-- THE Ri'CHIGAN _________ Original Pacific WrTmtable Is Moths Ahead o Sc PAGE SEVEN hedil Japanese Navy rippled; Only Army Is Intact No American Leader Predicts Early Victory Bq JAMES D. WHITE Associated Press Staff Writer As Americans turn to slug Japan with both hands, they find a situa- tion astounding in view of what was expected and planned for back in the dark days of Pearl Harbor. The original Pacific timetable is months, if not a full year, ahead of schedule. With one hand, almost alone, Uncle Sam has been able to push the Japanese back to within 325 miles of their homeland.! The Japanese navy is crippled, the air force trimmed down and the mer- chant fleet far below what the Em- pire needs to carry on. Only the Japanese army remains intact, and lately it has not been putting up too good a show. No American war leader will predict an early Japanese defeat however. Vast distances still are to be cross- ed, and a variety of climates and ter- rains may have to be fought through. But the Japanese octopus, which in f six months after Pearl Harbor spread its tentacles over a section of the globe 5,000 miles in diameter, has had some of those tentacles chopped off. The Allies retreated for six months- after Pearl Harbor. They fought de- laying actions off Malaya, in the Straits of Macassar, in the Java Sea and the Coral Sea. Then, after serious losses, they held. Japanese fleets were turned SOVIET RUSSIA KAMCHATKA SAKHALIN j PENINSULA MANCHUR!A A[LEUTIA MONGOLIA v .. ~~~V IAd iv t o k? Q' North CHNAJAPAN Pacifc Ocean '« } okyo Chungking OKINA WA - I - INDIA BURMA - -. WAKE 0IPI SA IPAN PHf iLfPPINE S -GUAM -:: MARSHALL IS. Singapore.GILBERT IS. IaSOLOMON Ocean NDNEW. /FS -GUINEA . a , ASKA \s Germany Faces Much-Shrunken Future; Yalta Decision Indicates Poland Will Gain ChprchIl_ Favors Shift of Populations; Net herlands Claim Compensation WAlAI AN SLANDS JAPAN IS STILL TO BE DEFEATED: Black areas on the map show the amount of territory that Japan now holds in the Pacific. The war against the Nipponese has progressed faster than was expected but there is still the toughest part of the Pacific war to fight. A large number of veterans of the European war which has just been completed are expected to be transferrwd to the Pacific theatre. Britain and possibly Russia will also help the United States defeat the Japs who began the war Dec. 7, 1941, at Pearl Harbor. back with serious damage at Mid- way, in the Aleutians, and off Gua- dalcanal. Australia was saved, and the Allied counteroffensive began with the Marines invasion of Gua- I I I ., la dalcanal, 3,390 miles from Tokyo, . on Aug. 7, 1942.7 Guadalcanal was occupied by Feb.; 9, 1943. During the remainder of the] year, these strange names became part of American history:+ New Georgia, Woodlark, Trobri- and, Bougainville, Munda, Vella La- vella, Lae, Salamaua, Finschhafen, Choiseul, New Britain, Cape Glou- cester, Arawe. Australians and New Zealanders died along with Ameri- cans in these places. In June, 1943, the Japanese had been cleared out of Attu, in the Al- eutians and evacuated Kiska without a fight. These became air bases to attack the Japanese Kurile- Islands. In November Admiral Nimitz sent a prong into the Pacific from the east. Marines landed on Tar- awa, Abemarna and Makin Islands in the Gilberts. The Navy was get- ting its strength back now. There were two spearheads instead of the one which General MacArthur had been directing through New Guinea. The year 1944 began with the Am- ericans leap-frogging along the New Guinea coast to Saidor, roughly a third of the way up its 1,500-mile coastline. They continued on to land just short of the Philippines at Mor- otai in the Halmaheras. By the end of the year, they were firmly estab- lished on Leyte, Samar and Mindoro in the Philippines, and other Ameri- cans had seized control of the strate- gic Palau Islands to the east. During the same year, Nimitz's central Pacific force devoured the worthwhile parts of the Marshall Is- lands, built up its bases there and by-passed formidable Japanese con- centrations at Truk and Ponape to land on Saipan in the Marianas on June 14. The Americans were soon back in Guam. Loss of the vital Mar- ianas outposts forced the Tojo cab- inet, which had begun the war, to resign after the longest term of any modern Japanese cabinet. That the tide was decisively turned was brought home to Tokyo by bombs falling upon war industries on the home Japanese islands and in Man- churia. The bombs were dropped by a newcomer, the B-29 Superfortress, which flew from China. In the meantime the Japanese had come out with their fleet and lost considerable of it in the first battle of the Philippine Sea, and the Japa- nese air force apparently had been "piddled away" to a great extent through faulty tactical use which wasted pilots and planes. The Japanese turned to the land and launched the most ambitious campaign in China. They won a corridor across China linking up with their holdings in French1 Indo-China. They were working to block com- pletion of the Burma Road into Chi- na. They turned back in the fall, when bold American-Chinese defen- sive measures stopped them near Kweiyang. The Burma Road went through early in 1945. Before that everything had been flown into China. Along with the road went the world's long- est pipeline. But the Japanese had meanwhile captured several American air bases which had been responsible for many of their shipping losses in the China Sea. They now worked to prevent an American landing on the China coast. Their fears were compounded by MacArthur's thrust to Leyte. The Japanese fleet appeared again. In the second battle of the Philippine Sea in October it was very seriously crippled. Early in 1945 MacArthur landed on Luzon. In 26 days he was in Manila. At long last a sizeable force of the Japanese army had been encoun- tered. On the whole its strategy and tactics appeared poorly coordinated. MacArthur's army piled up the fan- tastic total of more than 300,000 Japanese troops killed as it cleaned out island after island with the aid of guerrillas. Bases had been made read in the autumn for B-29s to bomb Tokyo from Guam and Saipan. These mis- sions were reinforced by carrier strikes from a mghty American fleet cruising at will almost within sight of Japan's home shores. On Feb. 19, 1945, Marines invaded Iwo Jima, only 750 miles from Tokyo and reduced the island in more than three weeks of the bloodiest fighting in their history. In March began a series of great B-29 raids on Japanese industrial cities. Carrier strikes continued but moved westward to cover the inva- sion of Okinawa Island April 1. This operation broke open the gates of the East China Sea and the China coast. It promised to put land- based planes within 1,000 miles 01 all Japan's industry. On April 5 the Russians an- nounced that they do not intend to renew their neutrality pact with Japan when it expires April 24, 1946. The Koiso cabinet resigned in a body, and Japanese emperor Hirohitc appointed a conservative to form i new cabinet. Hirohito could allot to Americar men and machines the major credi for his reverses. British and Chinese had carries the ball in Burma with Americar technical and air support, and e I British fleet appeared in the Oki nawa operation. Another British flee menaced Singapore from the Bay o Bengal. Otherwise, the Pacific has beer largely Uncle Sam's job. By SIGRID ARNE Associated Press Staff Writer Germany faces a much shrunken future, both in acreage and in bom- bast. To the east she will lose territory to Poland which compares to a large part of New England. At the Yalta conference President Roos e;elt, Prime Minister Churchill and Marshal Stalin "recognized that Poland must receive substantial ac- cessions of territory in the north and Wvest." 'Later Churchill told the British house that Poland would receive most of East Prussia, Danzig, and Upper Silesia. These areas include valuable coal deposits and much industrial strength. To Move Germans Churchill said further that for himself he favors "shifting of popu- lations" if necessary-meaning that Germans in these areas may be mov- ed back into what is left of Germany. The Russian "grapevine" has said that Stalin also approves the idea. To the west fewer official subtrac- tions are being talked about. The Netherlands government has announced that it "reserves the right to claim compensation" but that nothing can be done until the Dutch people are free to "express their will." How much territory that means is not known; but at this point most of the West Holland farm lands are flooded, under German destruction methods. Some 5,000,000 Dutch farm- ers lived there. There is British backing for the Dutch ."reservation," Commons was told by Deputy Prime Minister Cle- ment Atlee. That would include the steel cities in the Saar Basin and much of the Ruhr's industrial might. Conference To Be Held But all this remains to be delineat- ed in some Allied conference which will both draw the new borders and set the reparations to be demanded of Germany. At Yalta the Big Three said "Ger- many will be obliged to make com- pensation in kind to the greatest ex- tent possible." Working out the reparations is a Big Three commission in Moscow, with Isador Lubin, the President's economic advisor, sitting in for the United States. Reparations "in kind" mean, of course, food, raw materials or manu- ufactured goods-whatever Germany can produce in excess of her own absolute minimum needs. Indefinite Occupation There is no notion now how long Germany will be occupied by Ameri- can, British, Russian and French troops. But for some time to come their chiefs-of-staff will sit in Berlin I to iron out uniform policies for the revolution which the Allies are deter- i mined must come in German thinking and living habits. Their most complicated job will be the liquidation of the German war And what happens to the Germans machine-both military and indu- themselves? strial-which was promised at Yalta. UNRRA To Operate Some of, Germany's industry will The United Nations Relief and Re- oh habilitation Administration (UNR- either be destroyed, or the machines RA) charter says relief supplies wil will be removed to her devastated go only to Allied Nationals,, or tc neighbor. German citizens who were persecuted Industry To Continue for political or religious beliefs- Some industry-the sort which can most of them Jews. turn out peace time goods-will con- Not until the Allied peoples have tinue to work, but under Allied con- been brought back out of the slough trol, both to manufacture goods for of malnutrition, and back into re- reparations to other countries and to paired homes, will there be any out- supply Germany's needs. side aid for Germans, even though Germany's shrunken bombast will there is wide-spread starvation. appear, no doubt, rather ludicrously The unofficial view in Washingtox when Germany's men are stripped is that as long as Germany fed her of their military uniforms-and for self through the war, she can man good. Yalta said the Allies will age in the peace. If, on the othe: "break up for all time the German hand, she has more food than shi general army staff" and "wipe out needs, her excess stocks will b the Nazi party." apportioned among her victims. -. p~ 0 11,~ _ - A {n f ,r' a;~ t Ak . fi f+g z'.. nay No, MISTER TOJO, we haven't forgotten you. We're going to teach you how it feels to get in front of the biggest battle fleet in the world. You're going to learn-as Berlin learned--how it feels to watch your dreams of empire go up in flame and smoke of four-ton block busters. You're going to learn what it means to take a swipe at UNCLE SAM when his back is turned. MISTER TOJO, you're going to wish you had never even heard of Pearl Harbor! ~" - .r '. £3 l j , ..°'. '' r 0/ Ptae TODAY, in our moment of partial vic- tory, we should give reverence to the di- vine power which has helped us reach our first goal. Let us bow our heads and give thanks to Almighty God for the safe voy- age of those who shall return, and a prayer of devotion for those smiling faces we shall never again see. For those who won't return as victors in this world, we must conquer yet another and still more vicious enemy. Our war is not yet won. We must not stop fighting, praying, or working until the forces of oppression are defeated. Let our jubilation give us the physical and spiritual strength to reach our ultimate goal. (7LLn L t t f * * BUY MORE BONDS N 0 r 7 fA Support the C i I s, l ; Seventh War Loan Drive More than ever before it is neces- sary to save for victory. The more war bonds you buv, the sooner C i NAZI GERMANY LIES IN RUINS! It is well that we celebrate today the downfall of Hitlerism ... but let us not forget that ultimate victory still lies in the future. Let us not forget that every act of pillage, murder and rape by Nazi Germany has been duplicated ten-fold in Nanking, Hong Kong, Singapore, Manila, Java and Burma by the Japanese. Let us not forget that the Freedom we have fought for and won in the Western World will not be secure until the bloody sword has been struck from the hands of our foe in the Pacific. This day of triumph is also a day of dedication, a day wherein we dedicate ourselves to finishing swiftly the war that still lies ahead. Let us not rest on our labors, .. but let us continue to ease the burden of our fighting E Ii I 11 ! I I 'I . F I