Central Enterprises of the Communist Party of China to commemorate the Xi ‘an Incident poster surprised Chiang Kai-shek’s famous quotes

On the occasion of the 84th anniversary of the Xi’an Incident, China Unicom Shandong Customer Service released a poster with the phrase “To rebel against the outside world, we must first reassure the inside world” on its official Weibo account. (Photo source: Weibo)

“On the occasion of the 84th anniversary of the Xi’an Incident, Shandong branch of China Unicom, a central Communist Party enterprise, has released a poster with Chiang Kai-shek’s famous quote on fighting the Communist Party: “To expel the outside world, we must first secure the inside”, which has sparked heated debate among netizens.

On December 12 this year, the 84th anniversary of the Xi’an Incident, the official microblog of the Shandong branch of the Communist Party’s central enterprise China Unicom released a commemorative poster on which the words “to expel the outside world, we must first secure the inside” appeared.

Some netizens laughed and said, “The editor of China Unicom Shandong’s customer service didn’t have a clear idea of what the Xi’an Incident was about.” “The typical: no culture, really terrible!”

The “first thing you need to do is to reign in the country” is the political orientation put forward by Chiang Kai-shek, chairman of the National Government of the Republic of China, in the article “To the country’s compatriots to reign in the country” issued on July 23, 1931, the eve of the “September 18 Incident”. In the article, it was written: “Anti-Japanese must first fight bandits, and to fight foreigners, we must first secure the country, and to fight bandits in order to fight Japan. Chiang Kai-shek’s intention at that time was to concentrate his efforts on eliminating the “communist bandits” and then complete the ultimate goal of resistance against Japan.

On December 12, 1936, with the help of the Chinese Communist Party, Zhang Xueliang and Yang Hucheng staged an armed military coup in Xi’an, known as the Xi’an Incident. All 67 guards of Chiang Kai-shek’s guard platoon were killed.

According to Zhang Xueliang, after the Xi’an Incident, he always regretted this action and never returned to his homeland until his death, calling himself “the culprit of sinners”. It was a rebellion, and I had to take responsibility.”

The Chinese Communist Party’s Deceptive Lies

The CCP claims to be the mainstay of the anti-Japanese war, but in fact, the CCP is faking the resistance and growing in strength.

In 1937, Mao Zedong held a meeting in Luochuan, northern Shaanxi Province, to define the role of the Communist army in the anti-Japanese war. Mao instructed that “we must strengthen ourselves in seven parts, compromise in two parts, and resist the Japanese in one part,” meaning that we should play guerrilla and follow the policy of “if you do not offend me, I will not offend you, if the enemy comes, I will run, if the enemy advances, I will retreat,” and absolutely avoid fighting the Japanese head-on.

The Chinese Communist Party did not just fake resistance to Japan. When the Nationalist Army fought the Japanese head-on, the Chinese Communist Party’s agents staged riots in the countryside, causing trouble for the Nationalist government and making the Nationalist Party exhausted. Mao Zedong repeatedly said in meetings that “the war against Japan is the best opportunity for our Party to seize power”.

Not only that, the CCP even secretly colluded with the Japanese to collaborate with the enemy and sell out the country. The book “The Truth About Mao’s Collusion with the Japanese Army” written by Japanese writer Yu Endo based on the memoirs of a Japanese agent revealed that Pan Hannian, a major Chinese Communist agent, was the contact person dispatched by Mao to collude with the Japanese army and fight against the Kuomintang. Later, after Mao feared that the covert treason would be revealed and usurped power, he imprisoned Pan Hannian in the mountains of Hunan until his death.

Mao himself thanked the Japanese for invading China many times.