The Japanese Conquest of Penang: Part One

By William Tham, Enzo Sim

December 2021 LEST WE FORGET
main image
Australian anti-tank gun in action at Bakri on the Muar-Parit Sulong Road. Photo by: Imperial War Museum
Advertisement
THE OVERWHELMING FOCUS on the bombing of Pearl Harbor on December 7, 19411 as the start of the Pacific War means that the actual first shot is largely forgotten – that was fired on the shores of Kota Bharu, Kelantan, where the Japanese Imperial Army had landed just slightly over an hour earlier, while their airborne counterparts were still en route to Hawai’i.2 Japan’s grand plan to unify East Asia, beyond occupied Korea and the eastern parts of China, was...

Subscribe to our e-archive to read our older articles.

References
William Tham

has been published in NANG, PR&TA, The Best of World SF: Volume 2, and the Southeast Asian Review of English. He co-edited The Second Link: An Anthology of Malaysian and Singaporean Writing.

Enzo Sim

is a Mass Communications graduate who has an unwavering passion towards international relations, history and regional affairs of Southeast Asia. His passion has brought him to different Southeast Asian capitals to explore the diverse cultural intricacies within the region.


`