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U.S.-China Relations in the Post-Deng Era
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17047 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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8 / 1990 |
2,814 Words |
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Gerrit W. Gong Gerrit W. Gong is director of the Asian Studies Program at the
Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington,
D.C. He served as special assistant to two U.S. ambassadors in
Beijing from June 1987 to July 1989. The views expressed are
completely personal. |
As Deng Xiaoping turns 86 this August, Americans remain uncertain: Is he still China's champion of reform and modernization? Or just a "butcher of Beijing?"
For 10 years, we admired hope for the future. Now, after the tragedy at Tiananmen, many view Deng as China's past - one in a cabal of octogenarians who ordered the People's Liberation Army (PLA) to clear Tiananmen Square by force.
As history begins its judgment of Deng and as we assess the prospects for Sino-American relations in the coming post Deng era, we must put Deng, the causes and consequences of Tiananmen, and the challenges and opportunities facing the United States and the People's Republic of China (PRC) in perspective.
I first met Deng in October 1981. His 1978 comeback had marked the end of the Cultural Revolution and the defeat of the "Gang of Four.” It represented the beginning of a new effort to modernize China. From his animated analysis, it was clear Deng had a grand strategy to deal with China's most compelling imperative. In the long-standing historical debate, Deng sided with those who said China should modernize by interacting with the world. He said China was backward because China had been closed.
Defining a link between reform and opening (gaige kaifang), Deng said China would invigorate its domestic economy by expanding and strengthening its outside ties. To provide the period of peace necessary for development, Deng orchestrated an outward looking Chinese foreign policy based on normalized Sino-American
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