Bright Sword: Follow Kong's fun and build the strongest military industry

Chapter 380 The Anti-Japanese War Cannot Be Hasted

If we are bullied by foreign invaders at our doorstep and we dare not resist, who would have the nerve to call themselves descendants of the Chinese nation?

The next carriage was still filled with cotton cloth. Everyone just took a look and moved on to the next carriage. This time it was filled with miscellaneous military supplies, including various lunch boxes, water bottles, shoes, military uniforms and quilts, which was pretty good.

The carriage at the back became normal again, with bundles of Type 38 rifles and boxes of bullets appearing, which made everyone shout and scream again.

Seeing so many supplies, everyone seemed to be working in a perpetual motion machine and did not feel any fatigue.

Just like this rifle, there are about four rifles in a bundle of straw. Moving one bundle is equivalent to adding four advanced Type 38 rifles to our troops. As long as I think of this, I don’t feel tired, and I can even move two bundles at a time with great speed.

A box of bullets contains at least 5,000 rounds, which is enough for a main force regiment to fight a large-scale battle. It is estimated that the people present may not encounter such a good thing once in several years, so they must work hard.

The problem of things being too heavy and being physically tired does not exist at all, everything is focused on moving the supplies quickly, and everything else has to be put aside.

While the supplies were being moved, another explosion was heard in the distance. Kong Hao could only ask others to move the supplies quickly, while he led the remaining special forces members to check where the sound came from.

When they arrived, they found out that it was the Japanese patrol armored vehicle. No one paid attention to it when it was dark, and it was directly blown into the sky by the explosive packs buried in advance by the special forces. By the way, Kong Hao also won a merit.

Kong Hao immediately ordered the special forces to move the ambush site forward and avoid this place to prevent the Japanese road protection team from discovering it.

Sure enough, half an hour later, more than 20 Japanese soldiers came along the railway, but they were facing more than a dozen special forces soldiers armed with submachine guns. The result can be imagined.

After a few minutes of exchange of fire, all the Japanese soldiers were lying on the ground, and there were no casualties on our side.

Kong Hao was not polite either. He quickly ordered his team members to confiscate all the weapons and ammunition of the Japanese. No matter how small a mosquito leg is, it is still meat. Twenty Type 38 rifles, three Turtle Box pistols and a Type 99 light machine gun, plus more than 3,000 rounds of ammunition, can allow our main force to form an extra reinforced platoon, which is another considerable combat force.

If it were given to the guerrillas, five guerrilla teams with at least a hundred people could be formed at once, which could protect the safety of the people in several towns.

For the next night, our transport teams were frantically scrambling to transport supplies. The Japanese also noticed something unusual on the railway. In addition to stopping the trains behind, they kept sending troops to confirm the situation.

The largest number of special forces sent out at one time was a small team and an armored patrol vehicle. In the critical situation, Kong Hao used a rocket launcher and directly fired a rocket at the Japanese armored vehicle. The rest of the special forces took advantage of the fire to raid the Japanese infantry.

However, fighting at night was indeed a bit inconvenient. Although we wiped out a squad of Japanese devils, one of our team members was injured. Fortunately, he was only slightly injured and was basically fine after being bandaged on the spot, and would not affect subsequent operations.

There is no other way. At this time, we can only rely on the powerful strength of the special forces to defend this place and buy time for our transportation personnel.

If we let the guerrillas defend, they will not be able to stop the devil's attack. Once the enemy breaks through our defense line, the transport team will be in danger.

At this critical moment, even though they knew that fighting in such an environment would be extremely disadvantageous for the special operations team, they could only rely on the team members' strong individual combat capabilities to hold on.

Fortunately, the Japanese troops on the railway were not endless. After several batches were eliminated, they stopped sending troops here. In addition, the county brigade also launched a sparrow war in time. Fights were taking place in several nearby counties, and the Japanese had no time to take care of this side.

Especially after the guerrillas in other places received assistance of weapons and ammunition, they participated in the battle more actively, continuously attacked the enemy, and made the Japanese garrison troops exhausted to cope.

This situation lasted for a full week. By the time the Japanese reacted, all the supplies on the train had already been hidden by the guerrillas, and most of them had even been handed over to the main force.

After receiving weapons and ammunition, our main force also launched appropriate attacks on the Japanese strongholds. Using the tactics of besieging a stronghold and attacking its reinforcements, we consumed a lot of Japanese troops. The anti-Japanese war situation here suddenly improved.

This can be considered as achieving Kong Hao's goal. Next, a large amount of supplies will need to be transported from Tianjin, and the strength of each base must be strengthened.

By five o'clock the next morning, everything on the train had been taken away, even the various tools and disassembled items on the locomotive.

These are all good steel and worth a lot of money. They can be given to the main force or melted down to make hoes or sickles.

Our troops are too poor, and all the iron products are treasures. It's a pity that the train carriages are too big and too heavy, and time is too tight, so there is no way to dismantle them and transport them away. It's such a pity.

However, after all this trouble, the train was completely scrapped. To be on the safe side, Kong Hao had someone place an explosive on the locomotive, which would be detonated completely when leaving. He even buried a lot of booby traps nearby, so it would be nice to kill a few Japanese devils in the process.

Since we can't use it, we won't let the Japanese use it. A train is still worth a lot of money. If it is completely damaged, it will have a certain impact on the Japanese's transportation scheduling.

It is impossible to defeat the Japanese quickly these days, but we can continue to bleed the enemy. For example, if we completely destroy this train, the loss to the Japanese will be at least equivalent to killing an entire squadron of theirs.

In addition to the two squadrons of the Japanese Kwantung Army that had been killed before, as well as the enemy's railway protection troops, the Japanese had at least lost a battalion, and they were their elite veterans.

With so many weapons and ammunition seized, we can expand our troops by 5,000 people, and the enemy's strength will be weakened by more than 1,000 people. In order to suppress our troops, the Japanese will definitely have to mobilize a regiment from other places.

By this calculation, the Japanese will inevitably have one less regiment in other places, and our other brother troops will be much more relaxed. If the field troops are mobilized, it will also relieve some pressure on the front line.

This is just one place. There are wars going on every day in various parts of China. Even if we fight hard, we can still wear the Japanese down.

I remember a great man once said: "The War of Resistance Against Japan cannot be rushed." This is exactly the truth.

After another day of inventory, we finally obtained the following military supplies:

1927 Type 46 rifles, 92 Type 50 light machine guns, with a total of 10 rounds of bullets; 18 Czech light machine guns, with 5 rounds of bullets; 918 Type 11 heavy machine guns, with 1000 rounds of bullets; 50 Turtle Box pistols, with 1 rounds of bullets, 8000 Mauser pistols, with rounds of bullets; grenade launchers, with grenades; and melon grenades.

In addition, there were 30 tons of food, 45 tons of high-quality cotton cloth, and a batch of miscellaneous military supplies, mainly some of the Japanese's daily equipment, such as water bottles, lunch boxes, etc., which could equip about people.

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