Chapter 31: Asia and the Pacific
Communist China
Civil War and the Great Leap Forward
- By 1945, there were two Chinese governments.
- The Nationalist government of Chiang Kai-shek, based in southern and central China, was supported by the United States.
- The Communist government, under the leadership of Mao Zedong, had its base in North China.
- In 1946, full-scale war between the Nationalists and the Communists broke out.
- By the spring of 1949, the People’s Liberation Army had defeated the Nationalists
- The Communist Party, under the leadership of its chairman, Mao Zedong, now ruled China.
- Chinese leaders hoped that collective farms would increase food production, allowing more people to work in industry.
- To speed up economic growth, Mao began a more radical program, known as the Great Leap Forward, in 1958.
- Existing collective farms, normally the size of a village, were combined into vast communes.
- The Great Leap Forward was a disaster.
The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
- Mao now faced opposition within the Communist Party.
- In Mao’s eyes, only permanent revolution, an atmosphere of constant revolutionary fervor, could enable the Chinese to overcome the past and achieve the final stage of communism.
- In 1966, Mao launched the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution.
- To further the Cultural Revolution, the Red Guards were formed.
- Vicious attacks were made on individuals who had supposedly deviated from Mao’s plan.
China After Mao
- In September 1976, Mao Zedong died at the age of 83.
- Under Deng Xiaoping, the government followed a policy called the Four Modernizations, which focused on four areas— industry, agriculture, technology, and national defense.
- A new agricultural policy was begun.
- Collective farms could now lease land to peasant families who paid rent to the collective.
- Overall, modernization worked.
- Industrial output skyrocketed.
- Per capita (per person) income, including farm income, doubled during the 1980s.
- Despite these achievements, many people complained that Deng Xiao- ping’s program had failed to achieve a fifth modernization — democracy.
- The problem began to intensify in the late 1980s.
- In the late 1980s, rising inflation led to growing discontent among salaried workers, especially in the cities.
- Some Communist leaders were divided over how to respond.
- Throughout the 1990s, China’s human rights violations and its determination to unify with Taiwan strained its relationship with the West.
Chinese Society Under Communism
- From the start, the Chinese Communist Party wanted to create a new kind of citizen.
- During the 1950s, the Communist government in China took steps to end the old system.
- The new regime also tried to destroy the influence of the traditional family system.
- During the Great Leap Forward, children were encouraged for the first time to report to the authorities any comments by their parents that criticized the system
- At the time, many foreign observers feared that the Cultural Revolution would transform the Chinese people into robots spouting the slogans fed to them by their leaders.
- For most people, this shift meant better living conditions.
- The new attitudes were also reflected in people’s clothing choices.
China and the World: The Cold War in Asia
- When Chinese Communists came to power, American fears about the spread of communism intensified.
- Korea was a part of the Japanese Empire from 1905 until 1945.
- There was great tension between the two governments.
- In September 1950, UN forces — mostly Americans — marched northward across the 38th parallel with the aim of unifying Korea.
- Three more years of fighting produced no final victory.
- Western fears led to China’s isolation from the major Western powers.
- Faced with a serious security threat from the Soviet Union, along with internal problems, Chinese leaders decided to improve relations with the United States.
Independent States in South and Southeast Asia
India DIvided
- At the end of World War II, British India’s Muslims and Hindus were bitterly divided
- On August 15, 1947, India and Pakistan became independent.
- On January 30, 1948, a Hindu militant assassinated Mohandas Gandhi as he was going to morning prayer.
- India’s new beginning had not been easy.
The New India
- With independence, the Indian National Congress, renamed the Congress Party, began to rule India.
- Accordingly, the state took over the ownership of major industries, utilities, and transportation.
- Nehru died in 1964.
- In 1966, the leaders of the Congress Party selected Nehru’s daughter, Indira Gandhi (who was not related to Mohandas Gandhi), as the new prime minister.
- India faced many problems during this period.
- One result was worsening poverty for many people.
- Growing ethnic and religious strife presented another problem in India.
- Indira Gandhi’s son Rajiv replaced his mother as prime minister and began to move the government in new directions.
- Rajiv Gandhi was prime minister from 1984 to 1989
Pakistan
- Unlike its neighbor India, Pakistan was a completely new nation when it attained independence in 1947.
- Many people in East Pakistan felt that the government, based in West Pakistan, ignored their needs.
- In 1971, East Pakistan declared its independence.
- After a brief civil war, it became the new nation of Bangladesh.
- Both Bangladesh and Pakistan (as West Pakistan is now known) have had difficulty in establishing stable governments.
Southeast Asia
- Colonies in Southeast Asia, like colonies elsewhere, gained their independence at the end of World War II.
- In July 1946, the United States granted total independence to the Philippines.
- The Netherlands and France were less willing to abandon their colonial empires in Southeast Asia.
- The situation was very different in Vietnam.
- Over the following years, France fought Ho Chi Minh’s Vietminh for control of Vietnam without success
- Both sides agreed to hold elections in two years to create a single government.
- In March 1965, President Lyndon Johnson decided to send U.S. troops to South Vietnam to prevent a total victory for the Communists.
- By the end of the 1960s, the war had reached a stalemate—neither side was able to make significant gains.
- The reunification of Vietnam under Communist rule had an immediate impact on the region.
- In the beginning, many of the leaders of the newly independent states in Southeast Asia admired Western political and economic practices.
- By the end of the 1950s, however, hopes for rapid economic growth had failed.
- In more recent years, some Southeast Asian soci- eties have shown signs of moving again toward more democratic governments.
- Across South and Southeast Asia, women’s roles have changed considerably.
- After independence, India’s leaders sought to extend women’s rights.
- The constitution of 1950 forbade discrimination (prejudicial treatment) based on gender and called for equal pay for equal work.
Japan and the Pacific
The Allied Occupation
- From 1945 to 1952, Japan was an occupied country—its lands held and controlled by Allied military forces.
- An Allied administration under the command of United States general Douglas MacArthur governed Japan.
- Under MacArthur’s firm direction, Japanese society was remodeled along Western lines.
- On September 8, 1951, the United States and other former World War II allies (but not the Soviet Union) signed a peace treaty restoring Japanese independence.
The Japanese Miracle
- In August 1945, Japan was in ruins and its land occupied by a foreign army
- Japan’s rapid emergence as an economic giant has often been described as the “Japanese miracle.”
- Japan's new constitution embodied the principles of universal suffrage and a balance of power among the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government.
- At the same time, the current Japanese political system retains some of Japan’s nineteenth-century political system under the Meiji.
- Today, the central government plays an active role in the economy.
- Japan’s economic system has been described as “state capitalism.”
- Some problems remain, however.
- Two recent prime ministers have been forced to resign over improper financial dealings with business associates
- During their occupation of Japan, Allied officials had planned to dismantle the large business conglomerates known as the zaibatsu.
- The occupation administration had more success with its land-reform program.
- At the end of the Allied occupation in 1952, the Japanese gross national product was one-third that of Great Britain or France.
- Other analysts have cited more practical reasons for the Japanese economic success.
- During the occupation, Allied planners thought they could eliminate the aggressiveness that had characterized Japanese behavior before and during the war.
- Efforts to remake Japanese behavior through laws were only partly successful.
- The subordinate role of women in Japanese society has not been entirely eliminated.
- Women now make up nearly 50 percent of the workforce, but most are in retail or service occupations.
- After the Japanese defeat in World War II, many of the writers who had been active before the war resurfaced
- Since the 1970s, increasing wealth and a high literacy rate have led to a massive outpouring of books.
- Haruki Murakami is one of Japan’s most popular authors today.
The “Asian Tigers”
- A number of Asian nations have imitated Japan in creating successful industrial societies.
- In 1953, the Korean Peninsula was exhausted from three years of bitter war.
- After several years of harsh rule and government corruption in South Korea, demonstrations broke out in the capital city of Seoul in the spring of 1960.
- South Korea gradually emerged as a major industrial power in East Asia.
- Like many other countries in the region, South Korea was slow to develop democratic principles.
- After they were defeated by the Communists and forced to retreat to Taiwan, Chiang Kai-shek and his followers established a capital at Taipei.
- Chiang Kai-shek’s government maintained that it was the legitimate government of all the Chinese people and would eventually return in triumph to the mainland.
- Protection by American military forces enabled the new regime to concentrate on economic growth without worrying about a Communist invasion.
- A land-reform program, which put farmland in the hands of peasants, doubled food production in Taiwan.
- Prosperity, however, did not lead to democracy.
- A major issue for Taiwan is whether it will become an independent state or will be united with mainland China.
- Singapore, once a British colony and briefly a part of the state of Malaysia, is now an independent state.
- In Singapore, an authoritarian political system has created a stable environment for economic growth.
- Like Singapore, Hong Kong became an industrial powerhouse with standards of living well above the levels of its neighbors
Australia and New Zealand
- Both Australia and the country of New Zealand, located to the south and east of Australia, have identified themselves culturally and politically with Europe rather than with their Asian neighbors.
- In recent years, however, trends have been draw- ing both states closer to Asia.
- First, immigration from East and Southeast Asia has increased rapidly.
- Second, trade relations with Asia are increasing rapidly.
- Whether Australia and New Zealand will ever become an integral part of the Asia-Pacific region is uncertain.