Burma Road
In: Pacific affairs: an international review of Asia and the Pacific, Band 13, Heft 4, S. 476
ISSN: 1715-3379
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In: Pacific affairs: an international review of Asia and the Pacific, Band 13, Heft 4, S. 476
ISSN: 1715-3379
In: Far Eastern survey, Band 19, Heft 17, S. 182-187
In: Pacific affairs: an international review of Asia and the Pacific, Band 22, Heft 4, S. 437
ISSN: 1715-3379
In: Pacific affairs: an international review of Asia and the Pacific, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 354
ISSN: 1715-3379
In: International labour review, Band 56, S. 472-473
ISSN: 0020-7780
In: Routledge studies in the modern history of Asia 88
In: Foreign affairs, Band 26, Heft 1, S. 542
ISSN: 0015-7120
In: Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society, Band 34, S. 32-50
ISSN: 0035-8789
Lecture before the Royal central Asian society, London, Sept. 18, 1946.
In: Foreign affairs, Band 23, Heft 1, S. 496
ISSN: 0015-7120
In: Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society, Band 30, S. 37-52
ISSN: 0035-8789
In: Burma Büro Schriftenreihe, Nr. 1
World Affairs Online
In: Journal of Southeast Asian History, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 29-61
No international concern has been as important to Burma as her relations with China. Kuomintang China had encouraged the Burmese nationalists, had sponsored Burma's entry into the UN but had also exhibited (in various published maps and otherwise) traditional Chinese expansionist tendencies toward Burma and mainland Southeast Asia. Most of all, after 1950, Kuomintang China endangered Burma's relation with Communist China by her active, irresponsible support for her troops who had escaped via Yunnan into northeast Burma. However much the Burmese may have initially and quietly tolerated the presence of these KMT "escapees," – a view which has been unofficially hinted in some Burmese and American quarters — expecting that they would either merge into the Burma population or quickly repatriate to Taiwan, at the end of the first year of experience with these troops the Burmese became justifiably alarmed, repeatedly sought but did not receive assistance from the United States for this repatriation and eventually, in 1953, officially took the issue to the United Nations. (It was this issue which brought U.S. prestige and relations with Burma to a postwar low.)