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Title: The Chinese Revolution and the Korean War


1
The Chinese Revolution and the Korean War
  • Kevin J. Benoy

2
WW2 Ends
  • Just as the end of the world called into question
    the future geopolitical situation in Europe, Asia
    was also in a state of flux after Japan
    collapsed.
  • In Asia the preponderant military power was
    America so initially it appeared that American
    interests would come out on top.

3
WW2 Ends
  • Neither of the new super-powers considered the
    possibility of a Communist China.
  • Stalin seemed committed to accommodation with
    Chiang Kai Sheks (Jiang Zhongzheng in Mandarin)
    Kuomintang (Guomindang). As Stalins biographer,
    Isaac Deutscher notes, Stalin was contemptuous
    of partisans, sceptical of the chances of
    communism in China, and distrustful of any
    revolution asserting itself without his fiat and
    beyond the range of his military power.
  • The Americans also underestimated Maos partisans
    and were confident Chiang would become the
    policeman of the Far East in cooperation with
    the USA.

4
Maos CCP (Chinese Communist Party)
  • Mao was more confident in his own forces than was
    his Soviet sponsor.
  • He understood better than anyone outside China
    that KMT (GMD) power rested on a fragile base.

5
Maos CCP
  • During WW2 the Communists waged a reasonably
    effective guerilla war against the Japanese.
  • They were seen as Chinese patriots willing to
    continue the struggle even behind Japanese lines.
  • The KMT were seen as ineffective. Chiang seemed
    to place more importance on conserving his forces
    to use later, against the communists, than risk
    them against the Japanese prior to Japans
    invasion in 1937.

6
Maos CCP
  • In 1937 the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) had 5
    secure base areas with a population of 12 million
    people.
  • In 1945 there were 19 base areas with 100 million
    people.

7
The Kuomintang
  • KMT government was ineffective.
  • Corruption was rife. Officials were as likely as
    not to be lining their own pockets and those of
    their landowning friends with whatever could be
    skimmed from foreign aid or from national
    production.
  • Little or nothing was done for the rural
    peasantry, making up the bulk of Chinas
    population.

8
The Kuomintang
  • Peasants remembered that Chiang tolerated food
    profiteering during the 1930s a time of rural
    famine.
  • Peasants also faced high taxes and forced labour
    when many landlords conspicuously displayed their
    wealth.

9
The Kuomintang
  • Laws intended to prevent child labour were not
    enforced.
  • Factory inspectors were openly bribed, yet
    nothing was done to stop the practice because
    Chiang was afraid of alienating his industrialist
    backers.

10
The Communists
  • Compared to the KMT, the Communists appeared
    paragons of virtue.
  • Land reform took place in Communist areas all,
    including the poorest peasants, received some
    land.
  • Corruption was not tolerated by the thoroughly
    dedicated CCP leadership.

11
Wars End
  • At the end of the war American and Soviet forces
    ensured their clients, Chiang and Mao, moved in
    to replace the defeated Japanese in occupied
    territories.
  • Manchuria fell into Communist hands (though
    Stalin saw this as temporary giving him a
    bargaining chip).
  • To the South Chiangs KMT took control.
  • In both cases, Chinese forces inherited the
    weapon stocks of the defeated Japanese.

12
Wars End
  • As Soviet troops withdrew from Manchuria, they
    took with them about 200 million in industrial
    machinery.
  • When Chiangs troops finally entered the northern
    province, they were in a difficult situation.
  • They could only assert control in the cities.
  • Like the Japanese before them, they faced a
    hostile populationand their supply lines ran
    through hostile territory.

13
Wars End
  • Attempts to reconcile the KMT and CCP by US
    General George C. Marshall seemed to help as a
    compromise settlement was worked out in early
    1946.
  • However, nationalist (KMT) generals, fearing loss
    of power in a reconstructed national army, and
    CCP elements opposing expanded KMT influence in
    Manchuria, sank the deal.
  • Marshall called for an embargo on arms shipments
    to China but to no avail.
  • He left China blaming both sides as civil war
    raged.

14
Civil War
  • Chiang had strong support in the USA the China
    Lobby business interests and missionary groups
    opposed to communism.
  • Trumans policies elsewhere had stirred up strong
    anti-communist feelings now the administration
    was a prisoner of the great fear.
  • Pressure to resume aid to Chiang grew stronger.

15
Civil War
  • At first the KMT enjoyed some success in N. China
    and Manchuria, taking many of the cities from the
    communists.
  • However, economic trouble caused by the high cost
    of paying for the war undermined Chiangs efforts.

16
Civil War
  • Inefficiency and corruption, along with high
    inflation, could not be countered by even
    large-scale US aid about 900 million worth of
    military equipment was sold to Chiang for about
    20 of its real cost.
  • Civilian and military morale suffered.

17
Civil War
  • Financial matters in CCP controlled rural areas
    were of less consequence, as most lived outside
    the cash economy.
  • Communist morale remained high.

18
Civil War
  • In January, 1947 communist forces began an
    offensive that captured ½ of KMT territory in
    Manchuria.
  • Mass KMT desertions followed and much equipment
    fell into CCP hands.

19
Civil War
  • Other Communist forces advanced in Central China.
  • In 1948, decisive Communist victories occurred in
    North China.
  • Each CCP victory sapped KMT strength and
    undermined KMT morale.

20
Civil War
  • In a key battle for Hsuchow, total air
    superiority and superior armour could not
    overcome inept KMT leadership.
  • By January, surrounded KMT forces numbering
    500,000 men surrendered with all of their
    equipment.

21
Civil War
  • In 1949 Chiang resigned and was replaced by
    General Li but the situation was hopeless.
  • Nanking, Hankow and Shanghai fell.
  • By the end of 1949 only Hainan, Taiwan and some
    small islands were in KMT hands.

22
Civil War
  • The KMT government re-established itself on
    Taiwan taking with it as much of Chinas wealth
    as possible, including most of the national gold
    reserves and much treasure from mainland museums.
  • Chiang came out of retirement to head what was
    left of Nationalist China.
  • America was shocked that 35 billion in aid were
    not enough to give Chiang victory in the civil
    war.

23
Communist Victory
  • Mao now had the mammoth task of re-building a
    war-torn mainland China.
  • He began talks with Stalin (who he did not
    trust), hoping to receive aid.
  • For his part, Stalin wanted to exploit the
    unexpected communist windfall, while realizing
    that Maos victory also presented the Soviets
    with problems.

24
Communist Victory
  • It was clear that Mao would expect Stalin to give
    up some of his Manchurian booty.
  • Ideological differences between the two leaders
    were vast, despite their common Marxist rhetoric.
  • Stalin was a European proletarian communist,
    whereas Mao was an Asian communist with his roots
    planted firmly in the rural peasantry.

25
Communist Victory
  • After 3 hard months of negotiations in secret
    talks, a deal was finally reached.
  • On February 14, 1950 a formal alliance was
    signed.
  • Stalin promised to return what his forces took
    from Manchuria.
  • The Manchurian railway would be returned to China
    not later than the end of 1952.
  • Port Arthur was returned (though Dairen remained
    in Soviet hands).
  • Generous development aid was promised though
    only 300 million was ever delivered.
  • Stalin wanted to avoid having another breakaway
    Communist country like Jugoslavia. He needed
    any help he could get at a time of increasing
    friction between the USSR and the capitalist West.

26
Americas Response
  • Communisms terrific success in Asia shook US
    leadership.
  • Though the Truman Doctrine spoke forcefully of
    containing communism, it was felt that more was
    needed.
  • In early 1950 the National Security Council began
    work on a secret document (declassified in 1975),
    known as NSC-68, which would form the basis of US
    policy for the next 20 years.
  • America was committed to massive re-armament to
    the tune of 50-60 billion in spending per year.

27
Americas Response
  • The premise of the document was that the US and
    USSR were locked in a struggle of ideologies
    which ...inescapably confronts the slave society
    with the free... To that end Soviet efforts are
    now directed toward the domination of the
    Eurasian land mass.

28
Americas Response
  • Secretary of State Dean Acheson overruled the
    opposition of two key State Department experts on
    Russia, George Kennan and Charles Bohlen, who
    felt Stalin had no master plan for world
    conquest.
  • Acheson felt it necessary for the USA to launch a
    world-wide offensive to gain the initiative in
    the Cold War.
  • Events of 1950 were sufficient to convince Truman
    that Acheson was right.

29
Korea
  • At the end of hostilities in 1945, Korea was
    divided into two zones of occupation at the 38th
    Parallel to facilitate the surrender of Japanese
    forces.
  • The United Nations called for free elections in
    the entire country to determine a post-war
    government.
  • No agreement was reached on a formula suitable
    for both occupying powers.

30
Korea
  • Frustrated by Communist intransigence, the UN
    supervised elections in the South in 1948.
  • The result was the establishment of the Republic
    of Korea (ROK), under President Syngman Rhee.

31
Korea
  • In the North, the Soviets installed their own
    protégé Kim Il Sung in the new Democratic
    Peoples Republic of Korea a month later.
  • When American And Soviet troops pulled out of
    Korea in 1949, they left two mutually
    antagonistic regimes in Seoul and Pyongyang
    with two leaders claiming to be the legitimate
    leader of the whole country.

32
Korea
  • Both rulers were authoritarian.
  • Kim Il Sung adopted the traditional communist
    methods of dealing with the opposition.
  • Syngman Rhee also disregarded constitutional
    rights to the point where the US State Department
    registered a protest of his actions in early 1950.

33
The Korean War
  • On June 7, 1950, North Korean troops invaded the
    South attempting to take advantage of the
    political instability resulting from Rhees
    debacle in the May elections he won only 48 or
    168 seats, yet patched together a shaky coalition
    and continued to rule.

34
The Korean War
  • Encouraged by Acheson and MacArthurs comments
    that Korea stood outside the American defense
    perimeter, Kim (and his Soviet protector, Stalin)
    must have believed that the US would not act.

35
The Korean War
  • At first the N. Koreans defeated the hapless and
    disorganized forces of the South.
  • President Truman cut short a visit to Missouri to
    return to Washington.
  • He and Acheson was convinced this was part of a
    Russian-directed plot to spread communism.
  • Their response, however, was measured.

36
The Korean War
  • General MacArthur was ordered to sent supplies
    from Japan to the South Koreans.
  • Fearing Mao might strike against Taiwan, the US
    7th Fleet sailed between the island and the
    mainland.
  • At the UN, the USA introduced a resolution in the
    Security Council branding N. Korea an aggressor
    and calling for a return to pre-war positions.

37
The Korean War
  • The Soviets were boycotting the UN in protest
    against Red Chinas exclusion from the
    organization.
  • As a result, the motion passed 9-0, with just
    Jugoslavia abstaining, and no chance of a Soviet
    veto.
  • Two days later, with S. Korean forces collapsing,
    US air and naval forces committed to the war.

38
The Korean War
  • On the same day, June 27, another Security
    Council resolution was passed, calling for UN
    help for S. Korea.
  • This passed 7-1, with Jugoslavia opposing and
    India and Egypt abstaining.

39
The Korean War
  • 15 countries committed troops Australia,
    Britain, Canada, New Zealand, Nationalist China,
    France, Netherlands, Belgium, Colombia, Greece,
    Turkey, Panama, the Philippines, Thailand, and
    the United States.
  • All fell under the command of US General Douglas
    MacArthur.
  • Officially a UN operation, it was clear that the
    major contributor, the US, called the shots.

40
The Korean War
  • International support saved the South.
  • Reinforcements poured into the still unoccupied
    Pusan Perimeter.
  • In a dramatic counter-attack, MacArthur reversed
    the fortunes of war.
  • The Inchon landing, near Seoul, and a couple of
    hundred miles to the rear of the battle-front,
    resulted in a stunning defeat for the North
    Koreans.

41
The Korean War
  • Soon the North Koreans were in a disorganized
    retreat.
  • In two weeks, communist forces were pushed out of
    the South.
  • Truman ordered the UN to push beyond the 38th
    parallel fully intending to bring about
    unification by eliminating Kims communist
    government in the North.

42
The Korean War
  • Communist Chinas Zhou Enlai warned the Americans
    that crossing the 38th Parallel might bring China
    into the war.
  • The Americans thought it a bluff.
  • Confident that their nuclear superiority would
    keep Stalin out of the conflict and convinced
    Maos army was incapable of effective fighting,
    the US could not imagine a communist response.

43
The Korean War
  • With the US 7th fleet poised against it in the
    South China Sea, American forces approaching the
    Manchurian border and Chiang Kai Shek calling for
    his foces to be unleashed on the mainland to roll
    back communism, the Chinese communists took the
    initiative.

44
The Korean War
  • The war almost grew on October 9, when two US
    F-80 jets attacked a Soviet airfield near
    Vladivostok.
  • Stalin protested, the US apologized, and no
    further action was taken.

45
The Korean War
  • In November, 300,000 Chinese volunteers crossed
    the border, pushing UN forces out of North Korea
    by mid-January, 1951.
  • MacArthur talked of attacking Manchuria and using
    atomic bombs if necessary.

46
The Korean War
  • Truman countermanded MacArthurs orders to bomb
    Chinese troops and supplies in Manchuria.
  • Fearing his commander might spark a 3rd World
    War, Truman dismissed MacArthur on April 11, 1951.

47
The Korean War
  • The war settled into a long and hard-fought
    stalemate.
  • More and more lives were lost as two years of
    negotiations at Panmunjon continued.
  • Finally, a compromise was reached in July, 1953.
  • The border was returned, more, or less to the
    38th parallel modified to follow local
    landforms.

48
Results of the War
  • Korea was devastated.
  • 4 million were killed and 5 million left
    homeless.
  • The division of the country seemed permanent.
  • Cease-fire violations have continued regularly to
    the present.

49
Results of the War
  • The Soviet Union never again boycotted the UN.
  • Likewise, other Security Council members learned
    a valuable lesson.
  • Their use of the veto effectively blocked any
    further use of collective security in the Cold
    War period.

50
Results of the War
  • Turning the Cold War hot over Korea intensified
    the international conflict.
  • Both sides distrusted each other more than ever.
  • For the US, North Korean aggression and the
    Chinese intervention confirmed the beliefs of the
    authors of NSC-68 that the USSR was using client
    states to further communist expansion.

51
Results of the War
  • Americas relationship with China was strained
    for decades to come.
  • America was committed to a global strategy of
    containment of Communism no longer just in
    areas previously considered vital to American
    interest.

52
Results of the War
  • America soon began its fateful involvement in
    Vietnam, pledging to help France fighting
    communist insurgency.
  • Just financial at first, it would later involve
    troops.
  • US military commitments in Europe and Asia grew
    dramatically.

53
Results of the War
  • Within the US, anti-communist sentiment grew
    hugely and the efforts of MacArthur supporters
    and the radical right of Senator Joseph McCarthy
    took the US into a period of domestic turmoil.
  • Truman and Acheson were accused of being soft on
    communism.
  • American Leftists were persecuted and hounded out
    of jobs during the witch hunts of the 1950s.

54
Results of the War
  • By the time McCarthyism ran its course at least 9
    million Americans had been investigated.
  • Thousands lost their jobs and reputations badly
    tarnishing Americas reputation for fairness.
  • Much of Trumans Fair Deal was defeated in an
    atmosphere of anti-Socialism.
  • President Truman himself lost his job in the 1952
    election to Eisenhower.
  • Dean Acheson was replaced by an even stronger
    anti-communist John Foster Dulles.

55
finis
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