Little Iron Men - American Public University System
Transcription
Little Iron Men - American Public University System
“Little Iron Men” A History of The Bravery, Dedication And Honor of the Japanese-Americans Of the Famous 100 th Battalion/442nd Regimental Combat Team and Military Intelligence Service By: Terrence Lee Krips “The Principle on which this country was founded and by which it has always been governed is that Americanism is a matter of the mind and heart; Americanism is not, and never was, a matter of race or ancestry” ………..President Franklin D. Roosevelt……… 1943 At approximately 07:55 A.M. on the morning of December 7th , 1941, America’s sensibilities were shattered by the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor by air and naval forces from the Empire of Japan. As a result, the United States was thrust into a World War it had neither wanted nor was totally prepared for. Just like many other men and women who were of age to serve the military at the time, Japanese-Americans rushed down to the nearest Recruiting Station to enlist to fight, only to be told that they were not wanted. Their status had been changed to “4-C,” or “enemy alien.” For many of these JapaneseAmericans the experience of being rejected was a shock. In an atmosphere full of fear, mistrust, prejudice and racism many Japanese-Americans on Hawaii and on the mainland found themselves treated as if they were the enemy. On the heels of this action, President Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 that authorized the government to designate special “military areas” from which the free movements of any person could be excluded, and the right of any person to enter or leave was at the discretion of the military authorities. It is from this turmoil and rejection that some of the most incredible stories of courage, sacrifice, honor and patriotism begins. This is the story of how one minority overcame incredible odds both on the battlefield and on the home front to achieve amazing results. Whether as a member of the elite 100th Battalion/ 442nd Regimental Combat Team fighting in Europe, or as a member of the Military Intelligence Service serving in the Pacific, second generation Japanese-Americans played a significant role in helping the United States defeat its enemies. Using a combination of information researched from a long list of secondary source material, after-action combat reports and one-on-one oral interviews from surviving veterans of the 100th /442nd and MIS, this paper will attempt to uncover some of the mysteries of why these men fought so hard while their families languished in the Relocation Centers out West. In order to fully understand the incredible contributions made by second generation Japanese-American citizen soldiers during World War II, it is first necessary to examine the Asian-Pacific American experience and our relations with the Empire of Japan prior to December 7, 1941. During the late 1930’s, war fever had been growing between the United States and Japan over incidents relating to the conflict in China and Southeast Asia. In 1940, President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared an embargo on most food products going to Japan, increasing tensions even more. Also that same year in 1940, U.S. Congress established the National Draft Act, which had a dramatic impact on the nation as a whole, and on the population of Hawaii in particular. 1 In October of 1940, the Hawaiian National Guard, comprised of the 298th and 299th Infantry Regiments, became part of the regular Army. 2 According to a report done that summer, the Regiments had a combined strength of 110 officers and 1,741 enlisted men. 3 The enlisted men, who were classified according to “race origins” had the following make-up: Hawaiians and partHawaiians numbered 732; Caucasians, 524: Chinese, 217; Puerto Ricans, 84; Filipinos, 52; Koreans, 52; Japanese, 40; colored, 2; and other, 38. Of the officers, 76 were Caucasians, 28 Hawaiian or part Hawaiian, and 6 were Chinese. 4 At the time of the 1 Thelma Chang, I Can Never Forget-Men of 100th/442 (Honolulu: Sigi Productions, 1991), 76. Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms-Taken from the Annual Report of the Governor of Hawaii to the Secretary of the Interior for the Fiscal Year Ending June 30,1940 (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 41. 3 Ibid, 41. 4 Ibid, 41. 2 attack on Pearl Harbor, the 298th and 299th had become federalized as part of the 21st and 22nd Brigades of the Army’s Hawaiian Division with training commands at Schofield Barracks on Oahu. 5 Even as early as December 1940, when selective service boards were established in the Territory of Hawaii, the Japanese-American recruits exemplified themselves through their actions and dedication to duty. In the 12 months that followed December 1940, over 3,000 Nisei were inducted into the service including a number of JapaneseAmerican students from various ROTC units at Oahu high schools and the University of Hawaii who made- up the Hawaiian Territorial Guard; their skill and proficiency in military manners became quickly apparent. 6 The Army commander in Hawaii, Maj. Gen. Charles D. Herron, testified that: “In the training camp they were remarkably diligent and obedient to orders. When 4 o’clock came, after a long hard day, and others turned to rest or recreation, the Japanese kept right on at drill or study. There were no malingers among them and they were quick to learn.”7 At a public rally sponsored by the Oahu Citizens Committee for Home Defense held in June, 1941, a representative of General Herron’s staff commented that, “no group of selectees is doing its work with more intelligence, enthusiasm, and efficiency than the young men of Japanese ancestry.”8 In October, the State Department wrote: Due to the preponderance of Japanese in the population of the Islands, a much greater proportion of Japanese have been called to the draft than on the mainland. As on the mainland they are inclined to enlist before being drafted. The Army is extremely high in its praise of them as recruits. The Japanese seem to be chiefly afraid that their boys will not be given the same chance of promotion as whites. Frankly, at first this discrimination existed. A Japanese still had to be better than a white to gain promotion. The Army is gradually eliminating even this discrimination. They have been giving them a chance at becoming officers. Recently they picked out the very best of these and put them in charge of white troops. The Army officers confessed that they held their breath. Much to their surprise and relief there was absolutely no reaction from the white troops and they liked these officers very well. Of course, these were especially good officers, the Army is going to try more. This has been a great thing in strengthening the loyalty of the Japanese in the islands. They are beginning to feel that they are going to get a square deal and some of them are almost pathetically exuberant.9 5 Ibid, 42. Thelma Chang, I Can Never Forget-Men of the 100th /442 (Honolulu: Sigi Productions, 1991), 77. 7 Quoted in Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 43. 8 Ibid, 43 9 Ibid, 44 6 But for the Japanese-Americans of Hawaii, whether they were civilians, members of the federalized Hawaiian National Guard, or the replacement ROTC and University of Hawaii cadets of the Hawaiian Territorial Guard, the events of December 7, 1941 would forever change their lives. The attack by the Japanese on that fateful Sunday morning awakened a new sense of purpose, dedication and meaning for many Japanese-Americans towards their country of birth. 10 Soon after the Japanese attack planes had completed their devastating mission, Japanese-American soldiers and citizens did what they could to fight back or help. The 1st Battalion of the 298th Infantry moved by truck convoy to secure beach areas along the North Shore. By the end of December, 1941, the entire Hawaiian National Guard was placed under Army control with a total of 89 officers and 1,254 enlisted men ordered to secure and patrol over 150 posts in and near Honolulu including public buildings, utilities, newspaper plants, radio stations, warehouses and reservoirs. 11 During the confusion and chaos of the attack, Japanese-American soldiers scrambled as best they could to their duty stations. Ted Tsukiyama, a University of Hawaii ROTC student who would later serve in the Military Intelligence School in the China-Burma-India Theater, was ordered to help guard the Iolani Palace and surrounding electric, water, and communication installations. He had this to say about his experience as member of the Hawaiian Territorial Guard: I jumped into my ROTC uniform and rushed up to the university campus. There were reports that Japanese paratroopers had landed. Our orders were to deploy and meet the enemy, and delay their advance into the city. With pounding hearts, we moved to the south end of campus and scanned for the enemy. To put it bluntly, we were scared! But not for long. As we thought of the sneak attack that morning, a wave of fury and anger swept over us. There was no doubt or decision as we advanced. It was going to be ‘either them or us.’ We were assigned to the Iwilei industrial area to guard the waterfront, the port, the fuel tanks, the cannery, the gas storage and vital installations in that area. I can still picture the silhouettes of our boys standing on those gas tanks or peering out over the harbor waters, with only a Springfield’ 03 in hand…we were proud to be in uniform. We were serving our country in its direct hour of need.12 10 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 9. 11 Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 52. 12 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 10. Troops guarding the Hawaiian coast following attack on Pearl Harbor (Photo provided by the archives at the Center for Military History website) For all intents and purposes, the islands of Hawaii essentially became an enclosed fortress under martial law after December 7, 1941. Oahu became an armed camp surrounded everywhere by machine gun emplacements, anti-aircraft weapons, barbed wire, and sandbags. Many civilian operations and freedoms were restricted as a result of the new regulations, especially those of Japanese ancestry. Fishing fleets were impounded, Buddhist groups were put under surveillance, and travel restrictions were imposed on anyone who even resembled a Jap. 13 In prewar planning to deal with the possible Japanese problem on Hawaii, the United State’s military and the FBI used two different tactics to maintain order. Similar to what had been done on the mainland, the FBI had put together a list of possible alien dissidents who might be disloyal in wartime. 14 In addition, the FBI established a program in the summer of 1941 to notify all Japanese and Japanese-Americans on the island of Hawaii that if they remained loyal, they would receive favorable treatment. 15 Despite this official proclamation by the United States government offering fair treatment, there was still a strong prejudicial reaction among some influential businesses that urged the removal of all Japanese to camps on the 13 Thelma Chang, I Can Never Forget-Men of the 100th /442 (Honolulu: Sigi Productions, 1991), 84. Stetson Conn, Rose C. Engleman and Byron Fairchild, Guarding the United States and its OutpostsCenter for Military History (Washington D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1962), 137. 15 Ibid, 137. 14 mainland. Prejudicial and racist attitudes towards Japanese on the Hawaiian Islands were prevalent throughout the 1930’s and before, both among members of the civilian community and the military. For example, in 1937 a journalist recorded two comments from high-ranking officers that illustrated the U.S. Navy’s attitude towards Japanese on the island. On the topic of loyalty, one naval officer commented that, “Every Japanese, born under our flag or not, is always a Japanese. No matter how much he professes to be an American he is always thinking his Japanese thoughts, hoping secretly for Japanese victory.”16 When the reporter asked another officer in the recruiting branch why the Navy accepted no Nisei enlistments, the reply was, “Because a Jap is always a Jap.”17 These same words would echo throughout the nation once more on April 13, 1942. General John DeWitt, the officer in charge of enforcing president Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066 testified before the House Naval Affairs Subcommittee in San Francisco saying: “A Jap is a Jap. You can’t change him by giving him a piece of paper.”18 Despite the contributions made by Japanese-Americans in the days following the attack on Pearl Harbor, politics, war hysteria and poor leadership won out. Most of the Nisei soldiers serving in the Hawaiian National Guard were restricted to quarters underguard at Schofield Barracks until further notice, while many were shipped to the outlying islands of Hawaii and Maui. 19 Because of restrictions outlined in the National Draft Act, these Nisei soldiers could not be released, only reassigned. Many swapped rifles for shovels and were put to work digging ditches, entrenchments and other labor-intensive tasks. Although Washington desired to move all the Japanese from the island, General Delos Emmons, commander of the Army after replacing General Short, refused to comply. 20 To evacuate the thousands of Japanese from Hawaii would have severely reduced the Territory’s ability to survive economically. Japanese made-up approximately 35% of the island’s workforce and was the Territory’s largest white ethnic group. 21 16 Pearl Harbor Attack, Hearings, part 23, pp. 858-862; Part 28, pp. 1556, 1557; Part 39, p. 13. Ibid, 13. 18 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 65. Taken from Americans of Japanese Ancestry and the U.S. Constitution (San Francisco: National Japanese American Historical Society, 1987), 54 19 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 11. 20 Thelma Chang, I Can Never Forget-Men of the 100th /442 (Honolulu: Sigi Productions, 1991), 85. 21 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 13. 17 Those that were rounded-up included about 1,500 select community leaders, including Shinto and Buddhist priests, schoolteachers, and businessmen, most of who were incarcerated on Sand Island near Honolulu. By the evening of December 8, more than 480 persons were “interned” by the FBI, including 370 of Japanese descent. 22 Don Seki, a construction worker employed on the island of Hawaii and a future member of the 442nd RCT, remembered what it was like shortly after the Japanese attack: On December 6th I was playing poker at a teacher’s house. We would help him with his house and landscaping work so he would feed us. As we started shooting craps…just about 8 AM, dawn, we heard that Pearl Harbor was being attacked. We couldn’t see Pearl Harbor because we were in a valley, but we could certainly hear it. We though it was just a maneuver. We all went home. There was massive confusion and chaos…martial law…curfews…black-outs. The FBI came over to my friend’s house and found a small radio in his house. They took a sledge hammer and destroyed it. Just smashed it to bits.23 Tets Asato, a veteran of Company “G” of the 442nd RCT, was a 16- year high school student living in El Monte, California when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor: The FBI took my father right after the Pearl Harbor attack. The FBI turned our house upside down looking for whatever they could that would be harmful to my father. They confiscated a number of items of minor interest. My father was taken to a stockade that was barricaded with sentries. There were Japanese-Americans from all over the West Coast in this stockade. Why? My father wanted me to learn the Japanese language, so every Saturday he would take me over to this special school to learn the language. Since my father was connected to the school, the FBI took him away. My father was later returned to New Mexico an innocent man. We lost everything on the farm. Crops, car, everything!24 Despite both the public and FBI’s hysteria over sabotage, no Japanese-Americans were ever indicted during the war. On the other- hand, from 1942 to 1944, 18 Caucasians were charged with spying for Japan, and at least 10 were convicted. 25 Although there would be no large-scale evacuation of Japanese in Hawaii, that was not the case on the West Coast of the U.S. mainland. Because of intense political pressure applied by numerous Congressmen, and the massive war hysteria caused by the fear of a Japanese invasion, president Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942 forcing some 120,000 West Coast residents of Japanese descent to 22 Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassador in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 50. Don Seki, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, CA., June 30, 2002 24 Tets Asato, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Torrance, CA., June 17, 2002 25 Thelma Chang, I Can Never Forget-Men of the 100th /442 (Honolulu: Sigi Productions, 1991), 85. 23 leave their home regardless of their background or previous military service to this country. 26 Before he was shipped off to an internment camp, future MIS veteran Peter Okada worked as an employee of the Los Angeles City Public Park Service. Shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor, his life changed dramatically: When I was working the park, I got called in to the superior’s office in Los Angeles City Hall. Three of us were called in, and a guy named Mr. Scott, he was the Superintendent of Parks for all of LA. He said,’ Fellows, your country of origin is at war with our country. This is a pretty serious thing. You’re being paid by tax dollars. We don’t want you to be hurt because of your high visibility, so we want you to take a leave of absence.’ I told Mr. Scott that I couldn’t because I had a family to support. I have to work. He said, “Peter, if you don’t sign this agreement, I’ll make it so you never work for the city of Los Angeles again. So I signed. Several days later, posters were posted for Executive Order 9066. 27 Executive Order 9066 authorized the Secretary of War and military commanders to prescribe military areas from which any or all persons could be excluded because of, what General DeWitt called, “military necessity.”28 As a result of the order, numerous temporary relocation centers were established all along the West Coast, later replaced by 10 Relocation Centers in the states of California, Arizona, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah, Idaho, and Arkansas administered by the civilian controlled War Relocation Authority. 29 With only what they could carry in their arms, thousands of Japanese and JapaneseAmericans quietly left ho mes, farms, businesses and personal possessions behind to live under tar-paper barracks in compounds surrounded by barbed-wire, machine guns and dogs. CSM Atsushi Kiuchi, who was drafted into the Army in 1950 and served 13 months in Europe, was just a small boy when he and his family were sent to Camp Harmony at the Western Washington Fairgrounds in Puyallup, Washington. His comments reflect the harsh conditions and reality he and his family of seven, along with many other Japanese and Japanese-Americans, had to endure: Camp Harmony was a concentration camp, American style, complete with high barbed wire fences and armed guards. At night, through the only window in the single room occupied by our seven— member family, we watched the crisscrossing searchlights from the guard towers swoop and pierce the 26 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 13. 27 Peter Okada, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Kirkland, WA. June 10,2002 28 Stuart Portner, “The Japanese-American Combat Team,” Military Affairs, Volume 7, Issue 3 (Autumn, 1943): 159 29 Ibid, 159. darkness enveloping the camp. Camp life was measured in the length and number of waiting lines to fulfill basic needs. The Asian culture, stressing patience and respect for others, was tested. From May through August 1942, we learned to live with a modicum of privacy, crammed into makeshift quarters.” 30 This dehumanizing experience had a profound effect on the future enlistees of the 100th Battalion/ 442nd Regimental Combat Team and Military Intelligence Service. By February of 1942, the War Department reclassified all Japanese-Americans, including those still in the service, as “4C” (enemy aliens) and forbade them to enlist in the armed forces. 31 But as mentioned before, because of the National Draft Act, the military had to retain those who had already been drafted. Loyal Japanese-Americans swarmed to the recruiting stations on the mainland to join- up with the military to fight America’s new enemy, but their reception was less then cordial. As a student at Compton Junior College in Southern California, Lawson Sakai was busy doing homework when his thoughts were suddenly shattered by the news of the attack on Pearl Harbor: I didn’t know where Pearl Harbor was. I didn’t have a strong knowledge of Pearl Harbor and the Pacific. When my parents came out to hear the news, I kind of jumped my father and said…’What the hell is your country doing!” I was very upset. Shortly afterwards, myself and 3 of my friends (Caucasian) who served in the Submarine Service during World War I went to the Recruiting Station to enlist. Of course, the other 3 were taken, I was not. We decided that if I couldn’t go, no one would go. At that time I realized there was a difference. I didn’t know what ‘4C’ meant. Apparently I just became an “enemy alien” at the time. The recruiter took one look at me and my name and said you’re not wanted here.32 Not all Japanese-Americans serving in the military before Pearl Harbor were allowed to stay. Joe Ichiuji, whose parents were both from Japan, was drafted into the Army in September of 1941. He was sent to Camp Roberts, California for Basic Training and Field Artillery School. Ichiuji would later put his skills as an artilleryman to good use as a member of “A” Battery of the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion attached to the 100th /442nd RCT. His experiences following the attack at Pearl Harbor illustrate how most Japanese-American felt, and they also surprisingly reflect what type of prejudicial or racist attitudes prevailed at the time: 30 Atsushi Kiuchi, “A Special Hero,” Army 49 (January 1991), 28. Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 14. 32 Lawson Sakai, interviewed by author at the Air National Guard TEC, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002 31 My company was in basic training and on furlough in San Francisco at the time of the attack on Pearl Harbor. I notice what had happened through newspaper headlines. We all felt badly of the whole thing, especially since my parents came from Japan. We turned on the car radio and heard more about the bombing. We also heard that we were to report to duty immediately! I was apprehensive about returning to my base because I wasn’t sure how my friends would take it. I had no problems on base. The soldiers in my company didn’t blame me. They said I had nothing to do with the attack. We were all slated to go to Fort Warren, Wyoming before the attack. After the attack though, we were directed instead to go to Ft. Booth, Washington and join-up with the 188th Field Artillery Battalion of the 41st Division. There we went through maneuvers on the West Coast and constructed gun emplacements. There was speculation that the Japanese would attack the West Coast. We were there about 45 days. I was later pulled out of the field and sent back to an office position at Ft. Lewis. My First Sergeant told me I was being discharged at the convenience of the government. Why? Orders! I had to say goodbye to most of my buddies from North Dakota and Minnesota who were ironically of German descent.33 For Joe Ichiuji and other Japanese-Americans, the act of being discharged or rejected from military service was a difficult situation to handle. Even more difficult was the fact that so many of these loyal Japanese-American citizens had to accept the incarceration of their entire families in the Relocation Camps with quiet dignity. Tets Asado and his family eventually ended up at the Heart Mountain Relocation Camp in Wyoming, where freezing temperatures got down to as low as 30 below. “We were kids, we tried to do our best. The Japanese have a saying ‘we can’t help what’s happening so do the best with what you have.’”34 Not every state in the Union had the same feelings towards JapaneseAmericans. For example the Governor of Colorado, Ralph Carr, openly welcomed Japanese-Americans to relocate to his state despite the damage it would do to his political career. 35 Many Japanese-American families, like that of Lawson Sakai’s, benefited from Governor Carr’s bravery. “My parents contacted a church in Colorado of 7th Day Adventists and arranged to have a place to stay. We packed-up our car, told our friends goodbye and figured we’d be back in less then 6 months. When we got to Delta, Colorado, a family was there waiting for us.”36 The city of St. Louis was also more tolerable of the Japanese-American presence, mainly because of its large population of German-Americans who remembered what it was like during World War I. 37 While the 33 Joe Ichiuji, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Rockville, MA. June 18, 2002. 34 Tets Asato, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Torrance, CA., June 17, 2002. 35 Thelma Chang, I Can Never Forget-Men of the 100th /442 (Honolulu: Sigi Productions, 1991), 96. 36 Lawson Sakai, interview by author at Air National Guard TEC, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002. 37 Thelma Chang, I Can Never Forget-Men of the 100th /442 (Honolulu: Sigi Productions, 1991), 96. war escalated in both the Pacific and in Europe, there began a growing movement by the summer and fall of 1942 to persuade the U.S. government and military to allow JapaneseAmericans to enlist. 38 The growing movement to enlist Japanese-American was particularly helped by the efforts of the Japanese-American Citizen’s League, or JACL. The JACL lobbied hard in both Washington D.C., and in its official publications like the Pacific Citizen, to change the minds of those in charge at the War Department and Congress. “In the American Japanese soldiers,” declared the Pacific Citzen, “the U.S. Army has a propaganda medium worth fleets of bombers.”39 One particularly strong spokesperson for the JACL was Mike Musaoka, who later volunteered for the 442nd RCT along with his two brothers. According to Lawson Sakai, veteran of Company “E” of the 442nd RCT, “Mike would visit Washington D.C. on a regular basis. He would make statements like, ‘hey, allow us (the Japanese-Americans) to form combat suicide squads but just let us serve and we’ll go. This was his way of getting the attention of the U.S. politicians in Washington.”40 While these efforts were underway to slowly pave the way for the future enlistment of Japanese-Americans, events in the Pacific forced a much quicker change in policy. By the end of May 1942, it was believed that the Empire of Japan was preparing to launch yet another round of attacks on or near Hawaii. Questions were starting to be asked about how loyal resident Japanese-Americans would be if the island was once again attacked, this time by invading ground troops. To answer these questions, it was decided that it would be necessary to take a chance. On June 5, as Japanese forces were being repulsed at Midway, the Hawaiian National Guard was put on the liner SS Maui and shipped to the mainland in preparation for more intensive training. 41 As the news of the U.S. Pacific Fleet’s incredible victory at Midway was announced, this special group of 38 Stuart Portner, “The Japanese-American Combat Team,” Military Affairs, Volume 7, Issue 3 (Autumn, 1943): 159. 39 Stuart Portner, “The Japanese-American Combat Team,” Military Affairs, Volume 7, Issue 3 (Autumn, 1943): 160 40 Lawson Sakai, interviewed by author at the TEC Air National Guard Base in Knoxville, TN., May 22,2002. 41 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 14. Nisei soldiers of the “Hawaiian Provisional Infantry Battalion” sailed into Oakland to begin their new adventure as the 100th Infantry Battalion (Separate). 42 After their arrival in Oakland, it was decided that the 100th Battalion would be officially assigned to the Central Defense Command in order to be fully reorganized, equipped and trained as an infantry combat team no later than September 30, 1942. 43 By June 13, 1942, the 100th Battalion, known affectionately as the “One Puka, Puka” in honor of the Hawaiian word for “hole,” found a new home at Camp McCoy in Wisconsin. Initially under the command of Lt. Colonel Farrant L. Turner and Captain James W. Lovell, the men of the 100th Battalion (Separate) wasted little time in changing a few things. For the most part, many of the soldiers of the 100th Battalion did not like to be referred to as “Japanese-Americans.” They preferred to be called “Americans of Japanese Ancestry, ” or AJA for short. The unsuspecting individuals who called them a “Jap” usually found themselves in a fistfight.44 As it turned out, this was not to be a major problem in the Midwest communities surrounding Camp McCoy. The locals embraced the strange looking Nisei like long lost friends. For example, the townspeople of Sparta, Wisconsin invited both Turner and Lovell to a number of civilian luncheons featuring local reporters and newspapers. 45 While at these events, both commanders made it a point to tell the local town folk how patriotic the men of the 100th Battalion were, and that they had complete confidence in their abilities to fight. As a result, the papers wrote friendly articles about the unit while civic leaders and organizations like the Chamber of Commerce and Knights of Columbus pledged their total cooperation and support. 46 By August of 1942, the organization of the 100th Battalion expanded with the addition of new rifle companies, medical personnel, transportation crews and service support people. 47 With this expansion in size came the need for more officers, so Lt. Colonel Turner brought in a number of former regular Army noncoms from Hawaii who had recently attended Officer Candidate School on the mainland. Of course, most of these new officers were either Caucasian or haole (whites), and some were certainly a 42 Ibid, 15. Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii, 1955), 73. 44 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 19. 45 Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 82. 46 Ibid, 82. 47 Ibid, 75. 43 little worried about their new assignments. After Turner briefed one particular officer, his response was: “My God, I didn’t know what I was getting in to.”48 Despite their early anxieties about these new Nisei warriors, the new officers quickly grew to respect the men of the 100th Battalion. One veteran of 21 years Army service commented: “I’d rather have a hundred of these men behind me than a hundred of any others I’ve ever been with.”49 In Washington, and throughout the country, news articles about individual JapaneseAmericans serving in specific combat roles for the U.S. military started showing up everywhere. From the late summer of 1942 to early January of 1943, stories of individual bravery and service appeared in newspapers such as the Pacific Citizen, the Daily Tulean Dispatch and the Outpost that further fueled the momentum for allowing Japanese-Americans to enlist. 50 As the 100th Battalion was relocated to warmer environs at Camp Shelby, Mississippi in the autumn of 1942, high-ranking officials began noticing the potential benefits of changing the restrictions. One of the strongest advocates for allowing Japanese-Americans to enlist was the Secretary of the Office of War Information, Elmer Davis, who in a letter written to president Roosevelt in October of 1942, stated that, “Loyal American citizens of Japanese descent should be permitted, after individual test, to enlist in the Army and Navy. It would hardly be fa ir to evacuate people and then impose normal draft procedures, but voluntary enlistment would help out a lot.”51 Efforts to allow enlistment of Japanese-Americans in the U.S. military finally came to fruition after a plan for a proposed AJA combat unit was approved by army chief of staff, George C. Marshall, on January 1, 1943. Weeks later the final plan was endorsed by the War Department and a call for volunteers went out-1500 from Hawaii and 3,000 from the mainland. These numbers would total the amount needed to form a typical regiment in the U.S. Army during World War II. 52 A few days later, in a letter partially written by Davis and forwarded to Secretary of War, Henry L. Stimson, 48 Quoted in Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassador in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 75. Ibid, 76. 50 Stuart Portner, “The Japanese-American Combat Team,” Military Affairs, Volume 7, Issue 3 (Autumn, 1943): 160. 51 Report of the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians, Personal Justice Denied (Washington, D.C: Government Printing Office, 1982), 189. 52 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 62. 49 president Roosevelt approved the new plan with an apparent controversial reversal of his endorsement of Executive Order 9066: “The principle on which this country was founded and by which it has always been governed is that Americanism is a matter of the mind and heart; Americanism is not, and never was, a matter of race or ancestry.”53 In accordance with the new plan, the 442nd Regimental Combat Team was activated on February 1, 1943, by General Orders, Headquarters Third Army with Colonel Charles W. Pence at the command. 54 The 442nd RCT was composed of the 442nd Infantry Regiment with Lt. Colonel Keith K. Tatom commanding the 1st Battalion, Lt. Colonel James M. Hanley the 2nd Battalion, and Lt. Colonel Sherwood Dixon the 3rd Battalion. In addition to the infantry sections, the 442nd received additional support elements including the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion under Lt. Colonel Baya M. Harrison, and the 232nd Combat Engineers commanded by Captain Pershing Nakada. 55 To fill the needs of the new combat regiment, recruiters visited a number of Relocation Camps throughout the West to find volunteers. While in incarnation at Heart Mountain, Wyoming, Tets Asato of Company “G” of the 442nd was approached by one such recruiter. Despite a willingness to volunteer, Tets, as well as many other incarcerated Nisei still had to end ure an atmosphere of mistrust: We received a questionnaire from the recruiters while at Heart Mountain that had about 30 questions on it. Question #27 asked us if we would be loyal to the United States during the war. Question #28 asked us if we were willing to serve in the military of the United States. You either answered “yes/yes” or “no/no.” At this time my father was returned by the FBI from New Mexico innocent of any allegations of spying. He said, “Tets, you need to forget about Japan.” He told to me to make -up my mind and join. I said “yes” to both questions. Quite a few said “no/no”. These individuals ended-up serving time in prison in Washington.56 Tets was still in basic training at Camp Shelby, Mississippi when the first elements of the 442nd RCT joined the 100th Battalion (Separate) after the Battle of Monte Cassino in early 1944. Another “G” Company veteran of the 442nd, Jim Makino, had a similar experience at the Manzanar Relocation Camp: 53 Bill Hossokawa, Nisei: The Quiet Americans (New York: William Morrow, 1969), 365-366. Orville C. Shirey, Americans-The Story of the 442nd Combat Team (Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press, 1946), 19. 55 Ibid, 19. 56 Tets Asato, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Torrance, CA., June 17, 2002. 54 The recruiters showed-up late 43 or early 44 in two stages. The first groups of recruiters were looking for skilled Japanese-Americans as candidates for the Military Intelligence Service Language School. The next group of recruiters came looking for volunteers for the 442nd . Some resisted. When the draft was later re-instated for all Japanese-Americans, some resisted and were thrown in jail at Fort Leavenworth. The recruiters released a questionnaire that asked us if we would remain loyal to the U.S. by cutting all ties with the Japanese Empire. Responses varied, but I answered “yes/yes.” Although the height requirement to join the military was 5 foot 4 inches, many of the volunteers were about 4 foot something. Also, the regulations called for 18 year olds…many of the same volunteers were 17! 57 In an attempt to sell its new program of establishing a wholly independent JapaneseAmerican combat team, the Army told perspective volunteers, “If your strength were diffused through the Army of the United States-as has already been done with many other Americans of your blood-relatively little account would be taken of your action. You would be important only as manpower-nothing more. But united and working together, you would become a symbol of something greater than your individual selves, and the effect would be felt both in the United States and abroad.”58 Despite having been rejected and discharged from the service, Joe Ichiuji of the 522nd FAB decided he had something to prove when he re-joined the Army in January of 1943: I knew I was kicked-out of the Army, reclassified as an “enemy alien,” and incarcerated in a camp, but I felt that I was born and raised in America…so I volunteered to join the 442nd to show I was a loyal American. I wanted to prove that I wanted to fight for my country during wartime. I also felt that by showing people outside that we were loyal Americans, that would get my family and friends out of the camp earlier. That was the reason I volunteered.59 Although thousands of Nisei from Hawaii and the mainland responded to the call, eventually 3,000 were chosen from the Pacific island, while the mainland contributed 1500.60 When the new recruits from Hawaii and the mainland were finally brought together at Camp Shelby, Mississippi, there was almost immediate friction between the two groups. Right from the start the mainlanders from the West Coast had communication problems with the isla nders because of the unique “pidgin” English slang the Hawaiian boys would 57 Jim Makino, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to San Gabriel, CA., June 30, 2002. 58 Stuart Portner, “The Japanese-American Combat Team,” Military Affairs, Volume 7, Issue 3 (Autumn, 1943), 161. 59 Joe Ichiuji, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Rockville, MA. June 18, 2002. 60 Thelma Chang, I Can Never Forget-Men of the 100th /442 (Honolulu: Sigi Productions, 1991), 104. use. According to Lawson Sakai from Company “E” of the 442nd RCT, “the Hawaiians would use phrases like ‘peel the light, buddy.’ All the mainlanders like myself would look around and wonder what the heck that meant. It meant ‘turn of the light.’ What did we know. We couldn’t understand them. They would sing a song in perfect English, but speak ‘pidgin.’”61 On the other-hand, the Hawaiians thought the mainlanders were acting too much like the haole, or whites. Both sides had disparaging nicknames for each other. The mainlanders would refer to the islanders as “buddaheads,” in reference to the Japanese word “buta” for pig. 62 The islanders called the mainlanders “Kotonks” derived from the supposed sound a mainlander’s head would make when it hit the barracks floor. 63 In many ways, the mainlanders resented the islanders for their fun- loving, beerdrinking, rowdy ways. The boys from Hawaii were very popular because of all the money orders they would receive from the island sent in blue cards. Fistfights were always breaking out between the two sides. Another point of friction between the two sides dealt with the new chain of command that was put in place once the men from the 100th Battalion and the new 442nd were grouped together. Since they had more experience, the men of the 100th Battalion thought they would serve as the marquee component the 442nd would develop around. That was not the case. The Army decided to place haole officers from the mainland in charge, along with a cadre of veteran noncommissioned officers from the West Coast. 64 This did not sit well with the either the Nisei of the 100th Battalion or the new volunteer islanders of the 442nd. Tensions between each other weren’t the only things the Japanese-American soldiers of the 100th Battalion and 442nd RCT had to deal with. Regardless of where they came from, the Nisei soldiers had to confront the Deep South and continued prejudice and racism. In the small town of Hattiesburg outside Camp Shelby, evidence of “Jim Crow” laws were prevalent everywhere. These laws separated practically everything, from bathroom toilet stales to drinking fountains. It was a sight that many of the Nisei had never seen. “I didn’t know true discrimination until I saw how the black man was treated 61 Lawson Sakai, interview by author at Air National Guard TEC, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002. Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 67. 63 Ibid, 67. 64 Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 113. 62 in this town. They called them ‘niggers,” said Lawson Sakai of the 442nd. 65 What was very strange to many of the Nisei was that they were no longer the main-target for discrimination; the black soldiers were worse off then they were. While the men of the 100th /442nd felt sympathy for the Negroes of Mississippi, they realized that they could not change things without damaging the image of their own cause, so they resolved to go on. 66 But there were still some problems between the Nisei and the white soldiers at the Camp. Don Seki of the 442nd reported that, “Some of the white soldiers tried to take advantage of us, but we fought back. At the service club we would dance with the local Caucasian women and the white soldiers would get real jealous. Eventually all hell would breakout! When the men of the 10th Mountain Division came in, their commander told them not to mess with us. We drank beer together.”67 Eventually the mainlanders and the islanders settled down and got to the business of training for war. While at Camp Shelby, the Nisei soldiers were exposed to a variety of challenges that would help shape them into one of the most effective combat teams in American history. Not unlike the modern day soldier of today, the Nisei troops worked constantly on all the necessary training required of a front- line combat soldier. Hours were spent on military courtesy, close-order drill and the manual of arms. 68 In addition, the new soldiers had to familiarize themselves with practically every type of weapon used by the typical combat infantry soldier of World War II. These weapons included the Girand M1 rifle, the M1 carbine, the Browning Automatic Rifle (BAR), light machine guns and grenades. The troops also did a number of intensive maneuvers under trying conditions. One of the biggest fears among the men of the 100th /442nd was the sight of snakes. “On one occasion they sent us out on a night problem,” reported Don Seki of Company “G” of the 442nd. “They sent us out about 25 miles out from camp and we had to come back to the camp by compass azimuth reading. We had to go through all of these swamps! And the water moccasins, oh my! We were more afraid of snakes then anything else. And those 65 Lawson Sakai, interview by author at Air National Guard TEC, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002. Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 113. 67 Don Seki, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, CA., June 30, 2002. It should be noted that Senator Bob Dole was a member of the 10th Mountain Division. 66 68 Orville C. Shirey, Americans-The Story of the 442nd Combat Team (Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press, 1946), 19. snakes would ‘swoosh’ on by. Man was I scared.”69 After coming back from maneuvers with the 85th Division in Louisiana, the boys of the 100th Battalion had a much deeper appreciation for the huge water moccasins and deadly coral snakes that inhabited the area around Camp Shelby. 70 Along with the snakes, the Nisei had to fight the incredibly hot weather, bugs, poison ivy and chiggers as well. While the infantry soldiers were learning their skills, the other elements of the combat team plied their expertise as well. In the 522nd FAB, the gun crews spent many hours getting familiar with their 105 howitzers. Meanwhile, the engineers of the 232d Engineers practiced building roads, blowing-up bridges and operating large equipment. 71 Members of the 100th Battalion training at Camp Shelby, Mississippi. Photos courtesy of U.S. Army After months of intensive training, the men of the 100th /442nd were ready for action, anywhere. Finally, the 100th Battalion got the orders they were waiting for. Although rejected by General Eisenhower, Lt. General Mark Clark, Commander of the U.S. 5th Army fighting in the Mediterranean welcomed the fresh soldiers of the 100th Battalion with open arms. For the men of the original “One Puka, Puka,” their appointment with destiny was about to begin. On the sweltering afternoon of August 21, 1943, ships, troop and equipment transports of all types dotted the harbor area around Staten Island, New York bound for the war torn European-Africa Theater. In that mass of military build-up were the men of the 100th Battalion, patiently watching from the rails of the banana boat, the USS James Parker.72 By September 2, 1943, the convoy reached Oran, North Africa, where the 100th Battalion 69 Don Seki, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, CA., June 30, 2002. 70 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 67. 71 Orville C. Shirey, Americans-The Story of the 442nd Combat Team (Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press, 1946), 19. 72 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945, 1. disembarked. That night for the very first time, the men of the 100th Battalion had their very first taste of being bivouacked in an area other then Camp Shelby. 73 Shortly afterwards, the 100th Battalion received their assignment orders. They were attached to the 34th Infantry Division in the Bou Tlelis region of Algeria as per General Order, Number 35, Headquarters, 34th Division. 74 The 34th Division was an old National Guard component with a proud history dating back to the American Civil War, and had fought in more then 20 major battles. 75 Under the command of Major General Charles W. Ryder from West Point, the 34th Division had racked-up an impressive battle record in North Africa by the time the Nisei of the 100th Battalion joined them. With their Division slogan, “Attack, Attack, Attack,” the Red Bulls of the 34th fought bravely at Kasserine Pass and Hill 609 during the battle for Tunis. 76 After joining the 34th Division, the 100th Battalion was subsequently attached to the 133rd Infantry Regiment to replace the unit’s 2nd Battalion, which had departed to become Eisenhower’s personal security guard. 77 As the 100th Battalion settled- in to their new assignment, General Ryder made it a point to meet all the officers and non-commissioned officers from the Nisei unit in order to welcome them. According to General Ryder, the men of the 100th Battalion were not to be called “Japs” under any circumstances. Likewise, the commanding officer of the 133rd, Colonel Ray C. Fountain, echoed the same sentiments as the Japanese-American soldiers came into the bivouac area. “They are not Japanese,” he said, “but Americans born in Hawaii. They don’t ask any special considerations and we won’t give them anything that isn’t given to all other units. The Battalion (100th ) will be fighting with the rest of us taking its regular turn.”78 That first night, as the 34th Division’s band played in the background, the Red Bulls and the “One Puka, Puka” began a mutual friendship that would only intensify on the battlefields of Italy. 73 Ibid, 1. Ibid, 2. 75 John H. Hougen, History of the Famous 34th Division (Nashville: Battery Press, 1949), unknown. 76 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 2. 77 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 70. 74 78 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 3. On September 9th , following Italy’s surrender to the United Nations and preliminary attacks by the British 8th Army across the Straits of Messina, General Mark Clark’s U.S. 5th Army hit the beaches at Salerno with two Corps, the U.S. VI and British X. 79 In response, the Germans sent 5 Divisions south to reinforce the 16th Panzer Division outside of Salerno. These additional Divisions joined the German 10th Army under the overall command of Field Marshall Albert Kesselring. Despite heavy German counterattacks, the Allied forces were successful in establishing a beachhead that allowed fresh troops and supplies to pour in. As a result of this early success, General Eisenhower, commander of Allied forces in the Mediterranean, gave the order to continue the Allied offensive north towards Rome. Although the German forces around Salerno fought hard, overwhelming Allied firepower and numbers forced them to gradually retreat north across the entire line of the Volturno River approaching Rome. Original plans called for the 34th Division to join-up with the 5th U.S. Army 21 days into the fight, but the fierce German resistance around Salerno and Naples caused serious delays. The 100th Battalion, aboard the S.S. Frederick Funston, arrived in Salerno with the rest of 133rd Infantry on September 19th , 1943.80 A few days after landing, the 133rd Infantry received orders to join the rest of the 34th Division in its chase of the Germans north towards the Volturno River. The 133rd, along with the 100th Battalion, were trucked twenty-five miles south to Montecorvino Rovella where they would become part of a special combat team under the command of Assistant Division Commander, Brigadier General Caffey. 81 As the 133rd moved into position with other elements of the American VI Corps commanded by Major General John P. Lucas, the following order was issued to all commands: “There recently arrived in the theater a battalion of American soldiers of Japanese ancestry. The troops take particular pride in their American origin. Your command should be so informed in order that during the stress and confusion of combat, causes of mistaken identity may be avoided.”82 While at Montecorvino, the 133rd was ordered to move to the vicinity of Oliveto Citra to hook-up 79 John Keegan, The Second World War (New York: Penguin Books, 1989), 352. Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 125. 81 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 5. 82 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 76. 80 with the 45th Division covering the right flank of the U.S. 5th Army. 83 From there, the 133rd was to proceed north and west to cut-off the German retreat towards the Volturno River along the Montemarano-Avellion roadway. 84 The 100th Battalion finally headed into combat on September 26 to begin the ir fight against the Germans through some of the worst terrain conceivable. On September 28th , the 100th Battalion met the German Wehrmacht for the very first time near a small farmhouse in the vicinity of Montemarano. 85 It was at this location that the 100th would capture its first POW and sustain its first casualty of war. Reacting to a report given by a local villager that there was a lone German soldier who wanted to surrender, Company “B” of the 100th Battalion moved into the village. After apprehending the German soldier, the soldier’s luger was given to Major Lovell, the 100th ’s Executive Officer. In reaction to the faces around him, the German soldier asked if the Nisei soldiers were Chinese, but he was quickly corrected. 86 Still confused, the German soldier was marched off with a strong belief that Japan had switched sides and was fighting for the Allies. On this, as in other occasions, the Nisei soldiers usually took the opportunity to let the German POWs guess at their nationality-at times convincing the Germans that they were Japanese soldiers from the Empire of Japan. 87 Once a German POW realized the prank, he would normally respond with a sigh, “Ach, diese Amerikaner.”88 As mentioned, the 100th suffered its first casualty that same day when Sgt. Conrad C. Tsukayama, squad leader in Company “D’s” Mortar Platoon suffered a wound in the face from flying shrapnel blown in the air by a passing jeep that hit a landmine. 89 Showing the spirit and dedication that was so common among the Nisei soldiers, Tsukayama quickly returned to action by performing a reverse “AWOL” from the local field hospital. 90 On September 29, in an action that would be repeated over and 83 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 6. 84 Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 127. 85 Homer R. Ankrum, Dogfaces Who Smiled Through Tears (Lake Mills, Iowa: Graphic Publishing Company, 1987), 321. 86 Ibid, 321. 87 Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 137. 88 Ibid, 137. 89 Ibid, 321 90 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 8. over again throughout the war, the 100th earned its first battle medal near the town of Castlevere. While heading- up the Chiusana road towards the town, the 3rd Platoon under Lt. Paul Froning was pinned down by enemy machine gun fire. Knowing that enemy artillery would soon blast the area, Sgt. Shigeo J. Takata volunteered to take-out the gun. With a small squad of men, Takata was able to gradually surround the machine gun, forcing the Germans to pullback. In the continuing pursuit, Takata advanced alone while firing short bursts from his Tommy gun. Before he could overcome the enemy machine gun nest, a shell from a German artillery piece fatally wounded him. Before he died, he was able to pass on vital information about the location of the German guns. Takata’s actions earned him the Distinguished Service Cross. 91 After this action, the 100th Battalion moved to participate with the U.S. 5th Army in crossing the Volturno River near Limatola. On October 12-13, the 5th Army began its allout assault of the Volturno River over a 40- mile front by means of rafts, small boats, foot power and swimming. 92 On October 18-19, a second crossing of the Volturno was ordered to help solidify the hard-won positions already taken from the Germans, and to provide a base from which to attack the German 10th Army in the hills above. While the 100th Battalion struggled to cross the river, the Germans fired down from the high ground with terrible accuracy. Once across the river, the 100th moved towards the ancient towns of Alife and San Angelo d’Alife, where the crack German 3rd Panzer Grenadier Division had positioned one of their regiments in opposition along a ridge in the Matese Mountains. 93 As soon as the 133rd Infantry advanced over open ground, the Germans caught the 100th Battalion in the flats near Alife with a barrage of rifle, machine gun, artillery and Nebelwerfer fire from above. 94 The panic and confusion caused by the terrifying sound of the Nebelwerfer rockets, or “screaming meemies” as the American soldiers referred them to, scattered the Battalion in all directions and forced the advance to a halt. 95 Despite such setbacks, the men of 100th Battalion performed heroically 91 Homer R. Ankrum, Dogfaces Who Smiled Through Tears (Lake Mills, Iowa: Graphic Publishing Company, 1987), 321. 92 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 80. 93 Ibid, 81. 94 Fisher, Ernest F., Cassino to the Alps U.S. Army in World War II (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1977), 213. 95 Ibid, 213. throughout the battle for Alife. PFC Thomas I. Yamanage, BAR man of a lead rifle squad that was pinned-down by enemy artillery, silenced an enemy machine gun before being mortally wounded. He was posthumously awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for his actions. 96 Technician 5th Grade Satoshi W. Kadota moved into an open area to administer aid to 12 wounded soldiers. While under heavy fire, Kadota evacuated a large number of casualties, earning himself the Silver Star. 97 At the same time, Private Ted S. Shikiya, despite being severely wounded, dragged a fellow comrade to safety from a heavily shelled area. By his actions, Shikiya received a mortal wound and was later rewarded the Silver Star posthumously. 98 Forty-Eight hours after the attack began, the 100th Battalion seized the town of Alife, but the Germans continued to hold the high ground on Hill 529-known as “Castle Hill.”99 Executing a number of brilliant flanking movements, the 100th Battalion succeeded in pushing the German 8th Panzer Grenadier Regiment off Hill 529. 100 In the final tally, the fight for Alife and San Angelo d’Alife cost the 100th Battalion 21 killed and 66 wounded, including Major Lovell. These casualty numbers would only increase as the Battle of Monte Cassino, Rome, Southern France and the Po Valley loomed in the future. In November of 1943, the 100th Battalion received orders to hold and seize a series of roads and road junctions beyond the Volturno River near Venafro. The purpose of the mission was to protect the left flank of the Division against tank attacks. 101 It is during this action that the 100th participated in the first American bayonet attack in Italy. 102 After crossing the Voltur no River further to the north near Alife, the 100th Battalion ran into a heavy concentration of mines and booby traps. Company “B” was ordered forward to take a road junction when it was racked by heavy German machine gun fire at point blank range. 103 Almost as soon as the Germans opened fire, the Nisei soldiers responded with a fusillade of small arms fire, surprising the Battalion command group in the rear. 96 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 15. 97 Ibid, 15. 98 Ibid, 15. 99 Ibid, 15. 100 Ibid, 15. 101 Lt.Colonel James J. Gillespie and Captain Lauren McBride. “The 100th Battalion Against the Germans.” Infantry Journal (December, 1944), 8. 102 Ibid, 10. 103 Ibid, 10. Shortly afterwards, there was screaming heard everywhere. The Battalion command group couldn’t believe how fast the Nisei soldiers reacted. The commander of Company “B” later explained that his soldiers merely got behind a stone wall and advanced under cover while firing above the ramparts towards the enemy machine guns. 104 While the attack continued, it was learned that a lieutenant of one of the platoons in Company “B” was missing. As word got around, the non-commissioned officers of one of the Nisei platoons gave the order to fix bayonets. Upon his command, the platoon, followed by the entire Company, swarmed over the hill and quickly overran the German gun positions. The missing lieutenant was found, and all German resistance in the area stopped. This action illustrates the close loyalty and esprit de corps that existed in the 100th Battalion. 105 From November through the bitter cold months of December, the 100th Battalion continued to drive the Germans north at the expense of horrific casualties. On December 30th , 1943, the 100th moved-out to relieve the 36th “Texas” Division to make continued attempts to break the German winter line. Finally, on January 15th , the Germans pulled back further to an even more formidable defensive position known as the Gustav Line. The key to breaking this German defense was Monte Cassino. 106 Since 1943, the Germans had methodically put resources, men and equipment to work in building one of the most incredible fortresses ever known. Under the direction of the Todt Organization, Germany’s supreme military engineering company, an amazing mass of heavily constructed pillboxes, machine gun emplacements, artillery emplacements and troop positions had been constructed. Mines were placed in every path, along with interlocking machine guns aimed downward to sweep the rocky ledges leading to the top. To make matters even worse, the Germans had flooded the low- lying farmlands by damming the Rapido River. 107 As the Allies increased their attacks around the area of Monte Cassino, the following orders were issued to all German soldiers: “The Fuhrer orders that the Gustav position be held at all costs, bearing in mind that a completely successful defense will have political repercussions. The Fuhrer expects every yard of 104 Ibid, 10. Ibid, 11. 106 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 95-99. 105 107 Ibid, 107. ground to be bitterly defended.”108 As the Red Bull Division prepared to cross the Rapido River and attack Cassino, Allied forces launched an amphibious attack and landing at Anzio on the west coast of Italy. On January 24, the 100th Battalion launched their first of a series of costly attacks against the German positions all along the German line. As the 100th advanced, Nisei soldiers in separate ammunition and pioneer platoons helped clear paths through the minefields buried under floodwaters. 109 Once again, the brave and dedicated actions of individual soldiers in the 100th Battalion made the difference between success and failure. For their work in neutralizing mines, removing barbed-wire entanglements and administering first aid to wounded soldier, Silver Stars were awarded to Sgt. Calvin Shimogaki, Sgt. Takeshi Miyagawa, Technical Sergeant Gary Hisaoka and PFC Masanori Aoki. On February 8, 1944, the 133rd Infantry (including the 100th ) was ordered to attack Castle Hill on the outskirts of Monte Cassino. 110 Just day’s prior, the 100th rejoiced in the return of Major Lovell after his recuperation in a North Africa hospital. 111 During the attack on Castle Hill, Captain Young Kim of the 100th recalled an incident involving Major Lovell that truly illustrates the type of commander he was: We were under the cover of smoke shots. I was the point at the time. As I approached towards the castle, I saw a silhouette of a soldier in front of me. I thought, “What the heck? Who’s this soldier in front of me? There’s not supposed to be anybody in front of me except for the enemy.” As I approached him, it was Major Lovell…and he was our battalion commander! What army in the world would you find the battalion commander in front of the point man in the attack? Let me tell you, you won’t find anything like that in any other outfit, where you’ll find the battalion commander out front like that, worrying about his men. 112 As the battle continued, German machine guns and artillery pummeled the 100th unmercifully from the front while enemy tanks appeared in the rear. One enemy tank in particular, sporting a 75 mm gun, began blasting the 100th within just a few yards of Company “C.”113 Within minutes Nisei soldiers were scrambling everywhere shouting. “Awakuni! Awakuni! Awakuni!” Private Awakuni, affectionately known as “Tank Buster” among his comrades, was an ace when it came to handling a bazooka. After 108 John Ellis, Cassino: The Hallow Victory (New York: McGraw Hill, 1984), 52. Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 169. 110 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 107. 111 Ibid, 107. 112 Ibid, 108. 113 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 43. 109 grapping his weapon, Awakuni raced to within 30 yards of the German armor and fired his first shell. The initial shot hit the tank’s treads, partially disabling it. 114 Despite having given away his position, Awakuni continued to fire shell after shell into the tank until it finally exploded in a ball of flames, killing the entire crew. As the tank smoldered, Awakuni remained pinned down by enemy sniper fire until some 10 hours later. As he was running back towards friendly lines, he was hit by a machine gun bullet and wounded in the arm. As a result of his actions, Awakuni was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross. 115 In a last ditch effort to break through the Gustav Line at Monte Cassino and open the road to Rome, it was decided by higher headquarters to launch a massive aerial bombardment. The plan was to drop as many as 750 tons of bombs on Monte Cassino in the shortest possible time, thus providing both the firepower and surprise needed to blast through the German positions. 116 Wave after wave of bombers would attack the German pillboxes and concrete emplacements using time fused 1,000 pound bombs designed to penetrate to basement level before exploding. 117 Between the bombing waves, artillery would continue to pummel the Germans while Allied ground troops crept forward slowly. On the morning of March 15, 1944 between the hours of 0830 and 1200, a total of 435 aircraft including B-17’s, B-25’s, B-26’s and B-24’s, along with P-40 fighters from the 13th Mediterranean Air Force dropped more than 2,000 bombs on the Cassino area. 118 Despite the unprecedented attack, the Germans continued to hold the town and surrounding positions. On the 22nd of September, the 100th Battalion left their battered and scared position in the hands of the 6th New Zealand Brigade and headed back to Alife for rest and reorganization. 119 Casualties for the battle of Casino and the operations preceding it were very heavy for the 100th Battalion. When the 100th landed at Salerno in September of 1943, the unit had a total strength of 1,300 men. By the time the smoke 114 Ibid, 43. Ibid, 43. 116 Fisher, Ernest F., Cassino to the Alps U.S. Army in World War II (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1977), 439. 117 Ibid, 439. 118 Ibid, 441. 119 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 45. 115 settled over Cassino, the unit could only muster 521 effectives. 120 Back in the states, the unit was known as the “Purple Heart Battalion” in ho nor of its terrible losses. Shortly after heading to the rear, the “little iron men” of the 100th received a much- needed boost as the first group of reinforcements arrived from the 442nd Regimental Combat Team: 10 officers and 151 enlisted men. 121 From that moment on, the 442nd would begin to play a major role in the future of the Original 100th Battalion as the war shifted towards Rome. What few survivors remained of the Original 100th Battalion after the battle for Monte Cassino proceeded by landing ships to the Anzio beachhead further north. Fortunately for the Battalion, and the rest of the convoy for that matter, the Germans decided not to attack with their aircraft or pound the area with “Anzio Annie,” a 270 mm rail gun that fired daily into town. 122 The tactical plans for the Allied attack on Anzio called for the 5th U.S. Army to land two divisions on the beachhead and drive vigoursly inland towards Rome to cut-off the enemy’s supply and communication lines. 123 Stiff German resistance, both at Monte Cassino and at Anzio, forced the Allied troops into a long and costly stalemate that lasted months. Finally, on May 23, 1944, 150,000 troops in 7 Allied divisions blasted their way through the German lines at Anzio and raced down Route 7 towards Rome. As the U.S. 5th Army slugged its way closer and closer to Rome, it was halted by stiff German resistance near the town of Lanuvio on the outskirts of the Eternal City. 124 General Ryder of the 34th Division received orders to “crack this Lanuvio. It’s holding up the whole thing.”125 After two failed attempts by the 135th Infantry, the 100th got the call once more to complete a tough mission. After a careful reconnaissance, an attack was launched by the 100th that succeeded in smashing over a dozen enemy machine guns. Unfortunately for the men of the 100th , no one in the rear anticipated such a powerful drive. As the 100th smashed into the German lines, they were mistaken for 120 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 115. 121 Ibid, 115. 122 U.S. Army, Officia l History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 48. 123 Campaigns of World War II Commerative Series 40 Brochures (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1945), 3. 124 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 143. 125 Fisher, Ernest F., Cassino to the Alps U.S. Army in World War II (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1977), 179. enemy soldiers and received friendly fire that inflicted a heavy cost in casualties, including 15 killed and 63 wounded. 126 During this battle for the last enemy stronghold before the gates of Rome, the Nisei of the 100th Battalion were awarded six DSCs, a Silver Star and three Bronze Stars. 127 PFC Robert Yasutake wiped out two enemy machine guns, killing six and wounding seven. 128 He received a DSC. Private Shinyei Nakamine, Sgt. Yeiki Kobashigawa, Sgt. Yukio Yokota, PFC. Thomas Ono, and PFC Haruto Kuroda destroyed eight German machine gun emplacements and five machinepistol nests while killing or wounding over 25 enemy soldiers. 129 They all received DSCs. First Lieutenant Bert Tanaka received a Silver Star after he led a small squad to rescue his pinned-down platoon from enemy artillery fire. 130 Unbelievably there is no mention of this heroic action by the 100th in the official U.S. Army history, but the following statement made in a letter by a Caucasian officer printed in the Auburn Journal after the battle illustrates that those who fought alongside the brave Nisei didn’t forget: We had been sitting and living in foxholes at Anzio some 63 days. Then the big push out and the capture of Rome. They (100th Battalion) wiped out the last heavy German resistance we meet some 12 miles south of Rome and then it was practically a walk into the city.131 And the soldiers of the 100th Battalion wanted to be the first ones to walk into the city of Rome, but that did not happen. Much to the disappointment and chagrin of the Nisei, other elements of the U.S. 5th Army were allowed to pass by them. At that time there was some speculation and rumor that the 100th was halted before entering Rome because of racial prejudice. This may or may not have been true, but the feelings and memories surrounding that incident have not faded. According to Don Seki of Company “L” of the 442nd, racial prejudice was evident the day Rome was liberated: “They (the 100th ) were just outside Rome. They stopped the 100th Battalion and let the white troops go in to get the glory. The members of the 100th were fighting made because they had fought all the way from Salerno to Cassino. They were just about to enter Rome and they were 126 U.S. Army, Official History of the 100th Battalion, Department of the Army -The Adjutant General’s Office, Department Records Branch-Historical Section, (Washington D.C.: October 1945), 54. 127 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 144. 128 Ibid, 144. 129 Ibid, 144. 130 Ibid, 144. 131 Ibid, 144. stopped.”132 A few days after the fall of Rome, on August 11, the 100th Battalion officially became part of the 442nd RCT. Because of their impressive record, the 100th Battalion was allowed to keep its original designation as the new 1st Battalion of the 442nd. Officially the combined unit would be known as the 100th /442nd Regimental Combat Team. From the start, tensions ran high among the veterans of the 100th and the new soldiers from the 442nd. Upon hearing the news that they had been absorbed by the 442nd RCT, some members of the Original 100th spoke out. “The original boys from the 100th really detest it!” wrote one soldier, “All the boys are so proud of the 100th that they prefer to remain a separate battalion.”133 Some men of the 442nd were somewhat surprised and upset to learn that many of the members of the 442nd who left Camp Shelby as early replacements for the 100th had transferred their loyalty to the older battalion. In defiance, a large percentage of veterans from the 100th wore the Red Bull patch instead of the “Go For Broke” insignia on their shoulders. 134 The conflict between the two sides finally boiled over during the battle of Belevedere on June 26, 1944 when the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the 442nd were stopped in their tracks by heavy German artillery from the adjoining high ground by a crack SS motorized battalion. 135 Frustrated by the lack of results by the 442nd, General Ryder ordered the 100th Battalion in to remove the German presence on the flank. 136 The mission the 100th came up with was simple but effective. First, the Nisei had to infiltrate the Nazi positions, then close off the ent rance and exit to the town of Belevedere. Once the Germans were surrounded, the 100th would attack up the main hill where the enemy artillery was located. 137 The plan worked to perfection. In a matter of just a few hours, the 100th destroyed the entire SS battalion, killing 178 132 Don Seki, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, CA., June 30, 2002. 133 Quoted from Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 222. 134 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 148. 135 James P. O’Neill, Sgt. “The Battle of Belevedere” Yank (25 August, 1944): 2-4. Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 148. 137 James P. O’Neill, Sgt. “The Battle of Belevedere” Yank (25 August, 1944): 2-4. 136 Germans, wounding 20 and capturing 73. 138 In the end, the Germans lost 13 motorcycles, 19 jeeps, 7 trucks, 2 half- tracks, 1 Panzer IV tank, 1 self-propelled gun, 2 anti-tank guns, 4-155mms, 1 radio CP and 1 battalion CP with 20 phone s. 139 The 100th only lost one man and had eight wounded. 140 As a result of it actions at the battle of Belevedere, the 100th Battalion received a Presidential Unit Citation, the first of three it would receive. The 100th Infantry Battalion (Separate) Cited in War Department General Orders 66, 15 August 1944: The 100th Infantry Battalion (separate) is cited for outstanding performance of duty in action on 26 and 27 June 1944 in the vicinity of Belevedere and Sassetta, Italy. The 100th Infantry Battalion was assigned the mission of neutralizing a strongly defended German center of resistance at Belevedere, Italy. With insufficient time for proper physical reconnaissance but with a determined desire to fulfill its mission, the battalion quickly formulated its plan and launched the operation. All three companies went into action, boldly facing murderous fire from all types of weapons and tanks fighting and at times fighting without artillery support. Doggedly the members of the 100th Infantry Battalion fought their way into the strongly defended positions. The stubborn desire of the men to close with a numerically superior enemy and the rapidity with which they fought enabled the 100th Infantry Battalion to destroy completely the right flank positions of the German army, killing at least 178 Germans, wounding approximately 20, capturing 73, and forcing the remainder of a completely disrupted battalion to surrender approximately 10 kilometers of ground. In addition, large quantities of enemy weapons, vehicles, and equipment were either captured or destroyed, while the American infantry division operating in the sector was able to continue its advance. The fortitude and intrepidity displayed by the officers and men of the 100th Infantry Battalion reflect the finest traditions of the Army of the United States.141 Due to the scope of this paper, it would be difficult to continue with a detailed description of the entire history of the 100th /442nd and MIS without increasing the size of the essay to voluminous proportions. That being said, only a brief mention will now be made about the more important battles the 100th /442nd fought between July of 1944 until the end of the war, with an emphasis on the first hand accounts provided by oral history interviews done with surviving members of the 442nd and Military Intelligence Service from June through July 2002. After the battle for Belevedere, the 100th /442nd moved-up the west coast of Italy towards the important seaport of Livorno, or “Leghorn” as it was it called. On the way 138 Ibid, 2-4. Ibid, 2-4. 140 Ibid, 2-4. 141 Center for Military History, http://www2.army.mil/cmh -pg/topics/apam/puc.htm 139 the unit became locked in a struggle for survival on Hill 140 with German troops in hilltop observation posts. The men of the 100th /442nd referred to this action as the “Battle of Little Cassino” because of its fierceness and duration. 142 “We were on the other side of this ridge when the Germans started shelling us,” recalls Don Seki of Company “L” of the 442nd. “When we were there at night on the first night of the fight for Hill 140, all hell broke loose. We were just firing away. My Lieutenant of my platoon got killed that night, the poor guy.”143 As a member of “G” Company of the 442nd, Sgt. Jim Makino recalls his experiences during the battle: Hill 140, “Little Cassino,” north of Belevedere, as we called it, was a five-day battle. Man, we got our buts kicked! Three guys on my right received a Medal of Honor in this action. Otani, Ono, Nakamura and Moto.* I remember them. My squadron was the last one up the hill, and as we left, we got up to a point where we heard nothing but machine gun fire…2 or 3 guns traversing. I think this is where Nakamura got killed. Down in front of me one of my good buddies was all torn up, as well as the platoon leader. At the bottom of Hill 140 we came to a halt. My good buddy was all shot-up, and next to him was Lt. Torahashi. My buddy’s left arm was all gone, so we did the best we could. I remember putting him on a stretcher, wrapping a tourniquet on his wound with sulfur. There was a gapping hole just under his ear and a small hole in the back. The bullet must have ricocheted upwards through the back of his head. On the other side, Torahashi had a big hole where his dog tags were. I don’t know why, but I snatched off his dog tags and bars and put them in my pocket. This was a big no no. Over the 536 radio I heard yelling, “I’m underneath machine gun fire, we need help!” By the time we got back next morning the Battalion had us missing in action. I ended up in the hospital on July 4th after being hit by mortar shrapnel. Later, after being sent home, I met up with a buddy of mine in Chicago who was chased by a German 88 on Hill 140. This guy had the address of Torahashi’s widow. I went to see her. While I was with her, I gave her the dog tags and bars.144 After the battle for Hill 140, the 100th /442nd was notified that they would be pulled from the offensive against the Gothic Line to be part of Operation Dragoon, the invasion of Southern France. On September 27, 1944, the 100/442nd sailed for Marseilles, France to join the 36th “Texas” Division attached to the U.S. 7th Army. It was during this operation that the men of the 100th /442nd would prove their worthiness once more during the battle of Bruyeres. 145 142 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 151. 143 Don Seki, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, CA., June 30, 2002. 144 Jim Makino, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to San Gabriel, CA., June 30, 2002. *Note: Kazuo Otani, Frank Ono, William Nakamura and Kaoru Moto were originally awarded Distinguished Service Crosses for their actions. These awards were upgraded to a Medal of Honor in 2000. 145 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 175. On October 14, 1944, the 100th /442nd moved into position to attack the important road center of Bruyeres, France with the 100th Battalion on the left, the 2nd Battalion on the right. 146 The main objective of the attack was to sweep the Germans off the various hills surrounding the town, using the 1st and 2nd Battalions in a two-pronged attack with the 3rd Battalion in reserve. 147 During the subsequent attacks for the hills around Bruyeres, the entire 36th Division was subjected to a number of obstacles, some deadly. As thick underbrush, cold rain and overcast skies lowered the morale of the fighting men, a deadly combination of German artillery, S-mines, booby traps, mortars and machine guns made every advance by the American infantry slow and treacherous. 148 “The Germans were fearful fighters,” recalled Joe Ichiuji of Battery “A” of the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion. “The Germans were always on the highest ground looking down at us with those 88 howitzers. What a fearful gun! One night we had a full moon when we had to move, but we couldn’t because we would be bombed. The Germans also had these anti-personnel mines that would pop- up and explode in mid-air.”149 From October 14 to October 21, 1944, the battle for the hills surrounding Bruyeres raged back and forth with relentless fury, testing even the most battled-hardened veterans. For new replacements coming online, this fierce combat was a startling and frightful experience. “Until the blood gets flying, you really don’t know what combat is like,” exclaimed Lawson Sakai, veteran of Company “E”, 2nd Battalion, of the 442nd. “Combat is a horrible experience. I guess you’re numb to everything around you. You just react. You know the enemy is there and you know what you have to do.”150 One of the most fearful weapons in the German arsenal at Bruyeres was their infamous “88” field artillery/anti-aircraft/tank gun. “When the Germans moved their self-propelled “88s” on to a ridge, they would pre- zero in the weapon on suspected areas were American troops would advance. Out of no place, artillery barrages would come in, hundreds of rounds all at once! The sound the German “88” made was very shrill; something Hollywood has never been able to duplicate. The 146 Orville C. Shirey, Americans-The Story of the 442 nd Combat Team (Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press, 1946), 51. 147 Ibid, 51. 148 Franz Steidl, Lost Battalions (Novato: Presidio Press, 1997), 27. 149 Joe Ichiuji, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Rockville, MA. June 18, 2002. 150 Lawson Sakai, interview by author at Air National Guard TEC, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002. high velocity shell would go by kicking- up pebbles, and literally pull you out of your uniform. They’d shoot the “88” like a smalls arms M-1 rifle targeting individual soldiers on the ridges, chasing them from one spot to another!”151 The German “88” though was not the only German weapon feared by the American troops in Italy or the European Theater of Operations. “The German machine guns were fast things,” recalled Don Seki of “L” Company. “Their machine guns made a ripping noise, ours went pop, pop, pop..it was demoralizing. The only advantage for us was the fact the Germans had to change out their machine gun barrels because of the over-heating caused by firing so fast. When they interchanged their barrels, this gave us time to maneuver. The toughest thing we faced were the motor and artillery shells that were fired to burst in the tress above our heads. These shells would explode at tree top level, blasting shrapnel and tree blisters downward with terrible results.”152 A tree burst was how Lawson Sakai earned his Purple Heart. “Not long after the fight for the “Lost Battalion” I was patrolling through a wooded area when a tree burst got me. This hot piece of medal somehow hit a rib and glanced all the way to my front chest. Ah man, the pain was so intense I blacked out. I really thought I was a goner”. 153 On October 19, the last German resistance around the town of Bruyeres was silenced, except for some gunfire to the north. 154 Scattered pockets of German opposition were successfully repulsed and defeated in a series of brilliant counter-attacks by a special Task Force under the command of Major Emmet L. O’Connor, 3rd Battalion executive officer. 155 The combat actions carried out by this special force of infantry, wire, radio and minesweeping squads resulted in the destruction of 3 enemy ammunition carriers, 1 anti-tank gun, the capture of large quantities of small arms and the killing or wounding of over 130 German soldiers. 156 All the units that made-up Task Force O’ Connor received 151 Ibid. Don Seki, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, CA., June 30, 2002. 153 Lawson Sakai, interview by author at Air National Guard TEC, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002. 154 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 178. 152 155 Orville C. Shirey, Americans-The Story of the 442nd Combat Team (Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press, 1946), 59. 156 Ibid, 59. a Distinguished Unit Citation for their bravery under fire. 157 It was just prior to these attacks that Don Seki of “L” Company, 442nd, earned his Purple Heart. “I had gotten hit by a machine gun blast. The fire from one machine gun was about 6 feet high with tracer bullets you could see. It was the gun that was underneath at about 3 feet that got me. This was a common tactic the Germans used. One machine gun fired real high with tracers. You would think he was aiming too high, so you moved out, only to be racked by a second machine gun nest that aimed lower, waiting for your move! You think they’re firing high, but the one on the bottom is the real killer. The round ripped my arm real bad. I was in shock, that’s all I remember. Shortly afterwards I lost my arm in a field hospital. A colonel came out and gave me a Purple Heart.”158 After the battle of Bruyeres and Biffontaine, the 100th /442nd expected to head to the rear for some rest and reorganization, but within 36 hours the 442nd was pulled out of reserve and given orders to attack a few miles to the east. Their objective this time was to attempt a rescue of some 200 Texans of the famous 141st “Alamo” Regiment that were surrounded by heavy German forces on a narrow ridge leading out from the town of Biffontaine. 159 When numerous attacks by other units failed in dislodging the German 933rd Grenadier Regiment from its position surrounding the 141st , General Dahlquist, commander of the 36th Division, once more called on the 100/442nd to get the job done. 160 By October 40, 1944, the battle to rescue the “Lost Battalion” had become desperate. Aided by a preliminary mortar and artillery barrage by elements of the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion, the three companies of men from the 100th /442nd advanced up the slope in full few of the Texans from the 141st .161 Firing from the hip as they advanced up the hill, the Nisei soldiers pushed back fierce German resistance, leaving 55 dead enemy soldiers lying on the ground near the bunkers they so desperately tried to defend. 162 According to Lawson Sakai of Company “L”, 2nd Battalion of the 442nd RCT, the fight was closer then many thought: 157 Ibid, 59. Don Seki, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, CA., June 30, 2002. 159 Franz Steidl, Lost Battalions (Novato: Presidio Press, 1997), 77. 160 Ibid, 81. 161 Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 241. 162 Ibid, 242. 158 There were many U.S. generals who wanted to be the first into Germany. Patton was one, General Dahlquist of the 36th Division was another. That’s why the 141st Infantry got surrounded. They pushed beyond their means and supplies. And they were being annihilated. And they would have been in a couple of days I think. I don’t think the Germans knew the 141st was out of ammo and food. General Dalhquist ordered the 442nd back in to attack the hill where they were. It’s not that long of a distance, but it took 5 days to cover the ground. And it was just a daily battle night and day. It was rainy, cold and foggy. There weren’t as many trees in the Biffontaine area, but there was no place to hide. And of course, the Germans had the high ground. The only way for us to take out the German positions was to crawl up and loop grenades into the machine gun nests. You can’t take them out with a rifle. The members of the 141st were very thankful. They were numb from the experience. They knew that if they were not rescued that it would be the end. They had no more ammo, food…it was bad. They were hardly able to walk out, a pitiful site. 163 In the end, the 100th /442nd suffered more than 800 casualties to rescue 211 Texans. The 100th and 3rd Battalions were awarded Distinguished Unit Citations, as was the attached 232rd Engineer Company. The 2nd Battalion received similar recognition for taking Hill 617, and distinguished service for later battles in Italy. 164 As a gesture of extreme gratitude, the Texans of the 141st Infantry and 36th Division made the brave Nisei of the 100th /442nd RCT honorary citizens of the state of Texas. There was some talk after the battle was over that General Dalhquist considered the men of the 100th /442nd as nothing more then cannon fodder. The consensus among surviving veterans today is that there may have been some truth to that statement. “My feeling,” states Joe Ichuiji of the 522nd FAB, “is that the General thought we were expendable. Why would he use a lesser amount of men to accomplish an impossible mission when two whole divisions before couldn’t take the position?”165 Not long after the battle for the “Lost Battalion,” the Nisei of the 100th /442nd were separated from the 36th Division and sent back down the extreme southern portion of France where it connects to the border of Italy. There, in what was jokingly referred to as the “Champagne Campaign,” the 100th /442nd RCT performed combat and reconnaissance patrols to prevent the Germans from escaping out of the Italian Alps through France. 166 From there, the 100th /442nd was ordered to join back up with General Mark Clark and the U.S. 5th Army to help drive the last pockets of German resistance into surrender in the Po 163 Lawson Sakai, interview by author at Air National Guard TEC, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002. Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 198. 165 Joe Ichiuji, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Rockville, MA. June 18, 2002. 164 166 Orville C. Shirey, Americans-The Story of the 442nd Combat Team (Washington, D.C.: Infantry Journal Press, 1946), 75. Valley region of northern Italy. In April of 1945, General Clark ordered a new offensive in an attempt to remove heavy German opposition on the Ligurian coast blocking the allies from the Po Valley. In Operation Second Wind, the U.S. 92nd Division, with the attached 100th /442nd RCT, was ordered to launch a diversionary attack to capture Massa while the British 8th Army penetrated enemy defenses east of Bologna. 167 As the attack unfolded, the 92nd Division became bogged down by German defenses on the high ground to their front. Once again, the 100th/442nd was called in to accomplish the impossible. Serving in a light 60mm mortar platoon with “G” Company, 2nd Battalion of the 442nd, Tets Asato explains what happened next: It took all night to climb Mount Folgorito to our immediate front. The 3rd Battalion went in on the reverse side near Azzano, Italy. That happened around April 4th . The 2nd Battalion, with “G” Company attached to it, was to attack retreating German forces. The 100th Battalion went in on the left. This all took about 4 hours. We were told we had to climb the 3,000 feet without making any noise what so ever. Some of the men fell to their deaths from the high positions. They fell without making any sound! The Germans were looking down from the top. These were crack SS troops of the Machine-Gun Battalion Kesselring making a last stand.168 In less then 35 minutes, the 100th /442nd succeeded in driving the Germans from their mountain top positions that had previously withstood five straight months of persistent attacks by other U.S. forces. 169 It was during the battle for Mount Folgorito that the first Japanese-American soldier would earn a Medal of Honor posthumously. PFC Sadao Munemori of Los Angeles, California, while serving in “A” Company of the 100th Battalion, performed the most heroic act one can possibly give while engaged in the heat of battle. The following official citation describing Sadao’s heroic actions that spring day in 1945 serves as a timeless reminder of the ultimate sacrifice many most give in time of war. 167 Campaigns of World War II Commerative Series-Po Valley 1945 (Washington D.C.: Government Printing Press, 1945), 5. 168 Tets Asato, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Torrance, CA., June 17, 2002. 169 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 253. MUNEMORI, SADAO S. Rank and organization: Private First Class, U.S. Army, Company A,100th Infantry Battalion, 442d Combat Team. Place and date: Near Seravezza, Italy, 5 April 1945. Entered service at: Los Angeles, Calif Birth: Los Angeles, Calif. G.O. No.. 24, 7 March 1946. Citation: He fought with great gallantry and intrepidity near Seravezza, Italy. When his unit was pinned down by grazing fire from the enemy’s strong mountain defense and command of the squad devolved on him with the wounding of its regular leader, he made frontal, l-man attacks through direct fire and knocked out 2 machineguns with grenades Withdrawing under murderous fire and showers of grenades from other enemy emplacements, he had nearly reached a shell crater occupied by 2 of his men when an unexploded grenade bounced on his helmet and rolled toward his helpless comrades. He arose into the withering fire, dived for the missile and smothered its blast with his body. By his swift, supremely heroic action Pfc. Munemori saved 2 of his men at the cost of his own life and did much to clear the path for his company’s victorious advance.170 In an almost ironic twist of fate, one of the last chapters of the history of the 100th /442nd involves the Nisei of the 522nd Field Artillery battalion. While most of the 100th /442nd was sent back to northern Italy to help in the final push against the Germans, the 522nd FAB was detached and assigned as a roving artillery support unit assigned to various combat units in Germany. As such, the 522nd was involved with the liberation of Dachau, one of Nazi Germany’s most notorious extermination camps. During its infamous existence, the camp at Dachau housed prisoners from over 27 different countries and claimed over 32,000 deaths by mass extermination, death marches, individual execution and starvation. 171 It was during the last days of April, 1945 that men of the 522nd FAB happened upon a site that would be forever etched into their memory. In the book Go For Broke by Chester Tanaka, Company “K” of the 442nd RCT, the first moments when the soldiers of the Nisei artillery unit entered the camp are brought to light in the passages of a diary written by eyewitness, Ichiro Imanura of the 522nd Medical Detachment: “Two liason scouts from the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion, 170 The official website for the Center for Military History. ( http://www.army.mil/cmh -pg/mohiib1.htm) Data from Concentration Camp-Dachau, 1933-1945, International Dachau Committee, Munich, 1978, booklet.) 171 100th /442nd, were among the first Allied troops to release prisoners in Dachau concentration camp. I watched as one of the scouts used his carbine to shoot off the chain that held the prison gates shut. He said he just had opened the gates when he saw a couple of the 50 or so prisoners sprawled on the snow-covered ground, moving weakly. They weren’t dead as he had first thought.”172 Another eyewitness to the liberation of prisoners at Dachau was Technician Forth Grade, Joe Ichiuji of Battery “A” of the 522nd FAB. The following is his incredible story: Joseph Ichiuji, Battery “A”, 522 FAB during second Basic Training at Camp Shelby, Miss., 1943, pictured on left. Service record is on the right. (Photo courtesy of Joe Ichiuji) As a member of the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion, we were attached to the 21st Army Group in Germany. We passed the Siegfried Line where we saw a whole regiment of captured German POWs. The Germans were giving-up everywhere along the Rhine. We spent about 45 days in Germany as a floating battalion assigned as needed. We entered Dachau and saw a number of released Jewish prisoners with black and gray uniforms on. They were released by our advanced scouts. These prisoners had short haircuts and very shallow faces. Practically all of them suffered from malnutrition because the German soldiers, in their haste to escape our advance, left them with no food. I saw the Jewish inmates eating a raw horse on the side of the road. We bivouacked on the side of the Dachau camp where we built a fire. Many of the released Jews came into the camp looking for food and warmth. Some of our guys gave them blankets and “C” rations, whatever they could find. We were told later not to feed the inmates the food we had because it was too rich, they would not be able to handle it. Some died. Some of my friends went into the camp and opened the door to one of the barracks and it was full of skeletons! He said he would never forget the smell. The commanders of the 522nd allowed some of the Jewish inmates to work in the camps as aids in the mess tent. The 522nd helped some of the Jewish prisoners try to find lost family members who were separated after the massive round-ups by the Nazis. There was this one Jewish POW who was a painter. He knew that his family was in one of the concentration camps in Austria, so he asked the CO if it would be okay to look for his family, and the CO allowed it. He 172 Chester Tanaka, Go for Broke (Richmond, Ca.: Go for Broke, Inc., 1982), 117. found his wife and two children alive.” 173 As the war came to end, thousands of new Japanese-American recruits continued to flood the ranks of the 100th /442nd RCT in Italy. Finally, on May 2, the Germans surrendered in the Po Valley region, and 5 days later all German forces surrendered effective May 8, 1945. After a brief period as occupation troops, the men of the 100th /442nd RCT went home to little fanfare or celebration. 174 MSgt Sus Toyoda (far right) with Japanese POW (left In Bougainville, April 1944. 173rd Language Detachment, 37th Division Bougainville, 1944-45. MSgt Sus Toyoda is in the front row, 2nd from the right No history of the Japanese-American experience during World War II wo uld be complete without a brief examination of the contributions made in the Pacific Theater by the Nisei who served with the Military Intelligence Service (MIS). When the war in the Pacific began between the Empire of Japan and the United States, Japanese officials felt very confident in marking any type of military document or battle order in plain “Japanese” without first decoding the material. In fact, throughout the war it was common practice for Japanese pilots and radio operators to broadcast information in the 173 Joe Ichiuji, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Rockville, MA. June 18, 2002. 174 Lyn Crost, Honor by Fire-Japanese Americans at War in Europe and the Pacific (Novato: Presidio Press, 1994), 253. “clear” because it was thought that no one could understand the complex Japanese language. 175 To counter this problem, the War Department decided to start a language school in the Presidio of San Francisco under the direction of Lt. General John DeWitt, the same man who later echoed those infamous words “A Jap is a Jap” during the roundup for internment. 176 In July of 1942, months before the outbreak of war in the Pacific, a number of Nisei who were serving in the Army were subjected to a testing of their Japanese language abilities. Recruiters were quickly dispatched throughout Hawaii and the mainland to find skilled Nisei linguists who could be trained in the art of military intelligence and interrogation. One of the first recruits to enter the Military Intelligence Service was Sus Toyoda of San Gabriel, California: “I was inducted into the U.S. Army per the Selective Service Act at Fort MacArthur, California and assigned to Company “A” of the 56th Medical Battalion at Ft. Lewis, Washington. ”177 Sus, like so many other Japanese-Americans on the West Coast, was not immune to the effects of prejudice and discrimination produced by the attack on Pearl Harbor: I was in the San Francisco area attending the Surgical Technicians Course at Letterman General Hospital in the Presidio when I heard about the attack on Pearl Harbor. I quickly returned to Ft. Lewis in Washington and found the 56th Medical Battalion set-up in the surrounding woods. Rumors were flying that the Japanese were going to attack and land troops in Seattle. Being an eager beaver, I stepped out and became a volunteer for guard duty. I performed my guard duty 2 hours on down at the motor-pool armed with nothing but a nightstick, no rifle. We hadn’t received rifle training yet. I completed the 2 hours and reported back to the guard officer. He said, “You’re relieved of duty.” I said, “Why?” He replied that some of the guys in the outfit did not want the motor pool guarded by a “Jap.” That really hurt me!178 After being transferred to a Reception Center at Camp Wolters, Texas, Corporal Toyoda was assigned to the newly relocated Military Intelligence School at Camp Savage, Minnesota where he underwent 6 months of Japanese Language training. “It was an intensive course on the Japanese language. We had to memorize all types of material that contained Japanese writing including letters, radio intercepts, order of battle documents from the Japanese Army and diaries. We also had to learn all the Japanese holidays. Why? The Japanese military loved to attack on holidays.”179 Upon the completion of training, Corporal Toyoda and other MIS members were reassigned to the Pacific to help 175 Joseph D. Harrington, Yankee Samurai (Detroit: Pettigrew Press, Inc, 1979), 7. Ibid, 8. 177 Sus Toyoda, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Carlsbad, CA., June 9, 2002. 178 Ibid 179 Ibid. 176 the American and Allied troops gather information about the Japanese forces through POW interrogation. By March 1945, newly promoted Master Sergeant Sus Toyoda was heavily involved with the combat actions of the 173rd Language Detachment of the 37th Infantry Division on Bougainville in the Solomon Islands. After an intense firefight between the 37th Infantry and the 45th Regiment of the infamous Japanese 6th Division*, a Japanese POW disclosed vital information that resulted in a major victory for American forces. MSgt Toyoda was there to gather the crucial information from the POW: He mentioned he was on patrol and that he was trying to find a soft spot somewhere in our lines. Why? Because there was going to be a regimental attack by the Japanese forces. The next Japanese holiday was “Japan’s Army Day” on March 10th . This information was relayed to the G-2 section and the commanding officer of the U.S. XIV Corps all the way up the line. The front lines were really reinforced with extra fields of fire, extra pillboxes, barbed wire entanglements were doubled and tripled in some places. Sure enough, the Japanese 45th Regiment attacked on our right on March 10, 1944. Our infantrymen described it like shooting ‘fish in a barrel.’ Bodies were stacked like cordwood. The strength of the 45th was about 3500 soldiers. We estimated that the entire regiment was decimated. All this caused by the information from one prisoner.180 Information obtained by Japanese prisoners wasn’t the only source of valuable intelligence that had an effect on the outcome of the operations on Bougainville. Once again, according to MSgt Toyoda, information about Japanese operations could be found everywhere, even on the dead: I found a bloodied map showing the location of the 23rd Infantry Regiment of the Japanese 6th Division, including the assembly area, line of attack, and the line of departure, all for the entire 23rd Regiment. We noticed two nights prior to this that there had been an attack. The Japanese had used probing tactics every other night. It was estimated that the night I found the map was the night the Japs would assemble. Fortunately their maps and ours were practically the same as far as coordinates and grids go. It was decided that the artillery of the 37th , the 14th Corps and Americal Division would zero in on the assembly area. Starting around 6 in the evening, we sent everything but the kitchen sink into the area. The following morning the patrol went out and claimed that the entire jungle area appeared like a moonscape. They found only one Japanese soldier wondering around. He was brought back to Headquarters and interrogated. This guy broke down and cried because he came all the way from Japan to fight the American soldiers and he was unable to fire even one shot. This more or less ended the Battle of Bougainville. 181 180 181 Ibid. Ibid. *The Japanese 6th Division was involved with the “Rape of Nanking” in China For his service in the Philippines, Sergeant Toyoda received a Bronze Star. (Document courtesy of Sus Toyoda) From Bougainville, to the Philippines and all the way to the gates of Tokyo, the intelligence and information gathered by MIS men like MSgt Sus Toyoda had a dramatic effect on the outcome of the war in the Pacific as American and Allied forces won victory after victory over Japanese forces. In Burma, members of the MIS served with distinction as part of the elite 5307th Composite Unit under the command of Colonel Frank D. Merrill. 182 Modeled and trained along the lines of the Chindits under General Joe “Vinegar” Stillwell, the actions of “Merrill’s Marauders” were instrumental in re- 182 John Costello, The Pacific War-1941 to 1945 (New York: Rawson, 1981), 462. opening supplies along the vital Burma highway into China. 183 As the war ended in the Pacific, some MIS veterans continued to serve in occupied Japan, helping to re-build the ravaged nation. According to Peter Okada, who was assigned to the Marine 10th Division in southern Japan in October of 1945, “The Nisei were involved with almost everything, from helping establish the court system where they had the military tribunal, to providing assistance to industry and education.”184 Many believe the contributions of the veterans of the Military Intelligence School helped end the war in the Pacific two years earlier than expected. Before closing this chapter on the history of the Japanese-American experience during World War II, it’s important to examine what the leading commanders and soldiers in the field had to say about their contributions. General Mark Clark, Commander of the U.S. 5th Army had this to say about the 100th Battalion during its time in Italy: A bright spot in this period was the performance of the 100th Battalion, which had recently been assigned to the 34th Division. Except for several months in southern France, the 100th Battalion fought magnificently throughout the Italian campaign. It won the Presidential Citation for the destruction of a German SS Battalion on Mt. Belevedere, north of Piombino, in June 1944. It participated in many other engagements, had heavy casualties, and earned fourteen Distinguished Service Crosses and seventy-five Silver Stars. These Nisei troops seemed to be very conscious of the fact that they had an opportunity to prove the loyalty of many thousands of Americans of Japanese ancestry and they willingly paid a high price to achieve that goal. I was proud to have them in the 5th Army.185 Major General Jacob L. Devers, who commanded the Allied invasion of Southern France, had this to say about the 100th /442nd: There is one supreme, final test of loyalty for one’s native land-readiness and willingness to fight for, and if need be, to die for one’s country. These Americans pass that test with colors flying. They proved their loyalty and devotion beyond all question…These men…more than earned the right to be called just Americans, not Japanese Americans. Their Americanism may be described only by degree, and that the highest!186 In reaction to a wave of new racial discrimination that broke out after the war, a number of field officers and fellow G.I.s spoke out for their Nisei brethren. In a request to the War Department to get permission to officially speak out on behalf of the Japanese- 183 Ibid, 462. Peter Okada, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Kirkland, WA. June 10, 2002. 185 Mark Clark, Calculated Risk (New York: Harpers & Brothers, 1950), 235. 186 Chester Tanaka, Go for Broke (Richmond, Calif.: Go for Broke, Inc., 1982), 171. 184 American combat veterans in his home state of California, Captain George H. Grandstaff of the 100th Battalion had this to say: As one of the few white officers who served with the Japanese American 100th Battalion for two and a half years, my main interest is to see that the splendid work they have done in combat is called to the attention of the people of the Pacific Coast in order that Japanese Americans who desire to return here may receive fair treatment. The thought in…my mind…was that a white officer who lived in California most of his life could emphasize their splendid combat record as no Japanese American could. Racial prejudice would not enter the minds of the audience where I am concerned.187 Four other officers, including three from the 442nd RCT requested and received permission to similar assignments in their home states. All of them were given 30-day furloughs to represent the War Relocation Authority in its efforts to re- introduce the Japanese-Americans back into American society. 188 White soldiers who had served in other combat units along side the 100th /442nd also joined in these efforts: From Company D, 168th Regiment, 34th Division to the 100th Battalion in appreciation of the heroic and meritorious achievements of our fellow Americans in the 100th Battalion and the 442nd Infantry Regiment. We do hereby assert that our help can be counted upon to convince the folks back home that you are fully deserving of all the privileges with which we ourselves bestowed. It is a privilege and honor to acknowledge the members of the 100th Battalion and the 442nd Regiment as fellow Americans. We are duly proud to say “Well Done” to you and yours.189 These and other similar statements can be found almost everywhere in all the material and histories written about the 100th /442nd. The legacy of the dedicated work and bravery of the members of the Military Intelligence Service are best illustrated in the numerous buildings named in their honor at the Defense Language Institute at the Presidio of Monterey in California. In the end, the incredible record of achievements, awards and citations earned on the fields of battle in Europe and the Pacific by the heroic Nisei of the 100th /442nd Regimental Combat Team and Military Intelligence Service are testimony to the bravery and loyalty of all Japanese-Americans who contributed to American and Allied victory during World War II. When asked recently why they fought so hard against their enemies, the veterans interviewed for this essay all gave similar responses. “I didn’t do anything brave, I just did what I had to,” responded Tets Asato of Company “G” of the 187 Thomas D. Murphy, Ambassadors in Arms (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1955), 276. Ibid, 276. 189 Ibid, 277. 188 442nd. “ It’s part of our ancestry, you don’t do anything to shame the family. We did what we had to do as a team, some gave more.”190 For Jim Makino, a veteran of “G” Company of the 442nd, it came down to just doing the right thing: “We had to join, fight and win with honor, and live-up to our motto, “Go For Broke.”191 In reflecting on his motivation to serve with the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion of the 442nd RCT, Joe Ichiuji echoed similar thoughts: “We had to prove we were loyal Americans. I’m very happy to have served in the U.S. Army and that I came back uninjured.”192 One of the things that Don Seki of “L” Company, 442nd RCT remembers the most is the leadership: “Our noncommissioned officers, especially the platoon sergeants, they were the ones who really led us. Our officers were really terrific! They did whatever they could for us. Our Battalion commanders were terrific. I feel terrific today to have served with such an incredible group of guys.”193 The following sentiments by Lawson Sakai of “E” Company, 2nd Battalion of the 442nd encapsulates the total spirit and motivation of the typical Japanese-American combat veteran of World War II: We needed to prove we were loyal Americans. Prove to the government that we were loyal and not “enemy aliens” as they called us. We needed to right a wrong, and this is what we intended to do, even if it meant giving up our lives to do so. It meant serving with honor. That is why these men would charge a hill and attack a machine gun nest with such veracity. I don’t know if other units would do the same thing. I saw so many men shot down during those charges. I saw medics get shot right through the red cross on their helmets. These guys were the real heroes.194 For many veterans of the 100th /442nd and MIS, they interpreted their mission as a means to inspire their incarcerated families at home in Relocation Camps. In a letter to his imprisoned sister dated July 29, 1944, Pfc. Ernest Uno of the 442nd RCT wrote about why he was fighting: “I know now, for certain, what we are fighting for! Our mission is to free all the nations of oppression. Give the children of this, and the coming 190 Tets Asato, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Torrance, CA., June 17, 2002. 191 Jim Makino, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to San Gabriel, CA., June 30, 2002. 192 Joe Ichiuji, interviewed by author, phone tape recording from Knoxville, TN to Rockville, MA. June 18, 2002. 193 Don Seki, interviewed by author, phone tape recording, Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, CA., June 30, 2002. 194 Lawson Sakai, interview by author at Air National Guard TEC, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002. generations a chance to grow decently, and learn the true meaning of the ‘Four Freedoms.’”195 Thanks to the incredible efforts of the Nisei soldiers who fought and died on such infamous battle fields as Monte Cassino, Bruyeres-Biffontaine, Guadalcanal, Iowa Jima, Okinawa and in the Po Valley, the liberties and freedoms we so dearly cherish today are preserved for future generations. The surviving veterans of the 100th /442nd and the Military Intelligence Service are getting older now. Not many of them are left. But even as they pass on, their legacy continues in the form of their children and grandchildren. The lessons we’ve learned from the history of the 100th /442nd and MIS say a lot about our nation and people. In closing, let the following statement from President Truman made in honor of the 100th /442nd/MIS veterans at a special presentation at the end of the war, be the foundation in which we honor and remember these proud soldiers: You are to be congratulated on what you have done for this great country of ours. I think it was my predecessor who said that Americanism is not a matter of race or creed, it is a matter of the heart. You fought for the free nations of the world along with the rest of us. I congratulate you on that, and I can’t tell you how very much I appreciate the privilege of being able to show you just how much the United States of America thinks of what you have done. You are now on your way home. You fought not only the enemy, but you fought prejudice-and you have won. Keep up the fight and we will continue to win-to make this great Republic stand for just what the Constitution says it stands for: the welcome of all the people all the time. Bring forward the colors. Decorations Earned by the 100th Infantry Battalion and the 442nd Regimental Combat Team • 195 7 Major campaigns in Europe Pfc.Ernst Uno in a letter to his sister, Mae taken from War Letters, ed. Andrew Carroll (New York: Scribner, 2001), 225. • 8 Presidential Unit Citations: 5 of these were earned during the one -month period during the fighting for Bruyeres and the “Lost Battalion” • 9,486 Casualties (Purple Hearts) • 18,143 Individual decorations including: • 21 Congressional Medals of Honor • 52 Distinguished Service Crosses • 1 Distinguished Service Medal • 560 Silver Stars, with 28 Oak Leaf Clusters in lieu of second award • 22 Legion of Merit Medals • 4,000 Bronze Stars, 1,200 Oak Leaf Clusters representing second Bronze Stars • 15 Soldier’s Medals • 12 French Croix de Guerre, with 2 Palms representing second award • 2 Italian Crosses for Military Merit • 2 Italian Medals for Military Valor • 36 Army Commendations • 87 Division Commendations • 1 Meritorious Service Plaque for Medical Detachment and Service Company Medal of Honor Recipients of the 100th/442nd RCT Private Barney Hijaro Private First Class, I Company, 3rd Battalion, 442nd RCT Awarded the Medal of Honor for valor on October 19, 22 and 29, 1944, near Bruyeres and Biffontaine, France during the famous battle to rescue the “Lost Battalion” of Texas National Guardsmen from the 141st Infantry Regiment Acting as a security guard on top of an embankment, Hijaro observed a friendly unit under attack in a house 200 yards away. Disregarding personal safety, Hijaro directed fire at the enemy stronghold killing or wounding a number of snipers. While holding a forward attack position, Hijaro helped capture 2 light machine guns, two automatic rifles, 4 pistols, 10 rifles and a number of grenades. Tech. Sgt. James K. Okubo Awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism as a noncombatant on October 28 and 29, and November 4, 1944 with the 442nd RCT near Biffontaine, France. Under constant barrages of enemy small arms and machine gun fire, Okubo risked personal safety to treat a number of wounded soldiers during the fierce struggle to save the Texas National Guard troops of the “Lost Battalion”, 141st Infantry Regiment. In one particular instance, Okubo ran 75 yards under grazing machine gun fire, while exposing himself to direct hostile fire, to save a wounded crewman from a burning tank who would have otherwise died. Pfc. Kiyoshi Muranaga Private First Class, F Company, 442nd RCT Awarded the Medal of Honor for heroic actions on June 26, 1944 near Suverto, Italy. While his company of fellow soldiers dispersed around him, Pfc. Muranaga held his position as a mortarman in an attempt to hold back attacking German forces. Fully exposing his position to the enemy, he called down his own death as he dueled one-onone with the heavier artillery of deadly German 88 mm self-propelled guns in order to protect his comrades. Muranaga was killed by a direct hit on his position (no photo available) Pvt. Mikio Hasemoto Private, B Company, 100th Battalion, 442nd RCT Awarded Medal of Honor on November 29, 1943 During intense combat action around Cerasuolo, Italy, Pvt. Hasemoto distinguished himself by repulsing a German attack on the left flank of his position by over 40 heavily armed soldiers. When the enemy advanced on his position, Hasemoto fired his weapon until it was damaged by automatic rifle fire. He ran to the rear, secured another rifle, and continued to defend his position. Running through a barrage of machine gun bullets, Hasemoto continued to fire back at the enemy, killing 27 enemy soldiers in the process. He was killed the next day repelling another German attack. (no photo available) Tech. Sgt. Yeiki Kobashigawa Tech. Sgt. B Company, 100th Battalion, 442 RCT Awarded Medal of Honor for his actions on June 2, 1944, near Lanuvio, Italy During an attack, Kobashigawa’s platoon came across a series of German machine-gun nests. Spotting one 50 yards away, he crawled forward, threw a grenade and then charged with his sub- machine gun. He killed one enemy soldier and captured two prisoners. Moment’s later, more enemy machine-gun positions opened fire on Kobashigawa’s men. While providing cover fire and grenade support, Kobashigawa helped neutralize and capture a number of enemy soldiers and guns. Pvt. Shizuya Hayashi Private, A Company, 100th Battalion, 442nd RCT Awarded Medal of Honor for his actions on November 29, 1943 near Cerasuolo, Italy During an assault on high ground held by German soldiers, Hayashi rose alone in the face of grenade, rifle and machine-gun fire, fired his automatic weapon from the hip while wearing a shoulder sling, and cha rged an enemy machine-gun nest. He took the position, killing 7 men and wounding two more. Moments later, Hayashi attacked an enemy antiaircraft position, killing nine more enemy soldiers while capturing 4 prisoners. Pfc. Kaoru Moto Private First Class, C Company, 100th Battalion, 442nd RCT Awarded Medal of Honor for his actions on July 7, 1944 at Castellina, Italy While serving as a first scout, Pfc. Moto attacked a machine-gun nest, took a prisoner, and then captured a house used as an observation post by the enemy. Wounded, Moto continued to defend the position from being attacked by the Germans. Later, Moto spotted another machine- gun nest and opened fire, wounding two Germans and capturing several others. Pvt. Masato Nakae Private, A Company, 100th Battalion, 442nd RCT Awarded Medal of Honor for his actions on August 19, 1944 at Pisa, Italy Defending an outpost position, Pvt. Nakae held back a probe by German forces. Wounded during a mortar barrage, Nakae refused to leave and continued to fire his M-1 rifle and throw grenades from his exposed position. Despite being seriously wounded by shrapnel, Nakae held on and forced the Germans to withdraw. Pvt. Shinyei Nakamine Private, B Company, 100th Battalion, 442nd RCT Awarded Medal of Honor for his actions on June 2, 1944 at La Torreto, Italy When his platoon was pinned down by intense machine-gun cross fire, Pvt. Nakamine crawled to within 25 yards of one enemy position and then charged it while firing his sub- machine gun, killing 3 enemy soldiers and capturing 2 more. Later in the day, he led another successful attack against a second German machine-gun. After spotting a third enemy gun, he led another charge and was killed by a burst of enemy fire. Pfc. William K. Nakamura Private First Class, G Company, 442nd RCT Awarded Medal of Honor for his actions on July 4, 1944 at Castellina, Italy During a fierce firefight, Pfc. Nakamura crawled about 20 yards towards an enemy machine- gun nest while under intense gunfire. When he was within 15 yards of the enemy position, he quickly rose to a kneeling position and blasted the nest with a hail of grenades. Pfc. Nakamura was later killed in action while making a heroic stand to defend his position while the rest of his unit withdrew safely. Staff Sgt. Allan M. Ohata Staff Sgt. 100th Battalion, 442 RCT Staff Sgt. Allan M. Ohata, 100th Battalion, was cited for heroism on November 29 and 30, 1943, near Cerasuola, Italy. Ohata, his squad leader and three other men were ordered to protect their platoon’s left flank against a large force of enemy soldiers. Coming to the aid of a wounded comrade, Ohata sprinted through heavy gunfire, reached his comrade’s position, and pulled him to safety while spraying the enemy with withering fire from his automatic weapon. Ohata and his men repeatedly fought off German attacks throughout the day, killing over 40 some enemy soldiers. Staff Sgt. Kazuo Otani Staff Sgt., 442nd RCT Staff Sgt. Kazuo, 442nd RCT, was awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism on July 15, 1944, near Pieve Di S. Luce, Italy. Otani’s platoon was attacking a hill when it was pinned down in a wheat field by concentrated fire from enemy machine- gun and sniper fire. Realizing the danger confronting his platoon, Otani left his cover and killed a sniper who was firing with deadly effect upon his men. Then, followed by a steady stream of machine- gun bullets, Otani dashed across the open field to act as a decoy to help his men crawl to safety. Otani was killed while administering first aid to one of his wounded comrades. Tech. Sgt. Ted T. Tanouye Tech. Sgt. Ted T. Tanouye, 442nd RCT, distinguished himself by extraordinary heroism in action on July 7, 1944, near Molino A Ventoabbto, Italy. Tanouye led his platoon in an attack to capture the crest of a strategically important hill that afforded little cover or concealment. Tanouye crept up on an enemy machine-gun and opened fire, killing or wounding three Germans. While advancing forward, Tanouye was severely wounded by grenade bursts but continued forward, knocking out a number of enemy guns and men. After drawing enemy fire on his position for most of the afternoon, Tanouya finally organized a defensive position on a slope and accepted first aid for his wound. Pvt. Joe Hayashi Private First Class, Company K, 442nd RCT Pvt. Joe Hayashi, 442nd RCT, was presented the Medal of Honor for gallantry on April 20 and 22, 1945, near Tendola, Italy. Ordered to attack a strongly defended hill that commanded all approaches to the village of Tendola, Hayashi led his men to a point within 75 yards of enemy positions before they were detected. After dragging his wounded comrades to safety, he returned alone and exposed himself to small arms fire in order to direct and adjust mortar fire against the hostile emplacements. While attacking Tendola two days later, Hayashi engaged and destroyed a number of enemy machine- guns and men before being killed by a burst of machine pistol fire. Pfc. Joe M. Nishimoto Private First Class, Company G, 442nd RCT Pfc. Joe M. Nishimoto, 442nd RCT, was cited for heroism on November 7, 1944, near La Houssiere, France. After three days of unsuccessful attempts by his company to dislodge the enemy from a strongly defended ridge, Nishimoto, as acting squad le ader, crawled forward through a heavily mined and booby-trapped area. Spotting a machine gun nest, he hurled a grenade and destroyed it. Circling to the rear of another nest, he knocked it out with point-blank submachine gun fire. Nishimoto’s actions fo rced the enemy to withdraw. Tech. Sgt. Yukio Okutsu Tech Sgt., Company F, 2nd Battalion, 442nd RCT Tech. Sgt. Yukio Okutsu, 442nd RCT, distinguished himself in April 1945 on Mount Belvedere, Italy. While his platoon was halted by the crossfire of three machine guns, Oktutsu crawled through heavy fire to within 30 yards of one emplacement and destroyed it with two grenades. Crawling and dashing from cover-to-cover, he silenced a second machine gun with a grenade and then advanced on a third. Momentarily stunned by glancing fire of his helmet, Okutsu continued to engage several other enemy positions, killing and wounding a number of men. His single- handed actions enabled his platoon to resume its vital mission. Pfc. Frank H. Ono Private First Class, Company G, 442nd RCT Pfc. Frank Ono, 442nd RCT, was awarded the Medal of Honor for valor on July 4, 1944, near Castellina, Italy. In attacking a heavily defended hill, Ono’s squad was caught in a hail of gunfire from well-entrenched enemy soldiers. Ono opened fire with automatic rifle and silenced one machine gun 300 yards to his front. When his platoon was ordered to retreat, Ono occupied virtually unprotected positions, drawing enemy fire towards him and away from his comrades. Disregarding his own safety, Ono made himself a target until his men reached safety. Pvt. George T. Sakato Private, Company E, 442nd RCT Pvt. George T. Sakato, 442nd RCT, distinguished himself in action on October 29, 1944, near Biffontaine, France. After his platoon destroyed two enemy defense lines, during which Sakato killed five enemy soldiers and captured four, the unit was pinned down by heavy fire. Disregarding the enemy assault, Sakato made a one- man rush that encouraged his platoon to charge and destroy the enemy stronghold. After his squad leader was killed, Sakato too charge and continued the attack, killing and wounding a number of enemy soldiers. His gallantry helped turn possible defeat into victory. First Lt. Daniel K. Inouye Company E, 2nd Battalion, 442nd RCT First Lt. Daniel K. Inouye, now a U.S. senator, was awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism on April 21, 1945, in the vicinity of San Terenzo, Italy. While attacking a defended ridge guarding an important road junction, Inouye directed his platoon through a hail of automatic weapons and small arms fire to capture an artillery and mortar post. Inouye boldly crawled up the treacherous slope to within five yards of the nearest machine- gun and destroyed it with two grenades. Before the enemy could retaliate, he stood-up and neutralized a second enemy gun with submachine gun fire. Although wounded by a sniper’s bullet, he continued to engage the enemy until an enemy grenade shattered his right arm. Despite intense pain, Inouye refused treatment and continued to lead his men. Staff Sgt. Robert T. Kuroda Company H, 2nd Battalion, 442nd RCT Staff Sgt. Robert T. Kuroda, 442nd RCT, earned his Medal of Honor on October 20, 1944, near Bruyeres, France. While leading his men in an effort to eliminate snipers and machine gun nests, Kuroda encountered heavy enemy machine-gun fire from a heavily wooded slope. Unable to pinpoint the nest, he maneuvered under fire toward the crest of the ridge and located the enemy gun. He then advanced to within 10 yards of the nest and killed three enemy gunners with grenades. Kuroda was later killed that same day by a sniper while going to the aid of an American officer hit by enemy fire. Pfc. Sadao S. Munemori Pfc. Sadao S. Munemori, 100th Battalion, 442nd RCT, was awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously for gallantry on April 5, 1945, near Servavezza, Italy. When his unit was pinned down by grazing enemy fire and the outfit’s leader lay wounded, Munemori took over and made frontal, one- man attacks through direct fire and knocked out two machinegun nests with grenades Bibliography American Forces in Action. 14 Pamphlets. Washington: Government Printing Office. 1943-1947. -From the Volturno to the Winter Line 6-October to 15 November -5th Army at the Winter Line 15 November to 15 January, 1944 -Merrill’s Marauders, February to May 1944 Adamczyk, Richard D. and Morris J. MacGregor Jr. Ed. United States Army in World War II-Readers’ Guide. Washington D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1992. Ankrum, Homer R. Dogfaces Who Smiled Through Tears. 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Portner, Stuart. “The Japanese-American Combat Team.” Military Affairs, Volume 7, Issue 3 (Autumn, 1943): 158-162. Steidl, Franz. Lost Battalions. Novato: Presidio Press, 1997. Shirey, Orville C. Americans-The Story of the 442nd Combat Team. Washington D.C.: Infantry Journal Press, 1946. Tanaka, Chester. Go for Broke. Richmond, Ca.: Go for Broke, Inc., 1982. U.S. Army, “Salerno to Rome,” Official History of the 100th Infantry Battalion (Separate), 2 September 1943 to 11 June 1944, Box 21085, Folder INBN-100-0.3 (23473), National Archives Branch Depository, Suitland, Md. Oral Interviews conducted with the following veterans : Mr. Lawson Sakai, veteran of Company “E” of the 2nd Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team, interviewed by author at the Air National Guard Training and Education Center Multi-Media TV Studio, McGhee Tyson Air National Guard Base, Knoxville, TN., May 22, 2002. Mr. Tetsuo Asato, veteran of Company “G” of the 2nd Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team, interviewed by author by phone using a normal cassette tape recorder from Knoxville, TN to Torrance, California, June 17, 2002. Mr. Jim Makino, veteran of Company “G” of the 2nd Battalion, 442nd Regimental Combat Team, interviewed by author by phone using a normal cassette tape recorder from Knoxville, TN to San Gabriel, California, June 20, 2002. Mr. Joe Ichiuji, veteran of the 522nd Field Artillery Battalion attached to the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, interviewed by author by phone using a normal cassette tape recorder from Knoxville, TN to Rockville, Maryland, June 18, 2002. Mr. Don Seki, veteran of Company “L” of the 3rd Battalion of the 442nd Regimental Combat Team, interviewed by author by phone using a normal cassette tape recorder from Knoxville, TN to Long Beach, California, June 30, 2002. Mr. Sus Toyoda, veteran of the Military Intelligence Service who served in the campaigns at Bougainville and the Philippines, interviewed by author by phone using a normal cassette tape recorder from Knoxville, TN to Carlsbad, California, June 9, 2002. Mr. Peter Okada, veteran of the Military Intelligence Service who served in the Philippines and Japan during the occupation phase, interviewed by author by phone using a normal cassette tape recorder from Knoxville, TN to Kirkland, Washington, June 10, 2002.
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