474 Peninsula Final Battle

The huge explosion caused the ship to tear apart from the middle at once, and the surrounding passengers were blown away by the bombs, scattering along with the pieces of iron to all corners of the deck. Pen | fun | pavilion www. biquge。 info

Although the pilots of the Lei Gong 1 dive bomber have not been trained in sea attack, they have rich experience in dropping bombs against fixed targets.

Along the way, they bombed large and small pillboxes and bunkers, and even blew up bridges and other facilities.

In this case, it is a little unrealistic to ask them to blow up a ship that is hiding on the surface of the sea, but it is too simple for them to blow up a ship docked on the shore.

The explosion from the ship completely collapsed the Japanese on the dock, they wanted to get on the boat and escape, but who would have thought that the other party would blow up the boat directly.

There was no time to cry, the Japanese who were still alive on the dock hurriedly ran in the opposite direction, since leaving has become a luxury, then waiting on the dock, isn't it no different from waiting for death?

Now, what they want is to leave this hell on earth as soon as possible and hide in a relatively safe place.

It's a pity that the movements of the Ming Empire's Lei Gong 1 dive bombers are obviously faster than the crowd running on the ground, and these big birds made of steel, like vultures representing death, hovered in the sky for a long time and did not want to disperse.

Then they swooped down one after another, once again baptizing the Japanese crowd on the ground with their own cannon shells.

This time the strafing took longer, and the red straight lines drawn on the ground were longer. As cannon shells splashed on the ground, the sight of people flipping on their backs spread to the interior of the harbor.

Because it was far from the front line, Busan, as a rear port, did not even have a preset position for anti-aircraft guns. Some Japanese soldiers opened fire into the sky with rifles, which was good anti-aircraft fire.

As for the larger-caliber anti-aircraft guns, they have long been transported back to the mainland as key military supplies, or "decisive battle weapons".

The Japanese soldiers who are now left behind on the Korean Peninsula have either been abandoned without background, or have been forgotten because of chaos, and some have taken the initiative to stay and fight to the death......

The defenders on the outskirts of Busan are undoubtedly the third group of people - they demand to stay and fight to the death, protecting the port of Busan so that as many non-combatants can be removed.

It's just a pity that their efforts now seem to be in vain, because the air force of the Ming Empire appeared on the battlefield, and the blockade of the dock by these planes does not seem to be inefficient.

Without the port's capacity, Busan is just an ordinary city with the sea on its back, no more dangerous than places like Wonsan or Anju.

Outside the city, the Ming Empire's iconic cannons, 200 mm heavy artillery, have begun to roar, and these shells are not aimed at the Japanese defense line outside the city, but fly directly into the city of Busan.

A few shells fell in the middle of the city, and black smoke and dust immediately rose from the streets. The sound of the explosion muffled the screams of the people, and everyone on the ground who was hiding in Tibet knew that the soldiers of the Ming Empire were coming!

Japanese soldiers with weapons began to walk through the streets and alleys, bending over and moving as close to the walls as they could, reinforcing some places in the streets and alleys where they could be fortified.

Near the crossroads, several carriages that had been paralyzed and destroyed there had become the basis for the Japanese army to deploy the barricades, and the dead horses were dragged aside to be divided and eaten.

Although a large amount of grain was piled up in the city of Busan, and there was no plan to transport the grain, it was probably the habit of the Japanese soldiers to save food.

From Anju, to Wonsan, to Pyongyang...... The feeling of hunger after the Ming Empire besieged the city had spread to the entire Korean Peninsula with the soldiers of the Ming Empire.

At this moment, on the positions outside Busan, the soldiers of the 2nd Army of the Ming Empire had already torn apart the second line of Japanese defense and launched a new round of attacks on the edge of the city.

The artillery fire of the Ming Empire was ten times more fierce than that of the Japanese defenders in Busan. This kind of one-sided suppression of firepower has made the Japanese soldiers have no intention of fighting.

The Japanese soldiers began to retreat into the city, abandoning their defensive positions on the outskirts - although the previous battle plan was to delay time, they found themselves unable to meet the requirements of the plan.

The battle took only an hour, and most of the field fortifications on the outskirts of Busan were destroyed by the artillery fire of the Ming attack.

Some of the remaining areas of resistance were also quickly surrounded and annihilated. The soldiers of the Ming Empire attacked very well under the cover of tanks, and they were already very skillful in cooperating with tanks to sweep away the field fortifications around the city.

The soldiers of the Ming Empire have attacked with tanks several times in Yuanshan and other places, and they have very rich combat experience.

And the soldiers in the Japanese army who are familiar with the Ming Empire's tactics are now either killed in battle or squatting in prisoner of war camps.

In this way, the experience gap between the two sides is not a little bigger. The fighting soon stopped, and the next round of fighting was a battle for street fighting.

Because they didn't care about the benefits obtained by seizing the port, the artillery of the Ming Empire had no intention of stopping at all. Heavy artillery of 200 mm caliber is more involved in the battle.

In the beginning, there were only three or four, but now there are seventeen or eighteen. The power of these large-caliber heavy guns cost the Japanese defenders a terrible price.

A house can collapse into ruins in an instant when it hits a shell from a heavy cannon. Not only the people inside, but also the people around them.

The Japanese soldiers hidden in the barricades and other places were buried in the rubble before they could be attacked by the soldiers of the Ming Empire, and there were countless casualties.

At this time, more Lei Gong 1 dive bombers were mobilized and began to carry out focused bombing on the dock port.

Several ships docked at the pier were sunk, and some of the remaining small boats fled in a hurry and left Busan without looking back.

At this point in the fighting, it was only a matter of time before Busan was occupied by the Ming Empire, and Busan, as the last large city on the Korean Peninsula, would mark the end of the war on the Korean Peninsula once it was occupied by the Ming Empire.

Because of this, the battles here are fierce and bloody. But the commander of the 2nd Army, Yang Zizhen, did not know that not far from Busan, around an unnamed fishing village, the same fierce fighting was going on.