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Chiang Kaishek and Joseph Stilwell at Maymyo, Burma, 19 Apr 1942 [Colorized by WW2DB]

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Caption     Chiang Kaishek and Joseph Stilwell at Maymyo, Burma, 19 Apr 1942 [Colorized by WW2DB] ww2dbase
Colorization Note   This photograph was originally a black and white photograph; the colorized version presented here was a derivative work by WW2DB. The colors used in this version were speculative, and could be significantly different from the real colors.

Processed using Adobe Photoshop Image Processor, with default neural filter, selecting "None" as the profile.

View the original black and white photograph at its own permanent page.
Photographer    Unknown
Source    ww2dbaseUnited States Army
More on...   
Chiang Kaishek   Main article  Photos  
Joseph Stilwell   Main article  Photos  
Photo Size 1,028 x 1,329 pixels
Photos on Same Day 19 Apr 1942
Added By C. Peter Chen
Colorized Date 24 Feb 2023
Licensing  Public Domain. According to the United States copyright law (United States Code, Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 105), in part, "[c]opyright protection under this title is not available for any work of the United States Government".

Please contact us regarding any inaccuracies with the above information. Thank you.




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Visitor Submitted Comments

1. Commenter identity confirmed Bill says:
7 Oct 2011 09:20:39 PM

Chiang Kai-shek and General Joseph Stilwell
This is up front, what's underneath.

WITH FRIENDS LIKE THIS, WHO NEEDS ENEMIES...

Was Chiang a good military leader? He was a warlord and he manipulated people below him,
so nobody ever got too much power.
He wasn't efficient he took care of people in his favor, his Generals skimmed off the top with money, food and military equipment.

ITS NEWS TO ME:

China never had a civil society they had the court, mandarins and the peasants. Chiang felt that the Allies couldn't loose China, and he played with that, Chiang needed a lot of military equipment, and told the Allies, he never had enough, he had enough, but he was storing the supplies to ues against the Communists after the Japanese were defeated.

NOTHING TO FEAR, BUT FEAR ITSELF:

FDR sent a telegram to Chiang threatening to cut off all lend-lease aid, unless General Stilwell took over command of the Chinese army. Chiang told Stilwell to leave China, Stilwell knew how widespread the corruption was and Chiang was more interested in fighting the Communists than the Japanese.
Chiang wanted the United States to take care of the Japanese. Chiang was fighting on the side-lines.

HOLDING NONE OF THE CARDS: THE ODD MAN OUT

Chiang was furious when neither Roosevelt or Churchill met him at the airport in Cairo in 1943 he wangled his way into the conference

After defeat at the hands of the Communists
Chiang moved his Government to Formosa now called Taiwan on Dec. 10, 1949.
Mainland China was now Communist, so who lost
China?

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