Cape Gloucester: The Green Inferno
by Bernard C. Nalty
MacArthur's Marines
After the fierce battles at Guadalcanal in the South
Pacific Area, the 1st Marine Division underwent rehabilitation in
Australia, which lay within General MacArthur's Southwest Pacific Area.
Once the division had recovered from the ordeal of the Solomon Islands
fighting, it gave MacArthur a trained amphibious unit that he
desperately needed to fulfill his ambitions for the capture of Rabaul.
Theoretically, the 1st Marine Division was subordinate to General Sir
Thomas Blamey, the Australian officer in command of the Allied Land
Forces, and Blamey's nominal subordinate, Lieutenant General Walter
Kreuger, commanding the Sixth U.S. Army. But in actual practice,
MacArthur bypassed Blamey and dealt directly with Kreuger.
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During the planning of the New Britain operation, Gen
Douglas MacArthur, right, in command of the Southwest Pacific Area,
confers with LtGen Walter Kreuger, left, Commanding General, Sixth U.S.
Army, and MajGen Rupertus, whose Marines will assault the island. At
such a meeting, Cal Edwin A. Pollock, operations officer of the 1st
Marine Division, advised MacArthur of the opposition of the Marine
leaders to a complex scheme of maneuver involving Army airborne
troops. Department of Defense (USMC) photo 75882
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When the 1st Marine Division became available to
MacArthur, he still intended to seize Rabaul and break the back of
Japanese resistance in the region. Always concerned about air cover for
his amphibious operations, MacArthur planned to use the Marines to
capture the airfields at Cape Gloucester. Aircraft based there would
then support the division when, after a brief period of recuperation, it
attacked Rabaul. The decision to bypass Rabaul eliminated the landings
there, but the Marines would nevertheless seize the Cape Gloucester
airfields, which seemed essential for neutralizing the base.
The initial concept of operations, which called for
the conquest of western New Britain preliminary to storming Rabaul,
split the 1st Marine Division, sending Combat Team A (the 5th Marines,
reinforced, less one battalion in reserve) against Gasmata on the
southern coast of the island, while Combat Team C (the 7th Marines,
reinforced) seized a beachhead near the principal objective, the
airfields on Cape Gloucester. The Army's 503d Parachute Infantry would
exploit the Cape Gloucester beachhead, while Combat Team B (the
reinforced 1st Marines) provided a reserve for the operation.
Revisions came swiftly, and by late October 1943 the
plan no longer mentioned capturing Rabaul, tacit acceptance of the
modified Allied strategy, and also satisfied an objection raised by
General Rupertus. The division commander had protested splitting Combat
Team C, and Kreuger agreed to employ all three battalions for the main
assault, substituting a battalion from Combat Team B, the 1st Marines,
for the landing on the west coast. The air borne landing at Cape
Gloucester remained in the plan, however, even though Rupertus had
warned that bad weather could delay the drop and jeopardize the Marine
battalions already fighting ashore. The altered version earmarked Army
troops for the landing on the southern coast, which Kreuger's staff
shifted from Gasmata to Arawe, a site closer to Allied airfields and
farther from Rabaul with its troops and aircraft. Although Combat Team B
would put one battalion ashore southwest of the airfields, the remaining
two battalions of the 1st Marines were to follow up the assault on Cape
Gloucester by Combat Team C. The division reserve, Combat Team A, might
employ elements of the 5th Marines to reinforce the Cape Gloucester
landings or conduct operations against the offshore islands west of New
Britain.
During a routine briefing on 14 December, just one
day before the landings at Arawe, MacArthur off handedly asked how the
Marines felt about the scheme of maneuver at Cape Gloucester. Colonel
Edwin A. Pollock, the division's operations officer, seized the
opportunity and declared that the Marines objected to the plan because
it depended on a rapid advance inland by a single reinforced regiment to
prevent heavy losses among the lightly armed paratroops. Better, he
believed, to strengthen the amphibious forces than to try for an aerial
envelopment that might fail or be delayed by the weather. Although he
made no comment at the time, MacArthur may well have heeded what Pollock
said; whatever the reason, Kreuger's staff eliminated the airborne
portion, directed the two battalions of the 1st Marines still with
Combat Team B to land immediately after the assault waves, sustaining
the momentum of their attack, and alerted the division reserve to
provide further reinforcement.
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