Echoes of the Xiangxi Battle
10/5/2005 14:57
Zhou Guoxuan said there is one day he will never forget. It was May 8,
1945, the turning point in China's War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression
(1937-1945). The Xiangxi Battle in western Hunan started on April 9, 1945.
Japan mobilized five divisions and three mixed brigades - a total of 80,000
soldiers. Their mission was to seize an air base in Zhijiang. China assembled
20 divisions, about 200,000 soldiers, and deployed more than 400 battle
planes. The Japanese army quickly marched toward their destination with
little resistance at first. They encountered determined Chinese forces on May 1
near Xuefeng Mountain. They were later defeated at that spot. "I can still
recall on that day 60 years ago the Chinese and US air forces aroused batches of
battle planes to bombard the positions of the Japanese army in my hometown and
nearby Qingyan Village," the 75-year-old man said. "The fierce battle started
at dawn. The roar of guns and artillery did not cease until 4 in the afternoon.
My pals and I then went to the battlefield," he continued. "When we saw the
corpses of Japanese soldiers scattered far and wide on the hillsides and fields,
we all exclaimed with the greatest excitement 'the Japs were defeated and we
won."' His fellow villager Xiao Yansheng was even more excited when recalling
the battle. Xiao pointed at a forest on Xuefeng Mountain and said he saw the
planes of the Chinese and US air forces come one squadron after another on May 8
around Jiangkou and Qingyan. They bombed and strafed Japanese forces. "The
Japanese army had no anti-aircraft weapons and scampered off like frightened
rats. The bodies of Japanese soldiers were seen all around the mountain," Xiao
said. "The Japanese army were routed like an ebb tide. No one expected them
to lose the battle so quickly." Xiao Dongliang, researcher of the Hunan
Academy of Social Sciences, said the battle was important for more than just
military reasons. "It was the first thorough victory Chinese people had in
battling foreign intruders in more than a century," Xiao said. Xiao, an
expert on Chinese anti-Japanese history, also said "the turning point of the
Xiangxi Battle on May 8, 1945, was a prelude to China's counterattack against
Japan." China lost 7,737 men in the Xiangxi Battle. Nearly 12,500 Japanese
soldiers were killed and another 23,300 were wounded. Senior military
officials from both China and the United States went to the battlefield about 10
days later to commend the troops on their success. Xiao said the Xiangxi
Battle proved China played an important role in defeating fascism during World
War II.
Xinhua news
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