What a Cold War crisis over Taiwan could tell us about China-Russia relations today

IF 1.9 4区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists Pub Date : 2022-09-03 DOI:10.1080/00963402.2022.2109338
(Clark) Aoqi Wu
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Abstract

ABSTRACT The crisis today in Ukraine between Russia and the West has uncanny parallels to an often-overlooked Cold War conflict between China, the Soviet Union, and the United States known as “The Taiwan Straits Crisis of 1958” or “The Second Taiwan Straits Crisis” – which some analysts have referred to as the first serious nuclear crisis. In addition to worries about nuclear escalation, there are other similarities: Russia and China viewed themselves, then and now, as exceptional nations, superior to a decadent, materialist America thought to be in decline – but still carrying dangerous military clout. Faced with a strong West, the leaders of China and Russia in the 1950s tried to present a united, Sino-Russian public front, even if their two countries were fundamentally split over the issues that led to the Taiwan Straits Crisis. If the past is any guide, then despite economic pressure from the United States and the loss of international reputation, China is unlikely to ever join the US-led sanctions against Russia. As the conflict deepens, both dictators’ assessments of the strength and intentions of the United States might begin to diverge, opening a way for their rivals to drive a wedge between them.
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台湾的冷战危机可以告诉我们今天的中俄关系
摘要今天,俄罗斯和西方在乌克兰发生的危机与中国、苏联和美国之间经常被忽视的冷战冲突“1958年台湾海峡危机”或“第二次台湾海峡危机”有着不可思议的相似之处,一些分析人士称之为第一次严重的核危机。除了对核升级的担忧之外,还有其他相似之处:俄罗斯和中国当时和现在都认为自己是杰出的国家,优于被认为正在衰落的腐朽、唯物主义的美国,但仍具有危险的军事影响力。面对强大的西方,中国和俄罗斯领导人在20世纪50年代试图建立一个统一的中俄公共阵线,即使两国在导致台湾海峡危机的问题上存在根本分歧。如果以过去为鉴,那么,尽管美国施加了经济压力,国际声誉受损,中国不太可能加入美国领导的对俄罗斯的制裁。随着冲突的加深,两位独裁者对美国实力和意图的评估可能开始出现分歧,为他们的对手在他们之间制造隔阂开辟了道路。
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发文量
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