War  |  Memory  |  Gratitude

Jungle Commandos: The Battle for Arakan 1945

Jungle Commandos: The Battle for Arakan 1945

Webinar: Thursday 26th February at 8pm

 

The Kohima Educational Trust is delighted to present this webinar on Thursday 26th February at 8pm with Dr Robert Lyman MBE who introduces our guest speaker Lucy Betteridge-Dyson. Lucy is a military and animal historian, author and PhD candidate at the Defence Studies Department, King’s College London.
 
Following the Battles of Kohima and Imphal, the tide was turning against the Imperial Japanese Army. In November 1944, the British Fourteenth Army embarked on a dramatic advance that would lead to the re-conquest of Burma. Yet this famous victory would not have been possible without another offensive taking place along the western coast in Arakan, where XV Corps and 3 Commando Brigade were tasked with trapping and destroying the Japanese 28th Army.
 
In a series of daring combined operations and deep-penetration missions into the Burmese jungle, Royal Marine and Army Commandos – alongside the men of the 25 and 26 Indian Infantry and the 81 and 82 (West African) Divisions – inflicted a devastating defeat on an enemy once thought unbeatable.
 
In this talk Lucy will give an overview of the daring tactics, multinational cooperation, and overlooked battles of the Third Arakan Campaign, the logistical lynchpin of the reconquest of Burma. 
 
To register and book your free place on this online webinar, please click the button below: 
 
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Speakers: 

 

Dr Robert Lyman MBE - Military Historian, Author and Trustee of KET  Born in New Zealand in January 1963 and educated in Australia, Robert Lyman was, for twenty years, an officer in the British Army. Educated at Scotch College, Melbourne he was commissioned into the Light Infantry from the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, in April 1982. In addition to a business career he is an author and military historian, publishing books in particular on the war in the Far East. He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. Robert is married to Hannah, has two sons, and lives in Berkshire. For information about Robert's publications please visit his website: robertlyman.com

 

Lucy Betteridge-Dyson is a military & animal historian, author and PhD candidate at the Defence Studies Department, King’s College London. She has a strong personal connection to the Burma Campaign through her grandfather, Captain Edwin Alan Robert Syms, who served with 44 (Royal Marine) Commando during the Third Arakan Campaign, the subject of her first book, Jungle Commandos: The Battle for Arakan, Burma 1945. A Burma Star Memorial Fund scholar, her current research combines methodologies from military history and animal studies to explore the role of horses and mules in shaping operations and the institutional development of the British Army and imperial forces between 1918 and 1945. 

 

Sylvia May - Managing Trustee of The Kohima Educational Trust Sylvia May was born in New Jersey, USA in 1957. Her parents moved to England in 1963. Educated at High Wycombe School for Girls, she decided to pursue a career in the world of books. Sylvia worked for HarperCollins for 37 years, the last eleven of which she headed up their UK-based International Sales team. Sylvia May is the daughter of the late Gordon Graham, Founder and President of the Kohima Educational Trust. She is proud that her father has inspired many people to share his vision to commemorate those who fought and died in Kohima, and the wonderful Naga people who have done so much for the British in the past. She first visited India in 1994 with her husband Robert, and has returned on numerous occasions, staying in Kohima several times. In 2000, they followed the WWII route of the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders, her father’s regiment. The regiment’s first main engagement in this theatre of war was at Zubza shortly before the Battle of Kohima.

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