China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations | |
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Abbreviation | CICIR |
Formation | 1965 |
Type | Government-affiliated foreign policy think tank |
Location | Beijing |
Website | [1] |
Former name | China Institute of Contemporary International Relations |
The China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations (CICIR ; Chinese: 中国现代国际关系研究院; pinyin: Zhōngguó Xiàndài Guójì Guānxi Yánjiūyuàn) is among China’s largest and oldest civilian research institutions for international studies. Located in Beijing, the Institute is affiliated with China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS), and overseen by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China.[1][2]
CICIR has a staff of approximately 400, including 150 senior research fellows. It consists of 11 departments with different regional and functional concentrations, as well as two research divisions focusing on the Korean Peninsula and Central Asia, and eight research centers.[3] CICIR publishes the influential journal Contemporary International Relations (Xiandai Guoji Guanxi).
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David Shambaugh traces the origins of the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations to the Communist Party’s intelligence operations during the Chinese civil war and Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945). Specifically, these early intelligence operations targeted the US Dixie Mission and the Soviet presence in Communist Party bases in Yan’an during the 1940s.[1]
In 1964, then-Premier Zhou Enlai ordered the creation of several colleges and university departments to focus on international affairs.[1] A number of ministries, including the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Public Security, established their own think tanks and research organizations under the decree.[4] CICIR was established in 1965.[5] At that time, it fell under the Foreign Affairs Leading Group of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party, and served a number of senior Communist Party officials.[1] CICIR was the only international relations institute or university in China that did not close during the tumultuous years of the Cultural Revolution.
In 1980, amidst Deng Xiaoping’s reforms and openings to the outside world, CICIR was designated an “open” institution, and was authorized to engage with foreigners as a means of enhancing intelligence collection.[1] It began publishing the journal Xiandai Guoji Guangxi (Contemporary International Relations) in 1981. The journal became quarterly in 1986, and has been published monthly since 1993.[4]
In 1983, CICIR was placed under the bureaucratic management of the newly created Ministry of State Security (MSS). In 1999, it was again placed under the Communist Party’s Central Committee, maintaining strong organizational ties to the MSS and Foreign Affairs Leading Group.
In 2003, CICIR changed it name from the China Institute of International Relations to the China Institutes of International Relations.[3]
CICIR is identified by Stratfor Global Intelligence as belonging to the 8th Bureau of the Ministry of State Security, China's main intelligence agency, and provides intelligence reports to the Politburo Standing Committee of the Communist Party of China[6]
The institute has held considerable influence over China's foreign policy decision-making process due in part to its close organizational proximity to the Communist Party's Central Committee, the Foreign Affairs Leading Group, the Foreign Affairs Office, and the MSS. The institute's relevance to the foreign policy process is further bolstered by its large research staff and ability to produce timely intelligence analysis.[1] This influence has been in decline since the mid-1990s, however, coinciding with the death or retirement of some of its senior researchers, and the growing influence of the Foreign Ministry in foreign policy decision-making.[1]
CICIR comprises eleven distinct research institutes, each with its own regional or functional focus:
The organization has two research divisions under the direct control of CICIR leaders:
CICIR is also home to eight research centers: