
Contents
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India’s Opposition to a Second Asian-African Conference India’s Opposition to a Second Asian-African Conference
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Mao Zedong’s Radical Turn in Domestic and Foreign Policy Mao Zedong’s Radical Turn in Domestic and Foreign Policy
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Sino-Indian Relations Worsen Sino-Indian Relations Worsen
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The Struggle for Afro-Asia The Struggle for Afro-Asia
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Cite
Abstract
Chapter 11 traces Bandung’s legacy on Nehru’s foreign policy. It does so by assessing the role of the Afro-Asian caucus in addressing key Indian Cold War concerns and by examining the evolution of Sino-Indian relations between the late 1950s and early 1960s. After Bandung, Nehru no longer set great store by Afro-Asian solidarity to advance India’s national interests, given the diverse agendas and persistent disagreements among Afro-Asian nations. Furthermore, India and China grew apart within a few years of Bandung. India continued to view Afro-Asian cooperation as a mechanism to create neutralized areas of peace and avoid Cold War conflict. In contrast, China shifted from advocating peaceful coexistence to promoting violent national liberation struggles throughout the Afro-Asian world. To compound the growing chasm in Sino-Indian approaches to regional security, serious misunderstandings emerged over Tibet and their yet-to-be demarcated border. However, while the border question undoubtedly triggered the rapid unravelling of Sino-Indian ties, the relationship between India and China was already built on shaky ground, given the different premiums they placed on peace and stability, and their clashing visions for the postcolonial Afro-Asian world.
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