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The fourth and final volume in a pioneering series on the Chinese
military, "Imagined Enemies" offers an unprecedented look at its
history, operational structure, modernization, and strategy.
Beginnning with an examination of culturee adn thought in Part I,
the authors explore the transition away transition away from Mao
Zedong's revolutionary doctrine, the conflict with Moscow, and
Beijing's preoccupation with Taiwanese separatism and preparations
for war to thwart it. Part II focuses on operational and policy
decisions in the National Command Authority and, subsequently, in
the People's Liberation Army. Part III provides a detailed study of
the Second Artillery, China's strategic rocket forces. The book
concludes with the transformation of military strategy and shows
how it is being tested in military exercises, with Taiwan and the
United States as "imagined enemies."
Using major new documentary sources, the authors tell the story of
why and how China built its nuclear submarine flotilla and the
impact of that development on the nation's politics, technology,
industry, and strategy.
This is the fourth and final volume in a pioneering series on the
Chinese military. It begins with an examination of Chinese military
culture and history, with special attention to the transition from
Mao Zedong's revolutionary doctrine and the conflict with Moscow to
Beijing's preoccupation with Taiwanese separatism and preparations
for war to thwart it. Because such a war might involve the United
States, the Chinese have concentrated on measures to deter American
intervention. Part II focuses on the military and decisionmaking,
first in the National Command Authority and then in the People's
Liberation Army's command-and-control prioritizing system. Part II
provides a detailed study of the Second Artillery, China's
strategic rocket forces. Based in part on interviews, the book
provides an unprecedented look at its history, operational
structure, modernization, and strategy.
Originally published in 1970, this volume consists of essays by
twelve leading scholars from the United States and Britain, all of
whom concentrated their studies on the problems of China. Their
papers were originally written for a conference on the Chinese
Communist Party, held at Ditchley Park, England, in July 1968.
During the discussions, a number of themes emerged as the factors
governing the evolution of the Party. These related to problems of
leadership, power and the revolutionary struggle within the Party
and their effect on Chinese society. The authors subsequently
revised their papers, highlighting these problems within the realm
of their own subject, ranging from the power elite and the Central
Committee to the village leadership and the role of the Army. The
editor, in his introduction, throws further light on the leadership
and power struggle, on Mao's role and on the effects of the Great
Cultural Revolution.
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