
Xiaoming Zhang
Author of Deng Xiaoping's Long War: The Military Conflict between China and Vietnam, 1979-1991
Works by Xiaoming Zhang
Deng Xiaoping's Long War: The Military Conflict between China and Vietnam, 1979-1991 (2015) 40 copies, 1 review
Red Wings over the Yalu: China, the Soviet Union, and the Air War in Korea (2002) 39 copies, 2 reviews
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Red Wings over the Yalu: China, the Soviet Union, and the Air War in Korea (Williams-Ford Texas A&M University Military History Series) by Xiaoming Zhang
A fascinating and frustrating book, Red Wings Over the Yalu digs into the history of the Communist side of the air war over Korea from 1950 through 1953. As such, it is well written and provides a useful counterbalance to the Western-dominated narratives of the air war. Scholars and military history buffs will want to read it. Both will be frustrated, however, by the tone and implications of the history. Zhang does not maintain a clear relationship to the material; sometimes he repeats the show more PLAAF accounts without any comment, sometimes he points out inconsistencies in the PLAAF's perceptions and sometimes he makes clear judgments on the effectiveness of certain PLAAF policies. The net result is a confused narrative tone, where PLA propaganda is sometimes offered as if it were true and at other times the shortcomings of the PLAAF is stated as a fact.
In one example among many, on page 152 Zhang recounts an air battle fought by Wang Hai of the 3rd Division, concluding that "Wang Hai and his pilots learned the lesson that personal glory and individual success should come second to staying together and protecting each other during air combat." Yet Zhang concludes that "the actual experience the PLAAF gained in the Korean War was limited... their combat proficiency showed no significant improvement" (211). While the biased perspectives of participants is a necessary part of any history, it would have made for a cleaner narrative if Zhang had clearly quoted the Chinese sources (propaganda and all) to separate them more clearly from his judgments.
Another recurring challenge is the widely divergent kill ratios claimed by the Soviets, PLAAF and UN forces. Zhang recognizes the disagreement, notes that there is no definitive way to answer it and occasionally provides a detailed accounting for whether one side's claim is supported by the other side's records. This leads readers being unclear on how to interpret evidence that he offers without that context. Should PLAAF victories in general be accepted? It would have been clearer if Zhang had chosen some general principle (like only accepting a kill if the other side's records confirm it) and maintained that standard throughout the book. He instead set out to represent the official Chinese and Russian sources, but because he sometimes offers commentary based upon the US record readers are left wondering whether the Chinese claimed kills offered without comment are more accurate than the ones upon which Zhang does comment.
In short, this is a useful history but it raises as many questions as it answers. show less
In one example among many, on page 152 Zhang recounts an air battle fought by Wang Hai of the 3rd Division, concluding that "Wang Hai and his pilots learned the lesson that personal glory and individual success should come second to staying together and protecting each other during air combat." Yet Zhang concludes that "the actual experience the PLAAF gained in the Korean War was limited... their combat proficiency showed no significant improvement" (211). While the biased perspectives of participants is a necessary part of any history, it would have made for a cleaner narrative if Zhang had clearly quoted the Chinese sources (propaganda and all) to separate them more clearly from his judgments.
Another recurring challenge is the widely divergent kill ratios claimed by the Soviets, PLAAF and UN forces. Zhang recognizes the disagreement, notes that there is no definitive way to answer it and occasionally provides a detailed accounting for whether one side's claim is supported by the other side's records. This leads readers being unclear on how to interpret evidence that he offers without that context. Should PLAAF victories in general be accepted? It would have been clearer if Zhang had chosen some general principle (like only accepting a kill if the other side's records confirm it) and maintained that standard throughout the book. He instead set out to represent the official Chinese and Russian sources, but because he sometimes offers commentary based upon the US record readers are left wondering whether the Chinese claimed kills offered without comment are more accurate than the ones upon which Zhang does comment.
In short, this is a useful history but it raises as many questions as it answers. show less
Deng Xiaoping's Long War: The Military Conflict Between China and Vietnam, 1979-1991 (New Cold War History) by Xiaoming Zhang
A book on a war that is often long forgotten. A war I had no real knowledge about until I read Brother Enemy which was more focused on Vietnam's expansion into Cambodia but of course included the Sino Invasions. Examines the war itself along with its socio-economic and political causes and effects. Somewhat dry, but gets an extra star just for how rare its subject is.
A well written book which effectively puts forward the rightful position of Tibet being a part of The Peoples Republic of China
Red Wings over the Yalu: China, the Soviet Union, and the Air Way in Korea (Texas A&m University Military History) by Xiaoming Zhang
Easy read & different perspective from the Chinese side.
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- Rating
- 3.6
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- ISBNs
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