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The Liberation of the Philippines
The Liberation of the Philippines
The Liberation of the Philippines
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The Liberation of the Philippines

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General Douglas A MacArthur, Commander of the Southwest Pacific Area, saw the liberation of the Philippines Archipelago as the launching board for the invasion of the Japanese Home Islands. By late 1944, with the capture of New Guinea and surrounding islands, the US Sixth and Eighth Armies were poised for the challenge. American forces landed on Leyte on 20 October 1944 with the Leyte Gulf naval battle quickly following. By 25 December the island was cleared opening the way for Lieutenant General Walter Krueger’s Sixth Army to invade Luzon on 9 January 1945. Bitter Japanese resistance required Eichelberger’s Eighth Army as reinforcements. Manila finally fell on 4 March. In the meantime Bataan was captured on 16 February and Corregidor on 2 March after a US airborne assault. Fighting continued and MacArthur finally declared the liberation of the Archipelago on 5 July, just a month before the Atom bombs fell on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. This superbly illustrated work in the Pacific War Images of War series leaves the reader in no doubt as to the intensity of the land, sea and air operations required by the Allies to defeat the Japanese.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateAug 4, 2021
ISBN9781526788733
The Liberation of the Philippines
Author

Jon Diamond

Jon Diamond is a practising physician who has had a life-long interest in military history. A graduate of Cornell University, Jon has been on the faculties of Harvard Medical School and Pennsylvania State University. He has served as a civilian attendee to the United States Army War College National Security Seminar in Carlisle, Pennsylvania and has written a significant number of articles and papers including over fifteen for Military Heritage Presents WWII History. He is the author of a book on David Low's Cartoons and the British Policy of Appeasement. He resides in Hershey, Pennsylvania.

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    The Liberation of the Philippines - Jon Diamond

    Chapter One

    Imperial Japan’s Conquest of the Philippines 1941–42

    American Presence in the Pre-War Philippines

    On 30 April 1898, Commodore George Dewey’s nine-ship squadron passed Corregidor Island and entered Manila Bay. At dawn the next day, Spanish shore batteries opened fire as the American ships headed towards the Spanish base at Cavite. At nearly 0600 hours on 1 May, Dewey ordered Captain Charles V. Gridley, the commander of USS Olympia (Dewey’s flagship), ‘You may fire when you are ready, Gridley.’ Spain’s twelve-ship force was obliterated during the seven-hour battle, with only one American sailor dying. What began as the American frenzy, fanned by politicians and the press, to liberate Cuba from Spanish oppression and avenge the sinking of the USS Maine, a cruiser, on 15 February 1898 now led President William McKinley’s administration to oust Spain from the Philippines with Dewey’s domination of Manila Bay and Cavite.

    American infantry, dispatched under Major General Wesley Merritt (a Civil Warera cavalry officer), in its initial action outside the Western Hemisphere, moved on Spanish-controlled Manila contemporaneous with a growing Filipino insurgency against the Spanish that spread across the archipelago and of which, in the spring of 1898, McKinley was almost unaware. Also, American soldiers – both US Army regulars and volunteers – were wholly unprepared for war in the Philippines from logistics and training standpoints. Filipino independence was declared by Emilio Aguinaldo, chief of the Filipino nationalists, on 12 June 1898 in his home town of Cavite along the southern shores of Manila Bay.

    By the early summer of 1898, before Merritt’s infantry arrived, 30,000 Filipinos had laid siege trenches around Manila as the Spanish troops were also prohibited a sea exit by Dewey’s squadron in Manila Bay. One of Merritt’s subordinates was another Civil War veteran Brigadier General Arthur MacArthur, the father of Douglas A. MacArthur. Brigadier General Thomas H. Anderson, another Civil War veteran, was to seize Guam, Spain’s first Pacific colony after its discovery by Ferdinand Magellan in the early sixteenth century. Anderson sailed from San Francisco on 25 May 1898 with 2,500 American troops and once at sea was diverted to Guam, which after its seizure became the first US Pacific possession during this initial military expedition outside American continental limits. Late in June, Anderson’s contingent came ashore at Cavite, prior to a move more proximate to Manila, naming the area Camp Dewey.

    Dewey’s informal intelligence convinced him incorrectly that the Filipinos, under their leader Aguinaldo, did not want independence, despite Filipino rebels seizing armaments and ammunition in addition to Spanish prisoners at Cavite. With only 2,000 men under him, Dewey waited for Brigadier General MacArthur and also Greene’s detachments arriving in July 1898 and Merritt’s troops at the end of the month to commence an American offensive on Manila. However, the Filipino rebels wanted to capture Manila from the Spanish without American help, thereby straining the relationship between the two armed actions. Then, on 31 July, Spanish forces shelled and attacked the Americans, killing a dozen, the first US troops to be killed in action in the Philippines.

    With some sporadic fighting amid the siege lines of Manila, leaving a few more American soldiers killed in action, US Army infantry entered the city in August 1898. The Treaty of Paris between the US and Spain was signed on 10 December which granted independence to Cuba and made Guam, Puerto Rico and the Philippines American possessions. Nonetheless, US and Aguinaldo’s forces were ready to combat one another as the American occupation force was to soon approach 22,000 troops in the vicinity of Manila. On the night of 4 February 1899, fighting erupted along a 10-mile front separating Nebraska volunteers and Filipino forces near Manila’s Santa Mesa suburb where the Pasig and San Juan Rivers join flowing westward towards the Intramuros or ‘Walled City’. The ‘Philippine Insurrection’ had commenced between the United States and Filipino nationalists, ultimately becoming guerrilla warfare as Aguinaldo left the Manila area for northern Luzon.

    On 1 September 1900, William Taft, a future twenty-seventh American president (1909–13) and a Supreme Court Chief Justice (1921–30), along with his fellow commissioners assumed the functions of a legislative body in the Philippines, raising taxes, enacting laws and establishing judicial courts. In July 1902, then President Theodore Roosevelt proclaimed victory over the Filipinos with Aguinaldo’s capture in March 1902 by a contingent of Kansas volunteers led by Colonel Frederick Funston. However, fighting dragged on in other parts of the archipelago with Filipino resistance to American occupation forces, notably on Samar and Luzon. The fiercest resistance came from Muslim rebels on the southern Philippine islands of Mindanao and Jolo. The Spanish referred to the Muslim Filipinos as Moros after the Moors of North Africa. The Moros comprised more than a dozen ethnic groups, each led by a local sultan. The Moros launched massive attacks against the Americans, often wielding only spears and knives.

    John J. ‘Black Jack’ Pershing, a cavalryman and regimental quartermaster for the 10th Cavalry comprising African-American ‘Buffalo soldiers’ that fought on Kettle and San Juan Hills in Cuba, gained fame fighting the Moros. He was promoted from captain to brigadier general by President Theodore Roosevelt after his initial battles against the Moros. Pershing subsequently administered the region after a bloody action in 1913. Another senior officer gaining distinction fighting the Moros was Brigadier General Leonard Wood, a Harvard Medical School graduate who earned the Congressional Medal of Honor for his role in the capture of the Apache warrior Geronimo. One of Wood’s lieutenants in the Philippines was another cavalryman, George S. Patton.

    The casualties among the American forces in the Philippines were numerous as of 4 July 1902 when Roosevelt proclaimed that the war was over. There were more than 4,000 Americans killed and almost 3,000 wounded, while many became afflicted with lingering tropical diseases. More than 20,000 Filipino soldiers were killed, as well as 200,000 civilians who died from war, famine and atrocities.

    Douglas MacArthur was the central military individual in the Philippines before the outbreak of war in the Pacific during the Japanese conquest of the archipelago and throughout the islands’ liberation by US forces in 1944–45. MacArthur graduated from West Point in 1903. His late father was Arthur MacArthur, Jr, who was the commander of US forces in the Philippines from 1898 to 1901. In 1904, Douglas MacArthur was deployed to the Philippines where he first met a prominent lawyer, Manuel Quezon. During the First World War, MacArthur served as a 42nd Infantry Division’s brigade commander and its COS, ending the conflict as a brigadier general with many decorations for valour. In 1930, MacArthur was appointed Army Chief of Staff, a job his famous father never received. In 1935, while remaining on active duty in the US Army, he arrived in the Philippines again to take up President Quezon’s paid position to train the Filipino army with the rank of field marshal. As war with Japan loomed in 1941, the Filipino armed forces remained unprepared for a major war due to inadequate armaments, as well as language and cultural differences among the various native troops.

    Outbreak of the Pacific War

    Japan was embroiled in a protracted conflict with China since the invasion and annexation of Manchuria in 1931. Japan and the Soviet Union were also involved in an undeclared border conflict in north-east China from 1932 to 1939. A second Sino- Japanese War erupted in early July 1937 after the ‘Marco Polo Bridge Incident’ at Wanping, 15km from Peking. From 1937 to 1939, Japan was on a war footing with more than 1 million troops on the Asian mainland and, thereby, primed for their blitzkrieg across the Pacific and throughout southern Asia, the Philippines, Malaya, Singapore and the Netherlands East Indies (NEI) after the surprise Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) attack on US military installations at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on 7 December 1941, which ceded temporary naval supremacy to the IJN in the Pacific Ocean.

    Contemporaneous with Admiral Chūichi Nagumo’s aerial assault on the United States Navy’s (USN’s) Pacific Fleet and army installations on Oahu, both the IJN and Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) conducted offensive operations across Asia and the Pacific spanning 7,000 miles from Singapore to Midway Island (see Map 1). Malaya and Singapore were early targets in Japan’s major southern thrust, with additional operations to seize the Philippine archipelago, Hong Kong and parts of British Borneo. Guam was occupied on 8 December and Wake Island fell on 23 December. When Allied resistance was encountered by the IJA, notably on the Bataan Peninsula and Corregidor Island in the Philippines, these American bastions were simply cut off and bypassed until a lack of supplies and food compelled surrender.

    Since US Army and Navy planners believed that the Philippine Islands were not defensible if the Japanese mounted a full-scale attack, military preparations were wholly incomplete before General Douglas A. MacArthur’s arrival in 1935 to command the archipelago’s Filipino-American forces as a field marshal. Over the next six years, the build-up of forces under his leadership was still tardy and unfinished. Prewar American Pacific strategy in 1941 was code-named War Plan Orange (WPO-3). US war planners surmised that the Japanese were intent on landing their assault troops at sites of their choosing along Luzon’s coastline and among other Philippine islands. The planned Filipino-American response was to take up strong defensive positions on the Bataan Peninsula and in fixed fortifications around Manila. WPO-3 envisioned a stockpiling of foodstuffs, ammunition and medical supplies within the Bataan Peninsula to enable MacArthur’s Filipino-American force to hold out until the USN arrived with reinforcements after a theorized victory over the IJN somewhere in the Pacific Ocean.

    General Douglas MacArthur, now the commander of United States Army Forces in the Far East (USAFFE), scrapped WPO-3 and unsuccessfully prepared to repel the Japanese invasion at the waterline. American stockpiles were scattered throughout Luzon, leaving the Bataan Peninsula bereft of supplies for a long siege after the Filipino-American force retreated into that locale. MacArthur’s strategy of scrapping WPO-3 and contesting Japanese amphibious assaults at the shoreline became a disaster.

    Hours after the Pearl Harbor attack, MacArthur and his Chief of Staff (COS) Major General Richard K. Sutherland vacillated about a preemptive attack by US Air Corps B-17s on the Japanese airfields based on Formosa. Regardless of the unlikelihood of success if the Americans attacked the Formosan fields, keeping the B-17s at Clark Field rather than moving them to Del Monte airfield on Mindanao proved disastrous as neither the non-dispersed nor non-concealed US planes proved easy targets for the Japanese Formosa-based bombers, which destroyed MacArthur’s air strength mostly on the ground. Most of the B-17s and nearly a score of P-40 fighters were destroyed at Clark Field. Simultaneous Japanese air attacks at nearby Nichols and Iba Fields cost the Americans many more fighters destroyed on the ground. The remnants of the American air presence in the Philippines quickly succumbed to the enemy’s air superiority.

    Map 1. Strategic Overview of the Pacific War, 1941–42. Soon after the 7 December 1941 Pearl Harbor aerial attack, Malaya and the Philippines were invaded. Singapore fell to Yamashita’s 25th Army on 15 February 1942. Filipino-American forces surrendered at Bataan on 9 April 1942 followed by the capitulation of the Corregidor garrison on 6 May. Other American possessions such as Guam and Wake Island were captured by the Japanese juggernaut in December. The Dutch East Indies fell to Japanese forces in their drive towards the SWPA and Indian Ocean. Rabaul on New Britain Island in the Bismarck Archipelago was invaded in February 1942 with the Australian forces there having retreated or been captured. Rabaul, at New Britain’s north-eastern tip, became the main bastion for the IJA and IJN in the SWPA. Japanese outposts were established in North-East New Guinea and along Papua’s northern coast. Port Moresby on Papua’s southern coast and northern Australia were saved from invasion during early May’s Battle of the Coral Sea. The IJN was decisively defeated by a USN carrier-based aircraft victory, the Battle of Midway, in early June, eliminating a potential threat to the Hawaiian Islands. (Meridian Mapping)

    IJA Lieutenant General Masaharu Homma and his 14th Army were denied a quick victory in the Philippines, despite their air and naval dominance, as MacArthur’s Filipino-American troops retreated into the Bataan Peninsula and held out there until 9 April. It was not until 6 May that the neighbouring island fortress of Corregidor in Manila Bay capitulated following a Japanese invasion (see Map 2).

    Darwin, a port and administrative seat in Australia’s North-West Territories, was now under direct threat after the Japanese established bases along the northern coast of North-East New Guinea and soon Papua. The Australian government, with most of its army in the Middle East, could only spare modest reinforcements for Darwin’s garrison, which was initially bombed by the Japanese on 19 February, just four days after Singapore’s surrender, with a large contingent of Australian Imperial Force (AIF) troops, which figured largely in Australia’s pre-war defence planning. In early March, Port Moresby had only the 30th Infantry Brigade, a field artillery regiment and coastal AAA units, totalling between 6,000 and 7,000 men.

    Australian Prime Minister

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