A force so swift Mao, Truman, and the birth of modern China, 1949

Kevin Peraino

Book - 2017

"A compelling year-long narrative of America's response to the fall of Chiang Kai-shek and Nationalist China in 1949, and Mao Zedong and the Communist Party's rise to power, forever altering the world's geopolitical map."--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Crown [2017]
Language
English
Main Author
Kevin Peraino (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xvi, 379 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, map ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780307887238
  • Prologue
  • Missimo
  • The greatest force
  • The old devils
  • Bedbugs
  • The dean
  • All the aces
  • Riverdale
  • Wait, look, see
  • A new world
  • Heaven and hell
  • A vast and delicate enterprise
  • Neverland
  • Heat
  • Killing the tiger
  • The great crescent
  • Firecracker
  • No devil shall escape
  • Dig up the dirt
  • First lightning
  • Risky business
  • The voice
  • Through a glass, darkly
  • A rather spectacular triumph
  • A force so swift
  • Epilogue: the mills of the gods.
Review by New York Times Review

THE NINTH HOUR, by Alice McDermott. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, $26.) In McDermott's novel, the cause of a young Irish widow and her daughter is taken up by the nuns of a Brooklyn convent. But as the years pass, this struggling pair can't banish worldly temptation, with possibly dire consequences for their faith. MANHATTAN BEACH, by Jennifer Egan. (Scribner, $28.) Egan's first novel since the Pulitzer-winning "A Visit From the Goon Squad" tells a more traditional story - about a woman who works in the Brooklyn Navy Yards during World War II, and the disappearance of her father years earlier - but offers many of the same pleasures of language and character. A FORCE SO SWIFT: Mao, Truman and the Birth of Modern China, 1949, by Kevin Peraino. (Crown, $28.) Peraino's absorbing study of the pivotal year in Chinese-American relations shows how decisions made then have continued to affect relations between the two countries down to the present day. NEW PEOPLE, by Danzy Senna. (Riverhead, $26.) Set in mid-1990s Brooklyn, Senna's novel centers on a light-skinned black woman who despite her engagement to a biracial man becomes infatuated with a dark-skinned poet; it explores both the dream and the impossibility of a "post-racial" world. A LOVING, FAITHFUL ANIMAL, by Josephine Rowe. (Catapult, paper, $16.95.) In Rowe's gorgeous and harrowing debut novel, an emotionally scarred Vietnam veteran disappears from a small Australian town, leaving his family behind to struggle with intergenerational trauma. HALF-LIGHT: Collected Poems, 1965-2016, by Frank Bidart. (Farrar, Straus & Giroux. $40.) With its stylized spacing and typography, Bidart's work scores the speech inside his head. This career retrospective, a contender for a National Book Award this year, shows how he shed the masks of his early poems to create a kind of self-mythology. THE TWELVE-MILE STRAIGHT, by Eleanor Henderson. (Ecco/HarperCollins, $27.99.) A lynching and the legacy of Jim Crow haunt generations of a family in Henderson's second novel, which is ever alert to the proximity of oppressed and oppressor. Empathy for its troubled cast is one of the novel's great strengths. THE WOLF, THE DUCK & THE MOUSE, by Mac Barnett. Illustrated by Jon Klassen. (Candlewick, $17.99; ages 4 to 8.) In this darkly witty collaboration, a mouse is gobbled up by a wolf. Inside, he meets a duck who has set up housekeeping. A PROPERLY UNHAUNTED PLACE, by William Alexander. (Margaret K. McElderry, $16.99; ages 8 to 12.) A woman who specializes in "ghost appeasement" and her daughter move to a town that has banished all ghosts, but all is not as calm as it seems. The full reviews of these and other recent books are on the web: nytimes.com/books

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 16, 2018]
Review by Library Journal Review

Peraino (Lincoln in the World) takes a closer look at the tumultuous post-World War II period, focusing specifically on the rise of communism in China and its role in the beginning of the Cold War. The author views 1949 as the pivotal year that shaped much of the rest of the 20th century. America's diplomacy at the time, containment, was a way to gain leverage and weaken relations between Communist China and the Soviet Union. But as Peraino adeptly illustrates, American foreign policy strategy was a constant battle between Secretary of State Dean Acheson and Secretary of Defense Louis Johnson. After detailing how Communist leader Mao Zedong gained power, the end of the book shifts toward the eventual wars in Korea and Vietnam, both directly implicated by the happenings in China in 1949. While not covering ground completely untouched before him, Peraino does an admirable job portraying Zedong's calculating rise to power, America's conflicting diplomacy, and the destructiveness that would follow in the wake of 1949 in both Korea and Vietnam. VERDICT A worthy purchase for public libraries and readers who have an eye for foreign policy and East Asian history.-Keith Klang, Port Washington P.L., NY © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A study of the Communist victory in China in 1949 and the American role in the events leading to that triumph.The McCarthyites who charged that Harry Truman gave China to Mao Zedong's Communist regime had a point, at least of sorts. By former Newsweek senior writer and bureau chief Peraino's (Lincoln in the World: The Making of a Statesman and the Dawn of American Power, 2013) solid, if not groundbreaking, account, the Truman administration was simply outmaneuvered at several critical turns, with Mao and his lieutenants exploiting divisions among the Western powers. "The American interest in China was slightly amorphous, owing more to spiritual concerns than to material ones," writes the author, whereas the interests of Great Britain were decidedly material. While Winston Churchill advocated building a Pacific pact to shore up China's Asian neighbors, some elements within the Truman administration were in favor of direct intervention, even as Dean Acheson and other officials in the State Department shared Churchill's stance. The U.S. was also seriously played by Madame Chiang, the jet-setter wife of Chiang Kai-shek, who instructed her to finagle $1 billion dollars per year to support his nationalist regime, soon to be exiled to Taiwan. Though the administration had plenty of misgivings about Chiang, "by publicly outlining his qualms about the Nationalist government, Truman would ensure its total collapse." An inexperienced Cabinet did not help matters. Peraino competently navigates through a labyrinth of backroom deals and intrigues, and he is good at placing the China question in the larger context of the unfolding early Cold War and America's fixation on communism, which served Chiang particularly well even as Truman's representatives tried to steer him from making a fortress of his island refuge. In the end, writes the author, Mao's diplomatic and military victories encouraged him to confront American forces in Korea, with reverberations that continue to sound today. Provides useful context for the troubled, tangled history of U.S. dealings with China, a timely topic. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

***This excerpt is from an advance uncorrected copy proof*** Copyright © 2017 Kevin Peraino PROLOGUE October 1, 1949, Beijing Bodies jostled, elbow to elbow, angling all morning for a spot in the square. Soldiers clomped in the cold--tanned, singing as they marched, steel helmets and bayonets under the October sun. Tanks moved in columns two by two; then howitzers, teams of ponies, gunners shouldering mortars and bazookas. On the flagstones, in front of the imperial gate, men and women craned their necks toward a platform above a portrait of Mao Zedong, painted in hues of blue, hanging beside tubes of blue neon. Underneath, a sprinkling of yellow streamers rippled in the crowd. Nearly everything else in the frenzied square was red. Shortly after three p.m., a tall figure in a dark woolen suit stepped up to a bank of microphones atop the gate. He lifted a sheet of folded paper, pursed his lips, and glanced down at a column of Chinese characters. A double chin rested against his collar; heavy jowls had long since submerged his cheekbones. Although Mao was still only in his mid-fifties, he was not in good health. He rarely went to bed before dawn. For years he had punished his body with a masochistic regimen of stewed pork, tobacco, and barbiturates. Occasionally, overcome by a spell of dizziness, he would suddenly stagger--one symptom of the circulatory condition that his doctors called angioneurosis. Still, he had retained into middle age what one acquaintance described as "a kind of solid elemental vitality"--a kinetic magnetism that photographs could never quite manage to convey. On this day, Mao's speech, delivered in his piping Hunanese, was nothing particularly memorable: a few lines praising the heroes of the revolution and damning the British and American imperialists and their stooges. But the celebration that followed, marking the birth of the People's Republic of China, was a cathartic spectacle. Mao pressed a button, the signal to raise the flag--yellow stars against a field of crimson--and a band broke into "March of the Volunteers," the new national anthem, with its surging chorus of "Arise, arise, arise!" An artillery battery erupted in salute; a formation of fighter jets slashed across the sky. The sun set, and the party went on: fireworks raced toward their peaks, rockets of white flame--then fell, smoldering but harmless, into crowds of giddy children. Red gossamer banners billowed in the evening breeze, undulating like enormous jellyfish; to one witness, the British poet William Empson, they possessed a kind of "weird intimate emotive effect." Lines of paraders hoisted torches topped with flaming rags; others carried lanterns crafted from red paper--some shaped like stars, some like cubes, lit from within by candles or bicycle lamps. Slowly, singing, the glowing procession bled out into the city. Among the marchers was a boy of sixteen, Chen Yong. He held a small red flickering cube. He had been twelve years old when he joined Mao's army, though he had looked even younger--a year or two, at least. He had studied Morse code, one of the few jobs for a boy his age, then joined a unit that fought its way through Manchuria. As the long civil war was coming to a close, Chen's father had thrown his boy back in school. But on this night no one was studying. The war was over; Mao had won. Chen carried his lantern into the dark. Nearly seven decades after this celebratory light show, I visited Chen Yong at his home in Beijing, an unfussy apartment block in one of the city's western neighborhoods. Chen was now in his early eighties; his hair had gone white, and a gauzy beard descended from his chin. In his hand, trembling slightly, he clutched a pair of eyeglasses. One inflamed eyelid was nearly closed; a furtive intensity had replaced the calm flat gaze of his teenage years. One of my favorite parts of researching this book--a yearlong chronicle of the Truman Administration's response to Mao's victory in 1949--was the opportunity to spend time with some of the remaining eyewitnesses to the pivotal events of those dramatic twelve months. There are fewer and fewer survivors left; some of the key figures have been dead for four decades and more. The rest are elderly, their memories fading fast. In telling this story I have generally clung to the contemporary documents--the diaries, memoranda, letters, and news- paper reports that yield the most accurate portrait of that year. Still, I never passed up the opportunity to talk with those who were actually there. There was something magical about these encounters--a living connection to a bygone China. In the summer humidity of his apartment, Chen shuffled slowly across the concrete floor, opened a drawer in his bedside table, and pulled out a black and white photo. In the picture, his younger self wore the padded gray tunic of a Chinese Communist soldier--cinched hopefully at the waist, a size or two big for his teenage frame. As we talked, the emotion of that year seemed as present as it might have been seventy years ago; at one point he quietly began to sing one of his old marching songs. Yet when I pressed him on the granular details of his experiences, he was often at a loss. He would narrow his eyes, looking straight at me, and say with frustration, "It's hard to remember." Still, when I asked him how often he thought back to the events of that year, he said, "Pretty much all the time." And that, of course, is the great paradox of growing old: the less we can remember, the more time we spend remembering. As with people, so with nations: even as the survivors of the revolution are disappearing, Chinese leaders are spending more time trying to recall that era. China's current president, Xi Jinping, said shortly after he took power that he considered revolutionary history the "best nutrient" for a nation making its ascent as a great power. After years of de-Maoification in the 1980s, China's leadership now consciously seeks to reprise some of Mao's best-known political themes. When modern Chinese statesmen look to the past, they gravitate not to the lunacy of the Great Leap Forward, Mao's reckless attempt to transform China's agricultural economy, nor to the depredations of the Cultural Revolution, the fevered campaign to solidify Mao's rule in the late 1960s and early 1970s by mobilizing China's disaffected youth. Rather, today's Chinese leaders celebrate the triumphs of 1949, with all their emotional reverberations. Among other tributes, Xi's government recently inaugurated a new holiday, called Martyrs' Day, to be held each September 30 --the date in 1949 that Chinese leaders broke ground on a major national monument in Beijing. The China of today remains filled with mementos of 1949. On a recent spring morning, I took a day trip from Beijing to Xibaipo, one of the rural base camps that Mao had occupied at the beginning of the year, as his armies prepared to complete their conquest of the mainland. Once a bone-jarring voyage across pitted roads, today it is a painless four-hour drive along superhighways flanked by thick hanging trees. Although the weather in Beijing had been unusually sunny and smog- free, the sky grew hazier as we traveled southwest, into China's industrial heartland. Out the windows, flashes of the new China whizzed by: sand pits, smokestacks, solar panels, power lines, chewed hills that looked as if they had been eaten by a cosmic-scale monster. And yet in other ways, an older China was with us still. On the dashboard of his Ford sedan, my taxi driver had placed a slick white bust of Mao that said, on its pedestal, safe and sound. In Xibaipo, now a stark but bustling tourist town, we passed a restaurant called Red Memory and an information center selling trinkets emblazoned with portraits of Mao and Xi Jinping. Farther in, we arrived at a complex of low-slung, dun-colored bungalows marked with placards written in Chinese and Russian. Wandering beside the pear and locust trees, visitors paid five yuan to sit in a replica of Mao's can- vas folding chair; for a little more, twenty yuan, they could pose for a photo behind an embankment of sandbags, wearing an old army uniform and hoisting a rifle. The site, according to a member of the staff, had actually been moved slightly from its original location, to make way for a reservoir. But nobody seemed to mind. On this morning the museum was crowded with tourists filing past glass cases filled with relics of the revolution. Yet there is another, darker side to this sort of remembrance. Mao's victory in 1949 provoked a reaction across the Pacific; by the end of the year, the United States had extended its policy of containing Communism, once limited primarily to Europe, to Asia as well. The Truman Administration crafted an ambitious plan--including a series of covert operations--to bolster the nations along China's periphery. Even as Mao consolidated his control over the mainland, American opera- tors quietly slipped cash and weapons to his enemies. These historical events, too, inform Chinese views about the present, as the nation continues its fitful rise. Anxious Chinese officials see today's American policy as a sequel to the containment strategy hatched in 1949. They fret over American troop deployments and training missions to East Asia, and they suspiciously eye flashpoints like Tibet, Xinjiang, and Taiwan for evidence of modern American perfidy. That narrative of 1949--a combination of triumph mixed with grievance--overlooks a great deal. In reality, American policy makers battled fiercely with one another as they struggled to shape a response to Mao's victory. Some wanted to engage him; others wanted to con- front him; still others wanted to ignore him completely. In between existed a thousand shades of nuance. These disputes were not simply tactical differences of opinion; they reflected profound disagreements about the nature of the American relationship with China and revealed fault lines in the American character itself. They destroyed careers, reduced a cabinet member to tears, and in the decades that followed gave rise to some of America's most divisive foreign wars, in Korea and Vietnam. The most disconcerting thing is that these fissures--though now largely hidden--still exist. Each approach is fueled by its own self- deceptions, its own brand of remembering and forgetting. There is no obvious antidote to all this historical make-believe. It is not a matter of simply setting out the facts; the stories we tell our- selves about China are too freighted with emotion to be chased away so easily. Still, by slipping into the participants' skins and looking at the dilemmas of 1949 through their eyes, we can begin to share some of their fears and thrills--and ultimately purge some of our own anxieties and misconceptions. In other words, the only cure for a runaway story is another story. This one begins aboard an airplane, with a glamorous woman pre- paring for a fight. Excerpted from A Force So Swift: Mao, Truman, and the Birth of Modern China 1949 by Kevin Peraino All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.