. ,
Qinghai. Upon returning to China, he worked for several industrial enterprises, and was then recruited by
Sun Yat-sen to develop finances for his
Canton government. He served as Minister of Finance from August 1925 until 1927. After the success of Chiang Kai-shek's
Northern Expedition in 1927, Soong served in a succession of offices in the
Nationalist Government, including as Governor of the
Central Bank of China (1928–1934) and as
Minister of Finance (1928–1933). He founded the
China Development Finance Corporation (CDFC) in 1934, along with other prominent financial figures, such as
Chang Kia-ngau, Chen Guangpu and
H.H. Kung. CDFC provided China's chief access to foreign investment for the next decade. Many CDFC financial packages benefitted companies that were related to Soong or his family members. In the summer of 1940, Chiang appointed Soong to Washington, D.C., as his personal representative. His task was to win support for China's war with Japan. Soong successfully negotiated substantial loans for this purpose. After Pearl Harbor, Chiang appointed Soong
Minister of Foreign Affairs, though Soong remained in Washington to manage the alliance with both the U.S. and the U.K. During his tenure as
Finance Minister, he managed to
balance China's budget, which was no small accomplishment. He resigned in 1933, displeased with Chiang Kai-shek's appeasement of Japan and attempts to placate Japanese aggression. He later returned to service as Minister of Foreign Affairs (1942–1945), and as
President of the Executive Yuan (1945–1947). Soong left his legacy as head of the Chinese delegation to the
United Nations Conference on International Organization in San Francisco, April 1945, which later became the
United Nations. During the
German invasion of Russia, Soong was in charge of negotiating with the
Soviet leader
Joseph Stalin regarding Soviet interests in China, and travelled to
Moscow to extract from Stalin a guarantee to oppose the Chinese Communist Party. Soong conceded to Stalin the Manchurian railways and Korean independence but refused to allow Soviet interference in Xinjiang or military bases in Manchuria. He also indicated that China and the Soviet Union could share dominion over Mongolia if a "mutual assistance pact" was agreed to. Soong was known for his tough negotiating style with Stalin in getting straight to the point and freely using the threat of American military backing to strengthen his demands. When the Sino-Soviet treaty was signed, China ceded to the Soviets parts of Mongolia, the use of a naval base at Port Arthur (with civilian rule remaining Chinese), and co-ownership of the
Chinese Eastern Railway in Manchuria. In return, Soong extracted from Stalin recognition of the Republic of China as the legitimate regime of China, aid from the Soviets, and an oral agreement to an eventual Soviet withdrawal from Manchuria. Stalin had previously told the Americans that Franklin Roosevelt should inform Chiang Kai-shek of the Russian demands in Manchuria, at the
Yalta Conference, before Stalin informed Soong. During the war years, he financed the
Flying Tigers, an American mercenary group that was later incorporated into the
United States Air Force. Gen.
Claire Chennault was listed as an employee of the
Bank of China. On this project Soong worked very closely with his sister,
May-ling Soong. He once remarked to
John Paton Davies, Jr., one of the
China Hands, that there were no U.S.
State Department memos sent from China to which he did not have access within a few days. Criticism of Soong increased as the Nationalist government's financial crisis increased during January and early February 1947. Rival Nationalist individuals and factions which criticized him included those associated with
Sun Ke,
Zhang Qun,
CC Clique, and the
Gexin movement. The Gexin movement criticized Soong for what the group described as his bureaucratic capitalism, a phrase likely adopted from the communists' criticisms of Soong. The Gexin movement influenced many newspapers' criticisms of Soong. Its criticisms of Soong were also echoed in the
Legislative Yuan. On March 1, 1947, Soong resigned as president of the Executive Yuan. Nonetheless, Soong was active in the Nationalist government's financial policy until he moved to the United States in January 1949. Soong moved to New York and remained an influential member of the
China Lobby. ==Death==