The mission of General of the Army George C. Marshall to China to arrange for cessation of civil strife and to bring about political unification:1
1. For previous correspondence relating to this mission, see Foreign Relations, 1945, vol. vii, pp 745 ff.
Contents
- I. Negotiations leading to the cease-fire agreements of January 10,
1946 (Documents 1–29)
- II. Discussions pertaining to Political Consultative Conference
(January–April) (Documents 30–59)
- III. Negotiations respecting military reorganization and integration of
Communist forces into National Army (January–May) (Documents 60–123)
- IV. Initial problems arising in the implementation of the cease-fire
agreements and the situation in Manchuria; recall of General Marshall for
consultation (January–March 13) (Documents 124–236)
- V. Agreement to send teams into Manchuria, March 27, 1946 (Documents 237–282)
- VI. Agreements to remove to Communist areas Communist troops near Canton
and Hankow who were surrounded by Government troops (Documents 283–339)
- VII. The Manchurian crisis (March 28–May 22, 1946) (Documents 340–467)
- VIII. Negotiations leading to fifteen-day truce in Manchuria (May 22–June
6, 1946) (Documents 468–514)
- IX. Negotiations stalemated during Manchurian Truce (June 6–30,
1946) (Documents 515–622)
- X. Spread of hostilities in North China and Shanitung; failure of
political negotiations (July 1–21, 1946) (Documents 623–695)
- XI. Efforts of Ambassador Stuart and General Marshall to break deadlock;
the Anping incident (July 21–August 10, 1946) (Documents 696–752)