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15th
October, 2003- The Battle of Kohima
This battle was the turning point of the Burma Campaign, and thus
of the Pacific War. There was lively discussion at this meeting
involving older veterans and younger members, after the fascinating
presentations of a range of speakers, including Japanese veteran
Chairman of the Society, Masao Hirakubo, and others from the Norfolk
Regiment, the Cameron Highlanders, the West Kents and the Welch
Fusiliers who were all at Kohima.
The Battle of Kohima lasted for two months from 4 April 1944 and,
with the Battle of Imphal to the south fought simultaneously, was
the decisive battle of the war in Burma in the Second World War
in which the Japanese forces after more than two years of major
successes were largely destroyed. It was the end of the attempt
by the Japanese to invade India.
The village of Kohima at 5000 feet surrounded by tea plantations
and peaks up to 9000 feet is 46 miles by winding road from Dimapur
in the Brahmaputra valley. Dimapur was then the railhead in India
and the main base for British and allied troops in Burma. Imphal,
capital of the Indian border state of Manipur, is 86 miles south
by road. The Dimapur-Imphal road was the vital supply route with
the Kohima Ridge dominating the road. The Ridge, including DIS Hill,
FSD Hill, Kuku Picquet and Garrison Hill became the most critical
part of the fighting.
In 1942 the defending forces comprising 1st Burma Division and 17
Indian Division with thousands of civilians had retreated north
to India pursued by the Japanese. The monsoon began at the beginning
of May 1942 stopping the Japanese following up. The two armies settled
down out of touch for some months on the borders of Burma and India.
In the winter of 1942/43 the Japanese defeated British counter-attacks,
and in June 1943 planned a major attack into Manipur.
On 7 January 1944 Lieutenant General Renya Mutaguchi with his 15th
Army was ordered ÅeTo destroy the enemy at Imphal and establish strong
defensive positions covering Kohima and Imphal before the coming
of the rainy season.Åf MutaguchisÅfs plan was that 33 Division should
attach Imphal from the south, 15 Division would attack Imphal from
the north, and that 31 Division should seize Kohima and cut the
road from Dimpaur to Imphal.
Kohima had a small garrison of troops of the Assam Regiment who
were urgently reinforced by 500 men of the Royal West Kent Regiment
who had been flown in from the Arakan on the coast. These men held
out for 15 days against some 15,000 troops of 31 Division until
relieved by troops of 2 British Division.
Lieutenant Masao Hirakubo OBE, 3 Battalion, 58 Regiment, 31 Division,
described how he was responsible for feeding 1000 troops of this
battalion. His superior officer explained that no rations would
be supplied from the rear, and that troops would be fed from locally
purchased and captured supplies. MH gave each man 20 days supply
of rice to be carried on the man. The Division drove with them 15,000
Burmese cattle but only 10% arrived at Kohima which was reached
on the planned date of 4 April using steep jungle tracks, crossing
the Chindwin River, marching at night with no sleep for three days
and nights. Masao Hirakubo himself fell 100 metres into a stream
but survived. They were delayed by a battle at Sangshak east of
Kohima for nearly a week. They captured 20 British warehouses in
Kohima with supplies sufficient for three years for his entire Division.
MH removed two months supply of rations for his troops before bombing
by the Royal Air Force destroyed the warehouses and contents. Troops
in the front line were supplied with rice balls and salt with a
bottle of boiled water in bamboo baskets. This had to be done at
night because of the overwhelming advantage in arms, ammunition
and equipment of 2 British Division. It was a very primitive battle.
The Japanese had no air cover or air supply and attacked each night.
Officers were equipped with swords, pistols and grenades. The Japanese
expected all British and Allied Troops to fight to the last man
and did not expect to take prisoners for whom they had no facilities.
He had an orderly and small tent and slept on the ground. After
two months of bitter fighting they were defeated and were ordered
by the Divisional Commander to make a sudden retreat in the monsoon.
Nearly all of them were sick with beriberi, dysentery and malaria.
Corporal Roy Wellings, 4 Battalion, The QueenÅfs Own Royal West Kent
Regiment, 5 Indian Division, described on tape how his Company held
DID Hill for five days from 5 April in slit trenches fighting off
attacks night and day with rifles, bren guns and grenades , withdrawing
to FSD Hill and the Kuki Picquet where they received air drops of
water, food, ammunition and medical supplies. Kuki Picquet fell
on 17 April but the arrival of 2 British Division artillery prevented
the enemy following up. They were relieved by 2 Battalion Royal
Berkshire Regiment, 2 Division. He was one of only 10 survivors
out of 120 in his Company.
Corporal Gwilymn Davies MBE, 1 Battalion Royal Welch Fusiliers,
2 Division, described on tape first making contact with Japanese
forces on Garrison Hill, capturing the summit covered with British
and Japanese dead on 19 Aril and the capture of Kuki Picquet on
2 May after which Japanese resistance seemed to weaken. He believed
that the capture of the Garrison Hill with its wonderful arc of
fire over the Dimapur-Imphal road was the turning point in the Battle
of Kohima. He said:Åf The Japanese soldier always fought bravely.
I have always admired him for thatÅf.
Masao Hirakubo, Roy Wellings and Gwilym Davies all spoke of the
decisive effect of the overwhelming power of 2 Division artillery
to which the Japanese had no effective answer.
Captain Maurice Franses, Royal Norfolk Regiment was recorded in
action south of Kohima by a BBC radio commentator, witnessing a
Japanese taking his own life with a grenade rather than allowing
himself to be taken prisoner.
Major Gordon Graham MC and Bar, 1st Queens Own Cameron Highlanders,
2 Division, who took part in the Battle and initiator of the Burma
Campaign Memorial Library housed in the School of Oriental and African
Studies, London University, with an identical library in Japan,
referred to books on the Battle of Kohima to which reference could
be made and suggested the formation of a Kohima Educational Trust
to educate the Naga tribesmen in gratitude for their help to the
British at Kohima.
After the Battle the Japanese retreated across the Chindwin River
heavily bombed by the Royal Air Force. Having inflicted at Singapore
the greatest defeat in British military history, the Japanese in
the battles of Kohima and Imphal suffered the greatest defeat in
Japanese military history with the virtual destruction of five divisions
as fighting formations.
Towards the end of the Battle Major General Sato commanding 31 Division
complained bitterly to Mutaguchi, his Army Commander, that his troops
were without food and ammunition, refused MutaguchiÅfs order to fight
on, and ordered retreat. It is believed that this was the only known
occasion in the Japanese Army of a senior officer refusing to obey
the order of his superior. Sato was later invalided out of the Army.
Major General John Grover commanding 2 British Division was replaced
after the Battle of Kohima on the grounds that he had been too slow
in getting his Division up the road from Dimapur to relieve Kohima.
Some 50,000 Japanese troops were lost in the Kohima and Imphal battles.
185, 149 Japanese died out of 303,501 sent to Burma. Some 37,000
British and Commonwealth troops are buried or commemorated in Burma.
The Japanese lost three fifths of their men, compared with roughly
one in thirteen of the approximate one million British and Commonwealth
ground troops in Burma.
Kohima has become a place of Pilgrimage for British and Japanese
veterans, including joint visits. They, and particularly Masao Hirakubo,
have helped in the rebuilding of Kohima Roman Catholic Cathedral
which stands majestically above the village. The epitaph on the
Cross of Sacrifice in Kohima Commonwealth War Cemetery reads:
ÅeFor your tomorrow we gave our today.Åf
It is used at all services and ceremonies of the Burma Star Association
and other occasions.
Philip Malins
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