Abstract
China Commando Group was set up in 1941, funded by Great Britain and manned primarily with Danish volunteers and British servicemen, but also consisting of a variety of other nationalities. Its purpose was to train and equip Chinese guerrilla groups, forcing Japan to allocate a large number of troops to the China theatre. Despite initially high expectations, the unit never became fully operative, as it was hampered by British bureaucratic inefficiency and mutual Sino-British suspicions. This paper gives a brief outline of the unit’s history, based partly on Danish sources not previously used by historians outside Denmark, and also explores in greater detail the recruitment to China Commando Group, the unit’s relationship to its British superiors and its Chinese allies, and the reactions of its members to its eventual failure.
Translated title of the contribution | Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Free Danes, China Commando Group and the Sino-British Rivalry 1941-42 |
---|---|
Original language | Chinese |
Publication date | 23 May 2015 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Publication status | Published - 23 May 2015 |
Event | The War of Resistance and Chinese Society - Yichang, China Duration: 23 May 2015 → 24 May 2015 http://jds.cssn.cn/xwkx/zxxx/201605/t20160506_3334150.shtml |
Conference
Conference | The War of Resistance and Chinese Society |
---|---|
Country/Territory | China |
City | Yichang |
Period | 23/05/2015 → 24/05/2015 |
Internet address |