Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Acknowledgements
- Creating a revolutionary movement
- Competition and dissension within
- The drive to unify China – first phase
- Conflict over revolutionary goals
- Mounting problems for the Wuhan regime
- The communists turn to rebellion
- The final drive – Peking captured and Nanking the new capital
- Bibliographical essay
- Bibliography
- Index
The drive to unify China – first phase
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Acknowledgements
- Creating a revolutionary movement
- Competition and dissension within
- The drive to unify China – first phase
- Conflict over revolutionary goals
- Mounting problems for the Wuhan regime
- The communists turn to rebellion
- The final drive – Peking captured and Nanking the new capital
- Bibliographical essay
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Planning for the Northern Expedition
Planning had long been underway for a military campaign from Kwangtung province northwards to the Yangtze. General Blyukher presented a partial plan in March and June 1925, and drew up a more complete one in September while in Kalgan recuperating from Canton's sultry climate, both thermal and political. The September plan estimated the enemy's potential resistance against an expedition made up of regrouped and better trained Nationalist forces, and predicted no difficulty in the expedition taking the Wuhan cities on the middle Yangtze and then capturing Shanghai. It was a remarkably prescient prediction.
On 16 April 1926 a joint meeting of the Kuomintang Political Council and the Military Council appointed Chiang Kai-shek, Chu P'ei-te and Li Chi-shen as a committee to plan for the Northern Expedition. After Borodin's return and promise of support for the northern campaign, Chinese and Russian staff members did further planning, and when Blyukher returned to Canton late in May he refined the plans and presented them to the Military Council on 23 June. Blyukher emphasized a single thrust through Hunan towards Hankow, with forces deployed to protect Kwangtung from Fukien on the east and other forces to protect the expedition's right flank from attack by Sun Ch'uan-fang in Kiangsi. The expedition was to begin only when all troops were in position, because of the difficulty of coordination, given the primitive facilities for communication between units.
In preparation for the campaign Chiang Kai-shek organized a General Headquarters of the National Revolutionary Army, which eventually replaced the Military Council, a collegial group of leading political and military figures, as the principal command organ.
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- Information
- The Nationalist Revolution in China, 1923–1928 , pp. 49 - 77Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1984