Cape Gloucester: The Green Inferno
by Bernard C. Nalty
The Japanese in Western New Britain
A mixture of combat and service troops operated in
western New Britain. The 1st and 8th Shipping Regiments used
motorized barges to shuttle troops and cargo along the coast from Rabaul
to Cape Merkus, Cape Gloucester, and across Dampier Strait to Rooke
Island. For longer movements, for example to New Guinea, the 5th Sea
Transport Battalion manned a fleet of trawlers and schooners,
supplemented by destroyers of the Imperial Japanese Navy when speed
seemed essential. The troops actually defending western New Britain
included the Matsuda Force, established in September 1943 under
the command of Major General Iwao Matsuda, a specialist in military
transportation, who nevertheless had commanded an infantry regiment in
Manchuria. When he arrived on New Britain in February of that year,
Matsuda took over the 4th Shipping Command, an administrative
headquarters that provided staff officers for the Matsuda Force.
His principal combat units were the under-strength 65th Infantry
Brigadeconsisting of the 141st Infantry, battle-tested in
the conquest of the Philippines, plus artillery and antiaircraft
unitsand those components of the 51st Division not
committed to the unsuccessful defense of New Guinea. Matsuda established
the headquarters for his jury-rigged force near Kalingi, along the
coastal trail northwest of Mount Talawe, within five miles of the Cape
Gloucester airfields, but the location would change to reflect the
tactical situation.
As the year 1943 wore on, the Allied threat to New
Britain increased. Consequently, General Hitoshi Imamura, who commanded
the Eighth Area Army from a headquarters at Rabaul, assigned the
Matsuda Force to the 17th Division, under Lieutenant
General Yasushi Sakai, recently arrived from Shanghai. Four convoys were
to have carried Sakai's division, but the second and third lost one ship
to submarine torpedoes and another to a mine, while air attack damaged a
third. Because of these losses, which claimed some 1,200 lives, the last
convoy did not sail, depriving the division of more than 3,000
replacements and service troops. Sakai deployed the best of his forces
to western New Britain, entrusting them to Matsuda's tactical
command.
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