From the mid-19th century to the early Cold War, the United
States has a long history with China, and that interaction has not
always been positive or productive. This brief history of foreign
intervention in China, viewed through the experiences of the United
States Marines, examines how the occupying powers dealt with a
fellow sovereign nation. In many cases this involved the partition
or outright absorption of Chinese territory through naked
aggression. Clark contends that, considering the past two
centuries, the Chinese have good reason to distrust all foreigners,
and he urges the pursuit of a badly needed rapprochement.
This is, however, also the story of the evolution of the Marine
Corps as a separate service. Although an occupying force, the
Marines did make considerable efforts to earn the friendship of the
Chinese people. Always on the brink of extinction due to budgetary
cuts and the enmity of the army and navy, the Marines managed to
perform an onerous and difficult duty in a foreign land. With a
resurgent China constantly testing the United States, a fellow
Pacific Rim nation, every policymaker should be well aware of the
often difficult history that we share and the mistakes that have
been made in the past.
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