THE FINAL CAMPAIGN: Marines in the Victory on Okinawa
by Colonel Joseph H. Alexander, USMC (Ret)
The Air and Sea Battles
The Japanese strategy for defending Okinawa made the
most of that nation's dwindling resources and rampant fanaticism. While
General Ushijima bloodied the American landing force in a protracted
battle of attrition, the Japanese air arm would savage the Fifth Fleet
tethered to the island in support. The battle would thus feature the
unique combination of a near-passive ground defense with a violent air
offensive that would employ suicide tactics on an unprecedented
scale.
By the spring of 1945 the Americans knew well the
Japanese propensity for individual suicide attacks, having experienced
kamikazes in the Philippines, antishipping swimmers in the waters
near Iwo Jima, and "human bullet" antitank demolitionists at Peleliu.
But IGHQ escalated these tactics to an awesome level at Okinawa
by introducing the kikusui (Floating Chrysanthemums) massed
suicide air strikes against the fleet. While small groups of
kamikazes struck the fleet on a nightly basis, the worst damage
came from the concentrated kikusui raids. The Japanese launched
ten separate kikusui attacks during the battle some of
them numbering up to 350 aircraft and IGHQ coordinated
many of these with other tactical surprises, such as the counterattacks
of 12-13 April and 3-4 May or the sacrificial sortie of the
Yamato. The results proved costly to both sides.
The U.S. Army at Okinawa
It would be an injustice not to credit the U.S. Army
for its significant participation in the Okinawa campaign. In fact, the
Army deployed as many combat troops, sustained proportionate casualties,
and fought with equal valor as the Marines. The Army battles for Kakazu
Ridge, Conical Hill, and the Yuza Dake Escarpment are as much hallowed
touchstones to that service as are Sugar Loaf and Kunishi Ridge to the
Marines. The Okinawa campaign still serves as a model of joint-service
cooperation, in spite of isolated cases of "sibling rivalry."
At one point in mid-1943, the Joint Chiefs of Staff
could identify only three divisions in the Pacific with "amphibious
expertise": the 1st and 2d Marine Divisions, veterans of Tulagi and
Guadalcanal; and the 7th Infantry Division, fresh from the Aleutians. By
the time these same units joined with four other divisions to constitute
the Tenth Army for Okinawa, the number of divisions with experience in
amphibious operations deployed in the Pacific had expanded sevenfold.
The three principal assault units in Major General John R. Hodge's XXIV
Corps had fresh experience in "storm landings" in Leyte. That campaign
was the first for the 96th Division, which acquitted itself well, and
the third amphibious operation for the 7th Division, following Attu and
Kwajalein. Leyte also saw the 77th Division, veterans of the battle for
Guam, execute a bold landing at Ormoc which surprised the Japanese
defenders. New to XXIV Corps was the 27th Division, a National Guard
unit still regarded with acrimony by some Marines after the Saipan
flail, but an outfit proud of its amphibious experiences in the Gilberts
and Marianas. None of the Army divisions had the luxury of extended
preparations for Okinawa. General Douglas MacArthur did not release the
XXIV Corps, understrength and underfed after 110 days' combat in Leyte,
to the Tenth Army until seven weeks before the Okinawa landing. The 27th
Division had more time but endured unsatisfactory training conditions in
the jungles of Espiritu Santo.
Examples of full cooperation by Army units with
Marines abound in the Okinawa campaign. Army Air Forces P-47
Thunderbolts flew long-range bombing and fighter missions for General
Mulcahy's TAF. Army and Marine Corps artillery units routinely supported
opposite services during the protracted drive against the Shuri Line.
The Marines gained a healthy respect for the Army's 8-inch howitzers;
often these heavy weapons provided the only means of reducing a
particularly well-fortified Japanese strongpoint. In addition, General
Buckner attached the invaluable "Zippo Tanks" of the 713th Armored Flame
Thrower Battalion and 4.2-inch mortar batteries to both Marine
divisions. The 6th Marine Division also had the 708th Amphibian Tank
Battalion attached for the duration of the battle. Each of these
attached units received the Presidential Unit Citation for service with
their parent Marine divisions.
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Marine Corps
Historical Center
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On a less formal basis, the Army frequently lent
logistical support to the Marines as the campaign struggled south
through the endless rains. Even the fourth revision of the Marine
division's table of organization did not provide sufficient transport
assets to support such a protracted campaign executed at increasing
distances from the force beachhead. A shortfall in amphibious cargo
ships assigned to the Marines further reduced the number of organic
tracked and wheeled logistics vehicles available. Often, the generosity
of the supporting Army units spelled the difference of whether the
Marines would eat that day. The best example of this helping spirit
occurred on 4 June when elements of the 96th Division provided rations
to Lieutenant Colonel Richard P Ross' 3d Battalion, 1st Marines,
brightening what the battalion otherwise reported as "the most miserable
day spent on Okinawa."
Okinawa, in short, was too big and too tough for a
single service to undertake. The 82-day campaign against a tenacious,
well-armed enemy required unusual teamwork and cooperation among all
services.
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Swarms of kamikazes bedeviled the Fifth Fleet
from the time the advance force first steamed into Ryukyuan waters
throughout the course of the battle. Some intermediate Navy commanders
spoke dismissively of the threat inexperienced pilots in
ramshackle planes launched with barely enough fuel to reach Okinawa.
Indeed, many of the 2,373 kamikazes never made it to the
objective. But those Special Attack Unit pilots who survived the air and
surface screens inflicted grievous damage on the Fifth Fleet. By the end
of the campaign, the fleet had suffered 34 ships and craft sunk, 368
damaged, and more than 9,000 casualties the greatest losses ever
sustained by the U.S. Navy in a single battle.
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The
amphibious task force under one of the first destructive heavy
kamikaze attacks off Okinawa's southwest coast on L plus 5. The
kamikazes were to make many such visits to Okinawa before the
operation ended, causing much damage. Marine Corps Historical
Center
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The situation at sea grew so critical that on one
occasion smoke from burning ships and screening escorts offshore blinded
Yontan Airfield, causing three returning CAP planes to crash. As the
onslaught continued, Admiral Spruance observed frankly, "The suicide
plane is a very effective weapon which we must not underestimate."
Spruance spoke from first hand experience. Kamikazes knocked his
first flagship, the heavy cruiser Indianapolis, out of the battle
early in the campaign, then severely damaged his replacement flagship,
the battleship New Mexico, a few weeks later.
The Japanese attacking the U.S. fleet off Okinawa
also introduced their newest weapon, the "Ohka" (cherry blossom)
bomb (called by the Americans "Baka," a derisive Japanese term
meaning "foolish"). It was a manned, solid-fuel rocket packed with 4,400
pounds of explosives, launched at ships from the belly of a twin-engined
bomber. The Baka bombs became in effect the first antiship guided
missiles, screaming towards the target at an unheard-of 500 knots. One
such weapon blew the destroyer Manert L. Abele out of the water.
Fortunately, most of the Bakas missed their targets, the missiles
proving too fast for inexperienced pilots to control in their few
seconds of glory.
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A
U.S. ship badly damaged by a kamikaze hit receives a survey
inspection within the protected anchorage of Kerama Retto, where the
Navy repaired its damaged fleet. Marine Corps Historical Center
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The ultimate suicide attack was the final sortie of
the superbattleship Yamato, the last of the world's great
dreadnoughts, whose feared 18.1-inch guns could outrange the biggest and
newest U.S. battleships. IGHQ dispatched Yamato on her
last mission, a bizarre scheme, with no air cover and but a handful of
surface escorts and only enough fuel for a one-way trip. She was to
distract the American carriers to allow a simultaneous kikusui
attack against the remainder of the fleet. Achieving this, Yamato
would beach itself directly on Okinawa's west coast, using her big guns
to shoot up the thin-skinned amphibious shipping and the landing force
ashore. The plan proved absurd.
In earlier years of the war the sortie of this
mammoth warship would have caused consternation among the fleet
protecting an amphibious beachhead. Not now. Patrolling U.S. submarines
gave Spruance early warning of Yamato's departure from Japanese
waters. "Shall I take them or will you?" asked Vice Admiral Marc A.
Mitscher, commanding the fast carriers of Task Force 58. Spruance knew
his battleship force yearned for a surface battle to avenge their losses
at Pearl Harbor, but this was no time for sentiment. "You take them," he
signaled. With that, Mitscher's Hellcats and Avengers roared aloft,
intercepted Yamato a hundred miles from the beachhead, and sank
her in short order with bombs and torpedoes. The cost: eight U.S.
planes, 12 men.
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Japanese night raiders are met on 16 April with a
spectacular network of antiaircraft fire by Marine defenders based at
Yontan airfield. In the foreground, silhouetted against the interlaced
pattern of tracer bullets, are Corsairs of VMF-311. Department of Defense
Photo (USMC) 118775
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Another bizarre Japanese suicide mission proved more
effective. On the night of 24-25 May, a half-dozen transport planes
loaded with Giretsu, Japanese commandos, approached the U.S.
airbase at Yontan. Alert antiaircraft gunners flamed five. The surviving
plane made a wheels-up belly landing on the air strip, discharging
troops as she slid in sparks and flames along the surface. The commandos
blew up eight U.S. planes, damaged twice as many more, set fire to
70,000 gallons of aviation gasoline, and generally created havoc
throughout the night. Jittery aviation and security troops fired at
shadows, injuring their own men more than the Japanese. It took 12 hours
to hunt down and kill the last raider.
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Marine Avengers of Marine Torpedo-Bomber Squadron 232
are seen through the hatch of a transport, which served as a navigation
plane for the overwater flight from Ulithi to Kadena, The flight echelon
landed on 22 April and began close-support missions the next day.
Department of
Defense Photo (USMC) 121884
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Admiral Spruance at sea and General Mulcahy ashore
exerted Herculean efforts to reduce the effectiveness of these suicide
strikes. The fast carriers struck Japanese airfields in Kyushu and
Formosa time and again, but these numbered more than 100, and as usual
the Japanese proved adept at camouflage. Small landing parties of
soldiers and Marines seized outlying islands (see sidebar) to establish
early warning and fighter direction outposts. And fighter planes from
all three services took to the air to intercept the intermittent waves
of enemy planes.
Not all of the Japanese air strikes were
kamikazes. An equal number of fighters and bombers accompanied
each raid to guide the suiciders to their targets and attack American
targets by conventional means. Some of these included late-model
fighters like the Nakajima "Frank." Deadly air-to-air duels took place
over hundreds of miles of ocean expanse.
The far-ranging fast carriers usually made the first
interceptions. While most pilots were Navy, the task force included two
Marine fighter squadrons each on the carriers Bunker Hill and
Bennington. One Marine aviator from Bennington, Lieutenant
Kenneth E. Huntington, flew the only USMC Corsair in the attack on
Yamato. Huntington swept in through heavy AA fire to deliver his
bomb squarely on the battleship's forward turret. As described by combat
correspondent Robert Sherrod, "One Marine, one bomb, one Navy
Cross."
Marine Air at Okinawa
"Okinawa was the culmination of the development of
air support doctrine in the Pacific," declared Colonel Vernon E. Megee,
commander of the Landing Force Air Support Units during the campaign.
"The procedures we used there were the result of lessons learned in all
preceding campaigns, including the Philippines." Indeed, Marine
aviation at Okinawa operated across the spectrum of missions, from
supply drops to bombing an enemy battleship.
Altogether, some 700 Marine planes of one type or
another took part in the Okinawa campaign. About 450 of these engaged
in combat for more than half the battle. Most Marine air units served
under the aegis of the Tenth Army's Tactical Air Force (TAF), commanded
by Major General Francis P. Mulcahy, USMC (relieved on 8 June by Major
General Louis E. Woods, USMC.) Outside of TAF were the Marine
fighter squadrons assigned to the fleet carriers or escort carriers,
plus long-range transports.
Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, commanding all Allied
forces for Operation Iceberg, deemed the Japanese air arm to be the
biggest threat to the success of the invasion. The Tenth Army's first
objective, therefore, became that of seizing Yontan and Kadena airfields
to accommodate land-based fighter squadrons. The invaders achieved this
on L-Day. The following day General Mulcahy moved ashore and commenced
TAF operations. Mulcahy's top priority remained that of maintaining air
superiority over the objective and the Fifth Fleet. In view of the
unprecedented kamikaze attacks unleashed by the Japanese against
the task force, this mission remained Mulcahy's preoccupation for many
weeks.
Both Marine and Army aviation units would compromise
Mulcahy's TAF. The force would grow to include a total of 15 Marine
fighter squadrons, 10 Army fighter squadrons, two Marine torpedo bomber
squadrons, and 16 Army bomber squadrons. In the execution of the air
superiority missions, the Marine fighter squadrons flew Chance Vought
F4U Corsairs, and the Marine night fighter squadrons flew radar-equipped
Grumman F6F Hellcats. Army fighter pilots flew the Republic P-47
Thunderbolts; their night fighter squadron was equipped with the
Northrop P-61 Black Widows.
The American pilots fought their air-to-air duels not
just against one-way kamikazes; they also faced plenty of
late-model Jacks and Franks. Altogether, TAF pilots shot down 625
Japanese planes. Colonel Ward E. Dickey's Marine Aircraft Group 33 set
the record with 214 kills; more than half claimed by the "Death
Rattlers" of Major George F. Axtell's Marine Fighter Attack Squadron
(VMF) 323.
The necessity for TAF to protect the fleet caused
some ground commanders to worry that their own close air support would
be "short-sheeted." But Navy (and some Marine) squadrons from the
escort carriers picked up the slack, flying more than 60 percent of the
close air missions. Between 1 April and 21 June, the combination of TAF
and carrier pilots flew 14,244 air support sorties. Nearly 5,000 of
these supported the Marines of IIIAC. In the process, the supporting
aviators dropped 152,000 gallons of napalm on enemy positions.
Air Liaison Parties accompanied the front-line
divisions and served to request close air support and direct (but not
control the front was too narrow) aircraft to the target.
Coordination of lower-echelon air requests became the province of three
Marine Landing Force Air Support Control Units, one representing Tenth
Army to the fleet commander, the others each responsive to the Army XXIV
Corps and IIIAC. This technique further refined the experiments Colonel
Megee had begun at Iwo Jima. In most cases, close air support to the
infantry proved exceptionally effective. Some units reported prompt,
safe delivery of ordnance on target within 100 yards. In other
instances there were delays, accidents (although less than a dozen), or
situations where the lines were simply too intermingled for any air
support as during the 6th Marine Divisions' struggle for Oroku
Peninsula.
Other Marine aviation units contributed significantly
to the victory in Okinawa. Marine Torpedo Bomber Squadron (VMTB) pilots
flew their Grummann Avenger (TBF) "torpeckers" in "zero-zero" weather to
drop 400,000 pounds of rations, medical supplies, and ammunition to
forward ground units greatly assisted by the skilled prepackaging
of the IIIAC Air Delivery Section. And the fragile little Grasshoppers
of the four Marine Observation Squadron (VMO) squadrons flew 3,486
missions of artillery spotting, photo reconnaissance, and medical
evacuation. One senior artillery officer described the VMO pilots as
"the unsung heroes of Marine aviation . . . often they would fly past
cave openings at the same level so they could look in and see if there
was a gun there." Colonel Yahara complained that his artillery units
knew from bitter experience that they presence of an American
Grasshopper overhead presaged quick retribution for any Japanese gun
that fired.
Marine aviators at Okinawa served with a special
elan. During one desperate dogfight, a Marine pilot radioed,
"Come on up and help me, I've got a Frank and two Zekes cornered!" Those
were his last words, but his fighting spirit persisted. Said one
grateful destroyer skipper who had been rescued from swarms of kamikazes
by Marine Corsairs, "I am willing to take my ship to the shores of Japan
if I could have these Marines with me."
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Department of
Defense Photo (USMC) 126420
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Marine fighters of MAGs-31 and -33, flying from
Yontan under General Mulcahy's TAF, provided most of the CAP missions
over the fleet during the first several weeks of the battle. The CAP
requirement soared from 12 planes initially to as many as 32 on station,
with an additional dozen on strip alert. The missions involved long
hours of patrolling, typically in rough weather spiked by sudden violent
encounters with Japanese raiders. The CAP planes ran a double risk.
Dueling a Japanese fighter often took both planes within range of
nervous shipboard AA gunners who sometimes downed both antagonists
unwittingly.
On 16 April, VMF-441 raced to the rescue of the
picket ship Laffey, already hit by five suiciders. The Corsairs
shot down 17 attackers in short order, losing only one plane which had
chased a kamikaze so low they both clipped the ship's
superstructure and crashed.
On 22 April, the "Death Rattlers" of VMF-323
intercepted a large flight of raiders approaching the fleet at dusk.
Three Marines shot down 16 of these in 20 minutes. The squadron
commander, Major George C. Axtell, knocked down five, becoming an
instant ace. As Axtell described these sudden dogfights:
You'd be flying in and out of heavy rain and clouds.
Enemy and friendly aircraft would wind up in a big melee. You just kept
turning into any enemy aircraft that appeared . . . . It was fast and
furious and the engagement would be over within thirty minutes.
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A
"Grasshopper" from a Marine observation squadron flies over Naha,
permitting an aerial photographer to take oblique photos which will be
used by Marine artillery units to spot targets and determine the damage
already done by the Allies. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
128032
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But in spite of the heroic efforts of all these
aviators and their ground crews, the kamikazes swarmed in such
numbers that a few always got through. Soon, the protected anchorage at
Kerama Retto began to resemble a floating graveyard of heavily damaged
ships. Small groups of suiciders appeared every night, and the fleet
seemed particularly vulnerable during the full moon. One naval officer
described the night-time raiders as "witches on broomsticks." More often
than not, the victims of these nocturnal attacks were the "small boys,"
the picket ships and diminutive amphibs. Nineteen-year-old Signalman 3/C
Nick Floros manned a 20mm gun mount on tiny LSM-120 one midnight
when a kamikaze appeared "out of nowhere, gliding in low with its
engine cut off like a giant bat." The plane struck the adjacent
LSM with a terrific explosion before anyone could fire a shot. The small
landing ship, loaded with landing force supplies, somehow survived the
fiery blast but was immediately consigned to the "demolition yard" at
Kerama Retto.
Imperial General Headquarters, accepting the
inflated claims of the few observers accompanying the kikusui
attacks, believed their suicidal air offensive had fatally crippled the
U.S. Fleet. This was wishful thinking. The Fifth Fleet may have been
stressed and battered by the kamikazes, but it was simply too
huge a force to be deterred. The fleet withstood the worst of these
seemingly endless air attacks without for a moment forsaking its primary
mission of supporting the amphibious assault on Okinawa. Naval gunfire
support, for example, had never been so thoroughly effective, beginning
with the 3,800 tons of munitions delivered on L-Day. Throughout much of
the campaign, each front-line regiment received direct support from one
"call fire" ship and one "illumination ship." Typical of the
appreciation most members of the landing force expressed for the quality
of naval gunfire support was this message from General Shepherd to the
Commander, Northern Attack Force during the 6th Marine Division's
assault on Mount Yae Take: "The effectiveness of your gunfire support
was measured by the large number of Japanese encountered. Dead
ones."
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During a visit to Marines in late April, the Commandant,
Gen Alexander A. Vandegrift, second from left, called on MajGen Francis
P. Mulcahy, center commander of the Tactical Air Force, Tenth Army, and
three of his pilots: Maj George C. Axtell, Jr., left; Maj Jefferson D.
Dorroh, second from right; and Lt Jeremiah J. O'Keefe. Maj Axtell
commanded VMF-323, the "Death Rattlers." Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
119294
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Similarly, even during the the most intense of the
kikusui attacks of 1-16 April, the fleet unloaded an astonishing
557,000 tons of supplies over the Hagushi Beaches to support the Tenth
Army, executed the division level assault on Ie Shima, and cleared mines
and obstacles under fire to open the port of Nago. The only direct
effect the mass kamikaze raids ever had on the conduct of Tenth
Army operations ashore was the sinking on 6 April of the ammunition
ships Logan Victory and Hobbs Victory. The subsequent
shortage of 105mm and 155mm artillery ammunition delayed General
Buckner's first great offensive against the outer Shuri defenses by
about three days. In all respects, the Fifth Fleet deserved its media
sobriquet as "The Fleet That Came to Stay."
But as April dragged into May, and the Tenth Army
seemed bogged down in unimaginative frontal attacks along the Shuri
line, Admirals Spruance and Turner began to press General Buckner to
accelerate his tactics in order to decrease the vulnerability of the
fleet. Admiral Nimitz, quite concerned, flew to Okinawa to counsel
Buckner. "I'm losing a ship and a half each day out here," Nimitz said,
"You've got to get this thing moving."
The senior Marines urged Buckner to "play the amphib
card," to execute a major landing on the southeast coast, preferably
along the alternate beaches at Minatoga, in order to turn the Japanese
right flank. They were joined in this recommendation by several Army
generals who already perceived what a meatgrinder the frontal assaults
along the Shuri line would become. The Commandant of the Marine Corps,
General Alexander A. Vandegrift, visited the island and seconded these
suggestions to Buckner. After all, Buckner still had control of the 2d
Marine Division, a veteran amphibious outfit which had demonstrated
effectively against the Minatoga Beaches on L Day. Buckner had
subsequently returned the embarked division to Saipan to reduce its
vulnerability to additional kamikaze attacks, but the unit still
had its assigned ships at hand, still combat loaded. The 2d Marine
Division could have opened a second front in Okinawa within a few
days.
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All
Marines sight-in on the mouth of a cave into which an explosive charge
had been thrown, and wait to see if any enemy soldiers will try to
escape. This is one of the many bitterly contested cave positions found
in numerous ridges and hills. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
120053
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General Buckner was a popular, competent commander,
but he had limited experience with amphibious warfare and possessed a
conservative nature. His staff warned of logistics problems involved in
a second front. His intelligence advisors predicted stiff enemy
resistance around the Minatoga beachhead. Buckner had also heard enough
of the costly Anzio operation in Italy to be leery of any landing
executed too far from the main effort. He honestly believed the Japanese
manning the Shuri defenses would soon crack under the synchronized
application of all his massed firepower and infantry. Buckner therefore
rejected the amphibious option out of hand. Surprisingly, Nimitz and his
Chief of Staff, Rear Admiral Forrest Sherman, agreed. Not so Admirals
Spruance and Turner or the Marines. As Spruance later admitted in a
private letter, "There are times when I get impatient for some of
Holland Smith's drive." General Shepherd noted, "General Buckner did not
cotton to amphibious operations." Even Colonel Hiromichi Yahara,
Operations Officer of the Thirty-second Army, admitted under
interrogation that he had been baffled by the American's adherence to a
purely frontal assault from north to south. "The absence of a landing
[in the south] puzzled the Thirty-second Army staff," he said,
"particularly after the beginning of May when it became impossible to
put up more than a token resistance in the south."
By then the 2d Marine Division was beginning to feel
like a yo-yo in preparing for its variously assigned missions for
Operation Iceberg. Lieutenant Colonel Taxis, Division G-3, remained
unforgiving of Buckner's decision. "I will always feel," he stated after
the war, "that the Tenth Army should have been prepared the instant they
found they were bogged down, they should have thrown a left hook down
there in the southern beaches . . . . They had a hell of a powerful
reinforced division, trained to a gnat's whisker."
Buckner stood by his decision. There would be no
"left hook." Instead, both the 1st and the 6th Marine Divisions would
join the Shuri offensive as infantry divisions under the Tenth Army. The
2d Marine Division, less one reinforced regimental landing team (the 8th
Marines), would languish back in Saipan. Then came Okinawa's incessant
spring rains.
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