Featuring specially commissioned artwork, gripping first-hand accounts
and expert analysis, this engaging reassessment offers a glimpse of
what it was like for Britain's Chindits to fight in the jungles and
mountains of Burma at the height of World War II. In order to keep
China in the war against the Japanese, the Western Allies believed
they had to return to Northern Burma. Colonel Orde Wingate, a military
maverick and proponent of guerrilla warfare, knew that a different
type of British infantryman was required for this role – the
Chindit, indoctrinated with special training – to re-enter the
jungles and mountains of Northern Burma in order to combat the
victorious Japanese forces there. The Chindits' opponents would
include the 18th Division, one of Imperial Japan's most seasoned
formations, which by 1941 had already accumulated as much operational
experience as most Anglo-American divisions would acquire in the
entire 1939–45 war. In a host of encounters the two sides clashed
repeatedly in the harsh conditions of the Burmese jungle; the intended
role and subsequent operational performance of the Chindits remains
fraught with controversy today. Packed with full-colour artwork,
specially drawn maps and archive photographs, this gripping study
offers key insights into the tactics, leadership, combat performance
and subsequent reputations of six representative Chindit and Japanese
infantry units involved in three pivotal actions that hastened Japan's
defeat in Burma during World War II.
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1943–44
Product details
ISBN
9781472806529
Published
2020
Edition
1. edition
Publisher
Bloomsbury UK
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author