Menghean War of Liberation

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Menghean War of Liberation
Date9 November 1945 - 26 February 1964
Location
Result Menghean victory
Belligerents
  • Suguk Resistance Army (until 1958)
  • Menghean Communist Front (until 1958)
  • Menghean Liberation Army (after 1958)
  • Uzeri People's Front (1954-1963)
  • Republic of Menghe (after 1951)
  • Menghean Occupation Authority (until 1951)
  • New Tyran
  • Sylva
Strength
2,600,000 (1961 est.) 1,400,000 (1960 est.)
Casualties and losses
1,200,000 - 2,000,000 military dead 450,000 military dead
6,000,000 civilian casualties (est.)

The Menghean War of Liberation (Menghean: 멩국 해방 전쟁 / 孟國解放戰爭, Mengguk haebang jŏnjaeng), also known internationally as the Continuation War, was a civil war fought in Menghe between a variety of communist and nationalist insurgents, later unified into the Menghean Liberation Army, and the Republic of Menghe government, which succeeded the Menghe Occupation Authority. The war is conventionally dated from 9 November 1945, Menghe's surrender in the Pan-Septentrion War, to 26 February 1964, when the Republic of Menghe government went into exile in Altagracia, though sporadic fighting continued until the late 1960s. The victory of the communist forces led to the establishment of the Democratic People's Republic of Menghe, which was officially proclaimed on 4 April 1964.

Names and periodization

Within Menghe, the period of fighting between 1945 and 1964 is known as the Menghean War of Liberation (멩국 해방 전쟁 / 孟國解放戰爭, Mengguk haebang jŏnjaeng) or the Fatherland Liberation War (조국해방전쟁 / 祖國解放戰爭, Jŏguk haebang jŏnjaeng). It is usually shortened to War of Liberation (Haebang jŏnjaeng). A number of longer official titles exist, including the "nationwide anti-imperialist anti-capitalist glorious war for the liberation of the fatherland."

In the countries that assisted the Republic of Menghe during its fall, including New Tyran, it is known as the Menghean War, or sometimes the Second Menghean War (the first being the Pan-Septentrion War itself). In the Republic of Menghe it was known as the Menghean Civil War (멩국 내전 / 孟國內戰, Mengguk Naejŏn), a term which remains in use with the Menghean Government in Exile.

Other differences relate to the war's periodization. Conventionally, the conflict is broken up into three stages: 1945-1952, when the main resistance forces were rogue units of the Imperial Menghean Army; 1952-1960, when the communist insurgency rose to prominence; and 1960-1964, when the insurgency boiled over into a conventional war as guerillas linked together regional power bases and formed a large ground force complete with combat vehicles shipped in from Polvokia and Maverica. Tyrannian forces referred to the first period as the "Continuation War," and viewed as an extension of the Pan-Septentrion War; this name eventually stuck in Menghe as well.

Background

On November 9th, 1945, faced with news of a third nuclear attack on Anchŏn and still viewing the devastation of firebombing in Donggyŏng, Kim Myŏng-hwan issued an official statement calling on Menghean forces throughout the country to surrender. While many of his defense advisors were adamant that the Menghean Army could hold out for several more years, Kim knew by then that there was no longer any chance of victory, and refused to preside over the country's continued destruction. After receiving word that Allied forces had agreed to a ceasefire, he committed ritual suicide in the Donggwangsan palace.

Along the coast, most military units reluctantly agreed to disband, but others were determined to fight to the death. The Eighth Army, led by Yang Tae-sŏng, withdrew into the Chŏnsan Mountains, with General Yang proclaiming that his men would fight "to the last man, to the last cartridge, to the last grain of rice." Other soldiers and officers, inspired by his example, followed suit. Self-proclaimed loyalists began circulating rumors that traitors within the government had falsified the surrender order, and that the Donghŭi Emperor's final command had been for all citizens to rise up in defense of the country.

These acts had a deep foundation. Even before the coup of February 1927 that placed Kwon Chong-hoon in power, recruits in Menghe's armed forces had been inculcated with the belief that it was their duty to fight to the end in defense of Menghe's sovereignty; after the coup, and especially after the beginning of the war, these teachings had spread to the whole population. By 1944, citizen militia in many villages were already training with bamboo spears. After a full decade of wartime propaganda, the country's population struggled to make sense of the incongruous news that the Emperor had ordered an early surrender, and even once the scale of Menghe's defeat fully sank in, resentment against the occupying forces never faded.

1945-1952: Continuation War

Operation Henhouse

No sooner had the first Allied forces arrived than they faced their first crisis. Morale among surrendered troops was dangerously low, and many Allied commanders feared that the Imperial Menghean Army as a whole might defy the ceasefire and attempt to regain control.

In order to pre-empt a mass defection, the Allies hastily organized and carried out Operation Henhouse, a breakneck campaign to seize control of all divisional camps, armories, and munitions factories in the country. Before the occupation authority had even been formally established, motorized columns raced inland among the major roads, broadcasting news of the surrender as they went. As soon as the main coastal airfields had been turned over, airborne and air-mobile forces took part as well. Along the way, several units encountered ambushes, and one was met head-on by the under-strength remains of an infantry division with armored support. Yet by December 1st, the Allies had taken most of their objectives, including the official surrender of most divisions outside of the Eighth Army.

More worrying, in the longer term, was what they found when they arrived. Nearly all of the arsenals were missing some of their stockpiled weapons, a problem the local guards attributed to wartime shortages; some had been emptied entirely. Likewise, even among the divisions that did surrender, most had names struck inexplicably from the register, and hundreds if not thousands of individual soldiers and officers were unaccounted for. For the time being, the country's major cities, railroads, and factories were under control, but the mountains and forests were rumored to be teeming with insurgents.

The Occupation Authority

While Operation Henhouse was underway, the Allied forces began preparations to install a post-war government. The Prime Minister and surviving Army and Navy staff signed a formal treaty of surrender on November 23rd, and issued a declaration ordering all surviving military personnel to return to their barracks and await demobilization. As word of the surrender continued to spread, more reluctant Army units came forward to turn in their arms.

As an interim measure, the Allies set up a provisional government under their control, the Provisional Council for the Occupation of Menghe (PCOM). This was jointly overseen by two Allied generals, one Tyrannian and one Columbian. As one of its first acts, PCOM initiated a "de-nationalization" campaign, which aimed to remove prominent nationalists from positions of political and economic influence. The most egregious offenders, both in the military and civilian leadership, were put on trial for war crimes.

From its very first year, PCOM encountered obstacles that foreshadowed its future. While the Allies did ship food aid to Menghe to make up for damaged infrastructure and the loss of agricultural personnel, they severely underestimated the scale of the shortages, and a famine in 1946-47 may have killed as many as five million people. Worse still, in the spring of 1946 they had replaced the country's existing regime-aligned landowners with occupation sympathizers and consolidated plots into larger estates, a move that the existing rural peasantry deeply resented and came to associate with the famine. The memory of the war, however, was still fresh, and Allied forces maintained supremacy throughout the country - at least, through most of it.

Suguk uprising

For the first few months of the occupation, General Yang's Eighth Army remained more or less isolated in the Chŏnsan Mountains. Following the withdrawal of Themiclesian and Columbian forces from the interior, they enjoyed de facto control over the countryside in Baeksan and Pyŏngsu provinces, moving with impunity through the mountains and living off of supplies requisitioned from the local population. After hearing news that Allied troops were withdrawing, Yang Tae-sŏng decided to act. On August 15th 1946, his troops marched into Susŏng, the provincial capital and a Chŏndo holy city, and proclaimed the establishment of the Menghean Suguk Independence Front (Menghwa Suguk Dongrib Jŏnsŏn).

General Wilson, the leading Tyrannian commander in Menghe, requested a force of twenty divisions to defeat the Eighth Army, with an additional follow-up force to maintain control. Yet with uprisings in Khalistan and Azbekistan already underway, and troops depleted by the war itself, the Royal Army only allocated nine. To compensate for this, they did allocate a substantial force of strategic bombers left over from the war's final years. Unfazed, Wilson led his troops on Susŏng in October.

At Hwalsu Pass just south of the city, Yang's forces launched a large-scale ambush on October 21st and continued to attack until the 23rd but were driven back by tank fire and air support, the first major engagement of the war. Wilson's troops then advanced to Susŏng, where they found enemy troops deeply dug into its 16th-century fortifications. Unwilling to risk his men in a direct assault, Wilson surrounded the city and began a sustained artillery and aerial bombing campaign. True to their word, the Eighth Army soldiers fought to the death; of some 20,000 soldiers stationed in the city, only 112 appeared as prisoners of war in Tyrannian records. Yang Tae-sŏng was not among them; he had withdrawn into the mountains prior to the assault, in order to lead counterattacks against the enemy's flank during the battle.

Fighting in the mountains continues

In their initial confrontations with Tyrannian forces, the Eighth Army had relied on the same tactics used in the Pan-Septentrion War, including manse charges and entrenched defensive positions. After the fall of Susŏng, General Yang was forced to change his approach. While his army, reinforced with volunteers from other Army units, had no shortage of personnel, weapons and ammunition were scarce. General Wilson's forces in the valley were under orders to shoot at any peasants who came by to collect the Menghean dead, suspecting correctly that they had actually been sent to collect their rifles and ammunition belts.

Rather than continue confronting the enemy head-on, Yang's Eighth Army withdrew into the mountains, where it would conduct a long-term guerilla campaign. Spread thin across the Chŏnsan range, Wilson's forces patrolled the valleys but were never able to establish permanent control over the inner mountains. Relying on intelligence from the local population, Eighth Army soldiers withdrew as enemy forces approached and launched ambushes from the hills as they passed, initially targeting combat units but later focusing on supply trains and rear-area bases.

Unable to seek out the enemy directly, General Wilson committed to a war of attrition. He set up permanent armed outposts around the low-lying towns to prevent hostile guerillas from coming by in the night to requisition food and other supplies, and instructed his troops to search for stockpiled weapons and rations in any villages they passed through. In the deeper areas of the mountains, he relied on reconnaissance aircraft and bombers to strike at any suspected encampments.

In the end, neither side was able to establish a decisive upper hand. The Eighth Army gradually dwindled in strength but managed to retain a presence throughout the mountains, using equipment gathered in the early Occupation period to set up small ammunition and handmade-rifle workshops in the upper villages, which themselves became bombing targets. Yet while they extended their rural presence further north into Gangwŏn, Chikai, and Taehwa provinces, General Yang's forces were unable to repeat their initial success at Susŏng by capturing a major city.

Occupation ends

On June 5th, 1951, the Provisional Council for the Occupation of Menghe formally transferred power to an independent domestic government, the Republic of Menghe (멩화 궁화국 / 孟華共和國, Menghwa Gonghwaguk). Concerned about the risk of a nationalist resurgence, the Allies, and New Tyran in particular, retained a military presence in the country's government and its armed forces.

Distraught over the war's rising costs in funding and manpower, the Tyrannian government decided to shift more responsibility onto the shoulders of the newly formed Republic of Menghe Army. Generous volunteer wages in a period of economic stagnation drew millions of recruits, and by 1964 the RoMA would count some 2.1 million personnel under its payroll. Yet the force's morale and cohesion were never high, and its commanders were seldom effective. For the time being, it was adequate, but as the war progressed it would increasingly show signs of strain.

1952-1960: Insurgency

Communist movement gains strength

At the outset of the resistance period, communist movements in Menghe had held very little sway over the population. While the Greater Menghean Empire was not distinctly anti-communist, it had left little space for ideologies other than its own, and Marxism rarely spread beyond reading circles of factory workers and intellectuals.

Under the Occupation period, however, communist movements in Menghe rapidly gained momentum. Seeing an opportunity and a common cause, the Menghean Workers' Party and the Menghean Peasants' Resistance Front merged in 1948 and began sending political agitators into the countryside. Their anti-elite, pro-redistribution strongly resonated with peasants and tenant farmers, who resented the restoration of commercial landlord rule and the imposition of policies favoring cash crops. There were also external factors at work: Polvokia and the Federation of Socialist Republics began sending training and advising teams of their own into Menghe, hoping to take advantage of the restless atmosphere and establish a new communist ally.

Without an organized army like Yang Tae-sŏng, the emerging communist guerilla forces had to be even more cautious. Throughout the early 1950s, they focused on two modest goals: establishing new resistance cells across the countryside, and obtaining arms and explosives for a guerilla army. The latter need drove them to carry out raids on small police stations and RoMA armories, actions which simultaneously won them publicity and support among the peasantry. The communists also gradually built up a large arms smuggling ring near the Polvokian border, headed by Ryŏ Ho-jun and Jang Su-sŏk.

By 1953, when the insurgents began attacking military supply convoys, the Republic of Menghe government and its backers identified the communists as their main priority. The RoMA stepped up the number of armed guards outside bases and warehouses, and began assigning escort vehicles to any arms or food shipments in high-risk regions. Tyrannian forces adopted a more offensive approach: paying informants in villages to pass on any intelligence about insurgent activity and identify members of guerilla cells.

The latter strategy decimated the ranks of the Communist Party leadership. Three General-Secretaries were killed or arrested in four years, and Ryŏ Ho-jun narrowly escaped assassination on at least one occasion. For a brief period, the insurgents' pace slowed, though their guerillas remained active in the northern forests.

Resistance forces unite

The emergent communist movement faced opposition on a second front, this one internal. The Eighth Army, which by now had fully rebranded itself as the Menghe Suguk Independence Front, refused to cooperate with the Menghe People's Communist Party, viewing it not only as a rival for power but also as a threat to their nationalist aims. The two insurgencies regularly skirmished against each other in the 1950s, struggling for influence in the provinces of Taehwa and Chikai.

By 1958, however, it was becoming increasingly clear that the internal war posed a threat to the broader resistance effort. Isolated in the mountains for more than a decade with no access to smuggled arms, the Suguk Independence Front had steadily dwindled in strength, and the communists were still struggling to maintain a viable power base. In July of that year, Sun Tae-jun requested a meeting at the village of Sangwŏn in Gangwŏn Province, a blurred area between the two sides' power bases. Yang Tae-sŏng arrived expecting a ceasefire, but instead Sun offered a more radical proposal: the two sides, which both valued Menghean independence above all else, would combine their forces in a shared struggle to defeat the Republic of Menghe and its foreign backers, and would share power after the war's end. Several days of heated negotiation followed, but in the end Yang accepted, placing the national interest before his own.

From that point onward, the two factions united to form the Menghean Liberation Army (대멩 해방군 / 大孟解放軍, Dae Meng Haebanggun), which would later be renamed the Menghean People's Army. Internal fighting ceased, though disagreements between commanders continued, and the "Kalashnikov trail" of Polvokian rifles was extended southwest into the heart of the Chŏnsan mountains. The two factions not only cooperated, but complemented each other: staffed with veteran soldiers and officers, the former Eighth Army had the expertise the communists needed to train their forces and direct them in combat.

Rural insurgency and escalation

During the same period, the communist insurgency continued to gain strength. Increasingly daring in their attacks, the guerillas moved on to larger targets, derailing trains and ambushing military patrols. As before, the main priority was to establish a presence in the countryside, where the RoMA's control was weaker and peasant support for land redistribution stronger; in Sun Tae-jun's words, the cities would become "islands in a sea of red." By 1957, there were reports of insurgent activity on the far outskirts of Sunju, though for the time being the northeast was the center of revolutionary activity.

1960-1964: Conventional phase of the war

Decisive changes in the balance of forces

While by the Menghean Liberation Army had been gaining ground for several years, a number of factors came together in 1960 which turned the tide decisively in its favor.

The first was a new unity in the Communists' recruiting message. With the legitimacy of the Eighth Army behind them, they no longer faced skepticism from demobilized soldiers and rural traditionalists, who made up a large sector of the population in the East. Sun's gamble at Sangwŏn had paid off: the communists enjoyed a degree of unity which they had been unable to achieve before.

The second had to do with the location of their initial breakthrough. After a surprise attack by massed militia forces, the city of Myŏngju fell to Menghean control in December 1960, opening the second-largest checkpoint on the Menghe-Polvokia border to unrestricted trade. Entire trains full of rifles and anti-aircraft guns began to roll across the border, allowing the Menghean Liberation Army to properly equip the millions of peasants flowing into its ranks. Tyrannian commanders drafted a plan to bomb the narrow road and rail bridges over the Baekkang river, but the FSR declared that it would consider this an attack on Polvokian territory and a provocation to nuclear war.

The third major change came from the opposite direction: the southwest. Initially the most stable part of Menghe, due to its distance from Polvokia and the local minorities' wariness of the Suguk Independence Front, the four southwestern provinces had become a secondary priority for the Republic of Menghe and its backers. Yet in 1960, as Maverica fell to its own Communist revolution, Menghe's long southwestern border became awash in smuggled arms. Eager to export the revolution, Maverican volunteers crossed the border to train and lead the local communist movement, forcing the Republic of Menghe to divert troops away from the northeast.

Deeper problems lay within the Republic of Menghe itself. From the outset, the new regime had never enjoyed particularly strong legitimacy; most Mengheans regarded it as a puppet of foreign interests, and resented its promotion of landlord-organized cash-crop production. Its few supporters backed it mainly because it offered decent pay in an otherwise unstable economy. As the death toll on the front climbed, even this support began to dwindle. Kook Moon-shik, the new President installed in 1957, launched an erratic campaign to crack down on dissident religious organizations, deepening resentment within the RoM administration. By the time the communists' southward drive began, foreign advisors in Menghe were already warning that RoMA morale was "disastrously low."

Southward drive

Once the cross-border arms flow at Myŏngju was underway, the Menghean Liberation Army launched a renewed offensive to expand their control in the northeast. This time, their aim was to seize and hold ground, confronting hostile forces directly with head-on attacks and rear-area uprisings. Foreign troops held well, but the Republic of Menghe Army, which had recently transferred a large portion of its personnel to the southwest, collapsed. By the end of 1961, the provinces of Sinbukgang and Gilim were under MLA control.

Having established directly-controlled territory and built up a conventional force, the MLA were now in a position to drive southward. Local uprisings broke out across the central Jijunghae Basin, a long-standing cauldron of peasant resentment, which fell to communist forces as fast as they could advance. Resistance along the urbanized east coast was tougher. There, foreign troops were able to slow the communist onslaught, and in some places turn it back. Donggyŏng, the former capital, fell in October of 1962, but by the time winter arrived the Republic of Menghe and its allies still held most of the coastal cities and had established a coordinated defensive line.

Aftermath

Legacy

Atrocities and war crimes

Carried out by occupation forces

Carries out by insurgent forces

Death toll

Death toll in Menghe

Deaths and casualties among occupation forces

  •  New Tyran: ----- killed, ----- wounded, ----- missing