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Paperback The Road to Confrontation: American Policy Toward China and Korea Book

ISBN: 0807840807

ISBN13: 9780807840801

The Road to Confrontation: American Policy Toward China and Korea

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Concentrating on U.S. concerns for credibility abroad, Stueck uses recently declassified documents and many interviews to analyze the origins of the Sino-American confrontation in Korea in late 1950. He demonstrates how personalities (Secretary of State Marshall and General MacArthur) and bureaucracies (the State Department and the Joint Chiefs of Staff) influenced policy development and how congressional penny-pinching reduced prospects for a prudent...

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The American egagement in the Korean War was necessary

William Stueck was awarded the Stuart L. Bernath Lectureship I n 1986. He studied with Charles Neu at Brown University. He is currently an associate professor of history at the University of Georgia, and his research focused on the American policy toward China and Korea during the Truman period. Stueck is the author of ¡§ The Korean war as International History.¡¨, The Wedemeyer mission: American politics and foreign policy during the cold war, and The Road to Confrontation: American Policy Toward China and Korea, 1947-1950 and numerous scholarly articles.The book ¡§ The Road to confrontation¡¨ is his most representative work. This book tried to find the answer of the question ¡§How did the United States become engaged in this unwanted conflict with China in Korea?¡¨ by analyzing American policy toward China and Korea from 1947 through November 1950. It was divided into four parts according to the time scale, which shows the transition of American foreign policy toward China and Korean. After the World War II, American policy would be expressed as ¡§ the Decline of China and the Rise of Korea.¡¨ With the Japanese retreat out of Korea in 1945, the peninsula was divided into two, one was ruled by Soviet Union and the other was occupied by America. That¡¦s why Korea became the area of confrontation between the two superpowers. In 1947, forty thousand American troops were stationed into Korea. At the same time, Truman administration decided to withdraw the US force troop from China. Stueck pointed out 1947 was the year of crucial decisions regarding both China and Korea that would exert a major impact on the future of the United States in East Asia. The second period was under Marshall¡¦s stewardship. In this time (1947 and 1948), General Marshall took a central role in directing China policy and showed concrete policy in China and Korea. In China, the United Stated avoided to expand commitment to the Nationalist government in order to force the Nationalist and the Communists to establish a coalition government. In Korea, on the other hand, the United States expanded its aid to the South Korean authority. On August 1948, the United States promoted the creation of the Republic of Korea, which is below the 38 parallel. It was dependent on American aid for its survival. The third period was the eve of the Korean war. The Chiang Kai-shek government lost China in 1949. In the meantime, the Truman administration refused to launch new aid programs to sustain anti-communist group in Taiwan. In this period, American policy toward china was ¡§Letting the Dust Settle.¡¨ What was more, the Truman administration left South Korea out of the American defense perimeter in the pacific. That is to say, the American troops withdrew from the peninsula in 1949 and ignored an impending North Korean attack. In this period, American policy toward China and Korea tended to non-involvement. Although the United States failed to employ an effective strategy of deterrence in
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