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Battle of Attu

Battle of Attu
Part of the American Theater of World War II

U.S. soldiers fire mortar shells over a ridge onto a Japanese position on 4 June 1943
Date11–30 May 1943
Japanese holdouts until 8 September 1943
Location
Result Allied victory
Belligerents
 United States
 Canada[1]
 Japan
Commanders and leaders
John DeWitt
Thomas Kinkaid
Albert Brown
Eugene Landrum
Archibald Arnold
Yasuyo Yamasaki 
Strength
15,000[1] 2,600
Casualties and losses
549 killed
1,148 wounded
1,814 frostbitten and sick[2]
2,351 killed or committed suicide
28 captured
~200 missing or holding out[3]

The Battle of Attu (codenamed Operation Landcrab),[4] which took place on 11–30 May 1943, was fought between forces of the United States, aided by Canadian reconnaissance and fighter-bomber support, and Japan on Attu Island off the coast of the Territory of Alaska as part of the Aleutian Islands campaign during the American Theater and the Pacific Theater. Attu is the only land battle in which Japanese and American forces fought in snowy conditions, in contrast with the tropical climate in the rest of the Pacific. The battle ended when most of the Japanese defenders were killed in brutal hand-to-hand combat after a final banzai charge broke through American lines.

Background edit

The strategic position of the islands of Attu and Kiska off Alaska's coast meant their locations could control the sea lanes across the northern Pacific Ocean. Japanese planners believed control of the Aleutians would therefore prevent any possible U.S. attacks from Alaska. This assessment had already been inferred by U.S. General Billy Mitchell who told the U.S. Congress in 1935, "I believe that in the future, whoever holds Alaska will hold the world. I think it is the most important strategic place in the world."[5]

On 7 June 1942, six months after the United States entered World War II, the 301st Independent Infantry Battalion from the Japanese Northern Army landed unopposed on Attu. The landings occurred one day after the invasion of nearby Kiska. The U.S. military feared both islands could be turned into strategic Japanese airbases from which aerial attacks could be launched against mainland Alaska and the rest of the U.S. West Coast.

In Walt Disney's 1943 film Victory Through Air Power, the use of the Aleutian Islands for American long-range bombers to bomb Japan was postulated.[6]

Recapture edit

 
Map showing the recapture of Attu in 1943

On 11 May 1943, units from 17th Infantry, of Major General Albert E. Brown's 7th U.S. Infantry Division made amphibious landings on Attu to retake the island from Japanese Imperial Army forces led by Colonel Yasuyo Yamasaki. Despite heavy naval bombardments of Japanese positions, the American troops encountered strong entrenched defenses that made combat conditions tough. Arctic weather and exposure-related injuries also caused numerous casualties among U.S. forces. After two weeks of relentless fighting, however, American units managed to push the Japanese defenders back to a pocket around Chichagof Harbor.

On 21–22 May a powerful Japanese fleet assembled in Tokyo Bay in preparation for a sortie to repel the American attempt to recapture Attu. The fleet included the carriers Zuikaku, Shōkaku, Jun'yō, Hiyō, the battleships Musashi, Kongō, Haruna, and the cruisers Mogami, Kumano, Suzuya, Tone, Chikuma, Agano, Ōyodo, and eleven destroyers. The Americans, however, recaptured Attu before the fleet could depart.[7]

On 29 May, without hope of rescue, Yamasaki led his remaining troops in a banzai charge. The surprise attack broke through the American front line positions. Shocked American rear-echelon troops were soon fighting in hand-to-hand combat with Japanese soldiers. The battle continued until almost all of the Japanese were killed. The charge effectively ended the battle for the island, although U.S. Navy reports indicate that small groups of Japanese continued to fight until early July 1943,[citation needed] and isolated Japanese survivors held out until as late as 8 September 1943.[8] In 19 days of battle, 549 soldiers of the 7th Infantry Division were killed and more than 1,200 injured. The Japanese lost over 2,351 men, including Yamasaki; 28 prisoners were taken.[2]

Aftermath edit

Attu was the last action of the Aleutian Islands campaign. The Japanese Northern Army secretly evacuated its remaining garrison from nearby Kiska, ending the Japanese occupation in the Aleutian Islands on 28 July 1943.

The loss of Attu and the evacuation of Kiska came shortly after the death of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, who was killed by American aircraft in Operation Vengeance. These defeats compounded the demoralizing effect of losing Yamamoto on the Japanese High Command.[9] Despite the losses, Japanese propaganda attempted to present the Aleutian Island campaign as an inspirational epic.[9]

Order of battle edit

IJA 2nd District, North Seas Garrison (Hokkai Shubitai) – Colonel Yasuyo Yamasaki[10][11]

  • 83rd Independent Infantry Battalion – Lieutenant-Colonel Isamu Yonegawa
  • 303rd Independent Infantry Battalion "Watanabe Battalion" – Major Jokuji Watanabe
  • Aoto Provisional Anti-Aircraft Battalion – Major Seiji Aoto
  • Northern Kurile Fortress Infantry Battalion – Lieutenant-Colonel Hiroshi Yonekawa
  • 6th Independent Mountain Artillery – Second Lieutenant Taira Endo
  • 302nd Independent Engineer Company – Captain Chinzo Ono
  • 6th Ship Engineer Regiment
    • 2nd Company – Captain Kobayashi

US Landing Force Attu (US 7th Infantry Division) – Major General Albert Brown, Brigadier General Eugene M. Landrum from 16 May[12][11]

  • Provisional Scout Battalion – Captain William H. Willoughby
    • 7th Scout Company
    • 7th Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop
  • Northern Force – Colonel Frank L. Culin
    • 1st/17th Regimental Combat Team – Lieutenant Colonel Albert V. Hartl
  • Southern Force – Colonel Edward Palmer Earle , Colonel Wayne C. Zimmerman from 12 May
    • 2nd/17th Regimental Combat Team – Major Edward P. Smith
    • 3rd/17th Regimental Combat Team – Major James R. Montague
    • 2nd/32nd Regimental Combat Team – Major Charles G. Fredericks
  • Reinforcements/Combat Support
    • 1st/32nd Regimental Combat Team – Lieutenant Colonel Earnest H. Bearss
    • 3rd/32nd Regimental Combat Team – Lieutenant Colonel John M. Finn
    • 1st/4th Regimental Combat Team (at Adak) – Major John D. O'Reilly
    • 78th Coast Artillery (Anti-Aircraft) Regiment
    • 50th Combat Engineer Battalion

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "The Battle for Kiska", Canadianheroes.org, 13 May 2002, Originally Published in Esprit de Corp Magazine, Volume 9 Issue 4 and Volume 9 Issue 5
  2. ^ a b "US National Park Service". Nps.gov.
  3. ^ "Battle of Attu: 60 Years Later (U.S. National Park Service)". Nps.gov.
  4. ^ "Battle of Attu". The History Channel. 27 September 2023.
  5. ^ "Arctic Panel looks at the world from the top down". Army.mil. 6 November 2020. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
  6. ^ . YouTube. Archived from the original on 20 December 2016. Retrieved 3 December 2016.
  7. ^ "Zuikaku Tabular Record of Movement (TROM)". Imperial Japanese Navy Page. Jonathan Parshall. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  8. ^ Herder, 2019, p.85
  9. ^ a b John Toland, The Rising Sun: The Decline and Fall of the Japanese Empire 1936-1945 New York:Random House (1970) p. 444
  10. ^ Cloe, 2017, pp.160–168
  11. ^ a b Herder, 2019, p.66
  12. ^ Cloe, 2017, pp.150–159

Further reading edit

  • Cloe, John Haile (1990). The Aleutian Warriors: A History of the 11th Air Force and Fleet Air Wing 4. Missoula, Montana: Pictorial Histories Publishing Co. and Anchorage Chapter – Air Force Association. ISBN 0-929521-35-8. OCLC 25370916.
  • Cloe, John Haile (1990). Attu: The Forgotten Battle. United States Department of the Interior. ISBN 0-9965837-3-4. OCLC 25370916.
  • Dickrell, Jeff (2001). Center of the Storm: The Bombing of Dutch Harbor and the Experience of Patrol Wing Four in the Aleutians, Summer 1942. Missoula, Montana: Pictorial Histories Publishing Co., Inc. ISBN 1-57510-092-4. OCLC 50242148.
  • Feinberg, Leonard (1992). Where the Williwaw Blows: The Aleutian Islands-World War II. Pilgrims' Process. ISBN 0-9710609-8-3. OCLC 57146667.
  • Garfield, Brian (1995) [1969]. The Thousand-Mile War: World War II in Alaska and the Aleutians. Fairbanks: University of Alaska Press. ISBN 0-912006-83-8. OCLC 33358488.
  • Goldstein, Donald M.; Katherine V. Dillon (1992). The Williwaw War: The Arkansas National Guard in the Aleutians in World War. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. ISBN 1-55728-242-0. OCLC 24912734.
  • Hays, Otis (2004). Alaska's Hidden Wars: Secret Campaigns on the North Pacific Rim. University of Alaska Press. ISBN 1-889963-64-X.
  • Herder, Brian Lane (2019). The Aleutians 1942–43: Struggle for the North Pacific. Bloomsbury Publishing PLC. ISBN 9781472832542.
  • Lorelli, John A. (1984). The Battle of the Komandorski Islands. Annapolis: United States Naval Institute. ISBN 0-87021-093-9. OCLC 10824413.
  • MacGarrigle, George L. . The U.S. Army Campaigns of World War II. United States Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 17 March 2014. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
  • Morison, Samuel Eliot (2001) [1951]. Aleutians, Gilberts and Marshalls, June 1942 – April 1944, vol. 7 of History of United States Naval Operations in World War II. Champaign: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-316-58305-7. OCLC 7288530.
  • Parshall, Jonathan; Tully, Anthony (2005). Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway. Dulles, Virginia: Potomac Books. ISBN 1-57488-923-0. OCLC 60373935.
  • Perras, Galen Roger (2003). Stepping Stones to Nowhere, The Aleutian Islands, Alaska, and American Military Strategy, 1867 – 1945. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press. ISBN 1-59114-836-7. OCLC 53015264.
  • Urwin, Gregory J. W. (2000). The Capture of Attu: A World War II Battle as Told by the Men Who Fought There. Bison Books. ISBN 0-8032-9557-X.
  • Wetterhahn, Ralph (2004). The Last Flight of Bomber 31: Harrowing Tales of American and Japanese Pilots Who Fought World War II's Arctic Air Campaign. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-7867-1360-7.

External links edit

  • by Robert E. Burks.
  • Aleutian Islands War
    • PBS Independent Lens presentation of Red White Black & Blue – The Making Of and other resources
  • US Army Infantry Combat pamphlet- Part Two: Attu
  • Oral history interview with Robert Jeanfaivre, navy veteran who took part in the Battle of Attu [dead link] from the Veterans History Project at Central Connecticut State University
  • Diary of Japanese doctor killed on Attu
  • Battle of Attu - United Newsreel footage

52°52′44.67″N 173°9′24.80″E / 52.8790750°N 173.1568889°E / 52.8790750; 173.1568889

battle, attu, part, american, theater, world, soldiers, fire, mortar, shells, over, ridge, onto, japanese, position, june, 1943date11, 1943japanese, holdouts, until, september, 1943locationattu, aleutian, islands, territory, alaska, united, statesresultallied,. Battle of AttuPart of the American Theater of World War IIU S soldiers fire mortar shells over a ridge onto a Japanese position on 4 June 1943Date11 30 May 1943Japanese holdouts until 8 September 1943LocationAttu Aleutian Islands Territory of Alaska United StatesResultAllied victoryBelligerents United States Canada 1 JapanCommanders and leadersJohn DeWitt Thomas Kinkaid Albert Brown Eugene Landrum Archibald ArnoldYasuyo Yamasaki Strength15 000 1 2 600Casualties and losses549 killed 1 148 wounded 1 814 frostbitten and sick 2 2 351 killed or committed suicide 28 captured 200 missing or holding out 3 The Battle of Attu codenamed Operation Landcrab 4 which took place on 11 30 May 1943 was fought between forces of the United States aided by Canadian reconnaissance and fighter bomber support and Japan on Attu Island off the coast of the Territory of Alaska as part of the Aleutian Islands campaign during the American Theater and the Pacific Theater Attu is the only land battle in which Japanese and American forces fought in snowy conditions in contrast with the tropical climate in the rest of the Pacific The battle ended when most of the Japanese defenders were killed in brutal hand to hand combat after a final banzai charge broke through American lines Contents 1 Background 2 Recapture 3 Aftermath 4 Order of battle 5 Gallery 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editThe strategic position of the islands of Attu and Kiska off Alaska s coast meant their locations could control the sea lanes across the northern Pacific Ocean Japanese planners believed control of the Aleutians would therefore prevent any possible U S attacks from Alaska This assessment had already been inferred by U S General Billy Mitchell who told the U S Congress in 1935 I believe that in the future whoever holds Alaska will hold the world I think it is the most important strategic place in the world 5 On 7 June 1942 six months after the United States entered World War II the 301st Independent Infantry Battalion from the Japanese Northern Army landed unopposed on Attu The landings occurred one day after the invasion of nearby Kiska The U S military feared both islands could be turned into strategic Japanese airbases from which aerial attacks could be launched against mainland Alaska and the rest of the U S West Coast In Walt Disney s 1943 film Victory Through Air Power the use of the Aleutian Islands for American long range bombers to bomb Japan was postulated 6 Recapture edit nbsp Map showing the recapture of Attu in 1943 On 11 May 1943 units from 17th Infantry of Major General Albert E Brown s 7th U S Infantry Division made amphibious landings on Attu to retake the island from Japanese Imperial Army forces led by Colonel Yasuyo Yamasaki Despite heavy naval bombardments of Japanese positions the American troops encountered strong entrenched defenses that made combat conditions tough Arctic weather and exposure related injuries also caused numerous casualties among U S forces After two weeks of relentless fighting however American units managed to push the Japanese defenders back to a pocket around Chichagof Harbor On 21 22 May a powerful Japanese fleet assembled in Tokyo Bay in preparation for a sortie to repel the American attempt to recapture Attu The fleet included the carriers Zuikaku Shōkaku Jun yō Hiyō the battleships Musashi Kongō Haruna and the cruisers Mogami Kumano Suzuya Tone Chikuma Agano Ōyodo and eleven destroyers The Americans however recaptured Attu before the fleet could depart 7 On 29 May without hope of rescue Yamasaki led his remaining troops in a banzai charge The surprise attack broke through the American front line positions Shocked American rear echelon troops were soon fighting in hand to hand combat with Japanese soldiers The battle continued until almost all of the Japanese were killed The charge effectively ended the battle for the island although U S Navy reports indicate that small groups of Japanese continued to fight until early July 1943 citation needed and isolated Japanese survivors held out until as late as 8 September 1943 8 In 19 days of battle 549 soldiers of the 7th Infantry Division were killed and more than 1 200 injured The Japanese lost over 2 351 men including Yamasaki 28 prisoners were taken 2 Aftermath editAttu was the last action of the Aleutian Islands campaign The Japanese Northern Army secretly evacuated its remaining garrison from nearby Kiska ending the Japanese occupation in the Aleutian Islands on 28 July 1943 The loss of Attu and the evacuation of Kiska came shortly after the death of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto who was killed by American aircraft in Operation Vengeance These defeats compounded the demoralizing effect of losing Yamamoto on the Japanese High Command 9 Despite the losses Japanese propaganda attempted to present the Aleutian Island campaign as an inspirational epic 9 Order of battle editIJA 2nd District North Seas Garrison Hokkai Shubitai Colonel Yasuyo Yamasaki 10 11 83rd Independent Infantry Battalion Lieutenant Colonel Isamu Yonegawa 303rd Independent Infantry Battalion Watanabe Battalion Major Jokuji Watanabe Aoto Provisional Anti Aircraft Battalion Major Seiji Aoto Northern Kurile Fortress Infantry Battalion Lieutenant Colonel Hiroshi Yonekawa 6th Independent Mountain Artillery Second Lieutenant Taira Endo 302nd Independent Engineer Company Captain Chinzo Ono 6th Ship Engineer Regiment 2nd Company Captain Kobayashi US Landing Force Attu US 7th Infantry Division Major General Albert Brown Brigadier General Eugene M Landrum from 16 May 12 11 Provisional Scout Battalion Captain William H Willoughby 7th Scout Company 7th Cavalry Reconnaissance Troop Northern Force Colonel Frank L Culin 1st 17th Regimental Combat Team Lieutenant Colonel Albert V Hartl Southern Force Colonel Edward Palmer Earle Colonel Wayne C Zimmerman from 12 May 2nd 17th Regimental Combat Team Major Edward P Smith 3rd 17th Regimental Combat Team Major James R Montague 2nd 32nd Regimental Combat Team Major Charles G Fredericks Reinforcements Combat Support 1st 32nd Regimental Combat Team Lieutenant Colonel Earnest H Bearss 3rd 32nd Regimental Combat Team Lieutenant Colonel John M Finn 1st 4th Regimental Combat Team at Adak Major John D O Reilly 78th Coast Artillery Anti Aircraft Regiment 50th Combat Engineer BattalionGallery edit nbsp Imperial Japanese Army Colonel Yasuyo Yamasaki led Japanese forces during the Battle of Attu in May 1943 He died leading a banzai charge during the final attack nbsp Attu village at Chichagof Harbor in 1937 It was occupied by the Japanese in 1942 43 nbsp A U S Navy reconnaissance photo of four Japanese Mitsubishi A6M 2N Rufe seaplane fighters at Holtz Bay Attu on 7 November 1942 nbsp Imperial Army officers during the winter of 1942 43 nbsp To reduce the effects of the cold the Japanese built earthen billets on Attu nbsp Japanese troops train with a Type 88 75 mm AA Gun on Attu in 1943 nbsp Coastal artillery battery on Attu in 1943 nbsp A B 25 Mitchell from the 77th Bomb Squadron flying southeast of Attu in 1943 nbsp The battleship Pennsylvania bombards Attu during landing operations on 11 May 1943 nbsp The destroyer Pruitt guides landing craft toward the beach at Massacre Bay Attu nbsp Soldiers unloading landing craft on the beach at Massacre Bay Attu on 12 May 1943 nbsp More equipment and combat supplies are brought ashore at Massacre Bay on 13 May 1943 nbsp United States troops hauling supplies toward Chichagof Harbor nbsp An American mortar team fire shells over a ridge onto Japanese positions during the battle nbsp Smoke rising from American attacks on Chichagof Harbor nbsp Japanese troops lie where they fell during the final banzai charge at Chichagof Harbor on 29 May 1943 nbsp Dead Japanese soldiers are prepared for mass burial by U S forces nbsp The Japanese Peace Monument on Attu Island July 2007 See also editAleutian Islands World War II National Monument Castner s Cutthroats a specially selected 65 man unit which performed reconnaissance missions in the Aleutian Islands during the Pacific War Japanese Occupation Site Joe P Martinez a posthumous Medal of Honor recipient for actions during the Battle of Attu Paul Nobuo Tatsuguchi a Japanese Seventh Day Adventist who served as military surgeon on Attu and died during the fightingReferences edit a b The Battle for Kiska Canadianheroes org 13 May 2002 Originally Published in Esprit de Corp Magazine Volume 9 Issue 4 and Volume 9 Issue 5 a b US National Park Service Nps gov Battle of Attu 60 Years Later U S National Park Service Nps gov Battle of Attu The History Channel 27 September 2023 Arctic Panel looks at the world from the top down Army mil 6 November 2020 Retrieved 15 February 2022 Walt Disney s Victory Through Air Power 1943 720p YouTube YouTube Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Retrieved 3 December 2016 Zuikaku Tabular Record of Movement TROM Imperial Japanese Navy Page Jonathan Parshall Retrieved 10 September 2014 Herder 2019 p 85 a b John Toland The Rising Sun The Decline and Fall of the Japanese Empire 1936 1945 New York Random House 1970 p 444 Cloe 2017 pp 160 168 a b Herder 2019 p 66 Cloe 2017 pp 150 159Further reading editCloe John Haile 1990 The Aleutian Warriors A History of the 11th Air Force and Fleet Air Wing 4 Missoula Montana Pictorial Histories Publishing Co and Anchorage Chapter Air Force Association ISBN 0 929521 35 8 OCLC 25370916 Cloe John Haile 1990 Attu The Forgotten Battle United States Department of the Interior ISBN 0 9965837 3 4 OCLC 25370916 Dickrell Jeff 2001 Center of the Storm The Bombing of Dutch Harbor and the Experience of Patrol Wing Four in the Aleutians Summer 1942 Missoula Montana Pictorial Histories Publishing Co Inc ISBN 1 57510 092 4 OCLC 50242148 Feinberg Leonard 1992 Where the Williwaw Blows The Aleutian Islands World War II Pilgrims Process ISBN 0 9710609 8 3 OCLC 57146667 Garfield Brian 1995 1969 The Thousand Mile War World War II in Alaska and the Aleutians Fairbanks University of Alaska Press ISBN 0 912006 83 8 OCLC 33358488 Goldstein Donald M Katherine V Dillon 1992 The Williwaw War The Arkansas National Guard in the Aleutians in World War Fayetteville University of Arkansas Press ISBN 1 55728 242 0 OCLC 24912734 Hays Otis 2004 Alaska s Hidden Wars Secret Campaigns on the North Pacific Rim University of Alaska Press ISBN 1 889963 64 X Herder Brian Lane 2019 The Aleutians 1942 43 Struggle for the North Pacific Bloomsbury Publishing PLC ISBN 9781472832542 Lorelli John A 1984 The Battle of the Komandorski Islands Annapolis United States Naval Institute ISBN 0 87021 093 9 OCLC 10824413 MacGarrigle George L Aleutian Islands The U S Army Campaigns of World War II United States Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on 17 March 2014 Retrieved 17 August 2010 Morison Samuel Eliot 2001 1951 Aleutians Gilberts and Marshalls June 1942 April 1944 vol 7 ofHistory of United States Naval Operations in World War II Champaign University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 316 58305 7 OCLC 7288530 Parshall Jonathan Tully Anthony 2005 Shattered Sword The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway Dulles Virginia Potomac Books ISBN 1 57488 923 0 OCLC 60373935 Perras Galen Roger 2003 Stepping Stones to Nowhere The Aleutian Islands Alaska and American Military Strategy 1867 1945 Vancouver University of British Columbia Press ISBN 1 59114 836 7 OCLC 53015264 Urwin Gregory J W 2000 The Capture of Attu A World War II Battle as Told by the Men Who Fought There Bison Books ISBN 0 8032 9557 X Wetterhahn Ralph 2004 The Last Flight of Bomber 31 Harrowing Tales of American and Japanese Pilots Who Fought World War II s Arctic Air Campaign Da Capo Press ISBN 0 7867 1360 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Attu Logistics Problems on Attu by Robert E Burks Aleutian Islands Chronology Aleutian Islands War Red White Black amp Blue feature documentary about The Battle of Attu in the Aleutians during World War II PBS Independent Lens presentation of Red White Black amp Blue The Making Of and other resources Soldiers of the 184th Infantry 7th ID in the Pacific 1943 1945 US Army Infantry Combat pamphlet Part Two Attu Oral history interview with Robert Jeanfaivre navy veteran who took part in the Battle of Attu dead link from the Veterans History Project at Central Connecticut State University Diary of Japanese doctor killed on Attu Battle of Attu United Newsreel footage 52 52 44 67 N 173 9 24 80 E 52 8790750 N 173 1568889 E 52 8790750 173 1568889 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Attu amp oldid 1216513581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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