Title: China The Interwar Years
1ChinaThe Interwar Years
2Overview Situation After WWI
- By 1919, China had repeatedly been defeated by
foreign countries - 1895 1st Sino-Japanese War
- Boxer rebellion
- Economic incursions
3Domestic Conflicts
4May Fourth Movement (May 4, 1919)
- The movement started because of public
dissatisfaction with the Treaty of Versailles - It spread to over 20 provinces and 100 cities
across China - On May 4th, students and professors of the Peking
University and other local schools held a
demonstration in front of Tiananmen denouncing
the Treaty of Versailles - Soon, many students from across China went on
strike - In early June, workers and businessmen also went
on strike to support the students - Under the pressure, the Chinese representatives
at the Paris Peace Conference did not sign the
peace treaty
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6Northern Expedition (1926-1927)
- KMT, CCP, and the Soviet Union joined forces to
defeat three powerful warlords in Northern China - The National Revolutionary Army (NPA), equipped
with Soviet arsenal, confronted each warlord one
by one - The NPA had the support of the people, who were
suppressed by the warlords - The warlords were defeated, but in their place,
new warlords came to power - The Northern Expedition resulted in an end to
internal disorder and began the formation of a
centrally united China
7Political
- 1911-1925 Dr. Sun Yat-Sen organized a modern
political party and modern army, fought for
control with the CCP after the collapse of feudal
China - 1926 the Chinese Nationalist Party formed
- Two major political problems
- how to deal with two or three of the remaining
army commanders who only followed the central
government - how to cope with the ever growing communist party
that was thriving among the poverty-stricken and
dissatisfied peasants of central China - General Chiang Kai-Shek brought the Kuomintang
and the military together
8Kuomingtang
- Chinese Nationalist Party
- Centre-right
- Now Taiwan's largest political party
- Retreated from mainland-Chinese politics in 1949
- Led by Chiang Kai-Shek during the interwar
period, after the death of Sun Yat-Sen
9- The Chinese government
- bound by interlocking treaties and was not fully
sovereign in China - past regimes had accumulated a vast foreign debt
against which the central governments revenues
were pledged for repayment - January 1924 the KMT had its First National
Congress in Canton, new party program drafted,
goals including - social reform
- fundamental readjustment of Chinas international
status - Sun was the designated leader of the party and
had veto rights on all decisions, a central
executive committee was elected to manage party
affairs and confirm Suns decisions
10- China lacked a unified and centralized political
structure - the south was detached from Beijings control,
and the districts among the southern provinces
were run by different warlords - Szechwan was a world in itself that was divided
among several military rulers - Christian missionaries operated many schools,
hospitals and other philanthropic enterprises in
China, and they were all protected by
extraterritoriality
11- There was a plan for a military academy
- to train a corps of young officers that would be
loyal to the party - Officers would become the lower level commanders
in a new national revolutionary army that was to
be created - After the death of Sun, the KMT went through a
period of inner conflict, even though it still
progressed steadily with the help from the
Russians - the conflict was caused mainly by the
radicalization of the party under the influence
of the Communists who organized labor unions and
peasant associations and pushed class struggle
and the anti-imperialist movement - The two parties competed on
- the direction of the nationalist policy
- control of mass organizations
- recruitment of new members
12The Chinese Communist Party
- The CCP grew from the May Fourth Movement
- Motive spread Marxism to China (from the Soviet
Union), national revolution directed against
foreign imperialism and Chinese militarism - With a representative from the Soviet Union, a
Socialist Youth League helped starting to recruit
young intellectuals - Recruited students that had
- spent time in Russia for training
- studied in France and had gained experience of
the French labour movement and with the French
Communist Party
13Social
- 1919 May 4th Movement, professors and students
who believed that China needed a social
revolution and began to see Soviet Russia as a
model (Li Dazhao and Chen Duxiu where the CCPs
cofounders) - There had been a growing unrest among the
students in China due to two reasons - the Japanese occupation of Manchuria
- the impotency of the Chinese government
- the signatory parties to the peace treaties in
checking Japan's military operations - Students demanded that they be given military
training, the students aggressiveness was the
main reason between clashes with authorities
14- 1932 the Mass Education Movement played a big
part in adult education - Motto to eliminate illiteracy in this
generation - They determined that literacy does not
necessarily mean education, so they experimented
on three broader fields of cultural education,
economic education, and public health - The China Foundation for the Promotion of
Education and Culture decided to give 50 000
annually to the translation of Western literature
to Chinese - Due to traditional good will between China and
the United States and also because of the
increasing number of Chinese engineers and
business men being educated in US, trade between
the two countries grew
15International Conflicts
16Mukden Incident (September 18,1931)
- Some Japanese junior officers blew up about 1.5m
of railway that was operated by a Japanese
company in China - The Japanese then blamed the Chinese for this,
and used this as an excuse to annex Manchuria
17Invasion of Manchuria (September 19, 1931)
- It was the start of two decades of Sino-Japanese
conflict, was Chinas main international conflict - The Japanese cabinet believed that the Mukden
Incident was a conspiracy by the officers, but in
the end ceded to let the army annex Manchuria - Without the permission of the Emperor, the army
expanded their operation to the South Manchurian
Railway - By February 5 of the next year, the Three Eastern
Provinces were annexed - In response, the Chinese boycotted Japanese
goods, reducing the figure to one-sixth, which
led to the Japanese invasion of Shanghai - In 1933, after Japan withdrew from the League of
Nations, invaded Northern China, which was given
back to the Chinese after an agreement - The Japanese occupied parts of China until the
Marco Polo Bridge Incident
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19Marco Polo Bridge Incident (July 7, 1937)
- Japan claims that a soldier is missing in Wanping
Town, and wants to send in the army to look for
him - KMT forces denies the request, and Japan sent an
ultimatum that if they were not allowed in within
the hour, they would open fire on the town - By the afternoon of the next day, the Japanese
took over Wanping Town - KMT, after reinforcement from nearby units,
outnumbered the Japanese, completely retook the
town the day after - The two parties then went to negotiate (Zhang and
Hashimoto) - The KMT agreed to all of Japans conditions in
return that they do not invade Beijing - As Zhang left, the Japanese launched a full-scale
attack on Beijing - The Japanese conquered the bridge and Wanping in
3 days, and Nanyuan Town the day after - Beijing fell to the Japanese on July 29, Tianjin
on 30th, and the North China Plain by the end of
the year - The Chinese armies were constantly retreating
until the Chinese victory at Tai'er Zhuang
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21- When the KMT saw that the League of Nations was
powerless in checking Japan on Manchuria, the
leaders decided to take back the lost territory
by force, leading to
22Second Sino-Japanese War (July 7, 1937
September 9, 1945)
- It was an incident until the attack on Pearl
Harbour, and the Chinese officially declared war
on Japan - This Sino-Japanese War merged into WWII
- The Chinese army was poorly equipped, and lost to
the Japanese army in many engagements - Battle of Shanghai Chiang sent his
German-trained soldiers (his best) to defend
Shanghai after 3 months, the Chinese were
defeated and had to retreat to Nanjing, but it
showed that the Chinese were not defeated easily - After declaring war on the Japanese (December 7,
1941), China started to win back their land with
aid from the United States
23The Rape of Nanjing/Nanjing Massacre(December
13, 1937)
- The capital of China was transferred from Beijing
to Nanjing - As soon as the attack began, the bureaucrats fled
- Japanese war crimes against the Chinese,
including execution, rape, looting and burning - Target non-military, mostly civilians affected,
population around 1 million before massacre - The city was full of Chinese refugees, who fled
from other parts of China (ie. Shanghai, where
Japanese had just invaded) - 300,000 Chinese soldiers and civilians were
killed, and 20,000 women were raped - Atrocious and barbaric methods of killing
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25International Alliances, Pacts Treaties
26- November 1921 to February 1922 Washington Naval
Conference - desire to adopt a policy designed to stabilize
conditions in the Far East - to safeguard the rights and interests of China
- to promote intercourse between China and the
other Powers upon the basis of equality of
opportunity - To evade the technical difficulties, the Japanese
created a separate state called Manchukuo (the
1928 Kellogg Pact and the Nine-Power Treaty/Open
Door Policy) - According to Lytton Commission
- Japan was the clear aggressor
- But China did not participate in negotiations
with Japan - Manchuria would become an autonomous nation
27Sino-German Cooperation (1920s-1930s)
- The Chinese needed to modernize their military
and industry in order to defend against Japanese
aggressions - The Germans were in short supply of raw materials
- The cooperation helped the Chinese greatly in
their resistance against the Japanese in the
Sino-Japanese war - Max Bauer was invited to survey investment
possibilities in China in 1926 - He advised on the modernization of Chinese
industry and army to the KMT government - He supported opening up the Chinese market to
spur German production and exports - Before, China only had 10 000 miles of railways
(and most was in Manchuria, under Japanese
control), but construction of railway tracks
picked up pace from funding and modern technology
from Germany - Chinese military was modernized to German
standards - Cooperation ended when Hitler came to power
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29- Although the great powers tried to refrain from
helping particular parts of China, it was not for
the best because China was in turmoil with
regional militarism in full tide, as well as a
movement against the unequal treaties that were
beginning to take shape
30Overview Situation Prior to WWII
- The Chinese were resisting Japanese since 1937
(2nd Sino-Japanese War) - KMT refused to ally with the Communist Party of
China to fight the Japanese, and opted to fight
both at the same time - The Japanese are a disease of skin, the
Communists are a disease of the heart. - - Chiang Kai-Shek
- China was weakened by civil war and the people
were divided
31Bibliography
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Foreign Relations of the United States 1922. 17
Nov. 2006. Department of State Publication 2033.
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"The Boxer Rebellion." Small Planet
Communications. 2000. Small Planet
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lthttp//www.smplanet.com/imperialism/fists.htmlgt. - "China in the Interwar Years." China in the
Interwar Years. California Polytechnic State
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gsteenso/l7.htmlgt. - "Japanese War Crimes." Nanjing Massacre. 1995. 17
Nov. 2006 lthttp//www.centurychina.com/wiihist/njm
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Retrieved from the Internet on November 20, 2006
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lthttp//www.travelchinaguide.com/intro/history/qin
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http//www.wikipedia.org/.