Philippine Islands 7 December 1941 - 10 May 1942
A few hours after the raid
on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941,
Japanese aircraft attacked the Philippines.
Three days later Japanese troops landed on
Luzon. America’s meager air power in
the islands was soon destroyed. Unable to
obtain reinforcements and supplies, MacArthur could do nothing more than fight a
delaying action. Between 16 and 18 December
the few bombing planes that remained
were evacuated, by their crews,
to Australia, where US air power in the
Far East was to be concentrated. Other
members of the air units took up arms and
fought as infantrymen in the battle that
ended, at Bataan and Corregidor, with the
loss of the Philippines in May 1942.
Central Pacific 7 December 1941 - 6 December 1943
The war in the Central
Pacific began with the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. Six
months later an AAF task force took part
in the Battle of Midway, in which a great
Japanese fleet was defeated. But another
year and a half elapsed before American
forces began an offensive against Japanese
positions in the Central Pacific. It was
then, on 20 November 1943, that landings
were made in the Gilberts, on Makin and
Tarawa, with the Marines at the latter
place becoming engaged in one of the
bloodiest battles of the war.
Aleutian Islands 3 June 1942 - 24 August 1943
On 3-4 June 1942, at the time
of the Battle of Midway, a Japanese force
attacked Dutch Harbor and inflicted considerable
damage before it was driven off.
The Japanese then occupied Attu and
Kiska. For the rest of 1942 and into 1943,
Eleventh Air Force struck enemy bases
and installations whenever weather over
the Aleutians permitted. The United
States troops that landed on Attu on 11
May 1943 had possession of the island by
the end of the month. The capture of
Attu isolated Kiska, which was bombed
repeatedly by American aircraft. The
troops that invaded Kiska on 15 August
1943 discovered that the Japanese, under
the cover of fog, had secretly evacuated
their garrison.
Papua 23 July 1942 - 23 January 1943
In another effort to take Port Moresby the
Japanese landed troops at Buna, Gona, and
Sanananda in July 1942. At first the Allies
could offer only feeble resistance to the
enemy forces that pushed southward
through Papua, but the Allies were building
up their strength in Australia. By
mid September Fifth Air Force had superiority
in the air over New Guinea, and
the Japanese drive had been stopped. The
Allies then began to push the enemy back,
with Fifth Air Force ferrying supplies and
reinforcements to the troops fighting in the
jungle. Buna was taken on 2 January
1943, and enemy resistance at Sanananda
ended three weeks later.
Guadalcanal 7 August 1942 - 21 February 1943
On 7 August 1942 the first stage of the offensive began with landings by a Marine division on Guadalcanal and nearby islands. The Japanese reacted vigorously. They inflicted a serious defeat on Ghormley's naval forces in the Battle of Savo Island (8 August 1942), landed large numbers of reinforcements on Guadalcanal, and ultimately lost strong ground, air and naval forces in a desperate effort to hold Guadalcanal. Six major naval engagements were fought off the island. Air battles raged almost daily until the end of October 1942. On shore the issue was in doubt for almost three months. Before the island was finally secured in February 1943, the United States had committed two Marine divisions, two Army divisions, and an additional Army regiment to the fight. Late in February 1943 an Army division was unopposed in taking the Russell Islands, 35 miles northwest of Guadalcanal. The Allies thus firmly established themselves in the Solomons.
New Guinea 24 January 1943 - 31 December 1944
After the loss of Buna and
Gona in New Guinea, the Japanese fell
back on their stronghold at Lae. Their
attempt to reinforce Lae by sea in March
1943 met with disaster when American
and Australian planes sank most of the
convoy in the Battle of the Bismarck Sea.
Salamaua and Lae then became the objectives
for an Allied advance along the
northern coast of New Guinea. Fifth Air
Force bombers attacked airfields at Wewak,
300 miles west of Lae, to neutralize
them. The Allies dropped paratroops at
Nadzab, just beyond Lae. Enemy resistance
at Salamaua broke on 14 September
1943; Lae fell two days later. In the
months that followed, MacArthur’s forces
pushed westward, capturing some Japanese
strongholds and bypassing others.
After taking Hollandia in April 1944, the
Allies attacked islands off the northern
coast of New Guinea, taking Wakde and
Biak in May, Owi in June, and Noemfoor
in July. Sansapor on New Guinea also
was gained in July. Aerial attacks on the
Philippines began in August, and Morotai
was seized in October to provide air bases
for the invasion of the Philippines. Allied
planes also bombed the oil center at Balikpapan
and other targets in Borneo and
Celebes.
Northern Solomons 22 February 1943 - 21 November 1944
After the conquest
of Guadalcanal, Halsey’s forces, supported
by Thirteenth Air Force, began a campaign
to capture Japanese strongholds in
the Northern Solomons. In February 1943 American forces landed in the Russell
Islands to obtain an air strip. Air bases at
Munda (New Georgia) and on Kolombangara
Island were attacked as the Allies
fought to gain superiority in the air.
American troops landed on Rendova and
on New Georgia at the end of June. The
air base at Munda was taken in August,
and the base on Kolombangara was neutralized.
Landings were made in the
Treasury Islands in October. Allied air
power struck the great Japanese naval and
air bases at Rabaul on New Britain to support
the assault on Bougainville, which
began on I November 1943. Enemy garrisons
on Bougainville were contained, and
other Japanese forces in the Northern
Solomons were isolated. Although the
enemy continued to resist, American air
and naval power dominated the Solomons.
Eastern Mandates 31 January - 14 June 1944
After the operations in the
Gilberts, American air and naval forces
bombed and shelled Japanese bases in the
Marshall Islands. In February 1944
American troops went ashore on Kwajakin,
Roi, Namur, and Eniwetok. Other
islands, including Jaluit and Wotje in the
Marshalls and Truk in the Carolines, were
bombed and shelled but were bypassed.
Bismarck Archipelago 15 December 1943 - 27 November 1944
To isolate and
neutralize Rabaul on New Britain and the
Japanese base at Kavieng on New Ireland,
American forces landed at Arawe and
Cape Gloucester in December 1943, on
Green and Los Negros Islands in February
1944, and at Talasea on New Britain and
on Manus Island in March. Some other
enemy forces in the Bismarck Archipelago
were bypassed.
Western Pacific 15 June 1944 - 2 September 1945
Attacks on Truk, where the
Japanese had a major base, continued as
preparations were made for the invasion
of the Marianas. The American troops
that landed on Saipan on 15 June 1944 met
bitter opposition; but, after a desperate
Japanese counterattack on 7 July, organized
resistance soon terminated. Tinian,
invaded on 25 July, was won by I August.
Guam, which had been seized by the Japanese
on 10 December 1941, was invaded
on 20 July and regained after 20 days of
fighting. With the conquest of the Marianas,
the United States gained valuable
bases for an aerial offensive against Japan
itself. To provide bases for operations
against the Philipgines, the Palaus were
invaded in mid-September. Later, aerial
attacks were made on Formosa to support
the invasion of the Philippines and
Okinawa.
Leyte 17 October 1944 - 1 July 1945
On 17 October 1944, after preparatory
bombardment, the invasion of the Philippines
got under way with the seizure of
islands guarding Leyte Gulf. The landing
on Leyte itself on 20 October was
strongly contested by Japanese forces on
land and at sea. Organized resistance on
the island did not end until after Christmas,
and mopping up operations continued
for a long time. Meanwhile, at the
end of October, the neighboring island of
Samar was occupied with little difficulty.
Luzon 15 December 1944 - 4 July 1945
After Leyte came Mindoro, which was invaded
on 15 December 1944, an air strip
being obtained to provide a base for operations
during the invasion on Luzon.
American troops landed on the shores of
Lingayen Gulf on g January 1945 and
pushed to Manila, which the Japanese defended
vigorously until 24 February.
Rather than meet the Americans in a decisive
battle, the Japanese decided to fight
delaying actions in numerous places. Organized
resistance ended in southern
Luzon in April and in central and northern
Luzon in June.
Southern Philippines 27 February - 4 July 1945
After Luzon had been invaded
and Manila taken, a series of landings
were made in the southern Philippines, on
Palawan, Mindanao, Panay, Cebu, Negros,
and other islands. In some places the
Japanese offered little resistance; in others
they held out for considerable time. The
liberation of the Philippines was announced
by MacArthur on 5 July 1945.
Ryukyus 26 March - 2 July 1945
The invasion of the Ryukyus was made by troops of the U.S. Tenth Army, which had been activated on 20 June 1944 with Lt. Gen. Simon B. Buckner, Jr., as commanding general. The Ryukyus campaign began on 26 March 1945 with the capture of small islands near Okinawa, where forward naval bases were established. An amphibious assault on Okinawa took place on 1 April, and the fighting lasted until June. Here, for the first time, Americans were invading what the Japanese defenders considered their home soil, and the defense was fanatic in the extreme. American troops suffered heavy casualties, and the Navy, too, had heavy personnel losses as Japanese suicide flyers, the Kamikazes, sank some 25 American ships and damaged 165 others in a desperate attempt to save the Ryukyus. Among the nearly 35,000 American casualties were General Buckner, who was killed on 18 June. He was succeeded by Maj. Gen. Roy S. Geiger, who was in turn succeeded by General Joseph W. Stilwell, who arrived to assume command of the Tenth Army on 22 June 1945.
Capture of the Ryukyus gave Allied naval and air forces excellent bases within 700 miles of Japan proper. Throughout June and July, Japan was subjected to increasingly intensive air attack and even to naval bombardment.