Read Colossus Online

Authors: Niall Ferguson

Tags: #History

Colossus (60 page)

BOOK: Colossus
5.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

87
. See Gimbel, “Governing the American Zone,” pp. 92–96; Schlauch, “American Policy,” p. 125.

88
. The phrase was the British economist Lionel Robbins’s.

89
. Gaddis,
We Now Know
, p. 20.

90
. President Harry S. Truman’s Address Before a Joint Session of Congress, March 12, 1947,
www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/trudoc.htm.

91
. Hoge and Zakaria,
American Encounter
, pp. 155–70.

92
. Text from
http:www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/episodes/05/documents/nsc.report.68/.

93
. Lundestad,
American “Empire,”
p. 44.

94
. Bell,
Americanization
, p. 3.

95
. Reinstein, “Reparations,” p. 146.

96
. Bailey,
Postwar Japan
, p. 38.

97
. Ibid., p. 60f.

98
. Ibid., pp. 52–61.

99
. Dower, “Occupied Japan,” p. 487.

100
. The average annual growth rate of West German
per capita
GDP averaged over 5 percent a year between 1950 and 1973, as against 8 percent in Japan. Greece, Spain and Portugal enjoyed even more rapid growth than Germany in the same period, according to Maddison,
World Economy
, table A1-d.

101
. Backer,
Priming the German Economy
, p. 186f.

102
. United States Agency for International Development, Statistics and Reports Division, November 17, 1975.

103
. Backer,
Priming the German Economy
, pp. 174–78.

104
. In 2001 69,200 U.S. troops were deployed in Germany and 40,200 in Japan, mostly on the island of Okinawa.

105
. Oppen (ed.)
Documents
, pp. 156–60.

106
. Layne, “America as European Hegemon,” p. 20.

107
. Maddison,
World Economy
, p. 261, table B-18.

108
. Lundestad,
American “Empire,”
p. 40.

109
. Schiller,
Mass Communications
, p. 50.

110
. See esp. Gilpin,
Political Economy
.

111
. Office of the Undersecretary of Defense (Comptroller), “National Defense Budget Estimates for FY 2004,” (Green Paper), March 2003. Cf. Malkasian,
Korean War
, p. 13f, 73.

112
. Gaddis,
We Now Know
, pp. 89, 102f.

113
. University of Michigan, Correlates of War database.

114
. Magdoff,
Age of Imperialism
, p. 42. For different figures, see Peter H. Smith,
Talons of the Eagle
, p. 119.

115
. Lundestad,
American “Empire,”
p. 54.

116
. Ibid., p. 65.

117
. Pei, “Lessons,” p. 52. Oddly, Pei ignores the case of South Korea; admittedly, its transition to democracy came a long time after the intervention.

118
. Witness the vain attempts by Dean Rusk to discourage the emergence of a “Bonn-Paris axis” in 1963: Layne, “America as European Hegemon,” p. 24f.

119
. Stueck,
Korean War
, p. 26.

120
. Gaddis,
We Now Know
, p. 71f.

121
. Malkasian,
Korean War
, p. 15. Cf. Spanier,
Truman-MacArthur
, p. 257ff.

122
. Malkasian,
Korean War
, pp. 11–17.

123
. Mueller,
War, Presidents and Public Opin-ion
, table 3.2, p. 48.

124
. Foot,
Wrong War
, pp. 189–94.

125
. Malkasian,
Korean War
, p. 9.

126
Stueck,
Korean War
, p. 132f.

127
. This consciousness of European vulnerability had already been clearly expressed in NSC 68, which warned of the danger of “surprise attack” in Europe. Text at
http:www.cnn.com/SPECIALS/cold.war/episodes/05/documents/nsc.report.68/
.

128
. Gaddis,
We Now Know
, p. 103.

129
. McCullough,
Truman
, p. 837.

130
. Ferrell,
Truman
, p. 330.

131
. Truman,
Years of Trial and Hope
, p. 467ff. MacArthur invited the Chinese commander in chief to “confer in the field” or face the risk of “an expansion of our military operations to [China’s] coastal areas and interior bases.”

132
. Ibid., 472f. Ferrell,
Truman
, p. 332.

133
. Ferrell,
Truman
, p. 334. The mood of panic in Washington was palpable. The rushed press conference happened because Truman and his advisers feared that MacArthur “was going on a world-wide broadcast network” to resign before he could be fired: McCullough,
Truman
, p. 842.

134
. See Wittner (ed.),
MacArthur
, pp. 103–08.

135
. McCullough,
Truman
, pp. 837–50.

136
. Ibid., p. 852.

137
. Truman,
Years of Trial and Hope
, p. 459.

138
. Ibid., p. 464.

139
. McCullough,
Truman
, p. 833f.

140
. Foot,
Wrong War
, p. 23.

141
. McCullough,
Truman
, p. 853ff.; Ferrell,
Truman
, p. 335.

142
. McCullough,
Truman
, p. 854.

143
. Spanier,
Truman-MacArthur
, p. 273.

144
. For an overly sympathetic account, see Willoughby and Chamberlain,
MacArthur
, pp. 418–25.

145
. Foot,
Wrong War
, p. 176. The Chinese were fearful that a large proportion of the POWs would refuse to return home voluntarily.

146
. Ibid., p. 176f.

147
. Ibid., p. 184.

148
. Ibid., p. 25.

149
. Mueller,
War, Presidents and Public Opinion
, p. 105.

150
. The percentage of U.S. Army personnel killed in action fell from 13.6 percent in the second half of 1950 to just 3.6 percent in 1951 and little more than 1 percent in 1952 and 1953. See the figures in
http:/history.amedd.army.mil/booksdocs/korea/reister/ch1.htm
.

151
. For Korean War casualty statistics, there are now excellent electronic sources. See
http://www.koreanwar-educator.org/old%20site/public_html/toc/detail_casualty/PAGE%20FIVE.htm
;
http://www.centurychina.com/history/krwarcost.html
; and the invaluable
http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/war-stat2.htm.

152
. Kissinger, “Reflections on American Diplomacy” p. 50f.

153
. Greene,
Quiet American
, p. 124.

154
. Ibid., p. 96.

155
. Caputo,
Rumor
, p. 16.

156
. Ibid., p. 88f.

157
. Baker,
Nam
, p. 133.

158
. Ferguson, “Prisoner Taking.”

159
. Herring,
Longest War
, p. 268.

160
. Ibid., p. 192f.

161
. Karnow,
Vietnam
, p. 19.

162
. Herring,
Longest War
, p. 268.

163
. Karnow,
Vietnam
, p. 19.

164
. Ravenal et al., “Was Failure Inevitable?,” p. 268f.

165
. Palmer,
Twenty-five Year War
, p. 204f

166
. Karnow,
Vietnam
, p. 20f.

167
. Coker,
Conflicts
, p. 22.

168
. Palmer,
Twenty-five Year War
, p. 195.

169
. Ibid., p. 192f.

170
. Though of course there had been mil-itary advisers in Vietnam for some years; the first American to be killed there died as early as 1961. But the direct and overt participation of American forces in the war really dates from 1965.

171
. Mueller,
War, Presidents and Public Opinion
.

172
. Ravenal,
Never Again
, p. 106. Cf. Palmer,
Twenty-five Year War
, p. 190.

173
. Ravenal et al., “Was Failure Inevitable?” p. 275f; Abshire, “Lessons,” p. 406; Karnow,
Vietnam
, p. 17.

174
. Mueller,
War, Presidents and Public Opinion
, table 3.2, p. 49.

175
. Edelman,
Dear America
, p. 205.

176
. Julien,
Empire
, p. 13.

177
. Edelman,
Dear America
, p. 207.

178
. Siracusa, “Lessons,” p. 228.

179
. Roskin, “Generational Paradigms,” p. 569.

180
. Siracusa, “Lessons,” p. 228; Gaddis,
We Now Know
, p. 58.

181
. Herring,
Longest War
, p. 270.

182
. Siracusa, “Lessons,” p. 233; Roskin, “Generational Paradigms,” p. 575.

183
. Kupchan,
End
, p. 200. Cf. Lundestad,
“Empire,”
p. 92.

184
. Herring,
Longest War
, p. 267.

185
. Gaddis,
We Now Know
, p. 177; Lowenthal,
Partners in Conflict
, pp. 31–33.

BOOK: Colossus
5.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Gathering Night by Margaret Elphinstone
Dualed by Elsie Chapman
The Haçienda by Hook, Peter
For Everly by Thomas, Raine
Unspoken (The Woodlands) by Frederick, Jen
Ink by Amanda Anderson
Barley Patch by Gerald Murnane