Armies are made up of a small number of officers and a large number of
ordinary soldiers, recruited from the working class or peasantry. When
the military dominates a society, as it did in Warlord China, it is
these ordinary soldiers who become the direct agents of oppression and
terror. Asking who these men were, and why they turned on their own
society, this book looks at the origins, training and behaviour of the
soldiers of Warlord China. It thus provides a case study of the misery
inflicted by military regimes on civilian societies. Military control in
China was long drawn out, and fragmented. The Warlord period, in the
first years of Republican China, has been designated as the darkest of
Modern Chinese history. The soldiers who served in the warlord armies
were considered to be the lowest of the low, and have not for that
reason been a subject for study, but their impact on their society was
enormous. Their parallels in other, contemporary societies are equally
influential. Diana Lary's book includes in translation documents of the
period to illuminate the human side of her theme.