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Informationen zum Autor Benjamin Zawacki is a political analyst who has lived in Thailand for 18 years. He was a Term Member on the Council on Foreign Relations through 2016, and a Visiting Fellow at Harvard Law School in 2014-2015. He served as a Policy Advisor to President Jimmy Carter and two other “Elders” in Myanmar in 2013, and was Amnesty International’s Southeast Asia Researcher for five years through 2012. He has also worked for the Asia Foundation, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, and the International Commission of Jurists. Klappentext A provocative look at the Thai regime's drift towards China, and its implications for the Sino-American power struggle in Asia. Vorwort An authoritative modern history of the Thai regime’s shifting external alliances and the country's deepening internal divisions.A provocative look at the Thai regime’s drift towards China, and its implications for the Sino-American power struggle in Asia. Zusammenfassung An authoritative modern history of the Thai regime’s shifting external alliances and the country's deepening internal divisions. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: Points of Departure Part I 1. The Fog of Peace (1945?1949) 2. Means of Power (1949?1957) 3. War Comes to Thailand (1957?1973) 4. Experiments Interrupted (1973?1980) 5. Policy Drift (1980?1988) 6. The Thai Spring (1989?2001) Interface Part II 7. A Thaksin for Turning (Thailand and China, 2001?2006) 8. Another American War (Thailand and the US, 2001?2006) 9. China’s Pivot (2006?2014) 10. Continental Drift
List of contents
Introduction: Points of Departure
Part I
1. The Fog of Peace (1945-1949)
2. Means of Power (1949-1957)
3. War Comes to Thailand (1957-1973)
4. Experiments Interrupted (1973-1980)
5. Policy Drift (1980-1988)
6. The Thai Spring (1989-2001)
Interface
Part II
7. A Thaksin for Turning (Thailand and China, 2001-2006)
8. Another American War (Thailand and the US, 2001-2006)
9. China's Pivot (2006-2014)
10. Continental Drift
Report
'Exhaustively researched ... an excellent contribution to understanding American and Chinese foreign policy in Southeast Asia.'
Bangkok Post
'Presents a clear-eyed and well-informed analysis of a critical moment, in which ideals of democracy and human rights, never deeply rooted, are giving way as Thailand increasingly sees its future tied to a rising China.'
Seth Mydans, Southeast Asia correspondent for The New York Times
'Zawacki deftly unpacks Thailand's complex and evolving relationships with the United States and China, and issues a wake-up call to U.S. policymakers.'
Elizabeth Economy, Director of Asia Studies, Council on Foreign Relations
'A must-read for those concerned by Chinese ascendency in Southeast Asia and its implications on human rights in the coming decades.'
Tyler Giannini, Human Rights Program Director, Harvard Law School
'An important book at a pivotal moment. Zawacki brings clear eyes and rigorous research to one of America's most complicated and historically important Asian relationships.'
Shawn W. Crispin, Southeast Asia Editor, Asia Times
'Zawacki skillfully tells the story of America's oldest Asian ally, exploring how equivocation in Washington and dysfunction in Bangkok is allowing a resurgent China to extend its talons into a disturbingly authoritarian Thailand.'
Charlie Campbell, Beijing correspondent for TIME
'Zawacki's carefully documented and balanced analysis lifts the curtain on a gradual, often invisible, but seemingly inexorable geopolitical shift. It provides a thorough explanation of the circumstances that have led Thailand, once seen as an unequivocally staunch U.S. ally, to lean increasingly toward a pragmatic and strategically assertive China.'
Michael Herzfeld, Harvard University
'Presents a powerful counter-argument to the conventional wisdom that China's economic rise alone explains Thailand's pivot from the US to China. In thoroughly researched detail, the book traces a sorry trail of US condescension and clumsy diplomacy.'
Daniel Fineman, author of A Special Relationship: The United States and Military Government in Thailand
'Now comes the rare American deeply informed of a "faraway country" of whose people "we know nothing", in a profoundly disturbing study of how the world-changing US-China dynamic unfolds in Thailand. Read and weep.'
Jeffrey Race, author of War Comes to Long An: Revolutionary Conflict in a Vietnamese Province
'An important contribution to the field of Thailand's foreign relations.'
Contemporary Southeast Asia
'The US has failed to reliably present democracy and human rights as alternatives to the China Model. It has allowed its 'interests' to override its 'values,' and hence is vulnerable to accusations of hypocrisy. Zawacki argues that the US must correct for these two failures and make the kind of commitment to Asia that Obama promised but never delivered.'
New York Review of Books