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Chapter 22 Asia and the Pacific
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What themes are reflected in this Propaganda poster?
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The end of World War II brought dramatic changes to Asia; Japan was stripped of the lands it had conquered. Great Britain, France, and the Netherlands were forced to withdraw from their Asian colonies, and new nations arose. Communists won control in China and North Korea, and the Cold War affected the entire region. Out of turmoil, vigorous industrial powers have emerged.
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Japan For example, Japan had a major transformation into a global economic giant. They went from defeat to becoming a major world economic power and this has been one of the most important changes of the post-World War II era.
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Why? Japan became entirely a U.S. enterprise, headed by General Douglas MacArthur. He was determined not to plant the seeds of future war by imposing an unjust and unworkable system on the Japanese. MacArthur’s reform policies made Japan a remarkable place.
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Japan adopted a new constitution- MacArthur Constitution. It stripped imperial family of its political power and gave it to the Japanese citizens. The constitution also established a cabinet base on the British model. Both houses of the Diet, or legislation, were made elective, and citizens over the age 20 could vote.
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A bill of rights was added guaranteeing basic freedoms. In addition, the U.S. agreed to protect Japan militarily. This arrangement enabled Japan to concentrate more of its resources on consumer goods than on military equipment.
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Economically and Politically Japan became decentralized (reorganized and distributed land fairly). Also, Japan’s economic prosperity has allowed them to export more products than import leaving their country with no deficits but instead surpluses. With the most advanced economy in East Asia, Japan has increased its influence in the region.
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China As for China, after WWII, the Nationalists under Chiang Kai-shek and the Communists led by Mao Zedong fought a bitter civil war in China. By 1949, Mao’s Communist forces had defeated the Nationalists. That year, the Communists proclaimed the People’s Republic of China, with Beijing as the capital.
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Mao’s revolution was one of the major upheavals of the century. It succeeded in part because the Communists’ self- proclaimed patriotism and sense of duty appealed to many Chinese citizens disgusted with foreign controls and corruption of Chiang’s officials.
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Above all, Mao won over China’s peasants with his promises of land reform and an end to oppression by landlords. However, the “Great Leap Forward Plan,” an economic plan which put land into larger government controlled units and stressed human labor over technology, proved to be a disaster and caused massive suffering – more than 20 million people died of starvation.
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Food shortages, mismanagement, and peasant resistance to communes brought the program to a halt. After Mao’s death in 1976, China entered the Deng Era. Deng backed a plan called the Four Modernizations that stressed the need for improvements in agriculture, industry, science, and defense.
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Although the government still controlled major industries, factory managers were encouraged to make plants more efficient. In addition, economic reforms allowed some privately owned small businesses and private property. Deng also welcomed foreign businesses and technology to China.
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While Deng encouraged some free enterprise, he refused to grant political freedoms. By the late 1980s, students and intellectuals in Beijing, Shanghai, and other Chinese cities had organized movements to demand a more open political system.
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In fact, they rallied for democracy and other reforms in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square. Determined to maintain control, the government sent in troops and tanks to put down the rally. Thousands of demonstrators were killed or wounded. The Tiananmen Square massacre damaged China’s prestige abroad. The United States and other democratic nations condemned Deng’s use of force and investors backed off from doing business with the Chinese.
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South Asia In South Asia, nationalist movements created four new nations: India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and later, Bangladesh. However, in spite of economic progress, ethnic and religious rivalries hampered unity within and among these countries.
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Korea and Vietnam Korea and Vietnam, both divided into Communist and non-Communist parts, and both became cold war hot spots. During the Korean War, fought from 1950 to 1953, American – led United Nations forces fought back a Communist advance, but the conflict ended in a stalemate, with Korea returning to its divided status: communist North and democratic South.
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In Vietnam, however, Communist forces defeated American and anti-communist Vietnamese forces (in 1975)and united the entire country under Communist rule. The Vietnam conflict lasted from 1950s to the mid-1970s, with direct American military involvement beginning in the mid- 1960s.
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Since the Korean and Vietnam conflicts, economic prosperity has come to the nations along Asia’s Pacific Rim, stretching from South Korea through Japan and Taiwan to Southeast Asia. Australia, New Zealand, and other South Pacific nations are increasingly involved in trade with their Asian neighbors.
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Vlas: Korean War: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-X7n http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-X7n bwFxGRU Vietnam: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKhhb mk-akk http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKhhb mk-akk Which war was needed?(justified?) Either? Neither? What were reasons for the wars?
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