Background
Whiting, Allen Suess was born on October 27, 1926 in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, United States. Son of Leo Robert and Viola Allen (Suess) Whiting.
( An international relations classic, The Chinese Calculu...)
An international relations classic, The Chinese Calculus of Deterrence presents a framework for anticipating Chinese political-military behavior in the nuclear era. Through analysis and scholarly research, Allen S. Whiting reconstructs China's response to the perceived threat from India in 1962 and Beijing's secret military participation in the Vietnam War from 1964 to 1968. Comparing these with Chinese actions in the Korean War and Sino-Soviet border clashes, Whiting reveals the patterns in Chinese calculations of deterrence and the use of force. This book throws light on policy divisions at the highest levels in Beijing and on Chinese miscalculations in coping with enemy states. It also suggests ways in which other states can affect Chinese perceptions and behavior to reduce the likelihood of conflict. The analysis presented here strips away the mystery surrounding Chinese behavior and reveals it to be not so far removed from that of other governments. This volume includes a new foreword that considers recent data and developments in the Taiwan Strait.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0472969005/?tag=2022091-20
( What influence does the history of Japanese aggression ...)
What influence does the history of Japanese aggression in China have on Chinese images of and policies toward Japan today? Is Chinese acrimony and assertiveness toward Japan in the latter 1980s the product of calculated bargaining pressure or compulsive emotional nationalism? And what are the prospects for Sino-Japanese relations: increased political alignment or continued instability and friction? These are among the questions Allen Whiting, a leading scholar of Chinese foreign relations, addresses in this book. Working largely from interviews and from an examination of the Chinese media, Whiting finds that Chinese policy toward Japan embodies an uneasy tension between hostile imagery and pragmatic interest, manifest in increasing tension during the years 1982-1987. He challenges the commonplace assumptions that post-Mao Chinese foreign policy is pragmatically determined by economic and strategic calculations. Instead, Whiting argues that Sino-Japanese relations are vulnerable to Chinese images based on bitter memories of Japanese aggression combined with misperceptions of Japanese politics and society as well as provocative remarks by Japanese officials. These images are transmitted to younger generations by Chinese mass media with little challenge from more informed governmental and academic specialists. He concludes that, although there is an increased sophistication in the Chinese understanding of the United States and the Soviet Union, this is not yet evident in the case of Japan.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0520065115/?tag=2022091-20
consultant Political science educator writer
Whiting, Allen Suess was born on October 27, 1926 in Perth Amboy, New Jersey, United States. Son of Leo Robert and Viola Allen (Suess) Whiting.
Bachelor of Arts, Cornell Univercity, 1948; Master of Arts, Columbia University, 1950; certified Russian Institute, Columbia University, 1950; Doctor of Philosophy, Columbia University, 1952.
Instructor political science, Northwestern University, 1951-1953; assistant professor, Michigan State University, East Lansing, 1955-1957; social scientist, The Rand Corporation, Santa Monica, California, 1957-1961; director Office Research and Analysis Far East, unites states department State, Washington, 1962-1966; deputy consul general, American Consulate General, Hong Kong, 1966-1968; professor political science, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 1968-1982; professor, U. Arizona, Tucson, 1982-1993; Regents professor, U. Arizona, Tucson, since 1993; director Center for East Asian Studies, U. Arizona, Tucson, 1982-1993; consultant, unites states department State, 1968-1988; director, National Committee on United States-China Relations, New York City, 1977-1994; associate, The China Council, 1978-1988; president, Southern Arizona China Council, Tucson, 1983-1995. Fellow Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, 1995-1996.
( What influence does the history of Japanese aggression ...)
( An international relations classic, The Chinese Calculu...)
(Book by Whiting, Allen Suess)
(Book by Whiting, Allen Suess)
(Book by Whiting, A.)
(Paperback Edition)
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Served with United States Army, 1945. Member Association Asian Studies.
Married Alice Marie Conroy, May 29, 1950. Children: Deborah Jean, David Neal, Jeffrey Michael, Jennifer Hollister.