Posted on 03/10/2005 7:10:45 AM PST by rcocean
Our awe at the bravery of the Marines and their Japanese adversaries should not cause us to overlook the stupidity that forced them into this unnecessary meat grinder. Selective memories of World War II, which record only inspiring deeds and block out all waste and folly, create an impossible standard of perfection against which to judge contemporary conflicts.
(Excerpt) Read more at latimes.com ...
I forgot that we had all that available to us then!
I believe I have read that crippled bombers were landed on Iwo before the battle was even over.
Although I question his analysis of the necessity of the operation, he makes a very telling point in the last paragraph; our society is not prepared for the realities of modern war.
One thing that is not stated in Boot's article is that there was a tactical change in Japanese defensive doctrine starting with Saipan; defense in depth rather than defending the beachhead as at Tarawa.
Next some idiot will question the cost to having NATO since the Soviets never did invade Western Europe.
IMO, Roosevelt was certainly in the running for worst President.
After the B-29 came into the war, almost all the islands near Japan could've been skipped, I suppose.
An interesting point. Why blame MacArthur? We invaded the Phillipines because FDR, Stimson, Marshall and King wanted to. MacArthur was just in charge of SWPA.
Okinawa served essentially the same purpose.
I can see us needing one or the other, but not both.
I did not read the columnist's entire article, but only the two excerpts quickly provided at the beginning of the thread. I found the columnist to either be ignorant of some rather basic facts or intentionally glossing over those facts to promote an agenda. I did read the Cpl's entire article, which was taken from Capt. Burrell's study.
How?
It is my understanding that the vast quantities of fuel at Pearl are primarily stored in huge underground caverns, far below the ground.
Bingo!
Flyboys is the next book I'm going to read, but I'm just finishing up Flags of Our Fathers, by James Bradley. Its about the fight for Iwo Jima and the author's father was one of the flagraisers. Great read.
I agree that the 25-30K "lives saved" statistic is overlooking other islands, naval search-and-rescue, etc. But I also think it's a stretch that three divisions were rendered "unusable" - although your point at the degradation suffered is well taken.
Yes, I don't know the numbers, but indeed recall that point.
I may have to pick that up as soon as I'm done with FlyBoys.
Another point not mentioned on this thread yet is the Japanese commander made the tactical decision to allow the Marines to establish beachheads with relatively little resistance (which our forces did not anticipate). Then, once the "easy" landing resulted in a massing of our forces on the beachheads, the enemy opened up on the overcrowded landing areas. (This is based on recollection from readings many years ago.)
As long as the cowards in Washington DC allow a traitor
to serve in the US Senate we will see more of this stuff.
The left has learned they can get away with anything.
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Some would contend that he still doesn't know how to drive, given his body count.
"The truly unnecessary attack was the Phillipines, which advanced absolutely no strategic purpose, rather it allowed MacAuthur to claim a public relations victory by redeeming his pledge to return."
While it is not a strategic mission, I think we were duty bound to invade the Philipines to liberate U.S. POW's being held there since 1942 and to liberate Phillipinos, who were citizens of a U.S. territory and were actively resisting the Japanese.
Well, this is just flat-out wrong. Iwo Jima was 650 miles from Tokyo, which makes a 1,300 mile round trip. Other targets in Japan were even closer.
The operational range of the P-51D was 2080 miles, meaning combat patrols over Japan were well within range. The p-38 had an even longer range of 3000 miles. Iwo Jima could well have been used to provide fighter support for bombing missions over Japan.
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