US-China Relations (3rd Ed)

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US-China Relations (3rd Ed) Page 8

by Robert G Sutter


  were much more sympathetic to Chiang Kai-shek than Stilwell and his sup-

  porters. Chennault pressed for US military efforts that were supported by

  Chiang but opposed by Stilwell and his staff. He collaborated with and won

  Chiang’s support for plans involving US use of Chinese Nationalist-defended

  air bases in China to attack Japanese positions and shipping with US bomb-

  ers. Stilwell opposed the plans that diverted US supplies from his efforts to

  build Chinese armies in order to open ground supply routes to occupied

  China and for other use against Japan. Stilwell warned that once the US

  bombing attacks from Chinese air bases rose in Japan’s war calculus as a

  result of Chennault’s plan, the bases would be subject to Japanese ground

  attack and might be overrun because of weak Chinese Nationalist defenses

  for the bases. Indeed, presumably prompted at least in part by the US air

  Relations during World War II, Civil War, Cold War

  43

  attacks, Japanese forces in 1944 overran the weakly defended air bases and

  expanded more deeply into Nationalist-held areas, provoking a major crisis

  between Chiang and Stilwell and between the United States and its National-

  ist allies. 17

  The Chinese Communists, for their part, took advantage of limited inter-

  action with US officials, media, and nongovernment representatives in

  Chungking in order to build on the image they had already established

  through their brief encounters with American and other Western news per-

  sonnel at the Communist base in Yenan in north China in the 1930s. Consis-

  tent with their approach to Edgar Snow and other American visitors in that

  period, the Communists emphasized the image of a relatively democratic and

  honest political administration, positive public support received by the

  Yenan leadership, and the CCP’s reasonably benign attitude at that time

  toward free enterprise. In this way, they attempted to appeal to American

  ideals. At the same time, the Communist spokespersons tried to drive a

  wedge between Americans and Chinese Nationalists by criticizing what they

  viewed as the corrupt, oppressive, and totalitarian rule of the nationalist

  government. In line with their approach toward Snow and other visitors in

  the 1930s, the Communist officials did not disavow the CCP’s ultimate

  Marxist-Leninist goals regarding the future of China but indicated that such

  objectives were to be achieved at the end of a long “democratic” period.

  They thus revealed to American officials and other representatives the image

  of a Chinese party worthy of US support, willing to compromise with Wash-

  ington, and deserving of a share of power in China. In this context, heavy

  stress was placed on the Nationalists’ unwillingness to share power as the

  prime cause for continuing Communist-Nationalist confrontation in China. 18

  The central role in CCP policy toward and interaction with the United

  States was played by senior Communist leader Zhou Enlai, the chief Com-

  munist representative in Chungking during World War II. In his frequent

  contacts with American officials and other US representatives, Zhou demon-

  strated repeatedly a preference for realistic exchange, unencumbered by

  ideological constraints or bitterness over past Chinese affronts at the hands of US “imperialism.” He initiated a CCP proposal for the establishment of an

  American liaison mission to Yenan, cast doubt on Nationalist willingness to

  pursue the war against Japan, and attacked Chungking’s legitimacy as the

  regime best serving the interests of the Chinese people. Zhou, along with

  visiting senior Communist military leader Lin Biao, in Chungking for negoti-

  ations with the Chinese Nationalists, appealed for US supplies so that the

  Communists could go on the offensive against Japan. They also promised

  close intelligence sharing with the United States regarding enemy activities

  near the Communist base areas. They condemned the Nationalists’ passivity

  in the war effort while the Chiang Kai-shek forces reinforced their military

  blockade against the Communists.

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  Chapter 3

  Zhou Enlai’s initiatives and subsequent interaction with American offi-

  cials visiting Yenan on the part of Mao Zedong and other senior CCP leaders

  reflected pragmatic actions to deal with potentially adverse circumstances.

  The American entry into the war against Japan strengthened the position of

  the Communists’ adversary, Chiang Kai-shek, and raised the strong possibil-

  ity that the United States would continue to side firmly with Chiang follow-

  ing the defeat of Japan and the establishment of a new Chinese administra-

  tion. The relatively weak strategic position of the Chinese Communist forces

  in China at the time and the low probability that the Soviet Union would take

  decisive actions to protect the Chinese Communists from US-backed pres-

  sure from Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists added to incentives for the CCP to

  appeal to the United States for closer relations and support. 19

  The depth of the American–Chinese Nationalist alignment meant that the

  Communists could have little hope of undermining the American-Nationalist

  relationship. But by opening formal contacts with Americans through a US

  liaison mission in Yenan or other means, the Communists would at least have

  the opportunity to encourage the Americans to move away from Chungking

  over the critical issue of the Chinese civil dispute. In particular, a formal

  American mission in the Communist base area would allow CCP leaders to

  present their case to the highest levels in Washington; it would enable Mao

  and his group to scotch many ill-founded Nationalist allegations concerning

  the Communist leaders and policies, which had heretofore enjoyed credibil-

  ity with US policy makers. Further, formal ties with Washington would

  enhance the Communists’ ability to solicit US military supplies. The Com-

  munist leaders also seemed confident and proud of the economic, political,

  and military situation in their base area; if their administrative achievements could be shown to American officials, they would compare favorably with

  the deteriorating situation in Nationalist-held areas. 20

  In early 1944 there was a formal US presidential request to Chiang Kai-

  shek for the establishment of an American military observer mission in the

  Communist-held areas of China. The proposal was grudgingly approved by

  Chiang Kai-shek during the visit to China of American Vice President Henry

  Wallace in June 1944. Amid the crisis caused by Japanese forces overrun-

  ning US air bases in China and penetrating deep into previously Nationalist-

  controlled territory, Chiang was in a weak position to resist the US request. 21

  American officials were not only interested in shoring up Chinese resis-

  tance to Japanese aggression and improving military coordination against

  Japan with the Chinese Communists. By this time US officials were deeply

  involved in plans for dealing with previously unanticipated divisions that

  weakened China and posed the danger of Chinese civil war once Japan was

  defeated. There was concern that the Chinese Nationalists might draw in the

  United State
s on their side of the conflict and that the Chinese Communists

  might draw in the Soviet Union on their side of the conflict. To deal with this

  Relations during World War II, Civil War, Cold War

  45

  potentially dire situation warranted closer American interaction with, and

  understanding of, the policies and intentions of the Chinese Communist

  forces through the establishment of the US military observer mission to

  Yenan. 22

  Responding to Vice President Wallace’s expressions of concern over the

  Chinese war effort and the Nationalist government’s loss of public support,

  Chiang focused on American and especially Stilwell’s responsibility. Chiang

  impressed the American visitor with his determination to remove Stilwell or

  to have the United States send a personal representative from Roosevelt to

  control Stilwell and give Chiang regular access to the president free from the

  interference of the Departments of War and State, which were seen as influ-

  enced by Stilwell and his supporters in the US embassy. 23

  Patrick Hurley, a prominent Republican who served as President Herbert

  Hoover’s secretary of war, was a key figure in US policy toward the KMT

  and the CCP in 1944–45. His strong support for the Chinese Nationalists and

  accusations against opponents within the US government had lasting impacts

  on US relations with China. Hurley was sent to China as a special envoy by

  President Roosevelt in September 1944. Dealing with the major disputes then

  causing a crisis between Chiang Kai-shek and General Joseph Stilwell, Hur-

  ley sided with Chiang. Roosevelt recalled Stilwell in October 1944, appoint-

  ing General Albert Wedemeyer as his replacement. Hurley was appointed as

  ambassador to replace Clarence Gauss, who shared Stilwell’s negative opin-

  ions about Chiang and the Nationalists. 24

  In November 1944 Hurley traveled to Yenan and negotiated a Five-Point

  Agreement with Mao Zedong and his senior colleagues. Among other things,

  the agreement summarized Hurley’s promises of equal treatment and US aid

  to the Communists in a coalition with the Nationalists. Returning to Chung-

  king, he switched and sided strongly with Chiang Kai-shek in his demand

  that Communist forces be disbanded before the Communists could be

  brought into a Nationalist-led Chinese coalition government. Much of the US

  embassy staff in Chungking rebelled against Hurley by sending a collective

  message to Washington in early 1945 warning of the negative consequences

  of Hurley’s alienation of the Communists and bias toward Chiang’s Nation-

  alists. The ambassador disputed the charges in a meeting with President

  Roosevelt, who supported Hurley, leading to transfers of dissident US staff

  from Chungking. 25

  As US ambassador, Hurley supported the Nationalist-Communist peace

  talks in Chungking in September 1945. Chiang Kai-shek, backed by Hurley

  and the Harry Truman administration, demanded the Communists surrender

  their forces and territory as a precondition for joining a coalition. Fighting

  spread in China, and the talks collapsed. Hurley, unsuccessful in urging a full US commitment to Chiang’s cause, abruptly resigned as ambassador in November 1945, blaming pro–Chinese Communists in the State Department for

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  Chapter 3

  thwarting US policy. After the Communist victory in China and the Chinese

  intervention in the Korean War, Hurley’s charges provided a leading wedge

  for congressional investigators seeking to purge alleged pro-Communists and

  other security risks from among the ranks of the Chinese affairs specialists in the State Department and other agencies. 26

  US leaders worried about conditions in China and how they would affect

  the final stages of the war against Japan. They foresaw the inability of weak

  Chinese Nationalist forces to defeat the hundreds of thousands of Japanese

  forces in China as the war in the Pacific moved toward an end, and the

  danger of a Nationalist-Communist civil war in China that would drag in the

  United States and the Soviet Union on opposite sides. As a result of the so-

  called Far Eastern Agreement of the Allied powers at Yalta in February

  1945, Soviet forces, not Chinese forces, would take on the main task of

  defeating Japanese armies concentrated in Manchuria and northern China. In

  compensation, Russian territory taken by Japan would be restored; Russian

  interests in Manchuria, including a naval base, would be restored; and Outer

  Mongolia would remain independent. The United States promised to obtain

  the concurrence of China’s Nationalist government to provisions regarding

  Manchuria and Mongolia, which were claimed by China. The Soviet Union

  also expressed willingness to negotiate a friendship and alliance treaty with

  China’s Nationalist government. The Far Eastern Agreement had negative

  implications for the Chinese Nationalist government, which was not con-

  sulted on the territorial concessions to the Soviet Union, and for the Chinese

  Communists, who appeared to be isolated from the Soviet Union. 27

  The broad outlines of US policy toward China prevalent in early 1945

  persisted as Harry Truman became president upon the death of Franklin

  Roosevelt in April 1945, and as the war in the Pacific came to an unexpected-

  ly quick end with Japan’s surrender after the US atomic bomb attacks in

  August 1945. US policy strongly supported Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist

  forces. US airplanes and other means were used to transport Nationalist

  forces to various parts of China to take the surrender of Japanese forces. The

  US government provided hundreds of millions of dollars of military equip-

  ment and other assistance. The rival Communists were urged to participate in

  peace talks and come to terms in a united Chinese government under Chi-

  ang’s overall leadership. President Truman commanded that Japanese-con-

  trolled forces in China surrender their positions and arms to Chiang Kai-

  shek’s representatives, not to Communist forces. 28

  The Soviet army entered the war in China and defeated Japanese armies.

  The Soviet Union signed a friendship treaty with Chiang Kai-shek’s Nation-

  alist government, as noted in the Far Eastern Agreement at Yalta. Seemingly

  isolated, the Chinese Communists agreed to join peace talks in Chungking in

  September where Chiang, backed by US Ambassador Hurley and the Tru-

  man administration, demanded the Communists surrender their armed forces

  Relations during World War II, Civil War, Cold War

  47

  and territory as a precondition for joining a coalition government under Chi-

  ang’s leadership.

  There was little consideration at high levels of US policy makers for a

  more evenhanded US approach to the Nationalist-Communist rivalry in Chi-

  na, though some American officials warned of the danger of civil war and

  were uncertain how the Chinese Nationalists, weakened by years of warfare

  and led by often corrupt and inept officials, would fare. As the peace talks

  deadlocked and Communist-Nationalist armed conflict spread in northern

  China in late 1945, it became clear to US planners that Chiang’s forces

  would not defeat the Chinese Communists without a substa
ntial commitment

  of US military forces. It was against this background that Ambassador Hur-

  ley pushed for an open-ended US commitment to Chiang Kai-shek, but

  Washington decision makers demurred and Hurley resigned. 29

  President Truman appointed General George Marshall as his personal

  representative to salvage the deteriorating situation in China. Marshall man-

  aged a few months of shaky peace, but they were followed by frequent

  fighting in Manchuria as Nationalist and Communist forces vied to take

  control as Soviet occupiers retreated. US aid continued to go exclusively to

  Nationalist-held areas and increased markedly in mid-1946. On July 1, 1946,

  Chiang Kai-shek ordered a nationwide offensive against the Communists.

  Marshall intervened, got Truman to stop US arms aid to Chiang, and Chiang

  agreed to US-Nationalist-Communist truce teams to prevent fighting in

  northern China. The fighting still spread, however, and soon became a full-

  scale war. 30

  The failure to avoid civil war in China did not lead to fundamental change

  in the broad framework of US policy in China. Even though the Nationalists

  appeared increasingly weak and inept, and seemed headed for defeat on the

  mainland by 1948, the Truman administration continued support for them

  and took no significant steps to reach out to the Chinese Communists. In

  1948 the administration supported the China Aid Act providing $125 million

  for the failing Nationalist government in China. This was done in large

  measure to avoid resistance from many pro–Chiang Kai-shek congressional

  members regarding the administration’s requests for funding the Marshall

  Plan for Europe and Japan. Prospects for positive US relations with the

  Chinese Communists were soured by years of one-sided US support for the

  Chinese Nationalists. 31

  Given what were seen by Truman administration officials as continued

  strong US congressional and other domestic constraints against abandoning

  Chiang Kai-shek and opening US contacts with Chiang’s enemy, the Chinese

  Communists, the Truman administration officials allowed developments in

  China to settle the civil war in favor of the Chinese Communists. Over time,

 

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