Lessons Lost in Time

How War Built Modern China w/ Dr. Hans van de Ven

Feb 2, 2026
Hans van de Ven, a Cambridge historian of modern China, explains how a century of continuous war forged today’s political and military habits. He reframes 1937–1953 as one unbroken conflict. He traces how mobilization, party control, national trauma, and fears of encirclement shaped centralization, the PLA, and strategic caution in Chinese politics.
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INSIGHT

War As A Continuous Condition

  • China experienced the 20th century as an extended period of overlapping wars rather than discrete events.
  • That unbroken violence shaped a state obsessed with unity, memory, and intolerance of disorder.
INSIGHT

WWII In Asia Was Nation-Building Too

  • The Second World War in Asia merged anti-imperial struggles with national state-building conflicts.
  • Post-1945 fighting in many Asian countries continued as rival forces vied to shape their new nations.
INSIGHT

Party Control Over The Military

  • The Communists learned that a single disciplined party must control the military to avoid fragmentation.
  • That lesson explains the CCP's insistence on party supremacy over armed forces today.
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