.....shows Wavell Singapore Island'snorth side, which is undefended. No defense works are being built, or even planned. Wavell, furious, asks Lieutenant General Arthur Percival, General Officer Commanding Malaya, why this is so; Percival repliesthat defenses would be bad for morale. Wavell says that the impact would be greater when retreating troops begin crossing the causeway from the mainland and orders Percival to build defenses. Percival doesn't....
BISMARCK ARCHIPELAGO: A Japanese air raid on Rabaul, New Britain Island, destroys a Hudson and two Wirraways and damages two other Hudson, all of No. 24 Squadron RAAF.
CHINA: In Changsha Province, Chinese and Japanese troops fight a fairly pointless battle which neither side wins.
EAST INDIES: In Borneo, Japanese troops in British Sarawak reach the border of Dutch West Borneo.
MALAYA: The Japanese, in a strong tank-infantry assault beginning before dawn, break through the Slim River positions of Indian 11th Division and drive rapidly 19 miles toward Kuala Lumpur, reaching positions 2 miles south of Slim village.
The Indian III Corps withdraws from the Slim River line southward to Tanjong Malim, between the village of Slim and the road junction at Kuala Kubu. This action temporarily leaves the Indian 11th Division ineffective as a fighting force.
General Archibald Lord Wavell, who has been named Commander in Chief American-British- Dutch-Australian (ABDA) Command, arrives at Singapore to find out why the British are losing. He gets an earful. Brigadier Ivan Simson, the chief engineer, shows Wavell Singapore Island's north side, which is undefended. No defense works are being built, or even planned. Wavell, furious, asks Lieutenant General Arthur Percival, General Officer Commanding Malaya, why this is so; Percival replies
that defenses would be bad for morale. Wavell says that the impact would be greater when retreating troops begin crossing the causeway from the mainland and orders Percival to build defenses. Percival doesn't.
PHILIPPINE ISLANDS: The siege of Bataan begins as U.S. and Philippine forces complete their withdrawal from the Layac Line. The North Luzon Force becomes the I Philippine Corps, containing about 22,500 men of 1st, 31st, 71st, and 91st Divisions, all Philippine Army (PA), 26th Cavalry Philippine Scouts (PS), miscellaneous troops, and supporting weapons.
The Bataan Defense Force is renamed II Philippine Corps and consists of about 25,000 men of the 11st, 21st, 41st, and 51st Divisions (all PA), 57th Infantry (PS) of the Philippine Division, and supporting weapons.
The defense of Bataan as far south as the Mariveles Mountains is divided about equally between the two corps, I Corps being responsible for the western half and II Corps for the eastern half. The Service Command Area is located at the southern tip below the Mariveles Mountains and is the responsibility of Brigadier General A. C. McBride; in this area are the 2d Division Philippine Constabulary, organized on this date, provisional infantry units formed from USAAF personnel and a provisional battalion of USN and USMC personnel. Defenses on Bataan are organized in depth: the main line of resistance (MLR) extends from Mauban on the west to Mabatang on the east, a distance of 20 miles (32 kilometers); the outpost line (OPL) is disposed before the MLR; and the rear line of defense is being formed to be manned by the U.S. Army Forces, Far East (USAFFE) reserve, i.e., the U.S. Philippine Division, less the 57th Infantry Regiment; a tank group; a self-propelled mount group.
UNITED STATES: The USN's authorized aircraft strength is increased from 15,000 to 27,500.