JAPANESE IN MALAYA
—♦ — LACK OF MILITARY DRESS The light personal equipment of the Japanese soldiers in Malaya is emphasised in a statement in the official journal .of the Australian Army Education Service. Their dress often is non-mili-tary, commanders wearing a single sash at night and the non-commis-sioned officers a white armband. Troops have been captured wearing no unit insignia but a white strip bearing their name and number. Usually an advance is preceded by a forward screen, whose duty is to locate the position of defending troops. Frequently these forward parties are dressed in ordinary shirts, shorts, and running shoes. This helps them to mix with Asiatic refugees and assist the infiltration and flanking tactics tha't have been so successful. Wherever the forward screen reaches a defending position word is quickly passed back, and strong forces deploy in the rear and begin an outflanking move. When the forward screens meet counter-at-tacking forces they.Jie hidden until they can open fire on the rear of the attacking force that has passed through them. Just as German dive-bombers were provided with screaming devices to unnerve land troops and civilians, so the Japanese emplov various means of producing noises. They use mortar bombs and bullets which make very loud explosions, the idea apparently being to persuade the defenders that they are being heavily bombarded. In. some cases this ruse succeeded in causing premature withdrawals. One observer has reported that junior officers and non-commissioned_ officers slavishly follow the instructions in their field service manuals, and have even been seen to consult it in battle when confronted with an unexoected situation. The old dictum that a soldier does not think, but ju«t do"? -3= he is told is still maintained bv the Japanese army. Here lie? the strength and the weakness of the system.
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Press, Volume LXXVIII, Issue 23588, 16 March 1942, Page 3
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298JAPANESE IN MALAYA Press, Volume LXXVIII, Issue 23588, 16 March 1942, Page 3
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