What was the final fate of the generals who voted for Japan at the Ninth National Congress of the Ku

Mondo History Updated on 2024-02-15

During the Anti-Japanese War, some Kuomintang generals defected to the Japanese army. In the end, they choose different paths and have very different endings in life. Zhang Lanfeng: Died of illness in prison reformZhang Lanfeng, in the spring of 1933, served as the commander of the 19th Army of the Chahar Anti-Japanese Allied Army. After the outbreak of the Anti-Japanese War, he served as the deputy commander of the People's Anti-Japanese Self-Defense Army in Zhecheng County, Henan, and surrendered to the Japanese army in June 1938, becoming the largest puppet army leader in eastern Henan. Before the surrender of the Japanese army, Zhang Lanfeng surrendered to Chiang Kai-shek. In January 1947, Zhang was intercepted and surrounded by the People's Liberation Army, and Zhang only led dozens of guards to flee south and was captured alive. In the spring of 1949, Zhang Lanfeng was sent to Gongdelin Prison in Beijing for reform. In the spring of 1952, he died in prison from a ruptured cerebral blood vessel. Hao Pengju: After the uprising, the rebel was killedHao Pengju once defected to Hu Zongnan, was appointed chief of staff of the 27th Army, and defected to Wang Pseudo** in 1941. After Japan's surrender, Chiang Kai-shek appointed him commander-in-chief of the newly formed Sixth Route Army. In January 1946, Hao Pengju led 4 divisions and a special service group with a total of more than 20,000 people to declare an uprising. However, in January 1947, Hao Pengju rebelled and returned to Chiang Kai-shek. In February 1947, Hao was surrounded by the People's Liberation Army, most of them were annihilated, and Hao Pengju was captured alive. During an escort, Hao Pengju tried to escape and was shot dead on the river beach. Wu Huawen: Become the commander of the People's Liberation ArmyWu Huawen was the head of Feng Yuxiang's department, the commander of the pistol brigade of Han Fuyu's department, and the commander of the Jinan garrison area. After Han Fuyu was shot by Chiang Kai-shek, Wu Huawen's pistol brigade was changed to the New Fourth Division, with Wu as the division commander. In January 1943, Wu Huawen took refuge in Wang Pseudo**. After the surrender of the Japanese army, he served as the commander of the 96th Army and the commander of the 84th Division of the Kuomintang. In September 1948, the East China Field Army besieged Jinan, and he led 20,000 troops to hold a battlefield uprising. After that, the unit was reorganized into the 35th Army of the Chinese People's Liberation Army, and he served as its commander. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, Wu Huawen served as the director of the Zhejiang Provincial Department of Communications, and served as the vice chairman of the Zhejiang Provincial Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference and a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference in 1959, and died of illness in 1962. Sun Dianying: After being captured, he fell ill and died in prisonSun Dianying created a sensational Tanglin treasure theft case in 1928. In January 1933, the Japanese army attacked Rehe, and Sun Dianying led his troops to block the Japanese army, destroying four or five hundred enemies. In the summer of 1938, Chiang Kai-shek appointed Sun as commander of the new Fifth Army. In mid-April 1943, the Japanese army swept the Taihang Mountains, and Sun Dianying surrendered to the Japanese army after the defeat. After Japan's surrender, Sun Dianying defected to Chiang Kai-shek and was appointed commander-in-chief of the newly formed Fourth Route Army. In April 1947, the People's Liberation Army besieged Tangyin City, and Sun Dianying was captured. In the fall of that year, he died of illness in prison.

Pang Bingxun: I went to Taiwan to open a restaurant to spend my daysAfter the outbreak of the Lugou Bridge Incident in 1937, he led his troops to block the 10th Division of the Japanese Army, killing and wounding a large number of Japanese soldiers, and later participated in the Battle of Taierzhuang. In May 1943, Pang Bingxun, then chairman of the Kuomintang Hebei Province, deputy commander of the Jicha Theater and commander-in-chief of the 24th Group Army, surrendered to the Japanese army. After the surrender of Japan, Chiang Kai-shek appointed the commander of the advance army. In October, Pang Bingxun's 40th Army attacked the liberated areas of North China and was annihilated by the People's Liberation Army. Later, Pang Bingxun took his aunt and a pair of children to Taiwan and opened a restaurant with others to spend his days. In January 1963, Pang Bingxun died of illness in Taipei. Sun Liangcheng: Denounced and imprisoned by the widow of a martyrIn 1942, he served as the deputy commander of the 39th Group Army of the Kuomintang and the director of the Luxi Agency, and soon surrendered to the Japanese army. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, Sun Liangcheng "surrendered" to **, and was promoted to the commander of the 107th Army in November 1948 and went to Xuzhou to participate in the Huaihai Campaign. Because he was surrounded by the People's Liberation Army, he was forced to put down **, and the troops accepted the reorganization. But he soon conspired with Liu Ruming, commander of the Kuomintang's first appeasement zone, to plan a fake uprising and a real entrapment, and arrested Zhou Ho and other members who had rebelled against him.

In April 1949, Sun Liangcheng came to Shanghai from Wuxi and lived with his little wife. After the liberation of Ningbo and Shanghai, the widow of the martyr Zhou Hao found Sun Liangcheng and reported it to the Military Management Commission. Sun Liangcheng** was imprisoned and died of illness in March 1952. Li Changjiang: He was poisoned by the Japanese army and became a wasteLi Changjiang was the deputy commander-in-chief of the Kuomintang Army's guerrilla army in the Lusu-Anhui border region. In February 1941, Li Changjiang led 8 detachments of his department to publicly surrender to the Japanese puppet. In July 1942, the leader of the Japanese army, Xiangji, forcibly invited Li Changjiang to Yangzhou for a banquet in the name of convening a meeting of the generals of the northern Jiangsu garrison. In December 1956, he died of illness in a very remote place in Jiangxi. Ye Peng: Executed by Chiang Kai-shek's orderAfter Ye Peng took over as the commander of the Wuhan garrison in 1932, he hung the "Northeast Lost Map" and used the half-cut human figure symbolizing the Japanese and the center of the red circle (alluding to the Japanese flag) as the target for live firing. The Japanese consulate raised **, and Ye Peng was removed from his post as a result. At the beginning of 1939, Ye Peng invested in Wang Jingwei's traitor group. After Japan's surrender, Ye Peng became the commander-in-chief of the Kuomintang's new Seventh Route Army. However, Chiang Kai-shek saw that Ye Peng was no longer of use and ordered his arrest. In the winter of 1946, with the approval of Chiang Kai-shek, Ye Peng was executed. Ren Yuandao: "Buy the road" with 200 gold barsRen Yuandao participated in the Xinhai Revolution and served as the commander of the Pingjin garrison, and later became a giant traitor in Wang's puppet. After Japan's surrender, Chiang Kai-shek appointed him as commander-in-chief of the advance army, and all the military and police and security teams under the former command of the puppet commander, as well as various troops in Jiangsu Province and near Nanjing, were under his command.

Later, when he saw that Wang Pseudo and the gang had been arrested, he was worried that he would also end up in this fate, so he bribed the relevant parties with 200 gold bars and moved his family to Hong Kong. In 1949, when the People's Liberation Army approached Hong Kong, he flew his family to Canada to settle down, and died of illness in 1980.

Related Pages