TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1945 THE MICHIGAN IAILY PAGE TAKER TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1945 WAGE THREE history of the Whar Is, Argument for Peace 'H2 (Continued from Page 2) anese lost six more cruisers and de- stroyers and three more transports in a night fight two weeks later. An- other U. S. cruiser went down. But with their sealines cut, and reduced by starvation and disease, the Japanese gave ground to fierce- ly attacking American troops on the island, and finally announced that the remnants had been "withdrawn." The battle cost Tokyo 50,000 men, from 57 to 64 ships sunk, 102 damaged and 800 planes. The struggle also was costly for the United States - 28 ships, in- cluding the carriers wasp and Hor- net, plus very heavy ground casual- ties. On the day the Japanese disclosed their defeat on Guadalcanal they also belatedly announced their loss of Buna in New Guinea. New Guinea MacArthur began his comeback in New Guinea on Sept. 25, when the Japanese were within 32 piles of Port Moresby. Gen. Sir Thomas A. Blamey's Australians drove the in- vaders back over backbreaking Owen Stanley range. Then on Nov. 8- the day after the landing in North Africa, and while the Russians were battling in Stalingrad - MacArthur disclosed his first spectacular blow. Clad in camouflaged jungle suits and carying their jeeps, mortars and artillery in gliders and planes, air-. borne Americans descended into the New Guinea swamps in a flanking movement which sent the Japanese reeling back on Buna. But many an American and Aus- tralan was to die in New Guinea's green hell before the forces of Lt. Gen. Robert L. Eichelberger had mastered the last log blockhouse. The Japanese had to be killed one by one in no-quarter fighting, and more than one enemy convoy had to be knocked off before the coastal strongpoint, was overrun. MacArthur proclaimed his victory. on Jan. 23, 1943. The entire force of 15,000 Japanese had been de- stroyed.; During the remainder of 1943 - while the eyes of the world were turned upon Europe. where the Allies unhorsed their first dictator, Musso- lini, in July, and,, won the.surrender of Italy in September - MacArthur's jungle troops fought through a score of malarial green hells up the Solo- mons ladder and in New Guinea. With a flash of the genius that marked him -as one of the greatest of American generals, MacArthur landed his men east of Lae in Nas- sau Bay while U. S. parachutists made 'r their debut in the Pacific theater and dropped in the Markham Valley be- hind the New Guinea stronghold. Calamaua fell to the Australians on S"pt. 15 and Lae the next day. Finschhafen, farther up the coast, was taken Oct. 2 and the eastern eni of New Guinea was freed. This was not all accomplished by generalship. There was much hard fighting in the lush valleys and hills, with Lt. Gen. George C. Kenney's air force preparing the enemy for the knockout with a systematic pattern of attack on his trails, airfields and barge convoys. In the battle of the Bismarck Sea on March 2-6 Ken- ney's buzzsaw had destroyed 22 ships and perhaps 15,000 men in one of the most complete air victories of the war. Introduction of a new tactic, "skip bomb*xjg," found tae Japanese virtually helpless. Solomon Islands A series of amphibious operations, characterized by sharp, fierce de- stroyer and cruiser battles, patrol boat ctions and savage fighting in the tropical undergrowth, carried up the Iolomons islands. The Russell Is- lands were taken in February, Ren- jova, off Munda in New Georgia, was invaded on June 30, New Georgia it- self almost simultaneously, Vella La- rella in the central Solomons on August 17, Ardundel Island on August 30, Kolombangara three miles to the north ear. in October, the Treasury Islands on Oct. 27 and Empress Au- gusta Bay on Bougainville, north- western end of the chain, on Nov. 1. Finally, stepping across Dampier stroit from New Guinea, MacArthur invaded New Britain, drawing the Japanese off balance by 1.s first strokp at Arawe on the south coast, and then aiming his main blow in the Cape Gloucester area on the north side. Using rocket-firing boats to level beach defenses, MacArthur put ris men ashore near the end of 1943, on Dec. 26. The way was prepared for the isola- tion of the immensely strong point of Rabaul. Much hard fighting re- mained, particularly on Bougainville where Australians were left to mop up, but strategically the Solomons campaign was over. Ale utians Meanwhile, Yanks in the Aleutians were fighting under conditions as ex- treme as those of the jungle. Ham- mering Attu, easternmost of the chain which the Japanese invaded during the Bai tle of Midway, by sea and air whenever the weather permitted, the Americans invaded that barren is- land on May 11. Fighting through fog and 20 foot snowdrifts amid in- describable hardship, the Americans dug the enemy out of his holes around Massacre Bay and Chicago Harbor. Japanese resistance finally expired in a fantastic Banzai suicide charge and the island was reclaimed May 31, just under a year after the Jap- anese seized it. A f t e r elaborate .preparation, Americans 'and Canadians invaded Kiska on -Aug. 15, but found the enemy' had ms4eriously fled. Agattu already .had' Jbeen aban- doned by the Japanese, and the Aleutians were freed. The threat to Alaska was removed. Tarawa In the central Pacific, at Tarawa the second Marine division made he first assault on a f6rtified' atoll and wrote on the of most herioc pages in Marine Corps 'history. Tarawa had been pounded by a great weighi of naval shdls and bombs, but not enough. -Whn the Marines went ashore on Nov. 1 they found many o the concrete blockhouses -'intact Landing boats were wrecked on the coral reefs.Cut and bleeding, te men were pinned down in the sur by the enemy fire. 'Tarawa was the costliest bit of ground ever won by the Marines up to that time. In 76 hours 3,583 Americans were killed, wounded and missing-988 of them dead. But the Gilbert Islands were cleared as a result of the fighting. While the Marines were takin Tarawa, army troops captured Makin Previously, Marines had landed or Nanumea in the Ellice group or Sept 29. In Europe 1943 had set the stage for the climactic invasion of Nor mandy, with the Allies within strikin distance of Rome. In the Pacific the year had laid the foundation for the leapfrog oper ations up the New Guinean coast an the central Pacific offensive thai were to lead to the Philippines anc t i i f z i the Mariannas on the doorstep of Japan. MacArthur had set the pat- tern of his operations-a series of hops, skips and jumps, each "hit-, ting the enemy where he ain't," iso- lating the main bodies and leaving them to be weakened for the kill by strangulation. The year 1944 opened with Mac- Arthur's men carrying out -the first of his jumps, to Saidor on Jan. 2, and with Nimitz opening his central Paci- fic offensive at Kwajalein on Jan. 31. The isolation of Rabaul was com- pleted with landings on the Green Is- lands to the south of the New Britain stronghold, Emirau in the St. Mat- thias group to the north and the cap- ture of Manus Island in the Admiral- ties to the northwest. In giant strides, with Nimitz coop- erating, MacArthur proceeded to landings at Aitape and Hollandia in Dutch New Guinea on April 22, the Widke Islands on May 20, Biak Is- land on May 27, Noemfoer Island on July 2 and Sansapor at the western end of New Guinea on July 30. MacArthur estimated that out of a force of 250,000 Japanese assembled for the attack on Australia, 140,000 had been trapped by these operations which advanced Allied lines 1,200 miles. Marshall Islands Nimitz struck at the hfart of Ja- pan's strongly defended mid-Pacific Marshall Islands with a fleet spread over hundreds of miles. Profiting from the lessons of Tarawa, the Americans invaded Kwajalein after pounding the island almost , solid month with carrier and land planes and after a severe naval bombard- ment. Tracked amphibious vehicles put the men ashore over the treach- erous coral. Kwajalein, first bit of territory held by Japan at the start of the war to fall into American hands, was cap- tured in a week. Other key islands in the Marshalls fell quickly and the Ainerican fleet held sway over an ad- ditional 1,000,000 square miles of ocean. The way now opened to a sizzling series of task forces attacks lead by the swarms of flattops from America's shipyards. Truk, Japan's reef-girt Gibraltar of the Carolines, was neu- tralized and the strategic Marianas softened for invasion. Saipan Emerging at last from jungle and atoll warfare, three American divi- sions opened a new phase of the war on June 14 with the invasion of Sai- pan, 13-mile long island in the Mari- anas 1,500 miles from Tokyo. Its seizure was to clinch control of the cetral Pacific. The Americans streamed ashore just eight days after Gen. Eisenhow- er's invasion of Normandy. The second and fourth Marine and 27th infantry divisions were support- ed by a spectacular rocket barrage and a huge array of air and sea pow- er, but the Japanese, fighting to maintain their lifeline to the south Pacific, displayed a new high suicidal resistance. They fell back upon the jumbled ravines of Mount Trapotchau, a maze of caves lhundreds of feet deep which they had been building throughout their league of nations iandate over the island. Garapan, a city of 10,000, became a battlefield. The flame- thrower became the characteristic American weapon in the cave-to-cave warfare. At last venturing out to challenge the American advances, the Japan- ese fleet intervened. In the first bat- tle of the Philippine sea, a series of engagements extending from June 10 to 23, the enemy lost 747 planes, 30 ships sunk and 51 ships damaged. In one engagement 402 enemy aircraft were shot down, a new high for a single battle. American losses were 151 planes and damage to two car- riers, a battleship andanother war- ship. 'oward the end Japanese civilians took to suicide Hundreds leaped from cliffs into the sea. Mothers stabbed their children, fathers led their famil- ies into the sea, soldiers hugged gre- nades to their breasts. But thousands of civilians surrendered. In the end 21,000 Japanese dead were buried. while American casualties were the highest in the central Pacific-16,463, including 3,049 killed. The Americans returned to Guam on July 20, 11 days after the cap- ture of Saipan, and cleaned it in three weeks. The smaller island of Tinian was captured on Aug. 1. The Marianas campaign cost the Japanese 45,000 dead. In extermin- ating the Japanese--scattered sur- vivors were being killed many months after resistance formally ended- 4,470 Yanks died and more than 20,000 mffcered wounds. Air Attacks But on Nov. 24, a little over three months after resistance on Saipan ended, American B-29 Superfort- resses from the island made the first of their deadly and devastat- ing attacks on industrial Japan. Saipan, Guam and Tinian became a busy triple springboard for hun- dreds of Superfortresses which had made the first land-based attack on Japan from their China on bases on June 16. Within a year Guam, once again under the Stars and Stripes, had been turned into one of the most formid- able bases on the globe, its complex of camps, depots and airfields sur- rounding the headquarters of Adm. Nimitz. As a sequel to the body blow suffer- ed in the Marianas, Premier General Hideki Tojo, the grim instigator of he attack on Pearl Harbor fell from power on July 18 and was succeeded by General Kuniaki Koiso. A death struggle similar to that on Saipan was waged by the Japanese for Peleliu, main island of the Palaus, 1,200 miles west of Truk and o miles southwest of Guam. Veterans of the first Marine division, going ashore in alligators, carved out a beachhead on Sept. 15, the same day that MacArthur's troops fought onO Morotai in the Moluccas, only 375 miles from the Philippines. More than 12,000 Japanese were killed in the milti-level caverns of bloody nose ridge and the tangled mangrove swamps of rocky Peleliu in 29 days. Americans suffered their second highest percentage of losses of the Pacific campaign-6,172 killed and wounded. MacArthur Returns Gen MacArthur reached' the emo- tional climax of his two and a half year campaign on Oct. 20 when he returned to the Philiipines at the end of the 2,500-mile trail from eastern New Gulnea. Dramatically wading ashore on the east coast of Leyte island with his troops, the American leader in a broadcast over the "Voice of. Free- dom," called upon Filipinos to "rise and strike." With him was every able-bodied American who had es- Japed Corregidor. An example of long-range striking power, MacArthur's expedition was put ashore by a 600-ship convoy after a 1,300-mile voyage and had the sup- port of Adm. Halsey's third fleet, Vice Admiral Thomas Kincaid's seventh fleet, and both American and Aus- tralian army airmen. The seven divisions of Lt. Gen. Walter Krueger's Sixth Army had been preceded by one of the most in- tensive aerial offensives of the Paci- fic In, which Vice Admiral Marc A. Mitscher's carrier planes and island- based bombers had destroyed 1,333 enemy aircraft, 'sunk 86 ships and damaged '27 in 10 days of rampage from Forrposa and the. Ryukyus to Manila, the Philippines and the east- ern Carolines. 'Quickly the , dvapee divisions seized Tacloban, Leyte capital, and (Contiiue on Page 5) s I ii ii I r [deep andF and Thoughtful )rayerf u I is our boundless gratitude for our nation's vic- tory and the world's liberation. Ours was a bat- tie for no ordinary conquest but forthe greater triumph of Right over Wrong. May we in our humility and work prove Worthy of this blessed PEACE so clearly yet I i., i I so dearly won. May we never, never forget those whose great sacrifices have made pos- sible our VICTORY. And with H IS help, may we now wisely use our war-forged strength and power and courage to United Victory For The United Nations NATIONS BOUND TOGETHER to make way for a greater civilization - one of freedom and tolerance for all. Each one has made its contri- b~,nn.- - .,rii nt fnri- the crP2t work trhev make this day forever live in history day when war vanished from the earth. I' 'I I II1 as the 11 III i i