In 1959, the Dalai Lama fled Lhasa, leaving the People's Republic of
China with a crisis on its Tibetan frontier. Sulmaan Wasif Khan tells
the story of the PRC's response to that crisis and, in doing so, brings
to life an extraordinary cast of characters: Chinese diplomats appalled
by sky burials, Guomindang spies working with Tibetans in Nepal, traders
carrying salt across the Himalayas, and Tibetan Muslims rioting in
Lhasa.
What Chinese policymakers confronted in Tibet, Khan argues, was not a
"third world" but a "fourth world" problem: Beijing was dealing with
peoples whose ways were defined by statelessness. As it sought to
tighten control over the restive borderlands, Mao's China moved from a
lighter hand to a harder, heavier imperial structure. That change
triggered long-lasting shifts in Chinese foreign policy. Moving from
capital cities to far-flung mountain villages, from top diplomats to
nomads crossing disputed boundaries in search of pasture, this book
shows Cold War China as it has never been seen before and reveals the
deep influence of the Tibetan crisis on the political fabric of
present-day China.