Speaking of Marshal ***, everyone may be familiar with it.
In his early years, he led the famous Pingjiang Uprising and served as a senior commander of the Red Army. During the period of the Eighth Route Army and the People's Liberation Army, he was the second person in the whole army except for **. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he took command of the expedition and washed away China's humiliation for nearly a hundred years.
Later, people Xi called him "Mr. Peng". Although there are many outstanding generals in our army, there are very few who can be called "bosses".
Mr. Peng experienced some painful lessons during the Red Army, especially in the Pingjiang Uprising.
In this uprising, many founding generals emerged, such as generals Li Jukui and Peng Shaohui, lieutenant generals Yao Zhe and Li Shouxuan, and so on. They were staunch communists from the very beginning and made great efforts for the revolution.
However, just like heroes always have a negative side, some despised villains have also emerged in the ranks of the Pingjiang Uprising.
Guo Bingsheng is one of them, and he is regarded as a parent.
Guo Bingsheng's father was the squad leader when he was a soldier in the Hunan Army, and the two had a deep relationship. In 1919, **because he killed a bully**, he escaped on the way and hid in Guo Deyun's house. Guo Deyun had a life-saving grace for ***, so later *** was particularly attentive to the Guo family.
However, Guo Bingsheng defected to the Kuomintang in 1932 and was eventually killed. This man, who was once treated as his own son, eventually betrayed him.
Another traitor is Kong Hezhong, who once had the same position as ***.
Kong Hezhong held important positions in the entire Red Army, but due to personality problems, he repeatedly disobeyed the orders of his superiors and brought unnecessary losses to the Red Army. Eventually, Kong Hezhong defected, surrendered to the Kuomintang, and became one of the traitors to the Red Army.
His rebellion had an extremely bad effect, leading to the defection of many Red Army generals and dealing a heavy blow to the Red Army.
The most dangerous was Lei Zhenhui, the captain of the Fourth Brigade of the Red Army. In the face of the Kuomintang's "encirclement and suppression", Lei Zhenhui wavered and tried to pull the Fourth Brigade to surrender.
At a conference, he even grabbed a pistol and aimed it at ***, but fortunately was stopped in time. Lui was eventually publicly executed, but the scene was dangerous.
In general, the Red Army went through numerous hardships and obstacles under the leadership of ***, heroes and traitors coexisted. This period of history is full of legends and deserves to be remembered.