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American diplomacy and strategy toward Korea and Northeast Asia, 1882-1950 and after : perception of polarity and US commitment to a periphery / Seung-young Kim.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2009Edition: First editionDescription: xii, 287 pages ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 1403975450
  • 9781403975454
Other title:
  • American diplomacy and strategy toward Korea and Northeast Asia, eighteen eighty two-nineteen fifty and after
  • American diplomacy and strategy toward Korea and Northeast Asia, 1882 to 1950 and after
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 327.730519 22
LOC classification:
  • E183.8.K6 K5566 2009
Contents:
Introduction -- 1. Sources of US Commitment toward Korea -- Part I. US Diplomacy toward Korea in the Era of the Russo-Japanese War -- 2. The Rise of Korean Expectation and Decline of US Commitment to Korea, 1882-1901 -- 3. Great Power Rivalry and US Assessment at the Outbreak of the War -- 4. US Diplomacy and the Japanese Imposition of Protectorate on Korea -- Conclusion Part I -- Part II. US Diplomacy toward Korea during World War II -- 5. Vision of Cooperation among the Allies and the Four-power Trusteeship Plan for Korea -- 6. Emergence of the Bipolar Perception and a Missed Opportunity for Diplomacy -- 7. Consolidation of the Bipolar Perception and US Suggestion of the Thirty-eighth Parallel -- Conclusion Part II -- Part III. US Policy toward Korea from 1945 to June -- 8. Uncertain Strategic Situation and Rise of Competing Recommendations toward Korea -- 9. The Reemergence of a Multipolar Vision and the Decision for Withdrawal from Korea -- 10. The Erosion of Multipolar Perception and the Road to Intervention -- Conclusion Part III -- Conclusion: US Commitment toward South Korea since 1950.
Summary: "This book examines how and why American commitment toward Korea changed during the three US presidencies of Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Harry S. Truman. While focusing on the statesmen's perceptions of strategic situation as main locus of analysis, it reconstructs the process of assessment, decision-making, and diplomatic negotiations. This book demonstrates that the US policies toward Korea were shaped by the US decision-makers' broader concerns about great power relations in East Asia and the world, rather than their immediate concerns about the development in the Korean peninsula. This realist explanation of history sets forth clear and timely terms of debate about the current changes in the US-South Korean alliance as well. By showing the dramatic unfolding of US occupation, withdrawal, and intervention in the Korean peninsula, this book also sheds light on the broader issue of US military occupations of other countries in the twentieth first century."--Publisher's website.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 219-274) and index.

Introduction -- 1. Sources of US Commitment toward Korea -- Part I. US Diplomacy toward Korea in the Era of the Russo-Japanese War -- 2. The Rise of Korean Expectation and Decline of US Commitment to Korea, 1882-1901 -- 3. Great Power Rivalry and US Assessment at the Outbreak of the War -- 4. US Diplomacy and the Japanese Imposition of Protectorate on Korea -- Conclusion Part I -- Part II. US Diplomacy toward Korea during World War II -- 5. Vision of Cooperation among the Allies and the Four-power Trusteeship Plan for Korea -- 6. Emergence of the Bipolar Perception and a Missed Opportunity for Diplomacy -- 7. Consolidation of the Bipolar Perception and US Suggestion of the Thirty-eighth Parallel -- Conclusion Part II -- Part III. US Policy toward Korea from 1945 to June -- 8. Uncertain Strategic Situation and Rise of Competing Recommendations toward Korea -- 9. The Reemergence of a Multipolar Vision and the Decision for Withdrawal from Korea -- 10. The Erosion of Multipolar Perception and the Road to Intervention -- Conclusion Part III -- Conclusion: US Commitment toward South Korea since 1950.

"This book examines how and why American commitment toward Korea changed during the three US presidencies of Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Harry S. Truman. While focusing on the statesmen's perceptions of strategic situation as main locus of analysis, it reconstructs the process of assessment, decision-making, and diplomatic negotiations. This book demonstrates that the US policies toward Korea were shaped by the US decision-makers' broader concerns about great power relations in East Asia and the world, rather than their immediate concerns about the development in the Korean peninsula. This realist explanation of history sets forth clear and timely terms of debate about the current changes in the US-South Korean alliance as well. By showing the dramatic unfolding of US occupation, withdrawal, and intervention in the Korean peninsula, this book also sheds light on the broader issue of US military occupations of other countries in the twentieth first century."--Publisher's website.

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