In the late summer of 1944, a C-47 landed in Yan’an, a remote
town in northwestern China’s Shaanxi Province. On board were US
military and diplomatic staff, sent to the headquarters of the
Communist Party of China (CPC) as members of the US Army Observer
Group, better known as the Dixie Mission.
It was the first official contact between the US government and
the Chinese Communists.
Sixty years later, on August 23, 2004, a meeting was held in
Beijing to commemorate this major but relatively little-known event
in modern Sino-American relations. Jointly sponsored by the Society
for People’s Friendship Studies (CSPFS), the China Institute of
International Strategic Studies (CIISS) and the Friends of China
Research Foundation, the gathering was attended by over 100 former
Chinese diplomats, scholars, publishers and journalists as well as
family members of Dixie Mission staff and American researchers.
Huang Hua and Ling Qing, the honorary president and
president of CSPFS, were keynote speakers, as was General Xiong
Guangkai, chairman of CIISS, and Robert Service, son of John
Service, a member of Dixie Mission and a famous scholar who
suffered years of persecution under McCarthyism because of his
views on US-China relations. Robert Service is himself a former US
ambassador to Chile.
Both Huang Hua, a former foreign minister, and Ling Qing, a
former representative at the UN, once worked in the Foreign Affairs
Group of the CPC Central Committee and had personal contact with
the Dixie Mission members.
Huang said, “Most of the mission staff and members of the
foreign affairs group at Yan’an have passed away. Yet today we
still treasure the memories of those who participated in this
precious chapter of the extraordinary, historical cooperation
between China and the United States.”
General Joseph W. Stilwell first suggested sending the mission
and President Franklin D. Roosevelt approved it. The detached
military unit sent to Yan’an was responsible for transmitting
weather information, assisting the Communists in their rescue of
downed American flyers and evaluating their Communist hosts’
contribution to the war effort against Japan.
Mao Zedong, Zhu De, Zhou Enlai and many other leaders met and
had long discussions with mission members in Yan’an. They explained
the CPC’s views on the international situation and China’s war of
resistance.
To familiarize the members with the situation in the
resistance bases, arrangements were made to take the Americans
behind enemy lines to see at first hand the fighting against the
Japanese.
Reports of mission members such as John Service, John Davis and
Raymond Ludden, together with a proposal on American policy toward
the CPC signed by US Embassy staff in Chongqing, aroused the
attention of the US State and Defense departments and the White
House. The understanding and sympathetic views of the American
observers toward the CPC’s work and war effort stirred up
controversy in Washington.
Said Huang Hua: “On this occasion, our thoughts turn naturally
to General Stilwell. . . . He saw where the real strength of the
Chinese people was. To expedite the defeat of the Japanese
aggressors, he called for cooperation with the Eighth Route Army
and other resistance forces and for military aid for them. Although
his proposals failed, his spirit of going beyond ideological
differences and joining hands with the CPC in the face of a common
enemy is worthy of our deep respect.”
Ling Qing, who served as an interpreter for the mission,
recalled the Americans as fun-loving and friendly, but at the same
time hard-working, interested and intelligent. “These young
American friends met with warm and sincere friendship from our
cadres and people, who rendered them assistance as best as they
could,” recalled Ling.
General Xiong Guangkai, concurrently deputy chief of
Staffs of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, said that the
lesson learned from the Dixie Mission was that Sino-American
relations will be strong provided the two countries emphasize
mutual understanding and respect, treating each other with honesty
and sincerity.
“In the new century, with peace and development as the main
theme, China and the US should enhance cooperation in all sectors
and deal with various challenges together just as they did in their
common fight against fascism during World War II,” said Xiong.
Robert Service noted that at the time of the Dixie Mission, all
official contact with China was with Chiang Kai-shek’s Nationalist
government. Placing the Communists off limits was considered
irrational by many Americans, as the primary goal was to defeat the
Japanese.
Military need became the driving force behind the relaxation of
policy toward the Communists that enabled the Dixie Mission to
exist, Service noted. But that need paved the way for an event of
considerable significance in the history of Chinese-American
relations to take place.
During the gathering, a documentary film on the mission was
shown and a pictorial album with collection of rare old
photographs, as well as a translation of Carolle J. Carter’s book,
Mission to Yenan, was distributed to the participants.
During an afternoon panel discussion, three family members of
mission staff and one American researcher were special guest
speakers. One of the Chinese speakers on the panel was a Long March
veteran who was responsible for logistical support to the
mission.
Three surviving members of the Dixie mission, unable to attend
because of health reasons, sent congratulatory messages.
(China.org.cn, by Lin Wusun August 25, 2004)