ACROSS THE REEF: The Marine Assault of Tarawa
by Colonel Joseph H. Alexander, USMC (Ret)
D-Day at Betio, 20 November 1943 (continued)
Julian Smith knew little of these events, and he
continued striving to piece together the tactical situation ashore. From
observation reports from staff officers aloft in the float planes, he
concluded that the situation in the early afternoon was desperate.
Although elements of five infantry battalions were ashore, their toehold
was at best precarious. As Smith later recalled, "the gap between Red 1
and Red 2 had not been closed and the left flank on Red 3 was by no
means secure."
Smith assumed that Shoup was still alive and
functioning, but he could ill afford to gamble. For the next several
hours the commanding general did his best to influence the action ashore
from the flagship. Smith's first step was the most critical. At 1331 he
sent a radio message to General Holland Smith, reporting "situation in
doubt" and requesting release of the 6th Marines to division control. In
the meantime, having ordered his last remaining landing team (Hays' 1/8)
to the line of departure, Smith began reconstituting an emergency
division reserve comprised of bits and pieces of the artillery,
engineer, and service troop units.
|
U.S.
Navy LCM-3 sinks seaward of the reef after receiving a direct hit by
Japanese gunners on D-Day. This craft may have been one of four carrying
M-3 Stuart light tanks, all of which were sunk by highly accurate
coastal defense guns that morning. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
64142
|
General Smith at 1343 ordered General Hermle to
proceed to the end of the pier, assess the situation and report back.
Hermle and his small staff promptly debarked from Monrovia (APA
31) and headed towards the smoking island, but the trip took four
hours.
Sherman Medium Tanks at Tarawa
|
M-4A2 Sherman tank ("Charlie") of 3d Platoon, Company C,
Medium Tanks, was disabled inland from Red Beach. There by mutually
supporting Japanese antitank guns firing from well-dug in positions not
too far from the beaches. LtGen Julian C. Smith Collection
|
One company of M4-A2 Sherman medium tanks was
assigned to the 2d Marine Division for Operation Galvanic from the I
Marine Amphibious Corps. The 14 tanks deployed from Noumea in early
November 1943, on board the new dock landing ship Ashland (LSD
1), joining Task Force 53 enroute to the Gilberts. Each 34-ton,
diesel-powered Sherman was operated by a crew of five and featured a
gyro-stablized 75mm gun and three machine guns. Regrettably, the
Marines had no opportunity to operate with their new offensive assets
until the chaos of D-Day at Betio.
The Shermans joined Wave 5 of the ship-to-shore
assault. The tanks negotiated the gauntlet of Japanese fire without
incident, but five were lost when they plunged into unseen shell craters
in the turbid water. Ashore, they Marines' lack of operating experience
with medium tanks proved costly to the survivors. Local commanders
simply ordered the vehicles inland to attack targets of opportunity
unsupported. All but two were soon knocked out of action. Enterprising
salvage crews worked throughout each night to cannibalize severely
damaged vehicles in order to keep other tanks operational. Meanwhile,
the Marines learned to employ the tanks within an integrated team of
covering infantry and engineers. The Shermans then proved invaluable in
Major Ryan's seizure of Green Beach on D+1, the attacks of Major Jones
and Major Crowe on D+2, and the final assault by Leiutenant Colonel
McLeod on D+3. Early in the battle, Japanese 75mm antitank guns were
deadly against the Shermans, but once these weapons were destroyed, the
defenders could do little more than shoot out the periscopes with sniper
fire.
Colonel Shoup's opinion of the medium tanks was
ambivalent. His disappointment in the squandered deployment and heavy
losses among the Shermans on D-Day was tempered by subsequent admiration
for their tactical role ashore. Time and again, Japanese emplacements
of reinforced concrete, steel, and sand were reduced by direct fire from
the tanks' main guns, despite a "prohibitive ammunition expenditure."
Shoup also reported that "the so-called crushing effect of medium tanks,
as a tactical measure, was practically negligible in this operation, and
I believe no one should place any faith in eliminating fortifications by
running over them with a tank."
The Marines agreed that the advent of the Shermans
rendered their light tanks obsolete. "Medium tanks are just as easy to
get ashore, and they pack greater armor and firepower," concluded one
battalion commanders. By the war's end, the American ordnance industry
had manufactured 48,064 Sherman tanks for employment by the U.S. Army
and Marine Corps in all theaters of combat.
|
In the meantime, General Smith intercepted a 1458
message from Major Schoettel, still afloat seaward of the reef: "CP
located on back of Red Beach 1. Situation as before. Have lost contact
with assault elements." Smith answered in no uncertain terms: "Direct
you land at any cost, regain control your battalion and continue the
attack." Schoettel complied, reaching the beach around sunset. It would
be well into the next day before he could work his way west and
consolidate his scattered remnants.
|
SSgt
William J. Bordelon, USMC, was awarded the Medal of Honor (posthumously)
for his actions on D-Day. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
12980
|
At 1525, Julian Smith received Holland Smith's
authorization to take control of the 6th Marines. This was good news.
Smith now had four battalion landing teams (including 1/8) available.
The question then became where to feed them into the fight without
getting them chewed to pieces like Ruud's experience in trying to land
3/8.
At this point, Julian Smith's communications failed
him again. At 1740, he received a faint message that Hermle had finally
reached the pier and was under fire. Ten minutes later, Smith ordered
Hermle to take command of all forces ashore. To his subsequent chagrin,
Hermle never received this word. Nor did Smith know his message failed
to get through. Hermle stayed at the pier, sending runners to Shoup (who
unceremoniously told him to "get the hell out from under that pier!")
and trying with partial success to unscrew the two-way movement of
casualties out to sea and supplies to shore.
Throughout the long day Colonel Hall and his
regimental staff had languished in their LCVPs adjacent to Hays' LT 1/8
at the line of departure, "cramped, wet, hungry, tired and a large
number . . . seasick." In late afternoon, Smith abruptly ordered Hall to
land his remaining units on a new beach on the northeast tip of the
island at 1745 and work west towards Shoup's ragged lines. This was a
tremendous risk. Smith's overriding concern that evening was a Japanese
counterattack from the eastern tail of the island against his left flank
(Crowe and Ruud). Once he had been given the 6th Marines, Smith admitted
he was "willing to sacrifice a battalion landing team" if it meant
saving the landing force from being overrun during darkness.
|
Getting ashore on D-Day took great courage and
determination. Attacking inland beyond the relative safety of the
seawall on D-Day required an even greater measure. Department of Defense
Photo (USMC) 63457
|
|
"Tarawa, H-Hour, D-Day, Beach Red." Detail from a
painting in acrylic colors by Col Charles H. Waterhouse, USMCR.
Marine Corps
Historical Center Combat Art Collection
|
|
This
aerial photograph, taken at 1406 on D-Day, shows the long pier on the
north side of the island which divided Red Beach Three, left, from Red
Beach Two, where "a man could lift his hand and get it shot off"" in the
intense fire. Barbed wire entanglements are visible off both beaches. A
grounded Japanese landing craft is tied to the west side of the pier.
Faintly visible in the right foreground, a few Marines wade from a
disabled LVT towards the pier's limited safety and shelter. Marine Corps Personal
Papers
|
|
Marines try to drag a wounded comrade to safety and
medical treatment on D-Day. LtGen Julian C. Smith Collection
|
Fortunately, as it turned out, Hall never received
this message from Smith. Later in the afternoon, a float plane reported
to Smith that a unit was crossing the line of departure and heading for
the left flank of Red Beach Two. Smith and Edson assumed it was Hall and
Hays going in on the wrong beach. The fog of war: the movement reported
was the beginning of Rixey's artillerymen moving ashore. The 8th Marines
spent the night in its boats, waiting for orders. Smith did not discover
this fact until early the next morning.
On Betio, Shoup was pleased to receive at 1415 an
unexpected report from Major Ryan that several hundred Marines and a
pair of tanks had penetrated 500 yards beyond Red Beach One on the
western end of the island. This was by far the most successful progress
of the day, and the news was doubly welcome because Shoup, fearing the
worst, had assumed Schoettel's companies and the other strays who had
veered in that direction had been wiped out. Shoup, however, was unable
to convey the news to Smith.
Ryan's composite troops had indeed been successful on
the western end. Learning quickly how best to operate with the medium
tanks, the Marines carved out a substantial beachhead, overrunning many
Japanese turrets and pillboxes. But aside from the tanks, Ryan's men had
nothing but infantry weapons. Critically, they had no flamethrowers or
demolitions. Ryan had learned from earlier experience in the Solomons
that "positions reduced only with grenades could come alive again." By
late afternoon, he decided to pull back his thin lines and consolidate.
"I was convinced that without flamethrowers or explosives to clean them
out we had to pull back . . . to a perimeter that could be defended
against counterattack by Japanese troops still hidden in the
bunkers."
The fundamental choice faced by most other Marines on
Betio that day was whether to stay put along the beach or crawl over the
seawall and carry the fight inland. For much of the day the fire coming
across the top of those coconut logs was so intense it seemed "a man
could lift his hand and get it shot off." Late on D-Day, there were many
too demoralized to advance. When Major Rathvon McC. Tompkins, bearing
messages from General Hermle to Colonel Shoup, first arrived on Red
Beach Two at the foot of the pier at dusk on D-Day, he was appalled at
the sight of so many stragglers. Tompkins wondered why the Japanese
"didn't use mortars on the first night. People were lying on the beach
so thick you couldn't walk."
Conditions were congested on Red Beach One, as well,
but there was a difference. Major Crowe was every where, "as cool as ice
box lettuce." There were no stragglers. Crowe constantly fed small
groups of Marines into the lines to reinforce his precarious hold on the
left flank. Captain Hoffman of 3/8 was not displeased to find his unit
suddenly integrated within Crowe's 2/8. And Crowe certainly needed help
as darkness began to fall. "There we were," Hoffman recalled, "toes in
the water, casualties everywhere, dead and wounded all around us. But
finally a few Marines started inching forward, a yard here, a yard
there." It was enough. Hoffman was soon able to see well enough to call
in naval gunfire support 50 yards ahead. His Marines dug in for the
night.
|
Col
Michael P Ryan, USMC, wears the Navy Cross awarded to him at Tarawa.
Ryan, the junior major in the Division, was instrumental in securing the
western end of Betio, thereby enabling the first substantial
reinforcements to land intact. Marine Corps Historical Collection
|
West of Crowe's lines, and just inland from Shoup's
command post, Captain William T. Bray's Company B, 1/2, settled in for
the expected counterattacks. The company had been scattered in Kyle's
bloody landing at mid-day. Bray reported to Kyle that he had men from 12
to 14 different units in his company, including several sailors who swam
ashore from sinking boats. The men were well armed and no longer
strangers to each other, and Kyle was reassured.
Altogether, some 5,000 Marines had stormed the
beaches of Betio on D-Day. Fifteen hundred of these were dead, wounded,
or missing by nightfall. The survivors held less than a quarter of a
square mile of sand and coral. Shoup later described the location of his
beachhead lines the night of D-Day as "a stock market graph." His
Marines went to ground in the best fighting positions they could secure,
whether in shellholes inland or along the splintered sea wall. Despite
the crazy-quilt defensive positions and scrambled units, the Marines'
fire discipline was superb. The troops seemed to share a certain grim
confidence; they had faced the worst in getting ashore. They were
quietly ready for any sudden banzai charges in the dark.
Offshore, the level of confidence diminished. General
Julian Smith on Maryland was gravely concerned. "This was the
crisis of the battle," he recalled. "Three-fourths of the Island was in
the enemy's hands, and even allowing for his losses he should have had
as many troops left as we had ashore." A concerted Japanese
counterattack, Smith believed, would have driven most of his forces into
the sea. Smith and Hill reported up the chain of command to Turner,
Spruance, and Nimitz: "Issue remains in doubt." Spruance's staff began
drafting plans for emergency evacuation of the landing force.
The expected Japanese counterattack did not
materialize. The principal dividend of all the bombardment turned out to
be the destruction of Admiral Shibasaki's wire communications. The
Japanese commander could not muster his men to take the offensive. A few
individuals infiltrated through the Marine lines to swim out to disabled
tanks and LVTs in the lagoon, where they waited for the morning.
Otherwise, all was quiet.
|
"The
Hard Road to Triumph," a sketch by Kerr Eby. The action shows Maj
Crowe's LT 2/8 trying to expand its beachhead near the contested
Burns-Philp pier. U.S. Navy Combat Art Collection
|
|
Marines of Landing Teams 2/8 and 3/8 advance forward
beyond the beach. LtGen Julian C. Smith Collection
|
The main struggle throughout the night of D-Day was
the attempt by Shoup and Hermle to advise Julian Smith of the best place
to land the reserves on D+1. Smith was amazed to learn at 0200 that Hall
and Hays were in fact not ashore but still afloat at the line of
departure, awaiting orders. Again, he ordered Combat Team Eight (-) to
land on the eastern tip of the island, this time at 0900 on D+1. Hermle
finally caught a boat to one of the destroyers in the lagoon to relay
Shoup's request to the commanding general to land reinforcements on Red
Beach Two. Smith altered Hall's orders accordingly, but he ordered
Hermle back to the flagship, miffed at his assistant for not getting
ashore and taking command. But Hermle had done Smith a good service in
relaying the advice from Shoup. As much as the 8th Marines were going to
bleed in the morning's assault, a landing on the eastern end of the
island would have been an unmitigated catastrophe. Reconnaissance after
the battle discovered those beaches to be the most intensely mined on
the island.
|