Wang Jingwei nominally ruled the government as the Chairman of the Central Political Committee, Chairman of the National Government Committee, and
President of the Executive Yuan (commonly called the Premier), until his death in 1944, after which
Chen Gongbo succeeded him until Japan's defeat in 1945. His collaborationist Kuomintang was the
sole-ruling party.
Central Political Committee •
Chairman •
Wang Jingwei (March 1940 – November 1944) •
Chen Gongbo (November 1944 – August 1945)
National Government Committee •
Chairman •
Wang Jingwei (March 1940 – November 1944) •
Chen Gongbo (November 1944 – August 1945)
Executive Yuan •
Premier •
Wang Jingwei (March 1940 – November 1944) •
Chen Gongbo (November 1944 – August 1945) •
Vice Premier •
Chu Minyi (September–December 1940) •
Zhou Fohai (December 1940 – August 1945) •
Minister of the Interior –
Chen Qun •
Minister of Foreign Affairs –
Chu Minyi •
Minister of Finance –
Zhou Fohai •
Acting Minister of Military Administration –
Bao Wenyue •
Minister of the Navy –
Wang Jingwei, Acting by
Ren Yuandao •
Minister of Education –
Zhao Zhengping (independent) •
Minister of Judicial Administration –
Li Shengwu •
Minister of Industry and Commerce –
Mei Siping •
Minister of Agriculture and Mining –
Zhao Yusong (Young China Party) •
Minister of Railways –
Fu Shishuo (independent) •
Minister of Communications –
Zhu Xiang (State Socialist Party) •
Minister of Social Affairs –
Ding Mocun •
Minister of Propaganda –
Lin Bosheng •
Minister of Police –
Zhou Fohai (abolished on 16 August 1941) •
Reconstruction Commission –
Cen Deguang •
Frontier Affairs Commission –
Luo Junqiang •
Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission –
Chen Jicheng •
Water Resources Commission –
Yang Shoumei Legislative Yuan •
President •
Chen Gongbo (March 1940 – November 1944) •
Liang Hongzhi (November 1944 – August 1945) •
Vice Presidents •
Zhu Lühé (September 1940 – February 1941, concurrent) •
Miao Bin (February 1941 – August 1942) •
Zhu Xiang (August 1942 – August 1945)
Judicial Yuan •
President –
Wen Zongyao (March 1940 – August 1945) •
Vice President –
Zhu Lühé (March 1940 – April 1945) •
President of Supreme Court –
Zhang Tao •
President of Administrative Court –
Lin Biao (born 1889) •
Chairman of Commission on the Discipline of Civil Servants –
Zhu Lühé Examination Yuan •
President •
Wang Yitang (March 1940 – March 1942) •
Jiang Kanghu (March 1942 – November 1944) •
Chen Qun (November 1944 – August 1945) •
Vice Presidents •
Jiang Kanghu (March 1940 – March 1942) •
Jiao Ying (March 1942 – August 1945) •
Minister of Civil Service –
Jiang Kanghu •
Chairman of Examination Commission –
Jiao Ying Control Yuan •
President •
Liang Hongzhi (March 1940 – November 1944) •
Gu Zhongchen (November 1944 – July 1945) •
Vice Presidents •
Gu Zhongchen (March 1940 – November 1944) •
Xia Qifeng (November 1944 – August 1945) •
Minister of Audit –
Xia Qifeng Military Affairs Commission •
Chairman –
Chen Gongbo (from 1941) •
General Staff –
Yang Kuiyi •
President of Military Advisory Council –
Ren Yuandao •
Minister of Training Department –
Xiao Shuxuan •
Minister of Political Training Department –
Chen Gongbo •
Minister of Investigation and Statistics Department –
Li Shiqun (16 August 1941 – 9 September 1943) •
Deputy Minister –
Yang Jie •
Permanent Deputy Minister –
Xia Zhongming •
Minister of Political Department –
Huang Ziqiang (from 9 September 1943)
International recognition and foreign relations , and Manchukuo ambassador
Zang Shiyi sign the joint declaration, 30 November 1940 at the German embassy in 1941 The RNG received little international recognition as it was seen as a Japanese puppet state, being recognized only by Japan and the rest of the
Axis powers. Initially, its main sponsor, Japan, hoped to come to a peace accord with Chiang Kai-shek and held off official diplomatic recognition for the Wang Jingwei regime for eight months after its founding, not establishing formal diplomatic relations with the National Reorganized Government until 30 November 1940. The Sino-Japanese Basic Treaty was signed on 20 November 1940, by which Japan recognised the Nationalist Government, and it also included a Japan–Manchukuo–China joint declaration by which China recognized the
Empire of Great Manchuria and the three countries pledged to create a "
New Order in East Asia." The United States and Britain immediately denounced the formation of the government, seeing it as a tool of Japanese imperialism. In July 1941, after negotiations by Foreign Minister
Chu Minyi, the RNG was recognized as the government of China by
Germany and
Italy. Soon after,
Spain,
Slovakia,
Romania,
Bulgaria,
Croatia, and
Denmark also recognized and established relations with the Wang Jingwei regime as the government of China. China under the RNG also became a signatory of the
Anti-Comintern Pact on 25 November 1941. After Japan established diplomatic relations with the
Holy See in 1942, they and their ally Italy pressured
Pope Pius XII to recognize the RNG and allow a Chinese envoy to be appointed to
the Vatican, but he refused to give in to these pressures. Instead the Vatican came to an informal agreement with Japan that their
apostolic delegate in
Beijing would pay visits to Catholics in the RNG's territory. The Pope also ignored the suggestion of the aforementioned apostolic delegate,
Mario Zanin, who recommended in October 1941 that the Vatican recognize the Wang Jingwei regime as the legitimate government of China. Zanin would remain in the Wang Jingwei regime's territory as apostolic delegate while another bishop in Chongqing was to represent Catholic interests in Chiang Kai-shek's territory. Following Axis-aligned
Vichy France's increasing yielding to Japanese pressure, such as granting them economic and military facilities and privileges in Indochina and handing over in July 1943 the keys of Shanghai's French concession to Mayor Chen Gongbo, appointed by the Wang Jingwei government, Chiang Kai-shek broke diplomatic relations with Vichy the same month and moved closer to the
Free French. The RNG had its own Foreign Section or Ministry of Foreign Affairs for managing international relations, although it was short on personnel. On 9 January 1943, the RNG signed the "Treaty on Returning Leased Territories and Repealing Extraterritoriality Rights" with Japan, which abolished all foreign concessions within occupied China. Reportedly the date was originally to have been later that month, but was moved to January 9 to be before the United States concluded a similar treaty with Chiang Kai-shek's government. The RNG then took control of all of the international concessions in Shanghai and its other territories. Later that year Wang Jingwei attended the
Greater East Asia Conference as the Chinese representative. The Wang Jingwei government sent Chinese athletes, including the
national football team, to compete in the
1940 East Asian Games, which were held in Tokyo for the 2,600th anniversary of the legendary founding of the Japanese Empire by
Emperor Jimmu, and were a replacement for the cancelled
1940 Summer Olympics.
State ideology Wang Jingwei's government promoted the idea of
pan-Asianism Prior to the establishment of the RNG in March 1940, organized political propaganda played only a limited role in the administration later associated with Wang Jingwei. Even after the formal creation of the regime, the production and dissemination of pro-Japanese political materials remained a high-risk and low-return undertaking. But as the government gradually expanded its administrative reach, however, ideological messaging and political publications became increasingly visible and systematic. Lacking autonomous military power and facing widespread domestic skepticism, the Wang Jingwei regime sought to compensate through the construction of a coherent ideological framework. Propaganda and political education thus functioned not merely as instruments of persuasion, but as mechanisms intended to supply normative justification and institutional continuity, particularly by invoking elements of prewar Nationalist political discourse. The institutional center of ideological production under the Wang Jingwei regime was the Ministry of Propaganda, established in 1940. The ministry was tasked with coordinating political messaging, supervising publications, and articulating the regime’s official ideological positions. Over time, it evolved from a marginal administrative unit into one of the most influential organs within the government, reflecting the growing importance attached to ideological governance. A key figure in the organization and operation of the propaganda apparatus was
Lin Bosheng, an experienced newspaper editor and longtime associate of Wang Jingwei. As Deputy Minister of Propaganda (later Minister after the withdraw of Tao Xisheng), Lin mobilized extensive media networks to shape public representations of Wang Jingwei as a constitutional leader, explicitly contrasting this image with portrayals of Chiang Kai-shek as a dictator. Under the supervision of the Ministry of Propaganda, a range of newspapers and periodicals—including
China Daily News,
South China Daily,
New Orient, and later more explicitly ideological journals—were integrated into a centralized propaganda system. In addition to formal state institutions, the regime relied on a constellation of semi-official organizations that functioned as extensions of the propaganda apparatus, most notably those associated with the East Asia League. Founded in late 1940, the East Asia League China Comrades Association publicly presented itself as an organization dedicated to the ideological unification of China. In practice, it functioned primarily as a propaganda body responsible for disseminating pro-Japanese interpretations of Asianism and promoting the League’s four guiding principles. Its leadership included a number of prominent political and cultural figures associated with the regime. The association worked in close coordination with the Ministry of Propaganda, particularly through jointly produced publications and synchronized messaging. Distinct from the Comrades Association was the East Asia League China Headquarters, a formal political organization established on 1 February 1941. Wang Jingwei served as its president, while senior government officials such as Zhou Fohai and Chen Gongbo participated in its administration. Whereas the Comrades Association operated primarily in the ideological and cultural sphere, the Headquarters functioned as a political body designed to institutionalize the regime’s commitment to East Asian cooperation within its governmental structure. Daily newspapers and widely circulated periodicals constituted the most visible layer of the regime’s propaganda system. These outlets were used to normalize political narratives, disseminate official statements, and reinforce representations of Wang Jingwei’s leadership. Through repeated emphasis on constitutionalism, peace, and reconstruction, mass media played a central role in embedding ideological themes into everyday political discourse. More specialized journals served as platforms for systematic ideological elaboration.
Great Asianism, first published in August 1940, was the earliest periodical explicitly devoted to articulating the concept of Asianism within the regime’s political framework. While Lin Bosheng contributed regularly, much of the journal’s substantive ideological content was written by
Zhou Huaren, whose essays were later collected and published as monographs. These publications sought to situate the regime’s policies within a broader historical narrative of Asian victimization under Western imperialism. In July 1942,
Great Asianism was merged with the
East Asia League Monthly to form
Great Asianism and the East Asia League. The consolidation reflected both ideological convergence and wartime financial pressures. The new journal emphasized the inseparability of Asianism and the East Asia League, presenting them as a unified political project. Publication continued until 1943, when increasing material constraints led to its termination. Besides Lin Bosheng, Zhou Huaren and have also been viewed as leading ideologues behind the ideological system of the Wang Jingwei regime. Zhou Huaren was among the most prolific ideological contributors associated with the regime. Although formally serving as vice minister in the Ministry of Railways, he is widely regarded by scholars as one of the principal architects of the regime’s ideological discourse. Zhou’s writings framed Asianism as a response to a shared history of exploitation by Western powers and argued that only through Sino-Japanese cooperation and the establishment of an Asian alliance could this condition be overcome. His works remain among the most comprehensive treatments of Asianism produced in Chinese during the wartime period. Yang Honglie represented a more academic articulation of Asianism. A legal historian educated in Japan and a professional editor within the Ministry of Publicity, Yang authored the influential series “Eight Lectures on Asianism,” (亞洲主義八講) published in regime-affiliated journals. His writings demonstrated a high degree of continuity between prewar and wartime intellectual discourse, integrating Chinese political thought with contemporary Japanese political and military ideology. While often accommodating Japanese strategic perspectives, Yang’s work constituted one of the earliest systematic historical narratives of Asianism in the Chinese language.
National defense During its existence, the RNG nominally led a large army often called the "Nanjing Army" that was estimated to have included 300,000 to 500,000 men, along with a smaller navy and air force. Although its land forces possessed limited armor and artillery, they were primarily an infantry force. Military aid from Japan was also very limited despite Japanese promises to assist the RNG in the "Japan–China Military Affairs Agreement" that they signed. All military matters were the responsibility of the Central Military Commission, but in practice that body was mainly a ceremonial one. In reality, many of the army's commanders operated outside of the direct command of the central government in Nanjing. The majority of its officers were either former
National Revolutionary Army personnel or warlord officers from the
early Republican era. Thus their reliability and combat capability was questionable, and Wang Jingwei was estimated to only be able to count on the loyalty of about 10% to 15% of his nominal forces. Among the reorganized government's best units were three Capital Guards divisions based in Nanjing,
Zhou Fohai's Taxation Police Corps, and the 1st Front Army of
Ren Yuandao. The majority of the government's forces were armed with a mix of captured Nationalist weaponry and a small amount of Japanese equipment, the latter mainly being given to Nanjing's best units. The lack of local military industry for the duration of the war meant that the RNG had trouble arming its troops. While the army was mainly an infantry force, in 1941 it did receive 18
Type 94 tankettes for a token armored force, and reportedly they also received 20
armored cars and 24 motorcycles. The main type of artillery in use were medium
mortars, but they also possessed 31 field guns (which included Model 1917
mountain guns)—mainly used by the Guards divisions. Oftentimes, the troops were equipped with the German
Stahlhelm, which were used in large quantities by the Chinese Nationalist Army. For small arms, there was no standard rifle and a large variety of different weapons were used, which made supplying them with ammunition difficult. The most common rifles in use was the
Chinese version of the
Mauser 98k and the
Hanyang 88, while other notable weapons included Chinese copies of the Czechoslovak
ZB-26 machine guns. Along with the great variation in equipment, there was also a disparity in sizes of units. Some "armies" had only a few thousand troops while some "divisions" several thousand. There was a standard divisional structure, but only the elite Guards divisions closer to the capital actually had anything resembling it. In addition to these regular army forces, there were multiple police and local militia, which numbered in the tens of thousands, but were deemed to be completely unreliable by the Japanese. Most of the units located around
Beijing in northern China remained, in effect, under the authority of the North China Political Council rather than that of the central government. In an attempt to improve the quality of the officer corps, multiple military academies had been opened, including a Central Military Academy in Nanjing and a Naval Academy in Shanghai. In addition there was a military academy in Beijing for the North China Political Council's forces, and a branch of the central academy in
Canton. A small navy was established with naval bases at
Weihaiwei and
Qingdao, but it mostly consisted of small patrol boats that were used for coastal and river defense. Reportedly, the captured Nationalist cruisers
Ning Hai and
Ping Hai were handed over to the government by the Japanese, becoming important propaganda tools. However, the
Imperial Japanese Navy took them back in 1943 for its own use. In addition there were two regiments of marines, one at Canton and the other at Weihaiwei. By 1944, the navy was under direct command of Ren Yuandao, the naval minister. An Air Force of the RNG was established in May 1941 with the opening of the Aviation School and receiving three aircraft,
Tachikawa Ki-9 trainers. In the future the air force received additional Ki-9 and
Ki-55 trainers as well as multiple transports. Plans by Wang Jingwei to form a fighter squadron with
Nakajima Ki-27s did not come to fruition as the Japanese did not trust the pilots enough to give them combat aircraft. Morale was low and a number of defections took place. The only two offensive aircraft they did possess were
Tupolev SB bombers which were flown by defecting Nationalist crews. The RNG's army was primarily tasked with garrison and police duties in the occupied territories. It also took part in anti-
partisan operations against
Communist guerrillas, such as in the
Hundred Regiments Offensive, or played supporting roles for the
Imperial Japanese Army (IJA). The RNG undertook a "rural pacification" campaign to eradicate communists from the countryside, arresting and executing many people suspected of being communists, with support from the Japanese.
Japanese methods of recruiting During the conflicts in central China, the Japanese utilized several methods to recruit Chinese volunteers. Japanese sympathisers including Nanjing's pro-Japanese governor, or major local landowners such as
Ni Daolang, were used to recruit local peasants in return for money or food. The Japanese recruited 5,000 volunteers in the Anhui area for the RNG Army. Japanese forces and the RNG used slogans like "Lay down your guns and take up the plough", "Oppose the Communist Bandits" or "Oppose Corrupt Government and Support the Reformed Government" to dissuade guerrilla attacks and buttress its support. The Japanese used various methods for subjugating the local populace. Initially, fear was used to maintain order, but this approach was altered following appraisals by Japanese military ideologists. In 1939, the Japanese army attempted some populist policies, including: •
land reform by dividing the property of major landowners into small holdings, and allocating them to local peasants; • providing the Chinese with medical services, including vaccination against cholera, typhus, and varicella, and treatments for other diseases; • ordering Japanese soldiers not to violate women or laws; • dropping leaflets from aeroplanes, offering rewards for information (with parlays set up by use of a white surrender flag), the handing over of weapons or other actions beneficial to the Japanese cause. Money and food were often incentives used; and • dispersal of candy, food and toys to children Buddhist leaders inside the occupied Chinese territories ("Shao-Kung") were also forced to give public speeches and persuade people of the virtues of a Chinese alliance with Japan, including advocating the breaking-off of all relations with Western powers and ideas. In 1938, a manifesto was launched in Shanghai, reminding the populace the Japanese alliance's track-record in maintaining "moral supremacy" as compared to the often fractious nature of the previous Republican control, and also accusing Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek of treason for maintaining the Western alliance. In support of such efforts, in 1941 Wang Jingwei proposed the Qingxiang Plan to be applied along the lower course of the
Yangtze River. A Qingxiang Plan Committee (
Qingxiang Weiyuan-hui) was formed with himself as chairman, and Zhou Fohai and Chen Gongbo (as first and second vice-chairmen respectively). Li Shiqun was made the committee's secretary. Beginning in July 1941, Wang maintained that any areas to which the plan was applied would convert into "model areas of peace,
anti-communism, and rebuilders of the country" (
heping fangong jianguo mofanqu). It was not a success. ==Political boundaries==