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Historic Marine Corps Gazette Covers: January 1947

TSgt John DeGrasse
Description: 

According to LtCol Rathvon M. Tompkins' article To War by Air the next amphibious campaigning of the Marine Corps will probably have a third dimension added to the attack. "Vertical envelopment" is not new to the Corps, but was shelved in early 1944 because the Pacific theater offered little opportunity for the employment of paramarines or airborne troops.

Comments

ParaMarines

 

Actually the reason why the Marines disbanded their 1st Parachute Regiment in 1944 was not due to the lack of opportunities to use it but the lack of transport planes to drop it. The Marines had money to by lots of fighter aircraft but they did not feel the C-47's and the like were of much use.

 

The U.S. Army Paratroops in the Pacific had combat jumps in the Nadzab (New Guinea) operation in 1943, the dramatic long-range operations in Burma by Wingate's Raiders in 1943 and 1944, and the highly successful parachute drop on Corregidor in February 1945.

 

The Corregidor jump took place at the same time that 70,000 Marines were fighting 22,000 Japanese Soldiers on Iwo Jima. In the case of Corregidor, 7,000 U.S. Soldiers took the island fortress from 7,000 Japanese Marines in a one-on-one fight.

 

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