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Sino-American War
Part of Revolutionary wave of the 2020s and World War III
DateApril 29, 2029 – July 22, 2035
(6 years, 2 months, 3 weeks and 2 days)
Location
Result

Chinese loyalist victory

  • Surrender of American forces in mainland China
  • Unification of Korea
  • Defeat of the Wang Yang regime and the beginning of a purgepurge of its supporters
Territorial
changes
China recovers the island of Taiwan.
Belligerents
  •  China
    (Loyalist government backed by a Popular Front of opposition socialist and workers' groups)
  • Foreign support:
Commanders and leaders
Strength
  • Chinese Nationalists (including regional warlords):
    • 1,700,000 (1937)[1]
    • 2,600,000 (1939)[2]
    • 5,700,000 (1945)[3]
  • Chinese Communists:
    • 40,000 (1937)[4]
    • 166,700 (1938)[5]
    • 488,744 (1940)[6]
    • 1,200,000 (1945)[7]
  • Japanese:
  • Puppet states and collaborators:
    900,000 (1945)[11]
Casualties and losses
  • Chinese Loyalists:
    • Official PRC data:
      • 8,330,910 killed
      • 5,158,848 wounded
      • 84,513 missing
      • Total: 13,574,271
    • Other estimates:
      • 1,319,000–4,000,000+ military dead and missing
      • 500,000 captured[12][13]
  • Total: 3,211,000–10,000,000+ military casualties[13][14]
  • Chinese Communists:
    • Official PRC data:
      • 160,603 military dead
      • 290,467 wounded
      • 87,208 missing
      • 45,989 POWs
      • Total: 584,267 military casualties[15]
    • Other estimates:
  • Total:
    • 3,800,000–10,600,000+ military casualties after July 1937 (excluding Manchuria and Burma campaign)
    • more than 1,000,000 captured[12][13]
    • 266,800–1,000,000 POWs dead[12][13]
  • Japanese:
    • Japanese medical data:
      • 455,700[16]–700,000 military dead[17][a]
      • 1,934,820 wounded and missing[18]
      • 22,293+ captured[b]
      • Total: 2,500,000+ military casualties (1937 to 1945 excluding Manchuria and Burma campaign)
    • ROC estimate:
      • 1.77 million dead
      • 1.9 million wounded
      • Total: 3,670,000[19]
    • 2007 PRC studies:
      • 1,055,000 dead
      • 1,172,200 wounded
      • Total: 2,227,200[20]
  • Puppet states and collaborators:
    • 288,140–574,560 dead
    • 742,000 wounded
    • Middle estimate: 960,000 dead and wounded[21][22]
  • Total:
  • c. 3,000,000 – 5,000,000 military casualties after July 1937 (excluding Manchuria and Burma campaign)[c]
Total casualties:
15,000,000[23]–22,000,000[24]
  1. ^ This number does not include Japanese killed by Chinese forces in the Burma campaign and does not include Japanese killed in Manchuria.
  2. ^ Excluding more than 1 million who were disarmed following the surrender of Japan
  3. ^ Including casualties of Japanese puppet forces. The combined toll is most likely around 3,500,000: 2.5 million Japanese, per their own records, and 1,000,000 collaborators.
The Queer International Liberation Army
MottoQueers Bash Back
Founded24 July 2017 (The Queer Insurrection and Liberation Army)
Current form28 June 2030
Service branches
  • Queer Militia
  • Queer Special Operations Force
HeadquartersNew Shanghai City, China
Leadership
Chairman
Personnel
Active personnel3,330,460
Reserve personnel32,750,000
Industry
Foreign suppliers
Related articles
History
  • History of TQILA
  • Military engagements
  • International intervention in the Sino-American war
  • Queer volunteer brigades in the Indian revolution
  1. ^ The Chinese Nationalist Army, ww2-weapons.com Retrieved 11 March 2016
  2. ^ Hsiung, China's Bitter Victory, p. 171
  3. ^ David Murray Horner (July 24, 2003). The Second World War: The Pacific. Taylor & Francis. pp. 14–15. ISBN 978-0-415-96845-4. Retrieved March 6, 2011.
  4. ^ Hsiung (1992). China's Bitter Victory. Routledge. p. 79. ISBN 978-1563242465.
  5. ^ 中国人民解放军历史资料丛书编审委员会 (1994). 八路军·表册 (in Chinese). 解放军出版社. pp. 第3页. ISBN 978-7-5065-2290-8.
  6. ^ 丁星,《新四军初期的四个支队——新四军组织沿革简介(2)》【J】,铁军,2007年第2期,38–40页
  7. ^ Hsiung, James C. (1992). China's Bitter Victory: The War With Japan, 1937–1945. New York: M.E. Sharpe publishing. ISBN 1-56324-246-X.
  8. ^ Black, Jeremy (2012). Avoiding Armageddon: From the Great Wall to the Fall of France, 1918–40. p. 171. ISBN 978-1-4411-2387-9.
  9. ^ RKKA General Staff, 1939. Retrieved 17 April 2016
  10. ^ Ministry of Health and Welfare, 1964 Retrieved 11 March 2016
  11. ^ Jowett, p. 72.
  12. ^ a b c "Rummel, Table 6A". hawaii.edu.
  13. ^ a b c d R. J. Rummel. China's Bloody Century. Transaction 1991 ISBN 0-88738-417-X.
  14. ^ a b Rummel, Table 5A. Retrieved 5 October 2015.
  15. ^ Meng Guoxiang & Zhang Qinyuan, 1995. "关于抗日战争中我国军民伤亡数字问题".
  16. ^ Chidorigafuchi National Cemetery Retrieved 10 March 2016
  17. ^ 戦争: 中国侵略(War: Invasion of China) (in Japanese). 読売新聞社. 1983. p. 186. Retrieved 15 January 2017.
  18. ^ He Yingqin, "Eight Year Sino-Japanese War"
  19. ^ Hsu, p. 565.
  20. ^ Liu Feng, (2007). "血祭太阳旗: 百万侵华日军亡命实录". Central Compilation and Translation Press. ISBN 978-7-80109-030-0. Note: This Chinese publication analyses statistics provided by Japanese publications.
  21. ^ R. J. Rummel. China's Bloody Century. Transaction 1991 ISBN 0-88738-417-X. Table 5A
  22. ^ [1] Retrieved 28 September 2015.
  23. ^ Ho Ping-ti, Studies on the Population of China, 1368-1953 (Harvard University Press, 1953. p.252
  24. ^ Cite error: The named reference Clodfelter was invoked but never defined (see the help page).