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Malayan campaign - Wikipedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Malayan Campaign)
1941–1942 World War II military campaign
Malayan campaign
Part of the Pacific War of World War II

Troops of the Imperial Japanese Army crouch on a street in Johor Bahru in the final stages of the Malayan campaign
Date8 December 1941 – 15 February 1942
(2 months, and 8 days)
Location
Malaya
Result Japanese victory
Territorial
changes
Japanese occupation of Malaya
Belligerents
United Kingdom and Empire:
  •  India
  • Malaya
  • Straits Settlements
  •  Australia
  •  New Zealand
 Netherlands
  • Netherlands Dutch East Indies

Kuomintang of Malaya[1]
Communist Party of Malaya[1]
 Japan
Thailand
Kesatuan Melayu Muda
Commanders and leaders
Archibald Wavell
Robert Brooke-Popham
Arthur Percival Surrendered
Lewis Heath Surrendered
David Murray-Lyon Surrendered
Archibald Paris †
Arthur Barstow †
Gordon Bennett
Tom Phillips †
Conway Pulford †
Leong Yew Koh[1]
Lai Teck
Hisaichi Terauchi
Tomoyuki Yamashita
Takuro Matsui
Takuma Nishimura
Renya Mutaguchi
Michio Sugawara [jp]
Plaek Phibunsongkhram
Nobutake Kondō
Jisaburō Ozawa
Shintarō Hashimoto
Ibrahim Yaacob
Units involved
  • Far East Command[a] ABDA Command[b]
    • Malaya Command
      • III Corps
        • 9th Division
        • 11th Division
      • 8th Division
      • 53rd Brigade
      • Malay Regiment
      • SSVF
  • United Kingdom RAF Far East
    • United Kingdom RAF (8 SQNs)
    • Australia RAAF (4 SQNs)
    • RNZAF (1 SQN)

ML-KNIL


  • East Indies Fleet
    • Force Z

  • OCAJA[1]
  • MPAJA[1]
  •  Imperial Japanese Army
    • South Expeditionary Army
      • 25th Army
        • Imperial Guards
        • 5th Division
        • 18th Division
        • 3rd Tank Brigade
        • 56th Division
        • 3rd Air Corps
        • 3 Sentai/5th Air Corps
  • 2nd Fleet
    • Distant Cover Force
    • Closed Cover Force
    • Invasion Force
    • 22nd Air Flotilla

  • Royal Thai Police

  • Young Malays Union
Strength
130,246 troops[2]
253 aircraft
810 artillery pieces
208+ anti-tank and anti-aircraft guns
54 fortress guns[3][c]
250+ AFVs[3][d][4]
15,400+ motor vehicles[5][e]
125,408 troops[6]
799 aircraft[7]
440+ artillery pieces[8]
265 tanks[9]
3,000+ trucks[10]
Casualties and losses
130,246–138,708 casualties
7,500–8,000 killed[11]
10,000–11,000+ wounded
~120,000+ captured or missing
440~ aircraft destroyed[12][13]
9,657–14,768 casualties
3,507–5,240 killed
6,150–9,528 wounded[14]
>30 tanks destroyed
331 aircraft lost (92 in combat)[15]
108–331 aircraft damaged or destroyed[16][17]
20,000 to 83,000 civilians killed
  • v
  • t
  • e
Malayan campaign
  • Japanese invasion/Kota Bharu
  • Singapore bombing
  • Prince of Wales & Repulse
  • Jitra
    • Krohcol
  • Gurun
  • Kampar
  • Slim River
  • Gemas
  • Muar
  • Endau
  • Singapore
    • Sarimbun Beach
    • Kranji
    • Bukit Timah
    • Pasir Panjang
  • v
  • t
  • e
Japanese offensives,
1940–1942
1940
  • Manchukuo
  • Chongqing
  • South Guangxi
  • Baotou
  • West Suiyuan
  • Zaoyang–Yichang
  • French Indochina
  • Ningbo
  • Central Hubei
  • North China

1941

  • Panjiayu
  • South Henan
  • Western Hubei
  • Shanggao
  • South Shanxi
  • 2nd Changsha
  • Malaya
  • Pearl Harbor
  • Thailand
  • Hong Kong
  • Philippines
  • Guam
  • Wake
  • Sand Island
  • Niʻihau
  • Gilbert Islands
  • Indian Ocean
  • Borneo
  • Dutch East Indies
  • Burma
  • 3rd Changsha

1942

  • Nanshitou
  • Timor
  • New Guinea
  • Qantas Short Empire shootdown
  • Singapore
  • Darwin
  • Ellwood
  • Broome
  • KNILM Douglas DC-3 shootdown
  • Operation K
  • Andaman and Nicobar
  • Christmas Island
  • Ceylon
  • Solomons
  • Tulagi
  • Coral Sea
  • Nauru and Ocean Islands
  • Zhejiang-Jiangxi
  • Madagascar
  • Aleutian Islands
  • Midway
  • Sydney
  • Newcastle
  • Fort Stevens
  • Dureenbee
  • Mount Emily
  • v
  • t
  • e
South-East Asian Theater
French Indochina
  • Franco-Thai War
    • Ko Chang
  • Invasion
  • Coup de main
  • August Revolution

Thailand
  • Invasion
  • Air raids

Malaya and Singapore
  • Invasion
  • 1st Singapore
  • Sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse
  • Jitra
    • Krohcol
  • Gurun
  • Kampar
  • Slim River
  • Gemas
  • Muar
    • Parit Sulong Massacre
  • Endau
  • 2nd Singapore

Dutch East Indies
  • 1st Borneo
  • Manado
  • Tarakan
  • Balikpapan
  • Ambon
  • Makassar Strait
  • Sumatra
  • Palembang
  • Badung Strait
  • Timor
  • USS Langley
  • 1st Java Sea
  • Sunda Strait
  • Java
  • 2nd Java Sea
  • 8 June 1945
  • 2nd Borneo
    • Tarakan
    • North Borneo
    • Balikpapan

Indian Ocean
  • 27 February 1941
  • 8 May 1941
  • Sydney vs Kormoran
  • Japanese raiders
  • Andaman and Nicobar
    • Homfreyganj massacre
  • Christmas Island
  • 1st Indian Ocean
  • Easter Sunday Raid
  • Madagascar
  • Cocos Islands mutiny
  • Réunion
  • 13 November 1943
  • 11 January 1944
  • 14 February 1944
  • 2nd Indian Ocean
  • 17 July 1944

Burma, India and China
Japanese invasion of Burma
  • Bilin River
  • Sittang Bridge
  • Pegu
  • Taukkyan
  • Yunnan-Burma Road
    • Tachiao
    • Oktwin
    • Toungoo
  • Shwedaung
  • Prome
  • Yenangyaung
Burma campaign (1942–1943)
  • Arakan
  • The Hump
  • Longcloth
Burma campaign (1944)
  • Admin Box
  • Thursday
    • Mogaung
  • U Go
    • Imphal
    • Sangshak
    • Tennis Court
    • Kohima
  • Myitkyina
  • Mount Song
Burma campaign (1944–1945)
  • Meiktila & Mandalay
  • Pakokku
  • Hill 170
  • Ramree Island
  • Tanlwe Chaung
  • Dracula
  • Elephant Point
  • Sittang Bend
  • v
  • t
  • e
Second Sino-Japanese War
1931–1936
  • Mukden
  • Manchuria
    • Jiangqiao
      • Nenjiang Bridge
    • Jinzhou
    • Harbin
    • Lytton Report
  • 1st Shanghai
  • Counterinsurgency in Manchuria
    • Pingdingshan
  • Great Wall
    • Rehe
    • Tanggu
  • Inner Mongolia
    • North Chahar
      • Qin–Doihara
    • Suiyuan
  • He–Umezu
  • August 1
  • December 9th
  • Wayaobu
  • Xi'an
1937–1938
  • Lugou Bridge
  • Beiping–Tianjin
    • Guanganmen
    • Tongzhou
  • Chahar
  • 2nd Shanghai
    • Sihang Warehouse
  • Railway operations
    • Beiping–Hankou
    • Tianjin–Pukou
  • Taiyuan
    • Pingxingguan
    • Xinkou
      • Yanmen Pass
  • Nanking
    • USS Panay
    • Massacre
  • Tsingtao
  • Xuzhou
    • Taierzhuang
  • North-East Henan
    • Lanfeng
  • Amoy
  • Chongqing
  • Yellow River flood
  • Wuhan
    • Jiujiang
    • Wanjialing
    • Wenxi fire
  • Xinfeng
  • Canton
1939–1942
  • Hainan
  • Nanchang
  • Suixian–Zaoyang
  • Swatow
  • 1st Changsha
  • South Guangxi
    • Kunlun Pass
  • Winter Offensive
    • Baotou
    • West Suiyuan
    • Wuyuan
  • 1st South Shanxi
  • Zaoyang–Yichang
  • Hundred Regiments
    • Guanjianao
    • Three Alls policy
      • Panjiayu
  • Ningbo
  • Central Hubei
  • South Anhui
  • South Henan
  • 1st West Hubei
  • Shanggao
  • 2nd South Shanxi
  • 2nd Changsha
  • 3rd Changsha
  • Nanshitou
  • Yunnan-Burma Road
    • Tachiao
    • Oktwin
    • Toungoo
    • The Hump
    • Yenangyaung
  • Zhejiang–Jiangxi
1943–1945
  • Taihang Mountains
  • 2nd West Hubei
    • Changjiao
  • Linnan
  • North Burma and West Yunnan
    • Myitkyina
    • Mogaung
    • Mount Song
  • Sichuan
    • Changde
  • Ichi-Go
    • Central Henan
    • Changsha-Hengyang
      • Hengyang
    • Guilin–Liuzhou
  • West Henan–North Hubei
  • West Hunan
  • 2nd Guangxi
Air War
  • Jianqiao
  • Taihoku
  • v
  • t
  • e
Pacific War
Central Pacific
  • Pearl Harbor
  • Marshalls–Gilberts raids
  • K
  • Doolittle Raid
  • Midway
  • Gilberts and Marshalls
  • Marianas and Palau
  • Volcano and Ryukyu
  • Truk
  • Ocean Island
Indian Ocean (1941–1945)
  • Japanese merchant raids
  • Andaman Islands
    • Homfreyganj massacre
  • Christmas Island
  • 1st Indian Ocean
    • Ceylon
  • Bay of Bengal
  • 2nd Indian Ocean
Southeast Asia
  • Indochina (1940)
  • Franco-Thai War
  • Thailand
  • Malaya
  • Hong Kong
  • Singapore
  • Indochina (1945)
  • Malacca Strait
  • Vietnam
  • Jurist
  • Tiderace
  • Zipper
  • Strategic bombing (1944–45)
Burma and India
  • Burma (1941–42)
  • Burma (1942–43)
  • Burma and India (1944)
  • Burma (1944–45)
Southwest Pacific
  • Dutch East Indies (1941–42)
  • Philippines (1941–42)
  • RY
  • Solomon Islands
  • Coral Sea
  • Timor
  • Australia
  • New Guinea
  • New Britain
  • Philippines (1944–45)
  • Borneo (1945)
North America
  • Ellwood
  • Aleutian Islands
  • Estevan Point Lighthouse
  • Fort Stevens
  • Lookout Air Raids
  • Fire balloon bombs
  • Project Hula
  • PX
Japan
  • Air raids
    • Tokyo
    • Yokosuka
    • Kure
    • Hiroshima and Nagasaki
  • Mariana Islands
  • Japanese-Italian War
  • Volcano and Ryukyu Islands
  • Starvation
  • Naval bombardments
  • Sagami Bay
  • South Sakhalin
  • Kuril Islands
    • Shumshu
  • Downfall
  • Japanese surrender
Manchuria and Northern Korea
  • Kantokuen
  • Manchuria (1945)
    • Mutanchiang
  • Chongjin

Second Sino-Japanese War

  • v
  • t
  • e
Military campaigns of the Empire of Japan
Meiji era
  • Taiwan (1874)
  • Ganghwa (1875)
  • Ryukyu (1879)
  • Qing-Japanese War (1894–1895)
  • Triple Intervention (1895)
  • Boxer Rebellion (1899–1901)
  • Russo-Japanese War (1904–1905)
  • Japan–Korea Treaty of 1910

Taishō era

  • Tsingtao (1914)
  • German Pacific possesions (1914)
  • Siberia (1918–1922)

Shōwa era

  • Manchuria (1931–1932)
  • China (1937–1945)
  • French Indochina (1940)
    • coup d'état 1945
  • Pacific Theatre (1941–1945)
  • v
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  • e
Theatres of World War II
Europe
  • Poland
    • Soviet invasion
  • Phoney War
    • Saar Offensive
  • Finland
    • Winter War
    • Karelia
    • Lapland
  • Weserübung
    • Denmark
    • Norway
  • Western Front
    • Luxembourg
    • Netherlands
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    • France
  • Alps
    • 1944–1945
  • Britain
  • Eastern Front
    • Barbarossa
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    • Romania
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    • Vistula–Oder
    • Berlin
  • Liberation of France
    • Overlord
    • Dragoon
    • Siegfried Line
    • Market Garden
    • Bulge
    • Western Germany
Asia-Pacific
  • China
    • Marco Polo Bridge
    • Shanghai
    • Taiyuan
    • Nanjing
    • Xuzhou and Taierzhuang
    • Wuhan
    • Winter Offensive
    • Hundred Regiments Offensive
    • Northern Burma and Western Yunnan
    • Ichi-Go
    • 1945 Hunan
  • Burma
    • 1941–1942
    • 1942–1943
    • 1944
    • 1944–1945
  • South-East Asia
    • Indochina
    • Franco-Thai War
    • Thailand
    • Hong Kong
    • Malaya and Singapore
  • South West Pacific
  • Philippines 1941–1942
    • 1944–1945
  • Dutch East Indies
    • Borneo 1945
  • Coral Sea
  • Solomon Islands
    • Guadalcanal
    • New Georgia
    • Bougainville
  • New Guinea
    • Kokoda Track
    • Salamaua–Lae
    • Markham, Ramu and Finisterre
    • Huon Peninsula
    • New Britain
    • Admiralty Islands
    • Western New Guinea
  • Pacific Ocean
    • Midway
    • Gilberts and Marshalls
    • Mariana and Palau
    • Volcano and Ryukyu
  • Soviet-Japanese War(Mainland)
    • Manchuria and Northern Korea
    • pre-war border conflicts
  • Japan
    • Volcano and Ryukyu
    • South Sakhalin
    • Kurils
Mediterranean and Middle East
  • Balkans
    • Greco-Italian War
    • Greece
      • Crete
    • Albania
    • Yugoslavia
  • Mediterranean Sea
    • Adriatic
    • Malta
    • Dodecanese
  • East Africa
    • Guerrilla war
  • Middle East
    • Iraq
    • Syria–Lebanon
    • Iran
  • North Africa
    • Libya-Egypt
    • Morocco-Algeria
    • Tunisia
  • Italy
    • Sicily
    • Mainland Italy
    • Winter Line
    • Gothic Line
    • Spring Offensive
Other campaigns
  • Air warfare
    • Strategic bombing
  • Americas
    • Aleuts
  • Antarctica
  • Atlantic
  • Australia
  • Arctic
  • French West Africa
  • Indian Ocean 1940–1945
    • Madagascar
Coups
  • Uruguay
  • Norway
  • Baltic Nations
  • Yugoslavia
  • Romania 1941
  • Iraq
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  • Croatia
  • Romania 1944
  • Bulgaria
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Resistance movements
  • Albanian resistance
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  • Italian Resistance
  • Jewish Resistance
  • Korean resistance
  • Malayan resistance
  • Norwegian resistance
  • Polish resistance
  • Romanian resistance
  • Slovak partisans
  • Soviet partisans
  • Yugoslav Partisans
Part of a series on the
History of Malaysia
Les isles de la Sonde, entre lesquelles sont Sumatra, Iava, Borneo, &c / par le Sr. Sanson d'Abbeville geographe du roy ; A. Peyrounin sculp
Prehistoric period
Paleolithic
 Lenggong Valley c. 2,000,0000 BCE
Mesolithic
 Niah cultures 65,000–40,000 BCE
Neolithic
 Bewah man/woman 16,000 BCE
 Perak man/woman 11,000–200 BCE
 Neolithic Klang 500 – 200 BCE
Early kingdoms
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Pan Pan 424–775
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Srivijaya 700s–1025
Majapahit 1300s
Rise of Muslim states
Kedah Sultanate 1136–present
Samudera Pasai Sultanate 1267–1521
Brunei Sultanate 1368–present
Malacca Sultanate 1402–1511
Sulu Sultanate 1450–1899
Pahang Sultanate 1470–1623
Aceh Sultanate 1496–1903
Pattani Sultanate 1516– 1902
Johor Sultanate 1528–present
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Colonial period
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Siamese invasion of Kedah 1821–1826
Anglo-Dutch Treaty1824
Burney Treaty1826
Naning War 1831–1832
Kingdom of Sarawak 1841–1946
Separation of Perlis from Kedah 1843
Crown Colony of Labuan 1848–1946
Pahang Civil War 1857–1863
Larut Wars 1861–1874
Klang War 1867–1874
Pangkor Treaty 1874
Perak War1875–1876
British Malaya / Borneo 1874–1946
Jementah Civil War 1879
North Borneo 1882–1946
Pahang Uprising 1891–1895
Mat Salleh Rebellion 1894–1905
Federated Malay States 1895–1946
Anglo-Siamese Treaty 1909
Unfederated Malay States 1909–1946
Battle of Penang 1914
Kelantan rebellion 1915
World War II
Japanese occupation of Malaya / Borneo

1941–1945
Malayan campaign 1941–1942
Bornean Campaign 1941–1942
Battle of Muar 1942
Parit Sulong Massacre 1942
Battle of Singapore 1942
Sook Ching 1942
Syburi 1942
Sandakan Death Marches 1942–1945
Si Rat Malai 1943–1945
Jesselton revolt 1943–1944
Formative period
BMA of Malaya/Borneo 1945–1946
Crown Colony of N. Borneo/Sarawak 1946–1963
Anti-cession movement 1946–1963
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Malayan Emergency 1948–1960
Baling Talks 1955
Independence period
Malayan Independence 1957
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ISA 1960 1960–2012
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North Borneo self-governance 1963
Konfrontasi 1963–1966
Sarawak self-governance 1963
Formation of Malaysia 1963
Singapore in Malaysia 1963–1965
ASEAN Declaration 1967
Second communist insurgency 1968–1989
Modern period
1966 Sarawak constitutional crisis 1965–1966
13 May incident 1969
National Operations Council 1969–1971
Declaration of Rukun Negara 1970
New Economic Policy 1971–1990
Federal Territory of KL 1974
1977 Kelantan Emergency 1977
Pedra Branca dispute 1979–2008
South China Sea dispute (Spratly) 1980–present
Dawn Raid 1981
Federal Territory of Labuan 1984
Memali incident 1985
Sabah Emergency 1986
Ming Court Affair 1987
Operation Lalang 1987
Constitutional crisis 1987–1988
Peace Agreement of Hat Yai 1989
Royal Immunity Amendments 1993
Asian financial crisis 1997–1998
Reformasi Movement 1998–2022
Federal Territory of Putrajaya 2001
2008 Malaysian Opposition Wave 2008
2009 Perak constitutional crisis 2009
H1N1 flu pandemic 2009–2010
Lahad Datu standoff 2013
Sedition Dragnet 2014
1MDB scandal 2015–present
Pakatan Harapan takeover 2018
COVID-19 pandemic 2020–2022
Political crisis 2020–2022
Bornean Amendment 2021–2023
Green Wave 2022–present
2023 Sabah political crisis 2023
Incidents
Brunei revolt 1962–1966
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Singapore race riots 1964
Brunei's Limbang claim 1967–2009
Penang Hartal riot 1967
Ligitan and Sipadan dispute 1969–2002
Kuala Lumpur flash floods 1971
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AIA building hostage crisis 1975
National Monument bombing 1975
Campbell Shopping Complex fire 1976
Sabah Air GAF Nomad crash 1976
Japan Airlines Flight 715 incident 1977
MH653 incident 1977
1982 Bukit Merah radioactive pollution 1982
1985 Lahad Datu ambush 1985
Memali Incident 1985
Penang terminal bridge collapse 1988
Taufiqiah Al-Khairiah madrasa fire 1989
Kuala Lumpur–Karak Highway crash 1990
Bright Sparklers disaster 1991
Highland Towers collapse 1993
Genting landslide 1995
MH2133 incident 1995
Pos Dipang mudflow 1996
Tropical Storm Greg 1996
Nipah virus outbreak 1998–1999
2000 Sipadan kidnappings 2000
Al-Ma'unah incident 2000
Sauk Siege 2000
2001 Kampung Medan riots 2001
2002 Taman Hillview landslide 2002
Indian Ocean tsunami 2004
2006–2007 Southeast Asian floods 2006–2007
Bukit Antarabangsa landslide 2008
Attacks against places of worship 2010
2010 Cameron Highlands bus crash 2010
Hulu Langat landslide 2011
2013 Genting Highlands bus crash 2013
MH370 incident 2014
MH17 incident 2014
2014–15 Malaysia floods 2014–2015
Sabah earthquake 2015
2015 Plaza Low Yat riot 2015
Movida Bar grenade attack 2016
Kim Jong-nam's Assassination 2017
Darul Quran madrasa fire2017
2018 Subang Temple riot 2018
2019 Kim Kim River toxic pollution 2019
2020-21 Malaysia floods 2021
LRT train collision 2021
2021-22 Malaysia floods 2021–2022
2022 Batang Kali landslide 2022
2023 Elmina plane crash 2023
2024 Lumut helicopters crash 2024
2024 Ulu Tiram police station attack 2024
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The Malayan campaign, referred to by Japanese sources as the Malay Operation (馬来作戦, Maree Sakusen), was a military campaign fought by Allied and Axis forces in Malaya from 8 December 1941 – 15 February 1942 at the opening of the Pacific War and during the Second World War. It was dominated by land battles between British Commonwealth army units and the Imperial Japanese Army, with minor skirmishes at the beginning of the campaign between British Commonwealth and Royal Thai Police. The Japanese had air and naval supremacy from the opening days of the campaign. For the British, Indian, Australian, and Malayan forces defending the colony, the campaign was a total disaster.

The operation is notable for the Japanese use of bicycle infantry, which supposedly allowed troops to carry more equipment and swiftly move through thick jungle terrain. Royal Engineers, equipped with demolition charges, destroyed over a hundred bridges during the retreat, yet this did little to delay the Japanese. Japanese air supremacy, infiltration tactics, superior leadership, and experienced infantry units ensured an overwhelming victory over the unorganized Allied forces.

By the time the Japanese 25th Army had captured Singapore, they had suffered between 9,657 and 14,768 casualties.[18] Allied losses were much heavier at 130,246 to 138,708, including around 7,500 to 8,000 killed, 10,000 to 11,000+ wounded and 120,000+ missing or captured.[19] Between 20,000 and 83,000 civilians were killed in the campaign, mostly victims of the Sook Ching Massacre.[20]

Background

[edit]

Japanese

[edit]
Main articles: Second Sino-Japanese War and Japanese invasion of French Indochina

By 1941 the Japanese had been engaged for four years in trying to subjugate China. They were heavily reliant on imported materials for their military forces, particularly oil from the United States.[21] From 1940 to 1941, following the Japanese takeover of French colonies the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Netherlands imposed embargoes on supplying oil and war materials to Japan.[21] The object of the embargoes was to assist the Chinese and encourage the Japanese to halt military action in China. The Japanese considered that pulling out of China would result in a loss of face and decided instead to take military action against US, British and Dutch territories in South East Asia.[21] The Japanese forces for the invasion were assembled in 1941 on Hainan Island and in French Indochina. This troop build-up was noticed by the Allies and, when asked, the Japanese advised that it related to its operations in China.

When the Japanese invaded, they had over 200 tanks, consisting of the Type 95 Ha-Go light tank, Type 97 Chi-Ha and Type 89 I-Go medium tanks and Type 97 Te-Ke tankettes.[22] In support they had nearly 800 aircraft available. Commonwealth troops were equipped with the Manchester 6×4 Armoured Car, Marmon-Herrington Armoured Car, Universal Carrier and only 23 obsolete Mk VIB light tanks (in the 100th Light Tank Squadron of the Indian Army), none of which were sufficiently armed for armoured warfare.[4] They had just over 250 combat aircraft; half of these would be lost in the first few days of combat.

When the Japanese invaded Malaya it was part of expansive attack all across the Pacific and South East Asia, stretching from Pearl Harbor and islands in the Pacific, the Philippines, Hong Kong, Burma, Singapore, Borneo, and Thailand.[23][24]

Commonwealth

[edit]
Main article: Singapore strategy

Between the wars, the British military strategy in the Far East was undermined by a lack of attention and funding. In 1937, Major-General William Dobbie, General Officer Commanding (GOC) Malaya (1935–39), looked at Malaya's defences and reported that during the monsoon season, from October to March, landings could be made by an enemy on the east coast and bases could be established in Siam (Thailand). He predicted that landings could be made at Songkhla and Pattani in Siam, and Kota Bharu in Malaya. He recommended large reinforcements to be sent immediately. His predictions turned out to be correct, but his recommendations were ignored. The British government's plans relied primarily on the stationing of a strong fleet at the Singapore Naval Base in the event of any enemy hostility, in order to defend both Britain's Far Eastern possessions and the route to Australia. A strong naval presence was also thought to act as a deterrent against possible aggressors.[25]

By 1940, however, the army commander in Malaya, Lieutenant-General Lionel Bond, conceded that a successful defence of Singapore demanded the defence of the whole peninsula, and that the naval base alone would not be sufficient to deter a Japanese invasion.[26] Military planners concluded that the desired Malayan air force strength would be 300–500 aircraft, but this was never reached because of the higher priorities in the allocation of men and material for Britain and the Middle East.[citation needed]

The defence strategy for Malaya rested on two basic assumptions: first, that there would be sufficient early warning of an attack to allow for reinforcement of British troops, and second, that American help was at hand in case of attack. By late 1941, after Lieutenant-General Arthur E. Percival had taken over as GOC Malaya, it became clear that neither of these assumptions had any real substance.[26] In addition, Churchill and Roosevelt had agreed that in the event of war breaking out in South East Asia, priority would be given to finishing the war in Europe. The east, until that time, would be a secondary priority. Containment was considered the primary strategy in the east.[citation needed]

Intelligence operations

[edit]
See also: F Kikan

Planning for this offensive was undertaken by the Japanese Military Affairs Bureau's Unit 82 based in Taiwan. Intelligence on Malaya was gathered through a network of agents which included Japanese embassy staff; disaffected Malayans (particularly members of the Japanese-established Tortoise Society);[citation needed] and Japanese, Korean, and Taiwanese business people and tourists. Japanese spies, which included a British intelligence officer, Captain Patrick Stanley Vaughan Heenan, also provided intelligence and assistance.[27]

Prior to hostilities Japanese intelligence officers like Iwaichi Fujiwara had established covert intelligence offices (or Kikans) that linked up with the Malay and Indian pro-independence organisations such as Kesatuan Melayu Muda and the Indian Independence League. The Japanese gave these movements financial support in return for their members providing intelligence and later assistance in determining Allied troop movements, strengths, and dispositions prior to the invasion.[28]

Through the operation of these networks prior to the invasion the Japanese knew where the Commonwealth forces were based and their unit strengths, had good maps of Malaya, and had local guides available to provide them with directions.[29]

November 1941

[edit]

In November 1941, the British became aware of the large scale buildup of Japanese troops in French Indo-China. Thailand was seen to be under threat from this build-up as well as Malaya. British strategists had foreseen the possibility of Thailand's Kra isthmus being used by the Japanese to invade Malaya. To counteract this potential threat, plans for a pre-emptive invasion of southern Thailand, named Operation Matador, had been drawn up. By the time the invasion became highly likely the British decided not to use them for political reasons.[30]

Japanese invasion of Malaya

[edit]
Main article: Battle of Kota Bharu
Lt Gen Tomoyuki Yamashita, Commander of the Japanese 25th Army

The Malayan campaign began when the 25th Army, under the command of Lieutenant General Tomoyuki Yamashita, invaded Malaya on 8 December 1941. Japanese troops launched an amphibious assault on the northern coast of Malaya at Kota Bharu and started advancing down the eastern coast of Malaya.[31] The Japanese 5th Division also landed at Pattani and Songkhla in Thailand, then moved south into western Malaya.[31] French Indo-China was still under French administration, and had little option but to co-operate with the Japanese. The French authorities therefore submitted to the Japanese military using the territory's ports as naval bases, building air bases, and massing forces there for the invasion. Japan also coerced Thailand into co-operating with the invasion, though Thai troops resisted the landings in Thai territory for eight hours.[citation needed]

At 04:00, 17 Japanese bombers attacked Singapore, the first ever air raid on the colony. It became evident to the British that Japanese bombers based in Indochina were now within range of Singapore.[31]

The Japanese were initially resisted by III Corps of the Indian Army and several British Army battalions. The Japanese quickly isolated individual Indian units defending the coastline, before concentrating their forces to surround the defenders and force their surrender.[31] The Japanese forces held a slight advantage in numbers in northern Malaya and were significantly superior in close air support, armour, co-ordination, tactics, and experience, having fought in the Second Sino-Japanese War. The Allies had no tanks, which had put them at a severe disadvantage. The Japanese also used bicycle infantry and light tanks, which allowed swift movement of their forces overland through terrain covered with thick tropical rainforest, criss-crossed by native paths. Although the Japanese had not brought bicycles with them (to speed the disembarkation process), they knew from their intelligence that suitable machines were plentiful in Malaya and quickly confiscated what they needed from civilians and retailers.[31]

A replacement for Operation Matador, named Operation Krohcol by the British Indian Army, was implemented on 8 December, but the troops were easily defeated by the Royal Thai Police and the Japanese 5th Division.[6] Force Z of the Royal Navy (battleship HMS Prince of Wales, battlecruiser HMS Repulse, and four destroyers, under the command of Admiral Sir Tom Phillips) had arrived right before the outbreak of hostilities. Japanese aircraft based in Indochina sank Prince of Wales and Repulse on 10 December, leaving the east coast of Malaya exposed, allowing the Japanese to continue their invasion.[31]

Air war

[edit]

Background

[edit]

As a lower-priority theatre, the Allies had comparatively few modern aircraft to challenge the Japanese. In addition the Allies did not consider Japanese aircraft a significant threat. In 1941 the Allies assumed that Japan would only have a few hundred poor quality outdated aircraft. The respected Janes All the World's Aircraft for 1941 indicated that the Japanese only had a cluster of dated foreign and indigenous aircraft. Japanese pilots were also underrated, considered unlikely to make particularly good pilots.[32]

Prior to the invasion on 8 December there were 75 Allied aircraft stationed in northern Malaya and 83 in Singapore. The only fighter squadron in northern Malaya was No 21 Squadron RAAF that was equipped with 12 Brewster Buffalos.[33] The Japanese had at least 459 aircraft available.[34]

Japanese aircraft and units

[edit]
Japanese aircraft at Penang - Summer 1942

The Japanese Navy's 22nd Air Flotilla (22nd Kōkū-Sentai) with 110 aircraft and commanded by Vice Admiral Matsunaga Sadaichi operating out of three air bases near Saigon took part in the initial attacks on Malaya.[35][36][37]

The 22nd Air Flotilla included the 22nd (Genzan), Bihoro, and Kanoya Air Groups (or Kōkūtai).[37] They were equipped with 33 Type 96 Mitsubishi G3M1 'Nell' bombers. The Air Flotilla also had 25 Type 96 Mitsubishi A5M4 'Claude' fighters available.[38] The Genzen Air Group was a key participant in the sinking of the British capital ships Prince of Wales and Repulse off the coast of Malaya on 10 December 1941, losing one aircraft and its crew during the battle. On 22 January 1942, bombers from the Genzan Air Group attacked Kallang Airport in Singapore, and subsequently provided air support for Japanese offensives in Malaya including the landings at Endau.[citation needed]

The Japanese 3rd Air Corps (飛行集団, Hikō Shudan) and three Air Combat Groups (飛行戦隊, Hikō Sentai) of the 5th Air Corps took part in the Malaya Campaign.[39] In total there were 354 Imperial Japanese Army Air Service (IJAAS) first line aircraft involved together with the 110 Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service (IJNAS) aircraft.[35] The Army units were variously equipped with fighters: Nakajima Ki-27 Nate, Nakajima Ki-43 Oscar, Mitsubishi Ki-51 Sonia; bombers: Kawasaki Ki-48 Lily, Mitsubishi Ki-21 Sally, Mitsubishi Ki-30 Ann; and reconnaissance: Mitsubishi Ki-15 Babs, Mitsubishi Ki-46 Dinah.[38]

Most Japanese pilots of the IJAAS units and at least a quarter of the IJNAS pilots had combat experience against the Chinese and the Soviets. They were all very well trained.[39]

Allied aircraft and units

[edit]
Bristol Blenheim bombers of No. 62 Squadron RAF lined up at RAF Tengah, Singapore, 8 February 1941

Prior to the commencement of hostilities the Allies in Malaya and Singapore had four fighter squadrons: 21 and 453 RAAF, 243 RAF, and 488 RNZAF. They were equipped with the Brewster Buffalo, a plane that aviation historian Dan Ford characterized as pathetic.[40][41] Its engine had fuel starvation problems and poor supercharger performance at higher altitudes. Maneuverability was poor and the engine tended to overheat in the tropical climate, spraying oil over the windscreen.[42] In service, some effort was made to improve performance by removing the armour plate, armoured windshields, radios, gun camera, and all other unnecessary equipment, and by replacing the .50 in (12.7 mm) machine guns with .303 in (7.7 mm) machine guns.[43] The fuselage tanks were filled with a minimum of fuel and run on high-octane aviation petrol where available.[40][41]

The remaining offensive aircraft consisted of four RAF squadrons of Bristol Blenheim MkI and MKIV light bombers (27, 34, 60, 62 Squadrons), two RAAF squadrons (1 and 8) of Lockheed Hudsons, and two RAF squadrons of Vickers Vildebeest biplane torpedo bombers (36 and 100). The Vildebeests were obsolete and due to be replaced by modern Bristol Beaufort torpedo bombers. No 36 Squadron had some Fairey Albacore biplanes. There were also two Consolidated Catalina flying boats of 205 Squadron and three Catalinas from the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army Air Force at Singapore.[citation needed]

The squadrons were beset by numerous problems including inadequate spare parts and a lack of support staff, airfields that were difficult to defend against air attack with no early warning of impending attacks, a lack of a clear and coherent command structure, a Japanese spy in the Army air liaison staff (Heenan), and antagonism between RAF and RAAF squadrons and personnel. The Japanese through their network of informants knew the strength and disposition of Allied aircraft before they invaded.[42][44]

Many of the pilots lacked adequate training and experience. For example, 20 of the original 169 Buffalos were lost in training accidents during 1941. Those fighter pilots with experience had been trained in methods that were very effective against German and Italian fighters but suicide against the acrobatic Japanese Nakajima Ki-43 "Oscar" and Mitsubishi A6M "Zero" fighters. A counter tactic of avoiding dog fights with a 'slash and run' attack was developed by Lieutenant-General Claire Lee Chennault of the Flying Tigers but was too late for the Allied pilots serving in this campaign.[45][46]

Two days before the attack on Malaya, Hudsons of No 1 Squadron RAAF spotted the Japanese invasion fleet but, given uncertainty about the ships' destination and instructions to avoid offensive operations until attacks were made against friendly territory, Sir Robert Brooke-Popham, Commander-in-Chief of British Far East Command, did not allow the convoy to be bombed.[47][48]

Air campaign

[edit]
Pilots of No. 453 Squadron RAAF responding to a scramble order

On the first day, the focus of the Japanese air assault was on the Allied air bases. Mitsubishi Ki-21 Sallys from the 7th Hikodan bombed the airfields at Alor Star, Sungai Petani, and Butterworth. A total of 60 Allied aircraft were lost on the first day, primarily on the ground.[33] Those Allied fighters that did manage to engage the Japanese performed adequately against the Nakajima Ki-27 "Nate". However, the appearance of ever greater numbers of Japanese fighters, including markedly superior types such as the Nakajima Ki-43 "Oscar" soon overwhelmed the Buffalo pilots, both in the air and on the ground.[citation needed]

While contesting the Japanese landings on Malaya, Hudsons from No. 1 Squadron RAAF based at Kota Bharu became the first aircraft to make an attack in the Pacific War, sinking Japanese transport ship Awazisan Maru, while also damaging Ayatosan Maru and Sakura Maru off the coast of Kota Bharu, for the loss of two Hudsons, at 0118h local time (an hour before the attack on Pearl Harbor).[citation needed] The Squadron was transferred to Kuantan the following day.

By 9 December, Japanese fighters were operating out of Singora and Patani, Thailand, and Kota Bharu airfield was in Japanese hands.[34] The Allies tried to attack Singora airfield. The bombers were intercepted on take-off by a Japanese raid which disabled or shot down all but one. The sole surviving bomber, a Bristol Blenheim flown by Arthur Scarf, did manage to bomb Singora.[49] No 62 squadron had been moved from Alor Star to Butterworth, and on 10 December it was moved to Taiping.[citation needed]

On 10 December, No 21 Squadron RAAF was withdrawn from Sungai Petani to Ipoh, where it was joined on 13 December by No 453 Squadron RAAF. No 453 Squadron had been sent to protect Force Z on 10 December, but arrived after the warships were sinking. On 15 December both Squadrons were pulled back to Kuala Lumpur, receiving replacement aircraft for those shot down or destroyed. Within the first week of the campaign the Japanese had established air superiority. On 19 December the bombers were moved to Singapore, with No 62 Squadron being re-equipped with Hudsons.[citation needed]

One pilot—Sergeant Malcolm Neville Read of No. 453 Squadron RAAF—sacrificed himself by ramming his Buffalo into an Oscar of 64th Sentai over Kuala Lumpur on 22 December.[50][51]

Continued Japanese dominance eventually forced both Squadrons back to Singapore on 24 December, where they were merged until more replacement aircraft could be obtained. No 64 Squadron had run out of aircraft and its surviving ground-crew and airmen were shipped to Burma. RAAF No 1 and No 8 squadrons were amalgamated due to aircraft losses. This left the Allied ground troops and shipping completely open to air attack and further weakened the defensive position.[52] The Genzan Air Group sank Prince of Wales and Repulse on 10 December, which also established Japanese naval supremacy.[53] In comparison, the Japanese army enjoyed close air support from the start of the campaign, and sought to capture bases for their air support to operate from.[54]

On 25 December, the Second division of Squadron 5, Royal Netherlands East Indies Army Air Force was deployed to Singapore, contributing to the Allied cause before being recalled to Java on 18 January. Several Dutch pilots—including Jacob van Helsdingen and August Deibel—responded to a number of air raids over Singapore while stationed at Kallang Airport. They claimed a total of six aircraft, particularly the Nakajima Ki-27 Nate, which fared poorly in Malaya.[citation needed]

On 3 January 1942, 51 disassembled Hurricane Mk IIBs arrived in Singapore along with 24 pilots (many of whom were veterans of the Battle of Britain) who had been transferred to there with the intention of forming the nucleus of five squadrons.[55] The 151st Maintenance unit assembled the 51 Hurricanes within two days and of these, 21 were ready for operational service within three days. The Hurricanes were fitted with bulky 'Vokes' dust filters under the nose and were armed with 12, rather than eight, machine guns. The additional weight and drag made them slow to climb and unwieldy to maneuver at altitude, although they were more effective bomber killers.[56]

The recently arrived pilots were formed into 232 Squadron. In addition, 488 (NZ) Squadron, a Buffalo squadron, converted to Hurricanes. On 18 January, the two squadrons formed the basis of 226 Group. The following day 453 squadron provided an escort of eight aircraft for five Wirraways and four NEI Glenn Martin bombers, attacking Japanese troops on the Muar River. All the Martins and one of the Wirraways were lost.[57]

No 243 Squadron RAF, equipped with Buffalo fighters, was disbanded on 21 January and 232 Squadron became operational on 22 January, the same day the Genzan Air Group attacked Kallang Airport. 232 Squadron thus had the first losses and victories for the Hurricane in Southeast Asia that day.[58] Most of the bombers were moved to Sumatra midway through January.[citation needed]

Aircraft from 36, 62, and 100 Squadrons unsuccessfully attacked the Japanese invasion fleet at Endau on 26 January, suffering heavy losses. The surviving aircraft were evacuated to Sumatra on 31 January.[59]

In mid-January, the three Sentai of the 5th Air Corps returned to Thailand to participate in the Burma Campaign and the 3rd Air Corps turned its attention to the Netherlands East Indies.[39] In the end, more than 60 Brewster aircraft were shot down in combat, 40 destroyed on the ground, and approximately 20 more destroyed in accidents. Only about 20 Buffalos survived to reach India or the Dutch East Indies.[60] The last airworthy Buffalo in Singapore flew out on 10 February, five days before the island fell.[61] The RAAF and RNZAF fighter squadrons left for Sumatra and Java at the beginning of February.[citation needed]

It is not entirely clear how many Japanese aircraft the Buffalo squadrons shot down, although RAAF pilots alone managed to shoot down at least 20.[62] Eighty were claimed in total, a ratio of kills to losses of just 1.3 to 1. Additionally, most of the Japanese aircraft shot down by the Buffalos were bombers.[42] The Hawker Hurricane, which fought in Singapore alongside the Buffalo from 20 January, also suffered severe losses from ground attack; most were destroyed.[63]

Advance down the Malayan Peninsula

[edit]
Map of the Malayan campaign

The defeat of Allied troops at the Battle of Jitra by Japanese forces, supported by tanks moving south from Thailand on 11 December 1941 and the rapid advance of the Japanese inland from their Kota Bharu beachhead on the north-east coast of Malaya overwhelmed the northern defences. Without any real naval presence, the British were unable to challenge Japanese naval operations off the Malayan coast, which proved invaluable to the invaders. With virtually no remaining Allied planes, the Japanese also had mastery of the skies, leaving the Allied ground troops and civilian population exposed to air attack.[64]

The Malayan island of Penang was bombed daily by the Japanese from 8 December and abandoned on 17 December. Arms, boats, supplies and a working radio station were left in haste to the Japanese. The evacuation of Europeans from Penang, with local inhabitants being left to the mercy of the Japanese, caused much embarrassment for the British and alienated them from the local population. Historians judge that "the moral collapse of British rule in Southeast Asia came not at Singapore, but at Penang".[65] However, many who were present during the evacuation did not experience it as a scramble. It was a response to an order from British High Command which had come to the conclusion that Penang should be abandoned as it had no tactical or strategic value in the rapidly changing military scheme of things at that time.[66]

On 23 December, Major-General David Murray-Lyon of the Indian 11th Infantry Division was removed from command to little effect. By the end of the first week in January, the entire northern region of Malaya had been lost to the Japanese. At the same time, Thailand officially signed a Treaty of Friendship with Imperial Japan, which completed the formation of their loose military alliance. Thailand was then allowed by the Japanese to resume sovereignty over several sultanates in northern Malaya, thus consolidating their occupation.

The 11th Indian Division managed to delay the Japanese advance at Kampar for a few days, in which the Japanese suffered severe casualties in terrain that did not allow them to use their tanks or their air superiority to defeat the British. The 11th Indian Division was forced to retreat when the Japanese landed troops by sea south of the Kampar position. The British retreated to prepared positions at Slim River.[67]

At the Battle of Slim River, in which two Indian brigades were practically annihilated, the Japanese used surprise and tanks to devastating effect in a risky night attack. The success of this attack forced Percival into replacing the 11th Indian Division with the 8th Australian Division.[citation needed], and cleared the route to the city of Kuala Lumpur.

It did not take long for the Japanese army's next objective, the city of Kuala Lumpur, to fall. The Japanese entered and occupied the city unopposed on 11 January 1942. Singapore Island was now less than 200 mi (320 km) away for the invading Japanese army.[68]

Defence of Johor

[edit]
Main article: Battle of Muar
Royal Engineers preparing to blow up a bridge near Kuala Lumpur during the retreat

By mid-January, the Japanese had reached the southern Malayan state of Johore where, on 14 January, they encountered troops from the Australian 8th Division, commanded by Major-General Gordon Bennett, for the first time in the campaign. During engagements with the Australians, the Japanese experienced their first major tactical setback, due to the stubborn resistance put up by the Australians at Gemas. The battle—centred around the Gemencheh Bridge—proved costly for the Japanese, who suffered up to 600 casualties. However, the bridge itself (which had been demolished during the fighting) was repaired within six hours.[69]

As the Japanese attempted to outflank the Australians to the west of Gemas, one of the bloodiest battles of the campaign began on 15 January on the peninsula's West coast near the Muar River. Bennett allocated the 45th Indian Brigade—a new and half-trained formation—to defend the river's South bank but the unit was outflanked by Japanese units landing from the sea and the Brigade was effectively destroyed with its commander, Brigadier H. C. Duncan, and all three of his battalion commanders killed.[69] Two Australian infantry battalions—which had been sent to support the 45th Brigade—were also outflanked and their retreat cut off, with one of the Australian battalion commanders killed in the fighting around the town of Bakri, south-east of Muar. During the fighting at Bakri Australian anti-tank gunners had destroyed nine Japanese tanks,[69] slowing the Japanese advance long enough for the surviving elements of the five battalions to attempt an escape from the Muar area.[69]

Led by Australian Lieutenant-Colonel Charles Anderson, the surviving Indian and Australian troops formed the "Muar Force" and fought a desperate four-day withdrawal,[69] allowing remnants of the Commonwealth troops withdrawing from northern Malaya to avoid being cut off and to push past the Japanese to safety. When the Muar Force reached the bridge at Parit Sulong and found it to be firmly in enemy hands, Anderson, with mounting numbers of dead and wounded, ordered "every man for himself". Those who could took to the jungles, swamps and rubber plantations in search of their division headquarters at Yong Peng. The wounded were left to the mercy of the Japanese, and all but two out of 135 were tortured and killed in the Parit Sulong Massacre. Anderson was awarded a Victoria Cross for his fighting withdrawal.[69] The Battle of Muar cost the allies an estimated 3,000 casualties including one brigadier and four battalion commanders.[69]

On 20 January, further Japanese landings took place at Endau, in spite of an air attack by Vildebeest bombers. The final Commonwealth defensive line in Johore of Batu Pahat–Kluang–Mersing was now being attacked along its full length. In the face of repeated requests from his Chief Engineer, Brigadier Ivan Simson, Percival had resisted the construction of fixed defences in Johore, as on the North shore of Singapore, dismissing them with the comment, "Defences are bad for morale." On 27 January, Percival received permission from the commander of the American-British-Dutch-Australian Command, General Archibald Wavell, to order a retreat across the Johore Strait to the island of Singapore.[citation needed]

Retreat to Singapore

[edit]
Main article: Fall of Singapore
A view of the causeway, blown up after the Allied retreat, with the visible gap in the middle

On 31 January, the last organised Allied forces left Malaya, and Allied engineers blew a 70 ft (21 m)-wide hole in the causeway that linked Johore and Singapore; a few stragglers would wade across over the next few days. Japanese raiders and infiltrators, often disguised as Singaporean civilians, began to cross the Straits of Johor in inflatable boats soon afterwards.[citation needed]

In less than two months, the Battle for Malaya had ended in comprehensive defeat for the Commonwealth forces and their retreat from the Malay Peninsula to the fortress of Singapore. Nearly 50,000 Commonwealth troops had been captured or killed during the battle. The Japanese Army invaded the island of Singapore on 7 February and completed their conquest of the island on 15 February, capturing 80,000 more prisoners out of the 85,000 allied defenders.[citation needed] The final battle before the surrender was with the Malay Regiment at Bukit Candu on 14 February.

By the end of January, Heenan had been court-martialled for spying for the Japanese and sentenced to death. On 13 February, five days after the invasion of Singapore Island, and with Japanese forces approaching the city centre, he was taken by military police to the waterside and was hastily executed. His body was thrown into the sea.[70][page needed]

The Sook Ching Massacre

[edit]

In the immediate aftermath of Singapore's capture, Japanese forces systematically rounded up and screened Chinese males under arbitrary criteria. Kempeitai units and select army detachments systematically massacred detainees who were not "cleared" on Singapore's northeastern beaches. This process was named the Sook Ching, a "purification by elimination", a view borne from the resistance from Chinese irregular units in Singapore. In addition to Chinese victims, Japanese units also implemented public beheadings against Singapore's general population.[71]

Casualties

[edit]

The Japanese 25th Army suffered between 9,657 and 14,768 casualties in the Malayan Campaign.[18][20]

Allied losses were much heavier at 130,246 to 138,708, including around 7,500 to 8,000 killed, 10,000 to 11,000+ wounded and 120,000+ missing or captured.[19] These numbers included 38,496 British casualties, 18,490 Australian, 67,340 Indian, and 14,382 Malayan volunteers.[20]

Between 20,000 and 83,000 civilians were killed in the campaign, mostly victims of the Sook Ching Massacre. The exact death toll of the latter massacre is disputed; postwar senior Japanese officers have admitted to between 6,000 and 25,000 victims, while modern historians place the number as high as 70,000, including 50,000 in Singapore and 20,000 in the Malayan Peninsula.[71]

Battles of the campaign

[edit]
  • Battle of Kota Bharu (8 December 1941)
    Three transports landed some 5,200 troops at Kota Bharu (Malaysia's NE corner). The beaches had been prepared with wire and pillboxes, and were defended with artillery and aircraft. One Japanese transport was sunk, with two damaged. But after heavy fighting the Japanese succeeded in landing most of their troops with about 800 casualties.
  • Bombing of Singapore (8 December 1941)
  • Operation Krohcol (8 December 1941)
    This was an advance by commonwealth forces into Thailand to destroy the main road at "The Ledge". The operation failed due to delays in authorisation by Percival and resistance by Thai Police.
  • Sinking of Prince of Wales and Repulse (10 December 1941)
    The British battleship Prince of Wales and battlecruiser Repulse were sunk by Japanese aircraft after relying on false intelligence as to the location of the landings. They had no air support. This was the first time any capital ships at sea had been sunk by aircraft.
  • Battle of Jitra (11–13 December 1941)
  • Battle of Kampar (1941)
  • Battle of Slim River (1942)
  • Battle of Gemas (1942)
  • Battle of Muar (1942)
  • Battle off Endau (1942)
  • Battle of Singapore (1942)

See also

[edit]
  • Far East prisoners of war
  • Nanshin-ron
  • Japanese invasion of Thailand
  • Japanese occupation of Malaya
  • Japanese order of battle during the Malayan Campaign
  • Malaya Command: Order of Battle

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ until 7 January 1942
  2. ^ from 7 January 1942
  3. ^ Between Singapore and Malaya, the Japanese captured 300 field guns, 180 mortars/howitzers, 100 anti-aircraft guns, 54 fortress guns, 108 1-pounder guns (likely a typo meant to say 2-pounder[citation needed]), and, on the mainland, another 330 guns of unspecified type. Kevin Blackburn, Karl Hack. "Did Singapore Have to Fall?: Churchill and the Impregnable Fortress". Routledge. 1 November 2003. Page 193 gives a total of 225 25-pounders and 18-pounders for the campaign, but this number excludes 4.5-inch and 3.7-inch howitzers and 75mm field guns, as well as fortress guns. Page 74 gives a total of 226 for British artillery pieces during the siege of Singapore itself, including fortress guns (172 without them).
  4. ^ 50 armoured vehicles were captured on Malaya and 200 on Singapore, mostly Universal Carriers and armoured cars; includes 23 Mark VI light tanks.
  5. ^ 1,800 trucks and 13,600 cars and other vehicles were lost to the Japanese on both Singapore and the mainland.[citation needed]

Where is Fiji's mention? They sent 800 troops as part of the commonwealth to the malaysian Campaign.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e Kratoska 2018 pp 299
  2. ^ Farrell, 2015 [page needed]
  3. ^ a b Allen (2013) pp. 300-301.
  4. ^ a b Sandhu 1987, p. 32.
  5. ^ Allen (2013) pp. 300-301
  6. ^ a b Farrell, 2015 [page needed]
  7. ^ JM-54, "Malay Operations Record" p. 11. 612 Army and 187 Navy planes, of which 153 Army and 29 Navy planes were reserve. Retrieved 4/1/2022
  8. ^ Allen, Louis. Singapore 1941–1942: Revised Edition, Routledge, 2013. p. 169
  9. ^ Farrell, 2015 [page needed]
  10. ^ Toland, John. The Rising Sun New York: The Modern Library, 2003. p. 272
  11. ^ Farrell, 2015 [page needed]
  12. ^ Farrell, 2015 [page needed]
  13. ^ Frank, Richard (2020). Tower of sckulls. W.W. Norton and Company. p. 381.
  14. ^ Akashi, Yoji (2010). General Yamashita Tomoyuki: Commander of the Twenty-Fifth Army. Marshall Cavendish International (Asia) Pte Ltd.
  15. ^ Smith, Colin (2006). Singapore Burning. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0141010366.
  16. ^ Roy, Kaushik (2019). Battle for Malaya: The Indian Army in Defeat, 1941-1942. Open Road Integrated Media.
  17. ^ Frank, Richard (2020). Tower of sckulls. W.W. Norton and Company. p. 381.
  18. ^ a b Akashi, Yoji (2010). General Yamashita Tomoyuki: Commander of the Twenty-Fifth Army in A Great Betrayal? The Fall of Singapore Revisited. Marshall Cavendish International (Asia) Pte Ltd.
  19. ^ a b Farrell, 2015 pp 472–475
  20. ^ a b c Frank, Richard (2020). Tower of Skulls. W.W. Norton and Company. p. 381.
  21. ^ a b c Maechling, Charles. Pearl Harbor: The First Energy War. History Today. Dec. 2000
  22. ^ Bayly/Harper, p. 110
  23. ^ "Chapter 1: The Japanese Offensive in the Pacific". www.history.army.mil. Retrieved 3 December 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  24. ^ "Japanese Invasion of Thailand Reported". The New York Times. 8 December 1941. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
  25. ^ McIntyre, W. David (1979). The Rise and Fall of the Singapore Naval Base, 1919–1942. Cambridge Commonwealth Series. London: MacMillan Press. pp. 135–137. ISBN 0-333-24867-8. OCLC 5860782.
  26. ^ a b Bayly/Harper, p. 107
  27. ^ Elphick, Peter (28 November 2001). "Cover-ups and the Singapore Traitor Affair". Fall of Singapore 60th Anniversary Conference. Retrieved 16 October 2015. Published online by Four Corners, Australian Broadcasting Corporation, 2002.
  28. ^ Lebra, Joyce C. (1971), Japanese trained Armies in South-East Asia, New York,Columbia University Press, pp. 23–24, ISBN 0-231-03995-6
  29. ^ New Perspectives on the Japanese Occupation in Malaya and Singapore 1941–1945, Yōji Akashi and Mako Yoshimura, NUS Press, 2008, page 30, ISBN 9971692996, 9789971692995
  30. ^ "OPENING OF HOSTILITIES". Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  31. ^ a b c d e f L, Klemen (1999–2000). ""Seventy minutes before Pearl Harbor" The landing at Kota Bharu, Malaya, on December 7th 1941". Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942. Archived from the original on 12 April 2021. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  32. ^ The Imperial Japanese Navy Air Force in the Pacific War, Steve Lange, 1996, retrieved 1 May 2016
  33. ^ a b C N Trueman, "The Attack on Malaya by Japan" historylearningsite.co.uk, 19 May 2015. 3 March 2016., retrieved 29 April 2016
  34. ^ a b British and Japanese Military Leadership in the Far Eastern War - 1941-45 - Military History and Policy, Brian Bond, Routledge, 2012, page 141, ISBN 1136348832, 9781136348839
  35. ^ a b The Fall of Malaya and Singapore: Rare Photographs from Wartime Archives Images of War, Jon Diamond, Pen and Sword, 2015, ISBN 1473854474, 9781473854475
  36. ^ Japan's fatally flawed air forces in WW2, John W. Whitman, Aviation History, September 2006, retrieved 1 May 2016
  37. ^ a b Kehn, Donald M. (2009). A Blue Sea of Blood: Deciphering the Mysterious Fate of the USS Edsall. MBI Publishing Company. p. 90. ISBN 978-1616732387., 9781616732387
  38. ^ a b Chant, Chris (1979). Japanese Air Service, Air Forces of WW1 and WW2. Hamlyn Publishing Group. pp. 179, 184.
  39. ^ a b c An introduction to the Japanese Army Air Force, Dan Ford, retrieved 3 May 2016
  40. ^ a b Squadron Leader W.J. Harper, 1946, "REPORT ON NO. 21 AND NO. 453 RAAF SQUADRONS" (UK Air Ministry), p.1 (Source: UK Public Records Office, ref. AIR 20/5578; transcribed by Dan Ford for Warbird's Forum.) Access date: 8 September 2007
  41. ^ a b "RAAF 21/453 Squadrons: the secret report". Archived from the original on 11 November 2007. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  42. ^ a b c Rickard, J. "Brewster Buffalo in British Service." historyofwar.org, 27 June 2007. Retrieved: 6 September 2009.
  43. ^ Gunston, Bill, The Illustrated Directory of Fighting Aircraft of World War II, Salamander Books, 1988. ISBN 0-86288-672-4.
  44. ^ Harper 1946, pp. 1–2.
  45. ^ Smith 2015, pp. 146–149.
  46. ^ Spick 1997, p. 165.
  47. ^ Gillison, Royal Australian Air Force, pp. 200–201
  48. ^ Shores et al., Bloody Shambles Volume One, pp. 74–75
  49. ^ "No. 37623". The London Gazette (Supplement). 21 June 1946. p. 3211.
  50. ^ "Notable Brewster Buffalo pilots in Southeast Asia, 1941–42".
  51. ^ "Gallery". Aeroprints: The Aviation Art of Jon Field. Retrieved 23 November 2010.
  52. ^ Milan Vego. Maritime Strategy and Sea Control: Theory and Practice. In Cass Series: Naval Policy and History. Routledge, 2016. page 229, ISBN 1317439848, 9781317439844
  53. ^ Frank Owen. The Fall of Singapore. Penguin Books, 2001, ISBN 0-14-139133-2
  54. ^ Thomas B. Buell, John H. Bradley, Jack W. Dice; Editor Thomas E. Griess. The Second World War: Asia and the Pacific. Volume 2 of The Second World War - West Point military history series. United States Military Academy - Department of History; Square One Publishers, Inc., 2002. ISBN 0757001629, 9780757001628. page 69
  55. ^ Cull, Brian and Brian and Paul Sortehaug. Hurricanes Over Singapore: RAF, RNZAF and NEI Fighters in Action Against the Japanese Over the Island and the Netherlands East Indies, 1942 . London: Grub Street, 2004. ISBN 1-904010-80-6
  56. ^ Shores 1992, p. 297.
  57. ^ No. 453 Squadron (RAAF): Second World War, retrieved 6 May 2016
  58. ^ "Your Planes and Your Work Defend Your Empire (Poster)." Imperial War Museum (Printer: Fosh and Cross Ltd, London). Retrieved: 17 November 2011.
  59. ^ Clayton, Graham (2008). Last Stand in Singapore: The Story of 488 Squadron RNZAF. Auckland, New Zealand: Random House. ISBN 978-1-86979-033-2
  60. ^ Huggins 2007, pp. 35–36.
  61. ^ Stenman and Thomas 2010, p. 67.
  62. ^ Dennis et al. 2008, p. 115.
  63. ^ Wixey 2003, pp. 38–39.
  64. ^ Griess, Thomas E.; Buell, Thomas B.; Bradley, John H.; Dice, Jack W. (10 October 2018). The Second World War: Asia and the Pacific. Square One Publishers, Inc. ISBN 9780757001628 – via Google Books.
  65. ^ Bayly/Harper, p. 119
  66. ^ "Withdrawal from North Malaya". fepow-community.org.uk. Retrieved 18 October 2015.
  67. ^ Rottman, Gordon L.; Takizawa, Akira (20 October 2011) [2008]. World War II Japanese Tank Tactics. Elite 169. Osprey. ISBN 9781780961446. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  68. ^ Warren, Alan (January 2006). Britain's Greatest Defeat. A&C Black. ISBN 9781852855970. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
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Bibliography

[edit]
  • Bayly, Christopher / Harper, Tim: Forgotten Armies. Britain's Asian Empire and the War with Japan. Penguin Books, London, 2005
  • Bose, Romen, "Secrets of the Battlebox: The Role and history of Britain's Command HQ during the Malayan Campaign", Marshall Cavendish, Singapore, 2005
  • Burton, John (2006). Fortnight of Infamy: The Collapse of Allied Airpower West of Pearl Harbor. US Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-096-2.
  • Corfield, Justin & Robin (2012). The Fall of Singapore. Singapore: Talisman Books. ISBN 978-981-07-0984-6.
  • Cull, Brian (2004). Hurricanes Over Singapore: RAF, RNZAF and NEI Fighters in Action Against the Japanese over the Island and the Netherlands East Indies, 1942. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-904010-80-7.
  • Cull, Brian (2008). Buffaloes over Singapore: RAF, RAAF, RNZAF and Dutch Brewster Fighters in Action Over Malaya and the East Indies 1941–1942. London: Grub Street. ISBN 978-1-904010-32-6.
  • Dixon, Norman F, On the Psychology of Military Incompetence, London, 1976
  • Falk, Stanley L. (1975). Seventy days to Singapore: The Malayan Campaign, 1941–1942. London: Hale. ISBN 978-0-7091-4928-6.
  • Farrell, Brian (2015). The Defence and Fall of Singapore. England: Monsoon. ISBN 978-981-4423-88-5.
  • Kelly, Terence (2008). Hurricanes Versus Zeros: Air Battles over Singapore, Sumatra and Java. Barnsley: Pen and Sword. ISBN 978-1-84415-622-1.
  • L., Klemen (1999–2000). "Forgotten Campaign: The Dutch East Indies Campaign 1941–1942". Archived from the original on 26 July 2011.
  • Kratoska, Paul H. (30 April 2018). The Japanese Occupation of Malaya and Singapore, 1941-45: A Social and Economic History. NUS Press. ISBN 978-9971-69-638-2.
  • Seki, Eiji. (2006). Mrs. Ferguson's Tea-Set, Japan and the Second World War: The Global Consequences Following Germany's Sinking of the SS Automedon in 1940. London: Global Oriental. ISBN 978-1-905246-28-1 (cloth) [reprinted by University of Hawaii Press, Honolulu, 2007 – UH Press: Books and Journals published by the University of Hawaii Press previously announced as Sinking of the SS Automedon and the Role of the Japanese Navy: A New Interpretation.
  • Shores, Christopher F; Cull, Brian; Izawa, Yasuho. Bloody Shambles, The First Comprehensive Account of the Air Operations over South-East Asia December 1941 – April 1942 Volume One: Drift to War to the Fall of Singapore. London: Grub Street Press. (1992) ISBN 978-0-948817-50-2
  • Smith, Colin, Singapore Burning: Heroism and Surrender in World War II, London, 2005.
  • Smyth, John George Smyth, Percival and the Tragedy of Singapore, MacDonald and Company, 1971.
  • Thompson, Peter, The Battle for Singapore, London, 2005, ISBN 978-0-7499-5068-2 (HB)
  • Warren, Alan, Singapore: Britain's Greatest Defeat, Singapore, 2002.
  • Wigmore, Lionel (1957). "Chapter 8: Invasion of Malaya". Part II: South–East Asia Conquered. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 1 – Army. Vol. IV (online, 1st ed.). Canberra, ACT: Australian War Memorial. pp. 137–152. OCLC 464084033. RCDIG1070203. Retrieved 3 November 2016. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  • Gurcharn Singh Sandhu, The Indian cavalry: history of the Indian Armoured Corps, Volume 2, Vision Books, 1978 ISBN 978-81-7094-004-3

External links

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Sunting pranala
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UNIVERSITAS TEKNOKRAT INDONESIA | ASEAN's Best Private University
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Phone: (0721) 702022
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