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Storm Landings

Page 30

by Joseph H. Alexander

Puller, Samuel D., 102

  Pyle, Ernie, 161

  Quantico team, amphibious doctrine of, 12–16, 195–96

  Reefs, 25, 88

  landing vehicles for crossing, 46–47, 58–59, 155, 157

  Rendova, 38–39

  Rikusentai (special naval landing forces), 16, 17 table, 19, 202, 206

  Ringgold, 54

  River Clyde, at Gallipoli, 10

  Robertson, Donn J., 198–99

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 173, 190

  Rupertus, William, and Peleliu campaign, 120–23

  landing during, 114–15, 119

  preparing for, 112–13

  Rutherford, J. T. “Slick,” 62–63

  Ryan, Mike, 56, 196–97

  Saipan, 62–63, 64 fig., 70–73, 71 fig.

  lessons from, for Japanese, 109–10

  Saito, Yoshitsuga, 70

  Sanada, Joichiro, 131–32

  San Juan, 30

  Saratoga, 52, 146

  Schmidt, Harry “the Dutchman”

  and Iwo Jima campaign, 96, 128, 134, 142

  and Kyūshū campaign, 176, 179, 186

  and Tinian campaign, 80, 82, 84

  Schoettel, John F., 102

  SeaBees (Naval Construction Battalion), 51, 56, 83, 101–2, 121, 205

  Seventh Amphibious Force, 88–91, 176

  “77th Marine Division.” See Army units, 77th Division

  Shapley, Alan, quoted, 195

  Shepherd, Lemuel C., 100, 151

  and Guam campaign, 74, 77 n

  and Okinawa campaign, 160, 165, 169

  Sherman, Forrest, 66–67, 106, 165

  Sherrod, Robert, 141

  quoted, 102, 142, 199

  Shibasaki, Keiji, 40–44, 53–55, 186, 206

  Ships, 45, 48–49. See also Landing craft; Landing ships; Submarine operations; names of specific vessels

  troop transports, 34–38, 150 n, 184, 189

  vulnerability of, 94–95

  Shoup, David M., 39, 47 n, 54, 60, 196–97

  quoted, 23

  Singapore, 18

  Sixth Army, 175–76, 183, 187, 189, 192

  Slappey, Wallace J., 121

  Sledge, Eugene B., 115, 206–8

  quoted, 117, 124

  Smith, Holland M. “Howlin’ Mad,” 15, 79–80, 97, 105, 125, 203, 208

  and Iwo Jima campaign, 96, 128, 134, 135 fig., 145, 145 n

  and Liscome Bay sinking, 92

  and Marianas campaign, 67

  proponent of LVTs, 46

  quoted, 70, 126

  and Tarawa campaign, 50, 58–60

  Smith, Julian, 48–50, 53–54, 57, 60, 94

  Smith, Oliver P., 119

  Smith, Ralph, 80, 92–93

  Solomon Islands, 1–4, 29 fig.

  Spearfish, 128

  Spruance, Raymond A., 67, 72, 175

  and Iwo Jima campaign, 126–28

  and Okinawa campaign, 150, 158, 163, 165–66

  quoted, 170

  and Tarawa campaign, 48–50

  Stalin, Joseph, 173

  Stillwell, Joseph, 170

  Storm landings. See also Amphibious doctrine; Amphibious logistics; names of specific campaigns

  appraising, 87

  defined, xiii-xiv, 4–5

  night, 3–4, 33–34, 194

  overview of, in Central Pacific, 5–7, 193–99

  Stout, Robert F. “Cowboy,” 121

  Sturgeon, 150 n

  Submarine operations

  German, 35

  Japanese, 92, 146

  U.S., 56, 57, 61, 70, 95, 150 n, 203

  Sugawara, Michio, 182

  Sugihara, Kinryu, 136

  Suicide missions, 146, 178, 184–86, 188–89

  at Okinawa, 152–53, 155, 162–65

  Suicides, civilian, 72–73

  Sulfur Island. See Iwo Jima

  Suribachi flag-raisings, 143–44

  Susan B. Anthony, 35

  Susskind, David H., quoted, 143

  Swift, I. P., 176, 186

  Swimmers, stealth. See UDT (underwater demolitions team)

  Tactical Air Force, Okinawa, 151, 180

  Tada, Tokechi, 109

  Takashina, Takeshi, 75–77

  Tanambogo. See Gavutu-Tanambogo

  Tanks

  Japanese, 71, 118

  U.S., 71, 99–100, 113

  at Iwo Jima, 136, 141

  at Okinawa, 158, 161

  at Peleliu, 117–18

  at Tarawa, 48–49, 59

  Tarawa, 19, 52–56, 199 fig., 202, 205

  Japanese defense of, 21, 27, 40–44

  lessons from, 56–61

  planning for, 44–50

  Target Information Centers (TICs), at Okinawa, 167

  Task Force 40, 188

  Task Force 54, 178

  Task Force 58, 65, 72, 89, 139, 163

  Task Force 62, 1–4

  Taxis, Samuel G., quoted, 166, 191

  Taylor, Montgomery N., 13

  Tennessee, 41, 161

  Tentative Manual for Landing Operations (1935), 14–16, 196

  quoted, 20

  Tenth Army, 150–51, 171, 191

  III Amphibious Corps (IIIAC), 60, 67, 110, 151, 153

  at Guam, 73–78, 197

  at Peleliu, 107, 124

  Third Amphibious Force, 104, 176

  Third Fleet, 105, 175, 192

  Thomas, Gerald C., 25, 47

  Tinian, 79–85

  Toyama Maru, 150 n

  Toyoda, Soemu, 63, 69, 72

  TQM (transport quartermaster), 32

  Truk, 66

  Truman, Harry S., 173–74, 190

  Tulagi, 1–2

  Turnage, Allen, 74

  Turner, Kelly “Terrible,” 14–15, 34, 47, 93

  and Iwo Jima campaign, 128, 134, 139–41

  and Kyūshū campaign, 175–78

  and Liscome Bay sinking, 92

  and Marianas campaign, 67

  and Okinawa campaign, 150, 154–58, 165–66

  quoted, 188

  and Rendova campaign, 38–39

  in Southern Solomons, 1–4, 11

  and Tarawa campaign, 50, 57

  XXIV Corps, 150, 153, 161

  Twining, Merrill B., No Bended Knee, quoted, 172

  “Two-Ocean Navy Act” (1940), 34

  UDT (underwater demolitions team), 68, 71, 75, 154, 160

  daylight operations, 95, 95 n, 114, 138–39

  Ulithi, 121

  ULTRA intercepts, 24, 36, 69, 153

  concerning Kyūshū, 181, 182, 184, 189

  Umurbrogal (Bloody Nose Ridge), Peleliu, 111, 120, 122–24

  Ushijima, Mitsuru, 87, 151–52, 168, 186

  Vandegrift, Alexander A., 165

  quoted, 6, 22, 86

  Vogel, Clayton B., 46

  Wake Island, lessons from, 19–20

  Walker, Anthony “Cold Steel,” 169

  Wallace, William J., 160

  Walt, Lewis W., quoted, 198

  Weapons, Japanese, 71, 113, 114, 118, 169, 183. See also Suicide missions

  127-mm dual-purpose gun, 42 fig.

  antitank gun, 48, 133 fig.

  beach mines, 41, 103, 114, 115 fig., 141, 186

  at Iwo Jima, 132–34, 141

  kikusui (“floating chrysanthemum”), 152–53, 163–64

  mortars, 185 fig., 191

  shortage of, 186

  Weapons, U.S. See also Tanks, U.S.

  37-mm antitank gun, 84

  Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR), 100

  development of, 99–100, 101 fig., 151, 187

  pack howitzer, 31 n

  “siege gun,” 151

  Weller, Donald M., 207 fig., 208

  West Loch disaster, 68–69

  Wildcats, the. See Army units, 81st Division

  Wilkinson, Theodore S., 105, 120–22, 176

  quoted, 104

  Williams, Robert H., 2–3, 139

  With the Old Breed at Peleliu and Okinawa (Sledge), 115, 206–8

&nbs
p; quoted, 117

  Wright, Jerauld, 178

  Yahara, Hiromichi, 165–66, 168

  Yamamoto, Isoroku, 24

  Yamato, 163

  Yokoyama, Isamu, 182–83, 186

  Yoshida, Kiyoshi, 69, 100

  Youngdale, Carl A., 142

  Zeilin, Jacob, 191

  About the Author

  Col. Joseph H. Alexander served for twenty-nine years as an assault amphibian officer in the Marine Corps. He commanded a company in Vietnam and a battalion in Okinawa and served five years at sea on board amphibious ships. As a colonel, he served as chief of staff, 3d Marine Division, director of the Marine Corps Development Center, and military secretary to the Commandant of the Marine Corps.

  Colonel Alexander is an independent military historian now living in Asheville, North Carolina. A 1960 graduate of the University of North Carolina, he holds master’s degrees from Georgetown and Jacksonville Universities and is a distinguished graduate of the Naval War College. He is a member of the U.S. Naval Institute, the Marine Corps Historical Foundation, and the Society for Military History.

  He is the author of Utmost Savagery: The Three Days of Tarawa (Naval Institute Press, 1995), a main selection of the Military Book Club and winner of the 1995 Wallace M. Greene Award, 1995 Roosevelt Naval History Prize, and 1996 Alfred Thayer Mahan Award. He also coauthored, with Merrill L. Bartlett, Sea Soldiers in the Cold War (Naval Institute Press, 1994) and three World War II fiftieth-anniversary monographs (Tarawa, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa). His recent essays on the Pacific War have been published in the U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings, Naval History, MHQ: The Quarterly Journal of Military History, Leatherneck, and the Marine Corps Gazette. From 1993 to 1996 he participated as scriptwriter and principal on-screen authority for eleven historical documentaries with Lou Reda Productions for the Arts and Entertainment Network and the History Channel.

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