Chairman Mao asked Ye Jianying to find Mo Xiong and arrange work no matter what was wrong

Mondo History Updated on 2024-02-04

In 1949, he gave an order to the secretary of the Guangdong Provincial Party Committee, telling him to find a person who had made a significant contribution to the Chinese revolution no matter what.

This man played a crucial role in the early days of the Red Army's Long March, helping the Red Army pass safely through the first and second lines of blockade of the Kuomintang reactionaries. He held secret talks not only with the Red Army, but also with the Cantonese Army.

So, who is this person? Under what conditions did this secret meeting take place?

Mo Xiong's legendary revolutionary career Mo Xiong, the commander of the Guangdong Army, participated in the Northern Expedition. Because he was dissatisfied with the Kuomintang launching the April 12 counter-revolutionary coup, he was demoted to Nanxiong, Shaoguan, as the county magistrate.

He repeatedly approached *** and others and expressed his willingness to join the Communist Party. Ye Shuai and others repeatedly mobilized Mo Xiong, and Mo Xiong finally agreed to continue to lurk within the Kuomintang. This arrangement later paid off.

* In the fifth anti-encirclement and suppression operation in the Soviet zone, the Red Army suffered heavy losses. The top level of the Kuomintang held a secret meeting in Nanchang, and Mo Xiong participated as a representative of one side. At the meeting, the Kuomintang top brass secretly set up the strategy and tactics of encircling Ruijin by using iron barrels from around Ruijin to encircle Ruijin.

The Red Army did not know anything about this change in the enemy. Mo Xiong saw it in his eyes and was anxious in his heart, thinking about how to send this top-secret information out. He decided to paralyze the enemy, on the one hand, to sneak around within the Kuomintang, and on the other hand, to send his henchmen to send this top-secret information out.

Mo Xiong thought about it, so he had to send his adjutant to send it out.

Mo Xiong was a brilliant lieutenant who wittily used all sorts of disguises to get through the enemy's roadblocks, from peasants to beggars, even at the cost of disfigurement. His efforts were exchanged for key intelligence, which ultimately helped the Red Army's top brass make the decision to break through the westward expedition ahead of schedule, allowing the Red Army to successfully avoid the enemy's encirclement and embark on the road of the Long March.

Mo Xiong's contribution was highly praised by *** and Ye Shuai, who believed that Mo Xiong had made an important contribution to the Chinese Revolution. His wisdom and courage enabled the Red Army to negotiate with the Cantonese army, laying the foundation for China's future.

Mo Xiong is a true hero, and his story will always be remembered.

The Red Army bid farewell to the masses and embarked on the road of the Long March. Mo Xiong's intelligence shattered the Kuomintang army's ironclad strategy, but the Kuomintang had already set up the first and second blockade lines at Nanxiong and Lechang.

Mo Xiong once again stood up and negotiated for the Red Army and the Cantonese Army. The Cantonese army was not interested in fighting the Red Army, they were only interested in doing business. What is less known is that the Red Army used tungsten ore from southern Jiangxi to secretly trade with the Cantonese army in northern Guangdong.

The Red Army exchanged tungsten ore for grain and **, and the Guangdong Army sold tungsten ore ** to foreigners, and obtained advanced ** and large sums of ** from foreigners. Based on this relationship, the Cantonese army had no interest in fighting the Red Army.

Mo Xiong was well aware of this, and with his prestige in the Cantonese army, he facilitated negotiations between the representatives of the Red Army and the Cantonese army in a small peasant courtyard in southern Gansu. As a result of the negotiations, the Cantonese army agreed not to fight the Red Army as long as the Red Army did not enter the hinterland of Guangdong, and to give way for the Red Army to pass through.

Representatives of the Red Army also said that the Red Army was just a pretext. During this secret meeting, the representatives of the Red Army signed an agreement with the Cantonese army: The Cantonese army would give up a passage in the mountainous areas of northern Guangdong for the Red Army to pass through secretly, and the two armies would not attack each other, but would only fire their guns into the sky to show the Kuomintang top brass.

A secret meeting between the Red Army and the Cantonese Army, because of its high secrecy, was known only to people at the level of division commanders of the Cantonese Army. As a result, when the Red Army passed through northern Guangdong, some sporadic battles broke out with various branches of the Cantonese army.

However, after high-level communication between the two sides, the Cantonese army opened a road in northern Guangdong, which allowed the Red Army to easily break through the enemy's first and second blockade lines.

All of this would not have been possible without Mo Xiong's influence in the upper echelons of the Cantonese military, and he succeeded in facilitating this secret meeting. Therefore, Ye Shuai told Mo Xiong after the founding of New China that during the Long March that year, the Cantonese army gave way, and it was all up to him to mediate, and he made great contributions to the revolution.

So, what about Mo Xiong going to ** again? In March 1935, Mo Xiong was transferred to the post of Administrative Inspector and Commander of the "Suppression of the Communists" in Bijie, Guizhou, where he was responsible for "encircling, pursuing, intercepting, and intercepting" the Red Army and guerrillas of the Long March.

After arriving in Bijie, Mo Xiong appointed Lu Zhiying, an underground party member, as the chief of staff of the Security Command of the Commissioner's Office, and worked closely with Lu Zhiying to design and stabilize the commander of the 63rd Division of the ** Army stationed there, so that he could not actively "encircle and suppress" the Red Army, so that the wounded, sick and guerrillas of the Red Army could be transferred in time.

Mo Xiong: Clever Military Strategy and Selfless Dedication 1935, Red.

The 2nd and 6th Army Corps approached Bijie, and Mo Xiong used false information to skillfully enable tens of thousands of Red Army troops to rest and recuperate in Bijie, and then successfully pass through Bijie.

However, this action was discovered by Chiang Kai-shek, and he took Mo Xiong"The defense of the city was ineffective"with"Suspicion of the CCP"For this reason, he was imprisoned in the Nanjing Military Department Prison. After several months in prison, Mo Xiong was finally released by Zhang Fakui on guarantee.

From 1938 to 1947, when Mo Xiong was the commander of Shaoguan Security, most of his subordinates were underground parties. Mo Xiong used his position as a security commander to provide *** and medicine to the underground party and the Beijiang guerrillas.

He also helped the underground party and the Bac Giang Special Committee to open a pharmacy, which became a transportation station for the Bac Giang Special Committee, and provided a large amount of funds for the activities of the Bac Giang Prefectural Committee of the Communist Party of China.

In addition, Mo Xiong also obtained a large amount of top-secret information through the channels of the Kuomintang, and transmitted it to the party organization in a timely manner, avoiding major losses for the party. He also secretly sent a large amount of ammunition and supplies to the guerrilla area through Liu Qiang, and purchased 3,000 pairs of rubber shoes to send to the guerrillas.

At the same time, he also managed to rescue 5 Communist Party members. Mo Xiong's military strategy and selfless dedication have provided tremendous help to the Communist Party and its guerrillas in difficult times, and his contributions and courage deserve to be remembered and respected forever.

In his later years, Mo Xiong was in the special period of the liberation of Guangzhou. When the first secretary of the South China Branch learned that Mo Xiong was living in Hong Kong, he immediately sent Li Xuelin to Hong Kong with a handwritten letter to invite him to return to Guangzhou to work.

In November, he was appointed as the director of the Bac Giang Public Security Committee, making positive contributions to stabilizing the law and order of the Greater and Lesser Bac Giang. However, in the fifties, local peasants and agrarian reform cadres did not know much about Mo Xiong's history and demanded that he be brought back to England and Germany for mass struggle, and that he be executed on the spot.

At the critical moment, thanks to Ye Shuai's timely appearance, Mo Xiong's life was saved.

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