SECURING THE SURRENDER: Marines in the Occupation of Japan
by Charles R. Smith
Requirements for clothing, ordnance, and equipment
and supplies had to be determined and arranged for from the 5th Field
Service Depot. Initially, this proved to be difficult due to the secret
nature of the operation and that all requisitions for support from
supply agencies and the Island Command on Guam had to be processed
through III Amphibious Corps. At 0900 on 12 August, the veil of secrecy
surrounding the proposed operation was lifted so that task force units
could deal directly with all necessary service and supply agencies. All
elements of the task force and the 5th Field Service Depot then went on
a 24-hour work day to complete the resupply task. The regiment not only
lacked supplies, but it also was understrength. Six hundred enlisted
replacements were obtained from the FMFPac Transient Center, Marianas,
to fill gaps in its ranks left by combat attrition and rotation to the
United States.
Dump areas and dock space were allotted by the Island
Command to accommodate the five transports, a cargo ship, and a dock
landing ship of Transport Division 60 assigned to carry Task Force Able.
The mounting-out process was considerably aided by the announcement that
all ships would arrive in port on 14 August, 24 hours later than
originally scheduled. On the evening of the 13th, however, "all loading
plans for supplies were thrown into chaos" by information that the large
transport, Harris (APA 2), had been deleted from the group of
ships assigned and that the Grimes (APA 172), a smaller trans
port with 50 percent less capacity, would be substituted. The resultant
reduction of shipping space was partially made up by the assignment of a
landing ship, tank (LST) to the transport group. III Amphibious Corps
informed the task force that no additional ship would be allocated.
Later, after the task force departed Guam, a second LST was allotted to
lift a portion of the remaining supplies and equipment, including the
amphibian tractors of Company A, 4th Amphibian Tractor Battalion.
On the afternoon of 14 August, loading began and
continued throughout the night. The troops boarded between 1000 and 1200
the following day, and by 1600 all transports were loaded. By 1900 that
evening, the transport division was ready to sail for its rendezvous at
sea with the Third Fleet. Within approximately 96 hours, the regimental
combat team, it was reported, "had been completely re-outfitted, all
equipment deficiencies corrected, all elements provided with an initial
allowance to bring them up to T/O and T/A levels, and a thirty day
re-supply procured for shipment."
Two days prior to the departure of the main body of
Task Force Able, General Clement and the nucleus of his headquarters
staff left Guam on the landing ship, vehicle Ozark (LSV 2),
accompanied by the Shadwell (LSV 15) and two destroyers, to join
the Third Fleet. As no definite mission had been assigned to the force,
little preliminary planning had taken place so time enroute was spent
studying intelligence summaries of the Tokyo area. Few maps were
available and those that were proved to be inadequate. The trip to the
rendezvous point was uneventful except for a reported torpedo wake
across the Ozark's bow. Several depth charges were dropped by the
destroyer escorts with unknown results.
Halsey's ships were sighted on 18 August, and next
morning, Clement and key members of his staff transferred to the
battleship Missouri (BB 63) for the first of several rounds of
conferences on the upcoming operation. At the conference, Task Force 31
was tentatively established and Clement learned, for the first time,
that the Third Fleet Landing Force would play an active part in the
occupation of Japan by landing on Miura Peninsula, 30 miles southwest of
Tokyo. The primary task assigned by Admiral Halsey to Clement's forces
was seizure and occupation of Yokosuka airfield and naval base in
preparation for initial landings by air of the 11th Airborne Division.
Located south of Yokohama, 22 miles from Tokyo, the sprawling base
contained two airfields, a seaplane base, aeronautical research center,
optical laboratory, gun factory and ordnance depot, torpedo factory,
munitions and aircraft storage, tank farms, supply depot, ship yard, and
training schools and hospitals. During the war approximately 70,000
civilians and 50,000 naval ratings worked or trained at the base.
Collateral missions included the demilitarization of
the entire Miura Peninsula, which formed the western arm of the
headlands enclosing Tokyo Bay, and the seizure of the Zushi area,
including Hayama Imperial Palace, General MacArthur's tentative
headquarters, on the southwest coast of the peninsula. Two alternative
schemes of maneuver were proposed to accomplish these missions. The
first contemplated a landing by assault troops on the beaches near
Zushi, followed by a five-mile drive east across the peninsula in two
columns over the two good roads to secure the naval base for the landing
of supplies and reinforcements. The second plan involved simultaneous
landings from within Tokyo Bay on the beaches and docks of Yokosuka
naval base and air station, to be followed by the occupation of the
Zushi area, thus sealing off and then demilitarizing the entire
peninsula. The Zushi landing plan was preferred since it did not involve
bringing ships into the restricted waters south of Tokyo Bay until
assault troops had dealt with "the possibility of Japanese treachery."
Following the conference, Admiral Halsey recommended to Lieutenant
General Robert L. Fichelberger, commander of the Eighth Army, whom
MacArthur had appointed to command forces ashore in the occupation of
northern Japan, that the Zushi plan be adopted.
At 1400 on 19 August, Task Force 31 was officially
organized and Admiral Badger formed the ships assigned to the force into
a separate tactical group, the transports and large amphibious ships in
column, with circular screens composed of destroyers and high speed
transports. In addition, three subordinate task units were formed: Third
Fleet Marine Landing Force; Third Fleet Naval Landing Force; and a
landing force of sailors and Royal Marines from Vice Admiral Sir Bernard
Rawling's British Carrier Task Force. To facilitate organization and
establish control over the three provisional commands, the transfer of
American and British sailors and Marines and their equipment to
designated transports by means of breeches buoys and cargo slings began
immediately. Carriers, battleships, and cruisers were brought along both
sides of a transport to expedite the operation. In addition to the
landing battalions of sailors and Marines, fleet units formed base
maintenance companies, a naval air activities organization to operate
Yokosuka airfield, and nucleus crews to seize and secure Japanese
vessels. In less than three days, the task of transferring at sea some
3,500 men and hundreds of tons of weapons, equipment, and ammunition was
accomplished without accident. As soon as they reported on board their
transports, the newly organized units began an intensive program of
training for ground combat operations and occupation duties.
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Somewhere at sea off the coast of Japan, the carrier
Yorktown maintains a course within 75 feet of the landing ship
Ozark, as a breeches buoy is strung between the two ships and a
sea-going Marine is hauled across to the Ozark. National Archives Photo
127-N-133346
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On 20 August, the ships carrying the 4th Marine
Regimental Combat Team joined the burgeoning task force and General
Clement and his staff transferred from the Ozark to the
Grimes. Clement's command now included the 5,400 men of the
reinforced 4th Marines; a three-battalion regiment of approximately
2,000 Marines from the ships of Task Force 38; 1,000 sailors from Task
Force 38 organized into two landing battalions; a battalion of nucleus
crews for captured shipping; and a British battalion of 200 sea men and
250 Royal Marines. To act as a floating reserve, five additional
battalions of partially equipped sailors were organized from within
Admiral McCain's carrier battle group.
The next day, General Fichelberger, who had been
informed of the alternative plans formulated by Admirals Halsey and
Badger, directed that the landing be made at the naval base rather than
in the Zushi area. Although there was mounting evidence that the enemy
would cooperate fully with the occupying forces, the Zushi area,
Fichelberger pointed out, had been selected by MacArthur as his
headquarters area and was therefore restricted. His primary reason,
however, for selecting Yokosuka rather than Zushi as the landing site
involved the overland movement of the landing force. "This overland
movement [from Zushi to Yokosuka]," Brigadier General Metzger later
noted, "would have exposed the landing force to possible enemy attack
while its movement was restricted over narrow roads and through a series
of tunnels which were easily susceptible to sabotage. Further, it would
have delayed the early seizure of the major Japanese naval base."
Fichelberger's dispatch also included information
that the 11th Airborne Division would make its initial landing at Atsugi
airfield, a few miles northwest of the northern end of the Miura
Peninsula, instead of at Yokosuka. The original plans, which were
prepared on the assumption that General Clement's men would seize
Yokosuka airfield for the airborne operation, had to be changed to
provide for a simultaneous Army-Navy landing. A tentative area of
responsibility, including the cities of Uraga, Kubiri, Yokosuka, and
Funakoshi, was assigned to Clement's force. The remainder of the
peninsula was assigned to Major General Joseph M. Swing's 11th Airborne
Division. While Fichelberger's directive affected the employment of the
Fleet Landing Force it did not place the force under Eighth Army
control.
(click on image for an enlargement in a new window)
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To insure the safety of allied warships entering
Tokyo Bay, Clement's operation plan detailed the British Landing Force
to occupy and demilitarize three small island forts in the Uraga Strait
at the entrance to Tokyo Bay. To erase the threat of shore batteries and
coastal forts, the 2d Battalion, 4th Marines, supported by an underwater
demolition team and a team of 10 Navy gunner's mates to demilitarize the
heavy coastal defense guns, was given the mission of landing on Futtsu
Saki, a long, narrow peninsula which jutted from the eastern shore into
Uraga Strait at the mouth of Tokyo Bay. After completing its mission,
the battalion was to reembark in its landing craft to take part in the
main landing as the regiment's reserve battalion. Nucleus crews from the
Fleet Naval Landing Force were to enter Yokosuka's inner harbor prior to
H-Hour and take possession of the damaged battleship Nagato,
whose guns commanded the landing beaches.
The 4th Marines, with the 1st and 3d Battalions in
assault, was scheduled to make the initial landing at Yokosuka on L-Day.
The battalions of the Fleet Marine and Naval Landing Forces were to land
in reserve and take control of specific areas of the naval base and
airfield, while the 4th Marines pushed inland to link up with elements
of the 11th Airborne Division landing at Atsugi airfield. The cruiser
San Diego (CL 53), Admiral Badger's flagship; 4 destroyers; and
12 assault craft were to be prepared to furnish naval gunfire support on
call. Four observation planes were assigned to observe the landing, and
although there were to be no combat planes in direct support, more than
1,000 carrier-based planes would be armed and available if needed.
Though it was hoped that the Yokosuka landing would be uneventful, Task
Force 31 was prepared to deal with either organized resistance or
individual fanaticism on the part of the Japanese.
L-Day was originally scheduled for 26 August, but on
the 20th, storm warnings indicating that a typhoon was developing 300
miles to the southeast forced Admiral Halsey to postpone the landing
date to the 28th. Ships were to enter Sagami Wan, the vast outer bay
which led to Tokyo Bay, on L minus 2 day. To avoid the typhoon, all task
forces were ordered to proceed southwest toward a "temporary point" off
Sofu-gan, where they were replenished and refueled. On 25 August, word
was received from General MacArthur that the typhoon danger would delay
Army air operations for 48 hours, and L-Day was consequently set for 30
August, with the Third Fleet entry into Sagami Wan on the 28th.
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Marines of the Fleet Landing Force on board the
Ozark receive a final brief from LtCol Fred D. Beans, the 4th
Marines' commanding officer, prior to landing at Yokosuka. National Archives Photo
127-N-133054
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The Japanese had been instructed as early as 15
August to begin minesweeping in the waters off Tokyo to facilitate the
operations of the Third Fleet. On the morning of the entrance into
Sagami Wan, Japanese emissaries and pilots were to meet with Rear
Admiral Robert B. Carney, Halsey's Chief of Staff, and Admiral Badger on
board the Missouri to receive instructions relative to the
surrender of the Yokosuka Naval Base and to guide the first allied ships
into anchorages. Halsey was not anxious to keep his ships, many of them
small vessels crowded with troops, at sea in typhoon weather, and he
asked and received permission from MacArthur to put into Sagami Wan one
day early.
Early on the 27th, the Japanese emissaries reported
on board the Missouri. Several demands were presented, most of
which centered upon obtaining information relative to minefields and
shipping channels. Japanese pilots and interpreters were then put on
board a destroyer and delivered to the lead ships of Task Force 31. Due
to a lack of suitable minesweepers which had prevented the Japanese from
clearing Sagami Wan and Tokyo Bay, the channel into Tokyo Bay was
immediately check-swept with negative results. By late afternoon, the
movement of Admiral Badger's task force to safe anchorages in Sagami Wan
was accomplished without incident.
At 0900 on 28 August, the first American task force,
consisting of the combat elements of Task Force 31, entered Tokyo Bay
and dropped anchor off Yokosuka at 1300. During the movement, Naval Task
Forces 35 and 37 stood by to provide fire support if needed. Carrier
planes of Task Force 38 conducted an air demonstration in such force "as
to discourage any treachery on the part of the enemy." In addition,
combat air patrols, direct support aircraft, and planes patrolling
outlying airfields flew low over populated areas to reinforce the allied
presence.
Shortly after anchoring, Vice Admiral Michitore
Totsuka, Commandant of the First Naval District and Yokosuka
Naval Base, and his staff reported to Admiral Badger in the San
Diego for further instructions regarding the surrender of his
command. They were informed that the naval base area was to be cleared
of all personnel except for skeletal maintenance and guard crews; guns
of the forts, ships, and coastal batteries commanding the bay were to be
rendered inoperative; the breech blocks were to be removed from all
antiaircraft and dual-purpose guns and their positions marked with white
flags visible four miles to seaward; and, Japanese guides and
interpreters were to be on the beach to meet the landing force.
Additionally, guards were to stationed at each warehouse and building
with a complete inventory on its contents and appropriate keys.
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Just
after dawn on 30 August, Marines of the 2d Battalion, 4th Marines, hit
the beaches of Futtsu Saki to neutralize the shore batteries prior to
the main landing at Yokosuka. They found the Japanese had followed their
surrender instructions to the letter. National Archives Photo
127-N-134867
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As the naval commanders made arrangements for the
Yokosuka landing, a reconnaissance party of Army Air Force technicians
with emergency communications and airfield engineer equipment landed at
Atsugi airfield to prepare the way for the airborne operation on L-Day.
Radio contact was established with Okinawa where the 11th Division was
waiting to execute its part in Blacklist. The attitude of the Japanese
officials, both at Yokosuka and Atsugi, was uniformly one of outward
subservience and docility. But years of bitter experiences caused many
allied commanders and troops to view the emerging picture of the
Japanese as meek and harmless with a jaundiced eye. As Admiral Carney
noted at the time: "It must be remembered that these are the same
Japanese whose treachery, cruelty, and subtlety brought about this war;
we must be continually vigilant for overt treachery. . . They are always
dangerous."
During the Third Fleet's first night at anchor, there
was a fresh reminder of Japanese brutality. Two British prisoners of war
hailed one of the fleet's picket boats in Sagami Wan and were taken on
board the San Juan (CL 54), command ship of the specially
constituted Allied Prisoner of War Rescue Group. Their description of
life in the prison camps and of the extremely poor physical condition of
many of the prisoners, later confirmed by an International Red Cross
representative, prompted Halsey to order the rescue group into Tokyo Bay
and to stand by for action on short notice. At 1420 on the 29th, Admiral
Nimitz arrived by seaplane from Guam and authorized Halsey to begin
rescue operations immediately, although MacArthur had directed the Navy
not begin recovery operations until the Army was ready. Special teams,
guided by carrier planes overhead, quickly began the task of bringing in
allied prisoners from the Omori and Ofuna camps and the Shanagama
hospital. By 1910 that evening, the first prisoners of war arrived on
board the hospital ship Benevolence (AH 13), and at midnight 739
men had been brought out. After evacuating camps in the Tokyo area, the
San Juan moved south to the Nagoya Hamamatsu area and then north
to the Sendai-Kamaishi area. During the next 14 days, more than 19,000
allied prisoners were liberated.
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Marines of the 4th Regiment come ashore at Yokosuka from
landing craft as they had done many times before, but this time no one
is firing. National Archives Photo 127-N-133859
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Also that evening, for the first time since Pearl
Harbor, the ships of the Third Fleet were illuminated. As General
Metzger later remembered: "Word was passed to illuminate ship, but owing
to the long wartime habit of always darkening ship at night, no ship
would take the initiative in turning their lights on. Finally, after the
order had been repeated a couple of times lights went on. It was a
wonderful picture with all the ships flying large battle flags both at
the foretruck and the stern. In the background was snowcapped Mount
Fuji." Movies were shown on the weather decks. While the apprehension of
some lessened, lookouts were still posted, radars continued to search,
and the ships remained on alert.
Long before dawn on L-Day, three groups of Task Force
31 transports, with escorts, moved from Sagami Wan into Tokyo Bay. The
first group of transports carried the 2d Battalion, 4th Marines; the
second the bulk of the landing force, consisting of the rest of the 4th
Marines and the Fleet Marine and Naval Landing Forces; and the third,
the British Landing Force. All plans of the Yokosuka Occupation Force
had been based on an H-Hour for the main landing of 1000, but
last-minute word was received from General MacArthur on the 29th that
the first transport planes carrying the 11th Airborne Division would be
landing at Atsugi airfield at 0600. To preserve the value and impact of
simultaneous Army-Navy operations, Task Force 31's plans were changed to
allow for the earlier landing time.
As their landing craft approached the beaches of
Futtsu Saki, the Marines of 2d Battalion, 4th Marines spotted a sign
left on shore by their support team: "US NAVY UNDERWATER DEMOLITION
TEAMS WELCOME MARINES TO JAPAN." At 0558, the ramps dropped and Company
G, under First Lieutenant George B. Lamberson, moved ashore. While
Lamberson's company and another seized the main fort and armory, a third
landed on the tip of the peninsula and occupied the second fort. The
Japanese, they found, had followed their instructions to the letter. The
German made coastal and antiaircraft guns had been rendered useless and
only a 22-man garrison remained to oversee the peaceful turnover. As the
Japanese soldiers marched away, the Marines, as Staff Sergeant Edward
Meagher later reported, "began smashing up the rifles, machine guns,
bayonets and antiaircraft guns. They made a fearful noise doing it.
Quite obviously, they hadn't enjoyed doing anything so much in a long,
long time." By 0845, after raising the American flag over both forts,
the battalion, its mission accomplished, reembarked for the Yokosuka
landing, scheduled for 0930. With the taking of the Futtsu Saki forts
and the landing of the first transports at Atsugi, the occupation of
Japan was underway.
With first light came dramatic evidence that the
Japanese would comply with the surrender terms. Lookouts on board Task
Force 31 ships could see white flags flying over abandoned and
inoperative gun positions. A 98-man nucleus crew from the battleship
South Dakota (BB 57) boarded the battle ship Nagato at
0805 and received the surrender from a skeleton force of officers and
technicians; the firing locks of the ship's main battery had been
removed and all secondary and antiaircraft guns relocated to the Navy
Yard. "At no time was any antagonism, resentment, arrogance or passive
resistance encountered; both officers (including the captain) and men
displaying a very meek and subservient attitude," noted Navy Captain
Thomas J. Flynn in his official report. "It seemed almost incredible
that these bowing, scraping, and scared men were the same brutal,
sadistic enemies who had tortured our prisoners, reports of whose plight
were being received the same day."
The morning was warm and bright. There was hardly a
ripple on the water as the 4th Marines, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel
Fred D. Beans, scrambled into landing craft. Once on board, they
adjusted their heavy packs and joked and laughed as the coxswains
powered the craft toward the rendezvous point a few miles off shore.
Officers and senior enlisted men reminded their marines of orders given
days before: weapons would be locked and not used unless fired upon;
insulting epithets in connection with the Japanese as a race or
individuals would not be condoned; and all personnel were to present a
smart military bearing and proper deportment. "When you hit the beach,
Navy cameramen who will land earlier will be there," Lieutenant Colonel
George B. Bell said to the men of the 1st Battalion. "They will be
taking pictures. Pictures of you men landing. I don't want any of you
mugging the lenses. Simply get ashore as quickly as possible and do your
job."
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