CLOSING IN: Marines in the Seizure of Iwo Jima
by Colonel Joseph H. Alexander U.S. Marine Corps (Ret)
The Drive North
The landing force still had much to learn about its
opponent. Senior intelligence officers did not realize until 27
February, the ninth day of the battle, that General Kuribayashi was in
fact on Iwo Jima, or that his fighters actually numbered half again the
original estimate of 13,000.
For Kuribayashi, the unexpectedly early loss of the
Suribachi garrison represented a setback, yet he occupied a position of
great strength. He still had the equivalent of eight infantry
battalions, a tank regiment, two artillery and three heavy mortar
battalions, plus the 5,000 gunners and naval infantry under his
counterpart, Rear Admiral Toshinosuke Ichimaru. Unlike other besieged
garrisons in the Central Pacific, the two Japanese services on Iwo Jima
functioned well together.
Kuribayashi was particularly pleased with the quality
of his artillery and engineering troops. Colonel Chosaku Kaido served as
Chief of Artillery from his seemingly impregnable concrete blockhouse on
a promontory on the east central sector of the Motoyama Plateau, a
lethal landmark the Marines soon dubbed "Turkey Knob," Major General
Sadasue Senda, a former artillery officer with combat experience in
China and Manchuria, commanded the 2d Independent Mixed Brigade,
whose main units would soon be locked into a 25-day death struggle with
the 4th Marine Division. Kuribayashi knew that the 204th Naval
Construction Battalion had built some of the most daunting defensive
systems on the island in that sector. One cave had a tunnel 800 feet
long with 14 separate exits; it was one of hundreds designed to be
defended in depth.
The Japanese defenders waiting for the advance of the
V Amphibious Corps were well armed and confident. Occasionally
Kuribayashi authorized company-sized spoiling attacks to recapture lost
terrain or disrupt enemy assault preparations. These were not suicidal
or sacrificial. Most were preceded by stinging artillery and mortar
fires and aimed at limited objectives. Kuribayashi's iron will kept his
troops from large-scale, wasteful Banzai attacks until the last
days. One exception occurred the night of 8 March when General Senda
grew so frustrated at the tightening noose being applied by the 4th
Marine Division that he led 800 of his surviving troops in a ferocious
counterattack. Finally given a multitude of open targets, the Marines
cut them down in a lingering melee.
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Marine half-track scores a hit on a Japanese strongpoint
with its 75mm gun. Marine Corps Historical Collection
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For the first week of the drive north, the Japanese
on Iwo Jima actually had the attacking Marines outgunned. Japanese 150mm
howitzers and 120mm mortars were superior to most of the weapons of the
landing force. The Marines found the enemy direct fire weapons to be
equally deadly, especially the dual-purpose antiaircraft guns and the
47mm tank guns, buried and camouflaged up to their turrets. "The Japs
could snipe with those big guns," said retired Lieutenant General
Donn J. Robertson. The defenders also had the advantage of knowing the
ground.
Not surprisingly, most casualties in the first three
weeks of the battle resulted from high explosives: mortars, artillery,
mines, grenades, and the hellacious rocket bombs. Time
correspondent Robert Sherrod reported that the dead at Iwo Jima, both
Japanese and American, had one thing in common: "They all died with the
greatest possible violence. Nowhere in the Pacific War had I seen such
badly mangled bodies. Many were cut squarely in half."
Close combat was rough enough; on Iwo Jima the stress
seemed end less because for a long time the Marines had no secure "rear
area" in which to give shot-up troop units a respite. Kuribayashi's
gunners throughout the Motoyama Plateau could still bracket the beaches
and airfields. The enormous spigot mortar shells and rocket bombs still
came tumbling out of the sky. Japanese infiltrators were drawn to
"softer targets" in the rear. Anti-personnel mines and booby traps,
encountered here on a large scale for the first time in the Pacific,
seemed everywhere. Exhausted troop units would stumble out of the front
lines seeking nothing more than a helmet-full of water in which to bathe
and a deep hole in which to sleep. Too often the men had to spend their
rare rest periods repairing weapons, humping ammo, dodging major-caliber
incoming, or having to repel yet another nocturnal Japanese probe.
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The
drive north by the 3d Battalion, 28th Marines, enters rugged terrain.
Under heavy Japanese fire, this attack netted only 200 yards despite
supporting fires. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 111988
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General Schmidt planned to attack the Japanese
positions in the north with three divisions abreast, the 5th on the
left, the 3d (less the 3d Marines) in the center, and the 4th on the
right, along the east coast. The drive north officially began on D+5,
the day after the capture of Suribachi. Prep fires along the high ground
immediately north of the second airfield extended for a full hour. Then
three regimental combat teams moved out abreast, the 26th Marines on the
left, the 24th Marines on the right, and the 21st Marines again in the
middle. For this attack, General Schmidt consolidated the Sherman tanks
of all three divisions into one armored task force commanded by
Lieutenant Colonel William R. "Rip" Collins. It would be the largest
concentration of Marine tanks in the war, virtually an armored regiment.
The attack plan seemed solid.
The Marines soon realized they were now trying to
force passage through Kuribayashi's main defensive belt. The
well-coordinated attack degenerated into desperate, small-unit actions
all along the front. The 26th Marines on the left, aided by the tanks,
gained the most yardage, but it was all relative. The airfield runways
proved to be lethal killing zones. Marine tanks were bedeviled by mines
and high-velocity direct fire weapons all along the front. On the right
flank, Lieutenant Colonel Alexander A. Vandegrift, Jr., son of the
Commandant, became a casualty. Major Doyle A. Stout took command of the
3d Battalion, 24th Marines.
The Japanese 320mm Spigot Mortar
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Department of
Defense Photo
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One of the unique Japanese weapons that Marines
encountered on Iwo Jima was the 320mm spigot mortar. These enormous
defensive weapons were emplaced and operated by the Japanese Army's
20th Independent Mortar Battalion.
The mortar tube, which had a small cavity at the
muzzle, rested on a steel baseplate which, in turn, was supported by a
wooden platform. Unlike a conventional mortar, the five-foot long
projectile was placed over the tube instead of being dropped down the
barrel. The mortar shell had a diameter of nearly 13 inches, while the
mortar tube was little more than 10 inches wide. The weapon could hurl a
675-pound shell a maximum of 1,440 yards. The range was adjusted by
varying the powder charge, while changes in deflection were accomplished
by brute force: shoving and pushing the base platform.
Although the tubes only held out for five or six
rounds, enough shells were lobbed onto Marine positions to make a
lasting impression on those who suffered through that campaign.
According to a platoon leader who served with the 28th Marines, the
spigot mortar (referred to as "the screaming Jesus" in his unit) was
always afforded a healthy respect and, along with the eight-inch
Japanese naval rocket, remains one of his most vivid memories of Iwo
Jima. General Robert E. Cushman, Jr., who commanded the 2d battalion,
9th Marines, at Iwo Jima and went on to become the 25th Commandant of
the Marine Corps, recalled that the tumbling projectile's inaccuracy
made it that much more terrifying. "You could see it coming," he said,
"but you never knew where the hell it was going to come down."
Kenneth L. Smith-Christmas
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During the fighting on D+5, General Schmidt took
leave of Admiral Hill and moved his command post ashore from the
amphibious force flagship Auburn (AGC 10). Colonel Howard N.
Kenyon led his 9th Marines ashore and into a staging area. With that,
General Erskine moved the command post of the 3d Marine Division ashore;
the 21st Marines reverted to its parent command. Erskine's artillery
regiment, the 12th Marines under Lieutenant Colonel Raymond F. Crist,
Jr., continued to land for the next several days. Schmidt now had eight
infantry regiments committed. Holland Smith still retained the 3d
Marines in Expeditionary Troops reserve. Schmidt made the first of
several requests to Smith for release of this seasoned outfit. The V
Amphibious Corps had already suffered 6,845 casualties.
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Expended shells and open ammunition boxes testify to the
heavy supporting fire this water-cooled, .30-caliber Browning machine
gun poured on the enemy as Marines advanced in the furious and difficult
battle for the heights of Suribachi. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
110604
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The next day, D+6, 25 February, provided little
relief in terms of Japanese resistance. Small groups of Marines,
accompanied by tanks, somehow made it across the runway, each man
harboring the inescapable feeling he was alone in the middle of a
gigantic bowling alley. Sometimes holding newly gained positions across
the runway proved more deadly than the process of getting there.
Resupply became nearly impossible. Tanks were invaluable; many were
lost.
Schmidt this day managed to get on shore the rest of
his corps artillery, two battalions of 155mm howitzers under Colonel
John S. Letcher. Well directed fire from these heavier field pieces
eased some of the pressure. So did call fire from the cruisers and
destroyers assigned to each maneuver unit. But the Marines expressed
disappointment in their air support. The 3d Marine Division complained
that the Navy's assignment of eight fighters and eight bombers on
station was "entirely inadequate." By noon on this date General Cates
sent a message to Schmidt requesting that "the Strategic Air Force in
the Marianas replace Navy air support immediately." Colonel Vernon E.
Megee, now ashore as Air Commander Iwo Jima and taking some of the heat
from frustrated division commanders, blamed "those little spit-kit Navy
fighters up there, trying to help, never enough, never where they should
be."
In fairness, it is doubtful whether any service could
have provided effective air support during the opening days of the drive
north. The Air Liaison Parties with each regiment played hell trying to
identify and mark targets, the Japanese maintained masterful camouflage,
front-line units were often "eyeball-to-eyeball" with the enemy, and the
air support request net was overloaded. The Navy squadrons rising from
the decks of escort carriers improved thereafter, to the extent that
their conflicting missions would permit. Subsequent strikes featured
heavier bombs (up to five hundred pounds) and improved response time. A
week later General Cates rated his air support "entirely satisfactory."
The battle of Iwo Jima, however, would continue to frustrate all
providers of supporting arms; the Japanese almost never assembled
legitimate targets in the open.
"The Japs weren't on Iwo Jima," said Captain
Fields of the 26th Marines, "they were in Iwo Jima."
Richard Wheeler, who survived service with the 28th
Marines and later wrote two engrossing books about the battle, pointed
out this phenomenon:
This was surely one of the strangest battlefields in
history, with one side fighting wholly above the ground and the other
operating almost wholly within it. Throughout the battle, American
aerial observers marveled at the fact that one side of the field held
thousands of figures, either milling around or in foxholes, while the
other side seemed deserted. The strangest thing of all was that the two
contestants sometimes made troop movements simultaneously in the same
territory, one maneuvering on the surface and the other using tunnels
beneath.
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