LIBERATION: Marines in the Recapture of Guam by Cyril J. O'Brien
Colonel Suenaga Attacks
Colonel Tsunetaro Suenaga, commanding officer of the
38th Regiment, from his command post on Mount Alifan, had seen
the Americans overwhelm his forces below. Desperate to strike back, he
telephoned General Takashina at 1730 to get permission for an all-out
assault to drive the Marines into the sea. He had already ordered his
remaining units to assemble for the counterattack. The 29th
Division commander was not at first receptive. Losses would be too
high and the 38th Regiment would serve better defending the high
ground and thereby threatening the American advance. Reluctantly,
however, Takashina gave his permission, and ordered the survivors to
fall back on Mount Alifan if the attack failed, which he was certain it
would. Eventually Colonel Suenaga was forced to share the general's
pessimism, for he burned his regiment's colors to prevent their
capture.
At the focal point of the enemy's attack from the
south, Hill 40, the brunt of the fighting fell upon First Lieutenant
Martin J. "Stormy" Sexton's Company K, 3d Battalion, 4th Marines. The
enemy's 3d Battalion, 38th Regiment coming north from reserve
positions was still relatively intact. In the face of Japanese assaults,
the company held, but just barely. Sexton recalls Lieutenant Colonel
Shapley's assessment of the night's fighting: "If the Japanese had been
able to recapture Hill 40, they could have kicked our asses off the Agat
beaches."
Major Anthony N. "Cold Steel" Walker, S-3 (operations
officer) of the 3d Battalion, recalled that the Japanese, an estimated
750 men, hit the company at about 2130, with the main effort coming to
the left or east of the hill. He remembered:
Finding a gap in our lines and overrunning the
machine gun which covered the gap the enemy broke through and advanced
toward the beaches. Some elements turned to their left and struck Hill
40 from the rear. K Company with about 200 men fought them all night
long from Hill 40 and a small hill to the rear and northeast of Hill 40.
When daylight came the Marines counterattacked with two squads from L
Company . . . and two tanks . . . and closed the gap. A number of men
from Company K died that night but all 750 Japanese soldiers were
killed. The hill . . . represents in miniature or symbolically the whole
hard-fought American victory on Guam.
Along the rest of the Marine front, and in the
reserve areas, the fighting was hot and heavy as the rest of the
38th attacked. Colonel Suenaga pushed his troops to attack again
and again, in many cases only to see them mowed down in the light of
American flares. No novice to Japanese tactics, General Shepherd had
anticipated this first night's attack and was ready.
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Enemy reconnaissance patrols were numerous around
2130, trying to draw fire and determine Marine positions. Colonel
Suenaga was out in front of the center thrust which began at 2330 after
a brisk mortar flurry on the right flank of the 4th Marines. The
Japanese came on in full force, yelling, charging with their rifles
carried at high port, and throwing grenades. The Marines watched the
dark shadows moving across the skyline under light of star shells from
the ships. Men lined up hand grenades, watched, waited, and then
reacted. The Japanese were all around, attempting to bayonet Marines in
their foxholes. They even infiltrated down to pack-howitzer positions in
the rear of the front lines. It was the same for the 22d Marines. A
whole company of Japanese closed to the vicinity of the regimental
command post. The defense here was held largely by a reconnaissance
platoon headed by Lieutenant Dennis Chavez, Jr., who personally killed
five of the infiltrators at point blank range with a Thompson
sub-machine gun.
Four enemy tanks in that same attack lumbered down
Harmon Road. There they met a bazooka man from the 4th Marines, Private
First Class Bruno Oribiletti. He knocked out the first two enemy tanks
and Marine Sherman tanks of Lieutenant James R. Williams' 4th Tank
Company platoon finished off the rest. Oribiletti was killed; he was
posthumously awarded the Navy Cross for his bravery. Enemy troops of the
38th also stumbled into the barely set up perimeter of the newly
arrived 305th Infantry and paid heavily for it.
After one day and night of furious battle the
38th ceased to exit. Colonel Suenaga, wounded in the first
night's counterattack, continued to flail at the Marines until he, too,
was cut down. Takashina ordered the shattered remnants of the regiment
north to join the reserves he would need to defend the high ground
around Fonte Ridge above the Asan-Adelup beach head. The general would
leave his troops on Orote to fend for themselves.
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