In February 1972, President Nixon arrived in Beijing for what
Chairman Mao Zedong called the "week that changed the world." Using
recently declassified sources from American, Chinese, European, and
Soviet archives, Chris Tudda's A Cold War Turning Point reveals new
details about the relationship forged by the Nixon administration
and the Chinese government that dramatically altered the trajectory
of the Cold War.
Between the years 1969 and 1972, Nixon's national security team
actively fostered the U.S. rapprochement with China. Tudda argues
that Nixon, in bold opposition to the stance of his predecessors,
recognized the mutual benefits of repairing the Sino-U.S.
relationship and was determined to establish a partnership with
China. Nixon believed that America's relative economic decline, its
overextension abroad, and its desire to create a more realistic
international framework aligned with China's fear of Soviet
military advancement and its eagerness to join the international
marketplace. In a contested but calculated move, Nixon gradually
eased trade and travel restrictions to China. Mao responded in
kind, albeit slowly, by releasing prisoners, inviting the U.S.
ping-pong team to Beijing, and secretly hosting Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger prior to Nixon's momentous visit.
Set in the larger framework of international relations at the
peak of the Vietnam War, A Cold War Turning Point is the first book
to use the Nixon tapes and Kissinger telephone conversations to
illustrate the complexity of early Sino-U.S. relations. Tudda's
thorough and illuminating research provides a multi-archival
examination of this critical moment in twentieth-century
international relations.
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