Significance of the Chinese military contribution to World War 2 disputed.

bobcou

New Member
Registered Member
My feeling is that people like Bobcou are too focused on the sort of ideological ethicism in terms of virtue for its own value and not fully seeing nor really understanding the material processes in which communities develop to improve themselves. As the old adage goes 'freedom arrived through slave systems, not despite it'. But yes lets get back on topic.

WRT the CCP and KMT during the War of Resistance, things would have been far better if the KMT had gone leftwards with the CCP elements incorporated in it, imagine KMT with CCP organizational efficiency and coordination in both guerilla and conventional operations, that would have been a devastating effect on Japanese military forces.

You are right, I am Chinese thus I am passionately talking about China.
If you ask me about the Jews that got killed by the millions in WW2. I would say yes, but the UN and NATO formed, and the world has learned from the mistakes from the past. One sentence.

The difference really is, we are living it right now, and you are trying to analyze using a secondary source. All I have been doing is using myself as a primary source and saying what is happening. If you want to say what will become of what, then lets wait 10 years.
 

rhino123

Pencil Pusher
VIP Professional
WRT the CCP and KMT during the War of Resistance, things would have been far better if the KMT had gone leftwards with the CCP elements incorporated in it, imagine KMT with CCP organizational efficiency and coordination in both guerilla and conventional operations, that would have been a devastating effect on Japanese military forces.

Agreed. But I believe in the beginning, KMT did cooperate with the CCP though... until Chiang decided not to provide any supplies to the CCP later on.
 

Quickie

Colonel
1) Regards to economy stopping
- In developed countries, you have social insurance for everyone except aliens. There is unemployment insurance (though not much for most, it is enough to not starve). The problem here is with China, is that ALL the migrant villagers who are moving to the cities, are doing it at 100% risk. They are too poor to afford insurance, and are looking for advancement opportunities outside of their low income villages. Some countries have socialist policies like gov-controlled medical care. China is cash first for everything. So all the migrant workers will all just lay down and die if they have no money? The lack of a cash safety net is a major problem.

I'm not too familiar with China's welfare and pension scheme system but I've read that under the hukou system, immigrants can always go back to their village to work the land or to farm. All they have to do is reapply for the land to be leased back to them as provided for by the system. This is one issue the authorities are trying to deal with while figuring out what to do with the hukou system, as going back to farm is a form of insurance for the migrant workers.
 

Roger604

Senior Member
One of the main reasons that China's contributions to the war effort is marginalized because of politics. If you live in the west they always say that WW2 was started by Hitler in Europe in 1939. They don't consider Japan's invasion of China in 1937 or 1931 as part of WW2. Because this period makes the west look bad as they stood by and allowed millions of Chinese civilians to be slaughter by Japan. Also with the 1949 victory of the CCP vs the KMT the need to play down the war in China so that the west can repair their relations with Japan as part of Cold War politics.

Because the west ignores this period of Chinese history they constantly misinterpret the present Chinese defense policies. In the west it would be like not invoking 9/11 every time security has to tighten to prevent another terrorist attack.

When the west establishes 1939 as the beginning of WW2 it also allows them to excludes many of China's great victories against Japan. Even though Japan's invasion of China in 1937 would lead the US to declaring an oil embargo on Japan. The oil embargo on Japan imposed by the US leads to the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Japanese campaign to seize the oil fields of south east Asia.
Bingo! In other words, it's revisionism of the past to fit the present agenda. Chiang Kai Shek's KMT was one of the Big 4 allied powers.

Now all of the sudden the West wants to contain China so -- oops -- China disappears off the list of major allied powers.
 

vesicles

Colonel
Agreed. But I believe in the beginning, KMT did cooperate with the CCP though... until Chiang decided not to provide any supplies to the CCP later on.

I think there had been so much distrust between the two parties. even when they incorporated together, KMT was suspicious of the intention of CCP while CCP was suspicious that KMT would eventually wanted to eliminate them. So in other words, both sides had their own self-fulfilled prophecy. So it would be impossible for both of them to coexist at the same time in the same govn't. At the time, the idea of democracy and sharing a govn't with some others was not a well-accepted idea. Although both sides talked about this idea, deep in their mind, they still thought as ancient emperors. So in a sense, the outcome of what happened in the WWII was inevitable.
 

Schumacher

Senior Member
Some are too quick to blame CCP propaganda for branding KMT or more specifically Chiang Kai Shek as an incompetent, corrupt fool. I believe the Americans too called him peanut brain or something like that.
 

montyp165

Junior Member
You are right, I am Chinese thus I am passionately talking about China.
If you ask me about the Jews that got killed by the millions in WW2. I would say yes, but the UN and NATO formed, and the world has learned from the mistakes from the past. One sentence.

The difference really is, we are living it right now, and you are trying to analyze using a secondary source. All I have been doing is using myself as a primary source and saying what is happening. If you want to say what will become of what, then lets wait 10 years.

I may be an ABC, but I am no less interested in seeing China become fully developed on its own terms and not of the Western critics more concerned about their own egos than the welfare of the Chinese public. All countries have growing pains in these circumstances, South Korea being a good example, and some may have more baggage than others, but it is too be expected given human nature. But indeed lets wait 10 years, Chinese will be better off than before, and CCP administrative prudence will show bigger dividends than the economic ideologues undermining the US.


Some are too quick to blame CCP propaganda for branding KMT or more specifically Chiang Kai Shek as an incompetent, corrupt fool. I believe the Americans too called him peanut brain or something like that.

That was something General Stillwell in particular was noted for mentioning in his discussions with other US officials.
 
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Lezt

Junior Member
Lezt,
I didn't want to go in depth as that would make it even more complicated.
My point was, migrant workers come and go through major cities; but they don't have any insurance in case economy slows down. In the case it does slow down, its either food hand outs or starve. My reference towards the Western was that despite the US having 15 million unemployed, they still get some money from the government monthly to PREVENT starvation. China, doesn't have this. I know the costs etc, but my point was towards China as they don't have this social safety net. (Therefore the need to prevent recession at all costs). Notice I am focusing on the people and how they will act instead of the impacts on government finances.

But again, any other country, I`m not going to try and debate cause I`ve been in China for awhile now and haven`t had anything besides CNN so don`t know. All I'm going to say is about China. This is a China forum, didn't want to go really go off base. I'm not saying China is the pinnacle corrupt nation of the world.

My reference towards the food price was towards this current winter, where they are worried that if food costs are too high, and if people can`t afford there will be unrest. They have stiff penalties for people who are hoarding food products to sell and very strict orders to maintain low prices from top to down. Its not about fertilizer, and actual costs, its worry about judicial hoarding of prices in order to gain more profit in times or possible bad supply. Have you considered, why this is such an issue for China? Hungry people don't complain, they riot. And this is where you are not entirely correct.

Obviously, not every single dynasty downfall was the result of peasants. But the huge majority are. The exception is Song Dynasty, that one fell really purely because of the Mongols. But the rest, are all peasants or heavily reliant on peasants. If you are referring to the Jin and Manchus, do you know Li Zhicheng? Did you know that dude messed out Ming Dynasty to near collapse and then the Manchus flooded in? Ming already had a tough time against that rebel. In summary, the peasants uprised first which caused enormous instability before the Manchus came.

If you want to say Britain, it wasn't Britain that forced the Qing Dynasty collapse. Qing was particularly hit pretty hard itself due to bad harvests before the Opium Wars. While Britain certainly supported, it is not solely responsible. This involved with Qing's isolationist backward policies made people poor and eventually it is the peoples movement that Qing Dynasty collapsed.

I just mentioned GDP cause from farm to Chairman Hu, its all fake. Thats just my point

.

Bobcou, You have to assume that having social safety nets are better than not having them to make your statement. And, by that statement, you are assuming that it is a natural progression to having a European/Canadian social safety net from not having one.

This is what I dispute, because there are inherent issues with social security nets such as much higher tax, increase in fraud, increase bureaucracy and increases basic necessity costs - it is not necessarily a good thing to have.

And thus, if you understood what I said, you will also find that I am focusing on the society not on the government.

Hungry people do riot, so does any disgruntled civilians like those students in the UK right now. Dissatisfied people are not happy and it is true anywhere, and this is no failure of the Chinese government; people will riot for any reason.

Viewing the change of dynasty as mainly a peasant revolt is naive, The Xia was overthrown by the Shang by rebel nobility, Shang was defeated by Zhou which is not "chinese", Zhou inturn was destroyed by internal nobles. Qin was defeated by Chu rebels whom subsequently was subdued by the han rebels, Where Jin the decendents of the defeated Wei of the seven kingdom period disposed of the Han.

I think you get the picture, it is not peasant revolts, but rebel mobilities and the middle class which caused the majority of dynastic failure.

The Ming is an interesting story, the rebels did capture the imperial city finding the coffers empty, and the Ming relief army did arrive to retake the city, but so did the Manchus. Depending your perspective on the Manchus being decedents of the previous Jin, the Ming relief army sided with the Manchus.

Had the Manchus not be there, or the eight nation alliance, Chinese history would have been much different. But in all these cases, it is the nobility/middle class/educated whom organized, funded and perpetuated the military, economics and systems to replace the government. The peasant had traditionally been only a tool.

Back to the GDP, you can call China's fake, but so is everybody else.

How China contributed to WW2? I think it is more important in noting how China did not join the Axis, being a large supplier of rare earth metals to Germany and China's natural resource would have made the Axis much stronger.

What China did, in defiant of Tojo when he said that to conquer the world, first you need to conquer China, to conquer China, you need to first conquer Manchuria; is to hold the Japanese war machine at bay.
 

rhino123

Pencil Pusher
VIP Professional
How China contributed to WW2? I think it is more important in noting how China did not join the Axis, being a large supplier of rare earth metals to Germany and China's natural resource would have made the Axis much stronger.

The main reason China did not join the Axis (in my opinion) was because Chiang had always viewed himself and China as allies to the US. And US was not in the Axis. Another reason was the fact that Japan had invaded China and they are the 'enemy', Japan on another hand is one of the major Axis players thus there would be no way that China would join the Axis.

The most important thing I see here was the fact that China declared war on Germany, Japan and Italy on 9 Dec 1941. This is a move that I frankly find quite puzzling given the fact that China had been on friendly term with Germany and many of the KMT's most elite units are trained by the Germans and armed by the Germans.

Not joining the Axis is one thing, being allies to the US is another... but declaring war with Germany is something of a surprise. I mean, China could remain central, fighting only for her own survival and not join any faction. Unless Chiang actually forsee the Axis's downfall in not too far away future thus the bold move?
 

Lezt

Junior Member
The main reason China did not join the Axis (in my opinion) was because Chiang had always viewed himself and China as allies to the US. And US was not in the Axis. Another reason was the fact that Japan had invaded China and they are the 'enemy', Japan on another hand is one of the major Axis players thus there would be no way that China would join the Axis.

The most important thing I see here was the fact that China declared war on Germany, Japan and Italy on 9 Dec 1941. This is a move that I frankly find quite puzzling given the fact that China had been on friendly term with Germany and many of the KMT's most elite units are trained by the Germans and armed by the Germans.

Not joining the Axis is one thing, being allies to the US is another... but declaring war with Germany is something of a surprise. I mean, China could remain central, fighting only for her own survival and not join any faction. Unless Chiang actually forsee the Axis's downfall in not too far away future thus the bold move?


Rhino, I think it is one of those Hitler moments, he wanted Japan to help Germany with Russia, and Japan is pressuring Germany to break her assistance to China which Germany did in 1938.

Lets face it, the KMT are facist and I would think that Hitler would liked Chaig Kai Shek and vice versa. But by 1941, the main backers of China is the Soviets and the Americans, it is really a political move to declare war on Germany and Italy; look how fast the burma road was constructed.
 
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