China\'s Quest. The History of the Foreign Relations of the People\'s Republic of China - John Garver

(Steven Felgate) #1

Notes to pages 301–312 } 815



  1. Huang Hua, Memoirs, p. 225.

  2. Romberg, Rein In, p. 42.

  3. Romberg, Rein In, p. 45.

  4. Quoted in Romberg, Rein In, p. 46.

  5. Regarding China’s diplomatic offensive at this juncture, see Joseph Camilleri,
    Chinese Foreign Policy:  The Maoist Era and Its Aftermath, Seattle:  University of
    Washington Press, 1980. Samuel S. Kim, China, the United Nations, and the World Order,
    Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1979.

  6. Hoxha left an extensive diary on Albania’s ties with China. Enver Hoxha, Reflections
    on China, Vol. 1, 1962–72, Extracts from the Political Diary, Tirana: 8 Nentori, 1979. (Vol. 2
    covers the period 1973 to 1977.)

  7. Ibid., p. 437.

  8. Ibid., pp. 482–3.

  9. Ibid., pp. 555–62.

  10. Ibid., pp. 596, 601, 603, 678–80, 746–50.

  11. Ibid., pp. 658–8.

  12. Ibid., pp. 746–50.

  13. Ibid., p. 748.

  14. William J. Barnds, India, Pakistan, and the Great Powers, New York: Praeger, 1972,
    p. 479. The absence of Red Guards in the Islamabad embassy was conveyed to me by re-
    tired Chinese senior diplomat Zhang Wenjin in an interview in May 1990.

  15. G. W. Choudhury, India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and the Major Powers: Politics of
    a Divided Subcontinent, New York: Free Press, 1975, pp. 192–3. Syed, China and Pakistan,
    pp. 125–6. S. M. Burke, Pakistan’s Foreign Policy: A Historical Analysis, London: University
    Press, 1973, pp. 361–4.

  16. R. Rama Rao, “Pakistan Re-Arms,” India Quarterly, vol. 27, no. 2 (April–June 1971),
    pp. 140–8.

  17. At the time of writing, China is constructing a railway along the general align-
    ment of the Karakoram Highway. Regarding the highway, see Mahnaz Z. Ispahani, Roads
    and Rivals:  The Political Uses of Access in the Borderlands of Asia, Ithaca, NY:  Cornell
    University Press, 1989.

  18. Henry A. Kissinger, White House Years, Boston: Little Brown, 1979, pp. 906–15.

  19. Choudhury, India, Pakistan, p. 211.

  20. Sultan M. Khan, Memories and Reflections of a Pakistani Diplomat, London: Center
    for Pakistan Studies, 1997, 304–7.

  21. Richard Sisson and Leo E.  Rose, War and Secession:  Pakistan, India and the
    Creation of Bangladesh, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990, pp. 249–50.

  22. Mehrunnisa Ali, “China’s Diplomacy during the Indo-Pakistan War, 1971,”
    Pakistan Horizon (Karachi), vol. 25, no. 1 (1972): 53–62.

  23. Sisson and Rose, War and Secession, pp. 250–1.

  24. Sisson and Rose, War and Secession, pp. 250–1. Choudhury, India, Pakistan, p. 213.

  25. “Pakistan Delegation in China,” Peking Review, November 12, 1971, p. 23.

  26. Kissinger, White House Years, p. 910.

  27. This intelligence report that India’s Indira Gandhi planned to strike west after set-
    tling events in the east was apparently wrong. Nixon’s decision to deploy an aircraft carrier
    battle group to threaten India as a result of this incorrect intelligence was subsequently

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