Indian National Army (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Indian National Army" in English language version.

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    • "Subhas Chandra Bose". Britannica Online. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica. 2025. ISSN 1085-9721. Retrieved 11 January 2025. he led an armed force composed of former Indian prisoners of war and volunteers from the Indian expatriate community. ... aligned with the Axis powers and opposed the Allied powers during World War II.
      • "Subhas Chandra Bose". Britannica Online. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica. 2025. ISSN 1085-9721. Retrieved 11 January 2025. he led an armed force composed of former Indian prisoners of war and volunteers from the Indian expatriate community. ... aligned with the Axis powers and opposed the Allied powers during World War II.

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  • Markovits, Claude (2021), India and the World: A History of Connections, c.1750–2000, Cambridge, UK and New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, pp. 79, 113, 114, doi:10.1017/9781316899847, ISBN 978-1-107-18675-0, LCCN 2021000609, S2CID 233601747,   (p. 79) This was owing to Japan's own ambivalent attitude towards Indians: on the one hand, the Japanese saw them as potential allies in the fight against Britain, and they made an alliance with the dissident nationalist leader Subhas Chandra Bose; on the other hand, they despised them as a 'subject race' enslaved by the British. Thanks to this alliance, however, the Indians escaped some of the harshest measures that the Japanese took against the Chinese population in the region. That said, 100,000 Indian coolies, mostly Tamilian plantation workers, were conscripted as forced labour and put to work on various infrastructure projects for the Japanese Imperial Army. Some were sent from Malaya to Thailand to work on the infamous Thailand–Burma railway project, resulting in 30,000 deaths of fever and exhaustion (Nakahara 2005). Thousands of war prisoners who had refused to join the Indian National Army (INA) of Subhas Bose were sent to faraway New Guinea, where Australian troops discovered them hiding in 1945.
  • Mukherjee, Mithi (2019). "The "Right to Wage War" against Empire: Anticolonialism and the Challenge to International Law in the Indian National Army Trial of 1945". Law and Social Inquiry. 44 (2): 420–443. doi:10.1017/lsi.2019.12. S2CID 191697854.
  • Cohen 1963, pp. 411–429 Cohen, Stephen P. (1963), "Subhas Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army.", Pacific Affairs, 36 (4), University of British Columbia, Vancouver: 411–429, doi:10.2307/2754686, JSTOR 2754686
  • Green 1948, p. 68 Green, L.C. (1948), "The Indian National Army Trials", The Modern Law Review, 11, No. 1. (Jan., 1948), Blackwell: 47–69, doi:10.1111/j.1468-2230.1948.tb00071.x
  • Green 1948, p. 54 Green, L.C. (1948), "The Indian National Army Trials", The Modern Law Review, 11, No. 1. (Jan., 1948), Blackwell: 47–69, doi:10.1111/j.1468-2230.1948.tb00071.x

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  • Chaudhuri 1953, p. 351 Chaudhuri, Niradh C. (1953), "Subhas Chandra Bose: His Legacy and Legend", Pacific Affairs, 26, No. 4. (Dec., 1953) (4): 349–357, JSTOR 2752872
  • Chaudhuri 1953, p. 349 Chaudhuri, Niradh C. (1953), "Subhas Chandra Bose: His Legacy and Legend", Pacific Affairs, 26, No. 4. (Dec., 1953) (4): 349–357, JSTOR 2752872
  • Chaudhuri 1953, p. 1 Chaudhuri, Niradh C. (1953), "Subhas Chandra Bose: His Legacy and Legend", Pacific Affairs, 26, No. 4. (Dec., 1953) (4): 349–357, JSTOR 2752872
  • Cohen 1963, pp. 411–429 Cohen, Stephen P. (1963), "Subhas Chandra Bose and the Indian National Army.", Pacific Affairs, 36 (4), University of British Columbia, Vancouver: 411–429, doi:10.2307/2754686, JSTOR 2754686

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  • Markovits, Claude (2021), India and the World: A History of Connections, c.1750–2000, Cambridge, UK and New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, pp. 79, 113, 114, doi:10.1017/9781316899847, ISBN 978-1-107-18675-0, LCCN 2021000609, S2CID 233601747,   (p. 79) This was owing to Japan's own ambivalent attitude towards Indians: on the one hand, the Japanese saw them as potential allies in the fight against Britain, and they made an alliance with the dissident nationalist leader Subhas Chandra Bose; on the other hand, they despised them as a 'subject race' enslaved by the British. Thanks to this alliance, however, the Indians escaped some of the harshest measures that the Japanese took against the Chinese population in the region. That said, 100,000 Indian coolies, mostly Tamilian plantation workers, were conscripted as forced labour and put to work on various infrastructure projects for the Japanese Imperial Army. Some were sent from Malaya to Thailand to work on the infamous Thailand–Burma railway project, resulting in 30,000 deaths of fever and exhaustion (Nakahara 2005). Thousands of war prisoners who had refused to join the Indian National Army (INA) of Subhas Bose were sent to faraway New Guinea, where Australian troops discovered them hiding in 1945.

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  • Markovits, Claude (2021), India and the World: A History of Connections, c.1750–2000, Cambridge, UK and New York, NY: Cambridge University Press, pp. 79, 113, 114, doi:10.1017/9781316899847, ISBN 978-1-107-18675-0, LCCN 2021000609, S2CID 233601747,   (p. 79) This was owing to Japan's own ambivalent attitude towards Indians: on the one hand, the Japanese saw them as potential allies in the fight against Britain, and they made an alliance with the dissident nationalist leader Subhas Chandra Bose; on the other hand, they despised them as a 'subject race' enslaved by the British. Thanks to this alliance, however, the Indians escaped some of the harshest measures that the Japanese took against the Chinese population in the region. That said, 100,000 Indian coolies, mostly Tamilian plantation workers, were conscripted as forced labour and put to work on various infrastructure projects for the Japanese Imperial Army. Some were sent from Malaya to Thailand to work on the infamous Thailand–Burma railway project, resulting in 30,000 deaths of fever and exhaustion (Nakahara 2005). Thousands of war prisoners who had refused to join the Indian National Army (INA) of Subhas Bose were sent to faraway New Guinea, where Australian troops discovered them hiding in 1945.
  • Mukherjee, Mithi (2019). "The "Right to Wage War" against Empire: Anticolonialism and the Challenge to International Law in the Indian National Army Trial of 1945". Law and Social Inquiry. 44 (2): 420–443. doi:10.1017/lsi.2019.12. S2CID 191697854.

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  • McGregor, Rafe (2016). "Enemy of my Enemy: In the quest for India's independence, one fervent nationalist made a pact with the Axis to overthrow the British Raj". Military History. 33 (1): 69. ISSN 0889-7328. On Feb. 4, 1944, a Bahadur Group under Captain L.S. Misra infiltrated the British lines and overran the 7th Indian Infantry Division headquarters. The Japanese Twenty-Eighth Army—which included the 1st Battalion of the Subhas—fought its way to the Indian border. In April INA troops took Moirang, and the town became the army's first headquarters on Indian soil.
  • McGregor, Rafe (2016), "Enemy of my Enemy: In the quest for India's independence, one fervent nationalist made a pact with the Axis to overthrow the British Raj", Military History, 33 (1), ISSN 0889-7328, (the terms First INA and Second INA are sometimes used to distinguish Singh's administrative unit from Bose's combat unit).
  • McGregor, Rafe (2016). "Enemy of my Enemy: In the quest for India's independence, one fervent nationalist made a pact with the Axis to overthrow the British Raj". Military History. 33 (1). ISSN 0889-7328. His name was Subhas Chandra Bose, and he was head of the Japanese-allied and -supported Indian National Army
    • "Subhas Chandra Bose". Britannica Online. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica. 2025. ISSN 1085-9721. Retrieved 11 January 2025. he led an armed force composed of former Indian prisoners of war and volunteers from the Indian expatriate community. ... aligned with the Axis powers and opposed the Allied powers during World War II.
    • McGregor, Rafe (2016). "Enemy of my Enemy: In the quest for India's independence, one fervent nationalist made a pact with the Axis to overthrow the British Raj". Military History. 33 (1). ISSN 0889-7328. Soon after his arrival in the Japanese capital Bose met with Prime Minister Flideki Tojo, and they quickly reached an agreement: Japan would recognize Indian independence but maintain a military presence in liberated India until the conclusion of the war. On July 4 Bose took command of the INA, and on October 21 he was sworn in as prime minister of the Provisional Government of Free India.
      • "Subhas Chandra Bose". Britannica Online. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica. 2025. ISSN 1085-9721. Retrieved 11 January 2025. he led an armed force composed of former Indian prisoners of war and volunteers from the Indian expatriate community. ... aligned with the Axis powers and opposed the Allied powers during World War II.