有關「中國人民抗日戰爭勝利」的事實真相在歷史書有真實記錄。請看以下一段:
‘At the end of World War II, China was on the winning side, but not because it had defeated Japan. In fact, when the recording of Emperor Hirohito’s surrender was played on the radio there on August 15, 1945, many frontline Japanese soldiers couldn’t hear the broadcast clearly and assumed he was urging them on because, as far as they were concerned, they were winning... Landing at an airfield outside the capital Nanjing shortly afterward, a senior British officer reported a large Japanese military presence, vastly outnumbering their Chinese counterparts and struggling to comprehend the news that they had lost.”
[續]
‘At the end of World War II, China was on the winning side, but not because it had defeated Japan. In fact, when the recording of Emperor Hirohito’s surrender was played on the radio there on August 15, 1945, many frontline Japanese soldiers couldn’t hear the broadcast clearly and assumed he was urging them on because, as far as they were concerned, they were winning... Landing at an airfield outside the capital Nanjing shortly afterward, a senior British officer reported a large Japanese military presence, vastly outnumbering their Chinese counterparts and struggling to comprehend the news that they had lost.”
[續]
[續]
“If the war was won elsewhere, the other major problem for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) when it came to retelling this story in the years to come was that it was not involved in most of the fighting. It was the rival Kuomintang (KMT) forces, led by Mao Zedong’s enemy Chiang Kai-shek, that bore the brunt of the conflict. And it was Chiang, not Mao, who sat alongside Roosevelt and Churchill in meetings of the Allied powers and presided over the end of the war. The crowds at the victory celebrations in the major cities waved KMT and American flags, not the red banner of the CCP.”
未知道以上和我国官方版本有何不同呢?
“Dancing on Bones: History and Power in China, Russia and North Korea” by Katie Stallard
“If the war was won elsewhere, the other major problem for the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) when it came to retelling this story in the years to come was that it was not involved in most of the fighting. It was the rival Kuomintang (KMT) forces, led by Mao Zedong’s enemy Chiang Kai-shek, that bore the brunt of the conflict. And it was Chiang, not Mao, who sat alongside Roosevelt and Churchill in meetings of the Allied powers and presided over the end of the war. The crowds at the victory celebrations in the major cities waved KMT and American flags, not the red banner of the CCP.”
未知道以上和我国官方版本有何不同呢?
“Dancing on Bones: History and Power in China, Russia and North Korea” by Katie Stallard