War came suddenly to the Philippines            on Dec. 8 (Dec. 7, U.S. time), 1941, when Japan attacked without warning.            Japanese troops invaded the islands in many places and launched a pincer            drive on Manila. MacArthur’s scattered defending forces (about 80,000            troops, four fifths of them Filipinos) were forced to withdraw to Bataan            Peninsula and Corregidor Island, where they entrenched and tried to            hold until the arrival of reinforcements, meanwhile guarding the entrance            to Manila Bay and denying that important harbor to the Japanese. But            no reinforcements were forthcoming. The Japanese occupied Manila on            Jan. 2, 1942. MacArthur was ordered out by President Roosevelt and left            for Australia on Mar. 11; Lt. Gen. Jonathan Wainwright assumed command.                   
The besieged U.S.-Filipino army on Bataan finally crumbled on Apr.            9, 1942. Wainwright fought on from Corregidor with a garrison of about            11,000 men; he was overwhelmed on May 6, 1942. After his capitulation,            the Japanese forced the surrender of all remaining defending units in            the islands by threatening to use the captured Bataan and Corregidor            troops as hostages. Many individual soldiers refused to surrender, however,            and guerrilla resistance, organized and coordinated by U.S. and Philippine            army officers, continued throughout the Japanese occupation.
Japan’s efforts to win Filipino loyalty found expression in the establishment            (Oct. 14, 1943) of a “Philippine Republic,” with José P. Laurel, former            supreme court justice, as president. But the people suffered greatly            from Japanese brutality, and the puppet government gained little support.            Meanwhile, President Quezon, who had escaped with other high officials            before the country fell, set up a government-in-exile in Washington.            When he died (Aug., 1944), Vice President Sergio Osmeña became president.            Osmeña returned to 
            the Philippines with the first liberation forces, which surprised the            Japanese by landing (Oct. 20, 1944) at Leyte, in the heart of the islands,            after months of U.S. air strikes against Mindanao. The Philippine government            was established at Tacloban, Leyte, on Oct. 23. 
The landing was followed (Oct. 23–26) by the greatest naval engagement            in history, called variously the battle of Leyte Gulf and the second            battle of the Philippine Sea. A great U.S. victory, it effectively destroyed            the Japanese fleet and opened the way for the recovery of all the islands.            Luzon was invaded (Jan., 1945), and Manila was taken in February. On            July 5, 1945, MacArthur announced “All the Philippines are now liberated.”            The Japanese had suffered over 425,000 dead in the Philippines.
The Philippine congress met on June 9, 1945, for the first time since            its election in 1941. It faced enormous problems. The land was devastated            by war, the economy destroyed, the country torn by political warfare            and guerrilla violence. Osmeña’s leadership was challenged (Jan., 1946)            when one wing (now the Liberal party) of the Nationalist party nominated            for president Manuel Roxas, who defeated Osmeña in April. 
Source: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05.
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