The Silk of Diplomacy: China’s Foreign Relations 1949–2000
MTA
A strategic history of diplomacy, treaties, and global positioning of the People’s Republic
2nd Edition
*The Silk of Diplomacy* provides a strategic history of the People’s Republic of China’s foreign relations from its revolutionary founding in 1949 to its emergence as a global economic stakeholder in 2000. The narrative details how Beijing navigated the early Cold War through a "leaning to one side" alliance with the Soviet Union and military intervention in Korea, which established enduring patterns of strategic signaling and deterrence. As ideological and territorial tensions led to the Sino-Soviet split and border clashes on the Ussuri River, China recalibrated its positioning, famously pivoting toward a rapprochement with the United States in the 1970s to balance against Moscow while seeking international legitimacy through the United Nations.
With the ascent of Deng Xiaoping and the launch of "Reform and Opening," the book argues that Chinese diplomacy shifted from revolutionary agitation to a pragmatism rooted in economic modernization. During the 1980s and 1990s, trade, technology transfer, and foreign investment became the primary instruments of national security. This era saw China successfully negotiate the return of Hong Kong and Macau under the "one country, two systems" framework and begin a cautious transition from an arms control outsider to a participant in global nonproliferation regimes. Even the internal crisis of 1989 and the subsequent Western sanctions only temporarily stalled this trajectory, as Beijing utilized regional multilateralism in Asia and energy diplomacy in Africa and the Middle East to bypass isolation.
The final chapters examine China’s efforts to build a stable regional order at the century's close. By settling long-standing land border disputes with Russia and Central Asian states and spearheading the Shanghai Five, China secured its frontiers to focus on maritime challenges and the unresolved Taiwan question. The 1995–1996 Taiwan Strait Crisis serves as a pivotal case study in China's dual strategy of coercive deterrence and diplomatic dialogue. The book concludes with China’s fifteen-year quest for WTO accession, a process that codified its commitment to international rules and signaled its definitive integration into the global economic system as a rising power characterized by both strategic ambition and calculated restraint.
Danielle Mendoza
View booksMay 15, 2026
65,483 words
4 hours 35 minutes
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