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Wang Jingwei regime

The Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China (Chinese: 中華民國國民政府; pinyin: Zhōnghuá Mínguó Guómín Zhèngfǔ) was a puppet state of the Empire of Japan in eastern China. It existed alongside the Nationalist government of the Republic of China under Chiang Kai-shek, which was fighting Japan along with the other Allies of World War II. The country functioned as a dictatorship under Wang Jingwei, formerly a high-ranking official of the Nationalist Kuomintang (KMT). The region it administered was initially seized by Japan during the late 1930s at the beginning of the Second Sino-Japanese War.

Republic of China
1940–1945
Motto: 和平、反共、建國
Hépíng, Fǎngòng, Jiànguó
"Peace, Anti-Communism, National Construction"
Anthem: 
中華民國國歌,
Zhōnghuá Mínguó Guógē
"National Anthem of the Republic of China"[1]
The Wang Jingwei regime (dark red) and Mengjiang (light red) within the Empire of Japan (pink) at its furthest extent
StatusPuppet state of the Empire of Japan
CapitalNanjing
Largest cityShanghai
Official languagesStandard Chinese
Japanese
GovernmentUnitary Tridemist one-party fascist state[2]
President 
• 1940–1944
Wang Jingwei
• 1944–1945
Chen Gongbo
Vice President 
• 1940–1945
Zhou Fohai
Historical eraWorld War II
• Established
30 March 1940
• Recognized by Japan
20 November 1940
• Dissolved
16 August 1945
Today part ofChina

Wang, a rival of Chiang Kai-shek and member of the pro-peace faction of the KMT, defected to the Japanese side and formed a collaborationist government in occupied Nanjing in 1940, as well as a concurrent collaborationist Kuomintang that ruled the new government. The new state claimed the entirety of China (outside the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo) during its existence, portraying itself as the legitimate inheritors of the Xinhai Revolution and Sun Yat-sen's legacy as opposed to Chiang's government in Chongqing, but effectively only Japanese-occupied territory was under its direct control. Its international recognition was limited to other members of the Anti-Comintern Pact, of which it was a signatory. The Reorganized National Government existed until the end of World War II and the surrender of Japan in August 1945, at which point the regime was dissolved and many of its leading members were executed for treason.

The state was formed by combining the previous Reformed Government (1938–1940) and Provisional Government (1937–1940) of the Republic of China, puppet regimes which ruled the central and northern regions of China that were under Japanese control, respectively. Unlike Wang Jingwei's government, these regimes were not much more than arms of the Japanese military leadership and received no recognition even from Japan itself or its allies. However, after 1940 the former territory of the Provisional Government remained semi-autonomous from Nanjing's control, under the name "North China Political Council". The region of Mengjiang (puppet government in Inner Mongolia) was under Wang Jingwei's government only nominally. His regime was also hampered by the fact that the powers granted to it by the Japanese were extremely limited, and this was only partly changed with the signing of a new treaty in 1943 which gave it more sovereignty from Japanese control. The Japanese largely viewed it as not an end in itself but the means to an end, a bridge for negotiations with Chiang Kai-shek, which led them to often treat Wang with indifference.

Names edit

The regime is informally also known as the Nanjing Nationalist Government (Chinese: 南京國民政府; pinyin: Nánjīng Guómín Zhèngfǔ), the Nanjing Regime, or by its leader Wang Jingwei Regime (Chinese: 汪精衛政權; pinyin: Wāng Jīngwèi Zhèngquán). As the government of the Republic of China and subsequently of the People's Republic of China regard the regime as illegal, it is also commonly known as Wang's Puppet Regime (Chinese: 汪偽政權; pinyin: Wāng Wěi Zhèngquán) or Puppet Nationalist Government (Chinese: 偽國民政府; pinyin: Wěi Guómín Zhèngfǔ) in Greater China. Other names used are the Republic of China-Nanjing, China-Nanjing, or New China.

Background and establishment edit

While Wang Jingwei was widely regarded as a favorite to inherit Sun Yat-sen's position as leader of the Nationalist Party, based upon his faithful service to the party throughout the 1910s and 20s and based on his unique position as the one who accepted and recorded Sun's last will and testament, he was rapidly overtaken by Chiang Kai-shek.[3] By the 1930s, Wang Jingwei had taken the position of Minister of Foreign Affairs for the Nationalist Government under Chiang Kai-shek. This put him in control over the deteriorating Sino-Japanese relationship. While Chiang Kai-shek focused his primary attentions against the Chinese Communist Party, Wang Jingwei diligently toiled to preserve the peace between China and Japan, repeatedly stressing the need for a period of extended peace in order for China to elevate itself economically and militarily to the levels of its neighbor and the other Great powers of the world.[4] Despite his efforts, Wang was unable to find a peaceful solution to prevent the Japanese from commencing an invasion into Chinese territory.

 
Wang Jingwei was head of the Reorganized National Government.

By April 1938, the national conference of the KMT, held in retreat at the temporary capital of Chongqing, appointed Wang as vice-president of the party, reporting only to Chiang Kai-shek himself. Meanwhile, the Japanese advance into Chinese territory as part of the Second Sino-Japanese War continued unrelentingly. From his new position, Wang urged Chiang Kai-shek to pursue a peace agreement with Japan on the sole condition that the hypothetical deal "did not interfere with the territorial integrity of China".[5] Chiang Kai-shek was adamant, however, that he would countenance no surrender, and that it was his position that, were China to be united completely under his control, the Japanese could readily be repulsed. On December 18, 1938, Wang Jingwei and several of his closest supporters resigned from their positions and boarded a plane to Hanoi in order to seek alternative means of ending the war.[6]

From this new base, Wang began pursuit of a peaceful resolution to the conflict independent of the Nationalist Party in exile. In June 1939, Wang and his supporters began negotiating with the Japanese for the creation of a new Nationalist Government which could end the war despite Chiang's objections. To this end, Wang sought to discredit the Nationalists in Chongqing on the basis that they represented not the republican government envisioned by Sun, but rather a "one-party dictatorship", and subsequently call together a Central Political Conference back to the capital of Nanjing in order to formally transfer control over the party away from Chiang Kai-shek. In August, Wang secretly convened the 6th National Congress of the KMT in the city of Shanghai, effectively creating a new collaborationist Kuomintang with Wang as its leaders.[7] These efforts were stymied by Japanese refusal to offer backing for Wang and his new government. Ultimately, Wang Jingwei and his allies would establish their almost entirely powerless new government in Nanjing on 30 March 1940 during the "Central Political Conference",[7] in the hope that Tokyo might eventually be willing to negotiate a deal for peace, which, though painful, might allow China to survive.[8] The dedication occurred in the Conference Hall, and both the "blue-sky white-sun red-earth" national flag and the "blue-sky white-sun" Kuomintang flag were unveiled, flanking a large portrait of Sun Yat-sen.

On the day the new government was formed, and just before the session of the "Central Political Conference" began, Wang visited Sun's tomb in Nanjing's Purple Mountain to establish the legitimacy of his power as Sun's successor. Wang had been a high-level official of the Kuomintang government and, as a confidant to Sun, had transcribed Sun's last will, the Zongli's Testament. To discredit the legitimacy of the Chongqing government, Wang adopted Sun's flag in the hope that it would establish him as the rightful successor to Sun and bring the government back to Nanjing.

Wang and his group were damaged early on by the defection of the diplomat Gao Zongwu, who played a critical role in arranging Wang's defection after two years of negotiations with the Japanese, in January 1940. He had become disillusioned and believed that Japan did not see China as an equal partner, taking with him the documents of the Basic Treaty that Japan had signed with the Wang Jingwei government. He revealed them to the Kuomintang press, becoming a major propaganda coup for Chiang Kai-shek and discrediting Wang's movement in the eyes of the public as mere puppets of the Japanese.[9]

History edit

Shanghai as de facto capital, 1939–1941 edit

With Nanjing still rebuilding itself after the devastating assault and occupation by the Japanese Imperial Army, the fledgling Reorganized Nationalist Government turned to Shanghai as its primary focal point. With its key role as both an economic and media center for all China, close affiliation to Western Imperial powers even despite the Japanese invasion, and relatively sheltered position from attacks by KMT and Communist forces alike, Shanghai offered both sanctuary and opportunity for Wang and his allies' ambitions.[10] Once in Shanghai, the new regime quickly moved to take control over those publications already supportive of Wang and his peace platform, while also engaging in violent, gang-style attacks against rival news outlets. By November 1940, the Reorganized Nationalist Party had secured enough local support to begin hostile takeovers of both Chinese courts and banks still under nominal control by the KMT in Chongqing or Western powers. Buoyed by this rapid influx of seized collateral, the Reorganized Government under its recently appoint Finance Minister, Zhou Fohai, was able to issue a new currency for circulation. Ultimately however, the already limited economic influence garnered by the new banknotes was further diminished by Japanese efforts to contain the influence of the new regime, at least for a time, to territories firmly under Japanese control like Shanghai and other isolated regions of the Yangtze Valley.[10]

 
Wall bearing a government slogan that proclaims: "Support Mr. Wang Jingwei!"
 
Water Resource Committee of Wang Jingwei's puppet government

Efforts to expand Japanese recognition edit

 
Advertisement of congratulation towards the establishment of the new Nationalist government on Taiwan Nichi Nichi Shimpō

While Wang had been successful in securing from Japan a "basic treaty" recognizing the foundation of his new party in November 1940, the produced document granted the Reorganized Nationalist Government almost no powers whatsoever. This initial treaty precluded any possibility for Wang to act as intermediary with Chiang Kai-shek and his forces in securing a peace agreement in China. Likewise, the regime was afforded no extra administrative powers in occupied China, save those few previously carved out in Shanghai. Indeed, official Japanese correspondence regarded the Nanjing regime as trivially important, and urged any and all token representatives stationed with Wang and his allies to dismiss all diplomatic efforts by the new government which could not directly contribute to a total military victory over Chiang and his forces.[11] Hoping to expand the treaty in such a way as to be useful, Wang formally traveled to Tokyo in June 1941 in order to meet with prime minister Fumimaro Konoe and his cabinet to discuss new terms and agreements. Unfortunately for Wang, his visit coincided with the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, a move which further emboldened officials in Tokyo to pursue total victory in China, rather than accept a peace deal. In the end, Konoe eventually agreed to provide a substantial loan to the Nanjing government as well as increased sovereignty; neither of which came to fruition, and indeed, neither of which were even mentioned to military commanders stationed in China. As a slight conciliation, Wang was successful in persuading the Japanese to secure official recognition for the Nanjing Government from the other Axis Powers.[11]

Breakthrough, 1943 edit

 
Wang Jingwei at a military parade

As the Japanese offensive stalled around the Pacific, conditions remained generally consistent under Wang Jingwei's government. The regime continued to represent itself as the legitimate government of China, continued to appeal to Chiang Kai-shek to seek a peace deal, and continued to chafe under the extremely limited sovereignty afforded by the Japanese occupiers. Yet by 1943, Japanese leaders including Hideki Tojo, recognizing that the tide of war was turning against them, sought new ways to reinforce the thinly stretched Japanese forces. To this end, Tokyo finally found it expedient to fully recognize Wang Jingwei's government as a full ally, and a replacement Pact of Alliance was drafted for the basic treaty. This new agreement granted the Nanjing government markedly enhanced administrative control over its own territory, as well as increased ability to make limited self-decisions. Despite this windfall, the deal came far too late for the Reorganized government to have sufficient resources to take advantage of its new powers, and Japan was in no condition to offer aid to its new partner.[12]

War on Opium edit

As a result of general chaos and wartime various profiteering efforts of the conquering Japanese armies, already considerable illegal opium smuggling operations expanded greatly in the Reorganized Nation Government's territory. Indeed, Japanese forces themselves became arguably the largest and most widespread traffickers within the territory under the auspices of semi-official narcotics monopolies.[13] While initially too politically weak to make inroads into the Japanese operations, as the war began to turn against them, the Japanese government sought to incorporate some collaborationist governments more actively into the war effort. To this end in October 1943 the Japanese government signed a treaty with the Reorganized Nationalist Government of China offering them a greater degree of control over their own territory.[14] As a result, Wang Jingwei and his government were able to gain some increased control over the opium monopolies. Negotiations by Chen Gongbo were successful in reaching an agreement to cut opium imports from Mongolia in half, as well as an official turnover of state-sponsored monopolies from Japan over to the Reorganized Nationalist Government.[15] Yet, perhaps due to financial concerns, the regime sought only limited reductions in the distribution of opium throughout the remainder of the war.

The Nanjing Government and the northern Chinese areas edit

 
  Area of control of the invading Japanese forces

The Tongzhou administration (East Ji Anti-Communist Autonomous Administration) was under the commander-in-chief of the Japanese Northern China Area Army until the Yellow River area fell inside the sphere of influence of the Japanese Central China Area Army. During this same period the area from middle Zhejiang to Guangdong was administered by the Japanese North China Area Army. These small, largely independent fiefdoms had local money and local leaders, and frequently squabbled.

Wang Jingwei traveled to Tokyo in 1941 for meetings. In Tokyo the Reorganized National Government Vice President Zhou Fohai commented to the Asahi Shimbun newspaper that the Japanese establishment was making little progress in the Nanjing area. This quote provoked anger from Kumataro Honda, the Japanese ambassador in Nanjing. Zhou Fohai petitioned for total control of China's central provinces by the Reorganized National Government. In response, Imperial Japanese Army Lt. Gen. Teiichi Suzuki was ordered to provide military guidance to the Reorganized National Government, and so became part of the real power that lay behind Wang's rule.

With the permission of the Japanese Army, a monopolistic economic policy was applied, to the benefit of Japanese zaibatsu and local representatives. Though these companies were supposedly treated the same as local Chinese companies by the government, the president of the Yuan legislature in Nanjing, Chen Gongbo, complained that this was untrue to the Kaizō Japanese review. The Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China also featured its own embassy in Yokohama, Japan (as did Manchukuo).

Government and politics edit

Wang Jingwei nominally ruled the government as the Chairman of the Central Political Committee, Chairman of the National Government Committee, and President of the Executive Yuan (commonly called the Premier), until his death in 1944, after which Chen Gongbo succeeded him until Japan's defeat in 1945. His collaborationist Kuomintang was the sole-ruling party.[7] The supreme national ruling body was officially the Central Political Committee (Chinese: 中央政治委員會), under which was the National Government Committee (Chinese: 國民政府委員會). The administrative structure of the Reorganized National Government also included a Legislative Yuan and an Executive Yuan; they were respectively led by Chen Gongbo and Wang Jingwei until 1944.[7] However, actual political power remained with the commander of the Japanese Central China Area Army and Japanese political entities formed by Japanese political advisors. A principal goal of the new regime was to portray itself as the legitimate continuation of the former Nationalist government, despite the Japanese occupation. To this end, the Reorganized government frequently sought to revitalize and expand the former policies of the Nationalist government, often to mixed success.[13]

International recognition and foreign relations edit

 
Wang Jingwei, Japanese ambassador Abe Nobuyuki, and Manchukuo ambassador Zang Shiyi sign the joint declaration, 30 November 1940
 
Wang Jingwei with ambassador Heinrich Georg Stahmer at the German embassy in 1941
 
Unused example of a Wang Jingwei regime passport, circa 1941

The Nanjing Nationalist Government received little international recognition as it was seen as a Japanese puppet state, being recognized only by Japan and the rest of the Axis powers. Initially, its main sponsor, Japan, hoped to come to a peace accord with Chiang Kai-shek and held off official diplomatic recognition for the Wang Jingwei regime for eight months after its founding, not establishing formal diplomatic relations with the National Reorganized Government until 30 November 1940.[16] The Sino-Japanese Basic Treaty was signed on 20 November 1940, by which Japan recognised the Nationalist Government,[17] and it also included a Japan–Manchukuo–China joint declaration by which China recognized the Empire of Great Manchuria and the three countries pledged to create a "New Order in East Asia."[18][19][20] The United States and Britain immediately denounced the formation of the government, seeing it as a tool of Japanese imperialism.[17] In July 1941, after negotiations by Foreign Minister Chu Minyi, the Nanjing Government was recognized as the government of China by Germany and Italy. Soon after, Spain, Slovakia, Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia, and Denmark also recognized and established relations with the Wang Jingwei regime as the government of China.[21][22][23] China under the Reorganized National Government also became a signatory of the Anti-Comintern Pact on 25 November 1941.[24]: 671–672 

After Japan established diplomatic relations with the Holy See in 1942, they and their ally Italy pressured Pope Pius XII to recognize the Nanjing regime and allow a Chinese envoy to be appointed to the Vatican, but he refused to give in to these pressures. Instead the Vatican came to an informal agreement with Japan that their apostolic delegate in Beijing would pay visits to Catholics in the Nanjing government's territory.[25] The Pope also ignored the suggestion of the aforementioned apostolic delegate, Mario Zanin, who recommended in October 1941 that the Vatican recognize the Wang Jingwei regime as the legitimate government of China. Zanin would remain in the Wang Jingwei regime's territory as apostolic delegate while another bishop in Chongqing was to represent Catholic interests in Chiang Kai-shek's territory.[26] Vichy France, despite being aligned with the Axis, resisted Japanese pressure and also refused to recognize the Wang Jingwei regime, with French diplomats in China remaining accredited to the government of Chiang Kai-shek.[27]

The Reorganized National Government had its own Foreign Section or Ministry of Foreign Affairs for managing international relations, although it was short on personnel.[28]

On 9 January 1943, the Reorganized National Government signed the "Treaty on Returning Leased Territories and Repealing Extraterritoriality Rights" with Japan, which abolished all foreign concessions within occupied China. Reportedly the date was originally to have been later that month, but was moved to January 9 to be before the United States concluded a similar treaty with Chiang Kai-shek's government. The Nanjing Government then took control of all of the international concessions in Shanghai and its other territories.[29] Later that year Wang Jingwei attended the Greater East Asia Conference as the Chinese representative.

The Wang Jingwei government sent Chinese athletes, including the national football team, to compete in the 1940 East Asian Games, which were held in Tokyo for the 2,600th anniversary of the legendary founding of the Japanese Empire by Emperor Jimmu, and were a replacement for the cancelled 1940 Summer Olympics.[30][31]

State ideology edit

Wang Jingwei's government promoted the idea of pan-Asianism[32]: 18  directed against the West after Japan's pivot towards joining the Axis powers (which included signing the Tripartite Pact), an idea aimed at establishing a "New Order in East Asia" together with Japan, Manchukuo, and other Asian nations that would expel Western colonial powers from Asia, particularly the "Anglo-Saxons" (the U.S. and Britain) that dominated large parts of Asia. Wang Jingwei used pan-Asianism, basing his views on Sun Yat-sen's advocacy for Asian people to unite against the West in the early 20th century, partly to justify his efforts at working together with Japan. He claimed it was natural for Japan and China to have good relations and cooperation because of their close affinity, describing their conflicts as a temporary aberration in both nation's history. Furthermore, the government believed in the unity of all Asian nations with Japan as their leader as the only way to achieve their goals of removing Western colonial powers from Asia. There was no official description of which Asian peoples were considered to be included in this, but Wang, members of the Propaganda Ministry, and other officials of his regime writing for collaborationist media had different interpretations, at times listing Japan, China, Manchukuo, Thailand, the Philippines, Burma, Nepal, India, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Arabia as potential members of an "East Asian League."[33]

From 1940 onwards, the Wang Jingwei government depicted World War II as a struggle by Asians against the West, more specifically the Anglo-American powers. The Reorganized National Government had a Propaganda Ministry, which exerted control over local media outlets and used them to disseminate pan-Asianist and anti-Western propaganda. British and American diplomats in Shanghai and Nanjing noted by 1940 that the Wang Jingwei-controlled press was publishing anti-Western content. These campaigns were aided by the Japanese authorities in China and also reflected pan-Asian thought as promoted by Japanese thinkers, which intensified after the start of the Pacific War in December 1941. Pro-regime newspapers and journals published articles which cited instances of racial discrimination towards immigrant Asian communities living in the West and Western colonies in Asia. Chu Minyi, the minister of foreign affairs of the Nanjing Government, asserted in an article written shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor that the Sino-Japanese conflict and other wars among Asians were the result of secret manipulation by the Western powers. Lin Baisheng, the minister of propaganda from 1940 to 1944, also made these claims in several of his speeches.[34]

Since Japan was aligned with Germany, Italy, and other European Axis countries, the Nanjing Government's propaganda did not portray the conflict as a war against all white people and focused on the U.S. and Britain in particular. Their newspapers like Republican Daily praised the German people as a great race for their technological and organizational advancements and glorified the Nazi regime for supposedly transforming Germany into a great power over the past decade. The publications of the Nanjing Government also agreed with the anti-Jewish views held by Nazi Germany, with Wang Jingwei and other officials seeing Jews as dominating the American government and being conspirators with the Anglo-American powers to control the world.[35]

The government also took measures to ban the spread of Anglo-American culture and lifestyle among Chinese people in its territory and promoted traditional Confucian culture. Generally it considered Eastern spiritual culture to be superior to the Western culture of materialism, individualism, and liberalism. Christian missionary schools and missionary activities were banned, the study of English language in schools was reduced, and the usage of English in the postal and customs system was gradually reduced as well. Vice minister of education Tai Yingfu called for a campaign against the Anglo-American nations in education. Zhou Huaren, vice minister of propaganda, blamed Chinese students that studied in the West for spreading Western values among the population and disparaging traditional Chinese culture. Wang Jingwei blamed communism, anarchism, and internationalism (which Wang considered Anglo-American thinking) for making other peoples despise their own culture and embracing the Anglo-American culture. He believed it was necessary to promote Confucianism to oppose Anglo-American "cultural aggression." At the same time, Zhou Huaren and others also thought that it was necessary to adopt Western scientific advancements while combining them with traditional Eastern culture to develop themselves, as he said Japan did in the Meiji Restoration, seeing that as a model for others to follow.[36]

In addition to its pan-Asianism, nationalism was part of the regime ideology.[32]: 18 

National defense edit

 
President Wang Jingwei at a military parade on the occasion of the third anniversary of the establishment of the government
 
Type 94 tankettes on parade (note the driver's Stahlhelm and the KMT blue and white sun emblem on the tanks)

During its existence, the Reorganized National Government nominally led a large army often called the "Nanjing Army" that was estimated to have included 300,000 to 500,000 men, along with a smaller navy and air force. Although its land forces possessed limited armor and artillery, they were primarily an infantry force. Military aid from Japan was also very limited despite Japanese promises to assist the Nanjing regime in the "Japan–China Military Affairs Agreement" that they signed. All military matters were the responsibility of the Central Military Commission, but in practice that body was mainly a ceremonial one. In reality, many of the army's commanders operated outside of the direct command of the central government in Nanjing. The majority of its officers were either former National Revolutionary Army personnel or warlord officers from the early Republican era. Thus their reliability and combat capability was questionable, and Wang Jingwei was estimated to only be able to count on the loyalty of about 10% to 15% of his nominal forces. Among the reorganized government's best units were three Capital Guards divisions based in Nanjing, Zhou Fohai's Taxation Police Corps, and the 1st Front Army of Ren Yuandao.[37][38]

The majority of the government's forces were armed with a mix of captured Nationalist weaponry and a small amount of Japanese equipment, the latter mainly being given to Nanjing's best units. The lack of local military industry for the duration of the war meant that the Nanjing regime had trouble arming its troops. While the army was mainly an infantry force, in 1941 it did receive 18 Type 94 tankettes for a token armored force, and reportedly they also received 20 armored cars and 24 motorcycles. The main type of artillery in use were medium mortars, but they also possessed 31 field guns (which included Model 1917 mountain guns)—mainly used by the Guards divisions. Oftentimes, the troops were equipped with the German Stahlhelm, which were used in large quantities by the Chinese Nationalist Army. For small arms, there was no standard rifle and a large variety of different weapons were used, which made supplying them with ammunition difficult. The most common rifles in use was the Chinese version of the Mauser 98k and the Hanyang 88, while other notable weapons included Chinese copies of the Czechoslovakian ZB-26 machine guns.[38][39]

Along with the great variation in equipment, there was also a disparity in sizes of units. Some "armies" had only a few thousand troops while some "divisions" several thousand. There was a standard divisional structure, but only the elite Guards divisions closer to the capital actually had anything resembling it. In addition to these regular army forces, there were multiple police and local militia, which numbered in the tens of thousands, but were deemed to be completely unreliable by the Japanese.[40] Most of the units located around Beijing in northern China remained, in effect, under the authority of the North China Political Council rather than that of the central government. In an attempt to improve the quality of the officer corps, multiple military academies had been opened, including a Central Military Academy in Nanjing and a Naval Academy in Shanghai. In addition there was a military academy in Beijing for the North China Political Council's forces, and a branch of the central academy in Canton.[41]

A small navy was established with naval bases at Weihaiwei and Qingdao, but it mostly consisted of small patrol boats that were used for coastal and river defense. Reportedly, the captured Nationalist cruisers Ning Hai and Ping Hai were handed over to the government by the Japanese, becoming important propaganda tools. However, the Imperial Japanese Navy took them back in 1943 for its own use. In addition there were two regiments of marines, one at Canton and the other at Weihaiwei. By 1944, the navy was under direct command of Ren Yuandao, the naval minister.[42] An Air Force of the Reorganized National Government was established in May 1941 with the opening of the Aviation School and receiving three aircraft, Tachikawa Ki-9 trainers. In the future the air force received additional Ki-9 and Ki-55 trainers as well as multiple transports. Plans by Wang Jingwei to form a fighter squadron with Nakajima Ki-27s did not come to fruition as the Japanese did not trust the pilots enough to give them combat aircraft. Morale was low and a number of defections took place. The only two offensive aircraft they did possess were Tupolev SB bombers which were flown by defecting Nationalist crews.[43]

The Reorganized National Government's army was primarily tasked with garrison and police duties in the occupied territories. It also took part in anti-partisan operations against Communist guerrillas, such as in the Hundred Regiments Offensive, or played supporting roles for the Imperial Japanese Army (IJA).[44] The Nanjing Government undertook a "rural pacification" campaign to eradicate communists from the countryside, arresting and executing many people suspected of being communists, with support from the Japanese.[45]

Japanese methods of recruiting edit

During the conflicts in central China, the Japanese utilized several methods to recruit Chinese volunteers. Japanese sympathisers including Nanjing's pro-Japanese governor, or major local landowners such as Ni Daolang, were used to recruit local peasants in return for money or food. The Japanese recruited 5,000 volunteers in the Anhui area for the Reorganized National Government Army. Japanese forces and the Reorganized National Government used slogans like "Lay down your guns and take up the plough", "Oppose the Communist Bandits" or "Oppose Corrupt Government and Support the Reformed Government" to dissuade guerrilla attacks and buttress its support.[46]

The Japanese used various methods for subjugating the local populace. Initially, fear was used to maintain order, but this approach was altered following appraisals by Japanese military ideologists. In 1939, the Japanese army attempted some populist policies, including:

  • land reform by dividing the property of major landowners into small holdings, and allocating them to local peasants;
  • providing the Chinese with medical services, including vaccination against cholera, typhus, and varicella, and treatments for other diseases;
  • ordering Japanese soldiers not to violate women or laws;
  • dropping leaflets from aeroplanes, offering rewards for information (with parlays set up by use of a white surrender flag), the handing over of weapons or other actions beneficial to the Japanese cause. Money and food were often incentives used; and
  • dispersal of candy, food and toys to children

Buddhist leaders inside the occupied Chinese territories ("Shao-Kung") were also forced to give public speeches and persuade people of the virtues of a Chinese alliance with Japan, including advocating the breaking-off of all relations with Western powers and ideas.

In 1938, a manifesto was launched in Shanghai, reminding the populace the Japanese alliance's track-record in maintaining "moral supremacy" as compared to the often fractious nature of the previous Republican control, and also accusing Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek of treason for maintaining the Western alliance.

In support of such efforts, in 1941 Wang Jingwei proposed the Qingxiang Plan to be applied along the lower course of the Yangtze River. A Qingxiang Plan Committee (Qingxiang Weiyuan-hui) was formed with himself as Chairman, and Zhou Fohai and Chen Gongbo (as first and second vice-chairmen respectively). Li Shiqun was made the committee's secretary. Beginning in July 1941, Wang maintained that any areas to which the plan was applied would convert into "model areas of peace, anti-communism, and rebuilders of the country" (heping fangong jianguo mofanqu). It was not a success.

Political boundaries edit

 
Map of the Republic of China that was controlled by the reorganized national government in 1939 (dark green) Mengjiang was incorporated in 1940 (light green)

In theory, the Reorganized National Government claimed all of China with the exception of Manchukuo, which it recognized as an independent state. In actuality, at the time of its formation, the Reorganized Government controlled only Jiangsu, Anhui, and the north sector of Zhejiang, all being Japanese-controlled territories after 1937.

Thereafter, the Reorganized Government's actual borders waxed and waned as the Japanese gained or lost territory during the course of the war. During the December 1941 Japanese offensive the Reorganized Government extended its control over Hunan, Hubei, and parts of Jiangxi provinces. The port of Shanghai and the cities of Hankou and Wuchang were also placed under control of the Reformed Government after 1940.

The Japanese-controlled provinces of Shandong and Hebei were de jure part of this political entity, though they were de facto under military administration of the Japanese Northern China Area Army from its headquarters in Beijing. Likewise, the Japanese-controlled territories in central China were under military administration of the Japanese Sixth Area Army from its headquarters in Hankou (Wuhan). Other Japanese-controlled territories had military administrations directly reporting to the Japanese military headquarters in Nanjing, with the exception of Guangdong and Guangxi which briefly had its headquarters in Canton. The central and southern zones of military occupation were eventually linked together after Operation Ichi-Go in 1944, though the Japanese garrison had no effective control over most of this region apart from a narrow strip around the Guangzhou–Hankou railway.

The Reorganized Government's control was mostly limited to:

According to other sources, total extension of territory during 1940 period was 1,264,000 km2.

In 1940 an agreement was signed between the Inner Mongolian puppet state of Mengjiang and the Nanjing regime, incorporating the former into the latter as an autonomous part.[47]

Economy edit

The North China Transportation Company and the Central China Railway were established by the former Provisional Government and Reformed Government, which had nationalised private railway and bus companies that operated in their territories, and continued to function providing railway and bus services in the Nanjing regime's territory.

After its 1941 declaration of war against the United States and the United Kingdom, Japan moved into the foreign areas of the city that it had not previously occupied after the Battle of Shanghai.[48]: 11–12  It seized most of the banks in these areas of Shanghai (and occupied Tianjin) and declared that the Nationalist currency fabi had to be exchanged for bank notes of the Wang Jingwei regime at a mandated rate of 2:1 before June 1, 1942.[48]: 15  For most Chinese in these occupied areas, the exchange meant that their fabi lost half its value and a major blow to the economy of the lower Yangzi resulted.[48]: 15 

Life under the regime edit

Japanese under the regime had greater access to coveted wartime luxuries, and the Japanese enjoyed things like matches, rice, tea, coffee, cigars, foods, and alcoholic drinks, all of which were scarce in Japan proper. However, consumer goods became more scarce after Japan entered World War II. In Japanese-occupied Chinese territories the prices of basic necessities rose substantially as Japan's war effort expanded. By 1941, these prices in Shanghai increased eleven-fold.

Daily life was often difficult in the Nanjing Nationalist Government-controlled Republic of China, and grew increasingly so as the war turned against Japan (c. 1943). Local residents resorted to the black market in order to obtain needed items or to influence the ruling establishment. The Kempeitai (Japanese Military Police Corps), Tokubetsu Kōtō Keisatsu (Special Higher Police), collaborationist Chinese police, and Chinese citizens in the service of the Japanese all worked to censor information, monitor any opposition, and torture enemies and dissenters. A "native" secret agency, the Tewu, was created with the aid of Japanese Army "advisors". The Japanese also established prisoner-of-war detention centres, concentration camps, and kamikaze training centres to indoctrinate pilots.

Since Wang's government held authority only over territories under Japanese military occupation, there was a limited amount that officials loyal to Wang could do to ease the suffering of Chinese under Japanese occupation. Wang himself became a focal point of anti-Japanese resistance. He was demonised and branded as an "arch-traitor" in both KMT and Communist rhetoric. Wang and his government were deeply unpopular with the Chinese populace, who regarded them as traitors to both the Chinese state and Han Chinese identity.[49] Wang's rule was constantly undermined by resistance and sabotage.

The strategy of the local education system was to create a workforce suited for employment in factories and mines, and for manual labor. The Japanese also attempted to introduce their culture and dress to the Chinese. Complaints and agitation called for more meaningful Chinese educational development. Shinto temples and similar cultural centers were built in order to instill Japanese culture and values. These activities came to a halt at the end of the war.

Notable figures edit

Local administration:

  • Wang Jingwei: President and Head of State
  • Chen Gongbo: President and Head of State after the death of Wang. Also, President of the Legislative Yuan (1940–1944) and Mayor of the Shanghai occupied sector.
  • Zhou Fohai: Vice President and Finance Minister in the Executive Yuan
  • Wen Tsungyao: Chief of the Judicial Yuan
  • Wang Kemin: Internal Affairs Minister, previously head of the Provisional Government of the Republic of China
  • Liang Hongzhi: Head of the Legislative Yuan (1944–1945), previously head of the Reformed Government
  • Yin Ju-keng: Member of the Legal Affairs Department, previously head of the East Hebei Autonomous Government
  • Wang Yitang: Minister of the Examination Yuan, Chairman of the North China Political Council (1940–1943)
  • Jiang Kanghu: Chief of the Education Yuan
  • Xia Qifeng: Chief of the Auditing Bureau of the Control Yuan
  • Ren Yuandao: Minister of the Navy (1940–1945) & Chairman of the National Military Council (1940–1942)
  • Xiao Shuxuan: Minister of Military Affairs (1945) & Chairman of the National Military Council (1942–1945)
  • Yang Kuiyi: Chief of General Staff (1940–1942) & Chairman of the National Military Council (1945)
  • Bao Wenyue: Minister of Military Affairs (1940–1943) & Chief of General Staff (1943–1945)
  • Ye Peng: Minister of Military Affairs (1943–1945) & Chief of General Staff (1942)
  • Xiang Zhizhuang: Commander of the 5th Group Army, Commander of the 12th Army, Governor and Commander of Security in Zhejiang Province, Governor of Jiangsu Province
  • Rong Zhen: Chief of the Committee for Subjugation Communists, Governor of Hebei Province (1945)
  • Kou Yingjie: Councilor of the General Staff office
  • Liu Yufen: Chief of General Staff (1942–1943)
  • Hu Yukun: Chief of General Staff (1945)
  • Hao Pengju: Chief of Staff of the 1st Army group, Governor of Huaihai, General commander of the 6th Route Army
  • Wu Huawen: Commander in Chief of the 3rd Front Army
  • Qi Xieyuan: Commander-in-Chief of the North China Appeasement army, Supervisor of the General administration of Justice
  • Sun Dianying: Commander of the Collaborationist Chinese Army 6th group army district
  • Ding Mocun: Chief of the Collaborationist Secret police, Minister of Society, Minister of Transport, Governor of Zhejiang province
  • Li Shiqun: Head of No. 76, the regime's secret service stationed in No. 76 Jessefield Road in Shanghai
  • Zhu Xingyuan: Chief of the Agency of Political Affairs
  • Tang Erho: Chairman of the North China Political Affairs Commission
  • Gu Zhongchen: Vice-Chief of the Examination Yuan (1940–1944), Chief of the Examination Yuan (1944–1945)
  • Thung Liang Lee: director of the International Publicity Bureau (1940–1945)
  • Xia Suchu: Executive Vice-chief to the Evaluation Department of the Examination Yuan, Chief Secretary of the Examination Yuan
  • Chen Qun: Interior Minister (1940–1943)
  • Luo Junqiang: Minister of Justice (1942–1943), Governor of Anhui (1943–1944)
  • Zhao Yusong: Minister of Agriculture (1940–1941), Minister of Justice (1941–1942), Minister of Civil Service (1942–1943)
  • Mei Siping: Interior Minister (1943–1945)
  • Su Tiren: Governor of Shanxi (1938–1943), Mayor of Beijing Special city (1943)
  • Zhao Zhengping: Minister of Education (1940–1941)
  • Wang Shijing: Executive Member and Governor to the General Office for Finance, Governor of the General Office for Economy
  • Zhou Huaren: Executive Vice-Minister of Railways, Mayor of Guangzhou Special Municipality
  • Lin Bosheng: Propaganda Minister (1940–1944)
  • Zhao Zhuyue: Propaganda Minister (1944–1945)
  • Gao Guanwu: Mayor of Nanjing Special City (1938–1940), Governor of Jiangsu (1940–1943), Governor of Anhui (1943), Governor of Jiangxi (1943–1945)
  • Chen Zemin: Governor of Jiangsu Province
  • Yu Jinhe: Mayor of Beijing Special City (1938–1943)
  • Lin Biao (born 1889): Chief of the Administrative High Court
  • Kaya Okinori: Japanese nationalist, merchant, and commercial adviser
  • Chu Minyi: Foreign Minister (1940; 1941–1945), ambassador to Japan (1940–1941)
  • Cai Pei: Mayor of Nanjing Special City (1940–1942), ambassador to Japan (1943–1945)
  • Xu Liang: Foreign Minister (1940–1941), ambassador to Japan (1941–1943)
  • Li Shengwu: Foreign Minister (1945), ambassador to Germany
  • Zhang Renli: Mayor of Tianjin Special City (1943)
  • Yan Jiachi: Vice-Minister for Finance, Control Officer of the Control Yuan
  • Xu Xiuzhi: Mayor of Beijing Special City (1945)
  • Lian Yu: ambassador to Manchukuo (1940–1943), ambassador to Japan (1945)
  • Zhu Lühe: Vice-Chief of the Judicial Yuan, Chairperson of the Disciplinary Action Committee for Central Public Servants
  • Wen Shizhen: Mayor of Tianjin Special City (1939–1943)
  • Wang Xugao: Governor of Jinhaidao, Mayor of Tianjin Special City
  • Wang Yintai: Governor of the General Office for Business, Governor of the General Office for Agriculture, Chairperson of the North China Political Council
  • Chen Jicheng: ambassador to Manchukuo (1943–1945)
  • Wang Xiang (Republic of China politician): Chief of the Agency for Education in Shanxi, Governor and Security Commander of Shanxi
  • He Peirong: Governor of Hubei province (1938–1942), Commander of Security in Hubei
  • Ni Daolang: Governor of Anhui Province
  • Wang Ruikai: Governor of Zhejiang province (1938–1941)
  • Zhu Qinglai: Minister of Transport, Chairman of the Irrigation Commission, Vice-Chief of the Legislative Yuan
  • Wu Zanzhou: Governor of Hebei province (1939–1943), President of the Police High School
  • Shao Wenkai: Governor of Henan province
  • Wang Mo: Chief of the General Office for Education
  • Chao Kung: (Ignaz Trebitsch-Lincoln), purported Buddhist leader
  • Zhou Longxiang: Diplomat, Chief Secretary of the Executive Yuan, Chief of the Civil Servants.
  • Zhou Xuechang: Mayor of Nanjing Special City (1941–1945)
  • Zhu Shen: Executive Member and Chief of the Agency for Political Affairs, Chairperson of the North China Political Council
  • Yu Baoxuan: Observer to the Commission for High Ranking Officers Examination
  • Li Fang (diplomat): Foreign minister to Romania and Hungary, Ambassador to Germany
  • Yin Tong: Governor of the General Office for Construction
  • Hao Peng (ROC): Chief Executive of the Suhuai Special Region, Commander of the Suhuai Special Region Security forces
  • Wu Songgao: Secretary of the Central Political Committee, Vice-Minister for Judicial Administrating, Chairman of the Committee for Baojia system
  • Yue Kaixian: Chief of the General Office for Business
  • Deng Zuyu: Governor of Jiangxi province (1943)

Foreign representatives and diplomatic personnel:

Legacy edit

Having died before the war had ended, Wang Jingwei was unable to join his fellow Reorganized Nationalist Government leaders on trial for treason in the months that followed the Japanese surrender. Instead he, alongside his presidential successor Chen Gongbo (who was tried and sentenced to death by the victorious Nationalists) and his vice president Zhou Fohai (who had his death sentence commuted to life imprisonment), was given the title Hanjian meaning arch-traitor to the Han people. In the following decades, Wang Jingwei and the entire reputation of the collaborationist government have undergone considerable scholastic debate.

Characterizations of the regime are a matter of historical debate.[32]: 2  In general, evaluations produced by scholars working under the People's Republic of China have held the most critical interpretations of the failed regime, Western scholars typically holding the government and Wang Jingwei especially in a sympathetic light, with Taiwanese scholars falling somewhere in the middle.[50] The Western characterization of the regime is generally as collaborationist, while Chinese sources have often characterized it as illegitimate.[32]: 2 

In popular culture edit

  • Lust, Caution is a 1979 novella by Chinese author Eileen Chang which was later turned into an award-winning film by Ang Lee. The story is about a group of young university students who attempt to assassinate the Minister of Security of the Reorganized National Government. During the war, Ms. Chang was married to Hu Lancheng, a writer who worked for the Reorganized National Government and the story is believed to be largely based on actual events.
  • The 2009 Chinese film The Message is a thriller/mystery in the vein of a number of Agatha Christie novels. The main characters are all codebreakers serving in the Reorganized National Government's military, but one of them is a Kuomintang double-agent. A Japanese intelligence officer detains the group in a castle and attempts to uncover which of them is the spy using psychological and physical coercion, uncovering the protagonists' bitter rivalries, jealousies, and secrets as he does so.
  • The TV series Sparrow is a spy genre thriller. During Shanghai's Reorganised Government, communist agent Chen Shen infiltrates the Japanese' base and adopts the code name "Sparrow". His mission is to obtain the "zero" intel, a secret plan that could destroy China. To do so, he becomes the assistant of Bi Zhongliang, the leader of the Special Operations Team under the Public Security Bureau.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The yellow pennant, which reads Peace, Anti-Communism, National Construction, was not attached to the flag itself but flew separately on the flagpole immediately above it. In 1943, the pennant, which was previously mandatory for outdoor use of the flag, was removed. This made the flag identical to that of the rival Nationalist government based in the wartime capital Chongqing.

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Japanese Newsreel with the national anthem on YouTube
  2. ^ Larsen, Stein Ugelvik (ed.). Fascism Outside of Europe. New York: Columbia University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-88033-988-8. p. 255.
  3. ^ Bate (1941), p. 80–84.
  4. ^ Bate (1941), pp. 130–135.
  5. ^ Bate (1941), p. 136.
  6. ^ Bate (1941), p. 144.
  7. ^ a b c d 高雲昉 (1994). ["Sixth Party Congress" of Wang's Puppet Kuomintang]. China National Knowledge Infrastructure. Archived from the original on 2019-05-13. Retrieved 2018-03-14.
  8. ^ Bunker (1972), pp. 149–160.
  9. ^ Boyle (1972), pp. 277–280.
  10. ^ a b Bunker (1972), pp. 252–263.
  11. ^ a b Bunker (1972), pp. 264–280.
  12. ^ Matos, Christine; Caprio, Mark (2015). Japan as the Occupier and the Occupied. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 152–160. ISBN 978-1-137-40810-5.
  13. ^ a b Martin (2003), pp. 365–410.
  14. ^ Martin (2003), p. 385.
  15. ^ Martin (2003), pp. 392–394.
  16. ^ Boyle (1972), p. 301.
  17. ^ a b So (2011), p. 75.
  18. ^ So (2011), p. 77.
  19. ^ Signing of Japan-Manchukuo-China Joint Declaration.
  20. ^ Chinese puppet government travel document 2017-12-22 at the Wayback Machine. Published 23 September 2016. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  21. ^ Dorn (1974), p. 243.
  22. ^ Cotterell (2009), p. 217.
  23. ^ Brodsgaard (2003), p. 111.
  24. ^ Smyth, Howard M.; et al., eds. (1970). 15. September bis 11. Dezember 1941. Akten zur deutschen auswärtigen Politik 1918-1945 (in German). Vol. D-13-2. Vandenhoeck + Ruprecht.
  25. ^ Pollard (2014), p. 329.
  26. ^ The "Magic" Background to Pearl Harbor, Volume 4. Japanese diplomatic cables published by US Department of Defense, p. A-460.
  27. ^ Young (2013), pp. 250–251.
  28. ^ The "Magic" Background to Pearl Harbor, Volume 4. Japanese diplomatic cables published by US Department of Defense, pp. A-456–A-465.
  29. ^ Wang (2016), pp. 31–32.
  30. ^ Collins, Sandra (2014). 1940 TOKYO GAMES – COLLINS: Japan, the Asian Olympics and the Olympic Movement. Routledge. pp. 179–180. ISBN 978-1317999669.
  31. ^ Veroeveren, Piet. "2600th Anniversary of the Japanese Empire 1940 (Tokyo)". Rec.Sport.Soccer Statistics Foundation. Retrieved 25 December 2014.
  32. ^ a b c d Yang, Zhiyi (2023). Poetry, History, Memory: Wang Jingwei and China in Dark Times. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. ISBN 978-0-472-05650-7.
  33. ^ So (2011), p. 78–80.
  34. ^ So (2011), pp. 81–83.
  35. ^ So (2011), pp. 86–88.
  36. ^ So (2011), pp. 89–92.
  37. ^ Barret (2002), pp. 109–111
  38. ^ a b Jowett (2004), pp. 65–67
  39. ^ Jowett (2004), pp. 75–77
  40. ^ Jowett (2004), pp. 71–72
  41. ^ Jowett (2004), pp. 77–78
  42. ^ Jowett (2004), pp. 103–104
  43. ^ Jowett (2004), pp. 94–96
  44. ^ Jowett (2004), pp. 80–82
  45. ^ Zanasi (2008), p. 747.
  46. ^ Smedley (1943), p. 223.
  47. ^ MacKinnon & Lary (2007), p. 162.
  48. ^ a b c Coble, Parks M. (2023). The Collapse of Nationalist China: How Chiang Kai-shek Lost China's Civil War. Cambridge New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-009-29761-5.
  49. ^ Wakeman, Jr., Frederic (2000). "Hanjian (Traitor) Collaboration and Retribution in Wartime Shanghai". In Wen-hsin Yeh (ed.). Becoming Chinese: Passages to Modernity and Beyond. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 322. doi:10.1525/california/9780520219236.003.0009. ISBN 9780520219236.
  50. ^ Chen, Jian-Yue (October 2004). "American Studies of Wang Jingwei: Defining Nationalism". World History Review Journal.

Sources edit

Journal articles
  • Martin, Brian G. (2003-01-01). "'in My Heart I Opposed Opium': Opium and The Politics of the Wang Jingwei Government, 1940–45". European Journal of East Asian Studies. 2 (2): 365–410. doi:10.1163/157006103771378464. JSTOR 23615144.
  • So, Wai Chor (January 2011). "Race, Culture, and the Anglo-American Powers: The Views of Chinese Collaborators". Modern China. 37 (1): 69–103. doi:10.1177/0097700410382542. JSTOR 25759539. S2CID 220605241.
  • Zanasi, Margherita (June 2008). "Globalizing Hanjian: The Suzhou Trials and the Post-World War II Discourse on Collaboration". The American Historical Review. 113 (3): 731–751. doi:10.1086/ahr.113.3.731. JSTOR 30223050.
Books
  • Bate, Don (1941). Wang Ching Wei: Puppet or Patriot. Chicago, IL: RF Seymour.
  • Barrett, David P.; Shyu, Larry N., eds. (2001). Chinese Collaboration with Japan, 1932–1945: The Limits of Accommodation. Stanford University Press.
  • Behr, Edward (1987). The Last Emperor. Recorded Picture Co. (Productions) Ltd and Screenframe Ltd.
  • Boyle, John H. (1972). China and Japan at War, 1937–1945: The Politics of Collaboration. Harvard University Press.
  • Brodsgaard, Kjeld Erik (2003). China and Denmark: Relations since 1674. Nordic Institute of Asian Studies.
  • Bunker, Gerald (1972). The Peace Conspiracy: Wang Ching-wei and the China War, 1937–1941. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0674-65915-5.
  • Ch'i, Hsi-sheng (1982). Nationalist China at War: Military Defeats and Political Collapse, 1937–1945. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
  • Chiang, Kai-Shek. The Soviet Russia in China.
  • Chiang, Wego W. K. How the Generalissimo Chiang Kai Shek gained the Chinese-Japanese eight years war, 1937–1945.
  • Cotterel, Arthur (2009). Western Power in Asia: Its Slow Rise and Swift Fall, 1415–1999. Wiley.
  • Dorn, Frank (1974). The Sino-Japanese War, 1937–41: From Marco Polo Bridge to Pearl Harbor. Macmillan.
  • Hsiung, James C.; Levine, Steven I., eds. (1992). China's Bitter Victory: The War with Japan, 1937–1945. Armonk, NY: M. E. Sharpe.
  • Jowett, Phillip S. (2004). Rays of The Rising Sun, Armed Forces of Japan's Asian Allies 1931–45, Volume I: China & Manchuria. Solihull, West Midlands, England: Helion & Co. Ltd.
  • MacKinnon, Stephen; Lary, Diana (2007). China at War: Regions of China, 1937–1945. Stanford University Press.
  • Max, Alphonse (1985). Southeast Asia Destiny and Realities. Institute of International Studies.
  • Mote, Frederick W. (1954). Japanese-Sponsored Governments in China, 1937–1945. Stanford University Press.
  • Newman, Joseph (March 1942). Goodbye Japan. New York, NY.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Pollard, John (1014). The Papacy in the Age of Totalitarianism, 1914–1958. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0199208565.
  • Smedley, Agnes (1943). Battle Hymn of China.
  • Wang, Wei (2016). China's Banking Law and the National Treatment of Foreign-Funded Banks. Routledge.
  • Young, Ernest (2013). Ecclesiastical Colony: China's Catholic Church and the French Religious Protectorate. Oxford University Press. pp. 250–251. ISBN 978-0199924622.

External links edit

  • Central China Railway Company Flag, under Japanese Army control
  • Flags of the Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China
  • Slogans, Symbols, and Legitimacy: The Case of Wang Jingwei's Nanjing Regime
  • Visual cultures of occupation in wartime China
Preceded by Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China
1940–1945
Succeeded by

32°03′N 118°46′E / 32.050°N 118.767°E / 32.050; 118.767

wang, jingwei, regime, reorganized, national, government, republic, china, chinese, 中華民國國民政府, pinyin, zhōnghuá, mínguó, guómín, zhèngfǔ, puppet, state, empire, japan, eastern, china, existed, alongside, nationalist, government, republic, china, under, chiang, . The Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China Chinese 中華民國國民政府 pinyin Zhōnghua Minguo Guomin Zhengfǔ was a puppet state of the Empire of Japan in eastern China It existed alongside the Nationalist government of the Republic of China under Chiang Kai shek which was fighting Japan along with the other Allies of World War II The country functioned as a dictatorship under Wang Jingwei formerly a high ranking official of the Nationalist Kuomintang KMT The region it administered was initially seized by Japan during the late 1930s at the beginning of the Second Sino Japanese War Republic of China中華民國 Chinese Pinyin Zhōnghua Minguo Postal Romanization Chunghwa Minkuo Japanese Chuka Minkoku1940 1945Flag 1940 1943 Flag 1943 1945 note 1 National EmblemMotto 和平 反共 建國 Heping Fǎngong Jianguo Peace Anti Communism National Construction Anthem 中華民國國歌 Zhōnghua Minguo Guoge National Anthem of the Republic of China 1 source source track track track track track track The Wang Jingwei regime dark red and Mengjiang light red within the Empire of Japan pink at its furthest extentStatusPuppet state of the Empire of JapanCapitalNanjingLargest cityShanghaiOfficial languagesStandard ChineseJapaneseGovernmentUnitary Tridemist one party fascist state 2 President 1940 1944Wang Jingwei 1944 1945Chen GongboVice President 1940 1945Zhou FohaiHistorical eraWorld War II Established30 March 1940 Recognized by Japan20 November 1940 Dissolved16 August 1945Preceded by Succeeded byReformed Government of the Republic of ChinaProvisional Government of the Republic of ChinaMengjiang United Autonomous Government Republic of ChinaSoviet occupation of ManchuriaToday part ofChinaWang a rival of Chiang Kai shek and member of the pro peace faction of the KMT defected to the Japanese side and formed a collaborationist government in occupied Nanjing in 1940 as well as a concurrent collaborationist Kuomintang that ruled the new government The new state claimed the entirety of China outside the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo during its existence portraying itself as the legitimate inheritors of the Xinhai Revolution and Sun Yat sen s legacy as opposed to Chiang s government in Chongqing but effectively only Japanese occupied territory was under its direct control Its international recognition was limited to other members of the Anti Comintern Pact of which it was a signatory The Reorganized National Government existed until the end of World War II and the surrender of Japan in August 1945 at which point the regime was dissolved and many of its leading members were executed for treason The state was formed by combining the previous Reformed Government 1938 1940 and Provisional Government 1937 1940 of the Republic of China puppet regimes which ruled the central and northern regions of China that were under Japanese control respectively Unlike Wang Jingwei s government these regimes were not much more than arms of the Japanese military leadership and received no recognition even from Japan itself or its allies However after 1940 the former territory of the Provisional Government remained semi autonomous from Nanjing s control under the name North China Political Council The region of Mengjiang puppet government in Inner Mongolia was under Wang Jingwei s government only nominally His regime was also hampered by the fact that the powers granted to it by the Japanese were extremely limited and this was only partly changed with the signing of a new treaty in 1943 which gave it more sovereignty from Japanese control The Japanese largely viewed it as not an end in itself but the means to an end a bridge for negotiations with Chiang Kai shek which led them to often treat Wang with indifference Contents 1 Names 2 Background and establishment 3 History 3 1 Shanghai as de facto capital 1939 1941 3 2 Efforts to expand Japanese recognition 3 3 Breakthrough 1943 3 4 War on Opium 3 5 The Nanjing Government and the northern Chinese areas 4 Government and politics 4 1 International recognition and foreign relations 4 2 State ideology 4 3 National defense 4 4 Japanese methods of recruiting 5 Political boundaries 6 Economy 7 Life under the regime 8 Notable figures 9 Legacy 10 In popular culture 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 External linksNames editThe regime is informally also known as the Nanjing Nationalist Government Chinese 南京國民政府 pinyin Nanjing Guomin Zhengfǔ the Nanjing Regime or by its leader Wang Jingwei Regime Chinese 汪精衛政權 pinyin Wang Jingwei Zhengquan As the government of the Republic of China and subsequently of the People s Republic of China regard the regime as illegal it is also commonly known as Wang s Puppet Regime Chinese 汪偽政權 pinyin Wang Wei Zhengquan or Puppet Nationalist Government Chinese 偽國民政府 pinyin Wei Guomin Zhengfǔ in Greater China Other names used are the Republic of China Nanjing China Nanjing or New China Background and establishment editWhile Wang Jingwei was widely regarded as a favorite to inherit Sun Yat sen s position as leader of the Nationalist Party based upon his faithful service to the party throughout the 1910s and 20s and based on his unique position as the one who accepted and recorded Sun s last will and testament he was rapidly overtaken by Chiang Kai shek 3 By the 1930s Wang Jingwei had taken the position of Minister of Foreign Affairs for the Nationalist Government under Chiang Kai shek This put him in control over the deteriorating Sino Japanese relationship While Chiang Kai shek focused his primary attentions against the Chinese Communist Party Wang Jingwei diligently toiled to preserve the peace between China and Japan repeatedly stressing the need for a period of extended peace in order for China to elevate itself economically and militarily to the levels of its neighbor and the other Great powers of the world 4 Despite his efforts Wang was unable to find a peaceful solution to prevent the Japanese from commencing an invasion into Chinese territory nbsp Wang Jingwei was head of the Reorganized National Government By April 1938 the national conference of the KMT held in retreat at the temporary capital of Chongqing appointed Wang as vice president of the party reporting only to Chiang Kai shek himself Meanwhile the Japanese advance into Chinese territory as part of the Second Sino Japanese War continued unrelentingly From his new position Wang urged Chiang Kai shek to pursue a peace agreement with Japan on the sole condition that the hypothetical deal did not interfere with the territorial integrity of China 5 Chiang Kai shek was adamant however that he would countenance no surrender and that it was his position that were China to be united completely under his control the Japanese could readily be repulsed On December 18 1938 Wang Jingwei and several of his closest supporters resigned from their positions and boarded a plane to Hanoi in order to seek alternative means of ending the war 6 From this new base Wang began pursuit of a peaceful resolution to the conflict independent of the Nationalist Party in exile In June 1939 Wang and his supporters began negotiating with the Japanese for the creation of a new Nationalist Government which could end the war despite Chiang s objections To this end Wang sought to discredit the Nationalists in Chongqing on the basis that they represented not the republican government envisioned by Sun but rather a one party dictatorship and subsequently call together a Central Political Conference back to the capital of Nanjing in order to formally transfer control over the party away from Chiang Kai shek In August Wang secretly convened the 6th National Congress of the KMT in the city of Shanghai effectively creating a new collaborationist Kuomintang with Wang as its leaders 7 These efforts were stymied by Japanese refusal to offer backing for Wang and his new government Ultimately Wang Jingwei and his allies would establish their almost entirely powerless new government in Nanjing on 30 March 1940 during the Central Political Conference 7 in the hope that Tokyo might eventually be willing to negotiate a deal for peace which though painful might allow China to survive 8 The dedication occurred in the Conference Hall and both the blue sky white sun red earth national flag and the blue sky white sun Kuomintang flag were unveiled flanking a large portrait of Sun Yat sen On the day the new government was formed and just before the session of the Central Political Conference began Wang visited Sun s tomb in Nanjing s Purple Mountain to establish the legitimacy of his power as Sun s successor Wang had been a high level official of the Kuomintang government and as a confidant to Sun had transcribed Sun s last will the Zongli s Testament To discredit the legitimacy of the Chongqing government Wang adopted Sun s flag in the hope that it would establish him as the rightful successor to Sun and bring the government back to Nanjing Wang and his group were damaged early on by the defection of the diplomat Gao Zongwu who played a critical role in arranging Wang s defection after two years of negotiations with the Japanese in January 1940 He had become disillusioned and believed that Japan did not see China as an equal partner taking with him the documents of the Basic Treaty that Japan had signed with the Wang Jingwei government He revealed them to the Kuomintang press becoming a major propaganda coup for Chiang Kai shek and discrediting Wang s movement in the eyes of the public as mere puppets of the Japanese 9 History editShanghai as de facto capital 1939 1941 editWith Nanjing still rebuilding itself after the devastating assault and occupation by the Japanese Imperial Army the fledgling Reorganized Nationalist Government turned to Shanghai as its primary focal point With its key role as both an economic and media center for all China close affiliation to Western Imperial powers even despite the Japanese invasion and relatively sheltered position from attacks by KMT and Communist forces alike Shanghai offered both sanctuary and opportunity for Wang and his allies ambitions 10 Once in Shanghai the new regime quickly moved to take control over those publications already supportive of Wang and his peace platform while also engaging in violent gang style attacks against rival news outlets By November 1940 the Reorganized Nationalist Party had secured enough local support to begin hostile takeovers of both Chinese courts and banks still under nominal control by the KMT in Chongqing or Western powers Buoyed by this rapid influx of seized collateral the Reorganized Government under its recently appoint Finance Minister Zhou Fohai was able to issue a new currency for circulation Ultimately however the already limited economic influence garnered by the new banknotes was further diminished by Japanese efforts to contain the influence of the new regime at least for a time to territories firmly under Japanese control like Shanghai and other isolated regions of the Yangtze Valley 10 nbsp Wall bearing a government slogan that proclaims Support Mr Wang Jingwei nbsp Water Resource Committee of Wang Jingwei s puppet governmentEfforts to expand Japanese recognition edit nbsp Advertisement of congratulation towards the establishment of the new Nationalist government on Taiwan Nichi Nichi ShimpōWhile Wang had been successful in securing from Japan a basic treaty recognizing the foundation of his new party in November 1940 the produced document granted the Reorganized Nationalist Government almost no powers whatsoever This initial treaty precluded any possibility for Wang to act as intermediary with Chiang Kai shek and his forces in securing a peace agreement in China Likewise the regime was afforded no extra administrative powers in occupied China save those few previously carved out in Shanghai Indeed official Japanese correspondence regarded the Nanjing regime as trivially important and urged any and all token representatives stationed with Wang and his allies to dismiss all diplomatic efforts by the new government which could not directly contribute to a total military victory over Chiang and his forces 11 Hoping to expand the treaty in such a way as to be useful Wang formally traveled to Tokyo in June 1941 in order to meet with prime minister Fumimaro Konoe and his cabinet to discuss new terms and agreements Unfortunately for Wang his visit coincided with the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union a move which further emboldened officials in Tokyo to pursue total victory in China rather than accept a peace deal In the end Konoe eventually agreed to provide a substantial loan to the Nanjing government as well as increased sovereignty neither of which came to fruition and indeed neither of which were even mentioned to military commanders stationed in China As a slight conciliation Wang was successful in persuading the Japanese to secure official recognition for the Nanjing Government from the other Axis Powers 11 Breakthrough 1943 edit nbsp Wang Jingwei at a military paradeAs the Japanese offensive stalled around the Pacific conditions remained generally consistent under Wang Jingwei s government The regime continued to represent itself as the legitimate government of China continued to appeal to Chiang Kai shek to seek a peace deal and continued to chafe under the extremely limited sovereignty afforded by the Japanese occupiers Yet by 1943 Japanese leaders including Hideki Tojo recognizing that the tide of war was turning against them sought new ways to reinforce the thinly stretched Japanese forces To this end Tokyo finally found it expedient to fully recognize Wang Jingwei s government as a full ally and a replacement Pact of Alliance was drafted for the basic treaty This new agreement granted the Nanjing government markedly enhanced administrative control over its own territory as well as increased ability to make limited self decisions Despite this windfall the deal came far too late for the Reorganized government to have sufficient resources to take advantage of its new powers and Japan was in no condition to offer aid to its new partner 12 War on Opium edit As a result of general chaos and wartime various profiteering efforts of the conquering Japanese armies already considerable illegal opium smuggling operations expanded greatly in the Reorganized Nation Government s territory Indeed Japanese forces themselves became arguably the largest and most widespread traffickers within the territory under the auspices of semi official narcotics monopolies 13 While initially too politically weak to make inroads into the Japanese operations as the war began to turn against them the Japanese government sought to incorporate some collaborationist governments more actively into the war effort To this end in October 1943 the Japanese government signed a treaty with the Reorganized Nationalist Government of China offering them a greater degree of control over their own territory 14 As a result Wang Jingwei and his government were able to gain some increased control over the opium monopolies Negotiations by Chen Gongbo were successful in reaching an agreement to cut opium imports from Mongolia in half as well as an official turnover of state sponsored monopolies from Japan over to the Reorganized Nationalist Government 15 Yet perhaps due to financial concerns the regime sought only limited reductions in the distribution of opium throughout the remainder of the war The Nanjing Government and the northern Chinese areas edit nbsp Area of control of the invading Japanese forcesThe Tongzhou administration East Ji Anti Communist Autonomous Administration was under the commander in chief of the Japanese Northern China Area Army until the Yellow River area fell inside the sphere of influence of the Japanese Central China Area Army During this same period the area from middle Zhejiang to Guangdong was administered by the Japanese North China Area Army These small largely independent fiefdoms had local money and local leaders and frequently squabbled Wang Jingwei traveled to Tokyo in 1941 for meetings In Tokyo the Reorganized National Government Vice President Zhou Fohai commented to the Asahi Shimbun newspaper that the Japanese establishment was making little progress in the Nanjing area This quote provoked anger from Kumataro Honda the Japanese ambassador in Nanjing Zhou Fohai petitioned for total control of China s central provinces by the Reorganized National Government In response Imperial Japanese Army Lt Gen Teiichi Suzuki was ordered to provide military guidance to the Reorganized National Government and so became part of the real power that lay behind Wang s rule With the permission of the Japanese Army a monopolistic economic policy was applied to the benefit of Japanese zaibatsu and local representatives Though these companies were supposedly treated the same as local Chinese companies by the government the president of the Yuan legislature in Nanjing Chen Gongbo complained that this was untrue to the Kaizō Japanese review The Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China also featured its own embassy in Yokohama Japan as did Manchukuo Government and politics editSee also Kuomintang Wang Jingwei Wang Jingwei nominally ruled the government as the Chairman of the Central Political Committee Chairman of the National Government Committee and President of the Executive Yuan commonly called the Premier until his death in 1944 after which Chen Gongbo succeeded him until Japan s defeat in 1945 His collaborationist Kuomintang was the sole ruling party 7 The supreme national ruling body was officially the Central Political Committee Chinese 中央政治委員會 under which was the National Government Committee Chinese 國民政府委員會 The administrative structure of the Reorganized National Government also included a Legislative Yuan and an Executive Yuan they were respectively led by Chen Gongbo and Wang Jingwei until 1944 7 However actual political power remained with the commander of the Japanese Central China Area Army and Japanese political entities formed by Japanese political advisors A principal goal of the new regime was to portray itself as the legitimate continuation of the former Nationalist government despite the Japanese occupation To this end the Reorganized government frequently sought to revitalize and expand the former policies of the Nationalist government often to mixed success 13 International recognition and foreign relations edit nbsp Wang Jingwei Japanese ambassador Abe Nobuyuki and Manchukuo ambassador Zang Shiyi sign the joint declaration 30 November 1940 nbsp Wang Jingwei with ambassador Heinrich Georg Stahmer at the German embassy in 1941 nbsp Unused example of a Wang Jingwei regime passport circa 1941The Nanjing Nationalist Government received little international recognition as it was seen as a Japanese puppet state being recognized only by Japan and the rest of the Axis powers Initially its main sponsor Japan hoped to come to a peace accord with Chiang Kai shek and held off official diplomatic recognition for the Wang Jingwei regime for eight months after its founding not establishing formal diplomatic relations with the National Reorganized Government until 30 November 1940 16 The Sino Japanese Basic Treaty was signed on 20 November 1940 by which Japan recognised the Nationalist Government 17 and it also included a Japan Manchukuo China joint declaration by which China recognized the Empire of Great Manchuria and the three countries pledged to create a New Order in East Asia 18 19 20 The United States and Britain immediately denounced the formation of the government seeing it as a tool of Japanese imperialism 17 In July 1941 after negotiations by Foreign Minister Chu Minyi the Nanjing Government was recognized as the government of China by Germany and Italy Soon after Spain Slovakia Romania Bulgaria Croatia and Denmark also recognized and established relations with the Wang Jingwei regime as the government of China 21 22 23 China under the Reorganized National Government also became a signatory of the Anti Comintern Pact on 25 November 1941 24 671 672 After Japan established diplomatic relations with the Holy See in 1942 they and their ally Italy pressured Pope Pius XII to recognize the Nanjing regime and allow a Chinese envoy to be appointed to the Vatican but he refused to give in to these pressures Instead the Vatican came to an informal agreement with Japan that their apostolic delegate in Beijing would pay visits to Catholics in the Nanjing government s territory 25 The Pope also ignored the suggestion of the aforementioned apostolic delegate Mario Zanin who recommended in October 1941 that the Vatican recognize the Wang Jingwei regime as the legitimate government of China Zanin would remain in the Wang Jingwei regime s territory as apostolic delegate while another bishop in Chongqing was to represent Catholic interests in Chiang Kai shek s territory 26 Vichy France despite being aligned with the Axis resisted Japanese pressure and also refused to recognize the Wang Jingwei regime with French diplomats in China remaining accredited to the government of Chiang Kai shek 27 The Reorganized National Government had its own Foreign Section or Ministry of Foreign Affairs for managing international relations although it was short on personnel 28 On 9 January 1943 the Reorganized National Government signed the Treaty on Returning Leased Territories and Repealing Extraterritoriality Rights with Japan which abolished all foreign concessions within occupied China Reportedly the date was originally to have been later that month but was moved to January 9 to be before the United States concluded a similar treaty with Chiang Kai shek s government The Nanjing Government then took control of all of the international concessions in Shanghai and its other territories 29 Later that year Wang Jingwei attended the Greater East Asia Conference as the Chinese representative The Wang Jingwei government sent Chinese athletes including the national football team to compete in the 1940 East Asian Games which were held in Tokyo for the 2 600th anniversary of the legendary founding of the Japanese Empire by Emperor Jimmu and were a replacement for the cancelled 1940 Summer Olympics 30 31 State ideology edit Wang Jingwei s government promoted the idea of pan Asianism 32 18 directed against the West after Japan s pivot towards joining the Axis powers which included signing the Tripartite Pact an idea aimed at establishing a New Order in East Asia together with Japan Manchukuo and other Asian nations that would expel Western colonial powers from Asia particularly the Anglo Saxons the U S and Britain that dominated large parts of Asia Wang Jingwei used pan Asianism basing his views on Sun Yat sen s advocacy for Asian people to unite against the West in the early 20th century partly to justify his efforts at working together with Japan He claimed it was natural for Japan and China to have good relations and cooperation because of their close affinity describing their conflicts as a temporary aberration in both nation s history Furthermore the government believed in the unity of all Asian nations with Japan as their leader as the only way to achieve their goals of removing Western colonial powers from Asia There was no official description of which Asian peoples were considered to be included in this but Wang members of the Propaganda Ministry and other officials of his regime writing for collaborationist media had different interpretations at times listing Japan China Manchukuo Thailand the Philippines Burma Nepal India Afghanistan Iran Iraq Syria and Arabia as potential members of an East Asian League 33 From 1940 onwards the Wang Jingwei government depicted World War II as a struggle by Asians against the West more specifically the Anglo American powers The Reorganized National Government had a Propaganda Ministry which exerted control over local media outlets and used them to disseminate pan Asianist and anti Western propaganda British and American diplomats in Shanghai and Nanjing noted by 1940 that the Wang Jingwei controlled press was publishing anti Western content These campaigns were aided by the Japanese authorities in China and also reflected pan Asian thought as promoted by Japanese thinkers which intensified after the start of the Pacific War in December 1941 Pro regime newspapers and journals published articles which cited instances of racial discrimination towards immigrant Asian communities living in the West and Western colonies in Asia Chu Minyi the minister of foreign affairs of the Nanjing Government asserted in an article written shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor that the Sino Japanese conflict and other wars among Asians were the result of secret manipulation by the Western powers Lin Baisheng the minister of propaganda from 1940 to 1944 also made these claims in several of his speeches 34 Since Japan was aligned with Germany Italy and other European Axis countries the Nanjing Government s propaganda did not portray the conflict as a war against all white people and focused on the U S and Britain in particular Their newspapers like Republican Daily praised the German people as a great race for their technological and organizational advancements and glorified the Nazi regime for supposedly transforming Germany into a great power over the past decade The publications of the Nanjing Government also agreed with the anti Jewish views held by Nazi Germany with Wang Jingwei and other officials seeing Jews as dominating the American government and being conspirators with the Anglo American powers to control the world 35 The government also took measures to ban the spread of Anglo American culture and lifestyle among Chinese people in its territory and promoted traditional Confucian culture Generally it considered Eastern spiritual culture to be superior to the Western culture of materialism individualism and liberalism Christian missionary schools and missionary activities were banned the study of English language in schools was reduced and the usage of English in the postal and customs system was gradually reduced as well Vice minister of education Tai Yingfu called for a campaign against the Anglo American nations in education Zhou Huaren vice minister of propaganda blamed Chinese students that studied in the West for spreading Western values among the population and disparaging traditional Chinese culture Wang Jingwei blamed communism anarchism and internationalism which Wang considered Anglo American thinking for making other peoples despise their own culture and embracing the Anglo American culture He believed it was necessary to promote Confucianism to oppose Anglo American cultural aggression At the same time Zhou Huaren and others also thought that it was necessary to adopt Western scientific advancements while combining them with traditional Eastern culture to develop themselves as he said Japan did in the Meiji Restoration seeing that as a model for others to follow 36 In addition to its pan Asianism nationalism was part of the regime ideology 32 18 National defense edit Main article Collaborationist Chinese Army nbsp President Wang Jingwei at a military parade on the occasion of the third anniversary of the establishment of the government nbsp Type 94 tankettes on parade note the driver s Stahlhelm and the KMT blue and white sun emblem on the tanks During its existence the Reorganized National Government nominally led a large army often called the Nanjing Army that was estimated to have included 300 000 to 500 000 men along with a smaller navy and air force Although its land forces possessed limited armor and artillery they were primarily an infantry force Military aid from Japan was also very limited despite Japanese promises to assist the Nanjing regime in the Japan China Military Affairs Agreement that they signed All military matters were the responsibility of the Central Military Commission but in practice that body was mainly a ceremonial one In reality many of the army s commanders operated outside of the direct command of the central government in Nanjing The majority of its officers were either former National Revolutionary Army personnel or warlord officers from the early Republican era Thus their reliability and combat capability was questionable and Wang Jingwei was estimated to only be able to count on the loyalty of about 10 to 15 of his nominal forces Among the reorganized government s best units were three Capital Guards divisions based in Nanjing Zhou Fohai s Taxation Police Corps and the 1st Front Army of Ren Yuandao 37 38 The majority of the government s forces were armed with a mix of captured Nationalist weaponry and a small amount of Japanese equipment the latter mainly being given to Nanjing s best units The lack of local military industry for the duration of the war meant that the Nanjing regime had trouble arming its troops While the army was mainly an infantry force in 1941 it did receive 18 Type 94 tankettes for a token armored force and reportedly they also received 20 armored cars and 24 motorcycles The main type of artillery in use were medium mortars but they also possessed 31 field guns which included Model 1917 mountain guns mainly used by the Guards divisions Oftentimes the troops were equipped with the German Stahlhelm which were used in large quantities by the Chinese Nationalist Army For small arms there was no standard rifle and a large variety of different weapons were used which made supplying them with ammunition difficult The most common rifles in use was the Chinese version of the Mauser 98k and the Hanyang 88 while other notable weapons included Chinese copies of the Czechoslovakian ZB 26 machine guns 38 39 Along with the great variation in equipment there was also a disparity in sizes of units Some armies had only a few thousand troops while some divisions several thousand There was a standard divisional structure but only the elite Guards divisions closer to the capital actually had anything resembling it In addition to these regular army forces there were multiple police and local militia which numbered in the tens of thousands but were deemed to be completely unreliable by the Japanese 40 Most of the units located around Beijing in northern China remained in effect under the authority of the North China Political Council rather than that of the central government In an attempt to improve the quality of the officer corps multiple military academies had been opened including a Central Military Academy in Nanjing and a Naval Academy in Shanghai In addition there was a military academy in Beijing for the North China Political Council s forces and a branch of the central academy in Canton 41 A small navy was established with naval bases at Weihaiwei and Qingdao but it mostly consisted of small patrol boats that were used for coastal and river defense Reportedly the captured Nationalist cruisers Ning Hai and Ping Hai were handed over to the government by the Japanese becoming important propaganda tools However the Imperial Japanese Navy took them back in 1943 for its own use In addition there were two regiments of marines one at Canton and the other at Weihaiwei By 1944 the navy was under direct command of Ren Yuandao the naval minister 42 An Air Force of the Reorganized National Government was established in May 1941 with the opening of the Aviation School and receiving three aircraft Tachikawa Ki 9 trainers In the future the air force received additional Ki 9 and Ki 55 trainers as well as multiple transports Plans by Wang Jingwei to form a fighter squadron with Nakajima Ki 27s did not come to fruition as the Japanese did not trust the pilots enough to give them combat aircraft Morale was low and a number of defections took place The only two offensive aircraft they did possess were Tupolev SB bombers which were flown by defecting Nationalist crews 43 The Reorganized National Government s army was primarily tasked with garrison and police duties in the occupied territories It also took part in anti partisan operations against Communist guerrillas such as in the Hundred Regiments Offensive or played supporting roles for the Imperial Japanese Army IJA 44 The Nanjing Government undertook a rural pacification campaign to eradicate communists from the countryside arresting and executing many people suspected of being communists with support from the Japanese 45 Japanese methods of recruiting edit During the conflicts in central China the Japanese utilized several methods to recruit Chinese volunteers Japanese sympathisers including Nanjing s pro Japanese governor or major local landowners such as Ni Daolang were used to recruit local peasants in return for money or food The Japanese recruited 5 000 volunteers in the Anhui area for the Reorganized National Government Army Japanese forces and the Reorganized National Government used slogans like Lay down your guns and take up the plough Oppose the Communist Bandits or Oppose Corrupt Government and Support the Reformed Government to dissuade guerrilla attacks and buttress its support 46 The Japanese used various methods for subjugating the local populace Initially fear was used to maintain order but this approach was altered following appraisals by Japanese military ideologists In 1939 the Japanese army attempted some populist policies including land reform by dividing the property of major landowners into small holdings and allocating them to local peasants providing the Chinese with medical services including vaccination against cholera typhus and varicella and treatments for other diseases ordering Japanese soldiers not to violate women or laws dropping leaflets from aeroplanes offering rewards for information with parlays set up by use of a white surrender flag the handing over of weapons or other actions beneficial to the Japanese cause Money and food were often incentives used and dispersal of candy food and toys to childrenBuddhist leaders inside the occupied Chinese territories Shao Kung were also forced to give public speeches and persuade people of the virtues of a Chinese alliance with Japan including advocating the breaking off of all relations with Western powers and ideas In 1938 a manifesto was launched in Shanghai reminding the populace the Japanese alliance s track record in maintaining moral supremacy as compared to the often fractious nature of the previous Republican control and also accusing Generalissimo Chiang Kai Shek of treason for maintaining the Western alliance In support of such efforts in 1941 Wang Jingwei proposed the Qingxiang Plan to be applied along the lower course of the Yangtze River A Qingxiang Plan Committee Qingxiang Weiyuan hui was formed with himself as Chairman and Zhou Fohai and Chen Gongbo as first and second vice chairmen respectively Li Shiqun was made the committee s secretary Beginning in July 1941 Wang maintained that any areas to which the plan was applied would convert into model areas of peace anti communism and rebuilders of the country heping fangong jianguo mofanqu It was not a success Political boundaries edit nbsp Map of the Republic of China that was controlled by the reorganized national government in 1939 dark green Mengjiang was incorporated in 1940 light green In theory the Reorganized National Government claimed all of China with the exception of Manchukuo which it recognized as an independent state In actuality at the time of its formation the Reorganized Government controlled only Jiangsu Anhui and the north sector of Zhejiang all being Japanese controlled territories after 1937 Thereafter the Reorganized Government s actual borders waxed and waned as the Japanese gained or lost territory during the course of the war During the December 1941 Japanese offensive the Reorganized Government extended its control over Hunan Hubei and parts of Jiangxi provinces The port of Shanghai and the cities of Hankou and Wuchang were also placed under control of the Reformed Government after 1940 The Japanese controlled provinces of Shandong and Hebei were de jure part of this political entity though they were de facto under military administration of the Japanese Northern China Area Army from its headquarters in Beijing Likewise the Japanese controlled territories in central China were under military administration of the Japanese Sixth Area Army from its headquarters in Hankou Wuhan Other Japanese controlled territories had military administrations directly reporting to the Japanese military headquarters in Nanjing with the exception of Guangdong and Guangxi which briefly had its headquarters in Canton The central and southern zones of military occupation were eventually linked together after Operation Ichi Go in 1944 though the Japanese garrison had no effective control over most of this region apart from a narrow strip around the Guangzhou Hankou railway The Reorganized Government s control was mostly limited to Jiangsu 41 818 sq mi 108 310 km2 capital Zhenjiang also included the national capital of Nanjing Anhui 51 888 sq mi 134 390 km2 capital Anqing Zhejiang 39 780 sq mi 103 000 km2 capital HangzhouAccording to other sources total extension of territory during 1940 period was 1 264 000 km2 In 1940 an agreement was signed between the Inner Mongolian puppet state of Mengjiang and the Nanjing regime incorporating the former into the latter as an autonomous part 47 Economy editThe North China Transportation Company and the Central China Railway were established by the former Provisional Government and Reformed Government which had nationalised private railway and bus companies that operated in their territories and continued to function providing railway and bus services in the Nanjing regime s territory After its 1941 declaration of war against the United States and the United Kingdom Japan moved into the foreign areas of the city that it had not previously occupied after the Battle of Shanghai 48 11 12 It seized most of the banks in these areas of Shanghai and occupied Tianjin and declared that the Nationalist currency fabi had to be exchanged for bank notes of the Wang Jingwei regime at a mandated rate of 2 1 before June 1 1942 48 15 For most Chinese in these occupied areas the exchange meant that their fabi lost half its value and a major blow to the economy of the lower Yangzi resulted 48 15 Life under the regime editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Japanese under the regime had greater access to coveted wartime luxuries and the Japanese enjoyed things like matches rice tea coffee cigars foods and alcoholic drinks all of which were scarce in Japan proper However consumer goods became more scarce after Japan entered World War II In Japanese occupied Chinese territories the prices of basic necessities rose substantially as Japan s war effort expanded By 1941 these prices in Shanghai increased eleven fold Daily life was often difficult in the Nanjing Nationalist Government controlled Republic of China and grew increasingly so as the war turned against Japan c 1943 Local residents resorted to the black market in order to obtain needed items or to influence the ruling establishment The Kempeitai Japanese Military Police Corps Tokubetsu Kōtō Keisatsu Special Higher Police collaborationist Chinese police and Chinese citizens in the service of the Japanese all worked to censor information monitor any opposition and torture enemies and dissenters A native secret agency the Tewu was created with the aid of Japanese Army advisors The Japanese also established prisoner of war detention centres concentration camps and kamikaze training centres to indoctrinate pilots Since Wang s government held authority only over territories under Japanese military occupation there was a limited amount that officials loyal to Wang could do to ease the suffering of Chinese under Japanese occupation Wang himself became a focal point of anti Japanese resistance He was demonised and branded as an arch traitor in both KMT and Communist rhetoric Wang and his government were deeply unpopular with the Chinese populace who regarded them as traitors to both the Chinese state and Han Chinese identity 49 Wang s rule was constantly undermined by resistance and sabotage The strategy of the local education system was to create a workforce suited for employment in factories and mines and for manual labor The Japanese also attempted to introduce their culture and dress to the Chinese Complaints and agitation called for more meaningful Chinese educational development Shinto temples and similar cultural centers were built in order to instill Japanese culture and values These activities came to a halt at the end of the war Notable figures editLocal administration Wang Jingwei President and Head of State Chen Gongbo President and Head of State after the death of Wang Also President of the Legislative Yuan 1940 1944 and Mayor of the Shanghai occupied sector Zhou Fohai Vice President and Finance Minister in the Executive Yuan Wen Tsungyao Chief of the Judicial Yuan Wang Kemin Internal Affairs Minister previously head of the Provisional Government of the Republic of China Liang Hongzhi Head of the Legislative Yuan 1944 1945 previously head of the Reformed Government Yin Ju keng Member of the Legal Affairs Department previously head of the East Hebei Autonomous Government Wang Yitang Minister of the Examination Yuan Chairman of the North China Political Council 1940 1943 Jiang Kanghu Chief of the Education Yuan Xia Qifeng Chief of the Auditing Bureau of the Control Yuan Ren Yuandao Minister of the Navy 1940 1945 amp Chairman of the National Military Council 1940 1942 Xiao Shuxuan Minister of Military Affairs 1945 amp Chairman of the National Military Council 1942 1945 Yang Kuiyi Chief of General Staff 1940 1942 amp Chairman of the National Military Council 1945 Bao Wenyue Minister of Military Affairs 1940 1943 amp Chief of General Staff 1943 1945 Ye Peng Minister of Military Affairs 1943 1945 amp Chief of General Staff 1942 Xiang Zhizhuang Commander of the 5th Group Army Commander of the 12th Army Governor and Commander of Security in Zhejiang Province Governor of Jiangsu Province Rong Zhen Chief of the Committee for Subjugation Communists Governor of Hebei Province 1945 Kou Yingjie Councilor of the General Staff office Liu Yufen Chief of General Staff 1942 1943 Hu Yukun Chief of General Staff 1945 Hao Pengju Chief of Staff of the 1st Army group Governor of Huaihai General commander of the 6th Route Army Wu Huawen Commander in Chief of the 3rd Front Army Qi Xieyuan Commander in Chief of the North China Appeasement army Supervisor of the General administration of Justice Sun Dianying Commander of the Collaborationist Chinese Army 6th group army district Ding Mocun Chief of the Collaborationist Secret police Minister of Society Minister of Transport Governor of Zhejiang province Li Shiqun Head of No 76 the regime s secret service stationed in No 76 Jessefield Road in Shanghai Zhu Xingyuan Chief of the Agency of Political Affairs Tang Erho Chairman of the North China Political Affairs Commission Gu Zhongchen Vice Chief of the Examination Yuan 1940 1944 Chief of the Examination Yuan 1944 1945 Thung Liang Lee director of the International Publicity Bureau 1940 1945 Xia Suchu Executive Vice chief to the Evaluation Department of the Examination Yuan Chief Secretary of the Examination Yuan Chen Qun Interior Minister 1940 1943 Luo Junqiang Minister of Justice 1942 1943 Governor of Anhui 1943 1944 Zhao Yusong Minister of Agriculture 1940 1941 Minister of Justice 1941 1942 Minister of Civil Service 1942 1943 Mei Siping Interior Minister 1943 1945 Su Tiren Governor of Shanxi 1938 1943 Mayor of Beijing Special city 1943 Zhao Zhengping Minister of Education 1940 1941 Wang Shijing Executive Member and Governor to the General Office for Finance Governor of the General Office for Economy Zhou Huaren Executive Vice Minister of Railways Mayor of Guangzhou Special Municipality Lin Bosheng Propaganda Minister 1940 1944 Zhao Zhuyue Propaganda Minister 1944 1945 Gao Guanwu Mayor of Nanjing Special City 1938 1940 Governor of Jiangsu 1940 1943 Governor of Anhui 1943 Governor of Jiangxi 1943 1945 Chen Zemin Governor of Jiangsu Province Yu Jinhe Mayor of Beijing Special City 1938 1943 Lin Biao born 1889 Chief of the Administrative High Court Kaya Okinori Japanese nationalist merchant and commercial adviser Chu Minyi Foreign Minister 1940 1941 1945 ambassador to Japan 1940 1941 Cai Pei Mayor of Nanjing Special City 1940 1942 ambassador to Japan 1943 1945 Xu Liang Foreign Minister 1940 1941 ambassador to Japan 1941 1943 Li Shengwu Foreign Minister 1945 ambassador to Germany Zhang Renli Mayor of Tianjin Special City 1943 Yan Jiachi Vice Minister for Finance Control Officer of the Control Yuan Xu Xiuzhi Mayor of Beijing Special City 1945 Lian Yu ambassador to Manchukuo 1940 1943 ambassador to Japan 1945 Zhu Luhe Vice Chief of the Judicial Yuan Chairperson of the Disciplinary Action Committee for Central Public Servants Wen Shizhen Mayor of Tianjin Special City 1939 1943 Wang Xugao Governor of Jinhaidao Mayor of Tianjin Special City Wang Yintai Governor of the General Office for Business Governor of the General Office for Agriculture Chairperson of the North China Political Council Chen Jicheng ambassador to Manchukuo 1943 1945 Wang Xiang Republic of China politician Chief of the Agency for Education in Shanxi Governor and Security Commander of Shanxi He Peirong Governor of Hubei province 1938 1942 Commander of Security in Hubei Ni Daolang Governor of Anhui Province Wang Ruikai Governor of Zhejiang province 1938 1941 Zhu Qinglai Minister of Transport Chairman of the Irrigation Commission Vice Chief of the Legislative Yuan Wu Zanzhou Governor of Hebei province 1939 1943 President of the Police High School Shao Wenkai Governor of Henan province Wang Mo Chief of the General Office for Education Chao Kung Ignaz Trebitsch Lincoln purported Buddhist leader Zhou Longxiang Diplomat Chief Secretary of the Executive Yuan Chief of the Civil Servants Zhou Xuechang Mayor of Nanjing Special City 1941 1945 Zhu Shen Executive Member and Chief of the Agency for Political Affairs Chairperson of the North China Political Council Yu Baoxuan Observer to the Commission for High Ranking Officers Examination Li Fang diplomat Foreign minister to Romania and Hungary Ambassador to Germany Yin Tong Governor of the General Office for Construction Hao Peng ROC Chief Executive of the Suhuai Special Region Commander of the Suhuai Special Region Security forces Wu Songgao Secretary of the Central Political Committee Vice Minister for Judicial Administrating Chairman of the Committee for Baojia system Yue Kaixian Chief of the General Office for Business Deng Zuyu Governor of Jiangxi province 1943 Foreign representatives and diplomatic personnel Nobuyuki Abe Japanese ambassador to the Reorganized National Government 1940 Kumataro Honda Japanese ambassador 1940 1941 Mamoru Shigemitsu Japanese ambassador 1941 1943 Masayuki Tani Japanese ambassador 1943 1945 Teiichi Suzuki Japanese military and political adviser Sadaaki Kagesa Japanese military advisor Zang Shiyi Manchukuo ambassador Li Shaogeng Manchukuo special envoy Heinrich Georg Stahmer German ambassador 1941 1943 Erich Kordt German ambassador 1943 Ernst Woermann German ambassador 1943 1945 Francesco Maria Taliani de Marchio Italian ambassador 1941 1943 Alvaro de Maldonado y de Linan Spanish minister 1941 1943 Jose Gonzalez de Gregorio Spanish charge d affaires 1944 1945 Hialmar Collin Danish minister 1941 1945 Legacy editHaving died before the war had ended Wang Jingwei was unable to join his fellow Reorganized Nationalist Government leaders on trial for treason in the months that followed the Japanese surrender Instead he alongside his presidential successor Chen Gongbo who was tried and sentenced to death by the victorious Nationalists and his vice president Zhou Fohai who had his death sentence commuted to life imprisonment was given the title Hanjian meaning arch traitor to the Han people In the following decades Wang Jingwei and the entire reputation of the collaborationist government have undergone considerable scholastic debate Characterizations of the regime are a matter of historical debate 32 2 In general evaluations produced by scholars working under the People s Republic of China have held the most critical interpretations of the failed regime Western scholars typically holding the government and Wang Jingwei especially in a sympathetic light with Taiwanese scholars falling somewhere in the middle 50 The Western characterization of the regime is generally as collaborationist while Chinese sources have often characterized it as illegitimate 32 2 In popular culture editLust Caution is a 1979 novella by Chinese author Eileen Chang which was later turned into an award winning film by Ang Lee The story is about a group of young university students who attempt to assassinate the Minister of Security of the Reorganized National Government During the war Ms Chang was married to Hu Lancheng a writer who worked for the Reorganized National Government and the story is believed to be largely based on actual events The 2009 Chinese film The Message is a thriller mystery in the vein of a number of Agatha Christie novels The main characters are all codebreakers serving in the Reorganized National Government s military but one of them is a Kuomintang double agent A Japanese intelligence officer detains the group in a castle and attempts to uncover which of them is the spy using psychological and physical coercion uncovering the protagonists bitter rivalries jealousies and secrets as he does so The TV series Sparrow is a spy genre thriller During Shanghai s Reorganised Government communist agent Chen Shen infiltrates the Japanese base and adopts the code name Sparrow His mission is to obtain the zero intel a secret plan that could destroy China To do so he becomes the assistant of Bi Zhongliang the leader of the Special Operations Team under the Public Security Bureau See also editManchukuo Great Way Government Second Sino Japanese War History of the Republic of China National Revolutionary Army Collaborationist Chinese Army Organization of the China Garrison detachment of the Imperial Japanese Army to 1937 Organization of Japanese Expeditionary forces in China List of East Asian leaders in the Japanese sphere of influence 1931 1945 List of leaders of the Republic of ChinaNotes edit The yellow pennant which reads Peace Anti Communism National Construction was not attached to the flag itself but flew separately on the flagpole immediately above it In 1943 the pennant which was previously mandatory for outdoor use of the flag was removed This made the flag identical to that of the rival Nationalist government based in the wartime capital Chongqing References editCitations edit Japanese Newsreel with the national anthem on YouTube Larsen Stein Ugelvik ed Fascism Outside of Europe New York Columbia University Press 2001 ISBN 0 88033 988 8 p 255 Bate 1941 p 80 84 Bate 1941 pp 130 135 Bate 1941 p 136 Bate 1941 p 144 a b c d 高雲昉 1994 汪偽國民黨 六大 Sixth Party Congress of Wang s Puppet Kuomintang China National Knowledge Infrastructure Archived from the original on 2019 05 13 Retrieved 2018 03 14 Bunker 1972 pp 149 160 Boyle 1972 pp 277 280 a b Bunker 1972 pp 252 263 a b Bunker 1972 pp 264 280 Matos Christine Caprio Mark 2015 Japan as the Occupier and the Occupied New York NY Palgrave Macmillan pp 152 160 ISBN 978 1 137 40810 5 a b Martin 2003 pp 365 410 Martin 2003 p 385 Martin 2003 pp 392 394 Boyle 1972 p 301 a b So 2011 p 75 So 2011 p 77 Signing of Japan Manchukuo China Joint Declaration Chinese puppet government travel document Archived 2017 12 22 at the Wayback Machine Published 23 September 2016 Retrieved 19 December 2017 Dorn 1974 p 243 Cotterell 2009 p 217 sfnp error no target CITEREFCotterell2009 help Brodsgaard 2003 p 111 Smyth Howard M et al eds 1970 15 September bis 11 Dezember 1941 Akten zur deutschen auswartigen Politik 1918 1945 in German Vol D 13 2 Vandenhoeck Ruprecht Pollard 2014 p 329 sfnp error no target CITEREFPollard2014 help The Magic Background to Pearl Harbor Volume 4 Japanese diplomatic cables published by US Department of Defense p A 460 Young 2013 pp 250 251 The Magic Background to Pearl Harbor Volume 4 Japanese diplomatic cables published by US Department of Defense pp A 456 A 465 Wang 2016 pp 31 32 Collins Sandra 2014 1940 TOKYO GAMES COLLINS Japan the Asian Olympics and the Olympic Movement Routledge pp 179 180 ISBN 978 1317999669 Veroeveren Piet 2600th Anniversary of the Japanese Empire 1940 Tokyo Rec Sport Soccer Statistics Foundation Retrieved 25 December 2014 a b c d Yang Zhiyi 2023 Poetry History Memory Wang Jingwei and China in Dark Times Ann Arbor The University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 05650 7 So 2011 p 78 80 So 2011 pp 81 83 So 2011 pp 86 88 So 2011 pp 89 92 Barret 2002 pp 109 111 a b Jowett 2004 pp 65 67 Jowett 2004 pp 75 77 Jowett 2004 pp 71 72 Jowett 2004 pp 77 78 Jowett 2004 pp 103 104 Jowett 2004 pp 94 96 Jowett 2004 pp 80 82 Zanasi 2008 p 747 Smedley 1943 p 223 MacKinnon amp Lary 2007 p 162 a b c Coble Parks M 2023 The Collapse of Nationalist China How Chiang Kai shek Lost China s Civil War Cambridge New York NY Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 009 29761 5 Wakeman Jr Frederic 2000 Hanjian Traitor Collaboration and Retribution in Wartime Shanghai In Wen hsin Yeh ed Becoming Chinese Passages to Modernity and Beyond Berkeley University of California Press p 322 doi 10 1525 california 9780520219236 003 0009 ISBN 9780520219236 Chen Jian Yue October 2004 American Studies of Wang Jingwei Defining Nationalism World History Review Journal Sources edit Journal articlesMartin Brian G 2003 01 01 in My Heart I Opposed Opium Opium and The Politics of the Wang Jingwei Government 1940 45 European Journal of East Asian Studies 2 2 365 410 doi 10 1163 157006103771378464 JSTOR 23615144 So Wai Chor January 2011 Race Culture and the Anglo American Powers The Views of Chinese Collaborators Modern China 37 1 69 103 doi 10 1177 0097700410382542 JSTOR 25759539 S2CID 220605241 Zanasi Margherita June 2008 Globalizing Hanjian The Suzhou Trials and the Post World War II Discourse on Collaboration The American Historical Review 113 3 731 751 doi 10 1086 ahr 113 3 731 JSTOR 30223050 BooksBate Don 1941 Wang Ching Wei Puppet or Patriot Chicago IL RF Seymour Barrett David P Shyu Larry N eds 2001 Chinese Collaboration with Japan 1932 1945 The Limits of Accommodation Stanford University Press Behr Edward 1987 The Last Emperor Recorded Picture Co Productions Ltd and Screenframe Ltd Boyle John H 1972 China and Japan at War 1937 1945 The Politics of Collaboration Harvard University Press Brodsgaard Kjeld Erik 2003 China and Denmark Relations since 1674 Nordic Institute of Asian Studies Bunker Gerald 1972 The Peace Conspiracy Wang Ching wei and the China War 1937 1941 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0674 65915 5 Ch i Hsi sheng 1982 Nationalist China at War Military Defeats and Political Collapse 1937 1945 Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press Chiang Kai Shek The Soviet Russia in China Chiang Wego W K How the Generalissimo Chiang Kai Shek gained the Chinese Japanese eight years war 1937 1945 Cotterel Arthur 2009 Western Power in Asia Its Slow Rise and Swift Fall 1415 1999 Wiley Dorn Frank 1974 The Sino Japanese War 1937 41 From Marco Polo Bridge to Pearl Harbor Macmillan Hsiung James C Levine Steven I eds 1992 China s Bitter Victory The War with Japan 1937 1945 Armonk NY M E Sharpe Jowett Phillip S 2004 Rays of The Rising Sun Armed Forces of Japan s Asian Allies 1931 45 Volume I China amp Manchuria Solihull West Midlands England Helion amp Co Ltd MacKinnon Stephen Lary Diana 2007 China at War Regions of China 1937 1945 Stanford University Press Max Alphonse 1985 Southeast Asia Destiny and Realities Institute of International Studies Mote Frederick W 1954 Japanese Sponsored Governments in China 1937 1945 Stanford University Press Newman Joseph March 1942 Goodbye Japan New York NY a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Pollard John 1014 The Papacy in the Age of Totalitarianism 1914 1958 Oxford University Press ISBN 0199208565 Smedley Agnes 1943 Battle Hymn of China Wang Wei 2016 China s Banking Law and the National Treatment of Foreign Funded Banks Routledge Young Ernest 2013 Ecclesiastical Colony China s Catholic Church and the French Religious Protectorate Oxford University Press pp 250 251 ISBN 978 0199924622 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Reorganized National Government of China Central China Railway Company Flag under Japanese Army control Flags of the Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China Slogans Symbols and Legitimacy The Case of Wang Jingwei s Nanjing Regime Visual cultures of occupation in wartime ChinaPreceded byProvisional Government of the Republic of China 1937 40 Reformed Government of the Republic of China 1938 40 Reorganized National Government of the Republic of China1940 1945 Succeeded byNationalist government 1927 1948 32 03 N 118 46 E 32 050 N 118 767 E 32 050 118 767 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wang Jingwei regime amp oldid 1217830486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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