This book also needs to mention some representatives of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Volunteer Army and the hostile side of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Coalition Army.
Shigeru Honjo (1876-1945) was a native of Hyogo Prefecture, Japan. Graduated from the Army Non-Commissioned Officer School. During the Russo-Japanese War, he participated in the war with the rank of lieutenant. Later, he entered the Japanese Army University. After graduating in 1906, he successively served as a member of the Chinese class of the General Staff Headquarters, the head of the Manchurian and Mongolian class, and the head of the China Section. At the end of the Qing Dynasty, he served as military attache of the Japanese Embassy in China, and was active in Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, Hankou, Nanjing and other places. In 1921, he served as Zhang Zuolin's military adviser. In August 1931, he was appointed commander of the Kwantung Army. He was one of the main planners who launched the "918" Incident, commanded the Japanese army to invade and occupy Northeast China, and concocted a puppet regime of the Manchurians. For his meritorious work in the invasion, he received the title of baron. In 1932, he was appointed military senator. In 1933, he was promoted to army general and served as the chief military attache of Emperor Hirohito. After Japan's surrender in 1945, he committed suicide in November.
Takashi Hishikari (1871-1952) was a native of Kagoshima, Japan, who participated in the Sino-Japanese War in his early years. He graduated from the Japanese Army University in 1902. During the Russo-Japanese War, he served as a staff officer of the 1st Army and a member of the Military Affairs Bureau. After that, he served as a wing commander, brigade commander, and division commander. In 1930, he was appointed commander of the Kwantung Army. In August 1931, he was transferred to the military council, and in 1933, he returned to serve as the commander of the Kwantung Army and the Japanese ambassador to the puppet state of Manchukuo, with the rank of army general. In 1935 he was put into the reserve and died in 1952.
Nobuyoshi Muto (1862-1933) was a native of Saga, Japan. After graduating from the Army Non-commissioned Officer School in 1892, he participated in the Sino-Japanese War. Later, he graduated from the Japanese Army University. During the Russo-Japanese War, he served as a staff officer of the Guards Division and commander of the 3rd Division, with the rank of Lieutenant General. In 1926, he was appointed commander of the Kwantung Army and promoted to army general. The following year, he was appointed Director of Education for the Japanese Army. In 1932, he resigned due to the "May 15" incident and served as a military senator. In the same year, the puppet regime cultivated by Japan was established in the puppet state of Manchukuo, and he returned to serve as the commander of the Kwantung Army, the governor of the Kwantung region, and the plenipotentiary ambassador to the puppet state of Manchukuo. During this period, he was the main decision-maker in commanding the Japanese army to occupy Rehe, fully controlling the puppet regime of the puppet Manchukuo, and suppressing the anti-Japanese struggle of the volunteers. He died in office in 1933.
Minamijiro (1874-1955) was a native of Oita Prefecture, Japan. He graduated from the 6th class of the Army Non-commissioned Officer School and graduated from the Japanese Army University in 1903. During the Russo-Japanese War, he participated in the battle as a squadron leader of the 1st Cavalry Wing, and in 1906 he was appointed as an army staff officer at the Kwantung Governor's Office. In 1917, he was appointed chief of the cavalry section of the Military Affairs Bureau of the Ministry of the Army, and in 1919, he was appointed commander of the garrison army in China. In 1927, he was appointed Deputy Chief of Staff, and in 1931, he was appointed Minister of Land in the Cabinet of Wakahuai, with the rank of General. After Honjo, Doihara, Ishihara, Itagaki and other Kwantung Army pioneers in invading China created and provoked the "September 18" incident, he approved the actions of the Kwantung Army and effectively prevented the Japanese cabinet from attempting to interfere in the implementation of the Kwantung Army's decision to expand the situation, so that the Kwantung Army's aggression in the northeast continued to expand. In December 1931, the Wakahuai cabinet collapsed, and he became a military senator. In 1934, he became commander of the Kwantung Army. From 1936 to 1942, he was Governor General of Korea. After that, he served as an advisor to the Privy Council and president of the Great Japan Political Association. After Japan's defeat and surrender in 1945, Minamijiro was sentenced to life imprisonment as a Class A war criminal. He was temporarily released from prison in 1954 due to illness and died in 1955.
Kenji Dohihara (1883-1948) was a native of Okayama Prefecture, Japan. He graduated from the Army Non-commissioned Officer School in 1904 and the Japanese Army University in 1912, where he served in the Japanese General Staff Headquarters. He has been to China 10 times and has been engaged in spy work in China for more than 20 years. Before the "918" incident, he successively carried out spy activities in the capacity of assistant to military attache Poxi Rihachiro, military instructor of Qiqihar, and military attache of warlord Zhang Zuolin. In March 1931, he was appointed as the head of the Tianjin secret service, and in August he was transferred to the head of the Fengtian secret service, with the rank of Dazuo. With his secret service as the headquarters, Kenji Dohihara, together with Ishihara Waner, Itagaki Seishiro, Hanaya Masa, and others, planned and launched the "918" Incident, and served as the first mayor of Mukden City after the incident. Then, according to the intention of the Kwantung Army, he went to Tianjin to plan and coerce Pu Yi to come to the Northeast and concocted the puppet Manchukuo. Subsequently, he was not only active in Feng, Ji, Hei and Re regions in Northeast China, but also in Inner Mongolia, Chahar, North China, and Nanjing, and drove troops to invade Southeast Asian countries, and was the vanguard of promoting the war of aggression against China and launching the Pacific War. Because of his special "talents" and outstanding "achievements" during the invasion, he was promoted to the rank of general in 1941 and received the highest honor among Japanese soldiers.
On August 15, 1945, the Japanese emperor announced his unconditional surrender, and Kenji Dohihara was arrested by the Allies as a Class A war criminal and imprisoned in Sugamo Prison. In 1948, he was sentenced to death by hanging by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in Tokyo, where he was executed on December 23 of the same year.
Seishiro Itagaki (1885-1948) was a native of Iwate Prefecture, Japan. In 1904 he graduated from the Army Non-commissioned Officer School and later from the Army University. He successively served as Assistant Military Attache of the Japanese Embassy in China, Director of the General Staff Headquarters, and Senior Staff Officer of the Kwantung Army. In 1931, together with Kenji Dohihara, Ishihara Waner and others, he actively planned and launched the "918" incident, and was the core backbone of this incident. Subsequently, he served as the head of the Fengtian secret service and the top adviser to the military and political department of the puppet Manchukuo. In 1934, he served as deputy chief of staff of the Kwantung Army; In 1936, he was appointed Chief of Staff of the Kwantung Army. In 1937, as the commander of the 5th Division, he led the army to invade North China. In 1938, he was re-elected as Minister of War in the Cabinet of Konoe and Hiranuma and President of the Manchurian Affairs Bureau. In 1939, he was appointed Chief of the General Staff of the Chinese Dispatch Army. In 1941, he was promoted to army general and served as commander of the Korean Army. In 1945, he was appointed Commander of the 7th Front Army in Singapore. In August 1945, Japan surrendered unconditionally, and after the end of World War II, Seishiro Itagaki was sentenced to death by hanging by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East in 1948 as a Class A war criminal, and was executed on December 23 of the same year.
Koalum Kuniaki (1880-1950) was a native of Yamagata Prefecture, Japan. He graduated from the Army Non-commissioned Officer School and the Army University. During the Russo-Japanese War, he fought with the rank of lieutenant, and later served as a staff officer of the Kwantung Governorate, a member of the General Staff Headquarters, and an intelligence advisor. In 1916, he supported and supported the Zong Socialist Party, a force for the restoration of the Qing Dynasty, and planned "Manchu and Mongolian independence". He was then sent to Europe to study the First World War. He returned to China in 1917 and served as director of the War Ministry's Refinement Bureau. In 1930, he was appointed director of the Military Affairs Bureau. He supported the "918" incident launched by the Kwantung Army and the expansion of the war against China. In 1932, he served as Vice-Minister of the Army under Araki Tsukashi. Since then, he has successively served as Chief of Staff of the Kwantung Army, Commander of the 5th Division, and Commander of the Korean Army. In 1937, he was promoted to general. The following year, he was transferred to the reserve. In 1939, he became the Minister of Extension of the Hiranuma Cabinet. After the outbreak of the Pacific War, he became Governor General of Korea in 1942. After the fall of the Hideki Tojo cabinet in 1944, he became prime minister. The war situation deteriorated due to the failure to recover the defeat, and the cabinet resigned in April 1945. After Japan's defeat and surrender, he was sentenced to life imprisonment by the International Military Tribunal for the Far East as a Class A war criminal. In 1950, he died of illness while serving his sentence.
Ishihara Wanji (1889-1949) was a native of Yamagata Prefecture, Japan. He graduated from the 21st class of the Army Non-commissioned Officer School and later graduated from the Army University. After that, he served as a military attache in China and an instructor at Lu University. In 1928, he served as a staff officer of the Kwantung Army. In 1931, together with Kenji Dohihara and Seishiro Itagaki and others, he created the Wicker Lake Incident, launched the "918" Incident, and planned to cultivate the puppet Manchu puppet regime. In 1932, he went to Geneva as an attaché to the Conference on Disarmament and returned the following year. In 1935, he served as the chief of the Operations Section of the General Staff Headquarters. In 1937, he was directly promoted from the army chief at the time of the "918" incident to lieutenant general, and served as the head of the first operations department of the staff headquarters. After the Japanese launched the "Lugou Bridge Incident", he was excluded from the central department of the army and transferred to the reserve in 1941 because his strategic proposition for the war of aggression against China was different from that of Hideki Tojo, who was the chief of staff of the Kwantung Army at the time. The following year, he became a professor at Ritsumeikan University, where he conducted the East Asian Alliance Movement in the private sector, and later conducted research on Buddhism and the history of European warfare, and died in 1949.
Mitsuji Miyake (1881-1945) was a native of Kuwana City, Japan. In 1901 he graduated from the Army Non-commissioned Officer School. He graduated from the Army University in 1910. In 1914, he was appointed as a member of the Military Affairs Bureau, and in 1915, he was appointed Adjutant of the Ministry of the Army and Secretary to the Minister of Land. After 1919, he successively served as military attache at the embassies in Austria and Hungary, and a member of the Treaty of Paris. After 1924, he served as the commander of the 4th Guards Infantry Wing, the chief of staff of the 4th Division, and the commander of the 5th Brigade; In 1928, he was appointed Chief of Staff of the Kwantung Army. He actively supported Itagaki, Ishihara and others in planning and launching the "918" incident, and was one of the core figures in this incident. In 1932, he was promoted to lieutenant general. In 1936, he was transferred to the reserve, and after 1940, he served as the head of the Central Headquarters of the puppet Manchukuo Concord. After Japan's surrender in 1945, he was detained in the Soviet Union and died in Moscow in October of the same year.
Jiro Tamon (1878-1934) fought in the Russo-Japanese War in his early years. In 1918, taking advantage of the uncertain situation in the Far East, he led troops to invade Siberia. In order to meet the needs of the invasion and occupation of Northeast China, the Japanese military headquarters transferred the Duomen Division from Hokkaido, Japan to Northeast China in 1930, with its headquarters in Liaoyang. After the "918" incident, according to the order of the commander of the Kwantung Army, Honjo Shigeru, the headquarters of Lieutenant General Jiro Tamen and his troops in Liaoyang were the first to rush to Shenyang to participate in and direct the battle to occupy Shenyang. On 19 September, the day of the occupation of Shenyang, Jiro Duomen also issued a proclamation in the name of the commander of the 2nd Division, declaring that anyone who endangers the lives and property of overseas Japanese will be executed by shooting, regardless of who they are, and that it is forbidden to "demonstrate, assemble, and attempt to cause nuisance," and that violators will be "severely punished." Subsequently, he supervised the invasion of Jilin and Heilongjiang. In the battle of attacking the Nenjiang Bridge, the headquarters was severely attacked by the Northeast Army and suffered heavy casualties. In 1933, Jiro Tamon returned to Japan and died in 1934.
Yoyo Matsuoka (1880-1946) was a native of Yamaguchi Prefecture, Japan. He studied in the United States in 1893 and graduated from the University of Oregon School of Law. After returning to China, he served as consul in China for many times. Before the "18 September" incident, he vigorously preached that "Manchuria-Mongolia is the lifeline of Japan" and said that "it is of course justified and beyond reproach for Japan to ensure and defend the lifeline of Manchuria-Mongolia" in order to create public opinion for Japan's invasion of China. In 1933, he was appointed chief representative to the League of Nations in Japan. When the League of Nations discussed the Lytton Commission's report, he vigorously defended Japan, claiming that Japan's actions were "entirely for self-defence." In 1935, he served as the president of the "Manchurian Railway". From 1940 onwards, he served as a member of the Cabinet and was reappointed as Foreign Minister in July of the same year. During this period, he participated in the conclusion of the Triple Alliance of Germany, Italy, and Japan, which formed the fascist core of World War II. After Japan's unconditional surrender in 1945, Matsuoka was arrested in November as a Class A war criminal "suspect" and died of illness during his interrogation in 1946.
Hayashi Kujiro (1882-1964) was a native of Tochigi Prefecture, Japan. He graduated from Waseda University in 1903. From 1907 to 1923, he successively served as Consular Supplement and Consul of the Japanese Consulate in China, and as Clerk of the Ministry of Civil Affairs of the Qingdao Garrison in Jilin, Tianjin, Jinan, Qingdao, Fuzhou, and Hankou. In July 1925, he was appointed Minister Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Japan to Siam. From 1928 to 1932, he served as Consul General of Japan in Mukden. During his tenure in Mukden, the Japanese Kwantung Army brazenly launched the "918" incident that shocked China and the rest of the world. Due to the differences between the Japanese cabinet and the military department on the strategy of invading China at that time, Hayashi Kujiro carried out the will of Foreign Minister Kishigero Bihara and others, and advocated foreign aggression and expansion by covert and milder means, which caused the military department to be dissatisfied with it, and he was sent to Brazil as ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary in 1932, and was dismissed from the post of ambassador in February 1935. In 1942, he was appointed as the chief of the army department and was treated as a "personal officer". In August 1945, he voluntarily retired. He died in 1964.
Daisaku Kawamoto (1882-1955), graduated from the Japanese Army University in 1914, and served as a member of the Chinese class of the General Staff Headquarters, the head of the China Section, and an instructor of the Army University. In 1926, he was promoted to Dazuo and served as a senior staff officer of the Kwantung Army. In 1928, he planned and deployed the plan to murder Zhang Zuolin, and was the main culprit in the "Huanggutun Car Bombing Case". After Zhang was killed, Kawamoto was dismissed due to internal contradictions in Japan and condemnation by public opinion. In 1930, it was incorporated into the reserve. Under the protection of the leaders of the Kwantung Army, he turned to economic aggression and successively served as the general office of the Xi'an Coal Mining Company, the director of the "Manchurian Railway" and the chairman of the Economic Investigation Committee, and the chairman of the Manchurian Coal Mine. In 1943, he went to Taiyuan and engaged in spy activities under the commander of the 1st Army of the Japanese Army in North China, Iwamatsu Yoshio, and was also the president of the "Shanxi Industrial Society". After Japan surrendered, he stayed in Shanxi to help Yan Xishan fight the civil war. In 1949, he was arrested for war crimes. On August 25, 1955, he died of illness in the Taiyuan War Criminals Management Center.
Zheng Xiaoxu (1860-1938), known as Sukan, Taiyi, and Haizang, was born in Suzhou, Jiangsu Province. During the Guangxu period of the Qing Dynasty, he was appointed as an envoy and a political envoy. After the Xinhai Revolution, he lived in idleness and regarded himself as a widow of the Qing court. At the end of 1923, he was summoned by Pu Yi to Beijing and served as Minister of the Interior. After Pu Yi settled in Tianjin, Zheng served as an adviser until 1932.
After the "918" incident, he followed Pu Yi to the northeast and carried out various activities to restore the imperial system. After the establishment of the puppet Manchukuo, he served as the puppet premier of the State Council, and soon served as the puppet minister of culture and education. On September 15, 1932, he signed the Japan-Manchurian Protocol with Muto Nobuyoshi. In 1933, the Japan-Manchurian Cultural Association was established, and Zheng served as its first president. He stepped down on May 21, 1935 and died in Changchun on March 28, 1938.
Zhang Jinghui (1871-1959) is a five-character narrative. He is a native of Tai'an County, Liaoning Province. After the Sino-Japanese First Sino-Japanese War, Zhang Jinghui organized group training in his hometown and took care of the homes of wealthy gentry and wealthy businessmen. In 1902, he surrendered to the Qing court with Zhang Zuolin and became a sentry officer of the local armed forces of the Qing government, and later promoted to the chief of industry of the Anguo Military Government. In 1928, after Zhang Xueliang inherited his father's business, he appointed Zhang Jinghui as a member of the Northeast Political Affairs Committee and the chief executive of the Eastern Province Special Region.
After the "918" incident, he quickly surrendered to Japanese imperialism, and in adhering to the intention of the Kwantung Army, he lobbied for the surrender of Ma Zhanshan and the establishment of a puppet regime of the puppet Manchurians, sparing no effort. In 1932, he issued the so-called "Declaration of Independence" and assumed the post of puppet governor of Heilongjiang Province; Under the planning of the Japanese, the "Big Four Meeting" was convened and the "Northeast Administrative Committee" was established, with him as the chairman. After the establishment of the puppet state of Manchukuo, he successively served as the chairman of the puppet Senate and the governor of the puppet North Manchurian Special Region, the puppet minister of military affairs, the puppet prime minister, and the chairman of the puppet Manchurian Concord. In 1945, Japan surrendered, and Zhang ended his criminal career as a traitor. On January 11, 1959, he died of illness in the Fushun War Criminals Management Center.
Zang Shiyi (1885-1956) is known as Fengjiu. A native of Shenyang, Liaoning Province. Graduated from the Japanese Army Non-commissioned Officer School. After graduation, he successively served as Chief of Staff of the Jilin Military Supervision Bureau, Chief of Staff of the Northeast Army Sorting Office, Commander of Martial Law in Fengtian Province, Head of the Military Police of the Third and Fourth Front Armies of the Fengtian Army, Supervisor of the Arsenal of the Three Eastern Provinces, and Chairman of the Liaoning Provincial Government.
After the "918" incident, he was imprisoned by the Japanese army for more than two months, and was "released" on December 13, and took office as the puppet governor of Fengtian Province on December 16. After that, intense behind-the-scenes activities were carried out for the organization of a puppet regime for Japanese imperialism. On February 16, 1932, he participated in the meeting of the "Big Four". After the establishment of the puppet state of Manchukuo, he successively served as the puppet head of the Ministry of Civil Affairs, the puppet minister of civil affairs, the puppet chairman of the Senate of the State Council, and the deputy speaker of the puppet National Highway Council. After the fall of the puppet state of Manchukuo in 1945, he was arrested by the Soviet army. On November 13, 1956, he died of illness in the Fushun War Criminals Management Center.
Xiqia (1884-1952) was a character. Graduated from the Cavalry Section of the Japanese Army Non-commissioned Officer School. After graduation, he successively served as a staff officer of the Heilongjiang Governor's Office, the chief of education of the Jiangwutang of the three eastern provinces, the chief of staff of the three eastern provinces patrol embassy, the director of the military affairs department of the Mongolian Xinjiang Economic and Strategic Embassy, the chief of staff of the Jilin Supervision Office, the chief of staff of the Jilin Northeast Frontier Army Deputy Commander's Office and the training director of the Jilin Army.
After the "918" incident, he surrendered Jilin Province to the enemy, and on September 28, he established the puppet regime of Jilin Province before other provinces in Northeast China, and appointed himself as the governor. Later, he devoted himself to the Japanese invasion and occupation of Kyrgyzstan and Hei and the establishment of the puppet Manchurian regime. After the establishment of the puppet Manchukuo, he successively served as the chief minister of the finance of the puppet Manchukuo (and the puppet governor of Jilin Province), the puppet minister of the palace and other puppet positions. After the surrender of Japan, it was captured by Soviet troops and taken to the Soviet Union. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he was extradited back to China and imprisoned in the Fushun War Criminals Management Center, where he died of illness on October 29, 1952.
Jixing (1879-?) character Peizhi. A native of Shenyang, Liaoning Province. In 1911, he graduated from the Japanese Army Non-commissioned Officer School. After graduation, he served in the Fengjun Army, and successively served as the chief of staff of the Fengjun Headquarters in Beijing, the chief of staff of the 27th Division, the chief of staff of the Jilin Supervisory Military Office, the commander of the 13th Mixed Brigade of the Army and the guard of Yanji Town.
After the "918" incident, he defected to the Japanese army and became a taming tool for Japanese imperialism to carry out colonial rule in Northeast China and brutally suppress the anti-Japanese army and people. After the establishment of the puppet Manchukuo, he served as the commander of the puppet Jilin Provincial Garrison, and planned and participated in the "encirclement and suppression" of the Jilin National Salvation Army and the Jilin Self-Defense Army. After Pu Yi became emperor, he was promoted to the puppet army general and the commander of the 2nd Military District. In 1941, he was promoted to Puyi's chief military attaché and minister of the puppet Shangshu Mansion. In 1943, he was awarded the title of "General", the highest honor in the puppet Manchurian army. After Japan's surrender in 1945, he was arrested by Soviet troops and sent to the Soviet Union. On July 31, 1950, he was extradited back to China and imprisoned in the Fushun War Criminals Management Center, where he later died of illness.
Zhang Haipeng (1869a?) The word Xiantao. A native of Gai County, Liaoning Province. Born in the army. He successively served as the commander of the 55th Infantry Brigade of the 28th Division of the Army, the commander of the 4th Mixed Brigade of the Fengjun Army and the deputy commander of the Haiman Garrison, the commander of the Haman Garrison of the East Railway Road Protection Army, the commander of the 7th Mixed Brigade of the Jilin Army and the commander of the Hasui Garrison, and the commander of the Taoliao Town Guard and the commander of the Taosuo garrison. After the "918" incident, he surrendered to the Japanese army, declared "independence", and appointed himself as the "commander of border security". At the instigation of the Japanese army, he led the puppet army to invade Heilongjiang Province on a large scale, and acted as a pioneer in the Japanese army's attack on the Nenjiang Bridge. After the establishment of the puppet state of Manchukuo, he served as the chief military attache of the puppet ruling government. When the Japanese puppet army invaded Rehe, he served as the commander-in-chief of the former enemy of the puppet army. After the fall of Rehe, he replaced Tang Yulin as the governor of the puppet Rehe Province. After the surrender of Japan, it hid in Tianjin, and was suppressed after the founding of New China.
Yu Zhishan (1882-1951) is a member of the Chinese language. He is a native of Tai'an County, Liaoning Province. Born in the police force. He successively served as the commander of the 5th Mixed Brigade of the Fengtian Army, the commander of the 8th Brigade of the Northeast Independent Cavalry, the chief military attache of Zhang Zuolin, the commander of the 30th Army of the Fengtian Army, the commander of the 22nd Brigade of the Northeast Army, the envoy of the town in the east, and the military counselor of the Office of the Commander of the Northeast Frontier Army.
After the "918" incident, he surrendered to the Japanese invaders, declared "independence", and appointed himself as the "security commander" of the Eastern Side Province. After the establishment of the puppet Manchukuo, he served as the commander of the puppet Fengtian Provincial Garrison, the puppet Minister of Military Affairs, and the puppet Minister of Public Security, and in 1943, he was reappointed as the general of the puppet general's office. In the winter of 1947, he lived in Beiping. After the liberation of Beiping, he was arrested and imprisoned in the Fushun War Criminals Management Center, where he died of illness on May 2, 1951.
Yu Shenzheng (1887-1944) is a dangerous boat. He is a native of Shuangcheng County, Heilongjiang Province. Graduated from the 3rd class of the cavalry section of the Beiyang Army Accelerated School. After graduation, he successively served as the commander of the 10th Brigade of Jilin, the commander of the Jilin Bandit Suppression, and the commander of the 16th Division of the Fengjun Army.
After the "918" incident, he descended to Japan, and led the puppet army to attack Harbin on a large scale under the drive of the Japanese army. He successively served as the commander of the Jilin "Bandits" Army, the deputy commander of the Eastern Provincial Railway Road Protection Army, the commander of the 4th Military Administrative Region and the commander-in-chief of the North Manchurian Railway Road Protection Army. In 1935, he was appointed commander of the 1st Military District and promoted to army general. In July 1937, he concurrently served as the governor of the puppet Sanjiang Province. He died of illness in 1944.
Ding Chao (1876-1950) was a clean man. A native of Xinbin County, Liaoning Province. Graduated from the 8th class of the Japanese Army Non-commissioned Officer School. After graduation, he successively served as the instructor of the 4th Standard of the 2nd Mixed Association, the adjutant of the Army Military Academy, the section chief of the Fengtian Ordnance Factory, the adjutant general of the Jilin Governor's Office, the director of the Fengtian Ordnance Factory, the director of the military station of the Fengjun General Headquarters, the chief of staff of the Heilongjiang Supervision Military Administration, the commander-in-chief of the Manhai Garrison, the commander of the Eastern Provincial Railway Escort Army, the commander of Yanji Town and the commander-in-chief of Yanhui and Wang Martial Law, and the Jichang town guard and the commander of the 28th Brigade.
After the "918" incident, he and Li Du and others once organized their subordinates to resist the Japanese invading army, and participated in major battles such as the Battle of Harbin. After the fall of the sun. After Japan surrendered, he was captured by the Soviet army, and after the founding of New China, he was extradited back to China and imprisoned in the Fushun War Criminals Management Center. In 1950, he died of illness in prison.
In addition, it is also necessary to mention the fate of several major defectors of the Northeast Anti-Japanese Allied Army.
Song Yifu. Former secretary of the Jidong Provincial Party Committee and chief political and military officer of the Western Expeditionary Force of the Second Route Army. After he defected on July 30, 1938, he served as a police assistant of the puppet Binjiang Provincial Police Department, and participated in the "Ba, Mu, and Dongda Arrests" in 1943, committing numerous crimes. After the recovery of Northeast China, in 1946, Song Yifu was sentenced to death by the people's government in Harbin.
Xie Wendong. Commander of the 8th Army. On March 19, 1939, after surrendering to the enemy, he settled in Boli and served as the president of the puppet Boli County Association. After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, Xie Wendong organized the army and was appointed by the Kuomintang Nanjing government as the commander-in-chief of the 15th Group Army, making enemies of the people's army. In February 1946, Xie Wendong was captured alive by the bandit suppression troops of the Hejiang Military Region of the Northeast Democratic Alliance Army in Diao Ling Wudaohezigou, and then escorted back to Boli, where he was sentenced to death by the Boli County People's Government.
Li Huatang. Commander of the 9th Army. After defecting to the enemy in July 1939, he served as the manager of Jiamusi Sanjiang Apartment, but he actually became a Japanese spy. After the recovery of Northeast China, Li Huatang organized the army and was appointed by the Kuomintang Nanjing Government as the general commander of the 1st Group Army of the Northeast Advance Army. In December 1946, he was besieged by the bandit suppression troops of the Hejiang Military Region of the Northeast Democratic Alliance Army in the Yidong area, was wounded and captured, and died on the way to escort Diao Ling.