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Battle of Yijiangshan Islands

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(Redirected from Battle of Yijiangshan) 1955 battle in the Chinese Civil War
Battle of the Yijiangshan Islands
Part of the First Taiwan Strait Crisis

PLA troops assaulting Nationalist positions
DateJanuary 18–19, 1955
LocationYijiangshan Islands, Zhejiang
Result PRC victory
Belligerents
People’s Republic of China Republic of China
Commanders and leaders
Zhang Aiping Wang Sheng-ming 
Strength
  • 10,000 personnel
  • 184 aircraft
  • 186 ships
  • 1,100 troops
  • 8–12 ships
Campaigns of the Chinese Civil War
First Phase (1927–1937)
Resumption of hostilities (1945–1949)
Aftermath

The Battle of the Yijiangshan Islands occurred during the First Taiwan Strait Crisis in January 1955 when the People's Republic China (PRC) attacked and captured the islands from the Republic of China (ROC). The loss of the Yijiangshans forced the ROC to abandon the Dachen Islands to the PRC. The Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) considers the battle as its first joint operation.

Background

After the Chinese Civil War, the ROC staged attacks on the local PRC coast from the Dachen Islands. Holding the two Yijiangshan islands, which were closer to the coast, contributed to the defense of the Dachens. The ROC regarded defending the Yijiangshans as impractical but valuable for psychological warfare and maintaining American support.

In August 1954, the PLA's East China Military Region formed the Eastern Zhejiang Front Command commanded by Zhang Aiping to lead the campaign. Improving interservice coordination was a major feature of planning and exercises; this was aided by Soviet advisors. The landing force was four battalions from the 60th Infantry Division. Intelligence gathering and reconnaissance started in September, and operations to gain air and naval superiority starting in November.

Attack

The PLA landed on the Yijiangshans on 18 January 1955. PLA aircraft attacked ROC artillery and communication positions in the Yijiangshans and Dachens from 0800 to 1300 hours. The ground forces sailed in three columns and landed at 20 beaches from 1330 to 1500; gunboats gave close support while coastal artillery and aircraft suppressed ROC artillery. Two battalions from the 178th Infantry Regiment, with a third as follow-up landed on the north island, while one battalion from the 180th Infantry Regiment landed on the southern island. PLA aircraft forced back five ROC warships from the Dachens. The PLA quickly broke out of the beachheads and controlled the islands by 1750 on 19 January.

Aftermath

The PRC reported its own losses as 393 casualties, and the ROC's as 519 killed and 567 captured. The ROC reported that the entire garrison of 720 was killed, and that over 3000 PLA troops were killed; the 720 figure was symbolically fabricated to be ten times the number of identified revolutionaries killed during the Second Guangzhou Uprising. A captured ROC soldier visited Taiwan in 2011.

The attack contributed to American support for the ROC. The US adopted the Formosa Resolution nine days after the PRC victory.

The loss of the Yijiangshans compromised the ROC defense system for the Dachens. The ROC evacuated the Dachens in February 1955 under the cover of the United States Navy and Air Force in Operation King Kong.

See also

References

  1. ^ Han Cheung (12 January 2020). "Taiwan in Time: Yijiangshan: Moving the Americans to action?". Taipei Times. Retrieved 14 January 2020.
  2. ^ McCauley, Kevin (13 September 2016). "PLA Yijiangshan Joint Amphibious Operation: Past is Prologue". Retrieved 12 April 2024.
Chinese Civil War
Principal belligerents and campaigns
Nationalist Party / Taiwan National Government ( National Revolutionary Army) Taiwan Constitutional ROC Government (ROC Armed Forces) Taiwan Republic of China on Taiwan

Communist Party / Soviet Republic ( Red Army) Liberated Area ( 8th Route Army, New Fourth Army, etc. People's Liberation Army)  People's Republic of China

Pre-1945Post-1945
1923 Sun–Joffe Manifesto
1924 First United Front
1926 Canton Coup
1927–1949 Chinese Communist Revolution
1927 Nanking incident
Shanghai Commune
Shanghai massacre
Nanjing–Wuhan split
715 Incident
Little Long March
Nanchang uprising
Autumn Harvest Uprising
Guangzhou Uprising
1930–1934 Encirclement campaigns
1931–1934 Chinese Soviet Republic
1933–1934 Fujian People's Government
1934–1936 Long March
1936 Xi'an Incident
1937–1946 Second United Front (Wartime perception of the Chinese Communists)
1941 New Fourth Army incident
1944 Dixie Mission
1945 Chongqing Negotiations
Double Tenth Agreement
Retrocession of Taiwan
1946 Jiaochangkou Incident
Peiping rape case
1945–1947 Marshall Mission
1945–1949 Operation Beleaguer
1947 Yu Zisan Incident
1948 SS Kiangya incident
Liaoshen campaign
1948–1949 Huaihai campaign
Pingjin campaign
1949 Taiping Steamer Incident
Yangtze River Crossing campaign
Amethyst Incident
ROC Government retreat to Taiwan
PRC incorporation of Xinjiang
1949–1953 Bombing of Shanghai
1950 Hainan Island campaign
Wanshan Archipelago Campaign
1950–1958 Kuomintang Islamic insurgency
1961–1972 Project National Glory

28°37′N 121°49′E / 28.61°N 121.82°E / 28.61; 121.82

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