From History.com:
“Battle of
Iwo Jima”
The Battle of
Iwo Jima was an epic military campaign between U.S. Marines and the Imperial
Army of Japan in early 1945. Located 750 miles off the coast of Japan, the
island of Iwo Jima had three airfields that could serve as a staging facility
for a potential invasion of mainland Japan. American forces invaded the island
on February 19, 1945, and the ensuing Battle of Iwo Jima lasted for five weeks.
In some of the bloodiest fighting of World War II, it’s believed that all but
200 or so of the 21,000 Japanese forces on the island were killed, as were
almost 7,000 Marines. But once the fighting was over, the strategic value of
Iwo Jima was called into question.
Iwo Jima
Before the Battle According to postwar analyses, the Imperial Japanese Navy
had been so crippled by earlier World War II clashes in the Pacific that it was
already unable to defend the empire’s island holdings, including the Marshall
archipelago. In addition, Japan’s air force had lost many of its warplanes, and
those it had were unable to protect an inner line of defenses set up by the
empire’s military leaders. This line of defenses included islands like Iwo
Jima. Given this information, American military leaders planned an attack on
the island that they believed would last no more than a few days. However, the
Japanese had secretly embarked on a new defensive tactic, taking advantage of
Iwo Jima’s mountainous landscape and jungles to set up camouflaged artillery
positions. Although Allied forces led by the Americans bombarded Iwo Jima with
bombs dropped from the sky and heavy gunfire from ships positioned off the
coast of the island, the strategy developed by Japanese General Tadamichi
Kuribayashi meant that the forces controlling it suffered little damage and
were thus ready to repel the initial attack by the U.S. Marines, under the
command of Holland M. “Howlin’ Mad” Smith.
Marines
Invade Iwo Jima On February 19, 1945, U.S. Marines made an amphibious
landing on Iwo Jima and were met immediately with unforeseen challenges. First
and foremost, the beaches of the island were made up of steep dunes of soft,
gray volcanic ash, which made getting sturdy footing and passage for vehicles
difficult. As the Marines struggled forward, the Japanese laid in wait.
The Americans assumed the pre-attack bombardment had been effective, and had
crippled the enemy’s defenses on the island. However, the lack of
immediate response was simply part of Kuribayashi’s plan. With the
Americans struggling to get a foothold on the beaches of Iwo Jima—literally and
figuratively—Kuribayashi’s artillery positions in the mountains above opened
fire, stalling the advancing Marines and inflicting significant casualties. Despite
a banzai charge by dozens of Japanese soldiers as dusk fell, however, the
Marines were eventually able to move in past the beach and seize part of one
Iwo Jima’s airfields—the stated mission of the invasion.
Battle of
Iwo Jima Rages On Within days, some 70,000 U.S. Marines landed on Iwo Jima.
Although they significantly outnumbered their Japanese enemies on the island
(by a more than three-to-one margin), many Americans were wounded or killed
over the five weeks of fighting, with some estimates suggesting more than
25,000 casualties, including nearly 7,000 deaths. The Japanese,
meanwhile, were also suffering major losses, and were running low on
supplies—namely, weapons and food. Under Kuribayashi’s leadership, they mounted
most of their defenses via attacks under the cover of darkness. While
effective, the success of the Japanese forces seemed to merely forestall the
inevitable. Just four days into the fighting, U.S. Marines captured
Mount Suribachi, on Iwo Jima’s south side, famously raising an American flag at
the summit. That image was captured by Associated Press photographer Joe
Rosenthal, who won a Pulitzer Prize for the iconic photograph. However, the
fighting was far from over.
Iwo Jima
Falls to American Forces Battles raged on in the northern part of Iwo Jima
for four weeks, with Kuribayashi essentially setting up a garrison in the
mountains in that part of the island. On March 25, 1945, 300 of Kuribayashi’s
men mounted a final banzai attack. The American forces sustained a
number of casualties, but ultimately quelled the attack. Although the American
military declared that Iwo Jima had been captured the next day, American forces
spent weeks on end trudging through the island’s jungles, finding and killing
or capturing Japanese “holdouts” who refused to surrender and opted to continue
fighting. Dozens of Americans were killed during this process. Two
Japanese holdouts continued to hide in the island’s caves, scavenging food and
supplies until they finally surrendered in 1949, almost four years after the
end of World War II. In the end, neither the U.S. Army nor the U.S. Navy was
able to use Iwo Jima as a World War II staging area. Navy Seabees, or
construction battalions, did rebuild the airfields for Air Force pilots to use
in case of emergency landings.
Letters
from Iwo Jima Because of the brutality of the fighting, and the fact that
the battle occurred fairly close to the end of World War II, Iwo Jima—and those
who lost their lives trying to capture the island—retain a great deal of
significance even today, decades after the fighting stopped. In 1954,
the U.S. Marine Corps dedicated the Marine Corps War Memorial, also known as
the Iwo Jima Memorial, near Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia to honor
all Marines. The statue is based on Rosenthal’s now-famous photograph. Actor/director
Clint Eastwood in 2006 made two movies about the events on Iwo Jima called,
respectively, Flags of Our Fathers and Letters from Iwo Jima. The first depicts
the battle from the American perspective, while the latter shows it from the
Japanese perspective.
https://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/battle-of-iwo-jima
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