Artist's commentary
Rats! I can’t play World of Tanks, since there’s so much work…
I had in my mind a Type 95 light tank after the battle of Bukit Timah, a key location in the Japanese invasion of Singapore, when I drew this illustration. In the background are surrendered soldiers and above is a Nakajima Ki-43 of the Imperial Japanese Army Air Service. On the left foreground is a Type 95 light tank going downhill and on the right side is General Yamashita, a.k.a. The Tiger of Malaya, giving a salute. The nickname of Tiger of Malaya was given by a Japanese reporter at the time, however, General Yamashita did not like being called a Tiger.
There are famous images of General Yamashita slamming the table during the terms of surrender negotiations with the English senior officers on February 15, 1942. He is said to have hit the table asking, “Is it yes or is it no!?” The truth is actually less dramatic and he was apparently frustrated by the bumbling interpreter.
The man next to General Yamashita is Masanobu Tsuji, who was called the “God of Operations.” Recorded images of the time show him with a mutton chop beard. Masanobu Tsuji had a Fu-Manchu-like beard during the Battle of Khalkhin Gol, and many of his actions involved trying to stand out. And Kokoda Track campaign and the Guadalcanal were the results of that. Looking back at the campaigns in his postwar Defense Agency years, he believes the operation was appropriate, but the scanty supply line was the liability.
Masanobu Tsuji is a son of a charcoal making family. Despite seemingly low status of the job, there was ample demand for charcoal and firewood, since they were the main fuel used back then. This made Tsuji’s family relatively wealthy, which is why he was able to have an education, graduate first on the list of a military academy and become an elite army officer. He is somewhat of a local hero in his hometown, and there was a 100th anniversary celebration on year 2000, and a bronze statue of him there.
This Battle in Singapore was the height of the Japanese momentum in the War in East Asia. Just 4 months later was the famous naval battle in Midway on June 5, followed by the losses in Guadalcanal on August, and everything went downhill for the Japanese from there. Japan started the War since it needed strategic resources, but ironically this lack of resources haunted the Japanese throughout the War. Although some rare metal deposits have recently been found in waters near Japan, historically, Japan never had proper energy producing resources such as oil. All it had were its diligent and perseverant people. And we lost pretty much everything other than the people in the War. But by putting all the energy that previously went to fighting into rebuilding a better nation, Japan was able to rise from the ashes to where it is today.