THE FINAL CAMPAIGN: Marines in the Victory on Okinawa
by Colonel Joseph H. Alexander, USMC (Ret)
Daybreak on 29 May 1945 found the 1st Marine Division
beginning its fifth consecutive week of frontal assault as part of the
U.S. Tenth Army's grinding offensive against the Japanese defenses
centered on Shuri Castle in southern Okinawa. Operation Iceberg, the
campaign to seize Okinawa, was now two months old and badly
bogged down. The exhilarating, fast-paced opening of the campaign had
been replaced by week after week of costly, exhausting, attrition
warfare against the Shuri complex.
The 1st Marine Division, hemmed in between two other
divisions with precious little maneuver room, had advanced barely a
thousand yards in the past 18 days an average of 55 yards each
bloody day. Their sector featured one bristling, honeycombed ridge line
after another sequentially Kakazu, Dakeshi, and Wana (with its
murderous, reverse slope canyon). Just beyond lay the long shoulder of
Shuri Ridge, the nerve center of the Japanese Thirty-second Army
and the outpost of dozens of the enemy's forward artillery observers who
had made life so miserable for American assault forces all month
long.
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Two
Marines, Davis P. Hargraves with Thompson submachine gun and Gabriel
Chavarria with BAR, of 2d Battalion, 1st Marines, advance on Wana Ridge
on 18 May 1945. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 123170
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But on this rainy morning, this 29th of May, things
seemed some how different, quieter. After days of bitter fighting,
American forces had finally overrun both outposts of the Shuri Line:
Conical Hill on the east, captured by the 96th Infantry Division, and
the Sugar Loaf complex in the west, seized by the 6th Marine Division.
Shuri no longer seemed invincible.
Company A of the 1st Battalion, 5th Marines moved out
warily, expecting the usual firestorm of Japanese artillery at any
moment. There was none. The Marines reached the crest of Shuri Ridge
with hardly a firefight. Astonished, the company commander looked west
ward along the ridge several hundred yards to the ruins of Shuri Castle,
the medieval fortress of the ancient Ryukyuan kings. Everyone in the
Tenth Army expected the Japanese to defend Shuri to the death but
the place seemed lightly held. Spiteful small arms fire appeared to come
from nothing more than a rear guard. Field radios buzzed with this
astounding news. Shuri Castle itself lay beyond division and corps
boundaries, but it was there for the taking. The assault Marines asked
permission to seize the prize.
Major General Pedro del Valle, commanding the 1st
Marine Division, did not hesitate. By all rights the castle belonged to
the neighboring 77th Infantry Division and del Valle knew his
counterpart, Army Major General Andrew D. Bruce, would be angry if the
Marines snatched the long-sought trophy before his soldiers could
arrive. But this was an unprecedented opportunity to grab the Tenth
Army's main objective. Del Valle gave the go-ahead. With that, Company
A, 1/5, swept west along the ridge against light opposition and took
possession of the battered complex. Del Valle's staff had to do some
fancy footwork to keep peace with their Army neighbors. Only then did
they learn that the 77th Division had scheduled a major bombardment of
the castle that morning. Frantic radio calls averted the near-tragedy
just in time. Results of the Marines' preemptive action incensed General
Bruce. Recalled del Valle: "I don't think a single Army division
commander would talk to me after that."
Notwithstanding this inter-service aggravation, the
Americans had achieved much this morning. For two months the Shuri
Heights had provided the Japanese with superb fields of observed fire
that covered the port city of Naha and the entire five-mile neck of
southern Okinawa. Even now, as the Marines of A/1/5 deployed into a
hasty defensive line within the Castle's rubble, they were oblivious to
the fact that a Japanese rear guard still occupied portions of the
mammoth underground headquarters complex directly under their muddy
boondockers. They would be astounded to learn that the subterranean
headquarters of the Thirty-second Army measured 1,287 feet long
and as much as 160 feet deep all of it dug by pick and
shovel.
The Japanese had in fact stolen a march on the
approaching Tenth Army. Most of their forces had retreated southwards
during the incessant rains, and would soon occupy the third (and final)
ring of their prepared, underground defenses, a series of fortified
escarpments in the Kiyamu Peninsula.
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A
mass of rubble is all that is left of Shuri Castle, its walls, the moat
below them, and Shuri City beyond, after the 5th Marines had captured
the area. The battered trees are part of a forest growth which in more
peaceful times had surrounded it. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
124370
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Seizing Shuri Castle represented an undeniable
milestone in the Okinawa campaign, but it was a hollow victory. Just as
the flag-raising on Iwo Jima's Mount Suribachi signified only the end of
the beginning of that prolonged battle, the capture of Shuri did not end
the fighting. The brutal slugfest on Okinawa still had another 24 days
to run. And still the Plum Rains fell, and the horrors, and the dying,
continued.
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