China’s annual commemoration of the Marco Polo Bridge Incident is doing double duty: preserving the memory of war and delivering a warning about the politics of the present.
Officials, veterans, students and relatives of the fallen gathered near Beijing’s Lugu Bridge to mark 89 years since the July 7, 1937 clash that triggered full-scale war between China and Japan. The ceremony included patriotic performances, floral tributes and a message repeated throughout the event — history must not be rewritten.
For Beijing, the anniversary is central to the national story. China describes its resistance from 1931 to 1945 as a 14-year struggle that cost more than 35 million casualties and tied down a large share of Japan’s ground forces. The memory includes the Nanjing Massacre, Unit 731 and other atrocities that remain politically charged across East Asia.
This year’s ceremony carried a sharper contemporary edge. Chinese scholars and officials linked historical revisionism to Japan’s expanding defense posture, looser restrictions on arms and growing concern over Taiwan.
The argument from Beijing is straightforward: a country that minimizes wartime aggression cannot be trusted when it increases military power. Japanese critics of their own government have also warned that incomplete historical reckoning damages bilateral ties.
Tokyo sees its security changes through a different lens, pointing to China’s military rise and regional pressure. That clash of narratives ensures that remembrance is never only about remembrance.
The ceremony was therefore both memorial and policy signal. China is using wartime history to reinforce domestic unity, challenge Japan’s strategic direction and defend the post-1945 order as Beijing interprets it.
Nearly nine decades later, the bridge remains a battlefield — not for armies, but for legitimacy, memory and regional power.
