Chapter 211 Propaganda example
Chapter 211 Promotional Example
When the Chinese army entered Moscow, more than 5 million Russian soldiers and civilians had died in battle, frozen or starved to death during the three-month Battle of Moscow, and nearly one million people were missing. Most of them were frozen to death in the ice and snow when they went out at night. By the spring of 2055, in the areas around Moscow, the Chinese army had collected at least 800,000 unknown bodies.
According to the battlefield statistics provided by the Chinese army, nearly three million soldiers and civilians were killed in the Moscow city at that time, frozen and starved to death, most of them were civilians, or temporary armed militias, and the main causes of death were cold and hunger.
Among these dead, the weak elderly and young people are the main ones.
In a sense, the mutiny of the Russian army was directly related to serious non-combat deaths. At that time, the Russian army that captured the defensive headquarters was a local army formed in Moscow. The soldiers involved in the mutiny all had relatives killed due to Julianov's terror policy.
Originally, these people had the chance to survive, as long as Julianov let the civilians evacuate from Moscow.
Unfortunately, Julianov did not do this, but regarded civilians as flesh shields that blocked the Chinese army.
Of course, Julianov also suffered the consequences in the end.
Judging from the situation at that time, if Giulianov had evacuated civilians in advance, especially children and the elderly, the Moscow military and civilians would have been likely to share the same hatred of the enemy and survived and perished with Moscow. In such a city that was once burned by Napoleon's army, he would have written a heroic poetry history again.
You should know that most Russian military and civilians are not afraid of death. They just don’t want to see their underage children and elderly parents become cannon fodder.
However, the bloody battle in Moscow has not ended yet.
At that time, Julianov formed a "Young Defense Army" with a size of nearly one million. All the members were minors around fourteen years old. They spent more than two months brainwashing these teenagers, making them believe that it is the obligation and responsibility of every Russian to defend Moscow to the death. Only by living and dying with Moscow can Russia be saved and the nation have hope of rejuvenation.
The result was that after the Chinese army advanced to Moscow, the boy scouts did not surrender.
The sporadic battle lasted until January 8th, when the Chinese army basically controlled Moscow, and it was found that almost all the teenagers who were attacking them were not much higher than rifles.
In this cruel battle, hundreds of thousands of Russian teenagers were buried by a lie.
In fact, until after the war, many captured Russian Boy Scouts did not think that Russia was defeated, but believed that those traitors who betrayed the country and nation were the main causes of Russia's defeat. These traitors, including more than 10 million Russian officers and soldiers who surrendered in the war, as well as civilians who gave up their homes and fled to the rear, as well as those who were willing to accept the control of the enemy behind the enemy.
Obviously, in the eyes of these minors, the remaining Russians are traitors of the nation.
The result was that after the post-war repatriation, most of these Russian boy scouts went to extremes, and some even became terrorists.
Interestingly, the one who assassinated Julianov later was a boy scout.
The reason is very simple. In the eyes of these rebellious teenagers, Julianov was also a traitor because he did not stay and survive with Moscow. After the war, he was very shamelessly tried by the military court, and he gave evidence in the court, revealing many state secrets.
In short, these teenagers became the post-war social cancer in Russia.
To this end, the Chinese occupation forces had to open dozens of teenage labor reform centers in Russia, and it took more than ten years to eradicate this problem.
Obviously, Julianov was killed by himself.
By the time of death, Julianov probably didn't understand why the scouts who had obeyed him would assassinate him.
Of course, this is not the biggest problem.
At this time, the Russian authorities still did not admit defeat. Instead, they believed that China's occupation of Moscow in winter would be driven out of Moscow by the cold and fire again like Napoleon more than two hundred years ago, and retreated all the way and eventually be completely defeated.
The Russian authorities' illusion may be related to the destruction suffered by Moscow.
When the Chinese army entered Moscow, not only did there be no wooden board for heating in this city, which originally had more than 20 million residents, there was not enough food, clean drinking water and cold clothes and quilts, basically became a city that was not suitable for human habitation. At that time, only the Kremlin, which symbolized Russia, was not bombed or bombarded, but this former palace had long changed and became a center for the treatment of the wounded, and the magnificent buildings that could be used to burn heating were almost all burned. If the Chinese army drove into Moscow a few days later, the Russian army would probably burn out thousands of oil paintings and thousands of woodcut artworks stored in the basement. It can be said that this is absolutely possible. The Russian nation can abandon almost anything when it is alive and die.
In addition, there are about 15 million people waiting to be rescued.
Since the Chinese army occupied Moscow, it is impossible to abandon Moscow's residents, and it is even more impossible to freeze and starve to death in the cold wind.
In the eyes of the Russian authorities, this is a huge burden.
In fact, this is indeed a huge burden for the Russian authorities.
Before the Battle of Moscow started, there was a problem with the supply of daily necessities in Moscow, and it could only provide civilians with necessary daily necessities every day, and the reserved materials were only enough for a month at most. If Moscow had not had significant political symbolism, the Russian government moved to St. Petersburg at the end of July. At least in St. Petersburg, American transport ships could directly send a large amount of supplies.
The problem is that the Chinese army is definitely not the French army more than two hundred years ago.
At that time, it was not the cold winter in Russia, nor Moscow that was burned down by the fire, but the broken logistics supply line. After the 400,000 French troops invaded Moscow, most of them died in the snow and ice of Russia due to insufficient logistics supply.
Obviously, the Chinese military does not have such a problem.
On the day of entering the city, the Chinese army airlifted tens of thousands of tons of supplies to Moscow, all of which were daily necessities.
In the next two days, in order to prevent civilians from robbing food and heating fuel, the Chinese Air Force also used 2,000 large electric transport aircraft and deployed tens of thousands of tons of supplies into the Moscow urban area by airdrop, allowing more than 10 million civilians to obtain essential supplies on the spot.
Of course, the Chinese military did not forget to carry out propaganda, that is, to convince the civilians in Moscow that they would never be hungry again in the future.
By January 8, the Chinese army had more than 1.5 million tons of supplies sent to Moscow, and began to supply power to civilians on January 10. Then, the "Civil Engineering Department" was organized, mobilizing tens of thousands of engineers to repair water and heating equipment from door to door. At that time, in order to provide sufficient power supply, the Chinese Army concentrated 30 small fusion power supply systems near Moscow. In order to help civilians withstand the severe cold, the Chinese Army even urgently ordered a batch of heating appliances and provided them to civilians for free.
In January, the Chinese Army also set up more than 800 material distribution stations in Moscow, and used the roster of residents fabricated by the Russian army to provide Moscow's residents with essential supplies in a ration method, and the supply standard is three times that of basic living needs.
It can be said that the surviving Moscow civilians soon discovered that in addition to the need to rebuild their homes, their lives were much better than before. For example, they no longer had to worry about being hungry or freezing to death in their sleep, and even they could receive timely assistance after getting sick.
You should know that in the first few months of this winter, at least 10,000 Moscow residents died of pneumonia.
Such a strong transportation capacity allows the Chinese army to not only occupy Moscow, but also enables the capital of the first hostile country occupied by the Chinese army to become a role model for China's foreign propaganda, especially diplomatic propaganda, so that more countries can understand what China has done in this war.
Of course, occupying Moscow is definitely a burden.
If Wei Chenglong had the decision, he would definitely not have occupied Moscow, but would have completely destroyed the city or bypassed the city.
The reason is very simple. Even if logistics support is not a problem, the Chinese military must stop moving forward.
According to Wei Chenglong's estimate, the Chinese army will not expect to launch a strategic offensive within the next six months, because it will take six months just to restore order in Moscow.
More importantly, this is not just a military task, but a political task.
Huang Hanlin issued an instruction on December 28 that after the army occupied Moscow, it must manage the city well and restore it to its pre-war appearance. At that time, Huang Hanlin also stated that he would go to Moscow at the appropriate time to hold the fifth summit of the Oriental Alliance Group here.
Obviously, this stumped Wei Chenglong.
According to convention, the Oriental Alliance Group Summit is held every four months, and the next summit is scheduled in early April, leaving only three months for Wei Chenglong.
It is obviously impossible to restore Moscow to its pre-war appearance within three months.
Fortunately, Huang Hanlin finally changed his mind and chose the meeting location in Yalta, at the southern end of the Krimu Peninsula. He only came to Moscow with the heads of governments in the middle of the meeting, visited the magnificent Kremlin, and signed a significant political declaration here.
In other words, Wei Chenglong only needs to restore the Kremlin to its original appearance before early April.
In fact, this is not an easy thing either.
To this end, Wei Chenglong specially established a "Moscow Reconstruction Committee" and then mobilized tens of thousands of people to be responsible for the renovation of the Kremlin.
It was estimated that after the war, the Chinese Army spent at least 18 billion yuan to repair the Kremlin.
Chapter completed!