Who is the most important person for the military commander who crosses the battlefield? Of course, those generals who can charge forward when attacking and cannot move when defending, such as Huang Kecheng, Chen Guang, Yang Dezhi, and Yang Chengwu, are all specially valued by the leadership, and are often assigned the most difficult tasks when fighting. But what is strange is that there is a man who has never led a soldier to fight, but he is particularly heavily treated, no less than a general who fights on the battlefield.
Who is this person? And why can you get the weight?
This person's name is Su Jing, a native of Fujian. In 1932, he joined the First Red Army and participated in major battles such as the Long March, the march into the northeast, and the liberation of southern China.
The reason why Su Jing could get the weight was not because he could fight, but because of his excellent intelligence and reconnaissance ability.
After joining the Red Army, Su Jing was in charge of intelligence reconnaissance work for a long time, and she was able to successfully complete the task every time. During the Long March, the Red Army passed through strange places, and the military, people's, and geographical conditions were not familiar with it, and Su Jing, who served as an intelligence staff officer, could always provide complete and accurate intelligence, so that the Red Army could know itself and know the other, and take fewer detours. Every night, when others had already camped and rested, he was still gathering intelligence and drawing up a road map for the next day's march.
These road maps for the march were the magic weapon for the Red Army to defeat the enemy and ensure that the Red Army would not fall into haste and chaos. Su Jing drew hundreds of marching road maps during the Long March, making great contributions to the red army's victorious completion of the Long March.
Due to his excellent intelligence and reconnaissance capabilities, when the Red Army was reorganized into the Eighth Route Army, Su Jing served as the chief of the reconnaissance section of the 115th Division. In addition to reconnoitring the intelligence of the Japanese army, Su Jing also seized the translators and telegraphers who had been bribed by the enemy at the division headquarters, and even in turn, obtained the enemy's telegram codes.
Su Jing has always been a master of intelligence, and after Japan surrendered, she was named to go to the northeast. He did not disappoint, in early 1946, the Northeast Democratic Coalition Army was forced to retreat one after another, and the situation was very unfavorable. Su Jing soon found that the enemy had two regiments far away from the main force. The Democratic Coalition Army immediately concentrated its superior forces to completely annihilate the two regiments, and fought the first annihilation battle after marching into the northeast. Soon after, relying on the information he provided, he wiped out more than 4,000 elite enemy troops. After the battle, the leader of the Democratic Coalition Army excitedly said that "one Su Jing is equal to 100,000 elite soldiers."
In 1955, when the military rank was evaluated, According to the regulations, Su Jing was only a colonel, but he was awarded the rank of lieutenant general, jumping two grades in a row, becoming the only special case at that time.