United States Relations with China and Iran: Toward the Asian Century: New Approaches to International History
Editat de Osamah F. Khalilen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 dec 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350196087
ISBN-10: 1350196088
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 8 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Approaches to International History
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350196088
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 8 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria New Approaches to International History
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Unique in bringing together the United States' relations with both China and Iran in a single volume
Notă biografică
Osamah F. Khalil is Associate Professor of History at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, USA. He is also serving as Interim Director of Syracuse's interdisciplinary Middle Eastern Studies Program and is the author of America's Dream Palace: Middle East Expertise and the Rise of the National Security State (2016).
Cuprins
Introduction: America and the Asian Century Osamah Khalil (Syracuse University, USA)Part I. Toward Normalization: The United States and the People's Republic of China, 1972-present1. The Carter Administration's Normalization of Relations with China David P. Nickles (The Office of the Historian, USA)2. Normalizing U.S.-China Relations: Unstoppable Force Meets Immovable Object Terry Lautz (Syracuse University, USA)3. Authoritarian Resilience and the False Hope of Peaceful Evolution Dimitar Gueorguiev (Syracuse University, USA)4. The United States and China in the Eyes of Chinese International Students Yingyi Ma (Syracuse University, USA)5. The Cornerstone: Trilateral Relations between the US, Japan, and China from 1945-2016 Erik French (Syracuse University, USA)6. The Present and Future of Sino-American Relations David P Nickles (The Office of the Historian, USA), Terry Lautz (Syracuse University, USA), Dimitar Gueorguiev (Syracuse University, USA), Yingi Ma (Syracuse University, USA), and Erik French (Syracuse University, USA)Part II. Toward Confrontation: The United States and Iran, 1953-present7. Revisiting the Coup: Why Did Washington Refuse to Declassify the Coup Documents? Ervand Abrahamian (City University of New York, USA)8. When History Meets Politics: The Challenging Case of the 1953 Coup in Iran Malcolm Byrne (National Security Archive, USA)9. An Event So Inevitable Yet Unforeseen: The United States and the Iranian Revolution David Collier (Boston University, USA)10. Building Security in the 'Arc of Crisis': The Carter Administration's Approach to Southwest Asia and the Persian Gulf Region Adam Howard (The Office of the Historian and George Washington University, USA) and Alexander R. Wieland (The Office of the Historian, USA)11. The Rise of the Iranian Leviathan: US-Iranian Relations and the Evolution of the Post-Revolutionary State Pedram Maghsoud-Nia (Syracuse University, USA)12. The American Factor: The United States, Iran, and the 2015 Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action Abolghasem Bayyenat (Syracuse University, USA)13. The Present and Future of U.S.-Iranian Relations Ervand Abrahamian (City University of New York, USA), Malcolm Byrne (National Security Archive, USA), David Collier (Boston University, USA), Adam Howard (The Office of the Historian and George Washington University, USA), Alexander R. Wieland (The Office of the Historian, USA), Pedram Maghsoud-Nia (Syracuse University, USA) and Abolghasem Bayyenat (Syracuse University, USA)Chapter 14. Afterword: Making Sense of the History of U.S. Foreign Relations: Policy, Practice, Presentism, and the Profession Richard Immerman (Temple University, USA)NotesIndex
Recenzii
In this wonderful volume, Professor Khalil has assembled a group of young and established scholars to reflect on the state of Sino-American and Iranian-American relations over the last six decades. The result is a treasure trove of brilliant insights and analysis of primary documents pertaining to two of America's most contentious foreign policy relations. Diplomatic historians and aficionados of foreign policy should put this book on their required reading list.
This fascinating collection draws together experts on US relations with two distinct if equally challenging Asian powers in a single volume. It should be essential reading for all those interested in international relations and the projection of American power across a critical century of geopolitical change.
In 1979, Iran and China inaugurated a new era in their relationships with the USA but in two diametrically divergent directions. Whilst the clerical regime of Iran ended nearly three decades of cordial relations with the USA by occupying the US embassy and taking hostage its diplomats, China opened formal diplomatic relations with the US under Den Xiaoping, who in a seemingly ideological about turn accelerated the economic reforms by adopting a market model. The publication of this edited volume could not be more timely, as one of the characteristics of the 21st century thus far has been these epoch-making shifts in the relationships between the USA with China on one hand and Iran, on the other. The editor is right to suggest that this could be a decisive factor in the shaping of the present century. With 12 insightful and well-documented chapters, this volume explores in detail the development of these two divergent processes and discusses their causes, complex mechanisms and their achieved or impending consequences. This is an essential reading for students of history and international relations.
This fascinating collection draws together experts on US relations with two distinct if equally challenging Asian powers in a single volume. It should be essential reading for all those interested in international relations and the projection of American power across a critical century of geopolitical change.
In 1979, Iran and China inaugurated a new era in their relationships with the USA but in two diametrically divergent directions. Whilst the clerical regime of Iran ended nearly three decades of cordial relations with the USA by occupying the US embassy and taking hostage its diplomats, China opened formal diplomatic relations with the US under Den Xiaoping, who in a seemingly ideological about turn accelerated the economic reforms by adopting a market model. The publication of this edited volume could not be more timely, as one of the characteristics of the 21st century thus far has been these epoch-making shifts in the relationships between the USA with China on one hand and Iran, on the other. The editor is right to suggest that this could be a decisive factor in the shaping of the present century. With 12 insightful and well-documented chapters, this volume explores in detail the development of these two divergent processes and discusses their causes, complex mechanisms and their achieved or impending consequences. This is an essential reading for students of history and international relations.