Thoughts on the Chinese Civil War

lightspeed

Junior Member
the CCP’s majority and crucial smuggling activities to interior China then was by the sea route of Soviet-CCP Dalian to Lidao, Shandong. according to CCP Dalian official Li Zhuping then, there were more than 10 ships, containing munitions and other resources supplies, departing from Dalian to Lidao daily. the Soviet Russians simply turned a blind eye to the CCP shipping activities, and even gave them convenience on many occasions. in Manchuria, the Soviets gave the CCP the resources supplies through the North Korea-Manchuria border. the Soviets didn’t want to give the supplies to CCP directly, in consideration of their diplomatic relationship with KMT China, so the North Korea played the transporter role here.

the CCP had some smuggling networks in Hongkong, Shanghai and elsewhere, but they weren’t that important. the businessmen would help or do business with the CCP over the commodity goods, but rarely the weapons and ammunition, the latter option risks were simply too high, not worth it at all. so in interior China, the CCP's most important resources tap/line, in particular, the munitions, was the Dalian to Lidao route. from Lidao, they would transport the resources supplies to the distribution centers to be distributed to the rest of China.
 

wtlh

Junior Member
the CCP’s majority and crucial smuggling activities to interior China then was by the sea route of Soviet-CCP Dalian to Lidao, Shandong. according to CCP Dalian official Li Zhuping then, there were more than 10 ships, containing munitions and other resources supplies, departing from Dalian to Lidao daily. the Soviet Russians simply turned a blind eye to the CCP shipping activities, and even gave them convenience on many occasions. in Manchuria, the Soviets gave the CCP the resources supplies through the North Korea-Manchuria border. the Soviets didn’t want to give the supplies to CCP directly, in consideration of their diplomatic relationship with KMT China, so the North Korea played the transporter role here.


All of this happened AFTER the CCP already controlled much of the Northern China countryside and have entered Manchuria. By that time, CCP victory was already just a matter of time. KMT simply had no solution to the CCP growth, and all of its previous military attempts did not work well, and they were losing the propaganda war, losing the economy and losing domestic support. And there was nothing in the KMT politics and organisation (other than asking for more foreign aid) that would have pointed that they could somehow make a fundamental change to the situation and turn things around. They were losing support left and right. Even the liberals started to side with the CCP.
 
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Lezt

Junior Member
Well wtlh,

You can believe what you want to.

We went from your argument that the CCP got very little aid from the soviet union; to now that the CCP got a lot of aid from the soviet union in the last stage of the war, to Lin baio's troops only receiving the aid and southern units didnt.

Fact is the CCP received a shit load of aid from the CCP. That's and indisputable truth. Which CCP army was in the south? there were no regular CCP units south of the Yangtze until 1948 during the last phase of the war.

Chin-Doihara agreement forbade KMT troops to Hebei, i.e. next to Beijing. i.e. it is outside Manchuria. if you know the Geography of China, the only defensible pass is north of Beijing in Hebei; the next one is the Yangtze river. i.e. the KMT was not in northern China as the defense against the Japanese would be at the Yangtze; as the Song/Ming had done against the Mongols/Manchus. But honestly, does it matter? you want the KMT to be there with a strong force to be defeated by the CCP with peasants; well, why not show which unit were there? what training had they have? does the Nationalist Archive in Taipei colaborate with the Communist Archive in Beijing?

What the soviet archive have said differently than the CCP version of the story is:
Japanese arms were captured by the USSR and given to the CCP; The CCP didn't just aquire the Japanese arms from surrendering Japanese. Also, soviet block weapons and aid were sent in large quantity to the CCP.

Also, I have no idea why you keep arguing about pre 1945? I have stated many times that I am looking at post 1945. Why does it matter that the CCP was able to survive when the Japanese were giving the KMT a spanking and that the Americans/Soviets forced the KMT to not fight the CCP or they withdraw aid? That's a fact.

My post number 44:
The Chinese civil war was a battle of ideology and a struggle between social class. The fact that China came out of WW2 favored the communists as you have said, they have manpower from the poor. But what good is that manpower if you cannot feed and arm them? That ability, industrial base lies predominantly with the KMT but the majority of which were destroyed by the Japanese and stripped away (manchuria) by the soviets. i.e. the key advantage that the KMT had were largely dissipated at the resumption of the civil war.

I have been talking about post 1945 for the longest of times.

So sure, the CCP was able to smuggle in some arms, but that wasn't sufficient to wage offensive war. There is a reason why the CCP wasn't able to repel the 5th encirclement and spawn the long march.

And you think that the soviet union would give the KMT supplies had they been in northern China? I don't see how you can argue that because of brilliant leadership, the CCP was next to the soviet union when the hostilities resumed and thus received the supplies.

Anyhow, I agree that we disagree.
 

wtlh

Junior Member
We went from your argument that the CCP got very little aid from the soviet union; to now that the CCP got a lot of aid from the soviet union in the last stage of the war, to Lin baio's troops only receiving the aid and southern units didnt.

I have from the beginning said that the PLA received large amount of weapons in Manchuria from the Soviet.

And I have at the beginning, said, that however, that it benefitted mostly of Lin Biao's units, when Huaihai kicked off, the majority of the PLA units involved did not benefit that much from the supplies.

They did start receiving the supplies at the latter stages, but numerous battles have already been won before significant supplies from the North East arrived.


What the soviet archive have said differently than the CCP version of the story is:
Japanese arms were captured by the USSR and given to the CCP; The CCP didn't just aquire the Japanese arms from surrendering Japanese. Also, soviet block weapons and aid were sent in large quantity to the CCP.

The CCP version of the story clearly stated that they obtained the Japanese weapons and supplies FROM THE SOVIETS. Which were that of the Kwantong army supplies the soviets captured along with Manchuria. And I have been repeating this to the death... I am not sure which version of the CCP account were you looking at.

As far as I have been able to see, there is really nothing significant that from the Soviet archives that differs or are new from the CCP official version of events.

The Soviet block weapons given to them were much less in quantity, and it had been reported that they had not been in the best of conditions. The PLA soldiers generally preferred captured KMT weapons over the soviet or Japanese ones.

There were NO orders issued PLA wide on standardising arms until the Korean war. This was because they still relied heavily on captured arms, and all arms sources they could find or get their hands on.

There was NO evidence of large amount of Soviet bloc weapons being used by units in the Huaihai campaign, or in fact most of the CCP's major battles with the KMT---and I have said that before in the previous post.

Chin-Doihara agreement forbade KMT troops to Hebei, i.e. next to Beijing. i.e. it is outside Manchuria. if you know the Geography of China, the only defensible pass is north of Beijing in Hebei; the next one is the Yangtze river. i.e. the KMT was not in northern China as the defense against the Japanese would be at the Yangtze; as the Song/Ming had done against the Mongols/Manchus.

Chin-Doihara agreement stopped to apply when China and Japan went on fully fledged at killing each other. And certainly stopped applying when China formally declared war in 42.

What you do not seems to get, is that when the KMT pulled back from Northern China, the CCP was not much present in much of the region either. They were basically trapped in couple of pockets. Yes, Yanan was in North China, and because of that, you seems to reason that the CCP was already very much owning North China --- the size of half of Europe.

The reality is that, there was power vacuum in Chinese politics in the Japanese occupied regions. Independent guerrilla groups had formed everywhere, and BOTH CCP and KMT were directing guerrilla operations there. However, the CCP managed to win over more guerrilla groups and local population and establish a solid power base there, while the KMT lost hearts and minds. I really do not want to repeat myself again.

But honestly, does it matter? you want the KMT to be there with a strong force to be defeated by the CCP with peasants; well, why not show which unit were there? what training had they have? does the Nationalist Archive in Taipei colaborate with the Communist Archive in Beijing?

Seriously I do not understand what you mean. Which part of "winning over hearts and minds" did you not understand? See above.

Also, I have no idea why you keep arguing about pre 1945? I have stated many times that I am looking at post 1945. Why does it matter that the CCP was able to survive when the Japanese were giving the KMT a spanking and that the Americans/Soviets forced the KMT to not fight the CCP or they withdraw aid? That's a fact.

It is like talking about the last 10 minutes of a 90 minutes game, and say you have seen the whole game.

And the rest of the 80 minutes did matter, because the CCP had gone from 4:0 down, to 4:3 in that time.

The CCP did not just "survive", they thrived and expanded, and built the foundation for the the 45--49 show down. And it had to do a lot more than just "luck".

So sure, the CCP was able to smuggle in some arms, but that wasn't sufficient to wage offensive war. There is a reason why the CCP wasn't able to repel the 5th encirclement and spawn the long march.

No, as I have said, again, before, it was the medical supplies that they lacked the most, and relied heavily on smuggling.

Arms was mostly obtained from captures, at least, up until the much touted "Soviet supplies". They have survived through the 30s, the WW2 and won many battles against the KMT forces before they got any much touted soviet supplies. When fighting with the Japanese, they concentrated on raiding Japanese logistic lines and supply routes. I do not understand why you think that they will have logistic issues because of this. They were not fighting and capturing arms of 10 different armies with different standards all in one place.

CCP was unable to repel the 5th encirclement because they were suffering from a string of wrong strategies, and their numbers and morale had been exhausted by the leadership insisting on fighting with the KMT square on, and adopting some orthodox communist policies.

They had made corrections to their strategies and grown in strength since and after the long march, and was in a much healthier situation at 45.

And you think that the soviet union would give the KMT supplies had they been in northern China? I don't see how you can argue that because of brilliant leadership, the CCP was next to the soviet union when the hostilities resumed and thus received the supplies.

What? No, the Soviet union will only supply KMT arms if KMT ditched the Americans. I don't get your line of logic.

I was referring to, if I guessed correctly what you actually meant, that CCP having established a power base in northern China, adjacent to Manchuria, had given them the advantage in accessing Manchuria, and establishing physical links with the USSR, ahead of the KMT could do, which would block the link with USSR from happening.

"Brilliant leadership" was evident in how the CCP manoeuvred politically to the position it had in north of China before the Soviets were announcing their handover of Manchuria. I am repeating myself again, north China was not CCP's by right, they had to win it, and KMT had every chance and opportunity to do the same, and in terms of resources it even had an advantage, but they failed to do so. The CCP political skills, strategies and organisation made the situation it was.

Anyhow, I agree that we disagree.

I think the main difference between us is that:

I believed that human factors: strategy, organisation and support are more important in winning a conflict, especially a civil war. I believed that with these fundamentals correct, others, like manpower, outside support, arms, supplies etc. would soon follow.

While you believed that arms is the largest determining factor in any conflict. Therefore, you refuse to believe that the CCP won the Chinese civil war ultimately because of clearer, more realistic and better strategies and superior organisation, but must depend on the arms factor.
 
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I think the main difference between us is that:

I believed that human factors: strategy, organisation and support are more important in winning a conflict, especially a civil war. I believed that with these fundamentals correct, others, like manpower, outside support, arms, supplies etc. would soon follow.

While you believed that arms is the largest determining factor in any conflict. Therefore, you refuse to believe that the CCP won the Chinese civil war ultimately because of clearer, more realistic and better strategies and superior organisation, but must depend on the arms factor.

to me, wtlh seems to present what
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said: "Achieve victory not by numbers, but by knowing how" ("Воевать не числом, а умением."), while Lezt seems to look from the point view of logistics (and I tend to believe him more :)
 

solarz

Brigadier
to me, wtlh seems to present what
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said: "Achieve victory not by numbers, but by knowing how" ("Воевать не числом, а умением."), while Lezt seems to look from the point view of logistics (and I tend to believe him more :)

Logistics cannot be divorced from organization and leadership. In fact, I would argue that the CPC had an excellent logistic network, despite their lack of access to heavy hardware. On the opposite end, the KMT had dismal logistics, despite being supplied with superior equipment.
 

delft

Brigadier
From #44:
The Chinese civil war was a battle of ideology and a struggle between social class. The fact that China came out of WW2 favored the communists as you have said, they have manpower from the poor. But what good is that manpower if you cannot feed and arm them? That ability, industrial base lies predominantly with the KMT but the majority of which were destroyed by the Japanese and stripped away (manchuria) by the soviets. i.e. the key advantage that the KMT had were largely dissipated at the resumption of the civil war.
The peasants were well able to feed PLA. They grew the food. They just didn't deliver it in cardboard boxes.
 

Equation

Lieutenant General
I say a network of spies and intelligence gathering are just as important as battles. Mao sent spies into various KMT defense department during the war to gather intel on KMT movements and political involvement.
 

lightspeed

Junior Member
All of this happened AFTER the CCP already controlled much of the Northern China countryside and have entered Manchuria. By that time, CCP victory was already just a matter of time. KMT simply had no solution to the CCP growth, and all of its previous military attempts did not work well, and they were losing the propaganda war, losing the economy and losing domestic support. And there was nothing in the KMT politics and organisation (other than asking for more foreign aid) that would have pointed that they could somehow make a fundamental change to the situation and turn things around. They were losing support left and right. Even the liberals started to side with the CCP.


by what time, when the CCP victory was inevitable ? most historians would agree that the CCP victory was inevitable, only after the Huaihai campaign. in North China ( the Beiping area ), the Fu Zuoyi’s army was struggling but held out in different circumstances, and certainly hadn’t faced the risk of annihilation by the CCP until late 1948, the Pingjin campaign.

the bad policies were the KMT’s own worst enemy. according to Chen Lifu, CCP spy Ji Choading recommended to T. V. Soong to implement the disastrous 200 to 1, the Puppet to Chinese dollar exchange rate. Ji Chaoding persistent bad monetary policies resulted in the people turning against the KMT government, and the gradual loss of public support for the KMT. the KMT’s defeat was due to so many things.
 

Phoenix_Rising

Junior Member
I say a network of spies and intelligence gathering are just as important as battles. Mao sent spies into various KMT defense department during the war to gather intel on KMT movements and political involvement.
Some correction & fix.
1. KMT's failure was rooted in the guiding ideology and philosophy. KMT was doomed when they betrayed Dr. Sun's idality and chose grand landlords&comprador as the base of their rule. The CCP was weak, but their weltanschauung and methodology was far more scientific and advanced, so its victory was only a matter of time. Inspiring people's trust and admiration, superiority of intelligence, marvellous tactics and joint strike, spirit of bravery and dedication etc. were all apperances come out from it.
2. Chairman Mao had never been in charge of the secret frontline. The supreme leader of CCP's deepcover network had always been Premier Zhou Enlai.
3. Most of them were not "sent" into KMT, actually, they betrayed their side and come to CCP. Then they develop the network under the coordinate and lead of underground CCP branches as well as become part of them. It was not difficult to find a gatekeeper hence the CCP was associated with KMT deeply because of their coopration in 1921-27. For instance:
Chairman Mao was elected an Alternate Central Executive Committee in Jan.1924 then got appointed as Acting Propoganda Minister in Oct.1925, both positions were in K M T! He was one of KMT's inner circle. Incredible, huh?
Most(if not all) of high commanders of KMT's Central Army were graduates from Whampoa Military Academy. They call Chiang Kai-shek "principal" instead of "generalissimo" or "chief commissioner", and guess how Zhou En-lai was addressed? "Director".
Two of ten Marshals, Lin Biao(林彪) and Xu Xiangqian(徐向前), were Whompoa graduates, and other two, Ye Jianying(叶剑英) and Nie Rongzhen(聂荣臻) were instructors! Senior Admiral Chen Geng(陈赓) had been NRA commander and was deeply trusted by Chiang for he saved Chiang's life in a war against warlord Chen Jiongming in 1925. Lieutenant General Han Liancheng(韩练成) did the same in another chaotic war in 1930, he kept himself covered and fought in the core of KMT until his "uprise" in 1948.
Since CCP leaders and PLA high commanders had long-term relationship with their peer within KMT, their party and army was far more weaker, why they insist the revolution in hopeless situations? Why it was the KMT but not CCP elites who defected? Why CCP deepcover network survived then get rebuilt again and again, and KMT had never achived to build one?
The answer is that these KMT renegades kept faithful in saving the nation, they had believed that the the Three People's Principles could reach that. However, the realily they witnessed was completely opposite. Under Chiang's lead, the KMT betrayed Sun's idality.
The first break up was marked by the massacre began in Apr.12, 1927. You Americans can never understand how inhuman the class conflict could be. The number of KMT party member was more than 1210000(only less than 50000 among them were CCP). Then, in March 1928, this number decreased to 220000. That was ONE MILLION registed party members! Just gone. Most victims were NOT CCP, they were faithful beholders of Three People Principles and member of KMT's primary-level organization!
Nationalism squeezed comprador's space of selling out China's benefit, Democracy threat the old intellectuals' monopoly in government, People's livelihood required a distribution of the ownership of lands, of course landlords gonna kill anyone who dare to do that. They gathered, managed and chose their spokesman, Chiang Kai-shek, supported him with their resource of funds, public voice and social administration. A cruel assualt was launched, they won. Chiang bribed other warlords' officers, easily bought millitary victory with money from Song&Kong's clan. The landlords happily maintained their occupation after eliminating all peasent's association(both KMT and CCP). The foreign powers was glad to continue enjoying privilege.
Everyone got one share, everyone was happy. So who was suffering the tax higher than the whole harvest? Who was sobbing when the debt increased after entire year of hard work? Who was dying because not even treated as human?
Those most capable and aspiring people were serving the KMT for the sacred creed: the greater good of the entire nation, not the minority's interest. Hence the KMT was corrupted by what it should overthrow and give up their ideality, it no longer deseve their service. Those KMT-origined spies were in different side against CCP, but shared the same stand: rescuing Chinese people from foreign and domestic enemies. So, it is easy to understand why they abandoned their handsome life and risking death to overthrow KMT. They turned to someone who still upholds the banner.
 
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