Chapter 3 Morning Star (Part 3)
His words caused another hysterical laughter. The Japanese officers around him rubbed their eyes and shouted loudly, "Idiot, won't you catch the Chinese as slaves? They are so poor and so timid. Just give them a bowl of sorghum rice to eat, and make sure they will be grateful to you."
"Yes, with a ranch, who will grazing by himself? In the United States, people catch black people to do it, while white people just carry whips to serve as supervisors."
"There are also French in Africa and British in India, and no one is not catching locals as slaves! Our Japanese Empire was just too late to be dispatched, so it was limited to the East."
The more the officers were more excited, and they all looked forward to the days when they rode on the Chinese people after the war ended. Some planned to buy a Chinese mine from the emperor, some hoped to build a holiday villa on the beach in southern China, and some people had higher ambitions. They actually believed that the footsteps of the Great Japanese Imperial Army must not stop just because they conquered China. In addition to China, there were richer and wider lands waiting for them to conquer, such as French Indochina, Dutch and British Nanyang Islands. Among them, the most "heroic" ones actually focused on Australia tens of thousands of miles away, planning how much money and energy they had to invest to take over a gold mine there. Every day, they stood by the mine to check whether the slave workers who were working in the mine had hidden gold in their anus, (Note 1, Note 2)
It is not a big deal that they all spoke arrogantly. Since the "September 18th Incident", the Kwantung Army has never encountered opponents in China. Whether it was the Great Wall Battle in 1933 or the war around Peking in the autumn of the previous year, as long as the Kwantung Army takes action, it can crush the opponent with absolute advantageous equipment and powerful Bushido spirit. As for the few minor setbacks of the Imperial Army near Taierzhuang and Wuhan, it was just a shame for the North China Front Army and Central China dispatched troops, and had nothing to do with the Kwantung Army. The most elite Kwantung Army in the Great Japanese Empire also looked down on the two accomplices of North China and Central China who were only called second-rate troops.
While immersing in fantasy, a crisp gunshot suddenly came from his ears, "Ping,,." Everyone immediately turned over and dismounted, took out the pistol with the cover of the saddle, and shouted loudly at the soldiers under his command, "Download, unfold, the battle queue is unfolded, and the machine gun is ready at 2 o'clock in the afternoon."
Without the orders from the officers, the well-trained Japanese soldiers had already deployed their defensive formations according to the habit of being deeply engraved into the bones, and within one minute, they set up all the light and heavy parts of the team, aiming at the direction of two o'clock in the afternoon, and constructing a complete fan-shaped firepower coverage area.
But what made them extremely depressed was that there was neither the legendary Communist guerrillas nor the damn grassland horse thieves in their sight. Only they rode their horses in front of the team, tied a Chinese man with a rope, drove more than 20 sheep, and walked back with laughter.
Note 1: French Indochina, today's Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, plus China's Zhanjiang Port, Nanyang Islands, today's Philippines, Malaysia, Indonesia and other places.
Chapter completed!