Everything about Fall Of Singapore totally explained
III Corps 8th Division 18th Division Malay Regiment Straits Settlements Volunteer Force
| combatant2=
Twenty-Fifth Army Imperial Guards 5th Division 18th Division 3rd Air Division Imperial Navy
| commander1=
Arthur Percival Gordon Bennett Lewis Heath M. Beckwith-Smith
| commander2=
Tomoyuki Yamashita
| strength1= 85,000
| strength2= 36,000, 100 Tanks
| casualties1= 2,000 killed
5,000 wounded
50,000 captured
| casualties2= 1,713 killed
2,772 wounded
|notes=
|}}
The
Battle of Singapore was fought in the
South-East Asian theatre of
World War II when the
Empire of Japan invaded the
Allied stronghold of
Singapore. The fighting in Singapore lasted from
February 7,
1942 to
February 15,
1942.
It resulted in the fall of Singapore—the major
British military base in
South East Asia—to the Japanese, and the largest
surrender of British-led military personnel in history. About 80,000
Indian,
Australian and British troops became
prisoners of war, joining 50,000 taken by the Japanese in the
Malayan campaign. Britain's then-Prime Minister
Winston Churchill called the ignominious fall of Singapore to the Japanese the "worst disaster" and "largest capitulation" in British history.
The predominantly ethnic
Chinese people of Singapore had long provided material support to
China in its
war with Japan. This was one of the motivations for the Japanese invasion of Singapore and the later suffering and atrocities inflicted by the
Japanese occupation.
Background
Japan sought to invade Malaya because, like other nations in South-East Asia, it had valuable
natural resources that could be employed in its
war with the Allies. Singapore, which lay to the south, was connected to Malaya by the
Johor-Singapore Causeway. The Japanese saw it as a
strategic port which could be used as a launchpad against other Allied interests in the area, and to consolidate the invaded territory.
The Japanese also sought to eliminate the sources of
charitable aid and
philanthropy from Singapore that were supporting China in the
Second Sino-Japanese War. The ethnic
Han Chinese in Malaya and Singapore had through
financial and
economic means aided the Chinese defence against the Japanese, although the effort suffered from factionalism, as the aid was split between the opposing sides of the ongoing
Chinese Civil War. (The
Xi'an Incident had supposedly united both the ruling
Kuomintang party and the
Communist Party of China against the Japanese. However, fighting between them was still common.) The aid efforts procured funds and food for both
humanitarian causes to relieve the Chinese civilian population, as well as support of the military forces of the Kuomintang and/or the Communist Party of China. Such aid had contributed to the stalling of the Japanese advance in China.
Tan Kah Kee was a prominent philanthropist within the
Singaporean Chinese community, and was a major financial contributor, with many relief efforts organized in his name. Aid to China from the population of Singapore in its several forms became part of Imperial Japan's
motivation to attack Singapore through Malaya.
Invasion of Malaya
The
Japanese Twenty-Fifth Army invaded
Malaya from
Indochina, moving into northern Malaya and
Thailand by
amphibious assault on
December 8,
1941. This was virtually simultaneous with the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor, which was meant to deter the
United States from intervening in Southeast Asia. Japanese troops in Thailand
coerced the Thai government to let the Japanese use Thai military bases for the invasion of other nations in Southeast Asia and then proceeded overland across the Thai-Malayan border to attack Malaya. At this time, the Japanese began conducting strategic
bombing of sites all over Singapore, and air raids were conducted on Singapore from this point onwards, although
anti-aircraft fire kept most of the Japanese bombers from totally devastating the island as long as ammunition was available.
The Japanese Army was resisted in northern Malaya by
III Corps of the
Indian Army and several
British Army battalions. Although the 25th Army was outnumbered by Allied forces in Malaya and Singapore, Japanese commanders concentrated their forces. The Japanese were superior in
close air support,
armour, coordination,
tactics and experience. The
Imperial Japanese Army Air Force was more numerous, and better trained than the second hand assortment of untrained pilots and inferior allied equipment remaining in Malaya, Borneo and Singapore. Their superior fighters, especially the
Mitsubishi A6M Zero, helped the Japanese to gain
air superiority. The Allies had no armored vehicles such as tanks, which put them at a severe disadvantage.
The
battleships
HMS Prince of Wales and
HMS Repulse and four
destroyers (
Force Z) reached Malaya before the Japanese began their air assaults. This force was thought to be "unsinkable" and a deterrent to the Japanese. Japanese aircraft
sank the capital ships, leaving the east coast of Malaya exposed and allowing the Japanese to continue their
amphibious landings.
Japanese forces quickly isolated, surrounded, and forced the surrender of Indian units defending the coast. They advanced down the Malayan peninsula overwhelming the defences, despite numerical inferiority. The Japanese also used
bicycle infantry and
light tanks, which allowed swift movement of their forces through the
jungle.
Although more Allied units, including some from the
Australian 8th Division, joined the campaign, the Japanese prevented the Allied forces from regrouping, overran cities, and advanced towards Singapore. The city was an anchor for the operations of the
American-British-Dutch-Australian Command (ABDACOM), the first
Allied joint command of
World War II.
On
January 31 the last Allied forces left Malaya and Allied engineers blew up the
causeway linking
Johore and Singapore. Japanese infiltrators—many disguised as Singaporean civilians—crossed the
Straits of Johor in inflatable boats soon afterwards.
Preparations
The Allied commander, Lieutenant-General
Arthur Percival had 85,000 soldiers, the equivalent, on paper, of just over four
divisions. There were about 70,000 front-line troops in 38 infantry battalions—17
Indian, 13
British, six
Australian and two
Malayan—and three machine-gun battalions. The newly-arrived
British 18th Infantry Division under Major-General
Merton Beckwith-Smith was at full strength, but lacked experience and appropriate training; most of the other units were under strength as a result of the mainland campaign. The local battalions had no experience and in some cases no training.
Percival gave
Major-General Gordon Bennett's two brigades from the
Australian 8th Division responsibility for the western side of Singapore, including the prime invasion points in the north-west of the island. This was mostly
mangrove swamp and jungle, broken by rivers and creeks. In the heart of the "Western Area" was
RAF Tengah, Singapore's largest airfield at the time. The Australian 22nd Brigade was assigned a 10 mile (16 km) wide sector in the west, and the 27th Brigade had responsibility for a 4,000 yard (3,650 m) zone just west of the Causeway. The infantry positions were reinforced by the recently-arrived Australian 2/4th Machine-Gun Battalion. Also under Bennett's command was the
44th Indian Brigade.
The
Indian III Corps under
Lieutenant-General Sir
Lewis Heath, including the
Indian 11th Infantry Division, (Major-General
B. W. Key), the British 18th Division and the
15th Indian Brigade, was assigned the north-eastern sector, known as the "Northern Area". This included the naval base at
Sembawang. The "Southern Area", including the main urban areas in the south-east, was commanded by Major-General
Frank Keith Simmons. His forces comprised about 18 battalions, including the
Malayan 1st Infantry Brigade, the
Straits Settlements Volunteer Force Brigade and
Indian 12th Infantry Brigade.
From aerial reconnaissance, scouts, infiltrators and high ground across the straits such as the
Sultan of Johore's palace, the Japanese commander, General
Tomoyuki Yamashita and his staff gained excellent knowledge of the Allied positions. From
February 3 the Allies were shelled by Japanese artillery.
Japanese air attacks on Singapore intensified over the next five days. Air and artillery bombardment intensified, severely disrupting communications between Allied units and their commanders and affecting preparations for the defence of the island.
Singapore's famous large-calibre
coastal guns—which included one battery of three guns and one with two guns—were supplied mostly with
armour-piercing (AP) shells and few
high explosive (HE) shells. AP shells were designed to penetrate the hulls of warships and were ineffective against infantry, rendering the guns relatively ineffective. It is commonly said that the guns couldn't fire on the Japanese forces because they faced south, but this isn't so. Although placed to defend against enemy ships instead of the straits, most of the guns could turn northwards and they did fire at the invaders. Military analysts later estimated that if the guns had been well supplied with HE shells the Japanese attackers would have suffered heavy casualties, but the invasion wouldn't have been prevented.
Yamashita had just over 30,000 men, from three divisions: the
Imperial Guards Division under Lieutenant-General
Takuma Nishimura, the
5th Division under Lieutenant-General
Takuro Matsui and the
18th Division under Lieutenant-General
Renya Mutaguchi. The elite Imperial Guards units included a light tank brigade.
The Japanese landings
Blowing up the causeway had delayed the Japanese attack for over a week. At 8.30pm on
February 8, Australian machine gunners opened fire on vessels carrying a first wave of 4,000 troops from the 5th and 18th Divisions towards Singapore island. The Japanese
assaulted Sarimbun Beach, in the sector controlled by the Australian 22nd Brigade under Brigadier
Harold Taylor.
Fierce fighting raged all day, but eventually the increasing Japanese numbers—and the superiority of their artillery, aircraft and military intelligence—began to take their toll. In the northwest of the island they exploited gaps in the thinly spread Allied lines such as rivers and creeks. By midnight the two Australian brigades had lost communications with each other and the 22nd Brigade was forced to retreat. At 1am further Japanese troops were landed in the northwest of the island and the last Australian reserves went in. Towards dawn on
February 9 elements of the 22nd Brigade were overrun or surrounded, and the
2/18th Australian Infantry Battalion had lost more than half of its personnel.
Air War
|-
Air cover was provided by only one squadron,
RAF 232 Squadron, based at
Kallang airfield. This was because
Tengah,
Seletar and
Sembawang were in range of Japanese artillery at
Johore Bahru.
Kallang Airfield was the only operational airstrip left—the remaining squadrons were withdrawn from
Singapore by January.
This fighter force performed considerably well, but was outnumbered and often outmatched by the Japanese
A6M Zero—it suffered severe losses, both in the air and on the ground during February. The only reliable aircraft left was the
Hawker Hurricane, but only ten were left in Singapore when the Japanese invaded.
From
December 8, Singapore was subject to
aerial bombing by long-range Japanese aircraft, such as the
Mitsubishi G3M ("Nell") and the
Mitsubishi G4M ("Betty"), based in Japanese-occupied
Indochina.
During December, 51
Hurricane Mk II fighters were sent in crates to
Singapore, with 24 pilots, the nuclei of five squadrons. They arrived on 3 January, 1942, by which stage the Buffalo squadrons, had been overwhelmed.
No. 232 Squadron was formed and
No. 488 Squadron RNZAF, a Buffalo squadron, converted to Hurricanes. 232 Sqn became operational on 20 January and destroyed three Ki-43s that day, for the loss of three Hurricanes. However, like the Buffalos before them, the Hurricanes began to suffer severe losses in intense dogfights.
During the period
January 27–
January 30, another 48 Hurricanes (Mk IIA) arrived with No. 226 Group (four squadrons) on the aircraft carrier
HMS Indomitable, from which they flew to airfields code-named P1 and P2, near
Palembang,
Sumatra in the
Dutch East Indies. The staggered arrival of the Hurricanes, along with inadequate early warning systems, meant that Japanese air raids were able to destroy a large proportion of the Hurricanes on the ground in Sumatra and Singapore.
On the morning of
February 8, a number of aerial
dogfights took place over Sarimbun Beach and other western areas. In the first encounter, the last ten Hurricanes of 232 Sqn were scrambled from
Kallang Airfield to intercept a Japanese formation of about 84 planes, flying from Johore to provide air cover for their invasion force. In two sorties the Hurricanes shot down six Japanese planes for the loss of one of their own—they flew back to Kallang halfway through the battle, hurriedly re-fuelled, then returned to it.
Air battles went on over the island for the rest of the day, and by nightfall it was clear that with the few machines
Percival had left Kallang could no longer be used as a base. With Percival's assent the remaining Hurricanes were withdrawn to
Palembang,
Sumatra, and Kallang became merely an advanced landing ground. No allied aircraft were seen again over Singapore, and the Japanese had full control of the skies.
The second day
Percival maintained a belief that further landings would occur in the northeast and didn't reinforce the 22nd Brigade. During
February 9 Japanese landings shifted to the southwest, where they encountered the Indian 44th Brigade. Allied units were forced to retreat further east. Bennett decided to form a secondary defensive line, known as the "Jurong Line", around Bulim, east of Tengah Airfield and just north of
Jurong.
Brigadier
Duncan Maxwell's Australian 27th Brigade, to the north, didn't face Japanese assaults until the Imperial Guards landed at 10pm on
February 9. This operation went very badly for the Japanese, who suffered severe casualties from Australian
mortars and machine guns, and from burning oil which had been
sluiced into the water. A small number of Guards reached the shore and maintained a tenuous
beachhead.
Command and control problems caused further cracks in the Allied defence. Maxwell was aware that the 22nd Brigade was under increasing pressure, but was unable to contact Taylor and was wary of
encirclement. In spite of his brigade's success—and in contravention of orders from Bennett—Maxwell ordered it to withdraw from
Kranji in the central north. The Allies thereby lost control of the beaches adjoining the west side of The Causeway.
The Japanese breakthrough
The opening at Kranji made it possible for Imperial Guards armoured units to land unopposed there. Tanks with flotation equipment attached were towed across the strait and advanced rapidly south, along
Woodlands Road. This allowed Yamashita to outflank the 22nd Brigade on the Jurong Line, as well as bypassing the Indian 11th Division at the naval base. However, the Imperial Guards failed to seize an opportunity to advance into the city centre itself.
On the evening of
February 10,
General Archibald Wavell ordered the transfer of all remaining Allied air force personnel to the
Dutch East Indies. By this time the last airfield at Kallang was so pitted with bomb craters that it was no longer usable.
On the evening of
February 10, British Prime Minister
Winston Churchill, cabled Wavell, saying:
On
February 11, knowing that Japanese supplies were running perilously low, Yamashita decided to bluff and he called on Percival to "give up this meaningless and desperate resistance". By this stage the fighting strength of the 22nd Brigade—which had borne the brunt of the Japanese attacks—had been reduced to a few hundred men. The Japanese had
captured the Bukit Timah area, including most of the allied ammunition and fuel and giving them control of the main water supplies.
The next day the allied lines stabilised around a small area in the south-east of the island and fought off determined Japanese assaults. Other units, including the
Malayan 1st Infantry Brigade, had joined in. A Malayan platoon, led by Lt
Adnan bin Saidi, held the Japanese for two days at the
Battle of Pasir Panjang. His unit defended
Bukit Chandu, an area which included a major allied ammunition store. Adnan was executed by the Japanese after his unit was overrun.
On
February 13, with the Allies still losing ground, senior officers advised Percival to surrender in the interests of minimising civilian casualties. Percival refused, but unsuccessfully sought authority to surrender from his superiors.
That same day military police executed a convicted British traitor, Captain
Patrick Heenan, who had been an Air Liaison Officer with the Indian Army. Japanese military intelligence had recruited Heenan before the war, and he'd used a radio to assist them in targeting Allied airfields in northern Malaya. He had been arrested on
December 10 and court-martialled in January. Heenan was shot at
Keppel Harbour, on the south side of Singapore, and his body was thrown into the sea.
The following day the remaining Allied units fought on; civilian casualties mounted as one million people crowded into the area still held by the Allies, and bombing and artillery fire intensified. Civilian authorities began to fear that the water supply would give out.
Alexandra Hospital massacre
At about 1pm on
February 14 Japanese soldiers approached the
Alexandra Barracks Hospital. No resistance was offered by anyone in the building, but the Japanese attacked and killed the medical staff and some patients, including an allied
corporal who was lying on an operating table. The following day about 200 male staff members and patients, many of them walking wounded, were ordered to walk about 400 metres to an industrial area. Anyone who fell on the way was
bayoneted. The men were forced into a series of small, badly ventilated rooms and were imprisoned overnight
without water. Some died during the night as a result of their treatment. The remainder were bayoneted the following morning.
The fall of Singapore
By the morning of
Chinese New Year,
February 15, the Japanese had broken through the last line of defence and the Allies were running out of food and some kinds of ammunition. The anti-aircraft guns had also run out of ammunition and were unable to repel any further Japanese air attacks which threatened to cause heavy casualties in the city centre.
At 9:30 a.m, Percival held a conference at
Fort Canning with his senior commanders. Percival posed two alternatives. Either launch an immediate counter-attack to regain the reservoirs and the military food depots in the
Bukit Timah region and drive the enemy's artillery off its commanding heights outside the town, or capitulate. All present agreed that no counter-attack was possible. Percival opted for surrender.
A deputation was selected to go to the Japanese Headquarters. It consisted of a senior Staff Officer, the Colonial Secretary and an interpreter. They set off in a motor car bearing a
Union Jack and a white flag of truce towards the enemy lines to discuss a cessation of hostilities. They returned with orders that Percival himself proceed with Staff Officers to the
Ford Motor Factory, where General Yamashita would lay down the terms of surrender. A further requirement was that the Japanese
Rising Sun Flag be hoisted over the tallest building in Singapore, the
Cathay Building, as soon as possible to maximise the psychological impact of the official surrender. Percival formally surrendered shortly after 5.15pm.
The terms of the surrender included:
- The unconditional surrender of all military forces (Army, Navy and Air Force) in Singapore Area.
- Hostilities to cease at 8:30 p.m. that evening.
- All troops to remain in position until further orders.
- All weapons, military equipment, ships, planes and secret documents to be handed over intact.
- To prevent looting, etc., during the temporary withdrawal of all armed forces in Singapore, a force of 100 British armed men to take over until relieved by the Japanese.
Earlier that day Percival had issued orders to destroy before 4 p.m. all secret and technical equipment, ciphers, codes, secret documents and heavy guns. Yamashita accepted his assurance that no ships or planes remained in Singapore. According to
Tokyo's Domei News Agency Yamashita also accepted full responsibility for the lives of British and Australian troops, as well as British civilians remaining in Singapore.
Bennett, along with some of his staff officers, caused controversy when he handed command of the 8th Division to a brigadier and commandeered a small boat. They eventually made their way back to Australia.
The
Japanese Occupation of Singapore had begun. The city was renamed
Syonan-to (
Japanese: 昭南島
Shōnan-tō, literally
Light-of-the-South Island). The Japanese sought vengeance against the
Chinese and to eliminate anyone who held
anti-Japanese sentiment. The Imperial authorities were suspicious of the Chinese because of the Second Sino-Japanese War, and killed many in the
Sook Ching Massacre. The other races of Singapore, such as the
Malays and the
Indians were not spared. The residents would suffer great hardships under Japanese rule over the following three and a half years.
Many of the British and Australian soldiers taken prisoner remained in Singapore's
Changi Prison. Many soldiers, like Australian Trevor Tranter, would never return home. Thousands of others were shipped on prisoner transports known as "
hell ships" to other parts of Asia, including Japan, to be used as
forced labour on projects such as the Siam-Burma
Death Railway and
Sandakan airfield in
North Borneo. Many of those aboard the ships perished.
The Japanese were highly successful in recruiting
Indian soldiers taken prisoner. From a total of about 40,000 Indian personnel in Singapore in February 1942, about 30,000 joined the pro-Japanese "
Indian National Army", which fought Allied forces in the
Burma Campaign. Others became POW camp guards at Changi. However, many Indian Army personnel resisted recruitment and remained POWs. An unknown number were taken to Japanese-occupied areas in the South Pacific as forced labour. Many of them suffered severe hardships and brutality similar to that experienced by other prisoners of Japan during World War II. About 6,000 of them survived until they were liberated by Australian or U.S. forces, in 1943–45.
After the
Japanese surrender in 1945 Yamashita was tried by a US military commission for
war crimes committed by Japanese personnel in the
Philippines earlier that year, but not for crimes committed by his troops in Malaya or Singapore. He was convicted and hanged in the Philippines on
February 23,
1946.
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