000 08212nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c154078
_d154078
020 _a9788178271125
040 _cCUS
082 _a327.54051
_bDEE/I
100 _aDeepak, B.R.
_93490
245 0 _aIndia & China 1904-2004: A century pf peace an conflict/
_cB.R. Deepak
250 _a1st ed.
260 _aNew Delhi:
_bManak,
_c2005.
300 _axxiv, 508 p.
_c24 cm.
505 _a1. The Making of Common Borders—I: British Expansionism in the Himalayan Regions 1. British Attempts to Open Tibet for Trade 1.1. Bogle's Tibet Mission 1774 1.2. Samuel Turner's Mission 1783 2. The Russian Advances: British Expansionism in the Himalayan States 2.1. Kashmir 2.2. Ladakh 2.2.1. The Boundary Commission 1846-1847 2.2.2. The Johnson Boundary 2.2.3. John-Ardagh Boundary 2.2.4. The Macartney-Macdonald Line 2.3. Nepal 2.4. Sikkim 2.5. Bhutan 2.6. Assam 3. British Military Expeditions to Tibet 3.1. First Military Expedition 3.2. Younghusbands' Military Expedition 3.2.1. Tlie Tibetan Reaction 3.2.2. The British Invasion of Tibet and the Lhasa Convention 3.2.3. Chinese Reaction and the Anglo-Chinese Talks 4. The Anglo-Russian Convention over Tibet (1907) 2. The Making of Common Borders—II: Chinese Expansionism in the Himalayan Regions 1. The Tributary System 2. The Chinese Annexation of Xinjiang 2.1. Events Leading to the Annexation 2.2. Xinjiang under the Republic of China 3. The Chinese Expansion in Tibet 3.1. Tibet as a Sovereign State 3.2. Tibet During the Ming Dynasty 3.3. Tibet During the Qing Dynasty 4. The Nepalese Invasion of Tibet 5. China's Forward Policy in Tibet 5.1. Anglo-Chinese Agreement on Trade Regulations for Tibet 5.2. The 13th Dalai Lama and the Manchus 6. The Zhao Brothers' Military Conquests in Tibet 6.1. Forward Policy imder the Zhao Brothers 1907-11 6.2. The Chinese Expeditionary Forces to Lhasa 6.3. China's Forward Policy in the Assam Himalaya 1910-12 7. The Revolution of 1911, the Republicans and Tibet 3. The British India, Tibet and the Republic of China 1. The Simla Conference 2. The McMahon Line 3. Tibet After the Simla Convention 3.1. Sino-Tibetan Hostilities 3.2. Resumption of Negotiations 3.3. The Dalai-Panchen Row 4. Tibet and the Kuomintang (KMT) Government 4.1. Renewed Sino-Tibetan Confrontation 4.2. Huang Musong's Mission to Lhasa 4.3. Panchen's Attempt to Return to Tibet 4.4. The Installation of the 14th Dalai Lama 4.5. Tibet During the Second World War 4.6. Tbet Desperate and Hopeless 4. The Republic of India, Tibet and the Republic of China 1. India wins Freedom—Tibet Left in Lurch 2. Attempts to Gain Recognition iJ.X. Tibet at Asiatic Conference fl.l. The Tbetan Trade Mission ?J. Chinese Grievances to India 4. Expulsion of the Chinese from Tibet 4.1. The Communist Reaction 5. India and the Peoples Republic of China 1949-1959: A Decade of Mistrust and Diplomatic Manoeuvrability 1. The Tibetan Situation 2. India's China Policy 3. Tibetan Reaction to the Chinese Threats 3.1. China's Attitude 3.2. Tibet's Plea to the United States 3.3. Tibet in Dilemma 3.4. The Tibetan and Chinese Discussions in Delhi 4. The Chinese Action in Tibet and the Indian Policy 5. Tibet at the UN and India's China Policy 6. Sino-Tibetan Seventeen-point Agreement 7. The 1954 India-China agreement on Hbet; The Failure of Indian Diplomacy 7.1. China in Control of Tibet's Foreign Affairs 7.2. Sino-Indian Negotiations on Tibet 8. India-China after the 1954 Agreement: The Hype of Sino-Indian Brotherhood 8.1. Zhou Enlai's First India Visit 8.2. Nehru's China Visit 8.3. Nehru-Zhou at Bandung 8.4. Zhou Enlai's Second India Visit 8.4.1. Tibet Resurfaces in New Delhi 8.5. Zhou Enlai's Third India Visit 8.6. Other Bilateral Exchanges 9. China's India Policy 6. Behind the Facade of Sino-Indian Brotherhood: Hostile Coexistence 1. The Sino-Indian Border 1.1. The Western Sector 1.2. The Middle Sector 1.3. The Eastern Sector 2. Hostile Coexistence 3. The Tibetan Rebellion 3.1. The Spark 3.2. The Elight of the Dalai Lama 3.3. The Aftermath 4. Sino-Indian Relations and the Tibetan Revolt 5. Further Deterioration of Relations 5.1. The Longju Incident 5.2. Zhou's Flints at East-West Swap 5.3. Kongka Pass Incident 6. Nehru-Zhou Summit in Delhi 6.1. The Officials Report 6.1.1. Claims and Counter Claims 7. China- Prepares for the War 7.1. Steps to Enhance its Forward Communications 7.2. Increased Intrusions 7.3. Troop Deployment 8. The Indian Response—Forward Policy 9. An All Out Invasion 10. The Ceasefire and the Colombo Proposals 11. What Prompted the Chinese Invasion? II.I. Chinese Sensitivities in Tibet II .2. Domestic Problems II.3. External Troubles 7, Diplomatic Freeze and the Sino-Indian Detente After the 1962 War 1. Sino-Pak Entente 2. China Flares up Insurgency in India 3. China's Vulnerability in Tibet 4. India's 'Collusion' with Taiwan 5. De-freezing of Relations 5.1. The Indian Initiative 5.2. The Chinese Response 5.3. Some Irritants 6. Restoration of Ambassadorial Relations 6.1. Deng Xiaoping and the New Order in China 6.1.1. Wang Binnan's India visit 6.2. Change of Regime in India 6.2.1. Vajpayee's China Visit 6.2.2. Deng's proposal of East-west Swap 7. Indira Gandhi's Return to Power: New Initiatives 7.1. Huang Hua's India Visit 7.2. Eight Rounds of Talks on Border and Other Exchanges 8. The Arrival of Rajiv Gandhi 8.1. Rajiv Gandhi's China Approach 8.2. The Sumdorong Chu Crisis 8. Collapse of the Great Wall Between India and China: Towards a Sino-Indian Detente 1. Rajiv Gandhi's China Visit 1.1. Rajiv-Deng Handshake 1.2. Bilateral Agreements 1.3. "Tian'anmen Incident" and the Indian Silence 2. Janata Dal Government and India's China Policy 3. Li Peng's India Visit 3.1. Bilateral Agreements 4. Narasimha Rao's China Visit 4.1. Agreement Signed 5. Other High Level Visits and Exchanges 5.1. Political Visits 5.2. Defence Ties 5.3. Scientific and Technological Exchange 5.4. Trade Relations 5.5. Cultural Exchange 5.6. Cooperation on International Issues . 6. Ten JWG Meeting on Border 7. Jiang Zemin's India Visit 8. The LAC as an International Border? 9. India Exercises Nuclear Option: Setback to Sino-Indian Detente 1. PLA Chief in India 2. How Genuine are India's Security Concerns? 2.1. Role of Force in China's Foreign Policy 2.1.1. The Chinese Bomb 2.2. China's Military Assistance to Pakistan 2.3. China's Nuclear and Missile Proliferation 2.4. China and the Nuclear Petonations in the Subcontinent 2.5. International Condemnation 2.6. Damage Control and Security Dialogues 3. Efforts Leading to Restoration of Relations 3.1 Common Desire to Improve Relations 4. Kargil Conflict and China 5. China's Reaction to the Draft Indian Nuclear Doctrine 6. Karmapa's Flight to India 10. Towards a Constructive and Cooperative Partnership in the 21st Century 1. Exchanges at the Highest Level in 2001 1.1. K.R. Narayanan's China Visit 1.2. China's Foreign Minister, Tang Jiaxuan in India 1.3. Li Peng's India Visit 2. Other Functional Exchanges 3. Terrorist Attack on the Indian Parliament and China 4. Exchanges at the Highest Level in 2002 4.1. Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji in India 4.2. Jaswant Singh in China 5. Economic and Trade Relations 6. Five More JWG Meetings on the Border 7. Change of Guard in China 8. Highest Level Exchanges in 2003 8.1. The Indian Defence Minister in China 8.2. Vajpayee's China Visit 8.2.1. Tibet, Sikkim and Border in the Joint Declaration 11. India and China in the 21st Century: Problems and Prospects 1. Problems that Need to be Addressed 1.1. The Boundary Question 1.2. Tibet Problem 1.3. Sino-Pakistan Entente Cordiale 2. Shared Neighborhood 2.1. South Asia 2.1.1. Nepal 2.1.2. Bhutan 2.1.3. Bangladesh 2.1.4. Sri Lanka 2.2. Southeast Asia 2.2.1. Myanmar 2.3. Other Southeast Asian Countries 3. India, China and the Great Powers 4. Potentials for Future Cooperation 4.1. Need to Strengthen Economic and Trade Relations 4.1.1. Joint-venture Possibilities 4.1.2. Border Trade 4.1.3. Cooperation in the Field of Science and Technology 4.2. Cooperation in International Arena
650 _aIndia -- Foreign relations -- China.
_95053
650 _aChina -- Foreign relations -- India.
_95054
650 _aInde -- Relations extérieures -- Chine.
_915004
942 _cWB16
_03