James Shen
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
James C.H. Shen (b. 1909 Shanghai, China - died July 12, 2007 Taipei, Taiwan) was a Taiwanese diplomat. Shen served as the last official Taiwanese ambassador to the United States before the U.S. switched its diplomatic recognition to the People's Republic of China in 1979.[1]
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[edit] Early life
James Shen was born in Shanghai, China in 1909.[1] Shen was educated at Yenching University, which was located in Beijing. He earned his Masters degree in journalism at the University of Missouri in 1935.[2]
Shen worked as a reporter and editor early in his career. He reported for media agencies throughout China, Taiwan and Hong Kong.[2]
Additionally, Shen began work as a analyst and commentator for the Chinese government.[2] His early government positions included "section chief" of the Ministry of Information's international department and as a department director for the Government Information Office (GIO).[2]
[edit] Diplomatic career
Shen served for a time as an English-Chinese language interpreter and secretary[2] for Chinese Nationalist leader Chang Kai-shek.[1] He was then appointed spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and head of the GIO.[2]
Shen fled to Taiwan with the Nationalists when Chang Kai-shek moved his government to Taipei following their defeat by Mao Zedong's Communist forces in 1949. Shen served as Taiwan's ambassador to Australia from 1966 until 1968 before returning to Taiwan to become vice minister of foreign affairs between 1968 and 1971. [2]
James Shen was appointed as Taiwan's ambassador to the United States in 1971.[1] Shen arrived in Washington D.C. to assume his post just month's before U.S. President Richard Nixon visited mainland China on an official visit. While in China, Nixon signed a communique with Zedong's government. The communique officially created the United States's One-China policy which acknowledged Taiwan as part of China, not as the legitimate government of all of China or an independent state.[1] The communique was a huge blow to Taiwan's Nationalist government, which maintained that it alone was the sole legitimate government of all of China.
James Shen continued his efforts throughout the 1970s to persuade the United States to continue to recognize Taiwan and the Nationalists. The Nationalists and the United States had been important World War II and Cold War allies until the Nixon Administration. However, Shen's diplomacy proved in vein. The United States, under President Jimmy Carter, officially severed diplomatic relations with Taiwan in 1979 as part of its One-China policy.[1]
James Shen returned to Taipei, in January 1979[2] and retired following the end of diplomatic relations with the U.S. He lived in Taiwan for the remainder of his life. Shen died at his home in Taipei on July 12, 2007, following a lengthy illness.[1] He was 98 years old and was survived by his wife, Wei-yi Shen. [1]
Since 1979, Taiwan no longer maintains an embassy in the United States, since there is no official diplomatic relations between the two countries. However, Taiwan continues to operate a series of representative offices, called the Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Offices, in Washington D.C. and 12 other American cities.
[edit] External links
- International Herald Tribune: James Shen, Taiwan's last ambassador to US, dies at 98
- The China Post: Ex-envoy to U.S. James Shen passes away due to illness