
Contents
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The Long Crisis The Long Crisis
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PRC Interests in North Korea PRC Interests in North Korea
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China Tries to Manage a Prickly Comradeship China Tries to Manage a Prickly Comradeship
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North Korea as an Irritant in Sino-U.S. Relations North Korea as an Irritant in Sino-U.S. Relations
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Not Such a “Force for Peace” in This Case Not Such a “Force for Peace” in This Case
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter examines the tension between China and the United States over nuclear proliferation by the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK), more commonly known as North Korea. When it comes to North Korea, China's behavior is not aggressive but passive-aggressive. China refuses to join with the United States and other governments in the disciplining of a state that threatens international stability. China's actions are not directly threatening to the system or to other states. Indeed, China ostensibly takes the role of moderator and peacemaker. As Beijing realizes, this is not sufficient cause for states to increase their balancing against China. Nevertheless, the net effect of China's North Korea policy on international security is negative. A stronger China is more capable of shielding outlaw states that threaten peace if it chooses to do so, as it has in the nuclear weapons crises involving Iran and North Korea. Beijing has supported denuclearization, but only within certain conditions.
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