In
the early morning of 6 June 1942, 500 Japanese soldiers landed on
Kiska, one of the Aleutian Islands of Alaska. They took the only
inhabitants of the island, a ten man (and six dog) US Navy Weather
Detachment by complete surprise and quickly took control of American
soil. Today, the island is one of the USA’s National Historic Landmarks:
the aftermath of the Japanese invasion can still be seen on the rolling
hillsides of Kiska.
It is now known as
The Forgotten Battle
but the invasion caused widespread outrage in 1942. Pearl Harbor was
still a fresh memory, having been attacked on December 7 of the previous
year.
Now, a Japanese military force had stepped foot on American soil – and
the 500 had grown to over 5,000 men. Although Kiska and neighboring
Attu (which had been overrun two days previously) were part of the
distant Aleutian Islands they were, nevertheless, American. Plans were
immediately drawn up to retake the island, known as the
Aleutian Campaign. The campaign would not succeed for over a year and would claim many American lives.
Although
the Japanese had taken the island with little opposition, one man
managed to evade capture. Senior Petty Officer William C House, part of
the Kiska detachment, managed to get away from the base. Incredibly,
he managed to survive against the odds for 50 days. It was only then,
after subsisting on a diet of earthworms and the island’s meagre
vegetation that he surrendered to the Japanese. His weight had plummeted
to only 80 pounds.
Although artist Tomoharu Mikami was commissioned to paint the above as a celebration of the Japanese
conquest of Kiska, it is also easy to imagine them searching in vain for a single missing Chief Petty Officer.
Looking
at the desolate landscape today, still marked by craters caused by
shell bombardment, one can only marvel at how Senior Petty Officer House
managed to survive for so long. His surrender did not guarantee his
safety, however. He and the others were sent to Japan for the duration
of the war. In retaliation to the invasion, the Army Air Force and Navy
Patrol Wing dropped seven million pounds of bombs on the island. The
anti-aircraft response from the Japanese was formidable. This and the
capricious Aleutian climate, where fog and hurricane force winds could
rise in moments, led to the deaths of scores of American airmen.
The
unpredictable and changeable weather of the Aleutian Islands was neatly
summed up in this poster issued by the training division of the United
States Navy Bureau of Aeronautics. The humor here cleverly underpins
the immense danger each mission posed to the fliers, just in terms of
the weather. Yet bombs were not the only thing they dropped on the
islands.
Propaganda leaflets were also released from passing planes. The translation of the leaflet reads:
Before spring comes a second time, American bombs, like kiri leaves falling far away, will bring sadness and misfortune.
Propaganda
was not reserved for the Japanese occupiers, either. The Alaskan
people were consistently reassured that their state was important and
would not be forgotten – as well as emphasizing the part they had to
play in victory over the Japanese. Although the poster above does to our
eyes seem somewhat xenophobic, this was
after all total war.
The Japanese transport ship
Borneo Maru
was sunk on 5 October 1942 during early days of the campaign. Its
remains are still in the harbour. While the island was being bombarded,
US Navy warships ensured that the Japanese supply line to the two
islands was essentially strangled. This would ensure that the Japanese
occupiers would be at their lowest ebb when the islands were retaken. A
date was set – August 15 1943.
A
considerable fleet set out to retake Kiska. Yet, the Japanese had made
their escape several weeks earlier. In late July they had wired Kiska
City with charges and destroyed as many of their supplies and ammunition
as possible. Then, on the evening of the 29th they set up a radar
diversion.
The
American warships which were around the islands fell for the ruse and
left room for an evacuation fleet of eight warships to quietly steam in
to Kiska Harbor. In less than an hour over 5,000 Japanese soldiers
disappeared like ghosts in to the Aleutian mist leaving behind a base
and harbor rigged to wreak havoc on whoever entered. Even today the
island is littered with the ordnance they left behind, much of it
unexploded.
There
was a final bombardment by warships, including the USS Nashville,
above. Then, on August 15, 35,000 American and Canadian troops landed on
the islands. They were prepared for heavy casualties – the size of
their force reflected the intelligence which had been gathered,
indicating a Japanese presence of over 20,000 on the island. Instead of
Japanese infantry the liberation forces were greeted by a handful of
dogs, one of which was
Explosion, originally owned by the small
US Navy Weather Detachment and subsequently adopted by the invaders
after the American team had been taken to Japan.
The
discovery of the deserted Japanese base (and Explosion's return to his
compatriots) was subsequently painted by the war artist Edward Laning.
Yet
that was not the end. Incredulous at such a speedy and total
evacuation, troops began a systematic search of the seven square mile
island. The island took over a week to comb, during which time over
thirty soldiers were killed by booby traps or friendly fire.
The
Japanese had retreated hurriedly. Among the detritus were a number of
small submarines, gaping holes blown out of their sides.
Then the ship
Abner Read
hit a mine in the harbor and a further 71 perished. The ship was
repaired at Puget Sound, Washington (see picture above). It returned to
active duty only to be lost to Japanese Kamikaze Aircraft off Samar on
November 1 1944. Nevertheless after 439 days the Aleutian Campaign came
to an official end.
Much
of the ordnance was left behind. A sign warns today's visitors in
English, Russian and Japanese of the dangers still lurking on the
island.
The
site where the Japanese occupied Kiska now holds the maximum level of
recognition given to historic locations in the US. It is a National
Historic Landmark, only one of 2,430 in such an immense country.
Considerable amounts of
relics scatter the hills surrounding the harbor, equipment dumps, gun emplacements, tunnels and those small experimental submarines.
There
they will stay as a memorial to those who fought and who lost their
lives in the reclamation and liberation of American soil from forces of
invasion.
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