May 16, 2007 - 12:35 pm
Filed in: 1920s, Airmindedness, Avia-Corner, China, Propaganda

The second installment of the monthly blog run-down Military History Carnival has turned up a recent and relevant aviation-related post from the collaborative East Asian history blog Frog in a Well. In it, Alan Baumler ponders the question, “How air-minded was China?” and offers some background information concerning the role of airplanes and air power in Chiang Kai-shek’s vision of a new China.

It turns out that the Nationalist leader (and at least one of his subordinates) was “obsessed” with airplanes and viewed the development of Chinese aviation as a means for transforming his countrymen and unifying the nation. Baumler speculates that Chiang’s air-minded interests mirrored the widespread European fascination with flight in the inter-War period, particularly in 1930s Nazi Germany.

Perhaps. It seems to me though that it isn’t necessary to travel that far West in search of precedents to Chiang’s aerial obsession. In fact, it may be possible to identify the origins of Chiang’s fascination with flight without even leaving China.

On 13 July 1925 four Soviet airplanes landed in the Chinese capital. They were the remnants of a larger squadron that had departed Moscow six weeks earlier with the goal of demonstrating the USSR’s “sympathy and friendship for the Chinese people” by flying to Peking. Known as the “Great Flight” (Великий перелет), the mission was history’s first premeditated attempt to promote international goodwill through the use of aviation. [I discuss the details of the Great Flight in Chapter Six of DotA.]

While I have no way of measuring Chinese responses to the Soviet propaganda mission, given the high-level diplomatic negotiations that took place in advance, the audacious scope of the enterprise, and the widespread media coverage devoted to the event (journalists, cameramen, and a film crew flew along to document everything for the Bolshevik state), it seems reasonable to conclude that the Great Flight would have attracted the attention of interested officials and military leaders like Chiang. Perhaps it even inspired his original interest in aviation?

The “Russian connection” seems all the more plausible given the marked similarity of Chiang’s ideas to those advanced by Bolshevik Party propagandists during their 1923 Campaign to Build the Red Air Fleet. [Chiang's reported ideas bear an uncanny similarity to those first expressed in Leon Trotsky's pamphlet Aviation: Instrument of the Future (1923).] Likewise, while the Nationalists’ efforts to raise money through public donations can be traced to the national subscription campaigns popular in Western Europe and Imperial Russia prior to 1914, the practice of allowing enterprises and organizations to sponsor airplanes by donating the funds for their construction was first adopted by ODVF and Dobrolet. Not coincidentally (perhaps), several of these “factory-built” Soviet aircraft participated in the Great Flight.

Although the USSR more frequently followed than led when it came to the development of breakthrough aviation technologies, the country was often at the forefront in devising innovative ways of popularizing that technology. Ironically, it may well be that Russian Communists inspired the air-minded notions of China’s ill-fated Nationalist leader.

Whatever the case, I’d love to learn about the Chinese reaction to the arrival of the Great Flight squadron. The event would serve as a terrific vehicle for undertaking an article or essay on the origins of Chinese airmindedness.

Someone should get to work on this. Professor Baumler?

ScP

One Response to “The Russian Connection (re: Chinese Airmindedness)”
  1. 1
    Airminded · Your name here Pinged With:
    May 16, 2007 - 9:39 pm 

    [...] Update: see, I told you it reminded me of Russia! [...]

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