" Following the Japanese invasion of the islands in 1942, North
Luzon was the staging area for several Filipino-American guerrilla
bands who sought to gather intelligence and to destroy enemy
military installations or supplies. Bernard Norling focuses on the
Cagayan-Apayao Forces, or CAF, commanded by Maj. Ralph Praeger.
Their bravery was unquestionable, but by September 1943 all but one
member of Troop C had been claimed by combat, enemy capture, or
disease. The only survivor, Capt. Thomas S. Jones, remembered,
""Defeat is a terrible thing.... It brings down with it the whole
structure about which a nation or an army has been built. It
subjects men to the most severe of moral tests at a time when they
are physically least able to meet them."" Based primarily upon
unpublished sources, The Intrepid Guerrillas of North Luzon
includes the diary of Praeger's executive officer, Jones, and draws
on transcripts of radio communications between Praeger and General
MacArthur's headquarters in Australia. The struggles of the men of
the CAF tell a harrowing tale of valor, determination, and
occasional successes mixed with the wildcat schemes, rivalries,
mistrust, and betrayals that characterized the intramural relations
of guerrilla forces all over the Pacific islands.
General
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