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Posts Tagged ‘Chiang Kai-shek’

Dean Acheson’s Taiwan Dilemma

Posted by M. C. on February 8, 2025

by Joseph Solis-Mullen

“As economist Murray Rothbard noted at the time, this policy of defending Taiwan was always based on fallacious reasoning, parroted to this day by the current crop of hawks:

“A peaceful Pacific moat is needed for our defense. In order to protect this moat, we must secure friendly countries or bases all around it. To protect Japan and the Philippines, we must defend Formosa [Taiwan]. To protect Formosa we must defend the Pescadores. To protect the Pescadores we must defend Quemoy, an island three miles off the Chinese mainland. To protect Quemoy we must equip Chiang’s troops for an invasion of the mainland. Where does this process end? Logically, never.”

“And that is precisely the point.

https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/dean-achesons-taiwan-dilemma/

screenshot 2025 01 29 at 12.51.56 pm

In the aftermath of World War II, U.S. policymakers felt they faced an increasingly dire situation in China. By late 1949, Mao Zedong’s Communist forces had decisively defeated Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalists (Kuomintang/KMT), pushing them off the mainland to Taiwan. In the mind of Dean Acheson, secretary of state under President Harry Truman, the collapse of the Nationalists raised pressing questions. Could Taiwan be held against a Communist invasion? And was Chiang Kai-shek the right leader for this task? Acheson’s initial plans, however fleeting, to replace Chiang underscore the uncertainty and improvisation that characterized U.S. strategy in the early Cold War, and the hubris of the policymakers in Washington, convinced of their right to run the world.

Chiang’s regime had long been viewed with skepticism by American officials, even during the wartime alliance against Japan. Rampant corruption, poor governance, and military failures left the KMT vulnerable to the Communist insurgency. By 1949, Acheson and many in the Truman administration believed that Chiang bore significant responsibility for the Nationalists’ defeat.

Acheson’s January 1950 white paper on China publicly declared that the United States had done all it could to support Chiang’s regime and absolved Washington of blame for his collapse. Privately, Acheson believed that continued support for Chiang could harm American credibility and that Taiwan’s future depended on new leadership. He and other officials entertained various proposals, including sidelining Chiang in favor of a more competent leader or placing Taiwan under an international trusteeship.

One idea floated within the State Department was to engineer a transition of power within the KMT, potentially elevating more reform-minded figures such as Sun Fo, the son of Sun Yat-sen. Other suggestions went further, advocating for the establishment of a coalition government that might include non-KMT factions to stabilize Taiwan’s governance and make it a stronger bulwark against communism.

Chiang was acutely aware of these discussions. In early 1950, he acted preemptively by arresting General Sun Li-jen, one of the most respected Nationalist military leaders. Often referred to as the “Rommel of the East,” Sun was widely admired in Washington for his competence and honesty, qualities that stood in stark contrast to the corruption and inefficiency of Chiang’s regime. Fearing that Sun was being groomed by the United States as a replacement, Chiang accused him of plotting a coup and placed him under house arrest, where he would remain for decades. This decisive move eliminated a potential rival and signaled Chiang’s refusal to cede power.

By June 1950, Acheson was still grappling with the question of Taiwan’s future. At a meeting held at the Willard Hotel in Washington DC, he and several senior officials discussed various scenarios for the island, including the possibility of replacing Chiang. The meeting reflected the depth of American frustration with Chiang’s leadership and the desire to stabilize Taiwan as a potential bulwark against communism.

However, events overtook these deliberations.

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The Taiwan Problem You (Probably) Don’t Know

Posted by M. C. on August 21, 2024

The foolish insistence of FDR that Taiwan be granted to Chiang’s crumbling ROC regime, then Harry Truman and Dwight Eisenhower’s determination to keep that regime in power, played an obviously critical role in creating the circumstances that prevail to the present day: a Chinese Civil War never concluded.

https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/the-taiwan-problem-you-probably-dont-know/

by Joseph Solis-Mullen

chiang ching kuo and chiang kai shek 83b330

Taiwan is today lauded for its vibrant democracy, open economy, and progressive society. However, behind this shining exterior is a dark and brutal history that is frequently overlooked; or in the case of Washington and its loyal corporate mouthpieces, purposefully ignored.

For before its democratization in the 1990s, Taiwan was a harsh authoritarian police state under the rule of Chiang Kai-shek and his son Chiang Ching-kuo. This period, marked by severe repression and systemic terror, is an essential chapter in Taiwan’s history that Americans should know, particularly given the enduring resentment Washington’s vital support for the regime engendered and the purported reasons for the necessity of the island’s defense.

The roots of Taiwan’s authoritarianism can be traced back to the retreat of Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist government (Kuomintang, or KMT) to Taiwan after losing the Chinese Civil War to the Communists in 1949. The local population had already received more than an inkling of what awaited, the KMT authorities having already in 1947 brutally suppressed a popular protest against KMT corruption, mistreatment, and misrule on the island. Facing a precarious situation and the ever-looming threat of a Communist invasion, once arrived on the island Chiang established a regime that relied heavily on surveillance, repression, and brutality to maintain control.

Central to this regime was the role of Chiang Ching-kuo, Chiang Kai-shek’s son, who was instrumental in the creation and operation of Taiwan’s police state. Having spent formative years in Stalin’s Moscow, Chiang Ching-kuo learned from the Soviet Union’s tactics of surveillance, infiltration, and terror. Upon his return, he applied these methods to serve his father’s regime, becoming a formidable spy chief whose skills ensured the perpetuation of KMT rule in Taiwan.

Chiang Ching-kuo’s police force penetrated almost every facet of life in Taiwan. Officially, their task was to arrest enemies of the state, countering Communist subversion; in practice, this mission translated into the suppression of virtually any source of potential dissent, contributing to what became known as the White Terror.

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Presidential Candidates Successfully Conspired With Foreign Leaders – LewRockwell

Posted by M. C. on December 27, 2017

 Chiang Kai-shek played US during WW II. He pretended to fight Japanese while actually fight Mao’s forces. He annoyed everyone. Apparently he didn’t play well during Vietnam while president of Taiwan. 

Nixon wanted the CIA to take Chiang Kai-shek out. Hey, that is what they do when a country doesn’t do as it is told.

Check out the link below and The Stillwell Papers by Barbara Tuchman.

https://www.lewrockwell.com/2017/12/no_author/treason-presidential-candidates-successfully-conspired-with-foreign-leaders-to-thwart-official-american-policy-and-drag-out-war/

 Nixon also sought help from Chiang Kai-shek, the president of Taiwan. [He was considered somewhat of an enemy of the United States; the CIA considered assassinating him.] And he ordered Haldeman to have his vice-presidential candidate, Spiro T. Agnew, threaten the C.I.A. director, Richard Helms. Helms’s hopes of keeping his job under Nixon depended on his pliancy, Agnew was to say. “Tell him we want the truth — or he hasn’t got the job,” Nixon said…

 http://foreignpolicy.com/2015/09/03/assassinating-chiang-kai-shek-china-taiwan-japan-world-war-2/

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