Chapter 1265 The Crisis of the United States
1265 Marshall thought that Roosevelt had come to announce his dismissal, but he did not expect that he had come to ask about Hu Bin. Pen & Fun & Pavilion www.biquge.info
When he heard this, he immediately said that he had indeed discussed this issue, but now this question is still very difficult!
"It's very difficult, now Hu Bin has captured the Japanese soldiers, according to Hu Bin's telegram, he wants to sell those prisoners, and sell them to the Japanese! Are you okay with this kind of behavior? Roosevelt heard it, looked at Marshall and asked.
"No, but what can we do? Your Excellency the President, if you have a better idea, please say it, I will consider it, if I can, I will go to negotiate with Hu Bin, if there is no better way, I have no choice! Marshall began.
"General Marshall, I think that you, as the chief of staff of our army, should have your own views and insistence on such a thing!" One of Roosevelt's aides came over and said to Marshall.
"What are you, and what right do you have to question me?" Marshall's face changed suddenly, and he spoke directly to the staff.
"You!" That staff member was a little confused by Marshall's visit like this.
"General Marshall?" Roosevelt shouted as he looked at him dissatisfied.
"Come on, ask them to go out, this is a military stronghold, these staff members are all driven out of me!" Marshall didn't give Roosevelt face at all, and shouted directly at the door.
Immediately, a few guards came in front of the staff.
"General Marshall, what the hell do you mean?" The staff looked at Marshall with dissatisfaction.
"Wait a minute, General Marshall, what do you mean by that?" Roosevelt also looked at Marshall dissatisfied.
"As I said, they don't have the qualifications to enter here, this is a military powerhouse!" Marshall looked at Roosevelt and said, then said to the guards: "Go to the gate, if not, take coercive measures!" ”
"Yes!" When the guards heard this, they immediately responded, and several of the staff members could only stand up, glared at Marshall fiercely, and then left, and soon the office fell into silence.
"You won?" Roosevelt asked, looking at Marshall.
"Mi Guo won!" Marshall spoke, then stared at Roosevelt.
"Mr. Roosevelt, I want to ask, do you respect the soldiers of our country? Do you feel that they sacrificed their lives for the sake of the United States, do you deserve respect? Marshall looked at Roosevelt and asked.
"Of course I respect, what do you mean?" Roosevelt asked, looking at Marshall.
"Do you respect? If you respect it, you won't let those staff members say in your ear every day, our soldiers are useless, our generals are useless, we have been defeating the war, we dare not fight in the war, we have been retreating, is the army useless?
Your Excellency the President, we are useless, we have also taken our weapons to the front to fight, we have sacrificed many excellent generals and soldiers, we also know the gap between us and the Japanese generals, we are also learning, we are learning to fight.
Also, did Hu Bin come to help us fight the war, and now he is still killing the Japanese, not killing our Americans, right? Marshall stood up and shouted at Roosevelt.
"That's right!" Roosevelt nodded and said.
"Then why be hostile to him, why? I said, it's okay not to believe, don't be hostile, don't be suspicious! Marshall watched as Roosevelt shouted again.
"But now that he's going to sell those captives, how do you explain it to me?" Roosevelt looked at Marshall and shouted.
"You can send troops to kill those captives, Hu Bin said in the telegram, he didn't say that he must sell those captives, right? We can kill them, we can send troops to escort them back, I want to ask Your Excellency, do you dare to give such an order? Marshall looked at Roosevelt and said.
"Hu Bin's troops are over there, why didn't he bring them back?" Roosevelt looked at Marshall and said.
"If it were me, I wouldn't dare to escort it back, there are more than 2 million Japanese troops in the south, they are hiding now, what about the night, what if they come over and attack my troops at night, Hu Bin's side is 100,000 troops, and you have to watch those prisoners, you let Hu Bin's troops go to death?
If you want to send troops to escort those prisoners back, I am the first to disagree, it is to send to death, to send to death, understand? Now there are only two ways to deal with this captive, first, kill them, and second, Hu Bin sell them.
I ask Your Excellency, what should we do, do we want to kill them, if we want to kill them, now we can send a telegram to General Steven, he only needs to send a division of troops, with enough ammunition and heavy machine guns, he can kill all 200,000 prisoners, do you dare to give such an order? Marshall looked at Roosevelt, blushing at him, and shouted.
Roosevelt heard it and looked at Marshall!
"You don't know how to fight at all, but you still want to interfere in the war, and you take it for granted that this thing can be done, and MacArthur's counterattack this time is also, I said no, this is a trap, you don't listen, you think it's an opportunity, even you think it's an opportunity, is that still an opportunity?
That's the trap! Who listened? When I was arguing in your office, none of your aides pointed at my nose and accused me, saying that I didn't dare to fight! Is it something you don't dare to fight?
How much did it cost us for this, sacrifice 200,000 soldiers, in one day, 200,000 soldiers sacrificed, who will be responsible for the sacrifices of these soldiers, me? Am I responsible? Did I object? Who listened? Marshall shouted. Roosevelt looked at Marshall and still didn't speak.
"Fighting a war is a soldier's business, you interfere again and again, it is obviously a good opportunity, you give up, it is obviously a trap, but you let us get into it, this is to let us go to death, so that all our current commanders don't know how to fight, no one dares to command, and no one dares to take responsibility.
I would like to ask, Your Excellency the President, Hu Bin is fighting a war here, what did they interfere in at home?
If it weren't for us asking what Hu Bin would have done in Yan'an, they would not have interfered with Hu Bin's war at all, because the Chinese commanders know that the affairs of the army must be handed over to the people in the army to do, and they know how to make decisions.
Damn, do you know, because of your interference, now our generals don't know how to fight! Marshall was standing there scolding, he was quite angry, because this incident had a very big impact on their country.
"Originally, this time, if we gave Hu Bin 1 million soldiers, now we may drink coffee in Toronto, Hu Bin is really not wrong, the original plan has been made, and now, those troops are in our hands, and they have become tired soldiers.
And Steven's troops, you know, our 300,000 troops over there, about 120,000 participated in the battle, more than 180,000 enemies were destroyed, and the casualties were only more than 20,000.
Now that Japan's supplies on the American side are almost exhausted, we can counterattack, and as long as we hold on, we will be able to drive the Japanese troops into the sea. You also said that we missed the opportunity, and you forced us to miss the opportunity! Marshall stood there and finished speaking, panting.
Roosevelt sat there and didn't speak, and when Marshall was in a frenzy, he didn't speak, he just looked at Marshall.
"I know you have an opinion about me, because I don't listen to you, but this is the authority given to me by the position of chief of staff, I am responsible for our army troops, responsible for the people of our country, not for you, I don't need to be responsible for you, you have your guard force!
I am a native of the United States, all the soldiers are from the United States, they all love this country, and we also want to win the war, but every time, our strategy is arranged, and as soon as you intervene, it is all messed up, you listen to those staff, who has been a soldier, who has been a general?
You listen to these people and command our troops, do you want to bury all our troops in the United States? Marshall was still there watching Roosevelt shout.
"I didn't think of it that way!" Roosevelt spoke.
"Your Excellency the President, now our country is facing a huge problem, I don't know if you have ever thought about it, we have no soldiers, the last batch of soldiers are all up, do you know how much impact these soldiers have on our country if they are sacrificed?
They are all intellectuals, some could have become engineers, some could have become doctors, professors, teachers, entrepreneurs, yesterday's war, sacrificed 200,000, most of them were intellectuals, don't you feel distressed?
They originally had a great future, why did I invite Hu Bin's troops over, I just didn't want to send these people to the battlefield, once the war is over, it can make our country develop rapidly, it is these people, now we can only let such soldiers go to the battlefield! Do you know?
On the Chinese side, the state wants to arrange jobs for their college students, most of them go to schools and scientific research institutes, and in the army, one college student out of 1,000 people is amazing, and they are not willing to let intellectuals go to the battlefield at all! Marshall looked at Roosevelt and said.
"Isn't Hu Bin a college student?" Roosevelt looked at Marshall and asked. (To be continued.) )