Red China: Mao Crushes Chiang's Kuomintang, 1949
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About this ebook
Gerry van Tonder
Born in Southern Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe, historian and author Gerry van Tonder came to Britain in 1999. Specializing in military history, Gerry has authored multiple books on Rhodesia and the co-authored definitive Rhodesia Regiment 1899–1981. Gerry presented a copy to the regiment’s former colonel-in-chief, Her Majesty the Queen.
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Red China - Gerry van Tonder
INTRODUCTION
The epic proportions of the tragedy of the country that is China before, during and after the Second World War, is difficult to perceive in terms of sheer magnitude and scale. The cold statistic of 13 million casualties sustained during the war offers a semblance of the problems that confronted the nation’s ideologically diverse leaders after Japan’s capitulation.
Initially, the prominent role played by the Nationalists during the conflict seemed set to take China through the healing process and into a complicated future. However, such appearances were deceiving. Mao Zedong’s brand of people-centred communism ensured his hold over vast areas of northern China, while Chiang Kai-shek’s nationalist regime appeared bent on self-destruction as a miscellany of failures frustrated even his most loyal allies.
The closing stages of the Second World War in Asia was a Soviet affair. With Berlin captured by the victorious Red Army, ending the war in Europe, the wily Joseph Stalin redirected his military resources towards the Far East. In the northeastern Chinese puppet state of Manchukuo—‘State of Manchuria’— acquired by Japan in 1931, a vast agro-industrial empire had grown in isolation as the war in the Pacific effectively kept the region out of the war. The Kwantung Army, an army group of the Imperial Japanese Army, governed Manchukuo, its chiefs of staff holding the top military and civil administration positions. Originally formed as a garrison to protect the railroads paid for by Japanese banks, over a period of twenty-five years the Kwantung Army outgrew its humble beginnings, peaking at a strength of more than 1.3 million, assuming an exaggerated importance.
Its officers were complicit in the Mukden Incident in 1931 that implicated China, thereby justifying the seizure of the territory. Its role in the Marco Polo Bridge incident in 1937 launched the bitter Sino-Japanese War.
But for much of the Great Pacific War, as Tokyo called its struggle with the Allies from 1941 until 1945, the Kwantung Army remained idle, having little use in any theatre. As a result, it had grown large, impressive, and impotent.
On 9 August 1945, just three days after ‘Little Boy’ incinerated Hiroshima and coinciding with the same terrible hours when a flight of B-29s delivered ‘Fat Man’ to Nagasaki, the Soviet Red Army sealed Manchukuo’s fate. Slicing across Outer Mongolia on horseback, muleback, on foot and truck and tread, one half of a giant pincer carved a path to encircle the Kwantung Army in China’s dusty central plains.
The other pincer, ferried by river boats across the Amur and Usuri rivers, barrelled down on the Japanese with violent force, their path softened by the largest Soviet airborne operation of the war. Like the rest of Imperial Japan’s legions, the Kwantung Army was full of ardent soldiers equipped with inadequate weapons. Armoured cars and light tanks were the best that could be mustered against the Soviet T-34s. From radios to howitzers, Japan’s soldiers were ill-prepared to face off against the combined arms of their nemesis.
The remnants of the Kwantung Army surrendered en masse a week before the United States hailed VJ Day. The spoils of Manchukuo were for the Soviets to do with as they pleased. This meant the wholesale appropriation—more like pillaging— of machine tools, generators, raw materials, and whatever else could be disassembled and sent back to the Russian heartland. Included among this booty were unwanted Japanese prisoners numbering hundreds of thousands, well-appointed administrative buildings of a government that no longer existed, and the former Chinese Emperor Pu Yi, who was once again exiled—this time to the Soviet Union. But while the Soviet investment of Manchuria, its proper westernized name, seemed like a timely effort that hastened the war’s end, it did give Moscow a perfect opportunity to return favours; though not to the Americans, whose merchant fleet had delivered millions of tons in lend-lease aid over the past five years. China’s government, the Kuomintang (KMT), being so reliant on American support, allowed 50,000 marines to deploy in Manchuria to help the Soviets disarm and repatriate the resident Japanese population. But an attempt at delivering US marines to the old imperial capital of Peiping (also Beiping, later Peking / Beijing), and Qingdao was refused. The Soviets were just as steadfast in holding on to Port Arthur in the Liaotung Peninsula jutting along the rim of the Yellow Sea. As a further affront, the KMT was blocked from reclaiming Manchurian cities, which flew in the face of the Chiang Kai-shek regime’s Treaty of Friendship with the Soviet Union.
Emperor Puyi wearing Manchukuo uniform.
The New Emperor of Manchukuo
Pu Yi Enthroned
Hsingking, Manchuria
With quaint religious rites recalling China of the past, Pu Yi, the ex-boy Emperor of China, this morning became Emperor of the Japanese-protected realm of Manchukuo and its 30,000,000 inhabitants, under the title of Kang Teh (tranquillity and virtue
).
This was the second time Pu Yi had been made emperor, for at three years of age he ascended the throne of the Chinese Empire under the name of Hsuau Tung. But his father, Prince Chun, then ruled in his name until the revolution swept away the regime.
To-day’s ceremonies were divided into two parts—the religious observances dating back many centuries and the enthronement.
The first took place near the site of the future palace. In a square enclosure, screened by bunting of Imperial yellow, to a height of 12 feet, a circular Altar of Heaven,
seven feet high and 27 feet across, had been erected.
In the chill but clear air of the early morning, the highest officials of the new Manchu Empire had taken up their allotted positions. The distant strains of band music heralded the approach of the Emperor, through heavily guarded streets. He drove in a bullet-proof motor car, convoyed by nine other cars, containing his armed guard, and flanked by six motor cycles, with sidecars, filled with picked police.
As Pu Yi emerged from his car, he was seen to be wearing a fur-trimmed, pearl-bedecked hat, with red tassels, and a blue gown, richly embroidered with golden dragons and other symbols, the sleeves being of dark red. His outer coat, emblazoned with the Imperial dragon, bore the inscription in ancient characters: Jih yueh wan shou
—Ageless like the sun and moon.
The ceremony over, the Imperial party sped swiftly back through the silent streets to the palace. Troops kept citizens at a safe distance from the Emperor’s route.
Belfast News-Letter, Friday, 2 March 1934
Hidden in the minutiae of Soviet archives, the gambit playing out in Manchuria was the crowning glory for an audacious attempt to spread Moscow’s influence. Since 1919, agents of the nascent Soviet Union were laying the groundwork for the twentieth century’s most daring geopolitical project—bringing communism to Asia. Often resulting in minor gains at the cost of enormous losses, in 1945 the Red Army became a willing accomplice to the astute Mao Zedong and his People’s Liberation Army (PLA), who had spent the last ten years encircled in a remote corner of Shanxi, their final redoubt after the dreadful Long March.
Warlord Yan Xishan’s soldiers, Zuoquan County, Shanxi Province, 1925.
In a matter of months, some 300,000 troops, under the veteran PLA commander Lin Biao, crossed over to Manchuria. Experts at manoeuvre and subterfuge, the newly formed corps was allowed to equip themselves with captured Japanese weapons, and even received training at Kiamusze, a semi-clandestine staging ground near the Sino-Soviet border.
Years before the KMT had imposed a ‘United Front’ on the communists, who were surrounded by nearly half a million National Revolutionary Army (NRA) troops— Chiang’s armed forces—in their mountain enclave. The communists did pitch in, conducting a broad guerrilla campaign against Japanese-controlled cities and bases, although most of the time they were fighting Chinese ‘turncoat’ forces conscripted for garrison duty. In 1941, however, the CCP’s New Fourth Army clashed with KMT regular divisions, proving that the United Front bonds were far from permanent.
But Mao and his generals knew how to bide their time. In August 1945, Mao was flown to the capital Chungking for a conference with Chiang and the KMT leadership. The end of the war against Japan allowed the Allies to take stock. In the Chinese theatre, anywhere between 20 and 30 million civilians had died in the cruel years between 1937 and 1945. Since China had fought so desperately against the odds, she had lost a further 3.5 million soldiers. It was estimated that a quarter of China’s population was internally displaced or had lost their homes. The government was bankrupt and local industries were either destroyed or had been looted. Perhaps, as the Americans suggested, it was time to establish a lasting peace?
Mao was in Chungking until 10 October. He would participate in another round of talks in January the following year, this time with US General George C. Marshall doing his best to broker a power-sharing agreement between the factions.
Unknown to the Americans, the Chinese Communists had spent months preparing for all-out war against the KMT. What in previous years had been a genuine peasant army that travelled by foot was, in the space of less than a year, flush with rifles and machine guns, tanks and artillery, and with a total strength of 1.3 million.
By 1947, the hopes for a permanent United Front had disappeared without a trace. With much of north and northeast China reeling from the just-concluded world war, both sides readied themselves for a final struggle. The stakes could not have been higher. Whatever China could aspire to become, as a unified country commanding the largest population on earth, it had first to choose a course. Mao’s communists wanted perpetual revolution to replace the vestiges of the dynastic past. Chiang and the KMT, on the other hand, sought a place among the nations of the world.
1. THE REVOLUTION
The Chinese Communist Party (CCP) was born at a clandestine meeting overseen by a foreign agent. For years prior, lone provocateurs of the Communist International, or Comintern, stalked China’s cities and sought out local ideologues. Liberal ideas had spread across the mainland since before the turn of the century. Sun Yat-sen’s successful revolt in 1911 was supposed to be the shattering climax of this process, being the singular force that caused the weakening Qing Dynasty downfall. Sun and his allies expected to usher a new era of modernity that would launch China onto the world stage. Or so it was hoped. Sun’s ambitions were quickly thwarted by