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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Anna Chen Chennault

Wikipedia

 

Anna Chennault , (Chinese name Chen Xiangmei (?????????), also known as Anna Chan Chennault/Anna Chen Chennault) is the widow of World War II aviation hero Lieutenant General Claire Lee Chennault.


Born in Beijing, China on June 23, 1925, Chen Xiangmei "received a B.A. degree in Chinese from Lingnan University in Hong Kong in 1944, and an honorary Doctor of Literature degree from Chungang in Seoul, Korea in 1967". She "began her career as a journalist, serving as a war correspondent for the Central News Agency from 1944 to 1948. She was a feature writer for the Hsin Ming Daily News in Shanghai, China from 1944 to 1949."

Chen Xiangmei was married in 1947 to Claire Lee Chennault, who was more than 32 years her senior and died in 1958. She has two children, Claire Anna (born in 1949) and Cynthia Louise (born in 1950).

Her husband's death has not seemed to have slowed her career: "She served as a special correspondent for the Central News Agency from 1965 to the present 1999 and as a U.S. correspondent for the Hsin Shen Daily News from 1958 to the present 1999. In addition, she was a broadcaster for the Voice of America from 1963 to 1966." In addition, Chen Xiangmei served as an editor and public relations officer for the Civil Air Transport in Taipei, Taiwan, from 1946 until 1957. After her husband's death, Chennault was vice-president of international affairs for the Flying Tiger Line. "She has served as president of TAC International from 1976 to the present 1999."

"Chennault has been a member of the President's Advisory Committee for the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts since 1970...served as a member of the United States National Committee for UNESCO from 1970 to the present 1999...as president of Chinese Refugee Relief from 1962 to 1970 and has served as president of the General Claire Chennault Foundation from 1960 to the present 1999."

Chennault "has served as a committeewoman of the Washington, D.C. Republican Party since 1960...was the founder and chairperson of the National Republican Asian Assembly" and has advocated greater participation in political affairs by Chinese- and other Asian-Americans, and also has discussed relations between the U.S. and China.

She has also promoted her husband's legacy. In 1976, she came to Baton Rouge , Louisiana, for a ceremony honoring Chennault hosted by the city Mayor-President W.W. Dumas and then Governor Edwin Washington Edwards. Chennault grew up near Waterproof and Ferriday , Louisiana.

Role in the Nixon campaign sabotage of Paris Peace Accords

Recorded in Nixon, A Life, by Jonathan Aitken, notes of Patrick Hillings, the former congressman accompanying the candidate's 1967 trip to Taipei, Nixon interjected just after an unexpected encounter with Mrs. Chennault "Get her away from me, Hillings, she's a chatterbox." Yet according to records of President Lyndon B. Johnson's secret monitoring of South Vietnamese officials and his political foes, Anna Chennault played a crucial role on behalf of the Nixon campaign It was through Chennault's intercession that the Nixon campaign advised Saigon to refuse participation in the talks, promising a better deal once elected. Records of FBI wiretaps show that Chennault phoned Bui Diem on November 2 with the message "hold on, we are gonna win." "The tactic ???worked???, in that the South Vietnamese junta withdrew from the talks on the eve of the election, thereby destroying the peace initiative on which the Democrats had based their campaign. " Before the elections President Johnson ???suspected (???) Richard Nixon, of political sabotage that he called treason???. In part because Nixon won the presidency, no one was ever prosecuted for this alleged crime.


  • The Freedom Award of the Order of Lafayette (1966)

  • The Freedom Award from the Free China Association (1966)

  • The Award of Honor from the Chinese-American Alliance (1971)


  • Catherine Forslund, Anna Chennault: Informal Diplomacy and Asian Relations (2002) ISBN 0-8420-2833-1

  • Hyung-chan Kim, chief editor, Distinguished Asian Americans, A Biographical Dictionary , Greenwood Press (1999), pp. 55, 56.


Anna Chennault has written several books:

  • The Education of Anna (1980)

  • Song of Yesterday (1961) in Chinese

  • M.E.E. (1963) in Chinese

  • My Two Worlds (1965) in Chinese

  • The Other Half (1966) in Chinese

  • Letters from the U.S.A. (1967)

  • Journey among Friends and Strangers (1978, Chinese edition)


  • National League of America

  • PEN Women

  • Writer's Association

  • Free China Writer's Association

  • 14th Air Force Association

  • USAF Wives Club

  • Flying Tiger Association

  • American Newspaper Women's Club of Washington

  • Theta Sigma Phi

  • National Military Family Association, founder and chairperson

  • Committee of 100



  • ???The Trials of Henry Kissinger??? documentary by Eugene Jarecki (video, 1h19). Interview of Anna Chennault featured in sequence on Nixon campaign sabotage of Paris Peace Accords: start 15min 20sec ??? end 20min 10sec.


This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Anna Chen Chennault".


Last Modified:   2011-01-15


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