Liaoshen Campaign

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Liaoshen Campaign
Part of the Chinese Civil War

People's Liberation Army clearing the skirts of Shenyang.
Date 12 September 1948 - 12 November 1948
Location Manchuria
Result Decisive Communist victory; fall of Manchuria for the Nationalist government
Combatants
National Revolutionary Army People's Liberation Army Northeast Field Army
Commanders
Wei Lihuang, Fan Hanjie Lin Biao, Luo Ronghuan
Strength
1,300,000 700,000
Casualties
~472,000 (including non-combat losses) 70,000
Chinese Civil War
Major engagements in bold
Liaoshen Campaign (Changchun - Jinzhou) - Huaihai Campaign - Pingjin Campaign - Quemoy
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Liaoshen Campaign (Traditional Chinese: 遼瀋戰役; Simplified Chinese: 辽沈战役; pinyin: Líaoshên Zhànyì), literally the abbreviation of Liaoning-Shenyang Campaign, was part of the three major campaigns launched by the People's Liberation Army during the late stage of the Chinese Civil War. This engagement is known in the Nationalist government as the Battle of Liaoshi (Traditional Chinese: 遼西會戰). The campaign began on September 12, 1948, and ended in the same year on November 2, lasting 52 days.

Contents

[edit] Background

By August 1948, after years of brief advances throughout the Chinese Northeast region, the Northeast Field Army of the People's Liberation Army had fourteen columns of infantry, artillery, and fifteen independent divisions as well as three cavalry divisions, approximately 54 divisions which consisted of over 700,000 men in the Northeast. They also held control of 97% percent of the land in the Northeast and 86% of the population. The Nationalists on the other hand, had four Army Groups, which consisted of 14 armies and 44 divisions. With the local security regiments, they had over 550,000 men. However, they were cut apart in Shenyang, Changchun and Jinzhou, three regions that are not geographically connected. Because the Beining Railway was controlled by the People's Liberation Army, the land routes through Shanhai Pass to Changchun and Shenyang were cut off completely. Supplies had to be airlifted to these two cities.

Communist commanders. From left to right: Lin Biao, Luo Ronghuan and Liu Yalou.
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Communist commanders. From left to right: Lin Biao, Luo Ronghuan and Liu Yalou.

The Northeast was the only place which the Communist had superior military strength over the Nationalists at the time. Therefore, the Chinese Communist Military Committee had chosen the Northeast as the place for the first decisive engagement between the two sides.

[edit] Objectives

Nationalists: To withdraw from Changchun and Shenyang, as the supply routes were cut off for these two cities, prevent the Communists from entering Shanhai Pass, stabilize the situation and launch counter-offensive on the Northeast region when the time was right.

Communists: Encircle the city first, then attack it. Cut off the line between Jinzhou and Tashan from the south, intercept the Beining Railway to seal the Natioanlists force in the Northeast.

[edit] Course of campaign

The entire Liaoshen Campaign was divided into three stages:

[edit] First stage

Main article: Battle of Jinzhou
Communists marching south along Beining line.
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Communists marching south along Beining line.

On September 12, 1948, People's Liberation Army Northeast Field Army marched south and began to attack along the Beining Railway. After capturing Changli, Tashan, the Nationalist's Beining supply route is successfully cut off. During the battle in Yixian, the commander of North Field Army Cannoneer Column Zhu Rei was killed in action when he stepped on a mine. Beginning in October 3, the Northeast Field Army gathered up 250,000 men to encircle Jinzhou. Chiang Kai-shek ordered the Nationalist defenders in Huludao and the army group in Shenyang led by Liao Yaoxiang to reinforce and rescue Jinzhou. However, Ho Jingru, the commander of 17th Army Group in Huludao, was dissatisfied with Chiang's constant interfering of command, and fearing being ambushed on the way, he refused to follow the order. Liao Yaoxiang in Shenyang was afraid of being encircled by the People's Liberation Army and delayed the attack. After Chiang took command himself, the Nationalist forces in Huludao marched to Jinzhou, but was blocked by the People's Liberation Army in the area of Tashan, and was unable to continue on marching. The Northeast Field Army launched the final assault on Jinzhou On October 14, and occupied the city next day evening, killed & captured 100,000 defenders including Fan Hanjie, the vice-commander of all Nationalist force in the Northeast. The land route for the Nationalists to retreat back to North China Plain was blocked.

Meanwhile, the People's Liberation Army encircled Changchun. Zeng Zesheng, the vice commander of the nationalist forces defending Changchun was originally a subordinate of Zhang Xueliang, and like his fellow soldiers of his 70th Corps, he was deeply dissatisfied with Chiang Kai-shek's treatment. Capitalizing on this opportunity, communists infiltrated Zeng's inner circle and convinced him to rebel against the nationalists and that was exactly what Zeng did after the pressure from the fall of Jinzhou. The remaining Nationalist units including the elite 60th Army in Changchun had no choice but to surrender as a result. Zheng Dongguao, commander of the Nationalist forces in Changchun, surrendered as well along with 100,000 men on October 21.

[edit] Second stage

Chiang Kai-shek arrived in Shenyang to monitor the Nationalist war effort.
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Chiang Kai-shek arrived in Shenyang to monitor the Nationalist war effort.

After the Nationalist forces was destroyed in Jinzhou and Changchun, the situation turned worse for the Nationalists in the Northeast. Liao Yaoxiang decided to abandon Shenyang, open up the retreat route by capturing Heshan and Dahushan first, then turn south to Yinkou, and return to North China Plain via the ocean. However, they were unable to breakthrough the defensive line of the People's Liberation Army, and lost a considerable amount of time. Between October 20 to October 28, the People's Liberation Army launched the Battle of Liaoxi in the area east of Heshan, Dahushan, and west of Raoyanghe, and destroyed twelve Nationalist divisions, totaling up to 100,000 men, and captured the commander, Liao Yaoxiang.

[edit] Final stage

Beginning in October 29, the People's Liberation Army encircled Shenyang from four sides, penetrated Yinkou with three columns and attacked the defending 52th Army. On October 30, Wei Lihuang, the commander-in-chief of all Nationalist forces in the Northeast, left Shenyang via plane. He turned command over to Zhou Fucheng, the commander of the 8th Army Group. On November 1, the People's Liberation Army launched the final assault on the urban area of Shenyang, capturing the city the very next day. They killed or captured two armies of defenders, totaling up to 134,000 men. Zhou Fucheng was also taken prisoner. Yinkou was captured the same day. The PLA killed 14,000 men from the defending 52th Army. The remnants of the 52th Army retreated to Huludao via the ocean. The Liaoshen Campaign was over.

After the fall of Shenyang, the Nationalists in the area of Jinxi and Huludao retreated back to the North China Plain via the ocean. The Communist force captured these two forts the next day, and the entire Northeast was now under the Communist control. Up to this point, the National Revolutionary Army lost four army groups, eleven armies and thirty-three divisions, approximately 472,000 men. Only the New 5th Army, 52th Army and the 54th Army were able to retreat. The rest of the Nationalist forces in the Northeast were all destroyed. The comparison of military strength for the Nationalists and the Communists were reversed, and for the first time, the total strength for the Nationalists was weaker than the People's Liberation Army.

[edit] Review

Reasons for Nationalist defeat

1. During the period of March to June, the Nationalists were unable to move their main force southwards to combine with the North China battlefield and make the balance of forces more favorable to them.

2. Inability to of the different Nationalist forces to coordinate their attacks on the Communists.

3. Inability to breakthrough the Communist defensive line, thus unable combine the strength with distant armies.

4. Chiang's constant interference with the command: Chiang personally approved his commanders' the battle plans during meetings, but after the battles begun, Chiang often changed his mind and gave orders to the nationalist troops in the field down the division level directly, bypassing the chain of command. The uninformed nationalist commanders above the division level were rarely told about the changes by Chiang in time, and instead, they usually found out about the changes after their subordinates had already carried out Chiang's direct orders.

Reasons for Communist victory

1. Seized the strongpoint, captured Jinzhou, and besieged the Nationalists in the Northeast to inflict their destruction.

2. Instantly adjusted the deployment, destroyed the Nationalist forces that did not retreat in time.

3. Encircled the Nationalist defenders in Shenyang from multiple sides and swiftly destroyed them.

4. North China Communist forces successfully contained Nationalist forces in North China so they were unable to reinforce the Nationalists in the Northeast.

5. Effectively mobilized, long-term management.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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