Chapter 331: Open the door and confront the thief (please subscribe, please vote!)
Yes, as Tokutaro Sakai said, the Chinese also have cannons.
Although, it's not a heavy artillery.
75 mountain artillery, field artillery, 150 mortars, and 82 mortars are still the same when used in battles at the infantry division level, but if used in a battle of 100,000 people, they appear to be very weak.
It is not as destructive as the 200-caliber heavy artillery of the Japanese heavy artillery brigade, but it can still make the area 50 meters inside and outside the city wall tremble along with the earth.
Faced with the roar of the God of War, the Japanese troops who broke into the city wall area were also heartbroken.
The Chinese people are dying in the barrage more than a hundred meters away from here, and they will also have the opportunity to be reincarnated in this barrage created by the Chinese.
This round of artillery fire was covered, but because of Tang Dao's message of "Open the door and bow to the thieves", the major general and brigade commander was awakened and called the Songjiang headquarters, requesting to coordinate the artillery fire of the entire army to bombard the temporarily abandoned city wall fortifications like the last time in Cangcheng. .
Although Songjiang City is now surrounded on three sides, the west and south cities have not yet entered the decisive stage. Unlike the east city, where a round of heavy artillery bombardment was completed, the Japanese army also mobilized artillery from more than one artillery regiment to encircle the point and provide reinforcements. '.
The Songjiang headquarters agreed to Dongcheng's request and coordinated the mountain artillery battalions of the 107th Division and the 108th Division. The heavy mortar battalion cooperated with the three artillery battalions directly under the 67th Army Headquarters. A total of 7 artillery battalions pointed the muzzles directly at Dongcheng. city wall.
Not counting this, 16 mortars from two infantry regiments in Dongcheng District also quietly prepared their shells and adjusted their coordinates.
The intensity of the artillery fire can almost be said to be all that Songjiang City had, and it was a bit more terrifying than Cangcheng in the morning.
This is actually a disguised way of telling the Japanese army that before I have fired all my artillery, even if I throw the position to you, you'd better not come in. If you come in, you will become "shit"!
Having artillery is so arrogant.
The sharpshooter who stayed in the area away from the first line of the city wall was naturally Tang Dao. He knew that the Japanese commanders were not fools. After the battle in Amancang City, they would naturally take strict precautions against Chinese artillery.
Sure enough, the Japanese troops who had already arrived under the city wall were extremely cautious and sent only a few dozen infantry squads to rush to the city. Before the tanks arrived, their main infantry did not dare to rush into the city wall that had little fortification value. Inside.
But Tang Dao knew that these Japanese troops from North China were very arrogant, and the previous small setback could not make them have much respect for this battlefield besides making them angry.
Because, the rapid progress on the battlefield in North China has given them the illusion that I am the best in the world, and the Chinese are nothing more than chickens and dogs.
At this point, not only the ordinary Japanese infantry, but also the top brass of the Tenth Army considered how long it would take to crush the small town in front of them, and never thought of finding another way to conquer it because it would be too costly.
Victory will continuously boost morale and bring confidence, but it may also turn into poison.
The proud Imperial Japanese Army naturally cannot be intimidated by a Chinese soldier's "mantis' arm as a chariot". If an infantry squad cannot do it, then more people will be put in.
Living up to Tang Dao's high expectations, hundreds of Japanese troops broke into the city wall brazenly. Countless bullets and grenades flew at Tang Dao, leaving him in a state of panic. He was almost rolling and crawling in various bomb craters.
That was probably Tang Dao's most embarrassing moment on the battlefield. He was really running for his life, without the slightest counterattack, he just ran away and left alive.
But this did not damage Mo Songzi's idol worship while hiding in the trenches.
Lieutenant Colonel Tang's idol appearance had already been reshaped when the signal corpsmen ran out of breath to inform the soldiers on the front line of the city wall to retreat for the time being.
Then, almost two hundred meters away from them, Tang Dao killed the Japanese soldiers with one shot and one shot, and finally "colluded" more than 400 Japanese soldiers into the position.
What's even more frightening is that, faced with the fire of five or six light machine guns and hundreds of rifles, Tang Dao still survived incredibly tenaciously, until the sharp roar of the shells piercing the sky shocked the entire audience.
The light of the idol shines throughout the audience.
The sergeant clenched his fist fiercely and almost shouted: I will be your biggest fan from now on.
The once awesome rain of bullets, in the face of the blazing artillery fire, is just a group of girls holding big sticks meeting the bandits holding a big knife and showing a tuft of hair to protect their hearts. There is no comparison.
When the bombs kept rising, the whole earth seemed to be shaking.
The Japanese infantry who were standing under the city wall and had just found a temporary bunker could only watch with despair as the smoke gradually engulfed them, because they had no place to escape, and the only way to survive under the fire was to lie on the ground, and then Take out Amaterasu's name and repeat it silently.
At this point, the difference in traditional cultural heritage emerges. When Chinese soldiers ask for blessings, they can name twenty gods and goddesses at least in a few words, unlike the Japanese, who can only repeat a few names. Obviously, Amaterasu was not working well at this moment. The figures of the Japanese infantry kept "jumping" high as the smoke rose, and then fell "heartbreakingly".
At times like this, the Japanese troops standing on the top of the city may still be the luckiest. At least, they have a place to hide.
It's not the dilapidated fortifications on the top of the city, but the city wall with their backs. Unless the Chinese artillery fire can completely collapse this ancient city wall, otherwise, as long as they avoid the falling masonry, they will have High chance of escaping.
For example, the Pig-nosed team, which was previously suppressed by Tang Dao with one shot and one shot, originally suffered humiliation, but now they were surprised to find that I could at least run.
Facing the overwhelming artillery fire, the soldiers of the Pig Nose Team did not hesitate to turn around and jump off the city wall.
However, the walls of Songjiang City are six meters high! In the future, it would be close to the height of three stories. If there was mud below, it would probably be a fall with broken legs and arms, but the ground below the city wall was hardened.
What's even more terrible is that the Japanese infantrymen jumping down are fully armed, and their whole body weight is definitely more than 10 kilograms.
The Japanese army is absolutely reckless when it comes to escaping. You can just run away. If you don't have time to throw away the things on your body, you have to throw away the 38-inch cap with a bayonet in your hand first!
No, I don't. Even if I reacted enough to jump off the wall, I still held the gun that weighed several kilograms firmly in my hand, for fear of being punished by the superior officer if I lost the weapon.
However, those who are eligible to be punished must first be alive.
The Japanese infantrymen who had no place to escape naturally had no choice but to watch as they became trapeze artists. However, those who had a natural geographical advantage and took the initiative to jump under the city wall were not much better off.
If you choose the posture of "jumping off a building" well and land on your legs, you will basically end up with a short leg and a broken leg. If you don't choose the posture of "jumping off the building" well, you will basically fall to the ground without making a sound. Whether you live or die depends on it. Have they finished their Amaterasu tea?
But the most tragic thing is not that this group of people cannot be considered truly elite at first glance.
What is a true elite? It is a person with good physical fitness and good mental quality. Faced with a height of six meters, he does not panic at all. When he lands on the ground, he immediately chooses a roll to remove the terrible impact.
Normally, of course there is nothing wrong with such a choice. The big guys who see it will applaud them proudly, look at it! This is the strength of my Imperial Japanese Army warriors.
But now, not only are they still clutching their spears in their hands, but under the wall, there are still two to three hundred infantrymen from the 4th Infantry Brigade who have just rushed across the river!
Looking at a "human ball" charging at me with a gleaming bayonet, who would not be able to stretch out a gun to block it?
Is there a fixed track for scrolling? Of course it's not possible.
The consequences of using a knife to block it are obvious, it is easy to poke the 'little meat ball'.
The saying "A dead Taoist comrade will never die a poor Taoist" is actually just the instinct of human nature, so those who can protect their comrades and sacrifice themselves will be called heroes. He who overcomes human instinct, that is, he who defeats himself, is a hero.
But this group of Japanese people obviously do not have this qualification.
The elites who jumped off the city wall and escaped the artillery fire ended up dying under the bayonets of their own men. It sounds ridiculous, but it actually happened on the battlefield at this moment.
At least four Japanese soldiers "collided" with their own bayonets. The excellent steel quality of the 38 bayonets combined with the huge momentum allowed the bayonets to easily penetrate the body and bones.
Such an almost humiliating battle report will naturally not appear in the records of the Sixth Division.
If it weren't for the fact that a few members of the Pig Nose Team were lucky enough to survive to the end of the war and write down this tragic detail in their memoirs, perhaps these would have been lost in the long river of time!
The Sixth Infantry Brigade became the biggest victim of the "opening the door to welcome thieves" on the East City Defense Line.
The former favorite was completely abandoned by the furious Hisao Tani. More than 30 seriously injured people died in painful wails due to the inaction of medical staff. Those who survived were all called Xiaoqiang in the Republic of China.
The more cautious 4th Infantry Brigade actually did not fare well. Naturally, the shells of mountain artillery and field artillery would not hit them around corners, but the Chinese side had a large number of mortars, which were curved artillery guns with an elevation angle of up to 85 degrees.
After more than a dozen consecutive artillery shells dropped from the sky, the Japanese army realized that hiding under the city wall was not safe. They began to retreat frantically, and the river channel set up by the Japanese engineers was already within the artillery's bombardment coordinates.
Having no choice but to stay away from the passage but getting stuck in the quagmire, the Japanese soldiers could only fight for their lives amidst the flying shrapnel.
That is also a retreat path full of blood.
Hisao Tani's eyes, which were watching all this from a distance, were filled with seriousness!
(End of this chapter)
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