Chapter 2090: Qingying Alliance (Part 2)
Chapter 2090 Qing-Ying Alliance (Part 2)
Chapter 2088: Qing-Ying Alliance (Part 2)
Now Wang Mang did not dare to offend Qin Hao easily. He concluded that if he dared to send naval troops this time, and with Qin Hao's temperament, he would definitely send naval troops to land in Sanhan as soon as possible.
Although Wang Mang has been making every effort to expand his navy since he came to Sanhan. The scale of his navy is several times stronger than when he came, but it is obviously not enough compared with the Qin army's navy.
Moreover, he can expand the naval army, and Qin Hao can also expand the naval army. The naval army he built by selling iron and steel, Qin Hao can have it with a hook.
Unconsciously, the two sides were no longer on the same level, so before unifying the three Koreas, Wang Mang decided not to provoke Qin Hao easily.
Wang Mang did not save the Manchus. In addition to not wanting to offend Qin Hao, another reason was that he believed that the trapped Qing army was completely hopeless.
Instead of wasting time and energy and taking the risk of involving one's own navy to rescue the unrelated Qing army, it would be better to continue to conquer the Three Korean Peninsula.
Of course the main reason is that Wang Mang feels that the Manchu and Qing Dynasties are too strong. The current Manchu and Qing Dynasties are too arrogant and arrogant.
Watching the Qin army pin the Manqing to the ground and beat them up is not necessarily a good thing. It can wake up the arrogant Manqing senior officials and let them know how much they have, so that it will be easier for them to unite the three Koreas and the Manchus in the future. Qing joins forces.
Wang Mang refused so resolutely that Yinzhen didn't have a chance to say anything else. His mission was a failure, but Yinzhen's mission to Japan was successful.
Oda Nobunaga had no grudges against the Qin State, and even sent a mission to have a "friendly" exchange. However, a few months ago, the entire offshore area of the Han Dynasty was invaded by Japanese pirates, and hundreds of thousands of people died tragically. Let the Han people's dislike of Japan reach its peak.
Although the actions of the Japanese pirates were done by forces opposed to Oda Nobunaga and had little to do with Oda Nobunaga, the Han courtiers did not care so much as long as they knew they were Japanese.
Officials of the Qin, Ming, and Wu kingdoms wrote letters requesting their monarchs to send troops to conquer the Japanese country in order to wash away the humiliation.
In this regard, Ming King Zhu Di and Wu Gongsun Jian were willing but powerless, while Qin King Qin Hao said in public more than once that sooner or later the Japanese pirates would pay the price for their actions.
It can be seen that if the King of Qin took the lead, it would not be difficult to form a coalition to defeat Japan. At least Qin and Wu would definitely send troops.
Oda Nobunaga, who was aware of this, learned about it and quickly sent an envoy to Luoyang to tell the court the truth and abdicate the responsibility. However, the court asked him to hand over the culprit of the Japanese pirates.
Of course, Oda Nobunaga also wanted to hand over these people. After all, Japan would be unified without them. However, those forces that sent out Japanese pirates robbed a large amount of money and food from the Han Dynasty. The wounds from the previous war recovered faster than him. Oda Nobunaga may not be a match for the other alliance.
In order not to offend the Qin State at all, the Japanese envoys had no choice but to verbally promise the Han court that they would hand over the Japanese pirate leaders, but they did not set a specific date.
Oda Nobunaga planned to take it one step at a time. Anyway, the Japanese Empire was alone overseas. Before the thirteen states of the Han Dynasty were reunited, Qin was unlikely to cross the sea to conquer Japan. He still had time to develop national power and accumulate strength.
Leaving aside that Yinzhen is a time traveler, let’s just say that Oda Nobunaga was from the Ming Dynasty, and Yinzhen was from the Qing Dynasty. Naturally, Yinzhen has a certain understanding of Oda Nobunaga, a Japanese hero. Yinzhen knew that Oda Nobunaga, like the Manchus, was full of covetousness for the land of China. However, the power of the Central Plains princes was too strong, so before Japan grew stronger, he could only suppress his ambitions, concentrate on development, and save money. strength.
Originally, the two families were unrelated, but now the 200,000 Qing troops in Youbeiping were in danger, and Japan happened to have a naval force that could save the Qing army from the fire, so don't blame Yinzhen for scheming against Japan.
Yinzhen knew the difficulty of this mission. Using conventional rhetoric, whether it was inducement or coercion, the possibility of convincing Oda Nobunaga to send troops was very slim. The only possibility of success was to arouse Nobunaga's ambition.
As long as Oda Nobunaga understands the power of the Qin army, once the 200,000 Qing army is annihilated and the Qin Dynasty completely unifies the north without the control of the Qing Dynasty, the gap between the two countries will become wider and wider, and Japan will With no further possibility of marching into the Central Plains, it was possible to persuade Oda Nobunaga to send troops.
I have to say that Yinzhen is worthy of being a wise king, Emperor Yongzheng. His ideas are very correct. He aroused Oda Nobunaga's ambition and was indeed the only one who could allow him to send troops.
After a whole day of lobbying, Yinzhen racked his brains and tried his best to say everything he needed to say, but he still couldn't convince him completely. However, Oda Nobunaga's attitude towards sending troops also changed from his previous attitude. I didn't think about agreeing to send troops, but I started to weigh the pros and cons of sending troops.
After realizing this, Yinzhen began to strike while the iron was hot. Not only did he lobby Nobunaga himself, he also spent a lot of money to bribe officials from the Japanese Empire, asking them to help him lobby and state his interests, so that the two countries could join forces to fight against Qin's hegemony.
Two days later, Oda Nobunaga held a royal meeting and announced in public that he agreed to the naval expedition. He also decided to personally lead the navy to contain the Qin navy.
The reason why Oda Nobunaga was able to conduct a personal expedition was mainly because he could not trust his generals. After all, Japan's warships were inferior to Qin's, and there were not many navy generals who could take action.
As for the Qin State, just by listening to Yinzhen's description, Oda Nobunaga knew that Zhou Yu, the commander-in-chief of the Qin Navy Navy, was not simple. He was afraid that his naval generals would not obey orders and directly go to war with the Qin Navy Navy. In the end, the Japanese navy was buried in western Liaoning, so it was better to conquer it by myself.
Yinzhen did not expect that Oda Nobunaga would personally lead the expedition, and at the same time, he secretly sighed in his heart that it was a pity.
If another Japanese general led the army, he would naturally believe whatever he said and the Japanese would believe it. It would not be impossible to provoke the Qin and Japanese navies to go to war.
But if Oda Nobunaga personally takes action, if Yinzhen dares to make these small moves, he will really be seeking his own death.
Under Yinzhen's lobbying, Oda Nobunaga agreed to the Manchu alliance request. Japan and the Manchu Qing submitted letters of credence to form an alliance, agreeing that if one side was invaded, the other side would send troops to support it.
Subsequently, the Japanese Emperor Oda Nobunaga personally led 30,000 navy troops to march across the sea to western Liaoning. However, he did not start a war with the Qin army, but helped the Qing army to contain Qin's Qingzhou Navy.
The situation in Youzhou, which was already stable, has become more complicated due to the intervention of new forces.
To make up for last Friday’s guarantee
(End of this chapter)