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226 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. vii (1943)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0226 and id is 1 raw text is: INTRODUCTION

SOUTHEASTERN ASIA had little interest
for the majority of Americans until a lit-
tle more than a year ago. About all that
most people knew of it was that we de-
pended on it for our tin and rubber, and
that Singapore was a strong naval base.
Knowledge of the Philippines was not
much greater. The spectacular con-
quests of Japan and their consequences
to ourselves have completely changed
this attitude. Little reliable information
has been available, however, to satisfy
the demand which has been aroused.
Few Americans had lived in these coun-
tries long enough to understand their
problems, and practically none of them
had ever thought of publishing their
knowledge. The same statement could
be made regarding most of the British,
Dutch, and French residents. The in-
digenous peoples were not vocal, and the
very few who expressed themselves usu-
ally did so in local vernacular newspapers
or in the debates of the various legis-
lative bodies.
The object of this special issue of THE
ANNALS is to present an unbiased ac-
count of the prewar political and eco-
nomic situation, and of the causes of the
Japanese victories as far as it is possible
to deal with this subject. Very little re-
liable and detailed information has been
published on the campaigns in the Phil-
ippines, Malaya, and other places, and
since most of those who took part in
them are now prisoners, we shall not
learn the full truth until the war is over.
The one fact which stands out indis-
putably is that every one of the United
Nations was dangerously unprepared,
and that the Japanese victories were due
to this colossal sin of omission far more
than to the various mistakes which were
committed by the local governments and
military and naval leaders. With the
wisdom of hindsight it is now clear that
southeastern Asia and the Philippines
vii

were doomed from the day that the Japa-
nese opened their attack.
The fall of the American and Euro-
pean dependencies is not the end of the
story, and this description of conditions
therefore is far more than an account of
a tragic but dead-and-gone episode. The
whole question will come up again at the
postwar settlement, and will prove to be
one of the most complex and difficult
problems with which the leaders of the
United Nations will have to deal. There
can be no return to the world of 1941,
but that world will have to be taken into
very careful consideration if the new or-
der is to be more stable and lasting than
the old. The fundamental conditions of
political, economic, and social life will
not be swept away by Japan's temporary
control: they are too deep-seated and too
rooted in centuries of historical evolu-
tion to disappear so easily. Superficially
they may be changed, and they may well
prove to be more difficult to deal with.
In essentials, however, they will be the
same, and any settlement must accom-
modate itself to them if it hopes to suc-
ceed.
SEPARATION OF MASSES FROM
RULING GRoUPS
Perhaps the most important of these
basic factors is the gulf-political, eco-
nomic, and racial-which separates the
overwhelming majority of the population
from the controlling and ruling groups.
The average man of southeastern Asia
is a small farmer or fisherman whose in-
terests are very largely confined to his
fields and his village. He is conservative
and is strongly influenced by his tradi-
tional belief that government comes from
above and is not the business of the peas-
ant cultivator. This does not mean that
he is indifferent to his own well-being-
taxes, irrigation works, anything which
affects his own land or his village em-

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