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54 Pol. Sci. Q. 1 (1939)

handle is hein.journals/pclscceqry54 and id is 1 raw text is: 







Volume  LIV]


       POLITICAL SCIENCE


                QUARTERLY


     THE   UNITED STATES IN THE FAR EAST

IT   may  be superfluous now to analyze historically and theo-
      retically the question of America's rble in the Pacific.
      The answer may  be given by governmental action, in a
sense is being given, and in a sense was first adumbrated dec-
ades ago and has been brought progressively nearer definite
formulation with the years. The significance of acts, decisions
and tendencies since the closing months of 1938 should not
be underestimated. The abrupt injunction laid against Japan's
declaration of a tripartite Japan-China-Manchukuo bloc under
Japanese direction, the loan of $25,000,000 to China, the ex-
tension of further credits on China's gold deposit in this coun-
try, the proposed fortification of Guam, the implied invitation
to public pressure for an embargo on the sale of war supplies'
to Japan-these  are portents. They may  signify more than
abstract reasoning or deduction from historical sources.
  Whether  historical and theoretical analysis is superfluous
or not, it abounds. In the mounting polemical literature on
American  foreign policy in the Far East one school of thought
predominates.  America  is not genuinely concerned in the
Pacific; it has no vital interests there; it need take no active
commitments there; and in so far as there is any danger of war
with Japan, it is a willed, almost wilful, danger, a product of
the heedlessness, miscalculations and erroneous judgments of
individuals. In support are summoned all the minute cullings
from historical documents, especially documents in diplomatic
history; and here lies the strength of the case and here, too,
its weakness. For it may be said that diplomatic documents
are the formalized explanations of national acts, formalized


AMarck  ,939


[Number r

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