1st Edition

Shaping China's Future In World Affairs The Role Of The United States

By Robert G Sutter Copyright 1996

    This book considers Chinese foreign policy and China's future role in world affairs in the context of the country's recent past. Robert Sutter shows that although it appears to be in U.S. interests for post-Mao leaders to continue moving toward international norms, a post-Deng leadership backed by growing economic and military power and reflecting profound changes in China's economy and society could move in markedly different directions. Most foreign powers appear willing to accommodate China, avoiding actions that could prompt a sharp shift in Chinese foreign policy, but Sutter argues that current U.S. policy intrudes on so many issues that are particularly sensitive for Beijing and for China's future that it represents perhaps the most critical variable determining how China will position itself in world affairs. Concluding that there is no guarantee the United States will use this influence wisely, Sutter examines the uncertainty and unpredictability of U.S. foreign policy in the post-Cold War environment that work against the creation of an effective U.S. policy toward China.

    Shaping China’s Future in World Affairs: The Role of the United States -- China’s Foreign Policy in Historical Perspective -- China’s Emergence as a Global Actor -- Determinants of China’s Future in World Affairs -- The U.S. Factor -- The U.S.-China Relationship -- Charting China’s Course: Outcomes and Implications for U.S. Policy -- Appendix

    Biography

    Robert G. Sutter is a senior specialist in international politics with the Congressional Research Service and an adjunct professor of East Asian studies at Georgetown, George Washington, and Johns Hopkins Universities.