What were conditions like for Chinese men subject to recruitment by the army during the Second Sino-Japanese War and Chinese Civil War?

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There is evidence of this in Jonathan D. Spence's The Search for Modern China, it gives an overview of Chinese history from the 19th Century and he has been awarded the Lionel Gelber Prize for this work, so this is a trustworthy and credible source.

In page 477-478, Spence quotes and confirms Theodore White's accounts:

"The tear-stained faces, smudgy and forlorn in the cold, shamed us," wrote Theodore White, Chinese children are beautiful in health; their hair glows then with the gloss of fine natural oil, and their almond eyes sparkle. But these shrunken scarecrows had pus-filled slits where eyes should be; malnutrition had made their hair dry and brittle; hunger had bloated their bellies; weather had chapped their skins. Their voices had withered into a thin whine that called only for food.

Spence then adds his own information: (he did not cite a source) "These journalists, angry and sickened when reports of such miseries were cut from their dispatches by Guomindang censors, ended up blaming the Chongqing regime for both the human and the military dimensions of the catastrophe."

"Other Americans, including General Stilwell himself, were equally horrified at the campaigns of enforced conscription carried out by the Guomindang armies, and at the sight of ragged, barefooted men being led to the front roped together, already weakened almost to death by beriberi or malnutrition. Random executions of recruiting officers, occasionally ordered by Chiang Kai-shek, did nothing to end the abuses. It was estimated that of 1.67 million Chinese men drafted for active service in 1943, 44 percent deserted or died on the way to join their units. Those draftees who died before seeing combat between 1937 and 1945 numbered 1.4 million, approx- imately 1 in 10 of all men drafted."

Not only that, "Chinese peasants in the former Guomindang-held areas had been killing, robbing, and disarming the Chinese troops retreating from the Ichigo attacks in pent-up rage at the callousness of those same troops a year earlier, when the troops had enforced tax collections in kind even in the midst of terrible famine." Although troops abused their power, tax collections were ordered from officials and GMD members, so they were innocent in this respect.

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