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LIBRARY OF THE
MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
The MIT Press
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https://archive.org/details/americanpolicyinOOrost
An AMERICAN POLICY -inASIA
TECHNOLOGY PRESS BOOKS IN THE SOCIAL SCIENCES An
American Policy in Asia
By W. W.
R. W.
Rostow and
Hatch
Machine Translation of Languages (in press)
Edited
W. N.
by
Locke
and A. D.
Booth
Nine Soviet Portraits
By
Raymond
A.
Bauer
The Prospects for Communist China
By W. W.
Rostow and others
Labor Mobility and Economic Opportunity
By
Members of the Social Science Research Council
Nationalism and Social Communication
By
Karl
W.
Deutsch
Industrial Relations in Sweden
By
Charles
A.
Myers
Pressures on Wage Decisions
By
George P. Schultz
The Dollar Shortage
By
Charles
P.
Kindleberger
Mid-Century: The Social Implications of Scientific Progress Edited by John E. Burchard Cybernetics: Or Control and Communication in the Animal and the Machine
By
Norbert Wiener
The Movement of Factory Workers
By
Charles
A.
Myers
and W.
Rupert Maclaurin
An AMERICAN POLICY -inASIA W. W. ROSTOW in collaboration with Richard W. Hatch
Published jointly by The Technology Press of Massachusetts Institute of Technology and John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York Chapman & Hall, Ltd., London
Copyright, 1955 By The Massachusetts Institute of Technology
All Rights Reserved This book or any part thereof must not be reproduced in any form without the written permission of the publisher.
Printed in the United States of America
Dewey
Preface It is supposed to be rather bad form for a university research organization to sponsor the publication of a policy book. The academic code insists on a rigid separation of “scholarship” and prescription. This is an important tradition, and one that should not be abandoned lightly. The usefulness to society of the academic community depends on continued public trust in its sober objectivity. In a curious way, however, in the field of China studies, the attempt to observe the rule has defeated its own purpose. China scholars have tended to develop split personalities, painfully excluding policy insights from their scholarly work, and then permitting their pent-up convictions as to what the United States should do in the Far East to spill out in most unscholarly bursts of temper. Far from protecting their scholarly reputations, this dual performance has convinced many citizens, quite incorrectly, that the scholarship was a mere cloak for emotional special pleading. Thus when the Center for International Studies concluded three years ago that an important service could be performed by launching a fresh examination of the nature of contemporary Communist Chinese society, we decided to assign to the direction of this task a man with no background whatsoever in the China field. There were many China scholars who in fact would have carried through the analysis with balance and objectivity, but few if any who were not, rightly or wrongly, identified in the public mind with an intemperately stated policy position. Professor Rostow accepted the assignment and, with the help of a number of researchers and the advice of many of the senior scholars in the field, produced The Prospects for Communist China. He started, with no policy preconceptions, to prepare an analytic volume but made no attempt to conceal either from his colleagues or himself that the central purpose of the effort was to cast new light on the troublesome decisions the United States would have to take in the Far East over the next few years. Meanwhile other work on Asia was going forward at the Center. Studies were launched of economic development problems in India and Indonesia, of patterns of communication in India, and of the social and political structure of a Javanese community. Putting insights derived from these studies together with his own work on China and his earlier work on the Soviet Union and on economic growth. Professor Rostow and his colleagues developed a set of views on how the United States might conduct itself in its Asian relations. The Center has decided for two reasons that these views deserve careful and widespread consideration.
First, we would like to help re-establish the legitimacy
of sober analysis of policy alternatives as an appropriate activity for scholars, to be carried forward with all the care, balance, and judgment that should charac¬ terize any scholarly activity.
Second, there has been available to the general
public very little thinking on Asian policy that is both informed and temperate. A research organization like the Center has, we feel, a responsibility to give wide circulation to any individual policy insights arising from our work. The Center and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology cannot and should not, of course, take any responsibility for the substance of the views set forth in this book. They are inherently controversial matters on which there is room for much difference of view. What we can certify is that the positions taken are responsible in the sense that they are based on careful study and disinterested in the sense that their sole purpose is to stimulate and clarify public thinking. Max F. Millikan
Director
Introduction This short book is a sequel to The Prospects for Communist China. As our research on China proceeded in 1953-1954 we set down our views on the particular policy issues posed for the United States by the intentions and activities of Communist China in Asia.
We interested ourselves in policy as
well as research in order to make sure that we answered as best we could those questions about Communist China most relevant to the making of a forwardlooking United States policy. After our research was completed we took stock of our informal policy papers. Despite the initial interest in Communist China which inspired them, they con¬ stituted an outline for a positive American policy in Asia.
This book proceeds,
then, not from a negative statement of the dangers the United States confronts, but from a positive definition of American interests in Asia. It has been our job for two years to educate ourselves in contemporary Asia. We have emerged with certain convictions concerning the course the United States should now follow in Asia. and clearly as we could.
We have stated them in this book as simply
We are under no illusion that they constitute the final
word on an American policy in Asia.
Their primary purpose is to assist in
public discussion of American action that looks forward rather than backward, to future opportunity rather than to past failure. Two of our conclusions we would commend without reservation.
They con¬
cern the broad nature of the American position in the world and the spirit in which the United States must approach its tasks in Asia. We as a people have made a momentous choice.
We have now clearly ruled
out one conceivable approach to a solution to our international problem: namely, a military attack on the Soviet Union and Communist China initiated by the United States.
In Chapter 6 we indicate why, in our view, the United States
has ruled out this way of dealing with men who are openly our nation’s enemies. That American decision has an important consequence.
It means that the
American people must find other ways for protecting their interests. native to total war initiated by the United States is not peace.
The alter¬
Until a different
spirit and a different policy prevail in Moscow and Peking the alternative for the United States is a mixture of military, political, and economic activity, con¬ ducted insofar as possible in coalition with other peoples in many parts of the world. The more complicated alternative the United States has chosen is immensely challenging.
It demands that Americans learn to work with peoples whom we
do not know instinctively or well. It demands that Americans undertake new kinds of military, political, and economic tasks. It demands, in short, a sustained and revolutionary change in American relations with the rest of the world. vii
Com-
placency, inaction, and an unwillingness to learn are as real enemies as the Communist leadership in Moscow and Peking. It follows directly that American interests are not likely to be protected unless the American people are prepared to concern themselves with foreign policy to an unprecedented degree, and unless they are prepared to invest in complex and apparently remote issues not merely increased resources but also increased energy and human concern. Only against such a background of responsible citizenship can a democratic government do the things it knows it ought to do. The record of public wisdom in the past fifteen years—when the facts and alternatives have been made clear—is excellent. We have not the slightest doubt that the Amer¬ ican people are capable of supporting a mature foreign policy when they are fully informed—supporting it with the sacrifices, the patience, and the human poise and confidence which are required. As we have come to learn something of the American problem in Asia we have become impressed not merely with the dangers to the American interest that are inherent in Asia’s present position but also with the greatness of the constructive tasks that must be undertaken if those dangers are to be reduced and eliminated. In Asia there are hundreds of millions of human beings now striving actively for national independence, increased human dignity, increased material welfare. work with them.
In order to protect American interests, the United States must Asians must achieve these goals largely by their own efforts;
but the scale and quality of the American contribution in resources, technique, and human fellowship could be decisive. Looking back over our national history since the Civil War, it is not too much to say that the United States has come near to solving many of the great issues of its domestic life.
The problems of monopolies and industrial concentration,
of equity for the farmer, of labor union organization, of social security, of cyclical unemployment, of the Negro and other minorities—on all of them the nation has made great progress.
There is still much to be done; great problems are
rarely solved once and for all. And yet these challenges do not dominate the scene as they did even a generation ago. The great task for the United States lies in using its limited but real margin of influence on the course of history to help create a world in which our society and other open societies, based on the sanctity of the individual in relation to the state, can survive and continue to develop.
Having looked hard and without
wishful thought at both the Soviet and Chinese Communist challenges, we are convinced that the United States can do this job; but it will take the best that American society can produce. As a nation we can not yet settle down to a comfortable middle age, refining the solutions to old and familiar domestic problems. be regretted. As Herbert Croly wrote in 1909:
And this is not wholly to
An America which was not the land of promise, which was not informed by a pro¬ phetic outlook and a more or less constructive ideal, would not be the America bequeathed to us by our forefathers.
For the views expressed in this book I take full and personal responsibility. Mr. Richard W. Hatch is, however, responsible for much of whatever virtue the book contains.
We have discussed and thrashed out together the point of view
that informs this set of conclusions.
He is directly responsible for the writing
of Chapters 3 and 4, on the Free Chinese and Formosa.
He fought a stubborn
battle, with many rear-guard actions, to make the text as simple as the clarity of our thought permitted. We were helped and strengthened in developing these views by many criticisms and suggestions from four advisers: Messrs. James B. Ames, Fred L. Anderson, Kingman Douglass, and Richard D. Hughes. Although they bear no respon¬ sibility for the text, their wisdom, experience, and good sense make this a sub¬ stantially better book than it would otherwise have been. At many points this set of conclusions owes much to my colleagues at the Center for International Studies who are themselves at work on Asian problems. Chapters 2 and 7 in particular represent one formulation of our experience and our judgment as a research group. In particular we are indebted to Messrs. G. Baldwin, F. Bator, E. Hagen, B. Higgins, H. Isaacs, W. Malenbaum, M. F. Millikan, I. Pool, and P. Rosenstein-Rodan. W. W. Rostow Cambridge, Mass. March 1, 1955
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The ASIAN ARENA
Contents 1. THE UNITED STATES INTEREST IN ASIA The Asian Puzzle, 1. America, the Island Power, 1. Ideology and Se¬ curity, 2. Ideals and Interests, 3. The China Neurosis, 4. The United States Interest in Eurasia, 4. The New Weapons, 5. The Balance of Power and Ideology, 6. The Responsibility of Coalition, 7.
1
2. THE BROAD FOUNDATIONS FOR ALLIANCE IN FREE ASIA
8
Basic Differences in Outlook, 8. Colonialism, 9. Economic Growth, 9. The Outlook on Communism, 10. Asia and Democracy, 10. The Foundations for Coalition, 11. Some Possible Lines of United States Action, 11. Policy towards Colonialism, 11. Partnership for Economic Growth, 12. Intelligent Anti-Communism, 13. The Democratic Process, 14. Conclusion, 15. 3. THE FREE CHINESE Who and Where They Are, 16. Chinese Intellectuals, 19.
16 The Overseas Chinese, 17.
The Exile
4. FORMOSA
22
The Formosa Political Scene, 24. Formosa Objectives Past and Future, 25. Present Objectives, 26. The Question of Morale, 27. Formosa and Free Asia, 29. The United States Interest, 30. 5. THE VULNERABILITY OF COMMUNIST CHINA TO ITS ASIAN ENVIRONMENT
31
Chinese Communist Strengths, 31. Chinese Communist Weaknesses, 33. Military Policy, 35. Political and Economic Policy, 36. Conclusion, 36. 6. THE MILITARY PROBLEM
38
Politics and Force, 38. Should the United States Initiate War? 39. The Consequences of Rejecting War, 39. The Strategic Role of Atomic Weapons, 40. The Use of Force Short of Total Atomic Attack, 41. The Soft War, 42.
The Three Lines of Defense, 42.
7. AN ECONOMIC POLICY IN FREE ASIA The Transition to Self-Sustaining Growth, 43. A Policy of Assisting Take-Off, 44. The Problem of Japan, 45. The Empty Temptation of Trade with the Communist Bloc, 46. The Communist Challenge, 47. What Should We Do about the Asian Economic Problem? 48. Conclu¬ sion, 51. XI
43
Xll
8. UNITED NATIONS MEMBERSHIP FOR COMMUNIST CHINA? UNITED STATES RECOGNITION?
53
The Issues Involved, 53. United States Recognition of Communist China? 54. Implications for United States Action, 55. 9. THE FREE WORLD ALLIANCE London, 57.
New Delhi, 57.
Washington, 58.
56
Chronology THE UNITED STATES IN ASIA
United
1785
States
First American Canton, China.
Other Events
Participation
trading
vessel
First United States government rep¬ resentative in Canton.
1789
First tariff trade.
encourages
First English concessions in India.
1619
First Dutch foothold in Indonesia (Batavia).
1689
Russo-Chinese (Nerchinsk).
1786
First British foothold in Malaya.
1798
Ceylon becomes British crown col¬ ony.
1824
Singapore ceded to Great Britain.
1839
Anglo-Chinese War.
1841
Hong Kong ceded to Great Britain.
1842
Beginning of extraterritorial rights in China (for European powers).
1849
French occupy Honolulu.
Commercial
Treaty
to
1787
act
1608
China
1826
Agreements with rulers of Hawaii, Tahiti, Society Islands.
1833
First United States diplomatic mis¬ sion to Asia (Cochin-China; Siam). Commercial treaty with Siam.
1844
First treaty with China granting the United States extraterritorial rights.
1846
United States’ request for treaty with Japan refused by Japan.
1849
French occupation ended by warning States.
of Honolulu from United
Treaty with King of Hawaii. 1853
Commodore Perry’s visit to Japan opens Japan to the West.
1854
First Commercial Treaty with Japan.
1857- Great Britain and France force (by 1858 war) confirmation of extraterritorial rights from China. 1861
First American Minister in Peking.
1867
Purchase of Alaska from Russia.
1868
Burlingame Treaty with China, by which China recognized interna¬ tional law.
1875
Reciprocity Treaty with Hawaii.
1882
Chinese pended.
1883
Treaty with Korea.
1889
Assumption of sovereignty American Samoa.
1894
1898
labor
immigration
1862
First seizure by French of territory later to become Indo-China.
1863
France establishes protectorate over Cambodia.
1868
Japan begins period of moderniza¬ tion (Meiji Restoration).
1877
Queen Victoria proclaimed Empress of India.
1885
Great Britain seizes Burma and adds it to India.
1893
France Laos.
1894
Sino-Japanese War.
1895
Japan acquires Liaotung Peninsula, Pescadores, and Formosa (by Treaty of Shimonoseki with China).
1896
Federation of Malay states (under Great Britain).
1898
Spanish-American War.
1900
Boxer Insurrection in China.
1904
Russo-Japanese War.
sus¬
over
Exclusion of Chinese labor immi¬ grants confirmed by treaty with China.
United States takes possession Wake Island and Guam.
of
acquires
protectorate
Annexation of Hawaii. Philippines and Guam ceded to the United States by Spain (Treaty of Paris). 1899
United States insurrection.
crushes
Philippine
Open Door Policy for China advo¬ cated by United States at First Hague Conference. 1900
Hawaii becomes United States Ter¬ ritory. United States Marines take part in defeat of Boxer insurrection and capture of Peking, China.
1901
Boxer Protocol, with China, gives the United States the right to station troops in China and special rights to American vessels in Chinese waters.
over
XV
1905
Russo-Japanese Peace Treaty signed at United States Navy Yard, Ports¬ mouth, N. H., following suggestion of President Theodore Roosevelt.
1907
United States returns nearly half of Boxer indemnity to China ($10,785,286). Later used for education of Chinese both in China and in United States.
1915
United States refuses to recognize any Japanese rights impairing Chi¬ nese political or territorial integrity.
1918
United States (and Allies) occupy Vladivostok.
1921
Agreement by United States, in Four Power Treaty with Great Britain, France, and Japan, to ad¬ just Pacific territorial disputes by diplomacy.
1922
Agreement by United States, in Five Power Treaty with Great Britain, France, Italy, and Japan to limita¬ tion of naval armament.
1905
Japan acquires Port Arthur. Japan annexes Korea.
1912
Chinese Republic proclaimed.
1915
Japanese Twenty-One Demands ac¬ cepted by China. (Not fully en¬ forced because of United States ob¬ jections.)
1921
Chinese Communist Party organized.
1924
China recognizes Soviet Russia.
1925
Beginning of Chiang Kai-shek’s leadership of Chinese Nationalists.
1931
Japanese invade Manchuria.
1932
Thailand (Siam) becomes a consti¬ tutional monarchy.
Tariff Treaty with China (Nine Power Treaties included Great Brit¬ ain, Japan, France, Italy, Holland, Belgium, Portugal). 1924
Immigration act in effect excludes Japanese laborers.
1931 United States government considers but rejects action to oppose Japa¬ nese aggression in Manchuria.
Japan occupies Shanghai.
1934
United States guarantees Philippine independence in 1946.
1933
Japan resigns from League of Na¬ tions.
1934
Japan terminates Naval Limitations Agreement.
1937
Burma becomes self-governing unit of British Commonwealth. Sino-Japanese War begins.
1941
Japan attacks Pearl Harbor, pre¬ cipitating war.
1943
United States (and Great Britain) give up extraterritorial rights in China.
1945
Yalta Agreement. Japan surrenders to United States.
1943
Emergence of a Communist policy looking to postwar expansion in Southeast Asia.
1945
By surrender terms Japan loses all mainland territory (Manchuria, Ko¬ rea) and Formosa and Pescadores Islands.
1946
Marshall Mission to China.
1945
Chinese-Soviet Treaty confirming terms of Yalta Agreement.
1946
Japan adopts new constitution. India becomes independent repub¬ lic.
Philippine independence proclaimed.
Indonesian Republic proclaimed. 1947
Attempt to mediate in China aban¬ doned with termination of Marshall Mission.
1947
Immediate postwar Communist pol¬ icy of limited cooperation gives way to militant Communist activity throughout Asia. Dominion of Pakistan formed by partition of India.
1949 United States “White China published. “Point Four” technical program launched.
Paper”
on
1948
Ceylon granted full dominion status by Great Britain.
1949
Chinese Communists conquer China and proclaim Chinese People’s Re¬ public.
assistance
Chiang Kai-shek and Nationalist government flee to Formosa. Burma assumes full independence. Indonesian Republic’s autonomy rec¬ ognized by Holland.
1950
United States consular officials re¬ called from Communist China.
1950
Sino-Soviet Treaty of Alliance.
United States-Korea Arms Pact.
Communist War.
China
enters
Korean
United States recognition of Asso¬ ciated States of Indo-China.
Vietnam becomes sovereign state in French Union.
Entry into Korean War. Ban on China. 1951
trade
with
Communist
United States assumes charge under United Nations trusteeship of 625 Pacific islands.
1951
United Nations names Communist China aggressor. Communist China invades Tibet, which becomes Chinese province.
Contributes to Colombo Plan. United States-Philippine Mutual De¬ fense Treaty.
Colombo Plan (Economic Develop¬ ment for South and Southeast Asia) formed by Britain, Canada, Aus¬ tralia, Ceylon, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, Malaya, Singapore, Burma.
Pacific Security Pact with Australia and New Zealand. Japanese Peace Treaty.
India launches First Five Year Plan.
United States-Japan Security Pact. 1953
Korean War Armistice.
1952
End of Allied occupation of Japan.
1953
Sino-Soviet Trade Agreement. Launching of new General Line of “transition to socialism” in Com¬ munist China; First Five Year Plan under way.
1954
Observation of Geneva Conference. Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) formed.
1954
Vietminh victory at Dienbienphu. Geneva munist creation state in
Conference confirms Com¬ victory in Indo-China by of Vietminh (Communist) north.
1954
Krushchev visit to Peking. New Sino-Soviet Agreement returns Port Arthur and Dairen to China.
1955
United States-Formosa Mutual De¬ fense Agreement. Bangkok powers.
Conference
of
SEATO
President Eisenhower bids for truce in Formosa Strait, via United Na¬ tions, leaving position of Quemoy and Matsu undetermined.
1955
Tachen Islands evacuated by Chinese Nationalists and occupied by Chi¬ nese Communists.
;
CHAPTER
The United States Interest in Asia undercurrents in Japanese feeling and politics com¬
The Asian Puzzle
It is an irreversible fact of American life that the
bine with a continuing economic crisis to pull against
fate of our society is now bound up with the course
our interests and our hopes.
We have not reached a
of events throughout the world.
The United States
full understanding with India, which, along with the
as a nation and the American people collectively and
other Colombo powers, Pakistan, Burma, Ceylon, and
as individuals must accept responsibilities in other
Indonesia, pursues a course that often baffles and frus¬
parts of the world as never before in our history.
trates us.
This is most strikingly true of our relations with Asia.
the efforts of India and the other Colombo powers to
Once a distant part of the world, in no way connected
achieve effective independence, to create stable demo¬
in American eyes to our fate, Asia now confronts us
cratic societies, and to develop growing economies.
Nevertheless, we sympathize deeply with
with problems that are far more complex and difficult
Although step by step we have become deeply, even
than those laid on us by the Japanese attack on Pearl
inextricably, tied up in Asia’s fate, it is by no means
Harbor and that are as directly connected to our
clear to many Americans why this should be so.
future security.
There is, therefore, deep disagreement as to what
Seen from the United States the panorama of Asia is, indeed, confusing and troubling.
We are openly
threatened,
by Communist
and we
feel menaced
our response should be to the condition of Asia and to its present urgent problems. And it is by no means clear to many Asians why we
the
should assert so powerful an interest in the fate of
United States as its enemy, which has allied itself with
their region, many parts of which are newly liberated
Soviet Russia, and which actively seeks to expand its
from the domination and influence of white men.
power in Asia.
Instinctively and understandably they question our
China,
which
has
systematically
singled
out
But our allies urge us to permit the
entrance of Communist China into the United Na¬ tions and, at the least, to restrict our Chinese friends
motives and our intentions. If our policies in Asia are to be effective, if they are
We
to be sustained by the American people, if they are
are seriously committed in Southern Vietnam, and
to rally the support of our allies and our potential
we are threatened by the Communist menace to the
allies on both sides of the Iron and Bamboo curtains,
other Indo-Chinese states, to Thailand, and to South¬
they must be based on a clear understanding of
east Asia as a whole.
American interests.
on Formosa to passive survival as island exiles.
We have troops in South Korea.
We have made formal guarantees through the SEATO Pact to protect a number of Asian states.
We are
committed to support Japan and assist in its evolu¬ tion as a constructive part of a free world; but deep
America, the Island Power
Instinctively, on issue after issue, we have behaved as if we understood our interests.
Our actions have
2 been vastly more consistent and more subtle than the
lation.
In good conscience Americans could devote
language we have used officially to describe them to
themselves to the extension of both their principles
the world or the terms in which we have debated the
and their power on this continent.
We have reacted
The foreign policy of the United States from the
when the Eurasian continent, bounded by the off-shore
Revolution to the end of the nineteenth century was
islands of Japan and Great Britain, threatened to fall
concerned with the winning of independence, with
under the sway of a single power or unified coalition.
the expansion to the West, with the protracted nego¬
We have reacted by trying to keep alive on the Eu¬
tiations that established the Canadian boundary, with
rasian continent a military and political coalition,
the avoidance of British intervention during the Civil
linked loosely or tightly to the United States, which
War, with the formulation of relations with Latin
could continue to hold the balance of power in Eu¬
America around the somewhat elastic concept of the
rasia. That is, we have behaved throughout the world,
Monroe Doctrine, and with an extension of the Amer¬
since 1945 (or perhaps since the passage of Lend-Lease
ican interest to Alaska and the mid-Pacific islands.
in 1941), as if the United States were an island that
Although these actions involved a revolutionary alli¬
could be threatened by the course of military and
ance with France, a war with Mexico, and extensive
political events on the great Eurasian continent.
This
dealings with France and Spain, in this period Amer¬
is the underlying strand of logic that unites our re¬
ican diplomacy was mainly a function of the larger
action to the Fascist axis of the 1930’s and our reaction
domestic effort to establish and consolidate an inde¬
to the Communist bloc of the past decade.
pendent continent-nation and to protect its position
matter among ourselves at home.
But our national behavior throughout this period
in the Western Hemisphere.
Thus American security
has been colored by the apparent newness of our na¬
and ideological interests converged for more than a
tional circumstance; by the clash between our aware¬
hundred years in a policy of continental or hemi¬
ness of what needed doing and old conceptions bedded
spheric isolation.
deeply in our national life, and by the curious mixture
It should be noted, however, that over this period
We
the United States did not fully appreciate the extent
must look into our own past before we can achieve
to which its isolation hinged on a control of the seas
a clear understanding of our present interests in Asia.
by another power, Great Britain, which had deep
of emotions and ideas that governs our behavior.
continuing interests in Ideology and Security
Canada
and elsewhere in
avoiding war with the United States.
Although it
One key to American history is this: we have always
was mutual power interests between the United States
had, in addition to a natural military interest in our
and Britain that made American isolation an accept¬
national security, a parallel, related interest in and
able basis for our foreign policy in the nineteenth
devotion to certain principles concerning the indi¬
century, the importance of a friendly or neutralized
vidual and his relationship to the state.
British sea power remained an unspoken and even
Those prin¬
ciples were set down in the truths held self-evident
unconscious element in our security position.
by the signers of the Declaration of Independence
talked and even behaved as if it lay wholly in our
and were embodied with great subtlety in our Con¬
own power to ensure our isolation.
We
stitution. They are the core of the American ideology.
When the United States entered the First World
In its first years the United States regarded itself—
War, under Wilson’s leadership, our participation
and was regarded by the world—as embarked on a
was presented mainly as a defense of American prin¬
unique historical experiment in democracy, with its
ciples—as an ideological crusade rather than as a
great task the pioneering on a new continent of a new
course of action in the direct American security in¬
organization of society for free men.
terest.
Washington’s
Some Americans were aware that the control
injunction that we avoid permanent alliances and
of the Atlantic by a hostile European power, implied
involvement in European quarrels expressed a judg¬
by the success of German submarine warfare, was a
ment that both American ideological interests and
threat to American security.
security interests were best served by a policy of iso¬
the war and afterwards, American interests and ob-
However, both during
3 jectives in Europe tended to be publicly defined in ideological rather than in security terms.
When the
First, we have exhibited as a nation a persistent tendency to separate our ideals from our practical
ideological objectives defined by Wilson and largely
performance.
accepted by the American people proved difficult or
powerful role in the nation’s behavior.
impossible of immediate attainment, a shattering wave
come to action, idealism is mixed, as it must be, with
of disillusion struck the United States.
a sense of painful limitations, realities, and special
The United
Idealism has played and plays today a But when we
States largely withdrew from serious commitment in
interests.
Europe, never having clarified its basic and persistent
our statesmen by and large reflect our ideals.
security interests in the area.
performance is made up of a subtle and generally in¬
We returned to isola¬
Our formal statements and the speeches of Our
tion without understanding why we had left it or
articulate mixture of idealism and lesser interests.
whether it was a sound basis for the nation’s security.
is the Declaration of Independence which incorpo¬
Over the interwar years the structure of arrange¬
rates our creed; but it is the Constitution, incorporat¬
ments, which the United States had in large part fos¬
ing a shrewd sense of human weakness in the handling
tered, fell apart: the League of Nations itself, Ger¬
of power and a keen awareness of the power of spe¬
man disarmament,
the small democratic national
states created in eastern Europe, and so on.
Many
elements entered into this disintegration, but the fail¬ ure of the United States to appreciate that it had fundamental and continuing interests in the organi¬ zation of the power and political structure of Europe was certainly an extremely important if not decisive factor. In the Second World War a strong ideological bias also affected the American view of our own interests and objectives, although now we were strongly aware of the recurrent danger of German and Japanese ag¬ gression.
Both our insistence on unconditional sur¬
It
cial interests, which governs our political life from day to day.
American political oratory generally
looks to the Declaration rather than the Constitution. There is nothing cheaply cynical about this na¬ tional quality.
It represents one way of dealing with
a general dilemma of human beings—the problem of good and evil in public life.
And, on balance, the
American performance in relation to professed ideals has been remarkable.
However, this shifting from
abstract principles to hardheaded considerations of interest in foreign policy has produced considerable confusion abroad, where American life and its history are not well understood; and it has produced con¬ fusion at home as well.
render and the idea of postwar occupation, originally
In domestic politics we are all instinctively aware
devoted to a long-run weakening of German and Japa¬
of the subtle balance between idealism and special
nese military potential, represented the formulation
interest; but the issues of foreign policy are more re¬
of American security interests in Europe and Asia.
mote, and we cannot see them and feel them with the
Since the end of the war the realities of Soviet and
same directness as taxes and farm policy, unemploy¬
Chinese Communist strength and aggressive intent
ment and social security.
have forced the United States to change its focus;
one foreign policy issue on which the battle is car¬
and now we are concerned primarily with the build¬
ried forward with a sophisticated blending of ideal¬
ing in Europe and Asia of a security basis against
ism and special interest is the tariff, which is not only
Communist power.
There is evident danger that the
an old question but also one in which the average
Communist threat to American security may lead us
citizen sees or believes he can see the direct conse¬
to define American interests as inadequately and nega¬
quences of alternative policies in terms of his daily
tively as we did in the formula of unconditional sur¬
life.
render in the Second World War.
our history requires that the United States produce
It is significant that the
To clarify our national interest at this stage of
and project abroad a more orderly vision of its mixed Ideals and Interests
Our foreign policy performance over the first cen¬ tury and a half of our national life has been colored by two general characteristics of American life.
ideological and security interests than ever before in our history. There is a second and related national character¬ istic that has colored and confused our foreign policy
4 We have had a marked tendency to
In the past twenty-five years the considerable com¬
define our foreign interests and objectives in terms of
mercial, religious, educational, and security interests
formal or legal arrangements, as in our domestic life
of the United States in China have met defeat.
we tend to formalize desired relationships in legal
failed to aid China effectively when Japan intervened
documents.
In foreign policy, however, unlike our
on the mainland in the 1930’s; and after 1945 we
domestic life, we have tended to regard such docu¬
failed to prevent the Communists from seizing the
ments and such legal formulations as having power
Chinese mainland and turning China’s capabilities
in themselves regardless of whether or not there
against the United States.
were continuing efforts made to sustain them.
have prevented this outcome, it is essential to make
performance.
The
Kellogg-Briand Pact between the wars is an example of this tendency, as were certain of the wartime and immediate postwar agreements among the allies.
It
We
Whether or not we could
blunt acknowledgment of defeat. And so, since 1898 at least, the United States has suf¬ fered from a failure of will, a failure of understand¬
is evident that a mature American relationship with
ing, or both in its policy toward China.
Whether we
the outside world must, like our democracy at home,
have allocated too much attention and resources to
be based on our acceptance of the necessity of end¬
China or too little, it is indisputable that we have
less striving for certain basic purposes, our acceptance
not matched our general statements of national in¬
of a course of action in which formal arrangements
terest with national action.
may play a key role but are not ends in themselves.
China was right or wrong, we never backed it.
Whether our play in
The American people must now define the United The China Neurosis
States interest in China in terms we are likely to
These two national characteristics have been no¬
back as a nation and on a sustained basis.
We can
In many ways the
do this properly only if we accept the fact that
confusion of the United States with respect to its po¬
United States policy toward China must be part of
sition in Asia has been even more profound than in
United States policy in Asia and in the rest of the
the case of Europe.
world.
tably present in our Asian policy.
Much of the American story in
And this demands that we establish an or¬
Asia centers on China; and our policy toward China
derly and mature relation between our ideological
holds a special place in our history.
interest, as an open democratic society, and our mili¬
We began trading with China more than a hun¬ dred years ago.
American missionaries and educators
followed the traders.
tary interest as an island off a great and potentially threatening continent.
At the beginning of this cen¬
tury we advocated an Open Door policy in China, but no one knew whether we were expressing a pious hope or stating a national interest.
The United States Interest in Eurasia
The fundamental task of American foreign policy
We were not
is to maintain a world environment for the United
sure what the connection was between China and
States within which our form of society can develop
our national security, and we never decided how
in conformity with the humanistic principles which
much energy, inconvenience, treasure, or blood the
are its foundation.
Open Door was really worth.
protect our own
Theodore Roosevelt
We must, of course, physically country;
but
the
protection of
moved toward a balance of power in Northeast Asia
American territory is essentially a means to protect
among Russia, Japan, and China; but that policy was
our still-developing way of life.
never made wholly clear to the American people,
The United States has two distinct but connected
was never fully accepted in American political life,
interests in the vast continent of Eurasia.
and was never backed by the full force of American
combined resources of Eurasia could pose a serious
power.
From the Open Door down to 1931 there
threat of military defeat to the United States, it is
was a distinct and chronic gap between our pro¬
our interest that no single power or group of powers,
claimed purpose of maintaining China’s territorial
hostile or potentially hostile to the United States,
integrity and independence and our national per¬
dominate that area.
formance when the chips were down.
uation might be, a Eurasia under totalitarian die-
Since the
Since, whatever the military sit¬
5 tatorships would threaten the survival of democracy
ideological threat to South Korea may prove a crea¬
both elsewhere and in the United States, it is equally
tive Free World task for a generation.
our interest that the societies of Eurasia develop
There is a much closer connection between the mili¬
along lines broadly consistent with both our own con¬
tary, or security, threat and the ideological threat in
ception of the proper relation of the individual to
Asia than in Europe.
the state and with their own cultural heritages.
We
fluenced by the great gap between material aspiration
do not seek societies abroad built in our own image.
and reality throughout Asia, by bitter memories of
We do have a profound interest that societies abroad
colonialism, and by powerful feelings of race and
develop and strengthen those elements in their re¬
color.
spective cultures that elevate and protect the dignity
been deeply affected by the wide circulation of Lenin’s
of the individual as against the claims of the state.
theory of imperialism and by the respect and awe
We have a major and persistent stake in a world en¬
with which they regard the Soviet example of rapid
vironment predominantly made up of open societies.
industrialization.
In terms of geography, it is a persistent interest
Asian thinking is strongly in¬
The attitudes of educated Asian leaders have
Aspects of Communism interest
and tempt Asians with peculiar strength.
By and
of the United States that no single power or power
large we face a much greater risk of seeing Asia pass
grouping militarily dominate either western or east¬
into hostile hands and become a threat to our se¬
ern Eurasia.
curity without any military aggression by the Com¬
In western Eurasia the threat of such
an outcome is posed for us by the virtual absorp¬
munist powers than we do in Europe.
tion within the Soviet empire of eastern Europe and
not be too strongly emphasized now when it appears
East Germany.
The threat would become virtually
to be the policy of Moscow and Peking to expand—
a reality should West Germany be lost to the Free
notably in Asia—while avoiding large-scale overt use
World.
In the East the threat of such an outcome
of their own armed forces, but using diplomacy, sub¬
is posed for us by the close alliance of the Soviet
version, and local guerrilla bands to erode and de¬
Union and Communist China.
stroy weak areas in the Free World.
The situation in
Asia is, however, more complicated than in Europe. Whereas in Europe West Germany, by and large, is the crux of the matter, in Asia there is Japan on the one hand and the whole area of Southeast Asia on the other, Southeast Asia stretching from Indo-China around Thailand, Burma, Malaya, Indonesia, India, and Pakistan.
In Asia the threat would become vir¬
tually a reality should either Japan or Southeast Asia be lost to the Free World. threats to the United States—a military threat and an ideological threat.
These threats are clearly related:
the ideological loss of India, for instance, would raise important military problems;
If a stalemate
develops in weapons of mass destruction, the conflict may be decided by techniques of a mixed politicalmilitary character without any real engagement even between the ground forces of the major powers. The New Weapons
Underlying all these basic considerations of United States interests in Europe and Asia is an inescapable fact of contemporary life—the existence of the new weapons of mass destruction.
It is plain that the Communist world poses two
This fact can¬
The new weapons have
this fundamental characteristic: when a nation has built up the air power necessary to deliver a certain number of them, its military strength is no longer increased in direct proportion to further increase in
the military loss of
the ability to deliver. It may not increase at all.
northern Indo-China has raised important problems
Thus, it appears that in the near future relative
of ideological orientation throughout Southeast Asia.
industrial strength may not be a measure of rela¬
But the two American interests are not and should
tive military strength above a critical absolute point.
not be considered identical.
The time necessary and
Also, we must assume that in the long run many na¬
the kind of effort required to cope with the military
tions, including those of Asia, will develop impor¬
threat are likely to differ from those required by the
tant if not absolute delivery capabilities.
ideological threat.
The military threat to South
If this is true, the historic security mission of the
Korea was dealt with in a few years; defeating the
United States in the perhaps transitory period of its
6 world primacy can be defined as follows: to employ
1. To eliminate the present threat of eventual Com¬
every American military, political, and economic ca¬
munist military superiority in Asia by defeating any
pability to achieve effective international control of
attempt at Communist military aggression and by
armaments; and to maintain indefinitely thereafter
building up the military strength of Free Asia.
that system of control by assuming the responsibili¬
it is obvious that there can be no steady and creative
ties of leadership in an effective coalition of all those
growth of free democratic societies in Asia as long
states likely to share the United States interest that
as Asia lives under the fear of Communist military
international control be maintained.
conquest.
The United
States must have no illusions about armament con¬ trol.
Armament control is a means to an end, but it
is not an end in itself.
It will not permit the United
States safely to relax.
If achieved, it will simply
For
2. To eliminate the ideological threat of Commu¬ nist victory in Asia by encouraging and reinforcing the steady progress of Asian nations toward inde¬ pendence as free democratic societies.
For the idea
move international relations into a more heavily po¬
of Communism cannot be destroyed.
litical phase, in which American security will require
replaced.
endless attention to the maintenance of an effective
principles only if these principles prove themselves
alliance among those states that share our interest
in action.
that control be sustained.
International control of
And it can be replaced by democratic
Although it is possible thus to define the United States interests in Asia in brief and simple terms,
armaments will not sustain itself. As we consider the meaning of the existence and fundamental characteristic of the new weapons it again becomes obvious that our security interest and our ideological interest are closely linked.
Since gov¬
ernments based on the democratic conception of the proper relation of the individual to the state tend to reflect the average citizen’s desire for peace, they are generally not warlike.
It can only be
Thus both the long-run se¬
curity of the United States and its short-run security are intimately tied to the success achieved by the Free World in its ideological struggle against totali¬ tarianism.
there is vast meaning in them for the American peo¬ ple.
The Communist threats in Asia are threats to
the United States. The threat of Chinese Communist military and ide¬ ological expansion endangers the whole Free World position in Asia.
The ideological threat to our in¬
terest, that is, the possibility that the Chinese Com¬ munists can prove to Asians by progress in China that Communist methods are better and faster than democratic methods, is as great as the military threat. But, if we meet the challenge of that ideological threat, if we defeat Communism in that conflict, our victory there might end decisively the wave of Com¬
We must be clearly aware of these broad United States security and ideological interests in Europe and Asia, of the connection between these interests, and
munist expansion begun in 1917 and set the stage for serious measures of peace on a worldwide basis. The heart of the military threat to the United
of their connection to the struggle between Commu¬
States lies in the Soviet Union: in Soviet atomic
nism and the free societies.
weapon delivery capabilities, its army, and the indus¬
These three factors de¬
termine the specific United States interests in Asia.
trial potential behind them.
The Soviet Union,
Europe, and North America are now the centers of The Balance of Power and Ideology
military power.
But, barring a gross disintegration
Our interests in Asia are thus defensive—therefore
of the western alliance and western purposes. Com¬
in one sense negative; and they are offensive—there¬
munism can advance in the West only by military
fore positive and creative.
means, with the certainty of a major war that would
They exist side by side
as inseparable parts of a whole.
In these terms, it
be likely to destroy the foundations of Soviet power
is the very real and pressing interest of the United
in Russia.
States to hold and strengthen the precarious balance
advance is in Asia.
of power and ideology the Free World still holds in
munism in Asia might have decisive over-all conse¬
Asia.
quences.
This means that we must strive:
The most promising line for Communist Thus a major defeat of Com¬
7 The United States interest in Asia means, in the end, that we face complex and difficult tasks.
other peoples are basic to our security.
We must
We
strain our efforts to avoid seeing the balance of power
must be prepared to meet the challenge of raw mili¬
and ideology move against us in Europe and Asia.
tary power when it is used against us, as in Korea.
There was a long time when Britain, in combination
We must, working with our friends, learn to deal
with other European states, could do the job, aided
effectively with subversion and insurrection, as in the
by our occasional intervention.
Philippines a few years back and as now in Southern
must work over the indefinite future with those who
Vietnam.
share our interests.
Simultaneously, we must bend our crea¬
Now we ourselves
tive efforts by every possible means and over a long
We remain what we have been since the eighteenth
time toward building economic and political strength
century—the decisive portion of an island-continent,
in the societies of Free Asia.
lying off the still greater and ultimately more power¬
substitute for the other.
And neither job can
When guns are confronted,
ful land mass of Eurasia.
We have grown in the
they must be met with guns or there will be no Free
past century and a half, but Eurasia has also be¬
Asia to build.
stirred itself.
Unless creative progress is palpable
Vast areas, sluggish or passive in the
and hope is strong, there may be no power in Asia
nineteenth century, are now great powers or are striv¬
to resist Communist aggression when it comes in
ing to become great powers.
military form.
weapons have altered the strategic meaning of the
Communications and
oceans; and the fate of our society depends substan¬ The Responsibility of Coalition
tially on how we use or fail to use the limited but
As we face the tasks imposed on us by the new
real power and influence we can bring to bear on
importance of Asia in our national life and to our
the evolution of Eurasia.
And it is in the nature of
future, the first step we take must be to adjust our
the case, the case of an island coping with develop¬
thinking, our very emotions, to a new relationship
ments on a vast continent, that we must apply our
between ourselves and other peoples.
Perhaps the
power and influence in conjunction with others; for
most confusing aspect of our new and revolutionary
it is on the military and political orientation of
relation to the outside world is this: the accident of
other peoples living in distant places that our fate
world history has forced us quite suddenly from a
ultimately depends.
position where our interests appeared to be served by
ful, we shall remain a coalition power, with all the
the avoidance of alliances into a position where the
responsibilities and need for understanding ourselves
maintenance of alliances and a steady working with
and others that position demands.
We are and, if we are success¬
CHAPTER
The Broad Foundations for Alliance in Free Asia The outlook of the Asian political leadership ap¬
Basic Differences in Outlook
pears to differ significantly from the instinctive out-
Our postwar experience in Asia has made clear
that there is still no solid basis of common under¬ TTbok of Americans on four key issues: imperialism and colonialism, economic growth, the nature of standing between the Western World and the lit¬ erate Asians, who largely determine the course of
Communism, the nature of the democratic process.
Asian politics.
The Communist movement has made a sustained eF-”
The failure to understand each other
has had serious consequences in China and Indo-
fort to induce the Asian to interpret these issues in
China.
Communist terms.
It is an obstacle to building a serious Free
From the doubts, fears, and frus¬
World alliance embracing India, Burma, and Indo¬
trations of the literate Asian, Communist parties have
nesia.
sought
It presents problems even in areas where a
to
create
an
“intellectual
climate” *
that
precarious basis for common action appears to have
would lead Asians to reject western concepts and ac¬
been achieved: Japan, South Korea, Formosa, and
tively or passively accept Communism.
Pakistan.
ing in Asia with a literate leadership quite strongly
We are deal¬
influenced by Marxist and Communist ways of look¬
Asia embraces a variety of cultures and of modern
ing at the world around them.
experience: the Japanese view of colonialism and its perspective on economic problems is a special case;
Those responsible for American policy have been
the view of Communism in South Korea and on For¬
uneasily aware of this problem but have never come
mosa differs from that in India or Burma; the pri¬
fully to grips with it.
ority given economic development is higher in India
lem of shaping or even influencing the ideas that
and Burma than in Thailand or Indonesia.
govern the action of others is difficult for us.
The lit¬
For several reasons the prob¬ We
erate Asians who shape Asian politics are individual
rarely engage on an official basis in efforts to reshape
men and women living in distinctive societies spread
the ideas of our own citizens.
over the great arc from Japan to India.
Neverthe¬
so to speak, in an open market, where many indi¬
less, their relations to the West and especially to the
viduals and groups assert their views about what the
United States pose certain common problems and
important problems are and how they ought to be
offer certain common foundations on which to build
solved.
and sustain a Free World alliance including Asia.
a normal part of the workings of our society.
It is the purpose of this chapter to identify those
decision-influencing techniques most familiar to us,
problems and foundations and then to suggest some
primarily commercial advertising techniques, do not
The process proceeds,
We do not develop propaganda specialists as The
broad lines of United States action that appear neces¬ * For an excellent
sary to build and sustain an effective alliance in
discussion of
this problem, see
George
Taylor, “Asia’s Intellectual Climate,” The Yale Review, Winter,
Free Asia.
1953.
8
9 convert easily or effectively into methods for affecting the minds of intellectuals.
Economic Growth
Perhaps most important,
The aspirations of the Asian intellectual appear to
we in the United States are not clear in our minds
him impossible of achievement without a prompt
about the problems that concern the Asian; nor have
transformation of his nation’s economy.
we developed clear positions and lines of action in re¬
independence, international stature, higher levels of
lation to them that we can project effectively by word
individual human dignity, all manner of desired so¬
and deed.
cial reforms hinge on the achievement of a higher
Our concepts are, after all, the product
of a Christian, feudal, capitalist past, and they do not translate automatically into Asian idiom. If we are to sustain a position of Free World lead¬
National
standard of living. The creation of a situation in which sustained eco¬ nomic growth will be more or less automatic is ex¬
ership in a world embracing Asia, we must begin
ceedingly difficult.
with a cool but sympathetic appraisal of the prob¬
undeveloped country to such a situation has taken
lems the Asian regards as important and with an
ten to twenty years, preceded by a much longer period
understanding of how he looks at them.
of preparation marked by partial and sporadic eco¬ nomic progress.
Colonialism
Historically, the transition of an
It involves not only the mobilization
and wise use of a nation’s savings but also the accept¬
The impact of colonialism on the minds of literate
ance of new methods.
More than that, it requires
Asians has been too complex to be dealt with in any
changes in human attitudes from top to bottom of
detail; but the principal consequences of that impact
the society and the drastic alteration of institutions.
so far as they affect our relationships with Asia can
Certain of the Asian nations are striving purposefully
be stated in simple terms.
to make this transition, notably India and Burma.
Asians place a much higher priority than we do on the elimination of colonialism from those parts of the world in which it still exists.
They are intolerant of
delay in the solution of the many problems of the transition of colonial areas to independence; they are impatient for results.
Asians are inclined to accept
all or part of Lenin’s theory of imperialism and there¬ fore to accept the Communist interpretation of the motives of the West with respect to colonies: that is, they believe or half believe that the West has been driven on to create and then to cling to its imperial holdings
by
the
inevitable
working
of
capitalist
economies. In the midst of a transition from dependence to responsibility for their own problems and destiny, Asians are prone to blame all their difficulties on a colonial past; and they are extraordinarily sensitive to any action or attitude that might seem to be
Others, notably Pakistan and Indonesia, are con¬ cerned with the problem of growth but have not yet grasped the magnitude of the task and the responsi¬ bilities it imposes upon the nation’s leadership. Whatever the exact stage of the growth process in Asia, the problem of domestic economic progress has first place in the minds of many Asians.
They feel
that Americans are so concerned with the menace of Communist aggression in Asia that we fail to give proper emphasis and priority to their real interests, problems,
and
ambitions.
They
seek,
sometimes
wishfully, to maintain by whatever means are open to them an environment in which their own resources and those of the rest of the world can be devoted pri¬ marily to the searching domestic tasks implicit in the growth process. This frame of mind, not easily understood by Americans or others who live in societies where the
patronizing on our part. Most important, perhaps, the total problem of
transition to growth has been accomplished, poses
East-West relationships is complicated by deep, often
searching questions for the United States.
Can we
unconscious, issues of race and color.
The intensity
more effectively associate ourselves with Asian efforts
of certain anti-Western and anti-American reactions
to create a sustained rise in real income per capita?
on the part of Asians is undoubtedly caused by fierce
Can we simultaneously help induce the Asian leaders
underlying resentment of real or believed attitudes of
to take measures to cope with the various forms of
racial superiority in the West.
Communist aggression before it is too late?
10 Of course, if this represented the total of Asian
The Outlook on Communism
Americans generally think of Communism as a pur¬
thinking the Asians would long ago have all been
poseful conspiracy to maintain itself in power where
Communists.
it has already seized power and to expand its power
munism is weakened by increasing knowledge of the
to the limit compatible with the security of its exist¬
facts of Soviet society, by a profound nationalism
ing bases.
which distrusts the international nature of Commu¬
The image of Communism general among
nism, by the growing irrelevance of arguments based
Asian intellectuals is more complex. Marxist dogma, which offers a broad batch of sim¬ ple
concepts
for
interpreting and
The tendency to be attracted by Com¬
predicting
the
on past colonial history, by elements of humanistic individualism derived both from Asian cultures and
course of societies, exercises great power over Asian
from knowledge of the West.
Nevertheless, it is es¬
intellectuals, including non-Communists.
The diffuse
sential for us to understand that the Asian image of
and complex concepts of the West are more difficult
Communism is very different from ours; and that an
to grasp; and their very lack of dogmatism is dis¬
effective effort to build and sustain an alliance must
turbing to some Asians who, in the unsettled state of
recognize and cope with these special attitudes of
the societies in which they live, find satisfaction in
mind.
the false clarity and specious firmness of Marxism. Lenin’s doctrine of imperialism in particular has strongly influenced the minds of Asian intellectuals, especially those who now are leaders in the various Asian nations.
Almost without exception these men
spent the formative years of their lives struggling against colonial rule; and in their youth the Commu¬ nist concept of imperialism deeply impressed them as an explanation of the problem that most concerned them. The fact that the Communist struggle against the West has accelerated the breakup of colonial rule— for example, that French concessions to Indo-Chinese independence were related to the military pressure of Vietminh—has impressed the Asians.
Soviet methods
of industrialization, ruthless as they have been, appear to many Asians more applicable to Asia than the more humane processes that western values would suggest. Some Asians, although pursuing policies that are con¬ sistent with democratic practice, are not sure that
Asia and Democracy
The attachment of Asian political leaders to the fundamental
principles of democratic theory
and
practice and their understanding of them are often very deep.
In one sense democracy may mean more
to them than to many Americans.
In their minds it
is linked to the removal of colonial rule and to the elevation of the dignity and status of individuals whose subjection and subservience have been living facts.
In the United States we take much for granted.
But there are important distinctions between Asian and American attitudes toward the democratic proc¬ ess.
Mass illiteracy and the existence of vast peasant
populations still bound in traditional cultures give the educated minority in Asia a position of leader¬ ship and power for which there is no equivalent in American democracy.
Initiative must come from the
top down; and, by standards of American society, the outlook of the few leaders has disproportionate influence.
they will succeed and not sure that they will not have
American democracy is linked to a system of pri¬
to fall back on Stalin’s or Mao’s methods at a later
vate capitalism that assumes the existence of a large
stage.
responsible middle class capable of performing the
Finally, the Asian is powerfully affected by the
task of saving, initiating new methods, efficient man¬
western failures in China and Indo-China, and by
agement, tax paying, and so on.
the possibility that Communism may, in fact, prove
erally do not have such a middle class.
to be Asia’s wave of the future.
The ineffectual per¬
combined with the special difficulties of Asian econo¬
formance of the West in Asia, systematically empha¬
mies in transition, makes private capitalism much
sized in Communist propaganda, encourages Asians
less automatically an adjunct to democracy there
to accept Communism or neutrality rather than at¬
than here.
tempt resistance.
more powerful and especially more direct state con-
Asian societies gen¬ This fact,
Generally speaking, we must expect a
11 trol of economic activities in Asia than in the United
good will, human concern, and willingness to help
States.
which run deep through the American people and
Further, the existence of widespread hunger, pov¬
which can be brought to bear on the problem of
erty, disease, and illiteracy strongly influences Asian
building an Asian coalition.
ideas about the most important tasks for the demo¬
not so wrapped up in its own problems and difficul¬
cratic process.
ties as to lack a margin of energy to give to the con¬
Free elections and the other purely
The United States is
political mechanisms of democracy appear less impor¬
temporary drama of Asia.
tant to Asians than the relief of social and economic
its citizens have a direct interest in the outcome of
evils.
Asia’s struggle with its own problems and with Com¬ munism.
The Foundations for Coalition
The United States and
United States action to assist in a demo¬
cratic resolution is in the national interest; and this
Although the potential cross purposes between the
fact should not be concealed from ourselves or from
United States and Asian intellectuals are significant,
the world.
there are real foundations of common interests and
ing transcend the national interest in its narrower
objectives on which a coalition could be built.
sense.
But the motives of individuals in assist¬
Our religious and ethical value systems, our
In addition to the American tradition of anti¬
curiosity and sense of challenge in the face of tough
colonialism, there is, first, the simple fact of Indian,
problems, are, for many Americans, all engaged when
Burmese, Indonesian, and Philippine independence.
we contemplate the state of Asia.
British and American statesmanship and the Dutch
istic American policy must build on these qualities
acceptance of defeat have lifted a large part of the
among Americans as well as on the more conven¬
colonial burden in Asia.
tional areas of national interest and motivation.
Second, there is the simple
A wise and real¬
fact of responsibility for Asians, which is producing among those who are rising in the new national states a changing attitude toward their own countries and the external world.
Responsibility has made them
Some Possible Lines of
United States Action
It lies within American capabilities to improve our relations with Asian political leadership.
There are
look at their own limitations, and it has gradually
things to be done that we are not now doing, things
made them aware of the need for protecting their so¬
we should do better, and things we should stop doing.
cieties from internal and external aggression.
Their
Two thoughts above any others should be built into
reliance on the colonial powers is steadily decreasing,
any American program and should govern the be¬
a process that also decreases the tendency to blame
havior of the men who carry it out.
all difficulties on
Although
dealing in Asia with societies going through a com¬
we confront here a complex process that will take
plex and painful transition; a transition takes time;
decades to work itself out, the shape of a mature re¬
our working horizon at any given moment must be
lationship of mutual respect and dignity is begin¬
at least a decade; and we must be prepared above all
ning to emerge.
to sustain steadily the actions we undertake.
the colonial powers.
One element in that potential re¬
First, we are
Second,
lationship is that the former colonial areas will re¬
we are also dealing in Asia with complex and sensitive
quire a measure of economic and military assistance
human beings, coming to responsibility after a difficult
that only the United States and its western allies can
history; their effective assumption of responsibility is
provide.
our interest; and the mood of dignified partnership
Third, despite the power of Marxist ideas
over Asian minds and the favorable image of Com¬ munism, there is growing knowledge of Communist methods, with an increasing Asian awareness of the
should color all our relations with them. The main lines of action worth consideration ap¬ pear to be these.
reality of their threat. But the United States can offer more than an anti¬ colonial policy, economic assistance, military protec¬
Policy toward Colonialism
The United States should use its influence more
Its decisive
strongly to speed up the process of transition to in¬
resource for an Asian coalition is the disinterested
dependence in the areas where colonialism still exists.
tion, and alliance against Communism.
12 As the Indo-China situation has made abundantly
than to be trapped openly between contesting Free
dear, we did France and ourselves serious injury by
World groups.
financing France in Indo-China although France was
3. It is the lesson of the postwar years that it is
delaying interminably the dismantling of its Asian
safer for the colonial powers and ourselves to move
empire.
sooner rather than later.
Only Britain’s relinquishing of power in
India and Burma gave the Free World a real pos¬ sibility of sustaining significant ties with Southeast Asia.
The developing situation in colonial Africa,
Partnership for Economic Growth
The American interest in Asian economic growth
which Asians watch with the closest attention, presents
is an acknowledged part of national policy.
us now with issues of statesmanship in which the tim¬
the things we ought to do to accelerate the economic
ing of our actions will greatly matter.
transition of Asia are under way in one form or an¬
We must not underestimate the difficulty of engi¬ neering a peaceful transition to independence.
There
Most of
other: private and public loans, technical assistance, scientific
aid,
students’
grants,
food grants when
are problems of constitutional formulas for each stage,
needed, and so on.
and there are the deeper and more important prob¬
efforts and, especially, to make far greater efforts than
lems of developing increased competence and respon¬
we have thus far to enable Asians to understand and
sibility among the native populations involved.
believe in our genuine interest in their problems.
Our
It remains for us to increase such
general objective must be to make persuasive the
We must make it clear that our interest in their
promise of ultimate independence for colonial peoples
transition is distinctly separated from our military
and to make the fulfillment of that promise visible
interests in Asia.
by giving those peoples increasing responsibility for
are obsessed with military problems, possibly in prepa¬
their own political and social growth.
ration for an American-instigated war.
The develop¬
Too many Asians believe that we Asian con¬
ment of the capability to govern is a circular process,
fusion about American purposes will not be dissipated
in which the experience of responsibility is essential
at a stroke, but a fresh statement of our concern with
to create the capability to assume greater responsi¬
Asian economic development, backed by prompt and
bility.
sustained action, would go far toward creating an
We should recall here our national experience
in the progress of the American Negro toward full citizenship status.
accurate Asian view of our purposes. Our efforts to assist the growth process in Asia
Obviously, it is one thing to agree on a general ob¬
should certainly be enlarged; for economic growth
jective for American policy toward colonialism and
is a matter of degree, not merely a matter of the gen¬
quite another matter to find the right formulas in
eral direction of policy.
particular situations at particular moments of history.
invest more resources in Asia as part of a purposeful
There are no magic formulas, for example, on the
regional development program.
troubled issues of Africa.
accelerated from many directions, our efforts should
But three general proposi¬
tions can be asserted:
We should be prepared to Since growth can be
remain diverse; but, in terms of administration and
1. The possibility of American leadership in Asia
in American and Asian minds, they should be unified
depends in large part on Asians’ believing that it is
by an American policy of partnership for growth,
an unequivocal American policy to accelerate the
within which many private and public agencies could
transition to independence throughout the world.
play a constructive part.
We must accept the Amer¬
2. Since some of our allies have colonial posses¬
ican role in the partnership, not as a quick emergency
sions, there is a temptation for us to express our views
task of aid or reconstruction, but as an effort designed
but still maintain American neutrality when it comes
to extend over a decade at least; and the political and
to action on this issue.
Such neutrality will only de¬
institutional forces must be mobilized on that basis.
lay the process of transition and confront us in the
It is essential to emphasize the interconnection of
end with almost insoluble crises.
By and large, it is
Asia’s regional problems, especially the close link be¬
likely to be sounder Free World policy to press hard
tween Japan’s dangerous foreign trade problem and
our colonial partners (preferably behind the scenes)
the requirements of growth in Southeast Asia.
More-
13 over, important technical assistance is possible among
Southeast Asia.
Asian nations themselves—for instance, the general
sistance to military aid.
lessons to be learned from Indian planning experi¬
rity measures only where people share our awareness
ence and Formosan agriculture.
and sense of urgency.
We should not link economic as¬ We can take common secu¬
Indian leaders are acutely aware
There is a final element that should be introduced
of Communist political activity in India, and nothing
in such a fresh effort at consolidation and enlargement
we say is likely to make them more aware or more
of our economic policy in Asia.
able in coping with it.
We are engaged in
They are acutely and increas¬
a direct competition between Chinese Communist
ingly aware of Communist operations around their
theories of the Asian transition and those generated
borders.
elsewhere in Asia.
of national pride to respond.
The Chinese Communist theories
We can and we must rely on their own sense They do not now be¬
are derived almost wholesale from the Soviet and east¬
lieve that Communist intentions require the creation
ern European satellite experiences.
of an Asian defense pact.
They involve the
Neither pressure nor ties
ruthless mobilization of capital by the state, a priority
between promised economic aid and military asso¬
for heavy industry and armaments, limited investment
ciation will persuade them.
in agriculture, and a totalitarian system of controls over the individual.
Led by India, Free Asia is ex¬
perimenting with a different pattern.
This pattern
Our anti-Communist propaganda in Asia should be factual and accurate. own minds.
Asians must make up their
If their view of Communist theory and
involves a lesser relative mobilization of capital, pri¬
practice is false, it will not be altered by exhortation
ority for agriculture over industry, and the effort to
or rhetoric from us.
generate voluntary, cooperative, individual action to
reliable and relevant information combined with their
stimulate economic growth.
own experience.
It may be altered by a flow of
The outcome in Asia will depend on the relative
The United States believes there are two kinds of
results achieved in China and in the rest of Asia. The
Communist threats: a military threat and a political
Free World would be strengthened if our social sci¬
threat.
entists could develop in concrete form a general set
ers who accept the reality of the second threat but not
of growth concepts based on past and contemporary
the first.
experience and on democratic political and social
threats; but we should also be prepared to separate
principles.
our efforts and to use coalitions of different composi¬
There is little doubt that Asians are at
this point overly impressed with what they believe
There are those among Asian political lead¬ We must be prepared to deal with both
tions to deal with each.
has been the Soviet economic performance and with
The positive response of India and Southeast Asia
Communist China’s well-advertised industrialization
to the United Nations action in defense of South
plan.
Korea, in the summer of 1950, suggests that collective
A sober evaluation of the modern world’s ex¬
perience of the transition to sustained growth, focused
security
for defensive purposes is not unpopular
on the concrete problems and setting of Asia, would
among those who control Asian politics.
give confidence and perspective to those now charged
northward crossing of the 38th parallel was not pop¬
with guiding the development plans of Free Asia.
ular with most Asians.
This is not so much a task for governments as one for
are not in
Asian and western social scientists to undertake to¬
munism.
gether.
it is clear; and defensive collective security measures
But the
In general the Asian leaders
a mood for military crusade against Com¬ They will react to military menace when
can probably be developed in time and with patience. Intelligent Anti-Communism
It will require skill and patience to change Asian
But peace is an immensely powerful word and concept in Asia.
It does not imply a willingness among Asians
thinking about Communism itself, especially the Asian
to see their countries turned over to Communism by
reluctance to consider the military threat of Com¬
internal or external aggression; rather, it reflects a
munism.
desire to leave no stone unturned, no device unex¬
The United States should sharply reduce its ex¬ hortation and pressure for anti-Communist action in
plored, to prevent the world’s tension from generating a major war.
14 If we are to maintain an alliance embracing the
In a democracy there is wide acceptance of the prin¬
Asian peoples, it is essential that they understand and
ciple that the citizens have certain rights in the face
believe in our peaceful purposes.
The widespread
of the state and, especially, in the acceptance of their
belief in Asia that we intend to launch aggressive war
aspirations to move toward an enlargement of those
is already extremely costly to us.
rights.
And, should war
A totalitarian state is one in which no sig¬
come, its outcome in both political and power terms
nificant effort is made to achieve the compromise be¬
may well hinge on whether or not Asians believe that
tween the sanctity of the individual and the needs of
it was started by us.
the state; the moral weakness of men in power is ig¬
Thus, the permanent recapture by the United States
nored; the aspiration toward a higher degree of demo¬
of the symbols of peace is an essential ingredient in
cratic quality is not recognized as good; and, con¬
any anti-Communist policy that aims to bring and
versely, the extreme authority of concentrated power
hold the Asian intellectual in the Free World alliance;
is declared to be a virtue.
and this requires that we make our purposes clear and
A broad view of the democratic process is necessary
that we demonstrate by our words and actions not
if we are to understand sympathetically the political
only a willingness to use American military strength
evolution of Asia.
against Communist military aggression but also an
mocracy developed there will differ from our own, and
equal willingness to explore all avenues of peaceful
that the functions of the state in relation to the in¬
adjustment with the Communist bloc that are con¬
dividual will differ from those we would advocate in
sistent with our basic interests.
the United States.
It requires that we
It is certain that the forms of de¬
It is further evident that, even if
demonstrate a willingness to help positively with the
democratic Asia manages to make the transition to
great domestic tasks of transition which confront the
self-sustaining growth, conquer the problems of illiter¬
new Asian nations.
acy, and develop grass-roots democratic processes, the result will be forms of society radically different from
The Democratic Process
our own.
It is a persistent characteristic of American society reaching back to the Declaration of Independence that we enunciate our ideals in abstract absolutes.
As a
nation, we promptly translated our political beliefs into the Constitution which reflects not merely ideal aspirations but a shrewd awareness of human frailty and of the special problems of national politics.
We
have maintained in our domestic political life this mixture of idealistic aspiration and practicality; but we tend to present our purposes to others in terms of moral absolutes that match neither our performance nor the facts and possibilities of the real world out¬ side the United States.
These qualities in our own
The various cultures of Asia will leave
marks on Asian politics. These observations have certain implications for American action and public statement.
The behavior
and words of responsible Americans must reflect an awareness of the range of legitimate democratic forms, clarity about the minimum common democratic es¬ sences, and a living sense of the endless striving that is the democratic process.
On this basis, a common
understanding with Asians might be erected; whereas a rigid projection of the meaning of democracy only in terms of American ideas and experience at this stage of our history is likely to seem empty and remote
society raise certain specific issues for America’s rela¬
to those struggling toward similar goals but faced with
tions with the Asian.
very different problems and cultural settings.
First, we must come to understand and to articulate what is the essential truth about democracy.
Democ¬
Second, American policy must reassess the impor¬ tance of politics and political action in the Free World
racy is a matter of aspiration and degree; it is not an
alliance.
absolute.
sumption that it will preserve or accelerate the de¬
In all societies the freedom of an individual
Economic aid is usually given on the as¬
is limited by the requirements of civil order, common
velopment of democracy in political practice.
defense, and certain other matters of common welfare.
are conditions where this assumption is invalid.
There
The balance struck between liberty and order will
It is essential that there be an increase in relative
differ from society to society and from time to time.
power in Asian societies of those groups who meet
15 both the American interests: namely, that they wrestle
Indo-China would have been very different from what
with vigor, intelligence, and democratic technique
it proved to be.
with their domestic problems and that they under¬
using our full bargaining power to bring about an
stand and are prepared to resist assorted Communist
effective change in French colonial policy, we inter¬
efforts at subversion and aggression.
fered mightily in Indo-China.
Given the force
By giving France resources without
This is merely the
of unsatisfied Asian aspirations, men who meet the
most current and painful of several such lessons to
second but not the first criterion are likely to be in¬
be learned from our postwar experience.
effective in mobilizing support for the foreign policies we find most congenial.
In order to bring the best and ablest Asians into
The success of our efforts
a responsible coalition with us, our political policy in
at economic and military assistance has generally de¬
Asia must, in good balance, pursue both aspects of
pended since 1945 on local political constellations
our national interest; and we must proceed with a
embracing both elements: e.g., in the United King¬
dual awareness—a humble awareness of the limits of
dom, Turkey, the Philippines in the past few years.
American influence and an acute awareness of the
Our failures or danger spots are notable for a lack
unavoidable margin of our influence.
of this convergence: e.g., Nationalist China 1945-1949, Conclusion
Indo-China, Italy. It must be recognized immediately that the Amer¬
The general problem for American policy repre¬
ican ability to shape the local political scene is limited.
sented by Asian political leadership comes to this: at
It is an illusion, however, to believe that non-inter¬
present the Asian is not at all sure that his own and
ference is possible in the modern world.
his country’s interests and objectives are also United
Without
United States assistance (or with assistance in different
States interests and objectives.
forms or under different conditions) the postwar evo¬
and hold the literate Asian within the Free World
lution of Italy and South Korea, Indo-China, France,
alliance, he must come to believe that American in¬
and Formosa would, for better or worse, have been
terests and objectives conform in important respects
different from what it has been.
to his own.
American power and
If we wish to bring
And we must accept the basic fact that
its degree of involvement around the world make us
whether men are with us or against us does not de¬
a more powerful force in local politics than our tech¬
pend primarily on whether they like us; it does not
niques and habits of conventional diplomacy would
depend primarily on whether we give them money;
credit.
Our task is to use our influence well—to aid
on whether or not they are grateful for our assistance;
the essential political convergence where possible, not
it does not even depend on whether or how much they
to retreat to the illusion that we are not interfering.
hate and fear Communism; but it does depend heavily
History is unlikely to forgive us for serving as banker
on whether they believe United States interests and
to a supremely self-defeating French policy in Indo-
objectives as we see them overlap with their interests
China.
and objectives as they see them.
Without our aid, French political policy in
CHAPTER
The Free Chinese squarely to the issue of the United States interest in
Who and Where They Are
The Communist conquest of a country has generally
the Asian future, it is essential that we look more
meant that only a handful of its people, too few to
closely at the Free Chinese as one of the significant
represent
other
components of the over-all Asian situation that we
They could hardly be
must include in any calculation of the purposes and
any
great
potential
strength, have remained free.
political
or
possible effects of our Asian policy.
either a significant threat to the Communist regime
In the broadest sense all of the Free Chinese wher¬
in their native country or a major concern of Amer¬ ican policy.
ever they are represent a potential for keeping alive
The Communist conquest of China is
an exception to this general rule.
the symbols and realities of Chinese culture and as¬
There are some
pirations beyond the corrupting reach of Communism.
15,000,000 Chinese still beyond the reach of Chinese
Their presence, either as a minority in an Asian so¬
Communist control; and, in contrast to most ex¬
ciety or as a nucleus on Formosa, is the best possible
patriates and exiles, they have such potential political
evidence that the Chinese Communists do not speak
and economic power that they are a key factor in the Communist attempt to win Asia.
for all the Chinese people.
The Chinese Com¬
nese can be unified in spirit by a common allegiance
munist regime, well aware of this, has, since the be¬
to the true principles of the Chinese revolution, which
ginning of its rule, made increasing efforts to win the
looked to the making of a free democratic China,
Chinese now outside of mainland China to Com¬
there will be a living alternative to the present totali¬
munism, efforts so persistent that they have alarmed
tarian Communist China. A Free Chinese alternative,
the leaders in such Free Asian countries as India,
like the alternative of the successful political and eco¬
Burma, and Thailand.
nomic growth of a Free Asia outlined in the preceding
The United States has been slow to understand fully
chapters, would be a challenge to Communist claims
the connection between the loyalties of the Free Chi¬
to Asian leadership and could progressively weaken
nese and the United States interests in the growth
Communist rule in China itself.
and transition to independence of Free Asia and in the future of Communist China.
So long as the Free Chi¬
These generalizations indicate the basic nature of
To most Americans
the Free Chinese are an unknown quantity.
the United States interest in the future of the Free
And,
Chinese.
If the Free Chinese were all in one place,
therefore, although we have been sharply aware of
we might consider the problem of advancing our in¬
Formosa as a military problem, we have failed to sense
terest and theirs in terms of some inclusive single
the broad significance of the total phenomenon of the
policy.
Free Chinese in Asia, of which the military defense
varying degrees of influence that the United States can
of Formosa is only one part.
exert on them and the special nature of their position
If we are to face up 16
As it is, they are widely dispersed; and the
17 in their various locations make it necessary to consider
reorientation, and has had to face the possibility of
them in terms of a whole range of problems.
being forced to live under a Communist government
The simplest approach to understanding the Free
no matter where in Asia he might be.
Chinese potential and the possible lines of action that
This conventional Overseas Chinese, whose think¬
the United States might take to strengthen that po¬
ing has been woven over time into the whole texture
tential in the interest of the Free World is to consider
of Overseas Chinese thought, is outnumbered by those
separately three principal Free Chinese elements: the
of the second, third, and fourth generation born out¬
Overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia, the exile Chinese
side of China—in northern Malaya, for instance, some
intellectuals, and the Chinese Nationalist regime on
75 per cent of the Chinese population.
Formosa.
who have never seen any other place but the country
To this group,
where they were born, China has not meant either a The Overseas Chinese
home or a goal; but it has symbolized their identity
Like any other immigrant, the Chinese as an in¬
and dignity as a people.
Therefore, they, as well as
dividual in Southeast Asia left his native land in search
the first generation, have retained in varying degrees
of opportunity to acquire economic status he could
their hold on language and customs; they have sought
not hope for at home.
But, unlike most other immi¬
to establish their own schools; in good times their
grants, he had a deeply rooted, almost religious, de¬
sons have gone to China for college education; and,
termination to return to China—to his family village
like the first generation of immigrants, they have had
for a life of retired ease, if possible, but at least to
a sustained interest in the strength and stability of
live his last days and be buried in the place of his
China’s government while taking only a minimum
ancestors.
He had, therefore, little real interest in
interest in the local political situation except as it
the affairs of his temporarily adopted land so long as
touched them personally in the form of taxes or dis¬
business was good.
crimination.
He kept to himself unless a short¬
age of women of his own kind encouraged intermar¬
A first generalization, then, is that the Overseas
riage—and even then often kept his wife in China and,
Chinese in Southeast Asia, identifying themselves sen¬
while he was making his way up the economic ladder,
timentally with ancestral China, are currently listen¬
returned there periodically to beget sons.
ing to and watching both the Communists and the
He invested
a large share of his savings in land at home.
It fol¬
lowed that he was inactive in local politics but keenly
Free World, waiting to see where the ultimate strength lies.
Although prone
Over the years the Overseas Chinese acquired in¬
to judge a regime by the single criterion of strength,
creasing power in the economies of most of the South¬
he was by no means without principles and political
east Asian countries.
philosophy; and he financed and supported the 1911
per cent of the population, as in Thailand, or only
Revolution.
from 2 to 7 per cent as in the Philippines, Indonesia,
aware of the state of things at home.
This conventional Overseas Chinese still existed in some numbers in 1949.
He thought that he saw
Whether they represented 16
and Indo-China, they secured near-monopoly control of both wholesale and retail trade.
In Malaya, in
China unified and then given international status by
addition to controlling pineapple and poultry raising,
a strong central government that could even live up
they owned and operated more than a third of the
to its immediate promises to protect the rights of
tin mines; in Thailand they owned 80 per cent of the
Chinese wherever they were in Asia.
rice mills and furnished 70 per cent of the non-agri-
But then, as
news from mainland China leaked out to the rest of
cultural labor.
Asia, it became very plain that the Communist system
The rise of Asian nationalism has been almost uni¬
had no place in it for a life of retirement supported
versally accompanied by increased local hostility to
by investment in land—or, probably, in anything else.
the Chinese, arising invariably from the combination
China was no longer home; home was now where he
of their economic power and their unassimilability.
lived.
At the present time they are confronted with pressing
Thus the conventional senior Overseas Chinese
has had old roots cut, has had to attempt a difficult
local difficulties.
In many places their citizenship
18 Economic hostility causes them real
nese teaching in the national system, and other re¬
fears, whether it takes the concrete form of trade-
strictions have resulted in strong and increasing Com¬
exclusion laws such as those recently enacted by the
munist sympathies and complete Communist control
Philippine government and such exclusion acts as the
of Chinese labor unions.
Thailand laws closing some twenty-seven occupations
widely successful in penetrating educational systems
to Chinese, or whether it is evidenced only by a na¬
in Asia; and, according to their figures, drew 10,086
tional mood that makes their future uncertain.
Their
students, nearly all Overseas Chinese, from Asian com¬
attempts to preserve their own language and culture,
munities to the Communist mainland universities in
especially to establish their own schools beyond the
1953.
primary level, have met increasing resistance; language
returning Chinese students came from first-generation
and other obstacles have made local education at col¬
immigrant families, not from those fairly established
lege level practically inaccessible.
in the Overseas communities.
status is obscure.
The Communists have been
It must be noted, however, that apparently all
A second valid generalization is that the Overseas
On the other hand, the Overseas Chinese response
Chinese in Southeast Asia are more urgently con¬
to Formosa’s appeals has steadily increased as For¬
cerned with their own local problems of status and
mosa’s survival seems more sure and its regime to
survival than with external affairs, their first problem
represent, at least to the older generation, something
being that of integration into the various societies
more familiar and better than Communism.
where they live.
was host to only 826 Overseas Chinese university stu¬
In the situation outlined by these generalizations,
Formosa
dents in 1953, the first year any real effort was made
the Overseas Chinese in Southeast Asia, with their
to counter the Communist drive in education.
sentimental ties to the ancestral land but the facts of
small number is an indication of Formosa’s previous
life dictated by the local climate, have been, since
failure to encourage students, which reflects both in¬
1949, subject to three separate pressures.
Local gov¬
adequate facilities and lack of vision, rather than an
ernments have attempted both to limit their economic
indication of lack of Overseas Chinese students who
power and to encourage or compel their social inte¬
would go to Formosa if given the chance.
gration.
Formosa, at first with only limited means
Chinese interest in the educational problem has led
and imagination, has gradually worked up a steady
to their own establishment of a new Overseas Chinese
appeal for their loyalty but has had little to give in
university in Singapore, under the direction of local
return, not offering until 1953 even a token oppor¬
Chinese businessmen.
tunity for college education on the island.
The
Overseas
The Chi¬
The foregoing is a brief summary of salient facts.
nese Communists have consistently played every angle
Chinese now in the United States who have kept in
from the beginning: propaganda by radio and the
constant touch with the Overseas Chinese or have re¬
printed word, infiltration of Asian schools with both
cently returned frdln visits to the Overseas Chinese
personnel and texts, guidance and then leadership of
communities in Southeast Asia share opinions that can
unions.
They have made vitriolic attacks on any dis¬
be summarized as follows: The most urgent and criti¬
criminatory actions, stressing the theme that Com¬
cal issue is educational opportunity for Overseas Chi¬
munist China promises protection and equal status for
nese youth.
Chinese everywhere as part of the Asian revolution.
their economic hostility to the Chinese and let changes
The Chinese Communists’ shrewdest move, probably,
in the balance between Chinese and native roles in the
has been the offer of free college education followed
economies develop naturally.
by important and responsible jobs in the “New China”
in all the Asian countries for more news and infor¬
—status and opportunity for all youth, the age group
mation of all kinds from other than Communist
at which the Communists have directed their greatest
sources—in many places the only ones now readily
efforts.
available.
It is essential that Asian nations temper
There is a great need
The Overseas Chinese, like hosts of other
In Thailand, with one of the most vociferously anti¬
Asians, believe in their hearts that the political fate
communist governments in Asia, the forbidding of
of Asia will be determined largely by the action or
Chinese middle schools, without providing any Chi¬
inaction of the United States, whose apparently in-
19 consistent course baffles and worries them but whose
relaxing of barriers to the entrance of qualified Over¬
power they believe to be unquestionably the decisive
seas Chinese into this country for the purpose of get¬
factor in world affairs.
ting an education.
It is obvious that the Overseas element of the Free
Over the longer period necessary, the kind of Asian
Chinese confronts us with a complex situation on
economic policy outlined in Chapter 7 would offer
which the United States can have only limited direct
opportunities for exerting effective, if indirect, influ¬
influence.
ence on the problem of integration.
The Overseas Chinese are bound, like any
It should be
people with a long rich past, to cherish their racial
possible, as part of an economic program, to develop
and cultural heritage; there must be the opportunity
native industries, capital, and human resources that
and incentive for them to identify their symbolic
would steadily correct the imbalance between the na¬
loyalties with the principles and ultimate hopes of a
tive and the Overseas Chinese roles in the national
Free China.
Yet those loyalties must not conflict with
economies, not by suppressing the Chinese, but by
their integration as responsible citizens into the so¬
expanding the total numbers of other nationals en¬
cieties where their economic power and clannishness
gaged in commerce, industry, and other forms of
have generated a deep hostility.
modern economic activity.
This sounds very
The minority problem is
much like an impossibility—and, of course, it is for
likely to be less acute if the Asian nations are expand¬
the very near future; but, whatever the difficulties,
ing and the monopoly powers of the Overseas Chi¬
both their integration and their loyalty to the symbols
nese are being diluted constructively.
of a Free China are very much in the United States
setting of a general Asian development program it
interest, and we must encourage them by whatever
should not be beyond the reach of American tact and
means are at our disposal.
The first step is our own
diplomacy to encourage in Asia a more constructive
acceptance of two basic facts: first, that the Overseas
approach to the gradual integration of the Chinese
Chinese integrated by free choice into Free Asian
into the various Asian societies.
Within the
societies could be important assets in the Asian growth
Finally, as considered in Chapter 4, we can use our
process; second, that as a dissident, potentially Com¬
margin of influence over Formosa to help see devel¬
munist, and economically powerful group they would
oped there a program of cultural, economic, and po¬
constitute dangerous centers for subversion and ob¬
litical activities that would make that important is¬
structive tactics, a constant threat to both political
land a Free Chinese center for the Overseas Chinese,
and economic stability throughout Southeast Asia.
harmonious with the rest of Free Asia, a center whose
Despite the apparent difficulties, there are certain
activities would reinforce, not interfere with, the long-
actions that we can and should take now on behalf
run integration of the Overseas Chinese in the Free
of the Overseas Chinese.
Asian communities within which they now live, with¬
We can enlarge our information activities in South¬ east Asia, making a conscious effort to reach the Over¬
out denying the vitality of their long-run links to China, its traditions, and its future.
seas Chinese, especially groups like those in Indonesia that have no organized sources of information except Communist-dominated chambers of commerce and so on.
The Exile Chinese Intellectuals
The exile Chinese intellectuals are college- and
In particular, we can increase the flow of techni¬
university-trained Chinese who have fled Communist
cal literature, political comment, and history from
China or have been stranded in other countries after
non-official American and other democratic sources.
leaving China to study.
Their attitude toward Com¬
We can enlarge the opportunities of Overseas Chi¬
munism is plain enough: they have chosen exile and
nese youth to get an education without recourse to
abject poverty rather than serve the Chinese Com¬
Communist China, a course of action that would in¬
munist regime; but they are for the most part also
clude support and tactful guidance of local Overseas
either unsympathetic to the conservative Chiang Kai-
enterprises such as the new Overseas university in
shek regime or unable to find employment on For¬
Singapore, support and encouragement of Formosa’s
mosa.
program to enlarge its educational facilities, and a
United States, homeless for the most part, and at best
They are stranded in Hong Kong and in the
20 living from hand to mouth or supported by partial
In the first year of the operation of the United States
and often unsuitable employment, their skills wasted.
Refugee Relief Act, according to available informa¬
They are a significant and potentially powerful
tion, not one of the Chinese refugees in Hong Kong
minority among the millions of Free Chinese.
Not
was admitted into the United States.
Not only are
only do they have the deepest possible hostility to
the legal and sponsorship requirements almost im¬
Communism, but also they are typical of the Asian
possible for any Chinese in Hong Kong to meet, but
intellectual, who has in his society a unique influence
also the money requirements are prohibitive.
as the articulate voice of Asian aspirations and as
emphasis of the Act is that the United States is too
organizer and leader of reform and revolutionary
poor and too overcrowded to finance any exile intellec¬
movements.
tuals or to find either employment for them or places
Yet the existence of these Free Chinese
The
is almost unknown to most Americans; and official
for them to live.
America, repeatedly made aware of them, has chosen
of Representatives voted to cut approximately in half
generally to ignore them.
the appropriation to finance the foreign student ex¬
For thirty years a principal Communist strategy has been aimed at the winning of the Asian intellectual to Communism.
In 1954 the United States House
change program. Although there are over 5,000 trained Chinese in¬
As already pointed out in this book,
tellectuals presently stranded in the United States,
one result of the sustained long-range Communist
there has been no adequate continuing official action
efforts is that the whole intellectual climate of Asia
either to finance and encourage the operation and
is tainted with the acceptance in varying degrees of
collaboration of private groups who are trying to find
the Marxist-Leninist rationale and with sympathy for
appropriate occupation for these Chinese intellectuals
and tolerance, if not acceptance, of Communist prac¬
or to finance such obvious constructive devices as mak¬
tice.
Ho Chi-minh is but one example of Communist-
ing it possible by subsidy for American colleges to
trained leadership—one example of the comparative
employ these intellectuals in work commensurate with
influence in Asia of the intellectual leadership and of
their training.
military force.
There is no denying the complexity of the problem
And yet the United States has cultivated, and ap¬
posed by the situation of the Chinese and other Asian
parently still cultivates, a national obtuseness about
intellectuals.
Great skill and sustained effort over a
the Asian, and in this case Chinese, intellectual—re¬
long time are required for its solution; and there is
fusing to profit by the bald facts of Communist his¬
no simple answer such as blanket admission of refugees
tory, refusing to consider seriously any important ef¬
to this country or vast appropriations.
fort that may not pay off for many years, refusing to
challenge to our skill and understanding.
consider any adequate expenditure of money in the
not met that challenge.
It is a direct We have
cause of the Asian and Chinese intellectual, although
Although we can have for a long time only an in¬
the total sum required would be infinitesimal com¬
direct influence on the Overseas Chinese in Southeast
pared to our expenditures for arms.
Asia, we can take certain direct actions to influence
The Russians find it possible to teach Asians in their own languages.
The Soviet Union accepted
2,500 students from China alone in 1954.
the fate of the potentially powerful minority of exile Free Chinese intellectuals.
We can revise the terms
Communist
of refugee admission and coordinate the efforts of the
China accepted more than 10,000 students from South¬
several private and official operations required to deal
east Asia in 1953, urging them to come, offering free
constructively with the refugee intellectuals.
college education with all expenses paid, and promis¬
take a more intelligent and imaginative look at the
ing them jobs.
The Chinese Communist leaders have
future potential represented by the experience and
offered every inducement to persuade the trained exile
training of the refugees now in Hong Kong and the
intellectuals to return.
Chinese intellectuals in the United States.
There are more than 10,000 Chinese intellectuals, 2,000 of them with degrees from American colleges, who have fled from Communist China to Hong Kong.
We can
Above all,
we can take a realistic view of the costs involved. It is not necessary here to detail a program. main outlines are obvious.
Its
It is the purpose here to
21 emphasize that as the United States contemplates
sources as are symbolized by the Chinese and other
an Asian policy we must face certain facts that are
Asian intellectuals.
relevant to the present problem of the exile Chinese
hamstringing United States efforts in a vital sector
intellectual.
of the world conflict by immigration policies rooted
Nor is there any justification for
First, the Communist victories in China in 1949
in ignorance, prejudice, and fear and by financial
and in Indo-China in 1954 are dramatic proof that
policies dictated by the cheap and shortsighted evasion
revolutionary victory in Asia is not rooted so much
of adequate money commitments because they will
in military strength as in the emotional and intellec¬
not pay off tomorrow.
tual commitments of the people.
A United States policy for Asia that does not en¬
Second, in these terms Communist China has the
visage imaginative, broadly based action over an ex¬
means to win the rest of Asia without recourse to
tended period aimed at the problem of the Chinese
creating either a modern industrial economy or a vast
and other Asian intellectuals will fail to meet an issue
military machine—and it could win by means that
critical to the United States interest in Asia.
bypass the purely military and economic strength of the Free World.
The foregoing discussion touches upon two sides of the Free Chinese triangle.
In a very real sense
Third, in the light of present knowledge and in
both the present and future of the Overseas Chinese
view of the United States position and interests, there
in Southeast Asia and of the exile Chinese intellectuals
is no rational relationship between United States in¬
are closely related to, if not dependent on, the third
vestments in the military and other material weapons
side—Formosa, which is treated in some detail in the
and United States investments in such human re¬
next chapter.
CHAPTER
Formosa It must be pointed out first of all that Formosa,
of the Kuomintang, the Chinese Nationalist Party.
besides being the island retreat of the Chinese Na¬
There has been little understanding of the Formosa
tionalist government and some 2,000,000 Free Chinese
situation as a whole, and, especially, no evident Amer¬
from the mainland, is also the home of some 7,000,000
ican awareness of its potential political significance
Formosans, who have sought Formosan autonomy
in the struggle with Communism in Asia.
ever since Formosa was ceded to Japan in 1895, and
our national discussion of Formosa has been con¬
who now live under the rule of the Chinese National¬
ducted as though there were no connection between
ist regime.
Formosa and the rest of Free Asia.
Although the two groups therefore have
In fact,
The Formosa
different long-run interests, the present Formosa situa¬
debate in the United States government seems to have
tion does not repeat the conditions of Japanese occu¬
been centered largely on the United States military
pation and rule, for the great majority of Formosans
interest, leaving both the international status of For¬
are of Chinese origin, the original settlers having
mosa and the over-all interest of the United States
emigrated from the Chinese coastal provinces.
in Formosa so obscure that it has seemed as if we had
The authors would emphasize that the long-run operation of political and social reform on Formosa
no Formosa policy. As this is written, the world is in the midst of an
and, therefore, any detailed planning of the Formosa
acute crisis over Formosa.
future must take into consideration the related prob¬
at the Geneva Conference in translating the military
lems of both groups and embrace the entire Formosa
position of the Vietminh forces in Indo-China into
population.
Communist possession of the northern half of the
One of the major tests of the Nationalist
In 1954 Peking succeeded
regime on Formosa will be the pace and the extent
country.
to which the Formosans come to assume political and
as next in priority, to increasing the pressure on the
social equality and responsibility—a trend already well
Free World to turn over Formosa to Peking.
under way since 1949.
propaganda campaign to this effect began in China;
The Chinese Communists promptly turned, A major
Taking first things first, this chapter treats the
Free World diplomats were solemnly informed in
Formosa situation in terms of the most urgent present
private that the Chinese Communists were deter¬
task of United States policy toward Formosa—the cre¬
mined to retake Formosa; artillery and air attack
ation
began on Tachen.
of a
constructive relationship
between
the
United States and the Free Chinese government on Formosa. Public discussion of Formosa in the United States
Up to this point the United States government had left its intentions with respect to Formosa and the islands held by the Nationalists vague.
Strategically
has centered almost wholly on conflicting and highly
it was not wholly clear to the Free World whether or
emotional views of Chiang Kai-shek and the remnants
not the United States backed Chiang Kai-shek’s policy
23 of returning to the mainland by force at the earliest
gard a truce agreement as binding over the long fu¬
possible moment.
ture.
Tactically it was not clear whether
One must assume that, if Quemoy and Matsu
the United States was prepared to defend the off-shore
are evacuated, Peking will behave in the future in
islands (notably Tachen, Quemoy, and Matsu) as well
the Formosa Strait as the relative power potentialities
as Formosa and the Pescadores.
permit.
Many on Formosa
Nevertheless, it would be an important Amer¬
were not even clear that under pressure the United
ican advantage to have at least Free World consensus
States would defend Formosa itself.
on a Formosa policy so that future action there would
In the face of Communist propaganda, diplomacy, and military pressure, the United States began to
not be as unilateral and divisive within the Free World as it has been in the past.
clarify its intentions and commitments in this area.
Except for the extraordinarily explicit commitments
A Mutual Security Pact covering Formosa and the
of Peking to take over Formosa within a year and
Pescadores was negotiated and passed by the Senate.
for Moscow’s recently increased backing for Peking
Under American pressure the Nationalist forces and
on this issue, one would be inclined to assume that
many civilians were evacuated from Tachen.
The
the sort of de facto truce sought by the British, Indian,
British and Indian governments urged the United
and American governments might easily be achieved.
States to bring about a withdrawal from Quemoy and
And a number of factors make this still the most likely
Matsu and urged the Chinese Communists to abandon
outcome of the crisis: the military advantages of the
any effort to seize Formosa and the Pescadores by
United States in a battle that would be primarily
force.
They sought, in fact, a de facto truce in the
naval and air; the ability of Peking to turn off a
Formosa straits and the de facto emergence of two
propaganda campaign as easily as it turned it on; the
Chinas, as opposed to a state of actual or potential
assumed reluctance of both Moscow and Peking to
civil war.
involve themselves in major military operations at
As this is written,* the American government has
this juncture; the emergent unity of the Free World
taken the position that it is prepared to see the in¬
on the issue of Formosa’s defense.
ternational negotiation of a truce in the Formosa
may see substantial limited warfare in 1955 in the
Strait, but that it is not prepared to insist on the
Formosa Strait or even major war arising from the
evacuation of Quemoy and Matsu before such a truce
present crisis.
had been negotiated.
The grounds for this view are,
Nevertheless, we
Should major war come in 1955 the substance of
presumably, these: Moscow and Peking are now talk¬
this book becomes largely irrelevant.
ing not about a truce but about a Communist military
should come, the context of our recommendations
takeover of Formosa; they now know that the Mutual Security Pact requires the United States to defend Formosa and the Pescadores against military attack; the holding of Quemoy and Matsu would be of ad¬ vantage should a military assault be attempted; the United States will not surrender this military advan¬ tage until it is clear that it does not confront a direct military challenge at a point where it is now solemnly committed. We are holding Quemoy and Matsu thus far essen¬ tially as bargaining points in a truce negotiation and running the risk of division in the United States and the Free World should the Communists attack with¬ out entering such negotiation.
There is, of course,
no reason to believe that the Communists would re* March 1, 1955.
If limited war
would change, but not their basic import; for the holding of the balance of power in Eurasia for the Free World would remain not merely a military task but a combined task of military, political, and eco¬ nomic policy.
The reasoning in this chapter proceeds
from the assumption that the present crisis will be resolved along lines of a de facto truce.
This will
leave Formosa an island sanctuary, guaranteed mili¬ tarily by the United States and, perhaps, by other Free World powers.
Formosa will be committed to
avoiding acts of military provocation against the main¬ land; and the possibility of a Nationalist return to the mainland by force of American arms, at American initiative, is ruled out. The United States guarantee of military protection for Formosa places this country before the world, and especially in the eyes of the Asian peoples, squarely
24 in a position of responsibility for Formosa's future.
government, the Kuomintang firmly in control, with
This means more than merely Formosa’s future phys¬
Chiang Kai-shek its unquestioned leader.
For the watchful Asians,
The unbroken continuation of Kuomintang rule
the social, political, and economic progress of For¬
has meant that the Formosa political climate is the
mosa will be a test of the purposes and effectiveness
product of Kuomintang thinking and action and an
of American policy toward the Asian peoples.
accurate measure, therefore, of present Kuomintang
ical security from attack.
Thus,
in making the decision to protect Formosa we have
political philosophy.
Its chief feature is the pre¬
also made the underlying even if unspoken decision
ponderant emphasis on personal loyalties.
to meet a crucial test of our whole policy in Asia.
qualification for individual political power is personal
The first
There is little chance that we can meet that test
loyalty to Chiang Kai-shek; the second is loyalty to
successfully if we continue indulging in the emo¬
the Kuomintang as the unique means of China’s sal¬
tional hangover of the Chinese defeat of 1949 and if
vation.
we continue debating on the basis that Formosa is
petuate the idea that the future of the Free Chinese
a political liability we have somehow come to be sad¬
must depend on a single-party elite.
dled with, a hopeless situation because the govern¬
Kuomintang attitude appears to be one of very lim¬
ment on Formosa is exactly the same government that
ited understanding and even suspicion of the revolu¬
was defeated in China.
tionary role of the intellectual.
longer relevant.
The 1949 perspective is no
It has paralyzed American thought
Therefore, there is a strong tendency to per¬ The typical
Efforts at social re¬
form tend to emphasize physical welfare, to see that
It behooves us to think seri¬
people get more to eat, but to go slow on political
ously about Formosa in the perspective of 1955 and
reform and other aspirations that are voiced by the
to weigh the possibility that Formosa can be a po¬
intellectuals and are a vital factor of revolutionary
litical asset to the United States and the rest of the
nationalism in all Asia.
Free World.
traditional Kuomintang practices means that the For¬
and initiative too long.
Under such circumstances, what should be For¬ mosa’s
objectives?
would then exist?
What
foundations
for
Finally, the perpetuation of
mosan military is an inseparable element of the po¬
morale
litical picture: the army is Chiang Kai-shek’s army,
Aside from being an island out¬
therefore the Kuomintang’s army, with a built-in sys¬
post of American and Free World defense, can For¬
tem of political commissars.
mosa survive as a Nationalist base and have a mean¬
servers, there are two political networks in the mili¬
ingful place in Free Asia?
tary, the Kuomintang party organ and Chiang Kai-
These are the questions
this chapter seeks to answer.
shek’s personal agents.
According to some ob¬
Whether or not Chiang Kai-
shek employs a network of personal agents, the close The Formosa Political Scene
connection between the military and a political party
Before considering possible Formosa objectives un¬ der present conditions, it is necessary to have some
violates, in American eyes, a fundamental principle of democratic government.
idea of the nature of the Formosa regime and of the
Critics of the Formosa regime point to the increas¬
objectives that have been the basis of its morale in
ing power of Chiang’s older son, Chiang Ching-kuo.
six years of exile.
Chiang Ching-kuo is a controversial figure, partly be¬
The government that undertook the task of ruling
cause he has lived in the Soviet Union and is believed
in exile and under constant threat of attack was
by many to accept without reservation the methods
the escaped nucleus of Chiang Kai-shek’s mainland
and discipline of Communist Party organization and
Kuomintang regime, the tested and loyal center, from
operation and partly because he seems to be so intent
which the political and military bureaucracies and
first of all on making himself personally powerful
the dissident elements had been lopped off in the
that some observers fear that he is aiming at dictator¬
process of the Communist victory.
ship.
The Kuomintang
It is plain that he has considerable power and
has neither outlawed nor silenced the minority Young
that he bosses the various arms of the political control
China and Democratic Socialist parties; but the gov¬
apparatus from the military and the police down to
ernment of Formosa has continued to be a one-party
the youth level and the rehabilitation of the Korean
25 prisoner-of-war repatriates.
There is nearly unani¬
other factors—the war conditions in which it has had
mous agreement among Chinese and Americans best
to operate and a genuine lack of experience with
qualified to judge that Chiang Ching-kuo is insatiably
practical working democracy.
curious, possessed of unlimited energy, and tough.
selves that Americans shattered precedent to keep one
Opinions as to where he would be without his father’s
party and one president in office for the duration of
backing vary widely.
His supporters insist that he
our last war emergency and that the Kuomintang has
hates Communism and sincerely believes in demo¬
had to function under war conditions since 1937.
cratic principles.
view.
Unless those who know the many younger men in the
Therefore it is difficult at this point to know what
Formosa regime are wrong, there is in the present
his potential and his ultimate purposes are—whether
Kuomintang a considerable number who have fully
or not he has the will and capacity to develop as a
accepted the theories and are eager to learn the prac¬
constructive democratic leader of the Chinese on For¬
tical techniques of democracy—the know-how of steady
mosa.
progress toward what have always been the goals of
Others
take an opposite
But he is very much a part of the Formosa
political scene, and there seems little doubt that he
We might remind our¬
the Chinese revolution. The first requirement of any constructive American
hopes to succeed his father. A last political element consists of the Young China and Democratic Socialist groups.
approach to the problem of Formosa is to shake off
Their parties have
the 1949 blues and see the Formosa political situa¬
carried over from the mainland, where Young China
tion in the 1955 perspective—to grasp the fact that
originally stood for emphasis on nationalism and the
we are not confronted with a hopeless situation, but
Democratic Socialists for emphasis on social and po¬
with an organization in being that has distinct po¬
litical reform, with sharp attacks on one-man rule.
tentialities for the advancement of
Together they have 14 of the 702 seats of the Legisla¬
the Free Chinese and of the United States.
the interests of
tive Yuan and 10 of the 171 seats in the Control Yuan of the Formosa government.
One gets the impres¬
Formosa Objectives Past and Future
sion that they exist on Formosa by Kuomintang suf¬
The overriding objective of the Chinese on Formosa
ferance, a gesture the Kuomintang can well afford in
ever since they established themselves there in 1949
view of their small numbers; and it can hardly be
has been their return to the mainland.
said that they represent any real change from the
table that this common hope of all exiles should be
traditional Kuomintang one-party system.
translated into avowed determination in such a con
But, even
It was inevi¬
if there is no powerful leaven here, these small parties
centration of exiles as the 2,000,000 Chinese, includ¬
have survived, and they keep alive a nucleus with
ing some 600,000 soldiers, on Formosa.
some degree of independent thought; they keep alive
as pointed out in the preceding chapter, there are
the idea of loyal opposition.
some 12,000,000 Overseas Chinese, whose cultural loy¬
The important point to be made here is that the
Moreover,
alties even if only to a symbolic China require some
Formosa regime of Chiang Kai-shek and the Kuomin¬
focus.
tang is not, as many Americans still assume, the same
and the Chinese regime on Formosa should appeal to
exhausted, inefficient, corrupt apparatus that was de¬
those Overseas Chinese loyalties and that the Formosa
feated on the mainland in 1949.
These survivors
regime could have little or no basis for such an ap¬
have proved capable of maintaining unity, order, and
peal unless it proclaimed both its legitimacy as the
morale in exile and in danger.
government of China and its intention to return and
Objective observers
It was inevitable that both Communist China
agree that corruption in party or government is to
exert its rights.
any measurable degree non-existent.
the primary task of the Formosa regime has been to
The regime is
In the eyes of its leadership, then,
neither a totalitarian dictatorship nor what Ameri¬
create a military-political potential:
to unify and
cans could call a truly democratic government.
It can
keep in order a society in constant danger of attack,
be fairly described as ultraconservative, its evolution
and to create an armed force capable of both sus¬
in democratic directions delayed not simply by tra¬
tained defense of their island and bold attack on the
ditional Kuomintang stubbornness but also by two
Communist mainland.
It is necessary, as part of our
26 understanding of the present Formosa situation, that
thinking about Formosa.
we understand that these have been the human reali¬
attack on Communist China seems only a remote pos¬
ties underlying Formosa developments from 1949 to
sibility, two questions come immediately to mind.
the present.
What objectives can Formosa have?
The maintenance of unity and personal integrity in
Now that any Nationalist
What is to sus¬
tain Formosa morale?
the Formosa political regime, the establishment of an orderly, functioning society, the sustained morale of
Present Objectives
the armed forces—these are the outstanding successful
The preceding discussion emphasizes that any in¬
results of the pursuit of the great objective of return
telligent American approach to understanding the
to the homeland.
Formosa problem requires that we adjust our think¬
But Formosa also has had another objective, sec¬
ing about Formosa to the present, that we measure
ondary, in one sense, because far less emphasized than
the accomplishments and nature of the Nationalist
the first, and, in another sense, derived from the first,
regime realistically—not by 1949, but in terms of what
but still an objective that has taken on meanings and
it is today.
realities of its own increasingly independent of the
phasized that American thinking about Formosa must
possibility of a return to mainland China.
also be adjusted in another sense.
This
At this point, it must be as strongly em¬ The American
second objective is reform—political and social re¬
failure over the past five years to create any definable
form in the direction of democratic evolution.
policy toward Formosa, a failure that has meant that
The housecleaning in the Kuomintang itself has
it has been impossible to give Formosa any definable
been accompanied by changes in the operation of
international status, was at least partly the result of
government.
Chiang Kai-shek’s administration oper¬
an American frame of mind in which Formosa was
ates in at least partial obedience to constitutional
treated simply as a geographical item on a shifting
law.
military map.
It operates on a published budget.
The Legis¬
And most American discussion today
lative Yuan, no longer completely a rubber stamp,
seems to assume that Formosa is some kind of abstrac¬
has taken on a part of its proper function of initiat¬
tion, a piece in the Pacific puzzle to be disposed of
ing laws; and it works with an increasing freedom of
this way or that as the larger world may decide.
discussion and criticism.
Native Formosans and non-
have quite ignored the disturbing fact that Formosa
Kuomintang aspirants can make their bid for and
is a human element in the world situation, that what
occupy public office.
There has been sweeping land
we call Formosa is not just a fortified island in a de¬
reform, embracing the redistribution of 85 per cent of
fense scheme but also 9,000,000 human beings whose
the island’s agricultural acreage, a reform so success¬
hopes and fears we have been juggling with and for
ful to date that it could serve as a model for other
whose lives and destinies we have assumed responsi¬
parts of Asia.
bility.
Land reform has been accompanied
We
We must attempt to understand the problem
by public health programs that have reduced the
of Formosa objectives and morale, not as a problem
death rate from a level of 21 per 1,000, under Japa¬
of certain mechanical moves in a United States and
nese rule, to approximately 9 per 1,000 in 1953.
Free World operation, but as a problem of human
The
Formosa government has indicated an increasing in¬
life.
terest in the movement of exiles from Hong Kong to
that at the very heart of the Communist struggle in
Formosa and in the Overseas Chinese communities,
Asia, as elsewhere, are human aspirations and cour¬
especially in the needs of Overseas Chinese youth in
age and that Formosa is inseparable from the total
Asia for educational opportunity, by launching a
Asian problem, common justice would demand that
vigorous campaign to enlarge Formosa’s educational
we adjust our thinking about Formosa to include a
facilities.
consideration of Formosa as first of all a human situa¬
The great objective and hope of return to the main¬
tion.
Even if we were so shortsighted as to fail to see
What follows here, therefore, is an attempt to
land and the steady but slow progress of reform have
clarify the relationship between Formosa as a group
sustained the morale of the Free Chinese on For¬
of human beings and the United States interests in
mosa and have been the focus of Overseas Chinese
Asia.
27 What are to be Formosa’s objectives in such terms?
nese who are now free must thrash out and develop
The answer to this question is obvious: Formosa’s
an alternative.
The change
Second, although the exile’s process of change and
that the new, at least partially, defined position of
adjustment is difficult and complex, especially when
Formosa compels is not a change of objectives, but a
it means launching into a new kind of life, the cru¬
change of emphasis, a change of balance or relation¬
cial and hardest step in the process is the first one
ship between the two objectives already firmly fixed
of perceiving the alternative and taking the first set
in Free Chinese minds.
of consistent actions to realize it.
objectives must remain what they are.
First, the recent actions of the United States have
The Chinese on
Formosa have already taken that crucial step.
The
not altered Free Chinese emotions—the desire, the
assumption that up to the minute of the United States
hope of the exile for return to his home.
Since no
pronouncement they blindly believed that they were
action of the outside world can change human nature,
on the verge of assaulting Communist China is based
return will continue to be the ideal objective of the
on complete ignorance of Chinese realism.
exile Formosa Chinese regardless of what we do and
nese on Formosa have been aware of the facts of their
no matter how far into the future his hope is moved.
situation, aware that the United States has no inten¬
But it is also a basic fact of human nature that as
tion of starting a war—and the subtle process of
circumstances he is powerless to change move the
change has been under way for some time.
exile’s ideal into the indeterminate future, if he is
dence is plain in the visit Chiang Ching-kuo paid to
not to die in despair, he must come to live with the
the United States in 1953, in the increasing efforts
reality of the distant and perhaps unattainable ideal
to provide for Overseas Chinese students educational
goal by turning to present and attainable objectives.
opportunities on Formosa, in the delegations of For¬
This is the universal human story of exiles every¬
mosa
where.
teachers to educational centers here to learn about
Once there is the awareness of the attainable
alternative and there is a real value set on that alter¬
scholars
and
university
The Chi¬
The evi¬
administrators
and
American methods.
native, the subtle process of change is inevitable: the
In the simplest terms, then, the Formosa mission
dream remains in the heart, but everyday life assumes
for the foreseeable future is to keep militarily pre¬
reality and purpose.
And the Formosa Chinese al¬
pared and strong against possible attack while creat¬
ready have their alternative—the creation of a society
ing a new kind of free democratic Chinese society.
that moves urgently toward the free democratic goals
This conclusion leads directly to the question of mo¬
of the Chinese revolution, a society that would be a
rale—in other words, to the question of the capability
living symbol to every Chinese in the world—in Free
of the Formosa Chinese to undertake and accomplish
Asia or behind the Bamboo Curtain—a society that
such a mission.
would be a living challenge to the revolutionary per¬
of the connection between the Formosa future and
versions of Chinese Communism.
the United States interests.
The Formosa Chi¬
And it leads directly to the question
nese not only have their alternative in their present reform objectives; they have also set a value on that
The Question of Morale
What remains is to expand their reform
Now that the great objective of recapture of the
efforts and give them steadily increasing importance
mainland, which has been employed so emphatically
and emphasis.
The Formosa Chinese must enlarge
and consistently to rally and keep firm the Formosa
their democratic goals and their awareness of the
spirit, has been removed for the foreseeable future,
meaning of these goals for the Chinese future—and
what is to sustain Formosa morale?
alternative.
not only in Formosa terms.
They must develop and
At first glance it would seem, as many Americans
be able to communicate a concrete political and so¬
have assumed,
cial program for a Free China.
would collapse.
No man can now
that the whole Formosa structure This view coincides perfectly with
say when and under what circumstances the Chinese
the prophecy of Chou En-lai, Chinese Communist
people will again have the opportunity to choose a
premier, who boasts that even if Communist armies
government; but Formosa is the place where the Chi¬
do not conquer Formosa it will fall in a few years
28 into Communist hands by default.
Before conceding
in advance a Communist victory that would do ir¬
democratic peoples, a view that the authors of this book reject.
reparable damage to the cause of freedom in Asia
As already pointed out, Formosa has already set its
and equal damage to the prestige and position of the
eye on reform and social progress both for its own
United States in the eyes of all the Asian peoples,
sake and as a symbol of the Chinese democratic revo¬
we had better take a hard realistic look at Formosa
lution.
to see if there is another answer to the question.
role as a revolutionary party committed to the crea¬
The morale of a people is always sustained ulti¬
The Kuomintang has never abandoned its
tion of a free democratic China.
Its efforts at reform
mately by some hope or faith in the future, by the
have been weakened and postponed partially, it is
vision of an ideal goal such as the theoretically final
true, because of lack of vision and courage but also,
form of free democratic society toward which Ameri¬
and very largely, because of the conditions of war
cans look—what has been called the American Dream.
and revolution in which the Kuomintang has oper¬
And the morale of the Chinese on Formosa will con¬
ated almost continuously since 1937.
tinue to be sustained in some degree by their ideal
of social progress on Formosa during a most difficult
objective of return home.
period is evidence of the survival of Kuomintang
Day-to-day, or what we
The very fact
might call “working,” morale, the necessary human
revolutionary ideals.
support for the larger faith, must be sustained by
a secondary aim.
some sense of present and visible accomplishment.
It
standards, and we would not call Chiang Kai-shek’s
is this sense of worthwhile progress, in itself of the
regime truly democratic; but the start has been made.
living present yet having connecting threads to the
There is already at least a base of morale as Formosa
ideal future, that must be the principal basis of For¬
faces the future.
mosa morale now that return home is so uncertain
or not Formosa can be “converted.”
and remote a possibility.
In the simplest concrete
to make good its ultimate mission of keeping alive
terms, the basis of Formosa morale must be visible
for all Chinese—including those on the mainland—
success in creating a free self-respecting society that can take its place in and be respected by the rest of
Reform on Formosa has been It has been slow by American
The test of survival is not whether If Formosa is
the vision of a new democratic China, its policies and its program must look forward, not backward.
For¬
mosa cannot fulfill its mission merely as an orderly
Free Asia. It is no easy or simple process to substitute for the dynamic appeal of a glorious crusade to recapture the homeland the prosaic call to toil for the sake of constructing a stable society in exile.
The danger of
collapse of morale is very real—not only at the time of change but also for the extended period during which energies and, above all, emotions must be re¬ directed and supported until progress in the new di¬ rection is self-sustaining.
It would be unrealistic in
the extreme for the United States to assume that there is no possibility of a collapse followed by a process of degeneration that would result in the loss of For¬
garrison.
It must demonstrate and project effectively
to the world the principles of the Chinese democratic revolution. It is the consensus of thoughtful mature Chinese who judge the Formosa situation from long personal knowledge of the present Kuomintang leaders and from sustained current contacts by correspondence that Formosa has all the requirements for survival but one: the practical day-to-day working techniques, the training and organizing methods, the trade se¬ crets, so to speak, that go to make up what can best be called the democratic know-how. Now this is history repeating itself.
Sun Yat-sen,
mosa to Communism without the firing of a shot.
inspired by western, and especially American, democ¬
But, in view of the existing potentials of Formosa, to
racy, sought western assistance forty years ago in his
accept such a collapse as inevitable is equally un¬
attempt to translate his theoretical knowledge of de¬
realistic.
mocracy into action.
Moreover, it implies that the task of vital¬
At that time, because the West
izing an exile society and successfully supporting its
had no dogma to offer, no set of rules, and was not
efforts toward realization of worthwhile human goals
sufficiently interested to pitch in at the working
is beyond our power as the strongest of the free
level, Sun accepted the Russian Communist offer of
29 assistance.
The present Kuomintang has progressed
destiny is largely in our hands.
-
Whether we like this
beyond Sun’s concept of democracy, but it still lacks
view or not hardly matters.
the encouragement, support, and, above all, the tech¬
to develop a strong free society would have in Asian
nical political knowledge to move successfully for¬
minds widespread repercussions capable of serious
ward to its revolutionary goals.
long-lasting injury to the United States interests.
The challenge this
time is directly to the United States.
The failure of Formosa
And this time
What positive role can Formosa have in Free Asia?
there is no question whether it is in the United States
The immediate possibilities have been suggested in
interest to accept that challenge.
We must accept it.
this and the preceding chapter.
From the very be¬
We have been engaged for some time in a kind of
ginning of the process of successful evolution toward
military partnership with Formosa to ensure the de¬
the status of a free democratic Asian society, Formosa
fense of the island.
What is required now is some
would have a significant role in Asia both as visible
form of political partnership to ensure the successful
evidence of United States purposes and effectiveness
development of Formosa society as a whole—an asso¬
in dealing with Asian problems and as a symbol of
ciation for support and instruction at the working
a Free China to the 12,000,000 Free Chinese in the
level of Formosa’s administrative machinery.
rest of Asia.
This
Such a role would have positive con¬
does not suggest an easy task, but one that will re¬
structive values—intangible, but of critical importance
quire time and patience and that will require a de¬
for their effect on Asian minds.
gree of insight and imagination, and, most important,
It is difficult to look beyond this symbolic role and
a degree of tolerance and human understanding that
define with any exactness the part Formosa might
we have not heretofore applied to the Formosa prob¬
play in other relationships to Free Asia; for this is
lem.
a development that must come along with the later
But such an assignment is well suited to the
best in the American democratic spirit. To return to the question of Formosa morale, a realistic view in terms of the present leads to the blunt fact that the serious issue of Formosa’s survival as an asset to the Free World hangs not merely on the question of the ability of the Free Chinese on Formosa to sustain their morale but also, and in the end decisively, on the willingness of the United States to meet the challenge of its responsibility for the Formosa future. Formosa and Free Asia
It has already been noted that the eyes of Free Asia are on Formosa, and that the Asians are bound to look at the development of Formosa as a demonstra¬ tion of United States policy toward the Asian peo¬ ples.
It cannot be emphasized too strongly that the
prevalent American picture of Formosa as a problem
stages of Formosa growth.
But certain general pos¬
sibilities can be foreseen now.
Formosa could have
an extremely useful economic role in Free Asia.
The
development of secure conditions for private enter¬ prise on Formosa could draw Chinese capital, from Hong Kong and perhaps elsewhere, that is now un¬ productive or not as productive as it might be.
For¬
mosa agriculture, raw material, and industrial re¬ sources could be made to fit into a regional economic program.
Formosa experience with high-productivity
Asian agriculture could be helpful to other Asian areas in a technical assistance program. It should be noted that the prospect of participa¬ tion by Formosa in common Asian economic enter¬ prises would serve as one solvent to the awkwardness of Formosa’s present relations with certain Asian countries.
isolated from the rest of Asia is dangerously wrong.
The point to be made here is that in its planning
The reality we face is that, no matter what words or
the United States cannot, even if it would, isolate
policy pronouncements of good will we address to the
Formosa from the rest of Asia.
Asians, their judgment of us and the shape of their
now exactly define the future relationships between
responses to us will be powerfully influenced by the
Formosa and Free Asia, we must approach the For¬
effect of our actions on the development of Formosa.
mosa problem with the realization that Formosa’s
We cannot conceal from them the fact that Formosa
future will inevitably involve Formosa’s status in Free
is our charge, nor change their view that Formosa’s
Asia.
Although we cannot
We must shape any American effort to help
30 the successful growth of Formosa society on the island
which we have much at stake.
We can no longer
itself to include the development of Formosa’s role
afford confusion and indecision on such a vital issue. The general nature of the United States interest in
beyond the island in all the rest of Asia.
Formosa is made clear by the alternatives of the For¬ The United States Interest
mosa future, for which we have a unique responsi¬
The advancement of the United States interest in
bility.
The Formosa situation will not remain static.
Formosa and of our interests in Asia has been re¬
The degeneration of Formosa morale and the failure
tarded, if not seriously threatened, because the true
of Formosa to develop an increasingly strong and in¬
nature of our interest in Formosa has been obscured
dependent free democratic Asian society would do a
for Americans by emotion and ignorance.
Our bitter
great injury to the United States interests in all Asia.
preoccupation with the past has blinded too many
The successful evolution of Formosa as a focus for
American eyes to the realities of the present.
The
the spirit of a Free China for 15,000,000 Free Chi¬
explicit purpose of this chapter on a highly contro¬
nese and as a democratic society with a meaningful
versial subject has been to set forth a realistic view
political and economic role in Free Asia will power¬
of Formosa as of the present and to consider the real
fully advance the United States interests in Asia and
nature of the United States interest in Formosa.
create a Free World asset of far-reaching significance
Another and implicit purpose has been to urge on
in the Asian struggle with Communism.
Americans a rational approach to a situation in
no choice but to strive for such an evolution.
We have
CHAPTER
The Vulnerability of Communist China to Its Asian Environment A vigorous American policy, grounded in the prin¬
fore has the strength of tested loyalty and long asso¬
ciples of responsible alliance and economic partner¬
ciation; and the men who rule Communist China
ship, represents the best chance of holding the bal¬
have the strength of confidence born of past success.
ance of power in eastern Eurasia for the Free World
It follows from the unity of the small group who
and ourselves.
Such a policy would justify itself even
share power under Mao’s direction that the chains of
if it promised in no way to mitigate or alter the
command in Communist China are likely to remain
threat represented by Communist China.
under unified control and to follow loyally the lines
But the
Free World can affect the evolution of Communist
of policy laid down from above.
China if it acts with sufficient pace and if it can sus¬
ticular, maintained his close ties with the chief mili¬
tain its purposes for a sufficient period of time.
tary figures of the Communist movement,
The
Mao has, in par¬ all of
Sino-Soviet alliance and Communist China itself are
whom are still active at high levels in the present
vulnerable to a Free World policy that would frus¬
administrative system and share Mao’s revolutionary
trate Peking’s efforts at expansion and expose the
prestige.
falseness of its pretensions as an ideological model for
With the chains of command effectively unified at the top, the people of China are under extremely
underdeveloped areas. This judgment arises from a particular view of
effective control.
Several millions have been killed
or sent to forced labor camps; and no organized in¬
Chinese Communist strengths and weaknesses.
surrectional groups of importance are now known to Chinese Communist Strengths
exist.
China is ruled by Mao Tse-tung and a few men
Communist secret police and armed force
reach down to the villages and to the individual
who hold all the top positions of power in the mili¬
blocks of cities.
tary and civil organizations that govern China. These
trol, Communist China already matches the Soviet
men are a closely unified group; they have been in¬
Union in efficiency and ruthlessness.
timately associated for some twenty-five years.
As for the sheer mechanics of con¬
It
The Communist administrative system can assure
seems probable that high policy is made in small
government control of a very high proportion of
meetings in which Mao’s final power of decision is
China’s total resources.
not questioned.
Mao’s power has not been based
the village level, the existence of increasingly nation¬
thus far on the threat of violence against colleagues
alized industry and trade, and the tight government
or on mutual suspicion and jealousy among his sub¬
control exercised over all private industry and trade
ordinates but on the success of his leadership in in¬
make it possible for the Chinese Communist govern¬
surrection and the prestige that attaches to him.
ment to control something like 30 per cent of the
The
unity of Chinese Communist top leadership there¬
Tax collection techniques at
Chinese national income.
This sum is exceedingly
32 small by western standards—approximately 10 billion
to achieve a stalemate in conflict with the United
United States dollars in 1953, but by previous stand¬
Nations in Korea, its ability to keep the streets clean
ards of Chinese government it is a large sum; and it
and orderly, its ability to stabilize the currency, and
permits the government to bring the country’s re¬ I so on. sources under the direct control of national policy
The Chinese Communists benefited in this respect
for military, administrative, and investment purposes.
from certain aspects of Chinese culture.
Because of its heavy commitments to totalitarian con¬
it is in the Chinese tradition to accept powerful rule
trol at home and to its ambitions abroad, about two-
when it is successful rather than to oppose it.
thirds of the resources mobilized by Peking appear
example, there is no Chinese equivalent of the In¬
to be allocated to administration and military pur¬
dian tradition of passive resistance.
poses, about one-third to productive outlays.
intellectuals there is a special tradition of working
Communist China has greater military strength
In general, For
Among Chinese
with and accepting autocratic rule despite disagree¬
There are at least 4,000,-
ment with, and even despite a substantial amount of
000, excluding the militia, in the well-organized Chi¬
opposition to, the policies followed by the autocratic
nese Communist army.
ruler; and many Chinese intellectuals believed in
than all the rest of Asia.
The military chains of com¬ and, as a result
1949 that the Communists offered the best available
of the Korean War, the ground forces have acquired
possibility of achieving their aspirations for China.
a stock of artillery, tanks, aircraft, and motorized
At lower levels in the population the existence of
transport—and considerable experience in their use.
internal peace in the sense of the absence of civil war
The ground forces are supported by local militia,
and war-lordism added to popular respect for the
which exercise control down to the village level and
regime.
mand are effectively centralized;
number many further millions.
Communist China
As time has passed, popular respect has clearly
has also a considerable number of fighter aircraft and
diminished.
antiaircraft weapons;
and at present the Chinese
the deadly risks of opposition to the Communist
Communist regime is giving high priority to the con¬
rule, an attitude that from the regime’s point of
tinued modernization of its armed forces.
view is almost as satisfactory as positive approval and
The 1950 treaty with the Soviet Union gives the
What remains is a keen awareness of
almost as great an asset.
Chinese Communist regime added military protection
Finally, the Chinese Communist regime has con¬
since any opponent engaged with the Chinese Com¬
siderable assets in Asia, although these have prob¬
munists must reckon with the possibility of war with
ably declined from
the Soviet Union should hostilities be pressed beyond
after the Chinese Communist takeover.
a certain point.
spect the achievement by the Communists of effective
Although Soviet military support
their high point immediately Asians re¬
cannot be automatically invoked by Peking, the alli¬
national control in China.
They respect the vigor
ance with the Soviet Union adds considerably to the
with which the Chinese Communists appear to be
threat posed by Chinese Communist military strength.
going about the tasks of industrialization.
They
The regime still commands some popular respect
think it at least possible that an adaptation of the
for the simple reason that it is strong and successful
Communist type of collectivized agriculture in Asia
in imposing its authority on the whole country.
might quickly solve their problems of low produc¬
Dur¬
ing the first two years of its rule, its performance
tivity and overpopulation.
was impressive in other ways.
The success of the
strengths of the regime is its considerable if some¬
Chinese Communists in seizing power and their effi¬
what declining prestige in Asia as a possible model
ciency contrasted favorably with previous Chinese
for the solution of persistent and widespread Asian
experience of weak and ineffective government.
problems.
Chi¬
In short, one of the
nese (even some Chinese who were otherwise dissi¬
It would be shortsighted indeed not to give careful
dent) felt a certain pride in the strength and unity
consideration to these Chinese Communist strengths.
of the government, its ability to rule in China, its
With apparently complete control over the people
ability to eject at least western foreigners, its ability
and resources of the whole Chinese mainland, with a
33 massive military force mostly of well-organized vet¬
out some resolution of the competition for power be¬
erans, and with the support of the Soviet Union,
tween the different chains of command—civil versus
Communist
military, party versus government, police versus mili¬
China
has
the
potentials of a great
power and is striving mightily to be one.
But there
tary.
This in turn involves the development of bu¬
are great problems still facing the Chinese Commu¬
reaucratic loyalties and points of view as opposed to
nist regime, and grave weaknesses in the workings of
a simple party loyalty and the development within
the system, problems and weaknesses that could have
departments or provincial governments of independ¬
great meaning for the Chinese Communist future.
ent authority which becomes increasingly difficult for the top-level executives to manipulate and control.
Chinese Communist Weaknesses
These inevitable problems of organization have not
The regime has only begun the enormous task of transforming its vast administrative system into a conventional Communist bureaucracy.
This process
yet been solved by the men who are ruling Commu¬ nist China. After five years of Communist rule the people give
requires forms of training that are generally lacking
little genuine support to the regime.
in China; it requires, in place of the specialists in
comments reveal that the peasants resent the forced
agitation and propaganda who make a revolution,
government collection of their grain and the constant
great numbers of efficient technicians and adminis¬
pressure toward collectivization.
trators.
That the problem of efficient administration
ers, exhausted by exhortation and rising work quotas,
is still far from being solved is revealed by the fact
have reacted so unfavorably that, in 1953, the gov¬
that the Communist press and official reports con¬
ernment temporarily let up in its political, social,
tinuously criticize the cadres, the lowest level of ad¬
and economic pressure.
ministrators and active agents, who are indispensable
cadres have been harassed by shifting instructions
in a Communist system.
and by chronic purges.
It is apparent that, although
Communist
The factory work¬
The more than 5,000,000 The people are trapped by
they are undoubtedly anxious to follow instructions
the ruthless Communist control system, it is true; and
and to conform to the regime’s wishes, the cadres
their passive dislike and distrust for the regime are
have such difficulties in carrying out their tasks in
of little importance unless the unified control system
the villages and factories that they are not yet satis¬
is weakened by other factors.
factory instruments of administration.
to recognize the radical change in the political atmos¬
Although this
But it is important
condition does not seriously threaten the stability of
phere.
the regime, it is a source of inefficiency and low
days of 1949, Communist China has moved rapidly
productivity.
toward the dour, suspicious, prison atmosphere of
At the top of the regime there is always in the
Since the relatively enthusiastic and hopeful
Russian and eastern European totalitarianism.
background the fact that the present unity is due
The most formidable internal opponent of the
almost entirely to Mao’s personal power and prestige,
Communist regime, and its greatest weakness, is the
which raises the unspoken question of succession.
Chinese economy.
There is the problem of the division of power be¬
limited in terms of their own power aspirations and
tween such men as Liu Shao-ch’i and Chou En-lai,
in terms of the aspirations they have stirred among
the problem of preparing for the possibility of col¬
the Chinese people by the quality and quantity of
lective leadership when Mao dies or becomes unable
the resources available to them in China.
to carry on.
bilities of China for agricultural and industrial ad¬
The
Chinese
Communists
are
The capa¬
And even more fundamental, because it concerns
vance are real, if modest; and, with 30 per cent of
the entire top leadership and the entire Communist
the gross national product in the hands of the gov¬
control system and is interwoven with the problem
ernment, there is the possibility of a self-sustaining
of maintaining the unity of the regime after Mao, is
process of economic growth.
the problem of the balance of power in the Commu¬
pelled, however, to move rapidly and simultaneously
nist administrative machine.
toward rapid industrialization, agricultural collectivi¬
By the very nature of
Communist totalitarian rule there must be worked
The regime feels im¬
zation, and enlarged military strength.
It has, more-
34 over, stirred hopes in the Chinese people for a prompt rise in their real income.
The goals of rapid
First, the alliance with the Soviet Union, helpful as it is, creates a far from perfect situation for Com¬
industrialization, increased military strength in being,
munist China.
and rising standards of real welfare are almost cer¬
pressures, for Chinese Communist military strength
tainly incompatible goals in contemporary China,
is critically dependent on Soviet supplies of heavy
notably if agricultural collectivization is pursued with
equipment, aircraft, spare parts, and, for the time
vigor, as now seems likely.
being, on certain military technicians.
The gaps between the
The Soviet Union can apply various
This depend¬
real economic capabilities of China, the regime’s am¬
ence almost certainly is a principal reason why the
bitions, and the people’s material aspirations have
Chinese Communist regime feels goaded to develop
set up painful tensions.
independent
Further, the possibilities of
military strength
at
a
period
when
advance in China on any of these fronts, let alone
China’s resources are being strained to the limit.
all of them, will certainly be limited and may be
Moreover, Moscow seems to have set a limit to the
forestalled by a rapid increase in population, in part
amount of machinery it is willing to exchange for
due to the regime’s success in the public health meas¬
Chinese exports—in effect, a limit on the speed of
ures it has undertaken
Communist China’s industrial progress unless the
and in
creating,
after a
fashion, internal peace.
regime can raise more hard cash.
The agricultural situation holds a place of special
Second, Chinese Communist claims to leadership of
importance in China over the next several years. The
the Chinese people are weakened by the existence of
regime must mobilize increasing amounts of agricul¬
Free Chinese on Formosa and in the Overseas Chinese
tural products to feed the growing cities, the armed
communities who refuse to recognize the Communist
forces, the cadres, and those in forced labor; and to
regime and are pledged to destroy it.
increase exports in order to acquire modern military
12,000,000 Overseas Chinese; and the Communists
equipment, machinery, and those industrial raw ma¬
remember that it was this group, much smaller then,
terials in which China is not self-sufficient.
who financed and planned the revolution that over¬
The re¬
There are some
quirements for the cities and exports will surely grow.
threw the Manchu dynasty in 1911.
Meanwhile, the rise of population in the countryside
munist propaganda threats aimed at Formosa clearly
will proceed, increasing the pressure to retain food
betray the weakness in the Communist claims so long
locally.
as a free Formosa exists and show that the Com¬
At just this juncture the regime has introduced measures of forced grain sale and collectivization,
Chinese Com¬
munists realize that Formosa is a potential Chinese rallying place for a new free China.
which the peasants oppose and which in the Soviet
Finally, Communism in Asia is challenged by the
Union and eastern Europe have led to declining or
fact that the Free Asian nations, especially India, are
sluggish agricultural output.
Finally, after good or
seeking to make the transition to independence and
excellent harvests in the years 1950-1953, the rhythm
modern economies by essentially democratic methods
of weather may well run against the regime in the
and with Free World assistance.
next few years.
Although an agricultural crisis can¬
are as yet unwilling to accept Chinese Communist
not be predicted firmly, it is not to be ruled out; and
claims to leadership in solving the historic problems
it would strike at the foundations of Peking’s basic
of Asian weakness and poverty.
policies.
Broadly speaking, it is our conclusion that
are essentially the same in Communist China as in
Peking requires a 10 per cent increase in agricultural
the rest of Asia and the Chinese Communists have
output over 1952 to fulfill its First Five Year Plan;
made their claim to Asian leadership on the basis
and that a 10 per cent decline would yield a major
that they seek the same goals. Communist China can¬
disruptive crisis if it were to persist for several harvest
not isolate herself from Asia as Soviet Russia could
seasons.
isolate herself from Europe. Thus, Communist China
In addition to these weaknesses due to internal con¬
These Asian nations
Since those problems
is caught in the ideological struggle in Asia.
If Free
ditions the Chinese Communist regime has distinct
Asia succeeds in making significant progress toward
liabilities in its relationships with the outside world.
dignified independence and improvements in welfare
35 without using Communist methods, the Chinese Com¬
gression
munist regime’s claims to leadership will have little
power beyond its present limits.
meaning to the other Asian nations.
be
blocked
from
expanding
Communist
The successful geographical frustration of Com¬
When we balance the strengths and weaknesses of
munism in Asia is necessary first of all to provide the
the Chinese Communist regime, it is evident that Com¬
minimum security for the economic and political de¬
munist China, for all its potential strength, is not yet
velopment of Free Asia.
established as a great independent power but instead
able length of time, it would also significantly, if in¬
has only begun the process of becoming one.
directly, affect Communist China.
The
If sustained over a consider¬
Chinese Communist regime, faced with unsolved
The Chinese Communists entered into the Sino-
problems of administration and with increasing pop¬
Soviet alliance at a time when they had confident
ular discontent, must still overcome economic weak¬
hopes of Communist expansion in Asia.
nesses that endanger their whole program of economic
provisions and the possibility of the extension of
growth and industrialization.
Far from being assured
Communist power by joint Sino-Soviet action in Asia
of success, the Chinese Communists face a future that
compensated for the unfavorable aspects of the alli¬
is uncertain in the extreme.
ance, especially Communist China’s dependence on
And, most important
Its military
from the United States and Free World point of view,
the Soviet Union.
it can readily be seen that the future of Communist
military containment would reduce the value of the
China depends not only on what the Communist re¬
military provisions of the alliance in the eyes of many
gime can accomplish inside of China but also on what
Chinese and emphasize those elements in the alliance
happens in the rest of Asia.
least attractive to the Chinese—the border provisions
Returning, then, to United States policy in Asia
A protracted period of effective
and the economic arrangements.
In short, the frus¬
and its meaning in the struggle against Communism,
tration of Communism in Asia would increase the
the significant conclusion to be drawn from a realistic
elements of friction in the Sino-Soviet alliance and
appraisal of Communist China’s strengths and weak¬
deny Peking important power advantages both within
nesses is that a successful United States policy in Asia
and outside the Communist bloc.
can have important, perhaps decisive, influence on
The frustration of Chinese Communist expansion
the development of Communist China—and, therefore,
would be also the frustration of any hope of quickly
on the whole issue of Communism in Asia.
The po¬
adding new channels of trade and new sources of
tential interplay between American policy in Free
food and raw materials so urgently needed to assure
Asia and the forces at work in Communist China can
the success of Chinese Communist plans for economic
be described in broad outline at least.
growth and rapid industrialization.
There would be
no diverting the people’s attention from failures at Military Policy
home by pointing to triumphs abroad, no justifying
The British experience in Malaya, the French fail¬
food shortages and lower standards of living on the
ure in Indo-China, and the problem of the Huks in
ground that victorious armies must be fed.
The Chi¬
the Philippines have demonstrated that the frustra¬
nese Communist regime would be forced to live with
tion of Communism in Asia cannot be achieved by
the realities, the critical weaknesses, of their economy.
Flowever, there will be for
If Communist China had no hope of expansion by
some time the possibility of Communist military ag¬
armed force, the problem of the balance of power
gression for which the new Asian nations are not
between the military and civil chains of command
adequately prepared; and those nations must know
might well become acute, for military frustration
that we are ready and able to assist them.
For we
would raise the question of allocations of manpower
must retain in the Free World all of Free Asia, in¬
and resources to the military, a highly controversial
cluding Laos, Cambodia, and Southern Vietnam.
issue in a strained economy.
military means alone.
The
The present power and
minimum condition for any American policy in Asia
prestige of the Chinese Communist military leaders
worthy of the name is that Communist military ag¬
would be threatened.
36 In general, then, a positive United States military
would inevitably find a way into China; and there are
policy in Asia would both increase the serious prob¬
many ways of accelerating the communication proc¬
lems already faced by the Chinese Communist regime
ess.
and severely test the unity of its leadership, the real
dermine the foundations of Communist power in
source of its power.
Communist China; at the very least, it would seriously
These indirect effects of military
frustration would increase over time even with Mao
The awareness of such an alternative could un¬
weaken that power.
in control; and they would aggravate the complex and unsolved problem of succession if Mao died.
Conclusion
The message of this chapter is that the policies and Political and Economic
Policy
the performance of Communist China are susceptible
A creative United States policy that successfully
to the influence of Free Asia; that the political and
strengthened and speeded up economic and political
ideological threat of Communist China to Free Asia
development in Free Asia would have far-reachin
has its direct counterpart in the threat of Free Asia
effects on Communist China.
to Communist China.
The Chinese Communists have based their right
These assertions cannot be conclusively proved.
to rule China and their claim to political leadership
The realist looking for immediate clearly defined re¬
in Asia on the “correctness” of Communist theory and
sults is likely to be skeptical.
methods.
It is obvious that the success of Free World
policies proposed here were to be defended solely on
guidance and democratic methods in Asia, that is,
their believed effects on the power structure now
the steady progress of Free Asian nations to genuine
operating on the Chinese mainland, the case for them
independence under their own native leadership,
would be weak—or at least extremely difficult to make
would deny the Chinese Communists any hope of
with conviction.
political leadership in Asia; for a strong Free Asia
link.
which
claims
the policies that have been outlined in the foregoing
would destroy the prestige of the Chinese Communist
chapters are required as a minimum to hold the pre¬
regime in Asia.
carious balance of power that still lies with the Free
successfully
challenged
Communist
More than that, Free World success in Asia would
And, indeed, if the
But they do not depend on this
Regardless of their effect on Communist China,
World in Asia.
have effects inside Communist China—on the literate
Nevertheless, the judgment and the faith underly¬
Chinese, including many of the 6,000,000 Chinese
ing the thesis of this chapter are to be taken seriously.
Communists, and, in the longer run, on the Chinese
Communism came to China because the Communists
peasant and industrial worker.
It should be recalled
exploited the failure of modern China, in association
that the success of Chinese Communism in 1949 was
with the West, to realize the revolutionary aspirations
largely due to the fact that there was no alternative
that have been stirred in Asia over the past century.
then to the choice between the weakened and ineffi¬
The policy of the Communist regime in Peking is in¬
cient Kuomintang and the Communists; and that the
tended primarily to consolidate its own absolute
Communists now deny that there is any path to the
power at home and to make possible its expansion
realization of Chinese aspirations except Communism.
abroad rather than to realize those revolutionary as¬
The successful democratic evolution of Free Asia
pirations.
would demonstrate the existence of an alternative—
and if Free Asia succeeds in meeting successfully the
that a lean-to-one-side policy is unnecessary to main¬
challenge of that region’s aspirations, we shall see a
tain the dignity of Asian nations; that the productivity
new phase in the Chinese revolution.
of Asian agriculture can be increased without violence
of Asian history, the Sino-Soviet alliance in its present
and coercion, whereas the results of Communist vio¬
form is the wrong way to meet China’s authentic de¬
lence and coercion are declining food production and
sire for independence and dignity on the world scene;
hunger; that industrial progress and national strength
the Chinese Communist New General Line is the
can be maintained without totalitarian sacrifice of
wrong way to meet China’s authentic desire to mod¬
individual rights.
ernize and to develop its economy.
The fact of such results in Asia
If Peking’s expansionist dream is frustrated
As a matter
A strong and
37 creative Free Asia can both frustrate Peking and dem¬
to determine the fate of Thailand, Malaya, and, per¬
onstrate to the Chinese that a more attractive alterna¬
haps, Burma and Indonesia.
tive exists.
that will decisively succeed or fail in the next decade,
At some future time the profoundly
pragmatic Chinese people will choose their own ver¬ sion of that alternative.
Asia is under an attack
if not the next few years. We are in the midst of a climactic battle.
In the face of the brute reality of Peking’s current
It is
being fought with diplomacy, economic policies, sub¬
unity and strength, this faith in an historical process
version, and guerrilla forces.
may seem an act of optimism relevant only to a very
a place in the battle; but it is a small place now and
long future.
may remain small.
But it must be borne in mind that we
Guns and armies have
Despite its enormous domestic
stand at a highly dramatic moment in Asian history.
problems, Communist China has initiated this battle
The two greatest countries of Asia plan, within the
and it has staked its future on maintaining forward
coming decade, to make their bids for economic mod¬
momentum in Asia.
ernization.
The relative performance of India and
The United States should enter the battle of this
Communist China over the course of their respective
decade in Asia along the whole of its front.
First Five Year Plans may very well determine the
so we should be aware not only that we have a stake
outcome of the ideological struggle in Asia.
in avoiding defeat but also that victory could be de¬
The fate
of Southern Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia is likely
cisive.
In doing
CHAPTER
The Military Problem states of mind.
Politics and Force
This book is mainly a discussion of the political and
The policies of war were one thing,
the policies of peace another; and we did not prac¬
economic policies of the United States in Asia—poli¬
tice both at the same time.
cies that we would hope to pursue by peaceful means.
to be fought through to clean-cut decision by soldiers;
For that very reason, it is of particular importance
and then peace was to be resumed, dominated by
that the military component of our national problem
civilians and civil action.
not be ignored or taken for granted.
of force in relation to peaceful instruments for wield¬
We live in a world in which peace is by no means
ing influence and power.
Wars were special events,
Americans did not think In fact, our national debate
assured, and it cannot be assured by the action of the
on foreign policy since 1945 has tended often to as¬
United States alone.
sume the form of a debate on military versus non¬
On the contrary, the threat of
war is heavy on our minds.
We are opposed by men
to whom war is a legitimate means of extending their power.
So long as this condition exists, any United
military action, as though there could be no connec¬ tion between them. Until recently many Americans assumed that we
States policy in Asia or elsewhere by which we intend
had a clear-cut choice.
Some felt that, since we faced
to protect the security and ideological interests of
an avowed enemy, we should go forth to meet him
our country must take into account the possible use
for a military showdown at the earliest convenient
of force.
moment; or that we should meet the menace of his aggression by building up American armaments and
A vigorous military policy can never be a substitute In fact,
strictly military alliances with friends prepared to
no military policy can succeed without a proper po¬
confront Communist strength with military counter¬
litical and economic foundation.
strength.
for proper political and economic policies.
But under present
Others, sensing that the struggle was being
world conditions political, economic, and military
conducted against us substantially by non-military
action are so closely linked and interdependent that
means, exclusively emphasized the political, economic,
we dare not ignore the fact that our peaceful interests
and ideological nature of the struggle.
in Asia must be supported by a soundly conceived
majority of Americans recognize that both military
and firmly sustained military policy.
and non-military action are required to ensure our
Now the vast
The acceptance of a close link between military
national interests, but the nature of our military
and non-military policy is relatively new to us as
problem and its connection with other forms of United
a nation.
States action abroad are still far from clear in many
It has been our habit to regard war and
peace as two wholly different states of action and
American minds.
38
39 Should the United States Initiate War?
First, it is against our deepest moral and religious
Despite the strains of the past decade, the United
instincts to initiate war; and our national feeling is
States has avoided enlarging even such provocative
so strong that it would be impossible for the com¬
tests of strength as the Berlin Blockade or the Korean
mander-in-chief to act with the requisite secrecy and
War into an ultimate showdown.
initiative without violating some of our most cher¬
It has been con¬
sistently the policy of our government (Democratic
ished political traditions.
and Republican) to look after American interests with
Second, we cannot foresee even the purely military
the minimum use of force compatible with its respon¬
developments of a war initiated by us against the
sibilities. As a government and as a people the United
Soviet Union and Communist China: it might lead
States has rejected the idea of what has come to be
to a quick victory, notably if we did not demand the unconditional surrender of our enemies; but it might
called preventive war. But there is hardly an American citizen who has not at one time or another felt a strong instinctive desire to have it out with our enemies; and there has been a small minority, including some men of un¬ questionable integrity, who have more or less openly advocated that we do so.
Although this is an issue
difficult to discuss with coolness and clarity, it can¬ not be ignored; for our national decision not to ini¬ tiate war has important consequences. What are the arguments for United States initiation of a military showdown with the Soviet Union and
rilla struggle of which the outcome would be uncer¬ tain; it might lead to the effective elimination of com¬ peting centers of power, but the tasks of making such a victory stick for the long run would be enormously difficult. Third, the United States cannot enter a major war without counting on major loss of human life, major material damage, and possibly more profound and long-lasting damage to the fundamentals of our so¬ ciety. Fourth, our more vulnerable allies would not at
Communist China? First, we are confronted by sworn enemies whose steady unswerving objective is to destroy the founda¬ tions of American security in Europe and Asia so that they can deal with an isolated United States in their own good time. Second, starting from our absolute advantage in atomic weapons in
degenerate into a prolonged ground force and guer¬
1945, our military capabilities
relative to those of our enemies have steadily dimin¬ ished; and it is in the very nature of the new weapons that our advantage will grow less and less because our industrial strength will be less and less a guarantee of effective military strength.
first support a major war initiated by the United States; and, depending on the course of such a war, American relations with Eurasia might be perma¬ nently and adversely affected, with the possibility that even if we won a military victory we might lose what is more important to our national interest—the good will and effective cooperation of the people of Europe and Asia. Leaving aside the question of morality, the case against major war initiated by the United States comes to this: the possibility of a quick resolution of our fears, worries, and strains must be set off against incalculable risks.
Third, it is in the nature of the atomic weapon delivery problem that important advantages attach to initiative and surprise. Fourth, if we do not have a military showdown
The Consequences of Rejecting War
As a people we have seen both sides of this argu¬ ment pretty clearly; and we have decided against
while we still have some lead in atomic weapons, we
initiating an anti-Communist war.
shall have to engage in a long-drawn struggle in¬
seen so clearly the full meaning of that decision. Since
volving revolutionary and unfamiliar problems for
war initiated by us is not accepted as national policy,
the United States and requiring complex and awk¬
we are taking upon ourselves the responsibility of
ward alliances—a kind of struggle in which the United
protecting our national interests by other means.
States has not proved its capabilities.
Although our decision may involve less risk and cer¬
What are the arguments against initiating war?
But we have not
tainly conforms better to our national tradition, we
40 are accepting a deadly challenge on ground that is new for us as a nation.
We are not eliminating risk.
We are substituting one set of risks for another.
In
This does not mean that our atomic weapons are unimportant to security or that the degree of our danger is wholly outside our control.
The mainte¬
rejecting war initiated by us we must recognize that
nance of the kind of atomic weapon delivery capability
the propositions underlying the case for it are true.
we now apparently have, including the protection of
We do live in a world with sworn enemies, constrained
that capability against surprise attack, can deny to
from destroying us only by their internal power limi¬
any enemy not bent on suicide his ability to use them
tations set against the strength of all kinds that we
against us.
can mount against them; our strictly military power
But the maintenance of this capability is not a
is relatively diminishing; potentially, we are leaving
static thing.
initiative and surprise in attack in the hands of our
livery, the means of defense are all under constant
enemies, and this could matter greatly.
development and change.
We still must
The weapons, the means of their de¬ Until the very day when
demonstrate that we can build an alternative policy
effective international controls are installed we must
that will protect our society and our geographical
maintain our ability to deliver overwhelming national
base.
disaster on our enemies; and we must minimize their
More than that, the rejection of war initiated by us does not mean that major war cannot come.
ability to damage us and our allies.
This is an end¬
It
less task—not merely of allocating money and produc¬
does not mean that we shall never have to use force
ing gadgets, but also an endless task for creative
short of major war to protect our national interest.
scientists.
It in no sense guarantees peace.
long pull only if we recognize this fact and avoid
Our decision re¬
quires that we combine enormous military prepara¬ tion for various contingencies with a creative and vigorous political and economic policy.
In the course
of action that we have chosen, our enemies are not only the top leadership in Moscow and Peking; com¬ placency, lack of creative imagination, and inadequate understanding and effort here at home are equally dangerous enemies.
technical complacency. Our present position so far as atomic weapons are concerned might be summarized briefly as follows: First, our enemies know that atomic war would threaten Communist rule in Russia and China.
With
will and leadership our free society would re-erect itself after atomic attack.
The new weapons thus
carry a threat to our enemies not duplicated in the
The Strategic Role of Atomic Weapons
The United States is now in the process of reap¬ praising the role of atomic weapons in our security system in the light of their enlarging power of de¬ struction and the enemy’s ability to deliver them against us and our allies.
We can maintain our capability for the
It was clear from the be¬
ginning, in 1945, that atomic weapons would not in¬ definitely guarantee the security of the United States. If we developed such weapons, our potential enemies
United States.
We have this advantage in the test
of will with which we live. Second, our major allies in Europe and Asia, less protected than ourselves, will go to the greatest lengths to avoid atomic war.
It will be nearly impossible
to hold the Free World alliance together if our mili¬ tary policy is to depend solely on the accumulation of atomic weapons and air power for the purpose of massive retaliation.
We were also
Third, we must, therefore, find ways of coping with
aware that atomic weapons carried with them the new
the enemy’s challenge by means short of our ultimate
threat that our enemies could inflict directly upon us
weapons, if our aim is to maintain our coalition and
grievous damage and that future all-out wars would
to stay in Eurasia.
not be fought wholly on the territory of other peoples.
the enemy’s limited aggression in Eurasia can only
Thus we have had to accept the fact that the United
be met with our ultimate weapons and the citizens
States must live in a world of physical danger and
and governments of the Free World in Eurasia are
insecurity, at least until effective disarmament is in¬
openly or covertly blackmailed into accepting limited
stalled on a world basis.
defeat rather than permitting us to use those weapons.
could and would also develop them.
We must avoid situations in which
41 Fourth, in the last analysis, we must be prepared
assumption makes sense only if the United States
to confront the enemy with superior relative delivery
maintains its atomic weapon delivery capability, in¬
capabilities, as a deterrent, and to fight and win a
cluding the ability to maintain it in the face of sud¬
war with the ultimate weapons—if necessary on a bi¬
den secret assault and if Moscow and Peking remain
lateral basis—should his irrational action detonate a
aware that this is true.
war.
With the published evidence it is possible to en¬
From this view, it would be a disaster to the Amer¬
visage substantial military operations, limited in scope,
ican interest if we now prepared ourselves simply for
where atomic weapons could be used without yielding
the ultimate war; step by step this position leads to
mass destruction of cities and civil populations. Troop
our isolation on this continent; that is, it leads to
concentrations, air fields, communications facilities,
the achievement of the enemy’s primary immediate
shipping concentrations might all present targets sus¬
objective.
It would equally be a disaster if we did
ceptible of such limited attack; and it might well be
not maintain the capability to fight such a war to
to the advantage of both sides to maintain the rules
victory, if necessary on a national basis, alone; for
of the game, excluding large-scale strategic atomic at¬
we could then be bluffed to defeat or actually de¬
tack, down to the end of hostilities.
feated.
We must bend our energies to coping with
In accepting this possibility we must not have any
the enemy’s threat by means short of ultimate war,
illusion that such a situation would simply repeat the
holding our coalition together, holding the balance
Second World War experience with poison gas.
of power in Eurasia, while still maintaining a frame¬
use of gas at no time in the Second World War prom¬
work of superiority in delivery capabilities in the ulti¬
ised clean-cut decision or even a major effect on the
mate weapons.
enemy’s position.
A successful counter to our enemy’s atomic weapon
The
Hitler, mad and going down to
defeat in his Berlin shelter, could not pull his enemy
delivery capabilities is, then, the beginning, not the
down with him even by the use of poison gas.
end, of the military security task.
Our enemy noted
perate enemy, on the verge of major defeat in tactical
some years back that we had apparently come to re¬
atomic war, might well think of breaking the rules
gard atomic weapons as our main strength.
of the game.
Just as
A des¬
This possibility underlines the need to
the Russians worked around, blunted, and defeated
think of future war, should it come, not only in terms
Hitler’s main strength—his ability to penetrate Russia
of limited military techniques but also in terms of
with armored divisions—so they and the Chinese Com¬
limited objectives; that is, objectives short of uncon¬
munists are seeking to work around our atomic
ditional surrender.
weapon delivery capability by diplomacy, blackmail,
The fundamental role of alliances in the strategy
subversion, and limited military operations that afford
of American foreign policy, in addition to our national
neither satisfactory atomic weapon targets nor a po¬
stake in avoiding large-scale atomic attack, appears to
litical setting in which we can find it possible to
make the current trend of thought sound; namely,
launch a direct attack upon the centers of Commu¬
that we should envisage the possibility of coping with
nist strength.
a major military test of strength by means that would
This is the awkward form in which
we face the struggle with Communism in Asia.
exclude (at our initiative) the employment of atomic weapons in a general assault on the enemy’s society.
The Use of Force Short of Total Atomic Attack
The evolution of a strategy and tactics to match this
It is evident that the military men of the West are
conception is a challenging task, evidently involving
now turning their minds to the possibilities of de¬
new ideas, new types of military formations, new
fensive warfare short of total atomic counterattack
equipment.
on the enemy’s society.
must press forward; but limited major war is not now
Underlying this trend in
It is a task with which we and our allies
thought is the judgment that it is to the interest of
the form of assault the Free World faces in Asia.
Moscow and Peking, as well as Washington, London,
we could lose Asia to Communism without being
and Paris, to avoid the unlimited use of weapons of
offered the occasion for such a new, but fundamentally
mass destruction.
familiar military trial of strength.
It cannot be said too often that this
And
42 the point where guerrilla and other limited operations
The Soft War
can take effective hold; but we must be prepared to
What we face in Asia—and we face it now—is the
meet them now and in the future.
possibility that new territories will fall to the enemy by a combination of subversion and guerrilla warfare.
The Three Lines of Defense
Such operations do not require masses of troops or They do not demand that Soviet
Our military policy, then, must be a three-part
or Chinese Communist troops cross borders and create,
policy: we must remain prepared to fight and win
politically as well as militarily, targets for major Amer¬
a total war; we must develop new capabilities for lim¬
ican military strength.
In Vietnam, Laos, Cambodia,
ited warfare, embracing the tactical use of atomic
Thailand, and possibly in Indonesia as well, the enemy
weapons; we must develop with our Free World part¬
is now conducting this targetless warfare in which he
ners methods for dealing with subversive and guer¬
is a professional and we are amateurs.
rilla operations.
modern equipment.
Such aggression confronts the Free World and the
v
It is doubtful that we would reject the idea of a
It is clear that
showdown with our enemies and adopt the more diffi¬
we cannot act alone to stem Vietminh activities in
cult and complex method for dealing with our enemies
Southern Vietnam.
We can only be effective if the
if we did not have faith that a successful frustration
Vietnamese themselves and their government are pre¬
of Communist expansion by successfully building and
pared to resist; but, if they are prepared to resist, then
maintaining economic and political health in the
the United States can contribute a significant margin
Free World will eventually lead to changes within the
of help.
Communist bloc that will diminish or end the present
United States with a major challenge.
It should be recalled that Communism has
several times been set back by the Free World in this
acute dangers under which we live.
History affords
kind of muted warfare: in the Philippines, where a
few examples of peaceful transition of societies from
few years back the situation was almost as precarious
totalitarianism (or acute autocracy) to more benevolent
as in South Vietnam; in Burma, where on its own the
and peaceful forms of rule.
newly independent government made an almost magi¬
with Hitler and Mussolini offers little hope.
cal recovery from initial chaos; in Greece, where a
wars were required to end their rule.
substantial civil war had to be fought.
examination of the changes now taking place in Soviet
Our modern experience Bloody
But a close
Success in resisting the combination of subversion
society and of the problems and dilemmas with which
and guerrilla operations depends directly on the po¬
a successful Free World would confront Communist
litical, economic, and social health of the area at¬
China give limited grounds for maintaining faith in
tacked.
the possibility of a non-military resolution to the cur¬
A substantial part of American and Free
World policy must be devoted to eliminating or pre¬
rent struggle.
venting those circumstances under which subversion
the peaceful courses of American political and eco¬
can succeed.
In a sense, the rest of this book concerns
nomic action in Asia we must face the fact that they
substantially what the United States can do to avoid
cannot succeed unless they are conducted within a
such circumstances of weakness in Asia.
But we live
framework of American and Free World military
in a revolutionary world where rapidly changing so¬
capabilities covering the whole range from all-out
cieties may well be weak and vulnerable to the ene¬
atomic warfare to guerrilla and even lesser local sub¬
my’s methods of aggression in certain phases of their
versive operations.
history.
minimizing the use of force, we must be prepared to
It should be a major aim of American policy
to prevent situations in Asia from degenerating to
We must keep our faith, but as we plan
And, within a general policy of
use these capabilities when occasion demands.
CHAPTER —
7
—
An Economic Policy in Free Asia The United States must develop a more vigorous economic policy in Asia.
communications, and such products as raw materials
Without such a policy our
in which other nations have an economic interest.
political and military efforts in Asia will continue to
The scope of commerce, internal and external, widens.
have weak foundations.
And, here and there, manufacturing enterprise ap¬
As emphasized in Chapter 2,
Asia’s economic aspirations are linked closely to the
pears.
highest political and human goals of Asia’s peoples;
But all this activity proceeds on a limited basis
and American economic policy in Asia has, therefore,
within an economy and a society still mainly charac¬
important political as well as economic meaning.
terized by traditional low-productivity methods and
This chapter, however, deals with Asia’s economic
by the old social and cultural values and institutions
problem in narrower technical terms.
that developed in conjunction with them.
During
The Asian economic problem includes four key
this period, which generally lasts some time, the abil¬
elements: the problem of transition to self-sustaining
ity to use additional capital productively is low but
growth, dramatized by India; Japan’s acute problem
the small amounts absorbed are critical to further
of paying its way in international trade; the tempta¬
growth.
tion of trade with the Communist bloc; and the ideo¬
can wither and the economy return to stagnation.
logical challenge of the Communist example.
is also the period when the spreading of new technical
Each deserves separate examination.
This is a dangerous period; for early growth It
developments and technical assistance is most urgently needed; and where there may be occasion for large
The Transition to Self-Sustaining Growth
investment from abroad in railways, roads, docks,
Once societies are stirred from the lethargy of tradi¬
electric power stations, and other overhead capital.
tional economic stagnation, their transition to mature
Roughly, this was the stage in which Great Britain
self-sustained
found herself in 1783, the United States in 1848,
growth
generally
proceeds
in
three
Japan in 1868, Russia in 1890, Indonesia in 1954.
broadly definable stages. First, there is a period of several decades at least
Second, there is a stage of take-off in which many
during which the preconditions for economic progress
old blocks and resistances to steady growth are finally
are established.
The idea that economic progress is
overcome.
Under the impact of a particular stimulus,
possible spreads.
Education, for some at least, broad¬
sometimes
technological,
sometimes
political,
the
ens and changes to suit the needs of modern economic
economy lurches forward.
activity.
New types of enterprising men come forward
progress, which have yielded limited bursts of ac¬
willing to mobilize savings and to take risks in pursuit
tivity, expand and come to dominate the society.
of profit.
The rate of effective investment and savings rises
Banks and other institutions for mobilizing
capital appear.
Investment increases in transport,
43
The forces for economic
from, say, 5 per cent of the national income to 10
44 Key new industries expand rapidly,
Others, like Indonesia and perhaps Egypt and Iran,
yielding profits a large proportion of which are re¬
are approaching a point where a sustained effort to
invested in new plant.
make the transition may become feasible within, say,
per cent or more.
New techniques spread in
agriculture as well as industry, as increasing numbers
a decade.
of persons are prepared to accept them and the deep
sition; and Mexico is, perhaps, emerging from it.
changes they bring to ways of life.
A new class of
Argentina and Brazil have, on the whole, passed
businessmen, usually private, sometimes public serv¬
through this transition with success and confront now
ants, emerges and directs the enlarging flow of invest¬
the problems of regular growth itself.
ment.
India and Burma are beginning the tran¬
New possibilities for export and new import
requirements develop.
The economy exploits hitherto
unused natural resources and methods of production.
A Policy of Assisting Take-Off
An American policy designed to assist Asian eco¬
This is the stage when the need for foreign capital
nomic growth can be related to these stages.
is at its peak.
tain Asian countries the purpose of technical assistance
Often all this burgeoning enterprise
attracts substantial private capital from abroad.
In cer¬
In
and loans will be to help create the preconditions for
a decade or two both the basic structure of the econ¬
take-off; in other countries the purpose will be to
omy and the social and political structure of the so¬
accelerate and ease the social and political strains of
ciety are transformed in such a way that a steady rate
the take-off process itself.
of growth can be sustained with a diminishing inflow
assistance policy is to see the underdeveloped countries
of capital.
This was the process through which
of Asia through the take-off process into a stage where
Britain had passed, roughly, by 1815; the United
they are growing regularly out of their own resources.
States by 1873; Japan by 1890; Russia by 1913; and
This does not mean, of course, that we would be
through which Communist China and India seek to
assuming the responsibility for elevating their stand¬
pass in the next decade or so.
This is the complex
transition to a stage where sustained economic growth becomes possible.
Our aim would be to join
in partnership with those countries that are themselves taking measures to accelerate the growth process and
Third comes the long stage of regular if fluctuating progress.
ards of life to our own.
The ultimate goal of an
Some 10-20 per cent of the national in¬
come is steadily invested.
The make-up of the econ¬
omy changes unceasingly as technique improves, new industries accelerate, older industries level off.
The
economy finds its place in the international economy: goods formerly imported are produced at home; new import requirements develop, and new export com¬ modities to match them.
The society alters or adjusts
its old social and cultural values in such ways as to make possible modern and efficient production.
As
rapid growth provides a surplus from which addi¬
are prepared to absorb effectively increased technical assistance and capital from abroad.
Our goal would
be to assist their own efforts to develop forward momentum. The growth problem of each country at each stage will, therefore, differ.
Any program designed to ac¬
celerate growth must be hand-tailored, case by case, with a proper balance between technical assistance and capital investment and with a proper distribu¬ tion of both. At the moment India is the largest of the Asian
tional investment can be made, the need for capital
nations within the Free World and has the most pur¬
from abroad slackens and ultimately ceases entirely,
poseful economic program.
until domestic savings become so abundant that they
take off into self-sustaining growth.
begin to seek profitable employment abroad in areas
Five Year Plan is directed primarily toward agricul¬
even more recently launched on the growth sequence.
ture; and this makes sense as a first stage; but to suc¬
The so-called underdeveloped countries of the con¬
ceed in its take-off, India’s industrial effort must be
temporary world stand at different points in relation
expanded at the same time that the progress already
to these three rough stages.
under way in the rural areas is maintained.
Some, notably in Africa
It is actively trying to India’s First
Further
and the Middle East, have barely begun to develop
United States assistance to India, if granted and ac¬
the
cepted, should be directed mainly to industry.
preconditions
for
the
transition
to
growth.
45 The other Asian nations present problems different from that of India in many respects.
For example,
Japan has the energy, skill, frugality, investment experience, and trading know-how to develop its ex¬
Indonesia must still develop an agricultural policy
port industries and enlarge its foreign trade.
that will meet a food problem that is just around the
in fact moved in these directions in recent years.
corner, given the rise of population.
And, in gen¬
What is in doubt is whether the rate at which it
eral, Indonesian society must reorganize in order to
moves and the pattern of its investments will suffice
exploit that country’s great long-run opportunities
to avoid stagnation or decline in Japanese standards
for growth.
of living or a degenerative dependence on United
Pakistan must create adequate machinery
It has
for planning and administration in order to absorb
States grants.
What is also in doubt is whether the
capital effectively.
Technical assistance in its widest
United States and the rest of the Free World will
sense has a large role to play in Free Asia, and im¬
move at a sufficient rate in their investment and trade
portant changes in domestic attitudes and institutions
policies to provide the Japanese economy with the
must come about in some areas before the transition
Free World markets and sources of supply Japan needs
to self-sustaining growth can be seriously attempted.
for a solution to its problem.
In general, Asia is in an active pretake-off stage,
There are two major links between a solution for
with many possibilities for agricultural, raw material,
Japan and accelerated growth in the rest of Free
and industrial development that have an importance
Asia: first, accelerated Free Asian growth could offer
both for the evolution of each country and for t;he
Japan important new export markets; second, Free
possibility of solving Japan’s long-run problem.
Asia could increase its output of the commodities Japan needs increasingly to import.
The Problem of Japan
Potentialities exist in Free Asia for meeting a part
Japan confronts a basic long-run problem that is made more difficult by its immediate situation.
of Japan’s raw material and foodstuff requirements.
The
The known potentialities must be further developed
Japanese population is rising at the rate of 1.5 per
and new potentialities must be explored (e.g., the
cent each year.
development of Mindanao) in any effective regional
To maintain its living standard,
Japan needs more food and more industrial raw ma¬ terials.
In part, these commodities must come from
abroad.
Japan must, therefore, increase its exports
steadily, and this requires that it modernize and de¬ velop those industries whose products have the best chance of finding a future market. Japan faces this basic problem from a weak posi¬ tion.
Since the end of the war Japan has relied on
large imports from the United States of food and raw materials—notably cotton, wheat, and coal. Japan could not fully pay for these imports by selling in the United States.
Dollars were provided by American
aid and by military expenditures of American forces in the Far East.
As American aid and military expendi¬
tures in Japan have decreased, Japan has been strug¬ gling to find ways of earning dollars by exporting to the United States and seeking to find food and raw materials in countries more willing than the United States to buy Japanese products.
program for Free Asia. In such a regional effort it would have to be estab¬ lished in detail what Asian natural resources are suitable for economic development as Japanese im¬ ports.
Those Asian nations prepared to contribute
to the development of exports to Japan would cer¬ tainly have to receive additional loans for national development purposes.
Finally, the Asian nations
would have to feel assured that their development plans would be accelerated by these arrangements and not distorted; and they would have to feel assured that the increase in their trade with Japan would not carry with it political dependence. In short, the technical assistance and investment efforts in a regional plan for Asia should have three major purposes which would be mutually support¬ ing: the acceleration of growth in the underdeveloped economies, including the growth of demand for in¬
Japan needs, therefore, enlarged markets for its
dustrial equipment; a development of Japan’s capacity
exports, enlarged supplies of imports, and the mod¬
to produce economically and to export competitively
ernization of its export industries.
more industrial equipment; and the development of
46 foodstuff and raw-material surpluses in the region for
strained.
Although a totalitarian regime can allocate
Japanese import.
scarce commodities for export even under starvation conditions at home—as Stalin did for a time in the
The Empty Temptation of Trade with the
early 1930’s—there are likely to be grave difficulties
Communist Bloc
in expanding and maintaining an expanded level of
In the present phase of Communist policy Peking appears to seek an expansion in trade with the Free World.
Chinese agricultural exports unless total Chinese agri¬ cultural output expands.
In part this move may arise from real eco¬
From a strictly business point of view China is not
nomic interests; and it is certainly in part a political
likely to have a significant amount of grain, rice,
tactic to weaken the unity of the Free World and its
cotton, coal, or iron ore to sell Japan.
ties to the United States.
The technical prospects for expanded Japanese
The following may be the economic basis for
trade with the Communist bloc look little better,
Its
even if one were to assume that the total export sur¬
Five Year Plan calls for a substantial increase in im¬
pluses of the Communist bloc were to be made avail¬
ports over 1952 levels; and these imports must be
able to Japan.*
essentially financed by exports since Moscow’s credits
seed, and nuts could total Communist bloc exports
to Peking are limited.
The Communist bloc may
have met total Japanese import requirements in 1953.
have set some kind of upper limit to its willingness
A high proportion of the Communist-bloc coal avail¬
to accept key Chinese export commodities in exchange
able represents Polish exports to western Europe; and,
for industrial equipment.
similarly, the bulk of the timber exports available are
Peking’s interest in trade with the Free World.
There may be, therefore,
Only in coal, soybeans, timber, oil
pressure on Peking to increase its exports to the Free
Soviet shipments to western Europe.
Neither trade
World in order to secure Free World commodities
is likely to be diverted in large amounts to Japan.
or Free World foreign exchange that Moscow may
It is, in fact, out of the question to envisage a total
well be willing to accept in exchange for further ex¬
diversion of Communist-bloc trade to Japan.
ports to China.
On the other hand, the agricultural
if such a diversion occurred, however, Japan’s mas¬
difficulties of the Soviet Union may justify a shift in
sive requirements for cotton, rice, petroleum, wool,
Chinese production to meet Russian requirements;
wheat, and sugar could not be met.
and the economic basis for Sino-Soviet trade may be
trade holds out no significant prospects for Japan,
expanding.
except as a minor palliative.
Even
Communist-bloc
Peking’s Five Year Plan apparently requires an in¬
To Japan, and to the industrialized countries of
crease in imports of about $600 million by 1957 as
the Free World generally, the somewhat vague offers
compared with 1952.
of expanded trade that Peking dangles before them
There appears to be no inten¬
tion to diminish the present volume of trade with the
represent a powerful attraction.
rest of the Communist bloc; but Peking may seek
a serious dollar crisis; and any imports for which
to achieve a part of its trade expansion outside the
Japan can pay with its own exports look highly attrac¬
Soviet bloc.
tive.
The bulk of any increase in Peking’s exports must come from Chinese agriculture.
Increases in coal and
Second,
First, Japan faces
the attractiveness of such trade to
Britain, Germany, and other industrialized countries is only in degree less than it is for Japan.
Although
iron-ore output in China will be largely absorbed by
the western European trade position is now relatively
expanded domestic requirements unless an extraor¬
good, it remains precarious.
dinary investment effort is made to develop a surplus
economies are to grow, their foreign trade must con¬
for export.
tinue to grow.
There are no indications that such an
effort is in process or planned; and there is positive
If the western European
And this increase in foreign trade must be in good
evidence of difficulties in Communist China’s coal
part with areas other than the United States.
supply for domestic purposes.
reduction in American tariffs could help greatly; but
Peking plans to siphon
off an increasing proportion of agricultural output for export, even if the domestic food position is
* These conclusions are based on of George Waldstein.
unpublished
A sharp
calculations
47 the American market cannot offer a total solution
shared between the standard of living and further
to our allies’ requirements for trade expansion.
investment.
A concerted policy of investment and trade develop¬
This Communist advantage must be met
by a policy of loans and grants to Free Asia from the
ment within the Free World is the only technical
industrialized countries of the Free World.
solution open to the Free World over the foreseeable
loans and grants should be on a scale sufficient to
future: trade with the Communist bloc will remain
permit Free Asia to surpass Peking’s economic per¬
a minor matter.
With the underlying confidence such
formance; and this broad effort at Free Asian growth
a policy would impart to the Free World, our friends
must be woven into a solution to Japan’s trade prob¬
might take a fresh look at trade with the Communist
lem.
bloc, freed of its illusory glamor.
These
In this race Free Asia has one major advantage of its own, the significance of which is still to be
The Communist Challenge
Peking is now engaged in a ruthless effort to in¬
measured, but which may prove decisive.
That asset
is the ingrained attitude of the peasant.
Communist
dustrialize China and is apparently mobilizing suffi¬
techniques have demonstrated that men in a modem
cient resources to launch a sustained process of eco¬
factory and in urban life generally can be so con¬
nomic growth.
Its key problem centers on agricul¬
trolled that reasonable levels of output per man can
ture because the cost of its policies may be hunger
be maintained, even with a politically discontented
and starvation on a scale that may lead to major
population.
crisis.
Peking is applying in Asia essentially the
demonstrates that its techniques drag down agricul¬
method applied by Stalin in Russia after 1929—the
tural output by removing or reducing the peasants’
mobilization of a high proportion of the national
incentive to produce.
income in the hands of the state; a concentration on
hinges on so many unobservable acts that even highly
heavy industry at the expense of agriculture; the ex¬
organized collective control systems have not been
ploitation of agriculture to supply resources for in¬
able to make the peasant produce efficiently when he
vestment and other purposes of the state.
did not think it was in his interest to do so.
The whole
The history of modern Communism
Productivity in agriculture
In
effort of Peking is geared to a military modernization
pressing the peasant to increase output against his
program to expand its current lead as the largest
will Communism has been pushing on a string.
military power in Asia and to a political program
In the Soviet Union and eastern Europe the costs
that presents Communist China as the model for the
of Communist methods in agriculture could be borne
solution of Asia’s problems of backwardness.
for a time.
In
Communism was installed in both areas
short, Peking is projecting itself to Asia as the wave
at periods when there were natural food surpluses,
of the future in both a power and an ideological sense.
normally exported; and in addition food consumption
A reasonable degree of relative success in Commu¬
could be reduced without mass starvation.
Moreover,
nist China, as compared with Free Asia, could have
when Communism took over, these areas already had
the greatest political significance for Asia’s future.
enough industrial capacity to expand industry with¬
One obvious objective of United States policy should
out enlarging foreign trade.
In China and in Asia
be to help those Asian areas that are ready to help
conditions are very different.
There are no natural
themselves
growth
food surpluses except in a few special areas; there is
achieved by consent can outstrip Peking’s totalitarian
no substantial food margin above subsistence to be
effort.
The Asians will make this comparison whether
depressed; industrialization depends on an enlarged
or not we in the United States acknowledge it, and
flow of equipment that must come substantially from
whether or not the Free Asians now acknowledge it.
abroad, either through loans or as payment for ex¬
to
demonstrate
that
economic
In this race for economic growth Peking has one
ports.
Communism is taking much greater short-run
major advantage: its control system can force invest¬
risks in Asia than it did in the Soviet Union and east¬
ment at the cost of lowered standards of living and
ern Europe.
In Free Asia
In the longer run, the costs of collectivization for
increases in output must be shared with the people.
agricultural output will assert themselves in the Soviet
in the face of acute popular discontent.
48 Union and eastern Europe, as, indeed, they are be¬
lenge—and here the United States and the rest of the
ginning to do at the present time.
industrialized Free World can help.
In Free Asia it is possible to envisage a rural revo¬
This economic race poses two specific challenges
lution, brought about at the grass roots and by con¬
to Free World policy.
First, it demands that we in¬
sent, in which the peasant is won over to new meth¬
crease the capacity to absorb industrial capital in
ods, in which he shares with agents of national and
Free Asia and that we increase the availability of
regional governments the responsibility for the social,
capital to Free Asia on a sufficient scale to outstrip
political, and technical transformation required, and
Communist China.
in which he shares the fruits of increased output.
Second, it demands that we accelerate the village
The experience of the Indian village development
revolution by democratic means so that the agricul¬
experiments is not yet conclusive, but the results
tural foundations for economic growth will be firm.
are mightily hopeful.
They have produced sufficient
This is the economic challenge with which Peking
effect to make us believe that increased output shared
confronts us.
by the peasant and industrial investment is not an
but it is important not to overlook our assets and
impossible goal.
potentials,
Quite aside from morality, the Free World’s po¬
nesses.
The challenge is real and dangerous;
and
the
enemy’s
problems
and weak¬
It appears to lie well within the capabilities
litical method of consent may prove vastly more effi¬
of the Free World to meet and defeat the challenge
cient in agriculture than are Communist methods. It
represented by China’s industrialization effort if we
may well give Free Asian development plans the agri¬
are prepared to mobilize our energies, technical skill,
cultural underpinnings they require for sustained
and a reasonable margin of capital for the effort.
success and which Communist China now notably lacks.
To drive home this advantage, however, the
effort in Asian agriculture must be pushed at high
What Should We Do about the Asian Economic Problem?
priority and with great tact and skill; and investment
The problems of the underdeveloped countries and
in industry must be supplemented by flows of inter¬
of Japan argue strongly for a vastly expanded, more
national capital.
vigorous and purposeful American economic policy
This conclusion can be roughly illustrated by com¬
in Asia.
It is here that we have the opportunity to
paring the investment magnitudes in the Chinese
act not merely to outrace the Chinese Communist
Communist and Indian Five Year plans.
Peking
challenge but also to provide the foundations for a
plans to invest something like $14 billion in the course
political and human association of Free Asia with
of its First Five Year Plan; the comparable Indian
the Free World.
figure may be of the order of $8 billion.
Since India’s
population is about 60 per cent of China’s, these over-all investment figures are similar on a per head basis.
The principles that should underlie our action are -jd^ar enough.
They might be summarized as follows:
1. We must make available in Asia sufficient addi¬
Peking, however, plans to place perhaps $8
tional technical assistance and capital to help the
billion of its investment in industrial expansion; New
underdeveloped areas of Asia through the stage of
Delhi, concentrating on agriculture, will probably put
transition and into the take-off process as rapidly
less than $2 billion in industry.
as their economic, social, and political capabilities
Given the rates of
population growth in Asia and the long-run basic
permit.
role of agriculture in Asian economic development
2. This pool of capital and technical assistance
as a whole, the Indian initial emphasis is correct.
should be made up not only by the United States
Peking will pay, in one way or another, for its skimp¬
but also by other industrialized countries.
ing on agricultural investment, as well as for the damage it does to peasants’ incentives.
On the other
3. Capital and technical assistance should be made available only where they can be effectively and pro¬
hand, a heightened Indian effort in industry appears
ductively used.
required to meet fully the Chinese Communist chal¬
ment program.
This should be primarily an invest¬
49 4. There should be no tie between economic aid
countries everywhere, is not merely to mobilize capi¬
and military pacts; and no explicit political condi¬
tal but also to develop the ability to absorb capital,
tions within the Free World.
The Free World in¬
and, then, as the economy expands its output, to
terest in accelerated economic growth in Asia is a
plough an increasing proportion of its resources into
sufficient basis for common action.
further productive investment.
At the present stage
5. Although individual programs must be worked
of Asian history, a large proportion of additional
out for each country, there should be a regional plan
capital from abroad might go to India; but, as the
developed, probably through the Colombo Plan Or¬
momentum of the Indian transition increases, Indo¬
ganization, which already embraces Japan.
nesia, having further developed the preconditions for
6. The plan must look to a long future and en¬
take-off, might be ready to absorb large amounts of capital
visage a sustained United States effort. It is inevitable and proper that we ask what the
productively.
The
would certainly change.
distribution
of
effort
There is good reason to
price tag is likely to be for such a program if it is
believe that an annual program on some such scale
to produce the desired result.
No firm figure can
as this—an extra $2 billion per year—could be effec¬
The reason we cannot estimate firmly is
tively absorbed in Asia over, say, a five-year period
this: the program should look ahead some years, and
and that it would have a major accelerating effect on
it depends heavily on the ability of Asian states to
Asian economic growth.
absorb capital efficiently; but that capacity itself is
here the American contribution would be only a
changing rapidly and one purpose of technical assist¬
portion of the total, say, two thirds, the rest coming
ance is to stimulate that change.
mainly from the countries of western Europe.
be given.
Only a rough ap¬
On the principles suggested
By and large, then, the United States should con¬
proximation, therefore, can be made. Assuming what the economists call a marginal
sider enlarging its program of technical assistance
capital-output ratio of 3.5 to 1—that is, assuming 3.5
and loans to Asia, looking ahead at least five years,
additional dollars of capital yield a dollar increase
at a rate of about $1.3 billion per year; and the
of output—and if we set as an arbitrary target a 1
other industrialized areas of the Free World should
per cent per annum increase in real income per
put up about $0.7 billion.
head, a rate of investment of about $2 billion higher than that now current in Free Asia is required.
There are, of course, legitimate queries and objec¬ tions to a commitment of this kind, on this scale. Why cannot private investment do the job?
Rest of Asia South Central (Burma, Indo-China, Indo¬ Asia (India, Ceylon, nesia, Malaya, South Pakistan) Korea, Japan) Population (in millions) Per cent population increase Income (in billions of dollars) Net investment (in billions of dollars) Gross investment (in billions of dollars) Additional capital required (in billions of dollars for 1% per annum increase in real income per head)
There
are, basically, two reasons why private investment cannot now do the job that is required in Asia.
First,
it is of the nature of Asia’s transitional economic status (as well as its somewhat precarious political and
440 1.3
250 1.7
military position) that responsible private investors are reluctant to commit their resources in that area.
On
the whole, the scale of private investment is increas¬ 27 1.4 1.96
30
ing in Asia; but we cannot now expect a rapid
2
enough increase to do the job required in the Free
2.8
World’s interest.
If the United States and the coun¬
tries of western Europe should undertake a program of the kind proposed here, private investors would gain confidence as time went on; and, over a five- or ten-year period, we might hope and even expect that
1
1
The table above gives a rough order of magnitude
an increasing proportion of external assistance would take the form of private investment in Asia as is
for the region as a whole, but no more than that.
already true in Latin America.
But it is too soon to
The key problem of Asia, and of underdeveloped
lean heavily on private investment in Asia now.
50 Second, many essential projects are of a character
not large.
that yield a very large return in terms of economic
envisages only a 1 per cent increase in output per
growth, but the yield is difficult or impossible to
head as the basis for Free World investment in Asia.
pass along to the private investor.
Is such an increase worth striving for?
For example, a
The rough calculation presented here
The answer
major hydroelectric power station or a new railway
here is, emphatically, yes.
line or an enlarged harbor may have profound ef¬
ples of Asia is whether progress is being made,
fects on the economic growth of a whole region; but
whether it is likely that their children will live better
such investments are often unattractive to the private
and have wider opportunities than they could enjoy.
investor because he must wait long for his return
They do not demand that they have American or
and because the large indirect effects on growth do
western European standards of living immediately;
not return fully to the investor as income.
In Asia,
and, as they develop, the Asian countries may develop
as indeed in the United States and western Europe,
their own kinds of modern societies, quite different
a large part of such overhead investment must be
in ways of life from those of the West.
undertaken by governments or with governmental aid
stagnation frustrates men and makes them desperate,
if it is to be undertaken at all.
once their hopes and ambitions have been aroused.
Can we do anything useful in Asia, given the Asian
What matters to the peo¬
Economic
Limited but real progress encourages these hopes and
population problem? It is clear that the rapid growth
ambitions and fosters further constructive effort.
in population makes difficult a rapid increase in hu¬
idea is more fundamental both to economic growth
man welfare in Asia.
It is clear that a good propor¬
and to democratic development than this: that men,
tion of Asian investment must go into an effort to
of their own individual initiative, have it in their
increase the food supply for a growing population.
power to alter their environment for the better.
With a 1.5 per cent per year increase in population,
steady 1 per cent increase in output per head in Asia,
something like 5 per cent of the national income
at the present difficult stage of growth, is almost cer¬
must be invested merely to prevent a deterioration
tainly enough to confirm that basic faith.
in living standards; and such population increases are normal at this stage of Asian history.
But the
No
A
Is there any guarantee that the Free Asian nations will emerge from rapid economic growth politically
situation is by no means hopeless, quite aside from
democratic?
evidence, in India and elsewhere, that birth rates
relation between economic growth and political de¬
may be beginning to decline.
mocracy is not simple and automatic.
There is an immense
No such guarantee can be made.
The
More than
gap between agricultural productivity as it is in most
that, the decisive take-off process involves complex
of Asia and what it might become.
For example,
and often unsettling effects on societies, which must
rice and wheat yields per acre in India are about
transform their institutions and ways of doing things.
one third what they are in Japan, where chemical
But we must be clear about two fundamental facts.
fertilizers, irrigation, and double-cropping have been
First, the drive for economic development in Asia is
pretty fully applied.
already under way.
This gap gives the Free World
We can help determine how
the potentiality of coping with the problem of food
well or badly it goes and what the cost in human
supply for some decades.
The gap gives us the time
suffering is likely to be and whether or not Asians
to set in motion an industrialization process and
do the job in association with the rest of the Free
more direct social policies which are likely to cut
World.
down the rate of population increase.
tions will occur, but at what rate and how.
We cannot
The choice is not whether these transforma¬ Second,
ignore the seriousness of the Asian population prob¬
the process of deciding between Democracy and Com¬
lem; but there is no reason for despair.
munism as a political basis for economic growth is
Does a 1 per cent increase in output per head matter?
It is easy to become discouraged in looking
already under way in the minds of Asians.
The Chi¬
nese example is before them and is being watched
at Asia’s economic problem from an American point
with attention, even with fascination.
of view.
sure of the outcome even if we strongly help.
The increases in standards of living that
can be contemplated for the next decade or so are
We cannot be We
can be reasonably and pessimistically sure of the out-
51 come if we do not help.
In the sphere of Asian eco¬
nomic policy the risks of inaction
appear vastly
greater than those of action. What about India?
gifts; and even productive investment requires that we forego other things in the short run.
A commit¬
ment by the United States to invest something like
Nehru often appears at cross
an additional $6.5 billion in Asia over a five-year
purposes with American foreign policy and sometimes
period is serious and not casually to be proposed.
positively anti-American in his statements.
A serious
Nevertheless, given the scale and normal rate of
Asian economic development program must at this
growth of the American economy and the margin of
stage throw great weight behind the Indian effort.
unused capacity it now contains, it is evident that we
Does this make sense?
can assume this responsibility without risking either
Should we not support only Here we
our national standard of living or our ability to exe¬
must clear our minds as to what the American in¬
cute other tasks necessary for our national security.
terest is.
Our current national output is running at the rate of
our friends, like Pakistan and Thailand?
Does it matter to the United States whether
the Indian domestic effort succeeds or fails?
It is the
about $355 billion per year.
Normally our national
burden of a good portion of this analysis that it
output increases each year by $14 billion, owing to
matters greatly to us.
increases in population and in productivity.
If the Indian domestic effort
More¬
fails, it is altogether likely that India will choose
over, we now have a margin of about $30 billion in
totalitarian methods to carry on its economic devel¬
unused capacity, unemployed ability to produce. The
opment effort.
More than that, if India, the greatest
expenditure of an extra $1.3 billion a year for 5 years
country of Free Asia, fails, that failure will pro¬
is clearly not a threatening, let alone a crippling,
foundly discourage the rest of Free Asia.
extra burden for the United States to assume.
India and
It
Asia could be won to Communism without a Chinese
would add, in fact, less than 5 per cent to our present
Communist soldier crossing Chinese borders.
security outlays of all kinds.
This is
the negative case for United States support of India.
The issue at stake here is, then, whether an Asian
Despite the cross
economic development program is required in the
purposes between the United States and India, India
national interest and whether we have the will to
is now deeply committed to protecting its national
undertake it.
independence and to resisting Communism at home
States can afford such a program without incurring
as well as abroad.
significant cost to our national life and welfare.
There is a positive case as well.
Nehru does take a view of how
There is no doubt that the United
to cope with the Chinese Communists somewhat dif¬ ferent from that of the United States government.
Conclusion
Because of India’s history, geography, and concentra¬
Major steps in history are usually taken because a
tion of domestic tasks, it is altogether natural that
number of different considerations argue for the same
the problem of Communism in Asia should look
course of action.
somewhat different in New Delhi.
tained investment program in Free Asia, supported
Differences of this
sort are normal in any system of alliance.
The real
The case for an enlarged and sus¬
by the United States and the other industrialized na¬
question is not whether Nehru agrees with the De¬
tions, has this characteristic.
partment of State or even whether Nehru “likes” us.
lenge flung out from Peking argues for it; the nature
The question is whether there is a sufficient real
of Free Asian aspirations combined with the long-run
overlap of Indian and American interest to justify a
importance of India, Burma, and Indonesia argue for
major economic partnership.
There is every reason
it; the problems confronted by Japan argue for it;
to believe that such an authentic overlap of interest
and the possibility of stalemate in major military
exists. Can we afford an Asian economic development pro¬
weapons between the Communist bloc and the Free
gram?
potential Free World asset.
What is proposed here is not a program of
gifts but primarily a program of productive invest¬
The ideological chal¬
World argues for bringing into play this enormous Without attaching false magic to the estimates
Nevertheless, technical assistance and some
made in this chapter, it seems clear that a program
grants to Asian countries could take the form of
on something like the scale indicated is required to
ment.
52 shift the balance of advantage in Free Asia decisively
industrialization is already launched.
in our favor.
Moscow have set the time span of the race.
It seems clear that over a five-year
Peking and It be¬
period the proposed additional investment sums can
hooves the Free World and especially the United
be efficiently absorbed by Free Asian societies.
Fi¬
States to decide promptly whether it is to observe or
nally, this is an issue of the greatest urgency: the
participate in this struggle on which so much of our
Communist bid to win Asia by demonstrating rapid
destiny hinges.
CHAPTER
8
-
-
United Nations Membership for Communist China? United States Recognition? The Issues Involved
Communist China out of the United Nations we
The issue of United Nations membership for Com¬ munist China and the related but separate issue of United States recognition have caused a good deal of trouble in the past six years.
American politicians
would be effectively frustrating Chinese Communist expansionist purposes. From the point of view of Moscow, the absence of Peking from the United Nations offers two advan¬
have treated the possibility of membership and rec¬
tages.
ognition as virtually unmentionable.
Some of our
national champion and to maintain a higher degree
allies, having recognized the Communist regime in
of Peking’s diplomatic dependence on Moscow than
Peking, have regarded the American position as irra¬
would otherwise exist.
tional at best and possibly sinister; that is, they have
sibly the ardent sponsor of United Nations member¬
wondered whether our non-recognition policy was
ship for Peking has in fact done little or nothing to
the prelude to a military assault on the mainland in
alter the existing situation except to make proposals
association with Chiang Kai-shek.
calculated to make Peking’s entrance into the United
The lack of Free World unity on Communist China
It permits Moscow to pose as Peking’s inter¬
Thus, Moscow, while osten¬
Nations more difficult.
and on the future status and role of Formosa has
We can assume that Peking seeks a place in that
given Moscow and Peking a handy issue which they
international forum for two reasons: to enhance its
have systematically exploited with vigor and with
prestige at home and in Asia and to diminish the
some success.
They have portrayed the problem
degree of its diplomatic dependence upon Moscow.
posed for the Free World by Communist China as
Peking also desires the elimination of Formosa from
simply a matter of accepting an accomplished fact.
the United Nations, an act that would strengthen its
They have used the issue of United Nations recogni¬
political hand at home and abroad and undermine
tion in an attempt to split the United States from the
the potential role of Formosa as a rallying point for
rest of the Free World; and they have succeeded in
the Free Chinese.
diverting attention and energy from the fundamental
.J
From the perspective of our Free World allies the
Many of our
failure to bring Communist China into the United
friends in the Free World have been jockeyed into a
Nations after they had recognized Peking has been
position where they have come almost to believe that
an inconsistency difficult to justify to their own peo¬
if only the United States would permit the entrance of
ple and in diplomatic debate.
Communist China into the United Nations all would
perspective the United Nations issue has also been a
be well in Asia.
Many in the United States have
difficult domestic and diplomatic issue that has posed
come almost to believe that if only we could keep
sharply the question of our commitments to Formosa.
tasks of a Free World policy in Asia.
From the American
54 This brief outline of the principal issues involved
At least three conditions should attach to Commu¬
in the membership problem underlines the fact that
nist China’s entrance into the United Nations quite
they are virtually all minor issues of political or psy¬
aside from the return of our prisoners and the pacifi¬
chological warfare in the narrow sense except the
cation of Korea, Indo-China, and the Formosa Strait.
question of Formosa.
Peking’s entrance into the q First, Communist China should not have a perma¬
United Nations if accompanied by Formosa’s removal
nent seat on the Security Council.
would have a disastrous effect on Formosa morale.
seat on the Security Council now held by Nationalist
The pressure and emphasis given this issue by the
The permanent
China should pass to an authentically independent
Communist bloc and the Free World’s politicians
Asian power, perhaps to India.
Communist China
have had, however, a distinctive result: if member¬
has proclaimed itself a lean-to-one-side power, inti¬
ship came now as the result of pressure, and despite
mately tied to Moscow.
United States opposition, Peking could portray the
to status apart from its role in the Communist bloc.
event to the Chinese people and to the peoples of
Even if that role is not one of pure subservience to
Asia as a Chinese Communist diplomatic victory and
Moscow, the Security Council seat should pass from
an American defeat.
Nationalist China to an independent Asian state.
It does not seriously pretend
When the military situation is stabilized, when the
Second, Communist China’s entrance into the United
United States has set in motion on Formosa and in
Nations should be accompanied by that of Japan and
the rest of Asia positive policies designed to meet
perhaps by the entrance of other states now outside
and ultimately to defeat the political and ideological
the world organization.
challenge of Chinese Communism, then we can deal
Nations Charter in the course of 1955 may be the
with the recognition and membership issues from a
proper occasion to recognize that the weaknesses of
position of strength.
Under present conditions the
the United Nations caused by the split among the
voting of United Nations membership for Peking
world’s powers should be compensated for at least
would be an act of appeasement by the Free World.
partially by more nearly total world participation.
It would be correctly taken by the peoples of Asia as
Third, Formosa should retain a seat in the United
a sign of the Free World’s weakness and lack of co¬
Nations Assembly.
hesion and purpose.
The review of the United
Whether or not Peking would accept such terms
With Asia at peace, with a clear and positive Free
for entrance into the United Nations, it may be well
World policy launched, there would be a reasonable
for the Free World to agree on some such terms and
case for United Nations membership for Peking: for
make them known.
United Nations membership does not imply approval,
nition issue has been costly to the United States, not
and it need not interfere with a constructive political
because Peking’s presence in New York would be
role for Formosa.
One essential purpose of the
helpful, but because this issue has divided the Free
United Nations is that its membership be inclusive.
World and inhibited other more important lines of
It is a forum for the settlement of disputes short of
common action in Asia.
For the United Nations recog¬
war, and the one place where the Free World and the Communist bloc confront each other in non¬ military politics.
These central functions limit the
possible scope of United Nations action.
United States
Recognition of Communist China?
If the Chinese Communists should enter the United
But the
Nations, they would have a diplomatic headquarters
existence and power of Communist China are un¬
in New York; and we would meet and deal with
questioned; and the presence of Communist China’s
them around the various United Nations conference
representatives in the United Nations might assist in
tables. In one sense we would be recognizing the Chi¬
unifying the Free World coalition, since that action
nese Communist government.
would permit its members to take the measure of
then, as to whether or not we should then exchange
Peking’s policies and purposes without the confusion
ambassadors and enter into general recognition of
caused by the membership conflict.
Peking.
The question arises,
55 There would be little reason to withhold recogni¬ tion if the Chinese Communists were to accept For¬ mosa’s independent status in the Free World.
any American shift in policy are obviously serious matters.
Such
But the entrance of Peking into the United Na¬
action by Peking seems somewhat unlikely, however,
tions is a limited political movement, the importance
even if a truce is established in the Formosa Strait.
of which can easily be overestimated.
The Chinese Communists are unlikely to take any
at a time of Free World weakness—or actual military
step that would formally alter their claim to control
or diplomatic defeat—it would indeed symbolize Com¬
of Formosa; and, even if the Nationalist government
munist China as Asia’s wave of the future.
on Formosa is prepared to limit its operations across
be brought about under the circumstances envisaged
the Formosa Strait, it is unlikely to forego its claim
here, its adverse consequences can be minimized, and
to legitimacy on the mainland.
an important divisive issue removed from Free World
Under such circum¬
stances the United States might well find it desirable to postpone recognition although acceding to United Nations membership.
If it occurred
If it can
politics. It cannot be too strongly emphasized, however, that the entrance of Peking into the United Nations is unlikely to bring with it any results favorable to the
Implications for United States Action
The definition of our formal relations with Peking,
Free World; and the removal of this divisive Free World issue does not constitute a Free World policy
Communist China’s role in the United Nations, if
in Asia.
At the most, it may clear the ground for
any, and the consequences for the fate of Formosa of
the creation of such a policy.
CHAPTER
The Free World Alliance The proposals outlined in this book have been set
Geneva; where we have stood thus far on the ques¬
down in the belief that they would prove acceptable
tion of recognition of Communist China and on the
to our major Free World allies and that, put effec¬
question of Formosa.
tively into operation, they would strengthen the Free
would limit strictly the areas of common action and
World alliance in both Asia and Europe.
resolution of differences.
This form of compromise
This judgment proceeds from a general concept of
The danger here is evident: when one Free World
how and why the Free World alliance works or fails
position is put to the test, as in Indo-China, and
to work.
Each member of the Free World alliance
Free World common action fails, then a wave of
has a distinctive set of national interests and priori¬
what might be called isolationist sentiment is set in
ties; each has a somewhat different outlook on the
motion, with mutual recrimination and a weakening
major regions of the world and the problems they
in the Free World’s bonds.
pose for action.
confronted in mid-1954.
The American view of Formosa dif¬
fers from that of India and of Great Britain.
The
This is the situation we
On the other hand, we can negotiate common ac¬
French perspective on Indo-China differs from that
tion around the major Free World problems.
of the United States; and our view differs from that
inevitably means that the perspectives of various na¬
of Britain.
tions on the problem must be reconciled and what
The economic development problem in
Southeast Asia looks somewhat different in Delhi, Tokyo, and Washington.
New
The image of Com¬
This
might be called the “isolationist” view must be aban¬ doned.
This form of compromise was accomplished,
munist China is certainly not identical in Washing¬
for example, in the early stages of the war in Korea.
ton, London, and New Delhi; and so on.
It was accomplished in the Marshall Plan in Europe
An effectively united Free World policy requires compromise.
But this is an inadequate and perhaps
even misleading way of putting the matter. kind of compromise?
and in the Schuman Plan.
It was accomplished in
the organization of NATO.
It failed in Indo-China;
What
and it has not been attempted generally with respect
At the extremes there are two
to the problems posed by the Chinese Communist
possible forms of compromise within the Free World.
threat in Asia.
At one extreme we can agree to disagree and let each
Success in this form of compromise requires the
member of the Free World deal, more or less on its
making of a policy that includes certain elements
own, with those Free World problems that fall within
from the perspectives of all the Free World nations;
its historical range of national authority and respon¬
and it usually requires the abandonment of certain
sibility.
elements from each.
This is, for example, more or less where
we stood on the Indo-China question down through
The criterion for such an ac¬
ceptance or abandonment in the making of a com-
mon policy must be the common interest of the alli¬ ance.
3. The persistence of a residual Chinese sentiment
The meaning of this obvious criterion can
among the Overseas Chinese should be recognized as
only be established concretely; and the following dis¬
a fact; and constructive relations between the Over¬
cussion attempts to specify the manner in which the
seas Chinese and a developed Formosa should be
lines of action presented in this book would require
encouraged in forms that do not interfere with the
the acceptance and abandonment of certain positions
role of Overseas Chinese as citizens of local commu¬
held by individual members of the Free World alli¬
nities in Southeast Asia (notably Malaya).
ance for the sake of advancing their common interest.
4. The limitations and dangers of trade with Com¬
The method of the following analysis is to examine
munist China should be frankly recognized, and the
the meaning of the key suggested lines of action for
primary effort to solve the trade problem of the in¬
three Free World centers: London, New Delhi, and
dustrialized nations of the Free World should be
Washington.
made within the Free World by developing markets
If Britain and India (as well as the
United States) could be reconciled along the lines suggested here, it is likely that the Free World could be carried.
and sources of supply in underdeveloped areas. 5. Clear conditions and limitations on Peking’s en¬ trance into the United Nations should be agreed. There is every probability that London would
London
accept these shifts in position if the United States
The following elements in the proposed lines of
were to commit itself firmly to the actions outlined
action would meet present British positions and atti¬
in the preceding chapters of this book—to a sustained
tudes:
economic policy in Asia, to using its leverage to urge
1. The Free World should not on its own initia¬
forward the constructive political and social evolu¬
tive launch military operations against Communist
tion of Formosa, to clarifying its stance in Asia gen¬
China.
erally in terms of long-range United States interests.
2. Increased assistance should be given the eco¬ nomic
development
programs
of Southeast Asian
countries. 3. The Free World should take common action to
New Delhi
On the whole what holds true of London may be said of New Delhi as well.
The Indian view differs
prevent the Japanese effort to solve its trade problem
from the British in this context mainly in its more
from upsetting the precarious British trade equilib¬
parochial character.
rium.
outlook than Britain—although a growing sense of
4. Formosa, as presently constituted, is not an ef¬
India is more “isolationist” in
Peking’s external ambitions may be altering New
fective and constructive political force in the Free
Delhi’s complacence.
World alliance.
creased United States assistance in its development
5. United Nations membership, in some form, at some stage, for Peking should not be ruled out.
India will be moved by in¬
program if it is sustained and if it is without political or military strings.
Beyond that, it wants essentially
The following elements in the proposed lines of
an environment in which regional security is looked
action would require alteration in London’s perspec¬
after by someone else and general war is avoided.
tive:
Formosa and even Japan seem far away in New
1. The Free World should recognize frankly the
Delhi.
aggressive intent of Peking and not place its hopes
Indian gestures toward Communist China have
in wooing Peking from Moscow by concessions at
been part of a policy of general pacification—to the
the present time.
extent that they have been serious diplomacy.
Put
2. The Free World should develop Formosa as an
another way, New Delhi is not likely to interfere or
important and constructive political element in Free
disagree in more than a perfunctory way with the
Asia.
kind of program and function for Formosa that is
58 suggested in this book if it is felt that the United
has seriously weakened the bonds that hold the Free
States does not intend to launch on its own a major
World coalition together.
war against Communist China, and if it comes to
This book has emphasized the conviction
that
believe that the United States is prepared to launch
major United States foreign policies must be geared
and sustain a serious policy of partnership for eco¬
to the interests of the coalition we lead and that
nomic growth in Southeast Asia.
they should be implemented in the main by coali¬
Given the serious¬
ness of the Indian growth problem in the competi¬
tion action.
It does not follow, however, that the
tive context of Communist China, and given our stake
United States should hesitate to act unilaterally on
in Indian success, we should be prepared to accept
certain occasions.
a mood of Indian parochialism and in a sense even
of leadership is to take the first step in the dark.
Indian irresponsibility on certain general Free World
There have been and will be occasions when agree¬
issues if, in fact, India throws its energies whole¬
ment within the coalition will be impossible to ob¬
heartedly into its own development program.
tain unless and until the first decisive step is taken
An important part of the function
unilaterally by the United States. Washington
There have been
and will be occasions when we cannot persuade our
The proposals made in this book require that the
allies to sustain jointly the actions undertaken by us in the common interest.
United States:
The United States should
1. Increase its degree of concern with the political
be prepared to initiate actions unilaterally and even,
and social problems and the aspirations of the coun¬
if necessary, to sustain them unilaterally under the
tries of Southeast Asia.
following condition: that we are deeply convinced
2. Increase the priority it would accord and the
that such actions are in our own interest, when that
resources it would make available for Asian economic
interest is conceived at its highest level, embracing
development.
as it then does the long-run interests of the Free
3. Treat
the Japanese
trade
problem
and
the
growth problems of various Asian nations on
a
In short, the strategy
of a sound coalition policy does not always require coalition tactics; and coalition tactics should not be
united regional basis. 4. Acknowledge unavoidable responsibility for mov¬ ing Formosa in directions that would make it a con¬ structive element in the Free World coalition. 5. Place its Asian policy, in general, on a long¬ term basis, clarifying in the process the nature of abiding United States interests and objectives in Asia. The underlying American appraisal of Peking’s hostile intentions and the United States intent to sustain Formosa within the Free World have been sound.
World coalition as a whole.
United States resistance thus far to Peking’s
membership in the United Nations and United States denial of recognition have been sound.
made a fetish. But by and large the most important conclusion of this book is that American interests, properly de¬ fined, do in fact overlap with those of our major allies or potential allies.
If the United States meas¬
ures up to the challenges it confronts and acts with the mixture of idealism and energy that lies at the core of its heritage, our abiding interests in Asia can be protected. Do we have the will to do this job?
Here each
man must speak from his own sense of the nation and from private faith.
There is nothing in our his¬
United States
tory out of the long or recent past to suggest that,
technical assistance in Southeast Asia and economic
when the facts are laid before the American people
aid to Japan have been sound.
and vigorous leadership offered, we shall fail to re¬
But these particular
lines of action must be supplemented and more
spond.
broadly developed if they are to constitute an Asian
lief that, once the trend of events in Asia is made
policy around which the whole Free World can rally.
clear, it is not in the American temperament to ac¬
The underlying interests and objectives that inform
cept the slow, only momentarily comfortable defeat
our Asian policy must be clarified and effectively
the enemy plans for us.
projected.
symbol to the world of national independence and
The ambiguity concerning our purposes
This book was written in the profound be¬
Our country was born as a
59 freedom ordered by individual consent.
Americans
It will not be hastened by attempts at short cuts or
are not yet ready to retire from a field where inde¬
by partisan slogans.
pendence and freedom are the issues of combat.
maintaining a solid creative effort, military, political,
Victory will not come without sustained effort. will
not
arise
from
complacency,
brooding over past errors.
peevishness,
It requires a united America
It
and economic, for decades if necessary—although the
or
urgent character of the struggle in Asia may yield
It will not come cheaply.
a decision sooner than we now can know.
•
*
)
Date Due Auu 12 1961
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itiU* M6 W
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;Elb3.y *A?7 .R839
1955
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