Luo Puting soon became a middle-ranking officer, learned fluent Russian, and married a Russian aristocratic girl. When the troops moved near Manzhouli, Luo Puting led his troops to surrender to the Soviet Red Army, which was pursued thousands of miles away, and was appointed as a junior officer in charge of logistics support.
Later, Luo Buting was recommended as Lenin and Stalin's personal chef of Far East cuisine, which is what China called the imperial chef, because he knew authentic China cooking.
Extended data:
In the 1960s, a large number of Chinese or mixed-race people in the Soviet Union were persecuted as China people, and at the same time, a large number of mixed-race people in Northeast China were expelled and persecuted for political reasons.
President Putin escaped because of his aristocratic mother's family, but his uncle Luo Hairen had no choice but to wander around with his family and died in Xinjiang on 1975. Luo Hairen's second son, Luo Yuanping, went to work in the south after the reform and opening up, and now lives in Anhui, where he is living in poverty.
References:
Vladimir Putin-Baidu Encyclopedia