The Sacrifice of Singapore: Churchill's Biggest Blunder

The Sacrifice of Singapore: Churchill's Biggest Blunder
ISBN-10
9814302945
ISBN-13
9789814302944
Category
Singapore
Pages
285
Language
English
Published
2011
Author
Michael Arnold

Description

This book provides an account of events during World War II as they unfolded in Malaya, Singapore and elsewhere in the world prior to the Japanese attack, as well as a detailed study of the troops on the ground attacking and defending Singapore. The fate of Singapore was sealed long before the Japanese attack in December 1941. The blame lay with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill who refused to listen to warnings from military advisors to reinforce defences in Singapore/Malaya, convinced the Japanese would never dare to attack a 'white power'. Obsessed with beating German General Erwin Rommel, he poured into the Middle East massive resources that should have gone to the Far East. However when, inevitably, Singapore fell to the Japanese in February 1942, Churchill attempted to deflect criticism by accusing the defenders there of spineless capitulation. Recently released information from the Office of Naval Intelligence in Washington reveals that United States President Franklin Roosevelt not only knew of the impending attack on Pearl Harbour but actually instigated it. Although Roosevelt promised a shield of B-17 aircraft for Singapore from Manila, General Douglas MacArthur in the Philippines had been told to do nothing until after the Japanese attacks there and at Pearl Harbour so that the United States could claim an unprovoked assault that would allow them to declare war on Japan. Detailed analysis of not just troops, but weaponry and aircraft involved in defending and attacking Singapore Intimate look at the personality of Winston Churchill from wide range of sources who had close contact with him Comprehensive and wide-ranging study of multiple factors and personalities outside of Singapore that influenced the island's fate, spanning the UK, the US, Europe and the Middle East. Michael Arnold was born in England and has worked in the insurance profession for over fifty years. He was based in Kuala Lumpur for 17 years where he travelled throughout the Malay Peninsula with frequent visits to Singapore and became familiar with most of the locations featured in the fighting against the Japanese in this area in 1941-42. He is an avid researcher and amateur historian who specialises in cricket and military history. 'The Sacrifice of Singapore' is the result of five years' research and study.

Similar books

  • Stranger To Myself: The Diary of a Bangaldeshi in Singapore
    By MD Sharif Uddin

    Let us remember that we are meeting a passage of real life that runs concurrent to ours within this alleged city of dreams. The book is therefore urgent because it breaks open the hearts of readers to what our eyes fail to see.

  • Singapore: The Japanese Version
    By Col. Masanobu Tsuji

    Originally published in 1960, the author of this book is one of the planners of the Imperial Japanese Army’s invasion of Malaya and the capture of Singapore—Colonel Masanobu Tsuji himself.

  • The History of Singapore
    By Jean Abshire

    This book offers an engaging examination of Singapore using a theme of globalization to explain how the country's worldwide interactions across centuries have resulted in an ethnically diverse society and allowed it to ascend to a position ...

  • The Man Who Took the Rap: Sir Robert Brooke-Popham and the Fall of Singapore
    By Peter John Dye

    The National University of Singapore's select bibliography, published in 2002, lists nearly one hundred books on the ... The Fall of Singapore Revisited (Singapore: Marshall Cavendish, 2010); M. Arnold, The Sacrifice of Singapore ...

  • Singapore
    By Garry Rodan

    The state elites thus mobilised support primarily by claims that their success as economic managers constituted proof that sacrifice did pay off; and by their promises of a 'next lap' of further progress so long as the discipline was ...

  • Singapore-China Relations: 50 Years
    By Yongnian Zheng, Liang Fook Lye

    Photo credit: Photo collection of Lim Tai Wei. (Right) Kuay chup, another Hokkien-inspired rice noodle usually consumed with stewed bean curds, egg and pig intestines. Photo credit: Photo collection of Lim Tai Wei. (Left) Chai tow kueh, ...

  • Malaya and Singapore 1941–42: The fall of Britain’s empire in the East
    By Mark Stille

    Detailed analysis of the conflict, combined with a heavy focus on the significance of the aerial campaign, help tell the fascinating story of the Japanese victory, from the initial landings in Thailand and Malaya through to the destruction ...

  • The Singapore Economy: Dynamism and Inclusion
    By Hian Teck Hoon

    Indeed, Singapore also implemented various programmes to send normative messages to households and businesses in ... Therefore, energy efficiency and a better environmental performance do not need to come at the sacrifice of business.

  • Singapore's Success: Engineering Economic Growth
    By Henri C. Ghesquière

    This monograph seeks the key to good economic policy by explaining Singapore's remarkably rapid development-the world's fastest-growing economy between 1960 and 2000-and asks whether the city-state's success can be translated...

  • Singapore Secret: 1941 - 1981 a Human Story Over Three Generations
    By K. S. Drake

    This book also has a narrative by AK MacDougall and a pictorial history from 1941 to 1981. Enjoy this threepart nonfiction family saga of the Drake lineage.