German Spies in China (2)
- By Peter Harmsen
- 16 October, 2016
- 2 Comments
German intelligence operations in China were thoroughly reorganized in the fall of 1942, and a new top spy was put in charge. His name was Ludwig Eisentraeger, but he called … Continue Reading →
German Spies in China (1)
- By Peter Harmsen
- 9 October, 2016
- No Comments
In June 1940, German official Theodor Louis Siefken, who was working in Italy extracting Germans from East Africa amid the widening war with Great Britain, was recalled to Berlin. His … Continue Reading →
Russians in the Service of the Japanese Emperor
- By Peter Harmsen
- 27 September, 2016
- 3 Comments
Caucasians in Japanese-looking uniforms like the group in the photo to the left do not belong to the average type of World War Two imagery. In fact, the men in the picture … Continue Reading →
A Date to Remember – Or Forget
- By Peter Harmsen
- 18 September, 2016
- No Comments
September 18 is a date many Chinese want to remember, and some Japanese want to forget. On that date, in 1931, Japanese officers blew up a piece of railroad at … Continue Reading →
Reenactors in Taiwan
- By Peter Harmsen
- 15 September, 2016
- 3 Comments
Reenactment seems to be growing worldwide. Along with war gaming it is one of the ways that history enthusiasts can get a physical feel for the periods that they study in … Continue Reading →
Shanghai: Wicked Old ‘Paris of the Orient’
- By Guest blogger
- 24 August, 2016
- No Comments
“Keenly observant”, “riveting”, ” marvellous, microscopically descriptive” — the reviewers have rained down the superlatives on Canadian non-fiction writer Taras Grescoe’s new book Shanghai Grand: Forbidden Love and International Intrigue in a Doomed … Continue Reading →
Chinese or Japanese? Telling Friend From Foe
- By Peter Harmsen
- 5 August, 2016
- No Comments
In early 1945, it was obvious that the Japanese had lost the war, but it was still unclear how much longer they would hold out or where the final stages … Continue Reading →
Strangers at the Gate
- By Peter Harmsen
- 24 July, 2016
- 1 Comment
Scenes of despair unfolded as the Japanese army moved in on Shanghai in late 1937, spreading terror among the city’s three million civilians. Tens of thousands were thronging at the … Continue Reading →
‘Halfway Out of National Danger’: Chiang, Stalin and the Chinese Reaction to Barbarossa
- By Peter Harmsen
- 29 June, 2016
- No Comments
China’s reaction after Germany invaded the Soviet Union in June 1941 may surprise many. This article is based on a presentation made by Peter Harmsen at the King’s College ‘Second World … Continue Reading →
World War II Weekend!
- By Guest blogger
- 14 June, 2016
- No Comments
From the World War Two Weekend at the Mid-Atlantic Air Museum in Reading, PA. The photos have kindly been provided by Ryan Daniels, a true expert on China’s long war … Continue Reading →