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Fires of the Dragon

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Through the murder of Henry Liu, an American citizen, journalist, father, and spy, investigative reporter David E. Kaplan delivers dramatically shocking and newsworthy details on the conflict between China and Taiwan while unveiling the role the United States plays within the struggle.

In October 1984 in the privacy of his California home, Henry Liu was murdered by agents of an important American ally. Who was Henry Liu and why was he killed? The pages of this remarkable expose begin with the death of Henry, but what follows is far more than one man’s story.

For the first time ever, investigative journalist David E. Kaplan reveals the disturbing tale of international intrigue amidst the dispute between China and Taiwan and just how intense this struggle proved to be for the United States.

With Henry Liu’s elaborately complex lifetime providing a compelling framework, revelations of the Chiang Kaishek’s Kuomintang infiltration of the U.S. State Department and FBI, sabotage of the nation’s foreign policy, and recruitment of Mafia members to steal U.S. nuclear weapons.

576 pages, Paperback

First published October 21, 1992

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About the author

David E. Kaplan

9 books14 followers
David E. Kaplan is an investigative reporter and former director of the Center for Public Integrity's International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. Before this post, he worked for the American newsweekly U.S. News & World Report. David E. Kaplan commonly writes about terrorism, organized crime, and intelligence.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Jeff Gillenkirk.
23 reviews2 followers
March 29, 2016
David Kaplan wrote this book as a staff writer for the renowned Center for Investigative Reporting, which should be proud of this exhaustive, intriguing and informative book. In chronicling the 1984 murder of journalist Henry Liu in a San Francisco suburb, Kaplan exposes the shocking level of corruption of Taiwan's ruling Kuomintang party and its powerful impact on American politics. With American media focused for decades on the shortcomings of the People's Republic of China and its ruling Communist Party, the Kuomintang rolled along with much of the U.S. Congress, State Department and various presidential administrations firmly in its pocket. A valuable history lesson for its first two-thirds, the last third of Fires of the Dragon is a gripping tale of murder and political mayhem. This is an invaluable resource for anyone hoping to understand the complexities of U.S.- Chinese relations, past, present and future.
Profile Image for Gregory John.
23 reviews2 followers
December 31, 2021
p.52: “Taiwan’s fate was completely dark. Only a miracle of God could change its fate.”
The miracle came, fittingly, on a Sunday morning, in the early hours of June 25, 1950. In a foreign land a thousand miles away that Henry knew or cared little about, seventy-five thousand North Korean troops swarmed across the 38th Parallel in a surprise attack. The Communists had saved Taiwan.

p.96: When, in 1858, an American diplomat suggested to the viceroy of Chihli that Chinese consuls be dispatched to protect their subjects overseas, the official quickly dismissed the idea. “The emperor’s wealth is beyond computation,” explained the viceroy. “Why should he care for those of his subjects who have left their home, or for the sands they have scraped together?” But forty years later, as China’s last dynasty neared its chaotic end, the imperial court stripped away the law barring emigration and began actively soliciting the Chinese overseas. Events made clear that the Chinese abroad had scraped together far more than a few sands, and that they were using their newfound wealth to fund political movements back home.

p.113: Among those harassed and deported was Tsien Hsue-shen, a brilliant expert on aeronautics and rocketry who had spent seventeen years in America and, said friends at Cal Tech, hoped to become a U.S. citizen. During World War II, Tsien had created the designs for America’s first military missiles. Accused on hearsay of being a Communist, stripped of his security clearance, and imprisoned for a short time, Tsien turned bitterly against the U.S. government. Once back in China, he played an instrumental role in developing China’s first nuclear weapons.

p.241: In June 1977, unknown to the American public, federal officials formally placed Taiwan on the highly classified “criteria list” of nations considered a “hostile” treat to U.S. national security. No non-Communist, friendly nation ever had been put onto the top-secret list. America’s old ally, the Republic of China on Taiwan, joined such public enemies as Bulgaria, East Germany, and the Soviet Union.

p.442: Indeed, Ronald Reagan, who celled so ardently for a global war against terrorism, had failed to utter even a word about the Liu murder.

Profile Image for Marina Lant.
11 reviews
July 10, 2022
A fascinating look at the US’s tortured relationship with Taiwan and China in the 20th Century with a special focus on spy craft. The author’s meticulous research and intriguing conclusions about the role of American civil liberties in international diplomacy make this an excellent read for 2022.
Profile Image for Philip.
1,845 reviews128 followers
o-b-e
August 5, 2018
OKAY, NEW CATEGORY HERE - these are the books that have been on my shelf for a while, but which I will probably never read because for whatever reason they are now OBE - "overtaken by events;" i.e., either irrelevant due to the passage of time and/or vicissitudes of history, or have simply been replaced by better books on the same topic.

And yes, I know I spend way too much time on Goodreads - but as addictions go it's probably better than internet porn. I think.
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews