fbpx
Wikipedia

Philippines campaign (1941–1942)

Battle of the Philippines
Part of the Pacific Theater of World War II

A burial detail of American and Filipino prisoners of war uses improvised litters to carry fallen comrades at Camp O'Donnell, Capas, Tarlac, 1942, following the Bataan Death March.
Belligerents
 Japan  United States
 Philippines
Commanders and leaders
Masaharu Homma
Hideyoshi Obata
Ibō Takahashi
Nishizō Tsukahara
Douglas MacArthur
Jonathan Wainwright 
George Parker 
Manuel L. Quezon
Basilio J. Valdes
Strength
129,435 troops[1]
90 tanks
541 aircraft
151,000 troops[2]
108 tanks[3]
277 aircraft[4]
Casualties and losses

Japanese source:[5]
11,225

  • 4,130 killed
  • 287 missing
  • 6,808 wounded

US estimate:[6]
17,000–19,000

  • 7,000 killed or wounded
  • 10,000–12,000 dead of disease

146,000[7]

  • 25,000 killed
  • 21,000 wounded
  • 100,000 captured

The Philippines campaign (Filipino: Kampanya sa Pilipinas, Spanish: Campaña en las Filipinas del Ejercito Japonés, Japanese: フィリピンの戦い, romanizedFiripin no Tatakai), also known as the Battle of the Philippines (Filipino: Labanan sa Pilipinas) or the Fall of the Philippines, was the invasion of the Philippines by the Empire of Japan and the defense of the islands by United States and the Philippine Armies during World War II. It took place between December 8, 1941 and May 8, 1942.

The Japanese launched the invasion by sea from Formosa, over 200 miles (320 km) north of the Philippines. The defending forces outnumbered the Japanese by a ratio of 3:2 but were a mixed force of non-combat-experienced regular, national guard, constabulary and newly created Commonwealth units. The Japanese used first-line troops at the outset of the campaign, and by concentrating their forces, they swiftly overran most of Luzon during the first month.

The Japanese high command, believing that they had won the campaign, made a strategic decision to advance by a month their timetable of operations in Borneo and Indonesia and to withdraw their best division and the bulk of their airpower in early January 1942.[8] That, coupled with the defenders' decision to withdraw into a defensive holding position in the Bataan Peninsula and also the defeat of three Japanese battalions at the "Battle of the Points" and "Battle of the Pockets", enabled the Americans and Filipinos to hold out for four more months. After the Japanese failure to penetrate the Bataan defensive perimeter in February the Japanese conducted a 40-day siege. The crucial large natural harbor and port facilities of Manila Bay were denied to the Japanese until May 1942. While the Dutch East Indies operations were unaffected, this heavily hindered the Japanese offensive operations in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands, buying time for the U.S. Navy to make plans to engage the Japanese at Guadalcanal instead of much further east.[9]

Japan's conquest of the Philippines is often considered the worst military defeat in US history.[10] About 23,000 American military personnel and about 100,000 Filipino soldiers were killed or captured.[11]

Background

Japanese activity

Objectives

The Japanese planned to occupy the Philippines as part of their plan for a "Greater East Asia War" in which their Southern Expeditionary Army Group seized sources of raw materials in Malaya and the Netherlands East Indies while the Combined Fleet neutralized the United States Pacific Fleet. Five years earlier, in 1936, Captain Ishikawa Shingo, a hard-liner in the Japanese navy, had toured the Philippines and other parts of the Southeast Asia, noting that these countries had raw materials Japan needed for its armed forces. [12] This helped further increase their aspiration for colonizing the Philippines.

The Southern Expeditionary Army was created on 6 November 1941, commanded by General Hisaichi Terauchi, who had previously been Minister of War. It was ordered to prepare for war in the event that negotiations with the United States did not succeed in peacefully meeting Japanese objectives. They also included the condition of America's acceptance of their position in the Pacific as a superior force, with the testament of their occupation of China, but they did not get what they wanted. [13] Under Terauchi's command were four corps-equivalent armies, comprising ten divisions and three combined arms brigades, including the Japanese Fourteenth Area Army. Operations against the Philippines and Malaya were to be conducted simultaneously when Imperial General Headquarters ordered.

The invasion of the Philippines had four objectives:[14][13]

  • To prevent the use of the Philippines as an advance base of operations by American forces
  • To acquire staging areas and supply bases to enhance operations against the Dutch East Indies and Guam
  • To secure the lines of communication between occupied areas in the south and the Japanese Home Islands
  • To limit the Allied intervention when they attempt to launch an offensive campaign in Australia and the Solomon Islands via dispatching all the forces stationed in the country and other neighboring nations

Invasion forces

 
Advance Japanese landings in the Philippines December 8–20, 1941

Terauchi assigned the Philippines invasion to the 14th Army, under the command of Lieutenant General Masaharu Homma.[15]: 14, 20  Air support of ground operations was provided by the 5th Air Group, under Lieutenant General Hideyoshi Obata,[15]: 21  which was transferred to Formosa from Manchuria. The amphibious invasion was conducted by the Philippines Force under Vice Admiral Ibō Takahashi, using the Imperial Japanese Navy Third Fleet,[15]: 21  supported by the land-based aircraft of 11th Air Fleet of Vice Admiral Nishizo Tsukahara.

The 14th Army had two first-line infantry divisions, the 16th (Susumu Morioka) and 48th Divisions (Yuitsu Tsuchihashi), to invade and conquer Luzon, and the 65th Brigade as a garrison force.[15]: 21  The Formosa-based 48th Division, although without combat experience, was considered one of the Japanese Army's best units, was specially trained in amphibious operations, and was given the assignment of the main landing in Lingayen Gulf. The 16th Division, assigned to land at Lamon Bay, was picked as one of the best divisions still available in Japan itself and staged from the Ryukyus and Palau. The 14th Army also had the 4th and 7th Tank Regiments,[15]: 24  five field artillery battalions, five anti-aircraft artillery battalions, four antitank companies, and a mortar battalion. An unusually strong group of combat engineer and bridging units was included in the 14th Army's support forces.

For the invasion, the Third Fleet was augmented by two destroyer squadrons and a cruiser division of the Second Fleet, and the aircraft carrier Ryūjō from the 1st Air Fleet. The Philippines Force consisted of an aircraft carrier, five heavy cruisers, five light cruisers, 29 destroyers, two seaplane tenders, minesweepers and torpedo boats.[15]: 22 

Combined army and navy air strength allocated to support the landings was 541 aircraft. The 11th Kōkūkantai (Air Fleet) consisted of the 21st and 23rd Kōkūsentai (Air Flotillas), a combined strength of 156 G4M "Betty" and G3M "Nell" bombers, 107 A6M Zero fighters, plus seaplanes and reconnaissance planes.[15]: 24  Most of these were based at Takao, and approximately a third were sent to Indochina in the last week of November to support operations in Malaya. The Ryujo provided an additional 16 fighters and 18 torpedo planes, and the surface ships had 68 seaplanes for search and observation, totaling 412 naval aircraft. The army's 5th Kikōshidan (Air Group) consisted of two fighter regiments, two light bomber regiments, and a heavy bomber regiment, totaling 192 aircraft: 76 Ki-21 "Sally", Ki-48 "Lily", and Ki-30 "Ann" bombers; 36 Ki-27 "Nate" fighters, and 19 Ki-15 "Babs" and Ki-36 "Ida" observation planes.[15]: 24 

Defenses

 
Disposition of United States Army forces in the Philippines in December 1941

USAFFE

From mid-1941, following increased tension between Japan and several other powers, including the United States, Britain and the Netherlands, many countries in South East Asia and the Pacific began to prepare for the possibility of war. By December 1941, the combined defense forces in the Philippines were organized into the US Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE), which eventually included the Philippine Army's 1st Regular Division, 2nd (Constabulary) Division, and 10 mobilized reserve divisions,[16] and the United States Army's Philippine Department. General Douglas MacArthur was recalled from retirement by the U.S. War Department and named commander of USAFFE on July 26, 1941.[17] MacArthur had retired in 1937 after two years as military advisor to the Philippine Commonwealth,[18] and accepted control of the Philippine Army, tasked by the Filipino government with reforming an army made up primarily of reservists lacking equipment, training and organization.

On July 31, 1941, the Philippine Department had 22,532 troops assigned, approximately half of them Filipino.[19] MacArthur recommended the reassignment of department commander Major General George Grunert in October 1941 and took command himself.[20] The main component of the department was the U.S. Army Philippine Division, a 10,500-man formation that consisted mostly of Philippine Scouts (PS) combat units.[21] The Philippine Department had been reinforced between August and November 1941 by 8,500 troops of the U.S. Army Air Forces, and by three Army National Guard units, including its only armor, two battalions of M3 light tanks.[3] These units, the 200th Coast Artillery Regiment (an antiaircraft unit), 192nd Tank Battalion, and 194th Tank Battalion, drew troops from New Mexico, Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, and California.[22][23][24] After reinforcement, the department's strength as of November 30, 1941 was 31,095, including 11,988 Philippine Scouts.[25]

MacArthur organized USAFFE into four tactical commands.[26] The North Luzon Force, activated December 3, 1941 under Maj. Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright, defended the most likely sites for amphibious attacks and the central plains of Luzon. Wainwright's forces included the PA 11th, 21st and 31st Infantry Divisions, the U.S. 26th Cavalry Regiment (PS), a battalion of the 45th Infantry (PS), and the 1st Provisional Artillery Group of two batteries of 155 mm guns and one 2.95 inch (75 mm) mountain gun. The Philippine 71st Infantry Division served as a reserve and could be committed only on the authority of MacArthur.[27]

The South Luzon Force, activated December 13, 1941 under Brig. Gen. George M. Parker Jr., controlled a zone east and south of Manila. Parker had the PA 41st and 51st Infantry Divisions and the 2nd Provisional Artillery Group of two batteries of the US 86th Field Artillery Regiment (PS).

The Visayan–Mindanao Force under Brig. Gen. William F. Sharp comprised the PA 61st, 81st, and 101st Infantry Divisions, reinforced after the start of the war by the newly inducted 73rd and 93rd Infantry Regiments. The 61st Division was located on Panay, the 81st on Cebu and Negros, and the 101st on Mindanao. In January a fourth division, the 102nd, was created on Mindanao from the field artillery regiments of the 61st and 81st Divisions acting as infantry (they had no artillery pieces), and the 103rd Infantry of the 101st Division. The 2nd Infantry of the Philippine Army's 1st Regular Division and the 2nd Battalion of the U.S. 43rd Infantry (Philippine Scouts) were also made a part of the Mindanao Force.

USAFFE's Reserve Force, under MacArthur's direct control, was composed of the Philippine Division, the 91st Division (PA), and headquarters units from the PA and Philippine Department, positioned just north of Manila. The 192nd and 194th Tank Battalions formed the separate Provisional Tank Group, also under MacArthur's direct command, at Clark Field/Fort Stotsenburg, where they were positioned as a mobile defense against any attempt by airborne units to seize the field.

Four U.S. Coast Artillery Corps regiments guarded the entrance to Manila Bay, including Corregidor Island. Across a narrow 3 kilometre (2 mi) strait of water from Bataan on Corregidor was Fort Mills, defended by batteries of the 59th and 60th Coast Artillery Regiments (the latter an anti-aircraft unit), and the 91st and 92nd Coast Artillery Regiments (Philippine Scouts) of the Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays. The 59th CA acted as a supervisory unit for the batteries of all units positioned on Forts Hughes, Drum, Frank, and Wint. The majority of the forts had been built circa 1910–1915 and, except for Fort Drum and Battery Monja on Corregidor, were unprotected against air and high-angle artillery attack except by camouflage.[28][29][30]

The USAFFE's aviation arm was the Far East Air Force (FEAF) of the U.S. Army Air Forces, commanded by Maj. Gen. Lewis H. Brereton. Previously the Philippine Department Air Force and Air Force USAFFE, the air force was activated on November 16, 1941, and was the largest USAAF combat air organization outside the United States. Its primary combat power in December 1941 consisted of 91 serviceable P-40 Warhawk fighters and 34 B-17 Flying Fortress bombers, with further modern aircraft en route. Tactically the FEAF was part of the Reserve Force, so that it fell under MacArthur's direct command.

As of November 30, 1941, the strength of US Army Troops in the Philippines, including Philippine units, was 31,095, consisting of 2,504 officers and 28,591 enlisted (16,643 Americans and 11,957 Philippine Scouts).[31]

Mobilization

MacArthur's mobilization plans called for induction of the ten reserve divisions between September 1 and December 15, 1941. The timetable was met on September 1 with the induction of one regiment per division, but slowed as a lack of facilities and equipment hampered training. The second regiments of the divisions were not called up until November 1, and the third regiments were not organized until after hostilities began. Training was also seriously inhibited by language difficulties between the American cadres and the Filipino troops, and by the many differing dialects (estimated at 70) of the numerous ethnic groups comprising the army. By the outbreak of war, only two-thirds of the army had been mobilized, but additions to the force continued with the induction of the Constabulary and a portion of the regular army, until a force of approximately 130,000 men was reached.

The most crucial equipment shortfalls were in rifles and divisional light artillery. MacArthur requested 84,500 M1 Garand rifles to replace the World War I M1917 Enfields equipping the PA, of which there were adequate numbers, but the War Department denied the request because of production difficulties. The divisions had only 20% of their artillery requirements, and while plans had been approved to significantly reduce this gap, the arrangements came too late to be implemented before war isolated the Philippines.[32]

By contrast, the Philippine Division was adequately manned, equipped, and trained. MacArthur received immediate approval to modernize it by reorganizing it as a mobile "triangular" division. Increasing the authorized size of the Philippine Scouts was not politically viable (because of resentments within the less-well-paid Philippine Army), so MacArthur's plan also provided for freeing up Philippine Scouts to round out other units. The transfer of the American 34th Infantry from the 8th Infantry Division in the United States to the Philippine Division, accompanied by two field artillery battalions to create a pair of complete regimental combat teams, was actually underway when war broke out. The deployment ended with the troops still in the United States, where they were sent to defend Hawaii instead.

Other defense forces

The United States Asiatic Fleet and 16th Naval District, based at Manila, provided the naval defenses for the Philippines. Commanded by Admiral Thomas C. Hart, the surface combatants of the Asiatic Fleet were the heavy cruiser USS Houston, the light cruiser USS Marblehead, and thirteen World War I-era destroyers.[33] Its primary striking power lay in the 23 modern submarines assigned to the Asiatic Fleet. Submarine Squadron (SUBRON) Two consisted of 6 Salmon-class submarines, and SUBRON Five of 11 Porpoise and Sargo-class submarines. In September 1941, naval patrol forces in the Philippines were augmented by the arrival of the six PT boats of Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron Three. Likewise, the China Yangtze Patrol gunboats also became part of the Philippine naval defenses: USS Asheville (sunk south of Java March 3, 1942), USS Mindanao (lost May 2, 1942), USS Luzon (scuttled May 6, 1942 but salvaged by the Japanese), USS Oahu (sunk May 5, 1942), and USS Quail (scuttled May 5, 1942). In December 1941, the naval forces were augmented by the schooner USS Lanikai.

The U.S. 4th Marine Regiment, stationed in Shanghai, China, since the late 1920s, had anticipated a withdrawal from China during the summer of 1941. As personnel were routinely transferred back to the United States or separated from the service, the regimental commander, Col. Samuel L. Howard, arranged unofficially for all replacements to be placed in the 1st Special Defense Battalion, based at Cavite. When the 4th Marines arrived in the Philippines on November 30, 1941, it incorporated the Marines at Cavite and Olongapo Naval Stations into its understrength ranks.[34] An initial plan to divide the 4th into two regiments, mixing each with a battalion of Philippine Constabulary, was discarded after Howard showed reluctance, and the 4th was stationed on Corregidor to augment the defenses there, with details detached to Bataan to protect USAFFE headquarters.

Additionally the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, a paramilitary survey force, operated in Manila with the ship USC&GSS Research.[35]

Far East Air Force controversy

News reached the Philippines that an attack on Pearl Harbor was in progress at 2:20 am local time on December 8, 1941.[36][37] FEAF interceptors had already conducted an air search for incoming aircraft reported shortly after midnight, but these had been Japanese scout planes reporting weather conditions.[38][39] At 3:30 am, Brigadier General Richard Sutherland, chief of staff to General Douglas MacArthur, heard about the attack from a commercial radio broadcast.[36] At 5:00 am FEAF commander Gen. Brereton reported to USAFFE headquarters where he attempted to see MacArthur without success. He recommended to MacArthur's chief of staff, Brig. Gen. Richard Sutherland, that FEAF launch bombing missions against Formosa in accordance with Rainbow 5 war plan directives from which an attack was likely to come. Brereton was further made aware of an attack against the USS William B. Preston at Davao Bay.[40] Authorization was withheld, but shortly afterward, in response to a telegram from General George C. Marshall instructing MacArthur to implement Rainbow 5, Brereton was ordered to have a strike in readiness for later approval.[39][41]

Through a series of disputed discussions and decisions, authorization for the first raid was not approved until 10:15 am local time for an attack just before sunset, with a follow-up raid at dawn the next day. In the meantime, Japanese plans to attack Clark and Iba Fields using land-based naval bombers and Zero fighters were delayed six hours by fog at its Formosa bases, so that only a small scale Japanese Army mission attacked targets in the northern tip of Luzon. At 08:00 am, Brereton received a telephone call from Gen. Henry H. Arnold warning him not to allow his aircraft to be attacked while still on the ground. FEAF launched three squadron-sized fighter patrols and all of its serviceable bombers on Luzon between 08:00 and 08:30 am as a precautionary move.[42] After MacArthur gave Brereton the authorization he sought at 10:15 am, the bombers were ordered to land and prepare for the afternoon raid on Formosa. All three pursuit squadrons began to run short on fuel and broke off their patrols at the same time.

The 20th Pursuit Squadron's Curtiss P-40B interceptors patrolled the area while the bombers landed at Clark Field between 10:30 and 10:45, then dispersed to their revetments for servicing.[39] The 17th Pursuit Squadron, based at Nichols Field, also landed at Clark and had its aircraft refueled while its pilots ate lunch, then put its pilots on alert shortly after 11:00.[43] All but two of the Clark Field B-17s were on the ground.[44]

At 11:27 am and 11:29 am, the radar post at Iba Field detected two incoming raids while the closest was still 130 miles out. It alerted FEAF headquarters and the command post at Clark Field, a warning that reached only the pursuit group commander, Major Orrin L. Grover, who apparently became confused by multiple and conflicting reports.[39][41] The 3rd Pursuit Squadron took off from Iba at 11:45 with instructions to intercept the western force, which was thought to have Manila as its target, but dust problems during its takeoff resulted in the fragmentation of its flights. Two flights of the 21st Pursuit Squadron (PS) at Nichols Field, six P-40Es, took off at 11:45, led by 1st Lt. William Dyess. They started for Clark but were diverted to Manila Bay as a second line of defense if the 3rd PS failed to intercept its force. The 21st's third flight, taking off five minutes later, headed toward Clark, although engine problems with its brand-new P-40Es reduced its numbers by two. The 17th Pursuit Squadron took off at 12:15 pm from Clark, ordered to patrol Bataan and Manila Bay, while the 34th PS at Del Carmen never received its orders to protect Clark Field and did not launch.[45] The 20th PS, dispersed at Clark, was ready to take off but did not receive orders from group headquarters. Instead a line chief saw the incoming formation of Japanese bombers and the section commander, 1st Lt. Joseph H. Moore,[46] ordered the scramble himself.

Even though tracked by radar and with three U.S. pursuit squadrons in the air, when Japanese bombers of the 11th Kōkūkantai attacked Clark Field at 12:40 pm,[47] they achieved tactical surprise. Two squadrons of B-17s were dispersed on the ground. Most of the P-40s of the 20th PS were preparing to taxi and were struck by the first wave of 27 Japanese twin-engine Mitsubishi G3M "Nell" bombers; only four of the 20th PS P-40Bs managed to take off as the bombs were falling.

A second bomber attack (26 Mitsubishi G4M "Betty" bombers) followed closely, then escorting Zero fighters strafed the field for 30 minutes, destroying 12 of the 17 American heavy bombers present and seriously damaging three others. Two damaged B-17s were made flyable and taken to Mindanao, where one of them was destroyed in a ground collision.[41]

A near-simultaneous attack on the auxiliary field at Iba to the northwest by 54 "Betty" bombers was also successful: all but four of the 3rd Pursuit Squadron's P-40s, short on fuel and caught in their landing pattern, were destroyed in combat or by lack of fuel.[48] Twelve P-40s from the 20th (four), 21st (two), and 3rd (six) Squadrons attacked the strafers but with little success, losing at least four of their own.

The Far East Air Force lost half its planes in the 45-minute attack, and was all but destroyed over the next few days, including a number of the surviving B-17s lost to takeoff crashes of other planes.[39] The 24th Pursuit Group flew its last interception on December 10, losing 11 of the 40 or so P-40s it sent up, and the surviving P-35s of the 34th PS were destroyed on the ground at Del Carmen.[49] That night FEAF combat strength had been reduced to 12 operable B-17s, 22 P-40s, and 8 P-35s.[50] Fighter strength fluctuated daily until December 24, when USAFFE ordered all its forces into Bataan. Until then P-40s and P-35s were cobbled together from spare parts taken from wrecked airplanes, and still crated P-40Es were assembled at the Philippine Air Depot. Clark Field was abandoned as a bomber field on December 11 after being used as a staging base for a handful of B-17 missions.[51] Between December 17 and 20, the 14 surviving B-17s were withdrawn to Australia. Every other aircraft of the FEAF was destroyed or captured.[52]

No formal investigation took place regarding this failure as it occurred in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor. After the war, Brereton and Sutherland in effect blamed each other for FEAF being surprised on the ground, and MacArthur released a statement that he had no knowledge of any recommendation to attack Formosa with B-17s.[39] Walter D. Edmunds summarized the disaster: "in the Philippines the personnel of our armed forces almost without exception failed to assess accurately the weight, speed, and efficiency of the Japanese Air Force." He quoted Maj. Gen. Emmett O'Donnell Jr., then a major in charge of the B-17s sent to Mindanao, as concluding that the first day was a "disorganized business" and that no one was "really at fault" because no one was "geared for war."[53]

Invasion

Initial landings

 
A map of Luzon Island showing Japanese landings and advances from December 8, 1941, to January 8, 1942

The 14th Army began its invasion with a landing on Batan Island (not to be confused with Bataan Peninsula), 120 miles (190 km) off the north coast of Luzon, on December 8, 1941, by selected naval infantry units. Landings on Camiguin Island and at Vigan, Aparri, and Gonzaga in northern Luzon followed two days later.

Two B-17s attacked the Japanese ships offloading at Gonzaga. Other B-17s with fighter escort attacked the landings at Vigan. In this last coordinated action of the Far East Air Force, U.S. planes damaged two Japanese transports (Oigawa Maru and Takao Maru), the cruiser Naka, and the destroyer Murasame, and sank minesweeper W-10.[54]

Early on the morning of December 12, the Japanese landed 2,500 men of the 16th Division at Legazpi on southern Luzon, 150 miles (240 km) from the nearest American and Philippine forces. The attack on Mindanao followed on December 19, using elements of the 16th Army temporarily attached to the invasion force to permit the 14th Army to use all its troops on Luzon.

Meanwhile, Admiral Thomas C. Hart withdrew most of his U.S. Asiatic Fleet from Philippine waters following Japanese air strikes that inflicted heavy damage on U.S. naval facilities at Cavite on December 10. Only submarines were left to contest Japanese naval superiority, and the commanders of these, conditioned by prewar doctrine that held the fleet submarine to be a scouting vessel more vulnerable to air and anti-submarine attack than it actually was, proved unequal to the task. Because of this poor doctrine for submarine warfare and the infamous failures of the Mark 14 torpedo that plagued the U.S. submarine fleet for the first two years of the Pacific War, not a single Japanese warship was sunk by the Asiatic Fleet during the Philippines campaign.[55]

In a book A Different Kind of Victory: A Biography of Admiral Thomas C. Hart (Naval Institute Press, 1981), James Leutze wrote:

"He had 27 subs submerged in Manila Bay,...[56] it was Washington, not the Asiatic Fleet Commander that directed the fleet to withdraw from Manila.[57]... Hart was directed by Washington to send US Navy surface forces and submarines southeast toward Australia.[58]... Douglas MacArthur and Henry Stimson (United States Secretary of War) feuding with Admiral Hart over lack of US Navy submarine action. MacArthur asked Admiral Hart: "What in the world is the matter with your submarines?".[59].. MacArthur complained that Hart's inactivity allowed Japan's navy freedom of action.[60]... According to Stimson, MacArthur felt that Hart's ships and submarines were ineffectual, but because Admiral Hart had lost his courage. Admiral Hart's reaction to MacArthur's brickbats: "He (MacArthur) is inclined to cut my throat and perhaps the Navy in general."[61]"

Main attack

 
Withdrawal in the South, December 25–31, 1941

The main attack began early on the morning of December 22 as 43,110 men of the 48th Division and one regiment of the 16th Division, supported by artillery and approximately 90 tanks, landed at three points along the east coast of Lingayen Gulf. A few B-17s flying from Australia attacked the invasion fleet, and U.S. submarines harassed it from the adjacent waters, but to little effect.

General Wainwright's poorly trained and equipped 11th Division (PA) and 71st Division (PA) could neither repel the landings nor pin the enemy on the beaches. The remaining Japanese units of the divisions landed farther south along the gulf. The 26th Cavalry (PS) of the well-trained and better-equipped Philippine Scouts, advancing to meet them, put up a strong fight at Rosario, but was forced to withdraw after taking heavy casualties with no hope of sufficient reinforcements. By nightfall, December 23, the Japanese had moved ten miles (16 km) into the interior.

The next day, 7,000 men of the 16th Division hit the beaches at three locations along the shore of Lamon Bay in southern Luzon, where they found General Parker's forces dispersed, and without artillery protecting the eastern coast, unable to offer serious resistance. They immediately consolidated their positions and began the drive north toward Manila where they would link up with the forces advancing south toward the capital for the final victory.

Withdrawal into Bataan

The U.S. Philippine Division moved into the field in reaction to reports of airborne drops near Clark Field, and when this proved false, were deployed to cover the withdrawal of troops into Bataan and to resist Japanese advances in the Subic Bay area.

On December 24, MacArthur invoked the prewar plan WPO-3 (War Plan Orange 3), which called for use of five delaying positions in central Luzon while forces withdrew into Bataan. This was carried out in part by the 26th Cavalry Regiment.[62] He relieved General Parker of his command of South Luzon Force and had him begin preparing defensive positions on Bataan, using units as they arrived; both the military headquarters and the Philippine's government were moved there. Nine days of feverish movement of supplies into Bataan, primarily by barge from Manila, began in an attempt to feed an anticipated force of 43,000 troops for six months. (Ultimately 80,000 troops and 26,000 refugees flooded Bataan.) Nevertheless, substantial forces remained in other areas for several months.

On December 26, Manila was declared an open city by MacArthur.[63] However, the United States military was still using the city for logistical purposes while the city was declared open[64] and the Japanese army ignored the declaration and bombed the city.[65]

 
Generals Wainwright (left) and MacArthur

Units of both defense forces were maneuvered to hold open the escape routes into Bataan, in particular San Fernando, the steel bridges at Calumpit over the deep Pampanga River at the north end of Manila Bay, and Plaridel north of Manila. The South Luzon Force, despite its inexperience and equivocating orders to withdraw and hold, successfully executed "leapfrogging" retrograde techniques and crossed the bridges by January 1. Japanese air commanders rejected appeals by the 48th Division to bomb the bridges to trap the retreating forces,[66] which were subsequently demolished by Philippine Scout engineers on January 1.

The Japanese realized the full extent of MacArthur's plan on December 30 and ordered the 48th Division to press forward and seal off Bataan. In a series of actions between January 2 and 4, the 11th and 21st Divisions of the Philippine Army, the 26th Cavalry (PS) and the American M3 Stuart tanks of the Provisional Tank Group held open the road from San Fernando to Dinalupihan at the neck of the peninsula for the retreating forces of the South Luzon Force, then made good their own escape. Despite 50% losses in the 194th Tank Battalion during the retreat, the Stuarts and a supporting battery of 75mm SPM halftracks repeatedly stopped Japanese thrusts and were the final units to enter Bataan.

On December 30, the American 31st Infantry moved to the vicinity of Dalton Pass to cover the flanks of troops withdrawing from central and southern Luzon, while other units of the Philippine Division organized positions at Bataan. The 31st Infantry then moved to a defensive position on the west side of the Olongapo-Manila road, near Layac Junction—at the neck of Bataan Peninsula—on January 5, 1942. The junction was given up on January 6, but the withdrawal to Bataan was successful.

Battle of Bataan

 
Situation on Bataan, January 8, 1942

From January 7 to 14, 1942, the Japanese concentrated on reconnaissance and preparations for an attack on the Main Battle Line from Abucay to Mount Natib to Mauban. At the same time, in a critical mistake, they also relieved the 48th Division, responsible for much of the success of Japanese operations, with the much less-capable 65th Brigade, intended as a garrison force. The Japanese 5th Air group was withdrawn from operations on January 5 in preparation for movement with the 48th Division to the Netherlands East Indies.[67] U.S. and Filipino forces repelled night attacks near Abucay, and elements of the U.S. Philippine Division counterattacked on January 16. This failed, and the division withdrew to the Reserve Battle Line from Casa Pilar to Bagac in the center of the peninsula on January 26.

The 14th Army renewed its attacks on January 23 with an attempted amphibious landing behind the lines by a battalion of the 16th Division, then with general attacks beginning January 27 along the battle line. The amphibious landing was disrupted by a PT boat and contained in brutally dense jungle by ad hoc units made up of U.S. Army Air Corps troops, naval personnel, and Philippine Constabulary. The pocket was then slowly forced back to the cliffs, with high casualties on both sides. Landings to reinforce the surviving pocket on January 26 and February 2 were severely disrupted by air attacks from the few remaining FEAF P-40s, then trapped and eventually annihilated on February 13.

A penetration in the I Corps line was stopped and broken up into several pockets. General Homma on February 8 ordered the suspension of offensive operations in order to reorganize his forces. This could not be carried out immediately, because the 16th Division remained engaged trying to extricate a pocketed battalion of its 20th Infantry. With further losses, the remnants of the battalion, 378 officers and men, were extricated on February 15. On February 22, the 14th Army line withdrew a few miles to the north and USAFFE forces re-occupied the abandoned positions. The result of the "Battle of the Points" and "Battle of the Pockets" was total destruction of all three battalions of the Japanese 20th Infantry and a clear USAFFE victory.

 
California newspapers, April 9, 1942

For several weeks, the Japanese, deterred by heavy losses and reduced to a single brigade, conducted siege operations while waiting refitting and reinforcement. Both armies engaged in patrols and limited local attacks. Because of the worsening Allied position in the Asia-Pacific region, U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered MacArthur to relocate to Australia, as Supreme Allied Commander South West Pacific Area. (MacArthur's famous speech regarding the Philippines, in which he said "I came out of Bataan and I shall return" was made at Terowie, South Australia on March 20.) Wainwright officially assumed control of what was now termed United States Forces in the Philippines (USFIP) on March 23. During this period, elements of the U.S. Philippine Division were shifted to assist in the defense of other sectors.

Beginning March 28, a new wave of Japanese air and artillery attacks hit Allied forces who were severely weakened by malnutrition, sickness and prolonged fighting. On April 3, the Japanese began to break through along Mount Samat, estimating that the offensive would require a month to end the campaign. The U.S. Philippine Division, no longer operating as a coordinated unit and exhausted by five days of nearly continuous combat, was unable to counterattack effectively against heavy Japanese assaults. On April 8, the U.S. 57th Infantry Regiment (PS) and the 31st Division (PA) were overrun near the Alangan River. The U.S. 45th Infantry Regiment (PS), under orders to reach Mariveles and evacuate to Corregidor, finally surrendered on April 10, 1942. Only 300 men of the U.S. 31st Infantry successfully reached Corregidor.

Battle of Corregidor

 
Japanese bombers over Corregidor
 
Map of Corregidor island in 1941

Corregidor (which included Fort Mills) was a U.S. Army Coast Artillery Corps position defending the entrance to Manila Bay, part of the Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays. It was armed by older seacoast disappearing gun batteries of the 59th and 91st Coast Artillery Regiments (the latter a Philippine Scouts unit), an offshore mine field of approximately 35 groups of controlled mines,[68] and an anti-aircraft unit, the 60th CA (AA). The latter was posted on the higher elevations of Corregidor and was able to respond successfully to the Japanese air attacks, downing many fighters and bombers. The older stationary batteries with fixed mortars and immense cannons, for defense from attack by sea, were easily put out of commission by Japanese bombers. The American soldiers and Filipino Scouts defended the small fortress until they had little left to wage a defense.

Early in 1942, the Japanese air command installed oxygen in its bombers to fly higher than the range of the Corregidor anti-aircraft batteries, and after that time, heavier bombardment began.

In December 1941, Philippines President Manuel L. Quezon, General MacArthur, other high-ranking military officers and diplomats and families escaped the bombardment of Manila and were housed in Corregidor's Malinta Tunnel. Prior to their arrival, Malinta's laterals had served as high command headquarters, hospital and storage of food and arms. In March 1942, several U.S. Navy submarines arrived on the north side of Corregidor. The Navy brought in mail, orders, and weaponry. They took away with them the high American and Filipino government officers, gold and silver and other important records. Those who were unable to escape by submarine were eventually military POWs of Japan or placed in civilian concentration camps in Manila and other locations.

 
U.S. and Filipino soldiers and sailors surrendering to Japanese forces at Corregidor

Corregidor was defended by 11,000 personnel, comprising the units mentioned above that were stationed on Corregidor, the U.S. 4th Marine Regiment, and U.S. Navy personnel deployed as infantry. Some were able to get to Corregidor from the Bataan Peninsula when the Japanese overwhelmed the units there. The Japanese began their final assault on Corregidor with an artillery barrage on May 1. On the night of May 5–6, two battalions of the Japanese 61st Infantry Regiment landed at the northeast end of the island. Despite strong resistance, the Japanese established a beachhead that was soon reinforced by tanks and artillery. The defenders were quickly pushed back toward the stronghold of Malinta Hill.

Late on May 6, Wainwright asked Homma for terms of surrender. Homma insisted that surrender include all Allied forces in the Philippines. Believing that the lives of all those on Corregidor would be endangered, Wainwright accepted. On May 8, he sent a message to Sharp, ordering him to surrender the Visayan-Mindanao Force. Sharp complied, but many individuals carried on the fight as guerrillas. Few unit commanders were so hard pressed as to be forced to surrender and none had any desire to surrender. Sharp's decision to surrender involved many factors. Major Larry S. Schmidt, in a 1982 master's degree thesis, said Sharp's decision was based on two reasons: that the Japanese were capable of executing the 10,000 survivors of Corregidor, and that Sharp now knew his forces would not be reinforced by the United States, as had been previously thought.[69]

List of U.S. generals who became prisoners-of-war

 
U.S. generals in a group photo with Japanese captors

Eighteen United States Army generals surrendered to Japanese forces by May 1942:[70]

Two Americans serving as Philippine Army generals also surrendered to Japanese forces:

The other Philippine Army generals captured by Japanese forces were native Filipinos like Major General Guillermo B. Francisco and Brigadier Generals Mateo M. Capinpin, Vicente P. Lim and Fidel V. Segundo. Ten U.S. Army generals and General Stevens surrendered at Bataan in April 1942.[72] Generals Wainwright, Moore, Beebe and Drake surrendered at Corregidor in May 1942. Generals Sharp, Chynoweth, Seals, Vachon and Fort were captured in the southern Philippines.

Aftermath

 
Japanese troops conquered Bataan, Philippines in 1942
 
Group of American prisoners, May 1942

General Homma's victory in the Philippines was not received at the Imperial General Headquarters, and specifically by Premier Hideki Tojo, as warmly as he hoped for. They scoffed at Homma's supposed inefficiency and lack of drive to defeat the Americans according to their planned timetable. Homma then was recalled to Tokyo to serve as a reserve officer.[73]

The defeat was the beginning of three and a half years of harsh treatment for the Allied survivors, including atrocities like the Bataan Death March and the misery of Japanese prison camps, and the "hell ships" on which American and Allied men were sent to Japan to be used as slave labor in mines and factories. Thousands were crowded into the holds of Japanese ships without water, food, or sufficient ventilation.[74] The Japanese did not mark "POW" on the decks of these vessels,[74][75] and some were attacked and sunk by Allied aircraft and submarines.[76] For example, on September 7, 1944 SS Shinyō Maru was sunk by USS Paddle with losses of 668 POWs; only 82 POWs survived.[77] Although the campaign was a victory to the Japanese, it took longer than anticipated to defeat the Filipinos and Americans. This required forces that would have been used to attack Borneo and Java to be diverted to the battle in the Philippines,[78] and also slowed the advance on New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.[79]

During the occupation of the Philippines, American and Filipino guerrillas fought against the occupying forces.[80] The Allied and Philippine Commonwealth forces began the campaign to recapture the Philippines in 1944, with landings on the island of Leyte.

On January 29, 1945, US and Philippine forces liberated POWs in the Raid at Cabanatuan.

Importance

 
Manila newspaper announcing the fall of Bataan

The defense of the Philippines was the longest resistance to the Japanese Imperial Army in the initial stages of World War II. After the Battle of Abucay the Japanese started to withdraw from Bataan, and resumed their attack in April, allowing MacArthur 40 days to prepare Australia as an operational base; the initial resistance in the Philippines allowed Australia crucial time to organize for its defense.[81] Philippine-American resistance against the Japanese up to the fall of Bataan on April 9, 1942, lasted 105 days (3 months and 2 days).[82]

USAFFE order of battle, December 3, 1941; casualty reports

United States Army Forces Far East

Note: ground echelon of the 27th Bomb Group at Bataan fought as 2nd Battalion (27th Bombardment Group) Provisional Infantry Regiment (Air Corp).

  • V Interceptor Command
    • 19th Air Base Group ABMC list 1 died
    • 20th Air Base Group ABMC list 1 dead
      • Tow Target Detachment
      • 5th Communications Detachment. ABMC lists 0 dead
      • 5th Weather Detachment ABMC lists 0 Dead
      • Chemical Warfare Det,
        • 4th Chemical Company (Aviation). ABMC lists 33 dead
        • 5th Chemical Detachment (Company-Aviation) ABMC lists 2 dead
      • 19th Air Base Squadron. ABMC lists 79 dead
      • 27th Material Squadron. ABMC lists 75 dead
      • 28th Material Squadron. ABMC lists 92 dead
      • 47th Material Squadron.
      • 803d Engineering Detachment (Battalion-Aviation). ABMC lists 232 dead
      • 809th Engineering Detachment
      • 409th Signal/Communications Detachment (Company-Aviation) ABMC lists 29 dead
      • 429th Maintenance Detachment
    • 24th Pursuit Group (Headquarters, Clark Field). Colonel Orrin l. Grover. HQ Squadron ABMC lists 112 dead
    • 35th Pursuit Group (headquarters en route to Philippines) ABMC lists 5 dead
      • 21st Pursuit Squadron (attached 24th PG, Nichols Field, 18 P-40E received December 7) ABMC lists 89 dead
      • 34th Pursuit Squadron (attached 24th PG, Del Carmen Field, 18 P-35A received December 7) ABMC lists 0 dead
  • Philippine Aircraft Warning Detachment
  • 6th Pursuit Squadron, Philippine Army Air Corps (Batangas Field, 12 P-26) ABMC lists 1 dead

Philippine Army

  • HQ Philippine Army:
  • 11th Division
    • HQ 11th Division: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • HQ Com 11th Division: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • 11th Field Artillery Regt: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • 11th Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 4 dead
    • 12th Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 2 dead
    • 13th Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 1 dead
  • 21st Division
    • 21st Engr Battalion: ABMC lists 2 dead
    • 21st Field Artillery Regiment: ABMC lists 3 dead
    • 21st Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 3 dead
    • 22nd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 3 dead
  • 31st Division
    • 31st Engr Battalion: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • 31st Field Artillery Regt: ABMC lists 2 dead
    • 31st Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 6 dead
    • 32nd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 3 dead
  • 41st Division: Commanding general Vicente Lim {ABMC listed dead}
    • 41st Engr Battalion: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • 41st Infantry Regiment: ABMC Lists 6 dead
    • 42nd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 4 dead
  • 51st Division
    • 51st Field Artillery Regiment: ABMC lists 4 dead
    • 51st Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 4 dead
    • 52nd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 4 dead
    • 53rd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 4 dead
  • 61st Division
    • HQ 61st Division: ABMC Lists 1 dead
    • 61st Field Artillery Regiment: ABMC lists 4 dead
    • 61st Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • 62nd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 4 dead
    • 63rd Infantry Regiment: ABMC Lists 1 dead
  • 71st Division
    • 71st Field Artillery Regt: ABMC Lists 1 dead
    • 71st Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 2 dead
    • 72nd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 6 dead
    • 73rd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 3 dead
    • 75th Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • 71st Quartermaster Co: ABMC lists 1 dead
  • 81st Division-Brig Gen Guy O. Fort {KIA}
    • 81st Division: ABMC lists 5 dead
    • 81st Engr Batt.: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • 81st Field Artillery Regt: ABMC lists 2 dead
    • 82nd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 2 dead
    • 83rd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 1 dead
  • 91st Division
    • HQ 91st Division: ABMC lists 1 dead
    • 91st Field Artillery Regiment: ABMC lists 5 dead
    • 91st Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 2 dead
    • 92nd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 5 dead
    • 93rd Infantry Regiment: ABMC lists 1 dead
  • 101st Division
    • ABMC lists 1 with Division;
    • 101st Engr Battalion; ABMC Lists 1 dead;
    • 101st Field Artillery Regt; ABMC lists 1 dead;
    • 101st Inf Regt; ABMC lists 7 dead;
    • 102nd Inf Regt; ABMC lists 0 dead;
    • 103rd Inf Regt; ABMC lists 3 dead

Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays: For Strength in November 1941 see [2] Note: Harbor defenses included units listed above:

United States Navy

Admiral Thomas C. HartUnited States Asiatic Fleet and 16th Naval District,

United States Marine Corps

  • 4th Marine Regiment (Commander Colonel Samuel L. Howard) stationed at Corregidor; consisted of 142 different organizations:
    • USMC: 72 officers; 1,368 enlisted
    • USN: 37 officers; 848 enlisted
    • USAAC/PA: 111 officers; 1,455 enlisted

4th Marines Casualties were 315 killed/15 MIA/357 WIA in the Philippine Campaign.[3] 105 Marines were captured on Bataan and 1,283 captured on Corregidor of whom 490 didn't survive.[4]

Miscellaneous

Harbor Defenses, April 15, 1942 (Maj. Gen. George F. Moore):

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Reports of General MacArthur September 30, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Order of Battle plate. The total includes all elements of divisions assigned to the 14th Army at some point in the campaign, and replacements. The maximum strength of Japanese ground forces was approx. 100,000. The total does not include 12000+ Army air force personnel, whose totals were drastically reduced after January 1, 1942.
  2. ^ The Fall of the Philippines February 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine p. 18. The Philippine Army totalled 120,000 and the Army of the United States 31,000.
  3. ^ a b The Fall of the Philippines December 16, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, p. 33.
  4. ^ The Fall of the Philippines December 16, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, p. 42. Total includes 175 fighters and 74 bombers.
  5. ^ Senshi Sōsho 戦史叢書 (in Japanese). Vol. 2. Asagumo Shimbunsha. 1966.
  6. ^ . Center of Military History, U.S. Army. October 3, 2003. p. 19. Archived from the original on May 23, 2011. Retrieved February 19, 2009. Since 6 January the Japanese had suffered 7,000 battle casualties, with another 10,000 to 12,000 men dying of disease.
  7. ^ Life Magazine gives a total of 36,583 US/Filipino troops captured 9 April 1942 ""Missing in Action": With 66 Boys Lost on Bataan, the People of Harrodsburg, Ky. Pay Their Price for Freedom". Life. July 6, 1942. p. 15 – via Google Books.
  8. ^ Japanese Operations in the Southwest Pacific Area – Reports of General MacArthur Volume II May 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, p. 104.
  9. ^ Morton 1960.
  10. ^ "War in the Pacific: The First Year", https://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/npswapa/extContent/wapa/guides/first/sec2.htm. Retrieved May 4, 2016
  11. ^ "American Prisoners of War in the Philippines," Office of the Provost Marshal, November 19, 1945, http://www.mansell.com/pow_resources/camplists/philippines/pows_in_pi-OPMG_report.html. Retrieved May 4, 2016
  12. ^ Nish 2002, p. 112.
  13. ^ a b Nish 2002, p. 162.
  14. ^ Paine, Sarah (2017). The Japanese Empire: Grand Strategy from the Meiji Restoration to the Pacific War. Cambridge University Press. p. 157.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h Chun, Clayton K. S. (2012). The Fall of the Philippines, 1941–42. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84908-609-7.
  16. ^ The Fall of the Philippines – U. S. Army in World War II February 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, pp. 26–27.
  17. ^ The Fall of the Philippines February 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, p. 18.
  18. ^ The Fall of the Philippines February 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, p. 19.
  19. ^ The Fall of the Philippines February 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, p. 24.
  20. ^ The Fall of the Philippines February 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, p. 23.
  21. ^ The Fall of the Philippines February 17, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, p. 22.
  22. ^ . Archived from the original on May 23, 2011. Retrieved February 19, 2009.
  23. ^ Opolony, Jim (September 23, 2007). "Origin of the 192nd Tank Battalion". 192nd Tank Battalion Wiki.
  24. ^ "Company C, 194th Tank Battalion in the Philippines, 1941–42". militarymuseum.org.
  25. ^ The Fall of the Philippines December 16, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, p. 49, incl. notes.
  26. ^ The Fall of the Philippines, pp. 68–69.
  27. ^ The Fall of the Philippines, p. 499. The two divisions used as reserves, the 71st and 91st, were not from Luzon but from the Visayas, and each had only two regiments.
  28. ^ Stanton, Shelby L. (1984). Order of Battle, U.S. Army, World War II. Presidio Press. p. 461.
  29. ^ "The Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays, the Philippines". Coast Defense Study Group. May 24, 2016.
  30. ^ Berhow and McGovern, pp. 10–24
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on December 16, 2019. Retrieved June 23, 2008.
  32. ^ The Fall of the Philippines December 16, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, pp. 35–36.
  33. ^ United States Asiatic Fleet, complete Order of Battle including patrol craft of 16th Naval District.
  34. ^ The Fall of the Philippines May 25, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, pp. 528–529. The Peking and Chinwangtao detachments of the 4th were stranded in China by the onset of war. The 4th Marines had only two battalions, each organized into a machine gun company and two rifle companies of only two platoons each. The amalgamation of the 1st Special Defense Battalion, Cavite, enabled the 4th to organize a third battalion, and Marines of the Marine Barracks Olangapo enabled the 1st and 2nd Battalions to field three rifle companies of three platoons each.
  35. ^ Coast And Geodetic Survey (1951). "World War II History of the Department Of Commerce-Part 5 U.S. Coast And Geodetic Survey" (PDF). United States Government Printing Office. Retrieved January 27, 2012.
  36. ^ a b Couttie, Bob (2009). "17. The Last Charge". Chew the Bones: Maddog Essays on Philippine History. p. 101. ISBN 978-1442142596.
  37. ^ The attack on Pearl Harbor had occurred on December 7 by local, Hawaiian time. This was December 8 in the Philippines, which is on the other side of the International Date Line. Clock time in the Philippines was 18 hours 30 minutes ahead of Hawaiian time (see zoneinfo database).
  38. ^ Correll, John T. (December 2007). "Caught on the Ground". Air Force. Vol. 90, no. 12. p. 68.
  39. ^ a b c d e f Morton, Louis (1953). "Chapter V. The First Days of War". The Fall of the Philippines CMH Pub 5-2. US Army Center for Military History. Retrieved November 25, 2010.
  40. ^ "The Japanese Attack Finds General Macarthur Unprepared". The Pacific War Historical Society. Retrieved May 22, 2011.
  41. ^ a b c Correll, "Caught on the Ground".
  42. ^ Edmunds, Walter D. (1992). They Fought With What They Had. p. 77. ISBN 9781428915411. Retrieved January 28, 2011.
  43. ^ Edmunds, p. 83.
  44. ^ Edmunds, p. 84. One was on a reconnaissance mission to Formosa, the other over eastern Luzon after taking off as the others were landing. A third B-17 was in the air en route from Mindanao for repair of a wing fuel tank.
  45. ^ Edmunds, pp. 84–85.
  46. ^ "Lieutenant General Joseph H. Moore". Air Force. Retrieved February 13, 2022.
  47. ^ Edmunds, p. 102. Edmunds interviewed numerous officers present when the attack began.
  48. ^ Edmunds, pp. 95–97. Four of the 18 airborne P-40s made Rosario airfield, while a fifth took off from Iba and found refuge there also.
  49. ^ Edmunds, pp. 133–136.
  50. ^ Edmunds, p. 138.
  51. ^ Edmunds, p. 133.
  52. ^ Edmunds, p. 178.
  53. ^ Edmunds, p. 93.
  54. ^ Bob Hackett and Sander Kingsepp (2007). "HIJMS NAKA: Tabular Record of Movement". Retrieved September 26, 2007.
  55. ^ "Fizzling Fish and Hidebound Bureucrats: The Tragedy of the Mark XIV Torpedo in World War II". militaryhistoryonline.com. Retrieved January 5, 2022.
  56. ^ Leutze (1981), p. 235
  57. ^ Leutze (1981), p. 230
  58. ^ Leutze (1981), p. 237
  59. ^ Leutze (1981), p. 242
  60. ^ Leutze (1981), p. 234
  61. ^ Leutze (1981), p. 240
  62. ^ Merriam, Ray (1999), War in the Philippines, Merriam Press, pp. 70–82, ISBN 1-57638-164-1, retrieved January 31, 2008
  63. ^ "Manila Declared 'Open City'". Chicago Daily Tribune. Vol. C, no. 309. December 26, 1941. p. 1.
  64. ^ John W. Whitman (January 1998). "Manila: How Open Was This Open City?". Historynet.
  65. ^ "Japanese Bombs Fire Open City of Manila; Civilian Toll Heavy; Invaders Gain in Luzon". The New York Times. Vol. XCI, no. 30, 654. December 28, 1941. p. 1.
  66. ^ The Fall of the Philippines, p. 208.
  67. ^ Japanese Operations in the Southwest Pacific Area May 23, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, p. 104.
  68. ^ a b Bocksel, Arnold A. (1946). (PDF). Coast Artillery Journal. 89 (6): 54. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 12, 2018. Retrieved February 11, 2018.
  69. ^ Schmidt, Larry S. American Involvement in the Filipino Resistance Movement on Mindanao During the Japanese Occupation, 1942–1945 (PDF) (MMAS). Fort Leavenworth, Kans.: U.S. Army Command and General Staff College. p. 68. (PDF) from the original on December 12, 2019.
  70. ^ "30 Generals Killed, Captured or Missing: 7 Admirals, 2 Marine Generals Also on Casualty Rolls" (PDF). The New York Times. October 12, 1943. p. 12. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  71. ^ "Gen. Carl Seals". The Washington Post. October 31, 1955. p. 20. ProQuest 148640018. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  72. ^ "Ten U.S. and Six Philippine Generals Captured on Bataan". The Washington Post. April 18, 1942. p. 3. ProQuest 151521303. Retrieved February 6, 2023.
  73. ^ Agoncillo, Teodoro (2001). The Fateful Years: Japan's Adventure in the Philippines, 1941–1945, Volume Two. University of the Philippines Press. p. 295.
  74. ^ a b "The Hellships Memorial". Hellships Memorial Project. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  75. ^ "Hellship Information and Photographs". West-Point.Org. January 17, 2005. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  76. ^ "American POWs remember life in Japanese prison camp". Reuters. May 25, 2007. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  77. ^ "Hellships". Defenders of the Philippine. West Virginia Library Commission. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  78. ^ Costello, John (1982). The Pacific War. HarperCollins. p. 185. ISBN 978-0-688-01620-3. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  79. ^ "Manila American Cemetery and Memorial" (PDF). American Battle Monuments Commission. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  80. ^ General MacArthur's General Staff (June 20, 2006) [1966]. . Reports of General MacArthur. United States Army. pp. 295–326. LCCN 66-60005. Archived from the original on January 31, 2016. Retrieved May 9, 2018.
  81. ^ Webb, W. E. (1950). The Operations of the 41st Infantry Regiment (Philippine Army) of the 41st Infantry Division
    in the Defense of the Abucay Line, Bataan, Philippine Islands, January 10–18, 1942 (Philippine Campaign). The Infantry School, Staff Department. Fort Benning: US Army.
  82. ^ Atienza, Rigoberto J. (1985). A Time for War: 105 Days in Bataan. Manila: Eugenia S. vda. de Atienza.
  83. ^ Diosco, Marconi M. (2010). The Times When Men Must Die: The Story of the Destruction of the Philippine Army During the Early Months of World War II in the Pacific, December 1941 – May 1942. Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania: Dorrance Publishing Co. p. 40. ISBN 978-1-4349-0809-4. Retrieved May 30, 2011.
  84. ^ Capistrano, Robert (1982). (PDF). The Quan. Vol. 37, no. 2. American Defenders of Bataan & Corregidor, Inc. pp. 11–13. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 24, 2011. Retrieved May 30, 2011. Provisional Tank Group: BG James R.N. Weaver, USA (Ft. Stotsenburg)(organized 21 November 1941 with the arrival of the following units)
  85. ^ MacArthur, Douglas (July 1964). "The Country's Safety Was at State and I Said So". Life. Vol. 57, no. 1. pp. 55–66 – via Google Books. At this critical point I threw in my last reserve supported by a small light tank force under Brig. General James R. N. Weaver.
  86. ^ Company A was from Janesville, Wisconsin; Company B was from Maywood and Proviso Township, Cook County, Illinois; Company C was from Port Clinton, Ohio; Company D aka "Harrodsburg Tankers" was from Harrodsburg, Kentucky; see [1]
  87. ^ "On Eternal Patrol – USS Sealion (SS-195)". www.oneternalpatrol.com.

Books

  • Bartsch, William H. (2003). 8 December 1941: MacArthur's Pearl Harbor. College Station, Texas, USA: Texas A&M University Press.
  • Belote, James H.; William M. Belote (1967). Corregidor: The Saga of a Fortress. Harper & Row. ASIN B0006BOBRQ.
  • Berhow, Mark A.; Terrance C. McGovern (2003). American Defenses of Corregidor and Manila Bay 1898–1945 (Fortress). Osprey Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-84176-427-2.
  • Burton, John (2006). Fortnight of Infamy: The Collapse of Allied Airpower West of Pearl Harbor. US Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-096-X.
  • Connaughton, Richard (2001). MacArthur and Defeat in the Philippines. New York: The Overlook Press. ISBN 9781585671182.
  • Drea, Edward J. (1998). In the Service of the Emperor: Essays on the Imperial Japanese Army. Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-1708-0.
  • Edmunds, Walter D. (1951). They Fought With What They Had: The Story of the Army Air Forces in the Southwest Pacific, 1941–1942. College Station, Texas, USA: Little, Brown and Company (1992 reprint: Center For Air Force History). ISBN 978-1442142596.
  • Gordon, John (2011). Fighting for MacArthur: The Navy and Marine Corps' Desperate Defense of the Philippines. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-61251-057-6.
  • Jackson, Charles; Bruce H. Norton (2003). I Am Alive!: A United States Marine's Story of Survival in a World war II Japanese POW Camp. Presidio Press. ISBN 0-345-44911-8.
  • Mallonee, Richard C. (2003). Battle for Bataan: An Eyewitness Account. I Books. ISBN 0-7434-7450-3.
  • Martin, Adrian R. (2008). Operation Plum: The Ill-Fated 27th Bombardment Group and the Fight for the Western Pacific. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-1-60344-019-6.
  • Mellnik, Stephen Michael (1981). Philippine War Diary, 1939–1945. Van Nostrand Reinhold. ISBN 0-442-21258-5.
  • Morison, Samuel Eliot (2001) [1958]. The Rising Sun in the Pacific 1931 – April 1942, vol. 3 of History of United States Naval Operations in World War II. Castle Books. ISBN 0-7858-1304-7.
  • Morris, Eric (2000). Corregidor: The American Alamo of World War II. Cooper Square Press. ISBN 0-8154-1085-9.
  • Nish, Ian Hill (2002). Japanese Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period. Praeger. ISBN 978-0-275-94791-0.
  • Rottman, Gordon L. (2005). Japanese Army in World War II: Conquest of the Pacific 1941–42. Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-84176-789-5.
  • Schultz, Duane (1981). Hero of Bataan: The story of General Johnathan M Wainwright. St Martin's Press. ASIN B000UXDJJG.
  • Waldron, Ben; Emily Burneson (2006). Corregidor: From Paradise to Hell!. Trafford Publishing. ISBN 1-4120-2109-X.
  • Whitman, John W. (1990). Bataan: Our Last Ditch: The Bataan Campaign, 1942. Hippocrene Books. ISBN 0-87052-877-7.
  • Young, Donald J. (1992). The Battle of Bataan: A History of the 90 Day Siege and Eventual Surrender of 75,000 Filipino and United States Troops to the Japanese in World War. McFarland & Company. ISBN 0-89950-757-3.
  • Zaloga, Steven J. Japanese Tanks 1939–45. Osprey, 2007. ISBN 978-1-84603-091-8.

Further reading

  • Bartsch, William H. (1995). Doomed at the Start: American Pursuit Pilots in the Philippines, 1941–1942. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-0-89096-679-2.
  • Chun, Clayton (2012). The Fall of the Philippines 1941–42. Osprey Publishing; Osprey Campaign Series No. 243. ISBN 978-1-84908-609-7.
  • Martin, Adrian R. (2010). Operation PLUM: The Ill-fated 27th Bombardment Group and the Fight for the Western Pacific. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-1-60344-184-1.
  • Morton, Louis (1960). . In Kent Roberts Greenfield (ed.). Command Decisions. United States Army Center of Military History. LCCN 59060007. CMH Pub 70-7. Archived from the original on December 30, 2007. Retrieved June 18, 2010.
  • Morton, Louis (1953). . U.S. Army in World War II: The War in the Pacific. Washington, D.C.: United States Army Center of Military History. LCCN 53063678. CMH Pub 5-2. Archived from the original on January 8, 2012. Retrieved May 4, 2008. – full text
  • Bailey, Jennifer L. (2003). . The U.S. Army Campaigns of World War II (brochure). United States Army Center of Military History. CMH Pub 72–3. Archived from the original on May 23, 2011. Retrieved January 29, 2005.
  • "Japanese Operations in the Southwest Pacific Area, Volume II – Part I". . United States Army Center of Military History. 1994. 13-1. Archived from the original on January 25, 2008. Retrieved December 8, 2006.
  • "Volume I, Chapter 1 Japanese Offensive in the Pacific". . United States Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on April 24, 2021. Retrieved May 4, 2008. Report by MacArthur's staff
  • Stevens, Peter F. (2011). The Twilight Riders: The Last Charge of the 26th Cavalry. Lyons Press. ISBN 978-0-7627-6485-3.
  • Cooper, Colonel Wibb E. (1946). Medical Department Activities in the Philippines from 1941 to May 1942, and Including Medical Activities in the Japanese Prisoner of War Camps. Office of the Sergeon General.
  • General Headquarters, Far East Command (July 20, 1951). . Center of Military History. United States Army. Archived from the original on January 5, 2009. Retrieved September 25, 2008.

External links

  • C. Peter Chen. "Invasion of the Philippines". WW2DB. Retrieved May 31, 2005.
  • . HistoryAnimated.com. Archived from the original on July 15, 2011. Retrieved January 7, 2011.

philippines, campaign, 1941, 1942, allied, campaign, against, japanese, philippines, 1944, 1945, philippines, campaign, 1944, 1945, battle, philippinespart, pacific, theater, world, burial, detail, american, filipino, prisoners, uses, improvised, litters, carr. For the Allied campaign against the Japanese in the Philippines of 1944 1945 see Philippines campaign 1944 1945 Battle of the PhilippinesPart of the Pacific Theater of World War IIA burial detail of American and Filipino prisoners of war uses improvised litters to carry fallen comrades at Camp O Donnell Capas Tarlac 1942 following the Bataan Death March DateDecember 8 1941 May 8 1942LocationCommonwealth of the PhilippinesResultJapanese victoryTerritorialchangesJapanese occupation of the PhilippinesBelligerents Japan United States PhilippinesCommanders and leadersMasaharu Homma Hideyoshi Obata Ibō Takahashi Nishizō TsukaharaDouglas MacArthurJonathan Wainwright George Parker Manuel L Quezon Basilio J ValdesStrength129 435 troops 1 90 tanks541 aircraft151 000 troops 2 108 tanks 3 277 aircraft 4 Casualties and lossesJapanese source 5 11 225 4 130 killed 287 missing 6 808 woundedUS estimate 6 17 000 19 000 7 000 killed or wounded 10 000 12 000 dead of disease146 000 7 25 000 killed 21 000 wounded 100 000 captured The Philippines campaign Filipino Kampanya sa Pilipinas Spanish Campana en las Filipinas del Ejercito Japones Japanese フィリピンの戦い romanized Firipin no Tatakai also known as the Battle of the Philippines Filipino Labanan sa Pilipinas or the Fall of the Philippines was the invasion of the Philippines by the Empire of Japan and the defense of the islands by United States and the Philippine Armies during World War II It took place between December 8 1941 and May 8 1942 The Japanese launched the invasion by sea from Formosa over 200 miles 320 km north of the Philippines The defending forces outnumbered the Japanese by a ratio of 3 2 but were a mixed force of non combat experienced regular national guard constabulary and newly created Commonwealth units The Japanese used first line troops at the outset of the campaign and by concentrating their forces they swiftly overran most of Luzon during the first month The Japanese high command believing that they had won the campaign made a strategic decision to advance by a month their timetable of operations in Borneo and Indonesia and to withdraw their best division and the bulk of their airpower in early January 1942 8 That coupled with the defenders decision to withdraw into a defensive holding position in the Bataan Peninsula and also the defeat of three Japanese battalions at the Battle of the Points and Battle of the Pockets enabled the Americans and Filipinos to hold out for four more months After the Japanese failure to penetrate the Bataan defensive perimeter in February the Japanese conducted a 40 day siege The crucial large natural harbor and port facilities of Manila Bay were denied to the Japanese until May 1942 While the Dutch East Indies operations were unaffected this heavily hindered the Japanese offensive operations in New Guinea and the Solomon Islands buying time for the U S Navy to make plans to engage the Japanese at Guadalcanal instead of much further east 9 Japan s conquest of the Philippines is often considered the worst military defeat in US history 10 About 23 000 American military personnel and about 100 000 Filipino soldiers were killed or captured 11 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Japanese activity 1 1 1 Objectives 1 1 2 Invasion forces 1 2 Defenses 1 2 1 USAFFE 1 2 2 Mobilization 1 2 3 Other defense forces 2 Far East Air Force controversy 3 Invasion 3 1 Initial landings 3 2 Main attack 3 3 Withdrawal into Bataan 4 Battle of Bataan 5 Battle of Corregidor 5 1 List of U S generals who became prisoners of war 6 Aftermath 6 1 Importance 7 USAFFE order of battle December 3 1941 casualty reports 7 1 United States Army Forces Far East 7 2 Philippine Army 7 3 United States Navy 7 4 United States Marine Corps 7 5 Miscellaneous 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Books 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground EditFurther information Military history of the Philippines during World War II Japanese activity Edit Objectives Edit The Japanese planned to occupy the Philippines as part of their plan for a Greater East Asia War in which their Southern Expeditionary Army Group seized sources of raw materials in Malaya and the Netherlands East Indies while the Combined Fleet neutralized the United States Pacific Fleet Five years earlier in 1936 Captain Ishikawa Shingo a hard liner in the Japanese navy had toured the Philippines and other parts of the Southeast Asia noting that these countries had raw materials Japan needed for its armed forces 12 This helped further increase their aspiration for colonizing the Philippines The Southern Expeditionary Army was created on 6 November 1941 commanded by General Hisaichi Terauchi who had previously been Minister of War It was ordered to prepare for war in the event that negotiations with the United States did not succeed in peacefully meeting Japanese objectives They also included the condition of America s acceptance of their position in the Pacific as a superior force with the testament of their occupation of China but they did not get what they wanted 13 Under Terauchi s command were four corps equivalent armies comprising ten divisions and three combined arms brigades including the Japanese Fourteenth Area Army Operations against the Philippines and Malaya were to be conducted simultaneously when Imperial General Headquarters ordered The invasion of the Philippines had four objectives 14 13 To prevent the use of the Philippines as an advance base of operations by American forces To acquire staging areas and supply bases to enhance operations against the Dutch East Indies and Guam To secure the lines of communication between occupied areas in the south and the Japanese Home Islands To limit the Allied intervention when they attempt to launch an offensive campaign in Australia and the Solomon Islands via dispatching all the forces stationed in the country and other neighboring nationsInvasion forces Edit Advance Japanese landings in the Philippines December 8 20 1941 Terauchi assigned the Philippines invasion to the 14th Army under the command of Lieutenant General Masaharu Homma 15 14 20 Air support of ground operations was provided by the 5th Air Group under Lieutenant General Hideyoshi Obata 15 21 which was transferred to Formosa from Manchuria The amphibious invasion was conducted by the Philippines Force under Vice Admiral Ibō Takahashi using the Imperial Japanese Navy Third Fleet 15 21 supported by the land based aircraft of 11th Air Fleet of Vice Admiral Nishizo Tsukahara The 14th Army had two first line infantry divisions the 16th Susumu Morioka and 48th Divisions Yuitsu Tsuchihashi to invade and conquer Luzon and the 65th Brigade as a garrison force 15 21 The Formosa based 48th Division although without combat experience was considered one of the Japanese Army s best units was specially trained in amphibious operations and was given the assignment of the main landing in Lingayen Gulf The 16th Division assigned to land at Lamon Bay was picked as one of the best divisions still available in Japan itself and staged from the Ryukyus and Palau The 14th Army also had the 4th and 7th Tank Regiments 15 24 five field artillery battalions five anti aircraft artillery battalions four antitank companies and a mortar battalion An unusually strong group of combat engineer and bridging units was included in the 14th Army s support forces For the invasion the Third Fleet was augmented by two destroyer squadrons and a cruiser division of the Second Fleet and the aircraft carrier Ryujō from the 1st Air Fleet The Philippines Force consisted of an aircraft carrier five heavy cruisers five light cruisers 29 destroyers two seaplane tenders minesweepers and torpedo boats 15 22 Combined army and navy air strength allocated to support the landings was 541 aircraft The 11th Kōkukantai Air Fleet consisted of the 21st and 23rd Kōkusentai Air Flotillas a combined strength of 156 G4M Betty and G3M Nell bombers 107 A6M Zero fighters plus seaplanes and reconnaissance planes 15 24 Most of these were based at Takao and approximately a third were sent to Indochina in the last week of November to support operations in Malaya The Ryujo provided an additional 16 fighters and 18 torpedo planes and the surface ships had 68 seaplanes for search and observation totaling 412 naval aircraft The army s 5th Kikōshidan Air Group consisted of two fighter regiments two light bomber regiments and a heavy bomber regiment totaling 192 aircraft 76 Ki 21 Sally Ki 48 Lily and Ki 30 Ann bombers 36 Ki 27 Nate fighters and 19 Ki 15 Babs and Ki 36 Ida observation planes 15 24 Defenses Edit Disposition of United States Army forces in the Philippines in December 1941 USAFFE Edit From mid 1941 following increased tension between Japan and several other powers including the United States Britain and the Netherlands many countries in South East Asia and the Pacific began to prepare for the possibility of war By December 1941 the combined defense forces in the Philippines were organized into the US Army Forces in the Far East USAFFE which eventually included the Philippine Army s 1st Regular Division 2nd Constabulary Division and 10 mobilized reserve divisions 16 and the United States Army s Philippine Department General Douglas MacArthur was recalled from retirement by the U S War Department and named commander of USAFFE on July 26 1941 17 MacArthur had retired in 1937 after two years as military advisor to the Philippine Commonwealth 18 and accepted control of the Philippine Army tasked by the Filipino government with reforming an army made up primarily of reservists lacking equipment training and organization On July 31 1941 the Philippine Department had 22 532 troops assigned approximately half of them Filipino 19 MacArthur recommended the reassignment of department commander Major General George Grunert in October 1941 and took command himself 20 The main component of the department was the U S Army Philippine Division a 10 500 man formation that consisted mostly of Philippine Scouts PS combat units 21 The Philippine Department had been reinforced between August and November 1941 by 8 500 troops of the U S Army Air Forces and by three Army National Guard units including its only armor two battalions of M3 light tanks 3 These units the 200th Coast Artillery Regiment an antiaircraft unit 192nd Tank Battalion and 194th Tank Battalion drew troops from New Mexico Wisconsin Illinois Ohio Kentucky Minnesota Missouri and California 22 23 24 After reinforcement the department s strength as of November 30 1941 was 31 095 including 11 988 Philippine Scouts 25 MacArthur organized USAFFE into four tactical commands 26 The North Luzon Force activated December 3 1941 under Maj Gen Jonathan M Wainwright defended the most likely sites for amphibious attacks and the central plains of Luzon Wainwright s forces included the PA 11th 21st and 31st Infantry Divisions the U S 26th Cavalry Regiment PS a battalion of the 45th Infantry PS and the 1st Provisional Artillery Group of two batteries of 155 mm guns and one 2 95 inch 75 mm mountain gun The Philippine 71st Infantry Division served as a reserve and could be committed only on the authority of MacArthur 27 The South Luzon Force activated December 13 1941 under Brig Gen George M Parker Jr controlled a zone east and south of Manila Parker had the PA 41st and 51st Infantry Divisions and the 2nd Provisional Artillery Group of two batteries of the US 86th Field Artillery Regiment PS The Visayan Mindanao Force under Brig Gen William F Sharp comprised the PA 61st 81st and 101st Infantry Divisions reinforced after the start of the war by the newly inducted 73rd and 93rd Infantry Regiments The 61st Division was located on Panay the 81st on Cebu and Negros and the 101st on Mindanao In January a fourth division the 102nd was created on Mindanao from the field artillery regiments of the 61st and 81st Divisions acting as infantry they had no artillery pieces and the 103rd Infantry of the 101st Division The 2nd Infantry of the Philippine Army s 1st Regular Division and the 2nd Battalion of the U S 43rd Infantry Philippine Scouts were also made a part of the Mindanao Force USAFFE s Reserve Force under MacArthur s direct control was composed of the Philippine Division the 91st Division PA and headquarters units from the PA and Philippine Department positioned just north of Manila The 192nd and 194th Tank Battalions formed the separate Provisional Tank Group also under MacArthur s direct command at Clark Field Fort Stotsenburg where they were positioned as a mobile defense against any attempt by airborne units to seize the field Four U S Coast Artillery Corps regiments guarded the entrance to Manila Bay including Corregidor Island Across a narrow 3 kilometre 2 mi strait of water from Bataan on Corregidor was Fort Mills defended by batteries of the 59th and 60th Coast Artillery Regiments the latter an anti aircraft unit and the 91st and 92nd Coast Artillery Regiments Philippine Scouts of the Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays The 59th CA acted as a supervisory unit for the batteries of all units positioned on Forts Hughes Drum Frank and Wint The majority of the forts had been built circa 1910 1915 and except for Fort Drum and Battery Monja on Corregidor were unprotected against air and high angle artillery attack except by camouflage 28 29 30 The USAFFE s aviation arm was the Far East Air Force FEAF of the U S Army Air Forces commanded by Maj Gen Lewis H Brereton Previously the Philippine Department Air Force and Air Force USAFFE the air force was activated on November 16 1941 and was the largest USAAF combat air organization outside the United States Its primary combat power in December 1941 consisted of 91 serviceable P 40 Warhawk fighters and 34 B 17 Flying Fortress bombers with further modern aircraft en route Tactically the FEAF was part of the Reserve Force so that it fell under MacArthur s direct command As of November 30 1941 the strength of US Army Troops in the Philippines including Philippine units was 31 095 consisting of 2 504 officers and 28 591 enlisted 16 643 Americans and 11 957 Philippine Scouts 31 Mobilization Edit MacArthur s mobilization plans called for induction of the ten reserve divisions between September 1 and December 15 1941 The timetable was met on September 1 with the induction of one regiment per division but slowed as a lack of facilities and equipment hampered training The second regiments of the divisions were not called up until November 1 and the third regiments were not organized until after hostilities began Training was also seriously inhibited by language difficulties between the American cadres and the Filipino troops and by the many differing dialects estimated at 70 of the numerous ethnic groups comprising the army By the outbreak of war only two thirds of the army had been mobilized but additions to the force continued with the induction of the Constabulary and a portion of the regular army until a force of approximately 130 000 men was reached The most crucial equipment shortfalls were in rifles and divisional light artillery MacArthur requested 84 500 M1 Garand rifles to replace the World War I M1917 Enfields equipping the PA of which there were adequate numbers but the War Department denied the request because of production difficulties The divisions had only 20 of their artillery requirements and while plans had been approved to significantly reduce this gap the arrangements came too late to be implemented before war isolated the Philippines 32 By contrast the Philippine Division was adequately manned equipped and trained MacArthur received immediate approval to modernize it by reorganizing it as a mobile triangular division Increasing the authorized size of the Philippine Scouts was not politically viable because of resentments within the less well paid Philippine Army so MacArthur s plan also provided for freeing up Philippine Scouts to round out other units The transfer of the American 34th Infantry from the 8th Infantry Division in the United States to the Philippine Division accompanied by two field artillery battalions to create a pair of complete regimental combat teams was actually underway when war broke out The deployment ended with the troops still in the United States where they were sent to defend Hawaii instead Other defense forces Edit The United States Asiatic Fleet and 16th Naval District based at Manila provided the naval defenses for the Philippines Commanded by Admiral Thomas C Hart the surface combatants of the Asiatic Fleet were the heavy cruiser USS Houston the light cruiser USS Marblehead and thirteen World War I era destroyers 33 Its primary striking power lay in the 23 modern submarines assigned to the Asiatic Fleet Submarine Squadron SUBRON Two consisted of 6 Salmon class submarines and SUBRON Five of 11 Porpoise and Sargo class submarines In September 1941 naval patrol forces in the Philippines were augmented by the arrival of the six PT boats of Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron Three Likewise the China Yangtze Patrol gunboats also became part of the Philippine naval defenses USS Asheville sunk south of Java March 3 1942 USS Mindanao lost May 2 1942 USS Luzon scuttled May 6 1942 but salvaged by the Japanese USS Oahu sunk May 5 1942 and USS Quail scuttled May 5 1942 In December 1941 the naval forces were augmented by the schooner USS Lanikai The U S 4th Marine Regiment stationed in Shanghai China since the late 1920s had anticipated a withdrawal from China during the summer of 1941 As personnel were routinely transferred back to the United States or separated from the service the regimental commander Col Samuel L Howard arranged unofficially for all replacements to be placed in the 1st Special Defense Battalion based at Cavite When the 4th Marines arrived in the Philippines on November 30 1941 it incorporated the Marines at Cavite and Olongapo Naval Stations into its understrength ranks 34 An initial plan to divide the 4th into two regiments mixing each with a battalion of Philippine Constabulary was discarded after Howard showed reluctance and the 4th was stationed on Corregidor to augment the defenses there with details detached to Bataan to protect USAFFE headquarters Additionally the U S Coast and Geodetic Survey a paramilitary survey force operated in Manila with the ship USC amp GSS Research 35 Far East Air Force controversy EditMain article Attack on Clark Field News reached the Philippines that an attack on Pearl Harbor was in progress at 2 20 am local time on December 8 1941 36 37 FEAF interceptors had already conducted an air search for incoming aircraft reported shortly after midnight but these had been Japanese scout planes reporting weather conditions 38 39 At 3 30 am Brigadier General Richard Sutherland chief of staff to General Douglas MacArthur heard about the attack from a commercial radio broadcast 36 At 5 00 am FEAF commander Gen Brereton reported to USAFFE headquarters where he attempted to see MacArthur without success He recommended to MacArthur s chief of staff Brig Gen Richard Sutherland that FEAF launch bombing missions against Formosa in accordance with Rainbow 5 war plan directives from which an attack was likely to come Brereton was further made aware of an attack against the USS William B Preston at Davao Bay 40 Authorization was withheld but shortly afterward in response to a telegram from General George C Marshall instructing MacArthur to implement Rainbow 5 Brereton was ordered to have a strike in readiness for later approval 39 41 Through a series of disputed discussions and decisions authorization for the first raid was not approved until 10 15 am local time for an attack just before sunset with a follow up raid at dawn the next day In the meantime Japanese plans to attack Clark and Iba Fields using land based naval bombers and Zero fighters were delayed six hours by fog at its Formosa bases so that only a small scale Japanese Army mission attacked targets in the northern tip of Luzon At 08 00 am Brereton received a telephone call from Gen Henry H Arnold warning him not to allow his aircraft to be attacked while still on the ground FEAF launched three squadron sized fighter patrols and all of its serviceable bombers on Luzon between 08 00 and 08 30 am as a precautionary move 42 After MacArthur gave Brereton the authorization he sought at 10 15 am the bombers were ordered to land and prepare for the afternoon raid on Formosa All three pursuit squadrons began to run short on fuel and broke off their patrols at the same time The 20th Pursuit Squadron s Curtiss P 40B interceptors patrolled the area while the bombers landed at Clark Field between 10 30 and 10 45 then dispersed to their revetments for servicing 39 The 17th Pursuit Squadron based at Nichols Field also landed at Clark and had its aircraft refueled while its pilots ate lunch then put its pilots on alert shortly after 11 00 43 All but two of the Clark Field B 17s were on the ground 44 At 11 27 am and 11 29 am the radar post at Iba Field detected two incoming raids while the closest was still 130 miles out It alerted FEAF headquarters and the command post at Clark Field a warning that reached only the pursuit group commander Major Orrin L Grover who apparently became confused by multiple and conflicting reports 39 41 The 3rd Pursuit Squadron took off from Iba at 11 45 with instructions to intercept the western force which was thought to have Manila as its target but dust problems during its takeoff resulted in the fragmentation of its flights Two flights of the 21st Pursuit Squadron PS at Nichols Field six P 40Es took off at 11 45 led by 1st Lt William Dyess They started for Clark but were diverted to Manila Bay as a second line of defense if the 3rd PS failed to intercept its force The 21st s third flight taking off five minutes later headed toward Clark although engine problems with its brand new P 40Es reduced its numbers by two The 17th Pursuit Squadron took off at 12 15 pm from Clark ordered to patrol Bataan and Manila Bay while the 34th PS at Del Carmen never received its orders to protect Clark Field and did not launch 45 The 20th PS dispersed at Clark was ready to take off but did not receive orders from group headquarters Instead a line chief saw the incoming formation of Japanese bombers and the section commander 1st Lt Joseph H Moore 46 ordered the scramble himself Even though tracked by radar and with three U S pursuit squadrons in the air when Japanese bombers of the 11th Kōkukantai attacked Clark Field at 12 40 pm 47 they achieved tactical surprise Two squadrons of B 17s were dispersed on the ground Most of the P 40s of the 20th PS were preparing to taxi and were struck by the first wave of 27 Japanese twin engine Mitsubishi G3M Nell bombers only four of the 20th PS P 40Bs managed to take off as the bombs were falling A second bomber attack 26 Mitsubishi G4M Betty bombers followed closely then escorting Zero fighters strafed the field for 30 minutes destroying 12 of the 17 American heavy bombers present and seriously damaging three others Two damaged B 17s were made flyable and taken to Mindanao where one of them was destroyed in a ground collision 41 A near simultaneous attack on the auxiliary field at Iba to the northwest by 54 Betty bombers was also successful all but four of the 3rd Pursuit Squadron s P 40s short on fuel and caught in their landing pattern were destroyed in combat or by lack of fuel 48 Twelve P 40s from the 20th four 21st two and 3rd six Squadrons attacked the strafers but with little success losing at least four of their own The Far East Air Force lost half its planes in the 45 minute attack and was all but destroyed over the next few days including a number of the surviving B 17s lost to takeoff crashes of other planes 39 The 24th Pursuit Group flew its last interception on December 10 losing 11 of the 40 or so P 40s it sent up and the surviving P 35s of the 34th PS were destroyed on the ground at Del Carmen 49 That night FEAF combat strength had been reduced to 12 operable B 17s 22 P 40s and 8 P 35s 50 Fighter strength fluctuated daily until December 24 when USAFFE ordered all its forces into Bataan Until then P 40s and P 35s were cobbled together from spare parts taken from wrecked airplanes and still crated P 40Es were assembled at the Philippine Air Depot Clark Field was abandoned as a bomber field on December 11 after being used as a staging base for a handful of B 17 missions 51 Between December 17 and 20 the 14 surviving B 17s were withdrawn to Australia Every other aircraft of the FEAF was destroyed or captured 52 No formal investigation took place regarding this failure as it occurred in the aftermath of Pearl Harbor After the war Brereton and Sutherland in effect blamed each other for FEAF being surprised on the ground and MacArthur released a statement that he had no knowledge of any recommendation to attack Formosa with B 17s 39 Walter D Edmunds summarized the disaster in the Philippines the personnel of our armed forces almost without exception failed to assess accurately the weight speed and efficiency of the Japanese Air Force He quoted Maj Gen Emmett O Donnell Jr then a major in charge of the B 17s sent to Mindanao as concluding that the first day was a disorganized business and that no one was really at fault because no one was geared for war 53 Invasion EditInitial landings Edit A map of Luzon Island showing Japanese landings and advances from December 8 1941 to January 8 1942 The 14th Army began its invasion with a landing on Batan Island not to be confused with Bataan Peninsula 120 miles 190 km off the north coast of Luzon on December 8 1941 by selected naval infantry units Landings on Camiguin Island and at Vigan Aparri and Gonzaga in northern Luzon followed two days later Two B 17s attacked the Japanese ships offloading at Gonzaga Other B 17s with fighter escort attacked the landings at Vigan In this last coordinated action of the Far East Air Force U S planes damaged two Japanese transports Oigawa Maru and Takao Maru the cruiser Naka and the destroyer Murasame and sank minesweeper W 10 54 Early on the morning of December 12 the Japanese landed 2 500 men of the 16th Division at Legazpi on southern Luzon 150 miles 240 km from the nearest American and Philippine forces The attack on Mindanao followed on December 19 using elements of the 16th Army temporarily attached to the invasion force to permit the 14th Army to use all its troops on Luzon Meanwhile Admiral Thomas C Hart withdrew most of his U S Asiatic Fleet from Philippine waters following Japanese air strikes that inflicted heavy damage on U S naval facilities at Cavite on December 10 Only submarines were left to contest Japanese naval superiority and the commanders of these conditioned by prewar doctrine that held the fleet submarine to be a scouting vessel more vulnerable to air and anti submarine attack than it actually was proved unequal to the task Because of this poor doctrine for submarine warfare and the infamous failures of the Mark 14 torpedo that plagued the U S submarine fleet for the first two years of the Pacific War not a single Japanese warship was sunk by the Asiatic Fleet during the Philippines campaign 55 In a book A Different Kind of Victory A Biography of Admiral Thomas C Hart Naval Institute Press 1981 James Leutze wrote He had 27 subs submerged in Manila Bay 56 it was Washington not the Asiatic Fleet Commander that directed the fleet to withdraw from Manila 57 Hart was directed by Washington to send US Navy surface forces and submarines southeast toward Australia 58 Douglas MacArthur and Henry Stimson United States Secretary of War feuding with Admiral Hart over lack of US Navy submarine action MacArthur asked Admiral Hart What in the world is the matter with your submarines 59 MacArthur complained that Hart s inactivity allowed Japan s navy freedom of action 60 According to Stimson MacArthur felt that Hart s ships and submarines were ineffectual but because Admiral Hart had lost his courage Admiral Hart s reaction to MacArthur s brickbats He MacArthur is inclined to cut my throat and perhaps the Navy in general 61 Main attack Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Withdrawal in the South December 25 31 1941 The main attack began early on the morning of December 22 as 43 110 men of the 48th Division and one regiment of the 16th Division supported by artillery and approximately 90 tanks landed at three points along the east coast of Lingayen Gulf A few B 17s flying from Australia attacked the invasion fleet and U S submarines harassed it from the adjacent waters but to little effect General Wainwright s poorly trained and equipped 11th Division PA and 71st Division PA could neither repel the landings nor pin the enemy on the beaches The remaining Japanese units of the divisions landed farther south along the gulf The 26th Cavalry PS of the well trained and better equipped Philippine Scouts advancing to meet them put up a strong fight at Rosario but was forced to withdraw after taking heavy casualties with no hope of sufficient reinforcements By nightfall December 23 the Japanese had moved ten miles 16 km into the interior The next day 7 000 men of the 16th Division hit the beaches at three locations along the shore of Lamon Bay in southern Luzon where they found General Parker s forces dispersed and without artillery protecting the eastern coast unable to offer serious resistance They immediately consolidated their positions and began the drive north toward Manila where they would link up with the forces advancing south toward the capital for the final victory Withdrawal into Bataan Edit The U S Philippine Division moved into the field in reaction to reports of airborne drops near Clark Field and when this proved false were deployed to cover the withdrawal of troops into Bataan and to resist Japanese advances in the Subic Bay area On December 24 MacArthur invoked the prewar plan WPO 3 War Plan Orange 3 which called for use of five delaying positions in central Luzon while forces withdrew into Bataan This was carried out in part by the 26th Cavalry Regiment 62 He relieved General Parker of his command of South Luzon Force and had him begin preparing defensive positions on Bataan using units as they arrived both the military headquarters and the Philippine s government were moved there Nine days of feverish movement of supplies into Bataan primarily by barge from Manila began in an attempt to feed an anticipated force of 43 000 troops for six months Ultimately 80 000 troops and 26 000 refugees flooded Bataan Nevertheless substantial forces remained in other areas for several months On December 26 Manila was declared an open city by MacArthur 63 However the United States military was still using the city for logistical purposes while the city was declared open 64 and the Japanese army ignored the declaration and bombed the city 65 Generals Wainwright left and MacArthur Units of both defense forces were maneuvered to hold open the escape routes into Bataan in particular San Fernando the steel bridges at Calumpit over the deep Pampanga River at the north end of Manila Bay and Plaridel north of Manila The South Luzon Force despite its inexperience and equivocating orders to withdraw and hold successfully executed leapfrogging retrograde techniques and crossed the bridges by January 1 Japanese air commanders rejected appeals by the 48th Division to bomb the bridges to trap the retreating forces 66 which were subsequently demolished by Philippine Scout engineers on January 1 The Japanese realized the full extent of MacArthur s plan on December 30 and ordered the 48th Division to press forward and seal off Bataan In a series of actions between January 2 and 4 the 11th and 21st Divisions of the Philippine Army the 26th Cavalry PS and the American M3 Stuart tanks of the Provisional Tank Group held open the road from San Fernando to Dinalupihan at the neck of the peninsula for the retreating forces of the South Luzon Force then made good their own escape Despite 50 losses in the 194th Tank Battalion during the retreat the Stuarts and a supporting battery of 75mm SPM halftracks repeatedly stopped Japanese thrusts and were the final units to enter Bataan On December 30 the American 31st Infantry moved to the vicinity of Dalton Pass to cover the flanks of troops withdrawing from central and southern Luzon while other units of the Philippine Division organized positions at Bataan The 31st Infantry then moved to a defensive position on the west side of the Olongapo Manila road near Layac Junction at the neck of Bataan Peninsula on January 5 1942 The junction was given up on January 6 but the withdrawal to Bataan was successful Battle of Bataan EditMain article Battle of Bataan Situation on Bataan January 8 1942 From January 7 to 14 1942 the Japanese concentrated on reconnaissance and preparations for an attack on the Main Battle Line from Abucay to Mount Natib to Mauban At the same time in a critical mistake they also relieved the 48th Division responsible for much of the success of Japanese operations with the much less capable 65th Brigade intended as a garrison force The Japanese 5th Air group was withdrawn from operations on January 5 in preparation for movement with the 48th Division to the Netherlands East Indies 67 U S and Filipino forces repelled night attacks near Abucay and elements of the U S Philippine Division counterattacked on January 16 This failed and the division withdrew to the Reserve Battle Line from Casa Pilar to Bagac in the center of the peninsula on January 26 The 14th Army renewed its attacks on January 23 with an attempted amphibious landing behind the lines by a battalion of the 16th Division then with general attacks beginning January 27 along the battle line The amphibious landing was disrupted by a PT boat and contained in brutally dense jungle by ad hoc units made up of U S Army Air Corps troops naval personnel and Philippine Constabulary The pocket was then slowly forced back to the cliffs with high casualties on both sides Landings to reinforce the surviving pocket on January 26 and February 2 were severely disrupted by air attacks from the few remaining FEAF P 40s then trapped and eventually annihilated on February 13 A penetration in the I Corps line was stopped and broken up into several pockets General Homma on February 8 ordered the suspension of offensive operations in order to reorganize his forces This could not be carried out immediately because the 16th Division remained engaged trying to extricate a pocketed battalion of its 20th Infantry With further losses the remnants of the battalion 378 officers and men were extricated on February 15 On February 22 the 14th Army line withdrew a few miles to the north and USAFFE forces re occupied the abandoned positions The result of the Battle of the Points and Battle of the Pockets was total destruction of all three battalions of the Japanese 20th Infantry and a clear USAFFE victory California newspapers April 9 1942 For several weeks the Japanese deterred by heavy losses and reduced to a single brigade conducted siege operations while waiting refitting and reinforcement Both armies engaged in patrols and limited local attacks Because of the worsening Allied position in the Asia Pacific region U S President Franklin D Roosevelt ordered MacArthur to relocate to Australia as Supreme Allied Commander South West Pacific Area MacArthur s famous speech regarding the Philippines in which he said I came out of Bataan and I shall return was made at Terowie South Australia on March 20 Wainwright officially assumed control of what was now termed United States Forces in the Philippines USFIP on March 23 During this period elements of the U S Philippine Division were shifted to assist in the defense of other sectors Beginning March 28 a new wave of Japanese air and artillery attacks hit Allied forces who were severely weakened by malnutrition sickness and prolonged fighting On April 3 the Japanese began to break through along Mount Samat estimating that the offensive would require a month to end the campaign The U S Philippine Division no longer operating as a coordinated unit and exhausted by five days of nearly continuous combat was unable to counterattack effectively against heavy Japanese assaults On April 8 the U S 57th Infantry Regiment PS and the 31st Division PA were overrun near the Alangan River The U S 45th Infantry Regiment PS under orders to reach Mariveles and evacuate to Corregidor finally surrendered on April 10 1942 Only 300 men of the U S 31st Infantry successfully reached Corregidor Battle of Corregidor EditMain article Battle of Corregidor Japanese bombers over Corregidor Map of Corregidor island in 1941 Corregidor which included Fort Mills was a U S Army Coast Artillery Corps position defending the entrance to Manila Bay part of the Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays It was armed by older seacoast disappearing gun batteries of the 59th and 91st Coast Artillery Regiments the latter a Philippine Scouts unit an offshore mine field of approximately 35 groups of controlled mines 68 and an anti aircraft unit the 60th CA AA The latter was posted on the higher elevations of Corregidor and was able to respond successfully to the Japanese air attacks downing many fighters and bombers The older stationary batteries with fixed mortars and immense cannons for defense from attack by sea were easily put out of commission by Japanese bombers The American soldiers and Filipino Scouts defended the small fortress until they had little left to wage a defense Early in 1942 the Japanese air command installed oxygen in its bombers to fly higher than the range of the Corregidor anti aircraft batteries and after that time heavier bombardment began In December 1941 Philippines President Manuel L Quezon General MacArthur other high ranking military officers and diplomats and families escaped the bombardment of Manila and were housed in Corregidor s Malinta Tunnel Prior to their arrival Malinta s laterals had served as high command headquarters hospital and storage of food and arms In March 1942 several U S Navy submarines arrived on the north side of Corregidor The Navy brought in mail orders and weaponry They took away with them the high American and Filipino government officers gold and silver and other important records Those who were unable to escape by submarine were eventually military POWs of Japan or placed in civilian concentration camps in Manila and other locations U S and Filipino soldiers and sailors surrendering to Japanese forces at Corregidor Corregidor was defended by 11 000 personnel comprising the units mentioned above that were stationed on Corregidor the U S 4th Marine Regiment and U S Navy personnel deployed as infantry Some were able to get to Corregidor from the Bataan Peninsula when the Japanese overwhelmed the units there The Japanese began their final assault on Corregidor with an artillery barrage on May 1 On the night of May 5 6 two battalions of the Japanese 61st Infantry Regiment landed at the northeast end of the island Despite strong resistance the Japanese established a beachhead that was soon reinforced by tanks and artillery The defenders were quickly pushed back toward the stronghold of Malinta Hill Late on May 6 Wainwright asked Homma for terms of surrender Homma insisted that surrender include all Allied forces in the Philippines Believing that the lives of all those on Corregidor would be endangered Wainwright accepted On May 8 he sent a message to Sharp ordering him to surrender the Visayan Mindanao Force Sharp complied but many individuals carried on the fight as guerrillas Few unit commanders were so hard pressed as to be forced to surrender and none had any desire to surrender Sharp s decision to surrender involved many factors Major Larry S Schmidt in a 1982 master s degree thesis said Sharp s decision was based on two reasons that the Japanese were capable of executing the 10 000 survivors of Corregidor and that Sharp now knew his forces would not be reinforced by the United States as had been previously thought 69 List of U S generals who became prisoners of war Edit U S generals in a group photo with Japanese captors Eighteen United States Army generals surrendered to Japanese forces by May 1942 70 Lieutenant General Jonathan M Wainwright commanding general United States Forces in the Philippines USFIP Major General Albert M Jones commanding general Philippine I Corps Major General Edward P King commanding general Northern Luzon Major General George F Moore commanding general Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays Philippine Coast Artillery Major General George M Parker commanding general Southern Luzon Philippine II Corps Major General William F Sharp commanding general Visayan Mindanao Force Philippines Brigadier General Lewis C Beebe chief of staff to Lieutenant General Jonathan M Wainwright Brigadier General Clifford Bluemel commanding general 31st Division Philippines Brigadier General William E Brougher commanding general 11th Division Philippines Brigadier General Bradford G Chynoweth commanding general 61st Division Philippines Brigadier General Charles C Drake commanding general Quartermaster Corps in the Philippines Brigadier General Arnold J Funk chief of staff to Major General Edward P King Brigadier General Maxon S Lough commanding general Philippine Division Brigadier General Allan C McBride deputy chief of staff to General Douglas MacArthur and commanding general of the Service Command Area died 9 May 1944 in a prisoner of war camp Brigadier General Clinton A Pierce commanding general 26th Cavalry Regiment Philippine Scouts Brigadier General Carl H Seals adjutant general United States Army Forces in the Far East USAFFE 71 Brigadier General Joseph P Vachon commanding general 101st Division Philippines Brigadier General James R N Weaver commanding general 1st Provisional Tank GroupTwo Americans serving as Philippine Army generals also surrendered to Japanese forces Brigadier General Guy O Fort commanding general 81st Division Philippines executed 11 November 1942 in a prisoner of war camp Brigadier General Luther R Stevens commanding general 91st Division Philippines The other Philippine Army generals captured by Japanese forces were native Filipinos like Major General Guillermo B Francisco and Brigadier Generals Mateo M Capinpin Vicente P Lim and Fidel V Segundo Ten U S Army generals and General Stevens surrendered at Bataan in April 1942 72 Generals Wainwright Moore Beebe and Drake surrendered at Corregidor in May 1942 Generals Sharp Chynoweth Seals Vachon and Fort were captured in the southern Philippines Aftermath EditSee also Japanese war crimes Japanese troops conquered Bataan Philippines in 1942 Group of American prisoners May 1942 General Homma s victory in the Philippines was not received at the Imperial General Headquarters and specifically by Premier Hideki Tojo as warmly as he hoped for They scoffed at Homma s supposed inefficiency and lack of drive to defeat the Americans according to their planned timetable Homma then was recalled to Tokyo to serve as a reserve officer 73 The defeat was the beginning of three and a half years of harsh treatment for the Allied survivors including atrocities like the Bataan Death March and the misery of Japanese prison camps and the hell ships on which American and Allied men were sent to Japan to be used as slave labor in mines and factories Thousands were crowded into the holds of Japanese ships without water food or sufficient ventilation 74 The Japanese did not mark POW on the decks of these vessels 74 75 and some were attacked and sunk by Allied aircraft and submarines 76 For example on September 7 1944 SS Shinyō Maru was sunk by USS Paddle with losses of 668 POWs only 82 POWs survived 77 Although the campaign was a victory to the Japanese it took longer than anticipated to defeat the Filipinos and Americans This required forces that would have been used to attack Borneo and Java to be diverted to the battle in the Philippines 78 and also slowed the advance on New Guinea and the Solomon Islands 79 During the occupation of the Philippines American and Filipino guerrillas fought against the occupying forces 80 The Allied and Philippine Commonwealth forces began the campaign to recapture the Philippines in 1944 with landings on the island of Leyte On January 29 1945 US and Philippine forces liberated POWs in the Raid at Cabanatuan Importance Edit Manila newspaper announcing the fall of Bataan The defense of the Philippines was the longest resistance to the Japanese Imperial Army in the initial stages of World War II After the Battle of Abucay the Japanese started to withdraw from Bataan and resumed their attack in April allowing MacArthur 40 days to prepare Australia as an operational base the initial resistance in the Philippines allowed Australia crucial time to organize for its defense 81 Philippine American resistance against the Japanese up to the fall of Bataan on April 9 1942 lasted 105 days 3 months and 2 days 82 USAFFE order of battle December 3 1941 casualty reports EditUnited States Army Forces Far East Edit Philippine Constabulary 1st PC Regiment 2nd PC Regiment 3rd PC Regiment 4th PC Regiment HQ Philippine Dept Headquarters Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays Philippine Division PS Philippine Scouts As of July 31 1941 Division numbered 10 743 Post Service Command PS ABMC lists 175 dead 1st Philippine Coast Artillery ABMC lists 1 dead 12th Medical Battalion PS ABMC lists 121 dead 12th Medical Regiment PS ABMC lists 13 dead 12th Military Police Company PS ABMC lists 40 dead 12th Ordnance Company PS ABMC lists 45 dead 12th Quartermaster Battalion HQ PS ABMC lists 3 dead 12th Quartermaster Battalion PS ABMC lists 70 dead 12th Quartermaster Regiment United States PS ABMC lists 90 dead 12th Signal Company PS ABMC lists 77 dead 14th Engineer Regiment PS ABMC lists 324 dead 14th Engineer Battalion PS ABMC lists 4 dead 17th Ordnance Company US Army ABMC lists 45 dead 23rd Field Artillery PS Btry A ABMC lists 159 dead 1 dead 1st Battalion 24th Field Artillery PS ABMC lists 309 dead 26th Cavalry Regiment PS ABMC lists 301 dead 31st Infantry US Army ABMC lists 936 dead 43rd Infantry PS ABMC lists 31 dead 45th Infantry PS ABMC lists 1 039 dead 47th Motor Transport Company PS ABMC lists 1 dead 57th Infantry PS ABMC lists 983 dead 59th Coast Artillery US Army Corregidor ABMC lists 329 dead 1 Col Paul Bunker 60th Coast Artillery United States Corregidor ABMC lists 390 dead 71st Medical Battalion PS ABMC lists 0 dead 74th Quartermaster Bakery Co PS ABMC lists 17 dead 75th Ordnance Depot Company US Army ABMC lists 3 dead 75th Ordnance Company US Army ABMC lists 35 dead 86th Field Artillery PS ABMC lists 169 total 8 Dead for Regiment 161 dead for Battalion 88th Field Artillery PS ABMC lists 186 dead 91st Coast Artillery PS ABMC lists 202 dead 92nd Coast Artillery PS Corregidor ABMC lists 200 dead 200th Coast Artillery US Army ABMC lists 373 dead 202nd Philippine Engineer Battalion US Army ABMC lists 9 dead 252nd Signal Construction Company PS ABMC lists 44 dead 515th Coast Artillery Regiment US Army ABMC lists 207 dead 808th MP Company US Army ABMC lists 90 dead Provisional Tank Group under the command of BG James Weaver 83 84 85 17th Ordnance Battalion one Company ABMC lists 45 dead 192nd Tank Battalion ABMC lists 189 dead 86 HQ Co 192nd Tank Battalion ABMC lists 2 dead Note 192nd Tank Battalion article reports 328 did not survive the war 194th Tank Battalion less Company B ABMC lists 183 dead Far East Air Force commanded by Maj Gen Lewis H Brereton also commanded by Brig General Harold Huston George Killed in flying accident Australia April 30 1942 5th Air Base Group V Bomber Command 19th Bomb Group Heavy Headquarters Clark Field ABMC lists 3 dead HQ Squadron 19th BG ABMC list 103 dead 14th Bomb Squadron Del Monte Field December 5 8 B 17 ABMC lists 13 dead 28th Bomb Squadron Clark Field 8 B 17 ABMC lists 93 dead 30th Bomb Squadron Clark Field 9 B 17 ABMC lists 110 dead 93rd Bomb Squadron Del Monte Field December 5 8 B 17 ABMC lists 116 dead 440th Ordnance Squadron ABMC Lists 68 dead 27th Bomb Group Light Headquarters ABMC lists 3 dead 2nd Observation Squadron Nichols Field 21 various aircraft ABMC lists 71 dead 16th Bomb Squadron Fort William McKinley ABMC lists 72 Dead 17th Bomb Squadron San Fernando Field ABMC Lists 62 dead 91st Bomb Squadron San Marceleno Field B 18 ABMC lists 76 dead 48th Material Squadron ABMC lists 53 dead 19 also listed dead when the 48th Squadron was part of V Air Base Group 454th Ordnance Squadron ABMC lists 71 deadNote ground echelon of the 27th Bomb Group at Bataan fought as 2nd Battalion 27th Bombardment Group Provisional Infantry Regiment Air Corp V Interceptor Command 19th Air Base Group ABMC list 1 died 20th Air Base Group ABMC list 1 dead Tow Target Detachment 5th Communications Detachment ABMC lists 0 dead 5th Weather Detachment ABMC lists 0 Dead Chemical Warfare Det 4th Chemical Company Aviation ABMC lists 33 dead 5th Chemical Detachment Company Aviation ABMC lists 2 dead 19th Air Base Squadron ABMC lists 79 dead 27th Material Squadron ABMC lists 75 dead 28th Material Squadron ABMC lists 92 dead 47th Material Squadron 803d Engineering Detachment Battalion Aviation ABMC lists 232 dead 809th Engineering Detachment 409th Signal Communications Detachment Company Aviation ABMC lists 29 dead 429th Maintenance Detachment 24th Pursuit Group Headquarters Clark Field Colonel Orrin l Grover HQ Squadron ABMC lists 112 dead 3rd Pursuit Squadron Iba Field 18 P 40E ABMC lists 0 dead 17th Pursuit Squadron Nichols Field 18 P 40E ABMC Lists 0 dead 20th Pursuit Squadron Clark Field 18 P 40B ABMC Lists 96 dead 35th Pursuit Group headquarters en route to Philippines ABMC lists 5 dead 21st Pursuit Squadron attached 24th PG Nichols Field 18 P 40E received December 7 ABMC lists 89 dead 34th Pursuit Squadron attached 24th PG Del Carmen Field 18 P 35A received December 7 ABMC lists 0 dead Philippine Aircraft Warning Detachment 6th Pursuit Squadron Philippine Army Air Corps Batangas Field 12 P 26 ABMC lists 1 deadPhilippine Army Edit HQ Philippine Army 11th Division HQ 11th Division ABMC lists 1 dead HQ Com 11th Division ABMC lists 1 dead 11th Field Artillery Regt ABMC lists 1 dead 11th Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 4 dead 12th Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 2 dead 13th Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 1 dead 21st Division 21st Engr Battalion ABMC lists 2 dead 21st Field Artillery Regiment ABMC lists 3 dead 21st Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 3 dead 22nd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 3 dead 31st Division 31st Engr Battalion ABMC lists 1 dead 31st Field Artillery Regt ABMC lists 2 dead 31st Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 6 dead 32nd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 3 dead 41st Division Commanding general Vicente Lim ABMC listed dead 41st Engr Battalion ABMC lists 1 dead 41st Infantry Regiment ABMC Lists 6 dead 42nd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 4 dead 51st Division 51st Field Artillery Regiment ABMC lists 4 dead 51st Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 4 dead 52nd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 4 dead 53rd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 4 dead 61st Division HQ 61st Division ABMC Lists 1 dead 61st Field Artillery Regiment ABMC lists 4 dead 61st Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 1 dead 62nd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 4 dead 63rd Infantry Regiment ABMC Lists 1 dead 71st Division 71st Field Artillery Regt ABMC Lists 1 dead 71st Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 2 dead 72nd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 6 dead 73rd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 3 dead 75th Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 1 dead 71st Quartermaster Co ABMC lists 1 dead 81st Division Brig Gen Guy O Fort KIA 81st Division ABMC lists 5 dead 81st Engr Batt ABMC lists 1 dead 81st Field Artillery Regt ABMC lists 2 dead 82nd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 2 dead 83rd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 1 dead 91st Division HQ 91st Division ABMC lists 1 dead 91st Field Artillery Regiment ABMC lists 5 dead 91st Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 2 dead 92nd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 5 dead 93rd Infantry Regiment ABMC lists 1 dead 101st Division ABMC lists 1 with Division 101st Engr Battalion ABMC Lists 1 dead 101st Field Artillery Regt ABMC lists 1 dead 101st Inf Regt ABMC lists 7 dead 102nd Inf Regt ABMC lists 0 dead 103rd Inf Regt ABMC lists 3 deadHarbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays For Strength in November 1941 see 2 Note Harbor defenses included units listed above HQ and HQ Battery 59th Coast Artillery See above for casualty listings 60th Coast Artillery See above for casualty listings 91st Coast Artillery PS See above for casualty listings 92nd Coast Artillery PS See above for casualty listings USAMP Harrison 68 Station Hospital Chemical Warfare Det United States Navy Edit Admiral Thomas C Hart United States Asiatic Fleet and 16th Naval District 1 heavy cruiser USS Houston CA 30 for fate see below 2 light cruisers USS Boise CL 47 USS Marblehead CL 12 13 destroyers Destroyer Squadron 29 Captain Herbert V Wiley USS Black Hawk AD 9 USS Paul Jones DD 230 Destroyer Division 50 Commander P H Talbot USS John D Ford DD 228 USS Peary DD 226 USS Pillsbury DD 227 USS Pope DD 225 Destroyer Division 57 Commander E M Crouch USS Alden DD 211 USS Edsall DD 219 USS John D Edwards DD 216 USS Whipple DD 217 Destroyer Division 58 Commander Thomas H Binford USS Barker DD 213 USS Bulmer DD 222 USS Parrott DD 218 USS Stewart DD 224 USS Whippoorwill AM 35 US Submarines at Manila Mariveles Naval Section Base Cavite Philippines consisted of Submarine Squadron 2 consisted of 12 Salmon class submarines and Submarine Squadron 5 of 11 Porpoise and Sargo class submarines Submarine Squadron 21 of 4 Porpoise and Sargo class submarines submarine tender USS Holland AS 3 USS Perch SS 176 USS Permit SS 178 USS Pickerel SS 177 USS Pike SS 173 USS Porpoise SS 172 USS S 36 SS 141 USS S 37 SS 142 USS S 38 SS 143 USS S 39 SS 144 USS S 40 SS 145 USS S 41 SS 146 USS Salmon SS 182 USS Sargo SS 188 USS Saury SS 189 USS Sculpin SS 191 USS Seadragon SS 194 USS Seal SS 183 USS Sealion SS 195 USS Searaven SS 196 USS Seawolf SS 197 USS Shark SS 174 USS Snapper SS 185 USS Spearfish SS 190 USS Stingray SS 186 USS Sturgeon SS 187 USS Swordfish SS 193 USS Tarpon SS 175 PT Boat Squadron 3 for fate see below China Yangtze Patrol Rear Admiral William A Glassford for fate see below 5 out of six ships lost USS Tulsa PG 22 Patrol Wing 10 Capt Frank D Wagner Cavite Naval Base Luzon Philippines VP 101 VP 102 USS Childs DD 241 USS William B Preston DD 344 USS Heron AM 10 In December 1941 naval forces were augmented by the following schooner USS Lanikai Station Cast US Navy Code breaking on the Japanese military evacuated to Australia 1942 Navy losses Cruiser USS Houston CA 30 lost March 1 1942 368 survived of 1 061 crew PT Boat Motor Torpedo Boat Squadron Three 6 PT boats PT 31 PT 32 PT 33 PT 34 PT 35 PT 41 all lost December 6 1941 March 1942 USS Bittern AM 36 scuttled December 10 1941 USS Edsall DD 219 escaped to Australia sunk March 1 1942 USS Canopus AS 9 scuttled April 10 1942 548 crew served with 4th Marine Regiment 212 KIA MIA USS Genesee AT 55 scuttled May 5 1942 but salvaged by the Japanese sunk on November 5 1944 USS Finch AM 9 ran out of fuel and abandoned March sunk by Japanese on April 9 1942 salvaged as IJN Patrol Boat 103 sunk in 1945 USS Langley AV 3 escaped to Dutch East Indies and Australia lost May 8 1942 USS New York ACR 2 scuttled December 1941 USC amp GSS Research beached January 30 1942 USS Peary DD 226 escaped to Australia sunk February 19 1942 USS Perch SS 176 escaped to Australia scuttled March 3 1942 6 out of 54 crew did not survive the war USS Pickerel SS 177 escaped to Australia lost with all hands April 3 1943 USS Pigeon ASR 6 sunk May 4 1942 USS Pillsbury DD 227 escaped to Dutch East Indies sunk March 2 1942 USS Pope DD 225 escaped to Dutch East Indies sunk March 1 1942 USS Quail AM 15 scuttled following damage by air and surface attack May 5 1942 USS S 36 SS 141 scuttled following grounding January 21 1942 USS S 39 SS 144 run aground and abandoned August 13 1942 USS Sealion SS 195 scuttled December 25 1941 after damage December 10 1941 5 crewmen lost in war 87 USS Stewart DD 224 escaped to Java and scuttled March 2 1942 salvaged as IJN Patrol Boat 102 sunk in 1946 In addition 2 district patrol craft YP 16 and YP 17 and about 70 miscellaneous district craft were lost in the Philippines in 1942 See listing in List of United States Navy losses in World War II China Yangtze Patrol five of six vessels lost USS Asheville PG 21 lost March 3 1942 161 crew lost USS Luzon PG 47 scuttled May 6 1942 but salvaged by the Japanese sunk in the Philippines by USS Narwhal SS 167 on March 3 1944 USS Mindanao PR 8 lost May 2 1942 USS Oahu PR 6 sunk May 5 1942 USS Wake PR 3 captured December 8 1941United States Marine Corps Edit 4th Marine Regiment Commander Colonel Samuel L Howard stationed at Corregidor consisted of 142 different organizations USMC 72 officers 1 368 enlisted USN 37 officers 848 enlisted USAAC PA 111 officers 1 455 enlisted4th Marines Casualties were 315 killed 15 MIA 357 WIA in the Philippine Campaign 3 105 Marines were captured on Bataan and 1 283 captured on Corregidor of whom 490 didn t survive 4 Miscellaneous Edit See also Philippine Department Harbor Defenses April 15 1942 Maj Gen George F Moore US Army 5 012 US Navy 2 158 USMC 1 617 Philippine Scouts 1 298 Philippine Army 1 818 Philippine Navy 400 US Civilians 343 Civilians other 2 082 Army Nurse Corps Navy Nurse Corps 78 Angels of Bataan See also EditDay of ValorReferences EditNotes Edit Reports of General MacArthur Archived September 30 2012 at the Wayback Machine Order of Battle plate The total includes all elements of divisions assigned to the 14th Army at some point in the campaign and replacements The maximum strength of Japanese ground forces was approx 100 000 The total does not include 12000 Army air force personnel whose totals were drastically reduced after January 1 1942 The Fall of the Philippines Archived February 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine p 18 The Philippine Army totalled 120 000 and the Army of the United States 31 000 a b The Fall of the Philippines Archived December 16 2019 at the Wayback Machine p 33 The Fall of the Philippines Archived December 16 2019 at the Wayback Machine p 42 Total includes 175 fighters and 74 bombers Senshi Sōsho 戦史叢書 in Japanese Vol 2 Asagumo Shimbunsha 1966 Philippine Islands Center of Military History U S Army October 3 2003 p 19 Archived from the original on May 23 2011 Retrieved February 19 2009 Since 6 January the Japanese had suffered 7 000 battle casualties with another 10 000 to 12 000 men dying of disease Life Magazine gives a total of 36 583 US Filipino troops captured 9 April 1942 Missing in Action With 66 Boys Lost on Bataan the People of Harrodsburg Ky Pay Their Price for Freedom Life July 6 1942 p 15 via Google Books Japanese Operations in the Southwest Pacific Area Reports of General MacArthur Volume IIArchived May 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine p 104 Morton 1960 War in the Pacific The First Year https www nps gov parkhistory online books npswapa extContent wapa guides first sec2 htm Retrieved May 4 2016 American Prisoners of War in the Philippines Office of the Provost Marshal November 19 1945 http www mansell com pow resources camplists philippines pows in pi OPMG report html Retrieved May 4 2016 Nish 2002 p 112 a b Nish 2002 p 162 Paine Sarah 2017 The Japanese Empire Grand Strategy from the Meiji Restoration to the Pacific War Cambridge University Press p 157 a b c d e f g h Chun Clayton K S 2012 The Fall of the Philippines 1941 42 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84908 609 7 The Fall of the Philippines U S Army in World War II Archived February 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine pp 26 27 The Fall of the Philippines Archived February 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine p 18 The Fall of the Philippines Archived February 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine p 19 The Fall of the Philippines Archived February 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine p 24 The Fall of the Philippines Archived February 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine p 23 The Fall of the Philippines Archived February 17 2012 at the Wayback Machine p 22 Philippine Islands p 5 Archived from the original on May 23 2011 Retrieved February 19 2009 Opolony Jim September 23 2007 Origin of the 192nd Tank Battalion 192nd Tank Battalion Wiki Company C 194th Tank Battalion in the Philippines 1941 42 militarymuseum org The Fall of the Philippines Archived December 16 2019 at the Wayback Machine p 49 incl notes The Fall of the Philippines pp 68 69 The Fall of the Philippines p 499 The two divisions used as reserves the 71st and 91st were not from Luzon but from the Visayas and each had only two regiments Stanton Shelby L 1984 Order of Battle U S Army World War II Presidio Press p 461 The Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bays the Philippines Coast Defense Study Group May 24 2016 Berhow and McGovern pp 10 24 STRENGTH AND COMPOSITION OF U S ARMY TROOPS IN PHILIPPINE ISLANDS 30 NOVEMBER 1941 Archived from the original on December 16 2019 Retrieved June 23 2008 The Fall of the Philippines Archived December 16 2019 at the Wayback Machine pp 35 36 United States Asiatic Fleet complete Order of Battle including patrol craft of 16th Naval District The Fall of the Philippines Archived May 25 2017 at the Wayback Machine pp 528 529 The Peking and Chinwangtao detachments of the 4th were stranded in China by the onset of war The 4th Marines had only two battalions each organized into a machine gun company and two rifle companies of only two platoons each The amalgamation of the 1st Special Defense Battalion Cavite enabled the 4th to organize a third battalion and Marines of the Marine Barracks Olangapo enabled the 1st and 2nd Battalions to field three rifle companies of three platoons each Coast And Geodetic Survey 1951 World War II History of the Department Of Commerce Part 5 U S Coast And Geodetic Survey PDF United States Government Printing Office Retrieved January 27 2012 a b Couttie Bob 2009 17 The Last Charge Chew the Bones Maddog Essays on Philippine History p 101 ISBN 978 1442142596 The attack on Pearl Harbor had occurred on December 7 by local Hawaiian time This was December 8 in the Philippines which is on the other side of the International Date Line Clock time in the Philippines was 18 hours 30 minutes ahead of Hawaiian time see zoneinfo database Correll John T December 2007 Caught on the Ground Air Force Vol 90 no 12 p 68 a b c d e f Morton Louis 1953 Chapter V The First Days of War The Fall of the Philippines CMH Pub 5 2 US Army Center for Military History Retrieved November 25 2010 The Japanese Attack Finds General Macarthur Unprepared The Pacific War Historical Society Retrieved May 22 2011 a b c Correll Caught on the Ground Edmunds Walter D 1992 They Fought With What They Had p 77 ISBN 9781428915411 Retrieved January 28 2011 Edmunds p 83 Edmunds p 84 One was on a reconnaissance mission to Formosa the other over eastern Luzon after taking off as the others were landing A third B 17 was in the air en route from Mindanao for repair of a wing fuel tank Edmunds pp 84 85 Lieutenant General Joseph H Moore Air Force Retrieved February 13 2022 Edmunds p 102 Edmunds interviewed numerous officers present when the attack began Edmunds pp 95 97 Four of the 18 airborne P 40s made Rosario airfield while a fifth took off from Iba and found refuge there also Edmunds pp 133 136 Edmunds p 138 Edmunds p 133 Edmunds p 178 Edmunds p 93 Bob Hackett and Sander Kingsepp 2007 HIJMS NAKA Tabular Record of Movement Retrieved September 26 2007 Fizzling Fish and Hidebound Bureucrats The Tragedy of the Mark XIV Torpedo in World War II militaryhistoryonline com Retrieved January 5 2022 Leutze 1981 p 235 Leutze 1981 p 230 Leutze 1981 p 237 Leutze 1981 p 242 Leutze 1981 p 234 Leutze 1981 p 240 Merriam Ray 1999 War in the Philippines Merriam Press pp 70 82 ISBN 1 57638 164 1 retrieved January 31 2008 Manila Declared Open City Chicago Daily Tribune Vol C no 309 December 26 1941 p 1 John W Whitman January 1998 Manila How Open Was This Open City Historynet Japanese Bombs Fire Open City of Manila Civilian Toll Heavy Invaders Gain in Luzon The New York Times Vol XCI no 30 654 December 28 1941 p 1 The Fall of the Philippines p 208 Japanese Operations in the Southwest Pacific Area Archived May 23 2011 at the Wayback Machine p 104 a b Bocksel Arnold A 1946 The USAMP General George Harrison in the Harbor Defenses of Manila and Subic Bay PDF Coast Artillery Journal 89 6 54 Archived from the original PDF on February 12 2018 Retrieved February 11 2018 Schmidt Larry S American Involvement in the Filipino Resistance Movement on Mindanao During the Japanese Occupation 1942 1945 PDF MMAS Fort Leavenworth Kans U S Army Command and General Staff College p 68 Archived PDF from the original on December 12 2019 30 Generals Killed Captured or Missing 7 Admirals 2 Marine Generals Also on Casualty Rolls PDF The New York Times October 12 1943 p 12 Retrieved January 19 2023 Gen Carl Seals The Washington Post October 31 1955 p 20 ProQuest 148640018 Retrieved January 19 2023 Ten U S and Six Philippine Generals Captured on Bataan The Washington Post April 18 1942 p 3 ProQuest 151521303 Retrieved February 6 2023 Agoncillo Teodoro 2001 The Fateful Years Japan s Adventure in the Philippines 1941 1945 Volume Two University of the Philippines Press p 295 a b The Hellships Memorial Hellships Memorial Project Retrieved April 14 2011 Hellship Information and Photographs West Point Org January 17 2005 Retrieved April 14 2011 American POWs remember life in Japanese prison camp Reuters May 25 2007 Retrieved April 14 2011 Hellships Defenders of the Philippine West Virginia Library Commission Retrieved April 14 2011 Costello John 1982 The Pacific War HarperCollins p 185 ISBN 978 0 688 01620 3 Retrieved April 14 2011 Manila American Cemetery and Memorial PDF American Battle Monuments Commission Retrieved April 14 2011 General MacArthur s General Staff June 20 2006 1966 CHAPTER X GUERRILLA ACTIVITIES IN THE PHILIPPINES Reports of General MacArthur United States Army pp 295 326 LCCN 66 60005 Archived from the original on January 31 2016 Retrieved May 9 2018 Webb W E 1950 The Operations of the 41st Infantry Regiment Philippine Army of the 41st Infantry Divisionin the Defense of the Abucay Line Bataan Philippine Islands January 10 18 1942 Philippine Campaign The Infantry School Staff Department Fort Benning US Army Atienza Rigoberto J 1985 A Time for War 105 Days in Bataan Manila Eugenia S vda de Atienza Diosco Marconi M 2010 The Times When Men Must Die The Story of the Destruction of the Philippine Army During the Early Months of World War II in the Pacific December 1941 May 1942 Pittsburgh Pennsylvania Dorrance Publishing Co p 40 ISBN 978 1 4349 0809 4 Retrieved May 30 2011 Capistrano Robert 1982 The Southwest Pacific Theater or Operations PDF The Quan Vol 37 no 2 American Defenders of Bataan amp Corregidor Inc pp 11 13 Archived from the original PDF on August 24 2011 Retrieved May 30 2011 Provisional Tank Group BG James R N Weaver USA Ft Stotsenburg organized 21 November 1941 with the arrival of the following units MacArthur Douglas July 1964 The Country s Safety Was at State and I Said So Life Vol 57 no 1 pp 55 66 via Google Books At this critical point I threw in my last reserve supported by a small light tank force under Brig General James R N Weaver Company A was from Janesville Wisconsin Company B was from Maywood and Proviso Township Cook County Illinois Company C was from Port Clinton Ohio Company D aka Harrodsburg Tankers was from Harrodsburg Kentucky see 1 On Eternal Patrol USS Sealion SS 195 www oneternalpatrol com Books Edit Bartsch William H 2003 8 December 1941 MacArthur s Pearl Harbor College Station Texas USA Texas A amp M University Press Belote James H William M Belote 1967 Corregidor The Saga of a Fortress Harper amp Row ASIN B0006BOBRQ Berhow Mark A Terrance C McGovern 2003 American Defenses of Corregidor and Manila Bay 1898 1945 Fortress Osprey Publishing Ltd ISBN 1 84176 427 2 Burton John 2006 Fortnight of Infamy The Collapse of Allied Airpower West of Pearl Harbor US Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 59114 096 X Connaughton Richard 2001 MacArthur and Defeat in the Philippines New York The Overlook Press ISBN 9781585671182 Drea Edward J 1998 In the Service of the Emperor Essays on the Imperial Japanese Army Nebraska University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 1708 0 Edmunds Walter D 1951 They Fought With What They Had The Story of the Army Air Forces in the Southwest Pacific 1941 1942 College Station Texas USA Little Brown and Company 1992 reprint Center For Air Force History ISBN 978 1442142596 Gordon John 2011 Fighting for MacArthur The Navy and Marine Corps Desperate Defense of the Philippines Naval Institute Press ISBN 978 1 61251 057 6 Jackson Charles Bruce H Norton 2003 I Am Alive A United States Marine s Story of Survival in a World war II Japanese POW Camp Presidio Press ISBN 0 345 44911 8 Mallonee Richard C 2003 Battle for Bataan An Eyewitness Account I Books ISBN 0 7434 7450 3 Martin Adrian R 2008 Operation Plum The Ill Fated 27th Bombardment Group and the Fight for the Western Pacific Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 60344 019 6 Mellnik Stephen Michael 1981 Philippine War Diary 1939 1945 Van Nostrand Reinhold ISBN 0 442 21258 5 Morison Samuel Eliot 2001 1958 The Rising Sun in the Pacific 1931 April 1942 vol 3 of History of United States Naval Operations in World War II Castle Books ISBN 0 7858 1304 7 Morris Eric 2000 Corregidor The American Alamo of World War II Cooper Square Press ISBN 0 8154 1085 9 Nish Ian Hill 2002 Japanese Foreign Policy in the Interwar Period Praeger ISBN 978 0 275 94791 0 Rottman Gordon L 2005 Japanese Army in World War II Conquest of the Pacific 1941 42 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 84176 789 5 Schultz Duane 1981 Hero of Bataan The story of General Johnathan M Wainwright St Martin s Press ASIN B000UXDJJG Waldron Ben Emily Burneson 2006 Corregidor From Paradise to Hell Trafford Publishing ISBN 1 4120 2109 X Whitman John W 1990 Bataan Our Last Ditch The Bataan Campaign 1942 Hippocrene Books ISBN 0 87052 877 7 Young Donald J 1992 The Battle of Bataan A History of the 90 Day Siege and Eventual Surrender of 75 000 Filipino and United States Troops to the Japanese in World War McFarland amp Company ISBN 0 89950 757 3 Zaloga Steven J Japanese Tanks 1939 45 Osprey 2007 ISBN 978 1 84603 091 8 Further reading EditBartsch William H 1995 Doomed at the Start American Pursuit Pilots in the Philippines 1941 1942 Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 0 89096 679 2 Chun Clayton 2012 The Fall of the Philippines 1941 42 Osprey Publishing Osprey Campaign Series No 243 ISBN 978 1 84908 609 7 Martin Adrian R 2010 Operation PLUM The Ill fated 27th Bombardment Group and the Fight for the Western Pacific Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 60344 184 1 Morton Louis 1960 Chapter 6 The Decision to Withdraw to Bataan In Kent Roberts Greenfield ed Command Decisions United States Army Center of Military History LCCN 59060007 CMH Pub 70 7 Archived from the original on December 30 2007 Retrieved June 18 2010 Morton Louis 1953 The Fall of the Philippines U S Army in World War II The War in the Pacific Washington D C United States Army Center of Military History LCCN 53063678 CMH Pub 5 2 Archived from the original on January 8 2012 Retrieved May 4 2008 full text Bailey Jennifer L 2003 Philippine Islands The U S Army Campaigns of World War II brochure United States Army Center of Military History CMH Pub 72 3 Archived from the original on May 23 2011 Retrieved January 29 2005 Japanese Operations in the Southwest Pacific Area Volume II Part I Reports of General MacArthur United States Army Center of Military History 1994 13 1 Archived from the original on January 25 2008 Retrieved December 8 2006 Volume I Chapter 1 Japanese Offensive in the Pacific Reports of General MacArthur United States Army Center of Military History Archived from the original on April 24 2021 Retrieved May 4 2008 Report by MacArthur s staff Stevens Peter F 2011 The Twilight Riders The Last Charge of the 26th Cavalry Lyons Press ISBN 978 0 7627 6485 3 Cooper Colonel Wibb E 1946 Medical Department Activities in the Philippines from 1941 to May 1942 and Including Medical Activities in the Japanese Prisoner of War Camps Office of the Sergeon General General Headquarters Far East Command July 20 1951 Japanese Landings at Zamboanga 2 March 1942 Center of Military History United States Army Archived from the original on January 5 2009 Retrieved September 25 2008 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of the Philippines 1941 42 C Peter Chen Invasion of the Philippines WW2DB Retrieved May 31 2005 Animated History of The Fall of the Philippines HistoryAnimated com Archived from the original on July 15 2011 Retrieved January 7 2011 Battle for Bataan Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Philippines campaign 1941 1942 amp oldid 1146041926, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.