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Cold War Asia MTA
Superpowers, Proxy Wars, and Regional Transformations, 1945–1991
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Cold War Asia "Cold War Asia" examines how the Cold War profoundly reshaped the Asian continent from 1945 to 1991, emphasizing the agency of Asian actors amidst superpower competition. The book argues that while external pressures from the U.S. and Soviet Union were immense, local institutions, ideas, and social structures mediated and often redirected these influences, leading to diverse developmental and political trajectories. It integrates diplomatic, military, and social history, using a wide array of sources to show how high-level policies translated into ground-level realities and how societies responded to the burdens of war and alliance.

The book traces several key themes, beginning with the entanglement of decolonization with the bipolar conflict, where independence movements navigated aid offers and ideological patronage. It highlights the fragmentation within socialism itself, exemplified by the Sino-Soviet split, which fractured revolutionary internationalism and reverberated across the continent. Another major theme is the rise of the developmental state and export-led growth in East and Southeast Asia, underpinned by Western security guarantees and market access. The volume also explores the emergence of nonalignment and regionalism, demonstrating how diplomatic entrepreneurship created limited but real autonomy for many states.

Geopolitically, the text details how Asia's Cold War unfolded across vital sea lanes like the Indian Ocean and volatile borderlands, from the Korean DMZ to the Sino-Indian and Sino-Vietnamese borders, which frequently erupted into crises. These flashpoints influenced alliance behaviors, defense spending, and the proliferation of arms, including nuclear capabilities. The human consequences of these conflicts were immense, leading to mass displacement, altered gender roles, and reconfigured social relations, all while propaganda and cultural diplomacy vied for "hearts and minds."

The book covers major conflicts and transformations, including the Korean War and its legacies, the Chinese Revolution and its regional impact, the Taiwan Strait Crises, the Indochina Wars, and the Indonesia's 1965-66 upheaval. Later chapters delve into the Sino-Soviet split's impact, revolutionary waves and counterinsurgency in Southeast Asia, Japan's economic miracle and its U.S. alliance, South Asia's Cold War dynamics, and the dramatic shifts brought by Sino-US rapprochement and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. It concludes with an examination of China's market turn, the rise of authoritarian developmental states, and the "endgames" of the late 1980s that culminated in the Soviet retreat and the Cold War's denouement, leaving a lasting legacy that continues to shape contemporary Asia.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The book demonstrates how Asian actors actively maneuvered within, contested, and redirected Cold War pressures to pursue their own sovereignty and development goals, rather than being passive recipients of superpower designs.
  • It analyzes the entanglement of decolonization with bipolar competition, showing how independence movements navigated superpower patronage while facing counterinsurgency, partition, or intervention.
  • It examines the fragmentation of socialism through the Sino-Soviet split and its ripple effects across Asian revolutionary movements from Vietnam to Afghanistan.
  • It explores the rise of developmental states in Northeast and Southeast Asia, where security guarantees and market access interacted with domestic reforms to produce export-led growth models.
  • It traces the evolution of nonalignment and regionalism from Bandung onward, revealing how diplomatic entrepreneurship created limited but meaningful autonomy amid superpower rivalry.
Who's It For:

This book is intended for students, scholars, and researchers of Cold War history, Asian studies, and international relations who seek to understand how superpower rivalry interacted with local dynamics across Asia. It will particularly benefit those interested in decolonization processes, socialist movements, developmental state models, and nonaligned diplomacy. Policy analysts and professionals working on contemporary Asian geopolitics will find valuable historical context for current regional security dilemmas and development patterns.

Author:

Justin Munoz

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 19, 2026

Word Count:

113,117 words

Reading Time:

7 hours 55 minutes

Sample:

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