The United Front against Japan

Fearing that China would be plunged into renewed disorder if Chiang were killed, the nation clamoured for his release. The Soviet Union quickly denounced the captors and insisted that Chiang be freed (the Soviet Union needed a united China opposing Japan, its potential enemy on the east). The CCP leaders also decided that Chiang’s release would serve China’s interests as well as their own, if he would accept their policy against Japan. Zhou Enlai and several other communist leaders flew to Xi’an to try to effect this. Zhang Xueliang finally agreed to free his captive, with the understanding that Chiang would call off the civil war and unite the country against the invader. On December 25 Chiang was freed.

The two Chinese parties began protracted and secret negotiations for cooperation, each making concessions. But it was not until September 1937, after the Sino-Japanese War had begun, that the Nationalist government formally agreed to a policy of cooperation with the CCP. For its part, the CCP publicly affirmed its adherence to the realization of Sun Yat-sen’s Three Principles of the People, its abandonment of armed opposition to the KMT and of the forcible confiscation of landlords’ property, the substitution of democracy for its soviet government, and the reorganization of the Red Army as a component of the national army under the central government.

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