Stalin, Japan, and the Struggle for Supremacy over China, 1894–1945

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A01=Hiroaki Kuromiya
Anglo-Japanese Alliance
Author_Hiroaki Kuromiya
Category=NHF
Category=NHTT
CCP Member
China's Nationalism
China’s Nationalism
Chinese Government
Cold War
communist strategy analysis
covert intervention in China
East Asian geopolitics
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
hybrid warfare history
intelligence operations Asia
interwar international relations
Iosif Stalin
Japan's Invasion
Japan’s Invasion
Khalkhin Gol
KMT CCP Unite Front
Kwantung Army
Lake Khasan
Manchukuo
Manchuria
Mao Zedong
Marco Polo Bridge
Marco Polo Bridge Incident
Mukden Incident
Neutrality Pact
Ozaki Hotsumi
Russo Japanese Alliance
Sino-Japanese War
Soviet foreign policy
Soviet Japanese Pact
Soviet Union
Tanaka Giichi
Tanaka Memorial
Twenty Ninth Army
United States
USSR
Wang Jiazhen
Wang Zhengting
Zhang Xueliang
Zhang Zuolin

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032066738
  • Weight: 800g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Dec 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Stalin was a master of deception, disinformation, and camouflage, by means of which he gained supremacy over China and defeated imperialism on Chinese soil. This book examines Stalin’s covert operations in his hunt for supremacy.

By the late 1920s Britain had ceded place to Japan as Stalin’s main enemy in Asia. By seducing Japan deeply into China, Stalin successfully turned Japan’s aggression into a weapon of its own destruction. The book examines Stalin’s covert operations from the murder of the Manchurian warlord Zhang Zuolin in 1928 and the publication of the forged “Tanaka Memorial” in 1929, to Stalin’s hidden role in Japan’s invasion of Manchuria in 1931, the outbreak of all-out war between China and Japan in 1937, and Japan’s defeat in 1945. In the shadow of these and other events we find Stalin and his secret operatives, including many Chinese and Japanese collaborators, most notably Zhang Xueliang and Kōmoto Daisaku, the self-professed assassin of Zhang Zuolin. The book challenges accounts of the turbulent history of inter-war East Asia that have ignored or minimized Stalin’s presence and instead exposes and analyzes Stalin’s secret modus operandi, modernized as “hybrid war” in today’s Russia.

The book is essential for students and specialists of Stalin, China, the Soviet Union, Japan, and East Asia.

Hiroaki Kuromiya is a professor of history emeritus, Indiana University, USA. He has authored, among others, Freedom and Terror in the Donbas: A Ukrainian-Russian Borderland, 1870s–1990s (1998), Stalin (Profiles in Power) (2005), The Voices of the Dead: Stalin’s Great Terror in the 1930s (2007), Conscience on Trial: The Fate of Fourteen Pacifists in Stalin’s Ukraine, 1952–1953 (2012), and Zrozumity Donbas (2015), and coauthored Między Warszawą a Tokio: Polsko-japońska współpraca wywiadowcza 1904–1944 (2009, with Andrzej Pepłoński) and The Eurasian Triangle: Russia, The Caucasus, and Japan, 1904–1945 (2016, with Georges Mamoulia).

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