Hurricane at Biak


Book Description

The struggle for Biak Island, waged by soldiers, sailors and airmen of General Douglas MacArthur’s Southwest Pacific Area during mid-1944, was one of the most harrowing and least satisfying episodes of the Pacific War. Almost everything about it was nasty: the terrain; the climate; the prevalence of tropical diseases; the lack of water; the tenacity and fighting power of the enemy; the acrimony that developed among the American commanders; and the time pressure imposed by MacArthur himself. Perhaps this is why Biak has remained one of the least-known major battles fought by U.S. forces in World War II. But Biak came perilously close to being a first-class disaster for MacArthur, which could have materially affected the subsequent conduct of the Pacific War and MacArthur’s vision for liberating the Philippines. The fact that victory was achieved, at considerable cost, directly resulted from the heroic fighting qualities of the U.S. troops and the hands-on leadership of a great field commander, little heralded at the time, who had also saved MacArthur’s reputation on an earlier difficult occasion. World War II in the Southwest Pacific was a bitterly-contested aspect of hell. For the most part, there were no towns, or much civilization of any kind. Malaria, dengue fever, and scrub typhus were ever-present threats. Lucky soldiers could sometimes swing temporary leave to rest camps or cities in Australia, but most of the men sent forward to the gigantic island of New Guinea and beyond stayed there for the duration. Some never saw a bottle of Coca-Cola the entire time they were in New Guinea. But there was always the jungle – green, wet, and so thickly disorienting that many men who got lost in it were never seen or heard from again. The heat was unbearable and the enemy was skilled in jungle fighting and utterly ruthless. No quarter would be given by either side. As MacArthur’s advance proceeded westward along the northern coast of New Guinea, its pace accelerated as his flow of troops and supplies increased. What had started out, in 1942, as a slow, grinding advance against a fanatically stubborn foe had turned into a classic case of “hit ‘em where they ain’t.” MacArthur could outfox the Japanese, in part due to his codebreakers. But MacArthur also was prone to taking dangerous gambles. He was in a hurry to seize forward airfields from which he could operate his big bombers against enemy troop concentrations and supply depots. He was involved in a great race to Tokyo with the U.S. Navy, and he could not afford to finish second. So after successfully executing his brilliant strategic landing at Hollandia, in Dutch New Guinea, his eye fell upon several islands to the west that would provide good operating fields for his heavy aircraft. Biak was principal among these. Due to its coral composition, Biak made a perfect platform for aerial operations, and its location off the northwest coast of New Guinea meant that Allied airfields there would pose a huge threat to Japanese military and naval activities south of the Philippines. For that reason, the Japanese were prepared to make a stiff fight for the island, even to the point of risking their major fleet assets in an attempt to keep control of it. Allied planning failed to comprehend these Japanese intentions, with nearly disastrous results. The defenses faced by MacArthur’s men on the island were among the most formidable encountered anywhere in the Pacific War. They rivaled those found later on Peleliu and Iwo Jima, were incredibly elaborate, and were manned by significant numbers of crack Japanese troops. These factors, had they been reckoned with beforehand, would have altered the approach taken by MacArthur and his subordinate commanders toward c




Q.M.C. Historical Studies


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The Approach to the Philippines


Book Description







United States Army in WWII - the Pacific - the Approach to the Philippines


Book Description

[Includes 2 tables, 33 maps and 56 illustrations] Jungle warfare in the Southwest Pacific provided a unique experience for an army only lately thrust into global war; but as The Approach to the Philippines graphically demonstrates, the rules of war, the problems of leadership, and the opportunities for military success pertain in the steaming hills of New Guinea as well as on the broad plains of Normandy. This volume describes the operations of Allied forces in the Pacific theaters during the approach to the Philippines, April through October 1944. While this is essentially the story of U.S. Army ground combat operations during the approach, the activities of all ground, air, and naval forces are covered where necessary for the understanding of the Army ground narrative. Eight major and separate operations, all susceptible of subdivision into distinct phases, are described. Seven of these operations took place in the Southwest Pacific Area, while one--the Palau Islands operation--occurred in the Central Pacific Area. This series of actions is exceptional in that the operations were executed in such rapid succession that while one was being planned the height of combat was being reached in another and still others had entered the mopping-up stage. Because of the nature of the combat, the level of treatment in this volume is generally that of the regimental combat team--the infantry regiment with its supporting artillery, engineer, tank, medical, and other units. The majority of the actions described involved a series of separate operations by infantry regiments or regimental combat teams, since divisions seldom fought as integral units during the approach to the Philippines. Division headquarters, often assuming the role of a ground task force headquarters, co-ordinated and administered the oft-times widely separated actions of the division’s component parts.




With the 41st Division in the Southwest Pacific


Book Description

"[W]e began our advance toward the Mokmer Airstrip.... The road climbed a ridge 15 or 20 feet high and we found ourselves on a flat coral plateau sparsely covered by small trees and scrub growth.... As we moved westward along the road, two of our destroyers were sailing abreast of the lead elements of the advancing column. The first indication of trouble was the roar of heavy artillery shells sailing over our heads... aimed at our destroyers.... Shortly after that our forward movement stopped, and we heard heavy firing from the head of the column.... As we waited, we began to hear heavy fire from the rear.... We were cut off and surrounded!" In the enormous literature of the Second World War, there are surprisingly few accounts of fighting in the southwest Pacific, fewer still by common infantrymen. This memoir, written with a simple and direct honesty that is rare indeed, follows a foot soldier's career from basic training to mustering out. It takes the reader into the jungles and caves of New Guinea and the Philippines during the long campaign to win the war against Japan. From basic training at Camp Roberts through combat, occupation, and the long journey home, Francis Catanzaro's account tells of the excitement, misery, cruelty, and terror of combat, and of the uneasy boredom of jungle camp life. A member of the famed 41st Infantry Brigade, the "Jungleers," Catanzaro saw combat at Hollandia, Biak, Zamboanga, and Mindanao. He was a part of the Japanese occupation force and writes with feeling about living among his former enemies and of the decision to drop the atom bomb. With the 41st Division in the Southwest Pacific is a powerful, gritty, and moving narrative of the life of a soldier during some of the most difficult fighting of World War II.