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Japanese occupation of the Gilbert Islands

The Japanese occupation of the Gilbert Islands was the period in the history of Kiribati between 1941 and 1945 when Imperial Japanese forces occupied the Gilbert Islands during World War II, in the Pacific War theatre.

Japanese-occupied Gilbert Islands
ギルバート諸島
Girubāto-shotō
1941–1943
StatusMilitary occupation by the Empire of Japan
Common languagesJapanese
Gilbertese
GovernmentMilitary occupation
Historical eraWorld War II
• Occupation of Makin
9 December 1941
• American troops land on Tarawa
20 November 1943
• Occupation of Ocean Island ends
21 August 1945
Today part ofKiribati

From 1941 to 1943, Imperial Japanese Navy forces occupied the islands, and from 1942 until 1945 Ocean Island which was home to the headquarters of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands colony (GEIC).[1]

Preparations Edit

On 29 November 1941, Operation Gi[2] (for Gilbert Islands) was decided within the Japanese 4th Fleet and departed from Truk, headquarters of the South Seas Mandate. The flagship was the minelayer Okinoshima, and the operation included the minelayers Tsugaru and Tenyo Maru and cruiser Tokiwa, Nagata Maru, escorted by Asanagi and Yūnagi of the Destroyer Division 29/Section 1. The Chitose Naval Air Group provided air cover. On 2 December 1941, Okinoshima received the signal "Climb Mt. Niitaka 1208", signifying that hostilities would start on 8 December. Okinoshima arrived at Jaluit and embarked a SNLF, from 51st Guards Force. She departed from Jaluit on 6 December and joined Asanagi and Yūnagi on 8 December.

Northern Gilbert Islands Edit

The Japanese occupation of the Northern Gilbert Islands can be divided into three periods:

On the day of their attack on Pearl Harbor, Japanese military forces embarked on board the minelayer Okinoshima which was serving as flagship for Admiral Kiyohide Shima in Operation Gi (the invasion of the Gilbert Islands) and had deployed from Jaluit with a Special Naval Landing Force (SNLF). From 9–10 December, Okinoshima supported the Japanese landings on Makin and on Tarawa, and on 24 December, the seizure of Abaiang.[3] The 51st Guards Force from Jaluit occupied on 10 December 1941 (local time 0045), Makin and on 11 December Little Makin, then later Abaiang and Marakei in the northern Gilbert Islands. Japanese immediately seized the New Zealand Coastwatchers of Makin.[4] Within two days, a seaplane base was built on Makin lagoon by Nagata Maru.

A few hours before the Makin occupation, on 10 December 1941, the same Japanese landing military (DesDiv 29/Section 1's Asanagi and Yūnagi) also visited Tarawa, where they rounded up the Europeans and informed them that they could not leave the atoll without the permission of the naval commander, Kiyohide Shima. The Japanese destroyed all means of transportation and ransacked the Burns Philp trading station, then departed for Makin.

The Imperial Japanese Navy forces on Makin were part of the Marshall Islands Garrison, and officially titled the 62nd Garrison Force.[5] At the time of the Makin raid on 17–18 August 1942 the total force opposing the American landing consisted of 71 armed personnel of the Japanese seaplane base led by Warrant Officer (Heisouchou) Kyuzaburo Kanemitsu of the Special Naval Landing Force equipped with light weapons. In addition there were also four members of the seaplane tender base and three members of a meteorological unit. Two civilian personnel were attached to the Japanese forces as interpreters and civilian administrators.

 
10 shillings of the Japanese occupation currency, 1942

On 31 August 1942, Japanese troops also occupied Abemama. On September, some remote central and southern islands were also briefly visited or occupied (Tamana was the southernmost) especially in order to destroy the Coastwatchers network, headquartered on Beru.[6] On 15 September 1942, Japanese forces occupied Tarawa and began fortifying the atoll, mainly Betio islet where they built Hawkins Field, an airfield.

In response, on 2 October 1942, US forces occupied the Ellice Islands and began constructing airfields on Funafuti, Nukufetau and Nanumea as a base of operations against the Japanese occupation in the Gilbert and Marshall Islands.[7]

 
Japanese defense in Betio

The first offensive operation from the new American airfield at Funafuti was launched on 20 April 1943 when 22 B-24 Liberator aircraft from 371 and 372 Bombardment Squadrons bombed Nauru. The next day the Japanese made a predawn raid on the strip at Funafuti that destroyed one B-24 and caused damage to five other planes. On 22 April, 12 B-24 aircraft bombed Tarawa.[8]

 
Betio aerial view in September 1943

On 6 November 1943, the United States Seventh Air Force established its forward headquarters base on Funafuti, to prepare the battle of Tarawa.[8][9]

 
Aichi D3A Japanese plane wrecked in Tarawa

Rear Admiral Keiji Shibazaki was killed on 20 November 1943, as the last commander of the Japanese 3rd Special Base Force — in garrison on the island of Betio — and of the Gilbert Islands, Nauru and Ocean Island. Admiral Carl Henry Jones (1893 - 1958) became thereafter the U.S. commander of the Gilbert Islands subarea (from 18 Dec 1943 to 1 Oct 1944), at the end of this battle.[9]

Ocean Island Edit

In July 1941, Australia and New Zealand evacuated dependents of British Phosphate Commission employees from Ocean Island.

On 8 December 1941, a Japanese flying boat Kawanishi H6K dropped six bombs on the Government Headquarters on Ocean Island. In February 1942, the Free French destroyer Le Triomphant evacuated the remaining Europeans and Chinese from Ocean Island. Japanese forces occupied the island from 26 August 1942. Cyril Cartwright, was acting Resident Commissioner of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony on Ocean Island from December 1941 to August 1942. While he had the opportunity to leave Ocean Island when the personnel of the British Phosphate Commission were evacuated, he choose to stay to safeguard the people who remained on the island.[10] He was subjected to ill-treatment and malnutrition and died on 23 April 1943.[10] All but about 143-160 Banabans were deported to Nauru, Tarawa, Truk or Kosrae, until the end of the Pacific War in 1945.[11] On 20 August 1945, five days after the surrender of Japan, the Japanese troops massacred the 150 Banabans remaining on Ocean Island. Only one person, Kabunare Koura, survived the massacre. He was the chief prosecution witness in the trial of 23 of Japanese soldiers and officers charged with committing the massacre. Twenty-one of them were found guilty, with 8 of them being executed.[12][13] On 21 August, Australian troops retook Ocean Island from the Japanese. Before the end of the year, the 280 Banabans who survived the war on Nauru, Tarawa, Kosrae or Truk were resettled on Rabi Island in Fiji.

Japanese Commanders Edit

  • 9 Dec 1941 - 1942, Capt. Shigetoshi Miyazaki (宮崎重敏, IJNAF) (1897-1942), commanded the Gilberts’ Operation in the initial phase
  • 1942 - 17 Aug 1942, Warrant Officer Kyuzaburō Kanemitsu (d. 1942), commander on Makin, killed on Raid on Makin Island;[14]
  • Sep 1942 - 22 Feb 1943, Cdr. Keisuke Matsuo (松尾景輔) (b. 1890? - d. 1943), commander of the Yokosuka 6th SNLF (No. 6 Base Force, based in Kwajalein), was in command locally of the force on Tarawa;
  • 22 Feb 1943 - Jul 1943, Rear Admiral Saichirō Tomonari [it] (友成佐市郎) (b. 1887 - d. 1962), commander in Tarawa, for the Gilbert Islands, Nauru and Ocean Island;
 
Keiji Shibazaki, the last Japanese commander
  • Sep 1943 - 20 Nov 1943, Rear Admiral Keiji Shibazaki (b. 1894 - d. 1943)
    • Japanese occupation ends on the Gilbert Islands on 23 November 1943.
    • Japanese occupation ends on Ocean Island on 21 August 1945.

Because of the distance between Kwajalein and Tarawa (580 nm), on 15 February 1943, the Gilbert Islands, Ocean Island and Nauru were removed from the 6th Base Force in Kwajalein and replaced under a new 3rd Special Base Force with headquarters in Betio, with Admiral Tomonari replacing Matsuo. Because of the loss of his command, Matsuo performed seppuku on 2 May 1943.

See also Edit

Bibliography Edit

  • Hoyt, Edwin P. (1979). Storm Over the Gilberts: War in the Central Pacific 1943. New York, NY: Van Nostrand Reinhold.
  • Moran, Jim (2019). The Gilbert and Ellice Islands — Pacific War. Yorkshire, England: Pen & Sword Military. p. 176. ISBN 978-1-52675-119-5.
  • Garrett, Jemima (1996). Island exiles. Sydney: ABC books. p. 200. ISBN 0-7333-0485-0.
  • Gill, G. Hermon (1957). Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 2 – Navy. Vol. I – Royal Australian Navy, 1939–1942 (1st edition, 1957 ed.). Canberra: Australian War Memorial. Gill57.
  • Williams, Maslyn; Macdonald, Barrie (1985). The Phosphateers: A History of the British Phosphate Commissioners and the Christmas Island Phosphate Commission. Melbourne University Press. p. 586. ISBN 0-522-84302-6.
  • Tanaka, Yuki (2010). Japanese Atrocities on Nauru during the Pacific War: The murder of Australians, the massacre of lepers and the ethnocide of Nauruans. Japan focus.
  • Viviani, Nancy (1970). Nauru, Phosphate and Political Progress. Australian National University Press. ISBN 0-7081-0765-6.

References Edit

  1. ^ Macdonald, B. K. (1982). Cinderellas of the Empire: Towards a History of Kiribati and Tuvalu, Australian National University Press, Canberra.
  2. ^ "Operation Gi (i)". Codenames: Operations of World War 2.
  3. ^ Rohwer, Jürgen (2005). Chronology of the War at Sea, 1939-1945: The Naval History of World War Two. US Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-119-2.
  4. ^ Gillespie, Oliver A. (1952). "Chapter 8 – The Coastwatchers". The Pacific. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  5. ^ 第62警備隊
  6. ^ Hall, D.O.W. (1951). "The Southern Gilberts Occupied". Coastwatchers. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  7. ^ "To the Central Pacific and Tarawa, August 1943—Background to GALVANIC (Ch 16, p. 622)". 1969. Retrieved 3 September 2010.
  8. ^ a b Olson, James C.; Craven, Wesley Frank; Cate, James Lea (eds.). "Chapter 9, The Gilberts and Marshalls". Army Air Forces in World War II: Vol. IV, The Pacific: Guadalcanal to Saipan – August 1942 to July 1944. Retrieved 12 October 2013.
  9. ^ a b Jersey, Stanley C. (29 February 2004). . Tarawa on the Web. Archived from the original on 13 February 2021. Retrieved 28 July 2020.
  10. ^ a b "Wykehamist-War-Service-Record-and-Roll-of-Honour-1939-1945". militaryarchive.co.uk. 1945. p. 137. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  11. ^ Sigrah, R. K.; King, S. M. (2001). "Chapter 27 – Japanese Occupation". Te Rii Ni Banaba - The Backbone of Banaba. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  12. ^ Morris 2019.
  13. ^ Sissons 2020, p. 107.
  14. ^ From 5 February 1942 – 29 November 1943, Kōsō Abe was commander of the 6th Base Force at Kwajalein in the Marshall Islands. As such, he was essentially the wartime military governor of the Marshall Islands, Gilbert Islands, Nauru, Ocean Island and Wake Island in the central Pacific Ocean.

Sources Edit

  • Morris, Narrelle (2019). Japanese war crimes in the Pacific: Australia's investigations and prosecutions (PDF). Kingston, ACT: National Archives of Australia. ISBN 978-1-922209-22-1.
  • Sissons, David (2020). Tamura, Keiko; Stockwin, Arthur (eds.). Bridging Australia and Japan: Volume 2 the writings of David Sissons, historian and political scientist. Acton, A.C.T.: ANU Press. doi:10.22459/BAJ.2020. ISBN 9781760463762. OCLC 962408104. S2CID 225347954.

japanese, occupation, gilbert, islands, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, july, 2020, learn, when, remove, this,. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Japanese occupation of the Gilbert Islands was the period in the history of Kiribati between 1941 and 1945 when Imperial Japanese forces occupied the Gilbert Islands during World War II in the Pacific War theatre Japanese occupied Gilbert Islandsギルバート諸島 Girubato shotō1941 1943Flag of the Empire of Japan Imperial SealStatusMilitary occupation by the Empire of JapanCommon languagesJapaneseGilberteseGovernmentMilitary occupationHistorical eraWorld War II Occupation of Makin9 December 1941 American troops land on Tarawa20 November 1943 Occupation of Ocean Island ends21 August 1945Preceded by Succeeded byGilbert and Ellice Islands Gilbert and Ellice IslandsToday part ofKiribatiFrom 1941 to 1943 Imperial Japanese Navy forces occupied the islands and from 1942 until 1945 Ocean Island which was home to the headquarters of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands colony GEIC 1 Contents 1 Preparations 2 Northern Gilbert Islands 3 Ocean Island 4 Japanese Commanders 5 See also 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 SourcesPreparations EditOn 29 November 1941 Operation Gi 2 for Gilbert Islands was decided within the Japanese 4th Fleet and departed from Truk headquarters of the South Seas Mandate The flagship was the minelayer Okinoshima and the operation included the minelayers Tsugaru and Tenyo Maru and cruiser Tokiwa Nagata Maru escorted by Asanagi and Yunagi of the Destroyer Division 29 Section 1 The Chitose Naval Air Group provided air cover On 2 December 1941 Okinoshima received the signal Climb Mt Niitaka 1208 signifying that hostilities would start on 8 December Okinoshima arrived at Jaluit and embarked a SNLF from 51st Guards Force She departed from Jaluit on 6 December and joined Asanagi and Yunagi on 8 December Northern Gilbert Islands EditThe Japanese occupation of the Northern Gilbert Islands can be divided into three periods from 10 December 1941 to 16 August 1942 71 armed personnel of the Imperial Japanese Navy garrisoned the seaplane base on Butaritari then called Makin up to the time of the raid by the Marines on 17 18 August 1942 from 20 August 1942 to March 1943 with a gradual increase of the expansion towards the south including Tarawa and Abemama and also Nauru outside of the Gilberts to become fortified places with airfields the last phase before the end of occupation from March to the end of battle of Tarawa and battle of Makin on 23 November 1943 On the day of their attack on Pearl Harbor Japanese military forces embarked on board the minelayer Okinoshima which was serving as flagship for Admiral Kiyohide Shima in Operation Gi the invasion of the Gilbert Islands and had deployed from Jaluit with a Special Naval Landing Force SNLF From 9 10 December Okinoshima supported the Japanese landings on Makin and on Tarawa and on 24 December the seizure of Abaiang 3 The 51st Guards Force from Jaluit occupied on 10 December 1941 local time 0045 Makin and on 11 December Little Makin then later Abaiang and Marakei in the northern Gilbert Islands Japanese immediately seized the New Zealand Coastwatchers of Makin 4 Within two days a seaplane base was built on Makin lagoon by Nagata Maru A few hours before the Makin occupation on 10 December 1941 the same Japanese landing military DesDiv 29 Section 1 s Asanagi and Yunagi also visited Tarawa where they rounded up the Europeans and informed them that they could not leave the atoll without the permission of the naval commander Kiyohide Shima The Japanese destroyed all means of transportation and ransacked the Burns Philp trading station then departed for Makin The Imperial Japanese Navy forces on Makin were part of the Marshall Islands Garrison and officially titled the 62nd Garrison Force 5 At the time of the Makin raid on 17 18 August 1942 the total force opposing the American landing consisted of 71 armed personnel of the Japanese seaplane base led by Warrant Officer Heisouchou Kyuzaburo Kanemitsu of the Special Naval Landing Force equipped with light weapons In addition there were also four members of the seaplane tender base and three members of a meteorological unit Two civilian personnel were attached to the Japanese forces as interpreters and civilian administrators nbsp 10 shillings of the Japanese occupation currency 1942On 31 August 1942 Japanese troops also occupied Abemama On September some remote central and southern islands were also briefly visited or occupied Tamana was the southernmost especially in order to destroy the Coastwatchers network headquartered on Beru 6 On 15 September 1942 Japanese forces occupied Tarawa and began fortifying the atoll mainly Betio islet where they built Hawkins Field an airfield In response on 2 October 1942 US forces occupied the Ellice Islands and began constructing airfields on Funafuti Nukufetau and Nanumea as a base of operations against the Japanese occupation in the Gilbert and Marshall Islands 7 nbsp Japanese defense in BetioThe first offensive operation from the new American airfield at Funafuti was launched on 20 April 1943 when 22 B 24 Liberator aircraft from 371 and 372 Bombardment Squadrons bombed Nauru The next day the Japanese made a predawn raid on the strip at Funafuti that destroyed one B 24 and caused damage to five other planes On 22 April 12 B 24 aircraft bombed Tarawa 8 nbsp Betio aerial view in September 1943On 6 November 1943 the United States Seventh Air Force established its forward headquarters base on Funafuti to prepare the battle of Tarawa 8 9 nbsp Aichi D3A Japanese plane wrecked in TarawaRear Admiral Keiji Shibazaki was killed on 20 November 1943 as the last commander of the Japanese 3rd Special Base Force in garrison on the island of Betio and of the Gilbert Islands Nauru and Ocean Island Admiral Carl Henry Jones 1893 1958 became thereafter the U S commander of the Gilbert Islands subarea from 18 Dec 1943 to 1 Oct 1944 at the end of this battle 9 Ocean Island EditFurther information Operation RY and Ocean Island Banaba massacre In July 1941 Australia and New Zealand evacuated dependents of British Phosphate Commission employees from Ocean Island On 8 December 1941 a Japanese flying boat Kawanishi H6K dropped six bombs on the Government Headquarters on Ocean Island In February 1942 the Free French destroyer Le Triomphant evacuated the remaining Europeans and Chinese from Ocean Island Japanese forces occupied the island from 26 August 1942 Cyril Cartwright was acting Resident Commissioner of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony on Ocean Island from December 1941 to August 1942 While he had the opportunity to leave Ocean Island when the personnel of the British Phosphate Commission were evacuated he choose to stay to safeguard the people who remained on the island 10 He was subjected to ill treatment and malnutrition and died on 23 April 1943 10 All but about 143 160 Banabans were deported to Nauru Tarawa Truk or Kosrae until the end of the Pacific War in 1945 11 On 20 August 1945 five days after the surrender of Japan the Japanese troops massacred the 150 Banabans remaining on Ocean Island Only one person Kabunare Koura survived the massacre He was the chief prosecution witness in the trial of 23 of Japanese soldiers and officers charged with committing the massacre Twenty one of them were found guilty with 8 of them being executed 12 13 On 21 August Australian troops retook Ocean Island from the Japanese Before the end of the year the 280 Banabans who survived the war on Nauru Tarawa Kosrae or Truk were resettled on Rabi Island in Fiji Japanese Commanders Edit9 Dec 1941 1942 Capt Shigetoshi Miyazaki 宮崎重敏 IJNAF 1897 1942 commanded the Gilberts Operation in the initial phase 1942 17 Aug 1942 Warrant Officer Kyuzaburō Kanemitsu d 1942 commander on Makin killed on Raid on Makin Island 14 Sep 1942 22 Feb 1943 Cdr Keisuke Matsuo 松尾景輔 b 1890 d 1943 commander of the Yokosuka 6th SNLF No 6 Base Force based in Kwajalein was in command locally of the force on Tarawa 22 Feb 1943 Jul 1943 Rear Admiral Saichirō Tomonari it 友成佐市郎 b 1887 d 1962 commander in Tarawa for the Gilbert Islands Nauru and Ocean Island nbsp Keiji Shibazaki the last Japanese commanderSep 1943 20 Nov 1943 Rear Admiral Keiji Shibazaki b 1894 d 1943 Japanese occupation ends on the Gilbert Islands on 23 November 1943 Japanese occupation ends on Ocean Island on 21 August 1945 Because of the distance between Kwajalein and Tarawa 580 nm on 15 February 1943 the Gilbert Islands Ocean Island and Nauru were removed from the 6th Base Force in Kwajalein and replaced under a new 3rd Special Base Force with headquarters in Betio with Admiral Tomonari replacing Matsuo Because of the loss of his command Matsuo performed seppuku on 2 May 1943 See also EditPacific Islands home front during World War II Gilbert and Marshall Islands campaign Japanese occupation of Nauru Raid on Makin Island Battle of Tarawa Battle of MakinBibliography EditHoyt Edwin P 1979 Storm Over the Gilberts War in the Central Pacific 1943 New York NY Van Nostrand Reinhold Moran Jim 2019 The Gilbert and Ellice Islands Pacific War Yorkshire England Pen amp Sword Military p 176 ISBN 978 1 52675 119 5 Garrett Jemima 1996 Island exiles Sydney ABC books p 200 ISBN 0 7333 0485 0 Gill G Hermon 1957 Australia in the War of 1939 1945 Series 2 Navy Vol I Royal Australian Navy 1939 1942 1st edition 1957 ed Canberra Australian War Memorial Gill57 Williams Maslyn Macdonald Barrie 1985 The Phosphateers A History of the British Phosphate Commissioners and the Christmas Island Phosphate Commission Melbourne University Press p 586 ISBN 0 522 84302 6 Tanaka Yuki 2010 Japanese Atrocities on Nauru during the Pacific War The murder of Australians the massacre of lepers and the ethnocide of Nauruans Japan focus Viviani Nancy 1970 Nauru Phosphate and Political Progress Australian National University Press ISBN 0 7081 0765 6 References Edit Macdonald B K 1982 Cinderellas of the Empire Towards a History of Kiribati and Tuvalu Australian National University Press Canberra Operation Gi i Codenames Operations of World War 2 Rohwer Jurgen 2005 Chronology of the War at Sea 1939 1945 The Naval History of World War Two US Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 59114 119 2 Gillespie Oliver A 1952 Chapter 8 The Coastwatchers The Pacific a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help 第62警備隊 Hall D O W 1951 The Southern Gilberts Occupied Coastwatchers a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help To the Central Pacific and Tarawa August 1943 Background to GALVANIC Ch 16 p 622 1969 Retrieved 3 September 2010 a b Olson James C Craven Wesley Frank Cate James Lea eds Chapter 9 The Gilberts and Marshalls Army Air Forces in World War II Vol IV The Pacific Guadalcanal to Saipan August 1942 to July 1944 Retrieved 12 October 2013 a b Jersey Stanley C 29 February 2004 The Battle for Betio Island Tarawa Atoll A Japanese Perspective Tarawa on the Web Archived from the original on 13 February 2021 Retrieved 28 July 2020 a b Wykehamist War Service Record and Roll of Honour 1939 1945 militaryarchive co uk 1945 p 137 Retrieved 17 September 2021 Sigrah R K King S M 2001 Chapter 27 Japanese Occupation Te Rii Ni Banaba The Backbone of Banaba a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Morris 2019 Sissons 2020 p 107 From 5 February 1942 29 November 1943 Kōsō Abe was commander of the 6th Base Force at Kwajalein in the Marshall Islands As such he was essentially the wartime military governor of the Marshall Islands Gilbert Islands Nauru Ocean Island and Wake Island in the central Pacific Ocean Sources EditMorris Narrelle 2019 Japanese war crimes in the Pacific Australia s investigations and prosecutions PDF Kingston ACT National Archives of Australia ISBN 978 1 922209 22 1 Sissons David 2020 Tamura Keiko Stockwin Arthur eds Bridging Australia and Japan Volume 2 the writings of David Sissons historian and political scientist Acton A C T ANU Press doi 10 22459 BAJ 2020 ISBN 9781760463762 OCLC 962408104 S2CID 225347954 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Japanese occupation of the Gilbert Islands amp oldid 1180093733, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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