When it comes to military unification, people often think of Dai Kasa and then Mao Renfeng at the first time. In the more than ten years from the establishment of the military command in 1938 until its retirement from the mainland in 1949, it was in the hands of these two people in Jiangshan County, Zhejiang Province, which developed step by step and became the "Jinyi Guard" of the Republic of China that everyone heard of.
However, the final outcome of both Dai Kasa and Mao Renfeng was tragic. Dai Kasa died in 1946 when he flew back to Nanjing, at the age of 48, and was buried next to the Wuliang Hall of Nanjing Linggu Temple.
Mao Renfeng was jealous of seizing power by Chiang Ching-kuo in the tenth year after Dai Kasa's death, and died of a cancer outbreak in trepidation at the age of 58, and his cemetery was located in Haotianling, New Taipei City, Taiwan Province.
In addition to Dai Kasa and Mao Renfeng, in fact, there are many famous historical figures in the military command, such as Qian Dajun, Lin Wei, Zhang Zhizhong, He Yaozu, and Shang Zhen, successive directors of the Military Command Bureau, all of whom served as directors of Chiang Kai-shek's attendant office, and one of the part-time positions of the director of the attendant office was the director of the Military Command Bureau.
In fact, although Dai Kasa was the de facto commander of the military command, his position was only that of deputy director of the military command, so the official positions and status of these five attendants were still above Dai Kasa.
In addition, the real agents in the military command, such as the "three musketeers of the military command": Shen Drunk, Xu Yuanju and Zhou Yanghao, the "four heavenly kings of military unification": Zhao Lijun, Wang Tianmu, and Chen Gongshu, as well as Shen Drunk, and Jiang Yiying, a female spy who had cracked the secret telegram of the Japanese army's sneak attack on Pearl Harbor.
Some of these military leaders also had very different endings in their later lives, some of whom fled to Taiwan, such as Qian Dajun, Lin Wei, Chen Gongshu, Wang Tianmu, and Jiang Yiying; some were captured and imprisoned in war criminals management centers, such as Xu Yuanju and Zhou Yanghao; and some of them took the initiative to revolt and stayed on the mainland, such as Zhang Zhizhong, He Yaozu, and Shen Drun.
It is worth mentioning that Xu Yuanju and Zhou Yanghao in the "Three Musketeers of Military Unification" were arrested precisely because another "swordsman" was drunk.
In 1949, in Yunnan, Lu Han joined forces with Shen Drunk to revolt, and Shen Drunk came forward to trap a large number of agents in the Dian Army, including Xu Yuanju and Zhou Yanghao. Later, Shen Drunk was unjustly imprisoned in the war criminals management center, and was almost killed by Zhou Yanghao, who was imprisoned together. However, later the problem was clarified, and Shen Drunk's identity was changed from a war criminal to an uprising general.
When Zhang Zhizhong went to Beiping for negotiations in April 1949, he chose to stay in Beiping and did not return to Chiang Kai-shek's side. In August 1949, He Yaozu, together with Long Yun, Liu Fei and others, jointly issued an uprising telegram, so angry that Chiang Kai-shek wanted to send someone to assassinate him.
Leaving the mainland and not talking about these people who were arrested, these military leaders of the uprising, Zhang Zhizhong, He Yaozu and Shen Drun, were all buried in Babaoshan after their deaths in their later years, which can be described as enjoying great honors.
In addition, there was shang zhen, the last director of the attendant office, who was originally from Yan Xishan's Jin Sui Army and the highest official during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, but in 1944 he switched to the diplomatic field, went to Washington, D.C., attended the Dumbarton Oaks Conference, and participated in the drafting of the Charter of the United Nations.
After the victory of the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression, Shang Zhen served as the head of the military delegation in Japan and advocated the abolition of the Japanese emperor. After leaving office in 1949, he settled in Japan, and died of illness in Tokyo in May 1978, and in accordance with his will, his ashes were returned to China and buried in The Hachihosan Cemetery.
In this way, in the military command bureau, which is not highly evaluated in modern history, four of them were finally buried in Babaoshan, and what is even more amazing is that three of them (Zhang Zhizhong, He Yaozu, and Shang Zhen) are still above Dai Kasa.