CLOSING IN: Marines in the Seizure of Iwo Jima
by Colonel Joseph H. Alexander U.S. Marine Corps (Ret)
The Bitter End
The American drive north continued after the 5 March
standdown, but the going never got any easier. The nature of enemy fire
changedfewer big guns and rockets, less observed fire from the
highlandsbut now the terrain grew uglier, deteriorating into
narrow, twisted gorges wreathed in sulfur mists, lethal killing zones.
Marine casualties continued to mount, but gunshot wounds began to
outnumber high-explosive shrapnel hits. The persistent myth among some
Marine units that Japanese troops were all near sighted and hence poor
marksmen ended for good at Iwo Jima. In the close-quarters fighting
among the badlands of northern Iwo Jima, Japanese riflemen dropped
hundreds of advancing Marines with well-aimed shots to the head or
chest. "Poor marksmen?" snorted Captain Caldwell of Company F, 1st
Battalion, 26th Marines, "The Japs we faced all fired 'Expert.'"
Supporting arms coordination grew more effective
during the battle. Colonel "Buzz" Letcher established what some have
identified as the first corps-level Supporting Arms Coordination Center
(SACC), in which senior representatives of artillery, naval gunfire, and
air support pooled their talents and resources. While Letcher lacked the
manpower and communications equipment to serve as corps artillery
officer and simultaneously run a full-time SACC, his efforts represented
a major advancement in this difficult art. So did Colonel Vernon Megee's
Landing Force Air Support Control Unit, which worked in relative harmony
with the fledgling SACC. Instances of friendly fire still occurred,
perhaps inevitably on that crowded island, but positive control at the
highest level did much to reduce the frequency of such accidents. In
terms of response time, multiple-source coordination probably worked
better at the division level and below. Most infantry battalions, for
example, had nothing but praise for the Air Liaison Parties, Shore Fire
Control Parties, and artillery forward observer teams which deployed
with each maneuver unit.
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Mopping up the caves with grenades and Browning
automatic rifles, Marines flush out remaining Japanese hidden in Iwo
Jima's numerous and interconnecting caves. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
142472
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The Marines' Zippo Tanks
To the Marines on the ground, the Sherman M4A3 medium
tank equipped with the Navy Mark I flame thrower seemed to be the most
valuable weapon employed in the battle of Iwo Jima.
The Marines had come a long way in the tactical use
of fire in the 15 months since Tarawa, when only a handful of backpack
flame throwers were available to combat the island's hundreds of
fortifications. While the landing force still relied on portable flame
throwers, most Marines could see the value of marrying the technology
with armored vehicles for use against the toughest targets. In the
Marianas, the Marines modified M3A1 light tanks with the Canadian Ronson
flame system to good effect; the problems came from the vulnerability of
the small vehicles. At Peleliu, the 1st Marine Division mounted the
improvised Mark 1 system on a thin-skinned LVT-4 again; vehicle
vulnerability limited the system's effectiveness. The obvious solution
seemed to be to mount the flame thrower in a medium tank.
The first modification to Sherman tanks involved the
installation of the small E4-5 mechanized flame thrower in place of the
bow machine gun. This was only a marginal improvement; the system's
short range, modest fuel supply, and awkward aiming process hardly
offset the loss of the machine gun. Even so, each of the three tank
battalions employed E4-5 equipped Shermans during Iwo Jima.
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A
Marine flame tank, also known as a "Ronson," scorches a Japanese
strongpoint. The eight M4A3 Shermans equipped with the Navy Mark 1
flame-thrower proved to be the most valuable weapons systems on Iwo
Jima. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 140758
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The best solution to marrying effective flame
protection with mechanized mobility resulted from an unlikely
inter-service task force of Seabees, Army Chemical Warfare Service
technicians, and Fleet Marine Force tankers in Hawaii before the
invasion. According to Lieutenant Colonel William R. Collins,
commanding the 5th Tank Battalion, this inspired group of
field-expedient tinkerers modified the Mark 1 flame thrower to operate
from within the Sherman's turret, replacing the 75mm main gun with a
look-alike launch tube. The modified system could thus be trained and
pointed like any conventional turret gun. Using napalm-thickened fuel,
the "Zippo Tanks" could spew flame up to 150 yards for a duration of
55-80 seconds, both quantum tactical improvements.
Unfortunately, the ad hoc modification team
had only sufficient time and components to modify eight M4A3 tanks with
a Mark 1 flame system; four each went to the 4th and 5th Tank
Battalions. The 3d Tank Battalion, then staging in Guam, received
neither the M4A3 Shermans nor the field modifications in time for Iwo
Jima, although a number of their "A2" tanks retained the E4-5 system
mounted in the bow.
The eight modified Sherman flame tanks proved ideal
against Iwo Jima's rugged caves and concrete fortifications. The
Japanese feared this weapon greatly; time and again suicide squads of
"human bullets" would assail the flame tanks directly, only to be shot
down by covering forces or scorched by the main weapon. Enemy fire and
the rough terrain took their toll on the eight flame tanks, but
maintenance crews worked around the clock to keep them functional.
In the words of Captain Frank C. Caldwell, a company
commander in the 26th Marines: "In my view it was the flame tank more
than any other supporting arm that won this battle." Tactical demands
for the flame tanks never diminished. Late in the battle, as the 5th
Marine Division cornered the last Japanese defenders in "The Gorge," the
5th Tank Battalion expended napalm-thickened fuel at the rate of 10,000
gallons per day. The division's final action report stated that the
flame tank was "the one weapon that caused the Japs to leave their caves
and rock crevices and run."
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While the Marines remained angry at the paucity of
the overall preliminary naval bombardment of Iwo Jima, all hands valued
the continuous and responsive support received from D-day onward. Many
of the gunfire ships stood in closefrequently less than a mile
offshoreto deliver along the flanks and front lines, and many took
hits from masked Japanese coast defense batteries. There were literally
no safe zones in or around the island. Two aspects of naval gunfire at
Iwo Jima rate special mention. One was the extent to which the ships
provided illumination rounds over the battlefield, especially during the
early days before landing force artillery could assume the bulk of these
missions. The second unique aspect was the degree of assistance provided
by the smallest gunships, frequently modified landing craft armed with
4.2-inch mortars, rockets, or 20mm guns. These "small boys" proved
invaluable, especially along the northwest coast where they frequently
worked in lock-step with the 5th Marine Division as it approached The
Gorge.
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"The
Target," by Col Charles H. Waterhouse. Marine Corps Combat Art
Collection
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While the Marines comprised the bulk of the landing
force at Iwo Jima, they received early and increasing support from
elements of the U.S. Army. Two of the four DUKW companies employed on
D-day were Army units. The 138th Antiaircraft Artillery Group provided
90mm AA batteries around the newly captured airfields. Major General
James E. Chaney, USA, who would become Island Commander, Iwo Jima, at
the battle's end, landed on D+8 with advance elements of the 145th
Infantry.
As far as the Marines on the ground were concerned,
the most welcome Army units flew into Iwo Jima on 6 March (D+15). This
was the 15th Fighter Group, the vanguard of VII Fighter Command destined
to accompany the B-29s over Tokyo. The group included the 47th Fighter
Squadron, a seasoned outfit of North American P-51 Mustangs. Although
the Army pilots had no experience in direct air support of ground
troops, Colonel Megee liked their "eager-beaver attitude" and
willingness to learn. He also appreciated the fact that the Mustangs
could deliver 1,000-pound bombs. Megee quickly trained the Army pilots
in striking designated targets on nearby islands in response to a
surface-based controller. In three days they were ready for Iwo Jima.
Megee instructed the P-51 pilots to arm their bombs with 12-second delay
fuzes, attack parallel to the front lines, and approach from a 45-degree
angle. Sometimes these tactics produced spectacular results, especially
along the west coast, where the big bombs with delayed fuzes blew the
sides of entire cliffs into the ocean, exposing enemy caves and tunnels
to direct fire from the sea. "The Air Force boys did a lot of good,"
said Megee. With that, the escort carriers departed the area and left
close air support to the 47th Fighter Squadron for the duration of the
battle.
While technically not a "supporting arm," the field
medical support provided the assault Marines primarily by the Navy was a
major contributor to victory in the prolonged battle. The practice of
integrating surgeons, chaplains, and corpsmen within the Fleet Marine
Force units continued to pay valuable dividends. In many cases company
corpsmen were just as tough and combat-savvy as the Marines they
accompanied. In all cases, a wounded Marine immediately knew "his"
corpsman would move heaven and earth to reach him, bind his wounds, and
start the long process of evacuation. Most Marines at Iwo Jima would
echo the sentiments of Staff Sergeant Alfred I. Thomas, a half-track
platoon commander in the 25th Marines: "We had outstanding corpsmen;
they were just like family."
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Navy
corpsmen tend a Marine who was shot in the back by enemy sniper
fire. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 110902
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Unfortunately, the luxury of having first-rate
medical assistance so close to the front lines took a terrible toll.
Twenty-three doctors and 827 corpsmen were killed or wounded at Iwo
Jima, a casualty rate twice as high as bloody Saipan.
Rarely had combat medical support been so
thoughtfully prepared and provided as at Iwo Jima. Beyond the crude aid
stations, further toward the rear, Navy and Army field hospitals arose.
Some Marines would be wounded, receive treatment in a field hospital
tent, recuperate in a bunker, and return to the linesoften to
receive a second or third wound. The more seriously wounded would be
evacuated off the island, either by direct air to Guam, or via one of
several fully staffed hospital ships which operated around the clock
within the amphibious objective area. Within the first month of the
fighting on Iwo Jima, 13,737 wounded Marines and corpsmen were evacuated
by hospital ship, another 2,449 by airlift.
For a wounded Marine, the hazardous period came
during the first few minutes after he went down. Japanese snipers had no
compunctions about picking off litter crews, or corpsmen, or sometimes
the wounded man himself as his buddies tried to slide him clear of the
fire. One of the most celebrated examples of casualty evacuation
occurred after a Japanese sniper shot Corporal Edwin J. Canter, a rocket
truck crew chief in the 4th Marine Division, through the abdomen. The
rocket trucks always drew an angry fusillade of counterbattery fire
from the Japanese, and Canter's friends knew they had to get him
away from the launch site fast. As a nearby motion picture crew recorded
the drama, four Marines hustling Canter down a muddy hillside heard the
scream of an incoming shell, dumped the wounded man unceremoniously and
scattered for cover. The explosion killed the film crew and wounded each
of the Marines, including Canter, again. The film footage survived,
appeared in stateside newsreelsand eventually became part of the
movie "Sands of Iwo Jima." Canter was evacuated to a hospital ship,
thence to hospitals in Guam, Hawaii, and the States. His war had
ended.
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Installed in an abandoned Japanese dugout several
thousand yards behind the fighting, 4th Marine Division surgeons
operated on those badly wounded Marines and Navy corpsmen who might not
have survived a trip to the hospital ship. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
111506
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As
the fighting moved inland, the beaches of Iwo Jima became very busy
places with the continual incoming flow of supplies. Note the many roads
leading off the beaches over which trucks, LVTs, and DUKWs headed to the
frontlines. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 110852
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Meanwhile the beachmasters and shore party personnel
performed spectacular feats to keep the advancing divisions fully armed
and equipped. It is difficult to imagine the scope of logistical
management and sheer, back-breaking work required to maintain such a
high volume of supplies and equipment moving over such precarious
beaches. A single beach on the west coast became functional on D+11, but
by that time the bulk of landing force supplies were on shore. General
unloading ended the next day, releasing the vulnerable amphibious ships
from their tether to the beachhead. Thereafter, ammunition resupply
became the critical factor. On one occasion, well aimed Japanese fire
detonated the entire 5th Marine Division ammo dump. In another tense
moment, the ammunition ship Columbia Victory came under direct
Japanese fire as she approached the western beaches to commence
unloading. Watching Marines held their breath as the ship became
bracketed by fire. The ship escaped, but the potential still existed for
a disaster of catastrophic proportions.
The 2d Separate Engineer Battalion and the 62d Naval
Construction Battalion (Seabees) repaired and extended the captured
runways. In short order, an entire Seabee brigade moved ashore. Marines
returning to the beaches from the northern highlands could hardly
recognize the place they had first seen on D-day. There were now more
than 80,000 Americans on the small island. Seabees had bulldozed a
two-lane road up to the top of Suribachi.
Communications, often maligned in earlier amphibious
assaults, were never better than at Iwo Jima. Radios and handsets were
now waterproof, more frequencies were available, and a variety of radio
systems served the varying needs of the landing force. Forward observer
teams, for example, used the back-pack SCR-610, while companies and
platoons favored the SCR-300 "walkie-talkies," or the even lighter
SCR-536 "Spain Can" portables. Said Lieutenant Colonel James P.
Berkeley, executive officer of the 27th Marines and a former
communications officer, "At Iwo we had near-perfect communications, all
any commander could ask for." As the battle progressed, the Marines
began stringing telephone lines between support units and forward
command posts, wisely elevating the wire along upright posts to avoid
damage by tracked vehicles.
Japanese counterintelligence teams expected to have a
field day splicing into the proliferation of U.S. telephone lines,
but the Marines baffled them by heavy use of Navajo code talkers. Each
division employed about two dozen trained Navajos. The 5th Marine
Division command post established six Navajo networks upon arrival on
the island. No one, throughout the war, insofar as any one knew, was
ever able to translate the Navajo code talkers' voice transmissions.
African-American troops played a significant role in
the capture of Iwo Jima. Negro drivers served in the Army DUKW units
active throughout the landing. Black Marines of the 8th Ammunition
Company and the 36th Depot Company landed on D-day, served as stevedores
on those chaotic beaches, and were joined by the 33d and 34th Depot
Companies on D+3. These Marines were incorporated into the VAC Shore
Party which did Herculean work sustaining the momentum of the American
drive northwards. When Japanese counterattacks penetrated to the beach
areas, these Marines dropped their cargo, unslung their carbines, and
engaged in well-disciplined fire and maneuver, inflicting more
casualties than they sustained. Two Marines, Privates James W. Whitlock
and James Davis, received the Bronze Star. Said Colonel Leland S.
Swindler, commanding the VAC Shore Party, the entire body of black
Marines "conducted themselves with marked coolness and courage."
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"Iwo
Jima," proof lithograph of two Navajo code talkers, by Sgt John
Fabion. Marine Corps Combat Art Collection
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News media coverage of the Iwo Jima battle was
extensive and largely unfettered. Typical of the scores of combat
correspondents who stuck with the landing force throughout the battle
was Marine Technical Sergeant Frederick K. "Dick" Dashiell, a former
Associated Press writer assigned to the 3d Marine Division. Although
downright scared some times, and filled with horror often, Dashiell
stood the test, for he wrote 81 front-line communiques, pounding out
news releases on his portable typewriter on the edge of his foxhole.
Dashiell's eye for detail caught the flavor of the prolonged assault.
"All is bitter, frontal assault, always uphill," he wrote. He described
how the ceaseless wind filled the air with fine volcanic grit, and how
often the Marines had to stop and clean the grit from their
weaponsand how naked that made any Marine feel.
Most Marines were exhausted at this point in the
battle. Occasional hot food delivered close behind the front lines, or
more frequently fresh fruit and milk from the nearby ships, helped
morale some. So did watching more and more crippled B-29s soar in for
emergency landings, often two or three a day. "It felt good to see them
land," said Sergeant James "Doc" Lindsey, a squad leader in Company G,
2d Battalion, 25th Marines. "You knew they'd just come from Tokyo."
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