On September 15, 1944, General William Rupertus and the 16,000
Marines of the U.S. 1st Marine Division moved confidently toward
Peleliu, an obscure speck of coral island 500 miles east of the
Philippines. Though he knew a tough fight awaited him, Rupertus
anticipated a quick two-day crush to victory, strengthening Gen.
Douglas MacArthur's flank in his drive on the Philippines. Instead,
as "The Devil's Anvil" reveals, American forces struggled
desperately for more than two months against 10,000 deeply
entrenched Japanese soldiers who had spent six months preparing for
the battle. By the time the weary Americans could claim a victory,
the fight had become one of the war's most costly successes. Even
more tragic, Peleliu was later deemed a more or less unnecessary
seizure.
For those who survived, Peleliu remains a bitter, emotionally
exhausting chapter of their lives. In "The Devil's Anvil," Hallas
reports on the personal combat experience of scores of officers and
enlisted men who were at Peleliu. These men describe the
heartbreaking loss of friends, the pain of wounds, and the heat,
dirt, and exhaustion of a fight that never seemed to end.
General
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