|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Andrew Small (German Marshall Fund)Publisher: OUP India Imprint: OUP India Dimensions: Width: 13.50cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 21.30cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9780190076818ISBN 10: 019007681 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 15 April 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAn excellent book. --Anatol Lieven, New York Review of Books An impressive account of a little-understood friendship -- The Economist An original and timely contribution to this unusual relationship, never formalized in an alliance as it faces the Western withdrawal from Afghanistan. -- Times Literary Supplement This fascinating book disentangles the relationship between one of the oddest couples in geopolitics: an unpredictable Islamic republic and a communist state that has turned to a mixture of consumerism and authoritarianism. -- Prospect Exceptionally well-informed and insightful account -- Foreign Affairs This is an excellent, succinct book, and written with great verve. It is based, as the many pages of notes and references testify, on many hundreds of hours of interviews with key people throughout the region ... on China-Pakistan relations, and its regional and global context, it is hard to think of a better possible treatment. -- Kerry Brown, Asia Review of Books This unique and timely work provides fresh insights into one of the most important and most neglected new developments in world affairs -- China's turn to south and west Asia. As the US pivots toward (East) Asia, Andrew Small shows us how China is moving beyond traditional concepts of Asia. -- Barnett Rubin, Senior Fellow and Director at the Center on International Cooperation, New York University Small has written a valuable and perceptive book. -- Survival Andrew Small's remarkable book paints a vivid picture of twenty-first century geopolitics by uncovering one of the most important and under-explored relationships. A gripping narrative of how China's rise meets nukes, terrorists and the Taliban -- Mark Leonard, Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations and author of What Does China Think? The China-Pakistan Axis explores one of the most resilient and paradoxical bilateral relations of the post colonial era -- a superb illustration of the manner in which international relations can be determined by power considerations. Pakistan and China have been 'all weather friends' for more than fifty years in spite of their ideological differences. Andrew Small shows that their rapprochement resulted mostly from a real politik assessment of their common enemy, India, but that non material variables are back in the picture today because of the islamist connection in the case of the Uighurs, for example. The strength of Small's work lies in its analysis of the fascinating scope and trajectory of the Beijing--Islamabad relationship. -- Christophe Jaffrelot, Research Director at CNRS, Sciences Po and author of The Pakistan Paradox: Instability and Resilience A concise, informative and authoritative study of one of the world's most important state-to-state relationships. -- Bruce Riedel, Lawfare Small has illuminated the complementary calculations in Beijing and Islamabad which nurture this fascinating relationship, through a painstaking survey of numerous, diverse sources, coupled with extensive interviews throughout southern Asia. Small brings to bear not only copious research but analytic subtlety that makes this book both a joy to read and a veritable 'keeper'. -- International Affairs ...vastly superior to the fare that has been served of late on the subject... it is a work of stupendous research, rich in fresh insights. Extremely well-written. -- Frontline.in Small's book is an important reminder that if Pakistan continues to slide into instability, China's help will be sorely needed. It should be compulsory reading for anyone too carried away by the euphoria of warming U.S.-India ties and tempted to believe China can be nudged out of the picture. -- Myra MacDonald, War on the Rocks """An excellent book."" --Anatol Lieven, New York Review of Books ""An impressive account of a little-understood friendship"" -- The Economist ""An original and timely contribution to this unusual relationship, never formalized in an alliance as it faces the Western withdrawal from Afghanistan."" -- Times Literary Supplement ""This fascinating book disentangles the relationship between one of the oddest couples in geopolitics: an unpredictable Islamic republic and a communist state that has turned to a mixture of consumerism and authoritarianism."" -- Prospect ""Exceptionally well-informed and insightful account"" -- Foreign Affairs ""This is an excellent, succinct book, and written with great verve. It is based, as the many pages of notes and references testify, on many hundreds of hours of interviews with key people throughout the region ... on China-Pakistan relations, and its regional and global context, it is hard to think of a better possible treatment."" -- Kerry Brown, Asia Review of Books ""This unique and timely work provides fresh insights into one of the most important and most neglected new developments in world affairs -- China's turn to south and west Asia. As the US pivots toward (East) Asia, Andrew Small shows us how China is moving beyond traditional concepts of Asia."" -- Barnett Rubin, Senior Fellow and Director at the Center on International Cooperation, New York University "" Small has written a valuable and perceptive book."" -- Survival ""Andrew Small's remarkable book paints a vivid picture of twenty-first century geopolitics by uncovering one of the most important and under-explored relationships. A gripping narrative of how China's rise meets nukes, terrorists and the Taliban"" -- Mark Leonard, Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations and author of What Does China Think? ""The China-Pakistan Axis explores one of the most resilient and paradoxical bilateral relations of the post colonial era -- a superb illustration of the manner in which international relations can be determined by power considerations. Pakistan and China have been 'all weather friends' for more than fifty years in spite of their ideological differences. Andrew Small shows that their rapprochement resulted mostly from a real politik assessment of their common enemy, India, but that non material variables are back in the picture today because of the islamist connection in the case of the Uighurs, for example. The strength of Small's work lies in its analysis of the fascinating scope and trajectory of the Beijing--Islamabad relationship."" -- Christophe Jaffrelot, Research Director at CNRS, Sciences Po and author of The Pakistan Paradox: Instability and Resilience ""A concise, informative and authoritative study of one of the world's most important state-to-state relationships."" -- Bruce Riedel, Lawfare ""Small has illuminated the complementary calculations in Beijing and Islamabad which nurture this fascinating relationship, through a painstaking survey of numerous, diverse sources, coupled with extensive interviews throughout southern Asia. Small brings to bear not only copious research but analytic subtlety that makes this book both a joy to read and a veritable 'keeper'."" -- International Affairs ""...vastly superior to the fare that has been served of late on the subject... it is a work of stupendous research, rich in fresh insights. Extremely well-written."" -- Frontline.in ""Small's book is an important reminder that if Pakistan continues to slide into instability, China's help will be sorely needed. It should be compulsory reading for anyone too carried away by the euphoria of warming U.S.-India ties and tempted to believe China can be nudged out of the picture."" -- Myra MacDonald, War on the Rocks" An excellent book. --Anatol Lieven, New York Review of Books An impressive account of a little-understood friendship -- The Economist An original and timely contribution to this unusual relationship, never formalized in an alliance as it faces the Western withdrawal from Afghanistan. -- Times Literary Supplement This fascinating book disentangles the relationship between one of the oddest couples in geopolitics: an unpredictable Islamic republic and a communist state that has turned to a mixture of consumerism and authoritarianism. -- Prospect Exceptionally well-informed and insightful account -- Foreign Affairs This is an excellent, succinct book, and written with great verve. It is based, as the many pages of notes and references testify, on many hundreds of hours of interviews with key people throughout the region ... on China-Pakistan relations, and its regional and global context, it is hard to think of a better possible treatment. -- Kerry Brown, Asia Review of Books This unique and timely work provides fresh insights into one of the most important and most neglected new developments in world affairs -- China's turn to south and west Asia. As the US pivots toward (East) Asia, Andrew Small shows us how China is moving beyond traditional concepts of Asia. -- Barnett Rubin, Senior Fellow and Director at the Center on International Cooperation, New York University Small has written a valuable and perceptive book. -- Survival Andrew Small's remarkable book paints a vivid picture of twenty-first century geopolitics by uncovering one of the most important and under-explored relationships. A gripping narrative of how China's rise meets nukes, terrorists and the Taliban -- Mark Leonard, Director of the European Council on Foreign Relations and author of What Does China Think? The China-Pakistan Axis explores one of the most resilient and paradoxical bilateral relations of the post colonial era -- a superb illustration of the manner in which international relations can be determined by power considerations. Pakistan and China have been 'all weather friends' for more than fifty years in spite of their ideological differences. Andrew Small shows that their rapprochement resulted mostly from a real politik assessment of their common enemy, India, but that non material variables are back in the picture today because of the islamist connection in the case of the Uighurs, for example. The strength of Small's work lies in its analysis of the fascinating scope and trajectory of the Beijing--Islamabad relationship. -- Christophe Jaffrelot, Research Director at CNRS, Sciences Po and author of The Pakistan Paradox: Instability and Resilience A concise, informative and authoritative study of one of the world's most important state-to-state relationships. -- Bruce Riedel, Lawfare Small has illuminated the complementary calculations in Beijing and Islamabad which nurture this fascinating relationship, through a painstaking survey of numerous, diverse sources, coupled with extensive interviews throughout southern Asia. Small brings to bear not only copious research but analytic subtlety that makes this book both a joy to read and a veritable 'keeper'. -- International Affairs ...vastly superior to the fare that has been served of late on the subject... it is a work of stupendous research, rich in fresh insights. Extremely well-written. -- Frontline.in Small's book is an important reminder that if Pakistan continues to slide into instability, China's help will be sorely needed. It should be compulsory reading for anyone too carried away by the euphoria of warming U.S.-India ties and tempted to believe China can be nudged out of the picture. -- Myra MacDonald, War on the Rocks Author InformationAndrew Small has researched Chinese foreign and economic policy issues in Beijing, Brussels, London, and now Washington, D.C. He is a Transatlantic Fellow at the German Marshall Fund of the United States. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |