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Memory strands of Iwo Jima (60th Anniversary)
Philly Inquirer | 18 Feb 2005 | Edward Colimore

Posted on 02/18/2005 4:38:52 AM PST by LavaDog

After 60 years, the Iwo Jima veterans need only close their eyes to imagine themselves face-down again in the black volcanic sand, shells exploding around them, body parts flying through the air.

Marine Cpl. Edward Perry of Lakewood, N.J., remembers an explosion that tore through his lower back and threw him into the air, where he was hit by Japanese gunfire.

Pvt. William Myers of South Philadelphia recalls being wounded in the back by mortar shrapnel and nearly killed by a bullet that passed through his helmet.

And Pvt. Edward Szostek of King of Prussia has nightmarish memories of mangled comrades, including a lieutenant and staff sergeant, both cut in two by a high-velocity shell.

Myers, Szostek, and about 150 other Iwo Jima veterans are to mark the 60th anniversary of the 36-day battle during ceremonies today at the site of the National Museum of the Marine Corps, scheduled to open in 2006 in Quantico, Va.

Yesterday, Perry canceled his plans to attend when he developed back problems related to his war injuries.

The Marines began the battle - immortalized by the flag-raising on Mount Suribachi - with a beach landing on Feb. 19, 1945. About 6,000 Marines and 20,000 Japanese were dead by the time it ended March 16.

The capture of the island and its airfields put American warplanes within striking distance of the main islands of Japan.

"One of the things that stood out for me was the hundreds of ships," said Szostek, 81, a retired machinist tool-and-die maker. "An armada was bombarding the island for three days, and the bombers hit it for 72 days straight... . You'd swear the whole island would sink."

U.S. military planners thought the battle would be over within a few days - and their theory would be tested by the first wave of Marines, including Perry.

In the early morning, the troops clambered over the side of troop ships for amphibious tractors (amtracs) stored on landing craft. The amtracs were released close to the beach for the final dash to land.

"I couldn't believe we wanted to take the island; I thought, 'This is crazier than hell,' " said Perry, 79, a retired bank officer.

Perry stepped out of an amtrac and sank knee-deep into black sand while mortar shells rained down and machine gun fire raked the beach.

Coming in behind him was a second wave, including Szostek, who saw the first Marines "getting all shot up. They couldn't get off the beach."

Other troops followed. Myers, part of the fourth wave, recalled the tension in the landing craft.

"We were only kids - 18 and 19 - and there was no cutting up, no carrying on," said Myers, 79, a retired Pennsylvania welfare caseworker. "I remember a sailor hollering insults at us. We said, 'What the hell is the matter with this guy?' I think he was trying to make us angry so we would take it out on the Japanese."

Myers saw an amtrac next to his take a direct hit from a mortar shell. "I saw four or five Marines floating," he said. "The rest went down with the amtrac. After that, the guys were praying."

Jumping from his amtrac, Szostek said, he immediately saw "five or six dead Marines lying in the sand" and was soon shooting back at the Japanese, including four - all on fire - as they charged from a pillbox. One, an officer, was "waving a sword and hollering, 'Banzai!,' " Szostek said.

By the end of the first day, 30,000 Marines had landed. Part of an airfield was captured, and Mount Suribachi was isolated.

"It was 40 or 50 degrees in the day, and cold and damp at night," Perry said, also recalling a heavy rain on the second day that added to the misery. "I started to cry because it was so disheartening, and this fellow with me hit me with a helmet and told me, 'You son of a bitch. You better not crack up on me.' That saved me."

The Marines began moving forward on the second day. During a mortar attack, Myers jumped into a "big ditch" with other Marines.

One put his head up, and "his face was blown in. Another guy had his hand separated from his wrist, and I got shrapnel in my back," Myers said.

Marines moved north and south on the island and captured Mount Suribachi by Feb. 23. A small flag was raised at 10:20 a.m. and was replaced by the larger one shown being raised in the famous photo by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal.

"I was about 500 yards away and could see the flag go up," Myers said. "The ships were blasting their horns. We said, 'Look at that! Man alive!' We were elated as anything. We thought the battle was over, but we still had three-quarters of the island left."

Perry saw the flag-raising from farther away but was no less excited. "Everybody cheered," he said. "It seemed impossible."

By the sixth day, Perry was in a place the Marines would call Death Valley when a shell blew up behind him and ripped through his back and neck. He was tossed in the air and hit in the left shoulder by Japanese machine-gun fire.

"If not for the grace of the good God, I would be dead," said Perry, whom some call the "metallic Marine" because of the slivers of shrapnel still filling his body. "I came down on my back still conscious.

"A corpsman put some sulfur in my wound and gave me a shot of morphine. All the stretchers were gone, so eight guys used a poncho to carry me to a first-aid station."

Myers also ran into problems in Death Valley. The Japanese mounted a counterattack and ran into about 20 Marine riflemen.

"I felt something burn my ear," he said. "A bullet had gone through my helmet and drove a piece of it in my shoulder. I later brought the helmet home; the government charged me $2.87, but that sucker was a prize."

The grinding combat took an increasingly heavy toll on the troops, physically and mentally. More than 2,000, including Szostek, would suffer battle fatigue.

"On the 12th day, I got into a shell hole at an airfield on the north side of the island, and a mortar landed behind us," Szostek said. "It caused shell shock. You're 19, and you think you're strong. But you see your best friends die, mangled Marines everywhere. You walk through trenches on top of bloated Japanese... . It's blood and guts all day long."

Sixty years later, the three veterans still live with memories of the battle.

"I'm a survivor, not a hero," said Perry, a 100 percent disabled veteran, expressing the feelings of many Iwo Jima veterans.

"The ones who didn't make it, I call them heroes."

The Photograph

The photograph on Page B1 is perhaps the most famous image from World War II: five Marines and a Navy corpsman raising an American flag on top of Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima.

Taken by Associated Press photographer Joe Rosenthal on Feb. 23, 1945, the photo was dogged for years by rumors that it was staged.

It wasn't.

What it was - and no one tried to hide this - was a picture captured, at the right instant and from the right angle, of the second flag to be raised atop Suribachi. After the first had been raised (pictured above), Marine brass ordered a bigger one put up.

First or second, the image struck an enduring chord.

It won the Pulitzer Prize, was used on a postage stamp, and served as the model for the Marine Corps War Memorial in Arlington, Va.

None of the men who raised the flag is alive; three died on Iwo Jima. Rosenthal, 93, lives in California.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Pennsylvania
KEYWORDS: anniversary; iwojima; wwii
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To: Max in Utah

There were two main factors that drove the high casualty rate. The huge size of the fleet around Okinawa, and the sheer ferocity of the Kamikaze assault. Between 12 and 15 USN ships were sunk, many of them radar picket destoyers and destroyer escorts, placed closer to Japan to give the earliest possible warning that suicide planes were incoming to the main body of the fleet, which included the carriers and larger escorts and support ships supporting the landings. Several of the Essex class carriers were seriously damaged, and although none were sunk, they had large crews and many casualties. The BUNKER HILL itself, had over 500 dead. The fleet around Okinawa was larger than that at the Normandy invasion, and the battle raged for 83 days. This fleet became known as "The Fleet That Came to Stay", because they would not let the Japanese drive them away. The Navy took a terrible beating at the series of naval battles with the Japanes Navy at Guadalcanal, but Okinawa was worse.


21 posted on 02/18/2005 6:49:24 AM PST by Big Digger (I)
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To: Max in Utah

Kamaikazis and the hurricane, I think they lost more ships inthe hurricane than inbattle, too

I think it was called OPERATION ICEBERG

http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/wwii/okinawa/chapter1.htm

http://www.rickard.karoo.net/articles/battles_okinawa1.html

http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/wwii/okinawa/default.aspx


22 posted on 02/18/2005 6:51:18 AM PST by RaceBannon ((Prov 28:1 KJV) The wicked flee when no man pursueth: but the righteous are bold as a lion.)
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To: Max in Utah

http://www.history.navy.mil/faqs/faq102-6.htm

Hurricane off Okinawa

Sorry, TYPHOON


23 posted on 02/18/2005 6:52:54 AM PST by RaceBannon ((Prov 28:1 KJV) The wicked flee when no man pursueth: but the righteous are bold as a lion.)
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To: astounded
Yes, I am referring to Okinawa. 12,000 US dead between 1 April and 22 June. Largely forgotten as a battle, I think because it was sandwiched between Iwo and Hiroshima. It is usually accepted that the high toll during the Oki campaign is THE reason Truman decided to use Fat Man and Little Boy. With a few exceptions the IJA/IJN had decided to use attrition to bleed the US white. This strategy caused some conflict within the Japanese command on Okinawa. Sort of contrary to the Bushido code. As for the Navy, I believe they lost more souls during the Okinawa campaign than in all other Pacific actions put together. Sledge's book, "With the Old Breed" and Feifer's, "The Battle of Okinawa" put it into pretty good perspective from a Marine mortar man's and an operational point of view respectively. IMO.
24 posted on 02/18/2005 12:03:03 PM PST by canalabamian (Diversity is not our strength...UNITY is.)
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To: LavaDog; All

GREAT piece on the Wall Street Journal Op Ed page about Iwop Jima today. I'm surprised no one posted it, and I don't have it electronically. Really puts things in perspective.


25 posted on 02/18/2005 12:32:25 PM PST by the invisib1e hand ("remember, from ashes you came, to ashes you will return.")
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet

And Ping again...


26 posted on 02/19/2005 8:54:53 AM PST by Chad Fairbanks (Celibacy is a hands-on job.)
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To: Chad Fairbanks; jigsaw
U.S. military planners thought the battle would be over within a few days - and their theory would be tested by the first wave of Marines, including Perry.

In the early morning, the troops clambered over the side of troop ships for amphibious tractors (amtracs) stored on landing craft. The amtracs were released close to the beach for the final dash to land.

"I couldn't believe we wanted to take the island; I thought, 'This is crazier than hell,' " said Perry, 79, a retired bank officer.

Perry stepped out of an amtrac and sank knee-deep into black sand while mortar shells rained down and machine gun fire raked the beach.

Coming in behind him was a second wave, including Szostek, who saw the first Marines "getting all shot up. They couldn't get off the beach."

I appreciate the pings, guys. My dad was in this first wave.

By the way, does anyone know what date/time it is in Japan right now?

27 posted on 02/19/2005 11:46:30 AM PST by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (Humina, humina, humina...)
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet

Actually, I just looked, and I think it is tomorrow in Japan today... Day ahead, if I read it correctly.


28 posted on 02/19/2005 11:47:32 AM PST by Chad Fairbanks (Celibacy is a hands-on job.)
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To: Chad Fairbanks

Okay - thanks.


29 posted on 02/19/2005 11:49:04 AM PST by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet (Humina, humina, humina...)
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