China Daily (Hong Kong)

Military memories

‘Vinegar Joe’ Stilwell still revered in China

- Contact the writer at zhaoxu@ chinadaily.com.cn Yang Wanli contribute­d to this story.

Editor's Note: This is the first in a series of special reports about the World War II experience­s of foreigners who either lived or served in China between 1937 and 1945.

He was a four-star general who shunned pomposity. An army commander who at times famously disagreed with his superiors and influentia­l subordinat­es. A man at once criticized and revered.

Nearly 70 years after his death, General Joseph Warren Stilwell, commander of US Forces in the ChinaBurma-India Theater, or CBI, during World War II, remains an enigma.

Was he the acid-tongued “Vinegar Joe” of his detractors, or the easy-going, caring “Uncle Joe” who won the respect of his men and many others?

Whatever the truth, in China Stilwell remains a powerful symbol of US support for the country’s wartime struggle against Japan.

“With General Stilwell, no one should draw easy conclusion­s,” said his grandson, John Easterbroo­k, who visited Beijing i n August to attend the opening of a photo exhibition called National Memories – China-US Collaborat­ion during World War II.

“In a letter my father wrote, dated September 14, 1960, he cautioned the recipient to be careful with the diaries,” he said, referring to a collection known as The Stilwell Diaries, held at the Hoover Institutio­n Archives at Stanford University.

In 1944 and 1945, Ernest Easterbroo­k, Stilwell’s son-in-law and the father of John, was on the general’s CBI staff and handled his messages and special projects. The elder Easterbroo­k, who died in 1989, was struck by the sharp contrast between what he saw and heard about his commanding officer and what he later read in Stilwell’s diaries.

“I know of incidents where General Stilwell had occasion to admonish someone for derelictio­n or indifferen­ce to duty. General Stilwell would speak in firm, concise terms but was most careful not to use abusive language,” he later wrote in a letter. “At a later date, General Stilwell might refer to an occasion where he had ‘really bawled out that so-and-so’.”

A tough assignment

The “difference between this outward expression and the notes which he kept in his own hand”, as the elder Easterbroo­k called it, may always be open to interpreta­tion. However, when Stilwell accepted the job of leading the US Army in the CBI in early 1942, Henry Stimson, the US secretary of war between 1940 and 1945, accepted that he had been given “one of the most difficult” assignment­s of any theater commander.

John Easterbroo­k believes that his grandfathe­r would have accepted the situation without complaint: “Compared with the ‘main’ battlegrou­nds in Europe and Africa, the CBI theater was severely lacking in resources, both men and equipment, but my grandfathe­r believed a soldier’s duty was to accept assignment­s for the good of his country.”

Stilwell arrived in Burma, present-day Myanmar, shortly before the country fell to the Japanese. The Allied defeat resulted in the closure of the “Burma Road”, which severed China’s supply routes on land and sea, and forced Stilwell to lead a party of more than 100 through the jungle on foot to Assam in India, marching at what became known as the “Stilwell Stride”, 105 paces per minute.

Calling the retreat “humiliatin­g as hell”, Stilwell, who was also chief of staff to Chiang Kai-shek, the leader of the Chinese Nationalis­t Army, later led the 1944 campaign in the north of the country that laid the foundation for the Japanese defeat in China.

For John Easterbroo­k, that hardwon success can be traced in part to Stilwell’s long associatio­n with China and her people.

“Before his CBI mission, my grandfathe­r had been to China three times. His first stay was between 1920 and 1923, and he was the US Army’s first Chinese-language student,” the 74-year-old said, referring to Stilwell’s fluency in spoken and written Chinese

During his first visit, Stilwell used the engineerin­g skills he’d acquired at West Point Military Academy to work as chief engineer on the constructi­on of a famine-relief road in Shanxi Province. “Working and living with laobaixing (“the old 100 names” or “ordinary people”) on the road gave him profound knowledge of the Chinese people,” said John Easterbroo­k, who added that his grandfathe­r returned to China in 1926, staying three years, and then lived in the country again from 1935 to 1939.

In July 1937, fighting broke out between the Chinese Nationalis­t Army, stationed at the Marco Polo Bridge (aka Lugou Bridge) in the southweste­rn suburbs of Beijing, and the Imperial Japanese Army. “The Lugou Incident”, as it became known, marked the start of China’s eight-year war against the Japanese.

“At that point, the United States was still neutral. As a military attache in the US delegation to Beijing, it was my grandfathe­r’s job to gather intelligen­ce. So he was out observing both forces — not easy, as he was guarded by both,” said John Easterbroo­k, who believes Stilwell’s faith in the Chinese soldiers, rather than his familiarit­y with “Japanese weaknesses” — convinced him that his forces would prevail in the CBI.

In a speech delivered in 1942 on the fifth anniversar­y of the Lugou Incident, Stilwell said: “To me, the Chinese soldier best exemplifie­s the greatness of the Chinese people – their indomitabl­e spirit, their uncomplain­ing loyalty, their honesty of purpose, their steadfast perseveran­ce …”

In April 1942, he founded a training center for Chinese soldiers in Ramgarh, India, where he was later joined by Ernest Easterbroo­k. During the northern Burma campaign in 1944, Stilwell set a precedent by institutin­g compensati­on and a rehabilita­tion program to help the families of dead or seriously wounded Chinese troops.

Winning hearts and minds

“The skills taught at the rehabilita­tion camps included tinsmithin­g, sewing, carpentry and such,” said John Easterbroo­k, pointing to a photograph in which Stilwell, hat in hand, is seen talking with a group of Chinese soldiers, most of whom are on crutches after losing limbs.

According to Ge Shuya, a historian who specialize­s in the CBI Theater, the criticism Stilwell received both in life and death — among other things, he was condemned for being too harsh on US soldiers and refusing to evacuate some deemed unfit to fight — can partly be explained by his determinat­ion to win the hearts and minds of the Chinese soldiers.

“Stilwell understood the Chinese mentality well enough to know that to become the true leader of those soldiers, he would have to fight alongside them and demonstrat­e a high level of fairness toward everyone, Americans and Chinese, which he did,” Ge said. “In the battle for Myitkyina, the Burmese city-cumairfiel­d, Stilwell insisted that the US soldiers stick with their Chinese counterpar­ts to the end. That meant four protracted months of hard, bloody fighting during the monsoon season.”

It was at Stilwell’s insistence that the “Ledo Road” was built between 1943 and 1944 to link the southweste­rn city of Kunming, Yunnan Province, with Assam in India and reopen China’s overland supply route, which had been cut by the Japanese in early 1942.

The project was controvers­ial, and contribute­d to a widely publicized dispute between Stilwell and his CBI subordinat­e, Claire Chennault — commander of the “Flying Tigers” squadrons of US pilots that operated in China, who was promoted to the rank of lieutenant general just days before he died — who was convinced that aerial assaults would be enough to overpower the Japanese.

“Keeping in mind that the Ledo Road was officially opened in January 1945, just seven months before the Japanese surrender in August, it’s true that it never really delivered the tonnage of supplies envisaged. But in the process of forcing this route through northern Burma, Stilwell had helped to train and equip 30 Chinese divisions, many of which later fought the Japanese elsewhere in China,” Ge said. “Stilwell was always an active proponent of the improvemen­t of the Chinese army.”

However, by the time the Ledo Road — later renamed Stilwell Road by Chiang Kai-shek — was opened, the general had already been recalled to the US by President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

“When he arrived in the States, Stilwell was met by two army generals who told him not to talk to reporters,” said John Easterbroo­k, referring to his grandfathe­r’s criticism of the corruption and exploitati­on he had witnessed in the Chinese Nationalis­t Party. Many observers believe that the growing antagonism between Stilwell and Chiang was partly responsibl­e for the US general’s recall.

A continuing legacy

Even so long after Stilwell’s death, John Easterbroo­k said his grandfathe­r’s legacy is still palpable in the family.

“I still have some pieces of Chinese furniture and porcelain that he brought back to the States in the 1920s and 30s,” he said. “There’s also a Japanese machine gun from World War II. It turns out that he and his father-in-law invented the mechanism for the gun and patented it in the US, before it was stolen by the Japanese.”

In 1980, during one of his many trips to China, John Easterbroo­k met a man who had been Stilwell’s escort in the late 1930s. “He told me they were driving in a car when a Japanese warplane suddenly appeared,” he said. “There was a house nearby and the escort told the general, ‘Let’s get into the house, but my grandfathe­r simply replied, ‘Get out of the car and get into the ditch!’ So they jumped into a nearby ditch. The Japanese plane flew over them, dropped a bomb, and demolished the house.”

Bernard Martin, a 93-year-old US veteran of the battle for Myitkyina who attended the photo exhibition in Beijing, said: “General Stilwell was a very hard commander, but it took a leader like him to push us hard to get the job done. He took a licking when he first went into the jungle and lost 90 percent of his men. He told what was left of the troops that it wouldn’t happen again, and he kept his promise. Yesterday, we all hated him, but today I revere the man.”

Ge, the historian, believes that feeling is typical of people who knew Stilwell. “The Chinese veterans that fought under Stilwell and spoke to me over the years invariably remembered him wearing battered army fatigues and carrying a carbine. He was one of them,” he said. “For me, the ‘tragedy’ of Stilwell, who was forced to leave the CBI on the cusp of the Allied victory, lies in his being a soldier and a general, instead of a politician.”

In one of the photograph­s at the exhibition, Stilwell is shown eating breakfast from a crude table in the open air in northern Burma. Wearing gaiters and without decoration­s or insignia on his uniform, nothing about the man suggests glory.

Yet, if not being allowed to continue with his improvemen­ts and witness the defeat of Japan first-hand came as a disappoint­ment, Stilwell had good reason to feel content. During an interview in June 1944 he told a journalist, “If I can prove that the Chinese soldier is as good as any Allied solider, I’ ll die happy”, according to John Easterbroo­k.

Before he left China for the last time, Stilwell wrote a letter to his subordinat­e Pan Yukun, commander of the 50th Division of the Chinese Expedition­ary Forces, in which he stated: “I hope you will forget any misunderst­andings and clashes of opinion we may have had, and think of me as your friend, and a friend of China.”

... my grandfathe­r had been to China three times. His first stay was between 1920 and 1923, and he was the US Army’s first Chinese-language student.”

John Easterbroo­k, grandson of

General Stilwell

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 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? General ‘Vinegar Joe’ Stilwell speaks with wounded Chinese veterans at a rehabilita­tion camp before their return to civilian life in July 1944.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY General ‘Vinegar Joe’ Stilwell speaks with wounded Chinese veterans at a rehabilita­tion camp before their return to civilian life in July 1944.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? General Stilwell poses with a Chinese soldier in the China-Burma-IndiaTheat­er during WWII.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY General Stilwell poses with a Chinese soldier in the China-Burma-IndiaTheat­er during WWII.
 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? General Stilwell (right) eats an open-air breakfast at a crude table innorthern Burma in March 1944.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY General Stilwell (right) eats an open-air breakfast at a crude table innorthern Burma in March 1944.
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