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When Headlines Cry Peace
TIME, Monday, Jan. 17, 1949
On a bustling
Shanghai's powerful city council—addressing the Communists as "gentlemen" instead of "bandits"—radioed its peace appeal direct to Red headquarters at Yenan. Peiping and
Polite Insubordination. One of the most powerful advocates of peace now with the Reds was broad-shouldered, bony-faced General Pai Chung-hsi, formerly
Last week, by what the Chinese press called polite insubordination, Pai rudely defied the Gimo. He ignored an order to send one of his armies to the
In Nanking, meanwhile, amid vain attempts at secrecy, Foreign Minister Wu Te-chen conferred separately with the
Rude Interruption. Disregarding the inevitable, the Nationalist government pushed ahead with plans for a last-ditch stand. All ordnance plants in the Shanghai-Nanking area, much light industry and operational headquarters of civil and military airlines were being moved to
The high-riding Reds seemed to have no thought of making peace except on their own terms. A three-day radio barrage hammered out an anti-Chiang theme built around oft-repeated symbols of "reactionaries," "war criminals," and "running dogs of American imperialism." The big guns of Communist artillery then poured shells into Tientsin, North China's leading industrial and commercial city, where a quarter of a million men had been conscripted to build defense works.
The Reds battled their way to less than half a mile from Kiessling's famous confectionery-restaurant in the old British concession. Shells screamed down on Roosevelt Road, one of the main thoroughfares. Two members of the Nationalist garrison were executed for spreading "false" peace rumors. Then, just as suddenly as it had all started, the Reds called off their dogs—for the time being.
Under a white flag of truce, city fathers made their way 16 miles southeast for an interview with Communist General Lin Piao, who refused either to see or talk to them. Red guns resumed their shelling and Communist troops stormed across a dike surrounding the city to capture the North Station. At week's end it looked as if the clamor for peace in one of
Sources: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,780095-2,00.html