Singapore, 1942: Britain's Greatest DefeatThe surrender of Singapore on February 15, 1942, was the greatest and most humiliating defeat in British history and the high-point of Japanese expansion in Southeast Asia. It graphically exposed the military weakness of the British Empire and its inability to defend its Far Eastern colonies. Based on original records, "Singapore, 1942" shows what went wrong and how an outnumbered and poorly equipped Japanese invasion force swept to victory against a mixed army of British, Australian, and Indian soldiers, changing Britain' s imperial destiny and the course of World War II. |
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Page 39
... East went from bad to worse . Japan's Foreign Minister Matsuoka left for Europe on 12 March 1941. Matsuoka achieved ... Asia . There is no question that the German invasion of the Soviet Union changed the situation in east Asia . With the ...
... East went from bad to worse . Japan's Foreign Minister Matsuoka left for Europe on 12 March 1941. Matsuoka achieved ... Asia . There is no question that the German invasion of the Soviet Union changed the situation in east Asia . With the ...
Page 295
... South - East Asia to the Japanese during the Second World War had done terrible damage to the prestige of the British and other European colonial powers . The Europeans had ruled in east Asia partly because their claims to command had ...
... South - East Asia to the Japanese during the Second World War had done terrible damage to the prestige of the British and other European colonial powers . The Europeans had ruled in east Asia partly because their claims to command had ...
Page 297
... South - East Asia . Yet , so long as the Japanese held the Burmese port of Rangoon , the reconquest of Burma was South - East Asia Command's primary objective . On 3 February 1945 Admiral Mountbatten , South - East Asia Command's ...
... South - East Asia . Yet , so long as the Japanese held the Burmese port of Rangoon , the reconquest of Burma was South - East Asia Command's primary objective . On 3 February 1945 Admiral Mountbatten , South - East Asia Command's ...
Contents
British Malaya | 1 |
The Rise of the Japanese Empire | 11 |
The Defence of Malaya | 23 |
Copyright | |
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11th Indian Division 15th Brigade 18th Division 2/18th Battalion 2/19th Battalion 22nd Brigade aerodrome afternoon aircraft Alor Star anti-tank guns arrived artillery attack Australian Bakri battle Bennett bombers bombs bridge Brigade's headquarters British Brooke-Popham Bukit Timah Captain casualties China Chinese Churchill coast convoy December defence Division's East February Field Regiment fighting fire flank Force Z Galleghan Gurkhas Gurun Harrison Heath Imperial Guards Indian Brigade infantry January Japan Japanese force Japanese troops Jats Jitra Johore Strait jungle killed Kirby Kota Bharu Kuala Lumpur Kuantan landing later Layang Lieutenant Lieutenant-Colonel Lieutenant-General London machine gun Malay Malaya Command Malayan Campaign Maxwell miles military Muar Murray-Lyon naval night officers Percival Papers Percival's perimeter Phillips Punjabis railway retreat Rifles rubber senior ships Singapore Island Singora Slim River soldiers South-East Asia Squadron staff Sungei Trunk Road Tsuji units Wavell Westforce withdraw wounded XXV Army Yamashita Yong Peng