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Battle of South Guangxi

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Dates
  
15 Nov 1939 – 30 Nov 1940

Location
  
Guangxi, China

Result
  
Chinese victory

150,000 men, initially only 2 understrength army groups, reinforced by 2 army groups, including 200th Division (only mechanized force in NRA)
  
100,000 men, 5th Division, 18th Division(partial), Guards Mixed Brigade, Taiwan Mixed Brigade 100 planes 70 warships 2 aircraft carriers

Military casualties 5,600 killed 11,000 injured 800 missing 6,416 other casualties Total 23,816 military casualties Civilian casualties 11,147 killed 2,161 wounded 3,986 missing Total 17,294 civilian casualties 45 billion yuan worth of private and public property damage
  
4,000+ killed (including 85% of all officers) 4,000+ wounded 100 captured Total 8,100+ casualties

Similar
  
Battle of Kunlun Pass, Second Sino‑Japanese War, Battle of Wuhan, Battle of Suixian–Zaoyang, Battle of Shanggao

Battle of south guangxi


The Battle of South Guangxi (simplified Chinese: 桂南会战; traditional Chinese: 桂南會戰; pinyin: Guìnán Huìzhàn) was one of the 22 major engagements between the National Revolutionary Army and Imperial Japanese Army during the Second Sino-Japanese War.

Contents

In November 1939, the Japanese landed on the coast of Guangxi and captured Nanning. In this battle, the Japanese successfully cut off Chongqing from the ocean, effectively severing foreign aid to China's war efforts by the sea, rendering Indochina, the Burma Road and The Hump the only ways to send aid to China.

The Chinese were able to launch several major offensives that maximized Japanese casualties. A majority of the conflicts occurred in the contention for Kunlun Pass. With the success of the Vietnam Expedition in September 1940, the Japanese were able to cut China off from Indochina. Now only the Burma Road and The Hump remained, ending the costly necessity of occupying Guangxi. By November 1940, Japanese forces had evacuated from Guangxi except from some coastal enclaves.

Order of battle for battle of south guangxi


References

Battle of South Guangxi Wikipedia