thumb|Zhenbao Island

Zhenbao Island () or Damansky Island () is an island in Hulin, Jixi, Heilongjiang Province, China, with an area of only . It is on the Ussuri River on the border between Primorsky Krai, Russia, and Heilongjiang Province, China.

Prior to the 1991 Sino-Soviet Border Agreement, the island was disputed between China and the Soviet Union. It got its Russian name from the railway engineer Stanislav Damansky, who died there in an incident in 1888 while he was charting the future route for the Trans-Siberian Railway.

Conflict between Soviet Union and China

thumb|Map of the region showing the island at center right (square "MB, 1, 5") ([[Army Map Service|AMS, 1957)]]

The island was the subject of a territorial dispute between the Soviet Union and China. China (PRC) held that "in the absence of an explicit treaty provision, the central line of the main channel—the Thalweg principle—provided a legal basis for delimiting the boundary in the two rivers. On this basis, Beijing claimed that 600 of the rivers’ 700 islands—including Zhenbao Island on the Ussuri River, just 180 miles southwest of an important Soviet city, Khabarovsk—belonged to the P.R.C." Battles were fought with a considerable loss of life during the Sino-Soviet border conflict in mid-1969. The dispute over Zhenbao raised concerns that it could ignite World War III until an initial resolution of the conflict in November 1969.

In his memoir, US President Richard Nixon recounted a story that Premier Zhou Enlai (Chou En-lai) had told him about the border dispute:

On 19 May 1991, both sides came to an agreement that the island was part of the territory of China, and the Soviet troops withdrew.

A 2004 Russian documentary film, Damansky Island Year 1969. ("Остров Даманский. 1969 год"), was made about the 1969 Zhenbao incident.

See also

  • Bolshoy Ussuriysky Island
  • Outer Manchuria

References

  • Centuries-old dispute became open combat during Cold War (archived webpage)
  • Geo Coords: 46°29'8.13"N, 133°50'40.04"E. Google Earth File
  • Google Maps satellite image
  • Google Earth BBS article
  • Damanski-Zhenbao website