SECURING THE SURRENDER: Marines in the Occupation of Japan
by Charles R. Smith
Sasebo-Nagasaki Landings
In the period immediately following the conclusion of
the Luzon Campaign, the U.S. Sixth Army, under the command of General
Walter Krueger, was engaged in planning and preparing for the invasion
of Kyushu, the southernmost Japanese home island. The operation
envisioned an assault by three Army corps and one Marine amphibious
corps, totaling 11 Army and three Marine divisions, under the command of
General Krueger. After more than three years, the major land, sea, and
air components of the Central and Southwest Pacific forces were to merge
in the initial ground assault against Japan itself.
In early August, with the destruction of Hiroshima
and the Soviet Union's entry into the war, the possibility of an early
surrender increased. Although planning for the invasion continued,
General MacArthur directed Krueger to also plan and prepare for the
occupation of Kyushu and western Honshu should the Japanese Government
capitulate. General Krueger's initial plan for the occupation called for
V Amphibious Corps, commanded by Major General Harry Schmidt, to land
the 2d and 5th Marine Divisions in the Sasebo-Nagasaki area on 4
September. These landings were to be reinforced later by a 3d Marine
Division seaborne or overland movement to the Fukuoka-Shimonoseki area.
Major General Innis P. Swift's I Corps, consisting of the 25th, 33d,
98th, and 6th Infantry Divisions, was to land three days later in the
Wakayama area of western Honshu and establish control over the
Osaka-Kyoto-Kobe area. The X Corps, composed of the 41st and 24th
Infantry Divisions and commanded by Major General Franklin C. Sibert,
was scheduled to land in the Kure-Hiroshima area of western Honshu and
on the island of Shikoku on 3 October.
On 14 August, the Sixth Army assumed operational
control of V Amphibious Corps. After receiving official word of Japanese
acceptance of the surrender demands the following day, the Corps' three
divisions were informed that they should be prepared for an occupational
landing in early September, and that "all units were to be combat loaded
and alerted to the possibility of appreciable resistance to the
occupation." The Fifth Fleet, under Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, would
be responsible for collecting, transporting, and landing V Corps and
other scattered elements of Krueger's army. Because of the wide
dispersion of assault shipping and the magnitude of the minesweeping
problem, the fleet could not move major units to their targets
simultaneously and landing dates would therefore have to be
postponed.
|
In a
conference held on board the Mt. McKinley prior to the landing,
BGen William W Rogers, V Amphibious Corps Chief of Staff, left, stresses
a point to his interpreter, Maj F. D. Wolf, as RAdm Keichi Ishii, Chief
of Staff of Sasebo Naval Station and his vice chief locate a point under
discussion. National Archives Photo 127-N-139194
|
At the time of surrender there were an estimated
20,000 allied prisoners of war in Kyushu and western Honshu. Sixth Army
planners contemplated that recovery teams composed of American,
Australian, and Dutch representatives would accompany the occupational
forces and immediately evacuate prisoners in their respective zones.
Following the surrender, the Japanese virtually freed all Allied
prisoners by turning the prison camps over to them and allowing them
freedom of movement. Taking full advantage of the situation, many former
prisoners roamed the countryside at will, creating a situation that
called for an immediate change in plans.
With the landing of the first American forces in
Japan at the end of August, it became apparent that the evacuation of
all Allied prisoners of war "must receive first priority as many of them
were in poor physical condition." The revised Sixth Army plan allowed
the Eighth Army to extend its evacuation program to the west and to
evacuate prisoners through Osaka to Tokyo until relieved by Fifth Fleet
and Sixth Army units. Prisoners on Shikoku were to be ferried across the
Inland Sea to the mainland and then transported by rail through Osaka to
Tokyo. The Fifth Fleet and Sixth Army immediately organized two
evacuation forces consisting of suitable landing craft, hospital ships,
transports, Army contact teams, truck companies, and Navy medical
personnel. One force, under the command of Rear Admiral Ralph S. Riggs,
landed at Wakayama on 11 September and by the 15th had completed the
processing of all prisoners in western Honshu, a total of 2,575 men. The
other force, commanded by Rear Admiral Frank G. Fahrion, landed at
atom-bombed Nagasaki, after Fifth Fleet mine sweepers had cleared the
way, and by 22 September had evacuated all 9,000 remaining prisoners on
Kyushu.
Preliminary examination revealed that there were no
serious epidemics in the camps except for a few cases of typhoid and
dysentery. Malnutrition was common and the most serious cases of
beriberi and tuberculosis required immediate hospitalization. The
initial processing revealed many instances of brutality. However, as it
was reported at the time, "close questioning often disclosed that the
prisoners had been guilty of breaking some petty but strict prison rule.
A considerable number of the older men stated that the camp treatment,
although extremely rugged, was on the whole not too bad. They expected
quick punishment when caught for infraction of rules and got it. All
complained of the food, clothing, housing, and lack of heating
facilities." Except for a few stragglers, the release, medical
examination, delousing, processing, and screening of Allied prisoners of
war in southern Japan was completed on 23 September.
While the Eighth Army extend ed its hold over
northern Japan, and the two evacuation forces rounded up and processed
Allied prisoners, preparations for the Sixth Army's occupation of
western Honshu, Shikoku, and Kyushu continued. The occupation area
contained 55 percent of the total Japanese population, including half of
the Japanese Army garrisoning the homeland, three of Japan's four major
naval bases, all but two of its principal ports, two-thirds of all
Japanese cities with a population in excess of 100,000, and three of its
four main transportation centers. The island of Kyushu, which was to be
largely a Marine occupation responsibility, supported a population of
10,000,000 spread amongst its 15,000 square miles of mountainous
terrain. The southern and eastern parts of the island were chiefly
agricultural areas, producing large quantities of exportable rice and
sweet potatoes. The northwestern half of the island contained almost all
of southwestern Japan's coal fields, the nation's greatest pig iron and
steel district, and many important shipyards, in addition to a host of
other smaller industries.
|
Marines of the 8th Service Regiment crowd the rail of
their transport as its ties up to the dock at Sasebo Naval Base.
National Archives
Photo 127-N-136032
|
On 1 September, Major General Harry Schmidt opened
his command post on board the Mt. McKinley (AGC 7), flagship of
Amphibious Group 4, off Maui in the Hawaiian Islands and sailed to join
the 5th Division convoy, already enroute to Saipan. The remainder of V
Corps' troops, including several Army engineer augmentation units, with
the exception of rear echelons, continued loading and, on 3 September,
departed Hawaii for Saipan on board 17 LSTs. Schmidt's forces also
carried more than 300 tons of "Military Government" or relief supplies
consisting of rice, soy beans, fats and oils, salt, canned fish, and
medical equipment.
During the voyage to Saipan planning for the
occupation continued in light of changes to the original concept of
operations allowed by favorable reports of Japanese compliance with
surrender terms in northern Japan and alterations in the troop list.
However, every effort was made to salvage as much as possible of the
content of the Olympic plans for the assault landing. On 5 September,
the 3d Marine Division was deleted from the Corps' occupation force and
the 32d Infantry Division substituted. To guard against possible
treachery on the part of thousands of Japanese troops on bypassed
islands in the Central Pacific, the Navy tasked the 3d Division, then on
Guam, with preparing for any such eventuality. Meanwhile, the 2d Marine
Division and additional Corps units began loading in the Marianas.
"Someone at higher headquarters apparently made a gross error," noted
Lieutenant Colonel Jacob G. Goldberg, the division's logistics officer.
"For the first time since the war began we were assigned enough shipping
to lift the entire division, and by entire division I mean 100%
personnel and equipment. VAC was very much surprised that we were able
to do this, and I freely admit it was a hell of a nervous strain on me
up until the last ship was loaded."
Early on the morning of 13 September, the various
transport groups rendezvoused at Saipan. The 2d Marine Division almost
was loaded and the 32d Infantry Division on Luzon was preparing to move
to staging areas at Lingayen for loading on turn around shipping of the
5th Marine Division. Because of continuing indications that the landings
would be unopposed, the number of air and fire support ships assigned to
accompany the transport groups was reduced.
The following day, General Schmidt held a conference
of his subordinate commanders on board the Mt. McKinley to
clarify plans for the operation. He stressed "the importance of
maintaining firm, just, and dignified relations with the Japanese . . .
[and] responsibilities of commanders of all echelons in following the
rules of land warfare and the directives of higher authority."
In view of the cooperative attitude of the Japanese
thus far, permission was requested and granted to send advance parties
to Nagasaki and Sasebo. Their missions were "to facilitate smooth and
orderly entry of U. S. forces into the Corps zone of responsibility by
making contact with key Japanese civil and military authorities; to
execute advance spot checks on compliance with demilitarization orders;
and to ascertain such facilities for reception of our forces as
condition and suitability of docks and harbors; adequacy of sites
selected by map-reconnaissance for Corps installations; condition of
airfields, roads, and communications."
The first party, led by Colonel Walter W. Wensinger,
VAC operations officer, and consisting of key Corps and 2d Division
staff officers flew via Okinawa to Nagasaki, arriving on 16 September. A
second party of similar composition, but with underwater demolition
teams and 5th Division personnel attached, left for Sasebo by high speed
transport on 15th. After meeting with local officials, spot checking
coastal defenses, and arranging for suitable barracks, warehouse, and
command post sites, Colonel Wensinger and his staff proceeded by
destroyer to Sasebo where they made preliminary arrangements for the 5th
Division's arrival. On 20 September, the second reconnaissance party
arrived at Sasebo where it was met by Wensinger's party, and completed
preparations for the landing.
|
Marines move from the naval base into Sasebo. From
Sasebo 5th Division would move out into the countryside to ensure
Japanese compliance with the surrender terms. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
140484
|
At dusk on 16 September, Transport Squadron 22
bearing the Corps headquarters and 5th Marine Division slipped out of
Tanapag Harbor bound for Sasebo. The landing ships carrying elements of
the 2d Marine Division left Saipan for Nagasaki the next day. During the
eventful voyages, Marines received refresher training in military
discipline and courtesy and got their initial briefs on the Japanese
people, customs, and geography.
|