The Pacific War Online Encyclopedia: Tu Yu-ming (original) (raw)

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Tu Yu-ming (1905-1981)

Photograph of Tu Yu-ming

Generals.dk. Fair use may apply

Tu Yu-ming (Du Yuming) commanded the Kuomintang 5 Armyin December 1941. Stilwellinitial considered him "Solid ontactics. Ready to fight." Instead, he proved to be a vacillating and sulky commander with the warlord mentality. In one notorious incident, Tu explained to Alexanderthat he had not moved his artillerynear the front because they made his army the best in China: "If I lose them the Fifth Army will no longer be the best." In addition, Tu was receiving contradictory orders from Stilwell and Chiang Kai-shekthat left him confused and depressed, particularly since Tu was initially of the impression that Lo Cho-ying was the real commander of Chinese troops in Burma: "... the Americangeneral [Stilwell] only thinks he is commanding. In fact ,he is doing no such thing. You see, we Chinese think that the only way to keep the Americans in the war is to give them a few commands on paper. They will not do much harm as long as we do the work!" (Allen 1984)

Stilwell's frustration with Tu reached its peak when Stilwell ordered 22 Division to counterattack the Japanese, who were being held at Toungoo by 200 Division (Tai An-lan). Tu first refused to attack, then repeatedly postponed his attack, then found excuses to not attack after all. 200 Division was forced to give up Toungoo after taking a thousand casualties while inflicting heavy casualties on the Japanese. Tu later accepted an order to have 200 Division defend Meiktila, then did nothing to carry the order out. Chiang was almost certainly in direct contact with Tu and urging him to conserve his forces and avoid any catastrophe in Burma. When catastrophe came anyway (over half the Chinese troops deployed in the first Burma campaign were lost) Chiang was permanently embittered against Stilwell.

Tu had the patronage of Madame Chiang, who wanted Tu appointed commander of the Chinese troops at Ramgarh in India. Stilwell managed to get Lo Cho-ying appointed instead, only to discover that Tu had been named to command Y Force in Yunnan, which was to be the second pincer of Stilwell's offensive into north Burma. Stilwell managed to get Tu replaced with Ch'en Cheng.

Tu later staged a coup on behalf of Chiang that toppled Lung Yun, the independently-minded governor of Yunnan. When Tu was assigned to Manchuria shortly after the Japanese surrender, he confirmed his reputation as one of the most corrupt of the Kuomintang officials by turning the areas under his control into a kleptocracy. Chiang finally had Ch'en Ch'eng relieve Tu. Tu had no better luck as a commander in northeast China, performing poorly in the Huai-Hai battle and being captured by the Communists. He was held as a war criminal until 1959.

Service record

1905 Born
1937 Colonel Commander, Armored Regiment
1938 Major general Commander, 200 Division
1938 Commander, Siangtan Garrison Command
1938 Deputy commander, 11 Army
1939 Lieutenant general Commander, 5 Army
1942 Commander, Kunming Defense Command
1943 Commander, 5 Army Group
1949 Imprisoned as war criminal by Communists
1959 Released
1981 Dies

References

Allen (1984)

Dorn (1974)

Fenby (2003)

Generals.dk (accessed 2008-1-21)

Romanus and Sunderland (1953)

Sih (1977)

Wilson (1982)

The Pacific War Online Encyclopedia © 2007, 2011, 2014 by Kent G. Budge. Index


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