000 01721 a2200157 4500
999 _c26126
_d26126
020 _a9780190125042
082 _a954.042
_bLIN-C
100 _aLintner, Bertil
245 _aChina's India war
_b: collision course on the roof of the world
260 _bOxford University Press
_c2020
_aNew Delhi
300 _a xxviii, 352p.
504 _aInclude Index
520 _aThe first book to put the Sino-Indian border dispute and the 1962 war into its rightful historical and geopolitical context, China's India War examines how the 1962 war was about much more than the border. China was going through immense internal turmoil following the disastrous 'Great Leap Forward' and Mao Zedong, the architect of the movement, was looking to reassert his power over the Communist Party and the People's Liberation Army. Finding an outside enemy against which everyone could unite was his best option. Coincidentally, India was emerging as the leader of the newly independent countries in Asia and Africa and the stakes were high for a war with India: winning the war could mean China would 'dethrone' India and take over. A border dispute with India and India's decision to grant asylum to the Dalal Lama after a failed uprising against Chinese rule in Tibet in 1959 gave China legitimate reasons to go to war. This book unveils how China has started planning the war as early as in 1959, much before Jawaharlal Nehru launched the 'forward policy' in the border areas. And how the war accomplished much for China: India lost, China became the main voice of revolutionary movements in the Third World, and Mao Zedong was back in power.
650 _aForeign relations
_v Sino-Indian Border Dispute
_zIndia
_zChina
942 _2ddc
_cBK