Rivals: How the Power Struggle Between China, India, and Japan Will Shape Our Next Decade
This is a bold study of how the three major Asian states are engaging in power struggles that will shape the future of international relations, and not just in Asia. The title of the book and some of the chapter headings suggest conflict and differences, but the author's argument is essentially constructive and upbeat. Emmott sees China as the middle country that will play the central role in defining the future of the Asian continent, Japan as powerful but aging, and India as in the process of shedding its confused view of its potential role in international affairs.
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For some months, 1966 promised to be a year of significant albeit gradual change in American policy toward Communist China. In a strange and paradoxical fashion, the emotional issues of the Viet Nam War opened the way for the most sober, responsible and even-handed public discussion of China since the Communists came to power. At Congressional hearings and in the mass media, scholars and leaders of opinion have dispassionately calculated the possibilities for change, and Administration leaders have in their customarily guarded language intimated that change was not impossible. Most significant of all, the American public demonstrated a gratifying degree of maturity by forgetting the old passions and asking for only facts and analyses about the new China. Our national mood was increasingly one of believing that with prudence and wisdom it would be possible to work toward gradually incorporating China into responsible world relationships.
