Posted on 12/23/2002 12:10:46 AM PST by SAMWolf
are acknowledged, affirmed and commemorated.
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The Battle for Wake Island As of 6 December 1941, the defensive status of Wake was far from ideal. Intended primarily as a patrol-plane base for Catalina clippers, the island had no scouting aircraft yet, and only the most primitive facilities for any type of aircraft operations. Its squadron of 12 Grumman Wildcat aircrafts, VMF-211, was learning on the job how to operate wholly new aircraft which had no armor and on which the bomb racks did not match the local supply of bombs. On the entire atoll, there were 449 marines of all ranks, detachment of the 1st Defense Battalion, therefore equipped and trained for combat. The ground defenses, embodying the complete artillery of a defense battalion (5-inch seacoast batteries and 3-inch antiaircraft guns), had by dint of unceasing 12-hour working days been emplaced, and some protective sandbagging and camouflage accomplished. To man all these weapons, 43 officers and 939 enlisted were required, but only 15 officers and 373 enlisted were available. Furthermore, there were 1,200 unarmed civilian contract employees on the island. Word of war came around 7am on 8 December 1941. At 11am, several planes drop through the clouds : this was japanese Air Attack Force of 34 Nell bombers, based at Roi, 720 miles to the south. The fortuitous rain squall masked the enemy let-down and approach, but the complete lack of any type of early warning was a matter which pointed squarely at Wake's most critical shortage: the want of radar. The results of the Japanese attack were devastating. Using 100-pound bombs and 20 mm cannon, the air strike destroyed seven F4F fighters on ground. The island's main aviation gas tank took a direct hit, exploded and set everything ablaze, including the squadron's tentage, tools and spare parts. VMF-211 suffered nearly 60-percent casualties and there were 84 dead or dying on Wake. Across the Pacific it was a similar story : in Pearl Harbor, Guam, Philippines, North China. In his first message after the Pearl Harbor disaster, President Roosevelt had warned the American people to be prepared for word of the fall of Wake. With the core of the fleet on the bottom of the seas, there could be little question, for the time being, of a sustained and aggressive fleet defense. Wake would stand or fall largely by its own strength. By next morning, the Japanese bombers returned, methodical almost to a fault : the hour, altitude and pattern did not vary. The air combat patrol (or what was left of it) flanked them, opened fire and sent one bomber careening down in flames. The antiaircraft batteries opened up : five bombers were belching smoke, one burst into flames and exploded. Over the next two days, they would shoot down at least two more planes and score damaging hits on numerous others that disappeared over the horizon in a trail of smoke. The second raid hit hard the camp and the naval air station. They destroyed the hospital, the Navy's radio station, and the civilian and naval barracks, killing 55 civilians and four Marines. The aerial raids had been directed at the airstrip and the various supporting establishments. But, as events would shortly prove, the three days' bombing, while inflicting considerable damage on Wake, had been insufficient. Admiral Inouye, commanding the Imperial Japanese Fourth Fleet, was charged by current war plans with capture of Wake, but, more important, that of Guam, Makin and Tarawa. By dark on 10 December, Guam had fallen. Earlier that same day, Makin and Tarawa had surrendered. Wake alone remained : conduct of this last operation was delegated to Rear Admiral Kajioka. His naval force comprised one flagship light cruiser, the Yubari, two other light cruisers (Tatsuta and Tenryu), six destroyers (Mutsuki, Kisaragi, Yayoi, Mochizuki, Oite, and Hayate), two destroyer-transports, two transports, and two submarines. The plan was to have 150 men land on Wilkes Island, and 300 men on the south side of Wake Island to capture the airfield, covered by the guns of the naval force. If those numbers proved insufficient, supporting destroyers were to provide men to augment the landing force. At 3am, on 11 December, lookouts reported ships in sight. At 5am, Kajioka's ships began their final run. Because of the unfavorable weather and heavy seas, boating progressed slowly and unsatisfactorily, with some landing craft being overturned. Soon after, the boats opened fire at area targets along the south shore of Wake. The coastal guns, however, remained silent and hidden behind a brush camouflage. At 6am, as the boats were closer, the Marines commenced firing. Although they had unavoidably revealed their location, the ships' counterfire proved woefully inaccurate. A battery sent two shells into Yubari at the waterline and two more shells caught her slightly aft. Badly hurt, Yubari retired over the horizon. Another battery fired and caused a violent explosion in the destroyer Hayate : she broke in two and sank. The Oite was next and took a direct hit : she threw up a smoke screen and limped away. Then, the gunners shifted fire to the Japanese transports Kongo Maru and Konryu Maru : one shell hit the leading transport, causing both to flee. Next they turned their efforts to a cruiser off the west end of the island : she took one shell in the stern and retreated out of range. The destroyer Yayoi take a shell in the stern and be set afire. Then went a smoke screen, and the ships made their escape. Kajioka ordered a withdrawal : plans for a landing were forgotten and damage control on burning and smoking ships became priority. The fleet had no air cover and the remaining Wildcats found it little more than an hour's sail from Wake : the destroyer Kisaragi, suffering from an earlier hit, just blew up, and another destroyer suffered heavy damage. The defeat was total : two ships were lost, seven were damaged, and probably about 500 japanese died while four Marines were wounded in action.
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The enemy maintained aerial pressure on the atoll. Day after day, the shore-based Nell bombers of the Twenty-fourth Air Flotilla attacked, now covered by Zero fighters, helped by Mavis flying boats used as bombers, and soon by Val dive bombers from carriers Soryu and Hiryu. Enemy planes methodically worked over all battery positions, reducing american defenses. One by one, the defender planes were used up : when all the planes were destroyed, the remaining men of the squadron reported to serve as infantry.
In the meantime, at Pearl Harbor, a relief expedition made ready to sail. The relief train, consisting of Tangier cargo and Neches fleet oiler, had to deliver supplies, reinforcements and aircraft to Wake, evacuate wounded with a portion of the civilians, and return to Pearl Harbor. The expedition was to be protected from air, submarine, and surface attacks by the Saratoga task group : the carrier, three heavy cruisers and nine destroyers in all. But the speed of advance of the Task Force was considerably curtailed by the maximum speed of its slowest component, the old Neches, which could only make 12 knots.
On 21 December, intelligence available at Pearl Harbor indicated a heavy concentration of shore-based Japanese aviation strength in the Marshalls, with the possibility that hostile surface forces might be encountered astride Task Force's approach to Wake. Eager to evacuate or reinforce the island, Admiral Pye, acting commander of the Pacific fleet, nevertheless decided that the risk was too great. In light of the destruction inflicted on the fleet at Pearl Harbor, he could not chance damaging much less losing an American carrier or capital ship. Finally, the relief force was recalled. It was but 425 miles distant from Wake.
Despite the fact that the same general difficulties were anticipated for the next attempt, the Japanese higher echelons let the basic scheme of attack remain largely unchanged : the new plan and estimate of the situation were, in essence, amplified versions of the original one which had failed. The sunken ships were replaced by two new destroyers (Asanagi and Yunagi), together with one more, Oboro. In addition, two carriers (Hiryu and Soryu with 118 aircrafts), screened by the heavy cruisers Tone and Chikuma and the destroyers Tanikaze and Urakaze, were detached from their Pearl Harbor Striking Force, and headed toward Wake.
Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, the Commander in Chief of the Combined Fleet, was now convinced that Wake, by contrast with other central Pacific objectives, constituted a major stumbling block. In order that Wake's deadly seacoast batteries might be afforded minimum opportunities, initial landings were to take place by darkness, shortly before dawn. And as a measure of surprise, there was to be no preliminary naval bombardment.
The Marines spotted the Japanese assault force at 2am, 23 December. At the same time, Japanese infantrymen clambered down into the medium landing craft, two heading for Wilkes Island and others for the south shore of Wake Island.
On Wilkes island :
At 02:45 hours, the Japanese Company with approximately 100 men came ashore under heavy fire coming from two .50-caliber machine-guns above the landing area. The tiny garrison of the Marines on whole Wilkes numbered only approximately 70 men. The Japanese soon overrun the positions of the nearly battery, and also commenced movement to the west, toward the next battery. That was all what the Japanese had accomplished on Wilkes Island. Further advance was not possible, as good camouflaged machine-guns nets pinned down the Japanese to the ground.
By 04:00 hours, the situation on Wilkes Island have stabilized. The Japanese were in firm possession of the first battery position, but surrounded by the Marines, which prevented them any expansion of the beachhead. Then, the Marine combat groups joined their forces, and then proceeded to sweep the entire position.
After the successful attack, the Japanese casualties were horrible: they lost four officers and at least 90 men. American's losses were 9 Marines and 2 civilian workers killed, and five wounded. But the communication line with Devereux's command post was dead and this has later probably misled Major Devereux into belief that Wilkes Island already had fallen into Japanese hands. Around 8am, after their forces being pushed from the island, the Japanese continued with aerial and sea bombardment of the Wilkes Island, and finally managed to silence the island's coastal battery.
Eighty-one Marines, eight sailors and 82 civilian construction workers had been killed or wounded during the battle. The Japanese, however, paid a heavy price for their victory. Fragmentary information of varying reliability is to be found in various sources, however, the following estimated enemy losses are tabulated: 21 planes shooted down and 51 aircrafts damaged, 2 ships sunk and eight damaged, about 1.000 men killed or missing. Considering the power accumulated for the invasion and the meager forces of the defenders, it was one of the most humiliating battle the Japanese Navy ever suffered. And the Battle of Wake upset the timetable for the Japanese campaign of conquest in the Pacific.
Enraged by their losses, the Japanese treated the American soldiers brutally. Some were stripped naked, others to their underwear. Most had their hands tied behind their backs with telephone wire. And five of Wake's defenders were beheaded by the Japanese on board Nitta Maru. With the exception of nearly 100 contractors who remained on Wake Island, all the rest of the civilians joined Wake's Marines, sailors, and soldiers in prisoner of war camps.
Air raids on Wake occurred throughout the war, the first occurring in February 1942. Raids in October 1943, however, had grave repercussions for the contractors who had been left behind. The atoll commander, who feared that the raids portended a major landing, had them all executed. For that offense, he was hanged as a war criminal.
Wake was not recaptured by American forces during the war. There was no bloody American amphibious invasion to recapture the island, because air superiority and control of the sea made it possible to bypass Wake. The U.S. recovered Wake Island after the Japanese surrender in 1945.
Wake Island circa WWII December the seventh we heard about Pearl, We knew we'd be next on the list. The men of our Corps, four fifty, no more All swore to the death to resist. Chorus: Wake Island, Wake Island, It's not even marked on the maps Our Corps raised her name to honor and fame When they stopped the advance of the Japs. Cut off from supplies with no hope of aid We sighted the first Japanese, With thousands of troops and a task force of ships They thought they could take us with ease. They sent in their subs, their ships and their planes They shelled us by day and by night, Surrender they said, we laughed at their threats We're only beginning to fight. Our four hundred fifty cost six thousand Japs Our fighters downed twenty eight planes, We sank two destroyers and one submarine Six others got shelled for their pains. Our plan was to fight to the very last man But Deveraux gave this command, There's a thousand civilians I can't sacrifice We'll have to surrender our band. Yes, we lay down our arms on the twenty-third day The Japs cheered the news of defeat. But they could not believe a few crummy Marines Had stopped the whole Japanese fleet.
'I accept this island proudly, because this is Wake, not just any island. It was here the Marines showed us how.' --Commander Masek |
United States Army Sergeant Christopher Hamre, from the Fort Stewart, Georgia-based Alpha Company, 3-7 Infantry of Task Force 4-64 Armored, watches from his Bradley armored vehicle during a live fire exercise in the north Kuwait desert December 21, 2002. There are some 12,000 U.S. troops in Kuwait for training, many within just 5 kilometers of the Iraqi border. (Chris Helgren/Reuters) Two U.S. Army Bradley fighting vehicles of the Fort Stewart, Georgia based Alpha company, third battilion of the seventh Infantry of Task Force , fourth battalion of the 64th Armored, are illuminated by multiple rocket launchers in the north Kuwait desert December 22, 2002 during a brigade night live fire exercise. United States Army Specialist Todd McWaters, of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, eats lunch on top of his armored personnel carrier in the north Kuwait desert December 22, 2002 United States Army soldiers Spc. Lui Fenumai (top) of Juneau, Alaska and Spc. John Dresler of Oxford, Connecticut practise unarmed combat in the north Kuwait desert December 22, 2002. A United States Army Abrams tanks kicks up sand during a brigade live fire exercise in the north Kuwait desert December 21, 2002. Veteran French television journalist Patrick Bourrat died in a Kuwait hospital December 22, 2002, a day after he was hit by a tank, while covering U.S. military exercises in the Kuwaiti desert, the French embassy said. REUTERS/Chris Helgren
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Just dropping in prior to going to work, but wanted to take the opportunity to wish you all
- from an old 78 record a buddy of mine had.
Walt
One had some verses for the well known "Bless 'em all".
"We sent for the Army to come to Tulagi, But General McArthur said 'no'.
I'll tell you the reason, it isn't the season,
besides, you have no USO!
Bless 'em all, bless 'em all
the long and the short and the tall;
there'll be no promotion,
this side of the ocean
so good luck my lads, bless 'em all!
"We sent for the Navy to come to Tulagi; the dear little Navy agreed;
from 18 directions , in ten different sections;
Oh, Lord! what a screwed up stampede!"
Another song from Korea had a verse:
"I hope to raise a family when this cruel war is through;"
I hope to have a bouncing boy to tell my stories to.
But if some day when he grows up, he joins the Marine Reserve,
I'll kick his ass from dawn 'til dusk;
'cause that's what he'll deserve!"
Walt
Wake Island Raid, 24 February 1942
A Douglas TBD-1 torpedo plane from USS Enterprise (CV-6) flies over Wake during the raid. Note fires burning in the lower center. View looks about WNW, with Wilkes Island in the center and the western end of Wake Island in bottom center. Peale Island is at right.
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