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Philippines Campaign (1941-1942)

Battle of the Philippines
Part of the Pacific Theatre of World War II
Ww2 131.jpg
A burial detail of Filipino prisoners of war uses improvised litters to carry fallen comrades at Camp O'Donnell, Capas, Tarlac, 1942, following the Bataan Death March.
Date 8 December 1941 – 8 May 1942
Location Philippines
Result Decisive Japanese victory
Territorial
changes
Japanese occupation of the Philippines
Belligerents
 Empire of Japan

 United States

Commanders and leaders
Empire of Japan Masaharu Homma United StatesCommonwealth of the Philippines Douglas MacArthur
United States Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright IV (POW)
Commonwealth of the Philippines Manuel L. Quezon
Commonwealth of the Philippines Paulino T. Santos
Commonwealth of the Philippines Basilio J. Valdez
Commonwealth of the Philippines Vicente Lim
Commonwealth of the Philippines Alfredo M. Santos
Commonwealth of the Philippines Mateo Capinpin
Strength
129,435 troops
90 tanks
541 aircraft
151,000 troops
108 tanks
277 aircraft
Casualties and losses
22,500
9,000 killed
500 missing
13,200 wounded
146,000
25,000 killed
21,000 wounded
100,000 captured

 United States

The Philippines Campaign (Filipino: Kampanya sa Pilipinas or Labanan sa Pilipinas) or the Battle of the Philippines, fought 8 December 1941 – 8 May 1942, was the invasion of the Philippines by Japan and the defense of the islands by Filipino and United States forces during the Second World War.

The Japanese launched the invasion by sea from Formosa over 200 miles to the north of the Philippines. The defending forces outnumbered the Japanese invaders by 3 to 2, however they were a mixed force of non-combat experienced regular, national guard, constabulary and newly created Commonwealth units. The Japanese used first-line troops at the outset of the campaign concentrating forces in the first month enabling a swift overrun of most of Luzon.

The Japanese high command, believing they had won the campaign, made a strategic decision to advance by a month their timetable of operations in Borneo and Indonesia, withdrawing their best division and the bulk of their airpower in early January 1942. This, coupled with the decision of the defenders to withdraw into a defensive holding position in the Bataan Peninsula, enabled the Americans and Filipinos to successfully hold out for four more months.

The conquest of the Philippines by Japan is often considered the worst military defeat in United States history. Twenty-three thousand American military personnel were killed or captured and Filipino soldiers killed or captured totaled around 100,000.

The Japanese planned to occupy the Philippines as part of their plan for a "Greater East Asia War" in which their Southern Expeditionary Army Group seized sources of raw materials in Malaya and the Netherlands East Indies while the Combined Fleet neutralized the United States Pacific Fleet.


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