David Willey, the curator at The Tank Museum, talks about their captured Japanese Ha-Go in the above video.
The Tank Museum’s Type 95 was captured in Burma during WWII and was examined in Calcutta before being sent to Britain. Surviving Japanese tanks from the Second World War are extremely rare.
As for the Ha-Go, the 16-ton tank was the most numerous Japanese armored fighting vehicle ever made and saw extensive use from China to Siam. With its 37mm gun it 25mph road speed, it was roughly comparable to the M3 Stuart, though with just 12mm of armor it could easily be knocked out with a 37mm anti-tank gun (or the British comparable QF 2-pounder) from as far away as 1,400 yards, or the average bazooka later in the war at ranges much closer.
The cherry blossoms always make me swell with joy this time of year– especially after a dark winter.
“In the cherry blossom’s shade
there’s no such thing
as a stranger.” —Kobayashi Issa
Here we have a Japan Ground Self-Defense Force Type 74 (nana-yon-shiki-sensha) main battle tank under cherry blossoms somewhere in Japan.
Designed in the late 1960s as a contemporary of the U.S. M60 and the Soviet T-62/64, about 900 Type 74s were built by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries as a replacement for Japan’s first indigenous Post-WWII tank, the Type 61, which is turn was a very M46 Patton-like design that mounted a 90mm popgun.
If it looks familiar, the Type 74 uses the hull of the German Leopard I– though with different suspension and a 10cyl MHI diesel– and equipped with a licensed Royal Ordnance L7 105mm cannon with a number of local improvements.
They have largely been relegated to second-line service since the 1990s when the very Leopard 2-ish Type 90 Kyū-maru MBT went into production and in the end will be replaced as the new Type 10 MBT, complete with a 120mm gun and nano-crystal steel modular ceramic composite armor, is fielded in greater numbers.
Though a dated design for sure, about 250 updated Type 74s remain in service and, due to the current Japanese constitution, will likely never deploy outside of the Home Islands. As such they should prove a good enough deterrent for Godzilla.
“A tank unit of our victorious army roaring by the Philippine legislature (Japanese caption).”
Image taken from the captured Japanese propaganda booklet, Victory on the March (3月の勝利), published in 1942 at the high water mark of the Empire.
General Douglas MacArthur declared Manila an open city to prevent its destruction on Dec. 24, 1941 and withdrew U.S. forces from the capital. The neoclassical-style Legislative building was constructed in 1921 and was the seat of the Philippine government.
The building, much like Manila itself, was largely destroyed in February 1945 when the Japanese withdrew, with many historians remarking that no other national capital with the exception of Warsaw suffered the same amount of destruction. The building was restored and used by the Philippine Senate until 1997 and is now the home of the National Art Gallery and Museum complex.
National Museum of Fine Arts (Old Legislative Building) reopened in 2012, National Museum of Anthropology (Old Finance Building) inaugurated in 1998, and the National Museum of Natural History (Old Tourism Building) to open in 2018.
The vehicles in the top image, of a column of Type 95 Ha-Go light tanks, likely of the 4th Tank Regiment of the 14th Army, was taken when Japanese forces occupied Manila on 2 January 1942, some 76 years ago today.
The 4th was a crack veteran unit, as it had taken part in the Nomonhan against the Soviets in 1939 and would go on to be used in the Dutch East Indies within weeks of this image (bringing captured M3 Stuarts with them), then remain there in Java as garrison forces until 1945.
As for the Ha-Go, the 16-ton tank was the most numerous Japanese armored fighting vehicle ever made and saw extensive use from China to Siam. With its 37mm gun it 25mph road speed, it was roughly comparable to the M3 Stuart, though with just 12mm of armor it could easily be knocked out with a 37mm anti-tank gun (or the British comparable QF 2-pounder) from as far away as 1,400 yards, or the average bazooka later in the war at ranges much closer.
In short, it had pretty thin armor for a WWII-era tank.