Heroes of the Anti-Japanese War
Chapter 331 Uninvited Guest 1
Chapter 331 Uninvited Guest One
Schulz and Hannah sat in the auditorium of the German Consulate in Harbin, listening to the impassioned speeches by Consul Herrmann and Military Attaché Major Wolff.
More than 100 German expats living in Harbin are their audience.
Schultz watched with cold eyes. Out of the more than 100 people, only a few expressed fanaticism, and most of them looked blank.
These expatriates are businessmen or people like Schultz who live in Harbin by virtue of their skills.
Everyone hates war at heart.
"The brave and fearless German army quickly occupied Oslo and is advancing rapidly northward along the railway!" Wolf gave a speech excitedly.
After the speech, there will be a small celebratory reception.
The reason why it is small is that everyone is German, and there are only so many Germans in Harbin.
Can't people from the consulates of countries like Britain and France in Harbin be invited here to the celebration reception?
While Schultz and Hannah were standing at the table with wine glasses and talking softly, a young man came over to Schultz and said, "Mr. Schultz, Mr. Wolf would like to invite you to his office. He has something to talk to You talk."
Schultz nodded to Hannah and followed the young man.
Wolf, the German military attache in Harbin, shook hands with Schulz enthusiastically.
"Please sit down, Mr. Schultz, oh no, I should call you Comrade Schultz." Wolfe said with a smile.
He was showing Schulz that he, like Schulz, was a member of the National Socialist Party.
Schultz looked at Wolf quietly with a smile on his face.
After De Bruyne returned to Germany, the consulate changed two more military attaches, and Wolfe was the second.
"I've read all your interviews and reports. I heard that you also accepted the invitation of the Japanese to go sightseeing in Japan for a month?" Wolff asked.
"Yes, very impressed," Schultz replied.
Wolf stared at Schultz's face for a long time, wondering what Schultz meant by impressed.
But Schultz couldn't see anything with his expressionless face.
"Is all your unabashed praise of the Japanese true?" Wolff asked.
"Of course not. I will say what they like to hear." Schultz replied with a clear face.
Wolff nodded to Schultz with a knowing smile.
"I just arrived in Manchukuo not long ago, so I don't fully understand the situation. Japan is our friend, shouldn't it be very concerned about our friend?" Wolfe asked.
"Mr. Schultz, can you write me a report on your experience in Japan?" Wolfe asked.
"Which aspects are you referring to?" Schultz asked.
"The current political and economic situation in Japan and your view on the war that Japan is going on," Wolf explained.
The previous two military officers, including De Bruyne, were not considered competent, and they failed to fulfill their intelligence-gathering tasks. Wolfe planned to do more in intelligence-gathering.
Japan is a friend of Germany, and Germany hopes to have a more accurate judgment on Japan's economic and military strength.
"Okay, I'll write the report in a few days and send it over." Schultz replied readily.
He stood up, shook Wolfe's hand and left the office.
Schultz had just left, and the young man who brought Schultz into the office just now walked in and said, "Kowodek has arrived in Harbin!"
"Keep an eye on him and see what passage he will use to leave Manchukuo and return to Poland. Don't disturb him here!" Wolfe ordered.
After Poland was partitioned, Poles hated both Germans and Russians.
The Polish resistance underground fought both the German occupation forces and the Russians.
But they regard the Japanese, who are friends of the Germans, as their good friends.
Dwodek is the intelligence chief of the Polish underground organization. He must have sent intelligence about the Russians to the Japanese when he came to Harbin this time.
Northeast China is now dominated by the Japanese. Of course, Wolfe cannot attack Dvordek here, but if he knows how Dvordek left Manchuria, he can wait for him at the other end of the route and attack him. .
Dvordek walked into the intelligence department of the Kwantung Army.He came here in secret this time to send secret photos of the Soviet army's fortification area on the territory of the original Polish region.
In order to resist possible German attacks, the Soviet army built a large number of fortifications on the western front.
For the same reason, the Soviet army also built about ten fortified areas along the HLJ and along the Ussuri River.
The photos of the Soviet fortification area in Poland brought by Dwodek have a strong reference value for the Kwantung Army to understand the situation of the Soviet army's fortification area in the Far East.
When Dvordek walked into the meeting room, almost all the senior officers of the Kwantung Army Intelligence Department were present.
Dwodek asked the intelligence department to hang the enlarged photos on the wall.
"These photos were secretly taken by Polish workers working on the site," Dwodek said.
Pointing to a permanent fortification, he said: "The 250-mark cement fortification can resist the frontal bombardment of 105mm and 155mm howitzers, and can resist the bombing of 50kg bombs."
He pointed to another fortification and said: "The permanent fortification built with cement marked 400 can resist the frontal bombardment of 203mm and 155mm howitzers, and can resist the bombing of 114kg bombs."
"And the obstacles in front of these fortifications can prevent the passage of tanks under [-] tons." Dvordek continued.
The tanks of the Japanese army are far less than fifty tons, and it can be said that it is difficult to move an inch in front of such fortifications.
"How many weapons are there in such a fortification area?" Qin Yansaburo asked.
He has now been transferred to be the deputy chief of staff of the Kwantung Army, but Qin Yansaburo still came to attend this important intelligence meeting.
"As far as I know, there are three independent machine gun battalions, one artillery regiment, one communications company, one engineering company and six bunker artillery platoons in a fortified area on the Western Front," Dvordek replied.
In this way, there must be at least a thousand Soviet soldiers in a fortified area, and they are equipped with very powerful firepower.
"The situation of the fortification corps along the coast of the HLJ and the Ussuri River needs to be carefully investigated." The newly appointed chief of the intelligence department of the Kwantung Army Liu Tianyuansan said.
The entire meeting lasted for more than three hours before it ended.
Under the escort of his entourage, Dvordek left the Kwantung Army Intelligence Department and went to the British Consulate on Station Street!
Now Britain is faintly the enemy of Japan, but Dwodek rushed directly to the British consulate just after the intelligence exchange in the intelligence department of the Kwantung Army.
And all of this was done under the noses of the Japanese.
In the logic of some Poles represented by Dwodek, Japan is the enemy of the northern powers, so it is the friend of the Poles.Great Britain was an enemy of Germany and therefore a friend of the Poles.
The hostile relationship between Britain and Japan was not on Dwodek's mind.
"It's time to think about leaving here." Dvordek said to his followers.
(End of this chapter)
Schulz and Hannah sat in the auditorium of the German Consulate in Harbin, listening to the impassioned speeches by Consul Herrmann and Military Attaché Major Wolff.
More than 100 German expats living in Harbin are their audience.
Schultz watched with cold eyes. Out of the more than 100 people, only a few expressed fanaticism, and most of them looked blank.
These expatriates are businessmen or people like Schultz who live in Harbin by virtue of their skills.
Everyone hates war at heart.
"The brave and fearless German army quickly occupied Oslo and is advancing rapidly northward along the railway!" Wolf gave a speech excitedly.
After the speech, there will be a small celebratory reception.
The reason why it is small is that everyone is German, and there are only so many Germans in Harbin.
Can't people from the consulates of countries like Britain and France in Harbin be invited here to the celebration reception?
While Schultz and Hannah were standing at the table with wine glasses and talking softly, a young man came over to Schultz and said, "Mr. Schultz, Mr. Wolf would like to invite you to his office. He has something to talk to You talk."
Schultz nodded to Hannah and followed the young man.
Wolf, the German military attache in Harbin, shook hands with Schulz enthusiastically.
"Please sit down, Mr. Schultz, oh no, I should call you Comrade Schultz." Wolfe said with a smile.
He was showing Schulz that he, like Schulz, was a member of the National Socialist Party.
Schultz looked at Wolf quietly with a smile on his face.
After De Bruyne returned to Germany, the consulate changed two more military attaches, and Wolfe was the second.
"I've read all your interviews and reports. I heard that you also accepted the invitation of the Japanese to go sightseeing in Japan for a month?" Wolff asked.
"Yes, very impressed," Schultz replied.
Wolf stared at Schultz's face for a long time, wondering what Schultz meant by impressed.
But Schultz couldn't see anything with his expressionless face.
"Is all your unabashed praise of the Japanese true?" Wolff asked.
"Of course not. I will say what they like to hear." Schultz replied with a clear face.
Wolff nodded to Schultz with a knowing smile.
"I just arrived in Manchukuo not long ago, so I don't fully understand the situation. Japan is our friend, shouldn't it be very concerned about our friend?" Wolfe asked.
"Mr. Schultz, can you write me a report on your experience in Japan?" Wolfe asked.
"Which aspects are you referring to?" Schultz asked.
"The current political and economic situation in Japan and your view on the war that Japan is going on," Wolf explained.
The previous two military officers, including De Bruyne, were not considered competent, and they failed to fulfill their intelligence-gathering tasks. Wolfe planned to do more in intelligence-gathering.
Japan is a friend of Germany, and Germany hopes to have a more accurate judgment on Japan's economic and military strength.
"Okay, I'll write the report in a few days and send it over." Schultz replied readily.
He stood up, shook Wolfe's hand and left the office.
Schultz had just left, and the young man who brought Schultz into the office just now walked in and said, "Kowodek has arrived in Harbin!"
"Keep an eye on him and see what passage he will use to leave Manchukuo and return to Poland. Don't disturb him here!" Wolfe ordered.
After Poland was partitioned, Poles hated both Germans and Russians.
The Polish resistance underground fought both the German occupation forces and the Russians.
But they regard the Japanese, who are friends of the Germans, as their good friends.
Dwodek is the intelligence chief of the Polish underground organization. He must have sent intelligence about the Russians to the Japanese when he came to Harbin this time.
Northeast China is now dominated by the Japanese. Of course, Wolfe cannot attack Dvordek here, but if he knows how Dvordek left Manchuria, he can wait for him at the other end of the route and attack him. .
Dvordek walked into the intelligence department of the Kwantung Army.He came here in secret this time to send secret photos of the Soviet army's fortification area on the territory of the original Polish region.
In order to resist possible German attacks, the Soviet army built a large number of fortifications on the western front.
For the same reason, the Soviet army also built about ten fortified areas along the HLJ and along the Ussuri River.
The photos of the Soviet fortification area in Poland brought by Dwodek have a strong reference value for the Kwantung Army to understand the situation of the Soviet army's fortification area in the Far East.
When Dvordek walked into the meeting room, almost all the senior officers of the Kwantung Army Intelligence Department were present.
Dwodek asked the intelligence department to hang the enlarged photos on the wall.
"These photos were secretly taken by Polish workers working on the site," Dwodek said.
Pointing to a permanent fortification, he said: "The 250-mark cement fortification can resist the frontal bombardment of 105mm and 155mm howitzers, and can resist the bombing of 50kg bombs."
He pointed to another fortification and said: "The permanent fortification built with cement marked 400 can resist the frontal bombardment of 203mm and 155mm howitzers, and can resist the bombing of 114kg bombs."
"And the obstacles in front of these fortifications can prevent the passage of tanks under [-] tons." Dvordek continued.
The tanks of the Japanese army are far less than fifty tons, and it can be said that it is difficult to move an inch in front of such fortifications.
"How many weapons are there in such a fortification area?" Qin Yansaburo asked.
He has now been transferred to be the deputy chief of staff of the Kwantung Army, but Qin Yansaburo still came to attend this important intelligence meeting.
"As far as I know, there are three independent machine gun battalions, one artillery regiment, one communications company, one engineering company and six bunker artillery platoons in a fortified area on the Western Front," Dvordek replied.
In this way, there must be at least a thousand Soviet soldiers in a fortified area, and they are equipped with very powerful firepower.
"The situation of the fortification corps along the coast of the HLJ and the Ussuri River needs to be carefully investigated." The newly appointed chief of the intelligence department of the Kwantung Army Liu Tianyuansan said.
The entire meeting lasted for more than three hours before it ended.
Under the escort of his entourage, Dvordek left the Kwantung Army Intelligence Department and went to the British Consulate on Station Street!
Now Britain is faintly the enemy of Japan, but Dwodek rushed directly to the British consulate just after the intelligence exchange in the intelligence department of the Kwantung Army.
And all of this was done under the noses of the Japanese.
In the logic of some Poles represented by Dwodek, Japan is the enemy of the northern powers, so it is the friend of the Poles.Great Britain was an enemy of Germany and therefore a friend of the Poles.
The hostile relationship between Britain and Japan was not on Dwodek's mind.
"It's time to think about leaving here." Dvordek said to his followers.
(End of this chapter)
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