BREAKING THE OUTER RING: Marine Landings in the Marshall Islands
by Captain John C. Chapin, USMCR (Ret)
By the beginning of 1944, United States Marine forces
had already made a dramatic start on the conquest of areas overrun by
the Japanese early in World War II. Successful American assaults in the
Southwest Pacific, beginning with Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands in
August 1942, and in the Central Pacific at Tarawa in the Gilbert Islands
in November 1943, were crucial campaigns to mark the turn of the
Japanese floodtide of conquest. The time had now come to take one more
decisive step; assault of the islands held by Japan before 1941.
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Marine riflemen, under fire, leap from a just-beached
amphibian tractor in the January 1944 landing. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
72411
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These strategic islands, mandated to the Japanese by
the League of Nations after World War I, were a source of mystery and
speculation. Outsiders were barred; illegal fortifications were
presumed; yet any Central Pacific drive towards Japan's inner defense
ring had to confront these unknowns. The obvious target to begin with
was the Marshall Islands. As early as 1921 a Marine planning officer
had pinpointed their geographic significance.
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