The Map of National Shame (simplified Chinese: 国耻地图; traditional Chinese: 國恥地圖; Japanese: 国恥地図) is a map created around 1930 by the Nationalist government of the Republic of China, depicting territories that China perceived to have lost control or influence over to the Western powers and Japan.
These included the territories of several countries from the Ryukyu Islands, such as Okinawa, to Taiwan (then under Japanese rule), Pratas Island, Palawan in the Philippines, the Indochinese Peninsula, the northern part of Borneo (present-day Malaysia), Brunei, the Malay Peninsula (including modern Malaysia and Singapore), the Andaman Islands of India, Sakhalin, and others.
[1] According to Professor Yūsuke Anami [ja] of Tohoku University, the elites of modern China hold similar views of history, though the scope of the territories may differ somewhat.
[2] Instructors at the U.S. military's reconnaissance and intelligence officer training institution at the Goodfellow Air Force Base in Texas have been known to use this map as a basis for discussions.
[3] According to Professor Tomohide Murai of Tokyo International University, the U.S. Air Force may have been investigating the possibility that the People's Liberation Army of China was accelerating its actions under the banner of 'recovering lost territories'.