Satoru Anabuki


Lieutenant Colonel Satoru Anabuki was, depending on the source, the second or third highest-scoring flying ace of the Imperial Japanese Army Air Force in World War II, with 39 victories. Strangely enough there are 53 claimed victories to be found in his autobiography Soku no Kawa, where his first triple kill was mis-counted as just one.

Imperial Japanese Army Air Force career

Born into a farming family in the Kagawa Prefecture, he graduated high school to take the entrance examination for the Juvenile Flying Soldier School and entered the Tokyo Army Aviation School in April 1938, graduating in March 1941 in the 6th Juvenile Soldier Course and receiving a promotion to corporal in October. He was assigned to the 3rd Company of the 50th Air Squadron, stationed on Formosa in 1941.
With the outbreak of the Pacific War, he fought in the conquest of the Philippines, where he claimed his first victory, a Curtiss P-40, on December 22, 1941. On February 9, 1942, he shot down two more.
Soon after, his unit returned to Japan to exchange their Nakajima Ki-27 "Nates" for more advanced Ki-43 "Hayabusas". The 50th Air Squadron was then sent to Burma in June 1942. He was promoted to sergeant in December. On 24 January 1943, he shot down his first heavily armed B-24 bomber. He claimed to have shot down three B-24s and one P-38 fighter escort in a single engagement on 8 October 1943, but this has been disputed. The third B-24 claimed was reported rammed by him causing great damage to his aircraft in which he crash landed on the shoreline to be rescued three days later. In recognition of this achievement he was awarded an individual citation - at that time unprecedented for a pilot who was still alive.
In 1944, he was reassigned to Japan to be a flight instructor at the Akeno Army Flying School. He flew in the defense of the home islands. In December 1944, he was promoted to sergeant major and returned to action over the Philippines, where he claimed at least four F6F Hellcats shot down flying the Ki-84 "Hayate". Anabuki scored his last victory over Japan, a B-29.

Postwar

After the war in 1950, he enlisted in the National Police Reserve before joining the Japan Self-Defense Forces when it was founded in 1954. He served as a pilot flying Ground Self-Defense Force helicopters and retired as a lieutenant colonel in 1971, subsequently joining Japan Airlines and retiring in 1984.
KillDateFlyingVictimComments
11941-12-22Ki-27P-40Lingayen, Philippines
2-Ki-27unknownunknown
31942-02-09Ki-27P-40Bataan, Philippines
41942-10-25Ki-43P-40Chinskia?, India
51942-12-10Ki-43HurricaneChittagong, India
-1942-12-15Ki-43HurricaneChittagong, India
61942-12-20Ki-43HurricaneMagwe, Burma
71942-12-20Ki-43BlenheimMagwe, Burma
81942-12-23Ki-43unknownFenny, Burma ?
91942-12-23Ki-43BlenheimMagwe, Burma
10-121942-12-24Ki-433 HurricanesMagwe, Burma
131942-12-30Ki-43BlenheimMeiktila, Burma
141943-01-14Ki-43HurricaneInden?, India
151943-01-16Ki-43P-40Yunnan, China
161943-01-17Ki-43HurricaneFenny, Burma ?
17-181943-01-19Ki-432 HurricanesAkyab, Burma
191943-01-24Ki-43WellingtonRangoon, Burma
201943-01-26Ki-43B-24Mingaladon, Burma
211943-01-30Ki-43B-25Toungoo, Burma
221943-02-28Ki-43BlenheimAkyab, Burma
231943-02-28Ki-43HurricaneAkyab, Burma
-1943-03-02Ki-43HurricaneFenny, Burma ?
241943-03-24Ki-43B-25Meiktila, Burma
-1943-03-29Ki-43HurricaneMindon, Burma
25-261943-03-30Ki-432 HurricanesMindon, Burma
27-291943-03-31Ki-433 HurricanesPatenga, India
30-311943-04-04Ki-432 HurricanesDohazari, India
-1943-04-20Ki-43HurricaneImphal, India
321943-04-20Ki-43P-36Imphal, India
33-341943-04-21Ki-432 P-36sImphal, India
351943-04-28Ki-43P-40Kunming, China
361943-05-04Ki-43HurricaneCox's Bazar, India
37-401943-05-15Ki-434 P-40sKunming, China
41-421943-05-22Ki-432 HurricanesChittagong, India
43-441943-05-29Ki-431 Hurricane
1 Spitfire?
Chittagong, India
Ki-43 "Fubuki" retired of service with 230 hours of flying
45-481943-10-08Ki-431 P-38, 3 B-24sRangoon, Burma
flying Ki-43 "Kimikaze"
49-52unknownKi-844 HellcatsPhilippines
53unknownKi-100B-29Honshu, Japan

Many of Anabuki's victory claims during the Burma Campaign have been contested by comparing them to Allied records of lost aircraft on particular occasions. In several cases, there were no records of Allied planes even operating in the area where the claims were made.