Chinese suicide bomber putting on an explosive vest made out of Model 24 hand grenades to use in an attack on Japanese tanks.
The battle involved a Japanese plan to
conquer Xuzhou, a major city in the East. However, the Japanese failed to
consider the plans of generals Li Zongren and Bai Chongxi, who planned to
encircle the Japanese in the town of Tai'erzhuang. The Japanese operation
started on 24 March. Overconfidence led the Japanese commanders to overlook the
thousands of inconspicuous "farmers" in the area, who were affiliated
with Li Zongren and cut communication lines and supplies, diverted streams, and
ruined rail lines. By late March, supplies and fuels were being dropped from
airplanes to Japanese troops, but the quantities were insufficient.
On 29 March 1938, a small band of Japanese
soldiers tunneled under Tai'erzhuang's walls in an attempt to take the city
from within. They were caught by the Nationalist defenders and killed. Over the
next week, both sides claimed to hold parts of the city and surrounding area,
and many were killed in small arms battles.
Finally, the Japanese attacked frontally,
failing to consider the greater Chinese numbers. A major encirclement on 6
April, with Chinese reinforcements, preceded a major Japanese defeat and retreat,
which the Chinese failed to capitalize upon fully through pursuit due to a lack
of mobility.
The Chinese captured 719 Japanese soldiers
and large quantities of military supplies, including 31 pieces of artillery, 11
armored cars, 8 armored fighting vehicles, 1,000 machine guns and 10,000
rifles.
A "dare to die corps" was
effectively used against Japanese units.
Chinese suicide bomber putting on an
explosive vest made out of Model 24 hand grenades to use in an attack on Japanese
tanks
Due to lack of anti-armor weaponry, Suicide
bombing was also used against the Japanese. Chinese troops strapped explosives
like grenade packs or dynamite to their bodies and threw themselves under Japanese
tanks to blow them up. Dynamite and grenades were strapped on by Chinese troops
who rushed at Japanese tanks and blew themselves up. During one incident at
Taierzhuang, Chinese suicide bombers obliterated four Japanese tanks with
grenade bundles.
Amid the celebrations of the victory in
Hankow and other Chinese cities, Japan tried to deny and ridiculed the reports
of the battle for days. It was reported in the world's newspapers, however, and
by mid-April had provoked a Cabinet crisis in Tokyo.
The Chinese scored a major victory, the
first of the Nationalist alliance in the war. The battle broke the myth of
Japanese military invincibility and resulted in an incalculable benefit to
Chinese morale.
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