Morning Star.png

 

 

The Ignored Beginning of World War II

 

In November 1936 Japan signed the Anti-Comintern Pact with Germany and Italy
as a deliberate prelude to global fascist aggression

 

 

Jenny Clegg, The Morning Star, London, 3 September 2015

 

When did WWII begin?* September 1939? No, it started with Japan's attack on
China in July 1937. Japan had just signed the Anti-Comintern Pact with
Germany and Italy and its move was part of a carefully planned unfolding of
fascist world aggression.

 

September 3 is China's VJ day, a time to recall that China was in fact the
first and most consistent foe of WWII fascist aggression. Between 1937 and
1945 it fought a protracted war with some 35 million casualties, the
majority civilians, while 100 million more were made refugees - perhaps
one-fifth of the total population.

 

The Nationalist and Communist armies of China's United Front held down
around a million and a half Japanese troops - over 60 per cent of the
Japanese forces. This prevented Japan from opening up a second front against
the USSR, blocking the attempts to establish German-Japanese control across
Eurasia. The USSR was then able to concentrate all its forces against
Hitler.

 

The horrific bombing and destruction of Chinese cities caused worldwide
outrage and awoke a widening public to the dangers of the spread of war. But
at the same time, China's United Front raised hopes as military leader
Chiang Kai-shek's heroic 10-month defence of the city of Wuhan - China's
Madrid - became a symbol for anti-fascist resistance. Even after the loss of
the city in October 1938, China fought on virtually alone until 1941. The
Soviet Union was effectively the only country to come to China's aid in
these years.

 

Neither the British nor the US governments were willing to stand up against
Japan's aggression - but the people were different. In Britain, communists
and Quakers, trade unionists and anti-imperialists came together to form the
China Campaign Committee (CCC). They rallied trade unions and co-operative
societies, religious communities, Liberal and Labour parties, raising funds
for both sides of the United Front. China's cause was Britain's cause. As
George Hardy, CCC trade union organiser, put it: "Assist China now against
the menace of fascism in the Far East, which is simultaneously the defence
of the people of Europe against fascist aggression, directly involving the
British."

 

Even with the outbreak of war in Europe, the British government still lent
towards appeasement, conceding to Japan's demand to close the Burma Road in
1940. A CCC petition in protest gained signatures representing one and a
half million people: if the government could still give way to aggression in
the Far East, how firmly would it stand against Hitler?

 

After the Japanese attacks on Pearl Harbour and Hong Kong, Britain and the
US had to take Chinese war efforts more seriously. China joined the Allies,
and British and Chinese troops fought side by side in Burma. Mao Zedong,
too, fully grasped the need to work with the Allies, using the
contradictions between the imperialist powers. Finally, in 1943 the Cairo
Agreement brought to an end the unequal treaty system imposed on China
following the Opium Wars from the 1840s - all bar Hong Kong.

 

The Nationalists played a role in resistance, but it was the Chinese red
armies, using highly effective methods of guerilla warfare, that came out of
the war stronger. Their forces grew from some 30,000 to about one million at
the end of the war, with approximately one million Communist Party of China
(CPC) members. The Yenan headquarters, in the desperately poor province of
Shaanxi, served as a beacon of radical resistance, building support through
the New Democratic socio-economic reforms in the Liberated Areas.

 

While Britain and the US accepted China into the United Nations in 1945 as a
world power, their priority was to "maintain Anglo-Saxon superiority" over
post-war Asia - the US controlling the Pacific and Britain recovering its
economically valuable Asian colonies. But Churchill and Roosevelt allowed a
racially prejudiced myopia to cloud their vision: failing to see the war in
the Far East as of equal importance to that in Europe, they misjudged the
post-war situation.

 

As Mao recognised, the war in Asia was a war of liberation, its momentum
surging beyond 1945. The world was changing fundamentally as the defeat of
fascism unleashed progressive and national liberation movements across
Africa and Asia. It was the success of China's national revolutionary war in
ending the semi-colonial unequal treaties system that marked the beginning
of the end of the colonial era.

 

After 1945, China's anti-imperialist struggle continued under CPC leadership
to prevent the country, with a compliant Nationalist regime, falling under
the influence of the now dominant imperialist power of the US. China was the
country most changed by WWII. Out of the terrible suffering - cities laid
waste by bombing, the butchery at Nanjing, Japan's "kill all, burn all, loot
all" methods, the huge areas blighted by famine - came the revolutionary
will to create a new independent China.

 

Today, historical revisionism in Japan goes deeper than denials of war
crimes. Abe cannot admit to the deliberate Axis planning, instead framing a
nationalist narrative of resistance to Western colonialism to obscure the
nature of his country's imperialist aggression.

 

Western powers ignore the dangers of a revival of Japanese militarism as
they do the fascist resurgence in Europe. It was the US, of course, that let
the emperor off the hook after 1945, along with numbers of Japan's war
criminals. Now, contrary to the Potsdam Agreement which required the
absolute eradication of militarism in Japan for all time, Abe is encouraged
to ditch the pacifist constitution and prepare for military action.

 

In aligning Japan with the US-Asian pivot for the first time since 1945,
Japanese forces are returning to the South China Sea for military exercises.
This provocation seriously risks escalating tensions there. In fact, the
islands under dispute were included in the Potsdam Agreement which also
required Japan return all its territorial conquests. Instead history is
turned on its head and it is China that is identified as the "bully of the
South China Sea" as it seeks to assert its historical rights.

 

Beijing's VJ-day military parade will be criticised by some as a display of
aggressiveness. For the Chinese, humiliated time and again by the
imperialist intervention and wars, the need for a strong army to defend
itself is paramount. WWII agreements are being weakened and Japan is not
alone in disregarding the lessons of history. The US also fails to accept
that the Pacific is not "its lake," that it is only one Pacific power among
many, and that China is its equal.

 

But China is breaking loose from the cold war vice and will not allow
Britain and the US to forget that there were four Allies in WWII and that
victory in the anti-fascist war was an international effort of collective
resistance - not just that of Churchill and Roosevelt, but also of the
people's war in China. Historical revisionism must not be allowed to pave
the way for a repeat of the appeasement of the 1930s which saw the world
slide into war.

 

 

From:
<http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-cee1-The-ignored-beginning-of-World-Wa
r-II#.VefKL_mqqko>
http://www.morningstaronline.co.uk/a-cee1-The-ignored-beginning-of-World-War
-II#.VefKL_mqqko

 

 

*CU historical note:

 

The fascist armed attack on the Spanish Republic began on 17 July, 1936 (in
Morocco) and quickly escalated. The Italian fascist invasion of Ethiopia
began on 3 October 1936. 

 

These preceding events, important as they are for Africans to recall, do not
weaken the essential point that the author Jenny Clegg makes in this
article, which can be put thus: Long before Britain stood alone, China stood
alone; and the true end of the Second World War is the one that is being
commemorated today, in Beijing, namely China's final victory over the
Japanese fascist invaders, in China.

 

The author correctly says that "the revolutionary will to create a new
independent China" came out of the struggle against the Japanese
colonialists and the unequal treaties imposed by the West. The basis of the
Chinese People's Republic of today is the same as the basis of South Africa:
Continuing anti-colonial struggle.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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