Battle of Wuyuan

Battle of Wuyuan
Part of Second Sino-Japanese War

Chinese 35th Army
DateMarch 16 – April 3, 1940
LocationVicinity of Wuyuan in Western Suiyuan
Result Chinese victory
Belligerents
Japan Imperial Japanese Army, Japan Taiwan National Revolutionary Army, China
Commanders and leaders
Japan Shigenori Kuroda

Taiwan Fu Zuoyi
Taiwan Ma Hongbin
Taiwan Ma Hongkui

Taiwan Ma Buqing
Strength
5 - 10,000 28,000 including Muslim Cavalry
Casualties and losses
? ?

The Battle of Wuyuan (March 16 – April 3, 1940) was a Chinese counterattack that defeated the Japanese invasion of the Wuyuan area. This happened in reaction to the Chinese 1939-40 Winter Offensive in Suiyuan during the Second Sino-Japanese War. The Japanese call it 第2次後套作戦 ("The Second Battle of Wuyuan").

By the 28th of January 1940 the Japanese had built up forces from the 26th Division at Baotou sufficient to launch the 第1次後套作戦 or "First battle of Wuyuan in Inner Mongolia" to recover lost territory and move west to take Wuyuan which fell on February 3 and Linhe further west on the 4th of February.

Units

Japanese Forces:

Mongolia Garrison Army 駐蒙軍 - Noasaburo Okabe

Chinese Forces:

8th War Area - Deputy Commander Fu Zuoyi

Course of the Battle

On March 16, 1940 as the Japanese were attacking the New 4th Division west of Linhe, the rest of the Chinese 35th Corps with the New 31st Division and a regiment of the Garrison Brigade, secretly moved east along the Wu-chia River. On the night of the 20th they entered Wuyuan by surprise and after a seesaw fight over the strongpoint captured the city at 1600 hours on the 21st. The Japanese garrison retreated northward. Chinese forces then moved on to capture a strongpoint around Hsin-an-chen on the 22nd. This cut the road along the Yellow River to Wuyuan.

In an attempt to recover the situation the Japanese sent 600 troops from Dashetai via Siyitang in 80 trucks to make a forced crossing of the Wu-chia River at Ta-tsai-chu 10 km (6.2 mi) north of Wuyuan. For three days they fought the 101st Division without success. By the 25th they had been reinforced to 3,000 men and made the crossing with artillery and air support. Wuyuan again fell to the Japanese on the 26th and the Chinese fell back to the banks of Fang-chi-chu and continued their attacks at Xin'an, Xishanzui, Xixiaozhao, and Man-ko-su.

The Middlesboro Daily News which reported on Japan's planned offensive into the Muslim region, predicted that the Japanese would suffer a massive crushing defeat at the hands of the Muslims.[1]

Muslim Generals Ma Hongkui and Ma Hongbin defended west Suiyuan, especially Wuyuan in 1940 against the Japanese. Ma Hongbin commanded the Muslim 81st corps and incurred heavy casualties, but after fierce fighting eventually repulsed the Japanese and defeated them.[2][3]

Unable to withstand the pressure of Chinese attacks, the Japanese at Wuyuan retreated on March 30 and 31. On April 1 a guerrilla force and cavalry column recaptured Wuyuan, and the 11th Provisional Division recaptured Wu-pu-lang-kou. On April 3, cavalry recovered Xishanzui as the Japanese retreated to the east.

Sources

  1. https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=64VCAAAAIBAJ&sjid=E6sMAAAAIBAJ&pg=2996,3679068&dq=chinese+japanese+moslem&hl=en
  2. George Barry O'Toole, Jên-yü Tsʻai, ed. (1941). The China monthly, Volumes 3-5. The China monthly incorporated. Retrieved 2010-06-28.(Original from the University of Michigan)
  3. Aleksandr I͡Akovlevich Kali͡agin (1983). Along alien roads (illustrated ed.). East Asian Institute, Columbia University. p. 261 of 294. ISBN 0-913418-03-X. Retrieved 2010-06-28.(Original from the University of Michigan)

External links

Coordinates: 31°05′24″N 108°15′58″E / 31.09000°N 108.26611°E / 31.09000; 108.26611

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