A War of Empires Spiral-Bound | 2021-11-16

Robert Lyman

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A War of Empires is a sweeping saga of the longest Allied campaign of World War II. A clash of empires, it was a war that would change the future of both Britain and the Indian subcontinent.

In December 1941 the Japanese empire smashed into the British, American, and European empires in the Pacific and Far East. Japan had long desired an empire to rival that of the United States and European powers. The Japanese swept into Malaya and Burma as it simultaneously attempted to prevent America deploying its Pacific Fleet from Pearl Harbor. By February Singapore had fallen, and by May 1940 the Japanese had pushed the weak British forces out of Burma into India.
But change was coming. In 1943 the Allies--British, American, and Chinese--were determined to defeat the Japanese. New commanders were appointed and significant training together took place; new equipment arrived and new tactics developed. Perhaps most significantly, the Indian Army, defeated in 1941/2, was rebuilt. A million new recruits--all volunteers--were added to its ranks. Many of these Indian volunteers were fighting not to preserve the British Empire, but to resist the far more brutal Japanese empire and in hope for a future, independent India.
1944 would see the tide of war inexorably turn. Allied defeat in 1942 now turned into a series of extraordinary victories culminating in the Japanese defeat at Mandalay in May 1945 and the collapse of all Japanese forces in Burma.
Robert Lyman charts this dramatic change in fortunes as Allied forces fought against a brutal enemy. Their victories would ultimately redraw the map of the region with an independent India.

Publisher: Macmillan
Original Binding: Hardcover with dust jacket
Pages: 560 pages
ISBN-10: 1472847148
Item Weight: 2.3 lbs
Dimensions: 6.3 x 2.0 x 9.4 inches
Robert Lyman is one of Britain's most talented military historians, with fifteen bestselling books published to date and numerous appearances on television. He was the military consultant to the BBC for the Victory over Japan memorial celebrations in the UK in 2015 and for the 70th anniversary in 2020. He was commissioned from the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst into the Light Infantry in 1982 and spent 20 years in the British Army. He is an elected fellow of the Royal Historical Society.