THE FINAL CAMPAIGN: Marines in the Victory on Okinawa
by Colonel Joseph H. Alexander, USMC (Ret)
Legacy
There was little elation among the exhausted Marines
in southern Okinawa at the official proclamation of victory. The
residual death throes of the Thirty-second Army kept the
battlefield lethal. The last of General Ushijima's front-line infantry
may have died defending Kunishi Ridge and Yuza Dake, but the remaining
hodgepodge of support troops sold their lives dearly to the last. In the
closing period 17-19 June, die-hard Japanese survivors wounded Major
Earl J. Cook, CO of 1/22; Major William C. Chamberlin, S-3 of the 8th
Marines; and Lieutenant Colonel E. Hunter Hurst, CO of 3/7. Even the two
Marines who had survived so long in the shell crater on Sugar Loaf saw
their luck run out in the final days. Private First Class Bertoli died
in action. A Japanese satchel charge seriously wounded Corporal Day,
requiring an urgent evacuation to the hospital ship Solace.
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Okinawa's caves behind front lines were used as
temporary hospitals for emergency operations and treatment, at times
when casualties could not be rushed to the rear or to a hospital ship
standing in the transport area off of the landing beaches. Department of Defense
Photo (USMC) 123155
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Okinawa proved extremely costly to all participants.
More than 100,000 Japanese died defending the island, although about
7,000 uncharacteristically surrendered at the end. Native Okinawans
suffered the most. Recent studies indicate as many as 150,000 died in
the fighting, a figure representing one third of the island's
population. The Tenth Army sustained nearly 40,000 combat casualties,
including more than 7,000 Americans killed. An additional 26,000
"non-battle" casualties occurred; combat fatigue cases accounted for
most of these.
Marine Corps casualties overall ground, air,
ships' detachments exceeded 19,500. In addition, 560 members of
the Navy Medical Corps organic to the Marine units were killed or
wounded. General Shepherd described the corpsmen on Okinawa as "the
finest, most courageous men that I know . . . . they did a magnificent
job." Three corpsmen received the Medal of Honor (see sidebar). As
always, losses within the infantry outfits soared out of proportion.
Colonel Shapley reported losses of 110 percent in the 4th Marines, which
reflected both the addition of replacements and their high attrition
after joining. Corporal Day of 2/22 experienced the death of his
regimental and battalion commanders, plus the killing or wounding of two
company commanders, seven platoon commanders, and every other member of
his rifle squad in the battle.
The legacy of this great battle can be expressed in
these categories:
Foreshadow of Invasion of Japan. Admiral Spruance
described the battle of Okinawa as "a bloody, hellish prelude to the
invasion of Japan." As protracted a nightmare as Okinawa had been, every
survivor knew in his heart that the next battles in Kyushu and Honshu
would be incalculably worse. In a nutshell, the plans for invading Japan
specified the Kyushu landings would be executed by the surviving
veterans of Iwo Jima and Luzon; the reward of the Okinawa survivors
would be the landing on the main island of Honshu. Most men grew
fatalistic; nobody's luck could last through such infernos.
Amphibious Mastery. By coincidence, the enormous and
virtually flawless amphibious assault on Okinawa occurred 30 years to
the month after the colossal disaster at Gallipoli in World War I. By
1945 the Americans had refined this difficult naval mission into an art
form. Nimitz had every possible advantage in place for Okinawa a
proven doctrine, specialized ships and landing craft, mission-oriented
weapons systems, trained shock troops, flexible logistics, unity of
command. Every thing clicked. The massive projection of 60,000 combat
troops ashore on L-Day and the subsequent series of smaller landings on
the surrounding islands represented the fruition of a doctrine earlier
considered hare brained or suicidal.
Attrition Warfare. Disregarding the great opportunities
for surprise and maneuver available in the amphibious task force, the
Tenth Army conducted much of the campaign for Okinawa in an
unimaginative, attrition mode which played into the strength of the
Japanese defenders. An unrealistic reliance on firepower and siege
tactics prolonged the fighting and increased the costs. The landings on
Ie Shima and Oroku Peninsula, despite their successful executions,
comprised the only division-level amphibious assaults undertaken after
L-Day. Likewise, the few night attacks undertaken by Marine and Army
forces achieved uncommon success, but were not encouraged. The Tenth
Army squandered several opportunities for tactical innovations that
could have hastened a breakthrough of the enemy defenses.
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1st
Division Marines and 7th Infantry Division soldiers cheer exuberantly at
Okinawa atop Hill 89, where the Thirty-second Army commander took
his life. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 125699
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Joint Service. The squabble between the 1st Marine
Division and the 77th Division after the Marines seized Shuri Castle
notwithstanding, the battle of Okinawa represented joint service
cooperation at its finest. This was General Buckner's greatest
achievement, and General Geiger continued the sense of teamwork after
Buckner's death. Okinawa remains a model of interservice cooperation to
succeeding generations of military professionals.
First-Rate Training. The Marines who deployed to Okinawa
received the benefit of the most thorough and practical advanced
training of the war. Well-seasoned division and regimental commanders,
anticipating Okinawa's requirements for cave warfare and combat in
built-up areas, conducted realistic training and rehearsals. The battle
produced few surprises.
Leadership. Many of those Marines who survived Okinawa
went on to positions of top leadership that influenced the Corps for the
next two decades or more. Two Commandants emerged General Lemuel
C. Shepherd, Jr., of the 6th Marine Division, and then-Lieutenant
Colonel Leonard F. Chapman, Jr., CO of 4/11. Oliver P. Smith and Vernon
E. Megee rose to four-star rank. At least 17 others achieved the rank of
lieutenant general, including George C. Axtell, Jr.; Victor H. Krulak;
Alan Shapley; and Edward W. Snedeker. And Corporal James L. Day
recovered from his wounds and returned to Okinawa 40 years later as a
major general to command all Marine Corps bases on the island.
During the taping of the 50th anniversary
commemorative video of the battle, General "Brute" Krulak provided a
fitting epitaph to the Marines who fell on Okinawa. Speaking
extemporaneously on camera, he said:
The cheerfulness with which they went to their death
has stayed with me forever. What is it that makes them all the same? I
watched them in Korea, I watched them in Vietnam, and it's the same.
American youth is one hell of a lot better than he is usually
credited."
For Extraordinary Heroism
The Secretary of the Navy awarded Presidential Unit
Citations to the 1st and 6th Marine Divisions, the 2d Marine Aircraft
Wing, and Marine Observation Squadron Three (VMO-3) for "extraordinary
heroism in action against enemy Japanese forces during the invasion of
Okinawa." Marine Observation Squadron Six also received the award as a
specified attached unit to the 6th Marine Division.
On an individual basis, 23 servicemen received the
Medal of Honor for actions performed during the battle. Thirteen of
these went to the Marines and their organic Navy corpsmen, nine to Army
troops, and one to a Navy officer.
Within IIIAC, 10 Marines and 3 corpsmen received the
award. Eleven of the 13 were posthomous awards. Most, if not all,
deceased Medal of Honor recipients have had either U.S. Navy ships or
Marine Corps installations named in their honor. The Okinawa Medal of
Honor awardees were:
Corporal Richard E. Bush, USMC, 1/4; HA 1/c Robert E.
Bush, USN, 2/5; *Maj Henry A. Courtney, Jr., USMC, 2/22; *Corporal John
P. Fardy, USMC, 1/1; *PFC William A. Foster, USMC, 3/1; *PFC Harold
Gonsalves, USMC, 4/15; *PhM 2/c William D. Halyburton, USN, 2/5; *Pvt
Dale M. Hansen, USMC, 2/1; *Corporal Louis J. Hauge, Jr., USMC, 1/1;
*Sgt Elbert L. Kinser, USMC, 3/1; *HA 1/c Fred F. Lester, USN, 1/22;
*Pvt Robert M. McTureous, Jr., USMC, 3/29; and *PFC Albert E. Schwab,
USMC, 1/5.
* Posthumous award
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