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Operation Ichi-Go

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Operation Ichi-Go
Part of the Second Sino-Japanese War and the Pacific Theater of World War II

Japanese plan for Operation Ichi-Go
Date (1944-04-19) (1944-12-31)April 19 – December 31, 1944
(8 months, 1 week and 5 days)[1]
Location
Result Japanese victory
Belligerents
 Japan  Republic of China
 United States
Commanders and leaders
Empire of Japan Shunroku Hata
Empire of Japan Yasuji Okamura
Empire of Japan Isamu Yokoyama
Empire of Japan Hisakazu Tanaka
Republic of China (1912–1949) Tang Enbo
Republic of China (1912–1949) Xue Yue
Republic of China (1912–1949) Bai Chongxi
Republic of China (1912–1949) Zhang Fakui
Republic of China (1912–1949) Fang Xianjue
Republic of China (1912–1949) Li Jiayu 
United States Joseph Stilwell
United States Albert Coady Wedemeyer
United States Claire Lee Chennault
Strength
500,000
15,000 vehicles
1,500 artillery pieces
800 tanks
100,000 horses
200 bombers
1,000,000[2]
Casualties and losses
100,000 killed[3]
heavy materiel losses[4]
500,000-600,000 casualties (according to "China's Bitter Victory: War with Japan, 1937-45")[2]
Armies totalling 750,000 'destroyed' or put out of action according to Cox[5][6]

Operation Ichi-Go (Japanese: 一号作戦, romanizedIchi-gō Sakusen, lit.'Operation Number One') was a campaign of a series of major battles between the Imperial Japanese Army forces and the National Revolutionary Army of the Republic of China, fought from April to December 1944. It consisted of three separate battles in the Chinese provinces of Henan, Hunan and Guangxi.

These battles were the Japanese Operation Kogo or Battle of Central Henan, Operation Togo 1 or the Battle of Changheng, and Operation Togo 2 and Togo 3, or the Battle of Guilin–Liuzhou, respectively. The two primary goals of Ichi-go were to open a land route to French Indochina, and capture air bases in southeast China from which American bombers were attacking the Japanese homeland and shipping.[7]

In Japanese the operation was also called Tairiku Datsū Sakusen (大陸打通作戦), or "Continent Cross-Through Operation", while the Chinese refer to it as the Battle of Henan-Hunan-Guangxi (simplified Chinese: 豫湘桂会战; traditional Chinese: 豫湘桂會戰; pinyin: Yù Xīang Guì Huìzhàn).

Background

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Japanese planning

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By early 1944, Allied victories in the Pacific were eroding the Japanese defensive perimeter. Japan decided to attack in Burma and China to improve its position; these became Operation U-Go and Ichi-Go respectively.[8] Ichi-Go corresponded with a Imperial General Staff contingency plan to the loss of the Western Pacific; the plan was for securing an overland rail route through French Indochina and China for raw materials from south-east Asia, which would be used to develop offensives in 1946.[9] The objective for Ichi-Go approved by Emperor Hirohito on 24 January 1944 was the neutralization of USAF bases in China, particularly the XX Bomber Command bases near Chengdu, Sichuan.[10][9] China Expeditionary Army (CEA), commanded by General Shunroku Hata, expanded the objectives in its operational planning to include securing overland routes and neutralizing China by destroying Chinese forces.[9] Ichi-Go may also have been intended to force the Allies to open peace negotiations, and give Japan a better negotiating position.[11] General Yasuji Okamura was placed in charge of Ichi-Go.[12]

By early-Feburary, preparations along the Yangtze included repairs to a major bridge and air field maintanence.[13]

The IJA mobilized 500,000 troops, 100,000 horses, 1,500 pieces of artillery, 800 tanks, 15,000 mechanised vehicles,[14] and 200 bombers for the offensive. They were supplied with eight months of fuel and two years of ammunition.[15] According to historian Hara Takeshi, it was "the largest military operation carried out in the history of the Japanese army."[16]: 19 

Chinese planning

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The Chinese economy started collapsing in 1941.[17] China entered the war in 1937 with a primarily agrarian economy and quickly lost much of its industrial capacity to the Japanese.[18] Maintaining the forces needed to stay in the war imposed an unsustainable burden on an economy further weakened by blockade, shortages of staple goods, poor weather, and inflation;[19][20] there was widespread famine from 1942. The government responded to the economic pressure, reduced Japanese activity after December 1941, and the lack of offensive capability by encouraging the military to produce its own food. Some troops went further by entering industry and smuggling. The self-sufficiency drive and the lack of military action reduced military prepardness and increased corruption.[20] By Ichi-Go, the effectiveness of the Chinese miltiary had "plummeted".[21]

Allied strategy affected Chinese preparations. At the Cairo Conference in November 1943, China agreed to major combined operations in Burma on the condition that the Western Allies committed significant resources.[22][23] No such commitment occurred. A few days later at the Tehran Conference, the Western Allies and the Soviet Union agreed to prioritize the European theater.[24][25] In January 1944, Chiang warned US President Franklin D. Roosevelt that prioritizing Europe would encourage Japan to attack and knock China out of the war.[26][27] In late-March, China believed a Japanese offensive was "imminent"; the US received corroborating reports from Clarence E. Gauss, the American ambassador to China.[28] China sought to reinforce the defense with Yunnan-based Y Force, which was earmarked for Burma; Y Force was an American trained and equipped National Revolutionary Army (NRA) unit and some of the best troops available to China. In early April, the US threatened to halt Lend-Lease to China if Y Force was withheld from Stilwell in Burma. Ultimately, Y Force joined the Allied campaign in Burma in mid-May as Ichi-Go was underway.[29][30]

Chinese intelligence also misassessed indicators. It estimated that the Yangtze bridge would not be usable until May, and that Japanese troop movements in the north were a feint.[31] On 27 April, after the start of Ichi-Go, China received French intelligence from Indochina of the Japanese goal of securing the rail corridor.[32] The intelligence was disregarded as Japanese misinformation to draw forces away from Burma.[33] The Chinese could not independently verify significant Japanese movements in central and southern China. Only 30,000 Japanese troops were detected operating in the north, which suggested a localized effort.[32] The Chinese expected a larger attack in southern China,[15][34] a belief that persisted into May.[15]

Campaign

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Henan

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Japanese mechanized forces advancing towards Luoyang
Imperial Japanese Army invading Henan, in 1944

The first phase of Ichi-Go, codenamed Kogo,[35] was for capturing the Beijing–Hankou railway in Henan and destroying the ROC's First War Zone.[34] Kogo involved 60,000–70,000 Japanese troops.[36] The First War Zone was commanded by General Jiang Dingwen with General Tang Enbo as deputy. It had only 6000-7000 troops, or 60% to 70% of its authorized strength. USAF General Claire Chennault described the troops as a "poorly disciplined mob".[20] Overall, there were 400,000 Chinese troops in northern China.[33]

Kogo opened on 17 April, broke through the defenses by the end of the 18 April, and took Xuchang a week later.[37] Chinese communications was poor and the defense of Luoyang was uncoordinated.[38] Chiang intended to allow the Japanese to close around Luoyang - the city was fortified and contained provisions for weeks - and then attack the flanks once the Japanese became overextended; this tactic had been used successfully before to defend Changsha.[34] According to Jiang, he requested permission to attack as early as 23 and 24 April, but did not receive Chiang's permission until 1 May; by that time the Japanese had advanced too far. Poor communications also hampered the direction of reinforcements to Luoyang.[38] The Japanese encircled Luoyang on 14 May and captured the city on 25 May. The Japanese pursued Tang's westward retreat as far as the Tong Pass.[34] Combined with an advence north from Wuhan, the Japanese captured the railway.[34]

Contemporary Chinese analysis identified additional factors for the collapse of the First War Zone, some of which were related to the general degeneration of the Chinese military. According to one critic, Tang's command and control was poor and he abandoned his army; Tang was generally seen to have been in effective control of the First War Zone.[39] The local population - alienated by wartime deprivation, state corruption, and the First War Zone's aggressive requisitions - also withheld support.[40] Incidents included civilians attacking Chinese troops, stealing abandoned weapons,[41][17], and refusing to obey orders to destroy highways.[42] According to American reports, Kogo met only "token resistance". Theodore H. White observed Chinese officers neglecting their duties and that within three weeks "a Chinese army of 300,000 men had ceased to exist."[36]

Hunan

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The next phase was Togo 1[35] with the objective of securing the Guangzhou–Hankou railway from Wuhan to Hengyang. Togo 1 started on 27 May and involved 200,000 Japanese troops advancing south from Wuhan to Changsha.[43] Central China was defended by another 400,000 troops.[33] The ROC's Ninth War Zone, commanded by General Xue Yue, defended Changsha; it had held the city against three Japanese campaigns from 1939 to 1942; as in those engagements, Ninth War Zone strategy was a fighting withdrawal to the city combined with scorched earth. Togo 1 was much larger than the previous campaigns, advancing in three - rather than one - columns over a 150 kilometer-wide front; it was also adaquately supplied.[43] On 29 May, the ROC Military Affairs Commission ordered Changsha to be held to defend USAF air bases and maintain American confidence; the option of abandoning railway and retreating south-east to Guilin was rejected.[44] Chiang refused to send supplies to Changsha because he believed Xue was disloyal.[36]

The Japanese reached Changsha in early June. The city was defended by three understrength Chinese divisions commanded by General Zhang Deneng; two of the divisions and the artillery were on Yuelu Mountain south of the city across the Xiang River.[37] Unlike the previous campaigns, it was the Chinese who were outnumbered with 10,000 troops against 30,000 Japanese.[36] One of the two attacking Japanese division had urban warfare training.[37] Japanese bombers attacked the artillery on Yuelu while infantry moved around the city to attack from the south. Zhang's redeployment of troops from the city to reinforce Yuelu disorganized the defense; Chinese staff officers were unable to organize movement over the Xiang, leaving many units "stranded", and unclear orders made many troops believe that they were to retreat. The Japanese took Changsha on 18 June[45] after three days of fighting. The Chinese withdrew from Yuelu the same day leaving two companies in the city.[37]

Xue retreated south to Hengyang.[45] The city was defended by 18,000 troops.[37] USAF Fourteenth Air Force, commanded by Chennault, provided limited support;[45] it was also tasked with protecting USAF XX Bomber Command's bases and supporting the Allied Burma offensive.[46] The defenses included concrete fortifications, and was well provisioned with artillery, anti-tank guns, and supplies. Two large reserve groups were placed to threaten the Japanese flanks.[37] Chiang assigned General Fang Xianjue, whom he trusted, to command the city,[45] A relief force from Guangdong was organized. On 25 June, the Japanese captured a major nearby US air base. Afterwards, the Japanese 68th and 116th Division attacked Hengyang from the west and south. The flooded paddy fields and canals to the west made the use of tanks difficult. To the south were hills. The attack was halted with heavy casualties on both sides. The Japanese paused to reinforce their air forces and resupply. On 11 July, after five days of heavy fighting, the Chinese fell back to another line.[37] The Japanese paused again to bring up reinforcements of one division and several brigades. The Japanese sought to destroy Chinese reserves to reduce the defender's morale. Air attack destroyed much of the city. By the end of July, there was a food shortage in Hengyang.[46] Chiang did not resupply the city. Stilwell - who controlled Lend-Lease in the Chinese theater - refused Chennault's request to divert 1,000 tons of supplies to Hengyang;[47] according to the United States Army's official history, Stilwell believed that Chinese politics would prevent the supplies from being used against the Japanese.[48] Five Japanese divisions resumed the attack on 3 August, broke through the northern wall 7 August, and captured the city by the morning of 8 August.[46]

Guangxi and Guizhou

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Japanese occupation (red) of eastern China near the end of the war, and Communist guerrilla bases (striped)

Japanese forced entered Guangxi in early September 1944 and quickly captured United States air bases at Guilin, Liuzhou, and Nanning.[16]: 20  The 170,000 Nationalist troops defending northern Guangxi were largely unwilling to fight and units disintegrated.[16]: 21  Leaders of the Guangxi Clique like General Bai Chongxi deciding that that neither Guilin nor Liuzhou could be successfully defended and Chinese forces abandoned those cities.[16]: 21 

Areas of China that were never occupied by Japanese ground troops in the entire war include all of Shaanxi, all of Gansu,[49] all of Ningxia, all of Qinghai, all of Sichuan and Chongqing, most of Fujian except for some ports, most of Guizhou, most of Yunnan, a large western part of Hunan and eastern part of Hunan around a corridor, inland Anhui, part of Guangxi, part of Jiangxi and part of Suiyuan.[50] The unoccupied interior regions like Sichuan, Shaanxi, Guizhou, Yunnan were called dahoufang.[51]

The Nationalist government took control of the Hexi corridor in Gansu from warlord control in 1942 and then took over Xinjiang.[52]

In late November 1944, the Japanese advanced slowed approximately 300 miles from Chongqing as it experienced shortages of trained soldiers and materiel.[16]: 21  Although Operation Ichi-Go achieved its goals of seizing United States air bases and establishing a potential railway corridor from Manchukuo to Hanoi, it did so too late to impact the result of the broader war.[16]: 21  American bombers in Chengdu were moved to the Mariana Islands where, along with bombers from bases in Saipan and Tinian, they could still bomb the Japanese home islands.[16]: 22 

Toward the end of Ichi-Go, ROC 8th War Zone in Guizhou − with five armies and used to contain the Chinese Communists − was redeployed to fight the Japanese. Overextended supply lines and mounting casualties caused the Japanese to end Ichi-Go.[2]

Aftermath

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According to Cox, China suffered 750,000 casualties, including soldiers who simply "melted away" and those rendered combat ineffective besides being killed or captured.[5]

The poor performance of Chiang Kai-shek's forces in opposing the Japanese advance became widely viewed as demonstrating Chiang's incompetence.[16]: 3  The campaign further weakened the Nationalist economy and government revenues.[16]: 22–24  Throughout the war, but especially after the Ichigo campaign, the Nationalist government could not pay its bills.[16]: 204  Because of the Nationalists' increasing inability to fund the military, Nationalist authorities overlooked military corruption and smuggling.[16]: 24–25  The Nationalist army increasingly turned to raiding villages to press-gang peasants into service and force marching them to assigned units.[16]: 25 

With the rapid deterioration of the Chinese front, specifically the Nationalist forces, General Joseph Stilwell saw Operation Ichi-Go as an opportunity to win his political struggle against Chiang, China's leader, and gain full command of all Chinese armed forces. He was able to convince General George Marshall to have President Franklin D. Roosevelt send an ultimatum to Chiang threatening to end all American aid unless Chiang "at once" placed Stilwell "in unrestricted command of all your forces".[53]

Stilwell immediately delivered this letter to Chiang despite pleas from Patrick Hurley, Roosevelt's special envoy in China, to delay delivering the message and work on a deal that would achieve Stilwell's aim in a manner more acceptable to Chiang.[54] Seeing this act as a move toward the complete subjugation of China, a defiant Chiang gave a formal reply in which he said that Stilwell must be replaced immediately and he would welcome any other qualified U.S. general to fill Stilwell's position.[55][56] In Chiang's view, Stillwell had moved too many Chinese forces into the Burma campaign, leaving China insufficiently protected.[16]: 3  Stilwell was replaced as Chief of Staff to Chiang Kai-shek and commander of the U.S. Forces, China Theater (USFCT) by Major General Albert Wedemeyer. Stilwell's other command responsibilities in the China Burma India Theater were divided up and allocated to other officers.

Although Chiang was successful in removing Stilwell, the public relations damage suffered by his Chinese Nationalist Party (Kuomintang) regime was irreparable. Right before Stilwell's departure, New York Times war correspondent Brooks Atkinson interviewed him in Chongqing and wrote:

The decision to relieve General Stilwell represents the political triumph of a moribund, anti-democratic regime that is more concerned with maintaining its political supremacy than in driving the Japanese out of China. The Chinese Communists... have good armies that they are claiming to be fighting guerrilla warfare against the Japanese in North China—actually they are covertly or even overtly building themselves up to fight Generalissimo's government forces... The Generalissimo [Chiang Kai-shek] naturally regards these armies as the chief threat to the country and his supremacy... has seen no need to make sincere attempt to arrange at least a truce with them for the duration of the war... No diplomatic genius could have overcome the Generalissimo's basic unwillingness to risk his armies in battle with the Japanese.[57]

Atkinson, who had visited Mao Zedong in the communist capital of Yenan, saw his Communist Chinese forces as a democratic movement (after Atkinson visited Mao, his article on his visit was titled Yenan: A Chinese Wonderland City), and the Nationalists in turn as hopelessly reactionary and corrupt. This view was shared by many U.S. journalists in China at the time, but due to pro-Chiang Allied press censorship, it was not as well known to their readers until Stilwell's recall and the ensuing anti-Chiang coverage forced it into the open.[58]

The Japanese successes in Operation Ichi-Go had a limited effect on the war. The U.S. could still bomb the Japanese homeland from Saipan and other Pacific bases. In the territories seized, Japanese forces controlled only the cities, not their surrounding countryside. The increased size of the occupied territory also thinned out the Japanese lines. A great majority of the Chinese forces were able to retreat out of the area, and later come back to attack Japanese positions. As a result, future Japanese attempts to fight into Sichuan, such as in the Battle of West Hunan, ended in failure. All in all, Japan was not any closer in defeating China after this operation, and the constant defeats the Japanese suffered in the Pacific meant that Japan never got the time and resources needed to achieve final victory over China. The Japanese suffered 11,742 KIAs by mid-November, and the number of soldiers that died of illness was more than twice this.[59][60] The total death toll was about 100,000 by the end of 1944.[3]

Operation Ichi-Go created a great sense of social confusion in the areas of China that it affected. Chinese Communist guerrillas were able to exploit this confusion to gain influence and control of greater areas of the countryside in the aftermath of Ichi-Go.[61] This along with the aforementioned rapid deterioration of the Nationalist forces, Nationalist unpopularity both internally and abroad, Communist popularity both internally and externally, Kuomintang corruption and other factors allowed the Communists to gain victory in the resumed Chinese Civil War after World War II. Historian Hans van de Ven argues that the impact Ichi-Go had on the political situation in China was as important to the post-war world order as Operation Overlord and Operation Bagration were in Europe.[62]

In the spring of 1945, the US agreed to train and equip 36 Chinese divisions. China also wanted to withdraw some of its troops from China.[2] China began planning a counter-offensive for fall of 1945, called "White Tower" and "Iceman", to recapture the coastal ports in south-west China as routes for Allied aid.[63]

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The 1958 novel The Mountain Road, by Theodore White, a Time magazine correspondent in China at the time of the offensive, was based on an interview with former OSS Major Frank Gleason, who led a demolition group of American soldiers during the offensive that were charged with blowing up anything left behind in the retreat that might be of use to Japan. His group ultimately destroyed over 150 bridges and 50,000 tons of munitions, helping slow the Japanese advance. In 1960, it was adapted into a film by the same name starring James Stewart and Lisa Lu, noteworthy for being one of Stewart's few war films and the only one in which he plays a soldier, as he opposed war films because of their inaccuracy. It is generally believed he made an exception for this film because it was antiwar.

References

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Citations

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  1. ^ Davison, John The Pacific War: Day By Day, pg. 37, 106
  2. ^ a b c d Hsiung & Levine 1992, p. 165.
  3. ^ a b [1] 記者が語りつぐ戦争 16 中国慰霊 読売新聞社 (1983/2) P187
  4. ^ "Operation Ichi-Go" Archived 2015-11-17 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 16 Nov. 2015
  5. ^ a b Cox, Samuel J. (1980). The China Theater, 1944 - 1945: A Failure of Joint and Combined Operations Strategy (PDF) (Master of Military Art and Science thesis). United States Naval Academy. p. 2. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 April 2019.
  6. ^ Sandler, Stanley. "World War II in the Pacific: an Encyclopedia" p. 431
  7. ^ The U.S. Army Campaigns of World War II: China Defensive, pg. 21
  8. ^ Mitter 2013, p. 318.
  9. ^ a b c Van de Ven 2018, p. 181.
  10. ^ Mitter 2013, pp. 318–319.
  11. ^ Van de Ven 2018, pp. 181–182.
  12. ^ Van de Ven 2018, p. 190.
  13. ^ Van de Ven 2018, p. 182.
  14. ^ Van de Ven 2018, p. 179.
  15. ^ a b c Mitter 2013, p. 319.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Coble, Parks M. (2023). The Collapse of Nationalist China: How Chiang Kai-shek Lost China's Civil War. Cambridge New York, NY: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-009-29761-5.
  17. ^ a b Van de Ven 2018, p. 183.
  18. ^ Mitter 2013, pp. 182–183.
  19. ^ Mitter 2013, pp. 265–267.
  20. ^ a b c Van de Ven 2018, pp. 182–183.
  21. ^ Van de Ven, 2018 & p-185.
  22. ^ Mitter 2013, p. 308.
  23. ^ Van de Ven 2018, p. 171.
  24. ^ Mitter 2013, pp. 311–312.
  25. ^ Van de Ven 2018, pp. 171–172.
  26. ^ Mitter 2013, p. 314.
  27. ^ Van de Ven 2018, p. 172.
  28. ^ Mitter 2013, p. 316.
  29. ^ Mitter 2013, p. 317.
  30. ^ Van de Ven 2018, p. 191.
  31. ^ Van de Ven 2018, pp. 183–184.
  32. ^ a b Hsiung & Levine 1992, p. 163.
  33. ^ a b c Hsiung & Levine 1992, p. 164.
  34. ^ a b c d e Van de Ven 2018, p. 184.
  35. ^ a b Sherry 1996, p. 17.
  36. ^ a b c d Mitter 2013, p. 323.
  37. ^ a b c d e f g Van de Ven 2018, p. 186.
  38. ^ a b Mitter 2013, p. 320.
  39. ^ Mitter 2013, p. 321.
  40. ^ Mitter 2013, pp. 322–323.
  41. ^ Mitter 2013, pp. 320–321.
  42. ^ Mitter 2013, p. 322.
  43. ^ a b Van de Ven 2018, pp. 185–186.
  44. ^ Van de Ven 2018, p. 185.
  45. ^ a b c d Mitter 2013, p. 324.
  46. ^ a b c Van de Ven 2018, p. 187.
  47. ^ Mitter 2013, pp. 324–325.
  48. ^ Romanus, Charles F.; Sunderland, Riley (1956). China-Burma-India Theater: Stilwell's Command Problems. United States Army in World War II. Washington D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. p. 413.
  49. ^ Fu, Hong; Turvey, Calum G. (2018). The Evolution of Agricultural Credit during China's Republican Era, 1912–1949. Springer. p. 318. ISBN 978-3319768014.
  50. ^ Fu, Hong; Turvey, Calum G. (2018). The Evolution of Agricultural Credit during China's Republican Era, 1912–1949. Springer. p. 390-1. ISBN 978-3319768014.
  51. ^ Bernstein, Richard (2015). China 1945: Mao's Revolution and America's Fateful Choice. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 56. ISBN 978-0307743213.
  52. ^ Baker, Mark (November 17, 2023). "Energy, Labor, and Soviet Aid: China's Northwest Highway, 1937–1941". Modern China. 50 (3): 302–334. doi:10.1177/00977004231203897.
  53. ^ Romanus and Sunderland, Stilwell's Command Problem, p.446–447
  54. ^ Lohbeck, Hurley, p.292 [full citation needed]
  55. ^ Lohbeck, Hurley, p.298
  56. ^ Romanus and Sunderland, Stilwell's Command Problem, p.452
  57. ^ "Crisis". Time. 1944-11-13. Archived from the original on November 20, 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-02. quoting The New York Times
  58. ^ Knightley, Phillip (2004). The First Casualty: The War Correspondent as Hero and Myth-Maker from the Crimea to Iraq (3rd ed.). Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 303. ISBN 978-0-8018-8030-8.
  59. ^ "「歴戦1万5000キロ」". 9 July 2007.
  60. ^ Until mid-November, IJA had an illness toll of 66,000, and a field hospital had taken in 6164 soldiers, 2,281 of which died due to malnutrition 餓死した英霊たち P116
  61. ^ China at War: An Encyclopedia. Ed. Li Xiaobing. United States of America: ABC-CLIO. 2012. ISBN 978-1-59884-415-3. Retrieved May 21, 2012. p.163.
  62. ^ Van de Ven, Hans. China at War: Triumph and Tragedy in the Emergence of the New China. Harvard University Press, 2018, p.181
  63. ^ Hsiung & Levine 1992, p. 166.

Sources

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  • Hsiung, James C.; Levine, Steven I., eds. (1992). China's Bitter Victory: The war with Japan, 1937-1945. Armonk, New York: East Gate Book. ISBN 0-87332-708-X.
  • Mitter, Rana (2013). Forgotten Ally: China's World War II, 1937–1945. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-0-618-89425-3.
  • Sherry, Mark D. (1996). China Defensive (PDF). The Campaigns of World War II. United States Army Center of Military History. CMH Pub 72-38.
  • van de Ven, Hans (2018). China at War: Triumph and Tragedy in the Emergence of the New China. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-98350-2.

Further reading

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  • Paine, Sarah (2012). The Wars for Asia 1911–1949. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Cambridge University Press. p. 201. ISBN 978-1107020696.