Indian National Army | |
---|---|
Azad Hind Fauj | |
![]() Insignia of the INA | |
Active | July 1943 – September 1945 |
Allegiance | Empire of Japan |
Role | Guerrilla, infantry, special operations |
Size | ~43,000 Soldiers: Gandhi Brigade, Nehru Brigade, Azad Brigade, Subhas Brigade, Rani of Jhansi regiment |
Motto(s) | Ittefaq, Itmad aur Qurbani (Hindustani: Concord, Faith and Sacrifice) |
March | Qadam Qadam Badhaye Ja |
Engagements | World War II |
Commanders | |
Commander-in-Chief | Subhas Chandra Bose (1943–1945) First Indian National Army: Mohan Singh (1942) |
Chief of Staff | Jaganath Rao Bhonsle |
Notable commanders | Prem Sahgal Gurbaksh Singh Dhillon Shah Nawaz Khan |
The Indian National Army (INA, sometimes Second INA;[2] Azad Hind Fauj /ˈɑːzɑːð ˈhinð ˈfɔːdʒ/; lit. 'Free Indian Army') was a Japanese-allied and -supported armed force constituted in Southeast Asia during World War II and led by Indian anti-colonial nationalist Subhas Chandra Bose.[3][4] It comprised British Indian Army POWs taken by Japan and enlisting civilians in the region.[5] The INA aimed to liberate India from British rule.[6] After winning Japanese assent for its goal,[7] the INA furnished support to the Japanese Army.[8] The Japanese and INA forces invaded India from Rangoon in 1944, and Bose's nominal Provisional Government of Azad Hind declared war on Britain. But losses inflicted by the British in the Battle of Imphal in Manipur caused the invasion to be halted.[9] A long and exhausting withdrawal, accompanied by a lack of supplies, malnutrition, and death, ensued,[10] some victorious soldiers in the Indian Army not taking INA battlefield surrender kindly.[11] The remaining INA was driven down the Malay Peninsula and surrendered to Allied forces in August 1945.
An earlier incarnation of the INA, the First Indian National Army, had been founded in 1942 by Iwaichi Fujiwara and Mohan Singh.[12] However, Mohan Singh refused to align with the Japanese, leading to his arrest and the First INA's disbandment.[13] After Subhas Chandra Bose arrived in Southeast Asia from Nazi Germany in May 1943, he refounded the INA with significant recruitment from Indian civilian communities in Malaya and Singapore.[14][15]
Subhas Bose had both drive and charisma—promoting Indian slogans, such as "Jai Hind," which became highly popular—and the INA under Bose was a model of diversity by region, ethnicity, religion, and gender.[16][17] Bose's impassioned speeches may have been a factor in the POWs and civilians joining the INA.[18] Bitterness at their discriminatory treatment by the British,[19] and a sense of abandonment by the British after the Fall of Singapore may have been factors.[20] The thousands of POWs who did not join being shipped to distant Japanese labour camps may have been another factor.[21][22] The INA followed Japanese military strategy but had its own military law and police.[23] Although the INA has been described as a collaborationist force,[24] its battlefield performance was poor, and its formation did not constitute a legitimate mutiny.[25] The INA did not oppose Japanese Fascism, nor protest Japanese war crimes that occurred amongst its midst.[26]
After the INA's initial formation in 1942, there was concern in the British Indian Army that further Indian troops would defect. This led to a reporting ban and a propaganda campaign called "Jiffs" to preserve the loyalty of the Sepoy.[27] The British Raj, never seriously threatened by the INA, charged 300 INA officers with treason in the INA trials, but eventually backtracked in the face of opposition by the Indian National Congress.[28][29] These trials became a galvanising point in the Indian Independence movement for the Congress.[30][31] A number of people associated with the INA during the war later went on to hold important roles in public life in India as well as in other countries in Southeast Asia, most notably Lakshmi Sehgal in India, and John Thivy and Janaki Athinahappan in Malaya.[32]
On Feb. 4, 1944, a Bahadur Group under Captain L.S. Misra infiltrated the British lines and overran the 7th Indian Infantry Division headquarters. The Japanese Twenty-Eighth Army—which included the 1st Battalion of the Subhas—fought its way to the Indian border. In April INA troops took Moirang, and the town became the army's first headquarters on Indian soil.
(the terms First INA and Second INA are sometimes used to distinguish Singh's administrative unit from Bose's combat unit).
His name was Subhas Chandra Bose, and he was head of the Japanese-allied and -supported Indian National Army
(p. 564) The case of India showed how memories of nationalistic struggle and war could combine in unusual ways. Many Indian troops served on the Allied side during the war, although sentiment in favor of independence also fueled the Quit India Movement in 1942. A smaller but significant movement backed the Japanese outright. Subhas Chandra Bose, the former president of the Indian National Congress, formed the Indian National Army, which allied with Tokya in the hope of driving the British out of India by force.
he led an armed force composed of former Indian prisoners of war and volunteers from the Indian expatriate community. ... aligned with the Axis powers and opposed the Allied powers during World War II.
Later, after Bose's arrival, the INA would eventually number around 45,000, but about 18,000 of these were recruited from Indian civilian communities in Southeast Asia.
Bose's army was constituted mainly from Indian soldiers taken prisoner at Singapore, and was supported by the Free India League ... backed by the Indian community of southeast Asia.(Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
A large majority of Indian expatriates in Southeast Asia responded with great fervour ... At least eighteen thousand civilians, mostly Tamils from southern India, enlisted in the Indian National Army.
As a result, Punjabis, Bengalis, and Tamils soon found themselves serving in a national liberation army consisting of 40,000 men who Bose, together with the Japanese units, led against British India in 1943.
(404) After Subhas Bose became INA's supreme commander, it managed to recruit about 40,000 men. ... Civilians, ... swelled its ranks. (It) also had a women's regiment. (405) The dream of liberating India by means of an armed campaign ended rudely.
Soon after his arrival in the Japanese capital Bose met with Prime Minister Flideki Tojo, and they quickly reached an agreement: Japan would recognize Indian independence but maintain a military presence in liberated India until the conclusion of the war. On July 4 Bose took command of the INA, and on October 21 he was sworn in as prime minister of the Provisional Government of Free India.
Although the INA did little actual damage in the field, the fact that thousands of Indian soldiers had seen fit to renounce their oath of allegiance to the King-Emperor raised serious doubts about whether the military could continue to be relied on to enforce imperial authority.
Meanwhile, a leading Congress figure, Subhas Chandra Bose (1897–1945), formed the Indian National Army (INA) in Japanese-occupied Burma to invade India and fight for liberation.
(p. 479) The Japanese also assisted the exiled Indian nationalist Subhas Chandra Bose in the recruitment of overseas Indians to the Indian National Army. Although it played a role in military operations in Burma, the principal contribution of the INA was to the propaganda aimed at subverting British India.
Bose's provisional government of Azad Hind (Free India) declared war on Britain. An invasion of India was launched from Rangoon in 1944. The Japanese and INA forces were driven back with heavy losses by the British in the Battle of Imphal (March–July 1944) in the northeastern state of Manipur.
Gracey consoled himself that Bose's Indian National Army had also been in action against his Indians and Gurkhas but had been roughly treated and almost annihilated; when the survivors tried to surrender, they tended to fall foul of the Gurkhas' dreaded kukri.
In 1941 Subhas Chandra Bose had escaped house arrest and began building an army aligned to the Axis powers, specifically Japan, in order to overthrow British rule in India. Indian POWs held by the Japanese were then released into the INA and they fought against the British in Burma (Singh, 2006) In fact, this was the second incarnation of the INA: the first had been led by Mohan Singh who refused to align with the Japanese and was eventually arrested by them.
he led an armed force composed of former Indian prisoners of war and volunteers from the Indian expatriate community. ... aligned with the Axis powers and opposed the Allied powers during World War II.
The force that he (Bose) put together included not only prisoners of war, but other Indian residents of the area, including a novel women's detachment
Later, after Bose's arrival, the INA would eventually number around 45,000, but about 18,000 of these were recruited from Indian civilian communities in Southeast Asia.
After an epic submarine journey, Bose arrived in Japanese-dominated Southeast Asia. He assumed leadership of the Indian Independence League and the Indian National Army. His reinvigoration of the latter organization from among not only Japanese prisoners of war but Indians settled in Malaya called into question the notion of a narrow territorially bound nationalism.
Bose, ..., determined to resurrect the INA and, with Japanese aid, liberate India by force of arms. To the main force of prisoners of war he added Indian plantation workers from Malaya, and traders and shopkeepers from Thailand ... the INA was an admirable multi-ethnic force.
The force that he (Bose) put together included not only prisoners of war, but other Indian residents of the area, including a novel women's detachment
(p. 63) In July 1943, S. C. Bose's arrival in Singapore energized the remaining Indian POWs. A "fiery orator," Bose was known for his speaking skill. As one observer recalled, "When Subhas Chandra Bose spoke, women would throw their jewelry at his feet." It is difficult to know what exactly motivated the men who followed him. M. Singh believed they were inspired by the idea of freeing India from British rule. Most Indians were not believers in or loyal to the ideas of Pan-Asianism or its policy incarnation, the Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere. According to Pitt Kuan Wah, "those who did it did it for self-gain." But "The average Indian, yes, has a negative attitude toward the Japanese."
(p. 324) Canvassing for recruits among demoralized Indian prisoners-of-war captured in Malaya and Singapore, the nationalists secured quite a good response. Many men felt, in the words of one later INA brigade commander, that they had been 'handed over like cattle by the British to the Japs'.
In this war, some 2.5 million Indians served in British imperial armies. Many of those abandoned by their British officers when Singapore fell or in other British defeats joined the Indian National Army led by S.C. Bose that allied with the Germans and Japanese
(p. 79) This was owing to Japan's own ambivalent attitude towards Indians: on the one hand, the Japanese saw them as potential allies in the fight against Britain, and they made an alliance with the dissident nationalist leader Subhas Chandra Bose; on the other hand, they despised them as a 'subject race' enslaved by the British. Thanks to this alliance, however, the Indians escaped some of the harshest measures that the Japanese took against the Chinese population in the region. That said, 100,000 Indian coolies, mostly Tamilian plantation workers, were conscripted as forced labour and put to work on various infrastructure projects for the Japanese Imperial Army. Some were sent from Malaya to Thailand to work on the infamous Thailand–Burma railway project, resulting in 30,000 deaths of fever and exhaustion (Nakahara 2005). Thousands of war prisoners who had refused to join the Indian National Army (INA) of Subhas Bose were sent to faraway New Guinea, where Australian troops discovered them hiding in 1945.
The Japanese continue to try to win over Indian POWs. They found it better to separate Indian and British troops to achieve this end. They did so with the helf of Indian civilians. The biggest movements of all were of the Indian prisoners. Between December 1942 and September 1943 about 12,000 Indian POWs were shipped from Singapore to various islands in the Southwest Pacific, the Andaman Islands, and French Indochina. The largest convoy left Malaya in May, including not just men who had held out against collaboration but also men who had at one time been volunteers in Singapore and in building the Thai-Burma Railway. The POWs were proving useful as a labor pool not just in Singapore but at many points of Japan's far-flung empire.
(p. 260) Kawabe was not so easily shifted in the matter of military law. All the local armies allied with Nippon, he pointed out, the Nanking Army, the Thai army, the Burma National Army, accepted Japanese military law. But Bose found the prospect intolerable. It meant surrendering uniformed Indians to the tender mercies of the Kempeitai. The INA had its own Army Act and its own military police. These must suffice. And in the end Kawabe gave way. He even agreed that when Japanese and Indian officers of equal rank met, neither would wait, they would salute together.
None of the works that deal with ... Subhas Chandra Bose, or his Indian National Army has engaged ... the reaction of the soldiers in his army to the sex slaves kidnapped in Japanese-occupied lands and held in enclosures attached to the camps in which they were being trained to follow their Japanese comrades in the occupation of India
Lebra2008p219
was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search