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- Loss_of_China abstract "The \"loss of China\" refers, in U.S. political discourse, to the unexpected Communist Party takeover of mainland China from the American-backed Nationalists in 1949, and therefore the \"loss of China to communism\". The \"loss of China\" was portrayed by critics of the Truman Administration as an \"avoidable catastrophe\". It led to a \"rancorous and divisive debate\" and the issue was exploited by the Republicans at the polls in 1952. It also played a large role in the rise of Joseph McCarthy, who, with his allies, sought scapegoats for that \"loss\", targeting notably Owen Lattimore, an influential scholar of Central Asia.During World War II, Franklin D. Roosevelt had assumed that China, under Chiang Kai-shek’s leadership, would become a great power after the war, along with the U.S., the United Kingdom, and Russia. According to John Paton Davies Jr. (one of the so-called \"China Hands\", whose diplomatic career was later ruined by the loss of China), Roosevelt's lack of sufficient material support to Chiang Kai-shek during the war against Japan in the 1930s and 1940s and his deplorable choices of U.S. diplomatic emissaries to China contributed to the failure of Roosevelt's policy.According to historian Arthur Waldron, \"Franklin Roosevelt thought of China as a power already securely held by [Chiang Kai-shek].\" Chiang Kai-shek's hold on power was, however, tenuous, and \"once the Japanese were defeated, China would become a power vacuum, tempting to Moscow, and beyond the capability of the Nationalists to control. In that sense, the collapse of China into communism was aided by the incompetence of Roosevelt’s policy.\"Noam Chomsky, a leading critic of U.S. foreign policy, has commented that the terminology \"loss of China\" is revealing of U.S. foreign policy attitudes:".
- Loss_of_China wikiPageExternalLink ft296nb15t.
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- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Albert_Coady_Wedemeyer.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Waldron.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_the_United_States_(1945–64).
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Chiang_Kai-shek.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink China_Hands.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink China_Lobby.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_Civil_War.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Cold_War.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Communism.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Communist_Party_of_China.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Dean_Acheson.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Dixie_Mission.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Foreign_policy_of_the_United_States.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Franklin_D._Roosevelt.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Harry_S._Truman.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Henry_Luce.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink John_Paton_Davies,_Jr..
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_McCarthy.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Kuomintang.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Mainland_China.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Marshall_Mission.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink McCarthyism.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Noam_Chomsky.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Owen_Lattimore.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Republican_Party_(United_States).
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Second_Sino-Japanese_War.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink Venona_project.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLink World_War_II.
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLinkText "Loss of China".
- Loss_of_China wikiPageWikiLinkText "loss of China".
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- Loss_of_China subject Category:History_of_the_United_States_(1945–64).
- Loss_of_China type Redirect.
- Loss_of_China comment "The \"loss of China\" refers, in U.S. political discourse, to the unexpected Communist Party takeover of mainland China from the American-backed Nationalists in 1949, and therefore the \"loss of China to communism\". The \"loss of China\" was portrayed by critics of the Truman Administration as an \"avoidable catastrophe\". It led to a \"rancorous and divisive debate\" and the issue was exploited by the Republicans at the polls in 1952.".
- Loss_of_China label "Loss of China".
- Loss_of_China sameAs Q3328177.
- Loss_of_China sameAs m.0j64_sd.
- Loss_of_China sameAs Gubitak_Kine.
- Loss_of_China sameAs Губитак_Кине.
- Loss_of_China sameAs Q3328177.
- Loss_of_China wasDerivedFrom Loss_of_China?oldid=694305258.
- Loss_of_China isPrimaryTopicOf Loss_of_China.