CONDITION RED: Marine Defense Battalions in World War II
by Major Charles D. Melson
Gone But Not Forgotten
Defense battalions deployed early and often
throughout the Pacific campaigns, serving in a succession of distant
places, some dangerous, others boring. They did not benefit from
post-battle rest though few rest areas lived up to their name
nor were their accommodations comparable to those of an aircraft
wing sharing the same location. The Marines of the defense battalions
endured isolation, sickness, monotonous food, and primitive living
conditions for long periods, as they engaged in the onerous task of
protecting advance bases in areas that by no stretch of the imagination
resembled tropical paradises. After putting up with these conditions for
months, many of these same Marines went on to serve as replacements in
the six Marine divisions in action when the war ended.
Throughout their existence, the defense battalions
demonstrated a fundamental lesson of the Pacific War the need for
teamwork. As one Marine Corps officer has pointed out, the Marine Corps
portion of the victorious American team was "itself the embodiment of
unification." The Corps had "molded itself into the team concept without
the slightest difficulty ... . Marine tank men, artillerymen, and
antiaircraft gunners of the defense battalions, interested only in doing
a good job, gave equal support to . . . [the] Army and Navy . . . ."
Relations with other combat services, arms, and units
defined the role of the defense battalions in the Pacific, for they
functioned as a part of a combined effort at sea, in the air, and on the
ground. During the war, there were examples of independent deployment,
as at Wake Island and Midway. It was equally common, however, for
battalions or their components to serve with brigades or divisions, as
at Iceland, Samoa, or Guadalcanal, or to operate under corps-level
commands, as at New Georgia. Finally, especially after the transition to
antiaircraft artillery battalions, the units tended to perform
base-defense or garrison duty under the Fleet Marine Force, Pacific. The
shift of the defense battalions from fighting front to backwater of the
war reflected changing strategic reality and not an arbitrary decision
to deemphasize. Some of the Marines in these units may have felt that
the spotlight of publicity passed them by and focused on the assault
troops, even though antiaircraft gunners and even artillerymen sometimes
accompanied the early waves to an embattled beachhead, but the
apportionment of press coverage stemmed from the composition of the
Marine Corps and the nature of the fighting.
Armor and Support
While defense battalions could defend themselves with
small arms and machine guns, ghey lacked maneuver elements which, in
turn, made them vulnerable when deployed independently of other ground
forces. In 1941, the Marine Corps decided not to form separate infantry
units to support the defense battalions. For the most part, they would
have to depend upon the infantry elements with which they landed in an
amphibious assault. In some cases, however, infantry, armor, and
artillery support was provided to reinforce defense battalions in
certain operations. During the Pacific War, provisional rifle companies
were formed and assigned at various times to the 9th, 10th, and 11th
Defense Battalions.
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Because the defense battalion could train and serve
as an essentially independent organization, it became a logical choice
for the first African American unit formed by the Marines. Although
segregation prevailed in the Corps throughout World War II, the creation
of the 51st and 52d Defense Battalions signaled a break with racist
practices and became a milestone on the road toward today's racially
integrated Marine Corps.
Colonel Robert D. Heinl, Jr., a Marine historian who
had helped shape the concept of the defense battalion and served in one
of the wartime units, described the members as a "hard-worked and
frustrated species." He felt that the defense battalions represented the
culmination of Marine Corps thinking that could trace its
evolutionary course back to the turn of the century. The weapons,
radars, and communications equipment in the battalions at times
represented the cutting edge of war time technology, and the skill with
which they were used paid tribute to the training and discipline of the
members of these units. Charles A. Holmes, a veteran of the defense
battalion that fought so gallantly at Wake Island, said that, in his
opinion, anyone could serve somewhere in a division or aircraft wing,
but "it was an honor to have served in a special unit of the U.S.
Marines."
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