The Pragmatic Betrayal: Hitler’s Strategic Pivot in 1937
In the mid-1930s, the relationship between Nazi Germany and Nationalist China was a curious, symbiotic affair.
But Hitler’s "friendship" with China was never a moral commitment; it was a ledger entry. When the Second Sino-Japanese War erupted in 1937, Hitler faced a cold choice between his established trade partner and a rising, fascist-aligned Japan.
The betrayal, when it came, was swift and clinical. As 1937 turned into 1938, the German government began recalling its military advisors and abandoning arms contracts. Hitler’s "loyalty" to Chiang Kai-shek evaporated the moment Japan became a more useful piece on his geopolitical chessboard. It is a textbook example of the "sacred egotism" that governs statecraft: the human cost of the Sino-Japanese conflict was irrelevant compared to the utility of a Japanese alliance.
In the end, Nazi ideology, which viewed the Chinese as racially "inferior," eventually caught up with strategic reality. By 1941, Germany had severed all ties with Nationalist China, pivoting entirely toward the Axis alliance.