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The end of "My Northeastern Army"

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    After the end of World War II, China¡¯s total territory was approximately 44.99 million square kilometers (the largest in the world), and its total population was approximately 815 million (the largest in the world).  China¡¯s territorial boundaries include mainland China and various overseas autonomous regions:

    1. Mainland China (including 34 provinces, 4 municipalities, 3 autonomous regions, and 2 special administrative regions) has a total area of ??13.3 million square kilometers and a total population of 525 million. It is geographically divided into six major regions;

    1. Northeast

    The jurisdictions are: Liaoning Province, Jilin Province, Jehol Province, Suiyuan Province, Heilongjiang Province, Chahar Province, North Korea Province, South Korea Province, Taiwan Province, Qiongwan Province, Ryukyu Province, Beijing Municipality, Tianjin Municipality, and Hong Kong  Special Administrative Region, Macau Special Administrative Region, Sakhalin Province, Xinganling Province, and Baikal Province.

    2. Northwest

    The jurisdiction is: Shaanxi Province, Gansu Province, Ningxia Province, Qinghai Province, Xijiang Autonomous Region, and Mongolia Autonomous Region;

    3. Southwest

    The jurisdiction is: Sichuan Province, Guizhou Province, Yunnan Province, Chongqing Municipality, and Tibet Autonomous Region (including the former Nepal, Bhutan, and Sikkim);

    4. North China

    The jurisdiction is: Shanxi Province, Shandong Province, Hebei Province, and Henan Province;

    5. East China

    The jurisdiction is: Jiangsu Province, Anhui Province, Zhejiang Province, Jiangxi Province, Fujian Province, and Shanghai Municipality;

    6. South China:

    The jurisdiction is Guangdong Province, Guangxi Province, Hubei Province, and Hunan Province; (North China, East China, and South China are collectively referred to as "Southeast" in a broad sense)

    2. Indochina Autonomous Region (the jurisdiction covers the entire Indochina Peninsula)

    ? 1. Central South Autonomous East Region, whose jurisdiction is: the former Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia;

    2. The Central and South Autonomous Western Region, under the jurisdiction of: the former Siam and Myanmar;

    3. Southeast Asia Autonomous Region (the jurisdiction covers the entire Southeast Asian archipelago)

    1. Southeast Asia Autonomous Western Region

    2. Southeast Asia Autonomous Southern Region

    3. Central Southeast Asia Autonomous Region

    4. Southeast Asia Autonomous Eastern Region

    5. Southeast Asia Autonomous North Region

    6. Singapore Special Administrative Region

    4. The Autonomous Region of South Africa (jurisdiction includes: the African continent area south of the Tropic of Capricorn and all affiliated islands);

    5. Australian Autonomous Region (jurisdiction includes: Australian mainland and affiliated islands such as Tasmania, Bathurst Island, Wessel Islands);

    6. Indian Ocean Autonomous Northern Region (the jurisdiction includes: Sri Lanka Island, Socotra Island, Maldives Islands, Seychelles Islands, Chagos Islands and other northern Indian Ocean Islands);

    7. Indian Ocean Autonomous Southern Zone (jurisdiction includes: Madagascar, Comoros Islands, Mascarene Islands, Kerguelen Island, Crozet Islands, Amsterdam Island, St. Pol Island, Heard Island and other South Indian Ocean Islands)  ;

    8. Pacific Southwest Autonomous Region (jurisdiction includes: the South Island and North Island of the former New Zealand, as well as all islands in the Western Pacific waters such as the Solomon Islands and the Marshall Islands);

    9. Pacific Northwest Autonomous Region (jurisdiction includes: the former Japanese islands of Kyushu, Shikoku, and the former U.S. Mariana Islands, Guam and other affiliated islands);

    10. East Pacific Autonomous Region

    1. The Northwest American Autonomous Region (the jurisdiction includes: the former state of Alaska in the United States and the western coastal areas of Canada, as well as coastal affiliated islands such as Vancouver Island);

    2. Hawaii Special Administrative Region (jurisdiction: Hawaii Islands)

    11. North Asia Autonomous Region

    1. Northeast Asia Autonomous Region (Eastern Siberia);

    2. North Central Asia Autonomous Region (Central Siberia);

    3. Northwest Asia Autonomous Region (Western Siberia);

    12. Central Asia Autonomous Region (jurisdiction: the five former Central Asian countries)

    1. Central Asia Autonomous North Region (formerly Kazakhstan);

    2. Central Asia Autonomous Southern Region (formerly Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, and Tajikistan);

    China¡¯s territorial waters and waters under actual control include:

    1. North China Sea (including the former Sea of ??Japan, Korean Strait, Tartar Strait and other sea areas);

    2. East China Sea (including the former Bohai Bay, the former East China Sea, the former China Yellow Sea and other sea areas);

    3. South China Sea (including the former South China Sea, Java Sea, Sulawesi Sea, Banda Sea, Arafura Sea and other sea areas);

    4. West China Sea (including the former Bay of Bengal, Andaman Sea, Strait of Malacca and other waters);

    5. Northeast China Sea (formerly Sea of ??Okhotsk)

    6. 100% of the Indian Ocean

    &Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Military Region, he was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1948. In 1950, he was shot and killed when a gun went off.

    Fang Jingwei: Lieutenant General of the Army, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Central and South Military Region, died of illness in Bangkok in 1976.

    Chen Qian: Army Lieutenant General, Chief of General Staff of the Central and South Military Region. In 1945, he succeeded General He Zhuguo as the Commander-in-Chief of the Central and South Military Region. He died in Yangon in 1990.

    Liu Yi: Army Lieutenant General, Commander-in-Chief of the South African Military Region, died in 1960 due to assassination by Vietnamese revenge forces.

    Li Xihao: Vice Admiral of the Navy, Commander-in-Chief of the Marine Corps of the Northeast Field Army and Commander-in-Chief of the Garrison of the Hawaii Special Administrative Region. He died of illness in Hawaii in 1979.

    He Mingyang: Major General of the Air Force, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force Paratroopers of the Northeast Field Army. In 1949, he was promoted to Lieutenant General of the Air Force and Commander-in-Chief of the Air Force Paratroopers. He died of illness in Pyongyang, North Korea in 1973.

    Liu Yufei: Army Major General, deputy commander of the Army Aviation Force of the Northeast Field Army. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1950. He was killed in a plane crash while testing a new helicopter in 1963.

    Jin Jiahao: Army Major General, Commander-in-Chief of the Garrison of the Singapore Special Administrative Region. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1954. He died of illness in Singapore in 1985.

    Qu Jidong: Army Major General, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Southeast Asian Military Region. In 1953, he was promoted to Army Lieutenant General and succeeded General Liu Duoquan as Commander-in-Chief of the Southeast Asian Military Region. He died of illness in Yazhou in 1987.

    Wen Xingmao: Army Major General, Chief of General Staff of the Australian Military Region. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1955. He died of illness in Canberra in 1975.

    Shu Guosheng: Lieutenant General of the Army, Chief of General Staff of the Central Asian Military Region, died in the first Chechen War in 1961.

    Zhang Xuezeng: Army Lieutenant General, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Northeast Field Army Expedition Force in Japan. In 1955, he was promoted to Commander-in-Chief of the Expedition Force in Japan. He died of illness in Tokyo in 1989.

    Bian Xiaojin: Army Major General, commander of the 1st Corps of the Northeast Field Army in Japan. In 1955, he was promoted to Army Lieutenant General and served as deputy commander-in-chief of the Japan Expeditionary Force. He died of illness in Shikoku Island in 1971.

    Wu Junlei: Army Major General, deputy commander of the 1st Corps of the Northeast Field Army in Japan. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1955. He was killed in a mountaineering accident while climbing Mount Fuji in 1956.

    Yin Xiaotian: Army Major General, commander of the 2nd Army of the Northeast Field Army in Japan. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1956. He died of illness in Tokyo in 1969.

    Yu Guowei: Army Major General, commander of the 3rd Army of the Northeast Field Army in Japan. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1956. In 1958, he was accidentally hit by Israeli artillery shell fragments and died during the Japan-Israel War (Japan and Israel).

    Peng Daoqiang: Army Major General, commander of the 4th Army of the Northeast Field Army in Japan. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1956. He died in a car accident in 1959.

    Peng Tianyu: Army Major General, commander of the 5th Army of the Northeast Field Army in Japan. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1956. He died in Vancouver in 1990.

    Xu Dong: Army Major General, Chief of General Staff of the Northeast Field Army in Japan. He was promoted to Army Lieutenant General in 1958. He died of illness in Kyushu Island in 1978.

    Zhang Zuoxiang: Governor-General of Northeast Political Affairs. He succeeded Zhang Xueliang as the Chief Administrator of Northeast China in 1950. He died of illness in Shenyang in 1960.

    Qin Muhan: Minister of the Interior of Northeast China. He succeeded Zhang Zuoxiang as the Chief Administrator of Northeast China in 1959. He died in Shenyang in 1999.

    Zhang Xueliang: Special General of the Army, Minister of Defense of China, Deputy Commander-in-Chief of the Army, Navy and Air Force of the Chinese National Defense Force, Commander-in-Chief of the Northeast Field Army of the Chinese National Defense Force, the Army, Navy and Air Force and the Strategic Nuclear Force, and Chief Administrator of Northeast China. He resigned from all military and political positions on October 1, 1950.  His family moved to Hawaii, and he died in Hawaii Hospital on October 14, 2001.  According to the memories of those present at the time, when Zhang Xueliang was in a state of confusion before his death, he had been saying vaguely and repeatedly: "Thank God for giving me this opportunity" His children and grandchildren, as well as the old generals such as General Chu who came over, all expressed their gratitude to him.  This sentence puzzled Zhang Luffi, the youngest son, and asked: "Father, what do you want to say?" Zhang Xueliang said noncommittally: "This is an eternal secret. I have not wasted this life, and I will die with no regrets." Then.  Passed away suddenly at the age of one hundred and one.  After the death of Zhang Xueliang, the whole of China fell into great grief. The Central Government of the Federal Democratic Republic of China ordered the whole country to mourn for seven days to commemorate Zhang Xueliang's unprecedented and great contributions to the Chinese nation in his glorious and great life.  The Northeast Frontier Defense Force of the Chinese National Revolutionary Army (later also called the Northeast Field Army of the Chinese National Revolutionary Army) spent fifteen years from 1928 to 1943, traveling across the five continents of Asia, Africa, Australia, Europe, and North America, as well as the three oceans of the Pacific, Indian, and Arctic Oceans.  The war history has since become an eternal legend in Chinese military history and world military history.  ¡ª¡ªFrom December 31, 2009 to January 1, 2011, it has been a full year since this book was officially signed to VIP. Thank you all for your long-term support to me and "My Northeastern Army". The knight is here to express his gratitude to all  Loyal readers are grateful.  (Complete book) (Remember the website address: www.hlnovel.com
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