Among the founding major generals awarded in September 1955, one of them came from the Sanye system of "Chen Su", and later became the deputy political commissar of the Shanghai Garrison District, and this person was Li Binshan. Major General Li Binshan, who made outstanding achievements when he was young, originally had an unlimited future, but he was in the last century.
What is it about the mistakes of principle committed in the sixties and seventies, and in 1980 the organization stripped him of all the honors of his military career?
Li Binshan, a native of Pingjiang, Hunan, joined the party in 1929 and fought actively in the Hunan, Hubei and Jiangxi regions during the Red Army. During the all-out War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, Li Binshan became a cadre of the New Fourth Army, and successively served as the head of the Independent Regiment and the political commissar of the 3rd Vertical and 9th Detachment. In the War of Liberation, he was appreciated by superiors such as **, Su Yu, and Tao Yong, and became a division-level cadre in Sanye, and was promoted to deputy political commissar of the 23rd Army during the War to Resist US Aggression and Aid Korea. According to his qualifications and military merits, there is no controversy that Li Binshan was awarded the rank of founding major general in September 1955.
In the late fifties, Li Binshan continued to be reused and became the second deputy political commissar of the Shanghai Garrison District. The life in the bustling big city did not make Li Binshan change his hard living habits, he was still frugal and self-disciplined, and during this period, Major General Li Binshan's reputation among the military and civilians was still very good. However, in the 10 years when the party spirit and stance were truly tested, Li Binshan completely lost himself, joined the power struggle in which he should not participate, did a lot of bad things, and fell deeper and deeper in the later stage.
Liao Zhengguo, then commander of the Shanghai Garrison District, was also the founding major general. When the storm came, he was clear-headed and kind-hearted, and took measures to protect many cadres and comrades of local organs, thus becoming a thorn in the side of the relevant groups. They used Li Binshan as a pawn to oppose and suppress Liao Zhengguo. And Li Binshan tried his best after being **, he became a **** cadre, weaving materials in the garrison area and using fighting methods ** Commander Liao, the upright Liao Zhengguo was falsely accused of "counter-revolutionary" and deprived of military power and position. In the end, Liao Zhengguo died early in April 1972, and he was not rehabilitated during his lifetime.
What's even more outrageous is that Li Binshan actually planned and prepared a rebellion. In October 1976, after Hua, Ye and other leaders worked hard to stabilize the situation in Beijing, they purged the remnants of the relevant groups throughout the country. Shanghai, as the "base camp" of those people, is naturally the focus of the clean-up. Realizing that he had made a serious mistake, Li Binshan not only did not repent, but also feared being liquidated, so he distributed guns and live ammunition to the militiamen in Shanghai, incited the crowd against the Shanghai garrison, and plotted to launch a rebellion. When General Su Zhenhua was sent to Shanghai to control the situation, Li Binshan even tried to continue the confrontation and use violent means to "solve" the problem.
At this point, Li Binshan, the founding major general who once made outstanding contributions, has no turning back. Su Zhenhua and other cadres adopted thunderous measures and quickly eliminated the unrestful forces. * collapsed, and the rebellion in which Li Binshan participated was also crushed. In 1980, the relevant elements were severely punished by law, and Li Binshan was convicted of counter-revolutionary crimes for attempting to plot a rebellion. The organization remembered his merits during the war years, but only deprived him of all the honors he had received in his military career, expelled him from the party, and did not really put Li Binshan in prison. In May 1995, 83-year-old Li Binshan died of illness in Shanghai.