World War II - October 2018 USA
World War II - October 2018 USA
World War II - October 2018 USA
COM
42
76 64
O C TOBE R 2 0 1 8
ENDORSED BY
THE NATIONAL WORLD WAR II MUSEUM, INC.
F E ATUR E S
COVE R STO RY
32 INDIANAPOLIS
When the heavy cruiser sank in shark-infested waters, the navy
unjustly held its captain responsible. It took more than 50 years to
clear his name LYNN VINCENT AND SARA VLADIC
42 HEMINGWAY’S WAR
OSS officer Jack Hemingway was his father’s son—and
his own man NICHOLAS REYNOLDS
P O RT F O L I O
50 FORGOTTEN ARMY
Britain’s “Bevin Boys” spent their war in the mines
54 NO-WIN SITUATION
A German general battled Waffen-SS leaders along with the
Soviets in 1945 Budapest DAVID T. ZABECKI
W E A P O N S M A N UA L
62 FIRE AT WILL
America’s M2-2 flamethrower
64 A CALL TO ARMS
Two brothers in the Philippines made a name for themselves as
guerrillas fighting the Japanese STEVEN TRENT SMITH
DE PA RT M E N T S
8 MAIL
12 WORLD WAR II TODAY
22 CONVERSATION
A childhood in Nazi Germany
72 REVIEWS
Americans and the Holocaust; “Dorie” Miller’s heroism
76 BATTLE FILMS
Why The Caine Mutiny almost wasn’t made
79 CHALLENGE
80 PINUP
50 OCTOBER 2018
3
WWII Online WORLDWARII.COM
Michael A. Reinstein CHAIRMAN & PUBLISHER
David Steinhafel PUBLISHER
Alex Neill EDITOR IN CHIEF
EDITOR
KAREN JENSEN
4 WORLD WAR II
REYNOLDS VAN ELLS
CONTRIBUTORS
NICHOLAS REYNOLDS (“Heming- MARK D. VAN ELLS (“Travel”) is a become obsessed with the story at
way’s War”) is a lifelong Hemingway professor of history at Queensbor- age 13. Over nearly two decades,
and World War II aficionado. His ough Community College in New Vladic interviewed more than 100 of
recent study of Ernest Hemingway’s York City and the author of America the ship’s survivors and rescue crew
wartime relationships with Soviet and World War I: A Traveler’s Guide members. In 2016 she released an
and American intelligence, Writer, (2014). Van Ells is currently at work award-winning documentary, USS
Sailor, Soldier, Spy (2017), was an on a history of the 32nd “Red Arrow” Indianapolis: The Legacy. She is the
instant bestseller. Before becoming Infantry Division, which partici- coauthor, with Lynn Vincent, of
a fulltime writer, Reynolds held two pated in the 1941 Louisiana Maneu- Indianapolis: The True Story of the
of the best niche jobs in the U.S. gov- vers and inspired his travel piece. Worst Sea Disaster in U.S. Naval His-
ernment: officer in charge of field tory and the Fifty-Year Fight to Exon-
history for the Marine Corps and LYNN VINCENT (“Out of the Deep”) erate an Innocent Man.
museum historian for the CIA. is a U.S. Navy veteran and the author
or coauthor of 11 nonfiction books, DAVID T. ZABECKI (“No-Win
STEVEN TRENT SMITH (“A Call to including the just-published Indian- Situation”) is World War II’s chief
Arms”) is an award-winning televi- apolis: The True Story of the Worst military historian. A retired two-
sion photojournalist and the author Sea Disaster in U.S. Naval History star general, he started his military
of two books on sub warfare in the and the Fifty-Year Fight to Exonerate career as an infantry rifleman in the
Pacific: Wolf Pack (2003) and The an Innocent Man (2018), cowritten Vietnam War. He has a longstanding
PORTRAITS BY JOHANNA GOODMAN
Rescue (2008). While researching with Sara Vladic, from which our interest in lecturing and writing on
the latter, about American mission- cover story is adapted. senior-level leadership, and is the
aries who went into hiding rather editor and translator—with Dieter J.
than surrender to invading Japa- SARA VLADIC (“Out of the Deep”) Biedekarken—of the English edition
nese forces, he discovered the amaz- is one of the world’s leading experts of German general Hermann Balck’s
ing story of the Cushing brothers. on the USS Indianapolis, having memoirs, Order in Chaos (2015).
6 WORLD WAR II
Save over $200 on our new PT-305 Boat Experience when booked by September 4, 2018
Between 1914 and 1945, a generation of men and women spent their lives at war. Many Americans who
experienced war in the trenches of Western Europe in World War I returned to liberate the same
ground again in 1944. The military and political leaders of World War II learned the art of war from 1914
to 1918, and vowed not to repeat the mistakes of that war, and the flawed peace that ended it.
The 2018 pre-conference symposium will explore the legacies, leadership lessons and tactics
of World War I and the role its ending played in World War II’s beginning.
BUT LOVED
Your June 2018 article by Craig L. Symonds (“Unloved, Unlovely,
Bridge Company in Ambridge, Pennsylvania.
Not quite two weeks later, the ship on which
my uncle served, LST 665, was also launched
from there. On April 25, 1944, my uncle was
commissioned executive officer and received
Indispensable”) was a welcome read made more enjoyable with orders to report to Ambridge as part of the first
photos of LSTs launching. The lead wartime LST shipbuilder was crew of LST 665. LST 662 was commissioned
Dravo Corporation. They operated west and east yards on Neville on May 2, 1944, and LST 665 on May 12, 1944.
Island located just outside Pittsburgh and another yard in Wilming- My uncle eventually took command of
ton, Delaware, which primarily built Landing Ships, Medium LST 704 and went to Sasebo, Japan, immedi-
(LSMs) and destroyer escorts. ately after the war ended. There is so much
Eight miles downriver from Neville’s shipyards stood the U.S. history out there. Thanks for keeping it alive.
Steel Company’s American Bridge Company in Ambridge, Pennsyl- Norman Marten
vania. A photo of their yard [above] appears on your contents page. Bainbridge Island, Wash.
A quarter of the more than 1,000 LSTs built during the war came
from this area, close to the massive supply of steel the war demanded SHORTAGE
from the region’s furnaces. In tribute to the builders and particu- SHORTCOMINGS
U.S. NAVY/NATIONAL ARCHIVES
larly those who serviced the ships, the Interstate 79 bridge crossing I was very impressed with Craig L. Symonds’s
the Ohio River between the Neville and Ambridge yards is dedicated article about LST shortages for the D-Day
as the Pittsburgh Naval and Shipbuilders Memorial Bridge. invasion. This is the first good article I’ve read
Denis Galterio that shows how important the LST was during
Pittsburgh, Pa. the war. However, two important occurrences
8 WORLD WAR II
also contributed to the shortages: Exercise BIG WAR, SMALL WORLD FROM THE
Tiger and the West Loch disaster in Hawaii. While reading the June 2018 issue of your EDITOR
Exercise Tiger was secretly conducted in excellent magazine, I happened across the “Now came the most
difficult of all leadership
England on April 28, 1944, where the U.S. and letter submitted by James Owens of Eastham, challenges in war,”
Britain were rehearsing off the coast of Devon Massachusetts, who had served in Italy after German general Hermann
at Lyme Bay for the invasion of Normandy. World War II as a military police officer (MP) Balck wrote of the fighting
The exercise included 21 LSTs, 28 LCIs, 65 in the Gorizia/Trieste region of Italy (“Mail”). in 1945 Budapest—
“ending it without bigger
LCTs, and hundreds of small craft. In it, he relates the troubles and disputes that catastrophes.” When
German E-boats arrived there and torpe- arose over the contested region between Italy military leaders confront
doed and sunk two LSTs and badly damaged and Yugoslavia after the war. The accompany- loss, how they react to it
is a measure of their
another. The death toll was 198 sailors and 441 ing photo shows Owens in his MP uniform; humanity rather than
soldiers, mostly from drowning. the patch of the 88th Infantry Division on his of their generalship or
In the West Loch incident, six LSTs were helmet looked somewhat familiar. professionalism. Balck
chose to save as many of
destroyed and two were damaged at Pearl Sure enough, upon checking my mother’s his men as he could and
Harbor on May 21, 1944, from a mysterious old photo albums, I found that my father, find a dignified way out.
explosion. The tragedy ended the lives of 163 Cosimo C. Petrosino, was in that same unit Author David T. Zabecki,
himself a retired U.S. Army
men and injured 360. Many LSTs had to around the same time. With a little research,
major general, tells the
quickly be built to replace those lost in West I discovered the divisional patch, that of the story of Balck’s dilemma
Loch for the next island invasion in the Pacific. “Fighting Blue Devils” or “Cloverleaf” Divi- well in “No-Win Situation”
Joseph Panicello sion, is a cloverleaf design superimposed (page 54). Balck’s aim of
creating a foundation for
North Hill, Calif. with the coat of arms of the city of Trieste, Germany’s survival and
featuring a red shield with a white halberd. long-term recovery stood
Editor’s note: Readers interested in learning Another patch with the word “TRUST” (TRi- him apart from some other
generals. As Zabecki
more about the Exercise Tiger attack can check este US Troops) is sewn above it. told me: “Many of the SS
out Craig L. Symonds’s “Exercise in Tragedy” I was born in Trieste—at the time a free generals in particular
in our June 2014 issue, or on our website at territory of Italy—in 1951 and my father’s rec- believed with Hitler that if
Germany didn’t win, then it
www.worldwarII.com. ollections of the area after the border disputes didn’t deserve to survive.”
were settled were very fond ones. —Karen Jensen
SAFE BET Thanks to Mr. Owens and World War II
Kudos to Paul Starobin for reaching into the for a surprise trip down memory lane.
political and diplomatic ramifications sur- Keep up the great work.
rounding World War II (“Fake News–1940s Nick Petrosino
Style,” June 2018). However, the story begs for San Marcos, Calif.
a different perspective on the salient issues
regarding isolationists and isolationism.
Cosimo C.
Isolationists have historically been viewed Petrosino of the
as those wishing to totally distance themselves 88th Division
from European affairs. To the contrary, isola- (right) settled
tionists were well informed and advocated for down postwar
open trade—even trade with Germany. Brit- in Trieste, Italy.
ain’s intelligence and propaganda efforts came
to win the day, thereby controlling the flow of
goods into Germany, while the United States
quietly exacted trade opportunities with Brit-
COURTESY OF NICK PETROSINO; INSET: HISTORYNET ARCHIVES
PAYING RESPECTS
The U.S. Submarine Veterans WWII National Memorial West is
located just a few miles away from me on Seal Beach at the Naval
Weapons Station. There is a monument to each of the 52 submarines
that were lost during World War II with the names of all of the crew
members who died on them. I took the issue with Commander John
P. Cromwell’s story (“Captain Cromwell’s Decision,” June 2018) on
the cover to the USS Sculpin memorial [above] to pay homage to him
and the rest of the crew who were lost.
Jim Woods
Long Beach, Calif.
NEVER TOO LATHE
AN AVOIDABLE TRAGEDY?
LEFT: COURTESY OF JIM WOODS; RIGHT: BETTMANN/GETTY IMAGES
10 WORLD WAR II
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U. S. Marines
U.S. Army®
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1944, mission over Hansa Bay, off what is now Papua New Guinea. Kelly’s niece Diane Christie got the call as
His body was never recovered. His grief-stricken family put up a she left a grocery store in Folsom, Calif. “I
tombstone in a Livermore, California, cemetery with an etching of burst into tears,” she told the New York Times.
the B-24 and the inscription, “In Loving Memory.” “And I’m like, where did this come from? I
Five years ago, Kelly’s descendants began a campaign to locate didn’t even know my uncle.”
the wreckage of Heaven Can Wait, named for a 1943 movie. The The investigation started in May 2013
12 WORLD WAR II
OPEN-AND-
SHUT CASE
A PROMINENT FRENCH RESEARCHER has some bad news for con-
spiracy theorists: “Hitler died in 1945,” forensic scientist Philippe
Charlier told the news agency Agence France-Presse. “He did not flee
to Argentina in a submarine. He is not in a hidden base in Antarctica or
on the dark side of the moon.”
Charlier and other researchers last year persuaded the Russians to
let them examine the only remaining fragments of Adolf Hitler’s body:
some skull and a jawbone containing mostly false teeth. They found the
skull fragment “totally comparable” to x-ray images of Hitler’s head
taken a year before his death. The dentures matched Hitler’s dental
records and showed no meat fibers—consistent with his vegetarianism.
The skull fragment had a hole likely caused by a bullet. Bluish
deposits on his false teeth suggest a chemical reaction to cyanide. “We
Legwork by Diane Christie (above) don’t know if he used an ampule of cyanide to kill himself or whether
and her family helped identify the it was a bullet in the head,” Charlier said. “It’s in all probability both.”
crash site of her uncle, Second
Charlier, nicknamed “France’s Forensic Sleuth” by the New York
Lieutenant Thomas Kelly (opposite,
circled), and the rest of the Heaven Times, is known for his historical detective work; in 2013 he analyzed
Can Wait crew. the mummified heart of Britain’s King Richard I, the “Lionheart.”
The Hitler findings were published in May in the peer-reviewed
when Christie’s cousin—Scott Althaus, European Journal of Internal Medicine and are consistent with the
a University of Illinois political scientist— mainstream belief that Hitler committed suicide with Eva Braun as
started searching online to learn more Soviet forces closed in on Berlin on April 30, 1945.
about Kelly. He later dispatched Christie The Russians have been secretive about Hitler’s fate. Historian
and other family members to the Univer- Anthony Beevor has argued that Stalin deliberately hid the fact
sity of Memphis, home of an archive of the the Soviets had found Hitler’s body, apparently to sow speculation
90th Bombardment Group, known as the that the Americans had spirited him away. Partly as a result, the
“Jolly Rogers,” which included Heaven Can Führer’s fate has been the subject of wild speculative theories. In the
TOP: TALIA HERMAN/THE NEW YORK TIMES; BOTTOM: PHILIPPE CHARLIER VIA TWITTER; INSET: DANIEL FOURAY/OUEST-FRANCE
OCTOBER 2018
13
Germany has
made plans to sell
the Remagen
bridge’s eastern
towers (left). The
span collapsed in
March 1945 (inset).
TOP: DPICS/ALAMY; INSET: KEYSTONE VIA GETTY IMAGES; BOTTOM: HORACIO VILLALOBOS VIA GETTY IMAGES
sale to the highest bidder. The towers on the west side, in the town of erty may interest artists or historical societies.
Remagen, are already a museum. The span is officially named On March 7, 1945, soldiers from the advanc-
Ludendorff Bridge after German general Erich Ludendorff, a World ing U.S. 9th Armored Division were surprised
War I hero famed for his victories against the Russians. to find the bridge intact; despite concerted
“There are already several interested parties,” Jürgen Rothe, efforts, the Germans had not been able to
spokesman for the Federal Railway Property Fund, told the German destroy it in time before retreating. For that
news agency DPA. failure, the Nazis court-martialed and exe-
In a property listing, the fund describes the structure as the cuted four junior German officers.
DISPATCHES
Sister Agnès-Marie Valois, the “Angel of Dieppe,” died April 19 at a
French monastery at 103. The Augustinian nun was one of 10 nurses
who treated the Allied wounded—most of them Canadian—left behind
after a disastrous August 19, 1942, assault on Dieppe in German-
occupied France. She refused orders to treat the German wounded
first and is said to have positioned herself in front of an injured
Canadian when a Nazi officer attempted to execute him. Her bravery
and compassion made her a legend in Canada. After the war, she
continued to work as a nurse in France.
14 WORLD WAR II
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16 WORLD WAR II
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The Orduña was one of several refugee
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DISPATCHES
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18 WORLD WAR II
Authentic Historical
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who died in June at 105, left an audacious
mark. In two war patrols along the American
TOP LEFT: XINHUA NEWS AGENCY/REDUX; TOP RIGHT: UBOAT.NET; BOTTOM: NATIONAL WORLD WAR II MUSEUM
and combat medics. He hopes to encourage more study of the unit,
which was set up in Japanese-occupied Manchuria.
“This is the first time that an official document showing the
real names of almost all members of Unit 731 has been disclosed,”
Nishiyama told the Mainichi Shimbun newspaper. “The list is
important evidence that supports testimony by those involved. Its
discovery will be a major step toward unveiling concealed facts.”
In the name of medical research, Unit 731—officially the Japa-
nese Imperial Army’s Epidemic Prevention and Water Purifica-
The National World War II Museum in New
tion Department—exposed victims to frostbite, deprived them of
Orleans is hosting an exhibit about Bob
sleep, injected them with plague, typhus, and cholera, and cut Hope through February 10, 2019. On display
them open without anesthesia. are wartime correspondence between Hope
The Japanese government denied Unit 731’s existence until 1998 and troops, relics, photos, and films from
and has never revealed its activities. Information has emerged from his travels. During the war, Hope broadcast
documents, photographs, and the testimony of former members. most of his radio shows from military bases
around the world. The exhibit, “So Ready for
At war’s end, the United States—in a burgeoning arms race with
Laughter,” takes its name from a passage in
the Soviet Union—granted immunity to Unit 731 researchers in Hope’s 1990 memoir: the troops were “so
exchange for access to their biological warfare findings. Some unit ready for laughter,” he wrote, it made “what
veterans went on to enjoy successful medical carrers. we did for a living seem like stealing money.”
20 WORLD WAR II
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A CHILDHOOD IN
NAZI GERMANY
BRIGITTE SCHREIBER WAS BORN IN 1927 and grew up in Nazi would greet him in the morning, he would
Germany, living in the city of Paderborn with her parents and three reply with “Heil Hitler!” My sister and I
siblings until late in the war. Life during the war, she learned, could never say that; we could never get it
required constantly mastering new skills, including learning to not out, somehow. So we tried our best to avoid it.
speak your mind, keeping watch for low-flying Spitfires, and whip-
ping up breakfast for hungry American tankers. After the war, Bri- What do you recall of the
gitte met and married a British soldier, Jack Hayward, himself a persecution of Paderborn’s Jews?
veteran of Dunkirk and D-Day, and moved to England. Now 91, she I remember Kristallnacht in 1938, when the
lives in Maidstone, Kent. Nazis set the synagogue on fire. I was 11. My
sister and I went to see. We had never wit-
Was there talk about politics at home when you nessed such a thing before; it was horrible.
were a child? Also we had two Jewish boys in our school,
No, not very much. My father was a furniture maker and worked for and one day they just disappeared and we
a firm in Paderborn, but when that went bust he was unemployed didn’t know what had happened to them. It
from 1926 to 1933. He did his best to try to make ends meet, but we was 1942, I think. They were lovely boys. We
had to survive on very, very little. wondered where they had gone, but as chil-
dren we didn’t ask questions. My parents said
Did your parents vote for Hitler? they had probably gone abroad; that they had
Everybody did in 1933, because Germany was down and he promised gotten away. We knew that Hitler didn’t like
to get people back into work. My father got a job as a coachbuilder for the Jews, but we didn’t know what he was
German railways, so things were a little easier, and he was enthusias- doing with them. It was never talked about.
tic about Hitler at the beginning. But in about 1936 he realized that
things weren’t right. My father wasn’t left-wing, but he didn’t like Did you hear of any opposition
Hitler. He used to call him “Grossmaul” (big mouth). to the Nazis?
Only indirectly. In the summer of 1944, there
What was it like growing up in Nazi Germany? was a greengrocer who used to come around
It was all rather normal for us. We weren’t really restricted and we with his horse and cart, and my mother went
never felt threatened directly, but I think my parents knew there was down with another couple of ladies, includ-
a danger there. They always told us to be quiet; don’t speak out. ing the wife of our Nazi neighbor. And one of
them said that she had just heard on the
Did they oppose Hitler? radio that they had tried to kill Hitler, to
Not really. But I remember coming home from school—like many which the greengrocer asked, “Did they get
families, we had a Volksempfänger radio set—and my mother was him?” She said, “No, they didn’t” and he
standing there in the living room, with her ear nearly inside it. When replied, “What a shame.” And that was it.
I asked what she was doing, she said “I’m listening to the British We never saw him again. Later on we
news, it’s the only way to get the truth. But don’t you dare say any- heard he had died. We never heard anything
thing! Or they’ll take me away!” We never mentioned it again. about concentration camps, or what hap-
Also, my father said that “If we lose the war, it is bad, but if we win pened to people in them—but maybe we
the war, it’ll be worse.” Of course, he didn’t dare say anything like didn’t want to know.
that outside of our home, he just said it to the family.
What were your experiences
Did your family have Nazi friends or neighbors? of the bombing war?
We had a neighbor who was in the SA—a “Brownshirt”—and when we We didn’t have much bombing in Paderborn
22 WORLD WAR II
Brigitte Schreiber Hayward
in her garden last spring,
and (inset) as an 18-year-old
at the war’s end.
What happened
there?
That was in March and
the Americans arrived
in April. The village was
in a valley and we could
hear the fighting going
on around us. We had 16-year-old boys fight-
ing against them. We met one. He came down
into the village, crying, as he didn’t know
what to do, and he asked what the Americans
were like. And I said, “Just throw your gun
away, and go up the road and you’ll find them
and they won’t do anything to you.”
thing he could find. Naughty so-and-so! of it. I had never seen a black man before! I
could just see his teeth! He was waving; they
Did you stay in Paderborn? were all ever so friendly.
By 1945 I was 18; I was working in a factory making ammunition boxes The Americans stayed in our village for
and my sister, Ursula, was working in a uniform factory. My father about a week. My cousin used to make pan-
wanted to get us all out of the town. He said that the war would be fin- cakes for them; I used to make butter, and
ished soon; it couldn’t go on much longer, but he didn’t want us to be another cousin had bees, so we had lovely
killed in Paderborn. So he sent my sister to Bad Driburg—with my things to eat. And the Americans loved it:
mother and the two boys—and I went by bicycle to a little village called pancakes, thick butter, and honey. We had a
Ebbinghausen, 18 miles away, where I used to spend my holidays. good time then. For us the war was finished. +
OCTOBER 2018
23
FROM THE FOOTLOCKER
DIRTY JOB I was a truck driver for an antiaircraft quantities of dust and caked mud, and the
artillery unit, the 776th AAA AW [Au- Klopfsteg was simply a tool issued to soldiers
tomatic Weapons] Battalion, 49th AAA for beating them clean. Could it have been
Group, Third Army. When not towing used for other purposes? Of course it could.
guns, we would often be stationary for However, it was designed and manufactured
a week or two and take on other jobs. as a fabric cleaner, not as a weapon.
Curators at We were in Germany after the libera- Most examples I’ve seen are marked with
The National tion of Dachau concentration camp the initials “RAD,” for Reichsarbeitsdienst, or
when I was asked to help transport Reich Labor Service—a counterpart to the
World War II survivors for rehabilitation. Inside the Works Progress Administration in the United
Museum camp I found this object. The handle States at the time. Like the WPA, the RAD was
solve readers’ is about 12 inches long; the strips of established to mitigate the effects of unem-
artifact leather, about 16 inches. I don’t know ployment during the Depression. The Third
mysteries what it is for certain. Can you help? Reich leadership also used the Labor Service
—Athanace “Joe” Landry, Shirley, to clandestinely train soldiers to rebuild its
Massachusetts military, which during the 1930s was strictly
prohibited by the Treaty of Versailles.
IN SPITE OF ITS SINISTER LOOK, this is a Once hostilities began in September 1939,
clothes beater—or Klopfsteg in German army the RAD functioned more like engineers, sup-
slang—which was standard issue to German porting the German army by building fortifi-
service members. The Germans’ thick wool cations, roads, and bridges. In the closing days
24 WORLD WAR II
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BEAT IT
WHEN YOU BOIL IT DOWN to its essentials, the reason you form, train,
Japanese “manga” graphic novels,
along with Showa: A History of
Japan (four volumes, 2013–2015), an
unforgettable epic of Japan during
the war and a meticulous record of
life in the enlisted ranks.
and equip an army is to beat your enemy in battle. It’s hard to make a case for any of
But if you happened to be a soldier or sailor in the Imperial Japanese mil- this. Men have been training for war
itary during World War II, you might think differently. Given your daily since the beginning of time, and it
experience—from induction through training camp and finally to opera- does require a certain process of
tions in the field—sometimes it might have seemed as if the real purpose of toughening the recruit to let him
the country’s fighting force was not so much to beat the enemy as to beat you. know he’s not at home with his
This was a military that raised corporal punishment—physical beatings— mother anymore, that he’s entered a
to the status of a doctrine. You could be pummeled nearly to death for almost new and dangerous world. In the
any reason: failing to salute smartly enough, missing a button on your shirt, Soviet army, for example, beating
a lackadaisical attitude. Failure to snap to attention at the mention of the new recruits was a long-standing
emperor’s name was a serious offense in this world, and some particularly tradition. But the Japanese example
sadistic officers seemed to delight in mentioning the emperor solely to catch is so extreme, so pervasive, that it’s
their men napping. difficult to see the point of it, partic-
Whatever your offense, the result was the same: fists or clubs, or any ularly the severe beatings to veteran
good, solid piece of wood within your superior’s reach, would start to fly. The soldiers in the field.
aftermath was a grisly parade of smashed teeth, broken noses, and shattered During the Asia-Pacific War, the
ribs—along with all the predictable internal injuries. Imperial Japanese Army gained a
It was all hierarchical, of course: noncommissioned officers and lieuten- reputation for atrocious behavior,
ants beat their men, captains struck their lieutenants, generals clobbered especially toward helpless victims:
their colonels, and onward up the line. Even warlord Hideki Tojo himself, the comfort women, Allied POWs, Chi-
ILLUSTRATION BY JOHN TOMAC
prime minister and minister of war, was known to cuff around his subordi- nese civilians. Studying the way it
nates during staff meetings. Sometimes the men beat each other. One ser- treated its own men gives us a pretty
geant famously disliked bruising his own hands by punching offenders, so he good explanation for these horrors.
had his men do it. When they failed to show the proper devotion to their task, As so often in life, cruelty begins in
he screamed at them: “You are soldiers of the Imperial Japanese Army! When the home. +
26 WORLD WAR II
Proudly
S E R V I N G T H E M I L I TA R Y
For over 75 years,;Ľ;v|oo70|_;l;m-m7ol;m7;7b1-|;7|oruo|;1ঞm]ou1om|uĺ
$_-|Ľv0;;mĽvlbvvbomvbm1;7-om;ĺ);m7;uv|-m7oum;;7v-m7;Ľu;_;u;|o
ruob7;ob|_]u;-|1o;u-];ķY;b0Ѵ;r-l;m|orঞomvķml;uov7bv1om|v
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WAR GAMES
IN SEPTEMBER 1941, as German troops raced toward Moscow and Japan
troopers, and even cavalry troopers
on horseback took part as well—not
to mention critical support troops.
McNair trucked in mountains of
blank rounds and even played re-
extended its reach across the East, the United States was still playing war corded battle noises to add authen-
games. Throughout that month, the U.S. Army staged the Louisiana Maneu- ticity. Obviously, some actions had to
vers, the most extensive field exercises in its history. Thousands of nascent be simulated, such as airstrikes and
GIs in World War I–style helmets fought sham battles across central Louisi- the destruction of bridges. Equip-
ana’s prairies, cotton fields, and pine-covered hills. Today travelers come to ment shortages also hindered real-
the region to see antebellum plantations and Civil War sites, but for me it was ism. Antitank guns, to give just one
the Second World War that beckoned. Seventy-six Septembers after the 1941 example, were often made of logs.
maneuvers, I rented a car and explored the “battlefields” of Louisiana. Just as the first exercise was about
The outbreak of war in Europe in 1939 forced preparedness on America, to begin, on September 15, a tropical
and in 1940 the army selected central Louisiana as a training ground. The storm soaked the troops in the field.
warm climate allowed year-round operations, and the remote woodlands of But the training went on: General
Kisatchie National Forest offered plenty of space. Camp Beauregard, a moth- Lear, based north of the Red River,
balled World War I camp just north of Alexandria, sprang back to life. In attacked Krueger’s forces to the
1940–41 the army carved three more facilities out of national forest lands: south, camped on the flat prairies
Camp Livingston, 10 miles north of Alexandria; Camp Claiborne, 18 miles between Lake Charles and Lafayette.
south of Alexandria; and Camp Polk, eight miles southeast of Leesville. Lear planned an armored sweep
The maneuver area was vast, ranging from East Texas to Louisiana’s east- around Krueger’s left flank, but his
ern border, with the Red River bisecting it. The action occurred in two slow advance allowed Krueger to
phases, pitting Lieutenant General Benjamin Lear’s Second Army against blunt the attack, reposition his
Lieutenant General Walter Krueger’s Third Army. Participants included a forces, and grab the initiative.
veritable who’s who of future World War II commanders. Colonel Dwight D. The second exercise, nicknamed
Eisenhower was Krueger’s chief of staff. Major General George S. Patton led the “Battle of the Bridges,” com-
the 2nd Armored Division. General Headquarters Chief of Staff Lesley menced on September 24 w ith
McNair, known as the “brains of the army,” supervised the exercises. All were another drenching storm. In this
under the watchful eye of U.S. Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall. scenario, Lear defended Shreveport
28 WORLD WAR II
1941’s Louisiana Maneuvers tested a variety of U.S. Army forces, revealing a military
in transition. Opposite: A long-neglected road leads through old Camp Claiborne.
from Krueger’s forces attacking from the south. Lear traded space for time, Everything is covered with pine nee-
destroying bridges (in simulated fashion, of course) as he retreated northwest- dles, except for a narrow path down
erly up Red River Valley, forcing Krueger’s engineers to construct hundreds of the main road where a few vehicles
pontoon bridges—right alongside those already declared destroyed. The most occasionally pass. The war feels dis-
dramatic event was Patton’s armored sweep through East Texas, getting tant; it is hard to imagine these streets
behind Lear and approaching Shreveport from the north. crammed with soldiers and trucks or
Though the fighting may have been simulated, the casualties sometimes the sound of “Reveille” in the morning.
were real. A pilot died in a midair collision on the first day. In another inci- Among the spots Richard shows
dent, two soldiers drowned trying to cross the rain-swollen Cane River near me is the old camp recreation area.
Natchitoches. But there were moments of levity, too. According to one oft-told The swimming pool is overgrown
story, maneuver umpires declared a bridge wrecked, only to see soldiers with brush, the deep end filled with
walking across it. “Can’t you see that bridge is destroyed?,” yelled the umpire. stagnant green water. Nearby stand
“Of course,” one soldier responded. “Can’t you see we’re swimming?” pillars that once supported the gym-
By the time the maneuvers ended on September 28, the soldiers
had gained some insight into the rigors of a war campaign. Com-
manders got experience, too—and many who were found lacking
the necessary skills lost their jobs.
Louisiana remained an important training ground once the U.S.
entered the war. The famed 82nd and 101st Airborne Divisions,
for example, were reactivated at Camp Claiborne in 1942. After
the war, Polk and Beauregard remained in army hands. Claiborne
and Livingston were abandoned, and the Kisatchie National Forest
swallowed them up.
Tourists today will find most maneuver-related sites within an
hour’s drive of Alexandria. Perhaps the best place to begin your
explorations is the Louisiana Maneuvers and Military Museum at
Camp Beauregard, which houses artifacts from the war years,
including uniforms, equipment, weapons, and maps.
But for me, the ruins of the abandoned camps held greater allure.
My first stop is Camp Livingston. There is no interpretive signage
at the site, but fortunately the director of the Louisiana Maneuvers Major General
TOP AND RIGHT: NATIONAL ARCHIVES
George S. Patton
museum, Richard Moran, offers to show me around. He takes me
inspects 2nd
down a nondescript rural road and, before long, broken concrete Armored Division
slabs and crumbling vestiges of warehouses and loading docks field exercises during
begin to appear among the tall, fragrant pines and tangled under- the war games.
brush. The shady streets have not been maintained since Roos-
evelt was in office and are riddled with heaves and potholes.
OCTOBER 2018
29
WHEN
YOU GO
Alexandria is the best base
for exploring the maneuvers
area. Alexandria Interna-
tional Airport is served by
American, Delta, and United
airlines. In addition to Camp
Beauregard’s Louisiana
Maneuvers and Military
Museum (geauxguardmu-
seums.com), the Fort Polk
Museum (jrtc-polk.army.
Nature has swallowed most of Camp mil/museum.html) and Long
Livingston, but concrete pillars Leaf’s Southern Forest
from the old gymnasium remain. Heritage Museum (long-
leaf.la) also have exhibits
about the maneuvers.
to burst. The river runs slow and lazy— WHERE TO
Shreveport
M I L E S
not like the storm-swollen torrent of STAY AND EAT
K IS ATCHIE
0 50
1941—but I nonetheless think about the Alexandria’s Hotel Bentley
Natchitoches NATIONAL two soldiers who died trying to cross it, (hotelbentleyandcondos.
FO REST MIS SIS SIPPI
and the hard work of the engineers com) offers the area’s most
Florien
Alexandria during the “Battle of the Bridges.” elegant lodging option. The
Leesville I then turn west ward and drive likes of Eisenhower and
LOUISIANA through the wooded uplands, sharing the Patton once walked its fine
TE X A S
Lafayette road with rumbling trucks hauling mosaic floors and marbled
Lake Charles hallways. Inside is a small
timber stacked like giant matchsticks. A
exhibit of the war years.
portion of State Highway 118 between
Louisiana is noted for its
Florien and Kisatchie, an area that saw
unique Cajun cuisine. The
considerable action in the first maneuver, southern edge of the maneu-
nasium walls, rising ghost-like from the is now designated the Louisiana Maneu- vers area between Lake
forest floor. Graffiti artists have tagged vers Highway. A historical marker along Charles and Lafayette offers
the ruins, while discarded clothing, beer the road at Peason Ridge highlights the the best options for tasty
cans, and multicolored shotgun shells lay impact of the war on that rural commu- boudin, crawfish, and gumbo.
on the ground among the pinecones. nity. In 1941 the army forced its 25 resi-
Next I visit Camp Claiborne, the ruins dent families off their lands to create
WHAT ELSE TO
of which stretch a couple of miles along a permanent training ground. Small
SEE AND DO
Camp or hike Kisatchie
State Highway 112. A few information weather-beaten display cases poignantly National Forest (fs.usda.
panels mark the site of the old camp exhibit memorabilia about life there gov/kisatchie), but bring your
headquarters, where the 82nd and 101st before the war. There are numerous pho- bug spray. The maneuvers
Divisions were rebranded as airborne tographs—smiling families, proud cou- passed through what is today
units. As at Camp Livingston, enigmatic ples, a bearded Confederate veteran, and the Cane River Creole
concrete ruins dot the forest. Weathered a local boxer, fists up, ready to fight. Sol- National Heritage Area
sidewalks lead to nowhere. The woods diers still train at Peason Ridge today. (nps.gov/crha), south of
are eerily quiet, sounds muffled by 70 As the hazy orange sun sinks into the Natchitoches, which pre-
years of accumulated pine needles. west, I head toward New Orleans, where serves the area’s multicultural
history. During the Civil War,
One sunny morning I drive along the the next day I pay a visit to the impressive
real battles raged in Red
south bank of the Red River from Alexan- National World War II Museum. I walk
River Valley: 0DQVÞHOG
dria toward Natchitoches, about 50 miles through its exhibits—numerous and EDWWOHÞHOGand Forts
MAP BY BRIAN WALKER
northwest. Several tributary rivers and marvelous—but my mind drifts back to Randolph and Buhlow are
streams cross my path, most notably the the countryside, just a few hours to the both maintained by Louisiana
Cane River, which meanders through north, where the woods and fields have State Parks (crt.state.la.us/
snow-white cotton fields that seem ready their own stories to tell. + Louisiana-state-parks).
30 WORLD WAR II
OUT OF
THE DEEP
When the USS Indianapolis sank in
shark-infested waters, the navy unjustly
held its captain responsible. It took
more than 50 years to clear his name
By Lynn Vincent and Sara Vladic
32 WORLD WAR II
One of Indianapolis’s five-inch
guns bristles underwater more
than seven decades after
the ship met a horrible end.
Aboard Indianapolis, Captain McVay was many such quiet heroics—along with acts of
trying to verify that a distress signal had been cruelty and cowardice—would spin out across
transmitted when a wall of water swept him the survivor groups. Roughly 300 of the 880
from the ship along with hundreds of his men. men in the ocean coalesced into a single large
From the sea, they saw the flagship of the mass. Some of these men only had life jackets;
34 WORLD WAR II
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: NAVAL HISTORY AND HERITAGE COMMAND; COURTESY OF THE HASHIMOTO FAMILY; U.S. MARINE CORPS/NAVAL HISTORY AND HERITAGE COMMAND
others, nothing at all. Other survivors were arrival came and went, naval personnel USS Indianapolis (top)
fortunate enough to find floater nets and rafts noticed her absence, but also did nothing. sails into Pearl Harbor
equipped with meager rations, flares, fishing Furthermore, intelligence personnel had in 1937, six years
before a major
supplies, and flashlights. intercepted the message Hashimoto sent refitting; Japanese
At first, the men held out hope for rescue. about sinking a large warship and had trans- submarine I-58
But hours turned into days because the navy mitted it to high-ranking officers at Guam (bottom left), helmed
did not even realize the ship was missing. and Pearl Harbor, along with intelligence offi- by Lieutenant
After delivering components to Tinian for the cers working for Fleet Admiral Ernest J. King. Commander
atomic bomb to be dropped on Hiroshima, The message was missing the location and Mochitsura Hashimoto
(bottom right),
Indianapolis regrouped at the nearby base at type of ship sunk, but previous intel had launched the
Guam before departing for Leyte, Philip- placed Hashimoto’s boat, I-58, in the same torpedoes that sank
pines—an 1,100-mile straight shot across the area where Indy and her men were known to the heavy cruiser.
Philippine Sea. Afterward, officers at Guam be. Again, no one took action.
had done nothing other than move Indy west- As the days passed, hundreds of men died of
ward on a plotting board according to her their wounds or gave up hope and drowned
planned speed of advance—this despite con- themselves. Many sailors were taken by
firmed reports of an enemy sub chase dead sharks. One moment, these predators behaved
ahead of the heavy cruiser’s track. At Leyte, like gentle and curious giants, nosing up close
meanwhile, when Indy’s estimated time of to inspect the men with black, unblinking
OCTOBER 2018
35
“I deeply Jane Henry, wife of
Indianapolis dentist Earl
regret to Henry Sr., cradles son
Earl Jr. Little Earl was six
inform you weeks old when his
father was lost at sea.
that your
husband …
is missing
in action.”
eyes. The next, they attacked, their steel-trap the controls. When Marks reached the survivors, he saw that many
jaws snuffing out a man’s life before he could would not last until a ship could arrive to fish them out of the sea. Then
draw a breath to scream. his crew saw a shark take another man; Marks, against regulations,
decided to make an open-sea landing.
Thursday, August 2, 1945 Shortly after 5 p.m., against a lowering sun, Marks executed a power
Over the Philippine Sea stall into the wind and slammed his airplane belly-first into the back of
By the morning of Thursday, August 2, the a huge swell. The Dumbo’s hull screeched in fury, emitting all the
men had been in the water for four nights and sounds of a crash. The crew pitched forward, safety harnesses crushing
three days. Wilbur “Chuck” Gwinn, a navy their chests. The sea rejected the plane, batting it 15 feet back into the
pilot, was flying over the Philippine Sea in his air. Fighting physics, Marks gripped the control column with both
Lockheed PV-1 Ventura bomber. It was just hands. The Dumbo’s belly again smashed into a wave and again
after 11 a.m., and Gwinn was 350 miles north bounced—but not as high this time. Marks wrestled the controls, willing
of Palau, cruising at 3,000 feet. At this alti- the plane to obey. Finally, the Dumbo breached the swell’s shining skin.
tude, he could see 20 square miles at a glance, Marks and his crew saved 53 men. Near midnight of the men’s fifth
and the sea below appeared as smooth and night in the water, rescue ships finally arrived and hauled aboard 263
reflective as a foil sheet. more, though men continued to die even after rescue operations began.
His crew was testing a new trailing antenna The ships transported survivors to base hospitals around the Philippine
that had become tangled for the third time. Sea before eventually bringing them all to Guam. While the navy encour-
Frustrated, Gwinn turned the controls over to aged the men to write letters home, it prohibited them from mentioning
his copilot and ducked into the Ventura’s belly their whereabouts, the fact that Indianapolis had sunk, their nurses or
to help. Gwinn bent to take a look through a doctors, or to refer in any way to the ordeal they had just survived. COURTESY OF EARL O’DELL HENRY JR, WWW.EARLHENRYBIRDPRINTS.COM
36 WORLD WAR II
TOP: JOHN FROST NEWSPAPERS/ALAMY STOCK PHOTO; BOTTOM: U.S. NAVY/ NATIONAL ARCHIVES (BOTH)
The other voice paused. “Horace and Arletta lieutenant commander usnr, is The end of the war
just got a telegram today from the navy,” he missing in action 30 july 1945 in overshadowed
said, referring to Earl’s parents. “It says Earl’s the service of his country. your delayed news of
Indy’s sinking (top);
missing in action.” great anxiety is appreciated and injured sailors arrive
Jane’s insides went cold. She raised a hand you will be furnished with details on Peleliu (bottom
to brace herself against the wall. when received. left); survivors
The next day, Jane received her own ver- included Willie
sion of the dreaded telegram, which she read Later that morning, a town church bell Hatfield and Cozell
Smith, whose left
through a curtain of tears: began ringing, its insistent peal floating down
arm was bandaged
the street in joyous song. Another bell joined, from a shark bite.
i deeply regret to inform you that and another, until it seemed every church
your husband, earl o’dell henry, tower in Mayfield had joined in some kind of
OCTOBER 2018
37
rapturous chorus. George opened the door to officers conducting it did not hesitate to
The primary see people spilling out of their homes, laugh- report facts that might expose the navy’s fail-
charge ing and crying and embracing. Even inside the
house, Jane could hear their words: “Japan
ures in Indy’s sinking. These men sent regular
updates to King. One of these updates may
against surrendered! The war is over!” She looked have sealed McVay’s doom.
McVay was down at the wrinkled telegram still clutched
in her hand and wept.
On November 9, King’s inspector general,
Admiral Charles Snyder, said McVay felt the
that he had December 3, 1945
new investigation might produce evidence
favorable to his case and suggested the court-
endangered Washington Navy Yard martial be delayed until that investigation
his ship by Washington, DC
Four months after being pulled from the sea,
was complete. That would be sometime in
mid-December. King first agreed to the delay,
failing to Captain Charles McVay walked into the but quickly reversed himself after learning
courtroom in Building 57 at Washington that the men conducting the investigation
zigzag. Navy Yard. wished to interrogate the leading lights of the
A week-long naval court of inquiry had rec- Pacific War—including admirals so senior
ommended that McVay be tried by court- they had personally accepted the Japanese
martial, the primary charge being he had surrender. On November 12, King ordered the
endangered his ship by failing to zigzag— court-martial to proceed at once. In doing so,
In a highly unusual despite the fact that, with no known subma- he would ensure that the admirals’ testi-
move, the navy rine threat, it was standard procedure to mony—and accounts of the navy’s inaction—
called Hashimoto, cease zigzagging at night when visibility was would not reach the public ear.
a defeated enemy poor. On September 25, Admiral Ernest King
commander,
from Japan to concurred. King also ordered what would December 10, 1945
testify at McVay’s come to be called a “supplemental investiga- Washington, DC
court-martial. tion.” This probe roved far and deep, and the Sub commander Mochitsura Hashimoto
stood atop a run of aircraft loading stairs and
looked out at a foreign land: Washington, DC.
The victor had summoned the vanquished:
the U.S. Navy had called Hashimoto to testify
at McVay’s court-martial. Already, a proces-
sion of witnesses had testified about such
topics as visibility, moonlight, abandoning
ship, and whether the Indianapolis crew knew
of the protracted submarine chase ahead of its
track, while reporters scribbled furiously. But
when Hashimoto arrived, American newspa-
pers began calling him a “star witness.”
McVay’s attorney and his supporters ob-
jected vigorously to an enemy commander tes-
tifying against an American officer. But
Hashimoto ended up testifying that zigzag-
ging would not have saved Indianapolis. Or he
tried to: fatefully, an interpreter mistranslated
his words, giving the opposite impression.
Defense witness Captain Glynn Robert
Donaho, a 15-year submarine veteran, did
testify, initially, that zigzagging would not
save a target from a torpedo strike. With this,
moment um seemed to have sw ung in
McVay’s favor. But after enduring more than
50 sometimes-condescending questions from
prosecutor Captain Thomas J. Ryan, Donaho
AP PHOTO
38 WORLD WAR II
During his court-martial, McVay detailed his
whereabouts directly after the initial explosion
on the night Indianapolis went down.
June 1999
Offices of Senator Bob Smith
Washington, DC
When salvation came, it came 31 years later,
and from an improbable source.
“Look, Bob, I respect you, I’m on the com-
mittee with you, but come on,” Senator John
Warner of Virginia was saying. “This is some
kid’s school project. Is this really worth a
hearing before the Senate Armed Services
Committee?”
Warner’s response was typical of the uphill
battle New Hampshire senator Bob Smith
had been fighting for a year. That’s how long
it had been since he had first spied a line item
certing” for a submarine commander, as it throws off his calculations. on his daily agenda that stopped him cold.
With that, a wrecking ball smashed into the defense. The military “What’s this?” Smith had said, shooting a
court found McVay guilty of hazarding Indy by failing to zigzag. He was quizzical look at his legislative assistant, John
sentenced to lose 200 numbers toward his advancement to commo- Luddy. “‘USS Indianapolis and Hunter Scott?’”
dore—meaning 200 men of McVay’s rank would move ahead of him for “It’s a meeting with the survivors of USS
promotion—with a recommendation for clemency. Indianapolis, sir,” Luddy said.
McVay knew his career was over and carried his fate with stoic res- “Hunter Scott is an eighth grader,” Luddy
ignation. But grief did not fade for the families of the lost, and many added. “He’s a constituent of Joe Scarbor-
undertook a campaign to never let McVay forget it. While their son or ough,” a congressman representing Florida’s
brother or father or husband had disappeared into the deep, McVay, in 1st Congressional District.
their view, had received a slap on the wrist and a lifetime pension. From all the material the 14-year-old had
For 23 years, letters from the families of those lost, like the Joseys collected, one theme emerged. To a man, the
and the Flynns, arrived in his mailbox in envelopes that seemed sealed survivors were still outraged over the treat-
with venom. ment of their captain. Hunter Scott rallied to
If it weren’t for you, my son would be 25 years old today! their cause.
BETTMANN/GETTY IMAGES
If it weren’t for you, I’d be celebrating Christmas with my husband! Also outraged was U.S. Navy Commander
If it weren’t for you, my girls would have a father! Bill Toti, the last captain of a nuclear attack
At first these rants came weekly. Then they tapered down and submarine—also named USS Indianapolis—
came mainly around Christmas and other milestone dates. But they decommissioned the year before. Having
never stopped. extensively studied the navy’s position, Toti
OCTOBER 2018
39
Robert Shaw’s
famous speech in
the 1975 film Jaws
(above) introduced
Indianapolis to a
new generation—
LEFT: SUNSET BOULEVARD/CORBIS VIA GETTY IMAGES; RIGHT: PENSACOLA NEWS JOURNAL, AUG. 29, 2017 © 2017 GANNETT-COMMUNITY PUBLISHING; OPPOSITE: COURTESY OF THE PAUL G. ALLEN PROJECT; MAP BY BRIAN WALKER
including young
Hunter Scott (right),
whose eighth-grade
school project was
the catalyst for
McVay’s exoneration.
found their treatment of the captain offen- night” 54 years earlier, particularly those sur-
sive. At the Pentagon, he worked tirelessly on vivors present in the hearing room.
the survivors’ behalf. He published a new Among the witnesses were the young
analysis of McVay’s role in the Indy disaster in Hunter Scott; survivor Paul Murphy, who
the prestigious journal, Proceedings. As both a argued that the navy had blamed McVay to
friend to the survivors and an aide to the vice avoid admitting its own mistakes; and jour-
chief of naval operations, Toti found him- nalist Dan Kurzman, who spotlighted his dis-
self uniquely positioned to inf luence the covery of a “smoking gun.” Kurzman had
navy’s final word on McVay’s culpability for found a memorandum buried deep in the
the disaster. National Archives. From the former special
To secure the Senate hearing, there was assistant to the navy secretary in 1945, it read:
only one man Smith needed to convince: “The causal nexus between the failure to
Warner, the committee chair. But Warner was zigzag and the loss of the ship appears not to
opposed to reopening the issue. have a solid foundation.”
“The navy’s already decided this,” Warner In the end, however, the man who finally
said. “We’re going to stir up a hornet’s nest persuaded Warner was the same one who sank
that doesn’t need to be stirred up.” Indianapolis. In November 1999 Japanese
“We’re going to listen,” Smith said. “That’s commander Mochitsura Hashimoto of subma-
all we’re going to do. Exoneration comes later, rine I-58, then 90 years old, wrote a letter to
if you agree with it. If you don’t agree with it, the senator expressing his dismay over the fact
we won’t do it.” that McVay was ever tried in court:
After months of wrangling, Smith finally
secured his hearing. i have met many of your brave men
Adapted from
INDIANAPOLIS by w ho s u rv i v e d t h e si n k i ng of
Lynn Vincent and September 14, 1999 indianapolis. i would like to join
Sara Vladic. Copyright Senate Armed Services Committee them in urging that your national
© 2018 by Lynn Washington, DC legislature clear their captain’s
Vincent and Sara
Vladic. Reprinted by Three months later Senator Warner brought name. our peoples have forgiven
permission of Simon & the hearing to order. He praised the courage of each other for that terrible war
Schuster, Inc. the men aboard Indianapolis “that fateful and its consequences. perhaps it is
40 WORLD WAR II
time your peoples forgave captain number 35 popped out of the inky black, as
mcvay for the humiliation of his The sub crisp as the day it was painted.
unjust conviction. commander “That’s it, Paul, we’ve got it. The Indy!”
“Paul” is Microsoft cofounder Paul G.
For Warner, it was the final weight on the wrote a Allen, whose team had found what many
scale. He decided to take the exoneration reso-
lution to the Senate floor. On October 12,
letter argue is the most important American mili-
tary shipwreck to be discovered in a genera-
2000, the measure passed.
House Joint Resolution 48 also passed, and
expressing tion: USS Indianapolis.
Calls rang out across the country to survi-
with stronger exoneration language: that the dismay that vors and family members of those lost at sea.
“American people should now recognize Cap-
tain McVay’s lack of culpability for the tragic
McVay was Their reactions, although varied, had the
same tone—amazement followed by rever-
loss of USS Indianapolis and the lives of the ever tried. ence. For Earl Henry Jr., the 72-year-old son
men who died as a result of the sinking of that of lost-at-sea dentist Lieutenant Commander
vessel”; and that “Captain McVay’s military Earl Henry Sr., emotions unexpectedly broke
record should now reflect that he is exoner- through. After a lifetime of uncertain longing,
ated for the loss of USS Indianapolis and so he finally knew where his father was.
many of her crew.” Back in the Philippine Sea, after many
Finally, Captain Charles McVay’s record dives to the wreck, the ROV’s thrusters rotate
reflected his innocence. it away from the wreck for the last time.
Recalled to its mothership on the surface, the
August 19, 2017 vehicle takes its host of lights, camera, and
The Philippine Sea sensors with it. Once again, darkness envelops
But Indy’s story still had one final chapter. In APPROXIMATE the ship’s proud lines. Leaning just slightly to
SINKING AREA
2017—17 years after McVay’s exoneration—a starboard, it’s as if the ship is cresting a wave,
remotely operated vehicle, or ROV, whirred shrugging off another swell on her way to an
across the seafloor 18,000 feet down. Its important mission. Guns trained toward the
camera resolved an object that had been sky, Indianapolis is ready for all who might
shrouded in darkness for 72 years. The challenge her, forever on patrol. +
Under a remotely
operated vehicle’s
lights, the Indy
emerges from the
ocean’s depths. An
exploration team
discovered the ship
in August 2017.
OCTOBER 2018
41
HEMING
ressed in plain khaki, with an Ameri- bly was only a minute or two, the Germans
D
Jack Hemingway
can flag patch on his right shoulder continued on their way. The officer was again entered the army as an
and no insignia on his left, the young alone. Trembling, he forced himself to collect officer with the military
police (opposite); the
officer stood knee-deep in the stream, his gear and make his way onto the right bank,
eldest son of writer
enjoying the cool water that offset the quickly putting as much distance as he could Ernest Hemingway, he
heat of the midsummer day. Thrilled between himself and the railroad tracks. spent most of his war
to have a chance to fish, he had almost assigned to the CIA
forgotten he was behind German lines in THE SCENE COULD BE FROM one of Ernest precursor, the OSS.
France and that the year was 1944. Soon he Hemingway’s many novels or short stories
was fully absorbed in placing his flies, casting that mixed war and outdoor pursuits, espe-
from right to left and letting each fly float cially hunting and fishing. In “Big Two-
downstream past the trout he could see dart- Hearted River,” to name but one example,
ing this way and that below the surface. Nick Adams retreats to a river on Michigan’s
He heard little apart from the sound of rif- Upper Peninsula to overcome wartime
fles running over the rocks—that is, until trauma by fishing methodically—just as the
marching boots were about 40 yards away, young officer takes leave from war by fishing.
behind him to his left. His heart beat faster But this episode is not fiction. It is taken from
when he saw that they belonged to members of the memoirs of Heming way ’s son, John
a German patrol who were now looking down Hadley Nicanor Hemingway, known as “Jack,”
at him as they marched along a set of railroad and bolstered by his father’s wartime letters
tracks above the limestone bank. Without and once-secret official files.
raising their voices or addressing him directly, These sources show how Jack proved him-
the soldiers seemed to be bantering, probably self, again and again, under great pressure on
about his skill as a fisherman. He prayed that the battlefield. Yet he has been overshadowed
he would not hook a fish before the enemy by his father’s tumultuous life and the charac-
moved on; they would almost certainly stay ters he created: Adams; Frederic Henry, an
for the spectacle and notice the flag on his American in the Italian army in 1917 trying to
shoulder as he worked his catch. escape to neutral Switzerland in A Farewell to
Mercifully, the fish ignored the lures and, Arms; Robert Jordan of For Whom the Bell
after what seemed like an eternity but proba- Tolls, an American guerrilla in a lonely war
ERNEST HEMINGWAY PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION/JOHN F. KENNEDY PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM, BOSTON
OCTOBER 2018
43
against Fascism in Spain in the 1930s. But on track to become a second lieutenant in the
Jack, as a member of the special operations military police (MP) branch.
branch of the Office of Strategic Services Once commissioned, he set sail with his
(OSS), lived a wartime life of danger, excite- platoon of African American MPs for North
ment, and duty as fully as Henry or Jordan— Africa, arriving in Algeria in early 1944 and
and arguably more fully than his father, who settling into a less-than-glamorous routine of
Like his hunted U-boats from his cabin cruiser off the
coast of Cuba in the war’s early days, and was
guarding American installations well away
from the front. Not long after, Gellhorn passed
father, Jack a cross between a freebooter and a war corre-
spondent in France after D-Day.
through on her way to report on the war in
Europe. She arranged for Jack to meet her at
was an Born in 1923 to Ernest and the first of his the temporary home of her friends Duff and
outdoorsman, four wives, Hadley, Jack is familiar to most
Hemingway aficionados as the easygoing
Diana Cooper, glamorous members of the
British ruling class overseas on diplomatic
with a strong
ISTOCK/BARBOL88; OPPOSITE, TOP AND BOTTOM LEFT: ERNEST HEMINGWAY PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION/JOHN F. KENNEDY PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM, BOSTON; BOTTOM RIGHT: CENTRAL PRESS/HULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES
infant “Mr. Bumby” from his father’s memoir assignment. Among the other guests was
of life in Paris in the 1920s, A Moveable Feast. Winston Churchill’s often-troublesome son
interest in Young Jack was equally at home “in his tall Randolph, 33, who had managed to work him-
hunting and, cage bed with his big, wonderful cat named
F. Puss” and on sleigh rides in the company of
self deep into the world of British special
operations, roaming the deserts of North
above all, “a very dark-haired beautiful girl” named Africa and parachuting into occupied Yugo-
fishing. Tiddy at the Schruns, Austria, ski resort the
family visited in 1926.
slavia. Jack listened to Randolph’s stories of
derring-do with awe, and resolved to find the
After Ernest and Hadley separated, Jack American equivalent of British special forces.
continued to live in Paris with his mother, He stumbled upon it by following his nose.
becoming something of a Francophile with a He discovered a nearby camp known for the
firm grasp of the language and a fondness for remarkable food served in its mess, which was
the country. As Ernest’s son, Jack could not run by a French chef rather than a U.S. Army
help also becoming an outdoorsman, with cook. Jack jokingly asked what he had to do to
strong interests in hunting and, above all, get into the unit. The answer was: if you can
fishing. He was a fit young man, with the best teach tactics in French and are willing to
of his attractive parents’ good looks. Heming- accept hazardous assignments, all you have to
way’s third wife, novelist and journalist do is volunteer. And so Jack found himself
Martha Gellhorn, wrote that at 16, the fair- requesting a transfer to this mysterious unit,
haired Jack had “a body like something the the 2677th OSS Regiment (Provisional). Only
Greeks wished for, and to make you cry it is so after he had begun the process of joining did
lovely.” He never has any problems, she con- he learn what the regiment’s initials stood for.
tinued, “because he never thinks about him- On July 5, 1944, Jack was officially seconded
self, but only about trout fishing.” to the Office of Special Services, the home of
American special operations.
WHEN THE JAPANESE ATTACKED Pearl
Harbor on December 7, 1941, Jack, then 18, BY THEN D-DAY, the invasion of Normandy,
was living in Chicago with Hadley and her was past. It was one of the key turning points
second husband, journalist Paul Mowrer. in a long war and put Eisenhower’s forces on
Wanting to live up to his father’s expectations, the road to Paris. But Normandy was hun-
Jack decided to enlist in the Marine Corps. dreds of miles to the north; it was the looming
But both the senior Hemingway and the Mow- invasion of southern France, code-named
rers counseled him against that. The war was “Dragoon,” that was personal to soldiers in
likely to last for some time, they told him; if he North Africa. Conventional units, many of
had some college, he might become an officer them from bases in Algeria and Tunisia,
and, with luck, help liberate the country he would make the landings on the Mediterra-
loved almost as much as his own. Jack entered nean coast of France and fight their way
Dartmouth College, where he took a course in north. OSS detachments from Algeria would
military French, but dropped out a year later support Dragoon by operating behind German
to join the army. Inducted in February 1943, lines even before the landings.
he received no special treatment as the son of Jack learned this in a roundabout way when
a famous author. The luck of the draw put him he was asked to replace an officer on a team
44 WORLD WAR II
Young Jack (center, top) with
half brothers Patrick and Gregory
in Key West, Florida; and at age
three with his father at a Schruns,
Austria, ski resort (bottom, left).
The son of another famous father,
Randolph Churchill (with his
parents, bottom, right), sparked
Jack’s interest in special ops.
of four—two American officers and two sion—scouting for the invasion route. They
On a clear, French radio operators—that would para- were now on their own to find ways to accom-
moonless chute a few miles inland from the southern
coast in Hérault with two overlapping mis-
plish their second mission: work with the
Resistance to fight the Germans.
August sions: scout a possible invasion route west of
night, a B-17 the Rhône River, and work with the French
Resistance. The other officer, a down-to-
THE TWO YOUNG OFFICERS considered
their options and decided to arm any resisters
crew opened earth man named Jim Russell, already had
three combat missions to his credit. Jack, on
ready to fight and—not unlike Robert Jordan
in For Whom The Bell Tolls—proceeded to
a hole in the the other hand, had not ever used a parachute. direct small-scale guerrilla operations,
floor and But he did speak French.
Given Jack’s eagerness, the 2677th decided
including an ambush in which Hemingway
drew his first blood. Firing his Thompson, he
pushed that he would forgo jump training before the mortally wounded a young German soldier
mission. Why risk an injury in training? His (and then arranged for his care until he died
Jack out first jump would be a combat jump—some- the next day). Wise enough to steer clear of
into his war. thing well-nigh unimaginable in today’s
safety-conscious military. Jack added an
the large German formations withdrawing to
the northeast, Hemingway and Russell were
unofficial Hemingway touch: he would jump probably the first uniformed Allied soldiers
into France with a fly-fishing rod in to enter the small city of Montpellier from the
his right hand, along with gold Louis southwest after the Germans had left. On
d’or coins sewn into his clothing, a the morning in late August when tanks from
compass and map case filled with the French II Corps rolled in, its soldiers
trout flies, and an impressive assort- standing in the turrets and waving to the
ment of weapons—a pistol, knife, crowds as if they had gotten there first, Hem-
and Thompson submachine gun. ingway and Russell were sitting in a café on
It was on a clear, moonless night the town square, nursing hangovers and
in mid-August 1944 that the crew of watching the spectacle.
a B-17 bomber opened a hole in the By early September, the pair had reported
floor and pushed Jack out into his to the Strategic Services Section of the Sev-
war. Floating toward the ground, he enth Army, the senior U.S. command in the
had never felt “a greater sense of area. They became part of a larger cohort
jubilation.” The experience was so responsible for a variety of ad hoc OSS mis-
exhilarating he shouted “God sions. One of those missions was to recruit,
damn,” and earned an instant rep- train, and infiltrate line-crossers—innocent-
rimand from Russell. looking locals who could report on what they
In the coming weeks, Jack proved to be saw on the German side of the front while
Jack, center, sits his father’s son but also his own man. In addi- they went about their daily business.
between a downed tion to fishing behind the Germans’ backs, he There was art and science to studying the
U.S. airman and swiftly developed good combat skills. He was terrain, reaching out to friendly units, and
fellow OSS officer
Jim Russell in brave, practical, and level-headed. Like his finding just the right time and place to slip an
Le Bousquet, France; comrade and role model Russell, he seemed agent across. Hemingway was a quick study,
behind them are two to actually enjoy fighting. Unlike his father, learning on the job as summer turned to fall.
French civilians who was not always a good team player, the But, on October 28, 1944, one such mission
recruited as spies. younger Hemingway worked well with others, near a place called Hérival in the Vosges
The two OSS men whatever their rank or nationality. Mountains went very wrong when Heming-
improvised their
way through Jack’s After landing in Hérault, Russell and way, along with two others, stumbled on
first mission after it Hemingway quickly faced and dealt with German mountain troops digging foxholes in
COURTESY OF ANGELA HEMINGWAY CHARLES
went awry. challenges that read like problems for junior a patch of dense forest. Three rounds to his
officers in training. The team’s radios did not right arm and shoulder brought him down
survive the landing, leaving the men out of before he could bring his submachine gun to
touch with their parent command. By the bear. To keep from being shot again, he
time Operation Dragoon got underway on shouted, “Kamerad!”: “Comrade!” in German,
August 15, they had yet to collect any useful meaning “I give up” to every infantryman on
information about the region. This elimi- both sides. He was now a prisoner of war.
nated the need for their most important mis- Perhaps because he was still wearing his
46 WORLD WAR II
Newly liberated residents of Montpellier, France,
welcome M10 tank destroyers of the French 2nd
Dragoon Regiment in late August 1944.
MP branch insignia and did not appear to be The raiders—a 300-man task force of tanks and infantry from the
part of the OSS, or perhaps because he was 4th Armored Division—punched through German lines and traveled
named Hemingway, Jack was at first “very across some 40 miles of enemy territory to reach the camp late on the
well treated and cared for,” in the words of an afternoon of March 27, 1945, crashing through the fence and routing
official report he wrote after his liberation in a handful of overage defenders. Jack and his fellow prisoners now had
1945: “The Germans were lacking in medical three choices: stay put and wait for liberation, hitch a ride with the
supplies but did everything they could for us.” task force, or strike out on their own for U.S. lines. Like Frederic
Years later, he would add that when he first Henry in A Farewell to Arms, the young Hemingway and another
gave his name, rank, and serial number, his officer opted for the last.
captor asked if he had ever been at a ski resort For the next few days, they lived rough while moving west, trying to
in Schruns, Austria. The answer was yes.
When asked the name of his nursemaid, Jack
answered that it had been the beautiful
“Tiddy,” whereupon the German broke into
a grin, saying she was his girlfriend and pro-
TOP: © ROBERT AUCLAIRE/ECPAD/DEFENSE; BOTTOM: KEYSTONE/GETTY IMAGES
OCTOBER 2018
47
avoid other prisoners (who might attract officers. The first was near Nuremberg and the second, Stalag VII-A, at
unwanted attention) and German patrols. Moosburg, on the Isar River in Bavaria. Jack spent the remaining
Sleeping in the open, they were, in the words weeks of the war at the latter, returning to Allied control on April 29,
of Jack’s 1986 memoir, “famished, thirsty, 1945, when the U.S. 14th Armored Division liberated the camp. By then
cold, and stiff” most of the time—digging up his weight had dropped from around 200 to under 150 pounds.
root cellars and even killing an enemy’s pet
rabbit to survive. JACK HEMINGWAY would eventually receive both the Bronze Star
A patrol of nervous, underage German sol- and the French Croix de Guerre. A May 1945 award recommendation
diers eventually surprised them. One pointed in Jack’s file notes the “minor acts of heroism” Lieutenant Hemingway
a Schmeisser machine pistol at Jack’s stom- performed several times. His record in captivity also came in for
ach, his finger trembling on the trigger, and praise. “This officer has weathered experiences in combat…been
could have ended young Hemingway’s life wounded and [taken] prisoner…all without untoward emotional reac-
with a twitch. Jack stood as still as he could, tions,” an OSS evaluation of his fitness for duty in July 1945 found. “He
keeping his hands in the air. Speaking softly, is quite mature despite his youth. His motivation for service in the
he asked in broken German to speak to a non- field is of the highest. His social relations are good; he is frank and
commissioned officer—that is, an adult who engaging in manner. He is not particularly reflective and…will work
could take charge and get the Americans most effectively under direction, but he is resourceful, courageous and
safely behind wire with other prisoners of sufficiently self-assured to be an excellent operations officer.”
war. This is exactly what happened after a When he and his father were reunited late in the spring of 1945,
German sergeant appeared and took charge of Ernest, too, was impressed by the ways that Jack had grown up during
the prisoners, who were shunted to two mas- the war. After spending time with Jack and his two half brothers in
sive camps holding thousands of captured Cuba, the senior Hemingway wrote approvingly of his son’s exploits:
TOP: ERNEST HEMINGWAY PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION/JOHN F. KENNEDY PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM, BOSTON; BOTTOM: BETTMANN ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES
Ernest Hemingway’s younger brother, Leicester, tried but mostly
failed to follow in Ernest’s and Jack’s footsteps. Born in 1915, Leicester
applied in 1941 to join the office of the Coordinator of Information, a
forerunner of the OSS. He was discouraged—perhaps sabotaged—by
Ernest, who told Leicester, then 26, that he was too old for active ser-
vice, besides having a wife and children. (Ernest did not believe
that his own age—42 in the summer of 1941—and a wife and three
children disqualified him from adventures on the battlefield.)
Leicester instead spent much of the war in Washington, DC, with
the Federal Communications Commission before enlisting in the
Army Signal Corps as a filmmaker. When Jack fell into German hands
in 1944, Leicester volunteered to replace his nephew in the OSS, but,
not unlike Ernest, was turned down as unqualified. (In 1943, OSS
headquarters had turned down a recommendation to enlist Ernest,
believing him too independent to submit to military discipline.)
Leicester nevertheless made his way to the front, serving in France
with the 4th Infantry Division—the unit to which Ernest was accredit-
ed as a war correspondent. Ernest had to admit, somewhat grudging-
ly, that the brother he had “always considered a violently useless
character” might have “some decent blood” after all.
A few years later, Leicester wrote a book closely based on his
wartime experiences; The Sound of the Trumpet was not well received
when it appeared in 1953, the year before Ernest won the Nobel Prize
for Literature. After an imaginative but disastrous attempt to create an
independent country, “New Atlantis,” on a coral reef off Jamaica, and
years of suffering from diabetes, Leicester committed suicide in 1982
at the age of 67, joining a sad procession of Hemingways who died at
their own hands—principal among them his father Clarence and
brother Ernest. —Nicholas Reynolds
48 WORLD WAR II
ERNEST HEMINGWAY PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTION/JOHN F. KENNEDY PRESIDENTIAL LIBRARY AND MUSEUM, BOSTON
how Jack had had “some good fights” organiz- members destined for greatness. One was Jack and his father,
ing resistance behind German enemy lines; Ernest’s friend, David K. E. Bruce, the former with Patrick and
how he had refused to allow the German doc- commander of the OSS in Europe, already an Gregory, in Cuba
after the war. Ernest
tors to amputate his wounded arm; how he ambassador. Standing up for Jack’s bride was
Hemingway praised
was ready and willing to deploy again, this Hadley’s friend, the future chef Julia Child. Jack’s wartime
time to the Pacific, where the war against the She had served with the OSS in Washington experience, noting
Japanese was still raging. and Asia and happened to be living in the approvingly the
As Jack’s luck would have it, that war would French capital, where she was absorbing the “good fights” his son
end before he could redeploy and, through the lessons of French cuisine, and was tall enough had had behind
enemy lines.
fall of 1945, he stayed on the East Coast, serv- to serve as matron of honor for the tall and
ing first in Washington, DC, at OSS headquar- lovely bride, Byra Whittlesey.
ters, and then in Virginia, helping to guard With Byra, Jack would raise three daugh-
German prisoners of war. ters, two of them, Mariel and Margaux, des-
Jack Hemingway’s OSS experience marked tined for Hollywood. Jack himself would
him for years. After the war, he found himself comment with bittersweet pride that he was
again in uniform, serving in U.S. Army intel- not himself famous but had a famous father
ligence assignments in Germany, a natural and famous daughters. He could also have
follow-on to his wartime service. When he said, despite the lack of fame, that he had more
married, at Hadley’s Paris apartment in 1949, than measured up to the Hemingway code
the guests would include two former OSS in World War II. +
OCTOBER 2018
49
Ted Holloway, a British
wartime coal miner,
created this image he
titled simply Bevin
Boys. Holloway and
other Bevin Boy artists
were recently featured
in an exhibition at
the Mining Art
Gallery in Bishop
Auckland, England.
FORGOTTEN
ARMY Britain’s “Bevin Boys” spent
their war in the mines
50 WORLD WAR II
y late 1943, Great Britain was facing a
B
critical coal shortage. Since the onset
of World War II, coal mining had been
inexplicably left off the government’s list
of “reserved occupations,” a designation
that sheltered tagged workers from
serving in the armed forces. As a result,
TED HOLLOWAY, COURTESY OF THE AUCKLAND PROJECT
OCTOBER 2018
51
HELP WANTED
Holloway created this sketch (The
TOP: TED HOLLOWAY, COURTESY OF THE AUCKLAND PROJECT; BOTTOM: AP PHOTO; OPPOSITE, TOP: GETTY IMAGES;
Bad Gannen, above), of a miner
struggling with a stuck coal tub, in
1984. Holloway was one of 48,000
18- to 24-year-old men conscripted
to work in Britain’s coal mines—
regardless of their backgrounds or
work experience—from 1943 to 1948
after Labour Minister Ernest Bevin’s
initial appeal for volunteers went
largely unanswered.
52 WORLD WAR II
BEVIN BOYS
LUCK OF THE DRAW
Left: Bevin Boys ready for their
shift at Yorkshire’s Prince of Wales
Colliery in 1944. A weekly drawing
out of a hat determined who served
in the mines. If the final digit of a
call-up’s National Service number
matched the number drawn, that man
was assigned coal mining duty. The
drawings continued for 20 months.
FINAL RESPECTS
Bevin Boy David McClure’s 1947
Tunnel End with Miner (below)
depicts the coal miners’ cramped
conditions. Overlooked for decades,
the Bevin Boys’ wartime service was
officially recognized in 2008, when
Britain’s Ministry of Defence began
awarding Veterans Badges to former
miners or their widows, eventually
presenting more than 5,000 medals.
Highly decorated
German general
Hermann Balck,
here in mid-1944,
sought to prevent
“bigger catastrophes”
while seeing a losing
war to its end.
54 WORLD WAR II
eneral of Panzer Troops Hermann Balck was two field armies and the closest to the sector now under
G
sitting down to dinner at his headquarters in the Himmler’s control—from Army Group G and placed it
northeastern French city of Molsheim on under Oberkommando Oberrhein, which initially had no
December 23, 1944, when he got word that he troops of its own. Himmler did not want to share any anti-
had been fired. Balck, 51, had not been relieved of cipated glory with a Wehrmacht officer of Balck’s stand-
command because of any battlefield failure: the ing, so he next moved to get Balck out of the way.
commander of Army Group G, then fighting Balck wasn’t in limbo for long, though. Nor was he free
the advancing Allies in Alsace, he had spent most of conflicts with Waffen-SS leaders. His longtime friend
of the war battling the Soviets on the Eastern Front, and mentor, Colonel General Heinz Guderian, was then
where he made his reputation as one of Germany’s most the chief of the general staff of the German army. With
dynamic and aggressive panzer commanders. Germany in the final throes of the fight for its life, Gude-
Rather, Balck had run politically afoul of Heinrich rian could not afford to have one of his most talented
Himmler, Nazi Germany’s all-powerful Reichsführer-SS. battlefield commanders sitting idle. Less than 12 hours
The brain behind the Third Reich’s police state and the after being relieved of command, Balck met with Gude-
concentration and death camps of its “Final Solution to rian at the army’s high command headquarters at Zossen,
the Jewish Problem,” Himmler commanded the SS’s just south of Berlin, to be briefed on his next assignment:
armed force, the Waffen-SS. And Balck had a long record assuming command of the Sixth Army and relieving one
of contentious relationships with Waffen-SS units and of its units, the IX SS Mountain Corps, then in Budapest
their politically motivated commanders. and encircled by Soviet troops.
Earlier that month, Hitler had appointed Himmler
commander of the newly created Oberkommando Ober- THE WAR ON THE EASTERN FRONT had been deterio-
rhein—the Upper Rhine High Command. Although rating steadily for Germany ever since summer 1944,
Himmler lacked military expertise—or any military com- when the Red Army’s Operation Bagration completely
ULLSTEIN BILD/THE GRANGER COLLECTION
petence at all—he was now in a position to deal Balck caved in Germany’s Army Group Center and the German
some payback. One of Himmler’s missions was to orga- frontline in the East. As the Germans fell back all along
nize and command Operation Nordwind (“north wind”), the line, Soviet forces entered Hungary from Romania
a large-scale attack scheduled for January 1, 1945, as a that September.
follow-on counteroffensive to the already failing Hungary had been a member of the Axis powers since
Ardennes Offensive. To start with, Himmler detached the late 1940, but was now looking for a way out of the war. On
German Nineteenth Army—the southernmost of Balck’s October 11, 1944, the Hungarian government of Regent
NO-WIN
SITUATION
As the German war effort collapsed in 1945,
a seasoned Wehrmacht commander in Budapest
battled Waffen-SS leaders as well as the Soviets
By David T. Zabecki
OCTOBER 2018
55
would interfere with the Soviet premier’s
vision for the postwar order in Eastern
Europe.
On October 28, Stalin ordered the Red
Army to capture Budapest without delay. The
Soviet 2nd Ukrainian Front, along with the
First and Fourth Romanian armies, con-
verged on Budapest from the east, while the
3rd Ukrainian Front and First Bulgarian
Army enveloped it from the south. The two
Soviet fronts had 54 rifle divisions, five mech-
anized corps, and three tank corps. The total
strength was more than 719,000 troops, with
170,000 committed to the initial assault
against the city.
Red Army troops reached the outskirts of
Miklós Horthy signed a preliminary Pest on November 3. Momentum faltered
armistice agreement with the Soviets in after that, but by December 25, 1944, the Sovi-
Moscow. In response the German army, ets had Budapest—and the Axis troops there—
along with Hungarian troops of a just- completely surrounded.
formed breakaway government of loyal-
ists to Germany, occupied the capital of THAT WAS THE DAY Balck arrived in Hun-
Germany’s wayward ally. gary to assume his new command—just two
Budapest, which stretches along both days after having been relieved of his previous
sides of the Danube River, originated position. Virtually all of Budapest’s civilian
from the 1873 merger of the cities of population of more than one million was
Buda, on the steeply hilly west bank, and trapped in the city. During the first days of
Balck’s nemesis, Pest, on the flat east bank. Hitler ordered the the siege, the city’s gas, water, and electric-
Heinrich Himmler Wehrmacht to hold Budapest and Hungary at ity supply systems failed. Left with only the
(top), addresses all costs; Germany desperately needed Hun- barest means of sustenance, its residents were
Waffen-SS troops. gary’s agriculture and industry, and the forced to shelter in cellars against the effects
During the Red Führer wanted to use Budapest as the base for of air and artillery attacks. Medical services
Army’s Siege of a future counterattack against the Red Army. were almost nonexistent.
Budapest, an SS unit
under the command The commander of German forces in Buda- The IX SS Mountain Corps’ Pfeffer-Wild-
of Karl Pfeffer- pest was SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Pfeffer- enbruch planned a breakout for December
Wildenbruch (above) Wildenbruch, 56, who previously had com- 28, before the Soviet encirclement had a
became trapped manded the SS’s police division. His IX SS chance to harden. Hitler, however, ordered the
TOP: BUNDESARCHIV BILD 183-J27809 PHOTO HERMANN EGE; BOTTOM: ULLSTEIN BILD VIA GETTY IMAGES
there; Balck led the Mountain Corps was holding Budapest with German garrison to stand fast.
relief operation.
the weak 8th and 22nd SS Cavalry divisions To Balck, this sounded all too familiar. The
Opposite: Hungarian
civilians attempt to and elements of the 13th Panzer Division, the army he now commanded, Sixth Army, had
go about daily 60th Panzergrenadier Division, and the 271st been completely reformed after having been
activities as the Volksgrenadier Division. The Hungarian I annihilated at Stalingrad in early 1943. Sur-
formerly beautiful Corps, under the command of a former rounded and cut off by the Soviets in late 1942,
capital city burns. instructor of German at Hungary’s Ludovika Sixth Army might have had a chance to escape
Military Academy, General Iván Hindy, 54, destruction by breaking out to the west, where
fought alongside them. Altogether, the Axis it could have linked up with other German
had some 79,000 troops defending the city. forces. However, Hitler refused to authorize
Joseph Stalin’s objective was to keep Hun- the move, sealing Sixth Army’s fate.
gary split from the Axis alliance so he could Balck likened the situation he had just
expand the Soviets’ sphere of influence by inherited to a “new Stalingrad.” He was in an
imposing a Communist–style sociopolitical ironic position. In December 1942, as the com-
system on the country. Hungary had tactical mander of the 11th Panzer Division, he had
advantages as well; holding it would short- played a key role in the failed attempt to break
circuit British contingency plans to deploy through to Stalingrad and relieve Sixth Army.
forces to the Adriatic in late 1944, which Now a little more than two years later, as
56 WORLD WAR II
commander of Sixth Army, he was once more simply told his staff to do it without asking
leading a near-impossible relief operation. permission from anyone—least of all Hitler. Virtually
Balck also assumed operational control of
the Hungarian Third Army, making him the
Balck knew he was facing a no-win situa-
tion. “Looking at the big picture, I understood
all of
commander of a provisional army group. completely at this point that after our Budapest’s
Including the 79,000 Axis forces encircled in
the city, Balck’s initial force consisted of four
Ardennes Offensive failed, the war was lost,”
he later wrote. “Now came the most difficult
civilian
German and four Hungarian infantry divi-
sions and seven German panzer divisions.
of all leadership challenges in war—ending it
without bigger catastrophes.”
population of
Deployed along a front ranging 50 miles Balck’s first objective was to stabilize his more than
southwest of Budapest to 50 miles northwest
of it in present-day Slovakia, Balck had some
frontlines. Not only was Budapest completely
surrounded, the Sixth Army’s LVII Panzer
one million
180,000 troops, about 102,000 of which were Corps, northwest of the city, was almost com- was trapped
committed to the attempted breakthrough of pletely encircled by the 2nd Ukrainian Front.
the Soviet encirclement. By December 31, Balck had managed to with-
in the city.
Balck had reviewed the situation map draw the corps back to the west with very few
during his meeting with Guderian and losses and into more defensible positions.
noticed that the 3rd and 6th Panzer divisions With his front stabilized, he was ready to try
were deployed illogically—with all their to relieve Budapest itself.
armored elements south of the Danube,
facing Budapest, and their infantry and non- BALCK LAUNCHED the relief effort, Opera-
motorized elements north of the river. “This tion Konrad, on January 1, 1945. The 96th
TASS/PHOTO BY YEVGENY KHALDEI
must have been done by a real armor expert,” Infantry Division crossed the ice-choked
he sarcastically remarked at the time. Once Danube and advanced some 15 miles east
in Hungary, he issued orders to regroup the along the north bank, almost as far as the
two divisions. When the Sixth Army chief of city of Esztergom, northwest of Budapest.
staff told Balck the existing deployment was That secured the German left flank for the
the result of a direct Führer order, Balck main attack toward Budapest along the Dan-
OCTOBER 2018
57
Red Army troops fight their way to Budapest
(top). In the city, German SS troops aim a 75mm
Pak 40 antitank gun at the invaders (center). At
Székesfehérvár (bottom), a Soviet tank—a Lend-
Lease U.S. M4 Sherman—and its crew lie dead.
58 WORLD WAR II
north of the Danube. Hitler tried to interfere The SS commander wanted to continue
by issuing direct orders on how the division pressing the Konrad II attack. But as
should attack, but Guderian and Balck largely Balck later noted: “In this case, Hitler’s
ignored him. By January 12, the situation intervention was appropriate.”
north of the Danube was again stabilized. After taking five days to redeploy
over mountain roads and through snow-
WHILE THE FIGHTING continued there, on drifts, IV SS Panzer Corps reached its
January 7, the Germans launched a second assembly areas near Lake Balaton. The
relief attempt, Operation Konrad II, to exploit ambitious Konrad III started on Janu-
the gains from the first effort. Group Breith, ary 18: IV SS Panzer Corps made the
under the command of General of Panzer main attack directly toward the east,
Troops Hermann Breith and consisting of the supported on its left flank by the III
I Cavalry Corps and III Panzer Corps, attacked Panzer Corps and on its right by the
the Soviets 40 miles southwest of Budapest at Hungarian Third Army. The Germans,
the city of Székesfehérvár to relieve the pres- rather than simply breaking through to
sure against IV SS Panzer Corps’ right flank. Budapest, intended to surround and
On January 9, I Cavalry Corps’ panzer units destroy 10 Soviet divisions in the vicinity of
Herbert Gille, here
knocked out 74 Soviet tanks in a battle a few Székesfehérvár. They had a slight advantage,
SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG PHOTO/ALAMY; MAPS BY BRIAN WALKER; OPPOSITE FROM TOP: TASS/GETTY IMAGES; INSTITUTE AND MUSEUM OF MILITARY HISTORY, BUDA CASTLE; SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG PHOTO/ALAMY
in 1943, commanded
miles north of the city. That allowed Gille to with 376 armored fighting vehicles to the the IV SS Panzer
shift his main effort to his left flank farther Soviet Fourth Guards Army’s 250. Corps, which led the
north, for a renewed attack through the posi- The Soviets were caught completely by sur- German attack. Gille
tions of the 711th Infantry Division, southeast prise. Attacking on the left, the 1st Panzer was as decorated
as Balck, but Balck
of Esztergom. Two days later, lead elements of Division thrust south around Székesfehérvár,
considered him “a
his IV SS Panzer Corps reached Pilisszent- then pivoted north toward Budapest. In the strong egocentric
kereszt, a village 10 miles southeast of Eszter- center, the 3rd and 5th SS Panzer divisions type” and the two
gom, en route to Budapest. advanced 40 miles in 48 hours, reaching the leaders clashed.
Hitler, however, had lost faith in Konrad II. Danube south of Budapest by nightfall on the
With considerable justification, he feared that 19th. The panzers then turned north along the
IV SS Panzer Corps was vulnerable to encir- river, reporting to Sixth Army headquarters
clement by the Soviet 5th Guards Cavalry the destruction of 60 Soviet tanks and self-
Corps, assembled just northwest of Budapest. propelled guns. There was, however, no evi-
The Führer ordered the redeployment of dence to support the claim and, immediately
Gille’s corps to the northern end of Lake Bala- after the battle, Balck was unable to locate any
ton—an enormous freshwater lake 60 miles trace of the destroyed tanks and guns. Much
southwest of Budapest—in preparation for later, a Luftwaffe liaison officer to the IV SS
what would become Operation Konrad III. Panzer Corps confirmed to Balck that the
BUDAPEST
H U N G A R Y GERMAN LAKE
VELENCE
LAKE VELENCE ATTACK
SZÉKESFEHÉRVÁR
SOVIET OCCUPIED TERRITORY
LAKE BALATON LAKE BALATON
OCTOBER 2018
59
report had been a complete lie: an effort to halfway from Székesfehérvár to the Danube—on January 22. In just
inflate the Waffen-SS’s combat record. five days of operations, the Germans had taken more than 150 square
The situation in Budapest, meanwhile, miles of territory. But the Soviet 1st Guards Mechanized Corps threat-
had continued to deteriorate. On January 17, ened the left flank of the IV SS Panzer Corps’ northward thrust.
Pfeffer-Wildenbruch started evacuating Pest,
crossing to the hilly Buda side of the river. Sol- BALCK WAS FACED with a difficult decision. The IV SS Panzer Corps’
diers and civilians were slaughtered and all Gille wanted to keep driving straight toward Budapest—a plausible
manner of carts and vehicles were destroyed scenario, with little to his immediate front. But while penetrating to
as they crossed the Danube bridges under con- Budapest was one thing, holding open an evacuation corridor was
tinuous raking fire from the Soviets. By the another entirely. Without sufficient infantry forces, Balck knew that
FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG PHOTO/ALAMY; INSTITUTE AND MUSEUM OF MILITARY HISTORY, BUDA CASTLE (LAST TWO); MAP BY BRIAN WALKER
next day, the Soviets had control of Pest; just Gille’s corps would be marching into a trap unless the strong Soviet
before dawn, the Axis defenders blew up all of force on his left was eliminated first. Otherwise, the Germans would
Budapest’s bridges, leaving many Germans run a high risk of having not just one but two SS corps entrapped in the
and Hungarians still stranded on the Pest side. city. But, as Balck put it, “Gille was incapable of understanding this.”
For the next three days, Balck’s forces Balck prohibited the narrow thrust, but the clash over tactics
advanced toward Budapest, taking Székes- between Black and an outraged Gille cost the Germans a full day. By the
fehérvár and reaching Lake Velence—about time the attack resumed on a broader front on January 25, the Soviets
had brought up their 5th Guards Cavalry Corps—with 100 tanks and
360 artillery pieces—against the IV SS Panzer Corps’ right flank.
KONRAD III TERRITORY Meanwhile, Soviet forces that had been pushed to the south during
the initial German assault regrouped, attacking and virtually destroy-
ing the Hungarian Third Army and exposing Balck’s entire right flank.
H U N G A R Y On January 27, the 3rd Ukrainian Front joined the fray, with three
BUDAPEST mechanized and one rifle corps. Despite the Soviets’ overwhelming
force superiority, their attack was poorly coordinated and they suf-
GERMAN
ATTACK SOVIET fered huge losses at the hands of the Germans. In the end, though, the
COUNTERATTACK weight of numbers proved decisive, as the Soviet Fifty-seventh Shock
LAKE VELENCE
Army also attacked the German right flank from south of Lake Bala-
SZÉKESFEHÉRVÁR ton. By February 1, the Soviets had retaken almost all the ground the
GERMAN Germans gained during Konrad III.
ATTACK That day, Hitler awarded Karl Pfeffer-Wildenbruch the Oak Leaves
LAKE
FARTHEST to the Knight’s Cross of the Iron Cross in the hope it would encourage
BALATON GERMAN him to hold out in Budapest, where savage fighting continued. The
ADVANCE
German and Hungarian defenders were by then compressed into little
more than a square mile, centered on Buda’s Castle Hill. However,
DANUBE
RIVER Pfeffer-Wildenbruch at last had had enough and on February 11 defied
SOVIET
COUNTERATTACK the Führer by attempting to break out with his 28,000 surviving
troops, moving in three waves. The lead echelon achieved some
60 WORLD WAR II
element of surprise and about 800 broke strenuously, arguing that it could not possibly As the Soviets gained
through and escaped. But the Red Army succeed and would only further grind down control of the city,
crushed the two follow-on echelons and cap- the remaining German forces in the East. Axis defenders
destroyed its bridges
tured Pfeffer-Wildenbruch and the Hungar- Herbert Gille and all six Waffen-SS divisional (opposite, far left). By
ian I Corps’ Iván Hindy. (The Hungarian commanders supported it. February 14, 1945,
Communist government executed Hindy for The main attacking force was the weak the battle was over;
trea son in 1946; P fef fer-Wildenbr uch and gutted Sixth SS Panzer Army, led by SS- captured German
remained a prisoner in the Soviet Union until Oberstgruppenführer Josef “Sepp” Dietrich— vehicles line a
1955 and died in a traffic accident in 1971.) an officer whose main claim to high command Budapest street
(center) and German
was that he had once been Hitler’s chauffeur soldiers surrender
THE SIEGE OF BUDAPEST lasted 108 days, and bodyguard. Balck’s Sixth Army received (above). Yet for
with the city completely surrounded for 51 of orders to support Dietrich on his right flank. Budapest, the situation
them. The Soviets won the battle, but at a high And, as Balck predicted, Spring Awakening grew still more dire,
cost, sustaining half of all casualties they suf- failed miserably. “When six Waffen-SS divi- as Soviet troops
brutalized the city
fered during the entire Hungarian Campaign. sions were committed as an integrated whole,
and its population.
Casualty figures vary widely, but between it was a catastrophe waiting to happen,” Balck
November 3, 1944, and February 11, 1945, Soviet wrote, “especially when so many of the SS
and Romanian casualties—including those senior leaders had so little understanding of
fighting inside the city—most likely totaled operational issues and the bigger picture.”
about 280,000, with 70,000 killed. German and The last German forces were pushed out of
Hungarian casualties came to 137,000, with
47,000 of those killed. Approximately 105,000
Hungary on April 4, 1945, with Balck’s Sixth
Army retreating west toward Vienna and
Balck was
Hungarian civilians also died in Budapest. beyond. His primary objective then became bitter about
Balck was bitter about the loss. As he later
commented, “Our operations were made
evading the Soviets and surrendering to the
American forces approaching from the west.
the loss.
much more difficult by the fact that each
major Waffen-SS unit had a direct telephone
On May 9, 1945, Balck surrendered the bulk
of his Sixth Army in Kirchdorf, Austria, to the
One more
line to Himmler, who routinely interfered in commander of the U.S. 80th Infantry Divi- desperate
everything and who probably wanted to make
Gille the savior of Budapest.”
sion. A POW until 1947, Balck in later years
wrote a memoir of his war experience, which
offensive
One more desperate offensive was to come, was published in Germany in the early 1980s was to come,
though. Operation Spring Awakening was the and resounds with bile over the conduct of the
last major attack the Wehrmacht conducted final campaigns and the harmful influence of
though.
during World War II—and the most hopeless political leaders in military matters. The
crapshoot of all Germany’s final offensives. skilled field commander, who died in 1982 just
Conducted from March 6–16, 1945, Spring shy of his 89th birthday, summed up his role
Awakening’s objective was to secure oil fields in one sentence: “I just had to straighten out
southwest of Lake Balaton. Balck opposed it the consequences.” +
OCTOBER 2018
61
WEAPONS MANUAL AMERICA’S M2-2 FLAMETHROWER
ILLUSTRATION BY JIM LAURIER
FIRE AT WILL
TWIN TANKS
The M2-2’s dual tanks,
positioned on either
side of a pressure tank,
merged into a single fuel
reservoir that contained
four gallons of either
liquid fuel—most
effective at point-blank
range—or a thickened
fuel (napalm) that
doubled the weapon’s
firing range from about
20 to 40 yards.
LEFT TO LOOSEN
Turning the pressure
tank valve handle caused
the tank to release
compressed air (or
nitrogen) into the fuel
reservoir, which forced
fuel through the hose and
into the firing wand. This
process emitted a telltale
hissing noise—operators
were warned to turn the
propellant on well before
approaching their target.
62
AMERICAN M2-2
FLAMETHROWER
Weight (when full): 70 lb /
Fuel capacity: 4 gal / Range:
20–40 yd / Firing duration:
7–10 secs / The M2-2 proved
doubly effective against
dug-in Japanese troops, as
the gun produced lethal CO
fumes that seeped through
the enemy bunkers.
THE COMPETITION
BRITISH PORTABLE,
NO. 2 “LIFEBUOY”
FLAMETHROWER
Flamethrower in Okinawa, 1945 Weight (when full): 68 lb /
Fuel capacity: 4.8 gal / Range:
Up to 40 yd / Firing duration:
FEW WEAPONS EVOKE A MORE VISCERAL REACTION than the 7–10 secs / The nickname
flamethrower, which manages to retain an aura of coolness while derived from its round fuel
tank, the British “Lifebuoy”
simultaneously eliciting almost primal terror. The first flamethrow- was used in the European
ers, developed by Germany early in the 20th century, targeted French Theater from D-Day until the
and British trench fighters during World War I. The United States end of the war.
came up with its own version at the beginning of World War II, but GERMAN
the first model, the M1, was notoriously unreliable—operators often FLAMMENWERFER41
resorted to carrying backup ignition sources like cigarette lighters to FLAMETHROWER
Weight (when full): 45 lb /
ensure the flame actually lit. After modifications, in 1943 the army
Fuel capacity: 1.8 gal / Range:
rolled out the M2-2, which became the standard flamethrower for Up to 35 yd / Firing duration:
the rest of the war. It was used to great effect in the Pacific against 4–6 secs / Germany’s M41,
dug-in Japanese defensive positions. Flamethrowing tanks devel- the lightest World War II
flamethrower, proved
oped in 1944–45 soon became the preferred weapon in the class, unreliable during the Eastern
and the prevalence of the portable versions faded. —Larry Porges Front‘s cold winters.
CREATIVE SPARK
The flamethrower’s
SAFETY CHECK nozzle contained five
To shoot, the operator had to fuel-igniting incendiary
first pull the trigger and then cartridges that rotated
simultaneously squeeze both with each trigger pull, like
the safety and valve lever the cylinder in a revolver.
located on either side of the The cartridges were a
lower grip. Despite this built-in major upgrade from the
safety system, the M2-2 M1’s spark-plug ignition
training manual wisely advised system that often failed
operators to “keep the gun in the field.
pointed away from friendly
personnel at all times.”
ANDREY DANILOVICH/ISTOCK PHOTO; TOP INSET COURTESY OF THE AUTHOR; BOTTOM INSET: COURTESY OF MONICA YAMAMOTO
im Cushing was tearing up the town around the U.S. for a few years, picking up odd
The lives
J
again. The 30-year-old Mexican jobs—barnstorming parachutist, skyscraper
American miner and his friend had
drunkenly stumbled up to a cart
riveter, commercial diver. Then in 1932 he
sailed for the Philippines to try his luck at the
of both
driver in northern Mindanao in the family business—mining. brothers
Philippines and offered him a huge
tip if he could deliver them to their
Jim was tall and husky, and reticent as a
youth. He was always proud of being the “sev-
got a lot
rooms on the second floor of the Surigao City enth son of a seventh son,” which he believed more
Hotel. Despite loud cries of encouragement meant he would be lucky in life. But things
from the two drunks in English, Spanish, and started off slowly for him. He muddled along in serious on
a local Filipino dialect, the horse and driver’s
attempts to climb the steps failed. Fearing
school, was a middling athlete, and, after grad-
uating, went to work making tires for the Good-
December
they would be held responsible if the animal year company. In 1934 Jim tired of rubber and 8, 1941.
broke a leg, the men called a halt to the spec- decided to seek his fortune in the Philippines,
tacle. It was the dawn of 1940 and Jim’s intem- too. He soon found work as a mining mechanic
perate lifestyle suited him just fine. As he later for Mambulao Consolidated in southern
wrote, “I was not setting the world on fire.” Luzon, where he proved adept at handling
About the same time, 700 miles to the north, explosives. In late 1940 he met a girl from
Jim’s older brother Walt, 33, was busy working Leyte, fell in love, and married her, settling
the small gold mine he and two partners open- down and seeming to take life more seriously.
ed in Abra, a province in northern Luzon. Walt
had gone through his own wild period after his THE LIVES OF BOTH BROTHERS got a lot
wife left him 1937. Deep in despair, he blew all more serious on December 8, 1941. While Jim
his savings on a nine-month bender, and in one first reacted to the Japanese attack by con-
dark moment signed up for the French Foreign templating an escape to Australia, Walt was
Legion. Friends finally dissuaded his dissolu- determined to defend his island home of the
tion, got him back on his feet, and back into last 10 years. When he got word two days later
mining. Once again he felt settled and looked that 2,000 Japanese troops had landed on
forward to a bright future. Luzon at nearby Vigan, Walt eagerly headed to
The Japanese invasion of the Philippines the coast to reconnoiter. There, he tried to
the following year changed everything for the persuade a local unit of the Philippine Army to
brothers. Always aggressive, Walt jumped help him repel the Japanese invaders. Instead,
right into the fray, while Jim took on a wait- they denounced him as a “fifth columnist”—a
and-see attitude. But destiny had something foreigner working secretly with the enemy for
altogether different in store for each of them. his own gain—and sent him away.
Over the next four years, the guerrilla exploits Undeterred, Walt soon inspired 200 Filipi-
of Walt and Jim Cushing would become the nos to join him in fighting the Japanese. On
stuff of legend. January 18, 1942, he undertook his first big
operation, leading his volunteers on an am-
THE BOYS WERE AMONG the 10 children bush against a 10-truck convoy. During the
born in Mexico to silver miner George Cush- four-hour firefight that followed, Walt ran up OPPOSITE TOP: GETTY IMAGES; BOTTOM: HULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGES
ing and his Spanish Mexican wife, Simona. and down the highway, a .45-caliber pistol in
They inherited the light brown complexion of each hand, sticks of dynamite bulging from
their mother, the broad grin of their father, his pockets, shouting, “Give it to ’em boys!”
and grew up fluent in English and Spanish. In When it was over, more than 60 enemy sol-
1910 the Mexican Revolution tore apart the diers lay dead. He led more than 15 ambushes
Cushing family’s prosperous life, forcing that spring, blowing bridges as he went.
them to move to the safety of El Paso, Texas. But ultimately Walt’s efforts proved futile.
Walt was the runt, which may explain his The Japanese quickly overran northern
drive to succeed. At only five foot six and 125 Luzon, then turned their attention to Bataan
pounds, he was a star gymnast, football quar- and Corregidor. While the battles raged, Presi-
terback, soccer forward, and an Eagle Scout. dent Franklin D. Roosevelt ordered General
Though offered a place at Notre Dame, Walt Douglas MacArthur, commander in chief of
decided he wanted to see the world. He kicked the U.S. Army Forces in the Far East, to evacu-
66 WORLD WAR II
In 1942 Japanese soldiers storm through
Philippine oil fields set ablaze by retreating
American troops (top), and haul down an
American flag on Corregidor (bottom).
OCTOBER 2018
67
VIGAN
SEA
LUZON
PHILIPPINES
MANILA
CEBU
LEYTE
TABUNAN
CEBU
Filipino guerrillas scour NEGROS CITY
houses in Leyte for signs of
the enemy. On Luzon, 200 TOLEDO
such volunteers joined a
guerrilla force (below) led MILES MINDANAO
by Walt Cushing. 0 100
they gave him a proper funeral and burial at a churchyard. who dared resist. After the Japanese took
Cebu, resistance movements began springing
IT’S NOT CLEAR WHEN JIM LEARNED of his brother’s death; they up across the island. Some had 50 men. Some
probably hadn’t seen each other for a year or more. But by the time had 200. Each was a distinct entity. But in
Walt died on Luzon, Jim had become deeply entangled in his own guer- order to be a truly effective guerrilla force,
rilla resistance movement on the nearby island of Cebu. The shooting unity was a necessity. So local civic leaders in
war didn’t arrive there until April 10, 1942, when 12,000 Japanese southern Cebu approached Jim about bring-
troops stormed ashore at three separate beaches. As the enemy pushed ing order out of chaos by assuming the role of
toward Cebu City, besieged American commanders knew they had overall commander. They liked his manner,
68 WORLD WAR II
his fortitude, and hoped he could bring the dis- bane, Australia, which would give
parate players together. After mulling it over, in the CAC direct contact with General
late August 1942, Jim accepted the challenge. Headquarters (GHQ), as well as
While Jim gathered his men, another Amer- access to much-needed supplies.
ican, 35-year-old Harry Fenton—the prewar Returning to Cebu in November,
host of a popular local radio amateur hour who Jim learned that his men had exe-
mixed music with virulent anti-Japanese cuted Fenton, whose increasing
harangues—was also building up a force in paranoia and erratic violent behav-
northern Cebu. In October 1942 Fenton ior had sparked a mutiny. Furious
invited Cushing to join him as co-commander and shaken, sick in body and spirit,
of the Cebu Area Command (CAC). “I took Jim retreated to his hut for several
over the combat and tactics,” Cushing wrote. weeks. He came out of his depres-
“Harry took the job of organization.” They sion in late December 1943, and
located their headquarters near the tiny barrio firmly retook control of the CAC.
of Tabunan—an isolated, verdant valley barely The long-sought recognition
11 air miles from the center of Cebu City, and from MacArthur came on January
surrounded by steep, rocky mountains. 22, 1944. Jim Cushing was pro-
That November, Jim led his guerrillas on moted to lieutenant colonel and
the first of a series of attacks on enemy out- appointed sole commander of the
posts. During the raid on a garrison in the CAC, 8th Military District, U.S.
coastal city of Toledo, he was commanding Army Forces in the Far East. The following Walt, here circa
the furious action when he abruptly arose to month, a U.S. Navy submarine delivered to 1940, proved a fierce
move in for a clearer view. Moments later a Jim’s guerrilla unit its first load of supplies— fighter—one willing
mortar round made a direct hit on the foxhole guns, ammunition, medicine, and a long- to make the kind of
sacrifices that
he had just vacated, killing two men. It seemed range radio capable of reaching Brisbane. Jim
brought him the
the “luck of the seventh son” was with him felt his luck was holding steady. admiration of even
that morning. Cebuanos, buoyed by the the Japanese.
attacks, rained praise upon Jim Cushing. ON APRIL 8, 1944, Jim got word that one of
The CAC’s co-command structure worked his volunteer units would soon arrive at his
fine at first, but trouble was brewing. While camp with 10 Japanese prisoners who had
Jim was generally well liked and respected by survived a seaplane crash just off the coast.
the people of Cebu, Fenton was secretive, sus- He immediately transmitted the news to Bris-
picious, and feared by his own men. That fear bane, adding that “Constant enemy pressure
stemmed from his paranoid campaign to rid
the country of “spies” and “traitors.” His diary
makes this situation very precarious.” That
was putting it mildly.
As the
contains many entries like these: “3 spies exe- One of the captives turned out to be a rear enemy
cuted yesterday,” “Two executions today,” admiral in the Imperial Japanese Navy,
“Lucy Miller executed today.” His behavior Shigeru Fukudome, chief of staff to Combined
closed in,
did not sit well with the guerrillas, who were
sometimes the target of his conspiracies.
Fleet’s commander in chief, Admiral Mineichi
Koga. The two officers were en route from
Walt killed
In mid-1943, with the enemy in pursuit, Palau to Mindanao on separate aircraft; Koga’s six of them—
Jim disguised himself as a priest and went
over to neighboring Negros Island to meet
plane also went down when both planes ran
into a tropical storm. Koga did not survive.
then turned
with Major Jesus Villamor, a Philippine Air Jim had a real dilemma on his hands. He his last
Force officer sent in by General MacArthur to knew that GHQ was anxious to get the prison-
assess the resistance movements in the ers to Australia for interrogation. But the Jap- bullet on
Visayas. When he arrived, the major, a nation-
al hero in his own right, did not know what
anese army knew that Jim’s men were holding
Fukudome and began a frantic search. They
himself.
to make of Jim. “From the shadows there swept through barrios, burning huts and kill-
emerged a man dressed curiously in the flow- ing men, women, and children in an effort to
COURTESY OF THE AUTHOR
ing black robes of a priest,” he later wrote. “He force Jim to release the admiral. On April 9, as
looked so frail. I almost felt a surge of disap- troops neared Tabunan, Jim moved his head-
pointment. Was this the great Cushing?” Still quarters and prisoners deeper into the jungle.
Villamor listened patiently to Jim’s pleas for Along the way, an enemy plane spotted and
official recognition from MacArthur in Bris- strafed his group, killing three rebels. In a
OCTOBER 2018
69
running gun battle across Tupas Ridge, the remaining guerrillas made “Ops No. 73.” Called the “Z Plan,” it revealed a
their escape. That night, Jim made a momentous decision to protect his detailed blueprint for the Japanese defense of
people—his “Cebu patriots,” he called them—and hand over Fukudome. the Mariana Islands, by bringing “to bear the
He sent a message to the Japanese commander, Lieutenant Colonel combined maximum strength of all our forces
Seiiti Ohnisi, saying he would release his prisoners only “on condition to meet and destroy the enemy.” That meant
that your soldiers will stop the killing of innocent civilians.” In a return all land- and sea-based aircraft would be de-
note, Ohnisi agreed—adding “the measure taken by you is a warrior like ployed to seek out and crush the American
and admirable action. I expect to see you again in the battlefield some- fleet. The force available to the Japanese was
day.” Like his brother Walt, Jim had won the admiration of his adver- formidable: 1,100 planes and 88 warships.
sary. The next morning, the admiral and his party were freed. Using this insight into Japanese strategy,
Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, commander
ALTHOUGH JIM HAD GIVEN UP valuable prisoners, his luck would of the Fifth Fleet, successfully derailed their
reward him yet again. In the midst of the chaotic exchange, a native plan during the Allied invasion of Saipan, on
shopkeeper delivered to Jim a red leather portfolio that had been float- June 15, and the epic Battle of the Philippine
ing in the sea not far from Fukudome’s plane crash site. Inside were Sea, four days later. The enemy lost three car-
official-looking documents. Guessing they might be important, Jim riers, two oilers, and, in what came to be
informed GHQ that he still had “papers and field orders.” That caught known as the “Great Marianas Turkey Shoot,”
their attention. On his own initiative Jim sealed the papers in empty nearly 700 aircraft along with their well-
mortar shells and sent them to the guerrilla commander on Negros. trained pilots, effectively ending Japan’s abil-
On May 11, 1944, the submarine USS Crevalle was diverted from its ity to wage offensive air operations. Writing
regular war patrol to pick up the cache. The vessel surfaced off the about the effect the Z Plan had on the outcome
southwest coast of Negros and took aboard the mortar shells, as well as of the war, National Archives archivist Greg
41 Americans who had been stuck on the island since the start of the Bradsher said, “the exploitation of the Z Plan
war. On May 21 the documents reached Allied translators in Brisbane. was one of the greatest single intelligence
What emerged was Admiral Koga’s secret Combined Fleet orders— feats of the war in the Southwest Pacific Area.”
A native
shopkeeper
delivered
to Jim a
red leather
portfolio that
had been
floating in
the sea.
70 WORLD WAR II
ON OCTOBER 20, 1944, General MacArthur In 1949 Walt ’s remains were
fulfilled his promise to return to the Philip- moved from their Philippines
pines when he stepped ashore on Leyte. His burial site to the Fort Rosecrans
arrival boosted the spirits of Cebuanos hoping National Cemetery in San Diego,
for a quick end to their suffering. While they where family members still visit
waited, Jim continued his fight, inflicting his grave.
heavy casualties on the enemy. In March 1945, Jim Cushing had greatness thrust upon After the war, Jim
23rd “Americal” Infantry Division troops him. Before the war he was just another mid- faded into obscurity.
finally liberated the island. dling mining engineer with a fondness for But Filipinos honored
him upon his death
In the course of the war, CAC’s 8,700 guer- drink. When war came he, like his brother, with a military sendoff
rillas chalked up quite a record. In 218 orga- transitioned into a guerrilla leader of extraor- and burial at the
nized encounters, they killed more than dinary repute. Descriptions of the seventh Heroes Cemetery
10,000 Japanese and tied down thousands brother’s deeds echo those of the fifth—that in Manila.
more in occupation duties. In 1945 the army he was, according to his fellow guerrillas,
awarded Jim Cushing the Distinguished Ser- “worshipped by his soldiers, and too brave for
vice Cross, the United States’ second-highest his own good.”
valor medal. His citation noted that his “cour- With the war won, Jim’s greatness quickly
age and resourcefulness enabled him to faded. In about 1950 he moved down to Pala-
inspire in the people of Cebu a will to resist.” wan, in the southwest Philippines, in an
The next year, he also received a Silver Star attempt to restart his moribund mining
and a Bronze Star. The Philippine govern- career, but it didn’t work out. He ended up
ment, too, awarded Jim, with the Distin- living in poverty and obscurity, dependent
guished Ser vice Star. His brother Walt upon handouts from old friends.
posthumously received the Distinguished On August 26, 1963, Jim suffered a fatal
Service Cross, as well as a Silver Star. heart attack aboard an interisland ferry. He
was only 53. Though he was eligible for inter-
WALT CUSHING WAS BORN to greatness. In ment at the Manila American Cemetery, Jim
his short life, he achieved an impressive string had been adamant about being buried at
of accomplishments. When war came he tran- nearby Libingan ng mga Bayani—the Philip-
sitioned from successful gold miner to legend- pines’ “Heroes Cemetery.” The Filipino
ary resistance leader almost overnight. The people accorded him a full military funeral,
admiration and loyalty his guerrillas felt for his flag-covered coffin borne on a horse-
COURTESY OF THE AUTHOR (ALL)
their commander was boundless. His long- drawn caisson, followed by a solemn proces-
time friend, Captain M. B. Ordun, said Walt sion of Filipino war veterans. As a three-volley
was “utterly fearless and bold to the point of rifle salute rang through the still air, Jim
foolhardiness. His sense of fair play and his Cushing was laid to rest among the guerrilla
daring exploits against the enemy won for him patriots with whom he had fought side by side
the almost godlike devotion of his followers.” in the struggle to free their homeland. +
OCTOBER 2018
71
America has not always given refugees a
picture-perfect welcome, especially during
the Holocaust. It wasn’t until 1944 that the U.S.
took steps to help save Europe’s Jews and to
support those, like Swedish diplomat Raoul
Wallenberg (opposite), doing the same.
REVIEWS BOOKS
SALVAGING
RESCUE BOARD:
HOPE
FROM APRIL 1933—when Hitler’s govern- news of the Holocaust, President Franklin D.
UNITED STATES HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM, GIFT OF JULIUS WALD
The Untold Story ment issued its first anti-Jewish law—until Roosevelt set up the War Refugee Board
of America’s early 1944, the United States government did (WRB). Many dismissed the board’s efforts as
Efforts to Save virtually nothing to aid those persecuted by “too little and too late,” and the WRB worked
the Jews of the Nazis. An anti-immigration majority in in such shadowy ways that its impact is hard to
Europe Congress in the 1930s and a need to devote all measure. However, within its 21 months of
By Rebecca available funds and materiel to pursuing the existence, the board helped save hundreds of
Erbelding. 384 pp. war once the U.S. had entered arguably made thousands of those targeted for Nazi extermi-
Doubleday, 2018.
American silence defensible. nation. With a broad mandate and the freedom
$30.
But on January 22, 1944, after a Treasury to function independently, it was an effort that
Department report showed that the State has never been tried before or since then.
Department had been actively suppressing It is also an effort that some historians have
72 WORLD WAR II
REVIEWS
MUSEUM EXHIBIT
THE LONG VIEW
AMERICANS AND THE HOLOCAUST
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum,
Washington, DC. Open through 2021;
no tickets required; ages 11 and up.
highlighted as a subject in need of scholarly COULD THE UNITED STATES have stopped the Holocaust?
attention. Rebecca Erbelding, an archivist The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum attempts to answer this
at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and question with a major exhibit, “Americans and the Holocaust,”
that explores the country’s response to Nazism.
co-curator of its latest exhibit, “Americans and
Following the rise of Hitler, many Jews in Germany
the Holocaust” (reviewed at right), heeded attempted to seek refuge in the States. But when they arrived
their call, and chose the WRB as the topic of by ship at American ports (see “Ask WWII,” page 18), restric-
her doctoral research. Rescue Board is a read- tive immigration policies implemented by Assistant Secretary
able version of her dissertation. of State Breckinridge Long turned them away.
Erbelding quotes historian Yehuda Bauer’s Long, who supervised the State Department’s visa division,
cited national security concerns in actively seeking to reduce
assessment that what made the WRB unique the number of Jewish refugees
was that it was “officially permitted to break immigrating to the States.
practically every important law of a nation at Long—and many Americans—
war in the name of outraged humanity.” The believed the fleeing refugees
board worked on a number of fronts, from con- could include spies or sabo-
TOP LEFT: UNITED STATES HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL MUSEUM COLLECTION, GIFT OF MALWINA “INKA” GERSON ALLEN, 2007.45.5;
OCTOBER 2018
73
Pearl Harbor hero “Dorie” Miller (in Michigan,
left, on a war bond tour ) came to resent his
fame and treatment from fellow navy men.
HEROISM
DORIS MILLER, THE AVERAGE MILITARY ENTHUSIAST
mission.” And, sure enough, when he returns
to duty, a Japanese submarine sinks his ship.
Two years to the day of his heroism, on Dec-
ember 7, 1943, the Navy Department notifies
his parents that he is missing in action and
PEARL HARBOR, or student of African American history knows presumed dead.
AND THE little about the life and struggles of the first While the book is thoroughly researched
BIRTH OF THE black national hero of World War II, Doris and well written, the authors fall short in their
CIVIL RIGHTS “Dorie” Miller. The popular depiction of Miller desire to demonstrate that Miller’s entrance
MOVEMENT is that of a cook aboard a battleship anchored on the national scene reflects the “birth of the
By Thomas W. at Pearl Harbor who leaps into action to save civil rights movement.” In fact, the civil rights
Cutrer and T. his mortally wounded captain during the Jap- movement and its connection to African
U.S. NAVY/NATIONAL ARCHIVES
Michael Parrish. anese attack. Miller then mans a .50-caliber American military bravery and service pre-
140pp. Texas A&M machine gun and, although he has had no date the American Revolution.
University Press,
formal training, shoots down enemy aircraft. The authors also share the romantic notion
2017. $24.95.
For his bravery, he is awarded the Navy Cross that Miller and others like him had a moral or
and receives national recognition. At that ethical impact on Washington and the U.S.
74 WORLD WAR II
UNLIKE YOUR SUMMER BEACH VACATION,
Armed Forces that led to “greater
awareness and sensitivity to the THESE BEACHES WERE NOT THEIR CHOICE
talents and loyalties of black men WWII US Army Landings
and women.” But changes in equal
Commemorative Plaque
opportunity for blacks in the ser-
vice were motivated by the need This is the ONLY collectible
for military efficiency and to with sand from all the US Army
ser ve the political interest of European Theater of Operation
national leaders. The fact remains (ETO) landing beaches including
that despite countless examples of Torch, Husky, Avalanche, Shingle,
African American sacrifice and Overlord and Dragoon.
heroism for the first 300 years of Don’t miss this opportunity to
our nation’s history, blacks were own a piece of history today and
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recently. —Marcus S. Cox is the
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silence, it also provokes questions AUDUBON’S
FOUR-FOOTERS
about why Roosevelt, despite The naturalist’s
final portfolio
A CLASSIC
production required the scale and realism
that only actual warships could provide.
When Wouk appeared to back away from the
positive light. Some film projects have been so promilitary that sup- cerned that the film might cast the navy in a
port from the armed forces has been unstinting. Others have been negative light. He wondered only how Wouk,
so fundamentally antiwar that support has been out of the question. a naval reservist who had served during the
Still other movies have been problematic—one major example being war aboard two minesweepers, could have
76 WORLD WAR II
encountered “all the screwballs I
have known in my thirty years in
the navy.” But Fechteler also
intuited that the navy’s support
would influence the filmmakers
to portray the service positively.
Ultimately the movie, released
in June 1954 with Humphrey
Bogart in the role of Queeg—one
of Bogart’s most memorable per-
formances—underscored the
fact that the Caine was atypical
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Kramer also argued, correctly,
that film audiences would under-
stand that the navy was basically
competent—how else could it
have won World War II?—and
that the Caine was therefore
an aberration. And, inevitably,
he dedicated the film to the
U.S. Navy and included the dis-
claimer that there had never been
NOW ON DVD!
a mutiny aboard a navy vessel he remarkable, epic true story of
(although a well-known mutiny Lt. Col. Edwin Price Ramsey, leader of the last horse
cavalry charge in U.S. military history. He went on to
had occurred in 1842 aboard the command 40,000 guerrilla ighters behind enemy lines
USS Somers). It remains the case, in the jungles of the Philippines during World War II.
however, that without Fechteler’s
intervention, one of the classic
films in American cinematic his- the ed ramsey story
tory would never have made it to
the silver screen. + Shortlisted for Best Documentary at the 2016 Academy Awards.
Now available on Amazon at htp://ramsey.store
RMY
OU TO SEE
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EXECUTIONS?
TANKS
in July 1945.
“If the tanks
MAN
succeed, then
victory follows.” A broken Japanese
MAUS
code allowed the U.S.
—German tank to target Admiral
warfare strategist Isoroku Yamamoto.
RATTE ER
Heinz Guderian, 1937
O
LS
MONST
WAS KILLING
Hitler had big hopes
for a proposed big tank
with an inglorious
YAMAMOTO
name: the Ratte
A MISTAKE?
HANGMAN OF
John C. Woods
and a tool of MACARTHUR’S WALK
his deadly trade INTO PHOTO FAME
TRUE FICTION ON
‘I KNOW
TOO
LLEY OF DEATH MUCH’
WHY CAPTAIN
UETTAR PATTON’S OUTGUNNED ARMY JOHN CROMWELL
ED A BRUTAL PANZER ONSLAUGHT CHOSE TO GO
E
DOWN WITH
N THE SHIP
THIRD REICH IN 10 OBJECTS
HOW A SHORTAGE OF ALLIED
E SHIPS THREATENED D-DAY
ED HistoryNet is the world’s largest To keep a vital secret
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ARMOR
FLAG BEARER
We altered this photo of General Eisenhower’s driver and secretary,
Kay Summersby, to create one inaccuracy. What is it?
OCTOBER 2018
79
PINUP
REFLECTIVE
MOOD
Why is dancer/singer/actress
Adele Mara wearing a tin foil
bikini? Alas we can’t tell you.
The photo stems from her years
at Columbia Pictures, which
signed the teenage dancer as an
actress in 1942. “At Columbia I
was a little unhappy because
I wasn’t doing things I really
wanted to do,” like dance, Mara
said. She went on to sign with
Republic Pictures and make two
films starring John Wayne,
including Sands of Iwo Jima
(1949). In 1944 she even—
improbably—taught him a new
skill. “They needed a girl to dance
with John Wayne,” she said.
“He didn’t know how to dance,
so I taught him to jitterbug in
The Fighting Seabees.” In a
charming scene, she takes the
lead and he follows.
HISTORYNET ARCHIVES
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