
He Yingqin
何应钦
1890–1987
- Nationalist War Minister (1930–1944)
- Commander-in-Chief, Chinese Army (1944–1945)
Biography
Military Education and Early Career
He Yingqin was born in 1890 in Xingyi, Guizhou, into a family of modest means. He received military training at the Yunnan Military Academy before travelling to Japan, where he graduated from the Imperial Japanese Army Academy in 1911 — joining a cohort of Chinese officers whose Japanese military education would shape a generation of Nationalist commanders. He returned to China during the 1911 Revolution and served in various military capacities through the Republic's turbulent early years. His path crossed with Chiang Kai-shek's at the Whampoa Military Academy in 1924, where He served as an instructor. That connection would define the rest of his career.
Chiang Kai-shek's Most Reliable Commander
He Yingqin rose through the Northern Expedition (1926–1928) as one of Chiang's most trusted field commanders, and by 1930 had been appointed War Minister — a position he held for fourteen years. He was the institutional face of the Nationalist military establishment: capable, conservative, and entirely committed to Chiang's strategic priorities. He managed the five anti-Communist Encirclement Campaigns and oversaw the construction of the Nationalist army's German-advised modern divisions. His loyalty to Chiang was deep, though historians have noted that during the Xi'an crisis his calculation of personal advantage was not entirely absent from his hardline advocacy.
The Xi'an Incident: Advocate for Bombardment
When news of Chiang's detention reached Nanjing on 12 December 1936, He Yingqin moved immediately to assert military authority. As War Minister, he ordered ground forces to advance toward Xi'an and called for punitive aerial bombardment of the city. His position was that the mutiny must be punished by force regardless of the consequences for Chiang personally — a stance that placed him in direct opposition to those, including Soong Mei-ling and T.V. Soong, who believed that military action would cost Chiang his life. He's hardline posture was ultimately blocked by the collective weight of the Nanjing leadership, international pressure, and the success of the negotiated resolution. His conduct during the crisis remained a source of tension with Chiang, who understood well that He's calculations had not been purely selfless.
Accepting Japan's Surrender and Later Life
He Yingqin's most consequential moment came on 9 September 1945, when — as Commander-in-Chief of the Chinese Army — he accepted the formal surrender of Japanese forces in China from General Okamura Yasuji in Nanjing. The ceremony was a culmination of eight years of war and a moment of profound national significance. After 1949 He retreated with the Nationalist government to Taiwan, where he held ceremonial senior positions and remained active in public life into old age. He died in Taipei in 1987 at the age of ninety-seven, having outlived nearly every other figure of his generation. His historical reputation is mixed: an effective military administrator and loyal subordinate to Chiang, but one whose conduct at Xi'an revealed the limits of that loyalty under conditions of maximum pressure.