Battle off Endau | |||||||
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Part of the Battle of Malaya | |||||||
HMAS Vampire, c. 1940, seen here before the application of wartime camouflage | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Japan |
United Kingdom Australia | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Shintarō Hashimoto | William Moran | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
Naval: 1st Escort Unit Air: 1st Air Squadron 11th Air Squadron |
Naval: Royal Navy Royal Australian Navy Air: No. 36 Squadron RAF No. 62 Squadron RAF No. 100 Squadron RAF No. 1 Squadron RAAF No. 8 Squadron RAAF | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
1 light cruiser 6 destroyers 5 minesweepers 3 subchasers 4 converted patrol ships 2 troopships 2 auxiliary ships 32 fighters |
2 destroyers 21 fighters 15 light bombers 22 torpedo bombers | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
8 killed 18 wounded |
1 destroyer sunk 39 killed 33 captured |
The Battle off Endau was a Second World War battle that took place off Endau town on 26–27 January 1942. Part of the Battle of Malaya, it was the first notable naval engagement since the sinking of the battleship Prince of Wales and the battlecruiser Repulse on 10 December 1941, and the last effort by the Royal Navy to intercept Japanese convoy shipping around the Malay Peninsula.[1]
A Japanese convoy approaching Endau was detected by reconnaissance aircraft on 26 January and was ineffectually attacked multiple times by Allied aircraft as it was landing its troops. The Allies suffered heavy casualties, while the Japanese lost only a single aircraft. The Royal Navy committed two destroyers later that day to break up the Japanese landings, despite the much larger Japanese escort force. Sailing under the cover of darkness, they were able to locate the convoy anchored there without being detected, but could not find the troopships in the darkness. The ships attempted to disengage, but were fired upon by the convoy's escorts and one destroyer was sunk in the early morning hours of 27 January.