Wind Talkers: Navajo Code Talkers in WWII
BATTLE of PELELIU - LANDINGSAs the Allies developed plans to defeat Japan in the Pacific, recapturing the Philippines became a major priority. With an expected landing at Leyte, MacArthur wanted nothing to stand in victory's way. After the 1st Marines' successful work at Cape Gloucester, they rested at Pavuvu (an island with lots of rats). Arriving at Pavuvu around the time his childhood friend - Sid Phillips - was leaving, Sledge (a new recruit) had no battle experience. Phillips did not tell his friend (known to other Marines as "Sledgehammer") that he was about to enter "a very fearful time" of life. It was just as well, since the Americans were confident of another victory. In fact, they had no idea what they would soon face. The Allies lacked intelligence on an important fact: The Japanese had changed their way of island fighting. Replacing suicidal bonzai charges with dug-in fortifications, including underground caves and old mine shafts connected by tunnels - not to mention well-positioned, hidden pill-boxes - Japanese forces at Peleliu were still prepared to die. This time, however, they would fight a battle of attrition. If they lost Peleliu, they wanted as many Allies as possible to die with them: On Peleliu the Japanese commander, Col. Kunio Nakagawa, let the Marines come to him and the approximately 10,000 troops of his proud 14th Infantry Division. From mutually supporting positions, the Japanese covered nearly every yard of Peleliu from the beach inland to the center of Nakagawa's command post, deep beneath the coral rock in the center of the ridge system. Some positions were large enough to hold only one man. Some caves held hundreds. Thus the Marines encountered no one main defense line. The Japanese had constructed the perfect defense-in-depth with the whole island as a front line. (Sledge, With the Old Breed, page 53.) Approaching the island, none of the Marines knew the entire place was "a front line." Bob Leckie, however, could see really bad things were in store for them: Peleliu was already a holocaust. As the Marines approached Peleliu's beach: The enemy was saluting us. They were receiving us with mortar and artillery fire. Ten thousand Japanese awaited us on the island of Peleliu, ten thousand men as brave and determined and skillful as ever a garrison was since the art of warfare began. Skillful, yes; it was a terrible rain and it did terrible work among us before we reached the beach. (Leckie, Helmet for My Pillow, pages 278-79.) Although Leckie and his buddies were among the first assault wave, the beach was already filled with the carnage of battle: Our amtrack was among the first assault waves, yet the beach was already a litter of burning, blackened amphibian tractors, of dead and wounded, a mortal garden of exploding mortar shells. Holes had been scooped in the white sand or had been blasted out by the shells, the beach was pocked with holes - all filled with green-clad helmeted marines. Life on Peleliu, for both sides, was about to get even deadlier. And ... the situation was made even worse by cave warfare on the island.
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Table of Contents
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Biographies
History
- American Colonies
- American Revolution - Highlights
- Assassination of Abraham Lincoln
- Assassination of John F. Kennedy
- Auschwitz: Place of Horrors
- Book Burning and Censorship
Disasters
- America Attacked: 9/11
- Black Death
- Challenger Disaster
- Columbia Space Shuttle Explosion
- Deepwater Horizon: Disaster in the Gulf
- Fatal Voyage: The Titanic
Philosophy
- Bagger Vance and and the Bhagavad Gita
- Bonhoeffer: Martyr of Faith
- C.S. Lewis
- Dead Sea Scrolls
- Easter Story
- Freedom of Religion


















