The republic of China
(1912-1949) In the industrial city of Wuhan, a soldiers' group with
only a loose connection to Sun's alliance rose in rebellion in the
early morning of Oct. 10, 1911 (since celebrated as Double Ten,
the tenth day of the tenth month). The Manchu governor and his commander
fled, and a Chinese commander, Li Yuan-hung, was pressured into
taking over the leadership. By early December all of the central,
southern, and northwestern provinces had declared independence.
Sun Yat-sen, who was in the United States during the revolution,
returned and was chosen head of the provisional government of the
Republic of China in Nanjing. The Manchu court quickly summoned
Yuan Shikai, the former commander of the reformed Northern Army.
Personally ambitious and politically shrewd, Yuan carried out negotiations
with both the Manchu court and the revolutionaries. Yuan was able
to persuade the Manchus to abdicate peacefully in return for the
safety of the imperial family. On Feb. 12, 1912, the regent of the
6-year-old emperor formally announced the abdication. The Manchu
rule in China ended after 267 years and with it the 2,000-year-old
imperial system.Early in March 1912, Sun Yat-sen resigned from the
presidency and, as promised, Yuan Shih-kai was elected his successor
at Nanjing. Inaugurated in March 1912 in Beijing, the base of his
power, Yuan established a republican system of government with a
premier, a cabinet, a draft constitution, and a plan for parliamentary
elections early in 1913. The Kuomintang (KMT, National People's
party), the successor to Sun Yat-sen's organization, was formed
in order to prepare for the election. Despite his earlier pledges
to support the republic, Yuan schemed to assassinate his opponents
and weaken the constitution and the parliament. By the end of 1914
he had made himself president for life and even planned to establish
an imperial dynasty with himself as the first emperor. His dream
was thwarted by the serious crisis of the Twenty-one Demands for
special privileges presented by the Japanese in January 1915 and
by vociferous opposition from many sectors of Chinese society. He
died in June 1916 a broken man. After Yuan's death, a number of
his proteges took positions of power in the Beijing government or
ruled as warlords in outlying regions. In August 1917 the Beijing
government joined the Allies and declared war on Germany. At the
peace conference in Versailles, France, the Chinese demand to end
foreign concessions in China was ignored.
Sun yat-sen (1866-1925). Known as the father of modern China, Sun
Yat-sen worked to achieve his lofty goals for modern China. These
included the overthrow of the Manchu Dynasty, the unification of
China, and the establishment of a republic. Sun Yat-sen was born
on Nov. 12, 1866, in Guangdong Province and attended several schools,
including one in Honolulu, Hawaii, before transferring to a college
of medicine in Hong Kong. Graduating in 1892, Sun almost immediately
abandoned medicine for politics. His role in an unsuccessful uprising
in Canton in 1895 prompted Sun to begin an exile that lasted for
16 years. Sun used this time to travel widely in Japan, Europe,
and the United States, enlisting sympathy and raising money for
his republican cause. Sun returned to China in 1911 after a successful
rebellion in Wuhan inspired uprisings in other provinces. As leader
of the Kuomintang, or Nationalist party, Sun was elected provisional
president of the newly declared republic but was forced to resign
in 1912.
In 1913 his disagreements with government policies led Sun to organize
a second revolution. Failing to regain power, Sun left once again
for Japan, where he organized a separate government. Sun returned
to China and attempted to set up a new government in 1917 and 1921
before successfully installing himself as generalissimo of a new
regime in 1923.
Sun increasingly relied on aid from the Soviet Union, and in 1924
he reorganized the Kuomintang on the model of the Soviet Communist
party. Sun also founded the Whampoa Military Academy and appointed
Chiang Kai-shek as its president. Sun summarized his policies in
the Three Principles of the People--nationalism, democracy, and
socialism. He died of cancer in Peking on March 12, 1925. Sun's
tomb in Nanking is now a national shrine.
The May Fourth Movement
After World War I the Chinese felt betrayed. Anger and frustration
erupted in demonstrations on May 4, 1919, in Beijing. Joined by
workers and merchants, the movement spread to major cities. The
Chinese representative at Versailles refused to endorse the peace
treaty, but its provisions remained unchanged. Disillusioned with
the West, many Chinese looked elsewhere for help.
The May Fourth Movement, which grew out of the student uprising,
attacked Confucianism, initiated a vernacular style of writing,
and promoted science. Scholars of international stature, such as
John Dewey and Bertrand Russell, were invited to lecture. Numerous
magazines were published to stimulate new thoughts. Toward the end
of the movement's existence, a split occurred among its leaders.
Some, like Ch'en Tu-hsiu and Li Ta-chao, were beginning to be influenced
by the success of the Russian Revolution of 1917, which contrasted
sharply with the failure of the 1911 Revolution in China to change
the social order and improve conditions. By 1920, people associated
with the Comintern (Communist International) were disseminating
literature in China and helping to start Communist groups, including
one led by Mao Zedong. A meeting at Shanghai in 1921 was actually
the first party congress of the Communist Party of China (CCP).
The CCP was so small that the Soviet Union looked elsewhere for
a viable political ally. A Comintern agent, Adolph Joffe, was sent
to China to approach Sun Yat-sen, who had failed to obtain assistance
from Great Britain or the United States. The period of Sino-Soviet
collaboration began with the Sun-Joffe Declaration of Jan. 26, 1923.
The KMT was recognized by the Soviet Union, and the Communists were
admitted as members. With Soviet aid, the KMT army was built up.
A young officer, Chiang Kai-shek, was sent to Moscow for training.
Upon returning, he was put in charge of the Whampoa Military Academy,
established to train soldiers to fight the warlords, who controlled
much of China (See Chiang Kai-shek). Zhou Enlai (also Chou En-lai)
of the CCP was deputy director of the academy's political department.
Sun Yat-sen, whose power base was in the south, had planned to send
an expedition against the northern warlords, but he died before
it could get under way. Chiang Kai-shek, who succeeded him in the
KMT leadership, began the northern expedition in July 1926. The
Nationalist army met little resistance and by April 1927 had reached
the lower Yangtze. Meanwhile, Chiang, claiming to be a sincere follower
of Sun Yat-sen, had broken with the left-wing elements of the KMT.
After the Nationalist forces had taken Shanghai, a Communist-led
general strike was suppressed with bloodshed. Following suppressions
in other cities, Chiang set up his own government at Nanjing on
April 18, 1927. He professed friendship with the Soviet Union, but
by July 1927 he was expelling Communists from the KMT. Some left-wingers
left for the Soviet Union. The northern expedition was resumed,
and in 1928 Chiang took Peking. China was formally unified. Nationalist
China was recognized by the Western powers and supported by loans
from foreign banks.
The Nationalist Eera (1928-1937). The Nationalist period began with
high hopes and much promise. More could have been accomplished had
it not been for the problems of Comintern corruption and Japanese
aggression. In his efforts to combat them both, Chiang neglected
the land reform needed to improve the lives of the peasants. Driven
from the cities, the Communists concentrated on organizing the peasants
in the countryside. On Nov. 1, 1931, they proclaimed the establishment
of the Chinese Soviet Republic in the southeastern province of Jiangxi,
with Mao Zedong as chairman. Here the first units of the Chinese
Workers' and Peasants' Red Army were formed. While conducting guerrilla
warfare in these regions, the soldiers carried out an agrarian revolution
that was based on Mao's premise that the best way to win the conflict
was to isolate the cities by gaining control of the countryside
and the food supply. A military man by temperament and training,
Chiang sought to eliminate the Communists by force. He defined his
anti-Communist drive as "internal pacification before resistance
to external attack," and he gave it more importance than opposition
to the increasingly aggressive Japanese. With arms and military
advisers from Nazi Germany, Chiang carried out a series of "extermination
campaigns" that killed about a million people between 1930
and 1934. Chiang's fifth campaign, involving over half a million
troops, almost annihilated the Communists. Faced with the dilemma
of being totally destroyed in Jiangxi or attempting an almost impossible
escape, the Communists decided to risk the escape. On Oct. 15, 1934,
they broke through the tight KMT siege. Over 100,000 men and women
set out on the Long March of about 6,000 miles (9,600 kilometers)
through China's most rugged terrain to find a new base in the northwest.
In the meantime, the Japanese had made steady inroads into China.
The Mukden Incident of 1931, through which Mukden was occupied by
the Japanese, was initiated by Japanese officers stationed along
the South Manchurian Railway. This was followed by the occupation
of Manchuria and the creation of the puppet state of Manchukuo in
1932. By the mid-1930s the Japanese had seized Inner Mongolia and
parts of northeastern China and had created the North China Autonomous
Region with no resistance from the Nationalists. Anti-Japanese sentiment
mounted in China, but Chiang ignored it and in 1936 launched yet
another extermination campaign against the Communists in Shaanxi.
Chiang was forced to give up the anti-Communist drive when his troops
mutinied and arrested him as he arrived in Xi'an in December 1936
to plan strategy. He was released after he agreed to form a united
front with the CCP against the Japanese, who were making steady
inroads into China.
In China, World War II broke out on July 7, 1937, with a seemingly
insignificant little battle between Chinese and Japanese troops
near Peking, called the Marco Polo Bridge Incident. Within a few
days, the Japanese had occupied Peking, and the fighting spread
rapidly. The war in China fell into three stages. The first (1937-1939)
was characterized by the phenomenally rapid Japanese occupation
of most of China's east coast, including such major cities as Shanghai,
Nanjing, and Canton. The Nationalist government moved to the interior,
ultimately to Chongqing in Sichuan, and the Japanese established
puppet governments in Peking in 1937 and in Nanjing in 1940. The
second stage (1939-1943) was a period of waiting, as Chiang blockaded
the Communists in the northwest (despite the united front) and waited
for help from the United States, which had declared war on Japan
in 1941. In the final stage (1944-1945), the United States provided
massive assistance to Nationalist China, but the Chongqing government,
weakened by inflation, impoverishment of the middle class, and low
troop morale was unable to take full advantage of it. Feuds among
the KMT generals and between Chiang and his United States military
adviser, General Joseph Stilwell, further hampered the KMT. When
Japanese defeat became a certainty in the spring of 1945, the Communists
seemed in a better position to take over from the Japanese garrisons
than the KMT, which was far away in the rear of the formation. A
United States airlift of KMT troops enabled them to occupy many
cities, but the countryside stayed with the Communists.
After the end of World War II in Europe in May 1945, the Allied
war effort moved to the east. The Soviet Union joined the war against
Japan at the end of July. On August 6 and 9 the United States dropped
the world's first atomic bombs on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki. On Aug. 14, 1945, the Japanese surrendered. In China,
however, civil war raged over who should take charge of the Japanese
arms and equipment. At the end of August an agreement was reached
in Chongqing between a CCP delegation and the KMT, but the truce
was brief.
In January 1946 a cease-fire was negotiated by United States General
George C. Marshall. The Nationalist government returned to Nanjing,
and China was recognized by the new United Nations as one of the
five great powers. The United States supplied the Chiang government
with an additional $2 billion ($1.5 billion had been spent for the
war). Although the KMT's dominance in weapons and supplies was enormous,
it was kept under guard in the cities, while the Communists held
the surrounding countryside. As inflation soared, both civilians
and the military became demoralized. The CCP, sensing the national
mood, proposed a coalition government. The KMT refused, and fighting
erupted again.
The short and decisive civil war that followed was resolved in two
main places: Manchuria andthe Huai River area. Despite a massive
airlift of KMT forces by the United States, Manchuria was lost in
October 1948 after 300,000 KMT forces surrendered to the CCP. By
the end of 1948 the KMT had lost over half a million men, more than
two thirds of whom had defected. In April 1949 the Communists moved
south of the Yangtze. After the fall of Nanjing and Shanghai, KMT
resistance evaporated. By the autumn, the Communists had taken all
mainland territories except Tibet. Chiang Kai-shek and a number
of his associates fled to the island of Taiwan, where they set up
what they claimed was the rightful government of China.
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