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AMERICAN-CHINESE RELATIONS (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   146279


End of the cold war: a polemic from Singapore / Kausikan, Bilahari   Journal Article
Kausikan, Bilahari Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract THERE IS A STORY, possibly apocryphal, that while briefing Richard Nixon for his 1972 visit to China, Henry Kissinger told the President that Zhou Enlai was an avid student of French history. During his trip, Nixon met Zhou in the Forbidden City. As they strolled together through the gardens, Nixon remembered Kissinger's comment and asked Zhou what he thought had been the influence of the French Revolution on western civilization. Zhou paused for thought, then replied: "Too early to tell." Similarly it could well be too early to tell what the end of the Cold War means for the international system. But at least the broad outlines of some of the main issues may now be glimpsed.
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ID:   167735


Toward a history of the establishment of present-day U.S.A.-China relations / Dubinin, Yuri   Journal Article
Dubinin, Yuri Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract During the 20th century, relations between the United States and China underwent major changes several times. They went from the United States' opposing Japanese aggression in China in the 1930s, based on the U.S.A.'s Open Door policy; to a close military and political alliance in the 1940s, including recognition of China as a great power; and finally, to refusing to recognize the People's Republic of China in the early 1950s and adopting a policy of containment and isolation. The dead end in relations between the two countries was opened by U.S. President Richard Nixon's visit to China in 1972 and the concurrent signing of the Shanghai Communique.
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