
Nixon announces visit to communist
China
July 15, 1971

President Richard Nixon and Premier Zhou
Enlai
During
a live television and radio broadcast, President
Richard Nixon stuns the nation by announcing that
he will visit communist China the following year.
The statement marked a dramatic turning point in
U.S.-China relations, as well as a major shift in
American foreign policy.
Nixon was not always so eager to reach out to
China. Since the Communists came to power in
China in 1949, Nixon had been one of the most
vociferous critics of American efforts to
establish diplomatic relations with the Chinese.
His political reputation was built on being
strongly anti-communist, and he was a major
figure in the post-World War II Red Scare, during
which the U.S. government launched massive
investigations into possible communist subversion
in America.
By 1971, a number of factors pushed Nixon to
reverse his stance on China. First and foremost
was the Vietnam War. Two years after promising
the American people "peace with honor,"
Nixon was as entrenched in Vietnam as ever. His
national security advisor, Henry Kissinger, saw a
way out: Since China's break with the Soviet
Union in the mid-1960s, the Chinese were
desperate for new allies and trade partners.
Kissinger aimed to use the promise of closer
relations and increased trade possibilities with
China as a way to put increased pressure on North
Vietnam--a Chinese ally--to reach an acceptable
peace settlement. Also, more importantly in the
long run, Kissinger thought the Chinese might
become a powerful ally against the Soviet Union,
Americas Cold War enemy. Kissinger called
such foreign policy 'realpolitik,' or politics
that favored dealing with other powerful nations
in a practical manner rather than on the basis of
political doctrine or ethics.
Nixon undertook his historic "journey for
peace" in 1972, beginning a long and gradual
process of normalizing relations between the
People's Republic of China and the United States.
Though this move helped revive Nixons
sagging popularity, and contributed to his win in
the 1972 election, it did not produce the
short-term results for which Kissinger had hoped.
The Chinese seemed to have little influence on
North Vietnam's negotiating stance, and the
Vietnam War continued to drag on until U.S.
withdrawal in 1973. Further, the budding
U.S.-China alliance had no measurable impact on
U.S.-Soviet relations. But, Nixon's visit did
prove to be a watershed moment in American
foreign policy--it paved the way for future U.S.
presidents to apply the principle of realpolitik
to their own international dealings.
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