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...fought harder, more steadfastly or more tragically to stem the forces advancing along the Lenin-mapped route than Chiang Kaishek, and no leader in the free world knows those forces better, or has known them longer. Out of his bitter knowledge comes this book, subtitled A Summing-Up at Seventy.* It is extraordinary, among other things, for what it is not. It is neither bitter nor angry; it wastes no time on past glories or on recriminations. It is a coldly impersonal study of what went wrong in China and what ought to be done now. The book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Voice of China | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

SOVIET RUSSIA IN CHINA (392 pp.]-Chiang Kai-shek - Farrar, Straus & Cudahy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Voice of China | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

What Went Wrong? Chiang's diagnosis of why China fell to Communism - and why the rest of the world is threatened -can be summed up in one phrase: peaceful coexistence. Carefully, Chiang spells out the tortuous story from the day the Communists first lodged themselves like parasites within Sun Yat-sen's National Revolution to the time of the Japanese invasion which the Communists exploited to consolidate for further civil war, down to the moment when, after decades of war and chaos, "finally, the people lost their will to fight Communism...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Voice of China | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

...Chiang apportions blame among Russian maneuvers, Japanese aggression, Chinese dupes and traitors, U.S. naiveté-including Yalta's giveaway of Manchuria and the disastrous U.S. attempt (the Marshall mission) to mediate between the Nationalists and the Reds. But he does not dodge his own responsibility, charges himself with the basic fault of again and again having dealt with Russia and the Communists as men of good will. Each time the Chinese Reds were nearly defeated, "coexistence"' again saved them: "We were overconfident . . . We erred in being too lenient...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Voice of China | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

...much of the world fell for the slogans about the Chinese Reds as mere agrarian reformers, about Nationalist corruption, etc.. it was, says Chiang, partly his government's fault: "We lacked initiative in propaganda and substance in ideology." The Red victory, by Chiang's reckoning, was only 20% military; for the rest he details the case histories of treachery, infiltration, propaganda, the exploitation of an uprooted social order. One of the Reds' earliest tactics, recalls Chiang, was to incite the poor of a village to loot before Communist agents burned down the house of the landlords...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Voice of China | 6/24/1957 | See Source »

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