When the Type 97 entered service, properly equipped and supported, mechanized infantry units were realized. Type 97 Shinhōtō tanks were first used in combat during the
Battle of Corregidor in the Philippines in 1942. A special company known as the "Matsuoka Detachment" was formed from the 2nd Tank Regiment and sent to the Philippines. According to an after-action report, they performed well in combat by "silencing several American defensive positions". The Japanese commanders showed a "skillful and imaginative use of tanks" during the early string of victories of the Japanese military forces. The skill with which they maneuvered their mechanized infantry divisions was best seen in the
Japanese invasion of Malaya, where the lighter weight of Japanese medium tanks allowed for a rapid ground advance so heavily supported by armor that British defenders never had a chance to establish effective defense lines. 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 medium 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. " at the Beijing military museum While vulnerable to opposing Allied tanks (such as the
M4 Sherman and Soviet
T-34), the 47 mm high-velocity gun did give the Type 97 Shinhōtō a fighting chance against them. The 47 mm gun was effective against
light tanks and against the sides and rear of the Sherman tank. For this reason, some Shinhōtō Chi-Ha tanks were dug in concealed positions to ambush the American tanks and others were dug in to form the core of defense "strong points" during the battles for
Luzon and
Iwo Jima in 1945. The Type 97 Shinhōtō Chi-Ha served against
allied forces throughout the Pacific and East Asia as well as the
Soviets during the July–August 1945 conflict in
Manchuria. It is considered to be the best Japanese tank to have seen combat service in the
Pacific War. Some Japanese tanks remained in use, postwar during the
Chinese Civil War. After the end of World War II, IJA tanks captured by the Soviets were turned over to the
Communist Chinese army. After victory, the Chinese
People's Liberation Army (PLA) continued to use them in their inventory. The PLA's force of 349 tanks in 1949 included many Type 97 Shinhōtō Chi-Ha tanks. ==Variants==