Ward Incident

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Ward Incident

As Mao Zedong’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) swept through China during the Chinese Civil War against the Nationalists in 1948 and 1949, they began to harass Westerners in general and Americans in particular. As one of the major trade centers in China, Mukden was taken by the Communist troops in October 1948. In November, the Communists demanded that American Consul Angus Ward surrender the consulate’s radio transmitter. Ward refused. In response, the Mao’s troops surrounded the consulate, putting Ward and 21 staff members under house arrest. For months, without communication, water, and electricity, Ward and the other Americans were completely isolated under guard by the Chinese Communists.

The American government ordered the consulate closed and called for the withdrawal of Ward and his staff. But Ward was unable to do it because in June 1949 the Chinese charged the American consulate with serving as a headquarters for espionage. With the crisis worsening, the Truman administration called upon American allies to withhold recognition of Mao’s newly established government. In response, the PLA troops arrested Ward, accusing him and his staff members of inciting a riot outside the consulate in October 1949. In November 1949, as Angus Ward was brought to trial, the American public anger verged on explosion. President Harry S. Truman, already under severe attacks for “losing” China to the Communists, could not afford to show weakness in the face of the Chinese Communist challenge. He met with his military advisors to discuss the feasibility of a rescue operation. However incensed with the Communists, Washington showed great restraints because it was still looking for opportunities for reaching an accommodation with the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Secretary of State Dean Acheson conveyed the message to Beijing that the US would not recognize the new Chinese government until all the Americans at Mukden were released. On November 24, 1949, Ward and his staff were charged with the inciting-to-riot and ordered to be deported. They finally left China in December 1949.

The crisis lasted for more than a year, by which time the already fragile US relations with the Chinese Communists had been damaged virtually beyond repair. Any possibilities that might have existed for US recognition of the PRC became remote. In retrospect, the Ward Case is the beginning of the confrontation between the United States and the People’s Republic China.

References: New York Times (March 14, 1949); Gordon H. Chang, Friends and Enemies: The United States, China, and the Soviet Union, 1948-1972 (Stanford, CA, 1990); Jian Chen, China’s Road to the Korean War: The Making of the Sino-American Confrontation (New York, 1994).

Yuwu Song, Ph.D.