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Gilbert and Marshall Islands campaign

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
United States military campaign during World War II

Not to be confused withMarshalls–Gilberts raids.
Gilbert and Marshall Islands campaign
Part of thePacific Theater ofWorld War II

An SBD Dauntless flies patrol over USSWashington and USSLexington during the Gilbert and Marshall islands campaign
DateAugust 1942 – February 1944
Location
ResultAmerican victory
Belligerents
United States
Gilbert and Ellice Islands
 Japan
Commanders and leaders
Casualties and losses
  • ~5,100 killed or missing
  • 6,700 wounded
  • ~21,000 killed
  • 375 captured
Central Pacific
Indian Ocean (1941–1945)
Southeast Asia
Burma and India
Southwest Pacific
North America
Japan
Manchuria and Northern Korea

Second Sino-Japanese War

TheGilbert and Marshall Islands campaign was a series of engagements fought from August 1942 to February 1944, in thePacific theatre ofWorld War II between theUnited States andJapan. They were the first battles of a large-scale offensive across the Central Pacific by theUnited States Pacific Fleet andMarine Corps. The goal of the campaign was to establish airfields and naval bases that would allow American air and naval assets to support future operations across the Central Pacific. OperationGalvanic and OperationKourbash were the codenames for theGilberts campaign (in modernKiribati), and included the seizures ofTarawa andMakin, which took place during theBattle of Tarawa on 20–23 November 1943 and theBattle of Makin on 20–24 November 1943. OperationFlintlock and OperationCatchpole had the goal of capturing Japanese bases atKwajalein,Eniwetok, andMajuro in theMarshall Islands.

Background

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TheImperial Japanese Navy occupied theGilbert Islands three days after theattack on Pearl Harbor. The Japanese built a seaplane base onMakin and dispersed troops along the coastlines of the northern atolls to monitor theAllied forces' movement in theSouth Pacific.[1] TheMarshall Islands are located approximately 220 miles (350  km) northwest of the Gilbert Islands, and had been occupied by the Japanese sinceWorld War I as part of theSouth Seas Mandate. The Japanese regarded the islands as an important outpost for their navy.[2]

Allied commanders believed that an eventual surrender of Japan would require the capture of these islands.[why?] While GeneralDouglas MacArthur, commander of theUnited States Army in the south Pacific, wanted to push towards thePhilippines viaNew Guinea,United States Navy AdmiralChester W. Nimitz favored a drive across the Central Pacific,leapfrogging through the Gilberts, the Marshalls, theCarolines, and theMarianas. This would place AmericanB-29 bombers within range ofTokyo.[3] In addition to forcing the Japanese to fight two fronts against the Allies (Nimitz driving from the east andMacArthur from the south), Nimitz's plan would neutralize important outlying Japanese defenses and provide bases American forces to conduct future attacks against Japanese-occupied islands. The plan called for the seizure of Tarawa and Makin in the Gilbert Islands, and Majuro, Kwajalein, and Eniwetok in the Marshalls.[4]

Gilberts

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Prelude

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Japanese forcesoccupied the Gilbert Islands on 9-10 December 1941, landing troops of theSouth Seas Detachment onTarawa and Makin Islands (nowButaritari andMakin),[5] a few days after the attack on Pearl Harbor. These forces were tasked with protecting the southeastern Japanese flank from Allied counterattacks, and with isolating Australia. The islands were designated as a staging point for the planned invasion of theEllice Islands duringOperation FS, but the Japanese setback at theCoral Sea delayed these plans, and their defeats atMidway and later in theGuadalcanal campaign put a definitive end to an offensive utilization of the islands by the Japanese.

FollowingCarlson's Raiders' diversionaryraid on Makin Island and the defeat atGuadalcanal, the Japanese command had grown aware of the vulnerability and strategic significance of the Gilbert Islands, and started adopting a defensive stance. Because Japanese planners wanted to heavily fortify the Marianas and Palau before the Americans could arrive there in force, garrison commanders in the outer islands were told to hold out as long as possible with minimal support.[4][3][6] Fortifications were quickly improved by the Japanese beginning in March 1943. Makin Atoll had a seaplane base built on the main island of Butaritari, while Tarawa housed barely enough room for an airfield on its main harbor island,Betio.

Battle of Tarawa

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American forcesseized Tarawa from nearly 5,000Imperial Japanese Naval Landing Forces (3,000Special Naval Landing Forces and 1,247 construction laborers) from 20-23 November 1943. The Makin Islands, in contrast, were only held by a total of 798 Japanese troops, including some 100 isolatedJapanese aviation personnel.[7] A detachment of 300 soldiers from Tarawa also occupied the island ofAbemama in September 1942,[8] but by the time American troops landed there in November 1943, most Japanese soldiers had been evacuated back to Tarawa, leaving only 25 Special Naval Landing Forces behind to defend the island.[9]

Lieutenant Junior GradeSeizo Ishikawa, the Japanese commander in charge of defending Makin, ordered his troops to build extensive fortifications on the island. These included several 8 in (203 mm) coastal defense guns, 1.5 in (38 mm) anti-tank gun positions, machine gun emplacements, rifle pits, and 15-foot (4.6 m) deep tank barriers with anti-tank guns and barbed wire. These were ostensibly designed to hold the island until reinforcements could arrive.

On Tarawa,Keiji Shibazaki had 4,836 troops, including around 2,600 Special Naval Landing Forces, 1,000 Japanese construction workers and 1,200 Korean laborers. He intended to primarily defend Betio, the largest island in the atoll and the site of a crucial Japanese airfield. Shibazaki had 14 coastal defense guns, 50 pieces of field artillery at his dispoal, and oversaw the construction of over 100 machine gun nests, 500 pillboxes, and a large wall across the northern lagoon.[10]

Despite heavy casualties, the U.S. Marines took Tarawa after 3 days of fighting. Many officers[who?] questioned the significance of the invasion and accompanying heavy loss of American lives.

Marshalls

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Prelude

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U.S.newsreel about the invasion

After the Gilbert Islands fell to the Americans in late November 1943, AdmiralMineichi Koga of the Japanese Combined Fleet was unsure of which islands the Americans would strike next. Without any carrier aircraft to provide reconnaissance, he ordered AdmiralMasami Kobayashi to disperse his 28,000 troops primarily to the outer islands ofMaloelap,Wotje,Jaliuit, andMili. However, Allied intelligence intercepted and decrypted the Japanese transmissions, informing the Americans which islands were more heavily defended. The Americans therefore decided to invade the lesser-protected but strategically important islands ofMajuro,Kwajalein, andEniwetok.

As early as November 1943,B-24 bombers from theSeventh Air Force stationed in the Ellice Islands had flown bombing missions over Mili and Maloelap. On 3 December 1943,Task Force 50, under Rear AdmiralCharles Alan Pownall, including fleet carriersUSS Essex,Intrepid,Lexington, andYorktown and light carriersBelleau Wood andCowpens, launched airstrikes against Kwajalein. Four transports were sunk and fifty Japanese aircraft were destroyed, but the attack lacked strategic value. Fearing a counterattack from Wotje, Pownall ordered a second strike against the island. The Japanese counterattacked in a night bombing raid, in whichLexington sustained a torpedo hit but was not sunk. The American task force later returned to Pearl Harbor. TheYorktown's aircraft would continue to fly air cover over the atoll on 29 January, 31 January, and from 1 to 3 February.

The invasion of the Marshalls was delayed for about a month due to logistical problems. Japanese commander Rear AdmiralMonzo Akiyama was aware that he lacked sufficient fortifications.[2] He commanded a garrison of 8,000 men, but only about half of them were soldiers; most of the rest were Korean laborers.[7] To defend Kwajalein, Akiyama was relying on an aerial counterstrike with his 110 aircraft to weaken the American landing forces.[2] However, on 29 January 1944, American carrier aircraft from carriersYorktown,Lexington, andCowpens destroyed 92 Japanese fighters and bombers on the island. Akiyama now lacked the ability to effectively mount a successful defense of the island.[1]

Battle of Majuro

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On 31 January 1944, Rear AdmiralHarry W. Hill dispatched the Reconnaissance Company from theV Amphibious Corps of the U.S. Marines and the U.S. Army's 2nd Battalion,106th Infantry,27th Infantry Division to land on Majuro. This marked the beginning of Operation Flintlock, the invasion of Kwajalein.[2] American planners viewed the island as an important base for conducting air operations against the rest of the Marshall Islands, and eventually the Marianas.[6] The force took the lightly defended island in a single day without any casualties.[2]

Battle of Kwajalein

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Main article:Battle of Kwajalein
See also:Operation Flintlock ground order of battle
See also:Operation Flintlock naval order of battle

The same day as the landings on Majuro, the4th Marine Division under Major GeneralHarry Schmidt began theirassault on Kwajalein.[1] The Marines first landed onRoi-Namur, a group of islands in the northern part of the atoll.[2] Significant confusion and delays were caused by poor weather and inexperienced Marines, but thepre-invasion naval and air bombardment was extremely effective. Out of roughly 3,000 Japanese soldiers, only about 300 were left to contest the American landings.

On the southern island of Kwajalein, Major GeneralCharles H. Corlett's 7th Infantry Division landed with relative ease. Although Japanese defensive fortifications and counterattacks slowed the Americans, more troops, more experience in amphibious landings, an effective pre-landing bombardment, and the position of Japanese defenses on the opposite side of the atoll from where the Americans landed contributed to the capture of Kwajalein and its surrounding islands on 7 February.[2][11] Of the entire force of about 8,000 Japanese troops guarding Majuro and Kwajalein, only 253 were taken prisoner. The Americans suffered 348 men killed, 1,462 wounded, and 183 missing in the eight days it took to take the atoll.[11]

Battle of Eniwetok

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Main article:Battle of Eniwetok

American strategists believed that Eniwetok's islets contained enough room for airfields deemed critical for the upcoming invasion of the Marianas.[1] Japanese Major General Yoshimi Nishida knew that it would be difficult to hold the main island of Eniwetok against invasion. He had roughly 4,000 troops, half of them IJA troops, the remainder a variety of sailors. Since the Americans would be landing with naval and air support, therefore giving them the upper hand once they established a beachhead, he decided to attempt to stop them at the beaches.[2]

On 17 February 1944 the American naval bombardment of Eniwetok Atoll began, marking the beginning of Operation Catchpole. The same day, the22nd Marine Regiment under ColonelJohn T. Walker landed on the northern island of Engebi.[11] The landings were a logistically difficult, with American men and materiel scattered along the beach.[2] The Marines took the island on 18 February with 85 dead and 166 wounded. On 19 February, the 106th Infantry Regiment, under Lieutenant General Thomas E. Watson, landed on the main island of Eniwetok after a heavy bombardment.[11] However, the Japanesespider holes andbunkers withstood much American shore bombardment. Landing American troops also faced the same logistical problems as the 22nd Marine Regiment on Engebi. Japanese forces concentrated in the southwest corner of the island counterattacked the American flank, forcing the Americans to attack mainly at night.[2] Eniwetok Island was captured on 21 February with the loss of 37 Americans and nearly 800 Japanese.

On Parry Island, the Americans used heavy gunfire support from battleships before the 22nd Marine Regiment, under Watson, came ashore on 22 February, capturing the entire atoll by 23 February. On Eniwetok, 313 Americans were killed in the fighting, 879 were wounded, and 77 were reported missing, while the Japanese suffered 3,380 dead and 105 captured.[11] This marked an end to the Marshall Islands campaign.[2]

Aftermath

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The Americans emerged victorious in the Gilbert Islands campaign but suffered from logistical and experiential mishaps, ultimately incurring a total of 2,459 dead and 2,286 wounded. Meanwhile, Japanese forces suffered a total of 5,085 dead and 247 captured.[11] The heavy casualties and gruesome fighting conditions for both sides convinced GeneralHolland Smith, commanding general of V Amphibious Corps, that Tarawa should have been bypassed, although other high-ranking American officers[who?] disagreed.[12]

By contrast, the Marshall Islands fell to American forces with relative ease. The Americans used lessons learned at Tarawa by ensuring that they outnumbered enemy defenders by nearly 6 to 1, and brought heavier firepower to bear (including use of armor-piercing shells), even after the islands had received nearly a month of heavy air and naval bombardment.[6] In the Marshalls, the Americans had 611 killed, 2,341 wounded, and 260 missing, while the Japanese lost over 11,000 men and had 358 captured.[11]

After the Gilbert and Marshall Islands were taken, the Allies built naval bases, fortifications, and airfields on the islands to prepare for anassault on the Marianas.[2] The Japanese defeat forced the IJA and IJN to draw back to a new defensive perimeter, the Absolute National Defense Zone, which included theMarianas andPalau. Japanese forces heavily fortified these islands against the impending American assault, because if captured, they would allow American heavy bombers to directly target the Japanese home islands.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdMorison, Samuel Eliot (2001).History of United States Naval Operations in World War II, Vol. 7; Aleutians, Gilberts and Marshalls: June 1942–April 1944. Edison, NJ: Castle Books.
  2. ^abcdefghijkl"Marshall Islands Campaign". Retrieved12 July 2016.
  3. ^abcHylton, Wil (2013).Vanished: The Sixty-Year Search for the Missing Men of World War II. New York, NY: Riverhead Books.
  4. ^abMeyers, Bruce F. (2004).Swift, Silent, and Deadly: Marine Amphibious Reconnaissance in the Pacific, 1942–1945. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press.
  5. ^Gordon L. Rottman. (2001).World War II Pacific Island Guide: A Geo-military Study. Wesport, Connecticut, Greenwood Press.
  6. ^abcDickson, Keith (2001).World War II For Dummies. Indianapolis, IN: Wiley Publishing, Inc.
  7. ^abFrank, Bemis M.; Shaw Jr., Henry I. (1990).History of U.S. Marine Corps Operations in World War II, Vol. 5; Victory and Occupation. New York, NY: Penguin Books.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^Samuel Eliot Morison. (2011). Aleutians, Gilberts & Marshalls, June 1942-April 1944, Naval Institute Press
  9. ^lst Lt Leo B. Shinn, War Department, Action Report, GALVANIC. Encl. (H), HistDiv, HQMC, 6514-4559, Box 9, Folder A6-9. ^ Jump up to: a b
  10. ^Chen, C. Peter."Gilbert Islands Campaign". Retrieved26 September 2016.
  11. ^abcdefgRottman, Gordon (2013).The Marshall Islands 1944: Operation Flintlock, the capture of Kwajalein and Eniwetok (Campaign). Oxford: Osprey Publishing.
  12. ^Smith, Holland M.; Finch, Perry (1976).Coral and Brass. New York, NY: Viking.

Further reading

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  • Drea, Edward J. (1998). "An Allied Interpretation of the Pacific War".In the Service of the Emperor: Essays on the Imperial Japanese Army. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
  • Hoyt, Edwin P. (1979).Storm Over the Gilberts: War in the Central Pacific 1943. New York, NY: Van Nostrand Reinhold.
  • Toll, Ian W. (2015).The Conquering Tide: War in the Pacific Islands, 1942–1944. New York: W. W. Norton.
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