
Contents
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Explaining the Termination of the Sino-Vietnamese Alliance Explaining the Termination of the Sino-Vietnamese Alliance
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Bilateral Explanations for the Termination of the Sino-Vietnamese Alliance Bilateral Explanations for the Termination of the Sino-Vietnamese Alliance
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Principal Enemy Theory Principal Enemy Theory
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The Sino-Soviet-Vietnamese Triangle and the Consequences of Alliance Termination The Sino-Soviet-Vietnamese Triangle and the Consequences of Alliance Termination
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The Sino-Soviet-Vietnamese Triangle in the 1980S The Sino-Soviet-Vietnamese Triangle in the 1980S
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Prelude to Rapprochement: Sino-Soviet Relations from Brezhnev to Chernenko Prelude to Rapprochement: Sino-Soviet Relations from Brezhnev to Chernenko
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Gorbachev and the Sino-Soviet Rapprochement Gorbachev and the Sino-Soviet Rapprochement
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Soviet Realpolitik, Vietnamese Retrenchment, and Sino-Vietnamese Rapprochement Soviet Realpolitik, Vietnamese Retrenchment, and Sino-Vietnamese Rapprochement
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Competing Explanations Competing Explanations
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Explaining Enemy Designation in Chinese Foreign Policy During the Cold War Explaining Enemy Designation in Chinese Foreign Policy During the Cold War
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Ideological Revisionism Ideological Revisionism
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Neorealist Theory, Principal Enemy Designation, and Post-1949 Chinese Foreign Policy Neorealist Theory, Principal Enemy Designation, and Post-1949 Chinese Foreign Policy
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A Research Agenda for Principal Enemy Theory: Chinese Foreign Policy and Realism A Research Agenda for Principal Enemy Theory: Chinese Foreign Policy and Realism
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Principal Enemy Theory, Realism, and Sino-U.S. Relations in the Post-Cold War Era (1991–2009) Principal Enemy Theory, Realism, and Sino-U.S. Relations in the Post-Cold War Era (1991–2009)
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Principal Enemy Theory and the Future of Sino-U.S. Relations in East Asia Principal Enemy Theory and the Future of Sino-U.S. Relations in East Asia
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6 When Allies Become Enemies
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Published:February 2011
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Abstract
This chapter concludes that the Sino-Soviet dispute and the termination of their alliance were major developments in the international relations of the Cold War. They form a key component in any account of why the Soviet-led communist vision of international order was ultimately unsuccessful in its competition with the alternative vision led by the United States. Despite its manifest importance, the multiple consequences associated with the termination of the Sino-Soviet alliance have not been sufficiently explored in the literature. This book, however, has sought to make some headway in filling this gap by exploring one consequence of the termination of the Sino-Soviet alliance, namely, its effect on the Sino-Vietnamese alliance.
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