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rains. Its light equipment allowed it to cross terrain which heavier units would find impassable. Most of its transport consisted of locally enlisted porters. Two battalions laid ambushes along the road used by the
Japanese. A third was able to occupy impregnable positions on one side of the
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and the Gangaw Valley became
Fourteenth Army's main axis of advance. The Lushai Brigade now led the advance and screened the presence of heavier units following up. The town of
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brigade, the Lushai
Brigade. The commander was Brigadier P. C. Marindin. The brigade lacked artillery, engineers, transport, signals.
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and shoot up all traffic which tried to use the road on the other side. The fourth battalion, with some
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After this, the brigade was withdrawn for rest in India. It later moved to Burma.
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The brigade crossed the trackless hills on a wide front, during the worst of the
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invaded India. As the available
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As the monsoon ended, the brigade began moving south along the
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Military units and formations in Burma in World War II
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278:Lushai Detachment, V Force (attached)
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275:Falam Hills Battalion (attached)
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121:which was formed during
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162:British Fourteenth Army
212:Lushai and Chin Levies
143:Imperial Japanese Army
379:Orders of Battle.com
262:14th Punjab Regiment
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361:Defeat into Victory
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321:24 December
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216:Chin Hills
208:home guard
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184:Bishenpur
42:talk page
283:See also
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129:and the
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