969 Chu Tingchang's New Doctrine

Zhou Youfu's troops are restoring order, except for the bridge controlled by Atami, the rest of the obstacles have been controlled by Chu Tingchang's picket brigade. Zhou's retreat plan itself left room for five divisions and their subordinate units, each withdrawing from a different route. It was probably the last nuclear attack that made him wary, and his troops stayed away from each other most of the time to avoid being taken over.

In the "Enemy Situation Bulletin" issued by the US and British intelligence services, it has been speculated that the enemy's next nuclear bomb will not only increase its power, but also increase the delivery mode. According to the speculation of American experts, the Japanese nuclear bomb is a large 5 to 8 tons, composed of two parts of high-purity uranium-235, one large and one small, and when they are combined, they will reach a critical mass. This conjecture clearly comes from the technical line of the Americans themselves and is far from the real situation.

As for the method of delivery, the British speculated that since the first was detonated by a tower, and the second and third were transported by submarines and cargo ships, then the Japanese were obviously looking for a faster way, and the bombers and even the Japanese had already put into use must be the later means of delivery.

Of course, the whole report lacks concrete evidence to support the arguments, although some conjectures are quite reliable.

The existence of the Japanese nuclear bomb obviously brought a lot of constraints to Zhou Youfu, including the end of the command this time, in fact, it was also because of the fear of nuclear bombs. In order to avoid being detected by enemy planes to the position of the headquarters, he deliberately reduced the size of the surrounding troops, so that the enemy could easily hide his headquarters in the middle of the rest of the divisional headquarters judging only from the size of the radio station.

In any case, the possibility of the Japanese using bomber delivery * is growing.

In order to prevent the Japanese from sneak attacks in the air, Chu Tingchang has exhausted all means. Of course, he has enough capital to support Britain and the United States, but at this level, what is more needed is the common sense of modern military science and technology that is enough to integrate resources.

The British had some experience in early warning in their operations against the Luftwaffe in the British Isles, and the United States had gained a lot in long-range vigilance in naval battles in the oceans, but they all lacked experience in building effective air defense in mountainous areas.

Since the Allies had no experience, they had to do it themselves. Chu Tingchang forced the British to prioritize the deployment of precious trailer radars in the high mountains of Laos to establish the initial early warning. Subsequently, by continuously piling up the number of radars, the search area of a single radar that the British felt safe was reduced, and the overlapping area was increased to eliminate dead spots, and at the same time, telephone lines were connected to all radar stations to summarize the air situation and verify each other to prevent false alarms and false alarms.

Chu Tingchang was still not very confident about these meter-wave radars, and deployed the latest centimeter-wave radars at the lower and second highest points between the mountains. The Japanese used low-altitude raids in Burma several times, sometimes at night, although they were often killed by Qin Xiaosu's electronic deception, and they could not return home, but the nuclear bomb was not trivial, and he had to take precautions as soon as possible.

His idea of radar networking also made the United States and Britain refreshed, and he seemed to be like a layman who didn't understand bullshit, using his personal relationship with Roosevelt Churchill to forcibly reach out for this and that, and then according to his set of talents, different types of radars were deployed in a mess according to the attributes of gold, wood, water, fire and earth (detailed participation in the 1943 edition of the "Classification of the Five Elements of Modern Weapons" compiled by the Chief of Staff of Chu Ting), but still a young British Air Force intelligence officer, Dustin Hall, discovered some of these doorways. These chaotic ancient Chinese superstitions are not just about creating chaos, they actually imply an inner order.

Major Hall found that the chaotic, dog-toothed deployment points on the map had a large number of problems on the surface, such as antenna pointing misalignment and overlapping search ranges, but they essentially played a complementary role, and there were also staggered heights, and even adjacent radars were ...... In terms of frequency bands, there is a distinction to prevent the opportunity of false alarms caused by mutual interference.

Although the theory of deployment comes from Chu Tingchang's matching of the feng shui of mountains and rivers and the attributes of weapons, it really has to be carefully corrected, and there is no technical flaw. And, most unexpectedly, his defense at low altitudes was replenished. In order to explain this new situation to his superiors, Hauer also invented a new term for "low-altitude centimeter-wave radar blind spot supplement".

The usual habit is that the Air Force just uses a compass on the map, with the radar as the center of the circle, and the effective distance as the radius to draw the warning range, but this range is actually useless in the mountains, the British have long discovered the problem, and Japanese planes often use the radar blind spots blocked by the mountains to drill in, but there is no way to crack it, usually just use searchlights to make up for it.

However, Chu Tingchang's theory of employing troops (see the July 1943 issue of "Research on the Matching of Observation and Technical Weapons" compiled by Chu Tingchang's General Staff) believes that the high mountains are dry, strong and healthy, and the trough is kun, and the feminine and soft complement each other, so the deployment of equipment must have the expectation of mutual aid.

According to his own classification of Allied radars, the truss antenna is straight and huge, and it is yang, and if it cannot be rotated, it is dry; The parabolic antenna with a distorted shape is yin, and the antenna periodic rotation is a slip-off adaptation. From this, it is deduced that the complex fusion of yin and yang, the use of the norms of Qiankun and Mutual Aid, in short, no one in the allied forces can understand it, and Lao Jiang found a bunch of pedants there, and he didn't figure out the rules too much. The Japanese here, in fact, have also been stopping to study their theories in reverse, although Makino has reminded countless times that Chu Tingchang is just a traverser pretending to be a ghost, but there are still many people in the military department who respect his doctrine. Many people have also deduced from the Five Elements Bagua Theory that it was Makino and others who took the future technology through and tried to reverse history in a straightforward way, which led to the inevitable emergence of a geek like Chu Tingchang who relied on traditional wisdom and twists and turns to offset Japan's advantages. Therefore, Chu Tingchang must not be a traverser, but a reincarnated sage. This set of specious theories seems to be perfectly self-consistent at the metaphysical level.

At the beginning of the period, when Japanese planes approached, they would be detected by multiple radars at the same time, which caused a lot of confusion, but the intelligence center began to adapt, and new target designation specifications continued to appear, and gradually, chaos turned into efficiency.

Major Hall was surprised to find that the Japanese planes taking off from Guangdong, Hainan, and Malay were beginning to be invisible, and if the enemy tried to hide at low altitudes, the center could predict their direction, and they could soon be captured a second time, and they would not be repeatedly marked to misjudge the enemy's situation.

On such a basis, Chu Tingchang began to fight back. Although Japanese propaganda commented on this offensive as a great war that would determine the direction of the world in the next 100 years, and even called it the Waterloo of Chu Tingchang, in fact, the Japanese army had no possibility of further onslaught. Even after only 40 to 60 kilometers of the front, the Japanese army already ran out of supplies for the full advance. Sakagaki had to stop and wait for the northern forces of Isoya so as not to form a noticeable salient. Due to the offensive area of the Isoya cluster, the lack of large rivers for inland transportation made its logistical problems more pronounced than that of Sakagaki.

Chu Tingchang has been calculating the enemy's sea capacity, on the surface it seems that the Japanese have dried up, but he always feels that the Japanese have hidden some capacity, 419's current location, it is impossible to track every Japanese cargo ship, but in general, the number of cargo ships departing from the mainland and the northern territories of China in August does not match the number of subsequent returns from the South Seas, but it is about the same, about 200,000 tons, if you calculate this period, the 6 to 80,000 tons of cargo ships that were wiped out by the American submarines that became stronger in Vietnam War, The numbers also seem to be close to reasonable. There is always some lag in the statistics, and maybe there will be ups and downs in the numbers next month.

If the battle line does form a stalemate, and the enemy is unable to continue, he must consider playing the card of Huang Tianyang, Sakagaki sent a second-rate division to monitor the Jinou Peninsula and did not invest too many troops there, while Huang Tianyang has been growing and has just replenished tanks and heavy artillery. Huang Tianyang sent a telegram every day asking for battle, reporting that others were strong and their morale was high. It seems that Zhou Youfu needs to be corrected for the time being, and Tao Mingzhang's efforts to stabilize the defense can be used by this reserve team. He has always regarded Huang Tianyang's troops as a mobile force that can quickly maneuver in Vietnam and Thailand, and he doesn't dare to move, but if he doesn't fight out, the reserve seems to have lost its meaning?

On September 1, he sent a telegram to Huang Tianyang, asking his main force to break away from the entanglement with the Japanese guerrilla forces and prepare to launch an attack on the 79th Division south of Saigon, threatening the flank of Saigon, forcing Sakagaki to shrink and draw troops from the direction of Zhou Youfu. If the purpose of the campaign was achieved, Sakagaki's offensive could easily be disintegrated.

Sakagaki had been waiting for Chu Tingchang to make a move, waiting for him to put the last reserves into battle. Arriving in Brunei 10 days in advance, he was entrusted with the task of loading and returning to the South Seas resources, and through a series of errone's errant orders, he completely destroyed the original compact and efficient transportation plan, leaving a large number of ships stranded in the port and left no goods to transport. Within the unwitting army, Kagesa Zhenzhao got the nickname "Rice Bucket". Of course, this is just a conspiracy by him to cover up his true intentions. Because Ying Zuo Zhenzhao didn't know how long Chu Tingchang's hand could stretch, he could only come up with such a way to concentrate cargo ships in the South Seas without revealing his intentions. Any direct, commanding the assembly of cargo ships could lead to the leakage of intelligence, and eventually the entire plan deduced by the enemy.

Shojiro Iida was already in Singapore, and on the 20th day after his return from the reserves, he was officially appointed commander of the Malay Front. At present, his troops and supplies are scattered on various islands in Brunei, Malay, and Indonesia. It may seem scattered, but once the offensive begins, these troops and equipment can be transported by sea in a sequence, which is much easier than the gathering of scattered troops on land.

On September 3, the signs of an imminent offensive in Huangtian's Yang were already clear, and the 79th Division discovered a large number of enemy reconnaissance units and sapper movements. Japanese planes also discovered that Huang Tianyang was building a bridge over the river, and the troops scattered on the long transportation line were retracting.