Everything about State Of Burma totally explained
When the
Japanese invaded
Burma in
1942 they released
Ba Maw from prison and convinced him to head a
puppet government, the "
Burmese Executive Administration" being set up in
Rangoon on
August 1,
1942. Earlier in July,
Aung San had re-organised the
Burma Independence Army BIA as the Burma Defence Army (BDA). He remained its commander in chief - this time as
Colonel Aung San.
Exactly one year later, on
August 1,
1943 a Japanese-drafted Burmese "Declaration of Independence" was issued. Ba Maw was made head-of-state of Burma in a Japanese-backed government that declared war upon
Great Britain and the
United States, and concluded a Treaty of Alliance with Japan. Aung San became
Minister of Defence in the new regime, and also
Commander-in-Chief of the renamed
Burma National Army, with the rank of
Major General.
Although Burma was nominally self-governing, it remained under Japanese military occupation. The Ba Maw regime is most bitterly remembered for its use of forced Burmese labour to help the Japanese (the so-called Sweat Army). The resulting hardships and Japanese militaristic attitudes turned the majority Burman population against the Japanese. The insensitive attitude of the Japanese Army extended to the BNA. Even its officers were obliged to salute Japanese private soldiers as their superiors.
During 1943 and
1944, the BNA made contacts with other political groups inside Burma such as the communists who had taken to the hills in 1942. Eventually, a popular front organization called the
Anti-Fascist Organisation (AFO) was formed with
Thakin Soe as leader. Through the communists and a Japanese-sponsored force known as the
Arakan Defence Army, the Burmese were eventually able to make contact with the British
Force 136 in
India. The initial contacts were always indirect. Force 136 was also able to make contacts with members of the BNA's Karen unit in Rangoon.
In December 1944, the AFO contacted the
Allies indicating their readiness to launch a national uprising which would include the BNA. The situation wasn't immediately considered favourable for a revolt by the BNA by the British and there were internal disputes about supporting the BNA among the British. The first BNA uprising occurred early in 1945 in central Burma. In late March
1945, the remainder of the BNA paraded in Rangoon and marched out ostensibly to take part in the battles then raging in Central Burma. Instead, on
March 27 they openly declared war on the Japanese. The Burma government fell in early 1945, and Ba Maw fled via
Thailand to Japan, where he was captured later that year and was held in
Sugamo prison, in
Tokyo until
1946.
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| Flag of the State of Burma, 1942. |
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