Chapter 149: Give the government eye medicine

The anger in Li Junhao's heart is rising, this damn scraping the people's party will bring disaster to the country and the people! The bastard's Jiang bald head is not a son of man! If a soldier killed this pest with one shot during the Double 12 Incident that year, would the current situation be even worse? He didn't think so. No matter what future generations say about this history, he has experienced it himself now, and he really doesn't believe that it would be worse without a dead bald head!

Just look at the two tragedies that just happened! At a time when more than half of the country had fallen and when the whole people were fighting a war of resistance, what was this reactionary Kuomintang government doing? Whether it is Jiang Guangtou, or Lu Zhonglin, Zhang Yinwu and other generals of the national army who were ordered by him, they are all sinners of the nation......

He couldn't get angry, so he immediately drew up a telegram himself, got it to the telecommunications room, and asked the telegraph operator to send it, who knew that after reading the content, he said that he couldn't send it!

The angry Li Junhao took the draft of the telegram to the political counselor Sheehan, and this kind of thing was in his charge.

After reading the content of the call, Sheen also disagreed with the message, saying that it would affect the diplomatic relations between the two countries......

Li Junhao couldn't, but he knew what Sheehan meant, and after calming down, he also understood the reason, but he always felt that this matter was not unhappy. After thinking about it, he went to Lieutenant Colonel Kearton, the deputy military attache of the Consulate General, and asked to use the special radio station of the Military Attaché Office to contact the embassy in Chongqing, and this request was approved, after all, Li Junhao's official military position was the assistant military attache of the Grand Consulate.

Li Junhao personally sent a long telegram to his real boss, Colonel Joseph Warren Stilwell, the military attache of the embassy, in which he resolutely criticized the anti-communist behavior of the Kuomintang, believing that as the representative of the US military in China, the military attache of the embassy should make its voice heard and publicly condemn and sanction the Kuomintang government; It was also proposed to send representatives to the Eighth Route Army to offer condolences and provide formal military assistance to strengthen this truly anti-Japanese armed force......

After the telegram was sent, he exhaled a little, although he didn't know if Colonel Stilwell would take his advice, but he knew that he didn't like Jiang Guangtou either, whether he used this matter to complain to China, or directly scolded his mother, it was better than doing nothing!

After Li Junhao finished sending the telegram, he felt a little more relieved and went back to his own business, but in the military attaché office of the US Embassy in Chongqing, Stilwell, who received the telegram, was in a state of thought......

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Just as Li Junhao knew, as one of the few China experts among the American soldiers, Stilwell had a very bad understanding of Chairman Chiang, or rather despised him, and even called him "peanuts" in private, ostensibly because Chiang was a bald head, but in fact he was an allusion to Chiang's name as the head of the democratic government, but in fact he was the head of the feudal warlords.

In addition, Stilwell also greatly despised Chiang's military ability, believing that he was at best the level of a battalion and company commander of an old-fashioned army, but in battle-level battles, he repeatedly personally interfered with the command of front-line generals, and did not know how many losses were caused; In particular, in several major battles against Japan, its performance was simply unsightly, and the fact that the Japanese army occupied half of China's territory so quickly had a great deal to do with its chaotic decision-making and blind command.

Stilwell also knew about the two tragic incidents in the past two days, although he was also very angry, but because of the current US policy toward China, he was not prepared to do anything, but at this time he received a long telegram from the new assistant military attache Pan Sen, and looking at the analysis and suggestions on the incident, he began to seriously consider it.

Stilwell's life experience is deeply related to China, and he came to China for the first time in November 1911, when he was a lieutenant, and traveled to Shanghai, Xiamen, Guangzhou, Wuzhou, Hong Kong and other places. In August 1920, he came to China for the second time and officially took up the post of a language officer stationed in China, where he continued to study Chinese at the North China Union Language School in Beiping.

From 1921 to 1922, Stilwell was seconded by the International Disaster Relief Committee to serve as the chief engineer for the construction of the Fenyang-Jundu Highway in Shanxi Province and the Tongguan-Xi'an Highway in Shaanxi Province.

From 1922 to June 1923, as a member of the U.S. Military Attaché Office in China, Stilwell inspected and traveled to Northeast China, Outer Mongolia, Zhejiang, Jiangxi, Hunan, Siberia, Korea, and Japan.

In September 1926, Stilwell came to China for the third time and served as the commander of the 15th Infantry Regiment of the U.S. Army in Tianjin.

In May 1927, he was dispatched by the U.S. Legation in China to Xuzhou, Nanjing, Huhai and other places to inspect the military situation, and his report was later commended. Acting Chief of Staff of the 15th Infantry Regiment in January 1928; In May, he was promoted to lieutenant colonel.

In July 1935, Stilwell came to China for the fourth time and served as the U.S. military attache in Peking as a colonel. In 1936, he successively inspected Guangzhou, Guilin, Wuzhou, Nanning, Hankou, Xuzhou, Kaifeng, Luoyang and other places.

When the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression broke out in China in July 1937, he organized an intelligence group to report the progress of the war to the United States in a timely manner. At the end of the year, he moved to Hankou, and the following year he inspected the war situation in Lanzhou, Taierzhuang, Changsha, Chongqing and other places, and then moved to Chongqing with the embassy.

At this time, Stilwell had actually received an order from the Ministry of Defense to transfer himself back to China as the brigade commander of the 3rd Brigade of the 2nd Infantry Division. Therefore, at this time, after he felt that Li Junhao's suggestion was reasonable, he decided to really knock the Kuomintang government before leaving!

For this reason, Stilwell also brought Bao Ruide to him, asked him to also read Li Junhao's telegram, and said his thoughts, and the two quickly reached a consensus.

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He came to China in 1924 as an attaché at the U.S. Embassy in China, then as deputy army counselor, and as an intelligence officer at Tianjin.

Bao Ruide is also a China expert, and he is very clear about the deeds of the two parties in China, and Stilwell is a typical military thinking is slightly different in that he has a lot more ideas from politicians, but even so, in the current situation of the Anti-Japanese War, the Kuomintang government's persecution and suppression of the anti-Japanese force of the Eighth Route Army also made him very dissatisfied.

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After discussing with Barred, Stilwell went to the U.S. ambassador, Nelson Jensen......

After reading the telegram and listening to their thoughts, Ambassador Jensen nodded and agreed to their plan, but it was not appropriate for him to come forward directly in this matter, and Stilwell was still responsible for the implementation, with Barred assisting; In addition, he also said with a smile: Our assistant military attaché, Mr. Pan Sen, has his own political thinking and skills!