Title: THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
1THE LONG MARCH
CAUSES, KEY EVENTS, AND CONSEQUENCES OF THE
MARCH
Andrea Nam, Ayush, James Hooi, James Huang,
Alessio, Vicky Lee, Sau Gwan Chan, David
2THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
3THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
- The Long March was caused mainly because of
Chiang Kai Sheks hatred of communism. - After the Communist-Kuomintang split, communists
retreated to Jiangxi, and within a few years of
arriving, they had gained the support of the
peasants under their rule, mainly because of the
land redistribution, which allowed millions of
poor peasants who had never owned land before
become land owners and their own masters, and
also because they had reduced taxes, set up
schools and peasant councils. Also, the red army
members acted courteous and disciplined to the
peasants, which played an important part of
gaining the peasants support. - .
4THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
- In Chiang Kai-shek's point of view, the area in
which he found the most threat in was the Jiangxi
Province, where many Communists were living. He
launched four extermination campaigns, and they
all failed because they all had the same tactics.
- However, the fifth campaign was different. He
used a new strategy to attack the communists,
thought up by a German military advisor, General
Hans von Seeckt. The plan was successful, and on
October 1933, the blockhouse strategy began. - .
Hans Von Seeckt, KMDs military advisor from
Germany
5THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
- The Communists had succeeded in surviving through
the first four extermination campaigns. Their
method was to lure the Kuomintang into a small
area by retreating and then attacking them so as
many as possible would be killed in a
concentrated space. However, as Chiang launched
the fifth campaign, the Communists changed their
tactics.
- Otto Braun was a soviet advisor who was
living with the Communists in the Jiangxi
province. He was convinced that Mao, part of the
Communist Central Committee, had the wrong
tactics.
Otto Braun, the Communists military advisor sent
from the USSR
6THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
- The fifth extermination campaign was so
successful mainly because the Communists had an
incompetent military advisor, Otto Braun, who
recommended new tactics to defend their borders
by fighting head on with the KMD instead of using
Maos cowardly tactics. - However,Otto Brauns tactics led to a loss of
soldiers and weapons that could not be replaced
because of the blockhouses that cut them off from
the rest of China. - Mao and Braun disagreed with each other because
they each had different ideas which they thought
were the best. In Brauns point of view, Maos
tactics went against the Communist belief. When
they retreated inside the province, they would
leave the outer-lying houses helpless and
vulnerable. Although this action helped them
survive the campaigns, the innocent villagers
would be killed or starved to death. This tactic
was also hailed as cowardly, and eventually Mao
was expelled from the Central Committee.
7THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CAUSES OF THE LONG MARCH
- Otto Braun's tactics cost many lives. The
Communists were severely short of supplies due to
the blockhouse rings that continuously cut them
off from the rest of China. By the summer of
1934, the Communists were trapped inside the
heart of Jiangxi, surrounded by multiple layers
of Kuomintang blockhouses. - In order to survive, Mao suggested that they
should break out of the blockhouses and attack
the KMD from the rear, but his voice was ignored,
and Otto Braun planned a retreat to the Communist
base of the border of Hunan and Hubei where their
second red army group was based. - By the beginning of October 1934, around 87000
soldiers had started the retreat planned by Otto
Braun. They took all the equipment needed to set
up a new government, including printing presses,
radio equipment and gold bars etc. In addition,
they also carried with them as much weaponry as
they could. - The equipment would be greatly useful, either on
the march or in setting up a new government.
However, they carried much of the equipment on
their backs, which slowed the Red Army greatly.
It took them six weeks to break through the
blockhouse rings, and they were attacked as soon
as they had broken through.
8THE KEY FEATURES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE KEY FEATURES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE KEY FEATURES OF THE LONG MARCH
9What happened in the first six weeks of the Long
march?
- It took the Red Army 6 weeks to break through the
blockhouses and when they did manage to do so,
they were met with the GMD and were forced to
fight a major battle at the Xiang River that made
them lose almost half their men. - Half of the original 83000 communists who left
Jiang Xi died due to various reasons majorly
because of the extermination campaign. - The communists went through many different
provinces like Hunan, Guangxi and Guangdong.
10- They blamed Otto Braun because it was his easily
counter-able tactics that led to an immense loss
of communist lives. He had led the Red Army in a
straight line that allowed the GMD to predict
their actions, and it was because he told them to
take too much useless equipment, such as printing
presses and furniture, that slowed them down when
they could have escaped.
- At the Zunyi Conference Mao Zedong was elected
chairman of the CCP and Otto Braun was suspended.
11- He turned a cowardly retreat into a source of
pride for the communists through misdirection
(Lying/propaganda) - Mao led the Red Army on the route that twisted
and turned so that the GMD would not be able to
predict their route.
12They outsmarted the GMD, who were busy occupying
ferries by pretending to build a bridge while
actually they sent a small group of soldiers to
secure and assault some of the GMD soldiers and
capture their ferries.
13- The Long March was halted by the river which was
swollen with water and harried by the GMD air
force so they tried capturing the Luding
suspension bridge, but to their dismay it was
badly damaged and inoperable and so they had to
assault it. - 22 soldiers swung across the river gorger with
the chains which were all that were left of the
bridge, whilst under enemy fire, which allowed
the rest of the red army to pass through.
14- At the snowy mountains the men had to cross peaks
up to 4800m high and even in the summer many of
the southerners died of hypothermia. They were
caught in a terrible hailstorm that froze them
men whenever they rested or sat down. - At the grasslands the army was beleaguered by the
large amount of swamps and quicksand pits causing
a large loss of life by both illness and other
means. There were large amounts of mosquitoes
which made the mens faces black and their bodies
weak. The swampy water smelled horrible and made
people vomit.
15- The GMD leaders had not been swayed by the fact
that the CCP successfully crossed through the
Chang Jiang River, but in fact, the CCP had
fallen into enemy territory. Not the GMD, but in
an area where a primitive tribe, the Lolos. - The CCP had to pass through this area, but the
Lolos were not willing to let them through. It
was only after the CCP decided to bribe them with
money and weapons, did the Lolos let the Red Army
through.
16- The Long march ended in October 1935 at the Red
Army base in Shaanxi province.
17- Miles covered around 8000 miles covered in less
than 370 days - Communists Army Strength (Oct 1934)
Approximately 86,000 - Communist Army Strength (Oct 1935) Approximately
7000 - Chinese Nationalist Party Army Strength
Approximately over 300,000
18THE CONSQUENCES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CONSQUENCES OF THE LONG MARCH
THE CONSEQUENCES OF THE LONG MARCH
19The Consequences of the Long March
- As result of the Long March, over 7700 soldiers
of the Red Army died, but the Communists were not
exterminated. - The Long March bought the CCP to a place of
enough isolation that gave them the isolation it
needed to recuperate and rebuild itself in the
north of China.
CCP gained a positive reputation from the
determination and dedication of the surviving
participants, and spread communism over the Long
March through introducing land reform, promising
equality and promoting womens rights. Mao's
position as the undisputed leader of the CCP
solidified because of the Long March.
20The Consequences of the Long MarchTHE GMDs VIEW
OF THE LONG MARCH
- Otto Braun sent the Red army to march in a
straight line. The GMD were able to predict where
the Red Armys would move next. - When they reached to Zunyi the communist party
agreed to suspended from the control of the Red
Army. - When Mao took over he wanted to separate the Red
Army and move the army in twisted movement making
GMD impossible for them to predict. -
- The GMD viewed the Long March as a victory. They
described it as a long distance campaign to
press and annihilate the enemy and they did it
and got rid of the CCP from the south-west of
China so those provinces would be under their
governments control.
21The Consequences of the Long MarchMAOS VIEW OF
THE LONG MARCH
- Mao viewed the Long March as a great success and
this can be interpreted from the speech he made
in December 1935 on his views on this particular
event in history. According to Mao, the Red Army
face much difficulties in their journey including
being pursued, intercepted, and even blocked by
KMDs enormous army. However, despite all this,
he stated, by using our two legs we swept across
an immense distance of more that 10500 Km. He
was also extremely proud of their
accomplishments, calling the Red Army heroes, and
the KMD was powerless. He summarized the long
march by calling it a victory for us and defeat
for the enemy.
22The Consequences of the Long MarchHISTORIANS
VIEW OF THE LONG MARCH
- Historians have stated that Mao had used the Long
March for propaganda, as unlike his claims, the
Long March was greatly exaggerated as the
distance was a mere 6,000 km compared to his
declaration of it being 10, 500km. - Two historians include, Ed Jocelyn and Andrew
McEwen, two British researchers, who personally
retraced the Long March route in order to prove
the genuineness of Mao and the CCPs claims,
quite contrastingly found that as mentioned
above, Mao had almost doubled the length of the
Long March in his story. - In conclusion, historians believe that the Long
March was not as great as it was said to be and
question its authenticity.
23The Consequences of the Long MarchTHE CCPs VIEW
OF THE LONG MARCH
- They saw it as a glorious victory march towards
freedom from oppression, an honourable retreat
that did not use cowardly tactics and let
innocent peasants die. - The red army played a large role in the retreat
through harassing the GMD and retrieving firearms
from Jiangxi province for use against opposing
armies. - The Great March also brought about the
unification of the red army, although a large
portion of them died off during the march. - The march helped the CCP gain popularity among
the Chinese peasants, ultimately helping the
party to power in the end.
24The Consequences of the Long MarchTHE CCPs VIEW
OF THE LONG MARCH
- In the aftermath of the long march, the Communist
party had plenty of isolation and time to recover
and rebuild in their new position. - It also gave the CCP a great position to escape
into the communist soviet union for safety if the
GMD tried another extermination campaign.
25Before the march.
- In October 1933 Chiang began a blockade of
Jiangxi stopping movement of essential supplies - With 700 000 men Chiang encircled Jiangxi and
waited for them to surrender. - In 1934 the GMD controlled most of China and the
CCP controlled only four small bases
26Military facts.
- At the battle of Zunyi the red army lost 45 000
men out of the 87 000. - After the battle the Leaders of the CCP reviewed
their policy and blamed Otto Braun for their
loss. - Now that the army was deep into the countryside
they would be better off with a man of their own
and Mao Zedong was elected.
27Facts
- For the CCP this was a massive and honourable
retreat to escape from Chiang army. - Chiang tried to dislodge the CCP from their
mountain retreat with four consecutive campaigns. - There a lot of major key bridges and battles
along the march.
28The views.
- The CCP viewed the march completely differently
from how the GMD viewed it. - The CCP viewed this movement as a demonstration
of vitality by the red army. - The CCP describes their army with a
all-conquering fighting strength.