Monday 9 December 2019

The Air War in Malaya 1941-2

Blenheim Mk IVs formed the backbone of the bomber force
7 December 1941 was a disastrous day for the American Navy at Pearl Harbour. It heralded the beginning of Japanese military expansion, and it had been something that some had been watching and waiting for—despite one RAF intelligence officer, who believed that there was a rogue German fleet in the Pacific. He argued that the Japanese could not fly aircraft as they were carried as infants on their mother’s backs, and therefore lacked the necessary development in balance. Others were more astute and had been watching the Japanese with nervous eyes, believing the recent acquisition of south French Indo-China could be used as a springboard into British Malaya. Sir Brooke-Popham, the Air Officer Commanding, argued that the British should occupy Siam to deny it to the Japanese, or at least bomb the Siamese airfields that were being prepared for Japanese fighters. Intelligence officers estimated that, should the Japanese manage to get a foot hold, they would be able to land three or four divisions if they used the Siamese port of Signora, and be able to establish land-based aircraft to threaten Malaya. The British staff within the region had reached out to the local Dutch commanders to discuss mutual defence as early as the autumn of 1940, and a conference was held in Singapore to outline and finalise the basic plans the following February and a combined military plan was decided by April on defensive lines, though with the possibility of a limited offensive if needed or the opportunity rose
  The RAF in the Far East, much like in the Middle East, was spread thinly and armed with mostly obsolete aircraft, including Vildebeest torpedo bombers and the untried Buffalo fighter, and it had numerous inexperienced pilots and staff officers, with squadrons not knowing what their operational roles were or what training they should be doing until July 1941. New airfields had to be built to meet the strategical needs of war on the Malayan peninsula, a process which also met the quagmire of local government planning and shortages of both men and materials. The new airfields that were built had inadequate anti-air defences, camouflage, dispersal patterns and even the weapons for ground defence proved to be wholly inadequate for military facilities.


  Reinforcements from Britain were even less likely to go out to the Far East, despite pleas for modern aircraft and long-range bombers. A lack of spares added to the desperation, though petrol and bomb stocks were at ‘adequate’ levels by December 1941.


  The British GOC, Lt-Gen. Percival, had undertaken the responsibility of aiding the Dutch in defending Borneo and its oil fields at Miri and Serio, even if the rest of the island fell, which further watered down the number of aircraft available to Malaya.


  Further to that, Siam was going to prove an Achilles heel to the British position in Malaya, with their government leaning towards being pro-Japanese, and if they were intimidated into allowing a Japanese occupation, it would give the Japanese a springboard and airbases for their aircraft to attack. This was soon realised, with Japan intervening into the conflict between Siam and Pro-Vichy French Indo-China, which saw them occupy the southern region of the French colony and immediately establish a military presence. With Japanese aircraft flying reconnaissance over Singapore, Operation Matador was suggested, in which British units would strike in Siam and occupy the port of Singora, the only port in the area suitable for an invasion, but the military shortages and warnings from London not to provoke Japan into war meant that they missed their optimum window of opportunity. However, by the end of November, Percival was pushing for Matador to be put into action, despite the local representative of CIGS also warning that London would need consulted; that would take no less than thirty-six hours, but the Japanese bombers in south Indo-China were indicative of an attack against Siam rather than complete occupation of Indo-China, and there was a belief that Japan would act quickly before more Royal Navy units arrived at Singapore. The RAF in the region were moved to standby to support Matador, with the Blenheim-I-equipped 62 and 34 Squadrons to be ready to support the III Indian Corps, who were chalked for the advance with seventy-two hours notice, while No. 223 Group brought its headquarters to Kuala Lumpur.


  The war seemed imminent, with a report on 28 November from Saigon that showed that the Japanese were going to attempt a seaborne landing near the vital port of Signora between 30 November and 1 December: orders were released to attack any such troop convoy if it was seen, and Matador was advanced from seventy-two to twelve hours’ notice. Infuriatingly, London would not move on their position and insisted on consultation, despite the fact that Japan could be landing in thirty-three hours!


  The situation was deteriorating rapidly, to the point that the usual warning telegrams were to be abandoned and the local governor given free reign to react. The whole of the British forces were brought to second degree, which was defined as ‘International situation deteriorating utmost vigilance necessary; command to be in position to operate at short notice’. (1)


  On 7 December, the Japanese 25 Army and elements of the 15 Army were spotted in convoy by Flt Lt Ramshaw’s Hudson of the RAAF’s 1 Squadron, with further sightings through the day, one of which was chased off by Japanese float planes. Quick response was taken, with all forces ordered to full alert, and all bomber squadrons warned to be armed and ready. Two Hudsons were assigned to follow the fleet, and 36 Squadron’s aging Vildebeests were moved to Kota Bahru in preparation for an attack, while 62 Squadron brought under AHQ’s direct command—but the convoys vanished. Bad weather and nightfall caused them to be lost and the search widened into the Gulf of Siam, when a Catalina of 205 Squadron, flown by Fg Off. Edwin Beddell, spotted the fleet and, without sending a message with coordinates, instead dived to attack. Beddell soon found himself under attack by five Ki-27s who had flown from the secret base at Phu Kok and they very quickly destroyed the Catalina in a fire ball at 499 feet killing all of the crew.


  Despite continued sightings of warships, freighters, and tankers in the Gulf of Siam, Matador was abandoned in the fear that the Japanese were trying to provoke Britain into breaking neutrality or draw British forces away from Singapore. With no concrete photo reconnaissance, it was decided to wait for Japan to declare her intentions. With the Blenheims and other craft on standby, awaiting an attack order on Yamashita’s force before it landed between Singora and Patani and another force heading for Kota Bahru while bad weather kept the station’s aircraft grounded, the only help available to them was a message from the Chief of Staff to the Air Staff:
Our thoughts are with you at this fateful time and I send to all the air forces under your command best wishes of us all. We know the limits in numbers and in equipment which necessity has set to your resources but we are confident nevertheless, that your squadrons by their skill, gallantry and determination will overcome all handicaps and win enduring fame for themselves and their service. (2)


  On 8 December, the Japanese landed at Singora in the early hours of the morning and took the neutral port with ease. The landing at Kota Bahru, however, quickly drew attention as the first shells were fired, reconnaissance Hudsons were bombed up and briefed to attack at low level, and all available aircraft were ordered to attack at first light. 60 Squadron’s Blenheims were dispatched, 62 Squadron’s were ordered to prepare for a high-level bombing raid, and 34 Squadron, based at Alor Star, was bombed up with 500-lb SAP bombs and chalked up to attack Kauntan—a plan that was changed at the last minute to transports off Kehasin, before landing at Butterworth to refuel and prepare to go out again. The Hudsons scored first, taking off in awful weather in the dark, but managing to locate transports, who were supported by fierce flak. The largest of the transports took two direct hits and exploded, while Japanese soldiers were harassed as they disembarked onto the beachhead, and twenty-four barges were sunk, killing an estimated 1,000 soldiers. One Japanese cruiser advanced, giving the defenceless infantry covering fire and shooting down two of the Hudsons. At 5 a.m., 1 Squadron RAAF withdrew to rearm. By the time 60 Squadron arrived, they found that the Japanese ships had left the combat area with their mission complete; the Blenheims attacked the already damaged barges and abandoned landing craft, but then encountered Imperial Japanese Navy Zero fighters over the bloody sands. One of the Squadron’s navigators, Kingwell, described the scene:



Brewster Buffalo fighters were outclassed
We attacked by flights, each flight choosing its own target. The kill agreed in the squadron was one 8,000-ton ship and three fully laden craft… Two or three Blenheims decided to drop their bombs on the transport. We followed in behind and could see that she was red hot inside with bodies sprawled all over the decks. We decided not to waste our bombs on it. We dropped out bombs in a stick across them but by the time the twenty second fuses had burned, the craft had moved some yards away. We could see that the crews firing at us with automatic weapons. One of the boats overturned in the explosion which followed and the others must have been badly shaken. It was a neat bit of bombing but not particularly effective.(3)

One enemy fighter was claimed, but at the cost of one bomber unaccounted for. L4913, flown by Flt Lt Bowden, was shot down into the Gulf of Siam while attacking Japanese shipping. Bowden was

plucked from the sea to become the first Allied airman taken as a Prisoner of War by the Japanese, and the Blenheim flown by 60 Squadron’s Sqn Ldr George ‘Paddy’ Westrop-Bennett crashed onto the beach, killing him and his crew.


  At 3.45 a.m., the radar station at Mersing picked up incoming aircraft which quickly turned for Singapore; the civil authorities were warned, the RAF’s fighters were advised to attack at first light, and the AA guns ordered to fire. At 4.08 a.m., the bombs began to fall on the city for the first time, killing sixty-one and injuring twice as many. Seletar Airfield was also bombed, with three men killed and facilities such as the sanitary annexe and cook house destroyed, while at Tengah Airfield the runway was hit, leaving twenty-two craters and damaging three of 34 Squadron’s aircraft. Two hours later, at 6.34 a.m., nine of 34 Squadron’s surviving Mark IVs took off, leaving the three bomb-damaged aircraft behind. The flight carried 500-lb GP bombs and similarly hit the barges and strafed the beach, but they were attacked by Zeros, who quickly demonstrated their superiority, causing one aircraft to crash-land and forcing another down at Maching. The squadron reformed to head for Butterworth as planned, but were intercepted by another fighter patrol, who claimed another bomber for the cost of one of their own. The Blenheim fighters of 27 Squadron fared little better and, having returned to their airfield, found it had been heavily bombed.


  The only relatively unscathed Blenheim attack of the day was 62 Squadron’s high-level attack. On arriving over the beach, the formation of eleven bombers could see no Japanese ships and so set off on a south-easterly course to find them; they eventually found a force of fifteen ships, including barges carrying troops, and attacked from 8,000 feet, but could not observe any results due to low cloud. Despite flak and fighter cover from the Japanese 11th Regiment, all of the eleven Blenheims returned to Alor Star undamaged. On returning, the squadron began rearming and refuelling, but, at 10.45 a.m., they were attacked by high-level bombers, who dropped 150-lb high explosive and incendiary bombs from 13,000 feet, well beyond the range of the 3-inch anti-aircraft gun’s range, killing seven men and destroying four Blenheims, with a further five buildings damaged and fuel dumps left aflame.
  The Japanese had also began flying to the newly acquired airfields in Siam, where they had gained fuel and ammunition, and they prepared to attack and destroy the RAF in large numbers while they were on the ground, following the successful bombing of the Singapore fields that morning and the attacks on the FAA’s fields at Machang and Gong Kedah. Zero fighters and Kawasaki Ki-10 Type 95s attacked Kota Bahru over an eight-hour period, starting at 9:00 a.m., strafing AA posts, aircraft, and personnel—diving down from 7,000 feet to treetop level and hampering operations from the field. Sungei Patan fighter station, which suffered from a lack of hangers and boggy ground that meant that the aircraft could not be dispersed properly, also came under attack from high-level bombers, who killed five, set fire to a petrol dump, and struck the Station HQ. The surviving aircraft were withdrawn to Butterworth, which, as 34 Squadron were to find out on their arrival, was far from ideal to operate from. On arrival, the Blenheims found that there were no refuelling trucks or hoists with which to arm the bombers with 500-lb bombs, leaving armourers to lift 250-lb bombs by hand. When oil tankers finally arrived, they only had 90 octane, which was inadequate, as the bombers required 100 octane. When the higher-grade fuel was located, it was only available from oil drums, which had to be hand-pumped into the aircraft. The station commander was a junior accountant officer, and his day continued to get worse, as when the second flight of 34’s Blenheims arrived, they were being pursued by Japanese fighters, who proceeded to shoot up the airfield and shopt the undercarriage out from underneath one of the landing bombers, causing it to crash-land. When the Japanese finally withdrew, they left the squadron peppered, with only two aircraft left serviceable. The field was soon crowded with the surviving aircraft—seven Blenheim fighters of 27 Squadron and eight Buffalos of 21 Squadron—only to be attacked again, leaving only three of each fighter aircraft serviceable. The Australian airmen left the field that night to sleep two miles away from the target area, against the orders of their station commander.


  Japanese troops had managed to get into the hinterland, but there werer unsubstantiated rumours that further landings were being made up the coast. After a failed attempt to destroy the single branch railway bridge at Goluk River, it was decided by the station commander, Noble, without consultation with the local army commander, Brigadier Keys, to withdraw the aircraft to Kuantan. Noble went to investigate rumours of Japanese troops on the perimeter, and so was not present when an order from AHQ arrived to demolish the base to deny it to the enemy. He was most surprised to find his operations room, containing the logs and diaries, aflame on his return! By 7:00 p.m., all serviceable Hudsons and personnel had evacuated by air and motor transport.


AVM Brooke-Popham
  A photo reconnaissance Beaufort returned to base full of holes and so badly damaged it burst into flames, but its valuable cargo survived, and by 3:30 p.m., the RAF had confirmed that the Kota Bahru landing had been a diversion, and that Yamashita had achieved his objective and taken Singora’s port facility unopposed. It was imperative that the RAF attacked as soon as possible to destroy the newly achieved airfields while they still had the strength to do so, having lost nine of the eighty-seven aircraft of all types engaged on the first day. In total the RAF lost of sixty aircraft out of 110 to bombing and enemy fighters, with two airfields abandoned and two badly damaged. Lt General Percival summed it up in his post-war book, stating:

The performance of Japanese aircraft of all types and the accuracy of their bombing came as an unpleasant surprise. By the evening of the eighth our own air force had already been seriously weakened.(4)


  Air Vice-Marshal Brooke-Popham signalled to the Chiefs of Staff that he needed the maximum number of aircraft that could be sent, requesting that long-range bombers and night fighters be dispatched as soon as possible, warning that ‘Should Japan gain air superiority the situation would be very difficult.’ However, the official history summed up the situation; ‘Japan was not to achieve air superiority in the near future—rather she had grasped it that very day.’ (5)


  The following day, the remains of the RAF had to move quickly with the clearing and activation of southern airfields to get what was left to relative safety. The airfield’s approaches had to cleared of trees, drainage readying and most importantly fuel and bomb stores had to be delivered to the fields—they could not afford a repeat of Butterworth from the previous day.


  With enemy air superiority being the deciding factor, it was decided that the Blenheims would have to launch attacks on the enemy’s airfields as soon as possible, especially in the light that NORGROUP could only muster a small fighter defence. However the implementation of the raid was not carried out with any haste, as orders were not passed to Tengah until 9.39 a.m., for six Blenheims (three from 34, armed with 500-lb bombs, and three from 60, armed with 250-lb bombs) to be ready for a take off between 11–12 p.m., with a fighter escort collected at Butterworth arriving over the target at around 4 p.m. Butterworth was to launch a simultaneous attack using the maximum force of Blenheims available on Signora port facilities and, if successful and possible, then mount a second attack.


  There were fourteen of the superior Blenheim IVs of 34 Squadron at Tengah Airfield, compared to the four Mk Is of 60 Squadron. The former aircraft were preferred for the raid, but half of the force were to be crewed by 60 Squadron’s men; the crews were exhausted and had not slept properly in three days, and now 60 Squadron’s crews were to fly unfamiliar aircraft. Nevertheless, six bombers took off an hour late at 12.45 p.m. and flew to Butterworth to collect their escort, which consisted of two Blenheim night fighters. The deficiency on the number of fighter aircraft available at Butterworth, as well as the more pressing calls to defend the airfield and provide III Indian Corps with tactical reconnaissance, meant that was all that could be spared, and even then only for a short while—they soon peeled away, leaving the six bombers to go it alone. On arriving at the target, they were met by heavy flak and a swarm of fifty fighters. which caused them to have to take ‘violent evasive action’, but bombs were seen to land among a small group of fighters on the ground. The raid was a costly one though, as half the formation was destroyed, with two of the crews that were lost coming from 60 Squadron: Flt Lt Joseph Dobson’s aircraft came down in a fatal jungle crash, and Johnstone’s was captured by the Japanese in the jungle.


  The second raid was even more disastrous, with the formation of bombers being caught on the ground, ready to take off, by a Japanese air raid with fighter strafing runs and falling bombs taking a heavy toll. Sqn Ldr Arthur Scarf of 62 Squadron, whose aircraft was already airborne, was undamaged, and he courageously went on the mission alone, where he was attacked by fighters but still managed to bomb the target. Despite a running gun battle all the way to the Malayan border, the Blenheim stayed in the air, but force-landed near Alor Star, where the true extent of Scarf’s wounds were revealed. The 28-year-old officer had suffered a shattered left arm and a gaping hole in his back, but had brought his crew back uninjured. Scarf was taken to the hospital and, despite the offer of a blood transfusion from his wife, who was a nurse at the hospital, he died from his injuries before the day was out. Post-war, Scarf was awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross while his crew, made up of Sgt Calder and Sgt Rich, received a DFM and a posthumous mention in dispatches in 1943 respectively. Butterworth was attacked again that evening with ‘aircraft… being picked off one by one on the ground.’


  The disastrous first daylight raids prompted AHQ to rule that no further daylight raids were to be carried out until fighter escorts could be provided, but unfortunately these orders were academic: the fighters of 34 and 27 Squadrons and RAAF 21 Squadron had no serviceable aircraft, and neither did 62 Squadron, whose Blenheims were likewise destroyed on the ground. The dire state of the theatre was also playing on the mind of the station commander at Kuantan, who requested an evacuation of the field on 8 December; this was eventually accepted and, on the following day, the majority of aircraft (except for Hudsons and a flight of twelve Vildebeests) were evacuated, with the Blenheims of 60 Squadron withdrawn to Singapore itself. It was somewhat fortuitous, as the Japanese attacked the airfield that lunchtime, destroying four Hudsons, a Vildebeest, a powerhouse, and a bomb dump, with other damage to runways and other aircraft that caused the remaining aircraft to be withdrawn as well. The ground crews of the squadrons left by truck without official orders or their officers, before meeting with 1 Squadron RAAF’s ground crew from Kota Bahru. Finding no one in charge, they were taken over by their commanding officer, who took the 466-strong party to Jerautut, where they were put on a train that would send airmen to Singapore and Station Headquarters staff to Kuala Lumpur.


  Butterworth was likewise abandoned on 10 December, followed by Alor Star, where the last two remaining Blenheims of 62 Squadron were flown out to Singapore while ground personnel were sent to Taiping in order to hopefully reform the squadron at a later date. A further three Blenheim IVs of 34 Squadron and one solitary night fighter flew back to Singapore from Butterworth to add to the small force growing there. The airfields at Penanag was also demolished. Plans were made to demolish Kuala Ketil and Labok Klap using unused bombs due to a lack of demolitions equipment, but this was vetoed as the continual explosions and smoke was worrying the already shaken army forces, who feared that the Japanese had got past them—leaving RAF details to demolish the station’s buildings by hand!


  One flight of 34 Squadron advanced from Singapore for an early morning reconnaissance from Kuantan as the base was evacuated of all other craft. Despite rumours of a Japanese landing on the coast nearby (which was attended by Vildebeests and Hudsons, who found next to nothing), Kuantan was still vaguely operational, with one grass runway, stocks of fuel, and some ordinance, but no wireless. The station’s commander was ordered to stand fast with three officers and twelve men and await further orders, something that must have sounded quite ominous, considering the proximity of the Japanese and the unsupported army getting pushed back. The three Blenheims had been assigned to the important mission of scouting ahead and around the Royal Navy Force Z, which was centred on HMS Prince of Wales and the battlecruiser Repulse, who, under the flag of Admiral Tom Phillips, were to launch a lightening raid on Signora. The previous day’s abortive raids were supposed to have reduced the enemy’s air capability, as was a proposed raid on Indo-China by the USAF from the Philippines, but this never happened. Phillips was informed of movements sighted by the Blenheims and other aircraft, as well as of the lack of fighters and bomber support available from the RAF, who were now reduced to twelve Blenheims, twelve Vildebeests, and six to eight Buffalo fighters in the Northern sector, with only a couple of bases to operate from. Phillips dismissed the concerns, believing that the Japanese air force would be able to do little against him if he struck fast. It was a decision that cost him both capital ships and his life.


  On 11 December, a flight of six of 34 Squadron’s Blenheims were to take part in an intricate plan to bomb Signora at night, with refuelling and rearming positions prepared at Ipoh and Taipang. However, before the launch time, news reached AHQ that neither field could be of much assistance, so the bombers were alerted and told to spend the minimum amount of time over the target. The first aircraft to take off collided with the hill top at Tanjong Gul at 2 a.m., the second failed to take off, and the third circled Seletar Airfield for an hour and a half. The next three reached and bombed the target through cloud, before returning safely to Ipoh and Kluang by daybreak.


  The RAF’s scattered forces were no longer able to mount any further offensives and, with the decimation of airfields, AHQ could do little more than relegate its force to reconnaissance duties; this was carried out by the Hudsons, Buffalos, Catalinas, three warship-mounted Supermarine Walruses, and Dutch aircraft, while the Blenheim force tried to reorganise. On 14 December, 60 Squadron’s survivors were sent to Burma to reform and rearm with new aircraft from the west, leaving their Mark Is behind to shore up 34 Squadron while AHQ looked at converting Vildebeests into bombers and Wirraways into dive bombers. A Japanese fleet consisting of 140 ships was spotted on a south-south-westerly course from Indo-China, including 100 transports, two aircraft carriers, and several destroyers. Fearing the force was heading for Singapore to attack on her poorly defended east side, the RAF assembled a strike force of sixty aircraft, including nine Blenheim IVs armed with two 500-lb SAP, four Mark Is with four 250-lb SAPs, and five Mark Is with four 250-lb general purpose bombs based at Tengah, supporting twenty-two Vildebeests, seven Hudsons, and fifteen Dutch Glen Martins. However, at daybreak on 16 December the force could not be found on the predicted course, having instead attacked Borneo.


  The Anglo-Indian army was faced with a very aggressive enemy, equipped with twenty light tanks, and with air cover that left them struggling to hold ground. In ideal circumstances, the RAF would have been able to offer some support to them or the navy, but the earlier raids on airfields and losses during the counter attacks had neutered their strike force, and yet again weary soldiers found themselves looking to the skies and muttering ‘Where is the RAF?’ Furthermore, the Air Staff favoured the Blenheim to strike Signora Port and troop concentrations in the rear, rather than actively taking part in fighting over the front, and they acknowledged there was little, if anything, they could do to the Japanese-held airfields. This, however, was blocked by the GOC, with Percival believing that hitting airfields would give the RAF breathing room to attack shipping and aid the army. Those attacks would not come to pass though, as Air Marshal Brooke-Popham reported to the Air Ministry that ‘he was unable to deliver the scale of attack anticipated against enemy airfields and shipping because the northern airfields were untenable.’(6)


  Percival continued to meddle directly in the RAF’s plans, ignoring the advice and statements of officers who knew better, by ordering them to make supporting the 11th Indian Division as their top priority, and instructing Brooke-Popham that his priorities were in the Kedah region. The Air Marshal knew, however, that he did not have the infrastructure or fighters to escort the bombers, without whom there would soon be none left. Indeed, there were no fighters available to defend Penang’s port on 10 December or to be used for tactical reconnaissance. It was a situation that required the barrel to be thoroughly scraped and, despite pooling Buffalos at Ipoh Airfield, the Japanese offensive continued and the airfield was attacked, which reduced it to three operational aircraft, while Sungei Patani airfield had to be evacuated as the Japanese were believed to be seventeen hours away. On 19 December, Penang fell.


  The airfields at Alor Star and Sungei Patani were destroyed on 16 December by the RAF; Kuantan followed two days later, with personnel being evacuated two days after that. Other civilian fields fell to the Japanese, including the half-destroyed Sungei Patani, where a large petrol dump was captured intact due to a ‘lack of time and the hostility of the enemy.’ Ipoh followed on 18 December, with only three operational Buffalos, and steps were immediately made to destroy excess fuel, despite an attempt by an MVAF Rapide flying in spares to try and shore up the defences. Japanese air raids soon claimed the Rapide. As many spares as could be saved were placed on trains and sent to Sungei Besi at Kuala Lumpur, where Norgroup re-established its headquarters. Within days, the shortages of aircraft effectively meant that Norgroup ceased to exist, with its remaining fighter aircraft put under the control of the Station Commander at Kuala Lumpur, while everyone else was withdrawn to Singapore.


  A last roll of the dice was attempted with the only bombers available, and three of 34 Squadron’s
General Percival (far right) Surrenders Singapore
Mark IVs were sent to attack Sungei Patani. They took off from Tengah individually without escort and set off into the night, but were forced to return due to bad weather. The raid was attempted again on 23 December, and they reached the target but could not see their results through the dark and cloud. AHQ decided that further night operations would have to be carried out from 27 December, when the full moon would aid their bomb aimers.


  Despite the bravery of the Buffalo fighters at Kuala Lumpur, the Japanese tenacity proved too much, and AHQ ordered the withdrawal and destruction of all the mainland airfields and their stores, including Ipoh, on 22 December. Soldiers of III Corps managed to save 300 drums of irreplaceable aviation fuel, and disposed of what could not be saved before destroying the base.


  The air war in Malaya was very reminiscent of the RAF’s experiences in France and Europe, but without the luxury of reinforcements. The crews of the Blenheim bombers—and, indeed, the other aircraft—fought bravely against extremely tough odds, but the deck had been stacked against them before it had even begun. Poor maintenance of aircraft seriously affected availability of all types, while poor early warning systems and airfield defences left the aircraft very vulnerable to the inevitable air attacks by an exceptionally numerate enemy. The inadequacies of the Buffalo fighters were a contributing factor, but the biggest was the disregarding of information obtained by the Chinese and passed onto the RAF about the capabilities of the Zero fighter. With their forces in withdrawal and their aircraft destroyed, airmen were formed into scratch infantry detachments to help the beleaguered army, and some of 62 Squadron traded their Blenheims for armoured cars and, led by Squadron Leader Boxell, joined ‘C’Company of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders in battling the Japanese on the Grik road, and fell back to avoid being encircled. The situation was dire and, where possible, the army fell back to Singapore. The War Office looked at the very real possibility that Singapore would fall soon too.
 


1.   ​RAF Historical branch War in the Far East Vol II p. 1


2.​Ibid. p.8

3.​Young, A. J. & Warne D. W Sixty Squadron, (London, EP,  1967) p. 140




4.​Percival, A. E., The war in Malaya, (London, Eyre & Spotswood, 1949) p.114


5.​RAF Historical Branch, War in the Far East Vol II p.21


6.​Ibid. p.52