China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives

Inspired by China’s 1964 demonstration of its nuclear capability, Indonesian President Sukarno attempted to direct Indonesia’s nuclear program toward military use. Sukarno’s openly expressed nuclear ambition shocked foreign leaders and officials and created a longstanding mystery about whether China...

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Main Author: Zhou, Taomo
Other Authors: School of Humanities
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144491
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1444912023-03-11T20:06:43Z China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives Zhou, Taomo School of Humanities Humanities::History Sukarno China Inspired by China’s 1964 demonstration of its nuclear capability, Indonesian President Sukarno attempted to direct Indonesia’s nuclear program toward military use. Sukarno’s openly expressed nuclear ambition shocked foreign leaders and officials and created a longstanding mystery about whether China (PRC) exported its nuclear technologies at that time. Through unpacking three sets of contemporaneous Chinese archival materials, this article unveils the details of Indonesian research and military personnel visits to PRC nuclear sites and the nature of bilateral political and academic discussions on nuclear weapons. It argues that, while there was no movement of nuclear fuel or hardware between the two countries, Sino-Indonesian exchanges reveal the fluidity of individual political players’ ideologies (including those of left-leaning politicians, anticommunists, and neutralists), the complexity of bilateral relations, and the paradoxical quality of Third World solidarity in the atomic age. Many of the military and technical experts who approached Beijing for nuclear aid peacefully transitioned into the Suharto era and achieved personal success, quite unlike the experiences of “pro-China” Indonesian politicians who weren’t favorably associated with the nuclear program. Ideological fissures persisted between the two countries even when they shared substantial mutual interests in the short term. But those schisms sometimes appeared to be invisible to the United States and Soviet Union, which at the time were anxious to rein in potential nuclear proliferators in the Third World, and particularly in the Asia-Pacific region against the backdrop of the ongoing conflict in Vietnam. Accepted version 2020-11-09T02:41:35Z 2020-11-09T02:41:35Z 2019 Journal Article Zhou, T. (2019). China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives. Indonesia, 108, 89-120. - https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144491 108 89 120 en Indonesia © 2019 Cornell University Southeast Asia Program. All rights reserved. This paper was published in Indonesia and is made available with permission of Cornell University Southeast Asia Program. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::History
Sukarno
China
spellingShingle Humanities::History
Sukarno
China
Zhou, Taomo
China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives
description Inspired by China’s 1964 demonstration of its nuclear capability, Indonesian President Sukarno attempted to direct Indonesia’s nuclear program toward military use. Sukarno’s openly expressed nuclear ambition shocked foreign leaders and officials and created a longstanding mystery about whether China (PRC) exported its nuclear technologies at that time. Through unpacking three sets of contemporaneous Chinese archival materials, this article unveils the details of Indonesian research and military personnel visits to PRC nuclear sites and the nature of bilateral political and academic discussions on nuclear weapons. It argues that, while there was no movement of nuclear fuel or hardware between the two countries, Sino-Indonesian exchanges reveal the fluidity of individual political players’ ideologies (including those of left-leaning politicians, anticommunists, and neutralists), the complexity of bilateral relations, and the paradoxical quality of Third World solidarity in the atomic age. Many of the military and technical experts who approached Beijing for nuclear aid peacefully transitioned into the Suharto era and achieved personal success, quite unlike the experiences of “pro-China” Indonesian politicians who weren’t favorably associated with the nuclear program. Ideological fissures persisted between the two countries even when they shared substantial mutual interests in the short term. But those schisms sometimes appeared to be invisible to the United States and Soviet Union, which at the time were anxious to rein in potential nuclear proliferators in the Third World, and particularly in the Asia-Pacific region against the backdrop of the ongoing conflict in Vietnam.
author2 School of Humanities
author_facet School of Humanities
Zhou, Taomo
format Article
author Zhou, Taomo
author_sort Zhou, Taomo
title China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives
title_short China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives
title_full China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives
title_fullStr China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives
title_full_unstemmed China and Sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the Chinese foreign ministry archives
title_sort china and sukarno’s nuclear ambitions : translated and annotated documents from the chinese foreign ministry archives
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144491
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