Home Categories Essays Dajiang and Dahai lied to you: Li Ao's secret conversation

Chapter 153 153. China must be subjugated, and it is impossible to do so.

Japan's tactics are basically disruptive, incapacitating the Chinese army's ability to counterattack, and after dismantling this ability, they will automatically retreat.Gong Debai's "History of the Sino-Japanese War" is very precise: In the above-mentioned battles, Hainan Island was used as the base for the southward advance, and Nanchang was used to protect the enemy's Yangtze River route and to cut off our Zhejiang-Jiangxi route.The enemy's purpose in the remaining battles is to disrupt our army so that it cannot counterattack.For example, if a large number of troops are concentrated in a certain theater, and there is a possibility of a counterattack, the enemy will launch an offensive first to disperse our army, making it time-consuming to organize and make a counterattack impossible. It has to be said that the enemy was defeated and returned to the original defense.Those who compile history don't have to do this, so most of the words of exaggeration and propaganda are deleted, but there are still some that are not true.

This is the truth of the Japanese army's habit of "stopping the offensive repeatedly and withdrawing automatically" in China. The history of the War of Resistance of Chiang Kai-shek's followers is bragging.As the Japanese military chiefs have commented on themselves, Japan definitely has the strength to take down China.Because of the consideration of the world's grand strategy and the Japanese habit of wanting to take advantage of small advantages, they have put their troops on hold, and the demise of Chiang Kai-shek's government is no longer a priority.In purely military terms, the Japanese devils had no choice but to subjugate China, and they did not do so.

Press "Left Key ←" to return to the previous chapter; Press "Right Key →" to enter the next chapter; Press "Space Bar" to scroll down.
Chapters
Chapters
Setting
Setting
Add
Return
Book