Expat Living (Singapore)

75 Years On:

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The end of WWII in Singapore

Next month marks the 75th anniversar­y of the end of World War Two and the surrender of Japan in Singapore. Writer and historian LIZ COWARD looks at the events that unfolded in August and September 1945.

Hiroshima and Nagasaki

The first atomic bomb was dropped on the Japanese mainland at Hiroshima on 6 August. Around 100,000 people died instantly. Many more thousands subsequent­ly died from radiation poisoning, burns and shock. Japan was warned that if it failed to surrender immediatel­y, “it may expect a rain of ruin from the air, the like of which has never been seen on this earth.”

Two days later, the Soviet Red Army surged into Manchuria and northern China with more than 1,600,000 men, and invaded the Kurile Islands and Sakhalin north of Hokkaido.

On 9 August, the Japanese Supreme Council met to consider a surrender. The Imperial General HQ refused. Later that day, a second atomic bomb was dropped at Nagasaki.

Start of the surrender

Emperor Hirohito recalled the Supreme Council and said they should offer an unconditio­nal surrender provided the imperial house and its succession was preserved. Again, the military leaders refused, so the Allies continued their land offensive. On 14 August, the Emperor insisted that Japan should surrender and he would broadcast a message to that effect to the nation.

That night, he was forced to hide in the Imperial palace when it was attacked by officers determined to destroy the recording equipment. They failed, and the next day Hirohito announced that, “despite the best that has been done by everyone… the war situation has developed not necessaril­y to Japan’s advantage, while the general trends of the world have all turned against her interest…this is why we have ordered the acceptance of the provisions of the joint declaratio­ns of the powers.”

His announceme­nt was greeted with mixed feelings. Surrender ran contrary to bushido spirit and the exaltation “not to survive in shame as a prisoner”. Some pilots decided to launch one final glorious suicide mission against American forces. They were shot down, but it was clear that a peaceful surrender was far from guaranteed. This was uppermost in the mind of Lord Mountbatte­n, Supreme Allied Commander SE Asia Command (SEAC), within which area Singapore fell.

The situation in Singapore

Singapore was the jewel in the crown of Britain’s Southeast Asian colonies, so its rapid invasion was a priority. Following the Japanese surrender, these plans, Operation Tiderace, were converted to re-occupation. However, before it could commence, Itagaki, commander of Singapore’s garrison of 70,000 men, had to confirm that he intended to obey the Emperor’s orders.

Alarmingly, he didn’t respond to SEAC requests for confirmati­on. So, on 19 August, Captain O’Shanohun, SEAC staff signals officer, parachuted into Singapore to find out. He discovered that the Japanese intended to surrender – but also that their concerns had been well founded. Only the previous day, Itagaki had met Field Marshal Count Terauchi (Mountbatte­n’s equivalent) and expressed his reluctance to follow the Emperor’s orders. He was told, in no uncertain terms, to obey the Allied commander’s surrender instructio­ns. Itagaki confirmed that he would do so to O’Shanohun.

On 22 August, Itagaki informed his generals and senior staff that they would have to obey the Allies and keep the peace until they arrived. That night, 300 Japanese officers committed suicide at the end of a farewell party at Raffles Hotel.

Final formalitie­s

The surrender of Singapore was confirmed in Rangoon on 26 August. General MacArthur, Supreme Commander of the Allied Forces, wanted to take the first Japanese surrender, so the Rangoon document was described as a local agreement.

On 2 September, MacArthur accepted the unconditio­nal surrender of the Japanese Imperial General HQ, the Japanese armed forces and all the armed forces under Japanese control wherever situated. Shortly afterwards, permission to commence Operation Tiderace was received. On 4 September, detailed operationa­l terms of the Singapore surrender were agreed on the HMS Sussex in Keppel Harbour.

The local population was unaware of these momentous events, so when soldiers from the 1st Punjab Regiment came ashore on 5 September there was no one there to greet them. Upon arrival, they fanned out from the docks to occupy key positions, including the surrendere­d personnel camps. By midnight, the British and Commonweal­th troops were back in charge and 35,000 Japanese troops had been evacuated to camps in Johor.

A stalling tactic?

The re-occupation of Singapore had proceeded smoothly, but there was a last-minute hitch to the meticulous­ly planned official surrender ceremony. Terauchi, key signatory of the surrender, was too ill to attend. As supreme commander of the Japanese forces in Southeast Area command, his presence was vital to give legitimacy to all the previous and subsequent surrenders.

Mountbatte­n was suspicious of a stalling tactic, but Terauchi had indeed suffered a stroke and Itagaki was appointed to sign on his behalf. Hence, on 12 September, it was he who surrendere­d to Admiral Lord Mountbatte­n, officially restoring Singapore to the British Empire.

Liz Coward is the author of

which you can buy through the Expat Living website at expatlivin­g.sg/ magazines-guides-books.

 ??  ?? Hiroshima in the aftermath of the atomic bombing of 6 August 1945
Hiroshima in the aftermath of the atomic bombing of 6 August 1945
 ??  ?? General Itagaki signs the surrender document on 12 September
General Itagaki signs the surrender document on 12 September
 ??  ?? Japanese soldiers marching to surrendere­d personnel camps in Singapore, September 1945
Japanese soldiers marching to surrendere­d personnel camps in Singapore, September 1945
 ??  ?? Kranji War Memorial, present day
Kranji War Memorial, present day

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