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主题: 还有另一本书"Long March" by Sun Shuyun 也指疑飞夺泸定桥官方说法.
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作者 还有另一本书"Long March" by Sun Shuyun 也指疑飞夺泸定桥官方说法.   
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文章标题: 还有另一本书"Long March" by Sun Shuyun 也指疑飞夺泸定桥官方说法. (568 reads)      时间: 2007-3-22 周四, 上午5:41

作者:非文人罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org

下面是Wikipedia网上泸定桥介绍节选,其中特别指出刘文辉的作用.
朱德,刘伯承, 聂容臻曾写信给刘文辉,请他给红军方便,刘文辉答应并确实让路.


Recent additions
Two westerners living in China investigated the matter while retracing the route of the Long March:

With the exception of Yang Chengwu, no source ever suggests that there were no casualties on Luding Bridge. The very first description of the battle, given by Edgar Snow in Red Star Over China in 1937, cited three deaths. The official number, inscribed on the bridge itself, is now four.[1]
Sun Shuyun, who was born in China and has made documentaries for the BBC, did her own retracing of the march. At Luding Bridge, a local blacksmith gave her the following account:

Only a squadron was at the other end. It was a rainy day. Their weapons were old and could only fire a few metres. They were no match for the Red Army. When they saw the soldiers coming, they panicked and fled—their officers had long abandoned them. There wasn't really much of a battle. Still, I take my hat off to the twenty-two soldiers who crawled on the chains. My father and I did it in the old days when we checked the bridge, but we were inside a basket. Those men were brave. They crossed very quickly."[2]

The blacksmith also said that after they had crossed, the Red Army cut through four of the bridge's nine chains, making it unusable for months. This has not been mentioned in other accounts, but Sun Shuyun found another source and discovered that the idea came from Mao. (One of these chains is on display in The Military Museum of the Chinese People’s Revolution in Beijing.) She also suggests that the Red Army was indeed given an easy passage, but that this was done by local warlords in defiance of Chiang Kaishek:

It seems that one of the warlords, Liu Wenhui (刘文辉), was a key figure... When [Red Army commander] Zhu De, Liu Bocheng and Nie Rongzhen, his fellow Sichuanese, sent him money and a letter, asking for safe passage through his territory, including the Luding Bridge, he happily obliged... 'Chiang gives my army no ammunition or food, how can we fight tough battles?' he grumbled. He told his men to put up only half-hearted resistance, and to allow the Red Army through without much of a fight... Liu kept his contact with the Communists ... In 1949 he mutinied, taking two other warlords with him over to the Communists... he was made Minister of Forestry, and then a minister in the Communist government. (Ibid.)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luding_Bridge

作者:非文人罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org
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