Island Hopping 729
In the autumn of 1943 the American drives
toward Japan and the Philippines got under way at last.
In the central Pacific campaign the Guadalcanal action
was repeated on a smaller but equally bloody scale
from Tarawa in the Gilbert Islands to Kwajelein and
Eniwetok in the Marshalls. The Japanese soldiers on
these islands fought for every foot of ground. They
had to be blasted and burned from tunnels and con-
crete pillboxes with hand grenades, flamethrowers, and
dynamite. They almost never surrendered. But Admiral
Nimitz’s forces were in every case victorious. By mid-
summer of 1944 this arm of the American advance had
taken Saipan and Guam in the Marianas. Now land-
based bombers were within range of Tokyo.
Meanwhile, MacArthur was leapfrogging along
the New Guinea coast toward the Philippines. In
Atomic bomb
Midway
June,1942
Tarawa
Nov.,1943
Guadalcanal
Aug.,1942–
Feb.,1943
Saipan
June,1944
Philippine Sea
June 19–20, 1944
Leyte Gulf,
October 23–25,
1944
Iwo Jima
Feb.–March 1945
Coral Sea
May,1942
Okinawa
April–June,1945
Bataan Death March
April,1942
SOVIET UNION
(USSR)
MONGOLIA
CHINA
BRITISH
INDIA
JAPAN
MARSHALL
ISLANDS
GILBERT
CAROLINE ISLANDS
ISLANDS
MARIANA
ISLANDS
SOLOMON
ISLANDS
TIBET
BURMA
(Britain)
DUTCH EAST INDIES
THAILAND
MALAYA
(Britain)
INDOCHINA
(France)
BRUNEI
BORNEO
NORTH
BORNEO
PHILIPPINES
(U.S.A.)
NORTHEAST
NEW GUINEA
PAPUA
NEW GUINEA
AUSTRALIA
MANCHUKUO
Tokyo
March 1945
Hiroshima
August 6, 1945
Seoul
Vladivostok
Beijing
Nanjing
Nagasaki
August 9, 1945
Shanghai
Saigon
Bangkok
Hong Kong
Singapore
Manilla
Port
Moresby
PACIFIC
OCEAN
South
China
Sea
Coral
Sea
Yellow
Sea
Bay of
Bengal
Japanese Empire 1936
Extent of Japanese control,
Aug. 1942
Extent of Japanese control
in the Pacific
Allied powers
Neutral
Allied forces
Major battles
World War II Pacific TheatreAfter the Battle of Midway (June, 1942), the United States began to seize one Pacific island after another, with one
task force pushing west from Pearl Harbor, and another moving north from Australia.
October 1944 he made good his promise to return
to the islands, landing on Leyte, south of Luzon.
Two great naval clashes in Philippine waters, the
Battle of the Philippine Sea (June 1944) and the
Battle for Leyte Gulf (October 1944), completed
the destruction of Japan’s sea power and reduced its
air force to a band of fanatical suicide pilots called
kamikazes, who tried to crash bomb-laden planes
into American warships and airstrips. The kamikazes
caused much damage but could not turn the tide. In
February 1945 MacArthur liberated Manila.
The end was now inevitable. B-29 Superfortress
bombers from the Marianas rained high explosives
and firebombs on Japan. The islands of Iwo Jima
and Okinawa, only a few hundred miles from Tokyo,
fell to the Americans in March and June 1945. But