Battle of Tarawa | 1943 | Bloodiest Battle in the Pacific Theater of WW2 | US Army Battle Footage
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The Battle of
Tarawa was a battle in the
Pacific Theater of
World War II, fought from
November 20 to
November 23, 1943. Tarawa was the most fortified atoll
America would invade during the
Pacific Campaign. Previous landings met little or no initial resistance, but this time the 4,
500 Japanese defenders were well-prepared, and they fought almost to the last man, exacting a heavy toll on the
United States Marine Corps. More than 1,
000 U.S. troops were killed in action and some 2,000 were wounded in only three days of fighting at Tarawa.
Battle of Tarawa | 1943 | Bloodiest
Battle in the Pacific Theater of
WW2 |
US Army Battle Footage
About the the Battle of Tarawa:
In the Battle of Tarawa (November 20-23, 1943) during
World War 2, the U.S. began its
Central Pacific Campaign against
Japan by seizing the heavily fortified, Japanese-held island of
Betio in the
Tarawa Atoll in the
Gilbert Islands. The 18,000
U.S. Marines sent to tiny Betio were expected to easily secure it; however, problems quickly arose. Low tides prevented some U.S. landing crafts from clearing the coral reefs that ringed the island. Japanese coastal guns pounded the snagged vessels and desperate
Marines gave up on freeing the boats and instead waded toward shore–hundreds of yards away– through chest-deep water amidst enemy fire.
Despite heavy resistance from the 4,500 Japanese troops dug in on Betio, the Marines finally took the island after a bloody, 76-hour battle in which both sides suffered heavy casualties.
U.S. PACIFIC STRATEGY
After entering World War II in
December 1941 following the
Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii, the U.S. began to halt Japan’s aggressive expansion in the
Pacific with important battle victories at
Midway Island (June
1942) and Guadalcanal (August 1942-February 1943) in the
South Pacific.
American commanders next set their sights on an island-hopping campaign across the central Pacific. They intended to take the
Marshall Islands followed by the
Mariana Islands, then advance on Japan.
The Gilbert Islands, a group of 16 atolls near the equator, were viewed by the U.S. as a stepping stone to the
Marshalls and became the first target of the Central Pacific Campaign. In
November 1943, the U.S. launched an offensive code-named
Operation Galvanic, in which the prime target was the tiny island of Betio in the Tarawa Atoll in the Gilbert Islands. (As part of Operation Galvanic, the U.S. would also send a smaller force to the
Gilberts’
Makin Atoll, some
100 miles north of Tarawa. Compared with the taking of Tarawa, the U.S. faced far less
Japanese resistance at
Makin and the
Americans secured the atoll by November 23, 1943.) In late December 1941, Tarawa, a coral atoll located some 2,500 miles southwest of Hawaii, had been seized by the Japanese, who heavily fortified Betio, Tarawa’s largest island.
By
November 19, 1943, American warships had arrived near Tarawa. Naval and air bombardments were planned for the next morning with the goal of weakening Japan’s defenses and clearing the way for 18,000 U.S. Marines to seize the island. However, the taking of Tarawa would prove to be more difficult than the Americans had anticipated.
HEAVILY FORTIFIED TARAWA
Tarawa was the most fortified atoll America would invade during the Pacific Campaign. Japanese
Admiral Keiji Shibasaki (1894-1943), confident in his command, reportedly bragged that the U.S. couldn’t take Tarawa with a million men in
100 years. Measuring around two miles long and a half-mile wide, the island of Betio was crisscrossed with defenses: 100 pillboxes (dug-in concrete bunkers), seawalls, an extensive trench system for defensive movements and an airstrip were supported by coastal guns, antiaircraft guns, heavy and light machine guns and light tanks. Betio’s beaches were naturally ringed with shallow reefs, which were covered with barbed wire and mines. The Japanese garrison at Betio was defended by at least 4,500 troops.
The U.S. fleet of warships that arrived at the Tarawa Atoll on November 19, 1943, included battleships, aircraft carriers, cruisers, destroyers and a huge supply fleet, all supporting 18,000 Marines. The attack would be a monumental effort of combined arms coordination in a new war tactic, dubbed “Atoll War,” which relied upon heavy pre-invasion bombardment by battleships and carrier planes.
AFTERMATH OF TARAWA
More than 1,000 U.S. troops were killed in action and some 2,000 were wounded in only three days of fighting at Tarawa. However U.S. commanders learned important lessons from the Battle of Tarawa that would be applied to future atoll wars.