*** Welcome to piglix ***

Siege of Changchun

Siege of Changchun
Part of the Chinese Civil War
ChangchuanLiberated.jpg
Changchun after the siege
Date May 23 – October 19, 1948
Location Changchun and proximity
Result People's Liberation Army captures Changchun
Belligerents
Flag of the Republic of China Army.svg National Revolutionary Army Flag of the Chinese Communist Party.svg People's Liberation Army (Northeast and North China Field Army)
Commanders and leaders
Flag of the Republic of China Army.svg Zheng Dongguo Surrendered Flag of the Chinese Communist Party.svg Lin Biao
Flag of the Chinese Communist Party.svg Xiao Jinguang
Strength
~100,000 100,000
Casualties and losses
95,000; ~330,000 civilian deaths 6508

The Siege of Changchun (simplified Chinese: 长春围困战; traditional Chinese: 長春圍困戰; pinyin: Chángchūn Wéikùnzhàn) was a siege operation launched by the People's Liberation Army during the Chinese Civil War against the city of Changchun, defended by the Nationalist forces. The Siege of Changchun was part of the Liaoshen Campaign, and the fall of Changchun marked the end of its first stage.

Beginning on May 23, 1948, the People's Liberation Army began to encircle the Nationalist defenders in Changchun, while cutting off air transportation. The siege would last for 150 days, and resulted in the deaths from starvation of an estimated 80 percent of the civilian population. The siege ended when the People's Liberation Army entered Changchun after the Nationalist 60th Army and New 7th Army surrendered.

Lin Biao commanded the Communist forces during the siege. Lin had initially proposed to move on Changchun in April, but turned his attention to other cities after investigating Changchun. In October, Lin proposed to finally take the city. In response, Mao Zedong sent a sarcastic telegram ridiculing him for not having taken the city five months prior, and ordering Lin to take Jinzhou instead. As news from Jinzhou reached Changchun, the KMT commanding general, Ceng Zesheng (Chinese: 曾澤生; pinyin: Céng Zéshēng), defected to the Communists along with most of his officers. They were given posts in the Communist armies on Mao's personal orders.

Large numbers of civilians starved in the siege; estimates range from 150,000 to 330,000. The besieging Communist forces allowed Nationalist soldiers to leave, but forcibly prevented civilians from doing so, hoping to pressure General Zheng Dongguo (Chinese: 鄭洞國; pinyin: Zhèng Dòngguó), leader of the Nationalist forces, into surrender. Only 40,000 survivors remained, to tell of eating "rotten sorghum, then corncobs and then the bark off the trees” Later, people opened their pillows and consumed the corn husk filling. Later still they boiled and ate leather.


...
Wikipedia

...