Eighty Years Ago: Asia Pacific, Feb 22 – 28, 1940
- By Peter Harmsen
- 28 February, 2020
- No Comments
Feb 22, 1940: Japan and Italy continue cooperation in Anti-Comintern Pact, targeted at Soviet Union, despite Germany’s defection the previous year with non-aggression treaty with Moscow Feb 23, 1940: Ichikawa … Continue Reading →
Eighty Years Ago: Asia Pacific, Feb 15 – 21, 1940
- By Peter Harmsen
- 21 February, 2020
- No Comments
Feb 15, 1940: Japanese Army admits withdrawing troops in two separate campaigns in Guangxi in southern China and Inner Mongolia in the north Feb 16, 1940: US House of Representatives … Continue Reading →
Eighty Years Ago: Asia Pacific, Feb 8 – 14, 1940
- By Peter Harmsen
- 14 February, 2020
- No Comments
Feb 8, 1940: Japan worried that German-Soviet friendship, reflected in joint invasion of Poland the year before, will cause its cooperation with Berlin to fight global spread of communism to … Continue Reading →
The Nanjing Massacre: A Swedish Diplomat Reports (Part Three)
- By Peter Harmsen
- 4 August, 2019
- 2 Comments
In late 1937 and early 1938, the Swedish envoy to China, Johan Beck-Friis, who was based in Shanghai, filed a series of reports to the Foreign Ministry in Stockholm about … Continue Reading →
The Nanjing Massacre: A Swedish Diplomat Reports (Part Two)
- By Peter Harmsen
- 21 July, 2019
- No Comments
“The soldiers have murdered, burnt and looted while raping women without worrying about the presence of witnesses.” By early 1938, the Swedish envoy to China, Johan Beck-Friis, was in no … Continue Reading →
Death on the Marco Polo Bridge
- By Peter Harmsen
- 16 July, 2019
- No Comments
On July 7, 1937, Chinese and Japanese forces clashed at the Marco Polo Bridge near Beijing, unwittingly setting off an eight-year-long war that only ended with the formal Japanese surrender … Continue Reading →
The Nanjing Massacre: A Swedish Diplomat Reports (Part One)
- By Peter Harmsen
- 8 July, 2019
- 1 Comment
In December 1937, the Japanese Army captured the Chinese capital of Nanjing and immediately imposed a complete news blackout of events in the city. As a result, the outside world … Continue Reading →
China’s Low-Key VE-Day
- By Peter Harmsen
- 5 May, 2019
- No Comments
Seventy-four years ago, World War Two in Europe ended. In China, which had been at war with Japan for nearly eight years, newspapers reported the European events at great length, … Continue Reading →
China’s Ban on ‘The Great Dictator’
- By Peter Harmsen
- 21 April, 2019
- No Comments
Curious news was coming out of China’s wartime capital of Chongqing in the summer of 1941. Charlie Chaplin’s famous movie “The Great Dictator” had been banned in Chinese theaters, allegedly … Continue Reading →
White Russians in China, Part 2
- By Peter Harmsen
- 14 April, 2019
- No Comments
When Japan occupied northeast China in 1931 and 1932 and turned the area into the puppet state of Manchukuo, it also took over a minority of several thousand ethnic Russians … Continue Reading →