Who first proposed the Long March?Chairman Mao changed the direction he said!

Mondo Science Updated on 2024-01-30

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In October 1934, after the failure of the fifth anti-"encirclement and suppression" in the ** Soviet region, the Red Army began the famous Long March, which spanned more than a dozen provinces and reached a total length of 25,000 miles. Who was the initiator of the Long March?Little is known about this issue. In fact, the earliest conception of the Long March was Li De, a military adviser sent by the Comintern.

As early as the spring of 1934, Li De proposed to Bogu to "prepare for a strategic migration". This is arguably the earliest version of the Long March. Because the initial strategy of the main force of the Red Army did not intend to go as far as it did later, but only prepared to go to the west of Hunan and Hubei to join up with the Red Sixth Army Corps and establish a new revolutionary base there. Who changed this original plan?That's ***

In December 1934, after the Red Army suffered a major setback, he proposed at the Liping Conference to move to Guizhou, where the enemy was relatively weak, and saved the Red Army. Chen Guanren's "The Great River Goes East: Why They Follow ***" and "The Great River Goes East: Why They Condensed Under the Banner of ***" (two books are a set) published by China ** History Publishing House record in detail this great historical transformation and the outstanding wisdom of ***.

The book has become an annual bestseller of the China History Publishing House, with sales of more than one million copies, and is deeply loved by readers, becoming a popular red history bestseller.

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