THE XI'AN INCIDENT
Xi'an has always been known to the Chinese as a city rich with history, but it
only gained recognition in much of the Western world in 1936 when
Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek was kidnapped there by some of his own
generals.
The Xi'an Incident, as it became known, held the leadership of China
hanging in the balance for a couple of tension-wracked weeks. An intriguing
sequence of events brought on the kidnapping and its solution.
In 1936, while Hitler marched in Europe, the Japanese army was steadily
tightening its grip on China. Chiang Kai-shek was not so much in control as
simply being at the top of a fragile coalition of Chinese warlords and armies
spread over China. The Communists had escaped Chiang's pursuit on the
Long March and established themselves securely at Yan'an, in the mountains
north of Xi'an.
Chiang knew that a head-on conflict with the Japanese army would, if not
demolish him, at least weaken his position, and make him vulnerable to the
communists. He decided to appease the Japanese instead, and send many of
his troops to fight the Communists.
But for Zhang Xueliang, one of Chiang's allied generals, this policy of footdragging
against the Japanese was unacceptable. A bright and courageous
young general, Zhang was head of a Manchurian army and was incensed at the
way his home in northeast China had been overrun by the Japanese since
1931. Zhang saw the situation deteriorating further in 1936, when the
Japanese made a dramatic attack into Suiyan, a key area north of Beijing. On
4 December, a Nationalist attack on the Communists failed, resulting in a
widespread refusal amongst Chiang's troops to continue fighting. Chiang
flew to Xi'an to direct the campaign himself.
Zhang saw this as an ideal moment to make a move. He discreetly made
contact with the Communists and at dawn on 12 December, his troops
surrounded the palace at Huaqing Hot Springs, where Chiang was quartered.
Hearing gunfire, Chiang escaped barefoot in his nightshirt-leaving his
dentures behind-scaled a wall, injuring his back, and scurried up an old path
on Black Horse Mountain. Thirty of his men were killed defending him.
Zhang's officers combed the area, and one of them found their Generalissimo
later that afternoon, shivering and in pain, crouched in a crevice
between the rocks. As the officer moved to bind Chiang's hands, the Generalissimo
reminded his captor that he was the Commander-in-Chief. The
officer is said to have bowed politely to Chiang and replied, 'You are also our
prisoner.'
Two weeks of tough negotiations followed. Chiang and his formidable
wife, Soong May-ling, were on one side, with Zhang and Zhou Enlai, later
Communist China's premier, on the other, while the rest of China waited
impatiently. Many of the Communist leaders wanted to execute Chiang, or at
least keep him imprisoned. But a cable arrived from Moscow with an order
from Stalin to release Chiang and get on with the task of fighting the Japanese.
The Chinese Communists bristled at being told by 'Uncle Joe' how to
handle what they saw as their own affair. But they also knew they could win
some useful concessions out of Chiang if they released him.
In the end, a compromise was reached. Chiang was allowed to fly back to
Nanjing a free man, but had to give up the pretence of being the sole leader
of China. Ostensibly he joined with the Communists in a 'National Front'
against the Japanese. Zhang Xueliang, also went back to Nanjing as a prisoner
of Chiang's and was branded a traitor.
The visitor to Huaqing Hot Springs can still see the site of this famous
incident. The rooms where Chiang stayed and worked are marked, as is the
spot up the hill where the Generalissimo was actually caught. The hiding
place is marked by a chain and nearby, commemorating the capture, is a
pavilion of dignified Grecian structure.