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Jimmy Carter and China

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This book is an international history of the Carter administration’s intricate relations with the two competing Chinese regimes, emphasizing the geopolitical significance and lasting implications o...
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  • 10 March 2026
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In the late 1970s, with relations between the Soviet Union and the People’s Republic of China strained, the Carter administration saw an opening. The United States and its allies embarked on military and dual-use technology transfers to China as a counterweight to the USSR, transforming rapprochement into full-blown cooperation. Carter’s decision to pivot away from the United States’s traditional ally, the Republic of China on Taiwan, and embrace the People’s Republic redefined the Cold War from a struggle against communism to one against the Soviet Union. It not only complicated a variety of American objectives—from the security of Taiwan to global technology transfer and US-Soviet détente—but also sowed the seeds of future tensions between China and the West.

This book is an international history of the Carter administration’s intricate relations with the two competing Chinese regimes, highlighting the geopolitical significance and lasting implications of this pivotal moment. Drawing extensively from previously untapped archives in China, Taiwan, Western Europe, the United States, and Russia, Sheng Peng uncovers the internal governmental debates across world capitals that affected Carter’s China policy. He charts how both mainland China and Taiwan were integrated into global supply chains for defense and dual-use technologies during the 1970s and 1980s and the present-day consequences. Jimmy Carter and China demonstrates that technological competition was as crucial as strategic and ideological competition to the course of the Cold War, and together they profoundly shaped US-China relations and the world today.

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Price: $35.00
Pages: 344
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 10 March 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231211956
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century / Cold War, POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Asian, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / Arms Control, HISTORY / Asia / China

Sheng Peng has written a nuanced and balanced account of the Carter administration's policy toward China and Taiwan. Based on important research in Chinese and American source materials, it will be a crucial work for anyone who wants to understand the dilemmas that the United States faced in dealing with two competing Chinese governments.
Sheng Peng is a postdoctoral fellow at the Research Center for the History of Transformations at the University of Vienna and an associate fellow at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs.

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I. Strategic Competition
1. The Decline of Détente and the Normalization of US-China Diplomatic Relations
2. The China-France Nuclear Alliance and the Failed Comprehensive Test Ban Negotiation
Part II. Technological Competition
3. Western European Military and Dual-Use Technology Transfers to China
4. Chiang Ching-kuo and Taiwan’s Search for Security
Part III. Ideology
5. From Classmates to Enemies: Deng Xiaoping and Chiang Ching-kuo
6. The Global Response to Carter’s China Policy: Unheeded Warnings from Moscow to Washington
Conclusion: Multilateral Competition Beyond the Cold War
Notes
Bibliography
Index