Read China's Territorial Disputes Online
Authors: Chien-Peng Chung
Domestic Politics, International Bargaining and China’s Territorial Disputes
This book is a groundbreaking analysis of China’s territorial disputes, exploring the successes and failures of negotiations that have taken place between China and its neighbors, namely India, Japan, Russia, and countries in Southeast Asia. By using Robert Putnam’s two-level game framework, Chung relates the outcome of these disputes to the actions of domestic nationalist groups who have exploited these territorial issues to further their own objectives. By using first-class empirical data and applying it to existing theoretical concepts,
Domestic Politics, International Bargaining and China's Territorial Disputes
provides a detailed account of China’s land and maritime border disputes that is both clear and accessible. This book will be a very valuable resource for anyone interested in international relations, politics and the security of China and the Asia-Pacific.
Chien-peng Chung
is a Research Fellow at the Department of East Asian Studies, University of Toronto.
Politics in Asia series
Formerly edited by Michael Leifer
London School of Economics
ASEAN and the Security of Political Change in Southeast Asia
South-East Asia
Trimming the Banyan Tree
Michael Leifer Michael R. J. Vatikiotis
China’s Policy towards Territorial Hong Kong
Disputes
China’s Challenge
The Case of the South China Sea Islands
Michael Yahuda
Chi-kin Lo
India and Southeast Asia
Indian Perceptions and Policies
Mohammed Ayoob
Gorbachev and Southeast Asia
Leszek Buszynski
Indonesian Politics under Suharto
Order, Development and Pressure for Change
Michael R. J. Vatikiotis
The State and Ethnic Politics in Southeast Asia
David Brown
The Politics of Nation Building and Citizenship in Singapore
Michael Hill and Lian Kwen Fee
Politics in Indonesia
Democracy, Islam and the Ideology of
Tolerance
Douglas E. Ramage
Communitarian Ideology and Democracy in Singapore
Beng-Huat Chua
The Challenge of Democracy in Nepal
Louise Brown
Japan’s Asia Policy
Wolf Mendl
The International Politics of the Asia-Pacific, 1945-1995
Michael Yahuda
Korea versus Korea
A Case of Contested Legitimacy
B. K. Gills
Taiwan and Chinese Nationalism
National Identity and Status in International Society
Christopher Hughes
Managing Political Change in Singapore
The Elected Presidency
Kevin Y L. Tan and Lam Peng Er
Islam in Malaysian Foreign Policy
Shanti Nair
Political Change in Thailand
Democracy and Participation
Kevin Hewison
The Politics of NGOs in South-East Asia
Participation and Protest in the Philippines
Gerard Clarke
Malaysian Politics Under Mahathir
R. S. Milne and Diane K. Mauzy
Indonesia and China
The Politics of a Troubled Relationship
Rizal Sukma
Arming the Two Koreas
State, Capital and Military Power
Taik-young Hamm
Engaging China
The Management of an Emerging Power
Edited by Alastair Iain Johnston and Robert S. Ross
Singapore’s Foreign Policy
Coping with Vulnerability
Michael Leifer
Philippine Politics and Society in the Twentieth Century
Colonial Legacies, Post-colonial Trajectories
Eva-Lotta E. Hedman and John T Sidel
Constructing a Security Community in Southeast Asia
ASEAN and the Problem of Regional Order
Amitav Acharya
Monarchy in South-East Asia
The Faces of Tradition in Transition
Roger Kershaw
Korea After the Crash
The Politics of Economic Recovery
Brian Bridges
The Future of North Korea
Edited by Tsuneo Akaha
The International Relations of Japan and South East Asia
Forging a New Regionalism
Sueo Sudo
Power and Change in Central Asia
Edited by Sally N. Cummings
The Politics of Human Rights in Southeast Asia
Philip Eldridge
Political Business in East Asia
Edited by Edmund Terence Gomez
Singapore Politics under the People’s Action Party
Diane K. Mauzy and R. S. Milne
Media and Politics in Pacific Asia
Duncan McCargo
Japanese Governance
Beyond Japan Inc.
Edited by Jennifer Amyx and Peter Drysdale
China and the Internet
Politics of the Digital Leap Forward
Edited by Christopher R. Hughes and Gudrun Wacker
Challenging Authoritarianism in Southeast Asia
Comparing Indonesia and Malaysia
Edited by Ariel Heryanto and Sumit K. Mandal
Cooperative Security and the Balance of Power in ASEAN and the ARF
Raf Emmers
Islam in Indonesian Foreign Policy
Rizal Sukma
Media, War and Terrorism
Responses from the Middle East and Asia
Edited by Peter Van der Veer and Shoma Munshi
China, Arms Control and Nonproliferation
Wendy Frieman
Communitarian Politics in Asia
Edited by Chua Beng Huat
East Timor, Australia and Regional Order
Intervention and Its Aftermath in Southeast Asia
James Cotton
Domestic Politics, International Bargaining and China’s Territorial Disputes
Chien-peng Chung
Domestic Politics, International Bargaining and China’s Territorial Disputes
Chien-peng Chung
First published 2004
l! New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EE Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
29 West 35?h Street,New York, NY 10001
RoutledgeCurzon is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group
This edition publishea in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2004.
© 2004 Chien-peng Chung
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
A catalog record for this book has been requested
ISBN 0-203-60046-0 Master e-book ISBN
ISBN 0-203-34513-4 (Adobe eReader Format)
ISBN 0-415-33366-0
(Print Edition)
For my wife, Hua
It is not worthwhile remembering that past which cannot become a present.
Soren Kierkegaard, philosopher
What we face today ... is the reality that almost any past, worthwhile or not, can become a present if remembered and recounted with a vengeance.
Charles Hill, political scientist
Contents
2. The two-level game hypothesis
3. The
Diaoyu
/
Tiaoyutai
/
Senkaku
Islands dispute
4. The
Zhenbao
/
Chenpao
/
Damansky
Islands dispute
5. The McMahon Line/Aksai Chin dispute
7. Testing the propositions of the two-level game hypothesis
Illustrations
Figures
2.1 Effects of reducing win-set size for two-issue negotiations
3.1 The East China Sea
4.1 The Amur-Ussuri boundary between China and the USSR
4.2 The Amur-Ussuri junction
4.3 Sino-Soviet trade, 1950-1989
5.1 The eastern China-India frontier
5.2 The western China-India frontier
6.1 The South China Sea
Table
4.1 Sino-Soviet trade volume, 1950-1989
Acknowledgments
The author would like to thank Dr Stanley Rosen, Dr Steven I. Levine, and an anonymous reviewer for their useful comments in the task of writing this book.
1 Introduction
Importance of topic
The study of the foreign policy of the People’s Republic of China, especially with regard to its ties with neighboring countries with which it shares a common land or maritime border, is important in many aspects. As we enter the twenty-first century, we will encounter a China that is rapidly growing both economically and militarily, and which may once again assert its dominance against neighboring countries, as it has done in ages past. With the end of superpower dominance after the Cold War, we also face an Asia-Pacific region that is in strategic flux but is of increasing economic importance, not only to the United States, but also to Japan and the countries of the European Union. After the recovery of sovereignty over Hong Kong on 30 June 1997, China still has a few territorial claims against its neighbors. These territories were considered by the Chinese to have been detached from their country through a series of “unequal” treaties forced on it in the last century by Russia, Japan, and European imperialist powers, then also colonizing neighboring South and Southeast Asia. These so-called “unequal” treaties were immediately repudiated when the Chinese Communist Party established the People’s Republic of China on 1 October 1949, which had the effect of placing in limbo the legal status of many stretches of China’s international boundary. With the rise of Chinese nationalism and consequent irredentist claims, the stability and prosperity of countries in the Asia-Pacific region may be just as easily reassured or destabilized by China’s domestic stability and foreign policy behavior. Hence the unresolved land and maritime boundary disputes of China as the largest country in Asia have the potential to become a major cause of instability, not only for countries against which China has territorial claims, but also for their trading partners and military allies. So saying, I believe it is timely to focus on these disputes, by tracking their initiation, aggravation, continuation and possible settlement.