ABSTRACT

Chiang Kai-shek's long career illuminates modern Sino-Japanese relations from late Qing reform to postwar reconciliation. His early military education in Japan shaped his admiration for its discipline and national mobilisation, though he neglected its political institutions. After 1931, Chiang's policy sought to suppress domestic Communism while avoiding full-scale conflict with Japan until 1937. During the war, he pursued endurance strategies while relying on international alliances. In later years, Chiang advocated leniency towards Japan, helping enable its postwar revival and alignment with Taiwan against communism. Huang analyses Chiang's evolving perceptions of Japan to trace key shifts in bilateral relations.