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The American Military Mission to China, 1941-1942: Lend-Lease Logistics, Politics and the Tangles of Wartime Cooperation

Posted: December 19th, 2013 | No Comments »

A new history of the American Military Mission in China from William Grieve…

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This book is an overview of America’s first effort in military aid to a foreign sovereign nation at a time when Europe was engaged in open warfare and Asia was undergoing a series of military confrontations. Most of the world was convinced that global conflagration was inevitable. The work offers an insight into the impact of war in Burma, a backwater of World War II, but examines events that result when great powers expend treasure and blood to further their own goals. The goals may be to obtain natural resources on strategically important geography, defend and retain colonial holdings, or maintain power and prestige. The author examines disagreements among China, the United Kingdom, the United States and the Japanese Empire. This plays out as confrontations within and among several departments and individuals within the Roosevelt administration and the same dialogue and disagreement among our allies in the Asian region. The book shows the evolution of aid provision to another country and changing expectations as new information arises.
After enlisted duty as a combat engineer, William G. Grieve received a direct commission to the United States Marine Corps and retired as a colonel with 30 years of service. He has taught university level courses in Chinese culture, military history and American Diplomatic history at the university level and at the Marine Corps Command and Staff College.



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