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Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Dai Anlan: Commander of the 200th Division of the Expeditionary Force. In 1942, Dai Anlan was ordered to lead the 200th Division to Burma as the vanguard of the Chinese Expeditionary Force. In the Burmese war, the great battle of Tonggu and the reconquest of Tangji were fought. On May 18, 1942, General Dai was seriously wounded in the battle to command the breakthrough in the Langko area, and was martyred at 5:40 p.m. in the village of Maobang in northern Burma at 5:40 p.m. on the 26th, and was posthumously recognized as a revolutionary martyr after the victory of the Anti-Japanese War.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Chen Mingren: Commander of the Seventy-first Army of the Expeditionary Force. In the 25 years of the Kuomintang army's southern conquest of the northern war, he was appointed commander of the corps, was awarded the rank of lieutenant general, and was awarded the Order of the Blue Sky and White Sun by Chiang Kai-shek. On August 4, 1949, he and Cheng Qian, director of the Kuomintang Changsha Appeasement Office, sent a telegram of the uprising, and resolutely and peacefully revolted, which was praised by Mao Zedong and Zhu De. In 1955, he was awarded the rank of general of the Chinese People's Liberation Army. On May 21, 1974, Chen Mingren died of cancer at the age of 71.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Du Yuming: Deputy Commander of the First Road of the Expeditionary Force and Commander of the 5th Army. Lieutenant General of the National Revolutionary Army, backbone general of the Whampoa department. Born in the Whampoa Military Academy, he later served in the mechanized unit of the National Revolutionary Army, successively serving as the commander of the 200th Division and the commander of the Fifth Army, leading his troops to participate in the Battle of Guinan and achieving the Great Victory of Kunlun Pass. On January 9, 1949, the entire army was destroyed in the Battle of Huaihai and captured by the Chinese People's Liberation Army in Yongcheng County, Henan Province. He died in Beijing in 1981.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Wei Lihuang: Acting Commander of the Chinese Expeditionary Force. In 1944, the command post defeated the Japanese army on the border between western Yunnan and China and Burma and recaptured western Yunnan. In January 1948, he was appointed commander-in-chief of the Northeast "Suppression General", and his unit was defeated in the Liaoshen Campaign launched by the Northeast People's Liberation Army, and fled to Nanjing and was placed under house arrest. In 1955, he went to Beijing and served as vice chairman of the National Defense Commission and standing committee member of the Central Committee of the Revolutionary Committee of the Chinese Kuomintang, and was the first senior Kuomintang general to return from overseas. He died in Beijing on January 17, 1960, at the age of 64.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Sun Liren: Commander of the New 1st Army stationed in India. The Battle of Ren'anqiang defeated more than 4,000 Japanese troops with a single force, winning an international reputation for its fewer victories and more victories. He was promoted to commander of the New First Army, briefly participated in the Northeast Civil War, and was soon transferred to the Ministry of National Defense in Nanjing. Later, he went to Taiwan to train the new army, but was suspected of cooperating with the Americans in a mutiny and was placed under house arrest for 33 years. After Lee Teng-hui took office in 1988, he regained his freedom. He died in 1990.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

He Shaozhou: Commander of the Eighth Army of the Expeditionary Force. He Shaozhou was the son of He Yingqin's second brother, He Yinglu, and was known as "Nephew Shuai". He successively participated in the "128" Songhu War of Resistance, the Shanghai War of Resistance, the Battle of Nanjing, the Battle of Wuhan, and the West Yunnan War of Resistance. In 1949, he flew to Hong Kong, traded and lost most of his property, and then went to Brazil to rely on rubber plantations to earn a living. On September 6, 1980, due to a hypertension attack, he fell from the upper floor, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage and stroke, and died after being sent to the hospital.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Huo Yunzhang: Commander-in-Chief of the Twentieth Army Group of the Expeditionary Force. In 1943, he was also the chief of education of the cadre training regiment stationed in Yunnan, and went to western Yunnan to fight against the Japanese Kou. He once assassinated Wen Yiduo, Li Gongpu and so on. In November 1948, he was appointed Commander of the 16th Appeasement District. In May 1949, he was appointed commander of the Eleventh Corps and commander-in-chief of the Xianggan-E Border Region. In the autumn of the same year, he went to Taiwan. He died of cerebral hemorrhage in March 1953 at the age of 52.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Huang Jie (pictured left): Acting commander-in-chief of the 11th Army group of the Chinese Expeditionary Force. In January 1945, he crossed the Sino-Burmese border and met with the victorious division of the US army stationed in India and the allied US army, achieved a major victory in the counter-offensive and defense of western Yunnan, and completed the task of opening up the international communication line and the Burma Road. After the liberation of the whole territory of Hunan and Guangxi, he led more than 30,000 remnants of the army to retreat into Vietnam and arrived in Taiwan in June 1953. He died in Taiwan in 1996 at the age of 93.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Li Hong: Commander of the Thirty-eighth Division of the Newly Organized First Army of the Expeditionary Force. Since the counter-offensive against northern Burma, Li Hong, in a year-and-a-half-long and arduous battle, has shown outstanding command skills, repeatedly accomplished qigong, and has been promoted to the commander of the newly organized Thirty-eighth Division, and awarded the rank of major general. After the victory of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, although Li Hong hated civil war, he led the New Thirty-eighth Army to be transferred to the northeast and fell into the whirlpool of civil war. He died of illness on August 15, 1988.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

Li Mi: Commander of the Eighth Army of the Chinese Expeditionary Force. In 1944, he went to the Songshan Battlefield in Western Yunnan, joined the Chinese Expeditionary Force, fought the Battle of Songshan, and was promoted to the commander of the Eighth Army for his merits. In 1948 he was appointed commander of the Thirteenth Corps. During the Battle of Huaihai, he was ordered to support Huang Baitao's troops without success, and soon the 13th Corps was completely destroyed, and Li Mi fled in disguise to Weixian County, Shandong, Qingdao, and took a sea ship to Nanjing and Shanghai. It was evacuated to Taiwan in 1954.

Reveal the final outcome of the ten important generals of the Chinese Expeditionary Force during the War of Resistance

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