Li Jishen rubbed his eyes, he was quite tired. The constant campaigning was really getting to him, but he could not give up. The war was, after all, going much better than he could have hoped. Guangxi forces were advancing along the entire front, mostly due to the lack of heavy resistance. At the moment Bai Chongxi was with him, as he feared that the Chinese would return to Jiujiang before his own forces reached the city and wished for Li Jishen to continue to retain his divisions in a position from which they could support Bai Chongxi’s own corps. Li Jishen had already made up his mind, however, to do so regardless of what Bai Chongxi said at him, as he would arrive there in only three days, and allowed his mind to wander over the events of the past month.
Von Appel and Chen Jitang advanced without any fighting to the Zunyi-Huaihua line, von Appel’s corps finally making contact with Yunnese forces totaling seven divisions in Zhaotung. They had halted in front of Fuling only because it was strongly held by the Nationalists—at least three divisions, in rather mountainous terrain. Though they wished to continue, Li Jishen had ruled in favor of halting and resting for a short while—even the seven Yunnanese divisions on their flank may not have been enough to throw the Nationalist defenders across the river behind Fuling. The Yunnanese forces themselves had even been slightly valuable the past month as well, attacking any Nationalist forces that marched through Chongqing, keeping them off balance in the area though Li Jishen privately suspected this also had the deleterious effect of also sending some fleeing divisons to Fuling. To Chen Jitang’s right, Li Zongren did not advance beyond Shaoyung, as another Nationalist corps barred his way to Changde and Li Jishen had again ruled cautiously, only Chen Jitang’s forces were available to support him.
The western front.
More occurred to the east, both in terms of violence and territorial gain. This was partially because the terrain was kinder to advancing armies, but also because the defenders were still sown less thickly than they had become just slightly to the west. Major General Kravelkin’s Guangdong Baoantui advanced from Wuzhou to Changsha, through Hengyang and Zhuzhou, without encountering any resistance and secured the distance between Li Zongren’s right and Li Jishen’s left flanks, if somewhat weakly. Li Jishen himself attacked Pingxiang after occupying Hengyang, supported by Shermentcheff’s corps, as Bai Chongxi’s own divisions were still marching Ganzhou from their original positions in front of Guangzhou at the time.
The attack on Pingxiang, which tore at the already hard-hit Nationalist defenses in the region.
As soon as Bai Chongxi had reached Ganzhou he wheeled his corps past the defeated remnants of the Nationalist division at Pingxiang to march, unopposed, on the airfield at Nanchang, a rather exposed position that held great strategic value.
Bai Chongxi’s drive on Nanchang, where the airfields were in use until mere hours before his arrival.
In short succession, Bai Chongxi took part in two separate operations. First, there was Shermentcheff’s advance from Ganzhou to Shangrao, which began victoriously but had Shermentcheff bogged and then withdrawn to his starting point at Ganzhou just yesterday.
The ultimately failed drive on Shangrao.
Once he had helped secure Shermentcheff’s original victory, he turned north and pushed toward Jiujiang, supported by Li Jishen’s own corps, which had recently arrived in Pingxiang. This was the operation Li Jishen was still currently supporting.
The current operation, though at the moment the Nationalists had no presence closer than the river.
On the coastal front, Lindemann and Golukjin had been pushing forward as well. Golukjin had placed himself well, and only participated in a supporting role all month. Firstly, Lindemann and Golukjin decided, quite logically, that Quanzhou had to fall first. It was in the process of being reinforced and, though encirclement was tempting, the terrain was still mountainous and thus hostile to advancing without superiority. Thus, Lindemann attacked frontally, with Golukjin hitting the Nationalist flanks, and the enemy broke and fled.
The attack on Quanzhou.
From Quanzhou, Lindemann quickly pushed onward to Fuzhou, with Golukjin supporting. Li Jishen knew that, once Lindemann has established himself there, the roles would be reversed as Golukjin would attack to capture Nanping and Lindemann would support him.
The second part of June’s drive along the coast.
Li Jishen grunted, it was a good system of coordination and the terrain suited it; the rest of the Guangxi army was attempting to emulate it but the front was slowly widening beyond what could be handled. Li Jishen looked back at the map once more, before he noticed that Bai Chongxi was looking expectantly at him. Blinking, Li Jishen grinned, almost sheepishly, and nodded.
“I will support you until you’ve gained Jiujiang.”
Bai Chongxi nodded. “Thank you, sir. Now, if you will excuse me, I will return to my own headquarters.”
Li Jishen grunted and nodded. After watching Bai Chongxi leave, he looked back at the map. The Nationalists were not proving as difficult as expected yet, but that would surely change. Not only that, but the Communists had begun expanding. They will need to be watched…
The situation in China, July 1 1936.