• '21 '20 '18 '17 '16 '15 '14 '13

    Today is the Victory Day in Europe - 70th anniversary of the day Nazi Germany surrendered and thus brought World War II to the end.
    Glory to the millions fallen heroes who made it.
    Happy V Day!

  • Liaison TripleA '11 '10

    Time to Celebrate!

    Just make sure we snub any Russians…

  • '21 '20 '18 '17 '16 '15 '14 '13

    It’s OK. Dogs bark, but the caravan moves on.  :-)


  • @Me1945:

    Today is the Victory Day in Europe - 70th anniversary of the day Nazi Germany surrendered and thus brought World War II to the end.
    Glory to the millions fallen heroes who made it.
    Happy V Day!

    Well, not exactly for the US, at least.  Just VE Day, haha.  We had a little longer in the Pacific with the Japanese.


  • @WraithZer0:

    Well, not exactly for the US, at least.  Just VE Day, haha.  We had a little longer in the Pacific with the Japanese.

    Nor for the UK by that definition WraithZero. Still serious fighting in Burma, resulting in Japan’s greatest land defeat of the war, although perhaps as much of a sideshow as the US retaking of the Phillippines (take note Gargantua!). Quote from Wikipedia:

    The military and political results of the Burma campaign have been contentious on the Allied side. In military terms, the Japanese retained control of Burma until the result of the campaign was irrelevant to the fate of Japan. It was recognised by many contemporary US authorities and later American historians that the campaign was a “sideshow” and (apart from distracting some Japanese land forces from China or the Pacific) did not contribute to the defeat of Japan, although the recovery of Burma was reckoned a triumph for the British Indian Army. After the war ended, a combination of the pre-war agitation among the Burman population for independence and the economic ruin of Burma during the four years’ campaign made it impossible for the former regime to be resumed. Within three years, both Burma and India were independent.

    Against these criticisms, the attempted Japanese invasion of India in 1944 was launched on unrealistic premises and resulted in the greatest defeat the Japanese armies had suffered to that date. After the Singapore debacle and the loss of Burma in 1942, the British were bound to defend India at all costs, as a successful invasion by Japanese Imperial forces would have been disastrous. The defence operations at Kohima and Imphal in 1944 have since taken on huge symbolic value as the turning of the tide in British fortunes in the war in the East.

    The American historian Raymond Callahan concluded “Slim’s great victory … helped the British, unlike the French, Dutch or, later, the Americans, to leave Asia with some dignity.”[14]

    American goals in Burma had been to aid the Nationalist Chinese regime. Apart from the “Hump” airlift, these bore no fruit until so near the end of the war that they made little contribution to the defeat of Japan. These efforts have also been criticised as fruitless because of the self-interest and corruption of Chiang Kai-Shek’s regime.


  • The Allied powers which were already at war with Japan on V.E. Day (of which there were several) continued to be at war with Japan after the German surrender, with the USSR joining the war in August 1945.  The Instrument of Surrender signed by Japan on the USS Missouri in September 1945 was signed by the United States, China, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, Australia, Canada, France, the Netherlands and New Zealand.


  • That’s right, Private.  Thank you.  I had forgotten about Burma… and Bridge on the River Kwai! Haha.  All British Pacific engagements (Australia included).


  • Additionally, was there anything going on in Hong Kong (British Commonwealth) during this mess, including the civil war?

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