The combat mission has come down. In order to capture the Japanese technicians and rescue the enslaved people, we must send troops to rush into Zhoujiatun.

Zhoujiatun has now been developed by the Japanese into a diamond-shaped city dependent on the railway. One of its important facilities is the railway station, 90% of which has been completed and can be put into use once the roof is completed. There are several large shacks next to the railway station housing 2000 captured civilians. Hundreds of them are crowded in one shack with only one stove. The situation is extremely bad.

Next to the prisoners' shacks was the Japanese barracks, which almost surrounded the prisoners' shacks. This was done to facilitate management and prevent the prisoners from escaping.

The Japanese had an engineering corps stationed here with a lot of heavy construction equipment. There were more than 40 trucks for transporting building materials alone, and more than 30 other special construction vehicles. This was a huge fortune, and Li Weiguo could only say that he was very lucky to have encountered it.

At 1 a.m., the Punitive Army launched an attack in the midst of severe snowstorms. A modified bulldozer rushed in front to clear the snow and clear the way. Behind it were 10 Type 89 modified tanks, all of which were manned by Punitive Army soldiers equipped with automatic rifles.

These vehicles rushed directly towards the enemy's engineering corps garrison area. The roar of the engines was blown away by the blizzard along the way, and no one noticed it at all. When the tank team rushed into the residential area of ​​Zhoujiatun, no one opened the window to check!

The Japanese civilians living here have been lazy for too long, and now there is a huge snowstorm, no one is willing to open the door to get some fresh air. I don't believe that the enemy can launch an attack in such shitty weather. The tank troops of the Punishment Army actually had a smooth journey!

They soon arrived at the camp of the Japanese engineering regiment. There was a wire mesh door at the entrance of the camp. There was a small wooden house in front of the wire mesh. Fire could be seen through the gaps in the wooden house. This should be a sentry post, but because it was too cold, the Japanese on duty actually closed all the doors and windows.

The bulldozer driver accelerated, and with a loud bang, the cabin was smashed to pieces, with wood pieces and various debris flying everywhere. The two Japanese soldiers on duty inside were sent to another world without even showing up.

The bulldozer used all its remaining power to instantly break open the barbed wire, and 10 tanks entered one after another. Behind the tanks were 8 armored personnel carriers, and behind them was a large group of punitive army infantry running fast.

The tanks and armored personnel carriers quickly unloaded the infantry, and the infantry rushed towards the Japanese barracks as soon as they got off the vehicles.

A punitive army soldier took out a 2-kilogram explosive grenade from the cloth bag on his waist while running. He kicked open the Japanese barracks, pulled the ring of the grenade, and threw it inside. The Japanese immediately fell to the ground with his hands on his head.

There was a loud bang and the ground shook. The 2-kilogram grenade could be used against tanks and exploded in the Japanese barracks, killing half of the dozens of Japanese soldiers inside.

The punitive army soldiers quickly stood up, jumped into the house, raised their Liberator automatic rifles and started shooting. The Japanese soldiers who had just been awakened by the grenades were shot down while screaming.

The Liberator automatic rifle had only 25 rounds in its magazine, and the penal soldier quickly emptied the magazine. He stepped aside to reload, while another penal soldier raised his gun to replenish firepower.

The two men cooperated seamlessly and fired 6 magazines. A squad of more than 60 Japanese devils in the barracks were eliminated without them even seeing where the attackers were.

Gunshots were heard and the Japanese reacted, but the soldiers stationed here were engineers and did not have many heavy weapons. In addition, the commander of this regiment felt that it was impossible for the enemy to launch an attack in such cold weather, so he did not arrange for defense. As a result, they paid the price for their laziness.

The tanks of the Punishment Army began indiscriminate shelling. The 57mm guns fired high-explosive shells, which could blow a large hole in the wooden barracks in one go. The vehicle-mounted machine guns and the armored personnel carrier machine guns were also firing. The rain of bullets penetrated the wooden houses and killed many sleeping Japanese soldiers.

"What happened to my kidney?"

A raggedly dressed Japanese squadron leader pushed open the door of the barracks and saw two men in white carrying machine guns running to the door of his barracks. The Japanese was stunned for a moment, but the two men in white were not.

One of them picked up a machine gun and started shooting. The Japanese soldier fell to the ground with blood flowers bursting out of his body. The blood flowed out of his body and it froze in less than a second. The body was also frozen visibly to the naked eye.

The machine gunner of the Punishment Army held the trigger tightly and did not let go. Round after round of rifle bullets were fired. He swung the muzzle of the gun left and right, making holes in the wooden boards of the barracks, and screams were heard from inside.

He emptied the 100-round infantry ammunition belt at one time, causing white smoke to come out of the ceramic steel barrel. He dodged to the side to change the ammunition belt, and another machine gunner picked up the machine gun to add fire, and the continuous rattling sound continued.

The sudden attack by the punitive army turned the Japanese camp into chaos. There were sounds of machine guns, explosions, screams, fire everywhere, people running around, and bulldozers rushing in from the east end of the barracks and rushing out from the west end. The Japanese camp was in chaos.

Under the current situation, the Japanese are doomed to be defeated. Not to mention that the Japanese here are just engineers, even those regiments with single-digit numbers can only wait for death.

The noise was too loud and the wind and snow couldn't blow it away. The Japanese pioneers in the city were in chaos. They knew that the noise meant the enemy had broken in, but they had no way to escape. It was so cold that even a pee would freeze them. No one could escape in this kind of weather. The weather had become a cage, leaving them with nowhere to go. Now all they could do was pray to Amaterasu, hoping that the imperial soldiers would win.

In a landlord's compound in Zhoujiatun, a group of Japanese soldiers hurriedly pushed open the door of a house. Inside were three drunk Japanese lieutenants, a geologist with glasses and a literary look, and a traitor leader wearing a black patrol uniform.

When the Japanese soldiers saw that their officers were drunk like idiots, they were overwhelmed.

The Japanese soldier went up and shouted to the regiment commander: "Sir! The enemy is coming! Please issue a combat order quickly!"

The Japanese captain reeked of alcohol, his face was as red as a monkey's butt, and his eyes were narrowed so narrow that he could hardly open them.

"Enemy? Soga! These wines are the enemy!"

He pointed to the wine jug on the table.

"Do you want an order? Yosi, the order is to destroy all this wine, hehehehehehe..."

The guy stood up shakily, grabbed the Japanese soldier's collar, picked up the wine jug and poured it into his mouth.

"Hehehehe, destroy all this wine. Come on, do the job as ordered. Hehehehehehe..."

When the Japanese saw that the regiment commander was completely drunk, they looked at the several captains who were sleeping soundly on the wine table, and listened to the fierce gunfire not far away, and they were filled with despair.

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