Chen was born in modern
Wuxing District,
Huzhou,
Zhejiang in 1900. His father,
Chen Qiye and his uncles,
Chen Qimei and
Chen Qicai were all anti-Qing revolutionaries and later Kuomintang members. In 1925, he formally joined the
Kuomintang (KMT) in
San Francisco after receiving his master's degree in mining engineering from the
University of Pittsburgh. On 9 January 1926,
Chiang Kai-shek hired Chen as his confidential secretary. In 1927, Chiang appointed Chen to head the Investigation Section of the Organization Department of the KMT Chen and elder brother
Chen Guofu became heads of the KMT's secret service, leading a political faction known as the
CC Clique. Regarding the KMT's modernization policy, Chen stated in 1930 that "from this point forward, psychological reconstruction will be fundamentally attached to government reconstruction as its main program ... a revolutionary mentality must conform to the needs of a revolutionary government." In late 1935, China faced the looming threat of war with Japan, and Chiang decided to send Chen to the Soviet Union to negotiate a treaty of mutual military assistance. However, Chen flew to Berlin in disguise, and while preparing to go on to Moscow, preliminary negotiations broke down and he was recalled. In the fall of 1936, Chen was Chiang's representative at a series of secret meetings with
Chinese Communist Party representative
Pan Hannian, where the two sides attempted to negotiate a united front against the Japanese. This attempt failed, leading to the
Xi'an Incident. In 1938, Chen was again promoted, becoming the minister of education. Chen held this position until 1944. After the end of the
Second Sino-Japanese War, he became vice president of the
Legislative Yuan. Chen went to the United States to support
Thomas E. Dewey's campaign in the
1948 United States presidential election, a move that earned the Kuomintang the ire of
Harry S. Truman. With the Kuomintang defeat in the Chinese Civil War, Chen went to Taiwan. Under pressure from
Chen Cheng after the falling out of relations between him and
Chiang Kai-shek, he resigned from politics and moved to the United States. His brother,
Chen Guofu, remained in Taiwan until his death in 1952. In America, Chen ran a newspaper for the
Chinese-American community in
New York City. Additionally, Chen ran a chicken farm in New Jersey in order to make a living during his time in exile. He returned to Taiwan in 1961 to visit his father, Chen Qiye, before he died. In his memoir, Chen also stated that he was received by
Chen Cheng at the airport alongside a thousand people and met with Chiang at his father's house. He did not permanently return to Taiwan until 1968, 3 years after Chen Cheng's death. In 1993, Chen published a memoir titled
The Storm Clouds Clear Over China which documented his role in Chinese politics and the
Chinese Civil War. In his memoir, Chen denied the existence of the
CC Clique and refused to provide an English name for the movement. In Taiwan, Chen served as the vice chairman of the
Chinese Cultural Renaissance committee, the chairman of the Confucius-Mencius Society, and the chairman of the
China Medical University. He died in Taichung on 8 February 2001 at the age of 100. ==References==