Dan Snow's History Hit - Iwo Jima: WWII in the Pacific
Episode Date: February 10, 202580 years ago, on the rocky volcanic island of Iwo Jima, the vicious battle for the Pacific reached ever bloodier crescendos. As Allied forces crossed the Rhine in Europe, American Marines won a costly... victory on Iwo Jima in their island-hopping campaign towards the Japanese mainland.For the latest instalment of our 'D-Day to Berlin' series, we're joined by Timothy Heck, an artillery officer in the US Marine Corps Reserve and a supervisory historian with Naval History and Heritage Command. Tim explains why the battle happened, and how the Americans overcame the tenacious Japanese defenders.Produced by James Hickmann and edited by Matthew Peaty.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week and ad-free podcasts. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe.We'd love to hear your feedback - you can take part in our podcast survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on.You can also email the podcast directly at ds.hh@historyhit.com.
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On the night of the 18th of February 1944, 80 years ago, the US Fifth Fleet arrived.
One of the greatest assemblages of naval might in the history of our species.
Battleships accompanied by the mighty carrier task force alongside ships carrying the fifth
amphibious core. Imagine that. One minute empty sea, hours later a floating city has just appeared as if from nowhere, with airfields, warehouses, hospitals, men and morgues.
Over 100,000 troops in over 500 ships.
More aircraft than most modern air forces.
That is what control of the oceans allows you to do.
They'd arrived off a tiny speck of land called Iwo Jima,
a place that had really never troubled the history books until now. Because now it found itself
directly in the path of an American thrust towards the Japanese home islands. One of a chain of
islands that was being seized by the Americans to allow them to push military assets closer and closer to Japan itself. American bombers, for example, would be able to
use the airfield on this little volcanic extrusion from the ocean. But before any American planes
could take off or land, it had to be clear that it's Japanese defenders, just over 20,000 men.
But they were well led, and they'd had a lot of time to prepare.
You're listening to Dan Snow's History Hit, and this is the story of the Battle for Iwo Jima,
a battle that began hours after the arrival of that fleet. With a speed that must have shocked
the Japanese defenders, American troops headed for shore on the morning of the 19th of February.
American troops headed for shore on the morning of the 19th of February.
It was bright, clear blue skies.
As the men took to the landing craft, big gun battleships let rip on the beaches.
Surely, the infantrymen must have thought,
nothing could survive that weight of steel and fire that was being rained down on the island.
But they were wrong.
The planners had said the landings would be easy,
but they were wrong too.
When they did land, the Marines discovered the whole island was covered in a kind of loose volcanic debris
which left them trudging as if through snow.
The exit points off the beach were far steeper than expected.
And then the Japanese defenders opened up.
This is the story of what happened next.
80 years on, we're going to tell you about one of the toughest battles of the Second World War.
From the extraordinary defensive measures taken by the Japanese,
the tenacity of the Americans,
to the taking of one of history's most iconic, and yes, I mean iconic,
photographs. Joining me on the podcast is Timothy Heck. He's actually an officer in the US Marine
Corps Reserves. He's a supervisory historian with the Naval History and Heritage Command,
but he's speaking to me now as a private citizen, not as a representative of either of those two
august institutions. He's the author of Uncontested Shores, the evolving role of
amphibious operations in the history of warfare. The perfect man to take us through Iwo Jima.
Tim, thanks very much for coming on the podcast.
Thanks for having me.
Let's get the geography sorted.
Tell me about Iwo Jima, this little speck of, well, land, I guess,
that no one in the history of the human race had hardly ever heard of
before it became the center of global attention in 1945.
Where are we talking?
So we're talking about an island that's not far off the Japanese mainland comparatively, right?
The Pacific is vast. It's massive.
And you have an island that is within striking distance of Japan, right?
It's a staging. It's not as close as Okinawa, which is the next major American amphibious operation, but it's closer.
So we've moved north out of the Marianas.
We've advanced across the Pacific from east to west within striking distance of Japan. And that's part
of the reason that from the Japanese perspective, the island is so important is it's close.
The Americans care about it for a few reasons, and there's now historiographical debate and
significant discussions, and we can get to those later. The Americans like it because it's a good
stopping off point for either bombers getting damaged
coming out of Japan or bombers having trouble going into Japan.
Because the American air offensive, supplemented by British bombers as well, the American air
offensive has kicked off against the Japanese homeland.
Why stop at Iwo Jima?
Why not keep going?
And as you say, go to Okinawa, skip Iwo Jima.
Is there a powerful Japanese strike group base there?
Were they worried about them leaving it undaunted
as they advance further towards Japan?
Why go to all this trouble?
They go to this trouble, one,
because amphibious operations over long distances
are very hard to pull off.
And while the Japanese Navy has been effectively defeated,
right, it loses the last of its true remaining combat power
in Leyte in late 44.
You still have to stepping stone it.
And in this part of the Pacific, unlike the Southern Pacific and the Central Pacific,
where you have lots of little islands and MacArthur's famous island hopping campaign,
where I can leave and bypass Japanese detachments and let them wither on the vine,
that doesn't exist in the Northern Pacific in the same way.
You want to kind of take incremental gains as best you can. American intelligence, we know in retrospect, right,
the battle takes 36 days. The last Japanese troops actually surrender in 1949, but the battle really
takes 36 days. American intelligence says it would take five. So Iwo Jima is supposed to be,
according to the intelligence analysts and the folks predicting the operation, this is going to be quick.
There's a strangled Japanese garrison that's there, right, where they've been isolated.
This will be quick.
And it turns out to be the exact opposite.
You're an officer in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve.
Yes.
But you're speaking to me as a private citizen with a particular interest and focus in this subject.
but you're speaking to me as a private citizen with a particular interest and focus in this subject. With your experience as a practitioner, as somebody who studied amphibious warfare,
when you're looking at Iwo Jima, what do you see? And does it look like a daunting target?
Explain what you are seeing from the sea. Every amphibious operation is daunting. It's not easy,
right? You're combining where water meets land meets air.
It's ugly.
They're all ugly.
You know, and they look good on maps.
They look good conceptually, but they're hard to pull off.
I have the added advantage.
I'm working on a biography of Keller Rocky, who commands the 5th Marine Division at EWO.
They're the flag-raising division.
I have access to his personal papers. And I'm seeing his thoughts as he's kind of preparing for and writing correspondence and running a division ahead of combat. I think that while folks thought it was going to be five days,
anybody who had been in significant combat, which would be your three Marine division commanders on
that island, are thinking to themselves, we got told this before. It's never this easy.
You see in retrospective things from General Schmidt, who commands the
5th Amphibious Corps, which owns those three divisions, about the limits on pre-invasion
bombardment. Chris Hemler just came out with a fantastic book called Delivering Destruction.
He talks about that evolution of fire support for amphibious operations with the Marines and
the Navy in the Pacific. I think the best way to describe it is they were expecting 10 days worth of pre-invasion bombardment they get maybe two tim this means big gunned battleships firing those
enormous guns people are familiar with them there's in here in the uk we have a couple of
those guns outside the imperial war museum and in the states you're lucky enough to have so many
battleships and battle wagons left over so there's huge big guns absolutely blasting the shore,
taking the place of artillery on land, if you like,
naval artillery blasting the shore.
Okay, and they're hoping to have 10 days, and they got two.
And airstrikes.
And airstrikes.
So there's carrier-based aviation.
Carrier-based and some land-based, right?
Very long-range land-based bombing out of the Marianas.
And what were they trying to hit?
What's on the land there?
The objective are these two airfields and one that's under construction. It's a flat piece of
land on a relatively flat island. What they're really trying to hit with this pre-invasion
bombardment are the Japanese defensive works. Mount Suribachi, which anchors the southwestern
part of the island where the flag raising happens, it's this visually distinct piece.
southwestern part of the island where the flag raising happens, right? It's this visually distinct piece. It is honeycombed with Japanese caves and defensive positions. There are Japanese defensive
positions all over that island that reconnaissance aircraft, reconnaissance submarine missions had
identified. So the Navy task force that goes in is looking to destroy or soften those up.
It's pre-invasion bombardment. It's the same thing for your audiences that are
more attuned to the European theater. It's the same thing that was supposed to happen at Normandy,
right? We're going to silence these block houses. We're going to silence these oppositional
positions. The landing troops are going to go ahead and just be able to march to victory.
That's the intent. That's always the intent with pre-invasion fire support.
Never plays out that way. It all sounds so straightforward in a planning room, right?
It's nice and clear.
You've got a great map there.
You've got plenty of weight of shells, and it appears you've got a bit of time.
What could possibly go wrong?
Oh, I don't know.
Let's see.
Weather?
And that's the big one, right?
For the pre-invasion bombardment, this is 1945.
And while there is radar, you don't have what we have today.
Today, I have aircraft that can fly in all weather conditions.
I have aircraft that can drop ordnance through cloud cover on pre-designated sighted positions or that can follow laser beams.
Missiles I can launch from thousands of miles away, right?
Tomahawks and things like that.
I have all of these things that technology in the last 80 years have made all weather, all time of the day, right?
You can no longer hide in the darkness.
In 1945, that's not the case.
I have to be able to see a target or think that I see a target, right?
Because the Japanese are in these caves and fortified positions inside the mountain and on the beach, you know, just off the beaches.
I'm on a rocking ship, a moving
shooting platform, and I'm hoping that I'm going to hit a target. And so while there's this massive
saturation that does happen in those two days, you're kind of doing a spray and pray in some
ways. I'm going to shoot a lot of ammunition and a lot of targets. And statistically, based on all
of the analysis that's been done back at testing
ranges and testing facilities and with my operational research associate groups, they're
going to tell me I have destroyed the target because statistically I should have, but that's
not quite how it plays out. Not quite lab conditions here. No, I mean, as an artilleryman, there are,
oh goodness, I have to pull the memory banks real fast. 16 non-standard conditions to shoot artillery from a stationary position
against another stationary position. Now add a ship. Oh, and by the way, that round goes straight.
The artillery round arcs. I mean, there's all of these complications that go into it. So
the predictions that you can have in the States at planning conferences where you can sleep
in your own bed at night, you can have three square meals a day. It goes a lot smoother than
it ever does in practice. So tell me about those Marines. They are packed in there on transport
ships. What are conditions like? And is it like D-Day? Is there a delay of
24 hours and people are throwing up their guts and being sick? Or is it running smoothly and
they've got everything they need to hit those beaches in pretty good physical condition,
good night's sleep and holding some food down? Having talked to Marines that landed on that
island, nobody got a good night's sleep beforehand. So you've got three Marine divisions,
the third, the fourth, and the fifth. From south to north, got three Marine divisions, the 3rd, the 4th, and the 5th.
From south to north, the 5th Marine division hits the southern Moche Beaches.
To their right is the 4th Marine division, and held in reserve is the 3rd Marine division.
The 3rd and the 4th had seen combat before. They have seen extensive combat throughout the war.
The 5th Marine division as a whole is untested. So, Keller Rocky takes them over in 1944.
He's got them in California. He takes them to Hawaii. They have the benefit of an influx of
veterans either coming out of units that have been disbanded or that have volunteered. And John
Bazalone, you know, the Medal of Honor recipient from Guadalcanal, one of the main characters in
the HBO series, The Pacific, John Bazalone, volunteers to go back to combat and comes to the 5th Marine Division. So while it's untested, its leaders know
their jobs and a lot of their NCOs know their jobs. But a lot of those Marines, this is Welcome
to World War II. This is the first shot they're going to hear fired in anger, is on a beach in
Ujima. Yeah. Your 18, 19-year-old kids that were in high school six months ago are now being put
on transport ships to sail across the Pacific.
Wow.
In talking with these veterans, in talking with these Marines, you know, they talk about the training that happened on the ships as best they could because they're crammed in there, right?
This isn't, I can't practice patrolling.
I can't practice land navigation or any of these other vital skills.
But I can go out to the fantail and I can shoot my rifle a few times at the can that's been thrown over the side, or we can, you know,
the sergeants can talk to us, the lieutenants can show us the maps. You know, and certainly
in the 5th Marine Division, they're trained, they're highly trained in the States before
they get on those ships. They have the transit across the Pacific. By 1945, the American
industrial base and the American food industrial base, agricultural base, they're eating as well as they can. But that night before the invasion, you know,
there's a pre-invasion meal that's traditionally served. I don't know how many of those Marines
either ate it or retained it on their way into the beach. The landings were supposed to hit the
beaches on Iwo Jima at 09 in the morning. They landed at 859. So they're a minute ahead of
schedule. We're on path. What they land
to is very different than what they were expecting. Let's talk about those few strange minutes after
landing. What were they expecting and what happened? So Japanese defensive doctrine,
right? And the Japanese commander, Kurabayashi, intentionally broke from Japanese doctrine,
right? The defensive doctrine for the Japanese, the Americans from Japanese doctrine, right? The defensive doctrine
for the Japanese, the Americans and our allies, right? The Brits and the Dutch and the Aussies
and Kiwis have seen at other islands throughout the Pacific is they're going to be met at the
shoreline, right? When the water hits the beach, that's where the Japanese are going to fight.
And Kurabayashi says, no, we're not doing that. That's foolish. We're going to build our defenses in. We're going to do a defense in depth.
That's some moral courage on his part to counterman doctrine, to say to Japanese superiors,
no, what were they going to do to him? Shave his head and send him to Iwo Jima? But
he changes the script. And so the first hour, the Marines land on this beach and it is a volcanic sandy beach.
There's no roads off of it. You can't dig in. You can't do any of these things you're expecting to
do and that the Marines have done on other beaches in the Pacific. He waits an hour and then opens up
and that beach is crowded with waves and waves of Marines. And you read the memoirs, you read the
letters home, you talk to these Marines and that
first 24 hours on the beach after that initial calm, there wasn't a single shell hole or position
on that beach that didn't have a dead Marine. The Japanese fire is so effective because they can look
down from Suribachi and see everything. And oh, by the way, they've had possession of this island for
decades and know where every single
point is on it. So you can have an artillery spotter on the high ground and he can call in
fire precisely from artillery barrels where they've practiced. They know exactly what they've
got to do, what heat, temperature, wind conditions. They can drop a shell on exactly that spot of
ground. They've practiced it dozens of times and they can call in that fire at will.
Yes.
And oh, by the way, I can open the enclosure,
stick the barrel of the gun out,
fire, pull it back in, close the enclosure,
reload, rearm, reset,
an American counter-battery fire, he can't get me.
You're in a cave or you're in a really strong Sanger or something that people can't get.
Wow.
Yeah.
That first few minutes, though, when it was completely silent,
they must have, what did they think?
Oh, my God, this is so different to what's gone before.
Those veterans must have told everyone
that you're going to be fighting in the shallows.
And here they are going ashore.
They must have thought, what was going on?
Yes.
And, you know, in talking to some of these Marines
and certainly kind of projecting my own sense onto this a little bit, the mind can go one of two ways.
Oh, Intel got it right. This could be a cakewalk.
Or, oh God, something's coming. When is the other shoe going to drop?
And as we know in retrospect, an hour later when the Japanese opened up, the other shoe did drop.
So the naval bombardment was not as effective as they'd hoped.
I feel like I've said that on this podcast before, sadly. The aerial bombardment had not, so rather than just
occupying smashed Japanese positions manned by corpses, they are fighting a very, very alive
and prepared and motivated enemy, I guess, right? The Japanese, even by this point of the war,
people will have heard of this kind of suicidal valor of the Japanese display. I mean, what is motivating these men?
Are they fighting as fanatically as perhaps movies and TV shows have us believe?
Hollywood versus history. I think they are fighting to that level, right? So there's 21,000
roughly Japanese on the island. In the end, ultimately only about a thousand of them are
captured. The rest all die. So they are fighting to the end. In the end, ultimately, only about a thousand of them are captured. The rest all die.
So they are fighting to the end. They're fighting differently. Kurabayashi, again,
one, the tactics are different. He's fighting a defense in depth. He knows he cannot stop the
Americans. He's been given the strategic task of delaying. All he has to do is hold up the
Americans as long as he can because the Japanese know that the next stop is the start of the home islands, which is Okinawa, but it's the mainland Japan as well.
So every day he buys and every Marine he kills on Iwo Jima is one more day for prep on the islands and one fewer Marines in Tokyo and Kobe wherever.
more day for prep on the islands and one fewer marines in tokyo and kobe wherever we are fighting for our homeland we are fighting to defend our homes so that our mothers our sisters our
brothers our parents whatever our children don't have to or have to face a weaker enemy
but iwo jima is a strategic defense in depth position for the japanese as well
after the japanese open up you have vehicles being knocked out, you have
infantry being torn down, no cover. How did the Americans get off the beach?
Ones and twos under small leadership, small unit leadership. And I think, you know, one of the
legacies of the battle is the iconic image that Joe Rosenthal takes on D plus 4 on February 23rd of the flag raising.
It's a small unit that has stayed together under the leadership of young lieutenants, sergeants, corporals, and in some cases, you know, the senior private who was in the unit three days before the other two guys that are with him.
And that's how they get off the beach.
Somebody's saying, if we stay here, we're going to die. We that's how they get off the beach. Somebody saying,
if we stay here, we're going to die. We might as well at least die going forward. And that's a quote or a paraphrase from another battle, but that really is the mentality that gets
the Marines off that beach. Yes, they're being pushed by generals and by battalion commanders
and all of that, but they know their objectives and they know that if they stay, nothing good is going to happen.
There's no Manstein or Napoleon or Julius Caesar making flanking movements and big top-down pronouncements.
This is just a grinding, attritional battle.
They're crowdsourcing the problem.
Small groups finding little cracks, tiny little dents in the Japanese defenses,
and then pushing into them and expanding those little toeholds.
The generals and the staff officers, they plan this battle and then the Marines and the soldiers and the sailors go out and execute it. But they go out and execute it with that sense of why they're
going where they're going. And then, oh, hey, you follow me. And that's how they actually get off
the beach. It's not until eventually the Navy
construction battalions, the Seabees, are able to bulldoze exits off the beach that you can get
jeeps, you can get tanks, which wind up playing a major role in the battle, or an outsized role,
I should say, in terms of personnel versus impact, off the beach and into the inland.
But on that first day, and on those first hours, it's those
young leaders, right? Whether they're lieutenants or whether they're staff NCOs or non-commissioned
officers, picking up Marines and saying, follow me. Do we have casualty figures for that first
day, do we think? Those numbers are out there. The Marine Corps has done a really good job of
indexing its casualties, both wounded, non-battle, and all of this.
But maybe instead of the first day, let me give you one regiment in 5th Marine Division's casualties for the first four days between landing and the flag raising.
And this, by the way, is the regiment that raises the flag.
This is 28th Marines.
In the four-day period from D plus 1 to D plus four, they lose 510 Marines.
What's a regiment?
About 3,000, maybe?
A little more, probably, with reinforcements.
But they're losing significant numbers.
But comparatively, right?
In the span of the entire battle, Marine sailors, airmen, soldiers, 6,800 American dead.
In contrast, to put it in today's terms, 20-plus years of the global war on terror, and we're looking at about 6,800 American dead. In contrast, to put it in today's terms, 20 plus years of the global war
on terror, and we're looking at about 6,000. So in 36 days, as many casualties as in 20 years
of combat operations in this century. Listen to Dan Snow's history. We're talking about the Battle of Iwo Jima, more coming up.
This is History's Heroes.
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Subscribe to History's Heroes wherever you get your podcasts. Tell me, when they do manage to get off the beaches as you say they get some armor forward
they bulldoze some roots off the beach is it digging in is it like the first all this volcanic
rock it must have been very difficult indeed to construct any kind of uh shelter how does the
battle unfold once they get off that beach?
So the first day, largely they don't hit their objectives, right? The objectives are to capture the southern airfield. The objections are to isolate Mount Suribachi on the southern
part of the island. They do that. 28th Marines under Harry the Horse Liversedge, who is this
kind of outsized figure in Marine Corps history for good reason, he gets the regiment across the island.
It's 800 meters wide at its narrowest point.
He seals off Suribachi, and it takes them another four days, or three days rather,
to get that patrol up to the top of the mountain to raise the flags.
But they're still fighting.
The Japanese are dug into Suribachi, in caves, in tunnels that have been constructed.
The sand, and I can show you this on the podcast and we'll have to describe it to folks,
that's sand from Iwo Jima.
This is Tim holding up a vial of black coarse, big, big grained sand.
Because this is an island that is just a rock that has been worn down by the sea.
And it's sulfurous, right?
It's horrible smelling.
It's hot because it is a volcano, right? It's horrible smelling. It's hot
because it is a volcano. Digging in is very difficult. As you look at pictures, as the battle
advances and the battle continues, right? So they kind of hit the far shore, the western shore,
and both divisions turn right and thus to the north. So there's a kind of a turning movement
with the 5th Marine Division on the west coast, the left side of the island, the 4th Marine Division on the right side along
the east coast, and they're pushing north while a regiment of the 5th Marine Division is still
reducing the Japanese holdings on Suribachi, which has the commanding view of the entire island.
It was already a slog, but as you look at the advancing days, right, some days you make it 200
yards, some days you make it 20. And the Japanese defensive network, right, again, Karabayashi had
done a brilliant job of digging in. It's not World War I trench lines, but it's a series of
interconnected tunnels, interconnected pillboxes. And so you could clear one out.
And the Marines did this.
They found this out the hard way.
They would clear one out in advance and they hadn't sealed it off.
So Japanese soldiers would pop up in their rear and either take out the following waves or shoot them in the back because of the interconnected tunnels.
Kurabayashi had a plan to dig something like 27 kilometers of tunnels under the island. By the time the
Marines land, he's only, I say this in very air quotes, only has 17 kilometers of them dug or so,
but it's enough to make every yard gained, not actually gained until you can seal off what's
behind you, whether that's using bulldozers or satchel charges or flamethrowers and dogs.
And it's ugly. And as they advance north, the terrain starts to become a little bit more
compartmentalized is the military term for it, right? So you've got draws and valley,
not valleys like you would think of like, oh, lovely, I can go hiking here. But
you've got terrain that if you kind of using your finger as a terrain model, right? In between each finger, you've got these ridges,
you've got folds where your knuckles are, you've got all of this. And that's what they're fighting
in as they go north along the island. You mentioned flamethrowers, satchel charges.
So you're reducing these little strong points. But then presumably, once you've cleared out the
Japanese defenders,
there's guys who have to go in there and are entering the warren of tunnels. So you're fighting,
it's horrific above the ground, but I imagine it was pretty bad below the ground too.
You have to have strong nerve to go down there. You have some that do that, yes. But by and large,
the Marines' tactic was just to seal the caves off, to seal the tunnels off.
Oh, interesting. Okay, so it's cauterized them on the surface, right? So I either bulldoze materials into block the opening.
I satchel charge it. I try to collapse the caves or the tunnels using explosives, you know, never
send a man to do what a bullet could do or a block of TNT. And that's what the Japanese face that,
you know, the Marines are just blowtorch and corkscrew
tactics, right? The corkscrew being those explosives and the blowtorch being either
man-packed flamethrowers or Zippos or Ronsons, which are Sherman tanks with flamethrower
attachments on them. Let's just do the Mount Suribachi moment. You've already talked about it,
but this group of Marines goes up and
raises the US flag on top of that mountain. That's a great moment. Well, a brief respite,
a brief moment of celebration. Is that mountain then neutralized in terms of high ground or are
there still caverns and warrens in there which people are able to call down fire on American
positions? They're still able to call down fire, right?
The Japanese wind up behind, underneath, in front of, to the side of American positions.
And while there's the flag on top of Suribachi and the cheer goes out across the island and talking to Marines,
they remember either their buddy bumping them going, hey, look, or hearing it,
and then the cheer goes up across
the island. But at that point, there's still another month plus of fighting. And it's because
the Japanese are everywhere. Is the Japanese general, obviously he's built this extraordinary
defensive network. He's set out the doctrine. Once Suribachi, the summit falls, and is he still able to exercise any control
over the course of this battle?
Or is it just, now the Japanese really have broken out
and it's just small unit subletons
just saying, we're going to fight and die here, lads.
No, the Japanese still have command and control.
You know, Suribachi is the bottom corner of the island.
And certainly as the Americans advance,
command and control nodes,
telephone lines start going down. The Japanese ability to control at the general officer level down starts to degrade. He's very definitely still in control, though in many ways,
the mechanics of the battle had already been set. And to your Napoleon comment earlier,
he can't do that kind of sweeping gesture. And now
we will attack with this regiment here on the left-hand side. That's just not a possibility
for the Japanese. And that's not what they were intending to do anyway. So I never like to use
the word inevitable, but there is this overwhelming tide of American power that just continues to compress and compress and compress
the Japanese without taking away from the valor of the American soldier or the American Marine
or the Japanese soldier on that island. There's a lot of hard individual decisions when every
instinct, every survival mechanism in your body is saying, don't do this. Somebody else is saying,
survival mechanism in your body is saying, don't do this. Somebody else is saying, follow me,
and off they go. To that point, are there particular challenges of motivating the men in that situation when everyone on both sides kind of knows the outcome, and yet to get to that point,
you have to endure the unimaginable? They're similar to any other act of war. Inherently,
similar to any other act of war. Inherently, you are motivating someone to do what is not necessarily in their best interest, the human condition of war. How do you as a leader,
whether that's the senior private in a group of three or a group of two, whether that's the
sergeant, that's the lieutenant, that's the commanding general, how do you motivate and instill that sense of mission accomplishment,
that sense of fortitude and resilience, to use modern language, to make this sort of happen?
I don't think the Battle of Iwo Jima is any different than what is being seen in Ukraine right now
than what would have been seen in the English Civil War, any of the
battles of the ancient Romans, right? It's small groups of men and women fighting for something
that they believe in, whether that's a higher ideological cause, whether that's their buddy,
whether that's their reputation, whatever it is, it's combat remains combat. And motivating folks
is the hardest part of all of this.
Here's the Dan Snow's history.
We're talking Iwo Jima more after this.
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Pretty successful, you could say, kamikaze attacks,
so suicide aircraft attacks on the 21st, 22nd February.
One carrier lost, one carrier had to return to port for extensive refit.
Yes.
So an escort carrier sinks, and then the Saratoga is damaged to the point that it has to recover.
Did that affect the course of the battle?
Was that air component missed?
The default answer, anytime you lose access to a carrier, the answer is, yes, I've suffered a huge loss, right?
But American naval superiority and aerial superiority at this point is so vastly overwhelming that while there is logically a slight downturn, other existing assets can pick up some of that slack.
you never have a surplus of aircraft on station to deliver ordnance in your favor, but the Americans just have so much in the skies and at sea ahead off the coast. Really,
the carrier threat or the kamikaze threat to the U.S. Navy comes into its own and comes into its
fruition at Okinawa in a few months after this. The Marines are pushing north. Does anything
change? Is this just a day-in, day-out attritional
slog like you've described to this point? Does the nature of the operations change at all?
They change conceptually. And I'm not even sure I like that word as it comes out of my mouth. But
three Marine divisions are aligned against this island. On D plus two, General Schmidt,
the commander of the amphibious corps
has already committed the first part of his reserve at sea. You've inserted the third Marine
division onto the island and now you have more Marines, but you don't necessarily have a reserve
you can draw upon. The terrain changes as they start to move north, right? You get that more
compartmentalized terrain. You're off the beach. Supplies start
flowing into the battle. You start getting 155 millimeter artillery, for example, in place that
can fire. I mean, they fire something like 43,000 rounds of artillery, 155 rounds on the island,
which is a significant amount. They start to build some of the supporting establishments behind.
For wounded, there are field hospitals and things like that on the island. Mail comes in,
and it's hard to think of mail as what it meant to those young Marines in 1945, right? In this
era of text messages and email and all of this, I can get something immediately. By early March,
mail is getting flown into the island, which is a huge morale boost to the troops. They can hear
what's going on at home. They can find out that, hey, that picture of Suribachi, of the Marines
raising the flag on Suribachi, within 17 hours of it being taken by Joe Rosenthal, is on newspapers
throughout the United States. So people know what's happening on the
island to their loved ones almost in real time, or as close to real time as you can have. But
the fighting continues, and casualties don't diminish. They stay high throughout the campaign.
You know, the island is declared secure on the 16th, but really it's not until the 26th when
almost all of the Japanese defenders are taken care of. I mean,
an army regiment comes in, 147th, to do mop-up operations. But as I said earlier, the last
Japanese soldier surrenders in 1949. Well, let's break that one down. So by mid-March,
the island is declared occupied, but the fighting goes on until late March. General Kobayashi commits
suicide in his command post. Do we see a spate of suicides at the end here?
You see a watered down version of that stereotypical bonsai charge. And I say watered
down not to say that they weren't successful, but the Japanese defensive tactics throughout the rest of the Pacific War was to launch these kind of nighttime mass suicide raids and attacks.
So that was the traditional Japanese model.
I'm going to meet you on the beachhead.
Kurabayashi doesn't do that.
I'm going to fight you every inch of the way.
And at night, I'm going to launch these kind of human wave bonsai attacks with screaming and yelling and psychological things. And the Americans, by and large,
just machine gun and use howitzers and use hand grenades. And it winds up in hand-to-hand fighting
in many cases. But Kuroba Ashi said, that's a waste of manpower that doesn't accomplish our
objective. Because if I kill a thousand men in a bonsai charge that gets me ultimately nothing, I don't have a thousand men to fight tomorrow morning. I don't have a
thousand men to fight the day after. And so the Japanese defensive tactics continue to rely on
interlocking fields of fire from prepared positions across the island up until the very, very end,
as opposed to these traditional bonsai assaults, which would have happened on night three or night four. They wind up happening on night 26. They wind up happening much later in
the battle and in much smaller numbers. Now, they do hit an airfield one night, and they're
successful. They destroy planes on the ground, they kill pilots, they kill a ground crew, the
Army Air Force's personnel on the ground, fight back, right? There's this battle on an airfield
from a bonsai attack at night. But for the most part, you don't see that kind of stereotypical wave of suicidal attacks,
and you don't necessarily have the suicidal cliffs that you have on some of these other
islands in the Pacific. So different to Okinawa, which will come a couple of months later on.
So you mentioned that the people held out to 1949. So even when the
island was secure, there were still a couple of thousand Japanese hiding in this warren of tunnels.
And did they eventually just emerge and surrender through the course of 45? Or
how did they winkle them out of there? Some do. Like I said, you have this army unit,
right? The 147th Infantry Regiment, which is an Ohio National Guard unit that had fought in a series of campaigns in the war. They wind up providing security and
hunting down these Japanese stragglers. You have these, you know, these intelligence reports and
these after-action reports from these skirmishes, because there really are at this point skirmishes.
You know, we heard Japanese voices. We went out and investigated. We came across two Japanese
soldiers trying to steal food, get water, whatever it was, because that's ultimately one of the limiting factors
the Japanese had. They have a lot of ammunition. They use a lot of ammunition, but they can't
replenish their food and they can't replenish their water. And that's what winds up driving
many of them out eventually. And you see this across the Pacific, that at some point,
they get hungry. The Japanese holdouts that last into the 50s, last into the 70s in some cases, it's because they had
agricultural resources to live off of. That doesn't exist on Iwo Jima. They are clearing
out stragglers and pockets of Japanese throughout the end of the war and then on into the post-war period. That is crazy. Six, nearly 7,000 US personnel killed,
20,000 wounded. What do we think on Japanese casualties?
So the Japanese numbers, Rob Burrell wrote a book in 2006 called Ghosts of Iwo Jima.
He's questioned the numbers, right? The numbers were traditionally 20,000 Japanese
dead. He thinks that number is closer to 18,000 cumulatively. But the numbers of American casualties
on Iwo Jima are for the first time higher than the Japanese casualties. Now, the Japanese suffer
more dead, right? So absolute casualties off the battlefield permanently. The Japanese,
permanently. The Japanese, three times the American numbers, roughly. But the island is lost and every single one of those Japanese soldiers is off the battlefield permanently.
From that perspective, from a nutritional count, Iwo Jima is a success.
What about strategically? What were the benefits of having taken the island?
The traditional answer is it's a staging base for bombers
that have been shot up over Japan to come in and recover.
2,500 B-29s wind up landing on Iwo Jima.
So the math then has traditionally been,
well, that's 25,000 bomber crew that would have died otherwise.
Burrell and some others have gone through and said,
well, all right, let's look at those statistics, right? Numbers, you know, as Twain said, what lies, damn lies in statistics.
What would the survival rate have been if they had ditched at sea? What are these other things?
There's a funny story that a lot of these bomber crews, they land on the island for refueling or
minor engine repairs as opposed to battle damage. Very few land on the island because of battle
damage. There's a story of one of the officers on the island,
a Marine Lieutenant,
and a guy he'd played baseball with in New Jersey in high school
lands his B-29 on the island to see him.
You know, just says, no, I'm going to land and check on my buddy.
So you have some strategic questions in retrospect.
Was the cost of the island worth it? The Japanese still know
bomber fleets are coming. For example, there's a radar station down near Saipan in Marianas on an
island called Rhoda. So the Japanese can know and are radioing back, hey, the bombers are coming.
The Americans never go and take that radar station out. Because we don't have to invade the homeland,
the use of the island becomes more symbolic than it
does strategic. And in fact, even before the war has ended, the former chief of naval operations,
right, a former four-star admiral in the U.S. Navy says, what's the point? We can't launch
enough aircraft out of this. The army doesn't want it. You can't put a fleet in its harbor.
What was the point of all of this sacrifice so from a strategic
perspective there are questions and i'm still wrestling with that from an intellectual level
but i think what it does and certainly you know it's encapsulated in that image that rosenthal
takes that becomes the central image of the Seventh War bond drive. Altogether now is the slogan underneath the painting of it. In 1954, when the Marine Corps War Memorial is open here in Northern Virginia, it is that image that is used as the sculpture.
plaques and this, and Iwo Jima obtains this mythical status because it was a mythical battle,
but in terms of heroism and valor and all of these things, but from a strategic perspective,
I'm still wrestling with it. And there are other historians that are doing the same thing.
Interesting. Thank you so much for coming on and telling us all about this astonishing battle.
Tell us what your book is called.
Ooh, you're asking for a title of a book. I'm leaning towards Spearhead, right? Hopefully,
I'll have a draft to a publisher by the end of the year.
Well, people look out for that. And in the meantime, because they'll want to see what you've been up to, they can read On Contested Shores, The Evolving Role of Amphibious Operations
in the History of Warfare, which is great stuff. Tim, thank you so much for coming on the podcast.
Dan, thanks for having me. My pleasure. This is History's Heroes.
People with purpose, brave ideas, and the courage to stand alone.
Including a pioneering surgeon who rebuilt the shattered faces of soldiers in the First World War.
You know, he would look at these men and he would say, don't worry, Sonny,
you'll have as good a face as any of us when I'm done with you.
Join me, Alex von Tunzelman, for History's Heroes.
Subscribe to History's Heroes wherever you get your podcasts.