Forgotten Wars

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by Harper, Tim


  158. For this see T. N. Harper, ‘Lim Chin Siong and “the Singapore Story”’, in Jomo K. S. and Tan, Comet in our sky, pp. 1–56; Zahari, Dark clouds at dawn, pp. 275–9.

  159. Malaya Tribune, 4 January 1949.

  160. Mustapha Hussain, Malay nationalism before Umno: the memoirs of Mustapha Hussain, translated by Insun Mustapha and edited by Jomo K. S. (Kuala Lumpur, 2005), pp. 360–67.

  161. A. Samad Said, ‘1948: Dawn of a new literary era’, Between art and reality: selected essays (Kuala Lumpur, 1994), pp. 57–71.

  162. Oswald Henry, ‘Singapore makes Malay movies’, Malaya Tribune, 24 December 1947.

  163. Gregory Clancey, ‘Towards a spatial history of emergency: notes from Singapore’, Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore, Working Paper 8, 2003.

  164. Federation of Malaya, Political Report for January 1949, CO537/4763, TNA.

  165. Malaya Tribune, 29 March, 1949.

  166. ‘Translation of a printed MCP booklet entitled “Present day situation and duties”’, 1 November 1949, FO371/84481, TNA.

  167. W. C. S. Corry to W. E. Rigby, 9 May 1949, BA Pahang/99/49, ANM.

  168. Firdaus Haji Abdullah, Radical Malay politics: its origins and early development (Petaling Jaya, 1985), pp. 24–6.

  169. ‘Translation of a printed MCP booklet entitled “Present day situation and duties”’, 1 November 1949, FO371/84481, TNA.

  170. Chin Peng, My side of history, p. 262.

  171. A document, purporting to be from the Malayan Communist Party, Johore–Malacca Border Committee, Death of a heretic (Singapore, 1951).

  172. ‘Yap Sang, 14 October 1949’, B. P. Walker Taylor Papers, RHO.

  173. Federal War Council Joint Intelligence Advisory Committee, ‘The potential of the Malayan Communist Party’, 24 October 1950, FO371/84482, TNA.

  EPILOGUE: THE END OF BRITAIN’S ASIAN EMPIRE

  1. Mustapha Hussain, Malay nationalism before Umno: the memoirs of Mustapha Hussain, translated by Insun Mustapha and edited by Jomo K. S. (Kuala Lumpur, 2005), p. 313.

  2. From Utusan Melayu, 23 August 1947, translated and quoted in Ariffin Omar, Bangsa Melayu: Malay concepts of democracy and community, 1945–50 (Kuala Lumpur, 1993), p. 116.

  3. ‘The United Kingdom in South-East Asia and the Far East’, October 1949, and cabinet conclusions on ‘South-East Asia and the Far East’, in A. J. Stockwell, ed., British documents on the end of empire: Malaya, part II (London, 1995), pp. 158–70, 173.

  4. Rajeswary Ampalavanar, The Indian minority and political change in Malaya, 1945–1955 (Kuala Lumpur, 1981), p. 27.

  5. George C. Thomson, ‘Political Assessment of the visit of Pandit Nehru to Singapore’, 29 June 1950, FO371/101233, TNA.

  6. Anthony Short, In pursuit of mountain rats: the communist insurrection in Malaya (Singapore, 2000 [1975]), pp. 507–8.

  7. Michael Calvert, Fighting mad (Shrewsbury, 1996), pp. 202–5.

  8. David Rooney, Mad Mike: a life of Michael Calvert (London, 1997), pp. 134–45.

  9. Tony Geraghty, Who dares wins: the story of SAS, 1952–92, 3rd edn (London, 1992), pp. 327–55.

  10. The Times, 13 August 1953; Raffi Gregorian, The British army, the Gurkhas and Cold War strategy in the Far East, 1947–1954 (Basingstoke, 2002), p. 175.

  11. Timothy Parsons, The African rank-and-file: social implications of colonial military service in the King’s African Rifles, 1902–1964 (Oxford, 1999), pp. 39, 93, 109, 166, 199, 212. Malcolm Page, A history of The King’s African Rifles and East African Forces (London, 1998), pp. 190–95.

  12. Short, In pursuit of mountain rats, pp. 304–5. For the absence of planning see Chin Peng, My side of history (Singapore, 2004), pp. 287–9.

  13. The Times, 6 December 1951.

  14. A great deal has been written about these reappraisals. For Lyttelton’s report see, ‘Malaya’: Cabinet memorandum by Mr Lyttelton, 21 December 1951, in Stockwell, British documents: Malaya, part II, pp. 319–533. Also, Short, In pursuit of mountain rats, pp. 322–44; Richard Stubbs, Hearts and minds in guerrilla warfare: the Malayan Emergency, 1948–1960 (Singapore, 1989), pp. 136–40.

  15. John Cloake, Templer: tiger of Malaya (London, 1985).

  16. Victor Purcell, Malaya: communist or free? (Stanford, 1955), p. 16.

  17. R. W. I. Bland to Heussler, 21 August 1969, Heussler Papers, RHO.

  18. For ongoing controversy, see Karl Hack, ‘“Iron claws on Malaya”: the historiography of the Malayan Emergency’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 30, 1 (1999), pp. 99–125, who also argues for an early change of direction, and Kumar Ramakrishna, who restates the pivotal importance of Templer in ‘“Transmogrifying Malaya”: the impact of Sir Gerald Templer (1952–54)’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 32, 1 (2001), pp. 79–92.

  19. Robert Heussler, British rule in Malaya, 1942–57 (Singapore, 1985), p. 186.

  20. For the coercive side of the population control from a counter-insurgency perspective, see also Hack, ‘“Iron claws on Malaya”’, pp. 115–23.

  21. Johore Council of State, 4 October 1950, Sel. Sec/151/149, ANM.

  22. We are grateful to Simon Winder for suggesting this image.

  23. D. W. Le Mare, ‘Community development’, INF/18677/533, ANM.

  24. Sir Robert Thompson, Defeating communist insurgency: experiences from Malaya and Vietnam (London, 1966).

  25. Han Suyin, My house has two doors (London, 1980), p. 79.

  26. Federation of Malaya, Report on the conduct of food searches at Semenyih in the Kajang District of the State of Selangor (Kuala Lumpur, 1956).

  27. For this see Frank Furedi, ‘Britain’s colonial wars: playing the ethnic card’, Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics, 28, 1 (1990), pp. 70–89.

  28. Ministry of Defence ‘Malaya: defence costs’, 13 November 1951, CO1022/34, TNA. This was first brought to light by Richard Stubbs, Counter-insurgency and the economic factor: the impact of the Korean War prices boom on the Malayan Emergency (ISEAS Occasional paper no. 19, Singapore, 1974).

  29. Nicholas J. White, Business, government and the end of empire: Malaya, 1945–1957 (Kuala Lumpur, 1996), pp. 51–3.

  30. For an extended discussion of the ‘domestication’ of the Malayan Chinese, see T. N. Harper, The end of empire and the making of Malaya (Cambridge, 1999), chs. 5 and 6.

  31. Roy Follows, Jungle-beat: fighting terrorists in Malaya, 1952–61 (London, 2000), p. 97.

  32. W. Johnson (ed.), The papers of Adlai E. Stevenson, vol. V:Visit to Asia, the Middle East, and Europe, March–August 1953 (Boston, 1974), pp. 148–9.

  33. Abdul Aziz Ishak, The architect of Merdeka: Tengku Abdul Rahman (Singapore, 1957).

  34. Quoted in Harper, The end of empire, p. 322.

  35. Khatijah Sidek, Memoirs of Khatijah Sidek: Puteri Kesateria Bangsa (Kuala Lumpur, 2001 [1960]), pp. 118, 124–5.

  36. Miss P. G. Lim, ‘Radio broadcast on behalf of the Labour Party of Malaya’, 1 July, 1955, CO1030/313, TNA.

  37. Francis G. Carnell, ‘The Malayan elections’, Pacific Affairs, 28, 4 (1955), pp. 315–30.

  38. Sir Robert Scott to Anthony Eden, 23 October 1955, CO1030/245, TNA.

  39. The Times, 3 October 1951.

  40. ‘HH the Sultan of Johore’s speech’, in MacGillivray to Lennox-Boyd, 19 September 1955, CO1030/374, TNA.

  41. Chan Heng Chee, A sensation of independence: a political biography of David Marshall (Singapore, 1984), pp. 93–4.

  42. Said Zahari, Dark clouds at dawn (Kuala Lumpur, 2001), p. 285.

  43. Ibid., p. 282.

  44. Chin Peng, My side of history (Singapore, 2004), pp. 387–95.

  45. Cited in Gustaaf Houtman, Mental culture in Burmese crisis politics (Tokyo, 2001), p. 267.

  46. Peking to Rangoon, 4 July 1952, FO4371/101276, TNA.

  47. C. W. Dunn to J. S. Furnivall, 30 August 1950, Furnivall Papers, PP/MS 23, vol. I, SOAS.

  48. ‘A voice above the battle’, interview with Nehru, Picture Post,
49, 4 October 1950, pp. 13–15.

  49. S. Gopal (ed.), Selected works of Jawaharlal Nehru, Second Series (Delhi, 1984), vol. XIV, Part I, p. 501, n. 4.

  50. J. S. Furnivall to C. W. Dunn, 17 June 1950, Furnivall Papers, PP/MS 23, vol. I, SOAS.

  51. Mary Callahan, Making enemies: war and state building in Burma (Ithaca, 2004), pp. 137–44.

  52. H. Bruce Franklin, ‘By the bomb’s early light; or the Quiet American’s war on terror’: http://rutgers.edu/~hbf/Quietam.htm.

  53. Cloake, Templer, p. 297; Norman Cleaveland, Bang! Bang! in Ampang (San Pedro, CA, 1973), pp. 140–42.

  54. John A Nagi, Learning to eat soup with a knife: counterinsurgency lessons from Malaya and Vietnam, new edn (New York, 2005).

  55. Norman Sherry, Life of Graham Greene, 1939–1955 (London, 1994).

  56. New Times of Burma, 5 January 1955.

  57. The Nation, 7 August 1945.

  58. The Nation, 21 July 1955.

  59. Norman Lewis, The golden earth: travels in Burma (London, 1952), p. 139.

  60. Ibid., p. 90.

  61. Khin Myo Chit, Memoir, Mss Eur D1066/1, OIOC, fos. 138 ff.

  62. New Times of Burma, 18 March 1955.

  63. P. Lim Pui Huen and Diana Wong (eds.), War and memory in Malaysia and Singapore (Singapore, 2000); William H. Frederick, ‘Reflections in a moving stream: Indonesia memories of the war and the Japanese’, in Remco Raben (ed.), Representing the Japanese occupation of Indonesia: personal testimonies and public image in Indonesia, Japan and the Netherlands (Amsterdam, 1999), pp. 16–35.

  64. J. C. Sterndale Bennett to Sir Esler Dening, Tokyo, 12 April 1952, FO371/101233, TNA.

  65. Junko Tomaru, The postwar rapprochement of Malaya and Japan, 1945–61: the roles of Britain and Japan in South-east Asia (London, 2000).

  66. Shoko Tanaka, Post-war Japanese resource policies and strategies: the case of Southeast Asia (Ithaca, 1986), ch. 3.

  67. Masashi Nishihara, The Japanese and Sukarno’s Indonesia: Tokyo–Jakarta relations, 1951–1966 (Kyoto, 1976), pp. 211–12; Hikita Yasuyuki, ‘Japanese companies’ inroads into Indonesia under Japanese military administration’, in Peter Post and Elly Touwen-Bouwsma (eds.), Japan, Indonesia and the war: myths and realities (Leiden, 1997), p. 152.

  68. James Puthucheary, Ownership and control in the Malayan economy (Singapore, 1960); Nicholas White, ‘The beginnings of crony capitalism: business, politics and economic development in Malaysia, c. 1955–70’, Modern Asian Studies, 28, 2 (2004), pp. 389–417.

  69. See T. N. Harper, ‘Lim Chin Siong and “the Singapore Story”’, in Jomo K. S. and Tan Jing Quee (eds.), Comet in our sky: Lim Chin Siong in history (Kuala Lumpur, 2001), pp. 1–56.

  70. Ahmad Boestamam (trans. William R. Roff), Carving the path to the summit (Athens, OH, 1979), p. 3.

  71. http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2006/5/10/nation/14195479&sec=nation; also Amir Muhammad’s lastcommunist.blogspot.com. However, fresh memoirs by MCP leaders such as Rashid Maidin, Abdullah C. D. and Suraini Abdullah (Eng Ming Chin) were beginning to appear in Malaysia as this book was completed.

  Bibliography

  MANUSCRIPT SOURCES

  National Archives of Singapore

  Oral History Department, interviews, OHD:

  Ang Keong Lan

  Jacob Ballas

  Dato Haji Mohamed Yudof Bangs

  Chan Cheng Yean

  Cheah Fook Yong, Charlie

  Dr Benjamin Chew

  Carl Francis de Souza

  John Ede

  Arshak Catihatoer Galstaun

  Gay Wan Guay

  Ahmad Khan

  Heng Chiang Ki

  Karuppiah N.

  Alfred Lelah

  Lady Percy McNiece

  Sudarajulu Laksmana Perumal

  Dr Constantine Constantinovich Petrovsky

  Arthur Alexander Thompson

  D. K. Broadhurst Papers

  Institute of Southeast Asia Studies, Singapore

  Tan Cheng Lock Papers

  Arkib Negara Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur

  Tan Cheng Lock papers, SP 13

  Perpustakaan Universiti Malaya, Kuala Lumpur

  J. A. Thivy Papers

  Oriental and India Office Collection, British Library

  Arnold Papers, Mss Eur F145

  Burmese Politics Collection, Mss Eur D1066/2

  Dash Papers, Mss Eur C188

  Donnison Papers, Mss Eur B357

  Dorman-Smith Papers Mss Eur E215

  Clague Papers, Mss Eur E252

  Khin Myo Chit, ‘Many a house of life hath held me’, Mss Eur D1066/1

  Memoir of P. E. S. Finney, Mss Eur D1041/4

  Laithwaite Papers, Mss Eur F138

  McInery Diary, Eur Photo 148

  Pearce Papers, Mss D947

  Rance Papers, Mss Eur F169

  Saumarez Smith, W., ‘Seventy four days in 1947’, Mss Eur C409

  Thein Pe Myint, ‘Note to Indian Communists 1973, a critique of the Communist movement in Burma’, Mss Eur C498, fo.8

  Tyson Papers, Mss Eur E341

  Walton Papers, Mss Eur D545

  Wavell Papers, Mss Eur D977

  Centre of South Asian Studies, Cambridge

  F. O. Bell Memoir

  H. W. Bell Papers

  J. G. E. Bell Papers Benthal Papers Dash Papers

  P. D. M. Lingeman Memoir

  Ian Stephens Papers

  E. T. Stokes Papers

  Cambridge University Library

  United States Declassified Documents, State Department, Central Intelligence Agency, etc.

  Royal Commonwealth Society Library, Cambridge University Library

  British Malaysia Association:

  H. Bryson Papers

  Amy and Richard Haggard, ‘An account of the British Military Administration of Upper Perak, Malaya – 1945/46: being memories based on diaries and letter’, 4 April 2000

  Sir George Maxwell Papers

  Trinity College, Cambridge

  Pethick-Lawrence Papers

  Liddell Hart Centre, King’s College, London

  Gracey Papers

  Messervy Papers

  National Army Museum, London

  Alston Papers

  Bucher Papers

  Fauj Akhbar

  Savory Papers

  Wade Papers

  School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London

  Furnivall Papers

  Southampton University Library

  Mountbatten and Edwina Mountbatten Papers

  Rhodes House Library, Oxford

  John Dalley Papers/Malayan Security Service, Political Intelligence Journals, 1946–8

  Robert Heussler/Malayan Civil Service Papers

  Sir Ralph Hone Papers

  A. H. P. Humphreys Papers

  B. P. Walker Taylor Papers

  Sir Arthur Young Papers

  Christ Church, Oxford

  Tom Driberg Papers

  OFFICIAL PAPERS

  National Archives of Singapore

  British Military Administration Headquarters, Singapore, 1945–6: BMA/HQ

  British Military Administration Chinese Affairs, Singapore, 1945–6: BMA/CA

  Social Welfare Department/Chief Secretary’s Office, Singapore, 1945–7: SCA

  Microfilm collection:

  Files from National Archives and Records Administration, United States (NARA)

  From series: XL

  Arkib Negara Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur

  Federal records:

  British Military Administration Administrative, 1945–6: BMA/ADM

  British Military Administration Departmental, 1945–6: BMA/DEPT

  Malayan Union Secretariat: MU

  Labour, Malayan Union: LAB

  Director of Forests: DF

  Director of Co-operation: Coop

  State records:

  British Adviser, Pahang: BA Pahang

  Deputy Commissioner of Labour, Selangor: DCL Selangor

&nbs
p; District Office, Temerloh: DO Temerloh

  Information Department: INF

  State Secretariat, Perak: Pk. Sec

  State Secretariat, Selangor: Sel. Sec

  State Secretariat, Trengganu: SUK Tr

  Oriental and India Office Collection, British Library

  Burma Miscellaneous: L/PO/4 and 9

  Burma Office Papers: M/3

  Governor of Burma’s Office: R/8

  Information Department: L/I/1

  Judicial and Public Department: L/P and J/4,5 and 8

  Reforms Series: R/3 War Staff Files: L/WS/1 and 2

  The National Archive, Kew, London

 

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