In the spring of 1944; on the eastern front of India near the Burmese border; the seemingly unstoppable Imperial Japanese Army suffered the worst defeat in its history at the hands of Lieutenant General William Slim’s British XIV Army; most of whose units were drawn from the little-esteemed Indian Army. Triumph at Imphal-Kohima tells the largely unknown story of how an army that Winston Churchill had once dismissed as “a welter of lassitude and inefficiency†came to achieve such an unlikely; unprecedented; and critical victory for the Allied forces in World War II.Long the British Empire’s strategic reserve; the Indian Army had been comprehensively defeated in Malaya and Burma in 1941–1943. Military historian Raymond Callahan chronicles the remarkable exercise in institutional transformation that remade the British Indian forces to reverse those losses. With the invaluable help of the American DC-3 on the Burma front; Slim overhauled the British XIV Army with the Imperial Japanese Army's strategic weaknesses in mind; namely; an utter disregard for logistics and an unrelenting addiction to the attack. Callahan shows how; on an enormous battlefield—over five hundred miles from north to south—the XIV Army surmounted the challenges of terrain; disease; wretched communication; and climate to draw the Imperial forces under Lieutenant General Mutaguchi Renya ever deeper into ever stronger British defensive arrays until the Japanese Army’s vaunted offensive aggression finally exhausted itself.Following this epic battle from build-up to aftermath; this book brings overdue detailed attention to Lieutenant General William Slim’s handling of perhaps the most complex battle any Allied commander fought during World War II—and to the long-belittled British Indian Army that became the magnificent fighting force that triumphed at Imphal-Kohima and went on to reconquer Burma.
#268249 in Books Univ Pr of Kansas 2012-11-08Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.10 x 1.30 x 5.90l; 1.45 #File Name: 0700618686348 pages
Review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful. A Must Read!By Stephen YostThe Failure of Popular Sovereignty: Slavery; Manifest Destiny; and the Radicalization of Southern Politics (American Political Thought) (Hardcover)Christopher Childers has written a "must read" for any person wanting to learn more about popular sovereignty and its contributions to the rise of sectionalism before the start of the Civil War. The author provides a step by step approach in his book which provides a clear picture of the events; participants; and the unintended consequences of their actions. The research is outstanding and provides the reader with insights and the "thinking on the streets" by using quotes from contemporary newspapers and citizens. The author leaves no stone unturned as it relates to the topic. The maps are timely and beneficial to the reader. The book is thought provoking and should not be considered just another book on the Civil War.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Excellent!By History ProfAn excellent book on the connections between national politics and the implementation of popular sovereignty in the West.