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Kings and Generals: History for our Future
3.187 Fall and Rise of China: Battle of Suixian–Zaoyang-Shatow

Kings and Generals: History for our Future

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2026 35:03


Last time we spoke about the battle of Nanchang. After securing Hainan and targeting Zhejiang–Jiangxi Railway corridors, Japan's 11th Army, backed by armor, air power, and riverine operations, sought a rapid, surgical seizure of Nanchang to sever eastern Chinese logistics and coerce Chongqing. China, reorganizing under Chiang Kai-shek, concentrated over 200,000 troops across 52 divisions in the Ninth and Third War Zones, with Xue Yue commanding the 9th War Zone in defense of Wuhan-Nanchang corridors. The fighting began with German-style, combined-arms river operations along the Xiushui and Gan rivers, including feints, river crossings, and heavy artillery, sometimes using poison gas. From March 20–23, Japanese forces established a beachhead and advanced into Fengxin, Shengmi, and later Nanchang, despite stiff Chinese resistance and bridges being destroyed. Chiang's strategic shift toward attrition pushed for broader offensives to disrupt railways and rear areas, though Chinese plans for a counteroffensive repeatedly stalled due to logistics and coordination issues. By early May, Japanese forces encircled and captured Nanchang, albeit at heavy cost, with Chinese casualties surpassing 43,000 dead and Japanese losses over 2,200 dead.    #187 The Battle of Suixian–Zaoyang-Shatow Welcome to the Fall and Rise of China Podcast, I am your dutiful host Craig Watson. But, before we start I want to also remind you this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Perhaps you want to learn more about the history of Asia? Kings and Generals have an assortment of episodes on history of asia and much more  so go give them a look over on Youtube. So please subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry for some more history related content, over on my channel, the Pacific War Channel where I cover the history of China and Japan from the 19th century until the end of the Pacific War. Having seized Wuhan in a brutal offensive the previous year, the Japanese sought not just to hold their ground but to solidify their grip on this vital hub. Wuhan, a bustling metropolis at the confluence of the Yangtze and Han Rivers, had become a linchpin in their strategy, a base from which they could project power across central China. Yet, the city was far from secure, Chinese troops in northern Hubei and southern Henan, perched above the mighty Yangtze, posed an unrelenting threat. To relieve the mounting pressure on their newfound stronghold, the Japanese high command orchestrated a bold offensive against the towns of Suixian and Zaoyang. They aimed to annihilate the main force of the Chinese 5th War Zone, a move that would crush the Nationalist resistance in the region and secure their flanks. This theater of war, freshly designated as the 5th War Zone after the grueling Battle of Wuhan, encompassed a vast expanse west of Shashi in the upper Yangtze basin. It stretched across northern Hubei, southern Henan, and the rugged Dabie Mountains in eastern Anhui, forming a strategic bulwark that guarded the eastern approaches to Sichuan, the very heartland of the Nationalist government's central institutions. Historian Rana Mitter in Forgotten Ally described this zone as "a gateway of immense importance, a natural fortress that could either serve as a launchpad for offensives against Japanese-held territories or a defensive redoubt protecting the rear areas of Sichuan and Shaanxi". The terrain itself was a defender's dream and an attacker's nightmare: to the east rose the imposing Dabie Mountains, their peaks cloaked in mist and folklore; the Tongbai Mountains sliced across the north like a jagged spine; the Jing Mountains guarded the west; the Yangtze River snaked southward, its waters a formidable barrier; the Dahong Mountains dominated the center, offering hidden valleys for ambushes; and the Han River (also known as the Xiang River) carved a north-south path through it all. Two critical transport arteries—the Hanyi Road linking Hankou to Yichang in Hubei, and the Xianghua Road connecting Xiangyang to Huayuan near Hankou—crisscrossed this landscape, integrating the war zone into a web of mobility. From here, Chinese forces could menace the vital Pinghan Railway, that iron lifeline running from Beiping (modern Beijing) to Hankou, while also threatening the Wuhan region itself. In retreat, it provided a sanctuary to shield the Nationalist heartlands. As military strategist Sun Tzu might have appreciated, this area had long been a magnet for generals, its contours shaping the fates of empires since ancient times. Despite the 5th War Zone's intricate troop deployments, marked by units of varying combat prowess and a glaring shortage of heavy weapons, the Chinese forces made masterful use of the terrain to harass their invaders. Drawing from accounts in Li Zongren's memoirs, he noted how these defenders, often outgunned but never outmaneuvered, turned hills into fortresses and rivers into moats. In early April 1939, as spring rains turned paths to mud, Chinese troops ramped up their disruptions along the southern stretches of the Pinghan Railway, striking from both eastern and western flanks with guerrilla precision. What truly rattled the Japanese garrison in Wuhan was the arrival of reinforcements: six full divisions redeployed to Zaoyang, bolstering the Chinese capacity to launch flanking assaults that could unravel Japanese supply lines. Alarmed by this buildup, the Japanese 11th Army, ensconced in the Wuhan area under the command of General Yasuji Okamura, a figure whose tactical acumen would later earn him notoriety in the Pacific War, devised a daring plan. They intended to plunge deep into the 5th War Zone, smashing the core of the Chinese forces and rendering them impotent, thereby neutralizing the northwestern threat to Wuhan once and for all. From April onward, the Japanese mobilized with meticulous preparation, amassing troops equipped with formidable artillery, rumbling tanks, and squadrons of aircraft that darkened the skies. Historians estimate they committed roughly three and a half divisions to this endeavor, as detailed in Edward J. Drea's In the Service of the Emperor: Essays on the Imperial Japanese Army. Employing a classic pincer movement, a two-flank encirclement coupled with a central breakthrough, they aimed for a swift, decisive strike to obliterate the main Chinese force in the narrow Suixian-Zaoyang corridor, squeezed between the Tongbai and Dahong Mountains. The offensive erupted in full fury on May 1, 1939, as Japanese columns surged forward like a tidal wave, their engines roaring and banners fluttering in the dust-choked air. General Li Zongren, the commander of the 5th War Zone, a man whose leadership had already shone in earlier campaigns like the defense of Tai'erzhuang in 1938, issued urgent orders to cease offensive actions against the Japanese and pivot to a defensive stance. Based on intelligence about the enemy's dispositions, Li orchestrated a comprehensive campaign structure, assigning precise defensive roles and battle plans to each unit. This was no haphazard scramble; it was a symphony of strategy, as Li himself recounted in his memoirs, emphasizing the need to exploit the terrain's natural advantages. While various Chinese war zones executed the "April Offensive" from late April to mid-May, actively harrying and containing Japanese forces, the 5th War Zone focused its energies on the southern segment of the Pinghan Railway, assaulting it from both sides in a bid to disrupt logistics. The main force of the 31st Army Group, under the command of Tang Enbo, a general known for his aggressive tactics and later criticized for corruption, shifted from elsewhere in Hubei to Zaoyang, fortifying the zone and posing a dire threat to the Japanese flanks and rear areas. To counter this peril and safeguard transportation along the Wuhan-Pinghan Railway, the Japanese, led by the formidable Okamura, unleashed their assault from the line stretching through Xinyang, Yingshan, and Zhongxiang. Mobilizing the 3rd, 13th, and 16th Divisions alongside the 2nd and 4th Cavalry Brigades, they charged toward the Suixian-Zaoyang region in western Hubei, intent on eradicating the Chinese main force and alleviating the siege-like pressure on Wuhan. In a masterful reorganization, Li Zongren divided his forces into two army groups, the left and right, plus a dedicated river defense army. His strategy was a blend of attrition and opportunism: harnessing the Tongbai and Dahong Mountains, clinging to key towns like lifelines, and grinding down the Japanese through prolonged warfare while biding time for a counterstroke. This approach echoed the Fabian tactics of ancient Rome, wearing the enemy thin before delivering the coup de grâce. The storm broke at dawn on May 1, when the main contingents of the Japanese 16th and 13th Divisions, bolstered by the 4th Cavalry Brigade from their bases in Zhongxiang and Jingshan, hurled themselves against the Chinese 37th and 180th Divisions of the Right Army Group. Supported by droning aircraft that strafed from above and tanks that churned the earth below, the Japanese advanced with mechanical precision. By May 4, they had shattered the defensive lines flanking Changshoudian, then surged along the east bank of the Xiang River toward Zaoyang in a massive offensive. Fierce combat raged through May 5, as described in Japanese war diaries compiled in Senshi Sōsho (the official Japanese war history series), where soldiers recounted the relentless Chinese resistance amid the smoke and clamor. The Japanese finally breached the defenses, turning their fury on the 122nd Division of the 41st Army. In a heroic stand, the 180th Division clung to Changshoudian, providing cover for the main force's retreat along the east-west Huangqi'an line. The 37th Division fell back to the Yaojiahe line, while elements of the 38th Division repositioned into Liushuigou. On May 6, the Japanese seized Changshoudian, punched through Huangqi'an, and drove northward, unleashing a devastating assault on the 122nd Division's positions near Wenjiamiao. Undeterred, Chinese defenders executed daring flanking maneuvers in the Fenglehe, Yaojiahe, Liushuihe, Shuanghe, and Zhangjiaji areas, turning the landscape into a labyrinth of ambushes. May 7 saw the Japanese pressing on, capturing Zhangjiaji and Shuanghe. By May 8, they assaulted Maozifan and Xinji, where ferocious battles erupted, soldiers clashing in hand-to-hand combat amid the ruins. By May 10, the Japanese had overrun Huyang Town and Xinye, advancing toward Tanghe and the northeastern fringes of Zaoyang. Yet, the Tanghe River front witnessed partial Chinese recoveries: remnants of the Right Army Group, alongside troops from east of the Xianghe, reclaimed Xinye. The 122nd and 180th Divisions withdrew north of Tanghe and Fancheng, while the 37th, 38th, and 132nd Divisions steadfastly held the east bank of the Xianghe River. Concurrently, the main force of the Japanese 3rd Division launched from Yingshan against the 84th and 13th Armies of the 11th Group Army in the Suixian sector. After a whirlwind of combat, the Chinese 84th Army retreated to the Taerwan position. On May 2, the 3rd Division targeted the Gaocheng position of the 13th Army within the 31st Group Army; the ensuing clashes in Taerwan and Gaocheng were a maelstrom of fire, with the Taerwan position exchanging hands multiple times like a deadly game of tug-of-war. By May 4, in a grim escalation, Japanese forces deployed poison gas, a violation of international norms that drew condemnation and is documented in Allied reports from the era, inflicting horrific casualties and compelling the Chinese to relinquish Gaocheng, which fell into enemy hands. On May 5, backed by aerial bombardments, tank charges, and artillery barrages, the Japanese renewed their onslaught along the Gaocheng River and the Lishan-Jiangjiahe line. By May 6, the beleaguered Chinese were forced back to the Tianhekou and Gaocheng line. Suixian succumbed on May 7. On May 8, the Japanese shattered the second line of the 84th Army, capturing Zaoyang and advancing on the Jiangtoudian position of the 85th Army. To evade encirclement, the defenders mounted a valiant resistance before withdrawing from Jiangtoudian; the 84th Army relocated to the Tanghe and Baihe areas, while the 39th Army embedded itself in the Dahongshan for guerrilla operations—a tactic that would bleed the Japanese through hit-and-run warfare, as noted in guerrilla warfare studies by Mao Zedong himself. By May 10, the bulk of the 31st Army Group maneuvered toward Tanghe, reaching north of Biyang by May 15. From Xinyang, Japanese forces struck at Tongbai on May 8; by May 10, elements from Zaoyang advanced to Zhangdian Town and Shangtun Town. In response, the 68th Army of the 1st War Zone dispatched the 143rd Division to defend Queshan and Minggang, and the 119th Division to hold Tongbai. After staunchly blocking the Japanese, they withdrew on May 11 to positions northwest and southwest of Tongbai, shielding the retreat of 5th War Zone units. The Japanese 4th Cavalry Brigade drove toward Tanghe, seizing Tanghe County on May 12. But the tide was turning. In a brilliant reversal, the Fifth War Zone commanded the 31st Army Group, in concert with the 2nd Army Group from the 1st War Zone, to advance from southwestern Henan. Their mission: encircle the bulk of Japanese forces on the Xiangdong Plain and deliver a crushing blow. The main force of the 33rd Army Group targeted Zaoyang, while other units pinned down Japanese rear guards in Zhongxiang. The Chinese counteroffensive erupted with swift successes, Tanghe County was recaptured on May 14, and Tongbai liberated on May 16, shattering the Japanese encirclement scheme. On May 19, after four grueling days of combat, Chinese forces mauled the retreating Japanese, reclaiming Zaoyang and leaving the fields strewn with enemy dead. The 39th Army of the Left Army Group dispersed into the mountains for guerrilla warfare, a shadowy campaign of sabotage and surprise. Forces of the Right Army Group east of the river, along with river defense units, conducted relentless raids on Japanese rears and supply lines over multiple days, sowing chaos before withdrawing to the west bank of the Xiang River on May 21. On May 22, they pressed toward Suixian, recapturing it on May 23. The Japanese, battered and depleted, retreated to their original garrisons in Zhongxiang and Yingshan, restoring the pre-war lines as the battle drew to a close. Throughout this clash, the Chinese held a marked superiority in manpower and coordination, though their deployments lacked full flexibility, briefly placing them on the defensive. After protracted, blood-soaked fighting, they restored the original equilibrium. Despite grievous losses, the Chinese thwarted the Japanese encirclement and exacted a heavy toll, reports from the time, corroborated by Japanese records in Senshi Sōsho, indicate over 13,000 Japanese killed or wounded, with more than 5,000 corpses abandoned on the battlefield. This fulfilled the strategic goal of containing and eroding Japanese strength. Chinese casualties surpassed 25,000, a testament to the ferocity of the struggle. The 5th War Zone seized the initiative in advances and retreats, deftly shifting to outer lines and maintaining positional advantages. As Japanese forces withdrew, Chinese pursuers harried and obstructed them, yielding substantial victories. The Battle of Suizao spanned less than three weeks. The Japanese main force pierced defenses on the east bank of the Han River, advancing to encircle one flank as planned. However, the other two formations met fierce opposition near Suixian and northward, stalling their progress. Adapting to the battlefield's ebb and flow, the Fifth War Zone transformed its tactics: the main force escaped encirclement, maneuvered to outer lines for offensives, and exploited terrain to hammer the Japanese. The pivotal order to flip from defense to offense doomed the encirclement; with the counterattack triumphant, the Japanese declined to hold and retreated. The Chinese pursued with unyielding vigor. By May 24, they had reclaimed Zaoyang, Tongbai, and other locales. Save for Suixian County, the Japanese had fallen back to pre-war positions, reinstating the regional status quo. Thus, the battle concluded, a chapter of resilience etched into the chronicles of China's defiance. In the sweltering heat of southern China, where the humid air clung to every breath like a persistent fog, the Japanese General Staff basked in what they called a triumphant offensive and defensive campaign in Guangdong. But victory, as history so often teaches, is a double-edged sword. By early 1939, the strain was palpable. Their secret supply line snaking from the British colony of Hong Kong to the Chinese mainland was under constant disruption, raids by shadowy guerrilla bands, opportunistic smugglers, and the sheer unpredictability of wartime logistics turning what should have been a lifeline into a leaky sieve. Blockading the entire coastline? A pipe dream, given the vast, jagged shores of Guangdong, dotted with hidden coves and fishing villages that had evaded imperial edicts for centuries. Yet, the General Staff's priorities were unyielding, laser-focused on strangling the Nationalist capital of Chongqing through a relentless blockade. This meant the 21st Army, that workhorse of the Japanese invasion force, had to stay in the fight—no rest for the weary. Drawing from historical records like the Senshi Sōsho (War History Series) compiled by Japan's National Institute for Defense Studies, we know that after the 21st Army reported severing what they dubbed the "secret transport line" at Xinhui, a gritty, hard-fought skirmish that left the local landscape scarred with craters and abandoned supply crates, the General Staff circled back to the idea of a full coastal blockade. It was a classic case of military opportunism: staff officers, poring over maps in dimly lit war rooms in Tokyo, suddenly "discovered" Shantou as a major port. Not just any port, mind you, but a bustling hub tied to the heartstrings of Guangdong's overseas Chinese communities. Shantou and nearby Chao'an weren't mere dots on a map; they were the ancestral hometowns of countless Chaoshan people who had ventured abroad to Southeast Asia, sending back remittances that flowed like lifeblood into the region. Historical economic studies, such as those in The Overseas Chinese in the People's Republic of China by Stephen Fitzgerald, highlight how these funds from the Chaoshan diaspora, often funneled through family networks in places like Singapore and Thailand, were substantial, indirectly fueling China's war effort by sustaining local economies and even purchasing arms on the black market. The Chao-Shao Highway, that dusty artery running near Shantou, was pinpointed as a critical vein connecting Hong Kong's ports to the mainland's interior. So, in early June 1939, the die was cast: Army Order No. 310 thundered from headquarters, commanding the 21st Army to seize Shantou. The Chief of the General Staff himself provided the strategic blueprint, a personal touch that underscored the operation's gravity. The Army Department christened the Chaoshan push "Operation Hua," a nod perhaps to the flowery illusions of easy conquest, while instructing the Navy Department to tag along for the ride. In naval parlance, it became "Operation J," a cryptic label that masked the sheer scale unfolding. Under the Headquarters' watchful eye, what started as a modest blockade morphed into a massive amphibious assault, conjured seemingly out of thin air like a magician's trick, but one with deadly props. The 5th Fleet's orders mobilized an impressive lineup: the 9th Squadron for heavy hitting, the 5th Mine Boat Squadron to clear watery hazards, the 12th and 21st Sweeper Squadrons sweeping for mines like diligent janitors of the sea, the 45th Destroyer Squadron adding destroyer muscle, and air power from the 3rd Combined Air Group (boasting 24 land-based attack aircraft and 9 reconnaissance planes that could spot a fishing boat from miles away). Then there was the Chiyoda Air Group with its 9 reconnaissance aircraft, the Guangdong Air Group contributing a quirky airship and one more recon plane, the 9th Special Landing Squadron from Sasebo trained for beach assaults, and a flotilla of special ships for logistics. On the ground, the 21st Army threw in the 132nd Brigade from the 104th Division, beefed up with the 76th Infantry Battalion, two mountain artillery battalions for lobbing shells over rugged terrain, two engineer battalions to bridge rivers and clear paths, a light armored vehicle platoon rumbling with mechanized menace, and a river-crossing supplies company to keep the troops fed and armed. All under the command of Brigade Commander Juro Goto, a stern officer whose tactical acumen was forged in earlier Manchurian campaigns. The convoy's size demanded rehearsals; the 132nd Brigade trained for boat transfers at Magong in the Penghu Islands, practicing the precarious dance of loading men and gear onto rocking vessels under simulated fire. Secrecy shrouded the whole affair, many officers and soldiers, boarding ships in the dead of night, whispered among themselves that they were finally heading home to Japan, a cruel ruse to maintain operational security. For extra punch, the 21st Army tacked on the 31st Air Squadron for air support, their planes droning like angry hornets ready to sting. This overkill didn't sit well with everyone. Lieutenant General Ando Rikichi, the pragmatic commander overseeing Japanese forces in the region, must have fumed in his Guangzhou headquarters. His intelligence staff, drawing from intercepted radio chatter and local spies as noted in postwar analyses like The Japanese Army in World War II by Gordon L. Rottman, reported that the Chongqing forces in Chaozhou were laughably thin: just the 9th Independent Brigade, a couple of security regiments, and ragtag "self-defense groups" of armed civilians. Why unleash such a sledgehammer on a fly? The mobilization's magnitude even forced a reshuffling of defenses around Guangzhou, pulling resources from the 12th Army's front lines and overburdening the already stretched 18th Division. It was bureaucratic overreach at its finest, a testament to the Imperial Staff's penchant for grand gestures over tactical efficiency. Meanwhile, on the Nationalist side, the winds of war carried whispers of impending doom. The National Revolutionary Army's war histories, such as those compiled in the Zhongguo Kangri Zhanzheng Shi (History of China's War of Resistance Against Japan), note that Chiang Kai-shek's Military Commission had snagged intelligence as early as February 1939 about Japan's plans for a large-scale invasion of Shantou. The efficiency of the Military Command's Second Bureau and the Military Intelligence Bureau was nothing short of astonishing, networks of agents, double agents, and radio intercepts piercing the veil of Japanese secrecy. Even as the convoy slipped out of Penghu, a detailed report outlining operational orders landed on Commander Zhang Fakui's desk, the ink still fresh. Zhang, a battle-hardened strategist whose career spanned the Northern Expedition and beyond , had four months to prepare for what would be dubbed the decisive battle of Chaoshan. Yet, in a move that baffled some contemporaries, he chose not to fortify and defend it tooth and nail. After the Fourth War Zone submitted its opinions, likely heated debates in smoke-filled command posts, Chiang Kai-shek greenlit the plan. By March, the Military Commission issued its strategic policy: when the enemy hit Chaoshan, a sliver of regular troops would team up with civilian armed forces for mobile and guerrilla warfare, grinding down the invaders like sandpaper on steel. The orders specified guerrilla zones in Chaozhou, Jiaxing, and Huizhou, unifying local militias under a banner of "extensive guerrilla warfare" to coordinate with regular army maneuvers, gradually eroding the Japanese thrust. In essence, the 4th War Zone wasn't tasked with holding Chao'an and Shantou at all costs; instead, they'd strike hard during the landing, then let guerrillas harry the occupiers post-capture. It was a doctrine of attrition in a "confined battlefield," honing skills through maneuver and ambush. Remarkably, the fall of these cities was preordained by the Military Commission three months before the Japanese even issued their orders, a strategic feint that echoed ancient Sun Tzu tactics of yielding ground to preserve strength. To execute this, the 4th War Zone birthed the Chao-Jia-Hui Guerrilla Command after meticulous preparation, with General Zou Hong, head of Guangdong's Security Bureau and a no-nonsense administrator known for his anti-smuggling campaigns, taking the helm. In just three months, Zhang Fakui scraped together the Independent 9th Brigade, the 2nd, 4th, and 5th Guangdong Provincial Security Regiments, and the Security Training Regiment. Even with the 9th Army Group lurking nearby, he handed the reins of the Chao-Shan operation to the 12th Army Group's planners. Their March guidelines sketched three lines of resistance from the coast to the mountains, a staged withdrawal that allowed frontline defenders to melt away like ghosts. This blueprint mirrored Chiang Kai-shek's post-Wuhan reassessment, where the loss of that key city in 1938 prompted a shift to protracted warfare. A Xinhua News Agency columnist later summed it up scathingly: "The Chongqing government, having lost its will to resist, colludes with the Japanese and seeks to eliminate the Communists, adopting a policy of passive resistance." This narrative, propagated by Communist sources, dogged Chiang and the National Revolutionary Army for decades, painting them as defeatists even as they bled the Japanese dry through attrition. February 1939 saw Commander Zhang kicking off a reorganization of the 12th Army Group, transforming it from a patchwork force into something resembling a modern army. He could have hunkered down, assigning troops to a desperate defense of Chaoshan, but that would have handed the initiative to the overcautious Japanese General Staff, whose activism often bordered on paranoia. Zhang, with the wisdom of a seasoned general who had navigated the treacherous politics of pre-war China, weighed the scales carefully. His vision? Forge the 12th Army Group into a nimble field army, not squander tens of thousands on a secondary port. Japan's naval and air dominance—evident in the devastation of Shanghai in 1937, meant Guangdong's forces could be pulverized in Shantou just as easily. Losing Chaozhou and Shantou? Acceptable, if it preserved core strength for the long haul. Post-Xinhui, Zhang doubled down on resistance, channeling efforts into live-fire exercises for the 12th Army, turning green recruits into battle-ready soldiers amid the Guangdong hills. The war's trajectory after 1939 would vindicate him: his forces became pivotal in later counteroffensives, proving that a living army trumped dead cities. Opting out of a static defense, Zhang pivoted to guerrilla warfare to bleed the Japanese while clutching strategic initiative. He ordered local governments to whip up coastal guerrilla forces from Chao'an to Huizhou—melding militias, national guards, police, and private armed groups into official folds. These weren't elite shock troops, but in wartime's chaos, they controlled locales effectively, disrupting supply lines and gathering intel. For surprises, he unleashed two mobile units: the 9th Independent Brigade and the 20th Independent Brigade. Formed fresh after the War of Resistance erupted, these brigades shone for their efficiency within the cumbersome Guangdong Army structure. Division-level units were too bulky for spotty communications, so Yu Hanmou's command birthed these independent outfits, staffed with crack officers. The 9th, packing direct-fire artillery for punch, and the 20th, dubbed semi-mechanized for its truck-borne speed, prowled the Chaoshan–Huizhou coast from 1939. Zhang retained their three-regiment setup, naming Hua Zhenzhong and Zhang Shou as commanders, granting them autonomy to command in the field like roving wolves. As the 9th Independent Brigade shifted to Shantou, its 627th Regiment was still reorganizing in Heyuan, a logistical hiccup amid the scramble. Hua Zhenzhong, a commander noted for his tactical flexibility in regional annals, deployed the 625th Regiment and 5th Security Regiment along the coast, with the 626th as reserve in Chao'an. Though the Fourth War Zone had written off Chaoshan, Zhang yearned to showcase Guangdong grit before the pullback. Dawn broke on June 21, 1939, at 4:30 a.m., with Japanese reconnaissance planes slicing through the fog over Shantou, Anbu, and Nanbeigang, ghostly silhouettes against the gray sky. By 5:30, the mist lifted, revealing a nightmare armada: over 40 destroyers and 70–80 landing craft churning toward the coast on multiple vectors, their hulls cutting the waves like knives. The 626th Regiment's 3rd Battalion at Donghushan met the first wave with a hail of fire from six light machine guns, repelling the initial boats in a frenzy of splashes and shouts. But the brigade's long-range guns couldn't stem the tide; Hua focused on key chokepoints, aiming to bloody the invaders rather than obliterate them. By morning, the 3rd Battalion of the 625th Regiment charged into Shantou City, joined by the local police corps digging in amid urban sprawl. Combat raged at Xinjin Port and the airport's fringes, where Nationalist troops traded shots with advancing Japanese under the absent shadow of a Chinese navy. Japanese naval guns, massed offshore, pounded the outskirts like thunder gods in fury. By 2:00 a.m. on the 22nd, Shantou crumpled as defenders' ammo ran dry, the city falling in a haze of smoke and echoes. Before the loss, Hua had positioned the 1st Battalion of the 5th Security Regiment at Anbu, guarding the road to Chao'an. Local lore, preserved in oral histories collected by the Chaozhou Historical Society, recalls Battalion Commander Du Ruo leading from the front, rifle in hand, but Japanese barrages, bolstered by superior firepower—forced a retreat. Post-capture, Tokyo's forces paused to consolidate, unleashing massacres on fleeing civilians in the outskirts. A flotilla of civilian boats, intercepted at sea, became a grim training ground for bayonet drills, a barbarity echoed in survivor testimonies compiled in The Rape of Nanking and Beyond extensions to Guangdong atrocities. With Shantou gone, Hua pivoted to flank defense, orchestrating night raids on Japanese positions around Anbu and Meixi. On June 24th, Major Du Ruo spearheaded an assault into Anbu but fell gravely wounded amid the chaos. Later, the 2nd Battalion of the 626th overran spots near Meixi. A Japanese sea-flanking maneuver targeted Anbu, but Nationalists held at Liulong, sparking nocturnal clashes, grenade volleys, bayonet charges, and hand-to-hand brawls that drained both sides like a slow bleed. June 26th saw the 132nd Brigade lumber toward Chao'an. Hua weighed options: all-out assault or guerrilla fade? He chose to dig in on the outskirts, reserving two companies of the 625th and a special ops battalion in the city. The 27th brought a day-long Japanese onslaught, culminating in Chao'an's fall after fierce rear-guard actions by the 9th Independent Brigade. Evacuations preceded the collapse, with Japanese propaganda banners fluttering falsely, claiming Nationalists had abandoned defense. Yet Hua's call preserved his brigade for future fights; the Japanese claimed an empty prize. I would like to take this time to remind you all that this podcast is only made possible through the efforts of Kings and Generals over at Youtube. Please go subscribe to Kings and Generals over at Youtube and to continue helping us produce this content please check out www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals. If you are still hungry after that, give my personal channel a look over at The Pacific War Channel at Youtube, it would mean a lot to me. The Japanese operations had yet again plugged up supply leaks into Nationalist China. The fall of Suixian, Zaoyang and Shantou were heavy losses for the Chinese war effort. However the Chinese were also able to exact heavy casualties on the invaders and thwarted their encirclement attempts. China was still in the fight for her life.

CIONET
Tom Tanghe - General Manager ITC EMEA at Daikin Europe - Reinventing the CIO Role

CIONET

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2025 51:51


CIONEXT is just around the corner! Don't miss this exclusive opportunity to get to know one of our panellists – Tom Tanghe, General Manager ITC EMEA at Daikin Europe – and watch his full #LeadershipDeepDive interview. Have you already registered to join us on April 3rd at 15:00 CET? Now's the time

The Lady Jaye Meat Dudes - A Meat & Restaurant Podcast
Part 2: Pairing white wines and BEEF with Master Sommelier Chris Tanghe

The Lady Jaye Meat Dudes - A Meat & Restaurant Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2023 45:16


Which white wines pair well with beef? Usually you wouldn't think to pair the two, but we are breaking the old rules with Master Sommelier Chris Tanghe (1 of 270 Master Somms in the world)! Instead of going with the usual Slab and a Cab, Chris Tanghe brought us two more white wines to pair with big meat dishes: Rioja 2008 Vina Tondonia Reserva Alsace Cru Blanc "Grasberg," Domaine Marcel Deiss 2016 Let the meat and wine journey continue! Welcome to The Lady Jaye Meat Dudes! A Meat & Restaurant podcast from guys who smoke a ton of meat and run a restaurant in Seattle Lady Jaye Restaurant in West Seattle - ⁠⁠www.ladyjaye.com⁠⁠ Follow us on Instagram ⁠⁠@ladyjayewest⁠⁠ Facebook: ⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/Ladyjayewest⁠

The Lady Jaye Meat Dudes - A Meat & Restaurant Podcast
What wines go well with meat? Master Sommelier Chris Tanghe gives us a new look! Part 1

The Lady Jaye Meat Dudes - A Meat & Restaurant Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2023 33:24


What wines go well with meat? Most of us are used to pairing red wine with meat (a slab and a cab), white wine with fish, but Master Sommelier Chris Tanghe picked three white wines that he likes to pair with everything from A5 wagyu beef to brisket and pork! Did you know there are only 270 Master Sommeliers in the entire world? We get some expert advice on how to pair meat and wine with a totally new outlook! The most important thing, enjoy what you consume! Welcome to The Lady Jaye Meat Dudes! A Meat & Restaurant podcast from guys who smoke a ton of meat and run a restaurant in Seattle Lady Jaye Restaurant in West Seattle - ⁠www.ladyjaye.com⁠ Follow us on Instagram ⁠@ladyjayewest⁠ Facebook: ⁠https://www.facebook.com/Ladyjayewest⁠ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgGKZ7MxTkcU-FMZUNgV5Aw

Tineke Zwart | Succesvol Ondernemen Podcast
#110 In gesprek met Rien Tanghe over succesvol ondernemen, God, slaapproblemen, onzekerheden en meer

Tineke Zwart | Succesvol Ondernemen Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2022 33:41


In deze podcast spreek ik één van mijn voormalig 1 op 1 klanten Rien Tanghe. Rien helpt zowel startende als gevestigde ondernemers om zich persoonlijk veel beter te voelen met als gevolg dat hun bedrijf ook beter gaat lopen. Het is een open gesprek over zijn snelle succes als ondernemer, marketing strategieën die hij inzet, de rol van God, hoe Rien omgaat met slaapproblemen, zijn onzekerheden en nog veel meer. Je kunt Rien volgen op Instagram via https://www.instagram.com/rientanghe.nl/ Je kunt mij volgen op Instagram via https://instagram.com/tineke_zwart

IQ PODCASTS
Todd Tanghe and Bill Hughes on the Brett Davis Podcast Ep 393

IQ PODCASTS

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2022 20:34


Fundraiser for Coronado Police Officer Association to purchase and restore an antique 50's Chevy Deluxe to replicate a squad car from that period.

Music Runs The World
EP. 5 - Filip Tanghe | De adrenalinerush van het live mixen.

Music Runs The World

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 62:05


Filip is Muzikant, Producer, Engineer, Live mixer, Musical director. Een man met veel talenten. Hij is eigenaar van North Garden Studio en begeleid heel wat acts live. Filip werkte o.a. samen Ozark Henry, Baltazar, Blackwave, Tamino en nog vele andere. In deze aflevering ontdekken we de live industrie en wat het betekend om een goeie live show in elkaar te steken.

Pam van den Berg Podcast
#142 Geïnterviewd Door Rien Tanghe: Het Leven Is Niks Doen

Pam van den Berg Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2022 35:51


#142 Geïnterviewd Door Rien Tanghe: Het Leven Is Niks Doen In deze podcast word ik geïnterviewd door Rien Tanghe, ondernemer en mindsetcoach. Meer over Rien: https://rientanghe.nl/ Volg mij ook op Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/?hl=nl Music: Bensound

Sommlight
Chris Tanghe, Interim Executive Director || GuildSomm, Seattle

Sommlight

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 60:01


Chris Tanghe on why time is the most motivating currency, having conversations with his dog, Walter, and riding a magic carpet on his lunch breaks.

IQ PODCASTS
Todd Tanghe LIVE on The Brett Davis Podcast EP 284

IQ PODCASTS

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 4, 2021 36:26


A conversation with Todd Tanghe, President of the CORONADO 4th of JULY Events. Parade and Fireworks. Todd is also known as Dr. Electric!!! He is the man to go to for any Electrical needs!!! 619.423.4800

Nachtraaf
#14 SPECIAL: FILIP TANGHE & JONAS WEYN

Nachtraaf

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2021 144:34


Deze week hebben we een speciale aflevering staan met niet één maar twee gasten die komen leuteren over hun carrière. Dit dynamische duo leert elkaar kennen via de succesvolle band Balthazar. Daarnaast is Filip nog actief bij bands zoals: Tourist LeMC, Blackwave, Tamino, Warhaus, De Dolfijntjes en Noémie Wolfs. Veel van zijn tijd vertoeft hij ook in zijn eigen studio in Kortijk. Jonas daarentegen is actief als light designer bij Arf & Yes en heeft hiermee al ontelbare mode- & Tv-shows gedaan. Daarnaast kan hij Night of the Proms & stagemanager op de Lokerse feesten ook bij op zijn CV schrijven.

de Protpod
#24 - Sammy Tanghe - met Bruno Vanden Broecke

de Protpod

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2021 109:56


Kristof en Eline bespreken het personage "Sammy Tanghe" samen met Bruno Vanden Broecke, die de rol vertolkte in het Eiland.

De Vrienden Van Vanoo De Podcast
KapotKast #45 Toast met caviapaté (met Jonathan Tanghe en Santy M.)

De Vrienden Van Vanoo De Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2021 81:12


Maandag 10 mei 2021, Studio Mi Nuevo Casa Mooi volk in mijn nieuwe woonst. Santy wordt bijna vader en Jonathan serveert caviapaté.

Sporting Flagey
#15 Radio Radzinski: Alles over Football Leaks met Nico Tanghe

Sporting Flagey

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2021 71:45


Ja, het was een crimineel slechte wedstrijd tegen Kortrijk. En ja, het is dit weekend clásico. Maar er was ook onthullend nieuws over de transferdeals van Tielemans, Mitrovic, Mbemba en Trebel. En over Bayat, Henrotay en Zahavi. Het voetbal is doodziek en bij Anderlecht kwamen er een hoop dubieuze praktijken samen. Nico Tanghe, journalist van De Standaard, dook in duizenden Football Leaks-documenten en komt ons meer vertellen over de puzzel die hij aan de hand daarvan probeerde te leggen.

Sermons – Covenant Grace Baptist Church
Luke 10:1-16: Preparation for ministry: The trust we exercise

Sermons – Covenant Grace Baptist Church

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2020


Phillip Ryken tells the story of ‘The China Gospel Fellowship—also known as Tanghe—is a large network of Chinese house churches. Early in 1994 the fellowship began collecting donations for a special missionary trip. Since most of the group’s members live in poverty, their giving was sacrificial. People sold their chickens or gave up money they had been saving for marriage. No matter what the cost, they wanted God to be glorified in China. When sufficient funds had been raised, the fellowship held a worship service at which they commissioned seventy young evangelists to go out two-by-two and preach the gospel in the far provinces of China. The missionaries were young and single, some of them still in their teens. Given only enough money for a one-way journey, they were told to trust God to provide for their needs. This trust was well placed, for God was faithful to provide. Six months later all of the missionaries returned home safely, having established new churches in twenty-two of China’s thirty provinces. In sponsoring this mission, the Tanghe were carrying out the Great Commission to go into all the world and preach the gospel. They were also following the example of Jesus Christ, who “appointed seventy-two others and sent them on ahead of him, two by two, into every town and place where he himself was about to go” (Luke 10:1).’1 Luke 10:1-16 tells us the story of the second wave of disciples being sent out to Israel, the sending of the 70/72, depending on which ancient manuscript you use. Many like 70 because there are 70 nations in the table of nations in Gen. 10; or because there were 70 descendant of Jacob that went to Egypt when Joseph was 2nd in command; or because Moses appointed 70 elders of the people... Read More Source

Nutricast
Tout sur les huiles essentielles avec Wim Tanghe de Ladrôme laboratoire

Nutricast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2020 45:22


De plus en plus populaires, les huiles essentielles n'en restent pas moins des produits complexes et puissants qui méritent qu’on leur accorde une attention toute particulière. C'est chose faite avec cette émission qui leur est consacrée. Wim Tanghe, pdg de Ladrôme laboratoire et Céline Hovette, conseillère en aromathérapie, naturopathe et coach en nutrition, nous expliquent en détails les critères de sélection d'une bonne huile essentielle, leurs vertus mais aussi leurs dangers et les précautions indispensables à prendre avant toute utilisation.  

De Vrienden Van Vanoo De Podcast
Lockdown #51 Late Night Met Comedytoekomst (met Stef Vanpoucke, Frederik Turpyn en Jonathan Tanghe)

De Vrienden Van Vanoo De Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2020 146:13


Zaterdag 3 mei 2020 Gewoon over comedytoekomst gesproken, allez vooral Stef en Frederik. Jonathan en ik wisten af en toe ook eens iets te zeggen. Voor iedereen die Skype al door en door kent, begint de podcast echt na 8 minuten. Blijf leven!

PodKat Beauté
Ladrôme laboratoire - Fondateur Wim Tanghe : huiles essentielles, huiles végétales Bio

PodKat Beauté

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2020 68:51


Podcast beauté avec la société d'huiles essentielles et huiles végétales : ladrôme laboratoire - fondateur Wim Tanghe et ses collaborateurs Stéphanie et Joël au marketing

De Vrienden Van Vanoo De Podcast
VVVPodcast (88) met Bert Goethals (en sidekick Jonathan Tanghe)

De Vrienden Van Vanoo De Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2019 77:38


Donderdag 17 oktober 2019, Kuurne Stilte voor de storm, volgende week zondag is het zo ver: de VVVPodcast Live 100 Afleveringen Special XXL. Ik wordt bij deze uitdaging bijgestaan door de VVVPodcast Live Band, mijn eigen band voor één avond. Frontman van de band is Bert Goethals. De VVVPodcast Live Band toont verdacht veel gelijkenissen met Sister May. Sidekick Jonathan Tanghe is ondertussen aan het revalideren en heeft terug wat comedynieuws. Veel luisterplezier! Tickets nog steeds verkrijgbaar via: https://www.schouwburgkortrijk.be/programma/858/De_Vrienden_Van_Vanoo_De_Podcast_Producties/VVVPodcast_Live_100_Afl_Special_XXL/

De Vrienden Van Vanoo De Podcast
VVVPodcast (76) met Karel Michiels (en sidekick Jonathan Tanghe)

De Vrienden Van Vanoo De Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2019 117:07


Vrijdag 10 mei 2019, Noorderwijk De meeste gasten in deze podcast zijn comedians, dus het is dan ook logisch dat ik uiteindelijk ook terechtkwam bij dé comedyrecensent van Vlaanderen, Karel Michiels. Jonathan Tanghe vervoegt nu ook het sidekickteam omdat niemand anders kon. We hebben het onder andere over de legalisering van softdrugs, Xander De Rycke, reggae.be en ghostwriting. Het laatste half uur is enkel met Jonathan Tanghe opgenomen op een trein. Veel luisterplezier!

veel sidekick vlaanderen vrijdag xander de rycke tanghe
Het Mag Gezegd Worden
#26 alcazar gringo

Het Mag Gezegd Worden

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2019 37:52


Deze week zijn we vereerd dat we niemand minder dan Julien, alcazar gringo, Tanghe nog eens mogen verwelkomen op onze podcast. Jules speelt micro en gitaar bij JAKOMO en Denali Wrench en is een spilfiguur in het Brusselse muzieklabel: ET!KET records. De reden dat we Julien vroegen om nog eens terug te komen -zie aflevering 8-, was dat we vonden dat we niet genoeg, diepgaande vragen hebben kunnen stellen. En dat we op dat vlak nog wat op onze honger zijn blijven zitten. Bij deze maken we dat helemaal goed en doen we een deep dive in wat we allemaal willen weten over zijn label, zijn bands, maar vooral ook, over hem zelf.

Winteruur podcast
Martine Tanghe (Seizoen 4 - Aflevering 77)

Winteruur podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2019 8:15


In Winteruur brengt een gast zijn favoriete tekst aan op de sofa bij Wim Helsen. Een ode aan het geschreven woord. Van maandag- tot donderdagavond op Canvas en online te bekijken op VRT NU.

Bronze Metalist
Bronze Metalist Ep. 40: Rheia

Bronze Metalist

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2019 52:28


This album is not about Rhea Perlman. Just throwing that out there. Talking Points: Shock Mounts, Mud, Matthew Makalakahookahhonahey, Joe, Rheia (oathbreaker), Rheia (Titan, mother of the gods), Deathwish Records, New Headphones

Women's Wealth: The Middle Way
Kelli Tanghe and Team Ari: Pushing for Inclusion, One Race at a Time

Women's Wealth: The Middle Way

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2018 13:14


Kelli Tanghe and Team Ari: Pushing for Inclusion, One Race at a Time Kelli Tanghe promised herself that when her daughter Arianna, who has cerebral palsy and is legally blind, took her first steps on her own after years of therapy, she’d lace up her sneakers and start to run. Little did she know the journey that would follow. When Ari entered middle school, she voiced her disappointment being left on the sidelines in gym class and desire to compete in sports just like her older brother and sister. In order to get Ari off the bench and into the action, in 2012, Kelli pushed her daughter in her wheelchair in a 5k race. Since, they’ve crossed over 60 finish lines together, including multiple marathons, all while raising awareness for the inclusion of physically challenged and assisted athletes. Kelli is able to push herself through the miles thanks to encouraging words from Ari, who feels like her “disability disappears” when she races with her mom. Tune in as Kelli discusses how, even with the obstacles, Arianna blesses her life and inspires her every day.   Join us every other week on Women's Wealth: The Middle Way®, a radio show aimed at helping women navigate questions about work, money, and family. You can find us on http://www.womensradio.com/author/lhurd, and https://womenswealth.podbean.com, on the SoundCloud Apps for iPhone and Android, https://soundcloud.com/womenswealthmiddleway and Spotify. See you in two weeks!

Guild of Sommeliers Podcast
Blind Tasting—Chris Tanghe and Geoff Kruth

Guild of Sommeliers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2017 54:13


This month we go back to everyone's favorite topic of blind tasting with Master Sommeliers Chris Tanghe and Geoff Kruth. Each take on three wines and a surprise wine that might be a bit 'off the grid.'

That's Not Metal
TNM Extra: Oathbreaker (Caro Tanghe), Powered By Marshall

That's Not Metal

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2017 61:39


After releasing one of the most groundbreaking albums in the recent history of rock music, Beez sits down with Caro Tanghe of Oathbreaker to discuss their landmark album, Rheia, just how far a person is willing to push themselves physically and mentally for their art and how you difficult it is to take art that delves into the darkest parts of your emotions on the road and onto the stage. This is an interview not to be missed. That’s Not Metal is powered by Marshall. The world’s leading amps, effects pedals, headphones and more are available at shop.marshallamps.com #liveformusic

powered oathbreaker beez tanghe rheia not metal
Wine Without Worry
The Versatility of Sherry With Master Sommelier Christopher Tanghe

Wine Without Worry

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2014 29:31


Is Sherry one of the world’s most versatile wines? Master Sommelier Chris Tanghe makes the case. Also tune in for a further exploration of Spain, discover the next big thing in Washington wine, and find out how Tanghe’s culinary background informs his wine career.

Wine Without Worry – Jameson Fink
Wine Without Worry – The Versatility of Sherry With Master Sommelier Chris Tanghe

Wine Without Worry – Jameson Fink

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2014 30:12


Is Sherry one of the world’s most versatile wines? Master Sommelier Chris Tanghe makes the case during our discussion at Seattle’s Aragona, where he is Wine and Service Director. Also tune in for a further exploration of Spain, discover the next big thing in Washington wine, and find out how Tanghe’s culinary background informs his wine career. … Read more about this episode...