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The Battle for Hong Kong, December 1941 n Why were the British/Americans so caught off guard? n Why were the Canadians there? n Were we “lambs to the slaughter” sacrificed by the British? n Why were we so ill-prepared?
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Hong Kong n Were the Canadians somehow responsible for the failure to hold Hong Kong?
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An Overview n The strategic “problem” of Japan, 1940-1941 n The decision to send Canadians n The tactics of survival
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Japanese Imperialism Japanese Imperialism n 1904: Japan occupies Korea n 1931: Japan occupies Manchuria n 1937: The “Rape” of Nanking n 1940: French Indo-China occupied n September: Japan signs the Tri-Partite Pact with Germany and Italy –Remains neutral
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The British Problem n The British army is overstretched –Defence of UK –Middle East –India –Malaya/Singapore n What to do with Hong Kong? n August 1940: British Chiefs of Staff “ –“Hold as long as possible” but recognized that, if war came, Hong Kong could not be reinforced or relieved.
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Churchill’s First Position n January 1941 “This is all wrong. If Japan goes to war with us there is not the slightest chance of holding Hong Kong or relieving it.” n Why does Churchill change his mind?
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1941: The British View n June: The Germans attack the Soviet Union. (Operation Barbarossa) n Would the Japanese fight the Russians (north)? n Or the Americans, British, Dutch (south)? n Most felt that the Japanese would move north.
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1941: The Japanese View n 2 July 1941: Japanese Imperial Conference –Japanese occupy French Indo-China –US/UK freeze Japanese assets –A policy of deterrence
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Canadian Involvement n August 1941: Major-General A.E. Grasett goes to Ottawa n (GOC, Hong Kong defences) n Meets with Major-General H.D.G. Crerar, Canadian Chief of Staff –“addition of two or more battalions to the forces then at Hong Kong would render the garrison strong.” –No decisions on Canadian participation
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September 1941 n Grasett makes his case to Churchill –changed situation in the Far East –British have reinforced Malaya –“great moral effect” to reinforce Hong Kong
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19 September 1941 n The British formally request Canadian aid in the defence of Hong Kong n As a member of the Canadian Cabinet, how would you respond to this appeal?
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27 September 1941 n The Canadians approve the request –“anything which would either defer or deter Japan from coming in [to the war] would be highly desirable from our point of view.” –J.L. Ralston, Minister of National Defence
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Who to Send? n Could Canadian battalions in UK go? n What of those in Canada? n Royal Rifles of Canada--mobilized 8 July 1940--garrisoned in Newfoundland n Winnipeg Grenadiers--mobilized 1 Sept 1940--garrisoned in Jamaica
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What Level Training? n Basic training (16 weeks) –just 6% had less n Weapons training (incomplete due to shortages) n Company level training incomplete n Battalion level training incomplete
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“C” Force n CO Brigadier J.K. Lawson n 96 officers/1877 other ranks n Set sail Vancouver, 5 October 1941 n Arrive Hong Kong, 16 November 1941
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Japanese Intentions n 18 October--General Tojo leads a “war government” n If negotiations break off by 25 November, Japanese plan to attack Phillippines, Guam, Hong Kong, British Malaya, Burma, The Bismarcks, Java, Sumatra, Timor
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Hong Kong n Population 1941: 1.5 million n Colony 410 sq. miles n Island 29 sq. miles
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The Defences n Limited by Treaty n most naval vessels withdrawn n little artillery/anti-aircraft guns n no aircraft (closest RAF station: 1400 miles) n Army defences 11,000 fighting soldiers
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The Defensive Plan n Delay on the mainland n Then defend the island n Canadian battalions stood guard on the island for a seaborne attack that did not come
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The Battle Chronology n 7 December: Japanese 38th Division attacks from the north n 9 December: The “Gin Drinkers Line” is broken n 15 December: The Japanese cross to Hong Kong Island n 20 December: The island is divided n 25 December: The Garrison surrenders
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19 December 1941 n Brigadier Lawson is killed n CSM John Osborn, Winnipeg Grenadiers, is killed –Wins the Victoria Cross
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25 December 1941 Maltby Surrenders to the Japanese
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The Final Canadian Tally n Dead 23 officers/267 other ranks n Wounded 28 officers/465 other ranks n Died in captivity: 4 officers/124 other ranks –4 shot n Diphtheria, 1942: 50 dead n 136 died during forced labour in Japan n Of 1975 Canadians who left Canada in October 1941, 557 never returned
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C.P. Stacey’s verdict n “We can see today [1957] that the decision to reinforce Hong Kong was a mistake.” n “The historian’s hindsight is always far, far better than the foresight of the men, groping in the dark, who had to do the work at the time.”
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Acknowledgements and Further Reading n Maps courtesy of Mike Bechthold, Laurier Centre for Military, Strategic and Disarmament Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario n Charles Roland, Long Night’s Journey into Day: Prisoners of War in the Far East, 1941-1945. Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2001.
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