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Chapter 1877 Japanese Army Crossing the River 2

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    When those shells landed on the Yellow River, they sprayed water several meters high, and the water splashed continuously, falling on the heads of the Japanese troops like heavy rain.

    There were also artillery shells that exploded next to the bamboo raft, directly overturning the Japanese bamboo raft.

    The Japanese soldiers who fell into the water were struggling on the wide Yellow River.

    The extremely dense bullets were fired directly at the struggling Japanese soldiers on the river.

    After the bullets penetrated the bodies of these Japanese soldiers, they continued to fly forward, leaving a red trajectory, which was like red flames in the water.

    There were also many shells that directly hit the rafts and ferries.  The Japanese troops above were blown to pieces or jumped into the water.

    On the water surface of the Yellow River, many corpses of Japanese soldiers soon floated.

    The originally turbid river water was slowly dyed into yellow and red colors.

    But these Japanese river-crossing troops had no intention of stopping their advance. Instead, they continued to advance crazily toward the north bank of the Yellow River under the cover of rear artillery fire.

    They seemed to be emotionless combat machines. Even if bullets flew towards them, they continued to move forward.

    They didn¡¯t care at all about those bullets, tearing their flesh apart and blowing their heads off.

    The soldiers of the Fourth Army on the shore were already red-eyed at this time.

    They kept pulling the triggers in their hands and fired bullets onto the surface of the Yellow River.

    These soldiers did not even need to deliberately aim, because there were too many Japanese troops crossing the river.

    What they have to do is to build a firepower net to cover the entire Yellow River.

    Just when these Japanese troops were about to arrive on the beach of the Yellow River.

    The commander on the position shouted: "Launch napalm immediately, launch napalm immediately."

    With his order, napalm bombs were fired from the barrels of mortars and flat-fire cannons, flying directly towards the water of the Yellow River.

    Not only that, some trebuchets also began to ignite oil barrels filled with napalm, and then threw them directly onto the beach of the Yellow River.

    These napalm bombs, after flying onto the surface of the Yellow River, immediately ignited the surface of the river.

    Many Japanese soldiers who were still struggling in the river were suddenly enveloped in napalm.

    They shouted and screamed, but the flames were like sharks, quickly devouring their bodies.

    As for the large gasoline barrels on the river beach, after the explosion, the burning napalm was scattered on the river beach.

    The Japanese troops who had just landed on the river beach were ignited by the napalm before they had time to find bunkers.

    They kept wailing, some rolling on the ground, and some jumping directly into the Yellow River behind them.

    After the first batch of Japanese troops entered the Yellow River, the second batch of Japanese troops followed closely behind.

    Using the same bamboo raft and ferry, they began to move towards the north bank of the Yellow River.

    The attack of the 3rd Division did not weaken at all, and even began to become stronger.

    They have figured out the approximate route of the Japanese army to cross the river, and heavy machine guns began to interweave a dense firepower network.

    Harvesting the lives of these Japanese soldiers.

    Those Japanese soldiers who successfully completed the crossing were blocked on the beaches along the Yellow River by a dense network of firepower.

    These remaining Japanese soldiers, under the leadership of the commander, quickly gathered.

    But most of the soldiers have lost their original organization. They just looked for the highest-ranking Japanese commander in the surrounding area and began to climb up the embankment of the Yellow River.

    And when they finally climbed onto the river embankment, they found that the barbed wire fences had completely blocked their charge.

    These Japanese soldiers had no choice but to use the iron pliers they carried to cut off the barbed wire fences bit by bit.

    But during this process, the heavy machine gun firepower of the Third Division also began to cover their heads.

    "Many Japanese soldiers were directly shot through the body by heavy machine gun bullets as soon as they came to the barbed wire fence, and then they lay on the ground, with the blood in their bodies flowing downwards.

    The Japanese commander on the river beach here startedHajime shouted for the mortars in the rear to fire smoke grenades to provide cover for them.

    But the scope of crossing the river is too large, and the cover provided by rear smoke bombs is actually very limited.

    Those mortars that fired smoke screens of several hundred meters could actually only block a few hundred meters. As for other areas, there was no way to blockade them.

    Not only that, there are large areas of landmines between the barbed wire fences.

    These minefields cannot be blocked by the Japanese smoke bombs.

    Although many of these landmines have been detonated during previous Japanese artillery bombings.

    But there are still many that are buried in the soil.

    Although the Japanese soldiers who successfully crossed the river cut a lot of barbed wire, those mines became their eternal nightmare.

    Some Japanese soldiers tried to advance. Not far after they rushed over, they were blown away by landmines buried underground.

    These landmines are often jumping mines, or small mines that can only blow off one leg of the Japanese army.

    The function of jumping mines is to carry out large-scale damage to the Japanese troops within the range, directly causing more than 10 Japanese troops to lose their combat effectiveness.

    Those small landmines were used to increase the number of wounded by the Japanese army.

    ¡°A wounded Japanese soldier requires two healthy Japanese soldiers to take care of him.

    In this way, the Japanese army invisibly lost three charging soldiers.

    This will reduce the Japanese army's frontal impact capability.

    When the second batch of Japanese soldiers arrived on the river beach, the first batch of Japanese soldiers had already rushed into the barbed wire fence.

    But most of them were completely lost, and only a handful of them were suppressed in some bomb craters by the anti-fire power of the Fourth Army, unable to move at all.

    But the third batch of Japanese troops continued to cross the river.

    They didn¡¯t hesitate at all, as if they were machines without fear.

    And just when the third batch of Japanese troops had just entered the Yellow River, the roar of aircraft engines suddenly came from the distance.

    The sound was like muffled thunder running across the sky, getting closer and closer until it was deafening.

    When the soldiers of the Fourth Army saw the black spots in the sky in the distance, they knew that it was their air force and began to provide support here.

    Soon, those black spots became clearer and clearer.  (Remember the website address: www.hlnovel.com
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