Most people who stayed awake for at
least half of their high school history class knows that the Axis Powers in
World War II consisted of Germany, Italy and Japan. But few know that German
tactics and weapons—not to mention some actual Germans—helped the
Chinese Nationalists stall Imperial Japan’s conquest of China.
For about a decade, German soldiers
advised Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek in his campaigns against Chinese
Communists … and also against Germany’s future allies, the Japanese.
It’s one of history’s most
unexpected—and frankly unknown—wartime partnerships. It all began in the
aftermath of the Chinese revolution of 1911, as warlords carved up the country
and battled each other for power.
European and American arms dealers, unable
to find customers in the war-weary countries of the West in the years after
World War I, found enthusiastic buyers in the Chinese. The warlords imported
firearms and heavy weaponry and, in some cases, manufactured their own copies.
One of the most powerful, the Manchurian
warlord Zhang Zuolin had his own private air force of almost 100 of the latest
aircraft, including light bombers.
He also maintained close ties with Japan, in particular courting investment
from the Japanese South Manchuria Railroad Company.
Some warlords hired foreign military
instructors, many of them World War I veterans. The advisers made their way to
China in both official and unofficial capacities. The influx of foreign
soldiers would soon include Germans.
Rise of the Nationalists:
The greatest threat to the warlords were
not each other, but revolutionaries under the banner of the Chinese Nationalist
Party, also known as the Kuomintang. Led by Sun Yat-Sen, a republican and
educated medical doctor, the Kuomintang sought to unify China and transform it
into a modern state.
The Kuomintang, aligned with the Chinese
Communist Party and backed by Soviet advisers under the command of Vasily
Blyukher, launched the Northern Expedition to defeat the warlords.
Under the military leadership of Chiang
Kai-Shek, the Nationalist army scored victory after victory against the
warlords. With the death of Sun Yat-Sen of liver failure, Chiang began to
consolidate control of the movement. That put him at odds with the Communists,
several of whom were themselves plotting to take control of the revolution.
When the army reached Shanghai in 1927,
Chiang enlisted local crime syndicates, notably the powerful Green Gang, to
crack down on labor unions and violently purge Communists from the ranks. He
then expelled Blyukher and the other Soviet advisers, unceremoniously sending
them back to Moscow.
The last major warlord was Marshal Zhang
Zuolin. Failing to protect Japanese investments, Zhang had fallen out of favor
with his backers in Tokyo.
On June 4, 1928, while traveling an SMR
rail line, a bomb detonated underneath Zhang’s armored train, killing him. Most
believe the Japanese Kwantung Army planted the explosive device.
Zhang was succeeded by his son Zhang
Xueling, the Young Marshal. The Young Marshal, whom the Japanese expected to be
a spineless puppet they could easily control, surprised everyone by quickly
aligning himself with the Nationalists. The warlord era was fast ending.
But Chang realized he had a problem.
Severing ties with the Soviets had left him without any significant foreign
backer. There were still a few warlord holdouts—who often did have foreign
backing—plus a growing Communist insurrection. Japan also loomed just across
the China Seas.
On the advice of a German-educated friend,
Chiang looked to Berlin to fill the void the Soviets had left. Germany was an
attractive partner to Chiang. Berlin had lost all of its holdings in China
after World War I and would be less likely to interfere in China’s politics
than comparable Western powers.
And the forced downsizing of Germany’s
once-mighty army also resulted in a wealth of highly experienced but unemployed German soldiers
who’d be eager for work in China.
Here Come the Germans!:
Chiang sent an invitation to Gen. Erich
Ludendorff to bring military and civil experts to China. Ludendorff declined
the invitation, fearing his high profile would attract unwanted attention.
Still, he saw potential in the offer, and recommended retired Col. Max Bauer—a
logistics specialist with war experience—to lead a proposed German Advisory
Group.
After a quick tour of China, Bauer
returned to Berlin and handpicked a team of 25 advisers. Immediately upon
arriving in November 1928, the advisers set to work training young Chinese
officers.
Despite most of the advisers being
retired—and technically civilians—in the employ of the Chinese government, the
activities of German military men abroad was a touchy subject due to post-war
limitations on what Germany could legally do.
As a result, Bauer gave strict orders to
the group to avoid diplomats and journalists. Despite this, American military
observers in 1929 reported seeing Chinese troops undergoing close-order drill
under German supervision.
Bauer worked to standardize the
acquisition of equipment and weapons, urging Chiang to cut out expensive
middlemen and buy directly from manufacturers.
Unsurprisingly, many of these
manufacturers were German, resulting in increased business for German
companies. But the retail boom was cut short by Bauer’s unexpected death in May
1929.
Bauer was succeeded by Col. Hermann
Kriebel, a Nazi fanatic. He had been a member of the paramilitary Freikorps and
had a long record of putschist activity with Hitler in Bavaria. One rumor has
it that as a member of the German 1919 Armistice delegation, his parting words
were, “See you again in 20 years.”
Kriebel was arrogant, contemptuous of the
Chinese and clashed with Bauer’s selected officers. His attitude almost doomed
the mission, and Chiang demanded he be replaced.
Kriebel was succeeded by Gen. Georg
Wetzell. He helped plan anti-Communist operations and advised Gen. Ling during
the 1932 Shanghai War against the Japanese. He also convinced Chiang to set up
an artillery school. Chinese artillery would play a huge role years later
against Japanese invaders.
Gen. Hans von Seeckt, an influential
German army staff officer and Wetzell’s successor, built Chinese capacity
further. Seeckt, vividly recalling the bloody cost of static trench warfare,
believed in a war of movement.
He used his connections with German
industrialists to bring in a huge influx of modern German equipment, ranging
from helmets to artillery. One journalist suggested that as much as 60 percent
of Chinese war material at this time was imported from Germany.
The last and arguably best chief adviser
was Gen. Alexander von Falkenhausen. He had been military attaché in Tokyo from
1910 to 1914 and traveled to China to observe the revolution in 1911. During
World War I, he served in France, East Prussia and Turkey and as a commander
was credited with two victories over the British in East Jordan in 1918.
As a world traveler and professional
soldier who’d worked in a variety of cultures, Falkenhausen was immune to the
extremism that drove many of his predecessors. He also had little love for the
Nazis, having lost his brother to a violent internal struggle in the party that
solidified Hitler’s control.
As a result, he was better able to develop
close personal and professional ties with the Chinese.
Chinese
in Germany:
With Germans increasingly entrenched in
China, some of their Chinese counterparts found themselves in Germany. Chinese
businessmen, government officials and students hoped to learn from Germany’s
rapid rebound from an economically crippled failed state into a world power.
German industry was of particular interest.
The Nazis were split on their opinion of
the Chinese. Joseph Goebbels and Hermann Goering in particular were in bitter
disagreement. Goebbels was decidedly pro-China and favored continuing German
business interests—he also viewed Chiang as a burgeoning fascist.
Goering, however, saw the Japanese as the
stronger and most worthy power in Asia—especially considering their disdain for
the Soviets—and pushed for the Anti-Comintern Pact between Germany and Japan.
One of the most notable Chinese in Germany
at the time was Chiang Kai-Shek’s adopted son Chiang Wei-Kuo. He went to study
military tactics with the German army, training in military schools and taking
part in military operations.
He even commanded troops during the
annexation of the Austria.
As Falkenhausen took over the group in
1936, tensions between Japan and China were escalating. Around the same time,
The Young Marshal Zhang Xueling, tasked by Chiang to eradicate the communists,
was fed up with battling fellow Chinese while the Japanese only grew stronger.
Zhang conspired with Communist leader Zhou
Enlai and proceeded to kidnap Chiang and force him into a truce with the
Communists. Upon his release, he promptly had Zhang imprisoned. Falkenhausen
set to work advising Chiang on how best to resist Japanese aggression. One of
the great ironies of this episode is that Falkenhausen and Chiang’s
interactions were always in Japanese, their only common language.
Japan Invades:
The July 1937 Marco Polo Bridge Incident
marked the beginning of Japan’s full-scale invasion of China. The
poorly-trained Chinese troops in the north were quickly routed. When the
fighting broke out in Shanghai, Tokyo expected a quick victory.
However, among the Chinese troops dispatched
to Shanghai was the German trained — and equipped — 88th Division. Against all
expectations, the division’s infantry inflicted heavy casualties on the
Japanese in vicious urban combat. The Japanese responded by shelling and
bombing the Chinese troops—and by sending in tanks.
During this time, German advisers
including Falkenhausen were often near or in the fight in Shanghai, despite
Berlin’s preference that they not get directly involved.
“We all agreed,” Falkenhausen wrote, “that
as private citizens in Chinese employment there could be no question of leaving
our Chinese friends to their fate. Therefore I assigned German advisers
wherever they were needed and that was often in the front lines.”
Despite being present for some heavy
combat, no Germans advisers are known to have died.
The Chinese held out until November, but
eventually retreated in the face of Japanese armor, air and naval attacks.
Tokyo was badly bruised by the Chinese defensive and livid at being defied by
an “inferior” race.
Particularly embarrassing was the showdown
at Sihang Warehouse, in which a lone battalion from the 88th Division held out
against Japanese attacks in full view of the international district.
But now the Japanese were ready to strike
at the Chinese capital of Nanjing. En route they took out their frustration on
Chinese civilians, killing and looting wantonly. Even Kriebel, who had been so
contemptuous of the Chinese before and was back in China as the German consul
general in Shanghai, expressed his disgust at the atrocities.
But the march on Nanjing was just a
preview of how ugly things were to become.
Fall of
Nanjing:
Chiang called a meeting of his generals with Falkenhausen to plan their
next move. Generals Li Zongren and Bai Chongxi—the latter a favorite of Falkenhausen—advocated
withdrawing forces from Nanjing to regroup.
Next, the generals proposed declaring Nanjing to be an undefended city
so that the Japanese wouldn’t have any excuse to slaughter civilians.
Falkenhausen backed Li and Bai. The only dissenter was Gen. Tang
Shengzhi, who demanded a last stand against Japan in the capital. Chiang,
wanting to preserve his prestige and at least make an effort to defend Nanjing,
deferred to Tang.
John Rabe, a German businessman and prominent Nazi living in Nanjing, was
aghast “[Nanjing] cannot be effectively defended,” he wrote. “Sitting in this
crook in the Yangtze is like sitting in a mousetrap.”
“I continue to hope that Hitler will help us,” Rabe continued. “A man of
firm will and steady eye — the same as you and I — has deep sympathy not only
for the distress of his own people, but for the anguish of the Chinese, as
well.”
Rabe speculated that if Hitler were to demand a stop to the Japanese
advance, it would halt immediately.
The consequences of this last stand were disastrous. The Chinese
defenders were obliterated. Many of the remnants of the elite 88th Division
were destroyed in the fighting, though some were able to rejoin the army in the
west or blend into guerrilla bands in the countryside.
However, the worst consequence was one of history’s bloodiest massacres,
today known as the Rape of Nanjing. Japanese troops entered the city in
December 1937 and indulged in an orgy of rape of pillage that lasted until late
January.
Although exact numbers are disputed, most historians agree that
thousands of women and girls were raped by Japanese troops—and somewhere
between 180,000 and 300,000 civilians died.
Rabe, along with other Western residents of the city, labored hard to
aid the refugees and was instrumental in setting up the International Safety
Zone. He was known for wearing his Swastika armband as he escorted Chinese
nationals around, standing up to Japanese soldiers and officials.
Despite the initial hesitance of other American and European expats to
work with an avowed Nazi, Rabe earned the respect of both westerners and the
residents of Nanjing.
Unfortunately for Rabe’s faith in Hitler and in Germany’s commitment to
China, the defeat at Nanjing led Hitler to believe that China was a lost cause.
It was the beginning of the end for Sino-German ties. To Hitler, the Japanese
had proven to be a superior race to the Chinese.
But one more battle was to take place before Germany quit China for
good.
In the Battle of Taierzhuang in early 1938, Chinese troops under
Generals Li and Bai engaged Japanese troops in the small town of Shantung. The
Chinese troops, led by German-trained battalion commanders, maneuvered at night
to avoid Japan’s superior air assets and used German-built howitzers to smash
Japanese entrenchments.
German
Legacy:
The Chinese prevailed at Taierzhuang. After the battle, the Japanese
demanded that the Germans withdraw the advisory group. Hitler complied without
reservation. German Foreign Minister Joachim von Ribbentrop told Falkenhausen
to withdraw, which he did only under extreme pressure.
Falkenhausen and his staff reluctantly returned to Germany. Unlike
former Italian advisers who profited by selling detailed aerial surveys of
China to Japan, many of the Germans refused to divulge Chinese secrets to Japan,
even under pressure from the Nazis. Chiang Wei-Kuo, by that time commanding a
panzer on the border with Poland, was recalled back to China.
Westerners were horrified by the devastation in China. Urban warfare up
to this point had been a fairly rare occurrence in modern warfare. Certainly
the scale of death and destruction, particularly among non-combatants, seemed
new. In a few years, such bloodshed would all too common all over the world.
After the German Blitzkrieg tore through Western Europe beginning in
late 1939, Falkenhausen was appointed to serve as the German military governor
of Belgium—a position in which he took neither joy nor pride. Among his tasks
were the suppression of Belgian resistance and the rounding up of Jews and
other undesirables.
Throughout much of his tenure in Belgium, Falkenhausen was secretly in
touch with anti-Nazi conspirators and those helping to rescue Jews.
The rescuers included Qian Xiuling, a Chinese woman who had married a
Belgian man she’d met while studying chemistry at the Catholic University of
Louvain. Qian’s cousin was an officer in the Chinese army and had been trained
by Falkenhausen. He told her through correspondence that if she needed
anything, she should go to Falkenhausen.
The general helped Qian save the lives of many Jews and dissidents.
After an attempt on Hitler’s life in July 1944, Falkenhausen was imprisoned and
spent the remainder of the war in concentration camps, at one point being
interned in Dachau.
He was eventually liberated, but then subsequently arrested by U.S.
troops. He was sent back to Belgium to be put on trial for crimes against
humanity. Qian and others he had aided came to his defense, but he was
nevertheless sentenced to 12 years hard labor.
He was pardoned after only three years and moved back to Germany.
Chiang, having heard of his fate, began sending money and gifts to his old
comrade. But Faulkenhausen was so embittered by his experiences that he lived
out the rest of his life a jaded, reclusive old man. He died in 1966 at the age
of 88.
In 2001, when a journalist asked an aging Qian how she saw
Falkenhausen, she replied simply, “A man with morals.”
Rabe fared little better after the war.
Living in Germany again by then he was arrested first by the Soviets and then
by the British. Although never directly implicated in any crimes, his history
as a high profile party member meant he had to be declared “de-Nazified.”
Unable to find work, he sold off his
collection of Eastern art to buy food and quickly became destitute. According
to some accounts, he received aid from prominent citizens of Nanjing who had
heard of his plight. This help ceased after the Communists took Nanjing from
the nationalists.
Rabe died of a stroke in 1950. His
headstone has since been moved to Nanjing and his house made into a museum.
The strange tale of the Germans in China’s
wars demonstrates how quickly loyalty and national interest can shift—and
alliances with them. It also reveals that personal ties formed in the crucible
of combat can transcend these shifts and last a lifetime.
Unfortunately for men like Falkenhausen,
the saga also shows how steep the price of integrity can be.
This first appeared in WarIsBoring by Kevin Knodell
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