- Chapter XII:
-
- The Japanese Counteroffensive
And Its Aftermath
-
- A hundred feet below Shuri Castle,
in a small chamber shored up with heavy beams, the top commanders of the Japanese
32d Army met on the night of 2 May to make a fateful decision. General
Ushijima's staff was still divided over strategy. General Cho, the chief of
staff, continued to press for an immediate large-scale attack. The time was
ripe, he said, for a decisive blow. Colonel Yahara, clinging to his faith
in defensive tactics, opposed the attack as premature.
-
- Sake was flowing freely, and
the meeting became tense and quarrelsome. When it was proposed that the
63d Brigade of the 62d Division come under command of the 24th
Division for an attack, the brigade commander, General Nakashima, retorted
hotly with a pointed and biting comparison of the abilities of the 62d
and 24th Divisions. His brigade would not fight as a mere branch of
a weak tree; rather it would die where it stood. General Nakashima won his
point, and the meeting moved quickly to a decision. General Fujioka, commander
of the 62d Division, vehemently backed up Cho. Most of the Japanese
commanders were impatient with defensive fighting and saw no prospect of success
in a battle of attrition. Colonel Yahara's warnings were unavailing, and once
again he was overruled. General Ushijima ordered an all-out offensive by 32d
Army for 4 May.1
-
-
- Plan for Combined Operations
- Even before the Japanese commanders
conferred at Shuri headquarters, their operations officers had been framing
attack orders and telephoning the gist of them to unit commanders. The final
plan was ambitious. The enemy aspired to destroy the XXIV Corps on Okinawa
and to disable the Allied fleet offshore in a series of heavy, coordinated
blows. To this end he committed a sizeable portion of his ground, air, and
amphibious forces.
- [283]
- The 24th Division was to make
the main effort in the ground attack. This unit, comprising approximately
15,000 men under the command of General Amamiya, was largely intact on 3 May
except for its 22d Regiment, which had seen extended action. Amamiya's
mission was to drive strong spearheads through the center and left (east)
of the American lines. Once the XXIV Corps front was disrupted, his remaining
forces, supported by other Japanese units pouring through the gaps, would
systematically destroy the Corps in a series of day and night attacks.
-
- The amphibious attack was to come
in the form of landings from barges over the beaches behind the American front
lines. Several hundred men of the 26th Shipping Engineer Regiment,
loaded with light arms and satchel charges, were ordered to land on the west
and destroy American tanks and artillery. The aid Engineers had a similar
mission on the east coast. The raiders were formally detached from their units
and ordered not to return.2
-
- The Japanese offensive was to coincide
with a major attack by Kamikaze planes and suicide boats against the
American ships off Okinawa. The enemy was convinced that a successful assault
against American supply lines would be a decisive blow in the campaign. The
unending stream of supplies and ships was demoralizing to him. "There
were so many they looked like an island," a member of the 24th Division
wrote plaintively on the eve of the attack after he viewed the American ships.
"I wish we could somehow get air superiority back." 3
-
- Plan for the Ground Attack
- The Japanese planned their ground
attack with extreme care. This was to be no banzai charge. The enemy's intelligence
had formed an accurate estimate of American dispositions, and his orders were
clear and explicit. Divisions, regiments, battalions, and companies were given
definite objectives and precise boundaries. Units in close support followed
designated routes. Commanders were ordered to dispatch infiltrating squads
to gain up-to-date information. The efforts of supporting arms, such as artillery,
tanks, and engineers, were thoroughly integrated with the infantry action.4
- [284]
- The 24th Division, occupying
the eastern half of the front, was to open the attack at daybreak of "X
Day," 4 May. "After effecting a quick rupture of the enemy front
lines," General Amamiya's order read, "the division will continue
penetration and annihilate him at all points by continuous night and day attacks."
By sunset of the first day the Japanese were to have penetrated two miles
into the opposing lines to a point northeast of Tanabaru. The final objective
was an east-west line at Futema, site of the 96th Division command post, which
the Japanese mistakenly thought to be General Buckner's headquarters.
-
- The attack was to be two-pronged.
Following a 30-minute artillery preparation at daybreak, the 89th Regiment
on the east was to break through in the Onaga area. The 32d Regiment,
also supported by artillery, was to penetrate American lines in the Maeda
area. Tanks were to support both prongs. Raiding and infiltration units were
ordered to follow in the wake of the "break-through troops." Once
the 24th Division was established at the first objective northeast
of Tanabaru, the Japanese troops were to dig in against American counterattacks,
set up antitank traps, and prepare to continue the attack northward.
-
- The 22d Regiment and the
44th Independent Mixed Brigade had special missions. Located in the center
of the 24th Division's line, the 22d Regiment was to screen
the advance of the other two regiments with smoke and fire. Then, echeloned
to the left rear of the 89th Regiment, the 22d would join
in the attack. The 44th Independent Mixed Brigade, a fresh unit, was
ordered to protect the Japanese left flank during the attack. Following the
expected break-through east of Maeda, the 44th was to turn left toward
Oyama on the west coast and thus cut off the 1st Marine Division. The enemy
high command evidently considered the breakthrough at Maeda to be the critical
blow, for his troops were especially well supported by tanks, artillery, and
antitank elements. (See Map No. XXXII.)
-
- Rear Echelon Support
- The Japanese reasoned that success
depended on the extent to which they could support their frontline troops
with artillery, tanks, supplies, and communications. Their plans specified
in detail the role that each of the support units was to play in the projected
operations.
-
- Artillery units were ordered to regroup
in preparation for the attack. Guns and howitzers were pulled out of cave
positions and set up farther south in more open emplacements for greater flexibility.
They were to open fire thirty minutes before the attack. When the infantry
had driven through the American
- [285]
- front lines, artillerymen were to
move their weapons forward. The 27th Tank Regiment, hitherto uncommitted,
was ordered to move from its position near Yonabaru during the night over
several routes and support the attack in the Maeda area.
-
- Japanese signalmen had the task of
putting in a trunk line between the Shuri headquarters and a point behind
the front. As the troops moved forward, the line was to follow. Before dawn
on the 4th, a signal net was to connect "break-through units" with
artillery and transport elements. First-aid sections, two of which were assigned
to each of the spearheads, would collect the wounded in caves and send the
worst cases to the rear on trucks and carts. Engineers were responsible for
road maintenance and for "mopping up" behind the assault troops.
-
- Ammunition and other supplies were
carefully allotted. The infantry was allowed rations for ten days. Trucks
were to follow the troops closely, working out of designated supply points.
General Amamiya ordered that "critical materials will be supplied with
caution when required, and captured stores will be used to best advantage.
The division's fighting strength will be constantly maintained and cultivated."
5
-
- The offensive was to open at dawn
of 4 May. "Display a combined strength," final orders read. "Each
soldier will kill at least one American devil." 6
-
-
- All these preparations the Japanese
concealed with remarkable skill. On a May Col. Cecil W. Nist, XXIV Corps intelligence
officer, noted a definite decrease in the volume and intensity of enemy artillery
fire, and sound-plots located Japanese pieces nine miles south of their front
lines. Colonel Nist conjectured that the enemy was withdrawing his guns farther
south-a move which could foreshadow a general Japanese withdrawal. No one
divined the enemy's real intent. General Buckner believed that the enemy's
rigid type of defense made it impossible for him to launch more than minor
counterattacks.7
-
- Japanese rear areas, quiescent during
the daylight hours when there was constant air observation, burst into activity
soon after sundown on 3 May. Artillery opened up with heavy concentrations
on American front lines. Enemy
- [286]
- troops moved up to their appointed
positions. Small units of three or four men, variously designated as "reconnaissance
raiding" and "rear harassing" teams, proceeded toward the American
lines to attack command posts, heavy weapons, communications, and depots and
to send back information by means of smoke signals. The 27th Tank Regiment
rumbled up to Ishimmi, several of its tanks being severely damaged by American
artillery fire en route.8
On beaches south of Naha and Yonabaru, men of the shipping engineer regiments
piled into barges and assault boats.
-
- "The time of the attack has finally
come," a Japanese infantryman wrote in his diary during the evening.
"I have my doubts as to whether this all-out offensive will succeed,
but I will fight fiercely with the thought in mind that this war for the Empire
will last 100 years." 9
-
- Sorties in the Night
- The Kamikazes struck at American
shipping at dusk on 3 May. Five suicide planes crashed into the Aaron
Ward inside of one hour, firing the ship and killing or wounding ninety-eight
men. Three others carrying bombs sank the Little. Two vessels were
sunk and four damaged, but American planes and antiaircraft fire accounted
for fourteen suicide planes and twenty-two other enemy aircraft before dark.
The Japanese also bombed shore installations, concentrating on Yontan airfield.10
-
- Armed with antitank guns, heavy machine
guns, light arms, and thousands of satchel charges, several hundred men of
the 26th Shipping Engineer Regiment headed under overcast skies for
landing places below Yontan and Kadena airfields. They miscalculated their
position and turned, into the shore at a point where it was heavily defended.
At 0200 riflemen of the 1st Marine Division on the sea wall near Kuwan caught
sight of ten barges and opened up with concentrated fire. Naval flares lighted
up the area. One company fired 1,100 rounds from 60-mm. mortars. Several enemy
barges burst into flames. One platoon of marines used fifty boxes of ammunition
and burned out six machine-gun barrels as it sprayed the Japanese trying to
cross the reef. (See Map No. XXXIII.)
-
- Many of the enemy managed to reach
the shore; some of these fled back to the Japanese lines and others were cornered
in Kuwan, where the marines mopped them up at leisure. All the landing boats
were destroyed. A smaller group of Japanese advanced almost as far as Chatan,
landing one and one-half
- [287]
-
- JAPANESE AIR AND SEA ATTACK on transports left supply
craft beached and still burning the morning of 4 May. Scene above is near
mouth of the Bishi River. Some 48-foot folding landing craft (below),
a type used by the Japanese in their attempted surprise landing during
the night of 3-4 May, were found at Naha after its capture.
-
-
- [288]
- miles south of there at Isa, but they
were contained without major difficulty and during the following day were
destroyed.11
-
- The shipping engineers were even less
successful on the east coast of Okinawa. After a trip northward in various
types of boats, including native-type boats rowed by Boeitai, several
hundred tried to land behind the 7th Division lines, but most of them were
killed by fire from ships in Buckner Bay or by the 7th Division Reconnaissance
Troop and 776th Amphibious Tank Battalion on land.12
-
- The amphibious attack was a complete
fiasco. The enemy lost from 500 to 800 men and almost all their landing craft.
The engineer regiments never mounted another amphibious attack of any proportion;
the survivors fought as infantry in the final operations on Okinawa.
-
- The 24th Division Attacks
- Never had the 7th Infantry Division
in its long combat in the Pacific experienced such shelling as swept its front
lines during the night of 3-4 May. The enemy, using all types of weapons down
to 20-mm., fired more than 5,000 rounds on the division during the night.
To reach the Americans in their foxholes, he used airburst artillery and 70-mm.
barrage mortar shells which burst in the air and in turn scattered more explosives
to blow up on the ground. With their field pieces now in the open enjoying
wide fields of fire, the Japanese artillerymen were gambling that the infantry
attack would overwhelm XXIV Corps artillery before it could search out and
destroy their weapons.13
-
- In the pitch darkness Japanese troops
made their way toward the American front lines. At 0500 two red flares ordered
them to attack. As the artillery fire became heavy, a guard of Company A,
17th Infantry, on a hill just north of Onaga, dropped back below the crest
for cover. He thought that the enemy would not attack through his own artillery,
but the enemy did just that. A few Japanese appeared on the crest and set
up a light machine gun. Pfc. Tillman H. Black, a BAR man, killed the gunner,
and as more of the enemy came over the crest he killed four Japanese who tried
to man the machine gun. The enemy advanced over the crest in ragged groups,
enabling Black to hold his own. Soon the whole company was in action and drove
the enemy off the
- [289]
- crest. The Japanese abandoned three
light machine guns, four mortars, and much ammunition.14
-
- At another point a surprise attack
nearly succeeded. On high ground 1,000 yards east of Onaga a group of Japanese
crept up the hill in front of Company I, 184th, commanded by Capt. James Parker.
In the sudden onslaught that followed, two heavy machine gun crews abandoned
their positions. One of them left its weapon intact, and the Japanese promptly
took it over and swung it around on the company. Parker, watching the attack
from the ridge, had anticipated the move. The Japanese managed to fire one
burst; then Parker destroyed the usurped weapon with his remaining heavy machine
gun. For an hour or two longer the Japanese clung to the forward slopes, firing
their rifles amid shrill screams, but they made no further progress.
-
- By dawn the general pattern of the
Japanese attack on the left (east) of the XXIV Corps line was becoming clear.
In the 184th's sector the enemy's 89th Regiment, following instructions
to "close in on the enemy by taking advantage of cover," 15
had advanced around the east slopes of Conical Hill, crept across the flats,
and assembled in force around the "Y ridges" east of Onaga. They
had outflanked three companies of the 184th on Chimney Crag and the Roulette
Wheel north of Kuhazu, and had also managed to evade the forward battalions
of the 17th around Kochi. Another Japanese element had attacked 7th Division
lines on the high ground north of Unaha.
-
- At dawn 1st Lt. Richard S. McCracken,
commanding Company A, 184th, observed 2,000 Japanese soldiers in the open
area east and north of Kuhazu. They were perfect "artillery meat."
Unable to get through to his artillery support, McCracken called his battalion
commander, Colonel Maybury, and described the lucrative targets. Maybury was
equally pleased. McCracken suggested, however, that the Colonel should not
be too happy-a group of Japanese at that moment was within 100 yards of Maybury's
observation post.
-
- "Oh no," Maybury said, "that's
a patrol from Company K down there."
- "I don't know who the hell it
is," McCracken said, "but there's a lot of them and they've got
two field pieces that are pointed right at your OP."
-
- There was indeed a party of Japanese
busily unlimbering two 75-mm, howitzers just below Maybury. But Company C,
17th Infantry, had spotted this activity, and within a few minutes maneuvered
tanks into position and scattered
- [290]
- the enemy group. Artillery eliminated
the Japanese caught in the open.
-
- The 3d Battalion, 184th, beat off
an attack by 200 Japanese, who thereupon withdrew to the ruins of Unaha and
set up mortars. A mortar duel ensued, sometimes at ranges of 250 yards. The
3d Battalion, 32d, also poured fire on the enemy there. After the impetus
of the attack was lost, a Japanese officer stood out on open ground and waved
his saber to assemble his men for an attack. American mortarmen waited for
a worth-while target to develop, then put mortar fire on it. Four times the
officer assembled a group, only to have his men killed or scattered, before
he was finally killed.
-
- By 0800 the Japanese had been driven
beyond grenade range on the entire 7th Division front. But they did not abandon
their attack, perhaps because they had been ordered to advance "even
until the last man."16
They made the mistake of milling about in the exposed flatland, where they
became perfect targets; they neither pressed the attack nor essayed an organized
withdrawal. American heavy weapons fenced off avenues of retreat in order
to contain the enemy in open areas. "We laid them down like ducks,"
a platoon sergeant reported.
-
- Tank-Infantry Attack in the Center
- While the 7th Division was repelling
the Japanese attack in the eastern sector of the XXIV Corps line, the 77th
Division was blunting the other enemy "spearhead" in the center.
Here the Japanese 32d Regiment, supported by tanks and engineers,
attacked behind intense artillery fire. This sector was the critical point
of attack, for a break-through here would enable the supporting 44th Independent
Mixed Brigade to cut west and isolate the 1st Marine Division.
-
- Transportation difficulties beset
the 32d Regiment almost from the start. During the night light tanks
drove out of Shuri up the Ginowan road (Route 5), but American artillery interdicting
the road prevented medium tanks from following. The mediums had to take a
long detour, which was in such poor condition that only two of the tanks could
enter into the attack. Trucks and artillery also were slowed down. Even foot
troops had trouble in moving. One Japanese infantryman recorded that his column
was shelled on the way and that everyone except himself and one other was
wounded. Another wrote of encountering "terrific bombardment" on
the way -to Kochi. These difficulties severely handicapped the 32d Regiment
in ensuing operations.17
- [291]
- POSITION OCCUPIED BY THE JAPANESE IN THEIR PENETRATION TO TANABARU ESCARPMENT,
4-7 MAY
-
- [292-293]
-
- JAPANESE LAND OFFENSIVE of 4-5 May was opened by
rocket barrages. The erratic paths of enemy fire shown above are in sharp
contrast with those of more accurate American weapons. Below, a knocked-out
Japanese light tank is examined by a 96th Division soldier. All enemy
tanks used in the predawn offensive 4 May were destroyed.
-
-
- [294]
- Supported by nine light tanks, the
3d Battalion led the assault of the 32d Regiment against the
306th Infantry, 77th Division, before dawn on 4 May. The enemy mounted his
assault from southeast of Hill 187 and hit the 77th where Route 5 curled around
the east end of Urasoe-Mura Escarpment. The Japanese drove into the front
lines of the 1st Battalion, 306th, near Maeda. Although the enemy found the
weak points of the line, American automatic fire split up the attacking forces.
As in the case of their right "spearhead," the Japanese were unable
to move into the American lines at any place with sufficient force to break
through. The enemy's only success consisted of driving a platoon off one of
the hills. American artillery was called in against the Japanese tanks. Several
were knocked out, and, as the infantry stalled, the rest withdrew.18
-
- Shortly before daylight, when the
Japanese infantry had failed to take its initial objectives east of Hill 187,
Colonel Murakami, commanding the 27th Tank Regiment, became impatient
and recklessly committed his own infantry company, a standard element of a
Japanese tank regiment. American artillery fire destroyed one platoon, disrupting
the attack, and daylight found the surviving troops in a precarious position
across from the American lines. Colonel Murakami ordered the company to withdraw,
but artillery fire prevented a retreat during the day. When the Japanese used
smoke for concealment, the Americans simply blanketed the obscured area with
shell fire. The survivors straggled back to their front lines after nightfall.
All the light tanks that had supported the attack were lost.19
-
- By 0730 the 306th Infantry had driven
off the enemy. Broken up into small groups, the Japanese tried to pull back
over ground swept by tremendous volumes of artillery and mortar fire, but
few got through. Continued attack was impossible. At 0800 the commander of
the Japanese 3d Battalion radioed the 32d Regiment command
post at Dakeshi: "Although the front lines on the high ground southeast
of Maeda advanced to the line of the central sector and are holding, further
advance is very difficult due to enemy fire. There is no tank cooperation."
20
-
- Artillery and Air Attack
- On 4 May, for the first time in the
campaign, whole batteries of enemy artillery were visible. By bringing his
field pieces out into the open the enemy was
- [295]
- able to deliver more than 13,000 rounds
onto American lines in support of the attack. He ringed his artillery with
antiaircraft guns, chiefly 75-mm., to keep off cub planes, and he used smoke
pots to hide the flashes of the firing. This gamble proved to be a costly
failure. By taking advantage of area artillery barrages which drove Japanese
antiaircraft crews to cover, American cub planes were able to pinpoint many
Japanese artillery positions for precision fire. During 4 May American counterbattery
destroyed nineteen enemy artillery pieces and during the next two days forty
more. The Japanese thereupon moved their remaining weapons back into caves.
With the lessening of Japanese artillery fire, the number of combat fatigue
cases among American troops dropped correspondingly. 21
-
- The Japanese effort in the air on
4 May was more successful. From dawn to 1000 American naval forces were under
continuous attack by enemy planes using Kamikaze tactics, and many
of the light units were sunk or damaged. Four planes crashed into the U. S.
destroyer Morrison, and the ship sank in eight minutes, with 154 casualties.
A Baka bomb hit and fired the Shea, killing twenty-five and flooding the forward
compartments, but the ship stayed afloat. A plane over the transports in the
Hagushi area, after receiving fire from many ships, dived straight down into
the Birmingham just aft of Number 2 turret. The impact carried the
motor of the plane through three decks, and the 250-pound bomb burst in the
sick bay. There were ninety casualties. More Japanese planes attacked at dusk.
A suicide flyer hit the escort carrier Sangamon, destroying twenty-one
planes on the flight deck. Her entire hangar deck was gutted by fire, and
all radar and bridge control was knocked out. From the evening of 3 May until
that of 4 May the Japanese had sunk or damaged 17 American ships and inflicted
682 naval casualties, while American planes and naval gunfire had destroyed
131 enemy planes. The enemy's air attack, which was simply one phase of his
unceasing air campaign against the invading forces, amounted to 560 raids
by 2,228 enemy planes between 1 April and 17 May and was probably the most
profitable effort of his entire counteroffensive. 22
-
-
- General Amamiya refused to abandon
the attack. Although both "spearheads" of his 24th Division
had smashed vainly against the American defenses,
- [296]
- suffering heavy losses in the process,
he ordered another assault for the night of 4-5 May. The 1st Battalion,
32d Regiment, and the attached 26th Independent Infantry Battalion
were directed to penetrate XXIV Corps lines northwest of Kochi in a night
attack. The 1st Battalion had been used in support of the Japanese
left "spearhead" on the 4th, but it had not been fully committed
and was still relatively intact.
-
- The reason for Amamiya's persistence
after the morning's debacle is not clear, but one event of the day may well
have led to his decision. Unknown to XXIV Corps, elements of the 1st Battalion,
22d Regiment, had penetrated more than 1,000 yards behind the American
lines near Kochi. After dusk on the 4th these elements were ordered to pull
back to their regimental lines. Amamiya may have reasoned that he had found
a weak point in the American defenses. In any event the 1st Battalion
of the 32d was given a similar route of approach, lying near the boundary
between the 7th and 77th Divisions. 23
-
- Break-through at Night
- The Japanese, having shelled the lines
of the 306th Infantry during the night of 4-5 May, at 0200 launched an attack
on the 306th where it straddled Route 5 northwest of Kochi. American artillery
broke up this attempt. Three hours later the enemy attacked in battalion strength,
supported by tanks. Although six tanks were soon knocked out, the Japanese
pressed on through artillery and mortar fire to engage the 306th in close
combat. They isolated a battalion observation post and killed or wounded its
five occupants. Despite hostile heavy mortar fire, the Japanese set up knee
mortars and heavy machine guns close to the American lines and even tried-unsuccessfully-to
emplace a 75-mm. gun. 24
-
- Fierce fire fights developed along
the regiment's entire line. One enemy force, moving up a draw in close column
formation, marched squarely into a company and was destroyed by automatic
weapons fire. Most of the Japanese, unable to close in for hand-to-hand fighting,
took refuge in ditches just in front of the American positions. Grenade duels
and exchanges of automatic fire continued until midday. By dawn, however,
the 306th had the situation in hand. American tanks moved along the ditches
and machine-gunned the enemy. Some of the surviving Japanese, using smoke
for concealment, managed to withdraw to their lines. They left 248 dead in
the 77th Division's sector,
- [297]
-
- TANABARU ESCARPMENT viewed from position of the
17th Infantry, 7th Division, on a finger of Hill 178. Company E, 17th,
moved back to the secondary crest (right) on morning of 6 May after enemy
had counterattack in force. Below appear the north and west sides of the
escarpment, where Company F, 17th, regained the hill 7 May.
-
-
- [298]
- together with numerous machine guns,
mortars, rifles, and several hundred rounds of 75-mm. ammunition for the gun
they had failed to get into action.
-
- Behind this noisy fire fight along
Route 5, a large portion of the Japanese 1st Battalion, 32d Regiment,
managed to infiltrate through the XXIV Corps line. The Japanese made their
penetration at a point between Route 5 and Kochi. This route lay within the
77th Division sector but close to the divisional boundary between the 7th
and 77th. About ninety of the infiltrating Japanese made their way into the
command post of the 306th Infantry, but they did little damage and were killed
during the following day. Most of the Japanese, numbering approximately 450,
crossed the divisional boundary and reoccupied the town of Tanabaru and Tanabaru
Ridge. The deepest penetration was more than a mile behind the Corps front.25
-
- The town and ridge had constituted
a strong point on the first Shuri defense line, dominating much of the adjacent
area. This position had never actually been taken by American troops; the
Japanese had abandoned it on the night of 23 April when the rest of the line
cracked. The escarpment dropped abruptly in a steep coral cliff on the north.
The town stretched along the southeast slope of the ridge and was divided
by a road running south to Onaga and Kochi. The front-line battalions of the
17th Infantry, 7th Division, were supplied over this road. While the Japanese
held at Tanabaru, this supply road was effectively cut.
-
- Battle Behind the Lines
- Through field glasses sentries of
the r7th Infantry could see in the moonlight a column of troops moving northwest
against the skyline on Tanabaru Escarpment. The 17th fired on some of the
troops but was handicapped by fear of endangering friendly troops. Other Japanese
columns apparently passed undetected. The enemy quickly located and cut the
telephone wires between regimental headquarters and the three battalions,
but the regiment was able to record enemy movements through its units in the
rear areas. The Japanese also surrounded and attacked supply dumps at the
base of the ridge and were barely prevented from destroying them.26
-
- The job of cleaning out the infiltrating
Japanese fell to Company E, which sent a patrol of platoon strength up the
east slope of the escarpment. When the Japanese on the heights held up this
patrol with fire, 1st Lt. Walter J. Sinkiewicz,
- [299]
- commanding Company E, committed the
rest of his unit. One platoon almost reached the top, but the enemy drove
it back with mortar, machine-gun, and light-arms file, killing two and wounding
seven. A sharp fire fight developed, during which Sinkiewicz and his three
platoon leaders were all wounded.
-
- The Japanese were meanwhile making
the most of their position. Their fire covered the 1st Battalion's supply
dump and motor pool on the north side of the ridge, rendering them inaccessible
to the Americans. Enemy groups in Tanabaru mined the supply road through the
town and blanketed the road with machine-gun fire. A half-track carrying medical
supplies was disabled by a mine, and a medical officer was killed as he tried
to escape. The Japanese occupied the vehicle and converted it into a pillbox.
An American patrol killed eleven Japanese in and around the vehicle. S/Sgt.
Carl W. Johnson volunteered to retrieve the weapons in the half-track; he
made three successful trips across exposed ground but was killed on the fourth.
-
- By noon of 5 May there was apprehension
at the regimental command post, which had not fully appreciated the strength
of the infiltration. From a hill near the command post Lt. Col. Albert V.
Hard, executive of the 17th Infantry, could plainly see several Japanese soldiers
600 yards away on Tanabaru Escarpment. The Japanese were in turn watching
American activity. Lying on his stomach, Colonel Hard fired some shots from
an Mi at the Japanese to "neutralize" them. While he was so engaged,
a soldier ran up with a radio report that the German armies had surrendered.
"Well now," Hard said, "if we just had the Japs off the escarpment
we'd be all right, wouldn't we?"
-
- With Company E stalled on the east
slope of the escarpment, Company F attempted a broad flanking attack. Two
of its platoons on the line, supported by tanks, pushed through Tanabaru and
knocked out hastily established defenses. Beyond the town the company drew
heavy fire from numerous caves, and it spent the rest of the day destroying
the Japanese in these positions. Company E thereupon took over the burden
of the attack, and by 1730 it had reached the top of Tanabaru Escarpment behind
a mortar preparation. This move enabled the 1st Battalion to transfer its
vehicles and supplies to a safer location, but the supply route was still
blocked.
-
- Early in the morning of 6 May a force
of Japanese just below Company E pressed in on the Americans with grenades
and satchel charges. After suffering sixteen casualties in half an hour, Company
E retreated off the top to a protected ledge just below. Here the survivors
formed a line and bombarded the top of the hill with grenades to deny it to
the enemy. While some members of
- [300]
- the company hauled new boxes of grenades
up the steep trail, the others lobbed several hundred grenades on the Japanese,
who withdrew from the exposed top at dawn.
-
- Company F returned to Tanabaru the
same morning for a second sweep through the town and killed eight Japanese.
Supported by mortar fire and aided by small-arms fire from Company E, Company
F initially made rapid progress on the slope but then ran into a series of
coral outcroppings. With portable flame throwers, mortar fire, and quantities
of grenades, the troops eliminated all resistance on the slope by evening.
-
- On the following day, Company F attacked
the crest of Tanabaru Escarpment from the west behind mortar fire and quickly
gained the top. Trenches were littered with Japanese dead, most of them killed
by 81-mm. mortar fire. The amount of Japanese and American equipment found
on the escarpment explained the ability of the enemy to hold out so tenaciously.
Enemy equipment included one 75-mm. pack howitzer with ammunition, 2 heavy
machine guns, 6 light machine guns, 2 knee mortars, 3 magnetic mines, and
a large quantity of ammunition. Their American weapons consisted of 2 light
machine gun, a BAR's, 3 carbines, and 3 Tommy guns. A total of 462 Japanese
were killed in the area of Tanabaru during the 3-day battle, most of them
on the escarpment and others as they tried to make their way back to their
lines.27
-
- Failure of the Offensive
- By midnight of 5 May it was clear
to General Ushijima that the offensive had failed. He had suffered tremendous
casualties and had made no headway except in the Tanabaru area. Even there
his troops were being compressed. General Ushijima realized that he must revert
to defensive warfare. "The Army will temporarily halt its offensive,"
he ordered, "because of the opportunity offered by the painful blows
against the enemy . . . . The battle plan in the Shuri area sector will be
an attrition of enemy strength until he has lost his endurance. The 24th Division
. . . will shift to a holding basis."28
-
- Despite Ushijima's bravado, 32d
Army Headquarters was sunk in gloom over the failure of the offensive.
During the day Ushijima called Colonel Yahara to his office and declared with
tears in his eyes that henceforth he would be guided by Yahara's opinions.
Yahara felt that the battle had been the decisive event of the campaign. Even
General Cho, who was considered by many officers to be the incarnation of
the fighting will of the Japanese Army, gave up hope
- [301]
- for victory and said that defeat was
only a matter of time. This pessimism was reflected down the line. One Japanese
lieutenant wrote in his diary, "We realized that we were doomed when
we heard of the failure of the 24th Division." 29
-
- The Japanese lost in the attack approximately
5,000 troops, including those killed in the counterlandings. The 24th
Division was greatly reduced in strength. On 5 May the combat strength
of its 32d Regiment was down to 30 percent; two battalions of the
32d were at 15 percent. The 27th Tank Regiment never fought as
a mobile unit again; its six remaining medium tanks were converted to stationary
artillery and pillboxes northwest of Shuri. Japanese artillery and shipping
engineers also went into decline. The 44th Independent Mixed Brigade
was still intact, however, for it had not been committed after it became apparent
that the 24th Division would be unable to break through.30
-
- American casualties during the enemy
offensive were heavy. On q May 335 were killed or wounded, excluding 352 casualties
of the 1st Marine Division, which was not involved in the enemy ground attack.
On 5 May the two divisions hit hardest by the counterattack and penetration,
the 7th and 77th, suffered 379 casualties. These losses are comparable to
those previously incurred during the heaviest fighting in the Kakazu Ridge
struggles and in the first few days of the general attack starting 19 April.31
-
- Notwithstanding their heavy losses
during the Japanese offensive, the Americans, in general, suffered less from
Cho's aggressive tactics than .from Yahara's defensive methods. The 1st Marine
Division, for example, which was barely touched by the Japanese offensive
on 4 May, had more casualties on that date than the two other divisions of
the Corps combined; most of the losses had been suffered in making an attack
west of Machinato airfield against strong enemy defenses. Colonel Yahara had
hoped to exact such losses for every small advance by the Americans across
the entire line week after week. The Japanese counteroffensive of q-5 May
showed the superiority of Yahara's tactics to Cho's. Overambitiously conceived
and ineptly executed, the offensive was a colossal blunder.
-
-
- The XXIV Corps now resumed its attack,
which in several sectors of the front had hardly been interrupted by the Japanese
offensive. Because the Jap-
- [302]
- anese had used almost all their fresh
reserves in the counterattack, General Buckner could feel confident of the
launching sometime in May of a general attack on the Shuri defenses. On 7
May General Hodge ordered that preparatory to this coordinated Tenth Army
attack the advance was to continue to the AsaDakeshi-Gaja line, to be seized
by the evening of 8 May. Upon reaching this line, "a bare minimum,"
the attack was to continue in order to gain as much ground as possible for
later offensive action. 32
-
- After the failure of their offensive,
the Japanese turned all their energies toward waging a prolonged battle of
attrition. Their losses did not impair immediately their defensive capacities;
thus the XXIV Corps found no weak point in the Shuri defenses resulting from
the ill-starred offensive. By throwing fresh troops into the attack of 4 May
Ushijima had been able to maintain his strength all along the line. Nor was
there any breakdown in his command and staff operation. Front-line units were
reorganized without seeming loss of effectiveness; available reinforcements
were carefully allotted to existing regiments; local counterattacks were timed
for maximum effect.33
-
- General Ushijima's chief task now
was to keep sufficient combat troops at the front to man his Shuri defenses.
It was apparent by 7 May that the strength of the remaining regular infantry
was not great enough for this task. Consequently, Ushijima converted service
units into infantry combat groups. By mixing service troops with the "regulars,"
he exacted from them their maximum combat effectiveness. "One man in
ten will continue with his rear-echelon duties. The remaining nine men will
devote themselves to antitank combat training," one order stated.34
-
- The reorganization of the 32d Regiment,
24th Division, was typical of the resourcefulness of the Japanese.
The regimental headquarters received 5 men from the 24th Transport Regiment.
The 1st Battalion kept its own surviving members and was allotted all the
survivors of the 2d Battalion, 20 men from the 7th Shipping Depot,
90 from the 24th Transport Regiment, and y from the 26th Sea
Raiding Squadron. The ad Battalion was totally reconstituted from the
29th Independent Infantry Battalion and other units. The 3d Battalion
was reorganized in a manner similar to that used with the 1st. It was
by this process of piecing units together that the 32d Army was able
to stay intact long after the original
- [303]
- combat units had been virtually destroyed-a
capability which at the time American intelligence officers found "baffling."
35
-
- After his offensive failed, the enemy
formed a line in which the relative position of the major units was to remain
roughly the same until the end of the battle. On the east the 24th Division,
reinforced by two independent battalions, held the line as far as Shuri, with
its 89th Regiment on the east, its 22d in the center, and
its 32d on the west. The remnants of the battered 62d Division
were stretched from a point north of Shuri almost to the west coast, holding
about one-third of the line. Along the Asa River estuary was a battalion of
the 44th Independent Mixed Brigade.36
-
- The Japanese husbanded their remaining
heavy weapons, especially their artillery, as carefully as they meted out
their manpower. On 6 May the Japanese 5th Artillery Command directed
its units to "revert to the [defensive] situation which held prior to
the attack situation of 3 May." Once again the protection of individual
pieces was a cardinal feature of enemy operations. Artillery units were ordered
to "use ammunition with the utmost economy" and to "wait and
fire for effect against vital targets." 37
-
- Marines Fight for Hill 60
- Turning east to seize the high ground
that dominated the Asa River estuary, the 1st Marines on 6 May drove toward
Hill 60, a small hump one-half mile southeast of Yafusu. (See Map No. XXXIV.)
The mission was an extremely difficult one. Hill 60 was commanded by Japanese
fire from Dakeshi Plateau and Ridge, Wana Ridge, and high ground south of
the Asa River. Moreover, Nan Hill, a hillock 200 yards north of Hill 60 from
which the attack was to be supported, was not yet wholly in Marine hands.
In a classic demonstration of reverse-slope tactics, the Japanese had relinquished
the crest and northern slope of Nan to the Americans but still held numerous
caves on the southern slope as well as tunnels underground. Men of the 2d
Battalion, 1st Marines, had to ward off incessant forays on Nan during the
night; some of them were bayoneted or knifed to death in their foxholes.38
-
- The 2d Battalion attacked Hill 60
at 1000 on 6 May, supported by mortar, artillery, and naval fire. The Japanese
dug in on the reverse slope of Nan
- [304]
-
- ATTACKS ON HILL 60 by marines developed into a tank,
flame, and demolitions battle. Above, tank infantry team attacks northwest
slope of hill 60, Below, marines await result of a blasting charge, prepared
to pick off any Japanese who might attempt escape.
-
-
- [305]
- opened up on the attackers from their
flank and rear. The Marine platoons quickly lost contact with one another
and left a trail of casualties in their wake. Tanks met Japanese mortar and
47-mm. fire as soon as they moved onto open ground; two were destroyed and
left burning and another disabled, after receiving a total of ten hits. One
platoon reached the crest of Hill 60, only to come under a holocaust of grenades,
satchel charges, white phosphorus shells, and knee mortar shells. Marines
on Nan Hill were unable to move off to support the attack because of the Japanese
just below them. At 1227, after the marines on Hill 60 had suffered thirty-five
casualties without consolidating their position, the 2d Battalion commander
ordered them to withdraw.
-
- Next day a second attack on Hill 60
by the 2d Battalion was equally unsuccessful. Although four battalions of
artillery, a fire support ship, and 81-mm. and 60-mm. mortars put concentrated
fire on the slopes and crest of Hill 60, the marines who gained the top again
came under concentrated enemy fire. The fighting was at such close range that
it was impossible to keep enough grenades on the line, and the marines used
rifle butts against Japanese who tried to storm their position. One wounded
sergeant directed his squad until the moment he died. The troops lost their
hold at one point, then fought their way to the top again. But the continuing
Japanese fire from the reverse slope of Nan Hill was the decisive factor,
and at 1700 the marines pulled back after losing eight killed and thirty-seven
wounded.
-
- The 2d Battalion now redoubled its
efforts to destroy enemy positions on Nan Hill. The marines found the task
hazardous and often disheartening. Demolition charges placed in one cave sometimes
blew out several other openings as well. Rushing for defilade during blasting,
a marine might find himself in another part of a tunnel. In several instances
caves were unsealed by Japanese digging out from the inside. But the work
went steadily on. With relays of tanks and flame-thrower tanks, demolitions,
and hundreds of gallons of napalm, the marines cleaned out Nan Hill by 9 May.
-
- With Nan completely "processed,"
marines attacked Hill 60 again on 9 May. While the 1st Battalion assaulted
the northwest portion of Dakeshi Plateau, the 2d Battalion moved on Hill 60.
Careful coordination of tanks, infantry, and supporting weapons brought quick
results, and by the end of the day Hill 60 was securely in Marine hands.
-
- XXIV Carps Advances on the Left
- After extensive patrolling during
5-6 May, the 184th Infantry, 7th Division, resumed its southward drive. The
initial objective of Colonel Green, command-
- [306]
- ing officer, was Gaja Ridge, which
had been won and lost on a May. On 7 May this ridge was occupied with astonishing
ease. A platoon-sized patrol having operated freely along the tip of Gaja
Ridge, infantrymen of the 3d Battalion started across the flats southwest
of Unaha in deployed formation and were in place along the length of the ridge
an hour later. The Japanese, who may well have been surprised by the speed
of the attack, brought in a few artillery rounds but no small-arms fire.39
-
- Further moves by the 184th into the
western approaches of Conical Hill were more difficult. One patrol, cut off
by machine-gun fire and shelled by mortars, had to fight its way back. A drive
into Kibara stalled at the very edge of the town in the face of artillery
and mortar fire. Mines in Kuhazu and Onaga prevented tanks from coming up
in support. Infantry attacks on hills at the western terminus of the flatlands
were more successful. William Hill fell on 7 May; the forward slope of Easy
Hill, on the 8th.
-
- During this period the chief obstacle
to the 7th Division's advance was a network of Japanese positions around Kochi
Ridge and Zebra Hill just south of the town of Kochi. Previous attacks had
demonstrated that the defenses here could not be overrun in a single attack
but required a tedious, methodical destruction of individual enemy soldiers
and positions. Any large-scale attack by the 17th Infantry, even though coordinated
among battalions, was doomed to fail because of the combined fire power of
enemy positions stretching from Shuri to Conical Hill-a volume of fire greater
than a regiment could control.
-
- The struggle for the Kochi positions,
which had started on 26 April, was resumed after the Japanese counteroffensive
failed. By 6 May the 3d Battalion, 17th Regiment, was fighting for Knob 2
on Kochi Ridge and was trying to burn the Japanese out of the east side by
rolling 10-gallon cans of napalm, gasoline, and motor oil over the top. On
the same day two platoons of infantry seized a small portion of How Hill but,
contrary to orders, retreated in the face of heavy fire from Kochi Ridge.
At this point the 7th Division was under heavy pressure from XXIV Corps to
push more aggressively. Accordingly, Brig. Gen. Joseph L. Ready, the assistant
division commander, ordered Colonel Pachler's 17th Infantry to attack Zebra
Hill on the next day, 7 May.
-
- Tanks and infantry of the 3d Battalion
moved out the next morning through Kochi. Their initial objective was an enemy
strong point in the road cut between Zebra Hill and Kochi Ridge. This strong
point formed the western
- [307]
- AMERICAN ADVANCE DOWN THE CENTER of the line, 77th Division sector,
was slow and costly. Every knob of ground was fortified and fanatically
defended. This photograph, taken from an artillery spotting plane 6 May,
shows American tanks burning out a strong point on the edge of a village.
-
- [308]
- anchor of the Japanese line running
toward Kibara, from which the Japanese 22d Regiment was ordered on
7 May "to exact as heavy a toll of the enemy as possible." 40
Heavy artillery fire held up the infantry, but the tanks plunged through Kochi
to the west end of the road cut, and the troops followed as soon as the artillery
slackened off. The strong point was a cave in the north side of the cut. Japanese
fire from Knob 4 and neighboring heights, combined with the steep walls of
the narrow passage, made this position almost inaccessible. Tanks poured flame
and shells into the road cut, but when they prepared to return for resupply
the enemy on Knob 4 opened up on the troops. After exchanging fire with the
Japanese until midafternoon, the 3d Battalion withdrew.
-
- Meanwhile the 1st Battalion again
seized How Hill and gained more ground on Kochi. Rain began on the afternoon
of the 7th and continued into the next day, but the tired men of the 17th
Infantry did not give up the attack. The platoon of 2d Lt. William T. Coburn,
who had joined Company G nine days before as a replacement, followed him to
Knob 4 but was soon driven back by mortars and machine guns. Infuriated by
the loss of two men killed and three wounded, Coburn and S/Sgt. George Hills
returned to Knob 4 and hurled grenades at an enemy mortar crew in the road
cut below. Although a mortar shell had severely wounded Hills, he and Coburn
killed the Japanese in the cut.
-
- By 9 May, when the 17th was relieved
by the 382d Infantry, 96th Division, the hold of the Americans on Kochi was
almost complete. A straight and firm regimental line ran from How Hill to
the crest of Kochi Ridge and thence to the southern end of Kochi town. However,
the cave in the road cut, as well as all of Zebra Hill, was still in enemy
hands. On 9 May the battalion of the Japanese 22d Regiment which had
held this area for three days was relieved by other units and commended by
the regimental commander for "inflicting heavy casualties on the enemy."
41
-
- Inching Along in the Center
- In the very center of the island the
77th Division, after taking Maeda Escarpment, made step-by-step advances along
Route 5 in its advance on Shuri. General Bruce used all weapons available,
including air strikes, naval gunfire, and 8-inch howitzers, only to find the
enemy still capable of putting up a fierce fight when the infantry and tanks
moved up. The troops made use of seesaw tactics by which heavy weapons softened
up a small area, permitting troops to
- [309]
- extend a salient from which they could
support a similar effort in the adjoining sector. Nevertheless, progress was
agonizingly slow.
-
- The 5th Marines, 1st Marine Division,
on the right (west) of the 77th, met equally stout resistance. The enemy positions
to the immediate front of this regiment were organized around an area of rough
ground known later as Awacha Pocket, northeast of Dakeshi and south of the
town of Awacha. Here again the close teamwork of tanks and infantry, supported
by heavy weapons, provided the only means of advance. Encircling this pocket
required a week and was not finally accomplished until 11 May. By that time
the marines had uncovered even more formidable positions to the south.
-
- By 11 May XXIV Corps, though still
far from the minimum line set by General Hodge, had eliminated many Japanese
positions in preparation for the full-scale attack that was to follow. The
week of 3-10 May had been one of general consolidation of the line that ran
from Ouki on the east coast to Asa-Kawa on the west. At the expense of more
than 20,000 casualties, including nonbattle, 42
the American forces on the Shuri line had extended their line at Maeda, Kochi,
and Awacha, thus making their lines of communication more secure and gaining
more favorable terrain for the Tenth Army attack scheduled for 11 May.
- [310]
page created 10 December 2001