Thursday, 1 August 2013

World War Two: The Secret War



“...An island, an oasis in the midst of the stark, frightful wilderness which was once the Chinese city...on one side are streets and houses swarming with life; on the other is a cratered and barren moon-landscape...In this city – conquered, yet unoccupied by its conquerors – the mechanism of the old life is still ticking, but seems doomed to stop, like a watch dropped in the desert.”

-W. H. Auden & Christopher Isherwood, Journey To A War (1939)

After the Japanese occupation in 1937, things in Shanghai changed somewhat. On the surface, the mad parties and associated feverish activities continued, but they became more desperate as the new regime tried to clamp down on their subjects. Curfews, restrictions, the imposition of rationing and segregation into camps, all put the kibosh on the party town, slowing it down if not stopping it in its tracks. Both the Axis and Allied powers saw control of Shanghai as crucial to the war effort in China but, given the economic empires that were flourishing there, few parties attempted anything serious for fear of losing their stakes in a potential ‘post-war boom’.

Before 1941, the Americans were, as they had been in the Boxer Rebellion, largely ambivalent towards the situation; when they did decide to commit, they were deeply distrustful of the British and consequently, the OSS shared little intelligence with the SOE. The British secret service in Shanghai was composed largely of the entrenched taipans who were appointed mainly due to their local knowledge: their efforts were noticeably sophomoric and crude and their ranks became deeply divided on issues of policy and strategy. As well, they perceived the American efforts – and not incorrectly - as largely co-opted by the Kuomintang forces in Chungking and loftily chose to disregard US assistance.

On the Axis side of the equation, the Germans and the Japanese were united in only one thing: when the rest of the world was busy carving up China for their own benefit in the Nineteenth Century, these two countries had made no overt moves to grab extraterritoriality powers for themselves; consequently, they enjoyed fewer of the legal and commercial liberties enjoyed by the other nations represented in Shanghai. This put them in the same boat as other “stateless” peoples living in the city: White Russians and Russian Jews.

The Japanese, having conquered Shanghai in 1937, were initially happy to allow the Nazis free reign within their new territory; however, they were suspicious of Hitler’s rhetoric concerning “white races” as it applied to them and were always cautious in dealing with their ‘allies’. The Germans, on the other hand, were divided not only between the Nazi and non-Nazi factions in their midst, but also along the lines of the Gestapo and the SS, each of whom chose to run their own intelligence-gathering efforts at the expense of the other. Eventually, the German factions spent more time watching each other than they did anybody else.

Against this turgid background of cloak and dagger murkiness, many individuals – almost inevitably for Shanghai – saw an opportunity to make money. Many people embarked upon careers as collaborators, double- or even triple agents and information brokers. By playing all sides off against each other, adventurers and con-artists ran rings around the warring powers and lived life in the fast lane for as long as it would take them.

*****

This period is heralded by a marked change from the Shanghai lifestyle of the ‘20s and early ‘30s; Keepers who wish to focus on this period – a great location for dark, pulpy, noir-ish storytelling – should start here. There is almost so much blood, espionage, dirty money and back-alley treachery that considerations of the Mythos could take a back seat.

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