My Take
Once again I am left in awe of the one of the greatest generations of America to ever live – my parent’s generation. The sacrifices made by the Marines, soldiers, and Navy men are vividly described in this novel by one of my favorite authors, Jeff Shaara.
This is now my favorite Jeff Shaara book (that’s saying a lot) – lots of character development (both with admirals/generals and privates) combined with the massive research that I’ve come to appreciate that he does for each of his books.
This is really several books in one. In the Introduction, Shaara provides an excellent introduction that summarizes events leading up to WWII (especially in the Pacific theatre with Japan’s invasion of China – Shanghai and Nanking) all the way up to the invasion of Okinawa by the Americans. That’s a lot of information to squeeze into nine pages, but he does it well.
This book is laid out in three parts (see below) from the perspectives of Admiral Chester Nimitz, the Commander in Chief of the Pacific, Private Clay Adams, a private in the Sixth Marine Division, General Mitsuru Ushijima, commander of the Japanese forces on Okinawa, Lieutenant Porter (briefly), Adam’s platoon commander, Okiro Hamishita, a doctor practicing in the city of Hiroshima, President Harry Truman, and Colonel Paul Tibbets, the mission commander and pilot of the “Enola Gay”.
Part One: February 21 to May 2, 1945
The book starts out with a bang with snippets from an unnamed Navy Captain of an unnamed American submarine (so it could be anyone/anywhere – nicely done), with interesting insights about submarine warfare - picking up downed pilots, colleagues being killed by their own torpedoes (either misfiring or circling back around to kill them), and dealing with crafty enemy (a Japanese submariner using a freighter as a screen).
Part Two: May 4 to June 21, 1945
Continues the Battle of Okinawa as General Ushijima reluctantly agrees to General Cho’s insistence to launch an offensive counterstrike at the Americans. Adams and Welty continue to fight in the worst possible conditions – rain and mud and cold, no shelter, no natural cover. Somehow, Welty manages to keep up his ravenous appetite and maintains a quiet sense of dignity. Casualties continue to mount as the Japanese relocate their headquarters south. Among the casualties – Sgt Ferucci and Lt Porter; Private Yablonski, the big mouth you come to loathe, is killed by his own hands as he incorrectly uses a flamethrower. Clay Adams goes “Asian” for a bit but returns after a brief respite in a field hospital. Many are killed by Japanese subterfuge (strapping bombs to Okinawan women, disguising themselves as women with a machine gun strapped to their backs), and the Marines start using appropriate weapons such as shotguns and phosphorous grenades to kill them one by one. Tragically, Jack Welty is killed after being separated from Adams during one of the last fights, and Adams hooks up with Mortensen for the rest of the battle.
Interesting quote: “On May 8, 1945, the war ended in Europe with Germany officially surrendering. On Okinawa, VE Day was virtually ignored.”
Part Three: July 8 to August 14, 1945
After finishing Part Two, I was wondering what Shaara was going to do with the rest of the 110 pages in the book – I needn’t have worried. The last part was even better than the first two – it covers the decision by newly sworn-in Harry Truman to drop the atomic bomb and described those who did it – Colonel Paul Tibbetts and his crew of the Enola Gay.
I went off on so many rabbit trails at the end of this book (I spent a whole day writing this up) – see the “Connection” page at the end of this write-up.
An awesome novel about an awesome generation – thank God they stepped up when they did. Or, as my father once told me, we would be speaking another language right now (German or Japanese).
Character Perspectives
CHESTER NIMITZ
A look at the war from the perspective of command – his dealings with Washington and other brass as he tries to get things done. Curtis LeMay comes off as a somewhat of a Neanderthal - from just about everyone’s point of view this guy was (apparently) a gruff, rude, self-centered jerk. Also showed Lt Gen Simon B. Bucker, the commander of the Marines, as somewhat incompetent and blustery. He was killed by artillery fire because he thought he needed to take a look at the front lines – an unecessary death due to his own arrogance.
CLAY ADAMS
A look at the war from the ground level – as Private Clay Adams (the brother of Sgt Jesse Adams from the European theatre series) strives to earn a reputation in his unit as a tough guy by boxing – something that more people notice than he thinks. Sergeant Ferucci gives him training and sets up his fights. His first combat experience was at Guadalcanal, where after only a few days on the island he contracts a tropical parasitic disease (filariasis) that sent him back to San Diego for recuperation. Clay’s best friend is the red-headed Jack Welty, a quiet man who had seen a lot of combat and keeps to himself. The officers over them are Captain Bennet, the company commander, and Lieutenant Porter, his platoon commander. One of the scenes from Clay’s perspective is especially ironic – as they march inland virtually unopposed (part of Gen Ushijima’s strategy), they come across an airfield where a plane is landing. They think it’s a U.S. plane, but then see the “meatball” on the side as it lands. The Japanese pilot gets out of the plane, looks around, realizes his mistake and reaches for his pistol, and he gets hosed by machine gun and rifle fire. As Captain Bennett says, “It’s happened in every army that’s ever fought. There’s always some poor bastard who doesn’t get the word.”
MITSURU USHIJAMA
It was very interesting to see the perspective from the enemy’s side – from the commander of the Japanese forces on Okinawa, General Mitsuru Ushijima. Interestingly, he had to deal with a lot of the same stuff that Nimitz did – intransigent colleagues (Lt Gen Isamu Cho – a true “believer” who had been the primary force behind the rape and destruction of Nanking), inter-service rivalry, poor communications, etc. I’m reminded of a Japanese movie I saw a long time ago about the battle of Okinawa – from the perspective of the Japanese soldiers – and how much it surprised me to look at it from their perspective (this was a long time before Letters from Iwo Jima). I remember a Japanese soldier who had both legs blown off scraping his way along a trail, encouraging his fellow soldiers as he kept on fighting. I get the sense that this was the essence of the Japanese fighting soldier – and a chill when I consider how many casualties – American and Japanese – would have resulted from an invasion
HARRY TRUMAN
What an enormous burden Harry Truman acquired when Franklin Roosevelt died on April 12th – waging a world war, reigning in the Soviet Union and determining what the post-war scenario should like, and the challenge of an entirely new and untested weapon to boot! He had been completely out of the loop on the Manhattan Project as vice president, but when he was thrust in to having to make an immediate decision on what to do with it – God bless him he made the correct one. He had backbone (“the buck stops here”) and he was a Christian – and he saved millions of lives by making the decision to drop the two bombs on Japan.
At Potsdam (southwest of Berlin) on July 16, 1945, it was interesting to note how warm Churchill was to him and how Truman was already planning for post-war trouble with Stalin and the USSR. Again, I wonder why Churchill hated Henry Wallace, the vice president before Harry Truman, so much and what it was about Truman that so endeared him to Churchill? (see article on Wallace)
PAUL TIBBETS
I have always liked this man, and I like him even more now. I saw him at one of the Dayton Air Shows when we were at Ohio State University, and I’d heard that he never lost sleep over what he had done – good for him!
Shaara really puts more skin on him. Perhaps I like him so much because he was a fellow aviator, but I also like him for his strength of character – he was a real no-nonsense kind of guy with a bit of a sense of humor (e.g. the bit about him taking LeMay’s exec – Colonel Blanchard – up for a flight in a B-29!).
Tibbets had been the primary pilot for Generals Dwight Eisenhower and Mark Clark, and had more than forty missions as a B-17 pilot.
Tibbets had an excellent relationship with Maj Gen Leslie Groves, the commander of the Manhattan Project, based on mutual respect. LeMay tried to give Tibbets a hard time, but when he (LeMay) realized he couldn’t hand-pick who flew the plane that would drop the a-bomb, he relented somewhat. Again, LeMay comes across as something of an ass – I get a sense this was very true.
Interesting story about Tibbets’ first flight as a 12-year-old (dropping Baby Ruth candy bars from a barnstorming pilot’s plane). His mother had always supported him - hence the name of the plane, the Enola Gay.
He missed his kids terribly – Paul Tibbets and Gene Tibbets. What happened to them?
OKIRO HAMISHITA
Dr. Okiro Hamishita was a doctor living in Hiroshima, who had his own clinic and also attended to American POWs in Hiroshima Castle as well as his own patients. His wife, who had just returned from Tokyo, was killed immediately in the bombing. Hamishita died twelve days later of radiation sickness.
Other prominent characters/events in the book
Robert Oppenheimer, the chief physicist of the Manhattan Project; about the only one confident that the bomb would go off. Said to have thought of the phrase “I am become death, the destroyer of worlds” when he witnessed the first atomic explosion at 0530 on July 16, 1945 (from the ancient text of the Hindu people, the Bhagavad Gita.
Robert Furman and James Nolan – two men who accompanied the bomb from Alamosa to Tinian (aboard the ill-fated Indianapolis).
Brief discussion of the sinking of the USS Indianapolis, the ship that brought the atomic bomb to Tinian (of the 1,196 aboard, 900 made it into the water; only 317 survived five days of exposure and terrible shark attacks) and subsequent tragic life of her skipper, Captain Charles McVay.
Captain Robert Lewis, copilot. Competent, but seemed to have a bug up his ass about a lot of things (that Tibbets named the plane Enola Gay, that Tibbets actually flew the mission himself, etc.)
Major Tom Ferebee, bombardier; highly capable.
Captain Theodore “Dutch” Van Kirk, navigator, highly skilled.
Captain Deak Parsons (USN), Weaponeer and Ordnance Officer. At his suggestion, the bomb was not armed until in flight. This was extremely difficult (confined space, air turbulence, arming a NUCLEAR WEAPON) but he got the job done. He was aided by Lieutenant Morris Jeppson, Ordnance Expert.
Lieutenant Jacob Beser, radio countermeasure officer.
Private Richard Nelson, radioman.
Sergeant Joseph Stiborik, radar man.
Sergeant George R. “Bob” Caron, tailgunner.
Sergearnt Wyatt Duzenberry, Flight Engineer,and Sergeant Robert H. Shumard – Assistant flight engineer, were not mentioned in the book
Additional Impressions
The B-29 Superfortress: I wasn’t aware of the poor record of the B-29 – until reading this I thought it was a good airplane. It was rushed into production and had terrible engine problems (among others); I wonder how many crews were lost because of this. The description of the B-29 that crashed on takeoff (Tinian) on August 3rd – just before Tibbets’ own flight – was brutal. But it was wartime and lives were cheap – even our own.
Admiral King: Nimitz thought he was a miserable SOB, “How could one man make so many people so damn miserable?”
Douglas MacArthur: Confirmed what I know about him; a real pain in the ass to work with, especially if you disagreed with him. Apparently, he shelled the hell out of Manila, much more than he could/should have, before entering it and reclaiming it as his own. I thought the Japanese destroyed Manila, but apparently it was MacArthur. He was a smart guy but an incredible egomaniac, somewhat of a god-complex in this man. From Nimitz, “Can’t imagine that he thought all he had to do was show up and the Japs would hand him the place…he’s overdoing it, trying to scrape every Jap out of every cave…costing us casualties we should be losing…he can’t help…being Doug.”
The incredible brutality of the fighting on Okinawa: On both sides, from the Japanese as they fight for every yard using whatever they can to “take as many Americans with them as they die” and from the Americans as they shoot, stab, and burn them up one at a time. Whole companies of men are lost – only 6 of the original 100 men in Adams’ company are alive at the end. Corpsman who run out to take care of the wounded are savagely killed by the Japanese. This is carnage on a grand scale – and a horrifying preview of what would have happened if we had to invade the mainland.
p.330 “As the caves were exposed and the enemy obliterated, the Americans began to explore, shocked that the shattered remains of the dead were not always the worst that awaited them. In many of the caves, stolen American equipment and food was found, trinkets and souvenirs that showed very clearly that the Japanese showed no mercy either. Letters from American wives and mothers lay among the ruins in the caves, along with photographs of children, Bibles and notebooks, diaries, the forbidden journals written by American GIs who had kept them out of sight of their officers, personal thoughts recorded on burned pages that no on e would ever read…But the Americans responded in kind, gathering their own souvenirs, some with a horrifying disregard for the humanity of their enemy. ON both sides gold teeth were pulled from the jawbones of the dead and dying, jewelry ripped from fingers and necks…The fight for Okinawa had brought tout the worst in everyone involved, but in that it was not unique.”
The poor supply of the USMC during the battle: from horrible rations (K-rations that were decades old) to oil-laced water (from containers that had oil in them originally but had not been cleaned out before being filled with water) to even poor weapons (they had to beg, borrow, and steal ammunition and weapons). This is unconscionable – and hopefully has changed since then.
The Kamikaze Attacks (“Operation Chrysanthemum”): Did take a heavy toll on the US Navy, but not on the big ships, on the smaller escorts (like my dad was on).
The brutality of the Japanese soldiers towards the Okinawans, and why the Okinawans chose suicide over surrender.
The rancor between/among politicians, even during a time of war. Harry Truman and FDR didn’t like each other at all – it was a marriage of convenience. The vice president before Truman, Henry Wallace, was from Iowa and was perceived as some kind of “religious zealot”. In addition, Winston Churchill despised him (why?). This hasn’t changed much – as a matter of fact it has gotten worse. Barack Obama and the Democrats couldn’t care less about the Republicans, and they, likewise, hate the other side.
Target List for the Atomic Bomb: Kyoto, Kokura, Hiroshima, Niigata, Nagasaki. Truman vetoed Kyoto because it was an important religious and cultural center more than a military target.
Operation Olympic: The invasion of Japan. Scheduled for November 1, 1945. A “beach party that would make Normandy look like a rainy day in Miami.”
U.S. POWs in Hiroshima: I didn’t know about this, but there were American flyers who had been taken prisoner (like in many other Japanese cities) who were incarcerated in Hiroshima. There appears to have been 10-12 American POWs in Hiroshima at the time of the bombing. It would have sucked to be killed by your own people’s bomb – especially the a-bomb – but that’s only one of the infinite tragedies of the war. There is a book out that describes the two aircrews who perished; remarkably, the aircraft commander of one of them (Captain Thomas Cartwright of the B-24 crew The Lonesome Lady) survived because he was being interrogated in Tokyo at the time the bomb was dropped (see book). Also see article in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: An American face to the tragedy of Hiroshima).
Some little known but interesting facts about the atomic bomb –
• No one really knew if it was going to work (the fuse had malfunctioned on previous test runs); this was a HUGE gamble
• Tibbets himself selected the B-29 that would do the job, from the Martin assembly plant in Omaha, Nebraska; Lewis flew it to Tinian
• Final target choice made en route (weather) – Hiroshima
• Loading of the bomb: Began at 1200, 5 August
• Aircrew Briefing: 2300, 5 August – Tibbets reveals the details of the mission to the crew
• Before the flight, the group flight surgeon gave Paul Tibbets twelve cyanide capsules, one for each member of his crew
• Takeoff: 0130, 6 August (Tibbets used every single bit of runway to take off)
• Flew at 5,000 ft so that Parsons could arm the bomb in the bomb bay (oxygen)
• 0325 – the bomb is armed
• Hiroshima situated in a valley (blast effects)
• The bomb itself was 9,000 lbs, 10 ft long, 2 ft. wide
• Explosive force of 20,000 tons of TNT – equivalent of 200,000 average bombs
• The bomb was called Little Boy
• Three B-29s took off one hour prior to Enola Gay to act as weather ships (Hiroshima, Kokura, Nagasaki)
• A fourth B-29, the Top Secret, was in place at Iwo Jima as a spare
• A fifth B-29, the Great Artiste, flew several miles in trail of the Enola Gay with sensor equipment to record the blast and observer the aftereffects
• Explosion over Hiroshima: 0815 on 6 August. A T-shaped bridge at the junction of the Honkawa and Motoyasu rivers near downtown Hiroshima was the target. When the bomb exploded, 80,000 to 140,000 people were instantly killed and 100,000 more were seriously injured. The bomb exploded 1, 890 feet above the center of the city, over Shima Surgical Hospital, some 70 yards southeast of the Industrial Promotional Hall (now known as the Atomic Bomb Dome). Crewmembers of the Enola Gay saw a column of smoke rising fast and intense fires springing up. The burst temperature was estimated to reach over a million degrees Celsius, which ignited the surrounding air, forming a fireball some 840 feet in diameter. Eyewitnesses more than 5 miles away said its brightness exceeded the sun tenfold.
• Immediately after the “bomb away” from Ferebee, Tibbets put the Enola Gay into a 155 degree descending right turn to get away from the blast.
• To the crew of the Enola Gay, Hiroshima had disappeared under a thick, churning foam of flames and smoke. The co-pilot, Captain Robert Lewis, commented, "My God, what have we done?"
• About 30 minutes after the explosion, a heavy rain began falling in areas to the northwest of the city. This "black rain" was full of dirt, dust, soot and highly radioactive particles that were sucked up into the air at the time of the explosion and during the fire. It caused contamination even in areas that were remote from the explosion.
• Radio stations went off the air, and the main line telegraph had stopped working just north of Hiroshima. Chaotic reports of a horrific explosion came from several railway stops close to the city and were transmitted to the Headquarters of the Japanese General Staff. Military headquarters personnel tried to contact the Army Control Station in Hiroshima and were met with complete silence. The Japanese were puzzled. They knew that no large enemy raid could have occu