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ARCHIVES: The Man Who Planned the Victory
A special full-length online version of Keith E. Eiler's interview with A.C. Wedemeyer.
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President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill announce their unconditional surrender policy to correspondents at the Casablanca Conference, February 1943.
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Albert C. Wedemeyer, a native of Omaha, Nebraska, graduated from West Point in 1919.
In 1936 the army sent Wedemeyer, then a captain, to Berlin as an exchange student at the
German War College. The information he brought back from Berlin soon proved highly
useful to our own government. Assigned to the War Department at the request of the
chief of staff, General George C. Marshall, Wedemeyer was given the task of preparing
what came to be known as the Victory Plan. That 1941 document established the
strategic framework for American participation in a global war against the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis and laid the foundation for U.S. war mobilization.
Early in 1942 Wedemeyer, by then a lieutenant colonel, helped develop an
American plan for the defeat of the Axis in Europe. The U.S. strategy called for a rapid
buildup of Allied air and ground strength in the British Isles, a progressively intensified
campaign of attrition by air against the Continent, a cross-Channel invasion of France in
the summer of 1943, and a final drive into the heartland of Central Europe.
In 1943 Wedemeyer, now a major general, was sent to New Delhi as a deputy
chief of staff in the Allied Command in Southeast Asia under Mountbatten. He helped
plan and coordinate Allied efforts against the Japanese in India and Burma. Late in 1944
he left India for China, where he succeeded General "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell in the dual
role of commander of U.S. forces and chief of staff to Chiang Kai-shek. During the final
year of the war he worked hard to ensure that all Allied forces in China exerted utmost
pressure against the Japanese.
Wedemeyer returned to the Far East in 1947 as a special fact-finding ambassador
for President Truman. The long-unpublished report of that mission subsequently became
a major focus of controversy in the bitter foreign policy debates of the 1950s.
Wedemeyer requested retirement from active service in 1951. He then pursued a
career in industrial management in New York City, engaged in presidential politics, and
in 1958 published a memoir of his career. For many years he and Mrs. Wedemeyer have
lived at Friends Advice--a country estate some thirty miles from Washington,
D.C.--where this interview took place.
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Wedemeyer as a newly commissioned second lieutenant, early 1920s.
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KE: How did it happen that you became a soldier?
ACW: Well, for a long time in my youth I planned to become a doctor. Surgery
interested me, and in high school I studied chemistry, biology, Latin, German, and all
those subjects one needed for a career in medicine. Then the world war came along, and
the Mexican border affair in 1916, and, like most of the young men of the time, I became
rather concerned about military affairs. I wanted to do my part like the older boys,
including my brother who had joined the Nebraska National Guard. So when Senator
George Norris gave me a chance to compete for West Point, I jumped at it.
KE: Life in the army of the 1920s and 1930s is often depicted as rather dull. Did you find
it so?
ACW: On the whole I did not. Although I was a lieutenant for seventeen years, there was
more than enough to do. I enjoyed training and working with the men on post or in
bivouac. I liked marksmanship and riding. There were opportunities for considerable
travel at home and abroad. All in all, I look back on those years as a happy and rewarding
time.
I must confess that I got off to a questionable start as an officer, however, down at
Fort Benning, Georgia, right after graduation from West Point. Although I had seldom, if
ever, touched a drop of alcoholic beverages at the time, I returned one night to camp
quite intoxicated and very boisterous. The noise and high spirits disturbed a stuffy senior
officer, and he brought charges against me. A court-martial in those days was a very
serious matter, and I was sure my career in the army was ruined.
KE: What happened?
ACW: I was punished with six months of restriction to the limits of the post plus
deduction from pay for a like period. My superiors apparently thought that was enough of
a lesson. It was!
KE: Duty tours in the Far East and other faraway places must have been alluring.
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Accompanied by Lieutenant General Wedemeyer (left), General George C. Marshall inspects a Chinese guard of honor on his arrival in Shanghai, December 1945, to begin his mission of mediating disputes between the Nationalist and Communist forces.
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ACW: Yes indeed. And on my first voyage to the Far East, in 1923, I met an attractive
young lady, a so-called army brat. She was traveling with her parents to the Philippines,
where her father--a colonel (an exalted rank in the old army)--was to take command of
a regiment on Corregidor. It did not take Elizabeth Dade Embick and myself long to
arrange for our future together on a permanent basis, but it did take a year and three
anxious visits to her home on Corregidor--I was stationed on the mainland near
Manila--before I mustered the courage to approach her father. Getting a prospective
father-in-law's permission to marry his daughter was still the expected practice.
KE: In those early years you had tours of duty in the Philippines and in Washington,
D.C., and finally you sailed for China to join the 15th U.S. Infantry in Tientsin.
ACW: Yes, in 1929. China was in turmoil at that time, as it had been--and would
remain--for many years. For us Westerners, however, life could hardly have been more
pleasant. Mrs. Wedemeyer and I lived in a comfortable house in the British Concession
with our two small sons. Excellent help was available at prices even lieutenants could
afford. My wife and I tried at this time to learn some Mandarin, although I had turned
down an earlier opportunity to specialize in the language. We made it a point to meet
some of our Chinese neighbors and local notables. Among these were the philosopher
Lin Yutang and the scholar-diplomat Wellington Koo.
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Left to right: Chinese foreign minister T. V. Soong, Wedemeyer, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, U.S. ambassador Patrick J. Hurley, late 1944.
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KE: You returned home in 1934 to attend the Command and General Staff School at Fort
Leavenworth. Then you went off to the German War College in Berlin for two years.
How did that come about?
ACW: The commandant at Leavenworth recommended me on the basis of my work
there. Also, my record indicated that I had had a smattering of high school German.
Under terms of an intergovernmental reciprocal agreement, one American officer was
admitted to the Kriegsakademie each year, and a German officer was accorded the
privilege of attending one of our service schools.
KE: How did you get along with your high school German?
ACW: I had to struggle during the early months in Berlin because I lacked confidence in
speaking and understanding the language. I could read German pretty well. There were
times when I considered asking the War Department to replace me with someone more
fluent. But by Christmastime my problem with the language had eased considerably.
KE: When you arrived in Germany in the fall of 1936, the Nazis had been in power for
three years. Their rearmament program was already well advanced, and Hitler already
had reoccupied the Rhineland. What was the atmosphere like at the Kriegsakademie?
ACW: A spirit of urgency prevailed. The schedule was strenuous. The courses were well
organized and well taught. The pedagogy, I thought, was better than that at Leavenworth.
I was impressed with the practicality and thoroughness of the purely military work, as
well as with the intellectual breadth of the curriculum.
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Wedemeyers report to the president at the conclusion of his 1947 mission to the Far East became a major focus for the controversies that followed the Communist triumph in China in 1949. Long suppressed by the government, this report not only recommended unequivocal U.S. support for the Nationalist government—short of "Americanizing" the Chinese civil war—but also warned of the dangers of U.S. involvement in future wars in East Asia should China fall under Communist domination. The Korean War of 1950–53 and the later tragedy of Vietnam both seemed to confirm the prophetic nature of these warnings.
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KE: How were you received as an American?
ACW: The Germans--faculty and students alike--accepted the foreign officers as
military professionals. There were only a few lectures from which foreigners were
excluded on grounds of security.
KE: Were domestic German politics or current international tensions discussed?
ACW: Sensitive issues, including politics, certainly were not discussed, so far as I was
aware, either in the classroom or informally between the Germans and the foreign
students. My German classmates, some of whom became good friends, understandably
refrained from criticizing their government or raising political issues in private
conversations.
One could not fail, however, to sense the strained relations that existed between
the German military and the Nazis' quasi-military units. Of course, no German in the
military service was permitted to join the Nazi Party. You may recall that these tensions
erupted in the 1944 plot to assassinate Hitler and accomplish the overthrow of his
government. The conspiracy was widespread throughout the army and navy. It included
many senior officers, some (such as onetime Army Chief of Staff General Ludwig Beck)
in key positions. Two of my War College classmates--Claus von Stauffenberg and
Wessel Freitag von Loringhoven--played important roles. The assassination attempt was
unsuccessful. Both these officers--along with members of their families and scores of
others--were arrested. Many were tortured and executed by the Nazis.
KE: What were the most important lessons you brought back from the Kriegsakademie?
ACW: General Marshall asked me that same question when I came home in 1938. He
was then head of the War Plans Division of the War Department General Staff. I told him
that the German army was determined never again to get bogged down in trench warfare
in the manner of 1914-18. Their emphasis definitely was on mobility and aggressiveness.
Their organization, doctrine, equipment, and training were all aimed at revolutionizing
the tempo of the battlefield. They envisioned not simply envelopments in the traditional
sense but deep turning movements aimed at objectives far behind enemy lines.
Concentrated armored forces were to serve as "nutcrackers." These would be closely
followed by large units of mechanized infantry. The new Stuka dive bombers were now
to deliver much of the heavy fire support traditionally provided by long-range artillery.
These principles of blitzkrieg were put to dramatic use throughout World War II and with
particular success in the early campaigns against Poland, Russia, and Western Europe.
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Wedemeyer greets three of his German Kriegsakademie classmates in a postwar meeting in Germany, 1947.
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KE: Were there any other lessons you learned?
ACW: I learned the importance of the economic factor in war--the vital importance of
raw materials and productive capacity, for example, and the ways in which manpower is
related to war potential. I was impressed with the emphasis on the classical doctrine
enunciated by Clausewitz and other strategists that war was the continuation of politics
by other means--that the ends of war were not slaughter and destruction per se but the
achievement of rational goals. Strategy, properly conceived, thus seemed to me to require
a transcendence of the narrow military perspectives that the term traditionally had
implied. Strategy required a systematic consideration and use of all the so-called
instruments of policy--political, economic, psychological, etc., as well as military--in
pursuing national objectives. Indeed, the nonmilitary factors deserved unequivocal
priority over the military, the latter to be employed only as the last resort.
KE: Shortly after you returned home and submitted your report on the Kriegsakademie
experience to the War Department, you ended up serving in the War Department
yourself.
ACW: Yes, in 1940 General Marshall, who was by now chief of staff, assigned me to
duty in the War Plans Division of the General Staff.
KE: When did you get started on the Victory Plan?
ACW: Well, World War II had begun in Europe in September 1939, and a long, bitter
debate had gone on in America over what our role should be. Most Americans of course
wanted to stay out of war, but opinions were terribly mixed as to just what this war was
all about, whether or not we ought to get involved, and, if so, when and on what terms.
KE: Where did you stand on those issues?
ACW: World War I had demonstrated the way in which self-serving foreign propaganda
could and did strongly influence American policies and actions. I was therefore leery
about getting the United States involved in still another European conflagration unless it
was clear that our national security and interests demanded it.
KE: Tell me about the Victory Plan.
ACW: After France fell in June 1940, American public opinion seemed to shift pretty
solidly to support a major buildup of our military strength. In succeeding months
Congress passed a series of large defense appropriations for an ever-expanding
rearmament program. The need for a working hypothesis--an agreed-upon contingency
plan that would provide a basis for coordinating and judging all this activity--eventually
became apparent. Hence, in the summer of 1941, President Roosevelt directed the
secretaries of war and navy to prepare a mobilization plan that would provide an estimate
of the military forces that would be needed to ensure the defeat of any or all of our
potential enemies. This estimate would of necessity include optional concepts of global
deployments in Europe, the Far East, and elsewhere. The president's directive soon
trickled down to my desk in War Plans, and I was authorized to call upon any or all
officials and agencies in our government for information and advice. I collected
mountains of data. The fundamental assumptions on which the whole study had to be
based, however, seemed almost as elusive as the philosopher's stone. If we were to enter
the war, what would be our objectives? What would be our aims?
KE: How did you go about answering those questions?
ACW: To determine the basic industrial resources that were needed (raw materials,
factories, and so forth), it was necessary to estimate both the gross quantities of
munitions that were required (planes, ships, tanks, etc.) and the dates by which those
items had to be ready. To determine these quantities and schedules, it was necessary to
assume a lot about the nature of the war--What were the enemy capabilities? Where
would we be fighting and on how many fronts? What would our broad scheme of
maneuver be? That sort of thing. And to envision the nature of a likely war in this sense,
one also had to reflect seriously on war aims and political goals. Needless to say, at a
time when merely discussing such things was often interpreted as plotting war, few of the
harassed senior officials in Washington were in a position to offer much guidance.
KE: How did you proceed?
ACW: I assumed that we should make the maximum effort of which the country was
capable. Even if a halfhearted effort were theoretically enough to win, it appeared logical
that an all-out effort would win more quickly and with less ultimate cost in lives and
resources. So, I first asked, Is there a key limiting factor from which one can work
backward in these complicated and interrelated calculations? Studies of mobilization in
past wars seemed to indicate that about 10 percent of a nation's population could be
placed under arms while still leaving sufficient manpower to produce the weapons, grow
the food, administer the affairs of government, and keep the home fires burning. So I
assumed that 10 percent of the 1940 U.S. population--which, I believe, was around 140
million--would be made available. That totaled about 14 million. I then allocated those
14 million among the armed services on the basis of estimates prepared by the army, the
army air force, and the navy.
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Wedemeyer and former president Herbert Hoover at the Bohemian Grove in California, mid-1950s.
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KE: How accurate did those figures prove to be?
ACW: Pretty darned accurate. Considering everyone who served in uniform at one time
or another during World War II, I believe the total amounted to some 13 million. Our
estimates were not correct in every category, however. In the effort to provide strong
ground forces with great mobility and firepower, we estimated armored and mechanized
divisions far in excess of the number that could possibly be maneuvered. Had we
organized as suggested in the original Victory Plan, the mobility we sought would
paradoxically have been sacrificed. Imagine a traffic jam of thousands of bumper-to-bumper vehicles on the battlefield!
KE: Although war with the Axis came first in the Pacific area, didn't the United States
give first priority to Europe, in accordance with previous commitments?
ACW: By and large, yes, although Americans were mad as hell at the Japanese and
wanted to fight them immediately. Revenge was the motive. President Roosevelt and
Prime Minister Churchill directed, nonetheless, that Germany be defeated first. This
meant that the war in the Pacific had to be restricted to strategically defensive operations
for the time being, while the major effort was made in Europe. Building on the Victory
Plan and other studies, the military staffs in Washington worked day and night to
hammer out something specific. By April 1942 the American planners had developed
some pretty firm ideas.
KE: What were they?
ACW: We concluded that the Allies ought to strike at the industrial heart of
Germany--the vulnerable source of its war-making potential--as soon as we could
muster the strength to secure a lodgment on the Continent and exploit it. This implied
careful conservation of our strength. It meant resisting the inevitable temptations to make
ourselves comfortably secure here, there, and everywhere. It meant resisting the
temptation to chase off after secondary objectives and, in the process, dissipate resources.
Careful studies had convinced us that our best bet lay in an invasion of the Channel coast
of France from the British Isles in the early summer of 1943. This seemed the course that
promised a decisive victory at the least cost in time, casualties, and treasure.
KE: Amphibious operations are inherently hazardous. Given the formidable capabilities
of the German forces, the fact that Allied war production and troop mobilization would
not yet have reached their peaks, and many other uncertainties--was not this plan
awfully risky?
ACW: Everything in war is risky, and we had gone to no end of trouble in assessing
those risks. Remember that in the winter of 1942-43 the bulk of the German ground and
air forces were committed--perhaps irretrievably--far to the east in Soviet territory.
Remember, too, that the heavy defenses along the coast of Western Europe--the Atlantic
Wall--were not put in place until late 1943 and 1944.
KE: But the invasion did not take place until June 1944. What happened?
ACW: The Allies first had to agree on a broad scheme of maneuver and on the
employment of available forces. In April 1942, after we Americans got our plans worked
out, I accompanied General Marshall and Harry Hopkins (President Roosevelt's personal
representative) on a trip to London to present our ideas to the British. That was quite a
trip. We traveled under assumed names, for security reasons, in a large, four-engined
flying boat that was routed by way of Bermuda to Northern Ireland. We made three
formal presentations of our plans to military and political leaders, the last to the British
War Cabinet. There was a lot of polite comment and questioning. On the whole we felt
that the British had accepted our general proposals or at least had found them compatible
with their thinking. Prime Minister Churchill invited us out to his country home for the
weekend and was very cordial.
KE: Was this your first contact with Churchill?
ACW: It was my first real contact, and I found him a formidable personality. A physical,
intellectual, and spiritual bulwark, if ever there was one. He was one of the few men in
high position in whose presence I felt real trepidation when I had occasion (as I did later
on) to stand up and differ with him. His mind was marvelously stocked with all sorts of
knowledge and experience. He was a man of strong convictions, superbly articulate,
powerfully persuasive. One didn't challenge him lightly. On this occasion, however, we
talked pleasantly after dinner of strategic plans, mobilization problems in the United
States, and the Nazi leaders.
KE: You mention standing up to Churchill and differing with him.
ACW: There were several occasions on which circumstances required me to disagree
with the great man face-to-face. The first of these came during the summer following our
April mission to London. It had become clear by then that the British had accepted the
American proposals for a buildup and cross-Channel invasion in 1943 "with tongue in
cheek," as General Marshall commented to me on our flight home. So in June 1942 a
series of high-level British visitors arrived in Washington to promote their own views
and plans. The charming Lord Louis Mountbatten first spent considerable time closeted
with President Roosevelt warning of the dangers of a too-early invasion. Mr. Churchill
himself came next. Late one night General Marshall called me to the White House, where
he and other members of the Combined Chiefs of Staff were assembled with the
president and the prime minister. There was a large colored map of the European-Mediterranean area on the wall. The prime minister, wearing the one-piece jumpsuit for
which he was famous, took the floor. Mustering all his eloquence, he stressed the
importance of squeezing Rommel out of North Africa, of regaining full control of the
Mediterranean, of getting Allied land forces into major action in 1942, of meeting Soviet
demands for a second front. I recall his making a great sweeping gesture across the map,
moving downward from the British Isles toward Gibraltar, eastward along the breadth of
North Africa, back across the Mediterranean, and up through the Balkans into Central
Europe. It was a stunning performance.
President Roosevelt then turned to General Marshall. "George," he said, "what do
you have to say?"
"One of my planners is present," the general replied, "and with your permission I
will ask him to comment." So there I was, unexpectedly called upon to criticize the prime
minister's position and argue the alternate case for a cross-Channel invasion in 1943!
KE: What did you do?
ACW: I cleared my throat and waded into the subject. Fortunately I was pretty well
rehearsed because I had been living with our plans day and night for months and had
personally studied every mile of the European littoral from Norway to Turkey in search
of suitable landing sites. I remember stressing the logistic and tactical difficulties of
invading Europe through the Balkans as well as the strategic disadvantages of such
operations. General Marshall seemed satisfied, even pleased, and I thought President
Roosevelt had a mischievous twinkle in his eye--as if he enjoyed the confrontation. In
the end, of course, Mr. Churchill won, for the cross-Channel invasion eventually was
delayed for a full year--from 1943 to 1944. By then, in my opinion, the operation took
place in a profoundly changed environment, and the historic opportunity to strike a
decisive, timely blow on the Continent had been lost.
KE: Does this mean you were opposed to the Anglo-American invasion of North Africa
in November 1942?
ACW: Definitely. I did everything I could to point out the adverse implications of that
operation. Basically it was a diversionary move into a nondecisive theater. It would tie
down large numbers of troops and consume vast quantities of supplies, shipping, and
everything else for many months to come. Even worse, once our positions in North
Africa were secure, plausible arguments might be made for launching further operations
in the Mediterranean area--into Sicily and Italy, for example, or even into the Balkans or
the Near East. And that is exactly what happened. Resources that should have been
sequestered in the British Isles for the main blow were diverted to indecisive operations.
In agreeing to launch the North African expedition and follow-up operations in the
Mediterranean, President Roosevelt departed from the professional advice of his military
advisers, including Secretary of War Stimson. I have always felt that this unfortunate
shift was a tribute to the extraordinary persuasive powers of Churchill.
KE: The British obviously had different views of European strategy. How did you
perceive those?
ACW: I often described their general war-making concept as "periphery pecking." It
emphasized attrition against Festung Europa [Fortress Europe] by air attack, naval
blockade, and harassing operations at various points around the perimeter of the
Continent, from Norway to the Caucasus. Churchill seemed obsessed with the
possibilities of moving up through the Balkans--the "soft underbelly" of Europe, he
called it, but it really wasn't so soft. He constantly stressed the dangers of a massive
assault across the Channel into France. He would scowl ominously as he predicted that
the English Channel would run red with blood or be filled with Allied corpses. But I
believe an invasion in 1943 would have succeeded, that it would have shortened the war
in Europe, and that it would have reduced total Allied casualties and material costs. Most
important, Anglo-American forces would have been in control of most of Central as well
as Western Europe at war's end. The map of Europe would today be colored quite
differently. Who would argue that that would not be a good thing?
KE: Speculating on what might have been is always a dubious business, especially when
one is dealing with world wars. Don't you agree?
ACW: Of course we can't go back and replay vast historical events, so we never really
can know what might have been if we had played our cards differently. But we certainly
can look back and see what alternate courses were open to us and trace out the likely
consequences of taking one of those alternates. How else can we ever understand the
past--or learn anything from it for future use? Incidentally, several historians in Britain
and the United States have recently considered these questions and concluded that an
Allied invasion of the Continent in 1943 was indeed feasible and that it likely would have
resulted in an earlier victory and a more secure peace. This corroborates an opinion
expressed to me in 1946 by General Franz Halder, who had been chief of staff of the
German army during the early years of the war.
KE: When D-Day eventually came, you were in New Delhi--half a world removed from
the beaches of Normandy and the corridors of the Pentagon. I have heard it said that you
were eased out of Washington, perhaps at British suggestion, because your independence
made you unmanageable. You continued to press strongly for the early Channel crossing,
for example, and thus were seen as inconvenient to have so close to America's high
command.
ACW: There were rumors in Washington to that effect at the time. I discounted them
because I could not believe that Mr. Churchill would attempt to influence Allied strategy
in such a manner. Since the war, however, much evidence has come to light suggesting
he was indeed capable of such maneuvers.
KE: Were you pleased at the thought of going out to the new Allied Southeast Asia
Command (SEAC)?
ACW: I would have preferred combat duty or, if not that, continued assignment to my
challenging job in War Plans. General Marshall had frequently mentioned the possibility
of my commanding an armored or an airborne division. My appetite for action had been
stirred, too, by a recent visit to General Patton's army during the invasion of Sicily.
KE: You said you had met Admiral Mountbatten before you reported to his command at
SEAC.
ACW: Yes, on the trip to London in April 1942. He was handsome and personable, as
everyone knew, and seemed to be caught up in his work and very much on top of it. I
knew of his connections with the royal family and of Churchill's high regard for him, so I
confess that I kept an open mind as to whether he had "made it" on his own. But my
doubts proved unfounded. Mountbatten was first-rate in every respect. He did a
remarkable job of holding together all the various forces that were resisting the Japanese
in that part of the world. There were tensions among the Allies, problems with the
natives, interservice rivalries, prima donnas--to say nothing of the fact that we were
operating almost at the end of the global pipeline, under conditions of terrain and climate
that were extremely difficult, against an ingenious and ruthless enemy. Surmounting all
of this, the "Supremo"--as the admiral came to be known by all ranks--brought a sense
of common purpose to the command. He was fair-minded and diplomatic and had a flair
for leadership.
KE: There must have been some disagreements between you and him?
ACW: I can't really recall any during my year in SEAC. We were on the same team,
working toward the same goals, under the same instructions from the Combined Chiefs
of Staff. I understand that a few of the Americans serving with General Stilwell in India
thought I was too pro-British.
Later, when I was transferred to China, I found myself working for a radically
different Allied commander--Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek--under a different set of
instructions from Washington. Frictions inevitably developed under these circumstances
between the two geographically contiguous commands--SEAC and the China theater
(which included French Indochina). I continued, nonetheless, to find Admiral
Mountbatten a cooperative ally and an understanding friend.
Several recent historians and biographers have blown out of all proportion the
issues that arose between our respective commands. It has even been suggested that my
personal friendship with Mountbatten was strained by suspicions of double-dealing, but
all I know is that our friendship survived in all its warmth until his tragic death in 1979.
KE: China has often been described as a graveyard for Western diplomats and
soldiers--or at least for their reputations. Did you feel any apprehension as you flew over
the Himalayas from India to assume command of the China theater?
ACW: There wasn't much time for such reflection. The change came with almost no
warning, when General Stilwell was called home and the U.S. China-Burma-India theater
was split up into Burma-India and China theaters. My directive from the president
required me to keep China afloat and in the war. The hard-pressed and terribly suffering
Chinese were pinning down approximately one million Japanese who might otherwise
have been transferred to the Philippines or elsewhere to oppose MacArthur or Nimitz.
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President Chiang receives retired General and Mrs. Wedemeyer in Taiwan, ca. 1970.
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KE: What was the situation when you arrived in China?
ACW: Desperate. China--an underdeveloped country in terms of modern transportation,
communications, and industrial know-how--had already been battered by seven years of
war. The eastern third of the country, including all major ports and waterways, was in
enemy hands. In some localities people were subsisting at starvation levels. Even the
armies were woefully ill-equipped and ill-supplied. Medical facilities were practically
nonexistent. I visited a large Chinese army hospital in K'un-ming soon after my arrival
and was unable to tell the living from the rows of dead. And the Japanese were again on
the move with a major offensive!
KE: What did you do?
ACW: There was not much one could do. Our means were severely limited. Morale was
low. Practically all the military supplies we needed had to be airlifted into China over the
"Hump" from India and Burma. To stem the Japanese advance, however, we were able to
interpose two divisions of American-trained and -equipped Chinese troops by airlifting
them from Burma back to China. Fortunately that saved the day.
KE: You wore two hats in China: commander of the U.S. forces and chief of staff to
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek. What did this latter role involve?
ACW: I was to assist Chiang by coordinating all Allied military operations in the theater.
Prevailing relations between the Americans and Chinese officialdom, including the
generalissimo, were strained when I arrived. There was too little communication and too
little mutual understanding between the two sides. One of my first steps, therefore, was to
integrate the military staffs. This meant that the heads of the various Chinese and
American staff divisions--operations officers, supply officers, etc.--were required to
work out their common problems and to sit together at the daily joint staff meetings.
KE: Chiang Kai-shek has often been portrayed as corrupt, inefficient, stubborn, devious,
and so on. What did you think of him?
ACW: In my view, Chiang has been treated very unfairly. People often forget, or are
unaware, of the enormous obstacles he faced. Like all of us, he was in a sense a prisoner
of his past and his circumstances. The recent history of China had left him suspicious of
Westerners, even when they were formal allies. The Chinese, moreover, did not possess
the military, technical, and administrative skills of the West. After we had worked
together for a while, I found that Chiang sincerely wished to cooperate in the common
cause.
KE: The war with Japan finally ended in September 1945. How would you describe the
view from Chungking at that moment?
ACW: The long war had disrupted much of the economy of China and placed great
strains on the government and people. The Japanese surrender therefore brought a feeling
of indescribable relief. It also brought hopes of a brighter future. Chiang--who was
influenced by Western values and was a professed Christian--almost daily discussed
with me his plans for modernizing the economy, for building schools and hospitals, for
extending the rail and road systems, and so forth.
But China had been in a state of internal revolution during most of the twentieth
century, and that revolution had not yet run its course. Chiang, with his Kuomintang
Party and Nationalist government, represented the relatively liberal, Western-oriented
approach of Sun Yat-sen, who had come to power on the overthrow of the Manchu
Empire in 1911. Opposing this force was another, led by Mao Tse-tung, which was
determined to seize power and bring China into the modern world in accordance with
Marxist-Leninist principles. The end of Japanese aggression therefore brought China not
peace but a resumption of civil war.
KE: As a commander of American forces in the area, what was your attitude toward
China's internal conflict?
ACW: U.S. policy was to avoid getting our forces caught in any cross fire between the
Chinese factions. For some time after the war ended, our policy was one of continued
support of the established government.
KE: How long did that policy continue?
ACW: American attitudes toward China had undergone an understandable shift ever
since it became apparent that victory over Japan was assured. With the end of that war in
sight, it no longer seemed quite so important to give aid and comfort to our wartime ally
on the mainland of Asia. The corruption and ineptitude of the Nationalist government
were all too obvious, and these weaknesses had been played upon month after month by
American soldiers as well as journalists and other observers. In contrast to the perceived
shortcomings of Chiang and his government, Mao and his sturdy partisans of the back
hills were depicted as noble and promising. All "progressive" forces worldwide were
trumpeting the virtues of China's "agrarian reformers." American policymakers were
affected by these currents. Hence, as the internal conflict in China intensified in the latter
months of 1945, the U.S. government concluded that peace in China depended on
engineering a coalition between the Nationalists and the Communists.
KE: How did you feel about such a coalition?
ACW: My wartime experiences with the Communists, including my personal
acquaintance with Mao and Chou En-lai, who had occasionally been my guests in
Chungking, had convinced me that these men were not simple agrarian reformers. They
were thoroughly imbued with Marxist-Leninist ideology and committed to revolution.
They would accept a coalition as a step toward absolute power but had no intention
whatsoever of sharing power in a liberal democratic state. The Nationalists knew this and
had no intention of voluntarily relinquishing power to their mortal enemies. Hopes for a
foreseeable solution to the war through coalition therefore seemed to me an unrealistic
basis for U.S. policy.
Events of the months following Japan's surrender confirmed these views. With
the collapse of Japanese authority in Manchuria and North China, a scramble ensued to
fill the vacuum. The Soviet Union--which had joined in the war against Japan in its
closing days--rushed into Manchuria to assert the rights it had been granted (at China's
expense) by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill at the Yalta Conference. It
soon became clear that the Soviets were throwing their unequivocal support to the
Chinese Communists in violation of their recent treaty agreements with Chiang. Within
the limits of my authority and available resources, I continued to aid the Nationalist
government in disarming the Japanese and in moving Nationalist forces up to facilitate
the generalissimo's reassertion of control over north and east China.
KE: And this was the point at which General Marshall, your old boss, came out to China
to negotiate a coalition of the Nationalists and Communists?
ACW: I met General Marshall at the airport in Shanghai in December 1945. He showed
me his directive from the president, and I expressed the view that the job he had been
given could not be done. I explained that the Nationalists had most of the power in China
and were not prepared to relinquish one iota of it. The Communists, with the strong
support of Moscow, were determined to seize power and were not prepared to
compromise in any way.
KE: How did General Marshall react?
ACW: For the first time in our long relationship, he seemed displeased. "Well," he
replied, "it will work, Wedemeyer, and you are going to help me." I was taken aback. I
emphasized that I was prepared to do everything in my power to help him, as I always
had, and had already made two of my best staff officers available for that purpose. The
general had always encouraged me to speak up and to give him my full and honest views.
But now it appeared that the rules had changed.
KE: In spite of this strain in your relationship, General Marshall nonetheless
suggested--later on--that you be made U.S. ambassador to China.
ACW: That was in the spring of 1946, when the general was hard at work in China on his
mission of engineering the coalition. I had come home in April to have some surgery on
my sinuses, and he recommended to Washington that I return to China to replace
Ambassador Patrick Hurley, who had resigned. General Marshall changed his mind on
that, however, when news of the proposed appointment leaked and the Chinese
Communists voiced loud objections on the ground that I would not be impartial as
between them and the Nationalists.
KE: You did not go back to China then, in 1946. But you did return in 1947?
ACW: Yes, and much water had gone over the dam in the meantime. General Marshall
had returned to the United States early in 1947, frustrated in his efforts to bring the
warring factions together and reportedly feeling "a plague on both their houses." U.S. aid
to the Nationalists had dwindled, even as we pressured them to negotiate. The Soviet
Union, on the other hand, continued to give open and unreserved support to the Chinese
Communists. General Marshall became secretary of state in January of 1947--and,
incidentally, renewed the suggestion that I return to China as ambassador, which I
declined. As the months wore on, China policy became an increasingly sharp issue in
American politics. It was in these circumstances that I was asked--in July 1947--to
return to the Far East as a special representative of President Truman and to take a fresh
look at the situation.
KE: Were there any hopeful signs?
ACW: There was little cause for optimism. The situation had deteriorated drastically in
China during the previous year. The Communists had gained strength, the morale of the
Nationalist government had plummeted, the economy was a shambles. It seemed quite
clear that, without substantial aid, the Nationalist government would have no chance of
holding out indefinitely. It was questionable, however, whether any aid we might have
decided to send them at that late date could be delivered, assimilated, and used.
KE: So what did you recommend that the United States do?
ACW: In brief, I recommended in my report to the president that the United States
commit itself at once to a program of selective economic and military aid to the
Nationalist government. To prevent the Soviet Union from consolidating a permanent
grip over Manchuria, I also recommended that we urge the United Nations, in accordance
with the charter, to establish a five-power trusteeship over that area.
KE: Were you proposing that the United States take sides in a civil war--and risk getting
bogged down militarily?
ACW: There was risk only if we were stupid enough to commit ourselves unilaterally in
unwise ways. I did not and would under no circumstances have proposed the use of U.S.
troops on the mainland of Asia in this situation. We made a serious mistake in this
respect later in Vietnam.
KE: Would you never favor intervention abroad with U.S. military forces?
ACW: I am not saying that at all. I do believe situations arise in which the United States
should act militarily against aggressors and terrorists who disturb international peace.
This should seldom, if ever, be undertaken, however, except in concert with other like-minded peoples. And occasions for military intervention certainly can be reduced if our
foreign policies are farsighted, consistent, and energetic.
KE: Did official Washington like your 1947 report?
ACW: Apparently not. I expected to be called in for discussions of the crisis with the
secretary of state or the president. But nothing happened. The government adopted a
passive "wait and see" or "let the dust settle" policy with respect to China. I was
disappointed and disillusioned that the State Department failed to take any steps at the
United Nations respecting my proposal for a trusteeship over Manchuria. My report was
quietly buried. It was released to the public only after the passage of a couple of
years--and in the wake of the furor that arose when the Communists took over the
mainland.
KE: Do you believe that your 1947 recommendations, if adopted, would have made a
difference in the outcome in China?
ACW: Perhaps things already were too far gone in 1947, but I'm not so sure. Certainly if
we had acted promptly in 1945, right after the war ended, our chances of affecting events
there would have been far brighter. There was nothing "inevitable" about the communist
takeover in China. I certainly would have given it the old college try. The stakes were
big, very big. Imagine--just imagine--what the course of world history since 1949 might
have been had China remained friendly to the West. No war in Korea? No war in
Vietnam?
KE: General, as you look back on the history of your time, what thoughts predominate?
ACW: I have a troubled sense of the futility that has marked so much of our international
experience. Think of the wars and crises that have wracked the world in this century! We
Americans tend to get involved quite blindly, with little real understanding of ends or
thought of consequences. We plunge emotionally into conflicts, lose thousands of lives,
spend billions of dollars, help wreak enormous damage on the world and its peoples.
Then we go back and spend more billions trying to put things together again. What an
inane cycle! And look at what happened after World War II: we destroyed one set of
tyrants only to build up another! We "won" that war only in a limited military sense.
KE: What can or should be done?
ACW: Americans simply must become more forehanded and consistent in the way we
manage our public affairs. As populations grow and the struggle for space and resources
becomes more intense, a lot of heat is generated. We can't afford simply to sit back, let
events take their course, and jump in with a military solution when a crisis gets out of
hand. There are so many ways in which the course of events can be influenced without
the use or threat of force. Economic, diplomatic, cultural, psychological, and other means
are available in limitless variety. If all these "instruments of national policy" are
employed in a timely, coordinated, and imaginative way, in accordance with a reasonably
steady game plan, there is good reason to hope for progress toward a better world without
the scourge of war.
KE: I guess you are saying that we should all become strategists--in the broadest sense
of that term?
ACW: Precisely!
This essay originally appeared as "The Man Who Planned the Victory" in American Heritage, October/November 1983.
Available from the Hoover Press is Wedemeyer on War and Peace, edited by Keith E. Eiler, a collection drawn from the Wedemeyer papers in the Hoover Institution Archives. To order, call 800-935-2882.
Keith E. Eiler’s book on U.S. economic and military mobilization in World War II, titled Mobilizing America: Robert P. Patterson and the War Effort, 1940–1945, received the Hoover Institution’s Uncommon Book Award for 1999. It is available from Cornell University Press (607-277-2211).
Photos and documents courtesy of the Hoover Institution Archives.
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