Opium and Foreign Policy
The Anglo-american Search for Order in Asia, 1912-1954
By William O. Walker III
368 pp., 6 x 9
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Paperback ISBN: 978-0-8078-5645-1
Published: March 2011
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Throughout much of China and Southeast Asia, many farmers had cultivated opium for generations, and at times survival itself seemed to depend upon the market for the poppy crop. Before World War II, the British tolerated the deeply entrenched culture of the poppy in China in order to safeguard their economic and political interests. Conversely, the Americans, who had far less at stake in Asia strategically or economically, consistently opposed the opium trade. During the war, the United States defined opium as a strategic commodity and tried to restrict Japanese access to it. Following the war, American hopes of limiting the Asian drug trade were thwarted by civil war in China. Finally, as the Cold War spread to Southeast Asia in the 1950s, drug control was subordinated to Western security concerns in the fight against communism.
Basing his study upon extensive archival research in British and American sources, Walker shows that the chances for opium control were never good and that ultimately the search for order in Asia on Western terms failed. United States drug-control officials, Walker contends, must share in the blame for that failure.
Originally published in 1991.
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About the Author
William O. Walker III, professor of history at Ohio Wesleyan University, is author of Drug Control in the Americas.
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Reviews
"This work is quite by itself. It places opium traffic and policy within the larger context of foreign policy and the international relations of East Asia. There is nothing as comprehensive, authoritative, or up-to-date."--Waldo Heinrichs, Dwight Stanford Chair in History, San Diego State University
"Walker has thoroughly exploited the rich resources in the U.S. State Department records and the U.K. Foreign Office papers and has written a definitive history of opium as a foreign policy issue in the early twentieth century. Opium and Foreign Policy sets the diplomatic issue within the context of opium as a social and economic problem."--Terry M. Parssinen, University of Maryland at College Park