- Development of Chinese armoured forces (1927-1945)
This article deals with the chronology and development of Chinese armoured forces from
1927 to1945 .Introduction of Armoured Vehicles
The Chinese warlord
Zhang Zuolin introduced tanks toChina . Surprised during the Northern Expedition byChiang Kai-shek 'sNational Revolutionary Army , he bought severalRenault FT-17 tanks armed with 37 mm guns from France in 1927. It is uncertain how these tanks were used in combat, but they were eventually captured by the Japanese and the Chinese Nationalists. The tanks captured by the Japanese army were deployed in theKwantung Army and later used during theMukden Incident . The Nationalists in the meantime also bought 36 FT-17 tanks. However, they saw no action but were used mainly for training. Also about 6 or 10 Renault UE light armoured carriers armed with Browning MG were bought in France.Additional Armoured Vehicles
Influenced by the Japanese tank performance during the
First Battle of Shanghai , the Chinese Nationalist government started the mechanisation of the army in1933 , buying 24 British Carden Loyd Mk VItankette s. Later they bought about 20Vickers 6-ton tanks between1935 and1936 . They also bought someVickers Amphibious Tanks , which were developed in1932 and not used in theUnited Kingdom .Since
1930 , the Nationalists had hired several German military advisers. Though the German advisers were not particularly eager in teaching the Chinese,Fact|date=February 2007 they made the Nationalists purchase manyEurope an weapons through a German company with which the German advisers cooperated with. The Nationalists bought ItalianCV-33 tankettes, German Panzer I Ausf. A light tanks and British 12-ton tanks. The exact name of the British 12-ton tank is unknown.With these newly purchased tanks the Nationalists organized three tank battalions in 1936. The 1st Battalion in Shanghai had 32 Vickers Amphibious tanks and some Vickers 6-ton tanks, and the 2nd Battalion also in
Shanghai had 20 Vickers 6-ton tanks, 4 Carden Loyd tankettes and carriers. The 3rd Battalion in Nanking had 10 Panzer I Ausf. A tanks, 20 CV-33 tankettes and some SdKfz 221 and 222 armored cars. When theSecond Sino-Japanese War broke out in earnest, these battalions participated in theSecond Battle of Shanghai and theBattle of Nanking and were more or less completely destroyed by the Japanese forces.In early
1938 , theJapanese government demanded that the German government withdraw all German advisers from China. Given the closer relations between the two nations, Hitler agreed and soon after they left China.After the Germans left, the
Soviet Union started to support the Nationalists. Soviet advisers and Soviet tanks arrived in China for the first time in March1938 [ [http://mailer.fsu.edu/~akirk/tanks/china/china.html China ] ] . The Soviet advisers organized a mechanised unit in China, the200th Division , which consisted of one tank regiment and one motorised infantry regiment. The tank regiment consisted of four tank battalions. Each tank battalion had three tank companies. The tank regiments had approximately 200 armored fighting vehicles (AFVs). The Nationalist government bought 88T-26 tanks andBA-10 andBA-20 armored cars. These AFVs and remaining German AFVs were deployed in the 200th Division and the division finally saw action in late 1938, when it inflicted a devastating defeat upon the Japanese army at theBattle of Kunlun Pass . This division then saw action in the Burma Theatre underJoseph Stilwell , to disastrous results. With the signing of theMolotov-Ribbentrop Pact , the Soviet Union became less interested in supporting the enemy of their new German ally and further aid was stopped.Upon the American entry into the war in
1941 , it began to supply China with AFVs which the Soviets were unable to provide.M4 Sherman s andM18 Hellcat s trickled in through Burma and formed part of the several well-equipped, well-trained armies that the Nationalists could deploy. These units were responsible for stopping numerous Japanese attacks during the later phases of the war.ee also
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Development of Chinese Nationalist air force (1937-1945) References
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