SILK CHUTES AND HARD FIGHTING: US. Marine Corps
Parachute Units in World War II
by Lieutenant Colonel Jon T. Hoffman (USMCR)
Bougainville
On 1 November 1943, the 3d and 9th Marines, assisted
by the 2d Raider Battalion, seized a swath of Bougainville's coast from
Cape Torokina to the northwest. At the same time, elements of the 3d
Raider Battalion assaulted Puruata Island just off the cape. The single
Japanese company and one 75mm gun defending the area gave a good account
of themselves until overwhelmed by the invasion force. Over the next
several days the Marines advanced inland to extend their perimeter.
There were occasional engagements with small enemy patrols, but the
greatest resistance during this period came from the terrain, which
consisted largely of swampland and dense jungle beginning just behind
the beach. The thing most Marines remembered about Bougainville was the
deep, sucking mud that seemed to cover everything not already
underwater.
Japanese resistance stiffened as they moved troops to
the area on foot and by barge. The Marines fought several tough battles
in mid November and suffered significant casualties trying to move
forward through the thick vegetation, which concealed Japanese defensive
positions until the Marines were just a few feet away. Heavy rains and
the ever-present mud made logistics a nightmare and quickly exhausted
the troops. Nevertheless, the perimeter continued to expand as I MAC
sought an area large enough to protect the future airfields from enemy
interference. By 20 November, I MAC had all of the 3d Marine Division
and the 37th Infantry Division, plus the 2d Raider Regiment, on the
island. In accordance with the original plan, corps headquarters
arranged for the parachute regiment to come forward in echelon from
Vella Lavella and assume its role as the reserve force. The 1st
Parachute Battalion embarked on hoard ships on 22 November and arrived
at Bougainville the next day, where it joined the raider regiment in
reserve.
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The corps planners wanted to make aggressive use of
the reserve force. In addition to assigning it the normal roles of
reinforcing or counterattacking, I MAC ordered its reserve to be
prepared "to engage in land or water-borne raider type operations." By
26 November, the corps had established a defensible beachhead and enemy
activity was at a low ebb. However, the Japanese 23d Infantry
Regiment occupied high ground to the northeast of the U.S. perimeter
and remained a threat. Enemy medium artillery also periodically shelled
rear areas. To prevent the Japanese from gathering strength with
impunity, I MAC decided to establish a force in the enemy rear from
whence it could "conduct raids along coast and inland to main east-west
trail; destroy Japs, installations, supplies, with particular attention
to disrupting Jap communications and artillery." The plan called for
Major Richard Fagan's 1st Parachute Battalion, Company M of the raiders,
and artillery forward observers to land 10 miles to the east, neart of
Koiari, prior to dawn on 28 November. The raiders would secure the
patrol base while the parachutists conducted offensive operations. They
would remain there until corps ordered them to withdraw.
A Japanese air attack and problems with the boat pool
delayed the operation for 24 hours. Just after midnight on 28 November,
the 739 men of the reinforced battalion embarked on landing craft near
Cape Torokina and headed down the coast. The main body of the parachute
battalion went ashore at their assigned objective, but Company M and the
parachute headquarters company landed nearly 1,000 yards farther to the
east. Much to the surprise of the first parachutists coming off the
boats, a Japanese officer walked onto the beach and attempted to engage
them in conversation. That bizarre incident made some sense when the
Marines discovered that they had landed in the midst of a large enemy
supply dump. The Japanese leader must have thought that these were his
own craft delivering or picking up supplies. In any case, the equally
surprised enemy initially put up little opposition to the Marine
incursion. Major Fagan, located with the main body, was concerned about
the separation of his unit and felt that the Japanese force in the
vicinity of the dump was probably much bigger than his own. Given those
factors, he quickly established a tight perimeter defense about 350
yards in width and just 180 yards inland.
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Marines hug the sand during the Koiari raid on
Bougainville. The man nearest the camera has a Model 55 folding
wire-stock Reising submachine gun, reviled by many Marines due to its
propensity to jam. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
127-GR-84-69793
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By daylight, the Japanese had recovered from their
shock and begun to respond aggressively to the threat in their rear
area. They brought to bear continuous fire from 90mm mortars,
knee-mortars, machine guns, and rifles; the volume of fire increased as
the day wore on. Periodically infantry rushed the Marine lines. The
picture improved somewhat by 0930 when the body of raiders and
headquarters personnel moved down the beach and fought their way into
the battalion perimeter. The battalion's radio set malfunctioned about
this time, however, and Fagan could not receive messages from I MAC. For
the moment he could still send them, but was unsure if the corps
headquarters heard them. The artillery spotters could talk to the
batteries, though, and they fed a steady diet of 155mm shells to the
Japanese. Unbeknownst to Fagan, the raider company had its own radio and
maintained independent contact with the corps. These communication
snafus would lead to great confusion.
By late morning, I MAC already was thinking in terms
of pulling out the beleaguered force. At 1128, it arranged to boat 3d
Marine Division half-tracks (mounting 75mm guns) to assist in covering a
withdrawal. Staffers also called in planes to provide close air support.
Around noon Fagan sent a message requesting evacuation and corps decided
to abort the mission. It radioed the battalion at 1318 with information
concerning the planned withdrawal, but the parachutists did not get the
word. As a consequence, Fagan sent more messages asking for boats and a
resupply of ammunition, which was running low. For some reason, neither
Fagan nor corps headquarters used the artillery net for messages other
than calls for fire support. While sending other traffic would have been
a violation of standard procedures, it certainly was justified under the
circumstances. (After the operation was over, Fagan would express dismay
that Company M radio operators, without his knowledge or approval, had
sent their own pleas for boats and ammunition throughout the
afternoon.)
Tables of Organization
When the Plans and Policies Division at Headquarters
made its initial request in May 1940 for input on a Marine parachute
program, it suggested that planners work with a notional organization of
one infantry battalion reinforced by a platoon of pack howitzers and
some light antiaircraft and anti-tank weapons. In late October 1940, the
Commandant determined that each infantry regiment would train one of its
battalions as air infantry, with one company of each such battalion
prepared to conduct parachute operations. He estimated that would
require 750 parachutists, about the number originally envisioned for a
separate battalion. However, those men would now double as regular
infantry and help fill spaces in the chronically undermanned line units.
That idea did not last long and the Corps soon began talking about
multiple battalions specializing in parachute operations.
The first official parachute table of organization,
issued in March of 1941, authorized a battalion of three line companies
and a headquarters unit. The line companies consisted of a weapons
platoon (three 60mm mortars and three light machine guns) and three
rifle platoons of three 10-man squads (armed with six rifles, two
Browning Automatic Rifles [BARs], and two Thompson submachine guns). The
standard squad for regular infantry at the time was nine men, with eight
rifles and a single BAR. The 34 officers and 832 enlisted men of an
infantry battalion dwarfed the 24 officers and 508 enlisted men of a
parachute battalion, with the main difference coming from the former's
company of heavy weapons. The parachutists lacked the large-caliber
mortars, water-cooled machine guns, and antitank guns possessed by the
infantry, but made up for it in part with a much greater preponderance
of individual automatic weapons.
Once the United States entered the war, the parachute
units went through the same process of experimentation in structure as
the rest of the Corps. A 1942 revision to the tables did away with the
weapons platoons, distributing one 60mm mortar to each rifle platoon and
getting rid of the machine guns. The latter change was not as drastic as
it might appear, since each rifle squad was to have three Johnson light
machine guns. The remaining "riflemen" were supposed to carry Reising
submachine guns. This mix of automatic weapons theoretically gave the
parachute squad an immense amount of firepower. As things turned out,
the Johnson took a long time to get to the forces in the field and the
Reising proved to be an unreliable weapon.
The 1943 tables created a regimental structure
consisting of a headquarters company and a weapons company. The latter
unit of seven officers and 172 men served as a pool of extra firepower
for the lightly armed battalions. The company was supposed to field four
81mm mortars, one dozen each of the air-cooled and water-cooled
.30-caliber machine guns, two .50-caliber machine guns, two bazookas,
and eight grenade launchers. Headquarters also authorized a change in
the size of the battalions from 24 officers and 508 enlisted Marines to
23 officers and 568 enlisted. The additional personnel were all in the
headquarters company, though 33 of them formed a demolitions platoon
that did add directly to the battalion's combat power. Beyond that, I
MAC allowed the line companies to reestablish weapons platoons exactly
like those deleted in 1942. That move increased the authorized strength
of each battalion by another three officers and 87 enlisted men (though
manpower for these units was often taken out of hide). The new rifle
squad of 11 men was supposed to have three Johnson machine guns, three
Johnson rifles, and five Reisings, but by this time the parachute
regiment informally had adopted the fire team concept of three three-man
teams and a squad leader.
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At 1600, the landing craft arrived off the beach and
made a run in to pick up the raid force. The Japanese focused their
mortar fire on the boats and the sailors backed off. They tried again
almost immediately, but again drew back due to the intense bombardment
from the beach. Things looked bleak as the onset of night reduced
visibility to zero in the dense jungle and increased the likelihood of a
strong enemy counterattack. Ammunition stocks were dwindling rapidly and
weapons failed due to heavy firing and the accumulation of gritty sand.
Marines resorted to employing Japanese weapons, to include a small field
piece. The destroyers Fullam, Lansdowne, and Lardner and
two LCI gunboats came on the scene after 1800 and turned the tide. The
heavy fires at short range of the Lansdowne and the LCIs soon
silenced most of the Japanese mortars and boats were able to reach the
shore unmolested about 1920. American artillery also continued to rain
down around the perimeter. The parachutists and raiders exhibited a cool
discipline, slowly collapsing their perimeter into the beach and
conducting an orderly backload. After a thorough search to ensure that
no one remained behind, the final few Marines stepped onto the last wave
of landing craft and pulled out to sea at 2100.
The raid might he counted a failure since it did not
go according to plan, but it did achieve some positive things. The day
of fighting in the midst of the enemy supply dump destroyed considerable
stocks of ammunition, food, and medical supplies. Rough estimates placed
Japanese casualties at nearly 300 dead and wounded, though there was no
way to confirm whether this figure was high or low. Undoubtedly the
aggressive operation behind the lines caused the enemy to worry that the
Americans might repeat the tactic elsewhere with better luck. The Marine
force attained these ends at considerable cost. Total casualties were 17
dead, 7 missing, and 97 wounded (two-thirds of them requiring
evacuation). In one day of fighting the parachute battalion lost nearly
20 percent of its strength, as well as many weapons and individual items
of equipment. The unit was not shaken, hut it was severely bruised.
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