Wednesday, 19 June 2013

The Shifting Tides of the Warlords


During the period between the wars, China was a hot bed of martial activity. After the death of Yuan Shi-kai, the armies which he had mobilised to defend himself and to maintain his power ran amok and sought to claim the country in a mad grab for control. The north consolidated loosely under a series of military cliques, while the south mobilised, just as loosely, under the banner of the Kuomintang and set about unifying the country. Let no-one be deceived however: every faction had its own interests in mind and joined together for mutual benefit as long as that arrangement served themselves over everyone else. This was the rotten fruit of Sun Yat-sen’s glorious vision; he would die in 1925 before his dream ever became reality, leaving the unification of China in the incendiary, paranoid hands of Chiang Kai-shek.

Origins

The Ching Dynasty had no standing army of its own; instead it utilised the resources of regional militias to enforce its will. In the north, these units combined as the Beiyang Army under the leadership of Yuan Shi-kai. After the fall of the Manchus, Yuan maintained this battle force in the vicinity of Peking. The various leaders within the army were used to receiving the best training and supplies by their support of Yuan Shi-kai and so remained loyal to him. The individual units were comprised of men with shared military experience as well as regional associations: this policy was used as a means to get around dialectical miscommunication but instead brought about a nepotistic favouritism within the army’s various factions.

After the Shin hai Revolution in 1911, a provisional government under Sun Yat-sen was established in Nanking. Rather than continue fighting against the far superior Beiyang Army, Sun approached Yuan to create a unified National Government in Nanking with Yuan as President. Yuan accepted the role but kept his capital in Peking, close to the base of his personal power.

Yuan’s growing authoritarianism promoted a southern revolt in 1913 which was ruthlessly suppressed by the Beiyang Army. In the aftermath, all civil regional governors in China were replaced by military ones with loyalties to Yuan. In 1915, in opposition to Yuan’s declaration to become Emperor of China, the southern rebels broke loose again in the War of National Protection: this time most of Yuan’s military supporters abandoned him due to his dynastic ambitions, and Yuan was forced to back down from this proposition in order to win back his troops. The damage was done however, and by the time Yuan Shi-kai died in 1916, the government of China was a fractured mess, divided into two loose alliances in the north and south.

The Northern Alliance

 
As has always happened throughout China’s history, the north separated sharply from the south. Despite their unwillingness to back Yuan Shi-kai and his imperial claims, these leaders maintained a strict loyalty to Peking and its resident government. This was not out of some historical sentimentality: the force which held the capital could engage in diplomatic wheeling and dealing and could lay claim to taxes and other levies demanded of the populace. This was the sort of practical, cash-backed power that the warlords could get their teeth into. These generals did their utmost to hold onto the power that Yuan Shi-kai had amassed and were as wary of each other as they were of the southern factions. Ironically, the star emblem under which they operated was made up of five colours each representing their various ethnic groups combined as one force.

Ownership of Peking changed throughout this period as the warlords bickered and fought over its control. Despite other factional disagreements, the generals would always agree over the right of Peking to issue edicts and place demands but could not agree as to the extent, or ability, of Peking to enforce its will. Consequently, demands were issued against enemy warlords by Peking, knowing that these would be ignored as unenforceable, and this response would be deemed an act of treason allowing the controlling warlord to attack with impunity.

In short order, the warlord armies became nothing less than bandit forces, pillaging the towns and cities and enforcing martial chaos. The usual means of extorting money from the Chinese peasantry came back into play: kidnapping, vice, drug-running and protection rackets flourished. Even westerners were not free from the lawlessness and several instances are recorded of trainloads of foreigners being held hostage until enormous ransoms were paid.

Between the years 1911 and 1930, the power amongst the northern warlords shifted in three main phases, representing three separate coalitions that controlled the north over this time. The first such group or ‘clique’ was the Anhwei Clique.

The Anhwei Clique – 1916 to 1920

The President at the time of Yuan Shi-kai’s death was Li Yuanhong, however he was virtually deposed by the Beiyang Generals. Instead the Premier, Tuan Chi-jui, took over as the government leader. Tuan pacified the Chihli clique to maintain control but many provinces rebelled, calling for Tuan’s dismissal. Tuan tried repeatedly to get China to join the First World War siding with the Allies but he met with strong opposition. Finally, when it was revealed that he had undertaken several secret loans from the Japanese, he was deposed in 1917. Li Yuanhong took over again but fearing reprisals from Tuan and his supporters, he asked the general Chang Shun for protection. Instead, Chang took the unprecedented move of reinstating the Ching Dynasty; he was defeated by Tuan who was restored to power and named the saviour of the nation: he used this new clout to declare war on Germany and then turned his attentions to the fractious south.

Here however he ran into further trouble: the Chihli clique was opposed to the notion of fighting the south, preferring negotiation to open warfare. Tuan was forced to resign in order to maintain the solidarity of the Beiyang Generals. Conversely, the Anhwei clique put pressure on President (and leader of the Chihli clique) Feng Kuo-chang to have Tuan reinstated and this was done shortly afterwards. In Hunan, where the fighting in the southern campaign was strongest, a series of reversals led to a steady war of attrition and low morale reigned: Tuan resigned once more but tried to cause as much trouble between north and south as he could whilst he did so. The end of World War One and the Treaty of Versailles had caused much disillusionment in China with Chinese efforts during the conflict largely downplayed or ignored by the foreign community: China was forced to surrender the province of Shantung to Japan (The Shantung Problem) and this in turn led to the May Fourth Movement in China, a re-evaluation of China’s cultural identity and place on the world stage. Tuan’s pro-Japanese stance alienated the growing socialism in the provinces and he was again forced from power: the Chihli clique sided with the Fengtian clique under Chang Tso-lin and forced the Anhwei clique into submission.

The Chihli Clique – 1920 to 1924

Feng Kuo-chang died shortly after the rise of the Chihli clique and was replaced, in 1922, by Tsao Kun who immediately dissolved the relationship with the Fengtian clique, attacking them and driving them back into Manchuria. Seeking to legitimise their claims to power, Tsao Kun proposed the reinstatement of Li Yuanhong as leader of a reformed National Assembly: he asked that Sun Yat-sen and Hsu Shih-chang, civilian President of the Beiyang Government, unilaterally resign their presidencies in favour of Li. Sun attached several conditions to this proposal, none of which were palatable to the Chihli clique and the effort was abandoned. In retaliation, Tsao took steps to recognise southern warlord Chen Jiongming as the legitimate governor of Kwangtung, thereby causing him to defect from the KMT and drive Sun from the province and into hiding. In 1923, Tsao bought the presidency of Beiyang despite some opposition and the power of the Chihli clique seemed absolute until they were betrayed: Feng Yu-hsiang seized the capital and imprisoned Tsao, attacking the Chihli forces and driving them from the north and into the central plains.

The Fengtian Clique – 1924 to 1928

After seizing control of the capital, Feng Yu-hsiang formed a new nationalist government sympathetic to the KMT but not a part of it: he called it the Kuominchun (KMC) or ‘Nationalist Army’. Feng’s troops were nowhere near as strong as ChangTso-lin’s men and their alliance was shaky: they agreed to the installation of Tuan Chi-jui as President, given the Anhwei clique’s near extinction. Thereafter negotiations with the KMT slowly broke down as Tuan and Chang had nothing in common ideologically with Sun Yat-sen, who died of cancer in 1925. Shortly afterwards, Kuo Song-ling defected from the Fengtian forces and joined the KMC, forcing a retaliation against Feng’s forces under the leadership of Wu Peifu. The KMC was driven into the northwest but Chang was forced to recall his forces to face the onslaught of the Northern Expedition under Chiang Kai-shek and the KMT. A protracted battle for control of the capital ensued until Chang finally resigned the Presidency in 1928: he was assassinated by a Japanese bomb while fleeing to Manchuria. His son, Chang Hsueh-liang, formally acknowledged the new government of the Northern Revolutionary Army under Chiang Kai-shek on the 31st of December.

Anhwei Clique

Tuan Ch’i-jui

Chihli Clique

Feng Kuo-chang
Ts’ao K’un
Wu Peifu
Feng Yu-hsiang (KMC)

Fengtian Clique

Chang Tso-lin
Chang Hsueh-liang
Kuo Song-ling (KMC)

*****

A Prime  Example of the Warlord Breed: Chang Tsung-chang

 
A subordinate of Chang Tso-lin’s Fengtian clique and a fearsome military organiser, Chang was instrumental in toppling Shanghai for his master’s benefit. Unlike many other warlords he was less self-indulgent than his superiors, largely foregoing the peacock uniforms and masses of medals; instead, he concentrated on the amassing of power for its own end. The son of a witch and an itinerant trumpet player, at his height, he was referred to as the “Warlord of the Three Don’t Knows” – he said he didn’t know how many concubines he had; how much money he had, or how many troops he commanded. He was called the “Dog–Meat General” due to his fondness for a Manchurian form of gambling called Pai Gow, or ‘eating dog meat’. He was said to command a huge harem of women – Chinese, Western, White Russian, whatever – whom he referred to only by numbers - as he found it too hard to recall their names - and to each of whom he gave a washbowl and a washcloth, printed with the flag of their home country. He was fond of decorating telegraph poles with ‘cut melons’ (that is, the heads of his enemies) and he never travelled anywhere without his own heavily lacquered and decorated coffin. He was notable among the warlords as the first to recruit women into his army as nurses and significantly boosted morale and the effectiveness of his troops by doing so. In 1925 he entered Shanghai with his troops, forced its capitulation in the name of Chang Tso-lin and held it in his master’s name until 1928, when Chiang Kai-shek won it back through the efforts of his Northern Expedition. Instrumental to Chang Tsung-chang’s power was his use of armoured trains which he manned with the help of White Russian refugees fresh from defending the tracks of the Trans-Siberian Railway. For his efforts on his warlord master’s behalf he was named the administrator of Shantung under the Fengtian clique. He was captured by KMT forces but allowed to leave the country in 1932; unfortunately, he was assassinated by the son of one of his rivals before he could escape.

*****

The Southern Alliance

 
Sun Yat-sen had been distracted by the political skulduggery of Yuan Shi-kai and some had felt that he was losing his mind; however, he rallied and brought his administrative powers to bear in his native Canton. Despite some complications he drafted a provisional constitution and rallied a Military Government. He contacted the Russian Communists for advice in structuring his armies and they sent him an advisor in the form of Michael Borodin. With the establishment of the Whampoa Academy, the newly-formed Kuomintang had a ready source for its military commanders: within months, leaders were being drilled for the great Northern Expedition.

Formation – 1917 to 1922

In September of 1917, Sun Yat-sen was named generalissimo of the military government in Kwangtung in order to protect the provisional republican constitution. Many southern warlords joined the alliance, mainly in order to legitimise the criminal kingdoms they had already established in the region: they declared war on the Beiyang powers in charge of Peking in order to attract international attention but failed to attract much notice. In the following year, the other warlords forced Sun from his position and made him accept a position as part of a governing committee; he went into self-imposed exile thereafter due to malicious interference by the committee members. Loyalist party members worked to oust the remaining members of the committee in his absence and paved the way for Sun’s return and the establishment of the Chinese Nationalist Party or Kuomintang (KMT). In 1921, Sun was elected extraordinary president despite the protests of Chun Jiongming and T’ang Shao-i who both claimed the vote was unconstitutional. Tang absented himself while Chun began to plot with the northern Chili clique to overthrow the KMT in return for the governorship of Kwangtung in 1922.

Reorganisation – 1923 to 1925

Chen Jiongming was ousted by loyalists in 1923 and Sun was returned to power. He reorganised the KMT by allying with the Russian Communists creating the First United Front. The remainder of the representatives of the southern military government defected to the northern alliance under Tsao’s puppet government in Peking. With the assistance of the Russian, Michael Borodin, the Whampoa Military Academy was created to end reliance on opportunistic warlords by creating a military elite for the proposed one-party state. With the fall of the Chili clique, Sun travelled to Peking to initiate talks with the Kuominchung (KMC) and the Anhwei and Fengtian cliques. His death from cancer (poison?) ended these negotiations and a power struggle within the KMT ensued: Tang Jiyao stepped forward claiming to be Sun’s chosen successor but he was swiftly ousted.

Invasion – 1926 to 1928

Communist and Left Wing elements in the KMT attempted to kidnap Chiang Kai-shek aboard the warship Chongshan in Canton harbour; Green Gang elements and Chiang loyalists thwarted this plan causing a sharp break between the Left and Right factions of the KMT. Chiang emerged from the fracas as leader of the National Revolutionary Army (NRA) and proceeded to mount the Northern Expedition against the Beiyang factions. NRA forces easily overcame the central plains and eastern defenders under Wu Peifu and Sun Chuanfang, thereafter allying themselves with the KMC and the Shansi warlord, Yen Hsi-shan, to oust the Fengtian clique. Chiang established his base in Nanking but still needed to gain Peking in order to obtain international recognition. In 1927 a purge of the Communist elements of the KMT (the April 12 Incident) caused the Chinese Civil War. With the death of Chang Tso-lin, Yen Hsi-shan occupied Peking for the KMT and forced the capitulation of Chang Hsueh-liang.

Kuomintang (KMT)
Sun Yat-sen
Chiang Kai-shek

Kwangtung Warlord Faction
Chen Jiongming

Shansi Clique
Yen Hsi-shan

Yunnan Clique
Tang Jiyao

 

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