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Battle of Kohima

Battle of Kohima
Part of Operation U-Go during the Burma Campaign in the South-East Asian theatre of World War II

View of the Garrison Hill battlefield, the key to the British defences at Kohima
Date4 April – 22 June 1944
Location25°39′59″N 94°06′01″E / 25.66639°N 94.10035°E / 25.66639; 94.10035
Result Allied victory
Belligerents

United Kingdom

Japan
Commanders and leaders
Montagu Stopford Kotoku Sato
Strength
Start:
1 infantry brigade (1,500)
End:
2 infantry divisions
1 Chindit brigade
1 motor brigade
1 infantry division (15,000–20,000)[1]
Casualties and losses
4,064[2] 5,764–7,000[2]
(Combat deaths only, more lost to disease and starvation)[3][4]

The Battle of Kohima was the turning point of the Japanese U-Go offensive into India in 1944 during the Second World War. The battle took place in three stages from 4 April to 22 June 1944 around the town of Kohima, now the capital city of Nagaland in Northeast India. From 3 to 16 April, the Japanese attempted to capture Kohima ridge, a feature which dominated the road by which the besieged British and Indian troops of IV Corps at Imphal were supplied. By mid-April, the small British and British Indian force at Kohima was relieved.

From 18 April to 13 May British and British Indian reinforcements counter-attacked to drive the Japanese from the positions they had captured. The Japanese abandoned the ridge at this point but continued to block the Kohima–Imphal road. From 16 May to 22 June the British and British Indian troops pursued the retreating Japanese and reopened the road. The battle ended on 22 June when British and British Indian troops from Kohima and Imphal met at Milestone 109, ending the Siege of Imphal.

In 2013, a poll conducted by the British National Army Museum voted the Battles of Kohima and Imphal as "Britain's Greatest Battle".[5] The Battles of Kohima and Imphal have been referred to by authors such as Martin Dougherty and Jonathan Ritter as the "Stalingrad of the East".[6][7] Military historian Robert Lyman said that the battle of Kohima and Imphal "changed the course of the Second World War in Asia… For the first time the Japanese were defeated in a battle and they never recovered from it".[8] This assessment, however, ignores the several Battles of Changsha (beginning in 1939), the Battle of Milne Bay (September 1942), and the Battle of Guadalacanal (August 1942-February 1943), all significant Japanese defeats on land. It also ignores the fact most Japanese land forces were fighting the Chinese – in operation Ichi-Go, they lost 100,000 men in 1944 alone.

Background edit

The Japanese plan to invade India, codenamed U-Go, was originally intended as a spoiling attack against the British IV Corps at Imphal in Manipur, to disrupt the Allied offensive plans for that year. The commander of the Japanese Fifteenth Army, Lieutenant General Renya Mutaguchi, enlarged the plan to invade India itself and perhaps even overthrow the British Raj.[9][Note 1]

If the Japanese were able to gain a strong foothold in India they would demonstrate the weakness of the British Empire and provide encouragement to Indian nationalists in their decolonization efforts.[11] Moreover, occupation of the area around Imphal would severely impact American efforts to supply Chiang Kai-shek's army in China.[12][13] The objections of the staffs of various headquarters were eventually overcome, and the offensive was approved by Imperial General Headquarters on 7 January 1944.[14]

Part of the plan involved sending the Japanese 31st Division (which was composed of the 58th, 124th and 138th Infantry Regiments and the 31st Mountain Artillery Regiment) to capture Kohima and thus cut off Imphal. Mutaguchi wished to exploit the capture of Kohima by pushing the 31st Division on to Dimapur, the vital railhead and logistic base in the Brahmaputra River valley.[15]

The 31st Division's commander, Lieutenant General Kotoku Sato, was unhappy with his role. He had not been involved in the planning of the offensive, and had grave misgivings about its chances. He had already told his staff that they might all starve to death.[16] In common with many senior Japanese officers, Sato considered Mutaguchi a "blockhead". He and Mutaguchi had also been on opposite sides during the split between the Toseiha and Kodoha factions within the Japanese Army during the early 1930s, and Sato believed he had reason to distrust Mutaguchi's motives.[17]

Prelude edit

 
Imphal and Kohima campaign

Starting on 15 March 1944, the Japanese 31st Division crossed the Chindwin River[18] near Homalin and moved north-west along jungle trails on a front almost 60 miles (97 km) wide. Because of a shortage of transport, half the artillery regiment's mountain guns and the infantry regiments' heavy weapons were left behind. Only three week's supply of food and ammunition was carried.[19]

Although the march was arduous, good progress was made. The left wing of the division, consisting of the bulk of the 58th Regiment and commanded by the division's Infantry Group commander,[Note 2] Major General Shigesaburō Miyazaki, was ahead of the neighbouring formation (the Japanese 15th Infantry Division) when they clashed with Indian troops covering the northern approaches to Imphal on 20 March.[20]

The Indian troops were the 50th Indian Parachute Brigade under Brigadier Maxwell Hope-Thomson, at Sangshak.[18] Although they were not Miyazaki's objective, he decided to clear them from his line of advance. The Battle of Sangshak continued for six days. The parachute brigade's troops were desperately short of drinking water,[21] but Miyazaki was handicapped by lack of artillery until near the end of the battle. Eventually, as some of the Japanese 15th Division's troops joined the battle, Hope-Thomson withdrew. The 50th Parachute Brigade lost 600 men, while the Japanese had suffered over 400 casualties. Miyazaki had also captured some of the food and munitions that had been dropped by the Royal Air Force (RAF) to the defenders of Sangshak. However, his troops, who had the shortest and easiest route to Kohima, were delayed by a week.[22]

Meanwhile, the commander of the British Fourteenth Army, Lieutenant General William Slim, belatedly realised (partly from Japanese documents that had been captured at Sangshak) that a whole Japanese division was moving towards Kohima.[23] He and his staff had originally believed that, because of the forbidding terrain in the area, the Japanese would only be able to send a regiment to take Kohima.[1][24][Note 3]

Slim knew that there were few fighting troops, as opposed to soldiers in line-of-communication units and supporting services, in Kohima and none at all at the vital base of Dimapur 30 miles (48 km) to the north. Dimapur contained an area of supply dumps 11 miles (18 km) long and 1 mile (1.6 km) wide.[26][27] As the fall of Dimapur would have been disastrous for the Allies, Slim asked his superior, General George Giffard (commanding Eleventh Army Group),[28] for more troops to protect Dimapur and to prepare to relieve Imphal.[29]

The Allies were already hastily reinforcing the Imphal Front.[30] As part of this move, the infantry and artillery of the 5th Indian Infantry Division were flown from the Arakan, where they had just participated in the defeat of a subsidiary Japanese offensive at the Battle of the Admin Box. While the main body of the division went to Imphal (where some units had been isolated and almost all of IV Corps' reserves had already been committed), the 161st Indian Infantry Brigade, commanded by Brigadier Dermot Warren and with 24th Mountain Artillery Regiment, Indian Artillery attached, were flown to Dimapur.[31]

Early in March, the 23rd Long Range Penetration Brigade was removed from Major General Orde Wingate's Chindit force, and was dispatched by rail from around Lalaghat to Jorhat, 50 miles (80 km) north of Dimapur, where they could threaten the flank of any Japanese attack on the base. Giffard and General Claude Auchinleck, the Commander-in-Chief of the British Indian Army, also prepared to send the British 2nd Division and Indian XXXIII Corps HQ under Lieutenant General Montagu Stopford from reserve in southern and central India to Dimapur, by road and rail.[32][33]

Until XXXIII Corps headquarters could arrive at Dimapur, the HQ of 202 Line of Communication Area under Major General R.P.L. Ranking took command of the area.[26][34]

Battle edit

Geography edit

 
Kohima Ridge

Kohima's strategic importance in the wider 1944 Japanese Chindwin offensive lay in that it was the summit of a pass that offered the Japanese the best route from Burma into India.[1] Through it ran the road which was the main supply route between the base at Dimapur in the Brahmaputra River valley and Imphal,[35] where the British and Indian troops of IV Corps (consisting of the 17th, 20th and 23rd Indian Infantry Divisions) faced the main Japanese offensive.[36][37]

Kohima Ridge itself runs roughly north and south.[38] The road from Dimapur to Imphal climbs to its northern end and runs along its eastern face. In 1944, Kohima was the administrative centre of Nagaland. The Deputy Commissioner was Charles Pawsey. His bungalow stood on the hillside at a bend in the road, with its gardens and tennis court, and a clubhouse, on terraces above.[1] Although some terraces around the village were cleared for cultivation, the steep slopes of the ridge were densely forested.[1]

North of the ridge lay the densely inhabited area of Naga Village, crowned by Treasury Hill,[1] and Church Knoll (Baptist and other Christian missionaries had been active in Nagaland over the preceding half century). South and west of Kohima Ridge were GPT Ridge and the jungle-covered Aradura Spur. The various British and Indian service troop encampments in the area gave their names to the features which were to be important in the battle e.g. "Field Supply Depot" became FSD Hill or merely FSD.[39][40] The Japanese later assigned their own code-names to the features; for example, Garrison Hill, which overlooked Kohima,[8] was known as Inu (dog) and Kuki Piquet (see map of Kohima Ridge) as Saru (monkey).[41]

Siege edit

Before the 161st Indian Brigade arrived, the only fighting troops in the Kohima area were the newly raised 1st Battalion, the Assam Regiment and a few platoons from the 3rd (Naga Hills) Battalion of the paramilitary Assam Rifles.[1] Late in March 161st Brigade deployed in Kohima, but Major-General Ranking ordered them back to Dimapur, as it was felt initially that Dimapur had more strategic importance. Kohima was regarded as a roadblock, while Dimapur was the railhead where the majority of Allied supplies were stored.[26] Slim also feared that the Japanese might leave only a detachment to contain the garrison of Kohima while the main body of the 31st Division moved by tracks to the east to attack Dimapur.[42]

To Slim's relief, Sato concentrated on capturing Kohima. (Early in the siege, on 8 April, Mutaguchi directly ordered Sato to send a detachment to advance on Dimapur. Sato unwillingly dispatched a battalion of the 138th Regiment but a few hours later Mutaguchi's superior, Lieutenant General Masakasu Kawabe commanding Burma Area Army, vetoed the move.)[43]

As the right wing and centre of the Japanese 31st Division approached Jessami, over 80 miles (130 km) by road to the east of Kohima, elements of the Assam Regiment fought delaying actions against them commencing on 1 April. Nevertheless, the men in the forward positions were soon overrun and the Assam regiment was ordered to withdraw. By the night of 3 April, Miyazaki's troops reached the outskirts of the Naga village and began probing Kohima from the south.[44]

Stopford's Corps HQ took over responsibility for the front from Ranking on 3 April.[42] The next day, he ordered the 161st Indian Brigade to move forward to Kohima again, but only one battalion, 4th Battalion Queen's Own Royal West Kent Regiment commanded by Lieutenant Colonel John Laverty, and a company of the 4th Battalion, 7th Rajput Regiment arrived in Kohima before the Japanese cut the road west of the ridge. Besides these troops from 161st Brigade, the garrison consisted of a raw battalion (the Shere Regiment) from the Royal Nepalese Army, some companies from the Burma Regiment, some of the Assam Regiment which had retired to Kohima and various detachments of convalescents and line-of-communication troops. The garrison numbered about 2,500, of which about 1,000 were non-combatants[45] and was commanded by Colonel Hugh Richards, who had served formerly with the Chindits.[46]

The siege began on 6 April. The garrison was continually shelled and mortared, in many instances by Japanese using weapons and ammunition captured at Sangshak and from other depots, and was slowly driven into a small perimeter on Garrison Hill. They had artillery support from the main body of 161st Brigade, who were themselves cut off 2 miles (3.2 km) away at Jotsoma, but, as at Sangshak, they were very short of drinking water. The water supply point was on GPT Ridge, which was captured by the Japanese on the first day of the siege. Some of its defenders were unable to retreat to other positions on the ridge and instead withdrew towards Dimapur. Canvas water tanks on FSD and at the Indian General Hospital had neither been filled nor dug in to protect them from fire. While a small spring was discovered on the north side of Garrison Hill, it could be reached only at night.[47] The medical dressing stations were exposed to Japanese fire, and wounded men were often hit again as they waited for treatment.[48]

Some of the heaviest fighting took place at the north end of Kohima Ridge, around the Deputy Commissioner's bungalow and tennis court, in what became known as the Battle of the Tennis Court. The tennis court became a no man's land, with the Japanese and the defenders of Kohima dug in on opposite sides, so close to each other that grenades were thrown between the trenches. The American historians Alan Millet and Williamson Murray wrote about the fighting at Kohima between the Japanese vs. the Anglo-Indian troops: "Nowhere in World War II – even on the Eastern Front – did the combatants fight with more mindless savagery".[49]

On the night of 17/18 April, the Japanese finally captured the DC's bungalow area. Other Japanese captured Kuki Picquet, cutting the garrison in two.[50] The defenders' situation was desperate, but the Japanese did not follow up by attacking Garrison Hill as by now they were exhausted by hunger and by the fighting, and when daylight broke, troops of 161st Indian Brigade arrived to relieve the garrison.[51][49]

Relief edit

 
Indian soldiers of the British Indian Army inspect captured Japanese ordnance during the Kohima battle, April 1944

The British 2nd Division, commanded by Major General John M. L. Grover, had begun to arrive at Dimapur in early April. By 11 April, the Fourteenth Army had about the same number of troops in the area as the Japanese. The British 5th Brigade of the 2nd Division broke through Japanese roadblocks to relieve 161st Brigade in Jotsoma on 15 April. The British 6th Brigade took over 161st Brigade's defensive position (the "Jotsoma Box"), allowing the 161st Brigade with air, artillery and armour support to launch an attack towards Kohima on 18 April. After a day's heavy fighting, the leading troops of the Brigade (1st Battalion, 1st Punjab Regiment) broke through and started to relieve the Kohima garrison.[52] By this point, Kohima resembled a battlefield from the First World War, with smashed trees, ruined buildings and the ground covered in craters.[53]

Under cover of darkness, the wounded (numbering 300) were brought out under fire. Although contact had been established, it took a further 24 hours to fully secure the road between Jotsoma and Kohima. During 19 April and into the early hours of 20 April, the British 6th Brigade replaced the original garrison and at 06:00 hours on 20 April, the garrison commander (Colonel Richards) handed over command of the area.[54] 6th Brigade observers were taken aback by the condition of the garrison; one battle hardened officer commented: "They looked like aged, bloodstained scarecrows, dropping with fatigue; the only clean thing about them was their weapons, and they smelt of blood, sweat and death."[55]

Miyazaki continued to try to capture Garrison Hill, and there was heavy fighting for this position for several more nights, with high casualties on both sides. The Japanese positions on Kuki Picquet were only 50 yards (46 m) from Garrison Hill, and fighting was often hand-to-hand.[56] On the other flank of Garrison Hill, on the night of 26/27 April, a British attack recaptured the clubhouse above the Deputy Commissioner's bungalow, which overlooked most of the Japanese centre.[57]

Counter-offensive edit

 
The mined tennis court and terraces of the District Commissioner's bungalow in Kohima

The Japanese reorganised their forces for defence. Their Left Force under Miyazaki held Kohima Ridge with four battalions.[58] The divisional HQ under Sato himself and the Centre Force under Colonel Shiraishi held Naga Village with another four battalions.[59] The much smaller Right Force held villages to the north and east.[58]

To support their attack against the Japanese position, the British had amassed thirty-eight 3.7 Inch Mountain Howitzers, forty-eight 25-pounder field guns and two 5.5-inch medium guns.[60] The RAF (chiefly Hurricane fighter-bombers of 34 Squadron and Vultee Vengeance dive-bombers of 84 Squadron)[61] also bombed and strafed the Japanese positions. The Japanese could oppose them with only seventeen light mountain guns, with very little ammunition.[62] Nevertheless, the progress of the British counter-attack was slow. Tanks could not easily be used, and the Japanese occupied bunkers which were very deeply dug in, well-concealed and mutually supporting.[63]

While the British 6th Brigade defended Garrison Hill, the other two brigades of 2nd Division tried to outflank both ends of the Japanese position, in Naga Village to the north and on GPT Ridge to the south. The monsoon had broken by this time and the steep slopes were covered in mud, making movement and supply very difficult. In places the British 4th Brigade had to cut steps up hillsides and build handrails in order to make progress.[64] On 4 May, the British 5th Brigade secured a foothold in the outskirts of Naga Village but lost it to a counter-attack.[65] On the same day, the British 4th Brigade, having made a long flank march around Mount Pulebadze to approach Kohima Ridge from the south-west, attacked GPT Ridge in driving rain and captured part of the ridge by surprise but were unable to secure the entire ridge.[66] Two successive commanders of British 4th Brigade were killed in the subsequent close-range fighting on the ridge.[67]

Both outflanking moves having failed because of the terrain and the weather, the British 2nd Division concentrated on attacking the Japanese positions along Kohima Ridge from 4 May onwards. Fire from Japanese posts on the reverse slope of GPT Ridge repeatedly caught British troops attacking Jail Hill in the flank, inflicting heavy casualties and preventing them from capturing the hill for a week. However, the various positions were slowly taken. Jail Hill, together with Kuki Picquet, FSD and DIS, was finally captured on 11 May, after a barrage of smoke shells blinded the Japanese machine-gunners and allowed the troops to secure the hill and dig in.[68][69]

The last Japanese positions on the ridge to be captured were the tennis court and gardens above the Deputy Commissioner's bungalow. On 13 May, after several failed attempts to outflank or storm the position, the British finally bulldozed a track to the summit above the position, up which a tank could be dragged. A Lee tank crashed down onto the tennis court and destroyed the Japanese trenches and bunkers there. The 2nd Bn, the Dorsetshire Regiment, followed up and captured the hillside where the bungalow formerly stood, thus finally clearing Kohima Ridge.[70] The terrain had been reduced to a fly and rat-infested wilderness, with half-buried human remains everywhere. The conditions under which the Japanese troops had lived and fought have been described by several sources, including author Frank McLynn, as "unspeakable".[71]

The situation worsened for the Japanese as yet more Allied reinforcements arrived.[72] The 7th Indian Infantry Division, commanded by Major General Frank Messervy, was arriving piecemeal by road and rail from the Arakan. Its 33rd Indian Brigade had already been released from XXXIII Corps reserve to join the fighting on Kohima Ridge on 4 May.[67] The 114th Indian Infantry Brigade and the Division HQ arrived on 12 May and (with 161st Brigade under command) the division concentrated on recapturing the Naga Village from the north. The independent 268th Indian Infantry Brigade was used to relieve the brigades of British 2nd Division and allow them to rest, before they resumed their drive southwards along the Imphal Road.[72]

Nevertheless, when the Allies launched another attack on 16 May, the Japanese continued to defend Naga Village and Aradura Spur tenaciously.[73] An attack on Naga Hill on the night of 24/25 May gained no ground.[74] Another attack, mounted against both ends of Aradura Spur on the night of 28/29 May was even more decisively repulsed. The repeated setbacks, with exhaustion and the effects of the climate began to affect the morale of the British 2nd Division especially.[74]

Japanese retreat edit

 
Historic Kohima–Imphal road in 2018

The decisive factor was the Japanese lack of supplies. The Japanese 31st Division had begun the operation with only three weeks' supply of food.[62] Once these supplies were exhausted, the Japanese had to exist on meagre captured stocks and what they could forage in increasingly hostile local villages. (Shortly before the siege of Kohima began, the Japanese had captured a huge warehouse in Naga Village with enough rice to feed the division "for three years", but it was immediately bombed and the stock of rice was destroyed.)[75] The British 23rd LRP Brigade, which had been operating behind the Japanese division, cut the Japanese supply lines and prevented them foraging in the Naga Hills to the east of Kohima. The Japanese had mounted two resupply missions, using captured jeeps to carry supplies forward from the Chindwin to 31st Division, but they brought mainly artillery and anti-tank ammunition, rather than food.[62]

By the middle of May, Sato's troops were starving. He considered that Mutaguchi and the HQ of Japanese Fifteenth Army were taking little notice of his situation, as they had issued several confusing and contradictory orders to him during April.[76] Because the main attack on Imphal faltered around the middle of April, Mutaguchi wished 31st Division or parts of it to join in the attack on Imphal from the north, even while the division was struggling to capture and hold Kohima. Sato considered that Fifteenth Army headquarters were issuing unrealistic orders to his division without proper planning or consideration for the conditions. Nor did he believe that they were exerting themselves to move supplies to his division.[77] He began considering pulling his troops back to allow for resupply.[78]

On 25 May, Sato notified Fifteenth Army HQ that he would withdraw on 1 June, unless his division received supplies.[79] Finally on 31 May, he abandoned Naga Village and other positions north of the road, in spite of orders from Mutaguchi to hang on to his position.[59] (For a divisional commander to retreat without orders or permission from his superior was unheard-of in the Japanese Army.)[80] This allowed XXXIII Corps to outflank Miyazaki's position on Aradura Spur and begin pushing south.[81]

Miyazaki's detachment continued to fight rearguard actions and demolish bridges along the road to Imphal, but was eventually driven off the road and forced to retreat eastwards. The remainder of the Japanese division retreated painfully south but found very little to eat, as most of what few supplies had been brought forward across the Chindwin had been consumed by other Japanese units, who were as desperately hungry as Sato's men.[82] Many of the 31st Division were too enfeebled to drag themselves further south than Ukhrul (near the Sangshak battlefield), where hospitals had been set up, but with no medicines, medical staff or food, or Humine 20 miles (32 km) south of Ukhrul, where Sato vainly hoped to find supplies.[83]

 
The link-up at Milestone 109 between the two arms of the 14th Army which relieved the Japanese siege of Imphal.

Indian XXXIII Corps followed up the retreating Japanese. The British 2nd Division advanced down the main road, while the 7th Indian Division (using mules and jeeps for most of its transport), moved through the rough terrain east of the road. On 22 June, the leading troops of British 2nd Division met the main body of 5th Indian Infantry Division advancing north from Imphal at Milestone 109, 30 miles (48 km) south of Kohima.[84] The siege of Imphal was over, and truck convoys quickly carried vital heavy supplies to the troops at Imphal.[85]

During the Battle of Kohima, the British and Indian forces had lost 4,064 men, dead, missing and wounded.[2] Against this the Japanese had lost at least 5,764 battle casualties in the Kohima area,[2] and many of the 31st Division subsequently died of disease or starvation, or took their own lives.[3][4]

Aftermath edit

After ignoring army orders for several weeks, Sato was removed from command of Japanese 31st Division early in July. The entire Japanese offensive was broken off at the same time. Slim derided Sato as the most unenterprising of his opponents, and even dissuaded the RAF from bombing Sato's HQ because he wanted him kept alive, as doing so would help the Allied cause.[86] Japanese sources, however, blame his superior, Mutaguchi, for both the weaknesses of the original plan, and the antipathy between himself and Sato which led Sato to concentrate on saving his division rather than driving on distant objectives.[87]

 
View of Kohima Ridge after the battle.

After Sato was removed from command, he refused an invitation to commit seppuku and demanded a court martial to clear his name and make his complaints about Fifteenth Army HQ public. At Kawabe's prompting, Sato was declared to have suffered a mental breakdown and was unfit to stand trial.[88] He was replaced as commander of the 31st Division by Lieutenant General Tsuchitaro Kawada.[89] Major General Miyazaki was promoted and appointed to command the Japanese 54th Division, serving in Arakan.[90]

The huge losses the Japanese suffered in the Battles of Imphal and Kohima (mainly through starvation and disease) crippled their defence of Burma against Allied attacks during the following year.[91]

On the Allied side, Major General Grover was dismissed from command of the British 2nd Division on 5 July, for perceived slowness in conducting the offensive, and also after complaints about his handling of Indian formations (161st and 33rd Indian Brigades) attached to his division, and replaced by Major General Cameron Nicholson. He accepted his dismissal stoically and was appointed Director of Army Welfare Services at the War Office.[92] Seventy years after the Battle of Kohima a memorial to him was unveiled at Jotsoma, the site of his 2nd Division Headquarters.[93] Brigadier Dermot Warren, who commanded the 161st Indian Brigade during the siege,[94] was promoted to command the 5th Indian Division,[95] but was killed in an air crash the following year.[96]

Aerial resupply edit

The aerial resupply of Kohima was part of an effort that, at its height, delivered around 500 tons of supplies per day to Allied forces in the theatre.[97] At the sieges of both Kohima and Imphal, the Allies relied entirely on resupply from the air by British and American aircraft[98] flying from India until the road from the railhead at Dimapur was cleared. At Kohima, due to the narrow ridgelines, accuracy in the dropping of air delivered logistics proved to be a considerable problem and as the fighting intensified and the defended area decreased, the task became harder and more dangerous.[99] In order to improve the accuracy of the drops, the Dakota pilots were forced to fly "dangerously low".[100]

The increasing dominance of Allied airpower by this stage of the Burma campaign was a major factor in helping the Allies turn the tide of the war in this theatre. Allied air supply enabled British and Indian troops to hold out in positions that they might otherwise have had to abandon due to shortages of ammunition, food and water, as reinforcements and supplies could be brought in even when garrisons were surrounded and cut off.[101] Conversely, the Japanese found their own supply situation harder to resolve and in the end it was one of the deciding factors in the battle.[79]

Victoria Cross edit

Three Victoria Crosses were awarded for actions during the Battle of Kohima:

Memorial edit

 
The memorial in Kohima

The War Cemetery in Kohima of 1,420 Allied war dead is maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission.[109] The cemetery lies on the slopes of Garrison Hill, in what was once the Deputy Commissioner's tennis court.[110] The epitaph carved on the memorial of the 2nd British Division in the cemetery has become world-famous as the Kohima Epitaph. It reads:[111][112]

When you go home, tell them of us and say,
For your tomorrow, we gave our today

The verse is attributed to John Maxwell Edmonds (1875–1958), and is thought to have been inspired by the epitaph written by Simonides to honour the Spartans who fell at the Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC.[112][113]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to Julian Thompson, "To this day [in 2010] there is disagreement on whether or not Mutaguchi intended to stop at Imphal. He favoured pressing on into India, and with help from uprisings by Indian nationalists in India, throwing the British out. … A possible indicator of Mutaguchi’s aspirations… was the inclusion of the 1st Indian National Army (INA) Division [an anti-British force]…. The INA was ineffective in battle so Mutaguchi’s motive for saddling himself with seven thousand useless mouths could only have been to use them for propaganda on arrival in India".[10]
  2. ^ A Japanese Infantry Division had a separate "Infantry Group" or "Infantry Brigade" headquarters which, as in this case, could control any substantial detachment from the main body of the division
  3. ^ A Japanese regiment was approximately 2,600 men, while a division varied between 12,000 to 22,000 men.[25]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Allen 2000, p. 228.
  2. ^ a b c d Allen 2000, p. 643.
  3. ^ a b Rooney 1992, pp. 103–104.
  4. ^ a b Allen 2000, pp. 313–314.
  5. ^ . National Army Museum. Archived from the original on 25 December 2013. Retrieved 15 December 2015.
  6. ^ Dougherty 2008, p. 159.
  7. ^ Ritter 2017, p. 123.
  8. ^ a b Ethirajan, Anbarasan (14 February 2021). "Kohima: Britain's 'forgotten' battle that changed the course of WWII". BBC News.
  9. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 154–155.
  10. ^ Thompson 2010, p. 208.
  11. ^ Allen 2000, p. 154.
  12. ^ Keane 2010, p. 5.
  13. ^ "Burma Campaign: Seizing Imphal and Kohima in World War II". World History Group. 6 December 2006. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
  14. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 166–167.
  15. ^ Allen 2000, p. 285.
  16. ^ Allen 2000, p. 232.
  17. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 284–285.
  18. ^ a b Allen 2000, p. 189.
  19. ^ "Burma Operations Record: 15th Army Operations in Imphal Area and Withdrawal to Northern Burma" (PDF). ibiblio. Office of the Chief of Military History, US Army. p. 72. Retrieved 19 February 2021.
  20. ^ Allen 2000, p. 213.
  21. ^ Allen 2000, p. 216.
  22. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 212–220.
  23. ^ Allen 2000, p. 220.
  24. ^ Slim 1956, p. 299.
  25. ^ Allen 2000, p. 654.
  26. ^ a b c Allen 2000, p. 229.
  27. ^ Hantzis 2017, Chapter 13.
  28. ^ Allen 2000, p. 206.
  29. ^ Swinson 2015, Chapter 2.
  30. ^ Rooney 1992, p. 144.
  31. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 229–230.
  32. ^ Slim 1956, pp. 300–301.
  33. ^ Ministry of Defence 2004, pp. 2–3.
  34. ^ Slim 1956, p. 300.
  35. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 232–234.
  36. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 229&657.
  37. ^ Fowler 2009, Chapter 8.
  38. ^ Allen 2000, p. 231.
  39. ^ Rooney 1992, p. 74.
  40. ^ Fowler 2009, Chapter 9.
  41. ^ Allen 2000, p. 267.
  42. ^ a b Slim 1956, p. 306.
  43. ^ Dennis & Lyman 2010, p. 51.
  44. ^ Allen 2000, p. 230.
  45. ^ Allen 2000, p. 234.
  46. ^ Allen 2000, p. 227.
  47. ^ Allen 2000, p. 235.
  48. ^ Allen 2000, p. 236.
  49. ^ a b Murray & Millet 2000, p. 350.
  50. ^ Allen 2000, p. 237.
  51. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 237–238.
  52. ^ Slim 1956, pp. 316–317.
  53. ^ Dennis & Lyman 2010, p. 58.
  54. ^ Slim 1956, p. 317.
  55. ^ Wilson 2001, p. 110.
  56. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 267–269.
  57. ^ Slim 1956, p. 314.
  58. ^ a b Allen 2000, p. 270.
  59. ^ a b Allen 2000, p. 289.
  60. ^ Allen 2000, p. 272.
  61. ^ Luto 2013, p. 3.
  62. ^ a b c Allen 2000, p. 286.
  63. ^ Dennis & Lyman 2010, pp. 80–82.
  64. ^ Wilson 2001, p. 115.
  65. ^ Slim 1956, p. 315.
  66. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 273–274.
  67. ^ a b Allen 2000, p. 274.
  68. ^ Slim 1956, p. 316.
  69. ^ Dennis & Lyman 2010, p. 82.
  70. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 272–273.
  71. ^ McLynn 2011, p. 316.
  72. ^ a b Allen 2000, p. 275.
  73. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 274–275.
  74. ^ a b Dennis & Lyman 2010, p. 85.
  75. ^ Keane 2010, p. 238.
  76. ^ Allen 2000, p. 287.
  77. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 287–293.
  78. ^ Rooney 1992, p. 103.
  79. ^ a b Allen 2000, p. 288.
  80. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 292&308.
  81. ^ Dennis & Lyman 2010, p. 68.
  82. ^ Allen 2000, p. 290.
  83. ^ Allen 2000, pp. 290–292.
  84. ^ Allen 2000, p. 295.
  85. ^ Rooney 1992, pp. 104–105.
  86. ^ Slim 1956, p. 311.
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  95. ^ Brett-James 1951, Chapter XXV.
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  99. ^ Ministry of Defence 2004, p. 9.
  100. ^ Rooney 1992, p. 64.
  101. ^ Brayley 2002, p. 10.
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  105. ^ Keane 2010, p. 359.
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  108. ^ Association, Victoria Cross and George Cross. "Hafiz ABDUL VC". vcgca.org. Retrieved 10 November 2023.
  109. ^ . Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Archived from the original on 5 March 2010. Retrieved 17 December 2017.
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Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Callahan, Raymond. Triumph at Imphal-Kohima: How the Indian Army Finally Stopped the Japanese Juggernaut (University Press of Kansas, 2017) online review

External links edit

  • The Kohima Museum
  • Tom Hope (a Wearside man) recalls horrors of the brutal Battle of Kohima
  • Revisiting India's forgotten battle of WWII: Kohima-Imphal, the Stalingrad of the East. Ranjan Pal, CNN. Published 3 October 2020.
  • Kohima: Britain's 'forgotten' battle that changed the course of WWII

battle, kohima, part, operation, during, burma, campaign, south, east, asian, theatre, world, iiview, garrison, hill, battlefield, british, defences, kohimadate4, april, june, 1944locationkohima, naga, hills, district, assam, province, british, india, nagaland. Battle of KohimaPart of Operation U Go during the Burma Campaign in the South East Asian theatre of World War IIView of the Garrison Hill battlefield the key to the British defences at KohimaDate4 April 22 June 1944LocationKohima Naga Hills District Assam Province British India now Nagaland India 25 39 59 N 94 06 01 E 25 66639 N 94 10035 E 25 66639 94 10035ResultAllied victoryBelligerentsUnited Kingdom India NepalJapanCommanders and leadersMontagu StopfordKotoku SatoStrengthStart 1 infantry brigade 1 500 End 2 infantry divisions1 Chindit brigade1 motor brigade1 infantry division 15 000 20 000 1 Casualties and losses4 064 2 5 764 7 000 2 Combat deaths only more lost to disease and starvation 3 4 The Battle of Kohima was the turning point of the Japanese U Go offensive into India in 1944 during the Second World War The battle took place in three stages from 4 April to 22 June 1944 around the town of Kohima now the capital city of Nagaland in Northeast India From 3 to 16 April the Japanese attempted to capture Kohima ridge a feature which dominated the road by which the besieged British and Indian troops of IV Corps at Imphal were supplied By mid April the small British and British Indian force at Kohima was relieved From 18 April to 13 May British and British Indian reinforcements counter attacked to drive the Japanese from the positions they had captured The Japanese abandoned the ridge at this point but continued to block the Kohima Imphal road From 16 May to 22 June the British and British Indian troops pursued the retreating Japanese and reopened the road The battle ended on 22 June when British and British Indian troops from Kohima and Imphal met at Milestone 109 ending the Siege of Imphal In 2013 a poll conducted by the British National Army Museum voted the Battles of Kohima and Imphal as Britain s Greatest Battle 5 The Battles of Kohima and Imphal have been referred to by authors such as Martin Dougherty and Jonathan Ritter as the Stalingrad of the East 6 7 Military historian Robert Lyman said that the battle of Kohima and Imphal changed the course of the Second World War in Asia For the first time the Japanese were defeated in a battle and they never recovered from it 8 This assessment however ignores the several Battles of Changsha beginning in 1939 the Battle of Milne Bay September 1942 and the Battle of Guadalacanal August 1942 February 1943 all significant Japanese defeats on land It also ignores the fact most Japanese land forces were fighting the Chinese in operation Ichi Go they lost 100 000 men in 1944 alone Contents 1 Background 2 Prelude 3 Battle 3 1 Geography 3 2 Siege 3 3 Relief 3 4 Counter offensive 3 5 Japanese retreat 4 Aftermath 4 1 Aerial resupply 4 2 Victoria Cross 4 3 Memorial 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground editThe Japanese plan to invade India codenamed U Go was originally intended as a spoiling attack against the British IV Corps at Imphal in Manipur to disrupt the Allied offensive plans for that year The commander of the Japanese Fifteenth Army Lieutenant General Renya Mutaguchi enlarged the plan to invade India itself and perhaps even overthrow the British Raj 9 Note 1 If the Japanese were able to gain a strong foothold in India they would demonstrate the weakness of the British Empire and provide encouragement to Indian nationalists in their decolonization efforts 11 Moreover occupation of the area around Imphal would severely impact American efforts to supply Chiang Kai shek s army in China 12 13 The objections of the staffs of various headquarters were eventually overcome and the offensive was approved by Imperial General Headquarters on 7 January 1944 14 Part of the plan involved sending the Japanese 31st Division which was composed of the 58th 124th and 138th Infantry Regiments and the 31st Mountain Artillery Regiment to capture Kohima and thus cut off Imphal Mutaguchi wished to exploit the capture of Kohima by pushing the 31st Division on to Dimapur the vital railhead and logistic base in the Brahmaputra River valley 15 The 31st Division s commander Lieutenant General Kotoku Sato was unhappy with his role He had not been involved in the planning of the offensive and had grave misgivings about its chances He had already told his staff that they might all starve to death 16 In common with many senior Japanese officers Sato considered Mutaguchi a blockhead He and Mutaguchi had also been on opposite sides during the split between the Toseiha and Kodoha factions within the Japanese Army during the early 1930s and Sato believed he had reason to distrust Mutaguchi s motives 17 Prelude edit nbsp Imphal and Kohima campaignStarting on 15 March 1944 the Japanese 31st Division crossed the Chindwin River 18 near Homalin and moved north west along jungle trails on a front almost 60 miles 97 km wide Because of a shortage of transport half the artillery regiment s mountain guns and the infantry regiments heavy weapons were left behind Only three week s supply of food and ammunition was carried 19 Although the march was arduous good progress was made The left wing of the division consisting of the bulk of the 58th Regiment and commanded by the division s Infantry Group commander Note 2 Major General Shigesaburō Miyazaki was ahead of the neighbouring formation the Japanese 15th Infantry Division when they clashed with Indian troops covering the northern approaches to Imphal on 20 March 20 The Indian troops were the 50th Indian Parachute Brigade under Brigadier Maxwell Hope Thomson at Sangshak 18 Although they were not Miyazaki s objective he decided to clear them from his line of advance The Battle of Sangshak continued for six days The parachute brigade s troops were desperately short of drinking water 21 but Miyazaki was handicapped by lack of artillery until near the end of the battle Eventually as some of the Japanese 15th Division s troops joined the battle Hope Thomson withdrew The 50th Parachute Brigade lost 600 men while the Japanese had suffered over 400 casualties Miyazaki had also captured some of the food and munitions that had been dropped by the Royal Air Force RAF to the defenders of Sangshak However his troops who had the shortest and easiest route to Kohima were delayed by a week 22 Meanwhile the commander of the British Fourteenth Army Lieutenant General William Slim belatedly realised partly from Japanese documents that had been captured at Sangshak that a whole Japanese division was moving towards Kohima 23 He and his staff had originally believed that because of the forbidding terrain in the area the Japanese would only be able to send a regiment to take Kohima 1 24 Note 3 Slim knew that there were few fighting troops as opposed to soldiers in line of communication units and supporting services in Kohima and none at all at the vital base of Dimapur 30 miles 48 km to the north Dimapur contained an area of supply dumps 11 miles 18 km long and 1 mile 1 6 km wide 26 27 As the fall of Dimapur would have been disastrous for the Allies Slim asked his superior General George Giffard commanding Eleventh Army Group 28 for more troops to protect Dimapur and to prepare to relieve Imphal 29 The Allies were already hastily reinforcing the Imphal Front 30 As part of this move the infantry and artillery of the 5th Indian Infantry Division were flown from the Arakan where they had just participated in the defeat of a subsidiary Japanese offensive at the Battle of the Admin Box While the main body of the division went to Imphal where some units had been isolated and almost all of IV Corps reserves had already been committed the 161st Indian Infantry Brigade commanded by Brigadier Dermot Warren and with 24th Mountain Artillery Regiment Indian Artillery attached were flown to Dimapur 31 Early in March the 23rd Long Range Penetration Brigade was removed from Major General Orde Wingate s Chindit force and was dispatched by rail from around Lalaghat to Jorhat 50 miles 80 km north of Dimapur where they could threaten the flank of any Japanese attack on the base Giffard and General Claude Auchinleck the Commander in Chief of the British Indian Army also prepared to send the British 2nd Division and Indian XXXIII Corps HQ under Lieutenant General Montagu Stopford from reserve in southern and central India to Dimapur by road and rail 32 33 Until XXXIII Corps headquarters could arrive at Dimapur the HQ of 202 Line of Communication Area under Major General R P L Ranking took command of the area 26 34 Battle editGeography edit nbsp Kohima RidgeKohima s strategic importance in the wider 1944 Japanese Chindwin offensive lay in that it was the summit of a pass that offered the Japanese the best route from Burma into India 1 Through it ran the road which was the main supply route between the base at Dimapur in the Brahmaputra River valley and Imphal 35 where the British and Indian troops of IV Corps consisting of the 17th 20th and 23rd Indian Infantry Divisions faced the main Japanese offensive 36 37 Kohima Ridge itself runs roughly north and south 38 The road from Dimapur to Imphal climbs to its northern end and runs along its eastern face In 1944 Kohima was the administrative centre of Nagaland The Deputy Commissioner was Charles Pawsey His bungalow stood on the hillside at a bend in the road with its gardens and tennis court and a clubhouse on terraces above 1 Although some terraces around the village were cleared for cultivation the steep slopes of the ridge were densely forested 1 North of the ridge lay the densely inhabited area of Naga Village crowned by Treasury Hill 1 and Church Knoll Baptist and other Christian missionaries had been active in Nagaland over the preceding half century South and west of Kohima Ridge were GPT Ridge and the jungle covered Aradura Spur The various British and Indian service troop encampments in the area gave their names to the features which were to be important in the battle e g Field Supply Depot became FSD Hill or merely FSD 39 40 The Japanese later assigned their own code names to the features for example Garrison Hill which overlooked Kohima 8 was known as Inu dog and Kuki Piquet see map of Kohima Ridge as Saru monkey 41 Siege edit Before the 161st Indian Brigade arrived the only fighting troops in the Kohima area were the newly raised 1st Battalion the Assam Regiment and a few platoons from the 3rd Naga Hills Battalion of the paramilitary Assam Rifles 1 Late in March 161st Brigade deployed in Kohima but Major General Ranking ordered them back to Dimapur as it was felt initially that Dimapur had more strategic importance Kohima was regarded as a roadblock while Dimapur was the railhead where the majority of Allied supplies were stored 26 Slim also feared that the Japanese might leave only a detachment to contain the garrison of Kohima while the main body of the 31st Division moved by tracks to the east to attack Dimapur 42 To Slim s relief Sato concentrated on capturing Kohima Early in the siege on 8 April Mutaguchi directly ordered Sato to send a detachment to advance on Dimapur Sato unwillingly dispatched a battalion of the 138th Regiment but a few hours later Mutaguchi s superior Lieutenant General Masakasu Kawabe commanding Burma Area Army vetoed the move 43 As the right wing and centre of the Japanese 31st Division approached Jessami over 80 miles 130 km by road to the east of Kohima elements of the Assam Regiment fought delaying actions against them commencing on 1 April Nevertheless the men in the forward positions were soon overrun and the Assam regiment was ordered to withdraw By the night of 3 April Miyazaki s troops reached the outskirts of the Naga village and began probing Kohima from the south 44 Stopford s Corps HQ took over responsibility for the front from Ranking on 3 April 42 The next day he ordered the 161st Indian Brigade to move forward to Kohima again but only one battalion 4th Battalion Queen s Own Royal West Kent Regiment commanded by Lieutenant Colonel John Laverty and a company of the 4th Battalion 7th Rajput Regiment arrived in Kohima before the Japanese cut the road west of the ridge Besides these troops from 161st Brigade the garrison consisted of a raw battalion the Shere Regiment from the Royal Nepalese Army some companies from the Burma Regiment some of the Assam Regiment which had retired to Kohima and various detachments of convalescents and line of communication troops The garrison numbered about 2 500 of which about 1 000 were non combatants 45 and was commanded by Colonel Hugh Richards who had served formerly with the Chindits 46 The siege began on 6 April The garrison was continually shelled and mortared in many instances by Japanese using weapons and ammunition captured at Sangshak and from other depots and was slowly driven into a small perimeter on Garrison Hill They had artillery support from the main body of 161st Brigade who were themselves cut off 2 miles 3 2 km away at Jotsoma but as at Sangshak they were very short of drinking water The water supply point was on GPT Ridge which was captured by the Japanese on the first day of the siege Some of its defenders were unable to retreat to other positions on the ridge and instead withdrew towards Dimapur Canvas water tanks on FSD and at the Indian General Hospital had neither been filled nor dug in to protect them from fire While a small spring was discovered on the north side of Garrison Hill it could be reached only at night 47 The medical dressing stations were exposed to Japanese fire and wounded men were often hit again as they waited for treatment 48 Some of the heaviest fighting took place at the north end of Kohima Ridge around the Deputy Commissioner s bungalow and tennis court in what became known as the Battle of the Tennis Court The tennis court became a no man s land with the Japanese and the defenders of Kohima dug in on opposite sides so close to each other that grenades were thrown between the trenches The American historians Alan Millet and Williamson Murray wrote about the fighting at Kohima between the Japanese vs the Anglo Indian troops Nowhere in World War II even on the Eastern Front did the combatants fight with more mindless savagery 49 On the night of 17 18 April the Japanese finally captured the DC s bungalow area Other Japanese captured Kuki Picquet cutting the garrison in two 50 The defenders situation was desperate but the Japanese did not follow up by attacking Garrison Hill as by now they were exhausted by hunger and by the fighting and when daylight broke troops of 161st Indian Brigade arrived to relieve the garrison 51 49 Relief edit nbsp Indian soldiers of the British Indian Army inspect captured Japanese ordnance during the Kohima battle April 1944The British 2nd Division commanded by Major General John M L Grover had begun to arrive at Dimapur in early April By 11 April the Fourteenth Army had about the same number of troops in the area as the Japanese The British 5th Brigade of the 2nd Division broke through Japanese roadblocks to relieve 161st Brigade in Jotsoma on 15 April The British 6th Brigade took over 161st Brigade s defensive position the Jotsoma Box allowing the 161st Brigade with air artillery and armour support to launch an attack towards Kohima on 18 April After a day s heavy fighting the leading troops of the Brigade 1st Battalion 1st Punjab Regiment broke through and started to relieve the Kohima garrison 52 By this point Kohima resembled a battlefield from the First World War with smashed trees ruined buildings and the ground covered in craters 53 Under cover of darkness the wounded numbering 300 were brought out under fire Although contact had been established it took a further 24 hours to fully secure the road between Jotsoma and Kohima During 19 April and into the early hours of 20 April the British 6th Brigade replaced the original garrison and at 06 00 hours on 20 April the garrison commander Colonel Richards handed over command of the area 54 6th Brigade observers were taken aback by the condition of the garrison one battle hardened officer commented They looked like aged bloodstained scarecrows dropping with fatigue the only clean thing about them was their weapons and they smelt of blood sweat and death 55 Miyazaki continued to try to capture Garrison Hill and there was heavy fighting for this position for several more nights with high casualties on both sides The Japanese positions on Kuki Picquet were only 50 yards 46 m from Garrison Hill and fighting was often hand to hand 56 On the other flank of Garrison Hill on the night of 26 27 April a British attack recaptured the clubhouse above the Deputy Commissioner s bungalow which overlooked most of the Japanese centre 57 Counter offensive edit nbsp The mined tennis court and terraces of the District Commissioner s bungalow in KohimaThe Japanese reorganised their forces for defence Their Left Force under Miyazaki held Kohima Ridge with four battalions 58 The divisional HQ under Sato himself and the Centre Force under Colonel Shiraishi held Naga Village with another four battalions 59 The much smaller Right Force held villages to the north and east 58 To support their attack against the Japanese position the British had amassed thirty eight 3 7 Inch Mountain Howitzers forty eight 25 pounder field guns and two 5 5 inch medium guns 60 The RAF chiefly Hurricane fighter bombers of 34 Squadron and Vultee Vengeance dive bombers of 84 Squadron 61 also bombed and strafed the Japanese positions The Japanese could oppose them with only seventeen light mountain guns with very little ammunition 62 Nevertheless the progress of the British counter attack was slow Tanks could not easily be used and the Japanese occupied bunkers which were very deeply dug in well concealed and mutually supporting 63 While the British 6th Brigade defended Garrison Hill the other two brigades of 2nd Division tried to outflank both ends of the Japanese position in Naga Village to the north and on GPT Ridge to the south The monsoon had broken by this time and the steep slopes were covered in mud making movement and supply very difficult In places the British 4th Brigade had to cut steps up hillsides and build handrails in order to make progress 64 On 4 May the British 5th Brigade secured a foothold in the outskirts of Naga Village but lost it to a counter attack 65 On the same day the British 4th Brigade having made a long flank march around Mount Pulebadze to approach Kohima Ridge from the south west attacked GPT Ridge in driving rain and captured part of the ridge by surprise but were unable to secure the entire ridge 66 Two successive commanders of British 4th Brigade were killed in the subsequent close range fighting on the ridge 67 Both outflanking moves having failed because of the terrain and the weather the British 2nd Division concentrated on attacking the Japanese positions along Kohima Ridge from 4 May onwards Fire from Japanese posts on the reverse slope of GPT Ridge repeatedly caught British troops attacking Jail Hill in the flank inflicting heavy casualties and preventing them from capturing the hill for a week However the various positions were slowly taken Jail Hill together with Kuki Picquet FSD and DIS was finally captured on 11 May after a barrage of smoke shells blinded the Japanese machine gunners and allowed the troops to secure the hill and dig in 68 69 The last Japanese positions on the ridge to be captured were the tennis court and gardens above the Deputy Commissioner s bungalow On 13 May after several failed attempts to outflank or storm the position the British finally bulldozed a track to the summit above the position up which a tank could be dragged A Lee tank crashed down onto the tennis court and destroyed the Japanese trenches and bunkers there The 2nd Bn the Dorsetshire Regiment followed up and captured the hillside where the bungalow formerly stood thus finally clearing Kohima Ridge 70 The terrain had been reduced to a fly and rat infested wilderness with half buried human remains everywhere The conditions under which the Japanese troops had lived and fought have been described by several sources including author Frank McLynn as unspeakable 71 The situation worsened for the Japanese as yet more Allied reinforcements arrived 72 The 7th Indian Infantry Division commanded by Major General Frank Messervy was arriving piecemeal by road and rail from the Arakan Its 33rd Indian Brigade had already been released from XXXIII Corps reserve to join the fighting on Kohima Ridge on 4 May 67 The 114th Indian Infantry Brigade and the Division HQ arrived on 12 May and with 161st Brigade under command the division concentrated on recapturing the Naga Village from the north The independent 268th Indian Infantry Brigade was used to relieve the brigades of British 2nd Division and allow them to rest before they resumed their drive southwards along the Imphal Road 72 Nevertheless when the Allies launched another attack on 16 May the Japanese continued to defend Naga Village and Aradura Spur tenaciously 73 An attack on Naga Hill on the night of 24 25 May gained no ground 74 Another attack mounted against both ends of Aradura Spur on the night of 28 29 May was even more decisively repulsed The repeated setbacks with exhaustion and the effects of the climate began to affect the morale of the British 2nd Division especially 74 Japanese retreat edit nbsp Historic Kohima Imphal road in 2018The decisive factor was the Japanese lack of supplies The Japanese 31st Division had begun the operation with only three weeks supply of food 62 Once these supplies were exhausted the Japanese had to exist on meagre captured stocks and what they could forage in increasingly hostile local villages Shortly before the siege of Kohima began the Japanese had captured a huge warehouse in Naga Village with enough rice to feed the division for three years but it was immediately bombed and the stock of rice was destroyed 75 The British 23rd LRP Brigade which had been operating behind the Japanese division cut the Japanese supply lines and prevented them foraging in the Naga Hills to the east of Kohima The Japanese had mounted two resupply missions using captured jeeps to carry supplies forward from the Chindwin to 31st Division but they brought mainly artillery and anti tank ammunition rather than food 62 By the middle of May Sato s troops were starving He considered that Mutaguchi and the HQ of Japanese Fifteenth Army were taking little notice of his situation as they had issued several confusing and contradictory orders to him during April 76 Because the main attack on Imphal faltered around the middle of April Mutaguchi wished 31st Division or parts of it to join in the attack on Imphal from the north even while the division was struggling to capture and hold Kohima Sato considered that Fifteenth Army headquarters were issuing unrealistic orders to his division without proper planning or consideration for the conditions Nor did he believe that they were exerting themselves to move supplies to his division 77 He began considering pulling his troops back to allow for resupply 78 On 25 May Sato notified Fifteenth Army HQ that he would withdraw on 1 June unless his division received supplies 79 Finally on 31 May he abandoned Naga Village and other positions north of the road in spite of orders from Mutaguchi to hang on to his position 59 For a divisional commander to retreat without orders or permission from his superior was unheard of in the Japanese Army 80 This allowed XXXIII Corps to outflank Miyazaki s position on Aradura Spur and begin pushing south 81 Miyazaki s detachment continued to fight rearguard actions and demolish bridges along the road to Imphal but was eventually driven off the road and forced to retreat eastwards The remainder of the Japanese division retreated painfully south but found very little to eat as most of what few supplies had been brought forward across the Chindwin had been consumed by other Japanese units who were as desperately hungry as Sato s men 82 Many of the 31st Division were too enfeebled to drag themselves further south than Ukhrul near the Sangshak battlefield where hospitals had been set up but with no medicines medical staff or food or Humine 20 miles 32 km south of Ukhrul where Sato vainly hoped to find supplies 83 nbsp The link up at Milestone 109 between the two arms of the 14th Army which relieved the Japanese siege of Imphal Indian XXXIII Corps followed up the retreating Japanese The British 2nd Division advanced down the main road while the 7th Indian Division using mules and jeeps for most of its transport moved through the rough terrain east of the road On 22 June the leading troops of British 2nd Division met the main body of 5th Indian Infantry Division advancing north from Imphal at Milestone 109 30 miles 48 km south of Kohima 84 The siege of Imphal was over and truck convoys quickly carried vital heavy supplies to the troops at Imphal 85 During the Battle of Kohima the British and Indian forces had lost 4 064 men dead missing and wounded 2 Against this the Japanese had lost at least 5 764 battle casualties in the Kohima area 2 and many of the 31st Division subsequently died of disease or starvation or took their own lives 3 4 Aftermath editAfter ignoring army orders for several weeks Sato was removed from command of Japanese 31st Division early in July The entire Japanese offensive was broken off at the same time Slim derided Sato as the most unenterprising of his opponents and even dissuaded the RAF from bombing Sato s HQ because he wanted him kept alive as doing so would help the Allied cause 86 Japanese sources however blame his superior Mutaguchi for both the weaknesses of the original plan and the antipathy between himself and Sato which led Sato to concentrate on saving his division rather than driving on distant objectives 87 nbsp View of Kohima Ridge after the battle After Sato was removed from command he refused an invitation to commit seppuku and demanded a court martial to clear his name and make his complaints about Fifteenth Army HQ public At Kawabe s prompting Sato was declared to have suffered a mental breakdown and was unfit to stand trial 88 He was replaced as commander of the 31st Division by Lieutenant General Tsuchitaro Kawada 89 Major General Miyazaki was promoted and appointed to command the Japanese 54th Division serving in Arakan 90 The huge losses the Japanese suffered in the Battles of Imphal and Kohima mainly through starvation and disease crippled their defence of Burma against Allied attacks during the following year 91 On the Allied side Major General Grover was dismissed from command of the British 2nd Division on 5 July for perceived slowness in conducting the offensive and also after complaints about his handling of Indian formations 161st and 33rd Indian Brigades attached to his division and replaced by Major General Cameron Nicholson He accepted his dismissal stoically and was appointed Director of Army Welfare Services at the War Office 92 Seventy years after the Battle of Kohima a memorial to him was unveiled at Jotsoma the site of his 2nd Division Headquarters 93 Brigadier Dermot Warren who commanded the 161st Indian Brigade during the siege 94 was promoted to command the 5th Indian Division 95 but was killed in an air crash the following year 96 Aerial resupply edit The aerial resupply of Kohima was part of an effort that at its height delivered around 500 tons of supplies per day to Allied forces in the theatre 97 At the sieges of both Kohima and Imphal the Allies relied entirely on resupply from the air by British and American aircraft 98 flying from India until the road from the railhead at Dimapur was cleared At Kohima due to the narrow ridgelines accuracy in the dropping of air delivered logistics proved to be a considerable problem and as the fighting intensified and the defended area decreased the task became harder and more dangerous 99 In order to improve the accuracy of the drops the Dakota pilots were forced to fly dangerously low 100 The increasing dominance of Allied airpower by this stage of the Burma campaign was a major factor in helping the Allies turn the tide of the war in this theatre Allied air supply enabled British and Indian troops to hold out in positions that they might otherwise have had to abandon due to shortages of ammunition food and water as reinforcements and supplies could be brought in even when garrisons were surrounded and cut off 101 Conversely the Japanese found their own supply situation harder to resolve and in the end it was one of the deciding factors in the battle 79 Victoria Cross edit Three Victoria Crosses were awarded for actions during the Battle of Kohima Lance Corporal John Pennington Harman 102 103 4th Battalion Queen s Own Royal West Kent Regiment 161st Indian Infantry Brigade 5th Indian Infantry Division During heavy fighting around Detail Hill FSD during the siege he single handedly took out two Japanese machine gun posts the first on 7 8 April and a second on 8 9 April 104 He was killed withdrawing from the second attack and was later awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for these actions 105 Captain John Niel Randle 106 2nd Battalion Royal Norfolk Regiment 4th Infantry Brigade 2nd British Infantry Division 107 Jemadar Abdul Hafiz 9th Jat Regiment At 18 years old Abdul Hafiz became the youngest VC recipient from the British Indian Army He is buried in Imphal Indian War Cemetery 108 Memorial edit nbsp The memorial in KohimaThe War Cemetery in Kohima of 1 420 Allied war dead is maintained by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission 109 The cemetery lies on the slopes of Garrison Hill in what was once the Deputy Commissioner s tennis court 110 The epitaph carved on the memorial of the 2nd British Division in the cemetery has become world famous as the Kohima Epitaph It reads 111 112 When you go home tell them of us and say For your tomorrow we gave our today The verse is attributed to John Maxwell Edmonds 1875 1958 and is thought to have been inspired by the epitaph written by Simonides to honour the Spartans who fell at the Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC 112 113 See also editIndia in World War IINotes edit According to Julian Thompson To this day in 2010 there is disagreement on whether or not Mutaguchi intended to stop at Imphal He favoured pressing on into India and with help from uprisings by Indian nationalists in India throwing the British out A possible indicator of Mutaguchi s aspirations was the inclusion of the 1st Indian National Army INA Division an anti British force The INA was ineffective in battle so Mutaguchi s motive for saddling himself with seven thousand useless mouths could only have been to use them for propaganda on arrival in India 10 A Japanese Infantry Division had a separate Infantry Group or Infantry Brigade headquarters which as in this case could control any substantial detachment from the main body of the division A Japanese regiment was approximately 2 600 men while a division varied between 12 000 to 22 000 men 25 References edit a b c d e f g Allen 2000 p 228 a b c d Allen 2000 p 643 a b Rooney 1992 pp 103 104 a b Allen 2000 pp 313 314 Britain s Greatest Battles National Army Museum Archived from the original on 25 December 2013 Retrieved 15 December 2015 Dougherty 2008 p 159 Ritter 2017 p 123 a b Ethirajan Anbarasan 14 February 2021 Kohima Britain s forgotten battle that changed the course of WWII BBC News Allen 2000 pp 154 155 Thompson 2010 p 208 Allen 2000 p 154 Keane 2010 p 5 Burma Campaign Seizing Imphal and Kohima in World War II World History Group 6 December 2006 Retrieved 17 December 2017 Allen 2000 pp 166 167 Allen 2000 p 285 Allen 2000 p 232 Allen 2000 pp 284 285 a b Allen 2000 p 189 Burma Operations Record 15th Army Operations in Imphal Area and Withdrawal to Northern Burma PDF ibiblio Office of the Chief of Military History US Army p 72 Retrieved 19 February 2021 Allen 2000 p 213 Allen 2000 p 216 Allen 2000 pp 212 220 Allen 2000 p 220 Slim 1956 p 299 Allen 2000 p 654 a b c Allen 2000 p 229 Hantzis 2017 Chapter 13 Allen 2000 p 206 Swinson 2015 Chapter 2 Rooney 1992 p 144 Allen 2000 pp 229 230 Slim 1956 pp 300 301 Ministry of Defence 2004 pp 2 3 Slim 1956 p 300 Allen 2000 pp 232 234 Allen 2000 pp 229 amp 657 Fowler 2009 Chapter 8 Allen 2000 p 231 Rooney 1992 p 74 Fowler 2009 Chapter 9 Allen 2000 p 267 a b Slim 1956 p 306 Dennis amp Lyman 2010 p 51 Allen 2000 p 230 Allen 2000 p 234 Allen 2000 p 227 Allen 2000 p 235 Allen 2000 p 236 a b Murray amp Millet 2000 p 350 Allen 2000 p 237 Allen 2000 pp 237 238 Slim 1956 pp 316 317 Dennis amp Lyman 2010 p 58 Slim 1956 p 317 Wilson 2001 p 110 Allen 2000 pp 267 269 Slim 1956 p 314 a b Allen 2000 p 270 a b Allen 2000 p 289 Allen 2000 p 272 Luto 2013 p 3 a b c Allen 2000 p 286 Dennis amp Lyman 2010 pp 80 82 Wilson 2001 p 115 Slim 1956 p 315 Allen 2000 pp 273 274 a b Allen 2000 p 274 Slim 1956 p 316 Dennis amp Lyman 2010 p 82 Allen 2000 pp 272 273 McLynn 2011 p 316 a b Allen 2000 p 275 Allen 2000 pp 274 275 a b Dennis amp Lyman 2010 p 85 Keane 2010 p 238 Allen 2000 p 287 Allen 2000 pp 287 293 Rooney 1992 p 103 a b Allen 2000 p 288 Allen 2000 pp 292 amp 308 Dennis amp Lyman 2010 p 68 Allen 2000 p 290 Allen 2000 pp 290 292 Allen 2000 p 295 Rooney 1992 pp 104 105 Slim 1956 p 311 Allen 2000 pp 285 287 Allen 2000 pp 308 309 Allen 2000 p 314 Allen 2000 pp 513 514 Robinson Bruce Defence of Imphal and Kohima BBC Retrieved 10 October 2017 Keane 2010 pp 385 386 Major General John M L Grover s monument unveiled Nagaland Post 17 April 2014 Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 10 October 2017 Rooney 1992 p 200 Brett James 1951 Chapter XXV Indian Division Chief Killed The Syonan Shimbun 1 May 1945 p 1 Retrieved 17 December 2017 Rooney 1992 p 63 Allen 2000 p 244 Ministry of Defence 2004 p 9 Rooney 1992 p 64 Brayley 2002 p 10 Allen 2000 pp 235 236 No 36574 The London Gazette Supplement 20 June 1944 p 2961 Keane 2010 pp 265 269 Keane 2010 p 359 No 36833 The London Gazette Supplement 8 December 1944 p 5673 Ashcroft 2007 pp 319 320 Association Victoria Cross and George Cross Hafiz ABDUL VC vcgca org Retrieved 10 November 2023 Kohima War Cemetery Commonwealth War Graves Commission Archived from the original on 5 March 2010 Retrieved 17 December 2017 Ministry of Defence 2004 p 17 Burma 1944 1945 Worcestershire Regiment Retrieved 1 February 2012 Includes a photograph a b The Kohima 2nd Division Memorial burmastar org uk Archived from the original on 10 May 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2009 What is the Kohima Epitaph Imperial War Museum Archived from the original on 30 December 2014 Retrieved 4 April 2013 Bibliography editAllen Louis 2000 1984 Burma The Longest War 1941 45 London Phoenix Press ISBN 978 1 84212 260 0 Ashcroft Michael 2007 Victoria Cross Heroes London Headline Review ISBN 978 0 75531 633 5 Brayley Martin 2002 The British Army 1939 45 3 The Far East London Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 238 8 Brett James Antony 1951 Ball of Fire The Fifth Indian Division in the Second World War Aldershot Gale amp Polden ISBN 978 1 78331 096 8 OCLC 4275700 Archived from the original on 29 January 2020 Dennis Peter Lyman Robert 2010 Kohima 1944 The Battle That Saved India Osprey ISBN 978 1 84603 939 3 Dougherty Martin J 2008 Land Warfare Thunder Bay Press ISBN 978 1 59223 829 3 Fowler William 2009 We Gave Our Today Burma 1941 1945 Hachette ISBN 978 0 29785 761 7 Hantzis Steven James 2017 Rails of War Supplying the Americans and Their Allies in China Burma India Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 1 61234 937 4 Keane Fergal 2010 Road of Bones The Siege of Kohima 1944 London HarperPress ISBN 978 0 00713 240 9 Luto James 2013 Fighting with the Fourteenth Army in Burma Pen and Sword Military ISBN 978 1 78303 031 6 Ministry of Defence 2004 60th Second World War Anniversary The Battle of Kohima North East India 4 April 22 June 1944 PDF Ministry of Defence Retrieved 16 February 2021 McLynn Frank 2011 The Burma Campaign Disaster Into Triumph 1942 45 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 30017 162 4 Murray Williamson Millet Alan 2000 A War To Be Won Cambridge Mass Harvard ISBN 978 0 67400 163 3 Ritter Jonathan Templin 2017 Stillwell and Mountbatten in Burma Allies at War 1943 1944 University of North Texas Press ISBN 978 1 57441 674 9 Rooney David 1992 Burma Victory Imphal and Kohima March 1944 to May 1945 London Cassell ISBN 978 0 30435 457 3 Slim William 1956 Defeat into Victory London Cassell ISBN 978 0 33050 997 8 OCLC 891162827 Swinson Arthur 2015 1966 Kohima Head of Zeus ISBN 978 1 78408 177 5 Thompson Julian 2010 Forgotten Voices of Burma The Second World War s Forgotten Conflict Forgotten Voices illustrated reprint ed Random House ISBN 978 0 09193 237 4 Wilson David 2001 The Sum of Things Staplehurst Spellmount ISBN 978 1 86227 134 0 Further reading editCallahan Raymond Triumph at Imphal Kohima How the Indian Army Finally Stopped the Japanese Juggernaut University Press of Kansas 2017 online reviewColvin John 2012 Not Ordinary Men The Story of the Battle of Kohima Leo Cooper ISBN 978 1 84884 871 9 OCLC 793214121 Edwards Leslie 2009 Kohima The Furthest Battle The History Press ISBN 978 1 86227 488 4 Graham Gordon 2005 The Trees Are All Young on Garrison Hill Marlow Buckinghamshire The Kohima Educational Trust ISBN 978 0 95526 870 0 Karnad Raghu 2015 Farthest Field An Indian Story of the Second World War New York N Y W W Norton amp Company Ltd ISBN 978 0 393 24809 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Kohima The Kohima Museum Ball of Fire 5th Indian Division in World War II by Anthony Brett James Tom Hope a Wearside man recalls horrors of the brutal Battle of Kohima Revisiting India s forgotten battle of WWII Kohima Imphal the Stalingrad of the East Ranjan Pal CNN Published 3 October 2020 Kohima Britain s forgotten battle that changed the course of WWII Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Kohima amp oldid 1204392412, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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