The Initiation of the Sino-Indian rivalry

Q1 Social Sciences
M. Pardesi
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引用次数: 14

Abstract

ABSTRACT Sino-Indian interactions after the mid-19th century had a causal influence on Chinese and Indian elite perceptions. Modern China encountered modern India as an agent of British imperialism. China perceived India as an “imperial” power in the late 1940s by resorting to the availability heuristic while doubting India’s intentions in Tibet/Southeast Asia. By contrast, India viewed China as a fellow victim of colonialism that had sought India’s help during World War II. Consequently, India perceived China as a “partner” in postwar/postcolonial Asia. This interpretation was based on confirmation bias after 1947, despite contradictory Chinese signals. India’s image of China changed only after the 1950–51 invasion/annexation of Tibet. India then ascribed the image of an “expansionist/hegemonic” power to China based on historical analogy. Nevertheless, they carefully calibrated their strategies towards each other in consonance with these images until the 1959 Lhasa Uprising, thereby preventing their relationship from descending into militarized hostilities.
中印竞争的开始
19世纪中叶以后的中印交往对中国和印度精英的观念产生了因果影响。近代中国作为英帝国主义的代理人遇到了近代印度。在20世纪40年代末,中国认为印度是一个“帝国”力量,同时怀疑印度在西藏/东南亚的意图。相比之下,印度将中国视为二战期间寻求印度帮助的殖民主义的受害者。因此,印度将中国视为战后/后殖民时期亚洲的“伙伴”。这种解释是基于1947年后的确认偏差,尽管中国发出了相互矛盾的信号。印度对中国的形象是在1950-51年入侵/吞并西藏之后才改变的。基于历史类比,印度将“扩张主义/霸权主义”大国的形象归咎于中国。然而,在1959年拉萨起义之前,他们小心翼翼地根据这些形象调整彼此的策略,从而防止他们的关系陷入军事敌对状态。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Asian Security
Asian Security Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
4
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