Battle of Muar | |||||||
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Part of the Malayan Campaign of the Pacific War | |||||||
Australian 2 pounder gun of 13th Battery, 4th Anti-Tank Regiment, firing on Japanese Type 95 Ha-Gō tanks of the 14th Tank Regiment on the Muar-Parit Sulong road on 18 January 1942. |
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Belligerents | |||||||
Australia British India United Kingdom |
Empire of Japan | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Gordon Bennett Herbert Duncan † Charles Anderson Frederick Galleghan |
Takuma Nishimura Masakazu Ogaki Shiegeo Gotanda † |
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Units involved | |||||||
Westforce: 8th Division 9th Infantry Division 45th Infantry Brigade 53rd Infantry Brigade |
Twenty-Fifth Army: Imperial Guards 5th Division 3rd Air Division |
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Strength | |||||||
4,000 infantry 60 aircraft |
8,000 infantry 400 aircraft |
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Casualties and losses | |||||||
3,100 killed (including 145 prisoners of war) | 700+ killed 15+ tanks destroyed |
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The Battle of Muar was the last major battle of the Malayan Campaign during the Second World War. It took place from 14–22 January 1942 around Gemensah Bridge and on the Muar River. After the British defeat at Slim River, General Archibald Wavell, commander of ABDA, decided that Lieutenant General Lewis Heath's III Indian Corps should withdraw 240 kilometres (150 mi) south into the State of Johore to rest and regroup, whilst the 8th Australian Division would attempt to stop the Japanese advance.
Allied soldiers, under the command of Major General Gordon Bennett, inflicted severe losses on Japanese forces at the Gemensah Bridge ambush and in a second battle a few kilometres north of the town of Gemas. Members of the Australian 8th Division killed an estimated 700 personnel from the Japanese Imperial Guards Division, in the ambush at the bridge itself, whilst Australian anti-tank guns destroyed several Japanese tanks in the battle north of Gemas.
Although the ambush was successful for the Allies, the defence of Muar and Bakri on the west coast was a complete failure which resulted in the near-annihilation of the 45th Indian Infantry Brigade and heavy casualties for its two attached Australian infantry battalions. This was the first engagement between units of the British 18th Division and Japanese forces in Malaya.