Andre Engels wrote:
On Fri, 24 Sep 2004 18:48:53 -0700 Ray Saintonge
<saintonge(a)telus.net>
wrote:
But don't forget the British responsibility
in that. China was
allowed to walk into Tibet as a reward for their resistance to the
Japanese.
I understood that their reasons were mostly to keep out the Russians
without incurring the cost of colonizing Tibet themselves.
That too.
Britain and Russia have always had rocky relations, and that goes back
to long before the communist regime took over in 1917. The British had
ships in the Persian Gulf in the early 1600s out of concern for Russia;
it had Russia in mind during the Afghan wars. The Crimean War was a
direct confrontation with Russia. The British have always been
concerned about the Russians having southern sea access. I would need
to dig deeper to understand why, but perhaps it felt a threat to its
naval dominance. In the course of these geo-political wranglings
backward local tribes like the Tibetans and the Kurds could easily be
sacrificed to Britain's greater good.
Ec