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Everything about Battle Of Chingshanli totally explained

The Battle of Cheongsanri (Chingshanri in Chinese) was fought between the Imperial Japanese Army and Korean armed groups in a densely-wooded region of eastern Manchuria (Northeast China) called Qingshanli (青山里, 청산리) in October 1920. It occurred during the campaign of the Japanese army in Jiandao, during Japanese occupation of Korea (1910-1945).

Background

After the March 1st Movement of 1919 by Koreans calling for liberation from Japanese occupation, some Korean activists formed an "Independence Army". The Japanese government asked China to subdue them but got no substantive result.
   On October 2, 1920, independence forces raided Hun-ch'un and killed 13 Japanese including the commissioner of the consulate police. In response, Japan decided to send troops to eastern Manchuria. Japan immediately held talks with China, and on October 16 received permission of military action in eastern Jilin from the governor of Jilin.

Campaign

The forces who joined the expedition were:
  • the 19th Division of the Joseon Army,
  • the 28th Brigade of the 19th Division, which was on its way back to Japan, and
  • two units from the 11th and 13th Divisions who had been sent to Vladivostok. Among them, only the 19th Division of the Joseon Army launched an actual military operation and the rest just held a lockdown and a demonstration. The 19th Division was deployed in Hunchun (Isobayashi Detachment), Wangqing (Kimura Detachment) and Yanji-Helong (Azuma Detachment). The Isobayashi and Kimura Detachments engaged in no major combat. Only the Azuma Detachment fought against Korean guerrillas.
The Azuma Detachment engaged in combats with Korean guerrillas from October 21 to 26, and as a result, Koreans retreated from the area of operation. The 19th Division continued the sweeping operation until the end of 1920. Accomplishing their goals, most of the division withdrew from eastern Manchuria in early 1921 and the withdrawal was completed in May. Korean guerrillas went to Siberia to join a revolutionary army Lenin planned to establish.

Controversies

Hun-ch'un Incident

South Korea views the Hun-ch'un Incident as a deception by Japan, who they believe used it as an excuse to detach troops.
   According South Korean sources, the Japanese army bribed a bandit leader called Ch'ang-chiang-hao and made him attack Hun-ch'un, and Japanese victims were incidentally attacked by bandits who were enticed to the raid by Ch'ang-chiang-hao and were not under his control.

Casualties of the Japanese army

South Koreans refer to this battle as the "great victory at Cheongsalli" and consider it a victory of the Independence Army. For the casualties of the Japanese army, Chosun Doknip Undongji Hyulsa by Bak Inseok (1920) states "900-1,600 including Regimental Commander Kano," Daehan Minguk jeongdangsa compiled by the National Election Commission (1964) "over 1,000," Hanguk jeonjaengsa by the Military History Compilation Committee of the Ministry of National Defense (1967) "3,300 dead and wounded," and Hanguk Minjok Undongsa by Jo Jihun (1975) "3,300 including Regimental Commander Kano." Japanese sources claim 11 dead and 24 wounded, and no casualty from officers. These numbers are repeated by the list of the dead of the Yasukuni Shrine. Japanese investigation of weapons of the 19th Division after the expedition claims that the Japanese army consumed little.
   The only Japanese soldier Korean sources name was "Regimental Commander Kano." Chosun Doknip Undongji Hyulsa states that a secret paper by a Japanese consul reported Regimental Commander Kano's death, although Japan hasn't revealed such a report so far. Japan claims the only man corresponding to "Regimental Commander Kano" was Colonel Kano Nobuteru, who served as commander of the 27th regiment, and that his name can't be found in the casualty list, but is said to have led the regiment until 1922. Moreover, after two months of the Battle of Chingshanli, the regiment commanded by Colonel Kano captured one Korean people and this event is recorded in the secrecy telegraph from the Japanese consulate in Chingshanli on November 31, 1920.

Further Information

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