CLOSING IN: Marines in the Seizure of Iwo Jima
by Colonel Joseph H. Alexander U.S. Marine Corps (Ret)
The Bitter End (continued)
General Erskine came down with pneumonia during this
period, but refused to be evacuated. Colonel Robert E. Hogaboom, his
chief of staff, quietly kept the war moving. The division continued to
advance. When Erskine recovered, Hogaboom adjusted accordingly; the two
were a highly effective team.
Erskine had long sought the opportunity to conduct a
battalion-sized night operation. It rankled him that throughout the war
the Americans seemed to have conceded the night to the Japanese. When
Hill 362-C continued to thwart his advance, Erskine directed a pre-dawn
advance devoid of the trappings of prep fires which always seemed to
identify the time and place of attack. The distinction of making this
unusual assault went to Lieutenant Colonel Harold C. "Bing" Boehm,
commanding the 3d Battalion, 9th Marines. Unfortunately this battalion
was new to this particular sector and received the attack order too late
the previous day to reconnoiter effectively. The absence of advance
orientation notwithstanding, the battalion crossed the line of departure
promptly and silently at 0500 and headed for Hill 362-C. The unit
attained total surprise along its axis of advance. Before the sleepy
Japanese knew it, the battalion had hurried across 500 yards of broken
ground, sweeping by the outposts and roasting the occasional strongpoint
with flamethrowers. Then it was Boehm's turn to be surprised. Daylight
revealed his battalion had captured the wrong hill, an intermediate
objective. Hill 362-C still lay 250 yards distant; now he was surrounded
by a sea of wide-awake and furiously counterattacking Japanese infantry.
Boehm did what seemed natural: he redeployed his battalion and attacked
towards the original objective. This proved very rough going and took
much of the day, but before dark the 3d Battalion, 9th Marines stood in
sole possession of Hill 362-C, one of Kuribayashi's main defensive
anchors.
Iwo's Fire Brigades: The Rocket Detachments
Attached to the assault divisions of the landing
force at Iwo Jima were provisional rocket detachments. The infantry had
a love-hate relationship with the forward-deploying little rocket trucks
and their plucky crews. The "system" was an International one-ton 4x4
truck modified to carry three box-shaped launchers, each containing a
dozen 4.5-inch rockets. A good crew could launch a "ripple" of 36
rockets within a matter of seconds, providing a blanket of high
explosives on the target. This the infantry lovedbut each
launching always drew heavy return fire from the Japanese who feared the
"automatic artillery."
The Marines formed an Experimental Rocket Unit in
June 1943 and first deployed rail-launched barrage rockets during the
fighting in the upper Solomons. There the heavily canopied jungles
limited their effectiveness. Once mounted on trucks and deployed to the
Central Pacific, however, the weapons proved much more useful,
particularly during the battle of Saipan. The Marines modified the small
trucks by reinforcing the tail gate to serve as a blast shield,
installing a hydraulic jack to raise and lower the launchers, and
applying gravity quadrants and elevation safety chains. Crude steel rods
welded to the bumper and dashboard helped the driver align the vehicle
with aiming stakes.
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The
positions from which rocket troops launched salvos of 4.5-inch rockets
became very unhealthy places, indeed, as Japanese artillery and mortars
zeroed in on the clouds of smoke and dust resulting from the firing of
the rockets. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 111100
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Treeless, hilly Iwo Jima proved an ideal battleground
for these so-called "Buck Rogers Men." At Iwo, the 1st Provisional
Rocket Detachment supported the 4th Marine Division and the 3d
Detachment supported the 5th Division throughout the operation (the 3d
Division did not have such a unit in this battle). Between them, the two
detachments fired more than 30,000 rockets in support of the landing
force.
The 3d Detachment landed over Red Beach on D-day,
losing one vehicle to the surf, others to the loose sand or heavy enemy
fire. One vehicle reached its firing position intact and launched a
salvo of rockets against Japanese fortifications along the slopes of
Suribachi, detonating an enemy ammunition dump. The detachment
subsequently supported the 1st Battalion, 28th Marines' advance to the
summit, often launching single rockets to clear suspected enemy
positions along the route.
As the fighting moved north, the short range, steep
angle of fire, and saturation effect of the rocket launchers kept them
in high demand. They were particularly valuable in defilade-to-defilade
bombardments marking the final punctuation of pre-assault prep fires.
But their distinctive flash and telltale blast also caught the attention
of Japanese artillery spotters. The rocket trucks rarely remained in one
place long enough to fire more than two salvos. "Speedy displacement"
was the key to their survival. The nearby infantry knew better than to
stand around and wave goodbye; this was the time to seek deep shelter
from the counterbattery fire sure to follow.
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From
the viewpoint of Marine company commanders, having their own
"artillery," in the form of 60mm mortars, was a very satisfying matter.
A 60mm mortar crew is at work, in a natural depression, lobbing round
after round at enemy positions. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
142845
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Boehm's success, followed shortly by General Senda's
costly counterattack against the 4th Marine Division, seemed to
represent another turning point of the battle. On D+18 a patrol from the
3d Marine Division reached the northeast coast. The squad leader filled
a canteen with salt water and sent it back to General Schmidt marked
"For inspectionnot consumption." Schmidt welcomed the symbolism.
The next day the 4th Marine Division finally pinched out Turkey Knob,
moving out of The Amphitheater towards the east coast. The end seemed
tantalizingly close, but the intensity of Japanese resistance hardly
waned. Within the 5th Marine Division's zone in the west, the 2d
Battalion, 26th Marines, was reporting an aggregate casualty rate
approaching 70 percent. General Rockey warned of a state of "extreme
exhaustion and fatigue."
The division commanders began to look elsewhere for
relief of their shot-up battalions. In the 4th Marine Division, General
Cates formed a provisional battalion under Lieutenant Colonel Melvin L.
Krulewitch which conducted a series of attacks against the many bypassed
enemy positions. The term "mopping up" as applied to Iwo Jima, whether
by service troops or subsequent Army garrison units, should be
considered relative. Many pockets of Japanese held out indefinitely,
well-armed and defiant to the end. Rooting them out was never easy.
Other divisions used cannoneers, pioneers, motor transport units, and
amtrackers as light infantry units, either to augment front-line
battalions or conduct combat patrols throughout rear areas. By this
time, however, the extreme rear area at Iwo had become overconfident.
Movies were being shown every night. Ice cream could be found on the
beach. Men swam in the surf and slept in tents. This all provided a
false and deadly sense of security.
Amphibious Logistical Support at Iwo Jima
The logistical effort required to sustain the seizure
of Iwo Jima was enormous, complex, largely improvised on lessons learned
in earlier Marine Corps operations in the Pacific, and highly
successful. Clearly, no other element of the emerging art of amphibious
warfare had improved so greatly by the winter of 1945. Marines may have
had the heart and firepower to tackle a fortress-like Iwo Jima earlier
in the war, but they would have been crippled in the doing of it by
limitations in amphibious logistical support capabilities. These
concepts, procedures, organizations, and special materials took years to
develop; once in place they fully enabled such large-scale conquests as
Iwo Jima and Okinawa.
For the Iwo Jima operation, VAC had the 8th Field
Depot, commanded by Colonel Leland S. Swindler. The depot was designed
to serve as the nucleus of the shore party operation; the depot
commander was dual-hatted as the Shore Party Commander of the Landing
Force, in which capacity he was responsible for coordinating the
activities of the division shore parties. The timing of the logistics
support at Iwo Jima proved to be well conceived and executed. Liaison
teams from the 8th Field Depot accompanied the 4th and 5th Divisions
ashore. On D+3, units of the field depot came ashore, and two days after
this, when VAC assumed control on shore, the field depot took over and
the unloading continued without interruption.
The V Amphibious Corps at Iwo Jima used every
conceivable means of delivering combat cargo ashore when and where
needed by the landing force. These means sequentially involved the
prescribed loads and units of fire carried by the assault waves; "hot
cargo" preloaded in on-call waves or floating dumps; experimental use of
"one-shot" preloaded amphibious trailers and Wilson drums; general
unloading; administrative unloading of what later generations of
amphibians would call an "assault follow-on echelon"; and aerial
delivery of critically short items, first by parachute, then by
transports landing on the captured runways. In the process, the
Navy-Marine Corps team successfully experimented with the use of armored
bulldozers and sleds loaded with hinged Marston matting delivered in the
assault waves to help clear wheeled vehicles stuck in the soft volcanic
sand. In spite of formidable early obstaclesfoul weather, heavy
surf, dangerous undertows, and fearsome enemy firethe system
worked. Combat cargo flowed in; casualties and salvaged equipment flowed
out.
Shortages appeared from time to time, largely the
result of the Marines on shore meeting a stronger and larger defense
garrison than estimated. Hence, urgent calls soon came for more
demolitions, grenades, mortar illumination rounds, flame-thrower
recharging units, and whole blood. Transport squadrons delivered many of
these critical items directly from fleet bases in the Marianas.
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Department of
Defense Photo (USMC) 109635
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Field medical support at Iwo Jima was a model of
exhaustive planning and flexible application. The Marines had always
enjoyed the finest immediate medical attention from their organic
surgeons and corpsmen, but the backup system ashore at Iwo Jima, from
field hospitals to graves registration, was mind-boggling to the older
veterans. Moderately wounded Marines received full hospital treatment
and rehabilitation; many returned directly to their units, thus
preserving at least some of the rapidly decreasing levels of combat
experience in frontline outfits. The more seriously wounded were
treated, stabilized, and evacuated, either to offshore hospital ships or
by air transport to Guam.
The Marines fired an unprecedented half million
artillery rounds in direct and general support of the assault units.
More rounds were lost when the 5th Marine Division dump blew up. The
flow never stopped. The Shore Party used DUKWs, LVTs, and larger craft
for rapid offloading of ammunition ships dangerously exposed to Iwo
Jima's enemy gunners. Marine Corps ammunition and depot companies
hustled the fresh munitions ashore and into the neediest hands.
Lieutenant Colonel James D. Hittle, USMC, served as
D-4 of the 3d Marine Division throughout the battle of Iwo Jima. While
shaking his head at the "crazy-quilt" logistic adaptations dictated by
Iwo's geography, Hittle saw creative staff management at all levels. The
3d Division, earmarked as the reserve for the landing, found it
difficult to undertake combat loading of their ships in the absence of a
scheme of maneuver on shore, but the staff made valid assumptions based
on their earlier experiences. This paid huge dividends when the corps
commander had to commit the 21st Marines as a separate tactical unit
well in advance of the division. Thanks to foresightful combat loading,
the regiment landed fully equipped and supported, ready for immediate
deployment in the fighting.
To augment the supplies coming across the beach, the
3d Division staff air officer "appropriated" a transport plane and made
regular runs to the division's base in Guam, bringing back fresh beef,
mail, and cases of beer. The 3d Division G-4 also sent his transport
quartermaster (today's embarkation officer) out to sea with an LVT-full
of war souvenirs; these were bartered with ship's crews for donations of
fresh fruit, eggs, bread"we'd take anything." General Erskine
distributed these treats personally to the men in the lines.
Retired Brigadier General Hittle marveled at the
density of troops funnelled into the small island. "At one point we had
60,000 men occupying less than three-and-a-half square miles of broken
terrain." These produced startling neighbors: a 105mm battery firing
from the middle of the shore party cantonment; the division command post
sited 1,000 yards from Japanese lines; "giant B-29s taking off and
landing forward of the CP of an assault regiment."
In the effort to establish a fresh-water distilling
plant, Marine engineers dug a "well" near the beach. Instead of a source
of salt water the crew discovered steaming mineral water, heated by
Suribachi's supposedly dormant volcano. Hittle moved the 3d Division
distilling site elsewhere; this spot became a hot shower facility, soon
one of the most popular places on the island.
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Not very far to the north, Lieutenant Colonel
Cushman's 2d Battalion, 9th Marines, became engaged in a sustained
battle in extremely broken terrain east of the third airfield. The
Marines eventually encircled the Japanese positions, but the battle for
"Cushman's Pocket" raged on. As the battalion commander reported the
action:
The enemy position was a maze of caves, pillboxes,
emplaced tanks, stone walls and trenches . . . . We beat against this
position for eight continuous days, using every supporting weapon. The
coremain objective of the sectorstill remained. The
battalion was exhausted. Almost all leaders were gone and the battalion
numbered about 400, including 350 replacements.
Cushman's 2d Battalion, 9th Marines, was relieved,
but other elements of the 9th and 21st Marines, equally exhausted, had
just as difficult a time. Erskine truly had no reserves. He called
Cushman back into the pocket. By 16 March (D+25), Japanese resistance in
this thicket of jumbled rocks ended. The 4th Marine Division, meanwhile,
poured over the hills along the east, seizing the coast road and
blasting the last Japanese strongpoints from the rear. Ninety percent of
Iwo Jima now lay in American hands. Radio Tokyo carried the mournful
remarks of Prime Minister Kuniaki Koiso, who announced the fall of Iwo
Jima as "the most unfortunate thing in the whole war situation."
General Smith took the opportunity to declare victory
and conduct a flag-raising ceremony. With that, the old warhorse
departed. Admiral Turner had sailed previously. Admiral Hill and General
Schmidt finally had the campaign to themselves. Survivors of the 4th
Division began backloading on board ship, their battle finally over.
The killing continued in the north. The 5th Marine
Division entered The Gorge, an 800-yard pocket of incredibly broken
country which the troops would soon call "Death Valley." Here General
Kuribayashi maintained his final command center in a deep cave. Fighting
in this ungodly landscape provided a fitting end to the battlenine
endless days of cave-by-cave assaults with flamethrowers and
demolitions. Combat engineers used 8,500 tons of explosives to detonate
one huge fortification. Progress was slow and costlier than ever.
General Rockey's drained and depleted regiments lost one more man with
every two yards gained. To ease the pressure, General Schmidt deployed
the 3d Marine Division against Kitano Point in the 5th Division
zone.
Colonel Hartnoll J. Withers directed the final
assault of his 21st Marines against the extreme northern tip of the
island. General Erskine, pneumonia be damned, came forward to look over
his shoulder. The 21st Marines could see the end, and their momentum
proved irresistible. In half a day of sharp fighting they cleared the
point of the last defenders. Erskine signalled Schmidt: "Kitano Point is
taken."
Both divisions made serious efforts to persuade
Kuribayashi to surrender during these final days, broadcasting appeals
in Japanese, sending personal messages praising his valor and urging his
cooperation. Kuribayashi remained a samurai to the end. He transmitted
one final message to Tokyo, saying "we have not eaten or drunk for five
days, but our fighting spirit is still running high. We are going to
fight bravely to the last." Imperial Headquarters tried to convey the
good news to him that the Emperor had approved his promotion to full
general. There was no response from Iwo Jima. Kuribayashi's promotion
would be posthumous. Fragmentary Japanese accounts indicate he took his
own life during the night of 25-26 March.
In The Gorge, the 5th Marine Division kept clawing
forward. The division reported that the average battalion, which had
landed with 36 officers and 885 men on D-day, now mustered 16 officers
and 300 men, including the hundreds of replacements funneled in during
the fighting. The remnants of the 1st Battalion, 26th Marines, and the
1st Battalion, 28th Marines, squeezed the Japanese into a final pocket,
then overwhelmed them.
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After 24 days of the most bitter battle in the history
of the Marine Corps to that date, on 14 March 1945, the colors were
raised once again on Iwo Jima to signify the occupation of the island,
although the battle was still raging in the north. The official end of
the campaign would not be until 14 days later, on 26 March. Marine Corps Historical
Collection
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It was the evening of 25 March, D+34, and the
amphibious assault on the rocky fortress of Iwo Jima finally appeared
over. The island grew strangely quiet. There were far fewer illumination
shells. In the flickering false light, some saw shadowy figures, moving
south, towards the airfield.
General Schmidt received the good news that the 5th
Marine Division had snuffed out the final enemy cave in The Gorge on the
evening of D+34. But even as the corps commander prepared his
announcement declaring the end of organized resistance on Iwo Jima, a
very well-organized enemy force emerged from northern caves and
infiltrated down the length of the island. This final spasm of Japanese
opposition still reflected the influence of Kuribayashi's tactical
discipline. The 300-man force took all night to move into position
around the island's now vulnerable rear base area, the tents occupied by
freshly arrived Army pilots of VII Fighter Command, adjacent to Airfield
No. 1. The counterattacking force achieved total surprise, falling on
the sleeping pilots out of the darkness with swords, grenades, and
automatic weapons. The fighting was as vicious and bloody as any that
occurred in Iwo Jima's many arenas.
The surviving pilots and members of the 5th Pioneer
Battalion improvised a skirmish line and launched a counterattack of
their own. Seabees and elements of the redeploying 28th Marines joined
the fray. There were few suicides among the Japanese; most died in
place, grateful to strike one final blow for the Emperor. Sunrise
revealed the awful carnage: 300 dead Japanese; more than 100 slain
pilots, Seabees, and pioneers; and another 200 American wounded. It was
a grotesque closing chapter to five continuous weeks of savagery.
The 5th Marine Division and the 21st Marines wasted
no time in backloading on board amphibious ships. The 9th Marines, last
of the VAC maneuver units to land, became the last to leave,
conducting two more weeks of ambushes and combat patrols. The 147th
Infantry inherited more of the same. In the first two months after the
Marines left, the Army troops killed 1,602 Japanese and captured 867
more.
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