How the Far East Was Lost: American Policy and the Creation of Communist China, 1941-1949

How the Far East Was Lost: American Policy and the Creation of Communist China, 1941-1949

by Dr. Anthony Kubek
How the Far East Was Lost: American Policy and the Creation of Communist China, 1941-1949

How the Far East Was Lost: American Policy and the Creation of Communist China, 1941-1949

by Dr. Anthony Kubek

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Overview

The Far Eastern policy pursued during the Roosevelt-Truman administrations has long been the subject of spirited controversy among historians. This volume, first published in 1963, is the result of seven years of intensive research into a mass of documentary data dealing with the Communist conquest of China.

“Professor Kubek discusses with unusual candor and clear vision the many mistakes of the Roosevelt and Truman Administrations with reference to the Far East. There are new data and fresh interpretations that lend additional evidence to support the contentions of earlier writers that the diplomacy of the Administrations of Roosevelt and Truman was disastrous in the extreme. The strange actions of General Marshall in China, and his blind policy while Secretary of State, were chief factors in the loss of China to the Communists. In a noteworthy chapter that all Americans should read, Professor Kubek traces in damning detail the tragic role that Marshall played in the fall of Nationalist China.

“This is a volume that will earn the sharpest criticisms of the motley hordes that crowded the Roosevelt and Truman bandwagons, but it is a must book for any American who wants to know why the present sawdust Caesar, Khrushchev, can insult at will the President of the United States and can hurl continual threats to “bury” all Americans. Soviet militate might is the direct product of billions of Democratic Lend-Lease aid, coddling of Communists in high places in the American Government, and failure to understand the basic drives of world Communism. Never before in our history was Presidential leadership so devoid of vision, and never before had the mistakes of our Chief Executives been so fraught with peril to our nation. Read this book and then begin to worry about how Americans will fare in the next decade.”—Charles Callan Tansill, Professor Emeritus of Diplomatic History, Georgetown University (Foreword)

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787205963
Publisher: Eschenburg Press
Publication date: 06/28/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 544
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Dr. Anthony Kubek (June 10, 1920 - June 10, 2003) was a nationally prominent authority on American foreign policy, especially U.S. policy in Asia.

After a year as a scholarship student at Geneva College, he served during World War II in the U.S. Navy in the Pacific theater and the Far East.

He earned three degrees from Georgetown University: B.A. in Foreign Service (1948), M.A. (1950), and Ph.D. in American Diplomatic History (1956). During his academic career, he served as the Academic Dean of Frisco College, in Frisco, Texas, and as a professor at the University of Dallas, where he was chairman of the Department of History and Political Science.

He was widely known as a lecturer and a consultant on American foreign policy. He was active in the national honor society Phil Alpha Theta, the Political Science Association, and the American Historical Association.

His published writings included The Amerasian Papers, a two-volume study issued by the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, How the Far East was Lost: American Policy and the Creation of Communist China, 1941- 1949 (1963), The Red China Papers (1975) and Ronald Reagan and Free China (2002).

Dr. Kubek addressed the Ninth IHR Conference (1989), presenting a paper, “The Morgenthau Plan and the Problem of Policy Perversion,” which was published in the Fall 1989 Journal of Historical Review.

Throughout his life he was a devout Roman Catholic and staunchly anti-Communist. He and his wife Naomi Dugan Kubek were parents of four children.

He died at his home in Irving, Texas, in 2003 at the age of 83.
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