Battle of Pwinmyo and Nagapakaung: Difference between revisions

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The Battles of Pwinmyo (15 August - 20 November 1944) and Nagapakaung (4 September - 21 October 1944) took place in the region around the city of Pwinmyo and the small town of Nagapakaung located north of the former. The simultaneous battles were considered to be the final Quenminese offensive of the war.  
The '''Battles of Pwinmyo''' (15 August - 20 November 1944) and '''Nagapakaung''' (4 September - 21 October 1944) took place in the region around the city of Pwinmyo and the small town of Nagapakaung located north of the former. The simultaneous battles were considered to be the final Quenminese offensive of the war.  


While the Allied forces were halfway completed in the liberation of Bethausia, Quenminese Marshal [[Thạch Hung Sõn Chiến]] planned out in what would be the last Quenminese offensive operation of the war. Marshal Chien attempted to give the Allies a surprise by navigating to Sugiyama's weakest and least defended area at Pwinmyo. In addition, he called for a simultaneous attack at Nagapakaung once he had succeeded in forcing the Allies off Pwinmyo. Initially, the Imperial forces succeeded and Sugiyama was surprised at the sudden attack which caused him to pull-out his forces at Pwinmyo. Chien immediately gave chase to Sugiyama, who capitalised on the enemy advance by slowly stretching Chien's supply lines, as the heavy forestry and mountainous terrain of the region was already causing problems for logistics on both sides.  
While the Allied forces were halfway completed in the liberation of Bethausia, Quenminese Marshal [[Thạch Hung Sõn Chiến]] planned out in what would be the last Quenminese offensive operation of the war. Marshal Chien attempted to give the Allies a surprise by navigating to Marshal [[Archibald Sugiyama]]'s weakest and least defended area at Pwinmyo. In addition, he called for a simultaneous attack at Nagapakaung once he had succeeded in forcing the Allies off Pwinmyo. Initially, the Imperial forces succeeded and Sugiyama was surprised at the sudden attack which caused him to pull-out his forces at Pwinmyo. Chien immediately gave chase to Sugiyama, who capitalised on the enemy advance by slowly stretching Chien's supply lines, as the heavy forestry and mountainous terrain of the region was already causing problems for logistics on both sides.  


By October, Chien's supply lines were already stretched to the point that logistical nightmares were beginning to take shape within the Imperial lines. Sugiyama immediately ordered a counterattack that saw Erebonian and Rubrumian forces swinging south and attacking the main supply line to Pwinmyo while the Gallian and Estharian forces swung north and attacked the Imperial forces at Nagapakaung. With this, Sugiyama had effectively regained control of the battle as the main Imperial forces in the center began to fall back to Pwinmyo. Following the recapture of Nagapakaung by Allied forces, Chien ordered Quenminese forces at Pwinmyo to defend the city as he began an attempt to counterattack and relieve the city with elements from General [[Phó Minh Duyên]]'s armoured force. However, the relief force was met with heavy ERUAC resistance at the main road to Pwinmyo. Eventually, Duyên was forced to retreat across the Pwinmyo River. By 20 November, the remainder of the Quenminese forces at Pwinmyo surrendered.  
By October, Chien's supply lines were already stretched to the point that logistical nightmares were beginning to take shape within the Imperial lines. Sugiyama immediately ordered a counterattack that saw Erebonian and Rubrumian forces swinging south and attacking the main supply line to Pwinmyo while the Gallian and Estharian forces swung north and attacked the Imperial forces at Nagapakaung. With this, Sugiyama had effectively regained control of the battle as the main Imperial forces in the center began to fall back to Pwinmyo. Following the recapture of Nagapakaung by Allied forces, Chien ordered Quenminese forces at Pwinmyo to defend the city as he began an attempt to counterattack and relieve the city with elements from General [[Phó Minh Duyên]]'s armoured force. However, the relief force was met with heavy ERUAC resistance at the main road to Pwinmyo. Eventually, Duyên was forced to retreat across the Pwinmyo River. By 20 November, the remainder of the Quenminese forces at Pwinmyo surrendered.  

Latest revision as of 18:47, 2 June 2022

Battle of Pwinmyo and Nagapakaung
Part of the Asianna and the Pacific Campaign of the Second Europan War
The British Army in Burma 1945 SE1628.jpg
ERUAC troops at Pwinmyo
Date15 August 1944 - 20 November 1944
Location
Quenminese-Bethausian Border, Western Quenmin
Result Decisive Allied Victory
Belligerents
Commanders and leaders
Units involved
North Asianna Expeditionary Front
5th Army
Strength
  • 7 Infantry Divisions
  • 4 Armoured Divisions
  • 2 Parachute Brigade
  • 9 Infantry Divisions
  • 5 Armoured Divisions
  • 2 Reserve Brigades
Casualties and losses
10,147 killed or wounded
47 tanks
59 vehicles
24 guns
42 aircraft

54,981 killed or wounded

  • 17,785 dead from disease
101 tanks
98 vehicles
53 guns
75 aircraft

The Battles of Pwinmyo (15 August - 20 November 1944) and Nagapakaung (4 September - 21 October 1944) took place in the region around the city of Pwinmyo and the small town of Nagapakaung located north of the former. The simultaneous battles were considered to be the final Quenminese offensive of the war.

While the Allied forces were halfway completed in the liberation of Bethausia, Quenminese Marshal Thạch Hung Sõn Chiến planned out in what would be the last Quenminese offensive operation of the war. Marshal Chien attempted to give the Allies a surprise by navigating to Marshal Archibald Sugiyama's weakest and least defended area at Pwinmyo. In addition, he called for a simultaneous attack at Nagapakaung once he had succeeded in forcing the Allies off Pwinmyo. Initially, the Imperial forces succeeded and Sugiyama was surprised at the sudden attack which caused him to pull-out his forces at Pwinmyo. Chien immediately gave chase to Sugiyama, who capitalised on the enemy advance by slowly stretching Chien's supply lines, as the heavy forestry and mountainous terrain of the region was already causing problems for logistics on both sides.

By October, Chien's supply lines were already stretched to the point that logistical nightmares were beginning to take shape within the Imperial lines. Sugiyama immediately ordered a counterattack that saw Erebonian and Rubrumian forces swinging south and attacking the main supply line to Pwinmyo while the Gallian and Estharian forces swung north and attacked the Imperial forces at Nagapakaung. With this, Sugiyama had effectively regained control of the battle as the main Imperial forces in the center began to fall back to Pwinmyo. Following the recapture of Nagapakaung by Allied forces, Chien ordered Quenminese forces at Pwinmyo to defend the city as he began an attempt to counterattack and relieve the city with elements from General Phó Minh Duyên's armoured force. However, the relief force was met with heavy ERUAC resistance at the main road to Pwinmyo. Eventually, Duyên was forced to retreat across the Pwinmyo River. By 20 November, the remainder of the Quenminese forces at Pwinmyo surrendered.

The Imperial defeat at Pwinmyo and Nagapakaung proved to be the last ditch attempt to regain the initiative in Southeast Asianna. The Allied victory eventually paved the way for Operation Arbiter, the landbourne invasion of Quenmin.

Background

Prelude

The Battle

Opening Phase

Stalemate

Allied Counterattack

Aftermath