818 { Notes to pages 330–338
duty under this doctrine was Iran, but Japan was an obvious candidate. The doctrine was
also called the “Nixon Doctrine.”
- Michael H. Armacost and Kenneth B. Pyle, “Japan and the Engagement of
China: Challenges for U.S. Policy Coordination,” NBR Analysis, vol. 12, no. 5 (December
2001), p. 17. - Lee, Japan Faces China, p. 129.
- Lee, Japan Faces China, p. 129.
- Lee, Japan Faces China, p. 124.
- Lee, Japan Faces China, p. 124.
- Kissinger, On China, p. 283.
- PRC officials have consistently denied providing assistance to Pakistan’s nuclear
weapons efforts. Evidence strongly suggests, however, that there was such assistance
starting in 1974 and continuing into the 1980s. For a fuller exposition of the evidence,
see John Garver, Protracted Contest: Sino-Indian Rivalry in the Twentieth Century,
Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2001, pp. 324–36. - The report was obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request and con-
veyed by Kyodo news agency. Asian Recorder, September 17–23, 1975, p. 25081. - B. K. Kumar, “Nuclear Nexus between Peking and Islamabad: An Overview of
Some Significant Developments,” Issues and Studies 21 (August 1985), pp. 140–50. - Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, If I Am Assassinated, New Delhi: Vikas, 1979. The reference to
the June 1976 agreement is on page 221. Bhutto develops his anti-nuclear coup conspiracy
hypothesis on pp. 107, 137–8, 168–9. - Herbert Krosney, The Islamic Bomb: The Nuclear Threat to Israel and the Middle
East, New York: Time Books, 1981, p. 218. Also Judith Miller, “U.S. Is Holding Up Peking
Atom Talks,” New York Times, September 19, 1982, p. 11. - Reuters, March 31, 1996. There is an interesting contrast between China’s assistance
to Pakistan’s nuclear weapons effort in the 1970s and its rejection of a 1965 Indonesian
request for similar assistance. See Robert M. Cornejo, “When Sukarno Sought the
Bomb: Indonesia’s Nuclear Aspirations in the Mid-1960s,” Nonproliferation Review 7
(Summer 2000), pp. 31–43. Jay Taylor, China and Southeast Asia: Peking’s Relations with
Revolutionary Movements, New York: Praeger, 1976, pp. 104–8. - John Garver, China and Iran: Ancient Partners in a Post-Imperial World,
Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2006, pp. 154–5, 223–6. - This section follows Garver, China and Iran, pp. 29–56.
- US construction of facilities on the island began in 1971.
- A recent and authoritative biography of the shah which draws intriguing parallels
between his modernization effort and China’s post-1978 drive is Abbas Milani, The Shah,
London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011. For an exegesis of those similarities based on Milani’s
biography, see John Garver, “China and the Iran Model,” China Currents, forthcoming. - “Chinese Foreign Minister Honored at Tehran Dinner,” Xinhua, June 14, 1973,
quoted in Garver, China and Iran, p. 51, p. 332 n. 47. - This interpretation may, of course, be challenged on the grounds that Ji’s declara-
tion simply intended neutrality and noninvolvement in power rivalry in the Gulf. I think
the evidence suggests rather that Beijing sees Iran as a rising regional and friendly power
with which China should, gradually and over an extended period of time, build a strategic
partnership.