Chinas Seat in United Nations, Kashmir Issue and the India-Pakistan War of 1965

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Dr. Manzoor Khan Afridi
Dr. Manzoor Khan Afridi Ph.D.
σ
Dr. Abdul Zahoor Khan
Dr. Abdul Zahoor Khan
α International Islamic University, Islamabad International Islamic University, Islamabad

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Chinas Seat in United Nations, Kashmir Issue and the India-Pakistan War of 1965

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Abstract

On the one hand, the Sino-Indian border war, Sino-Soviet hostile relations and the US-China rivalry and on the other hand, Pak-India enmity, Pak-Soviet hostility and Pakistan’s disillusionment with the US brought China and Pakistan closer to each other. China was in struggle to get membership in United Nations where the Western powers were blocking its way and Taiwan was allowed to be a Chinese nation representative. In 1960s, Pakistan abandoned its policy of following the West and voted for Communist China in the UN. China too refrained from its policy of neutrality regarding Indo-Pak issues and openly started to support Pakistan on Kashmir issue. Beijing supported Islamabad in its war with New Delhi. China

References

17 Cites in Article
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Funding

No external funding was declared for this work.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval

No ethics committee approval was required for this article type.

Data Availability

Not applicable for this article.

How to Cite This Article

Dr. Manzoor Khan Afridi. 2015. \u201cChinas Seat in United Nations, Kashmir Issue and the India-Pakistan War of 1965\u201d. Global Journal of Human-Social Science - F: Political Science GJHSS-F Volume 15 (GJHSS Volume 15 Issue F3): .

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Issue Cover
GJHSS Volume 15 Issue F3
Pg. 19- 24
Journal Specifications

Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/GJHSS

Print ISSN 0975-587X

e-ISSN 2249-460X

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GJHSS-F Classification: FOR Code: 160609
Version of record

v1.2

Issue date

May 27, 2015

Language
en
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On the one hand, the Sino-Indian border war, Sino-Soviet hostile relations and the US-China rivalry and on the other hand, Pak-India enmity, Pak-Soviet hostility and Pakistan’s disillusionment with the US brought China and Pakistan closer to each other. China was in struggle to get membership in United Nations where the Western powers were blocking its way and Taiwan was allowed to be a Chinese nation representative. In 1960s, Pakistan abandoned its policy of following the West and voted for Communist China in the UN. China too refrained from its policy of neutrality regarding Indo-Pak issues and openly started to support Pakistan on Kashmir issue. Beijing supported Islamabad in its war with New Delhi. China

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Chinas Seat in United Nations, Kashmir Issue and the India-Pakistan War of 1965

Dr. Manzoor Khan Afridi
Dr. Manzoor Khan Afridi International Islamic University, Islamabad
Dr. Abdul Zahoor Khan
Dr. Abdul Zahoor Khan

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