Battle of Guningtou explained

Conflict:Battle of Kuningtou
Partof:the Cross-Strait conflict
Date:October 25–27, 1949
Place:Today's Jinning Township, Greater Kinmen Island (Quemoy), Kinmen County, Fujian Province (Fukien), Republic of China
Result:Nationalist victory
Combatant1: Republic of China
Combatant2: People's Republic of China
Commander1: Chiang Kai-shek
T'ang En-po
Hu Lien
Commander2: Mao Tse-tung
Ch'en Yi
Su Yu
Ye Fei
Strength1:Roughly 40,000 garrisoned troops mainly from the ROC 18th Army, 22nd Army, 12th Army (more reinforcements arrived after the battle however)
Air support from ROC Air Force
Maritime support from ROC Navy[1]
Strength2:19,000 infantry from PLA 29th Army Corps and the 244th, 246th, 251st, 253rd regiments from the PLA 28th Army Corps (Only 9,086 actually landed)
200 landing vessels (mostly confiscated fishing boats)
Mainland artillery support
Casualties1:1,267 killed
1,982 wounded[2]
Casualties2:3,873 killed
5,175 captured[3]

The Battle of Kuningtou[4] or Battle of Guningtou, also known as the Battle of Kinmen, was fought over Kinmen in the Taiwan Strait during the Chinese Civil War in 1949. The failure of the Communists to take the island left it in the hands of the Kuomintang (Nationalists) and crushed their chances of taking Taiwan to destroy the Nationalists completely in the war.[5] [6] [7]

Prelude

Following the establishment of the People's Republic of China on October 1, 1949, the government of the Republic of China under Chiang Kai-shek began withdrawing its forces from mainland China to Taiwan. However, ROC garrisons remained stationed on the islands of Quemoy (Kinmen) and Matsu, located off the coast in Fujian Province. Commanders of the PRC People's Liberation Army (PLA) believed that Quemoy (Kinmen) and Matsu had to be taken before a final assault on Taiwan. The PLA planned to attack Kinmen from nearby Aotou (Chinese: 澳頭) (in Xindian, Xiamen), Dadeng (Tateng) and Lianhe (Lienho) (Chinese: 蓮河) (then part of Nan'an County, now also in Xindian)[8] [9] by launching a first attack with 9,000 troops to establish a beachhead, before landing a second force of roughly 10,000 on Greater Kinmen Island, expecting to take the entire island in three days from an ROC garrison not expected to be larger than two divisions. The Communists had incorrectly estimated that there were only 12,000 Nationalist soldiers on the entire island, and believed they consisted of green recruits and demoralized remnants of conscripted units that had survived defeats in central China – a miscalculation that would contribute to their calamitous defeat.[10]

Expecting that a PLA attack was imminent, ROC commanders ordered the immediate construction of fortifications. By October, ROC troops had laid 7,455 land mines, and constructed roughly 200 earthen bunkers on the shores of Kinmen, as well as several anti-amphibious landing beach obstacles. The ROC garrison on Kinmen was also reinforced with armor (1st Battalion, 3rd Tank Regiment, which were veterans of Burma campaign, consisting of 22 M5A1 Stuart light tanks organized into two tank companies), battle-hardened infantry, and supplies from the 12th Army.[11] [3] In the opening hours of October 25, the PLA's armada (consisting of hundreds of wooden fishing boats) set sail for Kinmen. They intended to land near the village of Longkou on the narrowest part of the island. But due to the crudeness of their craft, choppy waters and winds, many of them were scattered and carried past Longkou and northwestwards toward the shore of Guningtou instead.

In October 1949, the islands were home to approximately forty thousand residents. Despite its small size, Quemoy's strategic significance lay in its remarkably close proximity to the mainland. This geographical proximity positioned Quemoy as a critical outpost for controlling maritime access to Xiamen and its adjacent coastal areas, making it strategically vital for the Nationalist government's retreat to Taiwan.[12]

Battle

October 25

Around 01:30 on October 25, a Nationalist patrol accidentally set off one of the land mines. The blast alerted other units all along the northern shore and the PLA's quiet approach to Kinmen was compromised. Immediately, flares were fired into the air by ROC troops and searchlights swept the area, which brightly illuminated the PLA's fleet and led to their discovery by the Nationalists.[12]

At the time of the discovery, a tank squadron consisting of Tanks 64 and 65, were guarding a tank receiving maintenance (having been stuck in sand the evening prior). Upon seeing the illuminated PLA attack force, the soldiers began returning fire with the tanks.[13] According to reported accounts, an ammunition ship was one of the first hit by ROC tank fire, resulting in a fire that burned neighboring landing craft.[14]

At about 02:00 when the tide had begun to recede, PLA troops from regiments 244, 251, and 253 landed on the north side of Greater Kinmen Island at Guningtou (Ku-ning-t'ou, Chinese: 古寧頭[15]), Huwei (湖尾) and Longkou (壟口). Regiment 244 was the first ashore landing near Lungkou where Nationalist defenders raked them with machine-gun fire, artillery, and mortars. They suffered heavy casualties. Regiments 251 and 253 fared better, landing near Guningtou and Huwei respectively where they broke through ROC defenses and continued to head inland.[12]

Arriving at high tide, many of the PLA landing vessels became caught on submerged anti-amphibious landing beach obstacles and immobilized. When the tide went out, the PLA landing vessels became beached and were unable to return to the mainland to transport the second wave of reinforcements. Although these Communists were initially supported by artillery fire from the mainland, it had to cease firing once the infantry disembarked. Some of the troops, stranded in their vulnerable landing craft still far from shore, had to swim or wade some 650 yards (600 meters) in order to reach the shore, also rendering them without cover and extremely vulnerable to the defenders' fire. The beached PLA vessels were destroyed shortly afterwards by gunfire from two ROC Navy vessels patrolling off the northwest coast of Guningtou, strafing runs by ROCAF P-51s, as well as by ROC troops who burned the mostly wooden boats using flamethrowers, grenades, gasoline, and oil.[12] [16]

The advancing PLA forces were met by the ROC 18th Army and US-made M5A1 tanks of ROC 1st Bn, 3rd Tank Regiment.[17] PLA Regiment 244 held high ground at Shuangru Hill (雙乳山), but were beaten back by ROC armor by early morning. PLA Regiment 253 holding Guanyin Hill (觀音山) and the Huwei Highlands (湖尾高地) were also forced to fall back by 12:00 after an overwhelming ROC counterattack of infantry, tanks, and soldiers with flamethrowers, and supported by mortars and artillery. The PLA troops were attacked from three sides. PLA Regiment 251 managed to break out of an ROC encirclement and entered the village of Guningtou, and dug in at Lincuo (林厝). Shortly afterwards, Regiment 251 was attacked by the ROC 14th and 118th divisions, with the ROC 118th division suffering heavy casualties. By the end of the day, the PLA had lost its beachheads at Huwei and Lungkou.[12]

October 26

At 03:00 on October 26, around 1,000 troops in 4 companies from PLA Regiment 246 and the 85th division landed on Kinmen to reinforce PLA forces already on the island landing again at Huwei and Guningtou. At dawn, Regiment 246 managed to break through ROC forces surrounding the village of Guningtou, making a rendezvous with the surviving PLA troops taking cover in the town. At 06:30, the ROC 118th division launched a counterattack along the northern coast on PLA forces in Guningtou at Lincuo. The resulting battle was extremely bloody and soon turned into urban warfare in the streets and alleyways of Guningtou. With air support from P-47s and B-24s of the ROC Air Force, ROC forces eventually prevailed, taking Lincuo by noon and Nanshan (南山) at 3PM. Surviving PLA forces began falling back to the coast.[18]

October 27

By the early morning of October 27, the surviving People's Liberation Army forces had exhausted both their food and ammunition supplies. 1,300 PLA troops retreated to the beaches north of Guningtou. After a final ROC assault, the remaining PLA troops surrendered to ROC forces at 10:00 on that day. All of the PLA troops who had landed on Kinmen were either killed or captured.

Aftermath

Following the failure at Guningtou, PLA General Ye Fei submitted an official apology to Mao Zedong asking to be punished for his failure. General Ye attributed the failure of the operation to three factors: an insufficient number of landing vessels, failure to properly secure the beachheads, and the lack of an overall commanding officer to oversee the three regiments involved in the first wave. As Ye was one of Mao's favorite generals, Mao never took any action against him.

For ROC forces accustomed to continuous defeats against the PLA on the mainland, the victory at Guningtou provided a much-needed morale boost. The failure of the PRC to take Kinmen effectively halted its advance towards Taiwan. With the outbreak of the Korean War in 1950 and the signing of the Sino-American Mutual Defense Treaty in 1954, the Communist plans to invade Taiwan were put on hold.

Due to the PLA's defeat, the Battle of Guningtou was not widely publicized in the PRC until early in the 21st century[19] when the publication of articles within the mainland examining reasons for its failure was widely distributed. The army generally concluded that its lack of amphibious landing experience, lack of sophisticated landing craft, lack of armor, low attack-repelling ability, lack of international recognition, and lack of intelligence services contributed to their defeat. As they had expected to win the battle after one day of fighting, they therefore did not bring enough ammunition, supplies, food, and water, on the first wave and also to a lesser degree during the second day's invasion. The battle is seen as being highly significant in Taiwan, as it laid the foundation for the current status quo relationship between Taiwan and mainland China.

Order of battle

People's Liberation Army

First Wave

Second Wave (only 10 platoons actually landed)

Republic of China Army

Greater Kinmen

Corps Headquarters

Corps Headquarters

5th Army: Commander Li Yuncheng

Air Force (Commander-in-Chief Zhou Zhirou)

Navy (Commander-in-Chief Li Yuxi)

ROC defenses at the landing site

The M5A1 tanks employed by the ROC forces on Kinmen proved to be effective in countering the human wave attacks employed by the initial PLA landing forces, which were mostly composed of light infantry. ROC tank crews who had depleted their ammunition used their tanks as road rollers to crush PLA infantry. The pivotal role these tanks played caused ROC troops to give the M5A1 the nickname "Bear of Kinmen" (金門之熊). The PLA's initial landing force of the 244th regiment at Longkou (壟口) was met by three tanks (#64, #65, #66) of the 1st platoon, 3rd company of the ROC 1st Battalion, 3rd Tank Regiment. The #66 tank had broken down on the beach the previous evening after company exercises, and the other two tanks in the platoon had been ordered to stay and guard it while repairs were attempted.[21]

The ROC Navy tank landing ship ROCS Chung Lung (中榮) was anchored near the PLA's landing site on October 25, and used its significant firepower (2x2 40mm guns, 6x1 40mm guns, 8x1 20mm guns) to destroy beached PLA landing craft, again made up mostly of wooden junks and fishing boats, during the battle. Chung Lung was supposed to leave on the evening of October 24 after offloading its cargo, but remained, offering an official excuse of "bad weather". The unmentioned real reason the ship remained in the area was that it was running a side business of smuggling brown sugar from Taiwan island in exchange for peanut oil. However, there was not enough peanut oil on the whole island for the deal, so the ship was forced to stay for another day while waiting for more peanut oil to be produced, making it the accidental hero of the battle.[22]

The battle also saw one of the few instances of combined-arms warfare from ROC forces. The ROCA 45th Division that formed part of Kinmen's defense garrison were formerly a ROCAF airfield security brigade and was both equipped with specialized radio equipment and supported by forward air controllers from the ROCAF, giving the division the ability to directly coordinate with ROCAF aircraft operating over the island. The division's commander, on his own initiative, organized air support that arrived before dawn and from his command post ordered airstrikes on PLA landing craft and transport ships off shore. This contributed to stranding of PLA forces already landed on the island.[23]

Legacy

In 1984, the soldiers and the fallen were memorialized in the Guningtou Battle Museum. The M5A1 tanks used the battle were also memorialized, displayed outside the museum.[24] [25]

In Taiwan, the battle was called “The Great Victory at Guningtou” .[26] Later views on the battle reflect a nuanced understanding of its significance and outcome. Government reports and scholarly analyses highlighted Chiang Kai-shek's strategic foresight and the KMT's preparedness as key factors in the victory over the PLA. While acknowledging tactical errors by the PLA, newer perspectives also emphasize the role of "coincidences" that favored the KMT, such as the accidental triggering of a landmine and the sudden revival of malfunctioning tanks. Despite differing interpretations, these analyses underscore the enduring legacy of the battle as a testament to the importance of preparation and readiness in military endeavors.[27]

See also

References

Sources

External links

24.4822°N 118.3089°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Gallery: The Battle That Saved Taiwan. August 7, 2012.
  2. Web site: 老衲. 2002. 古寧頭之役的回顧 . 四海一家軍事網 . 2004-06-01. https://web.archive.org/web/20040608064047/http://seehi.fayay.com/matr/show.php?id=250. 8 June 2004 . live. Chinese language only. See 戰果
  3. http://seehi.fayay.com/matr/show.php?id=250 老衲
  4. Web site: Chiang Kai-shek (1st–5th terms). Office of the President Republic of China (Taiwan). 29 September 2019. 1949-10-26 Taiwan wins victory in Battle of Kuningtou against Chinese Communists in Kinmen..
  5. Web site: 金門古寧頭戰役(一). https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/BUslg9_o4Xo. 2023-10-03 . live. 3 September 2009. YouTube. zh-Hant-tw.
  6. Web site: 金門古寧頭戰役(二). https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/ZtoAvnoFtqM. 2023-10-03 . live. 3 September 2009. YouTube. zh-Hant-tw.
  7. Web site: 金門古寧頭戰役(三). https://ghostarchive.org/varchive/CNwWgpXPz9M. 2023-10-03 . live. 3 September 2009. YouTube. zh-Hant-tw.
  8. Book: Chinese: 臺灣歷史地圖 增訂版. . Taiwan Historical Maps, Expanded and Revised Edition. February 2018. zh-tw. National Museum of Taiwan History. 978-986-05-5274-4. 154. Taipei. Chinese: 古寧頭戰役地圖1949年10月 3共軍集結澳頭、大嶝、蓮河 澳頭 大嶝島 蓮河.
  9. Web site: Taiwan's Tanks Managed to Do What Hitler's Mighty Panzers Failed to Do at Normandy. Sebastien Roblin. 26 February 2017. 11 August 2019. The National Interest. Calculating that the Republic of China forces had only eleven thousand troops on Kinmen island, the PLA assembled nineteen thousand troops on the mainland and Dadeng Island for the assault..
  10. Web site: Gallery: The Battle That Saved Taiwan. August 7, 2012.
  11. Web site: Battle of Guningtou: The Republic of China Fights for Survival. December 6, 2016.
  12. Yu . Maochun Miles . 2016 . THE BATTLE OF QUEMOY: The Amphibious Assault That Held the Postwar Military Balance in the Taiwan Strait . Naval War College Review . 69 . 2 . 91–107 . 26397935 . 0028-1484.
  13. Web site: 2014-10-20 . 古寧頭「開炮」小兵重返金門變老翁 - 兩岸社會 旺e報 . 2024-03-25 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141020080221/http://www.want-daily.com/portal.php?mod=view&aid=53785 . October 20, 2014 .
  14. Web site: 搶救遷臺歷史記憶庫 . 搶救遷臺歷史記憶庫 . 2024-03-25 . www.mocsr.com . zh-TW.
  15. Web site: Washington, D. C.. NG 50-15 HSIA-MEN. 1954. Perry–Castañeda Library Map Collection. Army Map Service. Ku-ning-t'ou 古寧頭.
  16. Web site: Huang . Jiamo . Chen . Cungong . 1988 . Interview Records of Mr. Lao Shenghuan . https://web.archive.org/web/20151117031651/http://www.mh.sinica.edu.tw/MHDocument/Publication/Publication_333.pdf. November 17, 2015.
  17. Web site: 自由時報電子報 . 2020-12-26 . 第一砲重擊上岸共軍 古寧頭戰役英雄熊震球辭世 - 政治 - 自由時報電子報 . 2024-03-24 . news.ltn.com.tw . zh-TW.
  18. Book: 中国人民解放军第三野战军战史 . 1996 . 解放军出版社 . 978-7-5065-3170-2 . zh.
  19. Web site: 2004 . Jinman and Dengbu . Amphibious Warfare Capabilities of the People's Liberation Army: An Assessment on Recent Modernizations . China Defense . 2006-03-12 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20060513064259/http://www.china-defense.com/pla/plaamphops/plaamphops02.html . 2006-05-13 .
  20. Book: 林福隆等著 . 軍事史評論第23期 . 2016-06-01 . 國防部政務辦公室(秀威經銷) . zh-TW.
  21. Web site: 2004 . 遺落戰史:《金門之熊的故事》 . 鐵之狂傲遊戲網 . 2006-03-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110725223226/http://www.gamez.com.tw/showthread.php?t=42160 . July 25, 2011 . dead . Copy of article originally from 華夏經緯網.
  22. Web site: 201 中海 . 60.250.180.26 . 2015-05-30 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131101062543/http://60.250.180.26/taiwan/4302.html . 2013-11-01 . dead .
  23. Book: 黃嘉謨 . 陳存恭 . 《勞聲寰先生訪問紀錄》 . 台北 . 中央研究院近代史研究所 . September 1988 . 2015-11-16 . https://web.archive.org/web/20151117031651/http://www.mh.sinica.edu.tw/MHDocument/Publication/Publication_333.pdf . 2015-11-17 . live .
  24. Web site: Tourism Administration . Republic of China (Taiwan) . 2008-04-30 . Tourism Administration, Republic of China (Taiwan)-Kinmen County . 2024-03-24 . Tourism Administration, Republic of China (Taiwan) . ENGLISH.
  25. Book: Denton, Kirk A. . The Landscape of Historical Memory: The Politics of Museums and Memorial Culture in Post–Martial Law Taiwan . 2021 . Hong Kong University Press . 978-988-8528-57-8 . 1. 10.2307/j.ctv1wd02k5 . j.ctv1wd02k5 .
  26. Web site: 2018-10-21 . Taiwan in Time: How the 'Great Victory' was won - Taipei Times . 2024-03-24 . www.taipeitimes.com.
  27. Book: 厲復霖 . 黃埔學報第77期 . 1974-09-01 . 中華民國政府出版品 . zh.