1982 because this is where World Handbook data stop.
    • World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators III, 1948-1982
  • 58
    • 0003471043 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The independent variables are lagged by one year, as one might expect if conflict is being used to divert domestic attention. The data come from the World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators.
    • World Handbook of Political and Social Indicators
  • 59
    • 85085782643 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • 2 = 0.29. That is, almost 30% of the variance in the dependent variable is accounted for by the independent variables. All the independent variables are statistically significant below the standard 0.05 level.
  • 60
    • 84888244389 scopus 로고
    • Revolution and war
    • April. Walt adheres to the pull arguments
    • For a helpful summary of various push and pull hypotheses linking revolutionary states to war proneness, see Stephen M. Walt, "Revolution and war," World Politics, Vol. 23, No. 3 (April 1992), pp. 323-333. Walt adheres to the pull arguments.
    • (1992) World Politics , vol.23 , Issue.3 , pp. 323-333
    • Walt, S.M.1
  • 61
    • 0006816122 scopus 로고
    • New York: Columbia University Press
    • See the arguments made by Chen Jian, China's Road to the Korean War (New York: Columbia University Press, 1994); Chen Jian, "China's involvement in the Vietnam War, 1964-1969," The China Quarterly, No. 142 (June 1995), pp. 356-387. Walt's coding of Chinese intervention in the Korean War - as an instance where a revolutionary state was dragged reluctantly into a conflict started by others - is suspect in the light of the new data. Thus his dismissal of the revolutionary push argument is less convincing.
    • (1994) China's Road to the Korean War
    • Jian, C.1
  • 62
    • 84972434607 scopus 로고
    • China's involvement in the Vietnam War, 1964-1969
    • June
    • See the arguments made by Chen Jian, China's Road to the Korean War (New York: Columbia University Press, 1994); Chen Jian, "China's involvement in the Vietnam War, 1964-1969," The China Quarterly, No. 142 (June 1995), pp. 356-387. Walt's coding of Chinese intervention in the Korean War - as an instance where a revolutionary state was dragged reluctantly into a conflict started by others - is suspect in the light of the new data. Thus his dismissal of the revolutionary push argument is less convincing.
    • (1995) The China Quarterly , Issue.142 , pp. 356-387
    • Jian, C.1
  • 63
    • 0346674306 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The data for share of world power come from the Correlates of War Capabilities Data Set (World Base). The indicators of militarization are "per cent of per cent" data. The Correlates of War data on a state's total share of power capabilities uses a basket of six indicators (military expenditures, military personnel, iron and steel production, energy consumption, urban population, and total population). Each indicator comprises a share of the total capabilities of a state. Per cent of per cent refers to the proportion that each indicator comprises of the total basket, with the total basket being a proportion of total world capabilities. Thus as the per cent of per cent figure for military expenditures or military personnel increases this simply means that these indicators comprise a larger portion of the total basket of capabilities. This changing portion shows the degree to which a state's power relies more or less on military expenditures and military personnel. I use an increasing portion of power comprised of military expenditures as a surrogate for the militarization of the economy. I use an increasing portion of power comprised of military personnel as a surrogate for the militarization of society.
  • 64
    • 85085782798 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • 2 = 0.08, p = 0.05. The figures for the U.S. case are not statistically significant.
  • 65
    • 0347935096 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Neorealists are, unfortunately, unclear about how to measure power. But in order to be consistent with their materialist ontology, they should concede that for research purposes power can be measured using material capabilities, military expenditures for instance. Thus for the purposes of testing this balancing hypothesis, I use Soviet and American shares of world military expenditures as the independent variables. If one were to use some indicator for "perceptions" of power, then one would not be making a neorealist argument.
  • 66
    • 84970316309 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
    • John Vasquez, The War Puzzle (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993); John Vasquez, "Why do neighbors fight: proximity, interaction, territoriality," Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 32, No. 2 (August 1995), pp. 277-294.
    • (1993) The War Puzzle
    • Vasquez, J.1
  • 67
    • 84970316309 scopus 로고
    • Why do neighbors fight: Proximity, interaction, territoriality
    • August
    • John Vasquez, The War Puzzle (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993); John Vasquez, "Why do neighbors fight: proximity, interaction, territoriality," Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 32, No. 2 (August 1995), pp. 277-294.
    • (1995) Journal of Peace Research , vol.32 , Issue.2 , pp. 277-294
    • Vasquez, J.1
  • 68
    • 0347304874 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • The percentage of unresolved borders was determined by the year in which a formal border treaty with another state was signed. Thus as the percentage of borders determined by a treaty increased, the percentage of unresolved borders declined.
  • 70
    • 85028411283 scopus 로고
    • The emerging disputes between Beijing and Moscow
    • "Minutes, conversation between Mao Zedong and Ambassador Yudin, 22 July 1958," in Zhang Shuguang and Chen Jian, "The emerging disputes between Beijing and Moscow," Cold War International History Project Bulletin, Nos. 6-7 (1995/96), pp. 155-59. See also Christensen, Useful Adversaries.
    • (1995) Cold War International History Project Bulletin , Issue.6-7 , pp. 155-159
    • Shuguang, Z.1    Jian, C.2
  • 71
    • 0007212746 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • "Minutes, conversation between Mao Zedong and Ambassador Yudin, 22 July 1958," in Zhang Shuguang and Chen Jian, "The emerging disputes between Beijing and Moscow," Cold War International History Project Bulletin, Nos. 6-7 (1995/96), pp. 155-59. See also Christensen, Useful Adversaries.
    • Useful Adversaries
    • Christensen1
  • 72
    • 0346674312 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • Here I used China's share of the total power of all major powers, rather than all states in the system. My reasoning was simple: China tended to compare itself with other major powers. In principle, therefore, its relative power position among major powers should matter more to its perception of status than its relative power position among all other states, large and small.
  • 73
    • 0029515033 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The South China Sea disputes: Implications of China's earlier territorial settlements
    • Spring
    • There is some work already emerging on patterns in China's diplomacy on territorial issues. See, for instance, Eric Hyer, "The South China Sea disputes: implications of China's earlier territorial settlements," Pacific Affairs, Vol. 68, No. 1 (Spring 1995), pp. 34-54. See also Jean-Marc Blanchard, "Borders and Borderlands: an institutional approach to territorial disputes in Asia," Ph.D. thesis, University of Pennsylvania, Political Science Department, 1997. The sources of China's concern with international status and image, and the trade-offs Chinese leaders make between maximizing status and maximizing other goals such as development and security is, however, still a severely neglected topic.
    • (1995) Pacific Affairs , vol.68 , Issue.1 , pp. 34-54
    • Hyer, E.1
  • 74
    • 0029515033 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ph.D. thesis, University of Pennsylvania, Political Science Department
    • There is some work already emerging on patterns in China's diplomacy on territorial issues. See, for instance, Eric Hyer, "The South China Sea disputes: implications of China's earlier territorial settlements," Pacific Affairs, Vol. 68, No. 1 (Spring 1995), pp. 34-54. See also Jean-Marc Blanchard, "Borders and Borderlands: an institutional approach to territorial disputes in Asia," Ph.D. thesis, University of Pennsylvania, Political Science Department, 1997. The sources of China's concern with international status and image, and the trade-offs Chinese leaders make between maximizing status and maximizing other goals such as development and security is, however, still a severely neglected topic.
    • (1997) Borders and Borderlands: An Institutional Approach to Territorial Disputes in Asia
    • Blanchard, J.-M.1
  • 75
    • 0347935093 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • This could change, of course, if there is a sense of rising expectations in China's quest for international status such that relative power share is no longer an accurate indicator of subjective assessments of China's status.
  • 76
    • 6144228870 scopus 로고
    • Beijing, Liberation Army Publishing House
    • Interview with Academy of Military Science strategist, Beijing, April 1996. See also Zhang Jing and Yao Yanjin, Jiji fangyu zhanlue qianshuo (An Introduction to the Active Defence Strategy) (Beijing, Liberation Army Publishing House, 1985), p. 137; Guan Jixian, Gao jishu jubu zhanzheng zhanyi (Campaigns in High Tech Limited Wars) (Beijing: National Defence University Press, 1993), pp. 141, 23-24; Deng Xiaoping, "Women de zhanlue fanzhen shi jiji fangyu" ("Our strategic policy is active defence"), in Academy of Military Sciences and Central Documents Research Office (eds.), Deng Xiaoping lun guofang he jundui jianshe (Deng Xiaoping on National Defence and Army Building) (Beijing; Academy of Military Sciences, 1980), p. 98. See also Chen Huiban's discussion of the flexible application of the second-strike principle, with specific emphasis on "exploiting the first opportunity to defeat the enemy" (xian ji zhi ren), "Guanyu xin shiqi zhanlue fangzhen he zhidao yuanze wenti" ("Concerning questions relating to the guiding principles and strategic policies of the new period"), in Guofang daxue xuebao (National Defence University Journal), in Fuyin baokan ziliao - junshi (Reproduced Periodical Materials - Military Affairs), No. 3 (1989), p. 28. The phrase is very close to the term for pre-emption - xian fa zhi ren - meaning, "setting out first to control/defeat the enemy." See also Nan Li, "The PLA's evolving warfighting doctrine, strategy, and tactics, 1985-1995: a Chinese perspective," The China Quarterly, No. 146 (June 1996), pp. 443-464.
    • (1985) Jiji Fangyu Zhanlue Qianshuo (An Introduction to the Active Defence Strategy) , pp. 137
    • Jing, Z.1    Yanjin, Y.2
  • 77
    • 0346043519 scopus 로고
    • Beijing: National Defence University Press
    • Interview with Academy of Military Science strategist, Beijing, April 1996. See also Zhang Jing and Yao Yanjin, Jiji fangyu zhanlue qianshuo (An Introduction to the Active Defence Strategy) (Beijing, Liberation Army Publishing House, 1985), p. 137; Guan Jixian, Gao jishu jubu zhanzheng zhanyi (Campaigns in High Tech Limited Wars) (Beijing: National Defence University Press, 1993), pp. 141, 23-24; Deng Xiaoping, "Women de zhanlue fanzhen shi jiji fangyu" ("Our strategic policy is active defence"), in Academy of Military Sciences and Central Documents Research Office (eds.), Deng Xiaoping lun guofang he jundui jianshe (Deng Xiaoping on National Defence and Army Building) (Beijing; Academy of Military Sciences, 1980), p. 98. See also Chen Huiban's discussion of the flexible application of the second-strike principle, with specific emphasis on "exploiting the first opportunity to defeat the enemy" (xian ji zhi ren), "Guanyu xin shiqi zhanlue fangzhen he zhidao yuanze wenti" ("Concerning questions relating to the guiding principles and strategic policies of the new period"), in Guofang daxue xuebao (National Defence University Journal), in Fuyin baokan ziliao - junshi (Reproduced Periodical Materials - Military Affairs), No. 3 (1989), p. 28. The phrase is very close to the term for pre-emption - xian fa zhi ren - meaning, "setting out first to control/defeat the enemy." See also Nan Li, "The PLA's evolving warfighting doctrine, strategy, and tactics, 1985-1995: a Chinese perspective," The China Quarterly, No. 146 (June 1996), pp. 443-464.
    • (1993) Gao Jishu Jubu Zhanzheng Zhanyi (Campaigns in High Tech Limited Wars) , pp. 141
    • Jixian, G.1
  • 78
    • 0347304838 scopus 로고
    • Women de zhanlue fanzhen shi jiji fangyu"
    • Academy of Military Sciences and Central Documents Research Office (eds.) Beijing; Academy of Military Sciences
    • Interview with Academy of Military Science strategist, Beijing, April 1996. See also Zhang Jing and Yao Yanjin, Jiji fangyu zhanlue qianshuo (An Introduction to the Active Defence Strategy) (Beijing, Liberation Army Publishing House, 1985), p. 137; Guan Jixian, Gao jishu jubu zhanzheng zhanyi (Campaigns in High Tech Limited Wars) (Beijing: National Defence University Press, 1993), pp. 141, 23-24; Deng Xiaoping, "Women de zhanlue fanzhen shi jiji fangyu" ("Our strategic policy is active defence"), in Academy of Military Sciences and Central Documents Research Office (eds.), Deng Xiaoping lun guofang he jundui jianshe (Deng Xiaoping on National Defence and Army Building) (Beijing; Academy of Military Sciences, 1980), p. 98. See also Chen Huiban's discussion of the flexible application of the second-strike principle, with specific emphasis on "exploiting the first opportunity to defeat the enemy" (xian ji zhi ren), "Guanyu xin shiqi zhanlue fangzhen he zhidao yuanze wenti" ("Concerning questions relating to the guiding principles and strategic policies of the new period"), in Guofang daxue xuebao (National Defence University Journal), in Fuyin baokan ziliao - junshi (Reproduced Periodical Materials - Military Affairs), No. 3 (1989), p. 28. The phrase is very close to the term for pre-emption - xian fa zhi ren - meaning, "setting out first to control/defeat the enemy." See also Nan Li, "The PLA's evolving warfighting doctrine, strategy, and tactics, 1985-1995: a Chinese perspective," The China Quarterly, No. 146 (June 1996), pp. 443-464.
    • (1980) Deng Xiaoping Lun Guofang He Jundui Jianshe (Deng Xiaoping on National Defence and Army Building) , pp. 98
    • Xiaoping, D.1
  • 79
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    • Guanyu xin shiqi zhanlue fangzhen he zhidao yuanze wenti
    • Guofang daxue xuebao (National Defence University Journal)
    • Interview with Academy of Military Science strategist, Beijing, April 1996. See also Zhang Jing and Yao Yanjin, Jiji fangyu zhanlue qianshuo (An Introduction to the Active Defence Strategy) (Beijing, Liberation Army Publishing House, 1985), p. 137; Guan Jixian, Gao jishu jubu zhanzheng zhanyi (Campaigns in High Tech Limited Wars) (Beijing: National Defence University Press, 1993), pp. 141, 23-24; Deng Xiaoping, "Women de zhanlue fanzhen shi jiji fangyu" ("Our strategic policy is active defence"), in Academy of Military Sciences and Central Documents Research Office (eds.), Deng Xiaoping lun guofang he jundui jianshe (Deng Xiaoping on National Defence and Army Building) (Beijing; Academy of Military Sciences, 1980), p. 98. See also Chen Huiban's discussion of the flexible application of the second-strike principle, with specific emphasis on "exploiting the first opportunity to defeat the enemy" (xian ji zhi ren), "Guanyu xin shiqi zhanlue fangzhen he zhidao yuanze wenti" ("Concerning questions relating to the guiding principles and strategic policies of the new period"), in Guofang daxue xuebao (National Defence University Journal), in Fuyin baokan ziliao - junshi (Reproduced Periodical Materials - Military Affairs), No. 3 (1989), p. 28. The phrase is very close to the term for pre-emption - xian fa zhi ren - meaning, "setting out first to control/defeat the enemy." See also Nan Li, "The PLA's evolving warfighting doctrine, strategy, and tactics, 1985-1995: a Chinese perspective," The China Quarterly, No. 146 (June 1996), pp. 443-464.
    • (1989) Fuyin Baokan Ziliao - Junshi (Reproduced Periodical Materials - Military Affairs) , Issue.3 , pp. 28
    • Huiban, C.1
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    • The PLA's evolving warfighting doctrine, strategy, and tactics, 1985-1995: A Chinese perspective
    • June
    • Interview with Academy of Military Science strategist, Beijing, April 1996. See also Zhang Jing and Yao Yanjin, Jiji fangyu zhanlue qianshuo (An Introduction to the Active Defence Strategy) (Beijing, Liberation Army Publishing House, 1985), p. 137; Guan Jixian, Gao jishu jubu zhanzheng zhanyi (Campaigns in High Tech Limited Wars) (Beijing: National Defence University Press, 1993), pp. 141, 23-24; Deng Xiaoping, "Women de zhanlue fanzhen shi jiji fangyu" ("Our strategic policy is active defence"), in Academy of Military Sciences and Central Documents Research Office (eds.), Deng Xiaoping lun guofang he jundui jianshe (Deng Xiaoping on National Defence and Army Building) (Beijing; Academy of Military Sciences, 1980), p. 98. See also Chen Huiban's discussion of the flexible application of the second-strike principle, with specific emphasis on "exploiting the first opportunity to defeat the enemy" (xian ji zhi ren), "Guanyu xin shiqi zhanlue fangzhen he zhidao yuanze wenti" ("Concerning questions relating to the guiding principles and strategic policies of the new period"), in Guofang daxue xuebao (National Defence University Journal), in Fuyin baokan ziliao - junshi (Reproduced Periodical Materials - Military Affairs), No. 3 (1989), p. 28. The phrase is very close to the term for pre-emption - xian fa zhi ren - meaning, "setting out first to control/defeat the enemy." See also Nan Li, "The PLA's evolving warfighting doctrine, strategy, and tactics, 1985-1995: a Chinese perspective," The China Quarterly, No. 146 (June 1996), pp. 443-464.
    • (1996) The China Quarterly , Issue.146 , pp. 443-464
    • Li, N.1
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    • Civil military relations and the cult of the offensive, 1914 and 1984
    • Summer
    • See Jack Snyder, "Civil military relations and the cult of the offensive, 1914 and 1984," International Security, Vol. 9, No. 1 (Summer 1984), pp. 108-146, and Stephen Van Evera, "The cult of the offensive and the origins of the First World War," International Security, Vol. 9, No. 1 (Summer 1984), pp. 58-107.
    • (1984) International Security , vol.9 , Issue.1 , pp. 108-146
    • Snyder, J.1
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    • The cult of the offensive and the origins of the First World War
    • Summer
    • See Jack Snyder, "Civil military relations and the cult of the offensive, 1914 and 1984," International Security, Vol. 9, No. 1 (Summer 1984), pp. 108-146, and Stephen Van Evera, "The cult of the offensive and the origins of the First World War," International Security, Vol. 9, No. 1 (Summer 1984), pp. 58-107.
    • (1984) International Security , vol.9 , Issue.1 , pp. 58-107
    • Van Evera, S.1
  • 83
    • 0346043518 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note
    • In the paradoxical world of nuclear deterrence, the existence of survivable second strike offensive capabilities creates a defence-dominant environment because no side can strike first or move offensively without risking destruction in return. A world with asymmetric strategic defences, therefore, is not a defence-dominant one. It is, rather, the opposite because it creates the option for one side to strike first and defend against retaliation. There is no reason to assume that with the end of the American-Soviet rivalry the basic elements of nuclear deterrence believed to operate in the Cold War are inapplicable in the American-Chinese relationship. The U.S. ought to be assisting China to develop an assured second strike minimum deterrence capability, by providing, for instance, early warning technologies, safety mechanisms for command and control, and submarine launched ballistic missile technology in return for verifiable, bilateral and/or multilateral commitments to eschew MIRVing, ballistic missile defence, and anti-satellite weapons development and deployment. It was conceptually possible for the U.S. to have made various offers to the Russians to help in developing mutual BMD capabilities on the grounds this was strategically stabilizing. While the offers - made in both the Reagan and Clinton administrations - were probably disingenuous, it is not beyond the realm of the reasonable that the U.S. should consider offers to help develop a Sino-U.S. defence-dominant nuclear relationship.
  • 84
    • 0347935061 scopus 로고
    • Beijing: Military Literature Publishing House
    • Hu Ping, Guoji chongtufenxi yu weiji guanli yanjiu (Research in International Conflict Analysis and Crisis Management) (Beijing: Military Literature Publishing House, 1993); Pan Shiying, Xiandai zhanlue sikao (Thoughts on Modern Strategy) (Beijing: World Affairs Press, 1992); and Gao Jinxi and Gu Dexin, Introduction to International Strategic Studies. In recent years China has put some of these principles into practice with a small number of bilateral and multilateral agreements on confidence-building measures with India, Russia, the Central Asian republics. These agreements include such steps as prior notification of military exercises and restrictions on the size of forces that
    • (1993) Guoji Chongtufenxi yu Weiji Guanli Yanjiu (Research in International Conflict Analysis and Crisis Management)
    • Ping, H.1
  • 85
    • 0346674278 scopus 로고
    • Beijing: World Affairs Press
    • Hu Ping, Guoji chongtufenxi yu weiji guanli yanjiu (Research in International Conflict Analysis and Crisis Management) (Beijing: Military Literature Publishing House, 1993); Pan Shiying, Xiandai zhanlue sikao (Thoughts on Modern Strategy) (Beijing: World Affairs Press, 1992); and Gao Jinxi and Gu Dexin, Introduction to International Strategic Studies. In recent years China has put some of these principles into practice with a small number of bilateral and multilateral agreements on confidence-building measures with India, Russia, the Central Asian republics. These agreements include such steps as prior notification of military exercises and restrictions on the size of forces that can exercise near borders.
    • (1992) Xiandai Zhanlue Sikao (Thoughts on Modern Strategy)
    • Shiying, P.1
  • 86
    • 0346043547 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Hu Ping, Guoji chongtufenxi yu weiji guanli yanjiu (Research in International Conflict Analysis and Crisis Management) (Beijing: Military Literature Publishing House, 1993); Pan Shiying, Xiandai zhanlue sikao (Thoughts on Modern Strategy) (Beijing: World Affairs Press, 1992); and Gao Jinxi and Gu Dexin, Introduction to International Strategic Studies. In recent years China has put some of these principles into practice with a small number of bilateral and multilateral agreements on confidence-building measures with India, Russia, the Central Asian republics. These agreements include such steps as prior notification of military exercises and restrictions on the size of forces that can exercise near borders.
    • Introduction to International Strategic Studies
    • Jinxi, G.1    Dexin, G.2


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