Ming Muyiyang
China Observer
comments
Comments by "Ming Muyiyang" (@mingmuyiyang8615) on "China’s Military Combat Skills Ridiculed Worldwide: Soldiers Are Best at Folding Tofu Block Quilts" video.
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In 1979, on the first day of the Sino-Vietnamese War, 220,000 PLA soldiers completely suppressed 130,000 Vietnamese troops. In 28 days, the Chinese suffered nearly 30,000 casualties, while the Vietnamese suffered 57,000 casualties. China entered the vicinity of Hanoi, the capital of Vietnam. In China, the "Self-Defense Counterattack War against Vietnam" is defined as a small-scale battle. Throughout the 1980s, China and Vietnam started a 10-year border war (21,754 Chinese casualties and 103,725 Vietnamese casualties). It ended with Vietnam compensating China for a large area of territory.
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@alexanderamayahernandez3912 The Battle of Changjin Lake in the Korean War. This was a battle in the early days of the Korean War. From November 27 to December 24, 1950 (just 28 days), a direct confrontation took place in the Changjin Lake area of North Korea. The U.S. military included the 1st Marine Division (abbreviated as the 1st Marine Division) and the 3rd and 7th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 1st Army of South Korea, with a total of about 100,000 troops (the U.S. military dispatched 195 tanks, 7 aircraft carriers, and 500 military aircraft. 3,000 sorties hovered over the volunteers every day); the 9th Corps of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army, which launched the attack, consisted of the 20th Army, the 26th Army, and the 27th Army, with nearly 150,000 troops (only the army). This is the data of the battle between the two sides, and this is the scale of the war. In the 28-day "Changjin Lake" battle, the U.S. military suffered 19,843 casualties, and the Chinese Volunteer Army suffered a total of 48,156 casualties. In just 28 days, the total casualties of both sides were close to 70,000. This is the intensity of the war. The Chinese Volunteer Army had no communication equipment, and communication relied on whistles and charge horns. Armed with old weapons, wearing ragged clothes, eating potatoes frozen harder than stone at -40 degrees Celsius, we fought barefoot in the snow against the American troops armed to the teeth. We drove the American troops out of the strategic position of "Changjin Lake" and wiped out the "Polar Bear Army" that the American troops were proud of. Our "bitter victory" was exactly what the United States feared. What does it mean to do whatever it takes? What does it mean to move forward courageously? Do you understand?
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@alexanderamayahernandez3912 Western perspective: According to the information disclosed by the Helsinki Military Academy, the "Battle of Shangganling" ended on November 25, 1952. In this earth-shaking bloody battle, on the high ground that could only accommodate two companies (up to 300 people), the Chinese army successively deployed 9 regiments of two elite field armies, plus 2,000 new recruits, 11 artillery battalions, and a rocket artillery battalion. A total of more than 43,000 people, the Chinese Volunteer Army consumed a total of 450,000 rounds of ammunition.
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The Battle of Changjin Lake in the Korean War. This was a battle in the early days of the Korean War. From November 27 to December 24, 1950 (just 28 days), a direct confrontation took place in the Changjin Lake area of North Korea. The U.S. military included the 1st Marine Division (abbreviated as the 1st Marine Division) and the 3rd and 7th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 1st Army of South Korea, with a total of about 100,000 troops (the U.S. military dispatched 195 tanks, 7 aircraft carriers, and 500 military aircraft. 3,000 sorties hovered over the volunteers every day); the 9th Corps of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army, which launched the attack, consisted of the 20th Army, the 26th Army, and the 27th Army, with nearly 150,000 troops (only the army). This is the data of the battle between the two sides, and this is the scale of the war. In the 28-day "Changjin Lake" battle, the U.S. military suffered 19,843 casualties, and the Chinese Volunteer Army suffered a total of 48,156 casualties. In just 28 days, the total casualties of both sides were close to 70,000. This is the intensity of the war. The Chinese Volunteer Army had no communication equipment, and communication relied on whistles and charge horns. Armed with old weapons, wearing ragged clothes, eating potatoes frozen harder than stone at -40 degrees Celsius, we fought barefoot in the snow against the American troops armed to the teeth. We drove the American troops out of the strategic position of "Changjin Lake" and wiped out the "Polar Bear Army" that the American troops were proud of. Our "bitter victory" was exactly what the United States feared. What does it mean to do whatever it takes? What does it mean to move forward courageously? Do you understand?
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From 1931 to 1945, China was extremely short of weapons and had to set up a "machete team". The popular war song in China at that time, with the lyrics "There are no guns, no cannons, the enemy makes them for us", is a true portrayal of China's hardships at that time. The tenacious will of the Chinese soldiers never backed down. Chinese soldiers used cold weapons to fight against the machine guns and cannons of the island countries, and used machetes to seize various weapons from the island countries. Often more than ten people were sacrificed to seize a machine gun. China's difficulties at that time were ten times more difficult than those of Palestine today. Remembering history, being grateful to ancestors, and revitalizing China, the Chinese spirit completely defeated the enemy's Bushido spirit, forcing the island countries to use the "high-tech weapons" of the time - biological weapons and chemical weapons - without scruples on the battlefield.
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@thattalldude0 The Battle of Changjin Lake in the Korean War. This was a battle in the early days of the Korean War. From November 27 to December 24, 1950 (just 28 days), a direct confrontation took place in the Changjin Lake area of North Korea. The U.S. military included the 1st Marine Division (abbreviated as the 1st Marine Division) and the 3rd and 7th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 1st Army of South Korea, with a total of about 100,000 troops (the U.S. military dispatched 195 tanks, 7 aircraft carriers, and 500 military aircraft. 3,000 sorties hovered over the volunteers every day); the 9th Corps of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army, which launched the attack, consisted of the 20th Army, the 26th Army, and the 27th Army, with nearly 150,000 troops (only the army). This is the data of the battle between the two sides, and this is the scale of the war. In the 28-day "Changjin Lake" battle, the U.S. military suffered 19,843 casualties, and the Chinese Volunteer Army suffered a total of 48,156 casualties. In just 28 days, the total casualties of both sides were close to 70,000. This is the intensity of the war. The Chinese Volunteer Army had no communication equipment, and communication relied on whistles and charge horns. Armed with old weapons, wearing ragged clothes, eating potatoes frozen harder than stone at -40 degrees Celsius, we fought barefoot in the snow against the American troops armed to the teeth. We drove the American troops out of the strategic position of "Changjin Lake" and wiped out the "Polar Bear Army" that the American troops were proud of. Our "bitter victory" was exactly what the United States feared. What does it mean to do whatever it takes? What does it mean to move forward courageously? Do you understand?
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@SD78 The Battle of Changjin Lake in the Korean War. This was a battle in the early days of the Korean War. From November 27 to December 24, 1950 (just 28 days), a direct confrontation took place in the Changjin Lake area of North Korea. The U.S. military included the 1st Marine Division (abbreviated as the 1st Marine Division) and the 3rd and 7th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 1st Army of South Korea, with a total of about 100,000 troops (the U.S. military dispatched 195 tanks, 7 aircraft carriers, and 500 military aircraft. 3,000 sorties hovered over the volunteers every day); the 9th Corps of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army, which launched the attack, consisted of the 20th Army, the 26th Army, and the 27th Army, with nearly 150,000 troops (only the army). This is the data of the battle between the two sides, and this is the scale of the war. In the 28-day "Changjin Lake" battle, the U.S. military suffered 19,843 casualties, and the Chinese Volunteer Army suffered a total of 48,156 casualties. In just 28 days, the total casualties of both sides were close to 70,000. This is the intensity of the war. The Chinese Volunteer Army had no communication equipment, and communication relied on whistles and charge horns. Armed with old weapons, wearing ragged clothes, eating potatoes frozen harder than stone at -40 degrees Celsius, we fought barefoot in the snow against the American troops armed to the teeth. We drove the American troops out of the strategic position of "Changjin Lake" and wiped out the "Polar Bear Army" that the American troops were proud of. Our "bitter victory" was exactly what the United States feared. What does it mean to do whatever it takes? What does it mean to move forward courageously? Do you understand?
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@SD78 Western perspective: According to the information disclosed by the Helsinki Military Academy, the "Battle of Shangganling" ended on November 25, 1952. In this earth-shaking bloody battle, on the high ground that could only accommodate two companies (up to 300 people), the Chinese army successively deployed 9 regiments of two elite field armies, plus 2,000 new recruits, 11 artillery battalions, and a rocket artillery battalion. A total of more than 43,000 people, the Chinese Volunteer Army consumed a total of 450,000 bombs.
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@SD78 From 1931 to 1945, China was extremely short of weapons and had to set up a "machete team". The popular war song in China at that time, with the lyrics "There are no guns, no cannons, the enemy makes them for us", is a true portrayal of China's hardships at that time. The tenacious will of the Chinese soldiers never backed down. Chinese soldiers used cold weapons to fight against the machine guns and cannons of the island countries, and used machetes to seize various weapons from the island countries. Often more than ten people were sacrificed to seize a machine gun. China's difficulties at that time were ten times more difficult than those of Palestine today. Remembering history, being grateful to ancestors, and revitalizing China, the Chinese spirit completely defeated the enemy's Bushido spirit, forcing the island countries to use the "high-tech weapons" of the time - biological weapons and chemical weapons - without scruples on the battlefield.
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@SD78 The Battle of Shanghai took place from August 13, 1937 to November 26, 1937. China had 180 aircraft, 40 tanks, and 0 warships. The Japanese army had 500 aircraft, 300 tanks, and 130 warships. The Battle of Shanghai (also known as the Battle of August 13, the Second Battle of Shanghai, and the Second Shanghai Incident in Japan) was the first large-scale battle between China and Japan in the War of Resistance against Japan, and it was also the largest and most brutal battle in the entire Sino-Japanese War.
In the Battle of Shanghai, a total of about 1 million troops from China and Japan were involved in the battle. The battle itself lasted for three months. The Japanese army deployed 9 divisions and 220,000 troops, with more than 90,000 casualties; the Chinese army deployed 73 divisions and more than 700,000 troops, with more than 250,000 casualties.
The Battle of Shanghai forced the Japanese army to shift its main strategic attack direction and shattered Japan's plan to "destroy China in three months."
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@akend4426 From 1931 to 1945, there were 24 large-scale battles between China and Japan.
(The number of Chinese participants exceeded 100,000, and the number of Japanese participants exceeded 100,000. The total number exceeded 200,000). Including the Battle of Shanghai, the Battle of Taiyuan, the Battle of Xuzhou, the Battle of Wuhan, the Battle of Changsha, etc. These battles were large in scale, with many participating troops and fierce fighting, which had an important impact on the direction of the war.
Medium-sized battles: 1,117 times. Medium-sized battles are usually carried out in a certain area, involving tens of thousands of troops, such as the attack and defense of some cities, regional battles, etc.
Small battles: (less than 10,000 people) 38,931 times by the Kuomintang and 125,165 times by the Communist Party. Small battles include small-scale encounters, guerrilla warfare, raids, etc., with various forms of fighting and distributed over the vast territory of China.
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@jimprice9703 The Battle of Changjin Lake in the Korean War. This was a battle in the early days of the Korean War. From November 27 to December 24, 1950 (just 28 days), a direct confrontation took place in the Changjin Lake area of North Korea. The U.S. military included the 1st Marine Division (abbreviated as the 1st Marine Division) and the 3rd and 7th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 1st Army of South Korea, with a total of about 100,000 troops (the U.S. military dispatched 195 tanks, 7 aircraft carriers, and 500 military aircraft. 3,000 sorties hovered over the volunteers every day); the 9th Corps of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army, which launched the attack, consisted of the 20th Army, the 26th Army, and the 27th Army, with nearly 150,000 troops (only the army). This is the data of the battle between the two sides, and this is the scale of the war. In the 28-day "Changjin Lake" battle, the U.S. military suffered 19,843 casualties, and the Chinese Volunteer Army suffered a total of 48,156 casualties. In just 28 days, the total casualties of both sides were close to 70,000. This is the intensity of the war. The Chinese Volunteer Army had no communication equipment, and communication relied on whistles and charge horns. Armed with old weapons, wearing ragged clothes, eating potatoes frozen harder than stone at -40 degrees Celsius, we fought barefoot in the snow against the American troops armed to the teeth. We drove the American troops out of the strategic position of "Changjin Lake" and wiped out the "Polar Bear Army" that the American troops were proud of. Our "bitter victory" was exactly what the United States feared. What does it mean to do whatever it takes? What does it mean to move forward courageously? Do you understand?
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@ityr The Battle of Changjin Lake in the Korean War. This was a battle in the early days of the Korean War. From November 27 to December 24, 1950 (just 28 days), a direct confrontation took place in the Changjin Lake area of North Korea. The U.S. military included the 1st Marine Division (abbreviated as the 1st Marine Division) and the 3rd and 7th Infantry Divisions, as well as the 1st Army of South Korea, with a total of about 100,000 troops (the U.S. military dispatched 195 tanks, 7 aircraft carriers, and 500 military aircraft. 3,000 sorties hovered over the volunteers every day); the 9th Corps of the Chinese People's Volunteer Army, which launched the attack, consisted of the 20th Army, the 26th Army, and the 27th Army, with nearly 150,000 troops (only the army). This is the data of the battle between the two sides, and this is the scale of the war. In the 28-day "Changjin Lake" battle, the U.S. military suffered 19,843 casualties, and the Chinese Volunteer Army suffered a total of 48,156 casualties. In just 28 days, the total casualties of both sides were close to 70,000. This is the intensity of the war. The Chinese Volunteer Army had no communication equipment, and communication relied on whistles and charge horns. Armed with old weapons, wearing ragged clothes, eating potatoes frozen harder than stone at -40 degrees Celsius, we fought barefoot in the snow against the American troops armed to the teeth. We drove the American troops out of the strategic position of "Changjin Lake" and wiped out the "Polar Bear Army" that the American troops were proud of. Our "bitter victory" was exactly what the United States feared. What does it mean to do whatever it takes? What does it mean to move forward courageously? Do you understand?
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