Share to: share facebook share twitter share wa share telegram print page

Battle of Ramree Island

Battle of Ramree Island
Part of The Burma campaign

British troops in landing craft make their way ashore on Ramree Island, 21 January 1945.
Date14 January – 22 February 1945
Location19°06′00″N 93°48′00″E / 19.10000°N 93.80000°E / 19.10000; 93.80000
Result British victory
Belligerents

 United Kingdom

 Japan
Commanders and leaders
Cyril Lomax Kan'ichi Nagazawa
Units involved
Two brigades, 26th Indian Infantry Division; one squadron, 146 Regt, RAC, elements of 3 Commando Brigade 2nd Battalion, 121st Regiment, 54th Division
Strength
c. 6,000 c. 1,000
Casualties and losses
"trifling"[1] c. 500 killed
20 captured
c. 500 evacuated to the mainland
Ramree Island is located in Myanmar
Ramree Island
Ramree Island
Burma (Myanmar)

The Battle of Ramree Island (Burmese: ရမ်းဗြဲကျွန်း တိုက်ပွဲ), also known as Operation Matador, took place from 14 January to 22 February 1945, in the Second World War as part of the offensive on the Southern Front in the Burma campaign and was conducted by the XV Indian Corps.

Ramree Island, part of Arakan (now Rakhine State), has an area of 520 sq mi (1,350 km2) and is separated from the mainland by a strait with an average width of about 490 ft (150 m); the island is 70 mi (110 km) south of Akyab (now Sittwe). During the Japanese invasion of Burma in early 1942, the Island had been captured. In January 1945, forces of the Indian XV Corps landed on Ramree and the neighbouring island of Cheduba, to establish airfields for the supply of the mainland campaign.

The battle is known for claims that hundreds of Japanese soldiers were killed by crocodiles in the mangrove swamps of Ramree. Some editions of the Guinness Book of World Records have attributed the highest number of fatalities in an animal attack; zoologists and modern military historians have dismissed these claims.[2]

Background

The early capture of Akyab made the 26th Indian Infantry Division (Major-General Henry Chambers) available for an attack on Ramree Island, 70 mi (110 km) to the south, the island being 50 mi (80 km) long and 20 mi (32 km) wide, flat and an obvious site for airfields.[3] A plan was ready by 2 January, when it was clear that the advance of the Fourteenth Army (Lieutenant-General William Slim) into Central Burma would soon pass beyond the range of its airbases at Imphal and Agartala; replacements at Chittagong, Akyab and Ramree would be needed.[4]

On 14 January, the 26th Indian Division was ordered to attack Ramree on 21 January, as a Royal Marine detachment from 3 Commando Brigade occupied the neighbouring Cheduba Island.[5] The Japanese garrison of Ramree consisted of the II Battalion, 121st Infantry Regiment (Colonel Kan'ichi Nagazawa), part of the 54th Division, with artillery and engineer detachments to act as an independent force.[6]

Prelude

The battle started with Operation Matador, an amphibious assault to capture the strategic port of Kyaukpyu at the north end of Ramree Island and the airfield near the port, south of Akyab across Hunter's Bay. The invasion force was led by three Joint Assault Commanders, Captain Bush RN, Major-General Cyril Lomax and Wing Commander H. Smith. Reconnaissance carried out on 14 January 1945, found that Japanese forces were placing artillery in caves overlooking the landing beaches on Ramree and the Royal Navy assigned the battleship HMS Queen Elizabeth, the escort carrier HMS Ameer, the light cruiser HMS Phoebe, the destroyers HMS Rapid, Napier, HMAS Norman and Pathfinder, with the sloops Flamingo and HMIS Kistna.[7]

The large number of ships was intended to provide more firepower in support of the landing force. On 21 January, an hour before the 71st Indian Infantry Brigade (Brigadier R. C. Cotterell-Hill) was to land, Queen Elizabeth opened fire with 69 rounds of 15 in (380 mm)-shell from the main battery, the fall of shot being watched by aircraft from Ameer. Phoebe also joined the bombardment, along with Consolidated B-24 Liberators, North American B-25 Mitchells and Republic P-47 Thunderbolts of 224 Group Royal Air Force (RAF), under the command of HQ RAF Bengal and Burma, that strafed and bombed the beaches.[7]

Battle

The assault troops were slightly delayed when a motor launch and a landing craft struck mines but landed unopposed on the beaches west of Kyaukpyu at 9:42 a.m., securing the beachhead by the afternoon. The following day, the 4th Indian Infantry Brigade (Brigadier J. F. R. Forman) landed, took over the beachhead and occupied Kyaukpyu. On 23 January, the 71st Infantry Brigade advanced southwards, down the west coast. Two days later Mayin was occupied and the troops reached the Yanbauk Chaung the next day. Resistance at the chaung from the troops of the II Battalion, 121st Regiment increased and on 31 January, the 71st Brigade was ordered to move inland, north-east towards Sane, then head south towards Ramree town. The 4th Brigade was to keep the defenders at Yanbauk Chaung under pressure and follow up vigorously should they retire.[7]

Men of the Wiltshire Regiment from the 26th Indian Infantry Division prepare a meal beside a temple on Ramree Island.

On 26 January in Operation Sankey, a Royal Marine force landed on Cheduba island, about 6.2 mi (10 km) offshore of the south-west coast of Ramree Island and found it unoccupied. On Ramree, the Japanese garrison resisted with great determination but on 1 February, the 71st Indian Infantry Brigade reached Sane and parts of the 36th Indian Infantry Brigade, from reserve, took Sagu Kuyun Island and relieved the marines on Cheduba Island.[7] When the British outflanked a Japanese stronghold, the 900 defenders abandoned the base and marched to join a larger force of Japanese soldiers across the island. The route took the Japanese through 9.9 mi (16 km) of mangrove swamp and as they struggled through it, the British encircled the area. Trapped in deep mud-filled land, tropical diseases soon started to afflict the soldiers, as did scorpions, tropical mosquitoes and saltwater crocodiles.[8]

On 7 February, the 71st Indian Infantry Brigade and supporting tanks reached the town of Ramree and encountered determined Japanese resistance. The 4th Indian Infantry Brigade had advanced to Ledaung Chaung and then moved east to reinforce the attack; the town fell on 9 February. The navy and the 26th Indian Infantry Division then concentrated on blockading the chaungs (small streams) on the east coast, to prevent the Japanese from escaping to the mainland. A Japanese air raid on 11 February seriously damaged a destroyer with a near miss and forty small craft were sent by the Japanese from the mainland to rescue the survivors of the garrison. Japanese resistance on the island ended on 17 February and the Allied blockade was maintained until 22 February, sinking many of the rescue craft and inflicting many casualties on the Japanese troops hiding in the mangrove swamps; about 500 troops managed to get away. Cheduba Island was not garrisoned and the 22nd East African Brigade was sent to hold Ramree Island.[9]

Aftermath

Analysis

In 1965, the British official historian, Stanley Woodburn Kirby, wrote that the Japanese defence of the island and the escape of about 500 men against "fearful odds", had been courageous and determined.[8] It took until 16 April for the airfield to be used for transport sorties, Akyab having come into use on 1 April. It had been vital to complete the occupation of Ramree Island quickly, as Operation Dracula against Rangoon needed to commence in the first week of May at the latest, to have a chance of finishing before the monsoon.[3] The experience in co-operation between the 26th Indian Division and the navy in the war of chaungs and small ports along the Arakan coast was intended to be exploited in the attack. An estimate put naval gunfire support from 4 January to 13 March for the land operations at Akyab, Ramree and Cheduba at 23,000 shells. The navy also carried 54,000 men, 1,000 vehicles, 14,000 long tons (14,000 t) of stores and 800 animals.[10]

Casualties

In the 1965 edition of the British official history, Stanley Woodburn-Kirby wrote that the Japanese force suffered about 500 men killed and twenty men taken prisoner; British losses were "trifling".[11]

Alleged crocodile attacks

On 24 February 1945, Reuters war correspondents reported that Japanese soldiers trying to escape Ramree island were "being forced by hunger out of the mangrove swamps and many have been killed by crocodiles".[12] In his 1962 collection Wildlife Sketches Near and Far, the Canadian naturalist and veteran of the Burma campaign, Bruce Wright, described the events of the battle, focusing on predation of the Japanese soldiers by the saltwater crocodiles.

That night [19 February 1945] was the most horrible that any member of the M. L. [motor launch] crews ever experienced. The scattered rifle shots in the pitch black swamp punctured by the screams of wounded men crushed in the jaws of huge reptiles, and the blurred worrying sound of spinning crocodiles made a cacophony of hell that has rarely been duplicated on earth. At dawn the vultures arrived to clean up what the crocodiles had left (...) Of about one thousand Japanese soldiers that entered the swamps of Ramree, only about twenty were found alive.[13]

Other writers, including Roger Caras, in his 1964 Dangerous to Man, repeated Wright's version, with Caras stating "had the story come from a source other than Bruce Wright, I would be tempted to discount it".[14] The story was incorporated into the Guinness Book of World Records as the worst animal attack ever recorded, due to Wright's statement that "[o]f about one thousand Japanese soldiers that entered the swamps of Ramree, only about twenty were found alive".[2]

The presence of crocodiles in the Ramree swamps led other servicemen stationed on the island to believe they were significant in the battle, with one British soldier writing in his diary that "[w]hen the Army landed they drove the Japanese into the swamps and the crocodiles killed hundreds of them. They used to call the crocodiles the allies".[15] In his memoir, An Odyssey in War and Peace, Lieutenant-General Jack Jacob (Indian Army) recounted his experiences during the battle,

Over a 1,000 soldiers of the Japanese garrison retreated into the crocodile-infested mangrove swamps. We went in with boats and interpreters using loudhailers asking them to come out. Not a single one did. Salt-water crocodiles, some of them well over 20 ft (6.1 m) long frequented these waters. It is not difficult to imagine what happened to the Japanese who took refuge in the mangroves![16]

In 2006, Robert Duff, formerly of the 26th Division, recorded an oral history for the BBC, "after a few weeks we managed to push [the Japanese] to the swamp on the other side of the island, which was full of crocodiles. They decided to take their chances in the swamp rather than surrender. Only a handful came out alive".[17]

In his 2011 analysis of the Burma campaign, the historian Frank McLynn challenged this interpretation, saying,

Most of all, there is a single zoological problem. If 'thousands of crocodiles' were involved in the massacre, as in the urban (jungle) myth, how had these ravening monsters survived before and how were they to survive later? The ecosystem of a mangrove swamp, with an exiguous mammal life, simply would not have permitted the existence of so many saurians before the coming of the Japanese (animals are not exempt from the laws of overpopulation and starvation).[18]

In 1974, a journalist, George Frazier, reported having asked the Japanese War Office about the crocodile attack and being told that they could not confirm that it had happened.[19] In 2016, Sam Willis, a historian, reported that he had found documents indicating that the Japanese soldiers mostly drowned and/or were shot and that crocodiles scavenged on their corpses afterwards.[20]

In 2000, a herpetologist, Steven Platt, visited Ramree Island, where he interviewed residents who had been alive during the war and who had been forced into slave labour by the Japanese; they "unanimously discounted any suggestion that large numbers of Japanese fell prey to crocodiles". "[t]he only crocodile-related deaths occurred when 10 to 15 soldiers were killed trying to ford Min Chaung, a tidal creek" and he concluded that although the deaths of nearly 1,000 Japanese soldiers during the Battle of Ramree Island are "well documented and undisputed", there is "little need to invoke crocodile predation".[21]

Platt published a historiographical analysis of the allegations of the crocodile attack.[21] He established that Bruce Wright had not been on Ramree Island during the battle and noted that although the other chapters in Wright's book were told in the first person, the account of the battle was in the third person; possibly, Platt speculated, Wright was repeating stories he had been told by friends. Platt also noted that Wright did not "attribute the majority of Japanese casualties to crocodile predation" but wrote that only 20 out of 1,000 Japanese soldiers survived the battle, with crocodiles being "just one of many hazards".[21]

Platt's findings are similar to sections of Wright's 1968 book, The Frogmen of Burma, which chronicled his experiences commanding the Sea Reconnaissance Unit (SRU). In the memoir, Wright described how he arrived on Ramree after the main battle had been concluded. Interviewing other members of the SRU, Wright reported that two of the men abandoned their paddleboards during the battle and climbed up a mangrove tree to avoid a crocodile. There, they "heard shouting and rifle fire during the night" far from the Allied position; "vultures often appeared over areas [British] forces had never reached…." Wright concluded the Japanese did not die from crocodiles alone but also from "thirst" and "wounds".[22]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Woodburn Kirby 2004, p. 250.
  2. ^ a b Russell 1987, p. 216; Kynaston 1998, p. 135.
  3. ^ a b Saunders 1975, p. 350.
  4. ^ McLynn 2011, p. 433.
  5. ^ Woodburn Kirby 2004, pp. 214–215.
  6. ^ Woodburn Kirby 2004, p. 215.
  7. ^ a b c d Woodburn Kirby 2004, p. 219.
  8. ^ a b Woodburn Kirby 2004, p. 220.
  9. ^ Woodburn Kirby 2004, pp. 219–220.
  10. ^ Allen 1984, p. 468.
  11. ^ Woodburn Kirby 2004, pp. 220, 350.
  12. ^ "The Guardian 24 Feb 1945, page 6". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 6 December 2022.
  13. ^ Wright 1962, p. 275.
  14. ^ Dangerous to Man; Wild Animals: A Definitive Study of Their Reputed Dangers to Man, by Roger Caras; published 1964 by Chilton Books; quoted at The-Avocado.org
  15. ^ Veterans' Voices: Coventry's Unsung Heroes of the Second World War, by Caroline Freeman-Cuerden; published 21 July 2005 by History Press
  16. ^ Jacob 2011, p. 24.
  17. ^ "BBC – WW2 People's War – Part 4: 1944 – August 1945". 7 June 2019. Archived from the original on 7 June 2019. Retrieved 5 December 2022.
  18. ^ McLynn 2011, p. 14.
  19. ^ A Man's Worst Friend, by George Frazier, in The Boston Globe; published 11 March 1974; retrieved 17 April 2022, via newspapers.com
  20. ^ Crocodile massacre of troops debunked as wartime myth, by Anna Pointer, in The Times; published 10 December 2016; via ProQuest
  21. ^ a b c Platt et al. 2001, pp. 15–18.
  22. ^ Wright 1968, p. 138.

References

Books


Journals

Further reading

  • Roskill, Stephen (2004) [1961]. Butler, James (ed.). The War at Sea: The Offensive, Part II 1st June 1944 – 14th August 1945. History of the Second World War, Military Series. Vol. III (pbk. facs. repr. Naval & Military Press, Uckfield ed.). pp. 314–317. ISBN 978-1-84342-806-0.

External links

Baca informasi lainnya yang berhubungan dengan : article

Article 19 Article 20

Read other articles:

Stasiun kereta api Jamshedpur Jamshedpur merupakan sebuah kota di India. Kota ini letaknya di bagian timur. Tepatnya di negara bagian Jharkhand di distrik Singhbhum Timur. Pada tahun 2001, kota ini memiliki jumlah penduduk sebesar 1.104.713 jiwa. Didirikan pada tahun 1919 oleh Jamshedji Tata. Demografi Agama Agama di kota Jamshedpur (2011)[1]   Hindu (83.67%)  Islam (6.95%)  Sikhisme (4.12%)  Kristen (2.24%)  Jainisme (0.16%)  B…

Fokker F50Fokker 50 Riau AirlinesTipePesawat turbopropTerbang perdana28 Desember 1985Diperkenalkan1987StatusTidak diproduksi, status aktifPengguna utamaCityJetPengguna lainDenim Air VLM Airlines Virgin Australia Regional AirlinesTahun produksi1987 - 1997Jumlah produksi213Harga satuan17.5 juta dolarAcuan dasarFokker F27 Fokker F50 merupakan sebuah pesawat penumpang sipil (airliner) kecil bertenaga turboprop, yang dibuat dengan mengembangkan pesawat pendahulunya, Fokker F27 Friendship. Sejarah Fok…

Đối với các định nghĩa khác, xem Yamato (định hướng). Thiết giáp hạm Yamato đang chạy thử máy, năm 1941 Lịch sử Nhật Bản Đặt tên theo Yamato (Đại Hòa), một tên thơ ca của Nhật BảnĐặt hàng tháng 3 năm 1937Xưởng đóng tàu Xưởng hải quân Kure[1]Kinh phí ~250 triệu yên Nhật (thời giá 1941)(Tương đương 2,5 tỷ USD thời giá 2017)Đặt lườn 4 tháng 11 năm 1937[1]Hạ thủy 8 tháng 8 năm 19…

Peta pembagian administratif tingkat pertama Haiti Pembagian administratif Haiti terdiri atas 10 departemen pada tingkat pertama, 42 arondisemen pada tingkat kedua, dan 145 komune pada tingkat ketiga. lbsPembagian administratif Amerika Amerika Utara Amerika Selatan Negara berdaulat Amerika Serikat Antigua dan Barbuda Argentina Bahama Barbados Belize Bolivia Brasil Chili Dominica Republik Dominika Ekuador El Salvador Grenada Guatemala Guyana Haiti Honduras Jamaika Kanada Kolombia Kosta Rika Kuba …

This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification. Please help by adding reliable sources. Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page, especially if potentially libelous.Find sources: Vimala Pons – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2019) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Vimala PonsPons in 2016Bor…

Mercedes-Benz B 170 De Mercedes-Benz B-Klasse is een compacte autotype van de fabrikant Mercedes-Benz. De auto werd in 2005 geïntroduceerd. Het merk lanceerde de B-Klasse, om zo meer marktaandeel te kunnen veroveren in het segment van de eenvolumers (genre Renault Scénic). Hoewel de B-Klasse 44 centimeter langer is, rust deze toch op hetzelfde platform als de A-Klasse, maar met een verlengde wielbasis. Met deze afmetingen behoort hij tot de middencategorie, en baseert zich onder meer op de Vol…

105th Cavalry Regimentcoat of armsActivevariousCountry United StatesBranchWisconsin Army National GuardSizeRegimentMilitary unit U.S. Cavalry Regiments Previous Next 104th Cavalry Regiment 106th Cavalry Regiment The 105th Cavalry Regiment is a regiment in the United States Army National Guard. A regiment with this designation has been formed three times, and due to the lineage system of the United States Army, all three formations are considered completely separate units. The first formatio…

هذه المقالة يتيمة إذ تصل إليها مقالات أخرى قليلة جدًا. فضلًا، ساعد بإضافة وصلة إليها في مقالات متعلقة بها. (أبريل 2019) إنيد كامبل (بالإنجليزية: Enid Mona Campbell)‏  معلومات شخصية تاريخ الميلاد 30 أكتوبر 1932  تاريخ الوفاة 20 يناير 2010 (77 سنة) [1]  سبب الوفاة مرض  مواطنة أستراليا&…

Схема простого акселерометра. Вантаж закріплений на пружині. Демпфер пригнічує коливання вантажу. Чим більше повне прискорення, тим сильніше деформується пружина, змінюючи покази приладу. Акселеро́метр (від лат. accelero — «прискорюю» і грец. μετρεω — «вимірюю») — пр…

Bài viết này cần thêm chú thích nguồn gốc để kiểm chứng thông tin. Mời bạn giúp hoàn thiện bài viết này bằng cách bổ sung chú thích tới các nguồn đáng tin cậy. Các nội dung không có nguồn có thể bị nghi ngờ và xóa bỏ. Một phần của loạt bài về Chính trịCác dạng chính phủ Danh sách các dạng chính phủ Nguồn gốc quyền lực Dân chủ (nhiều người cai trị) Demarchy Trực tiếp Tự do Đại …

Administrative region of the Philippines This article is about a region in the Philippines. For other uses, see Cagayan (disambiguation). Region in Luzon, PhilippinesCagayan Valley Tanap ti Cagayan Region IIRegion Clockwise from the top: Palaui Island Protected Landscape and Seascape, Cagua Volcano, Cape Engaño Lighthouse, Sabtang, Tumauini ChurchLocation in the PhilippinesOpenStreetMapCountry PhilippinesIsland groupLuzonRegional centerand largest cityTuguegaraoArea • Total28,2…

Artikel ini sebatang kara, artinya tidak ada artikel lain yang memiliki pranala balik ke halaman ini.Bantulah menambah pranala ke artikel ini dari artikel yang berhubungan atau coba peralatan pencari pranala.Tag ini diberikan pada Oktober 2022. Artikel ini terlalu bergantung pada referensi dari sumber primer. Mohon perbaiki artikel ini dengan menambahkan sumber sekunder atau tersier. (Pelajari cara dan kapan saatnya untuk menghapus pesan templat ini) Niigata Transys Co., LtdPlat perakit Niigata …

У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Роза Хутор. Вид на трассу параллельного гигантского слалома (сноуборд) во время Олимпийских игр 2014 года Экстрим-парк «Роза Хутор» — спортивный комплекс, расположенный на территории горнолыжного комплекса «Роза Хутор» к за…

1932 assassination plot in Japan This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations. (February 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) League of Blood defendants awaiting trial The League of Blood Incident (血盟団事件, Ketsumeidan Jiken, also translated as Blood-Pledge Corps Incident) was a 1932 assassination plot in Japan in which extremists …

此條目記述一項新聞動態。随着事件發展,信息可能會快速更新,而此條目之近期更新並不一定能夠反映現狀。維基百科不是新聞的收集處。您可自由改善此條目,或在討論頁討論條目內容,但請留心可供查證原則,確保信息正確。不可靠內容會被移除。 2022年—2023年摩爾多瓦示威2022年俄罗斯入侵乌克兰的反应的一部分首都基希讷乌的示威者,攝於2022年10月2日日期2022年9月18…

Turkish football supporter group Group ÇarşıFounded1982TypeSupporters' groupMottoÇarşı, her şeye karşı! (Çarşı is against everything!)StandKapaliWebsitewww.forzabesiktas.com Beşiktaş Çarşı Grubu (referred to simply as Çarşı) is the best known supporter group of BJK (Beşiktaş Gymnastics Club, notably including the Beşiktaş football club). At their home ground in Vodafone Park, Çarşı locate themselves on the curva of Kapalı (Covered Stand) and are known for their social…

Universitas Chieti-PescaraUniversità degli Studi Gabriele d'Annunziobahasa Latin: Adriatica Studiorum UniversitasJenisNegeriDidirikan23 Juni 1960; 63 tahun lalu (1960-06-23)Afiliasi akademikNETVALEUAENPHEILTERRektorSergio CaputiDirekturGiovanni CuculloStaf akademik1,336 (Musim gugur 2016)[1]Jumlah mahasiswa25,268 (Musim gugur 2016)[2]Sarjana21,368 (Fall 2016)[3]Magister3,900 (Musim gugur 2016)[4]LokasiChieti dan Pescara, ItaliaKampusChieti:489 ekar (198&…

Japanese manga series by Hiro Mashima Fairy Tail ZeroTankōbon volume coverGenreAdventure, fantasy[1] MangaWritten byHiro MashimaPublished byKodanshaEnglish publisherUS: Kodansha USAMagazineMonthly Fairy Tail MagazineDemographicShōnenOriginal runJuly 17, 2014 – July 17, 2015Volumes1 (List of volumes) Anime television seriesDirected byShinji Ishihira[A]Produced byYoshikazu BeniyaTetsuya EndōNoritoshi SatōWritten byMasashi SogoMusic byYasuharu Tak…

1999 studio album by PUFFYFever FeverStudio album by PUFFYReleasedJune 23, 1999GenrePop, rockLength51:09LabelEpic/SonyESCB-1995ProducerMasanori SasajiPUFFY chronology Jet-CD(1998) Fever Fever(1999) Spike(2000) Fever Fever (styled as Fever*Fever) is a 1999 album by PUFFY. On tracks 4 and 10, Nannari to Naru Deshou (Anything Can Become a Habit) and Always Dreamin' About You, the vocal parts are sung by Yumi Yoshimura and Ami Onuki solo, respectively. The latter is also sung entirely in Eng…

This article uses bare URLs, which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot. Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style. Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting, such as reFill (documentation) and Citation bot (documentation). (August 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Skyline of Taichung Taichung is located in the center of Taiwan's north-south movement…

Kembali kehalaman sebelumnya