Chapter 705: Another Victory on the Battlefield

"Maybe ......", the two-month battle plan for November and December can directly include Moscow. In front of the map of Russia in the dormitory, Liu Xian sank for a long time, then picked up a ruler and made a comparison on the map, and then a blue dot marked the location of Moscow.

It's already November, and these two months correspond to December to January in the Western calendar, which is the coldest season of the year in Russia.

In World War II, German tanks were greatly affected in these two months, not to mention the engine of current technology. Rudolph. It's true that Diesel is a genius, but he can't be ahead of his time.

The time for the wreaking havoc of armored forces is coming to an end. Maybe I will wake up early tomorrow morning, and a heavy snowfall will come unexpectedly at night, and the temperature will plummet by more than ten or twenty degrees, and all the armored vehicles, tanks, and trucks will be frozen and unable to move.

However, these two months cannot be wasted, which is equivalent to giving Russia, Britain, France, Spain, the Netherlands and other countries two months of preparation time, and even two months later, the tanks of the Europeans will appear on the battlefield. The Defence Force must make the most of these two months. In addition to the continuous transportation of supplies, quartermasters, and soldiers to the front line from the rear, the Wehrmacht also needed to show the spirit of hardship and hard work, return from the mechanized era to the end of the 19th century, and use its own two legs, snow plows, and horses to seize one city after another.

The plan for the next battle after the armored troops lay down had already been drawn up, and the Wehrmacht would continue to attack westward without stopping.

The interior has already transported 500,000 fresh troops to Central Asia, and the follow-up troops are still being transported, and the total strength of these troops, together with the original combat units, is far higher than the number of Russian troops now.

The defeat in the Battle of the Urals, the loss of one and a half million troops, drained the backbone of the entire Russian army. Even if St. Petersburg can quickly raise up another army of one or two million. These troops are also recruits, and they are all recruits who may not even be equipped with rifles. The officers who commanded and led them were far inferior to the previous elites. Fight against the Wehrmacht with such an army, which can sweep away the enemy even without the help of armored troops!

It is advisable to chase the poor bravely, and not to sell the name of the overlord. Take advantage of your illness to kill you, and not leave the enemy a chance to breathe. This is the life creed that Liu Xian has always believed.

Russia is definitely trembling. In fear. Nicholas II was not Stalin, the Romanov dynasty was not the Soviets and Egypt, and if his enemy had been replaced by the Soviet Union in World War II, Liu Xian would not have been as excited as he is now. Because victory is still early. Stalin was an iron man, a real iron man, and the Russia under his leadership was the durable Russia, the real fighting nation.

Can Nicholas II be compared to Stalin? Whether in terms of personal ability, resilience, or spirit, he is a scumbag of the 5 scum.

Nicholas II is definitely under heavy mental pressure and burden now, and Liu Xian is about to force him to collapse. With one victory after another. With a never-ending victory.

Napoleon reached Moscow in three months and occupied it. Liu Xian spent half a year, isn't it enough?

Look at how many troops the Russians still have in this vast area from the Volga to Moscow? Is there 100,000 people? No. There is absolutely no one hundred thousand. The coldest two months of the year are coming, and Moscow's most reliable reliance is only the bitterly cold weather.

And Myanmar at the same time, although it is also the lowest temperature of the year, the temperature is above 20 degrees.

The winter is also scorching, and there is a kind of autumn tiger rush. At this time, a long line rolled up dust and smoke. Aggressively marching towards Yangon. This is the Yunnan National Defense Force and the Taiping Army that pursued the British and Indian colonial forces.

The Anglo-Indian troops stationed in Burma fought two large-scale battles with the Chinese National Defense Forces and the Anti-British Army in Mandalay and Naypyidaw, especially the Battle of Naypyidaw. The number of British and Indian troops increased to 120,000 as never before, but they were still defeated by the armored forces of the Wehrmacht. 120,000 people lost more than 50,000.

This defeat completely deprived the British and Indian armies of the opportunity to turn around, and also made the Indian Governorate lose confidence in winning the battle to defend Burma. It's not about how strong China's national strength is, it's about how strong China's military is in combat. Just like Germany in World War II, a country that has just been freed from the yoke for a few years, a country that has lost all its colonies. Even after annexing Austria and Czechoslovakia, how could the overall strength be comparable to that of Britain and France?

The only thing that really allowed Germany to sweep across Europe against the whole world was their army. It's the same as China right now. In the west, it fought against most of Europe, and in the east, the United States was disgraced. In terms of comprehensive national strength, a single old United States can completely suppress China.

The current invincibility, the current unstoppable, is more of a false fire brought by new weapons.

The battle that begins next year is the real battle. Whether China can keep the results of the war, whether it can keep Nanyang, Burma, and Siam, and whether it can bite off a large piece of fat on Russia and the United States, next year's battle is the most critical.

No one knows that the treasury is too clean to raise rats, no one knows that the current military spending is completely raised by war bonds, national bonds and national donations, no one knows that the Qin consortium has begun to deal with the industry, and a large amount of money is directly transferred to the Ministry of Finance, turning into a pile of treasury bonds that cannot be used as money.

Britain and France have not broken their muscles and bones, and China has done its best!

The weather in the 20s made the soldiers sweat all over their bodies, and the armored troops advanced with a group of mules and horses, not mechanized troops on the Western Front. Because the transportation conditions in Myanmar are too poor and there are many rivers, it is really not suitable for tank operations. The armored forces here are really armored vehicle units.

However, these 100 armored vehicles helped the Wehrmacht, which had only two-thirds of the total strength of the British Army, to win the crucial Battle of Naypyidaw, and the Taiping Army was newly added after the Battle of Naypyidaw.

This armored vehicle unit is numbered the 7th Armored Battalion, and several armored units of the Southwest Military District are mostly armored vehicles, not tank vehicles. The commander's name is Du Ju, and he was born from the grassroots. The ancestors did not have any status and outstanding figures, and the above three generations were all farmers, not even small landlords.

The place where the troops now travel is Bago Province, located in the plains of the south-central part of the country. If you go south to the head of Bago Province, you can also see the brilliant golden light of the Rui Da Kwong Pagoda in Yangon.

However, compared with the Shwe Daguang Pagoda in Yangon, the 7th Armored Battalion and the more than 10,000 infantry attached to it paid more attention to chasing and suppressing the backward British and Indian remnants. They were not an attacking force, but a pursuing force.

This armored unit was directly driven from Naypyidaw, and its only mission was to pursue the defeated Anglo-Indian army units, and cooperate with the infantry to eliminate as many British troops as possible who had fled.

On the pursuit road of hundreds of miles, the Anglo-Indian troops who were eaten by them were not 10,000 but 8,000. Seeing that Rangoon is about to arrive, and the Anglo-Indian defenders in Rangoon seem to be less than 30,000 at this moment, their own pursuit effect is great.

At least 20,000 Anglo-Indian troops were still out, or rather left behind by the pursuing forces, and unless the British did not want this force anymore, they had to organize a defensive battle in Rangoon to wait for the scattered remnants to reach the Lai and Bago rivers in other directions. Yangon is located near the mouth of the Irrawaddy River, at the confluence of the Lai and Bago rivers.

At the mouth of the river and at the port of Yangon, there were a large number of British ships, except for warships, transports. They would leave Burma with the defeated Anglo-Indian army and looted wealth back to India through the Bay of Bengal.

But now the chief commissioner of the British province of Burma had to give orders for the troops to defend on the spot, and to prepare to establish defensive positions on the basis of Yongsin, twenty miles north of Yangon, in order to slow down the pace of the Chinese army's offensive. At the same time, a small force of cavalry was sent with all its strength to contact the scattered British and Indian defeated armies in various places.

The southward pursuit force was also a hundred and fifty miles away from the main forces of the Wehrmacht and the Taiping Army, but the British never thought of eating this lone force in depth. The morale of the army was low, the fighting spirit was corrupted, and the soldiers had lost the slightest will to fight. At this time, it is still reliable to fight a war of resistance, and to fight a war of annihilation will only kill oneself. Maybe the army will collapse and disintegrate itself while it is running.

However, before the scattered Anglo-Indian troops came back, the British troops here could only rely on themselves to carry them, and they had to hold on. Otherwise, the commanders and generals who led all this would have to bear the shame of voluntarily abandoning the 20,000 or 30,000 British and Indian troops.

Yongsheng is just a small Burmese city, and 10,000 British and Indian troops are based on this, preparing to 'break the net' with the Chinese defense forces that are surrounding, which is 'trapped beasts and fights'.

The commanders of the pursuing forces saw the attempts of the British very clearly. So, as soon as the battle began, the Wehrmacht was going all out.

And the Anglo-Indian troops, who were cornered by their own commanders and the enemy on the opposite side, also became crazy from top to bottom.

Think about it, they fled from Naypyidaw all the way to Yangon, and before they could settle down, the Chinese chased them, and they were thrown out to death by the upper peak, and it is strange that people are not crazy.

It is also because the Anglo-Indian troops in Rangoon are all units that are more loyal to the British, and the disloyal people have long fled and broken up halfway, and the fundamental reason is that the officers of these units have played a role.

Ninety percent of the mid- and lower-level officers in direct control of the troops were British, and they were unwilling to surrender to China, even if they were now cornered. The reaction of these people was not a surrender of Xisoft, but a desperate resistance.

Losing all of his heavy weapons is nothing, and what Yongsheng has is a small river. The most important thing is that Yongsheng City is too small, so that the British troops can only pull most of the main force into the field, relying on field fortifications to fight the Chinese Defense Force. All efforts only temporarily delayed their downfall.

More than 10,000 British and Indian troops held out at Yongsheng for only two days and one night, and when the sun turned west the next day, after the Chinese Defense Forces launched a general offensive, the two-hour battle at Yongsheng ended. Of the more than 10,000 Anglo-Indian troops, only three or four thousand escaped, and the rest were either killed or captured. (To be continued......)