| By
the turn of the year only the sea area between the Hawaiian Islands and
the United States and the supply route from the States through the South
Pacific to New Zealand and Australia were still in Allied hands. The
responsibility for holding open the lines of communication to the Anzac
area[2] rested primarily with the U.S.
Pacific Fleet. On 31 December that fleet came under the command of the man
who was to direct its operations until Japan unconditionally
surrendered--Admiral Chester W. Nimitz (CinCPac).
As soon as he arrived at Pearl Harbor, Nimitz was
given a dispatch from Admiral Ernest J. King, the newly appointed
Commander in Chief, United States Fleet (CinCUS, later abbreviated as
CominCh). King's message outlined Nimitz's two primary tasks as CinCPac.
He was to use his ships, planes, and men in:
- Covering and holding the Hawaii-Midway line
and maintaining its communications with the west coast.
- Maintaining communications between the west
coast and Australia, chiefly by covering, securing and holding the
Hawaii-Samoa line, which should be extended to include Fiji at the
earliest possible date.[3]
Although the Japanese had severely damaged the
Pacific Fleet in their Pearl Harbor raid, they had concentrated on ships
rather than installations, and the repair facilities of the navy yard were
virtually untouched. Round-the-clock work promptly restored to operation
many vessels which might otherwise have been lost for good or long delayed
in their return to fleet service. But Nimitz's strength was not enough to
hazard a large scale amphibious offensive, even with the addition of
reinforcements sent from the Atlantic Fleet. In the first few months of
1942, Allied strategists had to be content with defensive operations. The
few local attacks they mounted were hit-and-run raids which did little
more than boost home-front morale at a time when most news dealt with
defeat and surrender.
From 22 December to 14 January, the political and
military leaders of the United States and Great Britain met in Washington
(the ARCADIA Conference) to chart the course of Allied operations against
the Axis powers. The Americans, despite the enormity of the Japanese
attack, reaffirmed their decision of ABC-1 that Germany was the
predominant enemy and its defeat would be decisive in the outcome of the
war. The Pacific was hardly considered a secondary theater, but the main
strength of the Allied war effort was to be applied in the European,
African, and Middle Eastern areas. Sufficient men and materiel would be
committed to the battle against Japan to allow the gradual assumption of
the offensive.
One result of the ARCADIA meetings was the
organization of the Combined Chiefs of Staff (CCS), A supreme military
council whose members were the chiefs of services in Great Britain and the
United States. The CCS was charged with the strategic direction of the
war, subject only to the review of the political heads of state. The
necessity of presenting a united American view in CCS discussions led
directly to the formation of the United States Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS)
as the controlling agency of American military operations.
On 9 February 1942, the first formal meeting of
General George C. Marshall (Chief of Staff, United States Army),
Lieutenant General Henry H. Arnold (Chief of the Army Air Corps), Admiral
Harold R. Stark (CNO), and Admiral King (CominCh) took place. Expect for
the combination of the offices of CominCh and CNO in the person of Admiral
King which took effect of 26 March (Admiral Stark became Commander U.S.
Naval Forces Europe) and the addition of Admiral William D. Leahy as Chief
of Staff to the President on 20 July, the membership of the JCS remained
constant for the duration of the war. As far as the Marine Corps was
concerned their representative on the JCS was Admiral King, and he was
consistently a champion of the use of Marines at their greatest
potential--as specially trained and equipped amphibious assault troops.[4]
On 10 January 1942, the CCS, acting with the
approval of Prime Minister Churchill and President Roosevelt, set up a
unified, inter-Allied command in the western Pacific to control defensive
operations against the Japanese along a broad sweep of positions from
Burma through Luzon to New Guinea. The commander of ABDA
(American-British-Dutch-Australian) forces holding the barrier zone was
the British Commander in Chief in India, General Sir Archibald P. Wavell;
his ABDA air, naval, and ground commanders were respectively an
Englishman, an American, and a Dutchman. But ABDA Command had no chance to
stop the Japanese in the East Indies, Malaya, or the Philippines. Wavell's
forces were beaten back, cut off, or defeated before he could be reached
by reinforcements that could make a significant difference in the
fighting. By the end of February Singapore had fallen and the ABDA area
was split by an enemy thrust to Sumatra. Wavell returned to India to
muster troops to block Japanese encroachment into Burma. On 1 March ABDA
Command was formally dissolved.
Although this first attempt at unified Allied
command was short-lived and unsuccessful, it set a pattern which governed
operational control of the war through its remaining years. This pattern
amounted to the selection as over-all commander of a theater of an officer
from the nation having the most forces in that particular theater. His
principal subordinates were appointed from other nations also having
interests and forces there. Realistically, the CCS tried to equate theater
responsibility with national interest. On 3 March the Combined Chiefs
approved for the western Pacific a new dividing line which cut through the
defunct ABDA area. Burma and all Southeast Asia west of a north-south line
between Java and Sumatra were added to Wavell's Indian command and the
British Chiefs of Staffs were charged with the strategic direction of this
theater. The whole Pacific east of the new line was given over to American
JCS control.
The Joint Chiefs divided the Pacific into two
strategic entities, one in which the Navy would have paramount interests,
the Pacific Ocean Area (POA), and the other in which the Army would be the
dominant service, the Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA). (See Map 1, Map
Section for boundary.) Naval planners had successfully insisted in JCS
discussions that all positions such as New Caledonia, the New Hebrides,
and New Zealand which guarded the line of communications from Pearl Harbor
to Australia must be controlled by the Navy. In terms of the air age, the
JCS division of the Pacific gave the Army operational responsibility for an area of large land masses lying relatively close
together where land power supported by shore-based air could be decisive.
To the Navy the JCS assigned the direction of the was in a vast sea area
with widely scattered island bases where the carrier plane reigned
supreme.
The American commander in the Philippines,
General Douglas MacArthur, was the Joint Chiefs' choice to take over
direction of SWPA operations; Admiral Nimitz was selected to head POA
activities. Formal announcement of the new set-up was not made until
MacArthur had escaped from Corregidor and reached safety in Australia. On
18 March, with the consent of the Australian government, MacArthur was
announced as Supreme Commander of the SWPA (CinCSWPA). The JCS directive
outlining missions for both Pacific areas was issued on 30 March, and the
confirmation of Nimitz as Commander in Chief of the POA (CinCPOA) followed
on 3 April. By CCS and JCS agreement, both commanders were to have
operational control over any force, regardless of service or nation, that
was assigned to their respective theaters.
Nimitz still retained his command of the Pacific
Fleet in addition to his duties as CinCPOA. The fleet's striking arm, its
carriers and their supporting vessels, stayed under Nimitz as CinCPac no
matter where they operated. In the final analysis, however, the major
decisions on employment of troops, ships, and planes were made in
Washington with the advice of the theater commanders. MacArthur was a
subordinate of Marshall and reported through him to the JCS; an identical
command relationship existed between Nimitz and King.
The
concern felt in Washington for the security of the southern route to
Australia was acute in the days and weeks immediately following the Pearl
Harbor attack. Despite world-wide demands on the troops and equipment of a
nation just entering the war, General Marshall and Admiral King gave
special attention to the need for holding positions that would protect
Australia's lifeline. Garrison forces, most of them provided by the Army,
moved into the Pacific in substantial strength to guard what the Allies
still held and to block further Japanese advances. Between January and
April nearly 80,000 Army troops left the States for Pacific bases.
An infantry division was sent to Australia to
take the place of Australian units committed to the fighting in the Middle
East. At the other end of the lifeline, a new division was added to the
Hawaiian Island garrison. Mixed forces of infantry, coast and antiaircraft
artillery, and air corps units were established in early February at
Canton and Christmas Islands, southwest and south of Pearl Harbor. At
about the same time a New Zealand ground garrison reinforced by American
pursuit planes moved into the Fiji Islands, and a small garrison was sent
to the French-owned Society Islands to guard the eastern approaches to the
supply route. In March a task force of almost
division strength arrived in New Caledonia and the Joint Chiefs sent
additional Army garrison forces to Tongatabu in the Tonga Islands, south
of Samoa, and north to Efate in the New Hebrides. By the end of March 1942
the supply route to Australia ran through a corridor of burgeoning island
strong points and the potential threat of major Japanese attacks had been
substantially lessened. (See Map
1)
Actually the initial Japanese war plan
contemplated no advances into the South Pacific to cut the line of
communications to Australia. The Allied leaders, however, can be forgiven
for not being clairvoyant on this point, for the enemy's chance to seize
blocking positions along the lifeline was quite apparent. Samoa seemed to
be one of the most inviting targets and its tiny garrison of Marines
wholly inadequate to stand off anything but a minor raid. The necessity
for building up Samoan defenses as a prelude for further moves to Fiji and
New Caledonia had been recognized by Admiral King in his instructions to
Nimitz to hold the Hawaiian-Samoa line,[6]
and reinforcements from the States to back up those instructions were
underway from San Diego by 6 January. These men, members of the 2d Marine
Brigade, were the forerunners of a host of Marines who passed through the
Samoan area and made it the major Marine base in the Pacific in the first
year of the war.
Only two weeks' time was necessary to organize,
assemble, and load out the 2d Brigade. Acting on orders from the
Commandant, the 2d Marine Division activated the brigade on 24 December at
Camp Elliott, outside of San Diego. The principal united assigned to the
new command were the 8th Marines, the 2d Battalion, 10th Marines, and the
2d Defense Battalion (dispatched by rail from the east coast). Colonel
(later Brigadier General) Henry L. Larsen was named brigade commander. A
quick estimate was made of the special engineering equipment which the
brigade would need to accomplish one of its most important
missions--completion of the airfield at Tutuila. Permission was obtained
to expend up to $200,000 in the commercial market for the purchase of such
earth-moving equipment as could not be supplied from quartermaster stocks.
When the first cargo ship arrived at San Diego on New Year's day, the
brigade went on a round-the-clock loading schedule. Sixty-two hours later
all assigned personnel and gear had been loaded and the 4,798 officers and
men were on their way to Tutuila.
When the news of Pearl Harbor reached Samoa,
Lieutenant Colonel Lester A. Dessez, commanding the 7th Defense Battalion,
ordered his troops to man their positions. The Samoan Marine Reserve
Battalion was called to active duty and assigned to reinforce the
defenses. Despite a spate of rumors and false alarms, no sign of the
Japanese was evident until the night of 11 January, when a submarine
shelled the naval station for about seven minutes from a position
10,000-15,000 yards off the north shore where the coast defense guns could
not bear. The station suffered only light damage from the shells, some of
which fell harmlessly into the bay, and two men were wounded slightly by
fragments. The Marines remained on alert but received no further visits
from the enemy.
On 19 January radar picked up signs of numerous
ships, and observation stations on the island's headlands soon confirmed
the arrival of the 2d Brigade.
While still at sea, General Larsen had received
orders from the Navy Department appointing him Military Governor of
American Samoa and giving him responsibility for the islands' defense as
well and supervisory control over the civil government. As soon as the
ships docked antiaircraft machine guns of the 2d Defense Battalion, were
promptly unloaded and set up in the hills around Pago Pago harbor. The 8th
Marines took over beach defense positions occupied by the 7th Defense
Battalion and immediately began improving and expanding them. The
artillerymen of 2/10 and the 2d Defense set up their guns in temporary
positions while they went to work on permanent emplacements. Navy scouting
amphibians of a shore-based squadron (VS-1-D14) attached to the brigade
soon were aloft on a busy schedule of antisubmarine and reconnaissance
missions.
The airfield on Tutuila was only 10 per cent
completed when Larsen arrived, but he directed that construction be pushed
around the clock, work to go on through the night under lights. He also
detailed the brigade's engineer company to assist the civilian contractors
in getting the field in shape. For the 2d Brigade's first three months in
Samoa, its days were filled with defense construction. There was little
time for any combat training not intimately connected with the problems of
Samoan defense. The work was arduous, exacting, and even frustrating,
since the brigade had arrived during the rainy season and the frequent
tropical rainstorms had a habit of destroying in minutes the results of
hours of pick and shovel work.
General Larsen took immediate steps after his
arrival in American Samoa to ascertain the status of the defenses in
Western (British) Samoa, 40 or so miles northwest of Tutuila. On 26
January the brigade intelligence officer, Lieutenant Colonel William L.
Bales, flew to Apia, the seat of government on the island of Upolu, to
confer with the New Zealand authorities and make a reconnaissance of Upolu
and Savaii, the two principal islands. The New Zealanders were quite
anxious to cooperate with the Marines since they had a defense force of
only 157 men to guard two large islands with a combined coastline of over
250 miles. Bales whose investigation was aimed primarily at discovering
the feasibility of developing either or both of the islands into a
military base, reported back that Upolu's harbor facilities, road net, and
several potential airfield sites made it readily susceptible to base
development. He found, on the other hand, that Savaii had no safe major
anchorages and that its lava-crusted surface did "not offer airfield
sites that could be developed quickly by the Japanese or anyone
else."[7] On his return to Tutuila,
Lieutenant Colonel Bales reported to General Larsen that:
In its present unprotected state, Western Samoa is
a hazard of first magnitude for the defense of American Samoa. The
conclusion is unescapable that if we don't occupy it the Japanese will
and there may not be a great deal of time left.[8]
Naval authorities in Washington and Pearl Harbor
recognized the desirability
As an advance force of this new garrison, the 7th
Defense Battalion was sent to Upolu on 28 March, and a small detachment
was established on Savaii. In the States, the 1st Marine Division at New
River, North Carolina, organized the 3d Marine Brigade on 21 March with
Brigadier General Charles D. Barrett in command. Its principal units were
the 7th Marines and the 1st Battalion, 11th Marines. The 7th's 3d
Battalion and Battery C of 1/11 were detached on the 29th to move overland
to the west coast for further transfer to Samoa as part of the garrison
for Wallis. General Larsen meanwhile had been directed to organize the 8th
Defense Battalion of Tutuila, as the major element of the Wallis garrison.
To exercise overall authority, Headquarters Samoan Area Defense Force was
established on Tutuila. Major General Charles F.B. Price, who was
appointed to this command, arrived with his staff at Pago Pago on 28 April
from the States. On 8 May the 3d Marine Brigade convoy arrived off Apia
and General Barrett assumed military command of Western Samoa. At the end
of the month, the 8th Defense Battalion (Reinforced) under Colonel Raphael
Griffin moved into Wallis.
More than 10,000 Marine ground troops were
stationed in the Samoan area by the beginning of June, and reinforcements
arrived in a steady flow. Marine air was also well established. General
Larsen's interest and pressure assured that Tutuila's airfield was ready
for use on 17 March, two days before the advance echelon of MAG-13
arrived. The new air group, organized on 1 March at San Diego, was
earmarked for Price's command. Initially the group commander, Lieutenant
Colonel Thomas J. Walker, Jr., had only one tactical squadron, VMF-111,
operating from Tutuila's airfield, but VMO-151, a scout-bomber squadron,
joined in May with the arrival of the 3d Marine Brigade convoy. The
amphibians of the Navy's VS-1-D14 squadron were also put under Walker's
command and sent forward to operate from Upolu and Wallis while the
airfields projected for those islands were rushed to completion by naval
construction battalions.
Like the rest of the garrison forces in the South
Pacific which were rushed out to plug a gaping hole in Allied defenses,
General Price's defense force was never called upon to conduct the island
defense for which it was organized. Samoa might well have become a target
for enemy attacks, but the decisive Battle of Midway forced the Japanese
to curb their soaring ambition.[10] Samoa
became a vast advanced combat training camp instead of a battleground.
Most of the units coming there after the arrival of the 2d Brigade drew
heavily on the recruit depots for their personnel,[11]
and for these Marines Samoan duty was an opportunity for learning the
fundamentals of teamwork in combat operations. As the need for defense
construction was met and the danger of Japanese attacks lessened, Samoa
became a staging area through which replacements and reinforcements were
funneled to the amphibious offensives in the Solomons.[12]
Units and individuals paused for a while here and then moved on, more
jungle-wise and combat ready, to meet the Japanese.
Footnotes:
|
| [1]
Unless otherwise noted the material in this sections is derived from The
War Reports of General of the Army George C. Marshall -- General of the
Army H.H. Arnold -- Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King (Philadelphia &
New York; J.B. Lippincott Company, 1947), hereinafter cited as War
Reports; FAdm E.J. King and Cdr W.M. Whitehill, Fleet Admiral King:
A Naval Record (New York: W.W. Norton & Company Inc., 1952)
hereinafter cited as King's Naval Record; Strategic Planning.
[2] Anzac is
actually the abbreviation for Australian and New Zealand Army Corps used
in WW I, bu tthe term was so understandable and easy to use in reference
to the two Commonwealth nations that it was adopted in the Pacific War and
applied frequently to the geographic area in which they lay.
[3] King's Naval
Record, 353-354.
[4] On 13Apr51,
before a subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Armed Services, Gen
Holcomb stated that he was called in during the ARCADIA conference and
"sat as a member of that group." Later "... a formal
organization occurred in which I was not included. However, because of my
intercourse with Admiral Stark I was in on nearly all of the discussions
that took place." This intimate relationship changed, however, when
Stark was relieved as CNO on 26Mar42. An interesting sequel to this story
of the "exclusion" of the Commandant from the JCS was revealed
by Gen Holcomb when he further related how after a dinner party at the
White House in July 1943, the President, associating himself with the
Marine Corps, had said to him confidentially: "You know, the first
thing you know we are going to be left out of things. We are not
represented on the Joint Chiefs of Staff ... how would you like to be a
member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff?" Holcomb replied that he would
like it very much but didn't know how the Joint Chiefs would feel about
it. That was the last, however, that Holcomb ever heard of this matter
directly or officially. Senate Committee on Armed Services, 82d Congress,
Hearings on S. 667, "A Bill to Fix the Personnel Strength of the
United States Marine Corps and to make the Commandant of the Marine Corps
a Permanent Member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff" (Washington: GPO,
1951), 34-36.
[5] Unless
otherwise noted the material in this section is derived from HqDeFor Rept
of SamoanGru AdvB Facilities, 10Oct42; 2d MarBrig AnRept, 16 Jul42; 2d
MarBrig Diary, 23Dec41-30Jun42; CG 3d MarBrig ltr to CMC, 10Sep43; 3d
MarBrig Brief of Ops, 21Mar42-31Aug43; MAG-13 War Diary, 1Mar42-31May43;
Hist of the 7th DefBn, 21Dec42; Strategic Planning.
[6] King's Naval
Record, 354.
[7] LtCol W.L.
Bales ltr to CG, 2d MarBrig, 8Feb42, Rept on Recon in Western Samoa, 8.
[8] Ibid., 10.
[9] CMC Serial
003A7842, 20Mar42, Defense of Western Samoa and Wallis Island.
[10] Campaigns
of the Pacific War, 3. See Part
V, "Decision at Midway" and especially Chapter 1,
"Setting the Stage--Early Naval Operations" for events leading
up to the Midway battle.
[11] At least 40%
of the 3d MarBrig initial complement was straight out of boot camp. 3d
MarBrig AnRept, 6Sep42, 9.
[12] From
December 1942 to July 1943 Samoa was the training center for all Marine
replacement battalions raised on the east coast of the U.S. K.W. Condit,
G. Diamond, and E.T. Turnbladh, Marine Corps Ground Training in World
War II (Washington: HistBr, G-3, HQMC, 1956), 181-186. |