THE COLD WAR IN ASIA AND THE MIDDLE EAST

THE COLD WAR IN ASIA AND THE MIDDLE EAST

THE COLD WAR IN ASIA AND THE MIDDLE EAST
THE COLD WAR IN ASIA AND THE MIDDLE EAST

While seeking to prevent Com- munist ideology from gaining fur- ther adherents in Europe, the United States also responded to challenges elsewhere . In China, Americans worried about the advances of Mao Zedong and his Communist Party . During World War II, the National- ist government under Chiang Kai- shek and the Communist forces waged a civil war even as they fought the Japanese . Chiang had been a war-time ally, but his government was hopelessly inefficient and cor- rupt . American policy makers had little hope of saving his regime and considered Europe vastly more im- portant . With most American aid moving across the Atlantic, Mao’s forces seized power in 1949 . Chiang’s government fled to the island of Tai- wan . When China’s new ruler an- nounced that he would support the Soviet Union against the “imperial- ist” United States, it appeared that Communism was spreading out of

control, at least in Asia . The Korean War brought armed

conflict between the United States and China . The United States and the Soviet Union had divided Ko- rea along the 38th parallel after lib- erating it from Japan at the end of World War II . Originally a matter of military convenience, the divid- ing line became more rigid as both major powers set up governments in their respective occupation zones and continued to support them even after departing .

In June 1950, after consultations with and having obtained the assent of the Soviet Union, North Korean leader Kim Il-sung dispatched his Soviet-supplied army across the 38th parallel and attacked southward, overrunning Seoul . Truman, per- ceiving the North Koreans as Soviet pawns in the global struggle, read- ied American forces and ordered World War II hero General Douglas MacArthur to Korea . Meanwhile, the United States was able to secure a U .N . resolution branding North Korea as an aggressor . (The Soviet Union, which could have vetoed any action had it been occupying its seat on the Security Council, was boycot- ting the United Nations to protest a decision not to admit Mao’s new Chinese regime .)

The war seesawed back and forth . U .S . and Korean forces were initial- ly pushed into an enclave far to the south around the city of Pusan . A daring amphibious landing at In- chon, the port for the city of Seoul, drove the North Koreans back and

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threatened to occupy the entire peninsula . In November, China entered the war, sending massive forces across the Yalu River . U .N . forces, largely American, retreated once again in bitter fighting . Com- manded by General Matthew B . Ridgway, they stopped the overex- tended Chinese, and slowly fought their way back to the 38th parallel . MacArthur meanwhile challenged Truman’s authority by attempting to orchestrate public support for bombing China and assisting an invasion of the mainland by Chi- ang Kai-shek’s forces . In April 1951, Truman relieved him of his duties and replaced him with Ridgway .

The Cold War stakes were high . Mindful of the European prior- ity, the U .S . government decided against sending more troops to Ko- rea and was ready to settle for the prewar status quo . The result was frustration among many Americans who could not understand the need for restraint . Truman’s popular- ity plunged to a 24-percent approval rating, the lowest to that time of any president since pollsters had begun to measure presidential popularity . Truce talks began in July 1951 . The two sides finally reached an agree- ment in July 1953, during the first term of Truman’s successor, Dwight Eisenhower .

Cold War struggles also occurred in the Middle East . The region’s stra- tegic importance as a supplier of oil had provided much of the impetus for pushing the Soviets out of Iran in 1946 . But two years later, the United

States officially recognized the new state of Israel 15 minutes after it was proclaimed — a decision Truman made over strong resistance from Marshall and the State Department . The result was an enduring dilemma — how to maintain ties with Israel while keeping good relations with bitterly anti-Israeli (and oil-rich) Arab states .

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