Oh, I’m sorry, did I need to specify during WW2?
What about read? You old enough to read? Well look up, there is a document
Read what…?
The engagement you qouted was dated to 3rd of September 1945.
It’s not up to me to prove anything, I’m not making any claims to the positive.
Sino-Soviet cooperation did occur, but not joint combat operations
Examples:
- The USSR supplied China with tanks, aircraft, advisors, and pilots (especially 1937–1941).
- Soviet volunteer pilots flew in the Chinese Air Force against Japan.
- In 1945, the Red Army invaded Manchuria and Korea, indirectly supporting the Chinese war effort by defeating Japan’s Kwantung Army — but Chinese and Soviet forces did not fight side-by-side in combined units.
Summary
- Direct joint combat operations: Only some Chinese volunteers fighting within Red Army units (e.g., Khalkhin Gol).
- Formal China–USSR joint warfare: No, not during the main WWII period.
- Strong material support and shared enemies: Yes, especially before 1941 and again in 1945.
Are you old enough to count…?
3 is greater than 2.
Or, maybe the numbers go “1, 2, many” for you…?
So, I have to put it in your face, you can’t even scroll? What actualy you can do in this life except an empty argue
I give you a real documents, you give me what? Well, this boyo is a smarter, he can ask AI. Bravo.
Says nothing about troops fighting or supporting each other.
That’s just a report about the location of friendly forces.
Document of what ? Could be a chapter of hentai anime in WW2 theme for all I know.
Well in this exact case I kinda trust more to AI than some random enlisted forum soviet.
Real (let us assume for the moment) documents that does not prove that Soviet and Chinese troops fought together during the war.
Yeahhh… I’m gonna need that…

It says they do



Send your regards to German players then? Looking forward to participate?
Next premium squad – German friends BR1
I even translate it to you
Viki, you are a pretender, you do not care much about history, just agree
Where…?
Neither excepts you provided say they did.
And, I doubt you didn’t pick up the things you thought were the most convincing, so this is likely the best two examples you got.
A report about where friendly partisans are located, and fighting happening after the war was over.
Yeah no, that’s not proof of Chinese and Soviet forces fighting side by side in the war.
Let me translate some more of this historically important and absolutely legit as fk site.
“On November 30, 1939, the Soviet Union’s war with Finland began. Regimental command received orders to prepare the regiment for battle on the Karelian Isthmus. It was in this environment that my formation as a soldier began. All the young soldiers who arrived were assigned to specialties. I was assigned as a computer. The computer’s job was to compile accurate data for firing. The success of destroying enemy fortified positions depended on the accuracy of the data.”
And what about this? You try so much don’t you? Come on tell its not a fight, what’s wrong here? Its so funny
Manchurian partisans fighting on their own, then offered to give what they captured to advancing Soviets.
Still no fighting together, keep going.
Heh, also streatching the definition of “Chinese forces” now, sounds to me like this was a independent group of partisans.
This is a fun game!
The translation of the Russian document there is incorrect, by the way.
It doesn’t say “45 officers and up to 2,000 men”.
It says:
In the fighting for the town of Boli on 16 August, the 45th Manchurian regiment — up to 2,000 men, under the command of the regimental commander — surrendered to Skupsky’s units.
Under the influence of our propaganda, the Manchurian partisans engaged the remaining Japanese in small groups of soldiers in the Khubei-Foida area, killing 20 Japanese in the process. The partisans sent a report to the command of the Red Army asking that we receive from them the captured weapons and ammunition taken from the Japanese.
So basically there was a 45th Manchurian regiment, probably part of Kwantung Army or their Manchukuo puppet state, likely formed from ethnic Manchurians, who surrendered to the Red Army, and after being strongly advised to join the winning side followed the Soviet’s advise, turned against their retreating Japanese ex-comrades and killed 20 of them.
Sure, this definitely makes Chinese in Stalingrad valid and historical.
