Explaining and Influencing Chinese Arms Transfers


Book Description

China's role in missile and nuclear weapons proliferation has become one of 3 issues -- along with human rights and trade -- upon which the U.S. has focused its reassessment of U.S. policy toward China, and whether to attach conditions to the renewal of China's MFN trade benefits. Addresses the factors motivating Chinese conventional arms sales and speculates on means to influence them. Describes the history of PRC weapons exports, then examines various supply- and demand-side reasons for these transfers. Discusses sources of arms transfer restraints.







Chinese Arms Transfers


Book Description

In July 1987, the U.S. began Persian Gulf escort operations for reflagged Kuwait tankers to guarantee safe passage through vital int'l shipping lanes threatened by the escalating Iran-Iraq War. This task was complicated for the American Navy by Iran's deployment of shore batteries of Chinese-manufactured HY-2 Silkworm anti ship missiles. Washington negotiated with Beijing, seeking to deny further anti ship missile deliveries to Teheran. However, disagreements over arms transfer issues prove a recurring source of bilateral friction. This book identifies recurring patterns in the global arms trade to put the study of China into perspective.







China's Arms Sales


Book Description

Developed by the Rand Corporation, the site contains chapters covering an Introduction; Background; Explaining China's Arms Transfers; Possible Constraints on China's Arms; Implications for the United States; An Overview of China's Arms Sales; and a Bibliography.







China's Arms Acquisitions from Abroad


Book Description

This book assesses current Chinese arms imports in the light of China's historical efforts to modernize its weapon-production capacity through foreign acquisitions. It considers the implications of these imports for future security developments in the East Asian region.







Fire of the Dragon


Book Description




China and the Arms Trade


Book Description

First Published in 1985, China and the Arms Trade offers a detailed analysis of Chinese arms aid policy to examine Beijing’s changing nature of foreign and domestic policy. Military aid, like war, is a continuation of foreign policy by other means. The previous perception of China offering special and selfless military assistance seems no longer accurate. The nature of these Chinese aid now appears more complex and contradictory. China, now like other great powers, take an active role in the lucrative international arms bazaar. As one Chinese official said about his country’s more hard-headed arms sales policy, ‘we cannot sell at friendship prices all the time’. This book is a must read for scholars and researchers of Chinese foreign policy, strategic studies, Chinese politics, international relations and defence studies.