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Nehru’s Assessment of the Bandung Conference Nehru’s Assessment of the Bandung Conference
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Disagreements on the Prospect of a Second Asian-African Conference Disagreements on the Prospect of a Second Asian-African Conference
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China’s Post-Bandung Moment China’s Post-Bandung Moment
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Cite
Abstract
Chapter 10 reflects on the roles played by both Nehru and Zhou Enlai during the Bandung Conference’s proceedings and discusses their positive assessments of the conference’s outcomes. If Nehru felt vindicated in inviting China to Bandung, Zhou saw the conferences as an opportunity to advance China’s regional interests. That said, this chapter also shows that for all their high-minded and intoxicating rhetoric of Afro-Asian solidarity and peaceful coexistence, some differences emerged between Nehru and Zhou Enlai during the conference. These differences centred on whether some Afro-Asian machinery should be established to promote deeper Afro-Asian cooperation and if Afro-Asian conferences should become a regular feature of international life. While Zhou was enthusiastic about it, Nehru baulked at the idea of more Afro-Asian jamborees. Having secured a Chinese commitment to peaceful coexistence and facilitated Chinese peaceful engagement with the rest of the Third World—or so he thought—Nehru may have felt that a Bandung-style conference was not the most effective way of pursuing his goal of a neutralized and peaceful Asia.
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