65th Anniversary of the Japanese conquest of South East Asia

Discussion in 'War Against Japan' started by spidge, Dec 8, 2006.

  1. spidge

    spidge RAAF RESEARCHER

    Burma was conquered by Japan in December 1941. By conquering Burma, Japan could then stop war supplies from being sent to China from Burma via the Burma Road.
    In December 1941, Japanese troops invaded the Philippines. Although the American and Filipino troops fought bravely, they eventually surrendered to the Japanese on 6 May 1942 due to a lack of armed forces.
    On the same day it attacked Pearl Harbour, Japan landed in Southern Thailand and northern Malaya. It dropped its first bombs on Singapore. Within ten weeks, Malaya and Singapore fell into Japanese clutches.

    In December 1941, Japan began to invade the East Indies. In January 1942, they conquered Borneo and gained control of the Dutch and British oil fields.
    In the Battle of the Java Sea, the powerful Japanese defeated a combined fleet of British, Dutch, Australian and American warships. After that, it successfully conquered Java, Sumatra and other islands in the East Indies. Thus within a short period of six months, Japan conquered almost the whole of Southeast Asia. Only Thailand remained unconquered because the Thais signed a treaty of friendship with Japan, allowing Japan to set up military bases in Thailand.



    Japanese Invasion Malaya and Singapore were two important targets of the Japanese.
    Malaya was rich in raw materials while Singapore was a busy port and strong fortress. The British defences in Malaya and Singapore proved no match for the Japanese invaders. The Japanese "Zero" fighters defeated the outdated British planes easily. The Japanese also destroyed two British warships, the Prince of Wales and the Republic sent from the Singapore naval base to defend Malaya.

    THE MARCH THROUGH MALAYA
    8 December 1941:
    Japanese forces landed on the east coast of South Thailand and North Malaya. 11-12 December 1941:
    At Jitra (in Kedah) the British were defeated by the Japanese. The Japanese were armed with tanks. They were also well-trained in jungle warfare. The British troops retreated, leaving behind ammunition for their enemies. A British map in north Malaya was also left behind. The Japanese made use of the map to plan its attack.
     
  2. expatriot

    expatriot Junior Member

    We should all have a moment of slilence and shed a tear for the people killed by the Japanese military bent on conquest. May all the Japanese military rot in hell.
     
  3. Drew5233

    Drew5233 #FuturePilot 1940 Obsessive

    Hi and welcome to the forum.....would I be correct in assuming you have a certain dislike for all things Japanese?

    I hope you don't own a Sony TV ;)

    Regards
    Andy
     
  4. spidge

    spidge RAAF RESEARCHER

    Hi and welcome to the forum.....would I be correct in assuming you have a certain dislike for all things Japanese?

    I hope you don't own a Sony TV ;)

    Regards
    Andy

    My hatred is of the Japanese military of that period but not of their children.

    Their governments continued denial of criminal activity and the suppression of fact to their populace in the form of "inaccurate" reporting of their history is of continuing concern.
     
  5. Drew5233

    Drew5233 #FuturePilot 1940 Obsessive

    Spidge don't get me wrong,

    I'm no fan of the Japanese from WW2 and having worked for JAL in the 80's I can see that in the older generations that culturally probably little had changed in their mindset since the 40's.

    However I do have many Sony products :)

    Regards
    Andy
     
  6. spidge

    spidge RAAF RESEARCHER

    Spidge don't get me wrong,

    I'm no fan of the Japanese from WW2 and having worked for JAL in the 80's I can see that in the older generations that culturally probably little had changed in their mindset since the 40's.

    However I do have many Sony products :)

    Regards
    Andy

    Andy,

    As I have said previously, I let my daughter eat Sushi so I have nothing against the people of Japan who were not part of their WW2 atrocities.

    You may find this hard to believe but I do not consider Kamikaze pilots to be the terrible people they are portrayed to be.

    They gave their lives in war to defend their homeland. I abhor the deaths of the predominantly US sailors that were killed:

    7,465 Kamikazes flew to their deaths.
    120 US ships were sunk, with many more damaged (about 600+).
    3,048 allied sailors were killed and another 6,025 wounded.

    however there was some honour in their suicidal action as non combatants were not involved and should never be compared to suicide bombers of present day who do not care who they recruit or who they kill.
     

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