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Map:
Kohima and Imphal
On March 6th 1944, the Japanese launched the U-Go offensive
in northern Burma. U-Go had twin aims: to pre-empt the Allies own plans to
retake Burma and to break into India itself.
The failure of successive British offensives in the Arakan, the steamy
coastal region from which it was hoped it would be possible to gain access
to central Burma, had reinforced the Japanese high command's low opinion
of their opponent's abilities as jungle fighters. They were confident of
victory, but were soon to be taught a terrible lesson.
The gateway to India lay through the isolated border town of Imphal in
the then district of Manipur. A 130-miles (210km) road wound north from
Imphal to the hill town of Kohima before running on to the railhead at
Dimapur. It was Kohima's only contact with the outside world and would
link the two remote settlements in the high hills of Assam in some of the
most savage fighting of the war.
Two divisions of the Japanese 15th Army, commanded by the
hot-tempered General Renya Mutaguchi, crossed the Chindwin River and moved
on Imphal. The third headed for Kohima. Both the Japanese and the British
were operating under severe disadvantages. Time was not on Mutaguchi's
side. Once battle was joined, his troops could rely on no more than a
month's supplies. In May, the monsoon would arrive, making offensive
operations all but impossible. In contrast, the commander of the British
14th Army, General William Slim, had been preparing to go over
to the offensive and was not best placed to receive an attack in a sector
where there were such poor communications and few facilities for the
basing of large numbers of troops now committed to the front.
Nevertheless, Slim had one invaluable advantage. under his superb
leadership, Fourteenth Army had been transformed from the shattered force
which had been driven out of Burma in the spring of 1942 into a highly
motivated army. but it had yet to fight a full-scale battle against
experienced Japanese troops who had been ordered by the super-aggressive
Mutaguchi to fight to the death.
The British were prepared for the Japanese thrust. Ample evidence of
the build-up was provided by aerial reconnaissance. Nevertheless, Slim was
surprised by its initial speed. By April 5 the Japanese had cut the
Imphal-Kohima road and isolated the settlements. Slim ordered his
subordinate commanders not to withdraw without permission from higher
authority. It was imperative to deny the Japanese the mountain roads which
led down into the Indian plain. Imphal and Kohima, the latter situated on
a saddle ridge which in happier days was bright with forests of tropical
flowers, would have to be held at all costs.
At Kohima, last-minute reinforcements were rushed in from Dimapur by
the commander of the British XXXIII Corps, Lieutenant-general Montagu
Stopford. two battalions, supported by artillery, were positioned 2 miles
(3km) west of Kohima itself on the highest hill in the ridge, later to
become known as Garrison Hill.
Fighting began on the 30th as General Sato's 31st
division pushed back the scattered units of the Assam Rifles and other
regiments which were defending the approaches to Kohima. The commander at
Kohima, Colonel Hugh Richards, had a force of approximately 1200 men to
resist the all-out attack of 12,000 Japanese jungle veterans. He had to
rely on the arrival of a breakthrough force from Dimapur, the British
2nd Division, without which his defences would be overwhelmed.
The Japanese arrived on April 5. In the teeth of desperate resistance
they took the strongpoints on the hills and hummocks around Kohima. The
pattern of the battle was now set. Men crouched in slit trenches sometimes
only yards away from the enemy. One officer of the West Kents calculated
that from the plop of a grenade being fired to its arrival was no more
than 14 seconds. The intensity of Japanese artillery, mortar and sniper
fire in suck a small space meant that movement between units was virtually
impossible by day and extremely hazardous at night. Few of the men locked
in this fight for survival had a clear idea of what was happening beyond
the lip of their own trench.
Day and night the British and Indian troops were subjected to Japanese
broadcast appeals to them to surrender. Sato's aim was to exhaust the
defenders of Kohima. Japanese artillery was most active at dawn and
sunset, shredding nerves as well as destroying targets. When darkness
fell, the Allied troops stood to in the dark before the moon rose,
straining to catch the rustle of Japanese infiltrators moving behind them.
As one of Kohmia's defenders observed, this stoked the fear that when he
awoke the occupants of the next gunpit might be the enemy.
On April 11 Stopford sent 5th British Infantry Brigade up
the Dimapur-Kohima road. Two days later it had smashed its way through to
the Jotsoma 'box' held by 161st Brigade. by now, the situation
at Kohima was desperate. A message was sent to the 5th Brigade
that unless help arrived within 48 hours Kohima would fall: 'The men's
spirits are all right but there aren't many of us left....'
On the 17th the Japanese launched their fiercest attack on
the slopes of Garrison Hill. Phosphorous bombardments were followed by
howling infantry assaults with grenades and machine-guns. To the din was
added the fire of the defenders' howitzers. By the night of the
18th the men holding Garrison Hill were on their last legs. One
young private asked Colonel Richards, 'When we die, sir, is that the end
or do we go on?'
The Japanese swarmed everywhere but were unable to mount a co-ordinated
battalion-strength attack which would have spelled the end at Kohima. The
ground around Garrison Hill - just 350 yards (320m) square - was now all
that was left of the perimeter which had held on April 5. But the men of
the West Kents hung on until dawn of the 20th when troops of
the Royal Berkshires, the advance guards of 2nd Division, broke
in to relieve them. The stench of rotting corpses was so thick on Garrison
Hill that many of the Berkshires were physically sick as they dug in on
the battle-scarred hill, whose blasted trees were festooned with blackened
shreds of the parachutes used in the air supply of the Kohima garrison.
The evacuation of the West Kents did not mean the end of the battle.
The Japanese still occupied most of the Kohima massif and would have to be
driven off amid the downpours of the monsoon, which brought with it mud,
malaria and dysentry.
The most savage fighting of the battle erupted in mid-May. The sliver
of ground at stake was the British Deputy Commissioner's bungalow and its
adjacent tennis court. This had been seized on April 9 by the Japanese,
who had built a warren of bunkers and weapons pits on the surrounding
terraced hillside. The task of winkling out the Japanese was given to the
men of the 2nd Battalion Dorsetshire regiment. It was a dirty
business made more difficult by the terrain which denied the Dorsets any
armoured support. A solution was found by the Royal Engineers who cut a
path to a spur behind the bungalow. They then winched a Grant tank up and
pushed it down the slope. It came to rest on the baseline of the tennis
court, where its commander, Sergeant Waterhouse of the 149 Royal Tank
Regiment poured a hail of fire into the Japanese bunkers at no more than
20 yards (18m) range.
The Japanese fled on to the waiting rifles of the Dorsets. Only the
chimney stack of the bungalow remained. The rest of the landscape around
was a shell-churned rubbish dump alive with rats. When he saw it, General
Stopford compared it with the Somme in 1916: 'One could tell how desperate
the fighting had been.'
By now the Japanese had run out of time, supplies and ammunition. On
May 31, Sato ordered his men to withdraw to Imphal. Exhausted and riddled
with disease, they were harried all the way by the Allies. Imphal was
relieved on June 22, after over 80 days of siege, and now it was the turn
of Mutaguchi to throw in the towel. Early in July, his 15th
Army pulled out, the survivors struggling down liquefied roads to cross
the Chindwin on to the burma plains. Only 20,000 of the 85,000 Japanese
who had come to invade India were left standing.
Slim now had a springboard for the reconquest of Burma. The cost to the
Allies had been 17,857 British and Indian troops killed, wounded and
missing. the dead at Kohima have their own simple and moving monument
which bears the epitah: 'When you go home, tell them of us, and say: "For
your tomorrow, we gave our today".' |