Xelloss wrote:
3) Fall of Singapore in WWII. Notable in that the British, who were well entrenched and fortified, surrendered to a Japanese division that was outnumbered, outgunned, and under-equipped.
You're kidding me, right?
Well entrenched and fortified by WHAT standards?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Sarimbun_Beach
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Kranji
There were attempts by the British to fortify the beaches up north, but they simply wasn't finished. Indeed, the paucity of said defences up north is a constant criticism raised by Brigadier Ivan Simson. (He also criticised Simmons, commander of Fortress Singapore proper who fortified the harbor defences down south instead of north although the criticism ignores the larger context).
The failing of their defences are well known. The searchlights didn't work as advertised, since most of them didn't work, they only served to guide Japanese forces in to the landing as opposed to illuminating them up to Australian fire. Fire support was lacking, because of the general shortage of ammunition. There was no concrete bunkers and the network of trenches was incomplete. Field communications back to higher HQ didn't work well although how significant this was to the failure to coordinate artillery fire to suppress the Japanese landing is contested.
And how was the Japanese outgunned? Sure, they didn't actually manage to land tanks..... but they fixed the causeway and charged Jap tanks down the Aussies throat, who didn't have adequate AT guns.
Ammunition was short sure, but let's not forget. Its the BRITISH who ran out of ammunition in the Battle of Singapore first, NOT the Japanese. Percival last command decision, to ask his commanders if they felt that a charge against Bukit Timah to drive away Japanese artillery shelling the city was possible was dismissed because the British forces were out of ammunition.
Was Singapore an epic fail? Sure. It marked the end of an epoch in British colonial history. More than the Boer War, More than the Sepoy Mutiny, more than WW1, it highlighted the impossibility of the British Empire military to defend her empire using the forces from an island nation. The deficiencies showed the Empire military weakness. Even the defence planning showed just how much power had swung to the US, in 1940, Churchill entire plan for defending Singapore rested in the hopes that the US would intervene,since the Japs would be foolish to attack two white powers, and the two strongest navies of the land, especially when the Pacific Fleet is so close at Pearl Harbor.
Let him land on any Lyran world to taste firsthand the wrath of peace loving people thwarted by the myopic greed of a few miserly old farts- Katrina Steiner