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This publication, one in a series devoted to U.S. Marines in the
World War II era, is published for the education and training of
Marines by the History and Museums Division, Headquarters, U.S.
Marine Corps, Washington, D.C., as a part of the U.S. Department of
Defense observance of the 50th anniversary of victory in that war."
Daybreak on 29 May 1945 found the 1st Marine Division beginning its
fifth consecutive week of frontal assault as part of the U.S. Tenth
Army's grinding offensive against the Japanese defenses centered on
Shuri Castle in southern Okinawa. Operation Iceberg, the campaign
to seize Okinawa, was now two months old -and badly bogged down.
The exhilarating, fast-paced opening of the campaign had been
replaced by week after week of costly, exhausting, attrition
warfare against the Shuri complex. The 1st Marine Division, hemmed
in between two other divisions with precious little maneuver room,
had advanced barely a thousand yards in the past 18 days-an average
of 55 yards each bloody day. Their sector featured one bristling,
honeycombed ridge line after another-sequentially Kakazu, Dakeshi,
and Wana (with its murderous, reverse slope canyon). Just beyond
lay the long shoulder of Shuri Ridge, the nerve center of the
Japanese Thirty-second Army and the outpost of dozens of the
enemy's forward artillery observers who had made life so miserable
for American assault forces all month long. But on this rainy
morning, this 29th of May, things seemed somehow different,
quieter. After days of bitter fighting, American forces had finally
overrun both outposts of the Shuri Line: Conical Hill on the east,
captured by the 96th Infantry Division, and the Sugar Loaf complex
in the west, seized by the 6th Marine Division. Shuri no longer
seemed invincible. This book presents the story of the United
States Marines in the battle for Okinawa in World War II.
This official U.S. Marine Corps history provides unique information
about an important aspect of the Korean War. Subjects covered in
this history include: the 1st Marine Division; Major General Oliver
P. Smith; Seoul/Wonsan campaign; aerial medical evacuation; close
air support in the recapture of Seoul; marine combat vehicles;
Bushmaster; 1950 street fighting.
The Second Battle of Seoul was the battle to recapture Seoul from
the North Koreans in late September 1950. The advance on Seoul was
slow and bloody, after the landings at Inchon. The reason was the
appearance in the Seoul area of two first-class fighting units of
the North Korean People's Army, the 78th Independent Infantry
Regiment and 25th Infantry Brigade, about 7,000 troops in all. The
NKPA launched a T-34 attack, which was trapped and destroyed, and a
Yak bombing run in Incheon harbor, which did little damage. The
NKPA attempted to stall the UN offensive to allow time to reinforce
Seoul and withdraw troops from the south. Though warned that the
process of taking Seoul would allow remaining NKPA forces in the
south to escape, MacArthur felt that he was bound to honor promises
given to the South Korean government to retake the capital as soon
as possible. On the second day, vessels carrying the U.S. Army's
7th Infantry Division arrived in Incheon Harbor. General Almond was
eager to get the division into position to block a possible enemy
movement from the south of Seoul. On the morning of September 18,
the division's 2nd Battalion of the 32nd Infantry Regiment landed
at Incheon and the remainder of the regiment went ashore later in
the day. The next morning, the 2nd Battalion moved up to relieve an
U.S. Marine battalion occupying positions on the right flank south
of Seoul. Meanwhile, the 7th Division's 31st Infantry Regiment came
ashore at Incheon. Responsibility for the zone south of Seoul
highway passed to 7th Division at 18:00 on September 19. The 7th
Infantry Division then engaged in heavy fighting with North Korean
soldiers on the outskirts of Seoul. Before the battle, North Korea
had just one understrength division in the city, with the majority
of its forces south of the capital. MacArthur personally oversaw
the 1st Marine Regiment as it fought through North Korean positions
on the road to Seoul. Control of Operation Chromite was then given
to Major General Edward Almond, the X Corps commander. General
Almond was in an enormous hurry to capture Seoul by September 25,
exactly three months of the North Korean assault across the 38th
parallel. On September 22, the Marines entered Seoul to find it
heavily fortified. Casualties mounted as the forces engaged in
desperate house-to-house fighting. Anxious to pronounce the
conquest of Seoul, Almond declared the city liberated on September
25 despite the fact that Marines were still engaged in
house-to-house combat. This U.S. Marine Corps history provides
unique information about an important aspect of the Korean War.
Subjects covered in this history include: the 1st Marine Division;
Major General Oliver P. Smith; Seoul/Wonsan campaign; aerial
medical evacuation; close air support in the recapture of Seoul;
marine combat vehicles; Bushmaster; 1950 street fighting.
Sunday, 4 March 1945, marked the end of the second week of the U.S.
invasion of Iwo Jima. By this point the assault elements of the 3d,
4th, and 5th Marine Divisions were exhausted, their combat
efficiency reduced to dangerously low levels. The thrilling sight
of the American flag being raised by the 28th Marines on Mount
Suribachi had occurred 10 days earlier, a lifetime on "Sulphur
Island: ' The landing forces of the V Amphibious Corps (VAC) had
already sustained 13,000 casualties, including 3,000 dead. The
"front lines" were a jagged serration across lwo's fat northern
half, still in the middle of the main Japanese defenses. Ahead the
going seemed all uphill against a well-disciplined, rarely visible
enemy. The historic battles of the Marines in the Pacific War are
recounted in this U.S. Marines history book. Some of the subjects
covered include: Mount Suribachi, Kamikaze Pilots, Marine Zippo
Tanks, MacArthur and Roosevelt, V Amphibious Corps.
In August 1943, to meet in secret with Major General Julian C.
Smith and his principal staff officers of the 2d Marine Division,
Vice Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, commanding the Central Pacific
Force, flew to New Zealand from Pearl Harbor. Spruance told the
Marines to prepare for an amphibious assault against Japanese
positions in the Gilbert Islands in November. The Marines knew
about the Gilberts. The 2d Raider Battalion under Lieutenant
Colonel Evans F. Carlson had attacked Makin Atoll a year earlier.
Subsequent intelligence reports warned that the Japanese had
fortified Betio Island in Tarawa Atoll, where elite forces guarded
a new bomber strip. Spruance said Betio would be the prime target
for the 2d Marine Division. General Smith's operations officer,
Lieutenant Colonel David M. Shoup, studied the primitive chart of
Betio and saw that the tiny island was surrounded by a barrier
reef. Shoup asked Spruance if any of the Navy's experimental,
shallow-draft, plastic boats could be provided. "Not available,"
replied the admiral, "expect only the usual wooden landing craft."
Shoup frowned. General Smith could sense that Shoup's gifted mind
was already formulating a plan. The results of that plan were
momentous. The Tarawa operation became a tactical watershed: the
first, large-scale test of American amphibious doctrine against a
strongly fortified beachhead.
The historic battles of the Marines in the Pacific War are
recounted in this U.S. Marines history book. Some of the subjects
covered include: Mount Suribachi, Kamikaze Pilots, Marine Zippo
Tanks, MacArthur and Roosevelt, V Amphibious Corps.
This book is part of the Marines in World War II Commemorative
Series. It presents the story of the United States Marines in the
battle for Okinawa in World War II.
The Pacific War changed abruptly in November 1943 when Adm. Chester
W. Nimitz unleashed his Central Pacific drive, spearheaded by U.S.
Marines. The sudden American proclivity for bold amphibious
assaults into the teeth of prepared defenses astonished Japanese
commanders, who called them storm landings because they differed
sharply from earlier campaigns. This is the story of seven now-epic
long-range assaults executed against murderous enemy fire at
Tarawa, Saipan, Guam, Tinian, Peleliu, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa - and
a potential eighth, Kyushu. The author describes each clash as
demonstrating a growing U.S. ability to concentrate an overwhelming
naval force against a distant strategic objective and literally
kick down the front door. The battles were violent, thoroughly
decisive, and always bloody, with the landing force never
relinquishing the offensive. The cost of storming these seven
fortified islands was great: 74,805 combat casualties for the
Marines and their Navy comrades. Losses among participating Army
and offshore Navy units spiked the total to 100,000 dead and
wounded. Award-winning historian Joseph Alexander relates this
extraordinary story with an easy narrative style bolstered by years
of research in original battle accounts, new Japanese translations,
and fresh interviews with survivors. Richly illustrated and
abounding with human-interest anecdotes about colorful web-footed
amphibians, Storm Landings vividly portrays the sheer drama of
these three-dimensional battles whose magnitude and ferocity may
never again be seen in this world.
On November 20, l943, in the first trial by fire of America's
fledgling amphibious assault doctrine, five thousand men stormed
the beaches of Tarawa, a seemingly invincible Japanese island
fortress barely the size of the Pentagon parking lots
(three-hundred acres!). Before the first day ended, one third of
the Marines who had crossed Tarawa's deadly reef under murderous
fire were killed, wounded, or missing. In three days of fighting,
four Americans would win the Medal of Honor and six-thousand
combatants would die. The bloody conquest of Tarawa by the newly
created Central Pacific Force provided the first trial by fire of
America's fledgling doctrine of forcible amphibious assault against
a heavily fortified objective. Described by one veteran as"a time
of utmost savagery," the incredibly violent battle raged for three
days and left 6,000 men dead in an area no bigger than the Pentagon
and its parking lots. Utmost Savagery is the definitive account of
Tarawa and reflects years of research into primary sources, tidal
records, new translations of Japanese documents, and interviews
with survivors. A Marine combat veteran himself, Col. Alexander
presents a masterful narrative of the tactics, innovations,
leadership, and weapons employed by both antagonists. The book
portrays the battle's full flavor: the decisions, miscalculations,
extreme risks, lost opportunities, breakthroughs, blunders, and
vital lessons learned. Alexander describes the landing plan and its
assumptions, analyzes the freakish"tide that failed," and follows
the amphibious ship-to-shore assault as it encounters the exposed
reef and hellish Japanese fire. He renders a professional salute to
Japanese Admiral Keiji Shibasaki and his well-trained Special Naval
Landing Forces who defended Tarawa virtually to the last man. Above
all he highlights the courage and adaptability of the Marine
small-unit leaders who kept the assault moving throughout 76 hours
of unmitigated horror.
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