BBC History UK 04.2020

(Romina) #1

GETTY IMAGES/ MAP ILLUSTRATION: PAUL HEWITT, BATTLEFIELD DESIGN


and passageways inside the hills that
allowed the defenders to move safely to
each point of attack.

Stiffening opposition
Blissfully unaware of the Japanese strategy,
Buckner’s men made rapid progress during
the first few days of the campaign, cutting the
island in two and brushing aside light enemy
forces. By 4 April, Buckner’s US 10th Army
held a slice of Okinawa 15 miles long and
from three to ten miles wide. The beachhead
included two airfields and beaches that, in
the words of the official history of the Okina-
wa campaign, “could take immense tonnage
from the cargo ships, and sufficient space for
dumps and installations that were rapidly
b ei ng bu i lt ”.
But, as the US Army’s XXIV Corps moved
south towards the main Japanese defences,
the opposition stiffened. The first line was the
Kakazu hill mass, which boasted formidable
defensive features, including a deep moat, a
hill studded with natural and man-made
positions and a cluster of thick-walled
buildings. A four-day assault began
on 9 April, but failed to break through the
storm of Japanese artillery, mortar and

Smoking out the enemy
US Marines watch a barrage of phosphorous
shells explode among Japanese positions, May


  1. The defenders were holed up in a
    network of interconnected caves, almost
    impervious to bombs and shells


WHEN A SOVIET SUB


SANK THE WILHELM ,


THE VAST MAJORITY


OF ITS 10,600


PASSENGERS WERE


DROWNED


ALLIED


Troop numbers 540,000, including navy,
air and army (of whom
183,000 American ground
troops took part in the
initial assault)

Casualties 12,520 dead, 37,000
wounded and 26,000
‘non-battle’ casualties

Other losses 458 planes and 36 ships
(with a further 368
damaged)

KEY COMMANDERS
Navy Admiral Raymond
A Spruance (left),
commanding
the US Fifth Fleet

Air force Not applicable, as they
had no independent
air force

Ground forces Lieutenant General
Simon B Buckner Jr,
commanding the
US 10th Army (killed
by enemy shellfire
on 18 June)

JAPANESE


110,000, including navy,
air and army

100,000 dead and 7,400
PoWs (mostly Okinawans)

4,155 planes and 16 ships
(with a further four
damaged)

Vice    Admiral Seiichi Itō,    
commanding the ‘Ten-go’
task force. He went down
with the battleship Yamato
on 7 April 1945

Vice Admiral Matome
Ugaki, commanding the
Fifth Air Fleet – killed in
a kamikaze attack on
15 August

Lieutenant General
Mitsuru Ushijima (left),
commanding the Japa-
nese 32nd Army.
He killed himself with his
chief of staff in the
early hours of 22 June

HELL’S OWN CESSPOOL


The brutal struggle for Okinawa in figures


Battle dates 1 April–22 June 1945



GETTY IMAGES/ MAP ILLUSTRATION: PAUL HEWITT, BATTLEFIELD DESIGN


andpassagewaysinsidethehillsthat
allowedthedefenderstomovesafelyto
eachpointofattack.

Stiffeningopposition
BlissfullyunawareoftheJapanesestrategy,
Buckner’smenmaderapidprogressduring
the first few days of the campaign, cutting the
island in two and brushing aside light enemy
forces. By 4 April, Buckner’s US 10th Army
held a slice of Okinawa 15 miles long and
from three to ten miles wide. The beachhead
included two airfields and beaches that, in
the words of the official history of the Okina-
wa campaign, “could take immense tonnage
from the cargo ships, and sufficient space for
dumps and installations that were rapidly
b ei ng bu i lt ”.
But, as the US Army’s XXIV Corps moved
south towards the main Japanese defences,
the opposition stiffened. The first line was the
Kakazu hill mass, which boasted formidable
defensive features, including a deep moat, a
hill studded with natural and man-made
positions and a cluster of thick-walled
buildings. A four-day assault began
on 9 April, but failed to break through the
storm of Japanese artillery, mortar and

Smoking out the enemy
US Marines watch a barrage of phosphorous
shells explode among Japanese positions, May


  1. The defenders were holed up in a
    network of interconnected caves, almost
    impervious to bombs and shells


ALLIED


Troop numbers 540,000, including navy,
air and army (of whom
183,000 American ground
troops took part in the
initial assault)

Casualties 12,520 dead, 37,000
wounded and 26,000
‘non-battle’ casualties

Other losses 458 planes and 36 ships
(with a further 368
damaged)

KEY COMMANDERS
Navy Admiral Raymond
A Spruance (left),
commanding
the US Fifth Fleet

Air force Not applicable, as they
had no independent
air force

Ground forces Lieutenant General
Simon B Buckner Jr,
commanding the
US 10th Army (killed
by enemy shellfire
on 18 June)

JAPANESE


110,000, including navy,
air and army

100,000 dead and 7,400
PoWs (mostly Okinawans)

4,155 planes and 16 ships
(with a further four
damaged)

Vice    Admiral Seiichi Itō,    
commanding the ‘Ten-go’
task force. He went down
with the battleship Yamato
on 7 April 1945

Vice Admiral Matome
Ugaki, commanding the
Fifth Air Fleet – killed in
a kamikaze attack on
15 August

Lieutenant General
Mitsuru Ushijima (left),
commanding the Japa-
nese 32nd Army.
Hekilled himself with his
chief of staff in the
early hours of 22 June

HELL’S OWN CESSPOOL


The brutal struggle for Okinawa in figures


Battle dates 1 April–22 June 1945


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