Chiang Wei-kuo

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Chiang Wei-kuo as an officer candidate in the Wehrmacht. The shoulder boards indicate the rank of Fahnenjunker.
Chiang Wei-kuo as an officer candidate in the Wehrmacht. The shoulder boards indicate the rank of Fahnenjunker.

Chiang Wei-kuo (Chinese: 蔣緯國, 蒋纬国; Hanyu Pinyin: Jiǎng Wěiguó), or Wego Chiang (October 6, 1916September 22, 1997) was an adopted son of President Chiang Kai-shek, adoptive brother of President Chiang Ching-kuo, and an important figure in the Kuomintang (KMT). His nickname was Jianhao (建鎬) and sobriquet Niantang (念堂).

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[edit] Early life

Born in Tokyo when Chiang Kai-shek and the KMT was exiled to Japan by the Beiyang Government, Chiang Wei-kuo has long been speculated to be an offspring of Tai Chi-tao and a Japanese woman, Shigematsu Kaneko (重松金子). Chiang Wei-kuo previously discredited any such claims and insisted he was a legitimate son of Chiang Kai-shek until his later years(1988), when he admitted that he was adopted. [1]

According to popular gossip, Tai believed knowledge of his Japanese escapade would destroy his marriage and his career, so he entrusted Wei-kuo to Chiang Kai-shek, after the Japanese Yamada Juntaro (山田純太郎) brought the infant to Shanghai. Yao Yecheng (姚冶誠), Chiang's wife at the time, raised Wei-kuo as her own. The boy called Tai his "Dear Uncle" (親伯).

Chiang moved to the Chiang ancestral home in Xikuo Town of Fenghua in 1910.

He studied at Soochow University. With his sibling held as a virtual political hostage by Stalin, Chiang he sent Wei-kuo to Munich Military Academy for military schooling. After completing his training, served an internship as Alps Mountain Korps carrying 30 kilos of back pack. He was a commissioned sergeant, then commanding a Panzer during the 1938 Czechoslovakia campaign, and promoted to be a lieutenant of a unit waiting to be set out to Poland. He was recalled to return to China. He became a major at 28, a lieutenant colonel at 29, a colonel at 32, and major general later. He was in charge of a [Sherman] tank battalion scored some early victories during 1948 Nationalist-Communist campaign against Deng Xiao Ping's troops. In 1949 he moved his armor regiment to Taiwan.

In 1944, he married Shih Chin-i(石靜宜), the daughter of Shih Feng-hsiang (石鳳翔), a textile tycoon from North West China. Shih died in 1953 during a child birth. Wei-kuo later established the Jinsin Elementary School (靜心小學) in Taipei to commemorate his late wife.

In 1957, Chiang re-married, to Chiu Ju-hsüeh (丘如雪), also known as Chiu Ai-lun (邱愛倫), a daughter of Chinese and German parents. Chiu gave birth to Chiang's only son, Chiang Hsiao-kang, (蔣孝剛) in 1962. Chiang Hsiao-kang is the youngest of the Hsiao generation of the Chiang family.

[edit] Political career

His positions in the Republic of China government included:

  • Commanding general of the armored vehicles regiment (甲兵司令)
  • Commanding general of the unified logistics division (聯勤總司令)
  • Commandant of the Army Strategies College (陸軍指揮參謀大學)
  • Chancellor of the Three-Military University (三軍大學校長)
  • Senior advisor to the President (總統府資政)
  • Secretary-General, Council of National Security (國安會秘書長)

After Chiang Ching-kuo's death, Chiang was a political rival of native Taiwanese Lee Teng-hui, and he strongly opposed Lee's Taiwan localization movement. Chiang ran as vice-president with Taiwan Governor Lin Yang-kang in the 1990 indirect presidential election. Lee ran as the KMT presidential candidate and defeated the Lin-Chiang ticket.

In 1991, Chiang's housemaid, Li Hung-mei (李洪美, or 李嫂) was found dead in Chiang's estate in the Taipei City. The following police investigation discovered a stockpile of sixty guns on Chiang's estate. Chiang himself admitted the possibility of a link between the guns and his maid's death, which was later ruled a suicide by the police. The incident permanently tarnished Chiang Wei-kuo's name, at a time when the Chiang family was increasingly unpopular on Taiwan and even within the Nationalist Party. A new generation of Nationalists no longer had the will or desire to cover the decades of corruption and scandal that the Chiang family had surrounded itself with ever since Chiang Kai-shek rose to power in the 1930s.

[edit] Final years

In the early 1990s, Chiang Wei-kuo established an 11-person unofficial Spirit Relocation Committee (奉安移靈小組) to petition the Communist government to allow his father and brother to be exhumed and re-interred in mainland China. His request was largely ignored by both the Nationalist and Communist governments, and he was persuaded to abandon the petition by his stepmother and his father's widow, Soong May-ling in November 1996.

In 1994, a hospital was supposed to be named after him (蔣緯國醫療中心) in Sanchih, Taipei County, after an unnamed politician donated to Ruentex Financial Group (潤泰企業集團), whose founder was from Stician. Politicians questioned the motivation.

In 1996, the Chiang home on a military land was finally demolished by the order of the Taipei municipal government under Chen Shui-bian. The estate had been constructed in 1971. After Chiang moved elsewhere in 1981, he deeded it to his son. The justification was that son was not in military service and thus was not entitled to live there.

Chiang Wei-kuo died at the age of 82 from kidney failure. He had been experienced falling blood pressure complicated by diabetes after a 10-month illness at Veterans General Hospital, Taipei at 82. He wished to be buried in Suzhou in mainland China, but was instead buried at Wuchih Mountain Military Cemetery.

Chiang Wei-kuo was a Master Mason and was a Past Master of Liberty Lodge #7 in Taipei, Taiwan.[citation needed]

[edit] See also

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