65 Years Ago
Posted: 23 Jun 2009, 00:21
On June 22nd. 1944 British and Indian forces from Imphal and Kohima met at Milestone 110 to break the siege of Imphal and bring an end to the battle of Kohima. Fighting went on until July round Imphal, but from that point on the Japanese forces in Burma and India were on the retreat.
IV Corps of the Fourteenth army had inflicted the heaviest land defeat on the Japanese Army, with some 17,5000 Allied casualties at Imphal and a further 4,000 at Kohima. The Japanese lost 61,000 between the two battles.
As ever it seems the Fourteenth Army continue to be forgotten.
My father had been hospitalised just before the fighting broke out at Imphal, but refused to be evacuated to a place of safety, as he wanted to get back to his Mountain Artillery Regiment in Imphal, and just made it back before the siege began. The place of safety? Kohima.
One of the reasons for the successful outcome was the huge supply effort carried out by British and American C-46s and C-47s, some of them diverted from the Hump flights to supply the Chinese, keeping the besieged forces supplied and evacuating 13,000 casualties.
At Kohima the 2nd Division Memorial bears the inscription:
"When You Go Home, Tell Them Of Us And Say,
For Their Tomorrow, We Gave Our Today"
IV Corps of the Fourteenth army had inflicted the heaviest land defeat on the Japanese Army, with some 17,5000 Allied casualties at Imphal and a further 4,000 at Kohima. The Japanese lost 61,000 between the two battles.
As ever it seems the Fourteenth Army continue to be forgotten.
My father had been hospitalised just before the fighting broke out at Imphal, but refused to be evacuated to a place of safety, as he wanted to get back to his Mountain Artillery Regiment in Imphal, and just made it back before the siege began. The place of safety? Kohima.
One of the reasons for the successful outcome was the huge supply effort carried out by British and American C-46s and C-47s, some of them diverted from the Hump flights to supply the Chinese, keeping the besieged forces supplied and evacuating 13,000 casualties.
At Kohima the 2nd Division Memorial bears the inscription:
"When You Go Home, Tell Them Of Us And Say,
For Their Tomorrow, We Gave Our Today"