The
Battle for Burma by Roy Conyers Nesbit
The struggle of British, Commonwealth and
American-Chinese troops against the Japanese in Burma was one of the
decisive campaigns of the Second World War. With British India
significantly threatened by the relentless Japanese advance, the fate of
the British Empire in the East hung in the balance.
The tropical climate of dense malarial jungle
infested with vermin and swept by torrential monsoon rains made the
fighting, for both sides, a remarkable feat of arms. Yet the war in
Burma rarely receives the attention it deserves. Roy C. Nesbit aims to
change this.
In vivid detail he describes the British retreat
and humiliation at the hands of the Japanese invaders in 1942, with some
men fighting and retreating almost a thousand miles, the longest
distance in British history. The Allied response was to build up their
forces on a massive scale, eventually numbering over 1,300,000
personnel, and to train them to fight in jungle conditions. Their
counter-offensive, launched in 1944, culminated in the battle at Imphal
and Kohima which turned the course of the conflict and the reconquest of
Burma was achieved just before the atom bomb was dropped.
With over 200 exceptional black and white
photographs taken deep within the heart of the battle, as well as
numerous original maps, The Battle for Burma is a thoroughly researched,
beautifully written and eye-opening record of the entire campaign
against the Japanese during this historic period and is essential
reading for any military or history enthusiast.
Roy Conyers Nesbit has a long established
reputation as a leading historian of the Second World War. His service
in the RAF during the war included a period as a navigator and
bomb-aimer in Beauforts of Coastal Command. At the end of the war he
served in India and South-East Asia.