Since 1950, Tibet has been sandwiched between the heavyweights
of Asian geopolitics: Britain, absolving itself of its colonial
dominion; India, finding its legs as a newly independent nation;
China, seeking to simultaneously consolidate its new communist
regime and engender a "motherland"; and the United States, striving
to contain the perceived threat of international communism. Tsering
Shakya here gives a balanced, blow-by-blow account of Tibet's
desperate attempts to maintain her independence and safeguard her
cultural identity.
"The Dragon in the Land of Snows" provides
- the first detailed account of the behind-the-scenes political
developments in Tibet and the Tibetan, Chinese, and British
personalities involved;
- the first complete account of the CIA's involvement in Tibet
and the establishment of a secret military base in the Nepalese
Himalayas;
- the first description of Indian prime minister Jawaharlal
Nehru's involvement following the Chinese invasion, and his failure
to recognize the truth of what was happening in Tibet;
- the first account of the power struggles during the Cultural
Revolution and of the mass uprising against the Chinese that has
remained secret until now;
- the first detailed account of the negotiations between the
Dalai Lama and the Chinese government during the late 1970s and
early 1980s; and
- the first full assessment of the agenda behind the current and
future developments in Tibet.
With careful and thorough documentation, the author details the
Chinese depredations of Tibet and the many concomitant shifts in
policy and political fortune. However, he also reveals the failures
of the Tibetan leadership's myopic and divided strategies to engage
the Chinese by on the one hand pursuing a policy of coexistence
with communist China and on the other trying to preserve her unique
identity as a Buddhist state under the leadership of the Dalai
Lama.
Charting a clear course through the intricacies of the
historical record, Shakya lucidly depicts the tragedy that has
befallen Tibet and outlines the conflicting geopolitical forces
that continue to shape the aspirations of the Tibetan people to
this day.
General
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