Actions in Inner Mongolia (1933–1936)

The Inner Mongolian campaign in the period from 1933 to 1936 were part of the ongoing invasion of northern China by the Empire of Japan prior to the official start of hostilities in the Second Sino-Japanese War. In 1931, the invasion of Manchuria secured the creation of the puppet state of Manchukuo and in 1933, Operation Nekka detached the province of Rehe from the Republic of China. Blocked from further advance south by the Tanggu Truce, the Imperial Japanese Army turned its attention west, towards the Inner Mongolian provinces of Chahar and Suiyuan, with the goal of establishing a northern China buffer state. In order to avoid overt violation of the Truce, the Japanese government used proxy armies in these campaigns while Chinese resistance was at first only provided by Anti-Japanese resistance movement forces in Chahar. The former included in the Inner Mongolian Army, the Manchukuo Imperial Army, and the Grand Han Righteous Army. Chinese government forces were overtly hostile to the anti-Japanese resistance and resisted Japanese aggression only in Suiyuan in 1936.

Inner Mongolian campaign (1933–1936)
DateApril 1933 – December 1936
Location
Chahar and Suiyuan provinces
Result 1933 Japanese victory
1936 Chinese victory
Belligerents

 Empire of Japan

Republic of China
Commanders and leaders
Liu Guitang (1933)
Demchugdongrub (1936)
Wang Ying (1936)
Feng Yuxiang (1933)
Fang Zhenwu (1933)
Shang Zhen (1933)
Liu Guitang (1933)
Fu Zuoyi (1936)
Units involved
Japanese and collaborator armies
Chinese army and guerrilla units
  • National Revolutionary Army
  • Chahar People's Anti-Japanese Army
  • 1st Rout Army
  • 2nd Route Army
  • 3rd Route Army
  • Cavalry Army
  • Reserve Army
  • Northeastern Loyal and Brave Army
  • Rehe Anti-Japanese Militia
  • Chahar Self-Defense Army
Strength

1933
2,000 Japanese and 6,000 collaborators


1936
10,000 Inner Mongolians
6,000 Chinese collaborators
30 Japanese advisers

1933:
~100,000 troops


1936:
~45,000
Casualties and losses
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