Everything about Albert Coady Wedemeyer totally explained
Albert Coady Wedemeyer (
9 July,
1897 –
17 December,
1989) was an
American soldier, who served primarily in
World War II in
Asia. His most notable command was the
China theater in the
South-East Asia Theatre. During the
Cold War, Wedemeyer was a chief supporter of the
Berlin Airlift.
Life and military career
Albert C. Wedemeyer was born on July 9th, 1897, in
Omaha, Nebraska. In
1919, he graduated from the
United States Military Academy at
West Point.
At the outbreak of
World War II, Wedemeyer ranked at
Lieutenant Colonel and was assigned as a Staff Officer to the war-plans division of the
United States War Department. Notably, in
1941 he was the chief author of the Victory Program, which advocated the defeat of
Germany's armies in
Europe as the prime war objective for the U.S. This plan was adopted and expanded as the war progressed. Additionally, Wedemeyer helped to plan the
Normandy Invasion.
In
1943, Wedemeyer was reassigned to the
South-East Asia Theatre to be Chief of Staff to the Supreme Allied Commander of the
South East Asia Command (SEAC),
Lord Louis Mountbatten. In October
1944, with the dismissal of General
Joseph Stilwell, Wedemeyer was selected as Chief of Staff to the Generalissimo
Chiang Kai-shek, and commander of American forces in
China. In this time period, Wedemeyer gained valuable knowledge of the capabilities of the Allied Aircraft as they flew from India over
the Hump into China to resupply the
Nationalist Chinese Army and American forces. Such forces included the United States
Twentieth Air Force partaking in
Operation Matterhorn and the
Fourteenth Air Force operated by General
Claire Chennault.
The issue of forcing the Nationalists into a coalition government with the Communists became a central issue in the "who lost China" debates of 1949-51. Wedemeyer later said he opposed a coalition (Tsou, 1962). However, on July 10, 1945, Wedemeyer told Marshall:
If Uncle Sugar, Russia, and Britain united strongly in their endeavor to bring about a coalition of these two political parties [theKuomintang and the Chinese Communist Party] in China by coercing both sides to make realistic concessions, serious post-war disturbance may be averted and timely effective military employment of all Chinese may be obtained against the Japanese. I use the term coercion advisedly because it's my conviction that continued appeals to both sides couched in polite diplomatic terms won't accomplish unification. There must be teeth in Big Three
On December 7, 1945, Wedemeyer with General
Douglas MacArthur, and Navy Admiral
Raymond A. Spruance, the three top military officers in the Far East, recommended to the Pentagon transporting six more Chinese Nationalist armies into North China and Manchuria. However they also suggested that "the U.S. assistance to China, as outlined above, be made available as basis for negotiation by the American Ambassador to bring together and effect a compromise between the major opposing groups in order to promote a united and democratic China."
Wedemeyer served in China into 1946 and eventually was promoted to Army Chief of Plans and Operations. In July 1947 President
Harry S. Truman sent Lt. Gen. Wedemeyer to China and Korea to examine the "political, economic, psychological and military situations." The result was the "Wedemeyer Report," which Truman suppressed—thereby intensifying the bitter debate over the role of the United States in the Chinese civil war. Secretary of State
George C. Marshall hoped that Wedemeyer could convince Chiang Kai-shek to institute those military, economic, and political reforms necessary to defeat the Communists. Marshall rejected Wedemeyer's call for increased assistance and refused to publish his report, antagonizing those American supporters of China the Wedemeyer Mission was designed to placate. After the Communist victory in 1949 Wedemeyer became intimately associated with the
China Lobby and openly voiced his criticism of those responsible for the "loss of China." In 1951 Senator
Joseph R. McCarthy said that Wedemeyer had prepared a wise plan that would keep China a valued ally, but that it had been sabotaged; "only in treason can we find why evil genius thwarted and frustrated it." The evil geniuses, McCarthy said, included General George Marshall. Wedemeyer became a hero to the anti-Communist activists in the United States, giving many lectures around the country.
In
1948, he supported General
Lucius D. Clay's plan to create an
airbridge during the
Berlin Crisis.
In 1951, Wedemeyer retired, but was promoted to General (4-stars) on July 19, 1954. On December 17th, 1989, Wedemeyer died at
Fort Belvoir, Virginia.
Bibliography
Primary sources
- Albert C. Wedemeyer, Wedemeyer Reports!, New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1958.
- Wedemeyer, Albert C. Wedemeyer on War and Peace. ed. by Keith E. Eiler, Hoover Inst. Press, 1987. 245 pp.
Secondary sources
Herbert Feis, The China Tangle: The American Effort in China from Pearl Harbor to the Marshall Mission (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1953).
Romanus, Charles F. and Riley Sunderland, Time Runs Out in CBI (Washington, 1959), official U.S. Army history online edition
Stueck, William. The Wedemeyer Mission: American Politics and Foreign Policy during the Cold War. U. of Georgia Press, 1984. 177 pp.
Tang Tsou. America's Failure in China, 1941-50 (1963)
Tang Tsou. "The Historians and the Generals," The Pacific Historical Review Vol. 31, No. 1 (Feb., 1962), pp. 41-48 in JSTOR
Keegan, John. "Six Armies in Normandy: From D-Day to the Liberation Of Paris." Viking Penguin Inc 1982 (New 50th D-Day Anniversary 365 pp. edition includes a new introduction by the author) pp. 22, 31-4, 36, 37, 38Further Information
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