THE FINAL CAMPAIGN: Marines in the Victory on Okinawa
by Colonel Joseph H. Alexander, USMC (Ret)
Closing the Loop
The retreating Japanese troops did not escape
scot-free from their Shuri defenses. Naval spotter planes located one
southbound column and called in devastating fire from a half dozen ships
and every available attack aircraft. In short order several miles of the
muddy road were strewn with wrecked trucks, field guns, and corpses.
General del Valle congratulated the Tactical Air Force: "Thanks for
prompt response this afternoon when Nips were caught on road with
kimonos down."
Successful interdictions, however, remained the
exception. Most of Ushijima's Thirty-second Army survived the
retreat to its final positions in the Kiyamu Peninsula. The Tenth Army
missed a golden opportunity to end the battle four weeks early, but the
force, already slowed by heavy rains and deep mud, was simply too
ponderous to respond with alacrity.
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A
Marine who had his clothing blown from his back by a Japanese mortar
explosion, but is otherwise unwounded, is helped to the rear by an
uninjured buddy. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 120280
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The infantry slogged southward, cussing the weather
but glad to be beyond the Shuri Line. Yet every advance exacted a price.
A Japanese sniper killed Lieutenant Colonel Horatio C. Woodhouse, Jr.,
the competent commander of 2/22, as he led his battalion towards the
Kokuba Estuary. General Shepherd, grieving privately at the loss of his
younger cousin, replaced him in command with the battalion exec,
Lieutenant Colonel John G. Johnson.
As the IIIAC troops advanced further south, the
Marines began to en counter a series of east-west ridges dominating the
open farmlands in their midst. "The southern part of Okinawa," reported
Colonel Snedeker, "consists primarily of cross ridges sticking out like
bones from the spine of a fish." Meanwhile, the Army divisions of XXIV
Corps warily approached two towering escarpments in their zone, Yuza
Dake and Yaeju Dake. The Japanese had obviously gone to ground along
these ridges and peaks and lay waiting for the American advance.
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A
bereaved father prays for his dead son: Col Francis I. Fenton, 1st
Marine Division engineer, kneels at the foot of the stretcher holding
the body of PFC Michael Fenton, as division staff members mourn. Col
Fenton said that the other dead Marines were not as fortunate as his
son, who had his father there to pray for him. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
122274
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Rain and mud continued to plague the combatants. One
survivor of this segment of the campaign described the battlefields as
"a five-mile sea of mud." As Private First Class Sledge recorded in the
margins of his sodden New Testament, "Mud in camp on Pavuvu was a
nuisance . . . . But mud on the battlefield is misery beyond
description." The 96th Division wearily reported the results of one
day's efforts under these conditions: "those on forward slope slid down;
those on reverse slope slid back; otherwise no change."
The Marines began to chafe at the heavy-handed
controls of the Tenth Army, which seemed to stall with each encounter
with a fresh Japanese outpost. General Buckner favored a massive
application of firepower on every obstacle before committing troops in
the open. Colonel Shapley, commanding the 4th Marines, took a different
view. "I'm not too sure that sometimes when they whittle you away, 10-12
men a day, then maybe it would be better to take 100 losses a day if you
could get out sooner." Colonel Wilburt S. "Big Foot" Brown, a veteran
artilleryman commanding the 11th Marines, and a legend in his own
time, believed the Tenth Army relied too heavily on firepower. "We
poured a tremendous amount of metal into those positions," he said. "It
seemed nothing could be living in that churning mass where the shells
were falling and roaring, but when we next advanced the Japs would still
be there and madder than ever." Brown also lamented the overuse of star
shells for night illumination: "I felt like we were the children of
Israel in the wilderness living under a pillar of fire by night
and a cloud of smoke by day."
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This
self-propelled M-7 105mm gun was completely bogged down in the heavy
rains which fell on Okinawa in the last weeks in May. It replaced the
half-track mounted 75mm gun as the regimental commander's artillery
in Operation Iceberg. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 123438
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Such a heavy reliance on artillery support stressed
the amphibious supply system. The Tenth Army's demand for heavy ordnance
grew to 3,000 tons of ammo per day; each round had to be delivered over
the beach and distributed along the front. This factor reduced the
availability of other supplies, including rations. Front-line troops,
especially the Marines, began to go hungry. Again partial succor came
from the friendly skies. Marine pilots flying General Motors Avenger
torpedo-bombers of VMTB-232 executed 80 air drops of rations during the
first three days of June alone. This worked well, thanks to the intrepid
pilots, and thanks to the rigging skills of the Air Delivery Section,
veterans of the former Marine parachute battalions.
Offshore from the final drive south, the ships of the
fleet continued to withstand waves of kamikaze attacks. Earlier,
on 17 May, Admiral Turner had declared an end to the amphibious assault
phase. General Buckner thereafter reported directly to Admiral Spruance.
Turner departed, leaving Vice Admiral Harry W. Hill in command of the
huge amphibious force still supporting the Tenth Army. On 27 May,
Admiral William F. "Bull" Halsey relieved Spruance. With that, the Fifth
Fleet became the Third Fleet same ships, same crews, different
designation. Spruance and Turner began planning the next amphibious
assault, the long-anticipated invasion of the Japanese home islands.
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Cleanliness is next to godliness, figures this Marine,
as he stands knee-deep in water while shaving in the midst of a totally
saturated and flooded bivouac area. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
123507
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General Shepherd, appreciative of the vast amphibious
resources still available on call, decided to interject tactical
mobility and surprise into the sluggish campaign. In order for the 6th
Marine Division to reach its intermediate objective of the Naha
airfield, Shepherd first had to overwhelm the Oroku Peninsula. Shepherd
could do this the hard way, attacking from the base of the peninsula and
scratching seaward or he could launch a shore-to-shore amphibious
assault across the estuary to catch the defenders in their flank. "The
Japanese expected us to force a crossing of the Kokuba," he said, "I
wanted to surprise them." Convincing General Geiger of the wisdom of
this approach was easy; getting General Buckner's approval took longer.
Abruptly Buckner agreed, but gave the 6th Division barely 36 hours to
plan and execute a division-level amphibious assault.
Lieutenant Colonel Krulak and his G-3 staff relished
the challenge. Scouts from Major Anthony "Cold Steel" Walker's 6th
Reconnaissance Company stole across the estuary at night to gather
intelligence on the Nishikoku Beaches and the Japanese defenders. The
scouts confirmed the existence on the peninsula of a cobbled force of
Imperial Japanese Navy units under an old adversary. Fittingly, this
final opposed amphibious landing of the war would be launched against
one of the last surviving Japanese rikusentai (Special Naval
Landing Force) commanders, Rear Admiral Minoru Ota.
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Okinawa's "Plum Rains" of May and June came close to
immobilizing the U.S. Tenth Army's drive south. Heroic efforts kept the
frontline troops supported logistically. Marine Corps Historical
Center
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Admiral Ota was 54, a 1913 graduate of the Japanese
Naval Academy, and a veteran of rikusentai service from as early
as 1932 in Shanghai. Ten years later he commanded the 2d Combined
Special Landing Force destined to assault Midway, but was thwarted
by the disastrous naval defeat suffered by the Japanese. In November
1942, commanding the 8th Combined Special Landing Force in the
Central Solomons, he defended Bairoko against the 1st Marine Raider
Regiment. By 1945, however, the rikusentai had all but
disappeared, and Ota commanded a rag tag outfit of several thousand
coast defense and antiaircraft gunners, aviation mechanics, and
construction specialists. Undismayed, Ota breathed fire into his
disparate forces, equipped them with hundreds of machine cannons from
wrecked aircraft, and made them sow thousands of mines.
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When
the heavy rains of May arrived, deep mud caused by days of torrential
down pours made air delivery the only possible means of providing
forward combat units with food, ammunition, and water. As a result,
Marine torpedo-bombers of VMTBs -131 and -232 were employed in
supply drops by parachute. The white panels laid on the ground at the
right mark the target area for the drops. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
126402
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Krulak and Shepherd knew they faced a worthy
opponent, but also saw they held the advantage of surprise if they could
act swiftly. The final details of planning centered on problems with the
division's previously dependable LVTs. Sixty-five days of hard
campaigning ashore had taken a heavy toll of the tracks and suspension
systems of these assault amphibians. Nor were repair parts available.
LVTs had served in abundance on L-Day to land four divisions; now the
Marines had to scrape to produce enough for the assault elements of one
regiment. Worse for the planners, the first typhoon of the season was
approaching, and the Navy was getting jumpy. General Shepherd remained
firm in his desire to execute the assault on K-Day, 4 June. Admiral
Halsey backed him up.
Shepherd considered Colonel Shapley "an outstanding
officer of great ability and great leadership," and chose the 4th
Marines to lead the assault. Shapley divided the 600-yard Nishikoku
Beach between 2/4 on the left and 1/4 on the right. Despite heavy rains,
the assault went on schedule. The Oroku Peninsula erupted in flame and
smoke under the pounding of hundreds of naval guns, artillery batteries,
and aerial bombs. Major Anthony's scouts seized Ono Yama island, the 4th
Marines swept across the estuary, and LCMs and LCIs loaded with tanks
appeared from the north, from "Loomis Harbor," named after the IIIAC
Logistics Officer, Colonel Francis B. "Loopy" Loomis, Jr., a veteran
Marine aviator. The amphibious force attained complete surprise. Many of
1/4's patched-up LVTs broke down enroute, causing uncomfortable delays,
but enemy fire proved intermittent, and empty LVTs from the first waves
quickly returned to transfer the stranded troops. The 4th Marines
advanced rapidly. Soon it became time for Colonel Whaling's 29th Marines
to cross. By dark on K-Day the 6th Division occupied 1,200 yards of the
Oroku Peninsula. Admiral Ota furiously redirected his sailors to the
threat from the rear. Then Colonel Roberts' 22d Marines began advancing
along the original corridor.
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As
soon as the parachute drops landed in the target zone, grateful Marines
enthusiastically retrieved the supplies, often while under enemy fire.
Some of the drops were out of reach as they landed in territory where
Japanese soldiers claimed them. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
123168
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The amphibious assault had been nigh letter-perfect,
the typhoon came and went, and the Marines occupied the peninsula in
force, capturing the airfield in two days. When the 1st Marine Division
reached the south west coast north of Itoman on 7 June, Admiral Ota's
force lost its chance of escape. General Shepherd then orchestrated a
three-fold enveloping movement with his regiments and the outcome became
inevitable.
Admiral Ota was no ordinary opponent, however, and
the battle for Oroku was savage and lethal. Ota's 5,000 spirited sailors
fought with elan, and they were very heavily armed. No
similar-sized force on Okinawa possessed so many automatic weapons or
employed mines so effectively. The attacking Marines also encountered
some awesome weapons at very short range eight-inch coast defense
guns redirected in land, rail-mounted eight-inch rockets (the "Screaming
Mimi"), and the enormous 320mm spigot mortars which launched the
terrifying "flying ashcans." On 9 June the 4th Marines reported
"character of opposition unchanged; stubborn defense of high ground by
20mm and MG fire." Two days later the 29th Marines reported: "L Hill
under attack from two sides; another tank shot on right flank; think an
eight-inch gun."
Ota could nevertheless see the end coming. On 6 June
he reported to naval headquarters in Tokyo: "The troops under my command
have fought gallantly, in the finest tradition of the Japanese Navy.
Fierce bombardments may deform the mountains of Okinawa but cannot alter
the loyal spirit of our men." Four days later Ota transmitted his final
message to General Ushijima ("Enemy tank groups are now attacking our
cave headquarters; the Naval Base Force is dying gloriously. . . .") and
committed suicide, his duty done.
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It
seemed to be one hill after another in the drive south. Amidst tree
stumps which hardly serve as adequate cover, a bazooka team waits for an
opportunity to charge into the face of Japanese fire over the crest of
the hill in front of them. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
122167
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General Shepherd knew he had defeated a competent
foe. He counted the costs in his after-action summary of the Oroku
operation:
During the 10 days' fighting, almost 5000 Japanese
were killed and nearly 200 taken prisoner. Thirty of our tanks were
disabled, many by mines. One tank was destroyed by two direct hits from
an 8-inch naval gun fired at point blank range. Finally, 1,608 Marines
were killed or wounded.
When the 1st Marine Division reached the coast near
Itoman it represented the first time in more than a month that the
division had access to the sea. This helped relieve the Old Breed's
extended supply lines. "As we reached the shore we were helped a great
deal by amphibian tractors that had come down the coast with supplies,"
said Colonel Snedeker of the 7th Marines, "Other wise we couldn't get
supplies overland."
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Trying in vain to escape and knee deep in the water's
edge along the sea wall near the Oroku Peninsula, a Japanese soldier
passes the bodies of two other soldiers. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
126267
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