Program
Monday, September 25, 2006
2201 C St., N.W., Loy Henderson Conference Room, U.S. Department of
State
1:00-1:40 Registration - Enter from 23rd Street
1:40-1:45 Welcome
and Introductory Remarks: Dr. Marc J.
Susser, The Historian, U.S. Department of State
1:45-2:30
Scheduled Keynote Speaker: Dr. Philip D. Zelikow,
Counselor of the U.S. Department of State
2:30-4:30 Scheduled Panel of Former Diplomats and Government Officials:
- Ambassador Winston S. Lord (ret.), Member of the National Security Council Staff, 1969-1973; Special Assistant to Henry Kissinger, 1970-1973; Director of the Policy Planning Staff, Department of State, 1973-1977
- Professor W. Richard Smyser, Operations Staff, National Security Council, 1970-1971 and 1973-1975; Deputy Assistant Secretary and Assistant Secretary for Refugee Programs, Department of State, 1980-1981
- Lt. General Brent Scowcroft, U.S. Air Force (ret.), Deputy National Security Advisor, 1973-1975; National Security Advisor, 1975-1977
- Dr. Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security Advisor, 1977-1981
- Ambassador Charles W. (Chas.) Freeman, Jr. (ret.), Office of Asian Communist Affairs, Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs, Department of State, 1971-1973; Director for Chinese Affairs, Department of State, 1979-1981
- Panelist Comments
- Question and Answer
Tuesday, September 26, 2006
2201 C St., N.W., Loy Henderson Conference Room, U.S. Department of State
8:30-9:15 Registration and Continental Breakfast - Enter from 23rd
Street
9:15-9:30 Welcome
9:30-10:00 Scheduled Keynote speaker,
Christopher R. Hill, Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific
Affairs
10:00-10:15 Break
10:15-12:00 Session 1: Roundtable - Foreign
Relations of the United States, 1969-1976, volume XVII, China, 1969-1972 and
Scholarly Interpretations of Establishing Relations With China, 1969-1980
- Professor Steven Phillips, Department of History, Towson University (Chair)
- Professor Chen Jian, Department of History, Cornell University
- Professor Warren I. Cohen, Department of History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
- James Mann, FPI Author-in-Residence, School for Advanced International Studies, Johns Hopkins University
12:00-1:30 Lunch
1:30-3:00 Session 2
Chair: Dr. Chris Tudda, Office of
the Historian, U.S. Department of State
- "Musical Diplomacy in the Opening of China, 1971-1972"
Professor Adam Cathcart, Department of History, Hiram College - "Communication and Miscommunication in Sino-Soviet-American Relations,
1969"
Professor Lorenz Lüthi, Department of History, McGill University - "The Romanian Efforts to Facilitate a Sino-American Rapprochement,
1969-1971"
Mircea Munteanu, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars/The George Washington University
Comments: Professor Gregg Brazinsky, Department of History, The George Washington
University
3:00-3:15 Break
3:15-5:00 Session 3
Chair: Dr. Ding
Xinghao, President, Shanghai Association of American Studies and Shanghai
Institute of American Studies
- "Mobilizing for War: China's Limited Ability to Cope With the Soviet
Threat, 1969-1972"
Professor David Bachman, School of International Studies, University of Washington - "Between Historical Determinism and Anxiety: The Soviet Union and
Sino-American Rapprochement, 1969-1973"
Dr. Bernd Schaefer, German Historical Institute - "From Zhenbao Island to Beijing: The 1969 Sino-Soviet Border Conflict
and U.S.-China Relations"
Professor Dong Wang, Department of History and Political Science, York College of Pennsylvania - "The Sino-American Rapprochement and Chinese-Vietnamese Relations"
Professor Qiang Zhai, Department of History, Auburn University Montgomery Comments: Professor Thomas Schwartz, Department of History, Vanderbilt University
Wednesday, September 27, 2006
1957 E St., N.W., Lindner Family Commons, 6th Floor, Institute for
European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies, at the Elliott School of International
Affairs, The George Washington University (This portion of the conference is
funded by the Henry Luce Foundation)
9:00-10:15 Session 1
Chair:
Professor Hope M. Harrison, History Department and Director of the Institute for
European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, The George Washington University
- "U.S. Relations With the People's Republic of China, 1969-1974: The
Polish Perspective"
Malgorzata Gnoinska, The George Washington University - "Economic Problems in U.S.-China Rapprochement, 1972-1975"
William Burr, National Security Archive - "The Chinese Perspective on the U.S.-China
Rapprochement"
Professor Chen Jian, Department of History, Cornell University
Comments: Patrick Tyler, Woodrow Wilson Center
10:15-10:30
Break
10:30-11:45: Session 2
Chair: Dr. Christian Ostermann, Woodrow
Wilson Center
- "Zbigniew Brzezinski and the Carter Approach to China: 'The United
States Has Made Up Its Mind.' "
Professor Patrick Vaughan, Jagiellonian University, Krakow, Poland - "The False ShuffleCyrus Vance and the China Card"
Breck Walker, Department of History, Vanderbilt University
Comments: Professor David Shambaugh, Department of Political Science and
Director, China Program, The George Washington University
12:00-1:00
Lunch
1:00-2:15 Session 3
Chair: Professor Gregg Brazinsky, Department
of History, The George Washington University
- " 'Maximum Flexibility for Peaceful Change': Jimmy Carter, Taiwan and
the Recognition of the People's Republic of China"
Brian Hilton, Department of History, Texas A&M University - "The Carter Administration and China: The Culmination of
Self-Determination as a Human Right"
Professor Itai Sneh, Department of History, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York
Comments: Dr. Richard C. Bush, Director, Center for Northeast Asian Policy
Studies, The Brookings Institution
2:15-2:30 Break
2:30-4:00 Session 4
Chair: Professor Edward McCord, Department of History, The George
Washington University
- "The Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan and its Effect on Carter's Policy
Toward China"
Todd Rosa, Department of History, The George Washington University - "'The Vietnamese Lesson': The Carter Administration and the Chinese
Attack on Vietnam"
Professor Scott Kaufman, Francis Marion University - "The Chinese 'Punitive Invasion' of Vietnam as the 'Baptism of Fire'
of a New Strategic Partnership With Washington and its Repercussions on
the end of the Cold War"
Enrico Maria Fardella, Department of Political Sciences, University of Florence
Comments: Professor James G. Hershberg, Department of History, The George
Washington University
4:00-5:00 Session 5, Wrap-Up Session: New Evidence on
the International History of the Normalization of U.S.-China
Relations
Professor William Kirby, Department of History, Harvard
University
Professor Robert S. Ross, Fairbank Center for East Asian
Research, Harvard University and Department of Political Science, Boston
College