The American Occupation of Japan: The Origins of the Cold War in Asia

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Oxford University Press, 1985 - 351 ページ
This book provides a novel perspective on the origins of the Cold War in Asia, tracing it all the way back to the occupation of Japan after the Second World War. Schaller argues that the reconstruction of postwar Japan not only shaped the future of that country but the future of U.S. policy throughout postwar Asia, leading up to the controversial interventions in China, Korea, and Vietnam. The author shows how after the war, the United States sought to develop Japan as a stable bulwark against both Soviet expansion and Asian revolution. Schaller depicts the intense contest that raged among Americans, pitting the flamboyant Occupation Commander, General Douglas MacArthur, against virtually all civilian and military planners in Washington, including the president. First hailed as a hero and given nearly free reign to shape Japan's future, MacArthur was ultimately denounced by Truman and his advisors as a "bunko artist" who had wrecked Japan's economy and opened it to Communist influence. In place of MacArthur's ambitious social and economic reforms, the new Occupation program reconcentrated power in the hands of Japans's old elite. The book shows how Communist control of China and North Korea cut Japan off from its historic trading partners and forced officials to focus on developing the rich but unstable Southeast Asian states. Washington feared that economic blackmail alone would pull Japan into the Soviet orbit. Determined to secure Japan--the ultimate "domino"--The United States spurned possible detente with China, extended military aid to the French in Indochina, and finally entered the Korean War.--Publisher description.
 

目次

1 The End of the Pacific War
3
2 Remaking Japan 1945 to 1948
20
3 Northeast Asia and the Pacific 1945 to 1947
52
4 Reinterpeting the Postwar World
77
5 An Aborted Treaty
98
6 The Conservative Response to Liberal Reform
107
7 Setting a New Course
122
8 Regional Economic Integration and the Rise of Southeast Asia
141
12 Containment and Recovery in Japan and Southeast Asia
212
13 A Commitment to Vietnam
234
14 Japan and the Rekindled Crisis with China
246
15 At War in Asia
273
The Workshop of Asia
290
Abbreviations and Acronyms
299
Notes
303
References
337

Trying Again
164
10 Japanese Recovery Prospects in the Wake of Chinas Revolution
178
11 NSC 48 and the Renewed Debate over Asian Communism
195

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著者について (1985)

Michael Schaller, Professor History at the University of Arizona, is author of The U.S. Crusade in China, 1938-45 and The U.S. and China in the Twentieth Century.

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