Forgotten Armies: The Fall of British Asia, 1941-1945Allen Lane, 2004 - 554 من الصفحات The vast crescent of British-ruled territories from India down to Singapore appeared in the early stages of the Second World War a massive asset in the war with Germany, providing huge quantities of soldiers and raw materials and key part of an impregnable global network denied to the Nazis. Within a few weeks in 1941-2 a Japanese invasion had destroyed all this, almost effortlessly taking the impregnable fortress' of Singapore with its 80,000 strong garrison, and sweeping through South and Southeast Asia to the frontier of India itself. This revolutionary, absolutely gripping book brings to life the entire experience of South and Southeast Asia in this extraordinary period, telling the story from an Indian, Burmese, Chinese or Malay perspective as much as from that of the British or Japanese. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 81
الصفحة 351
... Americans , and even within the British and American camps themselves , as they did to advance the cause of the war . 123 Right from the beginning the more conventional officers of the British and Indian armies viewed Wingate's Chindit ...
... Americans , and even within the British and American camps themselves , as they did to advance the cause of the war . 123 Right from the beginning the more conventional officers of the British and Indian armies viewed Wingate's Chindit ...
الصفحة 353
... American military commanders at Fort Herz and the local British administrators . The Americans were recruiting and training their own special forces from among the Kachins and seemed to have imposed their own martial law on the hills ...
... American military commanders at Fort Herz and the local British administrators . The Americans were recruiting and training their own special forces from among the Kachins and seemed to have imposed their own martial law on the hills ...
الصفحة 364
... Americans ' confrontational manner either . K. K. Tewari remembered being flown into Akyab by a gum - chewing American sergeant : ' He was surprisingly courteous for an American , ' wrote Tewari . " 1 One friendly American officer had ...
... Americans ' confrontational manner either . K. K. Tewari remembered being flown into Akyab by a gum - chewing American sergeant : ' He was surprisingly courteous for an American , ' wrote Tewari . " 1 One friendly American officer had ...
المحتوى
Escaping Colonialism I | 1 |
Journeys through Empire | 30 |
An End and a Beginning | 456 |
حقوق النشر | |
3 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
administration Allied American Arakan Asian Assam Aung San Australian Ba Maw became began Bengal bombing Britain Buddhist Burma Burmese Calcutta camp campaign Changi Chiang Chin Peng China Chinese Churchill civil civilian colonial command December defence Delhi diary Dorman-Smith European evacuation February fighting forces front guerrilla hills Ibid Imperial Imphal independence Indian army Indian National Army Indian troops intelligence interview Japan Japanese occupation Johore jungle Kachin Kah Kee Kempeitai Khin Myo Chit Kuala Lumpur labour land large numbers later leader London Lushai Malay Malaya Malayan Communist Party Mandalay memoirs military minister Mountbatten Muslim Naga nationalist officers OIOC Penang peninsula Perak police political population propaganda railway Rangoon recruits refugees reported rice Road Shenton Thomas Singh soldiers Southeast Asia Stilwell Subhas Bose Sultan supplies Syonan Tan Kah Kee Teck Thailand Thakins town villages Wavell women wrote young