The Type 97 was deployed in China in combat operations in the
Second Sino-Japanese War with considerable success, as the ill-equipped
National Revolutionary Army of the
Republic of China forces were limited to only three tank battalions consisting of
British exports of the Vickers, German
Panzer Is, and Italian
CV33 tankettes. Its first real test in combat against opposing armor came with the
Battles of Khalkhin Gol in July 1939 against the
Soviet Union. The
IJA 1st Tank Corps consisting of the
3rd and
4th Tank Regiments (
Yasuoka Detachment) had been assigned to the Nomonhan region, under the command of
Lt. General Yasuoka Masaomi. Of the two regiments, only the 3rd Tank Regiment had been supplemented with four of the new Type 97 medium tanks. One was selected as the regimental commander's tank. During fierce fighting against the
Red Army, the 3rd Tank Regiment was assaulting an objective ringed with strung coiled wire (piano wire). The regimental commander,
Lt Col. Yoshimaru Kiyotake's Type 97 tank became entangled up to its drive sprockets. Struggling to extract itself from the tank trap, Yoshimaru managed to move his tank rearward about 40 metres, when his machine stopped completely. Exposed to
Soviet defensive positions, Yoshimaru's Type 97 was subjected to the fire of a dozen Soviet
BT-7 tanks and
anti-tank guns. Soviet shells struck the tank's drive gear, hull, and the engine area, causing the vehicle to erupt into flames. When the fire reached the tank ammunition, the tank exploded, tearing off the turret and throwing it several feet away from the hull. Only the tank's gunner, who abandoned it, prior to the explosion, was uninjured. Yoshimaru's body was recovered after the battle.
World War II From 8 December 1941 and into early 1942, during the
Battle of Malaya and the
Battle of Singapore, Type 97 tanks were used by the 3rd Tank Group's 1st, 6th, and 14th Tank Regiments under the command of Lieutenant-General
Yamashita. The 1st Tank Regiment was attached to the
IJA 5th Division, which was among the first Japanese military units to land at
Songkhla in southern
Thailand. One of its medium-tank companies was the 3rd Tank Company under First Lieutenant Yamane's command (comprising ten Type 97 medium tanks and two
Type 95 Ha-Go light tanks), forming part of the "Saeki Detachment". The company was in the vanguard of the attack on northern British Malaya at the end of 1941. Later on, this same unit would be involved in forcing the defending British forces to abandon much of northern Malaya in the decisive
Battle of Jitra at the start of 1942. One key to the overall Japanese military successes in Malaya and Singapore was the unexpected appearance of their tanks in areas where the British did not believe tanks could be fielded. The thick and wet jungle terrain did not turn out to be a decisive obstacle for the generally light Japanese tanks. Later on, the 2nd and 14th Tank Regiments participated in the
Burma Campaign from 1942. The 1st Independent Tank Company that took part in the Guadalcanal campaign in 1942,
sustained heavy losses in the battle for Henderson Field. Its nine Type 97 Chi-Ha tanks led the attack at the Matanikau River. Marine 37 mm Gun M3|
anti-tank guns and artillery destroyed the tanks. The Type 97 Shinhōtō Chi-Ha tanks were first used in combat in the
battle of Corregidor in 1942. The updated 47 mm gun was easily capable of dealing with the armor of the American
M3 Stuart light tanks, although in later combat service it was shown only to be effective against the sides and rear of the
M4 Sherman medium tank. During the
Battle of Saipan on the night of 16–17 June, Type 97s of the 9th Tank Regiment, joined with Type 95s of the 136th Infantry Regiment in an all-out counterattack against the established beachhead by
American Marines that had landed the day before. Led by the 44 tanks from the 9th, the Type 97s and Type 95s were knocked out by a Marine platoon of M4A2 tanks, several M3 75mm half-tracks,
bazookas and 37mm antitank guns. It was the largest Japanese armor attack of the
Pacific Theater of Operations. However, the Japanese Army seldom made major armored attacks during the
Pacific War due to the limited maneuvering areas that prevailed on
islands in the South
Pacific Ocean.
Terrain dictated the battle and IJA tanks were emplaced in hull
defilade positions or even buried up to their turrets. During the
Battle of Guam, 29 Type 97 and Type 95 tanks of the IJA 9th Tank Regiment and nine Type 95s of the 24th Tank Company were lost to bazooka fire or M4 tanks. At the
Battle of Okinawa, 13 Type 95s and 14 Type 97 Shinhōtō Chi-Ha tanks of the understrength IJA 27th Tank Regiment faced 800 American tanks of eight US Army and two USMC tank battalions. The Japanese tanks were defeated in their counter-attacks of 4–5 May 1945. Similar conditions were repeated in the Kwantung Army's defense against the
Soviet invasion of Manchuria, although there was little tank-versus-tank action. The Soviet
Red Army captured 389 tanks.
After World War II moving into the Chinese city of
Shenyang during the
Liaoshen campaign in 1948 Some Japanese tanks remained in use, under new ownership, post-war during the
Chinese Civil War. Type 97 tanks captured during the
Soviet invasion of Manchuria were turned over to the Chinese
Communist army. After victory in the civil war, the Chinese
People's Liberation Army (PLA) continued to use them in their inventory. The PLA's force of 349 tanks in 1949 consisted mainly of Japanese Type 95 Ha-Go, Type 97 Chi-Ha and Shinhōtō Chi-Ha tanks. In Japan, a number of Type 97 tanks were demilitarized and used post-war for reconstruction. ==Variants==