The U.S. government provided military, logistical and other aid to the Chinese
government led by
Chiang Kai-shek's
Kuomintang (KMT) in its civil war against the indigenous
Chinese Communist Party (CCP) led by
Mao Zedong. Both the KMT and the CCP were fighting against
invading Japanese forces, until the
Japanese surrender to the United States in August 1945. This surrender brought to an end the Japanese Puppet state of
Manchukuo and the Japanese-dominated
Wang Jingwei regime. After the Japanese surrender, the US continued to support the KMT against the CCP. The US airlifted many KMT troops from
central China to
Manchuria. Approximately 50,000 U.S. troops were sent to guard strategic sites in
Hubei and
Shandong. The U.S. trained and equipped KMT troops, and also transported Korean troops and even former
Imperial Japanese Army troops back to help KMT forces fight, and ultimately lose, against the People's Liberation Army. In his memoirs, President
Harry Truman justified deploying Japanese troops against the CCP: "It was perfectly clear to us that if we told the Japanese to lay down their arms immediately and march to the seaboard, the entire country would be taken over by the Communists. We therefore had to take the unusual step of using the enemy as a garrison until we could airlift Chinese National troops to
South China and send
Marines to guard the seaports." Within less than two years after the
Second Sino-Japanese War, the KMT had received $4.43 billion from the United States—most of which was military aid. After
World War II, the United States was in opposition to the Soviet Union, which it regarded as totalitarian and expansionist. During the U.S.'s global effort to organize the
Western Bloc and oppose communist expansion, the People's Republic of China was also seen as an expansionist, totalitarian dictatorship. According to
Osita G. Afoaku, in the Middle East, Asia, Latin America and Africa, the U.S. supported authoritarian governments such as those of the
Shah of Iran,
Ferdinand Marcos of the Philippines, the
Somoza dynasty of Nicaragua,
Fulgencio Batista of
Cuba,
Mobutu Sese Seko of
Zaire, and
Emperor Haile Selassie of
Ethiopia. According to journalist
Glenn Greenwald, American diplomat
Henry Kissinger initiated the U.S.'s arms-for-
petrodollars program for the autocratic governments of Saudi Arabia and pre-1979 Iran, supported coups and death squads throughout Latin America, and supported Indonesian dictator and close U.S. ally
Suharto. Greenwald notes
Jeane Kirkpatrick, the U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations (U.N.) under President
Ronald Reagan, was praised for her open support of pro-Western and right-wing oppressors including the Shah of Iran and Nicaragua's military dictator
Anastasio Somoza, both of whom "were positively friendly to the U.S., sending their sons and others to be educated in our universities, voting with us in the United Nations, and regularly supporting American interests and positions even when these entailed personal and political cost". Nigerian political scientist
Claude Ake stated that while the U.S. continued to present itself as the leader of the free world in the 1990s, it sold more weapons to
developing countries than all other arms traders combined. According to U.S. Representative
Cynthia McKinney and Senator
John Kerry; "[d]espite rhetorical pledges to promote democracy and constrain the spread of weaponry worldwide, the Clinton administration has continued the Cold War and Bush administration policy of providing substantial amounts of weapons and training to the armed forces of non-democratic governments". In a 1997 report,
Demilitarization for Democracy (DFD) said while democratic governments received 18 percent ($8 billion), non-democratic governments received 82 percent ($36 billion) of the $44.0 billion in arms and training provided to countries with U.S. Government approval during
Bill Clinton's first four years in office. The authors concluded; "[t]he United States is increasingly dependent on the developing nations to keep its high share of the global arms market". After
International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister,
Yoav Gallant, over
suspected war crimes in Gaza, American politicians have
threatened to impose sanctions on officials at the ICC.
Table of authoritarian governments supported by the United States ==Rationale==