Malayan 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:
 Netherlands

Kuomintang of Malaya[1]
Communist Party of Malaya[1]
 Japan
Thailand
Kesatuan Melayu Muda
Commanders and leaders
Archibald Wavell
Robert Brooke-Popham
Arthur Percival 
Lewis Heath 
David Murray-Lyon 
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
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

RAF Far East
  • RAF (8 SQNs)
  • RAAF (4 SQNs)
  • RNZAF (1 SQN)

ML-KNIL


East Indies Fleet
  • Force Z

OCAJA[1]
MPAJA[1]
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 (Including the casualties of the Battle of Singapore)
7,500–8,000 killed[11]
11,000+ wounded
~120,000+ captured or missing[12]
14,768 (Including the casualties of the Battle of Singapore)
5,240 killed
9,528 wounded[13]
>30 tanks destroyed[14]
108–331 aircraft damaged or destroyed[15]

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 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. By the time the Japanese had captured Singapore, they had suffered 14,768 casualties;[16] allied losses totaled 130,246, including around 7,500 to 8,000 killed, 11,000+ wounded and 120,000+ missing or captured.[17]

  1. ^ a b c d e Kratoska 2018 pp 299
  2. ^ Farrell, 2015
  3. ^ a b Allen (2013) pp. 300-301.
  4. ^ Sandhu 1987, p. 32.
  5. ^ Allen (2013) pp. 300-301
  6. ^ Farrell, 2015
  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
  10. ^ Toland, John. The Rising Sun New York: The Modern Library, 2003. p. 272
  11. ^ Farrell, 2015
  12. ^ Farrell, 2015
  13. ^ Akashi, Yoji (2010). General Yamashita Tomoyuki: Commander of the Twenty-Fifth Army. Marshall Cavendish International (Asia) Pte Ltd.
  14. ^ Smith, Colin (2006). Singapore Burning. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0141010366.
  15. ^ Roy, Kaushik (2019). Battle for Malaya: The Indian Army in Defeat, 1941-1942. Open Road Integrated Media.
  16. ^ 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.
  17. ^ Farrell, 2015 pp 472–475


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