Lu Rongting could construct a political and military machine from the forces that composed the Self-Government Armies, by calling on friends, family, and members of the
Zhuang ethnicity, but the lack of such a leader led to a rapid collapse into localism, which occurred as the Guangdong forces withdrew. There was intense fighting to re-occupy territory or to attempt to strip the retreating forces of their supplies and munitions. With the support of
Wu Peifu and the
Zhili Clique, Lu slipped back into Guangxi in 1923 and began to try to rebuild his coalition. He soon had control over the south with its important pool of Zhuang manpower, but the situation had changed and his political organization could not be rebuilt. Among the younger men who had been trained in military schools after the
1911 Revolution, there was a new appreciation for modern tactics, weapons, and political means. In the confused power struggles following the
Yue-Gui Wars, these local military men began to carve out territory in Guangxi and dominate it. In the southwest there were opium trails from
Yunnan and
Guizhou that ran through
Baise and then down the river to
Nanning. From there, opium usually went out through
Wuzhou, where the trade was financed. During the Yue-Gui wars,
Huang Shaohong, then the commander of the Model Battalion of the 1st Guangxi Division, and
Bai Chongxi, his former deputy, attempted to stay neutral and relocated to Baise. Huang eventually got control of Baise, and the
opium trade. Later he expanded his control to Wuzhou, thus controlling the routes through which opium both entered and left Guangxi. With his opium revenue Bai was able to build a well-equipped and trained force. During the Yue-Gui Wars,
Li Zongren had accompanied Lu and
Lin Hu into
Guangdong and led the rear guard when the
Old Guangxi Clique forces retreated before
Chen Jiongming's attack. During the campaign, Li's battalion was reduced to about one thousand men and "sank into the grasses." But Li, intending to become more than a bandit, began building a personal military machine of professional units of soldiers. These were to be the equal of any force in China and more than a match for any number of bandits or Zhuang irregulars that Lu drew on in his war to re-establish his power in Guangxi. Li joined the
Kuomintang in 1923, when he already controlled a considerable numbers of troops in northern Guangxi and wiped out the local bandits, warlords, and remnant forces of the Old Guangxi clique in the north. ==New Guangxi clique takes power==