China's strong arm : protecting citizens and assets abroad / Jonas Parello-Plesner and Mathieu Duchâtel.
2015
JZ1427 .P37 2015 (Map It)
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Title
China's strong arm : protecting citizens and assets abroad / Jonas Parello-Plesner and Mathieu Duchâtel.
Published
Abingdon, Oxon : Routledge, 2015.
Call Number
JZ1427 .P37 2015
ISBN
9781138947269
1138947261
1138947261
Description
160 pages : maps ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)910502715
Summary
China has long adhered to a principle of 'non-interference' in other states' affairs. However, as more of its companies have been investing in projects overseas, and millions of its nationals are travelling abroad, Beijing is finding itself progressively involved in other countries--through the need to protect these interests and citizens. During the turmoil of the Arab Spring in 2011, China was compelled to evacuate more than 35,000 Chinese workers and expatriates from Libya, and later it led the hunt for the killers of 13 Chinese sailors in the Golden Triangle region of the Mekong River. In 2015, Beijing sent a combat battalion to join the UN peacekeeping mission in South Sudan, where it has huge oil ventures. Its plans to construct a New Silk Road will mean new commercial endeavours to protect in Pakistan. The shift in Chinese foreign policy towards a more interventionist approach in protecting nationals abroad has not been the result of grand strategy, but an adjustment to unfolding events. The large risk appetite of state-owned Chinese business is inexorably drawing the Chinese state into security hotspots, and as China becomes a great power its people are openly calling on their government to protect compatriots caught in crises overseas, including via military means. While much attention has focused on Beijing's increasingly assertive behaviour in disputed Asian seas, this book highlights another equally important area of change, with potentially far-reaching consequences for international security.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Added Author
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
6
Glossary
7
Introduction
9
Inflection points for Chinese foreign policy
11
Responsibility to protect points to further foreign-policy change
14
ch. One
China's new global risk map
19
Chinese economic expansion abroad
20
Chinese nationals abroad
24
The changing nature of the challenge
31
ch. Two
Transforming Chinese foreign policy and institutions
37
Responding to public scrutiny
39
Capacity-building in the State Council
41
Chinese companies abroad
50
Force as the ultimate foreign-policy option
54
New capacities to serve greater ambitions
59
ch. Three
China's `AfPak' hinterland
67
China's risky business ventures in Afghanistan
68
China's reluctant involvement in Afghanistan
73
Leaning on Pakistan for security assistance
76
Dealing with Islamist threats
82
Considering a higher profile
83
ch. Four
Murder on the Mekong: The long arm of Chinese law
91
Beijing swings into action
93
The hunt for the perpetrators
95
A show trial for Naw Kham
97
Joint patrols expand China's influence
99
The Mekong's new river cop?
101
ch. Five
International rescue: Beijing's mass evacuation from Libya
107
Twelve days to pull 35,860 Chinese out of Libya
109
China fine-tunes its non-interference principle
114
Dealing with the Libyan rebels
116
Beijing's new, keener perception of risk
119
ch. Six
China in deep in the oil-rich Sudans
125
An African oil rush
126
Beijing under fire over Darfur
128
Adjusting to South Sudanese independence
131
Chinese lives held to ransom
133
Rescuing Chinese workers from a new civil war
134
China dons blue helmets out of national self-interest
136
In for the long haul
138
Conclusion
145
The shift to a more interventionist approach
146
What lies ahead on China's great-power trajectory?
152
Index
157