For many Indian soldiers, the choice between the INA and remaining a POW was, in Gautam's words, an "impossible dilemma". Breaking a military oath was a code-shattering decision akin to breaking marriage vows. Listen to the latest episode today. #MilitaryEthics #WW2History #Podcast
07.03.2026 07:09
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History is often written by the elite, but Gautam Hazarika used 20,000 interrogation reports to hear the actual voices of the sepoys and sergeants. Discover their personal accounts of the Burma campaign in our new episode. These stories are there to be told. #History #WWII
06.03.2026 06:09
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It's #ThingThursday (it's a thing!), & is a little bit special. My great-grandfather Jasper Botten's Soldier's Small Book, his Pay Book, & a little pocket history of the 1st Royal Sussex Regt that he had clearly got from someone else. He spent the FWW on garrison duty, which maybe saved his life.
05.03.2026 09:56
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Beyond the INA, 14,000 Indian POWs went to Papua New Guinea as slave labour. Half didnβt survive the horrific conditions & Allied bombings. We honour these forgotten men & their suffering in our latest episode. In pic Jemadar Chint Singh identifying war criminals in Nov 1945 (from awm.gov.au)
05.03.2026 06:18
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The Borneo Graveyard 1941-1945 John Tulloch. Opus Publications 2020
Fascinating pod. This book tells the story of Allied personnel in Japanese captivity. Grim about sums it up. #histbookchat
03.03.2026 20:28
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Imagine escaping Singapore & walking 3,000 miles to India. Lieutenant Markandan 'Mark' Pillai refused to be a prisoner, island-hopping & trekking through the monsoon to reach safety in India by August 1942. An incredible feat of endurance that we discuss in detail on the latest show. #EscapeStory
04.03.2026 06:31
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I mentioned the last stand of the 7/10 Baluch earlier this week, and they really show that the retreat in 1942 was not just a meek rolling over by the fighting troops. Here is an extract from the war diary on 12 Feb 1942 at about 2am:
'These [Japanese] attacks came in waves. Each wave containing...
03.03.2026 09:26
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Did you know the Indian National Army began 18 months before Subhas Chandra Bose arrived? Captain Mohan Singh (pic 1) led the first INA, attempting to unite 40,000 volunteers under a single Indian identity. Hear the full story of this early movement in our latest episode. #IndianNationalArmy #WWII
03.03.2026 06:30
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Kalewa would of course be the later site of the 1400 yard (and at that time the longest) bailey bridge - nicknamed 'Grub Bridge', where the liberation of Burma really got started.
02.03.2026 15:26
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Today's #MapMonday is the Burma Army's final evacuation route - the ferry between Shwegyin & Kalewa on the Chindwin, a 6 mile meandering course where the Irrawaddy Flotilla Company steamers & requisition boats used by Force Viper helped bring the remnants of Alex & Slim's army to safety in May 1942.
02.03.2026 15:26
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I missed this due to a family emergency, but what a brilliant interview - thank you Gautam. A fascinating look at Indian POWs and the birth of the INA π
02.03.2026 06:16
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Out now! Gautam Hazarika joins us to discuss his new book on the 62,000 Indian soldiers captured in 1942. We explore the birth of the INA and the brutal reality of captivity across the Far East. Listen today for this truly gripping story #ForgottenWar #MilitaryHistory #WW2Podcast
02.03.2026 06:15
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Great to hear Rob!
01.03.2026 08:00
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Learning a lot I didn't know because of this podcast.
28.02.2026 08:39
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Tomorrow, we delve into the complex, hidden history of 62,000 Indian POWs from WWII. Join Rob & special guest Gautam Hazarika as he explores the "impossible dilemma" of loyalty after the fall of Singapore. It is a truly deep story of survival, sacrifice, & forgotten struggle #FEPOW #WWII #History
01.03.2026 08:00
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Though the Japanese didn't invade India in 1942, V Force ensured the frontier was never truly blind. By providing eyes & ears for the military & dominating no-manβs land, they laid the groundwork for eventual Allied victory. Hear the full analysis in S3 E6 of the pod today #History #Burma #VForce ..
28.02.2026 07:07
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The concept of "stay-behind" parties was central to V Force operations. These brave individuals remained in areas occupied by the enemy to report on Japanese movements. It was a high-stakes game of cat and mouse in the thickest monsoon jungles of the East. #WW2
(pic from the excellent ekkhaale.org)
27.02.2026 05:53
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In other news: Iβve managed to get my hands on the back catalog of the British Mule Society Journal which Iβll be helping to digitise. I came across a name I did not expect to see in the index, but it all makes sense somehow:
25.02.2026 09:49
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As they helped build roads for the evacuation and then militarising of Assam & Manipur, the Tea Planters also supported V Force. In our latest episode, we discuss how civilian residents & tea estates became integral to the V Force network, providing logistical support and local expertise in a crisis
26.02.2026 05:55
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V Force wasn't just regular soldiers. It relied on the bravery of local hill tribesβthe Naga,Chin&Lushai people, or people like the anthropologist Ursula Graham Bower. Their knowledge of the geography of the Burma/India frontier was the ultimate weapon against invasion. #NagaHills #BurmaWar #VForce
25.02.2026 06:15
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For the first time ever Jack and Rob will be onstage together at Despatches Magazine Live.
Doors open at 2:30pm on Sunday 26 April, with the FWP team giving their headline talk Thunder & Lightning: Burma 1945 at 5:15pm.
Get your Β£25 tickets hereπ
DispatchesLiveTalks.eventbrite.com
24.02.2026 10:58
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Great to see the phrase Thunder Run is sticking for the advance and capture of Meiktila, most recently here - the @Imperial War Museum have used it in their recent video on the Burma Campaign.
24.02.2026 10:44
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In 1942 the defence of Northeast India was described as "naked." Wavell had to act fast to fill the massive gaps. S3 E6 details how V Force was created as a screen to watch the borders & provide vital intelligence from the deep jungle. Listen now. #History #Military #VForce
(pic from ekkhaale.org)
24.02.2026 06:33
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Apologies Michael it was a typo, sorry. Please do, itβs fascinating to hear, just interesting itβs such a similar story.
23.02.2026 19:30
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Whatβs your source Matt? Might be completely different person, but that sounds a bit like James Lunt who regularly played golf with a Japanese dentist in Burma in 1940/41, but he didnβt know what became of him, and Lunt didnβt become a PoW. He mentions it in his book βA Hell of a Lickingβ.
23.02.2026 18:27
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The bond between soldiers and their horses & mules was not just sentimentality...
23.02.2026 14:28
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