SINO-JAPANESE WAR, SECOND

1937–45, conflict between Japanese and Chinese forces for control of the Chinese mainland. The war sapped the Nationalist government's strength while allowing the Communists to gain control over large areas through organization of guerrilla units. Thus, it was an important factor in the eventual Communist defeat of the Nationalist forces in 1949. In its early stage, the war was often called the China Incident.

Origins

Following the Manchurian Incident (Sept., 1931), the Japanese Kwantung army occupied Manchuria and established the puppet state of Manchukuo (Feb., 1932). Japan pressed China to recognize the independence of Manchukuo, suppress anti-Japanese activities, and form autonomous regional governments in N China. The Japanese were partially successful in 1933 and 1935 when they forced China to form two demilitarized autonomous zones bordering Manchuria.

Outbreak of War

Growing domestic opposition to the Nationalist government's policy of self-strengthening before counterattacking in N China and Manchuria led to the kidnapping of Chiang Kai-shek was kidnapped at Xi'an in Dec., 1936, by Chang Hsüeh-liang. Chiang was forced to agree to a united anti-Japanese front with the Communists as a condition for his release. The situation was tense, and in 1937 full war commenced. A clash (July, 1937) between soldiers of the Japanese garrison at Beijing and Chinese forces at the Marco Polo Bridge was the pretext for Japanese occupation at Beijing and Tianjin. Chiang Kai-shek refused to negotiate an end to hostilities on Japanese terms and placed crack troops outside the Japanese settlement at Shanghai. After a protracted struggle Shanghai and the national capital, Nanjing, fell to the Japanese. The Chinese broke the Huang He dikes (June, 1938) to slow the enemy advance. In late 1938, Hankou and Guangzhou were taken.

Japanese strategy was aimed at taking the cities, the roads, and the railroads, thereby gaining a net of control. Thus, although the Japanese by 1940 had swept over the eastern coastal area, guerrilla fighting still went on in the conquered regions. The Nationalist government, driven back to a temporary capital at Chongqing, struggled on with little help from outside. Chinese resources were inadequate, and the supplies sent over the Burma Road were far from sufficient. The Chinese cause continued to decline despite vast resistance and bloody fighting. Dubious of China's ability to sustain a protracted war, Wang Ching-wei broke with Chiang Kai-shek and established a collaborationist regime at Nanjing (1940).

World War II

The Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor brought the United States into the war and merged the Sino-Japanese War into World War II as China declared war on Japan, Germany, and Italy. American and British loans and supplies, the establishment of military air bases in China, and the aid of an increasing number of U.S. and British advisers helped relieve China as Japan diverted armies elsewhere. Nevertheless, China's military position continued to deteriorate until Apr., 1945. In May the Chinese launched a successful offensive at Zhijiang (Chihkiang) that lasted until Japanese capitulation on Aug. 14. The Japanese troops in China formally surrendered Sept. 9, 1945. By the provisions of the Cairo Declaration, Manchuria, Taiwan, and the Pescadores were restored to China.

Bibliography

See H. Feis, The China Tangle (1953); F. C. Jones, Japan's New Order in East Asia (1954); D. J. Lu, From the Marco Polo Bridge to Pearl Harbor (1961); J. H. Boyle, China and Japan at War, 1937–1945 (1972); L. Li, The Japanese Army in North China (1975).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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...during the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895 U...offices to mediate the wars and restore order...neutrality. In the latter war, the government...diplomacy toward the Sino-Japanese War of 1894-1895...diplomacy during the second Cleveland administration...
...et seq.; 11 -2; Japanese expedition to, 8...Kiyotaka, chief of Japanese Mission to Fusan...regulations for war, 64 et seq.; "Second", 66 et seq...for expenditures for Sino-Japanese War 1894-1910 , 113...
...Sir Austen Chamberlains second letter says: "I am...necessitate recourse to war for that purpose...German Government. The Japanese Government, informed...forces at the time, the Japanese Government, which is...brief, is, first, that Japanese national sentiment would...
...Taiwan, long a part of China, had become a Japanese colony after China's defeat in the 1894 Sino-Japanese War. After the Second World War, the island was returned to China. When the...
...too late for the war with China, a true...payoff came in the Sino-Japanese War of 1894 95 when...their control of Japanese tariffs, and the...rehabilitated. After the Sino-Japanese War exports...indemnity from China. Second...
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...it holds for the Sino-Japanese relationship, this...compromise. The second section analyses...Stephen Chen, "Anti-Japanese Protesters Assail...Realpolitik, and War Memory in Contemporary Sino-Japanese Relations", Asian...
...Can the War Crimes of...Analysis of the Japanese Textbook Problem...Youming: For Sino-Japanese...Women of World War II, ed...50) Rose, Sino-Japanese Relations...International Womens War Crimes Tribunal...62) Rose, Sino-Japanese Relations...
...undermine the benefits of Sino-Japanese interdependence exacerbating...examines the theme of Sino-Japanese rivalry within interdependence...would be affected; second, interdependence...remain neutral in any war on the continent...most destructive wars of the twentieth...
...before the (Second World) War no longer exists...perceptions of the Japanese military are...achievements of postwar Japanese diplomacy...Southeast Asia Sino-Japanese relations have...perhaps the second most important...post-Cold War years, although...
Japan and Sino-japanese Relations Japan and Sino-Japanese Relations36 With its economy in...Asia. Japan remains the worlds second biggest economy, the biggest...forbids the country from waging war), are openly discussed, as...
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...with the late Cold War period, from 1971...States as a result. Second, the two sides...It would poison Sino-American relations, risk Japanese rearmament against...could lead to a Sino-American military...would rival the Cold War in terms of costs...
...with the late Cold War period, from 1971...States as a result. Second, the two sides...It would poison sino-America relations, risk Japanese rearmament against...could lead to a Sino-America military...would rival the Cold War in terms of cost...
The Russo-Sino Role Reversal: U.S...dominant during World War II, that China was about...bizarre corollary that the Sino-Soviet split of the...the other). In the second half of the nineteenth...versions of the Opium Wars and the extraterritorial...after expelling the Japanese and uniting the country...
...Holocaust of World War II. by Iris Chang...his history of the Second World War in the...victims of the Imperial Japanese Armys sadism the...Nanjing following the Japanese conquest of the city...reprisals against Japanese nationals in Shanghai...vicious but localized Sino-Japanese war raged...
...wished to avoid a war with the United...of Americas Cold War policy. A second flawed aspect that...late 1940s that Japanese reconstruction could only occur if the Japanese economy was linked...We now know that Japanese economic growth...
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...Commemorating the End of the Second World War in the Pacific. ON September...that formally ended World War II. The 23-minute ceremony...preceding years. World War II was an amalgam of two...beginning in Asia with the Sino-Japanese War in 1937 and the other...
...proclamation of independence would mean war. Complicating the situation...captured the presidency in Taiwans second free election. Torn by internal...China loses the Sino-Japanese war and cedes Taiwan to Japan "in...to the Allies, ending World War II. 1945: The Republic of China...
...the end of World War II, 1945 to the...abstraction of the second and the pluralist...this group is the Japanese-born Brazilian...the outbreak of the Sino-Japanese War, Miss Otake...compositions, typically Japanese in their restraint...
...two years teaching at a Japanese university; a three...book of poems and his second book of criticism...adverse conditions - the Sino-Japanese war, the absence of books...explaining that "the Japanese men and women look so...
...in the county in 1936 - the same year the Japanese invaded the country and the Second Sino-Japanese War began. Bryer was cared for by a Chinese cook...mother taught Bible studies to women. As the war intensified, Bryer remembers bombs raining...
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SINO-JAPANESE WAR, SECOND 1937 45, conflict...and in 1937 full war commenced. A clash...sustain a protracted war, Wang Ching-wei...World War II The Japanese bombing of Pearl...war and merged the Sino-Japanese War into...
WORLD WAR II 1939 45...Outbreak This second global conflict...stop the Second Sino-Japanese War in 1931...Second World War (tr. 1974...Gilbert, The Second World War (rev. ed...Rising Sun: The Japanese-American War...
...autonomy was gained. The First Sino-Japanese War (1894 95) marked the real...after an incident at Beijing, Japanese troops invaded the northern...scale though undeclared war (see Sino-Japanese War, Second ). A puppet Chinese government...
...Japanese War, Second ). While Japan moved...into full-scale war as both raced to...evacuated by the Japanese. The United States...with Japan over how Japanese actions during World War II were treated in Japanese textbooks, over...
...as a result of the war. Given the emotional...late in the year. A second North-South presidential...ended the Korean War. Relations between...friction) and over Japanese school history textbooks...actions during World War II. The Uri party...and South met in a second summit in Pyongyang...
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