{"title":"Marines and Mothers: Agency, Activism, and Resistance to the American North China Intervention, 1945–46","authors":"James R. Compton","doi":"10.35318/mch.2022080102","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract:At the culmination of the Second World War, the Marines of the III Amphibious Corps (III AC) were preparing to assault the Japanese homeland. With the abrupt conclusion of hostilities in September 1945, they were ordered instead to war-ravaged North China. The mission in North China was amorphous—protecting infrastructure and key terrain during the reemergent Chinese Civil War. As Marines labored to resist the expansion of their mission, the lifting of wartime censorship protocols enabled them to voice concern to their families and Congress. Mothers and citizen groups also challenged the young Harry S. Truman administration on the merits and morality of the North China intervention. Set at the dawn of the Cold War, this article investigates the role of unlikely political actors—Marines and mothers—in shaping American policy in North China from 1945 to 1946. Combating narratives of inevitable quagmire, the Marines in North China are examined as important agents in the restraint of American power at contingent moments. This piece argues that the Truman administration failed to make an affirmative case for intervention and was, in part, constrained by popular opinion.","PeriodicalId":161827,"journal":{"name":"Marine Corps History","volume":"21 2","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Marine Corps History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.35318/mch.2022080102","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Abstract:At the culmination of the Second World War, the Marines of the III Amphibious Corps (III AC) were preparing to assault the Japanese homeland. With the abrupt conclusion of hostilities in September 1945, they were ordered instead to war-ravaged North China. The mission in North China was amorphous—protecting infrastructure and key terrain during the reemergent Chinese Civil War. As Marines labored to resist the expansion of their mission, the lifting of wartime censorship protocols enabled them to voice concern to their families and Congress. Mothers and citizen groups also challenged the young Harry S. Truman administration on the merits and morality of the North China intervention. Set at the dawn of the Cold War, this article investigates the role of unlikely political actors—Marines and mothers—in shaping American policy in North China from 1945 to 1946. Combating narratives of inevitable quagmire, the Marines in North China are examined as important agents in the restraint of American power at contingent moments. This piece argues that the Truman administration failed to make an affirmative case for intervention and was, in part, constrained by popular opinion.
摘要:在第二次世界大战的高潮,第三两栖兵团(III AC)的海军陆战队正准备攻击日本本土。随着1945年9月战争的突然结束,他们被命令前往饱受战争蹂躏的华北。中国北方的任务是在重新爆发的中国内战期间保护基础设施和关键地形。当海军陆战队努力抵制扩大任务时,战时审查协议的解除使他们能够向家人和国会表达关切。母亲和公民团体也质疑年轻的哈里·s·杜鲁门(Harry S. Truman)政府对中国北方干预的是非曲性和道德性。本文以冷战初期为背景,调查了1945年至1946年间,海军陆战队员和母亲这两个不太可能的政治角色在塑造美国在华北的政策中所扮演的角色。与不可避免的泥潭叙事相反,中国北方的海军陆战队被视为在偶然时刻制约美国力量的重要代理人。这篇文章认为,杜鲁门政府未能提出积极的干预理由,而且在一定程度上受到了民意的制约。