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Tarawa

Andy Warhol once said that everyone would have his 15 minutes of fame! Well, during combat, time is often measured in seconds! One frequently can remember the oddities that happen in the midst of war's carnage that made you cry, laugh, or evoked extreme fear or wonder at the amazement of it all.

I had two such occasions in the 76 hours it took to conquer that sand spit of Betio Island, Tarawa Atoll, which was not any larger than Central Park in New York City. My weapon was a motion picture camera, and my responsibility was to document this first ever, by the Marine Corps, amphibious attack against a heavily fortified beachhead. Read the entire article.

Tarawa

Shortly after leaving radio school, I was assigned to the 1st Medium Tank Battalion of the 2d Marine Division. I had difficulty adjusting to the close confines of a tank. It bothered me to be enclosed in this hulking 33-ton mass of steel, peering out only through a periscope. As soon as possible, therefore, I made my escape into another mode of transportation. We had a newly formed reconnaissance platoon, and this was for me. It was comprised of a couple of half-tracks and half a dozen Jeeps, and each vehicle required a radio operator. Read the entire article.

Tarawa

Amphibious warfare came of age in the forceful seizure of Betio Island, Tarawa Atoll, Gilbert Islands, by U.S. Marines during 20-24 November 1943-50 years ago.

Few battles have ever matched Tarawa's concentrated violence at point-blank range in such a compressed period of time. Six thousand Japanese and Americans were killed in 76 hours within an area smaller than New York's Central Park. The Tarawa assault had a significant impact on American strategy in the Pacific, the national psyche, and the institution known as the Navy-Marine Corps team. Some of Tarawa's legacies, both positive and negative, persist today. Read the entire article.

Tarawa

When Marines think about the history of amphibious warfare, very likely the first image that comes to mind is Tarawa. Even for those who know next to nothing about that battle, its very name evokes heroism, great sacrifice against incredible odds, and the pride of being a Marine. It was the closest the Marines have ever come to being forced back into the sea during an amphibious assault. It is little wonder then that the debate over the future of amphibious doctrine and technology often turns to the question, "What happens if we face another Tarawa?" Read the entire article.

Tarawa

William Deane Hawkins was born April 19, 1914, in Fort Scott, Kansas. He died of wounds, a first lieutenant of the United States Marine Corps Reserve, November 21, 1943, on Betio Island, Tarawa Atoll.

Anyone who has ever been in combat knows that it is almost impossible to grade bravery. Who can judge that one man who risks his life is more courageous than another? Who can say that a man is braver if he kills many of the enemy than if he lost his own life on the beach before he ever had a chance at the enemy? Read the entire article.

Tarawa

As the tide of battle sweeps westward across the Pacific, and colossal naval forces pound Japanese positions on coral islands into dust, neutralizing the efforts of our enemies to resist, the landing and seizing of these islands is made relatively easy so long as the fleet, with its superior air power, can exercise control of the air and sea, and deliver thousand of tons of explosives at a dozen or more critical points.

Let us not forget, however, that this has not been the order of the day for very long and it may not continue to be the pattern of war. The more normal pattern seems to be that of the Guadalcanal, the Bougainville, and the Cape Gloucester campaigns with an occasional Tarawa thrown in as the supreme test. Read the entire article.

Tarawa


The First Battalion, Tenth Marines, equipped with 75-mm pack howitzers and attached to the Second Marines, Second Marine Division, as direct support artillery for that combat team, landed on Betio beach, close behind their brothers-in-arms on that memorable morning, November 20, 1943. Under extremely adverse conditions they effectively accomplished the mission assigned.

Though landed on call under battalion control, firing batteries were embarked on separate transports with normal infantry landing teams of the Second Marines. Headquarters and Service Battery was divided between two ships with one complete Fire Direction Center team on each. The Battalion Commander, Bn-3, Communication Officer, and Bn-2 embarked on the Combat Team command ship. Read the entire article.

 

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