Chapter 34 Rebirth and Revolution: Nation-Building in East Asia and the Pacific Rim



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CHAPTER 34

Rebirth and Revolution: Nation-Building in East Asia and the Pacific Rim

Chapter Outline Summary

I. East Asia in the Postwar Settlements

Korea divided

Russian, American zones

Taiwan


Chinese occupation

Chiang Kai-shek

Reoccupation of some areas

Japan occupied by United States

New Divisions and the End of Empires

Postwar decolonization

U.S. grant independence to Philippines

Dutch: Indonesia

British: Malaya

Chiang, Guomintang

driven to Taiwan

A. Japanese Recovery


American occupation

ended, 1952

Democratization

women got the vote

unions encouraged

Shintoism disestablished

land redistribution

new constitution

modified, 1963

Liberal Democratic Party, 1955

B. Korea: Intervention and War

North


communist

Kim Il-Sung, to 1994

South

Syngman Rhee



parliamentary government

North invaded South, 1950

U.S. led UN effort

China supports North

1953, armistice

C. Emerging Stability in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore

Taiwan

Guomindang retreated to Taiwan



U.S. support
Hong Kong

British colony

Chinese control, 1997

Singapore

independence, 1965

II. Japan, Incorporated: A Distinctive Political and Cultural Style

A. Post-war Politics and Culture


Liberal Democrat Party, 1955–1993

corruption raised questions

Cultural continuity

Hiraoka Kimitoke

nationalist

B. The Economic Surge: Japan Challenges the Superpowers with Economic Supremacy


Company unions

cooperation between management, labor

Women

traditional attitudes



Popular culture

Western influence

Political change

1990s


III. The Pacific Rim: New Japans?
Pacific Rim nations Followed Japanese model

A. Development from the Top Down

South Korea

Park Chung-hee, 1961–1979


military lost power

more open press, political action

new companies

Hyundai
B. Advances in Taiwan and the City-States


Taiwan

rapid economic growth

more contact with China, other neighbors

Death of Chiang Kai-shek, 1978

gap narrowed between China and Taiwan

Singapore

similar to Taiwan

Lee Kuan Yew

authoritarian rule

returned to China, 1997

C. Common Themes and New Problems
Common culture

group loyalty stronger than individualism

Confucianism important in economic development

benefited from Japanese influence

Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia follow

IV. Mao’s China: Vanguard of World Revolution?
Chiang Kai-shek
Japanese invasion

allied with communists

Guomindang’s position lessened

partly due to military defeat

Communism popular

Mao gaining power by 1945

Defeat of Japan, 1949

communists ascendant

A. The Communists Come to Power
Secession movements

Inner Mongolia, Tibet

Korean War

China supported division

Vietnam

supported liberation



Alliance with Soviet Union

collapsed by late 1950s

border disputed

post-Stalin changes

War with India
B. Planning for Economic Growth and Social Justice
Land reform

First five-year plan, 1953

Mass Line approach, 1955

agricultural cooperatives

farming through collectives from 1956

Purge of intellectuals, 1957

C. The Great Leap Backward
The Great Leap Forward, 1958
based on peasant communes

peasants uncooperative

famine

ended by 1960



Mao no longer state chairman

head of Central Committee

replaced by pragmatists

Zhou Enlai, Liu Shaoui, Deng Xiaoping

D. “Women Hold Up Half of the Heavens”

Mao and Jiang Qing


Guomindang

unsupportive of women’s rights

Communist promising

legal equality

Women worked outside the home

opportunities increased

E. Mao’s Last Campaign and the Fall of the Gang of Four
Cultural Revolution, 1965

Zhou Enlai

into seclusion

Liu Shaoqui

killed

Deng Xiaoping



imprisoned
ended, 1968

Gang of Four

Jiang Qing

opposed by Deng

defeated by pragmatists

imprisoned

Pragmatists

more open to West, capitalism



V. Colonialism and Revolution in Vietnam
French

interest since 1600s

hoped to convert to Catholicism

Tayson peasant rebellion, 1770s

Nguyen, Trinh dynasties out

French back Nguyen Anh (Gia Long)

unification by 1802

new capital at Hue

Minh Mang

persecution of Vietnamese Catholics

French intervene, 1840s

Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos taken over by 1890s

Nguyen as puppets

French takeover

discredited emperor, bureaucracy, Confucianism

A. Vietnamese Nationalism: Bourgeois Dead Ends and Communist Survival


French influence

Western-educated middle class

Vietnamese Nationalist Party (VNQDD)

from 1920s

repressed, 1929

Communist the focus of resistance


crushed by French

aided by Comintern

Japan occupied Vietnam, 1941

B. The War of Liberation against the French

Viet Minh

communist-dominated resistance

Vo Nguyen Giap

proclaimed independence, 1945

only in North

War


French defeated at Dien Bien Phu, 1954

Geneva conference promises elections

C. The War of Liberation Against the United States
Vietnam

battleground between communists and United States

South

Ngo Dinh Diem, president



fought communists (Viet Cong)

North


supported Viet Cong

United States

supported military overthrow of Diem

withdrew, 1970s

Communists

took control of South Vietnam


D. After Victory: Salvaging Communism in an Era of Globalization
Difficulties

U.S. blocked international aid

reprisals

Economy more open in 1980s



better relations with U.S.





Chapter Summary

Yun Ruo. The son of a leader in the Chinese Communist Party, Yun Ruo lived a privileged life, until he fell victim to the turmoil of the Cultural Revolution. He was well-educated, finishing his training in the Soviet Union. Unlike many of his colleagues, he was not drafted into forced labor in Mao’s Great Leap Forward campaign. When the Cultural Revolution came, however, he was labeled an enemy of the revolution. His time in the Soviet Union had turned into a liability, and letters from his Russian lover were confiscated and used against him. The real cause appears to be Mao’s enmity for Yun’s father, Liu Shaoqui, one of the high party officials that had replaced Mao briefly, now the targets of Mao’s purges. He spent eight years in prison, but died not long after. The postwar era in Asia was marked by uncertainty. Much of Japan had been destroyed. The civil war in China left the communists in power, just beginning their persecution of enemies.
Chapter Summary. The recent history of China, Japan, and Vietnam has significant differences from other Asian and African states. Japan remained independent, industrialized, and became a great imperialist power. After World War II, Korea, Taiwan, and other industrializing nations gave the Pacific Rim new importance. China and Vietnam suffered from Western and Asian imperialists. With their traditional order in ruins, they had to face the usual problems of underdeveloped colonial peoples. Full-scale revolutions occurred. By the beginning of the 21st century, the result of all the changes gave east Asia a new importance in world affairs.
East Asia in the Postwar Settlements. Allied victory and decolonization restructured east Asia. Korea was divided into Russian and American occupation zones. Taiwan was occupied by Chiang Kai-shek’s Chinese government. The Americans and Europeans reoccupied, temporally, their colonial possessions. Japan was occupied by the United States. The Pacific Rim states became conservative and stable nations tied to the West.

New Divisions and the End of Empires. The postwar tide of decolonization freed the Philippines from the United States, Indonesia from the Dutch, and Malaya from the British. The Chinese Communist victory in China drove Chiang’s regime to Taiwan. Korea remained divided after a war in which American intervention preserved South Korean independence. Japan, under its American occupiers, peacefully evolved a new political structure.

Japanese Recovery. Although Japan had been devastated by the war, it recovered quickly. The American occupation, ending in 1952, altered Japan’s political forms. The military was disbanded and democratization measures were introduced. Women received the right to vote, unions were encouraged, and Shintoism was abolished as a state religion. Landed estates were divided among small farmers and zaibatsu holdings temporarily dissolved. A new constitution established the parliament as the supreme governing body, guaranteed civil liberties, abolished the “war potential” of the military, and reduced the emperor to a symbolic figurehead. The Japanese modified the constitution in 1963 to include social service obligations to the elderly, and a recognition of traditional values. Most Japanese accepted the new system, especially the reduction of the role of the military. Defense responsibility for the region was left to the United States. Two moderate political parties merged to form the Liberal Democratic Party in 1955. It monopolized Japan’s government into the 1990s. The educational system became one of the most meritocratic in the world.

Korea: Intervention and War. Cold war tensions kept Korea divided into Russian and American zones. The North became a Stalinist-type communist state ruled until 1994 by Kim Il-Sung. The South, under Syngman Rhee, developed parliamentary institutions under strongly authoritarian leadership. The North Koreans, hoping to force national unity on communist terms, invaded the South in 1950. The United States organized a United Nations defense of South Korea that drove back the invading forces. China’s communist government reacted by pushing the Americans southward. The fighting stalemated and ended with a 1953 armistice recognizing a divided Korea. In the following years, North Korea became an isolated, dictatorial state. South Korea, under authoritarian military officers, allied to the United States. The South Korean economy flourished.

Emerging Stability in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore. When the Guomindang regime was defeated in China by the communists, it fell back on Taiwan. The Chinese imposed authoritarian rule over the majority Taiwanese. The United States supported Taiwan against China until tensions lessened in the 1960s. By then, Taiwan had achieved growing economic prosperity. Hong Kong remained a British colony, with its peoples gaining increasing autonomy, until it was returned to Chinese control in 1997. Singapore developed into a vigorous free port and gained independence in 1965. By the end of the 1950s, there was stability among many smaller east Asian states; from the 1960s, they blended Western and traditional ideas to achieve impressive economic gains.

Japan, Incorporated: A Distinctive Political and Cultural Style. From the 1950s, Japan concentrated upon economic growth and distinctive cultural and political forms. The results demonstrated that economic success did not require strictly following Western models.

Post-war Politics and Culture. The Liberal Democrat Party provided conservative stability during its rule between 1955 and 1993. The political system revived oligarchic tendencies of the Japanese past as changes in parliamentary leadership were mediated by negotiations among the ruling elite. Change came only in the late 1980s when corruption among Liberal Democratic leaders raised new questions. Japan’s distinctive political approach featured close cooperation between state and business interests. Population growth slowed as the government supported birth control and abortion. Most elements of traditional culture persisted in the new Japan. Styles in poetry, painting, tea ceremonies, theater, and flower arrangements continued. Films and novels recalled previous eras. Music combined Western and Japanese forms. Contributions to world culture were minimal. Nationalist writers, such as Hiraoka Kimitoke, dealt with controversial themes to protest change and the incorporation of Western ideas.

The Economic Surge: Japan Challenges the Superpowers for Economic Supremacy. By the 1980s Japan was one of the two or three top economic world powers. The surge was made possible by government encouragement, educational expansion, and negligible military expenditures. Workers organized in company unions that stressed labor-management cooperation. Company policies provided important benefits to employees, including lifetime employment. The labor force appeared to be less class-conscious and individualistic than in the West. Management demonstrated group consciousness and followed a collective decision-making process that sacrificed quick personal profits. Leisure life was very limited by Western standards. Family life also showed Japanese distinctiveness. Women’s status, despite increased education and birth-rate decline, remained subject to traditional influences. Feminism was a minor force. They concentrated on household tasks and childrearing, and did not share many leisure activities with husbands. In childrearing, conformity to group standards was emphasized and shame was directed at nonconformists. Group tensions were settled through mutual agreement, and individual alienation appeared lower than in the West. Competitive situations produced stress that could be relieved by heavy drinking and recourse to geisha houses. Popular culture incorporated foreign elements, such as baseball. Pollution became a major problem and the government gave the environment more attention after 1970. Political corruption led to the replacement of the Liberal Democrats during the 1990s by unstable coalition governments. Severe economic recession and unemployment disrupted former patterns.

The Pacific Rim: More Japans? Other Asian Pacific coast states mirrored Japan’s economic and political development. Political authoritarian rule under parliamentary forms was common. Governments fostered economic planning and technical education. Economies flourished until the end of the 1990s.

Development from the Top Down. The South Korean government normally rested in the hands of military strongmen. One general, Chung-hee, held power from 1961 to 1979. The military was pressured from power at the end of the 1980s and was succeeded by an elected conservative government. Limited political activity and press freedom was allowed. From the mid-1950s, primary attention went to economic growth. Huge firms were created by government aid joined to private entrepreneurship. The Koreans exported a variety of consumer goods, plus steel, automobiles, and textiles. The industrial groups, such as Hyundai, resembled Japanese zaibatsus and had great political influence. As Korea industrialized, its population soared to produce the highest national world population density. Korea’s per capita income advanced, but was still far behind Japan’s. Important economic inequalities continued.

Advances in Taiwan and the City-States. The Republic of China (Taiwan) experienced a high rate of economic growth. Agricultural and industrial production rapidly increased as the government concentrated on economic gains. Education received massive investments. The policies meant important economic and cultural progress for the people of Taiwan. The government remained stable despite the recognition of the communists as the rulers of China by the United States in 1978. The Taiwanese built important regional contacts throughout eastern and southeastern Asia to facilitate commerce and opened links with the regime in Beijing that continued to claim the island was part of China. After the death of Chiang Kai-shek in 1978, the gap between mainland-born Chinese and Taiwanese lessened as gradual reform went forward. Singapore developed along lines roughly similar to those of Taiwan. Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew held power for three decades after 1965. Tight controls were maintained over many aspects of public and private life. Authoritarian rule suppressed opposition movements. Successful economic development eased the political strains; by the 1980s Singapore’s people had the second-highest per capita income in Asia. After its return to China in 1997, Hong Kong continued as a major world port and international banking center. It linked China to the rest of the world. Industrial development fueled high export levels.
Common Themes and New Problems. The nations had more in common than economic success. They all stressed group loyalty over individualism and emphasized hard work. Confucian morality played a part in the process. All relied on government planning and limits on dissent. All benefited from contact with the flourishing Japanese economy. Pacific Rim dynamism influenced other regions of southeast Asia. By the 1980s, Indonesia, Thailand, and Malaysia experienced rapid economic growth. But by the closing years of the 20th century, the region showed weaknesses in the region as growth lessened, currencies declined, and unemployment rose. Many Westerners thought that the nations had to adopt more free-market competition. The economic distress brought political difficulties that played a role in a change of government in Indonesia. At the end of the century, economic growth quickened.

Thinking Historically: The Pacific Rim as a U. S. Policy Issue. The rise of Pacific Rim economies raises important questions for the West, especially the United States, because of its military role and world economic position. The United States had promoted the region’s economic development as part of the contest with communism. It did not want to end its influential position of military superiority. The economic competition of the Pacific Rim states posed real threats. Japan was a major contributor to the United States’ unfavorable trade balance, and it increased its holdings within the country. During the 1980s, many individuals urged Americans to imitate Pacific Rim patterns, and some firms did so. Others wanted a more antagonistic American response: evacuation of military bases, imposition of tariffs. No clear policies followed. Pacific Rim nations similarly had to rethink their relationship with the West and the United States. Access to Western markets and military assistance were still sought, but there was a strong wish to establish a more equal relationship.

Mao’s China: Vanguard of World Revolution. Chiang Kai-shek’s success during the 1930s was interrupted by the Japanese invasion. He allied with the communists and for the next seven years war against the Japanese replaced civil war. The war strengthened the communists at the expense of the Guomindang since it was defeated by the Japanese when waging conventional warfare. The communists fought guerrilla campaigns and extended control over much of north China. Intellectuals and students changed their allegiance to the communists. By 1945 the balance of power was shifting to Mao. In 1949, following renewed civil war after the defeat of Japan, the communists were victorious. Mao triumphed because communist policies won the support of the peasantry and other groups. Land reform, education, and improved health care gave them good reason to support Mao. The communists won because they offered a solution to China’s fundamental social and economic problems.

The Communists Come to Power. The long struggle had given communists a strong military and political organization. The army was subordinate to the party. The communists used their strength to reassert Chinese regional preeminence. Secessionist movements in Inner Mongolia and Tibet were suppressed and, in the 1950s, China intervened in the Korean War and preserved the division of that country. They periodically threatened to invade the Guomindang refuge in Taiwan, and supported the Vietnamese liberation movement. The close cooperation with the Soviet Union collapsed by the late 1950s, because of border disputes and arguments with the post-Stalinist leadership. During the early 1960s, China defeated India in a brief border war. The Chinese became the first nonindustrial nation to detonate a nuclear device.

Planning for Economic Growth and Social Justice. Government activity for domestic reform was equally vigorous, but less successful. Landlords were dispossessed and purged, and their lands redistributed. To begin industrialization, a first five-year plan commenced in 1953, drawing resources from the countryside for its support. Some advances were achieved in heavy industry, but the resulting consequences of centralized state planning and a privileged class of urban technocrats were unacceptable to Mao. He had a deep hostility to elitism and to Lenin’s idea of a revolution imposed from above; he clung to his faith in peasants as the force of the revolution. The Mass Line approach began in 1955 with the formation of agricultural cooperatives; in 1956 they became farming collectives that provided the bulk of Chinese production. Peasant ownership ceased. In 1957 intellectuals were purged after being asked their opinion of government policies.

The Great Leap Backward: The Great Leap Forward, an effort to revitalize the revolution by restoring its mass and rural base, was launched in 1958. Small-scale industrialization aimed at creating self-reliant peasant communes, but instead resulted in economic disaster. Peasants reacted against collectivization. Communist China experienced its worst famine, the crisis exacerbated by a growing population and a state rejection of family planning. The government did then introduce birth control programs and succeeded in slowing population increase. By 1960 the Great Leap ended and Mao lost his position as state chairman. He continued as head of the Central Committee. Pragmatists such as Zhou Enlai, Liu Shaoqui, and Deng Xiaoping pushed policies of restored state direction and local level-market incentives.

Women Hold Up Half of the Heavens.” Mao, assisted by his wife Jiang Qing, was committed to the liberation of Chinese women. Guomindang efforts to reverse gains made by women during the early revolution caused many women to support the communists. They worked in many occupations in communist ranks. When the revolution triumphed, women received legal equality. Women gained some freedom in selecting marriage partners and were expected to work outside of the home. Educational and professional opportunities improved. Traditional male attitudes persisted and women had to labor both in and out of their homes. Males continued to dominate upper-party levels.



Mao’s Last Campaign and the Fall of the Gang of Four. By 1965 Mao believed that he had won sufficient support to overthrow his pragmatist rivals. He launched the Cultural Revolution during which opponents were attacked, killed, or forced into rural labor. Zhou Enlai was driven into seclusion, Liu Shaoqui killed, and Deng Xiaoping imprisoned. The destruction of centralized state and technocratic elites endangered revolutionary stability. The campaign was terminated by Mao in 1968 as the military brought the Red Guard back into line. The struggle between Mao and his rivals recommenced, with Deng slowly pushing back on the Gang of Four led by Jiang Qing. The deaths of Zhou Enlai and Mao in 1976 cleared the way for an open succession struggle. The pragmatists won out; the Gang of Four were imprisoned for life. Since then, the pragmatists have opened China to Western influences and capitalist development, but not to political reform. The communists, since taking power in 1949, have managed a truly revolutionary redistribution of China’s wealth. The majority of people have much better standards of living than under previous regimes, and their condition is superior to that of the people in many other developing regions. The agricultural and industrial growth rates have surpassed India’s.

Colonialism and Revolution in Vietnam. Although the Vietnamese were brought under European rule during the 19th century, the Confucian influence of China on their historical evolution makes their encounter with the West similar to China’s. The failure of the Confucian emperor and bureaucracy to prevent a French takeover discredited the system in force in Vietnam for a millenia. The French had been interested in Vietnam since the 17th century; by the late 18th century they became politically involved when internal power struggles brought wide disorder. From the late 1770s, the Tayson peasant rebellion toppled the Nguyen and Trinh dynasties. The French backed Nguyen Anh (later renamed Gia Long) and helped him to unify Vietnam by 1802. Hue became the capital, and French missionaries and traders received special rights. Gia Long and his successors were conservatives deeply committed to Confucianism, thus disappointing French missionary hopes to convert Vietnam to Catholicism. When ruler Minh Mang persecuted Vietnamese Catholics, the French, during the 1840s, intervened. By the 1890s, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Laos were under French control, and the Nguyen made into puppet rulers. The French exploited Vietnam without providing its people any significant return. Food consumption among the peasantry dropped between the early l900s and the 1930s while Vietnam became a leading world rice producer.

Vietnamese Nationalism: Bourgeois Dead Ends and Communist Survival. The failure of the Nguyen to resist the French discredited the dynasty. Guerrilla opposition in the early 20th century was localized, small-scale, and easily defeated. With the old order discredited, many Vietnamese rejected Confucianism. Under the French, a Western-educated middle class grew to work in government and private careers. They contested French racism and discrimination in job opportunities. French ability to repress all outward signs of opposition gave those arguing for violent solutions the upper hand. In the 1920s a Vietnamese Nationalist Party (VNQDD), with members drawn from the educated middle class, began to pursue violent revolution. Their efforts ended with the harsh repression of the party in 1929. The fall of the VNQDD left the Communist Party, dominated by Nguyen Ai Quoc (Ho Chi Minh), as the main focus of resistance. The communists believed in revolt based upon urban workers until, in the early 1930s, they shifted to a peasant emphasis to take advantage of rural risings. The French crushed the party, but it survived underground with help from the Comintern. The Japanese occupied Vietnam in 1941.

The War of Liberation against the French. The Communist-dominated resistance movement, the Viet Minh, fought the Japanese during the war and emerged at the end of World War II as an effective party ready to continue the reforms they had inaugurated in liberated regions. By 1945, under the leadership of Vo Nguyen Giap, and with much rural support, the Viet Minh proclaimed an independent Vietnam. They did not control the South where the French returned to exploit local divisions and reassert colonial rule. A harsh colonial war followed that closed with the French defeated at Dien Bien Phu in 1954. An international conference at Geneva promised elections to decide who should govern Vietnam.

The War of Liberation Against the United States. The promise of elections was not kept as Vietnam became entangled in cold war maneuvers. Anti-communist feeling in the United States during the early 1950s fed the idea that South Vietnam must be defended against a communist takeover. A southern government, with United States backing, was established, with Ngo Dinh Diem as president. He rigged elections to legitimize his rule and began a campaign against the communists (the Viet Cong) in the South. The North Vietnamese regime supported the Viet Cong. When hostilities escalated and Diem proved unable to stem communist gains, the United States allowed the military to depose him and take over the war. The fighting continued, but even the intervention of 500,000 American troops and massive bombing did not defeat the communists. The United States gave up and withdrew its forces in the 1970s. Southern Vietnam fell to the communists in 1975. Vietnam had its first united government since the mid-19th century, but it ruled over a devastated country.

After Victory: Salvaging Communism in an Era of Globalization. Communist efforts to rebuild have floundered, partly because of Vietnamese isolation from the international community. The United States used its influence to block international assistance. Border clashes occurred with China. Vietnamese leaders of a dictatorial regime pushed hard-line Marxist-Leninist political and economic policies and persecuted old enemies. A highly centralized economy stifled growth and continued wartime miseries. Liberalization in the economic sphere finally began during the late 1980s. The United States and Vietnam began movement into a more constructive relationship.

GLOBAL CONNECTIONS: East Asia and the Pacific Rim in the Contemporary World. Both China and Vietnam have undergone revolutionary transformations during the 20th century. Monarchies and colonial regimes have been replaced by communism. Entire social classes have disappeared. New educational systems have been created. Women have gained new legal and social status. Confucianism fell before Marxist-Leninism and later Western capitalist influences, but much remains unchanged. Suspicion of commercial and entrepreneurial classes persists, and the belief remains that rulers are obliged to promote the welfare of their subjects. Ideological systems stress secular and social harmony rather than religious concerns. Japan and the Pacific Rim have undergone lesser change, and in some ways, remain more traditional societies. But industrialization and democratization have brought change in many areas. East Asia, largely independent of Western control, has become a growing force in world affairs

KEY TERMS
Singapore: part of the British colony of Malaya with a mostly Chinese population; after World War II emerged as a flourishing, independent city-state.
Douglas MacArthur: American commander during the war against Japan; headed American occupation government of Japan after the war; commanded United Nations forces during the Korean War.
Liberal Democratic Party: moderate political party that monopolized Japanese governments from 1955 into the 1990s.
Republic of Korea: southern half of Korea occupied by the United States after World War II; developed parliamentary institutions under authoritarian rulers; underwent major industrial and economic growth after the 1950s.
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea: northern half of Korea dominated by U.S.S.R. after Word War II; formed a communist dictatorship under Kim Il-Song; attacked South Korea to begin the Korean War.
Korean War: fought between 1950 and 1953 between North Korea and its Soviet and Chinese allies and South Korea and United Nations’ forces directed by the United States; ended in stalemate.
Taiwan: island off the Chinese mainland that became the refuge for Chiang Kai-shek’s Guomindang regime; maintained independence with United States support; rapidly industrialized after the 1950s.
Hong Kong: British colony in China; became a major commercial and industrial center; returned to China in 1997.
Hyundai: major Korean industrial giant; typical of firms producing Korea’s economic miracle.
Lee Kuan Yew: authoritarian ruler of Singapore for three decades from 1959; presided over major economic development.
Mass Line: economic policy of Mao Zedong inaugurated in 1955; led to formation of agricultural cooperatives that then became farming collectives in 1956; peasants lost land gained a few years earlier.
Great Leap Forward: economic policy of Mao Zedong introduced in 1958; proposed small-scale industrialization projects integrated into peasant communities; led to economic disaster and ended in 1960.
Zhou Enlai, Deng Xiaoping, and Liu Shaoqui: pragmatists who opposed the Great Leap Forward; wanted to restore state direction and market incentives at the local level.
Jiang Qing: wife of Mao Zedong; one of the Gang of Four; opposed pragmatists and supported the Cultural Revolution; arrested and imprisoned for life in 1976.
People’s Liberation Army: military, and dominant, arm of the communist structure in China.

Cultural Revolution: initiated by Mao Zedong in 1965 to restore his dominance over the pragmatists; disgraced and even killed bureaucrats and intellectuals; called off in 1968.
Lin Bao: one of Mao Zedong’s military associates.
People’s Republic of China: communist Chinese government; founded in 1949 by Mao Zedong.
Red Guard: student brigades active during the Cultural Revolution in supporting Mao Zedong’s policies.
Gang of Four: Jiang Qing and her allies who opposed the pragmatists after the death of Mao Zedong; arrested and sentenced to life in prison.
Tayson Rebellion: peasant revolution in southern Vietnam during the 1770s; toppled the Nguyen and the Trinh dynasties.
Nguyen Anh (Gia Long): with French support, unified Vietnam under the Nguyen dynasty in 1802 with the capital at Hue.
Minh Mang: second ruler of united Vietnam (1802–1841); emphasized Confucianism and persecuted Catholics.
Vietnamese Nationalist Party (VNQDD): middle-class revolutionary organization during the 1920s; committed to the violent overthrow of French colonialism; crushed by the French.
Communist Party of Vietnam: the primary nationalist party after the defeat of the VNQDD in 1929; led from 1920s by Ho Chi Minh.
Ho Chi Minh (Nguyen Ai Quoc): shifted to a revolution based on the peasantry in the 1930s; presided over the defeat of France in 1954 and the unsuccessful United States intervention in Vietnam.
Viet Minh: Communist Vietnamese movement; fought the Japanese during Word War II and the French afterwards.
Vo Nguyen Giap: military commander of the Viet Minh and the victor at Dien Bien Phu in 1954.
Ngo Dinh Diem: became president of South Vietnam with United States support in the 1950s; overthrown by the military, with U.S. approval.
Viet Cong: the communist guerrilla movement in southern Vietnam during the Vietnamese war.

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