The CIA and Third Force Movements in China during the Early Cold War: The Great American Dream
By (Author) Roger B. Jeans
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
27th November 2017
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Cold wars and proxy conflicts
951.05
Hardback
342
Width 157mm, Height 238mm, Spine 26mm
717g
When the Chinese Communists defeated the Chinese Nationalists and occupied the mainland in 19491950, U.S. policymakers were confronted with a dilemma. Disgusted by the corruption and, more importantly, failure of Chiang Kai-sheks Nationalist armies and party and repelled by the Communists revolutionary actions and violent class warfare, in the early 1950s the U.S. government placed its hopes in a Chinese third force. While the U.S. State Department reported on third forces, the CIA launched a two-prong effort to actively support these groups with money, advisors, and arms. In Japan, Okinawa, and Saipan, the agency trained third force troops at CIA bases. The Chinese commander of these soldiers was former high-ranking Nationalist General Cai Wenzhi. He and his colleagues organized a political group, the Free China Movement. His troops received parachute training as well as other types of combat and intelligence instruction at agency bases. Subsequently, several missions were dispatched to Manchuriathe Korean War was raging thenand South China. All were failures and the Chinese third force agents were killed or imprisoned. With the end of the Korean War, the Americans terminated this armed third force movement, with the Nationalists on Taiwan taking in some of its soldiers while others moved to Hong Kong. The Americans flew Cai to Washington, where he took a job with the Department of Defense. The second prong of the CIAs effort was in Hong Kong. The agency financially supported and advised the creation of a third force organization called the Fighting League for Chinese Freedom and Democracy. It also funded several third force periodicals. Created in 1951 and 1952, in 1953 and 1954 the CIA ended its financial support. As a consequence of this as well as factionalism within the group, in 1954 the League collapsed and its leaders scattered to the four winds. At the end, even the term third force was discredited and replaced by new force. Finally, in the early 1950s, the CIA backed as a third force candidate a Vietnamese general. With his assassination in May 1955, however, that effort also came to naught.
[Jeans" draws upon Graham Greenes work to conclude with a damning assessment of CIA intervention overseas, stating that despite the legacy of China and Vietnam, the CIA has never learned its lesson about the perils and costs of covert intervention in someone elses country (263). [He] has clearly illustrated this in his important study, which brings together historical fields including military and intelligence studies and Chinese and American cultural and political history, and will be of immense use to readers interested in the Cold War, Sino-American relations, and the complexities and immoralities of US empire. * Pacific Affairs *
As Chinese Communist forces swept to victory in 1949 and Chiang Kai-sheks government seemingly imploded, some American policy makers fantasized about a Third Force, a movement of pro-democracy, pro-American leaders opposed to both the CCP and Chiang. Enter the CIA and covert operations and the Third Force project was born. This project has been shrouded in secrecy and indeed CIA records are still closed. But in this important new study, Roger B. Jeans has done a remarkable job of sleuthing to find archival sources, published material, memoirs, and, most importantly, oral interviews. This is likely the definitive study of the effort for the foreseeable future. -- Parks M. Coble, University of Nebraska
The story of CIAs failed efforts to back a Chinese third force between the Communists and the Nationalists during the early Cold War lays bare the futility of US covert operations in Asia, as well as the hopelessness of third force movements. Drawing on a range of underutilized American and Chinese sources, Roger B. Jeans has provided a masterful account, with a critical analysis of the failed project and an assessment of the unrealizable 'great American dream' from which the United States apparently had learned little. -- Edmund S. K. Fung, Western Sydney University
Roger B. Jeans tells the complicated story of a giant fiasco that has been highly classified since the 1950s and kept secret. The book is a pioneering work, thorough and well researched. It is destined to become definitive. -- Stephen R. MacKinnon, Arizona State University
Roger B. Jeans has done historians of China, the United States, and the Cold War an enormous favor. He has left no stone untouched in his hunt for the truth behind CIA interventions in China and Vietnam in the civil wars in these two countries. He demonstrates that their efforts to foster political and military forces amenable to US guidance in between the main opponents were as blinkered as they were inept. More than that, The CIA and Third Force Movements in China during the Early Cold War also amounts to a ringing denunciation of the CIA's continuing and increasing efforts to keep its past hidden from public scrutiny, an instinct of benefit to no one. -- Hans van de Ven, University of Cambridge
Roger B. Jeans is Elizabeth Lewis Otey Professor of History emeritus at Washington and Lee University.