besiege a city to annihilate the enemy reinforce
Besieging the city for aid, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w é ICH é NGD ǎ Yu á n, which means that the attacking party encircles the enemy defending the city with some troops, induces the enemy to ask for support from other forces, and then annihilates the enemy's reinforcements with the main force. From defending Yan'an.
Idiom usage
Combined; used as predicate and attribute; used in military affairs. Chapter 5, Section 8 of Mao Zedong's strategic issues in China's Revolutionary War: "only under the principle of" encircling the city and fighting for assistance ", the purpose is not to encircle the enemy, but to help the enemy. The preparation for fighting against the encircling enemy is quite long-lasting, but it is still a quick decision to help the enemy."
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 5 of Du Pengcheng's defending Yan'an: "isn't the method of 'encircling the city and fighting for aid' often used?"
besiege a city to annihilate the enemy reinforce
This is tolerable, which is intolerable - cǐ ér kě rěn ,shú bù kě rěn
take cities and seize territory - gōng chéng lüè dì
Take care of the old and the young - fù lǎo xié yòu
The law does not spread to six ears - fǎ bù chuán liù ěr