Shimushu participated in the landings in Thailand, escorting the
55th IJA Infantry Division to landings at Nakhon on 8 December 1941. She also escorted various other invasion convoys to
Malaya,
Sumatra, and
Palembang. Using her sonar, she located the British
battlecruiser on 29 January 1942, being the first ship to locate the submerged wreck.
Shimushu participated in the
HI-40 convoy disaster of 19–24 February 1944, in which all six oilers that were escorted by her — and only her, as she was the lone escort vessel —
Nampo Maru were torpedoed and sunk by the American submarines and . After that convoy disaster, the Naval General staff discontinued assigning only one escort to convoys and organized larger convoys with more escorts.
Shimushu participated in the TA No. 2 and 3, the Japanese effort to hold
Leyte island, and claimed one of the five
B-25 Mitchell medium bombers lost in the first wave. On 25 November,
Shimushu was torpedoed by the submarine and lost her bow, and was repaired by 20 January 1945. The ship spent more than a year on repatriation duty and was ceded to the Soviet Union on 5 July 1947. The ship served in the Soviet Pacific Ocean Fleet as patrol ship
EK-31 (1947), dispatch ship
PS-25 (1948), repair ship
PM-74 (1957). She was decommissioned on 16 May 1959 and scrapped. ==Notes==