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The bloodiest and crulest campaign of 00:05
World War II rages on a small island the 00:08
size of Los Angeles. 00:11
The Battle of Okinawa. 00:14
As war winds down in Europe, here on 00:19
this little piece of land in the middle 00:22
of the Pacific Ocean, the United States 00:24
and Japan face off in an agonizing 00:26
conflict that will change the course of 00:29
history. 00:31
>> It's gruesome, high casualties. This is 00:37
really a slugfest, more of a World War I 00:40
type of battle. 00:42
On the American side, 180,000 soldiers, 00:44
an armada of battleships, and thousands 00:48
of fighter aircraft. 00:50
On the other, 120,000 desperate Japanese 00:53
ready to die for their country. 00:57
>> You had to be willing to sacrifice your 01:00
life for the emperor. That meant you 01:02
were a good Japanese citizen. 01:03
General Buckner leads the American army 01:09
against General Ushima on the Japanese 01:11
side. The two officers will fight to the 01:13
bitter end. 01:16
Almost everything was wiped out. It was 01:18
a massive destructive battlefield. 01:21
>> Over three grueling months in 1945, the 01:25
horror and violence reached their peak. 01:28
April sees massive kamicazi attacks 01:32
against the American fleet. That's the 01:34
costliest battle in US Navy history. 01:36
>> In May, fierce battles rage in the 01:41
mountains. 01:43
>> The Americans called the south side of 01:44
the hill the bloody mountain. 01:46
>> And in June, the rainy season brings new 01:51
torment to the ground troops. 01:53
>> You end up with feet of mud that go down 01:55
and down and down. 01:58
Now, through rare archival footage, 02:04
you're about to relive the decisive 02:06
moments of the crucial battles day by 02:08
day and as if you were there in the 02:10
trenches. 02:12
How was the landing on the island of 02:14
Okinawa planned? 02:16
Which Japanese strategies took the 02:18
American generals by surprise? 02:20
And what tipped the fate of certain key 02:23
battles? 02:26
It's the one big mistake that the 02:30
Japanese make on the defense of the 02:31
island. 02:33
>> This is the story of the Battle of 02:35
Okinawa. 82 days of combat that turned a 02:37
small Pacific island into a hell of fire 02:40
and blood. 02:43
[Music] 02:45
[Music] 02:54
East China Sea 5:30 a.m. On this 02:55
particular Easter Sunday, 1300 American 02:59
and British warships, including 12 03:02
aircraft carriers and seven battleships 03:04
are sailing towards the island of 03:07
Okinawa. A super powerful air sea task 03:09
force is ready to unleash countless 03:12
bombs on the island in order to land and 03:14
take it from the Japanese. 03:16
[Music] 03:18
The code name for this mission is 03:21
Operation Iceberg. It is the largest 03:22
assault of the entire Pacific campaign. 03:24
Since the surprise attack on Pearl 03:32
Harbor by Japanese planes in December 03:34
1941, the American army has set out to 03:36
conquer the territories of the Japanese 03:39
Empire. This includes the Marshall 03:41
Islands, the Solomon Islands, Saipan, 03:43
and the Philippines. It's been one 03:46
battle after another throughout World 03:48
War II. For the American command, 03:49
landing on the main Japanese island is 03:52
the last step of this relentless 03:53
conquest. After the Battle of Euima, the 03:55
last islands remaining to be seized are 03:58
in the Okanawa Archipelago, located a 04:00
mere 700 km south of the Japanese coast. 04:02
[Music] 04:08
>> In order to win against Japan 04:11
holistically, they needed to attack the 04:12
mainland. Whether that was by air, 04:16
continual bombing would get the job 04:17
done, or whether they actually had to 04:19
put boots on ground. In order to do 04:20
that, they have to get as close as they 04:23
can. 04:25
>> Okinawa is important for two reasons. 04:29
First, its strategic location allows it 04:32
to be an ideal base for the invasion of 04:34
Japan. You've got a lot of good space 04:38
for airfields. It's the right distance 04:40
to bomb southern portions of Japan. 04:42
You've also got a lot of space to have 04:45
infantry units train and station. 04:48
Second reason is that it allows the 04:52
Americans to cut off Japan from its 04:55
colonies. Taiwan, China coast, 04:57
Singapore, Java. All those pieces of 05:00
real estate are still in Japanese hands 05:02
in 1945. Japan's an island and most of 05:04
its economy is based on shipping. So, 05:07
it's easy to hit that with either ships 05:09
or with planes. 05:11
>> The 10th American Army is tasked with 05:17
invading Okinawa, 05:19
a force of 180,000 men under the command 05:21
of three star General Simon Bolivar 05:23
Buckner. 05:25
[Music] 05:27
Facing them, Japan has had time to 05:31
prepare its defense. 05:33
80,000 soldiers of the 32nd Japanese 05:35
Army led by General Ushima Mitsuru are 05:37
stationed on the island. 05:40
[Applause] 05:44
The population is also enlisted as 05:47
40,000 civilians will fight alongside 05:49
the soldiers. 05:51
Japanese troops come over and they 05:55
mobilize the entire island. And I mean 05:58
every man, woman, and child is supposed 06:02
to build fortifications and air strips 06:03
and all their farming is supposed to 06:06
feed the troops. And they're supposed to 06:08
be prepared to fight and enlist to 06:11
fight. 06:13
The Japanese general staff already knew 06:17
that their army would be decimated in 06:19
Okinawa. 06:20
The main mission of the troops was to 06:23
buy some time. 06:25
>> No matter the cost, they had to delay 06:32
the battle that would soon occur on 06:34
Japan's main island, even just by one 06:35
day. The army and the emperor himself 06:37
were aware that the island of Okinawa 06:40
would eventually be occupied by the 06:42
American troops, but they needed more 06:44
time to get ready before fighting the 06:47
Americans on their own turf. 06:48
[Music] 06:53
The Japanese wanted to inflict a lot of 06:55
casualties on the Americans. That was 06:57
basically their main strategic objective 06:59
in the fighting the battle. 07:01
The American general staff decide to 07:05
land on the western part of the island 07:07
on a coast stretching 8 km south of Cape 07:09
Zanpa near the village of Hagushi. 07:11
[Music] 07:14
There the reef is shallow and several 07:16
beaches run along the coastline. 07:18
During low tide, their width reaches 45 07:21
m, which is ideal for troop landing. 07:24
[Music] 07:31
While 1,200 troop ships approach the 07:32
coastline, the air and sea force blaze a 07:34
trail for the soldiers that are ready to 07:36
land. 07:38
40,000 shells, 30,000 rockets, and air 07:45
dropped napalon. 07:48
The fires of hell are unleashed on 07:53
Okinawa. 07:55
At 8:30 a.m., the first American 08:08
soldiers set foot on the beach. 08:10
But as the soldiers are expecting to 08:20
meet the fire of Japanese defense, the 08:22
surroundings are unusually quiet. 08:24
When the Americans landed, there were 08:32
hardly any Japanese soldiers. They faced 08:33
no resistance. 08:36
[Music] 08:38
When the soldiers arrived on April 1st, 08:41
it almost felt like they were going on a 08:43
picnic. 08:44
[Music] 08:47
They landed, they walked in, it was 08:52
really quiet. Soldiers and Marines alike 08:54
were like, "Wow, this is relatively 08:57
easy." There's no resistance there along 08:59
the beach. 09:02
You literally see soldiers marching in 09:04
land standing upright. The Americans are 09:07
getting lodged on the island and they're 09:10
like, "What is the Japanese general 09:12
doing?" And the answer is, "I don't 09:13
know, but we'll take advantage of it." 09:15
[Music] 09:23
However, the lack of resistance to the 09:25
American landing is in fact a deliberate 09:26
tactic on the part of the Japanese 09:28
command. 09:30
The Japanese air forces were heavily 09:32
damaged and destroyed. At this point, 09:35
they really didn't have the fuel to make 09:37
some of those operations. 09:40
The thing that they decide to do is 09:45
they're going to defend in land. They're 09:47
going to defend away from the beaches so 09:48
the Americans can't use their big guns 09:50
from their battleships against them. 09:52
So what happens is the landing force 09:55
lands on the beach and everyone is 09:57
expecting, you know, horrific casualties 10:00
and they're literally like where where 10:02
are the Japanese? 10:04
[Music] 10:06
The first day of Operation Iceberg is a 10:08
complete and unexpected success for the 10:11
American force. 10:12
In just a few hours, an area of 14.5x 5 10:18
km is already secured. While the 10:22
airfields of Kadana and Yumitan are 10:24
seized by the infantry, 10:27
[Music] 10:30
the death toll on the American side 10:33
amounts to 28. In comparison, the 10:35
landing in Normandy had caused 10,000 10:38
casualties on the first day alone. 10:40
[Music] 10:44
Nonetheless, the Japanese forces are 10:47
ready to fight. 10:49
A section is stationed up north, notably 10:50
on the Motubu Peninsula, while a 10:53
majority are lying in weight in the 10:56
southern part of the island along the 10:57
Shuri line. It's a mountainous area made 10:59
of hills where the soldiers have dug 11:02
tunnels to hide as they await the enemy. 11:04
For the Americans, the battle of Okinawa 11:10
is far from over. 11:12
[Music] 11:16
On the second day of the invasion, the 11:20
American soldiers start progressing 11:22
inland. 11:24
Four army divisions head south, while 11:28
the invasion of the north is entrusted 11:30
to two marine divisions facing a very 11:32
weak resistance. 11:35
Before 11:37
long, the entire west coast all the way 11:39
to Cape Za is occupied and the troops 11:42
march towards their next objective, the 11:44
Matubu Peninsula. 11:46
[Music] 11:51
But as the soldiers gain ground in the 11:53
open sea, the naval force must face a 11:55
relentless and unpredictable threat. 11:57
[Music] 12:03
The kamicazis. 12:10
The kamicazis were basically young, 12:36
relatively inexperienced pilots. 12:40
They didn't have a lot of aviation fuel 12:44
left in Japan and they didn't have a 12:47
good way of replacing pilots that they 12:49
lost. And when you go into combat, 12:51
you're always going to take casualties. 12:53
Japan didn't have any more high 12:59
performance planes or qualified pilots 13:01
at its disposal to conduct traditional 13:03
bombing operations. 13:05
So the general staff decided to round up 13:09
teenagers and asked them to simply crash 13:11
on the ships. 13:13
Back then it was considered an act of 13:19
bravery. one had to be willing to 13:21
sacrifice his life for the emperor. 13:23
>> That meant you were a good Japanese 13:27
citizen. It was utter madness, pure 13:28
fanaticism. 13:31
[Music] 13:37
These guys are often flying on their 13:42
kamicazi missions with 10, 15 hours in 13:44
the cockpit, which is not a whole lot. 13:46
The idea is that the kamicazis will 13:52
basically find and hit a US ship. 13:54
Carriers and battleships. 13:57
US aircraft carriers are not 13:59
particularly wellarmored. 14:02
There's the USS Franklin which is almost 14:05
taken out and there is the USS 14:07
Enterprise. 14:10
Franklin basically is toast. It is 14:13
ruined as a ship. 14:15
They took out about 30 destroyers during 14:18
the battle. 5,000 dead, another 5,000 14:21
wounded. That's the costliest battle in 14:24
US Navy history. 14:26
You're hitting destroyers. Boom, boom, 14:34
boom, boom. The Navy is going, "Move 14:36
faster. Move faster. We got to get these 14:39
guys out of here." So the kamicazis were 14:41
really, really hitting them hard. 14:44
In some cases, because it was so close, 14:48
they could actually see the face of the 14:51
pilot. 14:52
Those images really stayed with people 14:57
who experienced those attacks firsthand 15:00
for a very long time afterwards. 15:02
Along with its fighter planes, the 15:09
Japanese army also uses small suicide 15:11
boats called shino that are riddled with 15:13
explosives and maneuvered by a single 15:16
man. 15:18
>> You tend to think of kamicazi as only 15:22
being pilot, but kamicazi is a way in 15:24
which their fight that is the pilots, 15:26
that is the boats. A lot of it was being 15:28
aimed at ammunition transports. So you 15:30
can kind of cut off on some of that 15:34
advantage that the US had in terms of 15:35
supplies, ammunition. 15:37
>> The objective is not suicide. The 15:43
objective is victory. 15:46
>> The Japanese army stops at nothing to 15:52
damage the American war arsenal. Hoping 15:54
to weaken it furthermore, Emperor 15:57
Hirohito decides to go allin and hit the 15:59
Allied fleet stationed off the coast of 16:01
Okinawa with full force by ordering 16:03
operation Tango. 16:06
[Music] 16:11
Only six days into the invasion of 16:21
Okinawa, an armada of warships leave the 16:23
coast of Japan and head towards the 16:25
archipelago. 16:27
Among them is the Yamato, the largest 16:30
battleship in the world. 16:33
>> The Yumato was a magnificent ship, and 16:37
it was something that was also the pride 16:38
of Japan, too. It's 863 feet, 69,000 16:40
tons, and it had nine 18-in guns, which 16:45
is a little bigger than what even the US 16:50
has. 16:51
This is about all they have left. So, 16:53
they send the Yamato down to Okinawa, 16:55
and the idea was ram it onto the beaches 16:58
of Okinawa, point its guns out towards 17:02
sea, and shell the crud out of the 17:05
American invasion fleet. 17:08
problem with that is we have radar 17:11
pickets, we have submarines doing picket 17:13
duty and they see the Yamato coming. 17:15
When the Yamato and its escort pass the 17:23
Osumi Peninsula while heading south 17:25
towards Okinawa, 17:27
Admiral Spruent, the commander-in-chief 17:29
of the American army in the Pacific, 17:31
gives the order to launch an immediate 17:33
counterattack. 17:35
Admiral Raymond Spruent says, "I want to 17:40
kill that battleship, but I do not want 17:43
to get in a battleship fight where they 17:44
might actually win or they might take a 17:46
couple of my guys with them." 17:48
So, he basically sends airplanes off his 17:51
carriers. 17:53
[Music] 17:56
In just a few hours, the American 18:09
aircraft carriers hurl some 386 fighter 18:11
planes towards the Japanese Armada 18:14
heading towards Okinawa without any air 18:16
cover. 18:18
[Music] 18:26
Despite the firepower of the largest 18:32
battleship of the world, the Yamato 18:34
cannot withstand the violence of the 18:36
attack. 18:38
On that day, the entire crew of 3,000 18:42
men perish. 18:45
Biggest, baddest ship never fires a shot 18:50
in angry. 18:53
Goes down. Completely militarily 18:55
ineffective. sunk north of Okinawa. 18:57
>> It sinking was a huge emotional loss to 19:03
much of Japan, too. 19:08
So much was symbolized in that ship. A 19:10
whole national effort to build that size 19:14
vessel. 19:17
>> Operation Tang Go is a complete failure 19:22
for the Japanese Army. They've 19:24
sacrificed the jewel of their naval 19:27
force without causing any damage to the 19:28
enemy. 19:31
From his beloved second home at Warm 19:42
Springs, Georgia, the body of Franklin 19:44
Delano Roosevelt moves on the first 19:46
stages of its journey to his final 19:48
resting place. Scores of sufferers from 19:50
infantile paralysis sorrowfully bid 19:53
farewell to their great friend and 19:55
>> with the destruction of the Yamato. The 19:57
American army wins a key victory against 19:59
Japan. But meanwhile, the United States 20:01
are struck by the sudden death of 20:04
President Franklin Roosevelt. The entire 20:06
world is grieving. 20:09
The troops on Okinawa also pay tribute 20:13
to the late president. 20:16
But the Japanese general staff used this 20:18
event in an attempt to destabilize the 20:21
troops. They sent to the field a 20:23
propaganda pamphlet written in English. 20:25
To all American officers and men, we 20:29
must express our deep regret over the 20:32
death of President Roosevelt. The 20:34
American tragedy is now raised here at 20:36
Okinawa with his death. You must have 20:37
seen 70% of your CVs and 73% of your 20:40
bees sink or be damaged, causing 150,000 20:42
casualties. Not only the late president, 20:45
but anyone else would die in the excess 20:48
of worry to hear such an annihilative 20:50
damage. The dreadful loss that led to 20:52
your late leader's death will make you 20:54
orphans on this island. The Japanese 20:56
special attack war will sink your 20:58
vessels down to the last destroyer. You 20:59
will witness it realized in the near 21:01
future. 21:03
The numbers are totally whimsical, but 21:05
the text clearly shows that the Japanese 21:08
troops are willing to fight till the 21:10
end, and they make sure their enemy is 21:11
aware of it. 21:14
On the island, the battles have been 21:26
raging for nearly 3 weeks. The invasion 21:28
force faces a fierce resistance from the 21:31
outposts of the Shuri line, preventing 21:33
further advance in the south. 21:36
In the north, the progressing troops 21:41
reach Cape Hedo. 21:43
The last pocket of resistance is now 21:45
surrounded on the Mobu Peninsula near 21:48
Mount Yetake, the Japanese headquarters 21:50
of the North Sector. 21:52
Harassed by the Marines, their defense 21:59
is reduced to nothing. 22:01
With victory in sight, the general staff 22:05
decided to set out for a new objective. 22:07
The small island of Ewima, located less 22:10
than 3 km from the coast. This strategic 22:13
spot has three takeoff runways and radar 22:16
equipment which are indispensable to 22:18
establish air domination. 22:20
However, the geography of the island 22:30
makes its invasion extremely risky. 22:31
Japanese soldiers have taken refuge 22:34
inside of tunnels dug deep into the 22:36
mountain of Euoima. 22:38
The GIS must climb under enemy fire 22:41
coming from above. One of the most 22:43
dreaded situations for military men. 22:45
>> The Americans called the south side of 22:52
the hill the bloody mountain. 22:54
The Japanese army had been stationed 22:59
there long before their arrival. This is 23:00
where the most violent battles took 23:02
place. 23:04
>> So what you had there in terms of 23:09
Japanese forces is about 930 950 actual 23:10
uniformed troops about a battalion size 23:15
worth. They were augmented by Okanowan 23:18
conscripts and augmented by a lot of 23:20
civilians. 23:23
[Music] 23:26
Several months before the battle began, 23:30
the Japanese army had undertaken a 23:32
brainwashing operation of the civil 23:34
population on all the islands of the 23:36
Okanawa archipelago. 23:38
Propaganda pamphlets had been 23:40
distributed with the intention of 23:41
scaring the residents. 23:42
The indoctrination was not just about 23:47
where your loyalty should be in a sense 23:49
of civic duty, but was also a very 23:50
strong propaganda piece about how evil 23:53
the Americans were and how death at 23:56
their hands would be so torturous and 23:59
painful and drawn out that it is far 24:01
better to jump off a cliff and get it 24:04
over quick. 24:07
[Music] 24:10
We can easily imagine the fear of the 24:13
civilians who saw American soldiers for 24:14
the first time. They'd been ordered not 24:16
to be taken alive. 24:19
[Music] 24:21
They panicked. Only a few people had 24:24
received grenades to commit suicide. All 24:26
the others died decapitated, strangled 24:28
with ropes, or hit with pieces of wood 24:31
or rocks. The men couldn't bear the 24:33
thought of their wife and children being 24:35
captured and humiliated by the American 24:37
soldiers. They'd rather kill them with 24:39
their own hands. 24:41
[Music] 24:44
>> On the island, over 3,500 civilians are 24:50
prepared to face the invaders. 24:53
>> On the islands of the archipelago, 25:00
including Leima, many civilians were 25:02
mobilized and turned into soldiers, 25:04
including women. They were given 25:06
grenades to attack the Americans. In 25:08
Japanese, we call that kirikcomi. It 25:10
means suicide attack. 25:13
>> You'd have women running around with 25:22
spears, women with their children 25:24
strapped to them, still fighting the 25:26
battle and defending the caves and all 25:27
of that, which made it a very shocking 25:29
type of combat for the American soldiers 25:32
to handle and take over. 25:34
[Music] 25:38
[Applause] 25:45
[Music] 25:47
To a Japanese person, nothing is worse 25:50
than shame. Retaining one's dignity is 25:52
as important as one's life. The people 25:55
were told that being captured was a 25:57
humiliation and that had to be prevented 25:58
at all costs. That's what the civilians 26:00
believed because that's what they were 26:03
taught. 26:04
[Music] 26:06
The battles on the small island of Iwima 26:30
cost the lives of 4,700 Japanese while 26:33
only 149 are made prisoners 26:36
[Music] 26:40
on the field. As the battle enters its 26:43
fourth week, the American soldiers now 26:45
realize that the hell of Okinawa has 26:47
just begun. 26:49
[Music] 26:51
[Music] 27:01
On the main island of the archipelago, 27:05
the north is now entirely occupied by 27:07
the Americans. But in the south, the 27:09
battles continue. 27:12
This mountainous sector favors the 27:14
Japanese who have had time to organize 27:15
their defense. 27:17
The Japanese troop arrived in Okinawa 27:27
between August and September of 1944. 27:29
That's about 6 months before the 27:32
Americans who got there in April of the 27:33
following year. During that period, the 27:35
soldiers dug several tunnels by hand. 27:37
[Music] 27:43
Every crest of every hill is the theater 27:47
of fierce battles, and it often takes 27:49
several days to capture a single 27:52
position from the enemy. 27:54
They use tanks, mortar rounds, and 28:01
flamethrowers. And yet, despite the 28:03
devastating power of the American army, 28:05
it seems almost impossible to drive the 28:07
Japanese soldiers out of their hiding 28:09
places. 28:11
They had enough munitions to hold on for 28:18
6 months. 28:20
This is the best supplied Japanese army 28:22
unit that the Americans have encountered 28:25
in the Pacific War. 28:26
It's gruesome, high casualties, low 28:30
yards. In fact, no yards taken in some 28:33
cases. This is really a slugfest. More 28:36
of a World War I caliber than a World 28:38
War II type of battle. 28:40
[Music] 28:46
On April 24th, after 2 weeks of 28:54
attempts, the Americans finally succeed 28:56
in seizing Kakazu Ridge, a crest only 28:58
100 m long. 29:01
That day, the entire Machinado line 29:05
finally falls. 29:07
It's the first of three Japanese defense 29:10
lines. 29:12
>> The Japanese had all these defensive 29:17
positions prepared. So even though they 29:19
had breached the main line, there's 29:21
still other ones and other ones and 29:23
other ones. 29:24
The idea is we're going to make this 29:27
costly and you're going to die and then 29:29
your friends are going to die and then 29:31
their friends are going to die. 29:33
If you want Okinawa, fine. But you're 29:37
going to pay a very heavy price in lives 29:39
to take this island. 29:42
>> As the battle soon enters its second 29:47
month, the American soldiers morale 29:48
reaches a new low. 29:51
>> In the beginning of May, combat in the 30:02
hills is raging. 30:05
The Americans are faced with a fierce 30:08
resistance that immobilizes both camp's 30:10
positions on the field. 30:12
However, on the Japanese side, a 30:17
disagreement arises between General 30:19
Ushima's two advisers. 30:20
General Hiroshima Yahara in favor of an 30:24
ultra defensive strategy recommends that 30:27
the troops remain in hiding in the 30:29
island's caves as long as possible. 30:30
Whereas General Isamu Cho encourages 30:32
them to reassess their strategy. 30:35
General Cho, the chief of staff of the 30:40
32nd Army, was more old school in the 30:42
sense that he believed in, you know, 30:45
attack and he didn't like Colonel 30:47
Yahara's defensive tactics. So he 30:49
convinces Ushiima to launch an offensive 30:52
attack against the 10th Army. 30:54
[Music] 30:58
The counteroffensive is based on two 31:01
simultaneous moves involving a 3,000men 31:03
brigade supported by tanks that will hit 31:06
the center of the American lines while 31:08
an amphibian assault on the back coasts 31:10
creates a diversion. 31:13
The Japanese come out of their trenches. 31:23
They start charging. A little bit of a 31:25
bonsai charge. They were dug in and they 31:27
give that up and they're out in the 31:30
open. And it ends badly for these guys. 31:32
The counterattack is a complete 31:44
disaster. 31:46
[Music] 31:48
[Applause] 31:50
The Americans managed to destroy dozens 31:52
of Japanese heavy weapons. 31:55
As for the amphibian troops supposed to 31:57
attack the coasts, they are annihilated 31:59
at sea without leaving a single 32:01
survivor. 32:03
>> It's the one big mistake that the 32:07
Japanese make on the defense of the 32:09
islands and it accelerates the Japanese 32:11
defeat because they were holding. I 32:13
mean, the Americans are like banging 32:15
their heads against this, making no 32:16
progress. Suddenly, the Japanese do the 32:18
Americans a great favor. 32:20
On May 8th, 1945, victory is declared in 32:34
Europe. 32:37
[Music] 32:38
Populations around the world are 32:45
celebrating after 7 years of war. 32:47
Meanwhile, thousands of kilometers away, 32:50
battles keep on raging in the Pacific. 32:53
Japan hasn't surrendered. The American 32:56
soldiers engaged in this fight must try 32:59
and survive the nightmare of Okinawa. 33:01
>> The end of the war in Europe on May 8th 33:04
doesn't really matter that much on 33:06
Okinawa. The guys who are in the front 33:08
lines are still in the front lines. 33:10
They're still trying to accomplish a 33:12
military mission. Still trying not to 33:13
get killed by the other guy. 33:15
[Music] 33:21
>> On the field, the soldiers are settling 33:27
in. The slightest truce is an 33:29
opportunity to regain some sense of a 33:31
normal life. 33:33
However, quiet moments are short-lived 33:40
for the soldiers. 33:42
[Music] 33:46
Day after day, they must head back to 33:50
combat. 33:52
Each meter gained in the south gets them 33:55
closer to victory and their dream of 33:57
ever coming home. 33:59
[Music] 34:04
Dakashi, Wana, Sugarloaf Hill, Horseshoe 34:08
Hill, Half Moon Hill, Konicle Hill. The 34:11
southern Japanese outposts fall one 34:14
after the other at the expense of heavy 34:16
American casualties. 34:18
Meanwhile, on the West Coast, the 34:24
American forces are now getting closer 34:26
to the next goal of Naha, the island's 34:28
capital. 34:30
[Music] 34:42
In the last few days, the bombing of 34:44
Naha by the American Air Force has 34:46
intensified 34:48
on the field and around the city. The 34:51
violence of the battle is horrifying. 34:53
[Music] 34:59
The battle of Okinawa was described by a 35:06
war correspondent as a succession of 35:08
days in hell. 35:10
In the hills surrounding Naha as well as 35:13
downtown, the advantage kept changing 35:15
sides. 35:17
One day the American army dominated, the 35:19
next the Japanese would get back on top. 35:21
The battle was so fierce that many 35:24
American soldiers went mad. 35:26
It takes 6 days for the Americans to 35:38
capture the city. 35:40
On May 17th, the GIS enter the 35:42
devastated capital after weeks of 35:45
bombing. 35:47
But even after the fall of Naha, the 35:55
soldiers must face a new enemy just as 35:57
fearsome as it is destructive. 36:00
The rain. 36:03
[Music] 36:09
After the capital, the American general 36:12
staff must tackle the Shuri Castle, the 36:14
Japanese headquarters of the South 36:16
Sector. 36:18
The troop's progression on the western 36:20
and eastern fronts allows the Americans 36:22
to surround the location. 36:24
Ashuri Castle is an extremely protected 36:27
fortress sitting on top of a mountain 36:29
riddled with tunnels 36:31
and the extreme weather conditions 36:36
considerably slow down the soldiers 36:38
progression. 36:40
When you have steep areas that are very 36:43
muddy, it becomes difficult for vehicles 36:47
to move, tanks to move, personnel to 36:49
move. 36:52
But it's a lot more than just being wet. 36:58
The ground itself becomes extremely 37:00
saturated and never totally dries out. 37:03
So you end up with feet of mud that go 37:07
down and down and down and down. 37:10
supply becomes extremely difficult to 37:13
get through. The Marines actually are 37:15
hand carrying supplies in because they 37:17
cannot get the trucks to transport in 37:19
there by any means. 37:21
[Music] 37:27
Of course, it affects the air. You're 37:28
not going to be flying in terrible, 37:31
rainy, awful electric weather. 37:33
[Music] 37:36
If you happen to be holding a cave, 37:38
which the Japanese are, that again 37:39
affords them an advantage. 37:41
For several days, while Shuri Castle is 37:52
surrounded by the American army, both 37:54
camps are paralyzed by mud. Any attack 37:57
would be doomed to failure. 38:00
Confronted with this desperate 38:11
situation, General Ushima orders his 38:12
troops to fall back in the south. 38:15
Thanks to a lull, American surveillance 38:19
aircrafts are able to spot the maneuver. 38:22
General staff launch the final assault 38:26
on Shuri Castle, now deserted by the 38:28
Japanese. 38:30
[Music] 38:38
[Music] 38:45
On May 29th, the site is captured and 38:55
the American flag finally flies over one 38:58
of the most protected places of Okinawa. 39:00
General Buckner, commander of the 39:07
American invasion forces, decides to 39:08
reach out to his Japanese rival 39:11
directly. 39:12
>> Late May, General Simon Bolver Buckner 39:15
Jr., the commanding general of the 10th 39:17
Army, sends a letter to General Ushima. 39:19
Basically says, "General, let's end the 39:22
bloodshed. I've taken the key parts of 39:24
the island. There's really no reason to 39:25
keep fighting. 39:27
>> In this unprecedented letter in the 39:31
history of war, General Buckner offers 39:33
an honorable exit to General Ushima, 39:35
hoping to end a battle the latter cannot 39:37
win. 39:40
But for the Japanese commander, victory 39:42
was never the goal. 39:44
Strategy always had been to inflict as 39:48
many casualties on the Americans as 39:50
possible. If they want to take Okinawa, 39:52
they're going to take it. We don't have 39:54
the resources to drive them off, but 39:56
we're going to increase this cost bit by 39:58
bit, forcing them to take every ridge 40:00
and every line. 40:02
[Music] 40:07
He ignores the letter. There's no 40:11
response. 40:13
Following General Ushiima's refusal to 40:17
surrender, the Americans start chasing 40:19
the Japanese troops across the vast 40:22
plains in the south of the island. 40:24
Almost all of central and southern 40:28
Okinawa were destroyed. 40:31
Buildings, farmlands, trees, 40:35
almost everything was wiped out. It was 40:40
a massive destructive battlefield. 40:42
[Music] 40:46
In June, when the troops started to 40:49
retreat to the south, the entire 40:50
Japanese organization started to 40:52
collapse. 40:54
At that point, the soldiers were only 40:56
trying to survive. 40:57
[Music] 40:59
The people of Okinawa, who had been 41:03
recruited by the army, also tried to run 41:04
away. It's understandable because they 41:07
weren't even soldiers in the first 41:09
place. 41:10
They had no military training. 41:14
At that point, they realized they didn't 41:18
want to die in this never- ending 41:20
battle. 41:21
Abandoned by their own country's 41:29
military, the civilians are left to 41:31
their own devices. They're faced with 41:33
three options. Follow the orders given 41:35
by the army and commit suicide to avoid 41:38
being taken prisoner. run away and risk 41:40
to die of hunger or sickness or 41:43
surrender to the Americans. 41:45
[Music] 41:47
>> The Japanese troops were forcing 41:52
civilians to come out of their caves. 41:54
They took their food and those who 41:56
refused to leave were simply killed by 41:58
the soldiers. 41:59
Even those that were spared by the 42:03
Japanese army were forced to leave and 42:04
found themselves defenseless. 42:06
They were exposed to the American 42:09
bombings facing a certain death. 42:11
[Music] 42:14
There was mud everywhere which made it 42:20
very difficult to walk. Most of the 42:22
testimonies gathered from the residents 42:24
say they had no other choice than to 42:26
leave the wounded and the elderly behind 42:28
as they couldn't keep up. 42:30
The American army tries to convince the 42:42
civilians and the soldiers to surrender 42:44
by dropping leaflets by plane. They 42:46
contain testimonies allegedly written by 42:49
Japanese soldiers saying that those who 42:51
accept to stop fighting won't be harmed. 42:54
[Music] 42:56
Hundreds of soldiers have surrendered, 42:58
including high-ranking officers. There's 43:00
no reason to be ashamed. Instead of 43:02
killing or mistreating us, the Americans 43:04
treat us the same way they do their own 43:06
soldiers. Once peace is restored, your 43:08
family will be happy to know you're 43:10
still alive. 43:12
[Music] 43:16
Unfortunately, those instructional 43:28
leaflets weren't always believed or 43:31
trusted. 43:34
Even if somebody may have been 43:36
influenced by it and wanted to do it, 43:38
for whatever reason, they hesitated from 43:41
doing it. And that's because of 43:43
propaganda against them earlier that the 43:46
Americans are all rapists and they'll 43:50
murder you. 43:53
Several thousand residents are made 43:59
prisoners anyway. They realize that 44:01
those they were conditioned to fear are 44:04
actually helping them. 44:06
[Music] 44:08
family members survive and then they're 44:12
angry when they discover that the 44:14
Americans are actually decent, giving 44:16
him food, medical supplies. 44:18
[Music] 44:21
Since the capture of Shuri Castle, the 44:22
Japanese forces have been retreating. A 44:25
major section is stationed on the Oroku 44:28
Peninsula, while the rest occupies a 44:30
defense line at the base hills of Yaju, 44:32
Yuza, and Misado. 44:35
[Music] 44:37
The Japanese positions are getting 44:40
weaker with each passing day. The 44:42
progression of the American army is 44:44
inexurable. 44:45
The Aroku Peninsula is finally captured 44:48
on June 13th. Mount Yijup on the 14th 44:50
and Mount Yuza on the 16th. The very 44:54
last of the Japanese forces are hiding 44:57
in the natural caves in the far south of 45:00
Okinawa, notably on the Kinishi ridge 45:02
and the hill of Mabuni. 45:05
[Music] 45:07
On June 18th, as the American army feels 45:25
victory within its grasp, General 45:27
Buckner comes to look over his troops on 45:30
the front line. 45:31
These are the last images of the 45:35
American commander. 45:37
>> A few seconds later, 45:40
>> he's hit by shrapnel from Japanese 45:44
artillery fire. 45:46
[Music] 45:47
He dies from his injuries shortly after. 45:50
[Music] 45:53
He is the highest ranking American 45:57
officer to be killed in combat during 45:58
World War II. 46:00
[Music] 46:05
3 days later, American soldiers discover 46:17
the body of General Ushuima in a cave of 46:19
the Mabuni Hill. 46:22
The Japanese general had resorted to a 46:25
ritual suicide known in Japan as sepuku. 46:27
[Music] 46:31
The Japanese army was going to be 46:43
defeated. It was inevitable. Given the 46:44
situation, there was no way he could 46:47
return to Japan alive. That was the rule 46:48
in the Japanese army. To surrender was 46:51
unimaginable. 46:53
He was hiding in a tunnel on the side of 46:57
the hill and the Americans were closing 46:59
in. He was stuck. 47:00
[Music] 47:05
In those days, army commanders committed 47:07
suicide to avoid dishonor. 47:09
If they died by their own hand, they 47:12
could somehow save face. That's why he 47:14
opted for the sapuku. 47:16
[Music] 47:19
He disembowled himself and asked one of 47:23
his men to cut his head off. 47:26
But before he died, he ordered his men 47:29
to fight until the end and to not get 47:31
caught alive. 47:34
While the last remaining resistance 47:39
pockets fall into the hands of the 47:40
Americans, the two generals who led the 47:42
battle of Okinawa are dead. as if fate 47:44
had decided that this nightmare now had 47:47
to come to an end. 47:50
On June 22nd, 1945, after 82 days of 48:03
combat of gruesome violence, the Battle 48:07
of Okinawa is officially over. 48:09
There was obviously an immense amount of 48:13
pride and relief that it had been 48:16
seized. 48:18
Maybe slightly off schedule, but it had 48:19
been seized 48:21
and that the US was in the prime 48:24
position to be able to strike out 48:26
against mainland Japan. 48:28
[Music] 48:31
10th Army staff is starting to look at 48:34
maps of Honshu and figuring out how can 48:36
we land, where can we land, getting 48:39
ready for the next big operation. 48:41
And at that point in time, the invasion 48:44
Japan is scheduled to basically be 48:46
November of 1945. 48:47
So you only have about 2 months to get 48:50
ready. 48:51
[Music] 48:54
[Music] 49:10
The conquest of the island has claimed 49:16
the lives of 12,500 Americans and 49:17
wounded 35,000 more. Confronted with a 49:20
death toll of this magnitude and the 49:24
pressure of a country refusing to 49:26
withstand more casualties, the general 49:27
staff start reconsidering their invasion 49:30
plans of Japan. 49:32
>> There is a sad irony about the Battle of 49:36
Okinawa. 49:39
It implanted the correct idea that a 49:42
landing on mainland Japan is going to be 49:46
so destructive and it's going to take 49:50
possibly a million forces to land and 49:53
seize that it's just going to be so 49:56
horrific that maybe the use of the 49:58
atomic bomb was necessary. 50:02
45 days after the capture of Okinawa, 50:15
the United States end the war with Japan 50:18
by dropping two atomic bombs on the 50:20
cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. 50:22
[Music] 50:25
The Battle of Okinawa is therefore the 50:29
last one of World War II. 50:31
It has destroyed 90% of the island's 50:35
buildings and cultural heritage while 50:38
costing the lives of 150,000 residents. 50:40
[Music] 50:45
After the end of the war, the Americans 50:47
remain on the island in order to 50:49
establish their main Pacific bases and 50:51
implement a system allowing the people 50:53
to regain a normal life. 50:55
[Music] 50:58
Okinawa is later returned to Japan in 51:02
1972, 51:05
but the Americans continue to maintain 51:06
at least some presence. 51:08
>> Okinawa represents only about 0.6% of 51:12
Japan's total territory. 51:16
It's not even 1% yet 70% of US military 51:18
bases in Japan are concentrated there. 51:21
The residents still feel like victims 51:29
and their memories of war remain quite 51:31
vivid. 51:33
In a way, the battles that devastated 51:35
Okinawa are not over for them. 51:37
[Music] 51:42
On Okinawa, the scars left by 82 days of 51:44
gruesome battles will likely never 51:48
disappear. 51:50
[Music] 51:55

– English Lyrics

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[English]
The bloodiest and crulest campaign of
World War II rages on a small island the
size of Los Angeles.
The Battle of Okinawa.
As war winds down in Europe, here on
this little piece of land in the middle
of the Pacific Ocean, the United States
and Japan face off in an agonizing
conflict that will change the course of
history.
>> It's gruesome, high casualties. This is
really a slugfest, more of a World War I
type of battle.
On the American side, 180,000 soldiers,
an armada of battleships, and thousands
of fighter aircraft.
On the other, 120,000 desperate Japanese
ready to die for their country.
>> You had to be willing to sacrifice your
life for the emperor. That meant you
were a good Japanese citizen.
General Buckner leads the American army
against General Ushima on the Japanese
side. The two officers will fight to the
bitter end.
Almost everything was wiped out. It was
a massive destructive battlefield.
>> Over three grueling months in 1945, the
horror and violence reached their peak.
April sees massive kamicazi attacks
against the American fleet. That's the
costliest battle in US Navy history.
>> In May, fierce battles rage in the
mountains.
>> The Americans called the south side of
the hill the bloody mountain.
>> And in June, the rainy season brings new
torment to the ground troops.
>> You end up with feet of mud that go down
and down and down.
Now, through rare archival footage,
you're about to relive the decisive
moments of the crucial battles day by
day and as if you were there in the
trenches.
How was the landing on the island of
Okinawa planned?
Which Japanese strategies took the
American generals by surprise?
And what tipped the fate of certain key
battles?
It's the one big mistake that the
Japanese make on the defense of the
island.
>> This is the story of the Battle of
Okinawa. 82 days of combat that turned a
small Pacific island into a hell of fire
and blood.
[Music]
[Music]
East China Sea 5:30 a.m. On this
particular Easter Sunday, 1300 American
and British warships, including 12
aircraft carriers and seven battleships
are sailing towards the island of
Okinawa. A super powerful air sea task
force is ready to unleash countless
bombs on the island in order to land and
take it from the Japanese.
[Music]
The code name for this mission is
Operation Iceberg. It is the largest
assault of the entire Pacific campaign.
Since the surprise attack on Pearl
Harbor by Japanese planes in December
1941, the American army has set out to
conquer the territories of the Japanese
Empire. This includes the Marshall
Islands, the Solomon Islands, Saipan,
and the Philippines. It's been one
battle after another throughout World
War II. For the American command,
landing on the main Japanese island is
the last step of this relentless
conquest. After the Battle of Euima, the
last islands remaining to be seized are
in the Okanawa Archipelago, located a
mere 700 km south of the Japanese coast.
[Music]
>> In order to win against Japan
holistically, they needed to attack the
mainland. Whether that was by air,
continual bombing would get the job
done, or whether they actually had to
put boots on ground. In order to do
that, they have to get as close as they
can.
>> Okinawa is important for two reasons.
First, its strategic location allows it
to be an ideal base for the invasion of
Japan. You've got a lot of good space
for airfields. It's the right distance
to bomb southern portions of Japan.
You've also got a lot of space to have
infantry units train and station.
Second reason is that it allows the
Americans to cut off Japan from its
colonies. Taiwan, China coast,
Singapore, Java. All those pieces of
real estate are still in Japanese hands
in 1945. Japan's an island and most of
its economy is based on shipping. So,
it's easy to hit that with either ships
or with planes.
>> The 10th American Army is tasked with
invading Okinawa,
a force of 180,000 men under the command
of three star General Simon Bolivar
Buckner.
[Music]
Facing them, Japan has had time to
prepare its defense.
80,000 soldiers of the 32nd Japanese
Army led by General Ushima Mitsuru are
stationed on the island.
[Applause]
The population is also enlisted as
40,000 civilians will fight alongside
the soldiers.
Japanese troops come over and they
mobilize the entire island. And I mean
every man, woman, and child is supposed
to build fortifications and air strips
and all their farming is supposed to
feed the troops. And they're supposed to
be prepared to fight and enlist to
fight.
The Japanese general staff already knew
that their army would be decimated in
Okinawa.
The main mission of the troops was to
buy some time.
>> No matter the cost, they had to delay
the battle that would soon occur on
Japan's main island, even just by one
day. The army and the emperor himself
were aware that the island of Okinawa
would eventually be occupied by the
American troops, but they needed more
time to get ready before fighting the
Americans on their own turf.
[Music]
The Japanese wanted to inflict a lot of
casualties on the Americans. That was
basically their main strategic objective
in the fighting the battle.
The American general staff decide to
land on the western part of the island
on a coast stretching 8 km south of Cape
Zanpa near the village of Hagushi.
[Music]
There the reef is shallow and several
beaches run along the coastline.
During low tide, their width reaches 45
m, which is ideal for troop landing.
[Music]
While 1,200 troop ships approach the
coastline, the air and sea force blaze a
trail for the soldiers that are ready to
land.
40,000 shells, 30,000 rockets, and air
dropped napalon.
The fires of hell are unleashed on
Okinawa.
At 8:30 a.m., the first American
soldiers set foot on the beach.
But as the soldiers are expecting to
meet the fire of Japanese defense, the
surroundings are unusually quiet.
When the Americans landed, there were
hardly any Japanese soldiers. They faced
no resistance.
[Music]
When the soldiers arrived on April 1st,
it almost felt like they were going on a
picnic.
[Music]
They landed, they walked in, it was
really quiet. Soldiers and Marines alike
were like, "Wow, this is relatively
easy." There's no resistance there along
the beach.
You literally see soldiers marching in
land standing upright. The Americans are
getting lodged on the island and they're
like, "What is the Japanese general
doing?" And the answer is, "I don't
know, but we'll take advantage of it."
[Music]
However, the lack of resistance to the
American landing is in fact a deliberate
tactic on the part of the Japanese
command.
The Japanese air forces were heavily
damaged and destroyed. At this point,
they really didn't have the fuel to make
some of those operations.
The thing that they decide to do is
they're going to defend in land. They're
going to defend away from the beaches so
the Americans can't use their big guns
from their battleships against them.
So what happens is the landing force
lands on the beach and everyone is
expecting, you know, horrific casualties
and they're literally like where where
are the Japanese?
[Music]
The first day of Operation Iceberg is a
complete and unexpected success for the
American force.
In just a few hours, an area of 14.5x 5
km is already secured. While the
airfields of Kadana and Yumitan are
seized by the infantry,
[Music]
the death toll on the American side
amounts to 28. In comparison, the
landing in Normandy had caused 10,000
casualties on the first day alone.
[Music]
Nonetheless, the Japanese forces are
ready to fight.
A section is stationed up north, notably
on the Motubu Peninsula, while a
majority are lying in weight in the
southern part of the island along the
Shuri line. It's a mountainous area made
of hills where the soldiers have dug
tunnels to hide as they await the enemy.
For the Americans, the battle of Okinawa
is far from over.
[Music]
On the second day of the invasion, the
American soldiers start progressing
inland.
Four army divisions head south, while
the invasion of the north is entrusted
to two marine divisions facing a very
weak resistance.
Before
long, the entire west coast all the way
to Cape Za is occupied and the troops
march towards their next objective, the
Matubu Peninsula.
[Music]
But as the soldiers gain ground in the
open sea, the naval force must face a
relentless and unpredictable threat.
[Music]
The kamicazis.
The kamicazis were basically young,
relatively inexperienced pilots.
They didn't have a lot of aviation fuel
left in Japan and they didn't have a
good way of replacing pilots that they
lost. And when you go into combat,
you're always going to take casualties.
Japan didn't have any more high
performance planes or qualified pilots
at its disposal to conduct traditional
bombing operations.
So the general staff decided to round up
teenagers and asked them to simply crash
on the ships.
Back then it was considered an act of
bravery. one had to be willing to
sacrifice his life for the emperor.
>> That meant you were a good Japanese
citizen. It was utter madness, pure
fanaticism.
[Music]
These guys are often flying on their
kamicazi missions with 10, 15 hours in
the cockpit, which is not a whole lot.
The idea is that the kamicazis will
basically find and hit a US ship.
Carriers and battleships.
US aircraft carriers are not
particularly wellarmored.
There's the USS Franklin which is almost
taken out and there is the USS
Enterprise.
Franklin basically is toast. It is
ruined as a ship.
They took out about 30 destroyers during
the battle. 5,000 dead, another 5,000
wounded. That's the costliest battle in
US Navy history.
You're hitting destroyers. Boom, boom,
boom, boom. The Navy is going, "Move
faster. Move faster. We got to get these
guys out of here." So the kamicazis were
really, really hitting them hard.
In some cases, because it was so close,
they could actually see the face of the
pilot.
Those images really stayed with people
who experienced those attacks firsthand
for a very long time afterwards.
Along with its fighter planes, the
Japanese army also uses small suicide
boats called shino that are riddled with
explosives and maneuvered by a single
man.
>> You tend to think of kamicazi as only
being pilot, but kamicazi is a way in
which their fight that is the pilots,
that is the boats. A lot of it was being
aimed at ammunition transports. So you
can kind of cut off on some of that
advantage that the US had in terms of
supplies, ammunition.
>> The objective is not suicide. The
objective is victory.
>> The Japanese army stops at nothing to
damage the American war arsenal. Hoping
to weaken it furthermore, Emperor
Hirohito decides to go allin and hit the
Allied fleet stationed off the coast of
Okinawa with full force by ordering
operation Tango.
[Music]
Only six days into the invasion of
Okinawa, an armada of warships leave the
coast of Japan and head towards the
archipelago.
Among them is the Yamato, the largest
battleship in the world.
>> The Yumato was a magnificent ship, and
it was something that was also the pride
of Japan, too. It's 863 feet, 69,000
tons, and it had nine 18-in guns, which
is a little bigger than what even the US
has.
This is about all they have left. So,
they send the Yamato down to Okinawa,
and the idea was ram it onto the beaches
of Okinawa, point its guns out towards
sea, and shell the crud out of the
American invasion fleet.
problem with that is we have radar
pickets, we have submarines doing picket
duty and they see the Yamato coming.
When the Yamato and its escort pass the
Osumi Peninsula while heading south
towards Okinawa,
Admiral Spruent, the commander-in-chief
of the American army in the Pacific,
gives the order to launch an immediate
counterattack.
Admiral Raymond Spruent says, "I want to
kill that battleship, but I do not want
to get in a battleship fight where they
might actually win or they might take a
couple of my guys with them."
So, he basically sends airplanes off his
carriers.
[Music]
In just a few hours, the American
aircraft carriers hurl some 386 fighter
planes towards the Japanese Armada
heading towards Okinawa without any air
cover.
[Music]
Despite the firepower of the largest
battleship of the world, the Yamato
cannot withstand the violence of the
attack.
On that day, the entire crew of 3,000
men perish.
Biggest, baddest ship never fires a shot
in angry.
Goes down. Completely militarily
ineffective. sunk north of Okinawa.
>> It sinking was a huge emotional loss to
much of Japan, too.
So much was symbolized in that ship. A
whole national effort to build that size
vessel.
>> Operation Tang Go is a complete failure
for the Japanese Army. They've
sacrificed the jewel of their naval
force without causing any damage to the
enemy.
From his beloved second home at Warm
Springs, Georgia, the body of Franklin
Delano Roosevelt moves on the first
stages of its journey to his final
resting place. Scores of sufferers from
infantile paralysis sorrowfully bid
farewell to their great friend and
>> with the destruction of the Yamato. The
American army wins a key victory against
Japan. But meanwhile, the United States
are struck by the sudden death of
President Franklin Roosevelt. The entire
world is grieving.
The troops on Okinawa also pay tribute
to the late president.
But the Japanese general staff used this
event in an attempt to destabilize the
troops. They sent to the field a
propaganda pamphlet written in English.
To all American officers and men, we
must express our deep regret over the
death of President Roosevelt. The
American tragedy is now raised here at
Okinawa with his death. You must have
seen 70% of your CVs and 73% of your
bees sink or be damaged, causing 150,000
casualties. Not only the late president,
but anyone else would die in the excess
of worry to hear such an annihilative
damage. The dreadful loss that led to
your late leader's death will make you
orphans on this island. The Japanese
special attack war will sink your
vessels down to the last destroyer. You
will witness it realized in the near
future.
The numbers are totally whimsical, but
the text clearly shows that the Japanese
troops are willing to fight till the
end, and they make sure their enemy is
aware of it.
On the island, the battles have been
raging for nearly 3 weeks. The invasion
force faces a fierce resistance from the
outposts of the Shuri line, preventing
further advance in the south.
In the north, the progressing troops
reach Cape Hedo.
The last pocket of resistance is now
surrounded on the Mobu Peninsula near
Mount Yetake, the Japanese headquarters
of the North Sector.
Harassed by the Marines, their defense
is reduced to nothing.
With victory in sight, the general staff
decided to set out for a new objective.
The small island of Ewima, located less
than 3 km from the coast. This strategic
spot has three takeoff runways and radar
equipment which are indispensable to
establish air domination.
However, the geography of the island
makes its invasion extremely risky.
Japanese soldiers have taken refuge
inside of tunnels dug deep into the
mountain of Euoima.
The GIS must climb under enemy fire
coming from above. One of the most
dreaded situations for military men.
>> The Americans called the south side of
the hill the bloody mountain.
The Japanese army had been stationed
there long before their arrival. This is
where the most violent battles took
place.
>> So what you had there in terms of
Japanese forces is about 930 950 actual
uniformed troops about a battalion size
worth. They were augmented by Okanowan
conscripts and augmented by a lot of
civilians.
[Music]
Several months before the battle began,
the Japanese army had undertaken a
brainwashing operation of the civil
population on all the islands of the
Okanawa archipelago.
Propaganda pamphlets had been
distributed with the intention of
scaring the residents.
The indoctrination was not just about
where your loyalty should be in a sense
of civic duty, but was also a very
strong propaganda piece about how evil
the Americans were and how death at
their hands would be so torturous and
painful and drawn out that it is far
better to jump off a cliff and get it
over quick.
[Music]
We can easily imagine the fear of the
civilians who saw American soldiers for
the first time. They'd been ordered not
to be taken alive.
[Music]
They panicked. Only a few people had
received grenades to commit suicide. All
the others died decapitated, strangled
with ropes, or hit with pieces of wood
or rocks. The men couldn't bear the
thought of their wife and children being
captured and humiliated by the American
soldiers. They'd rather kill them with
their own hands.
[Music]
>> On the island, over 3,500 civilians are
prepared to face the invaders.
>> On the islands of the archipelago,
including Leima, many civilians were
mobilized and turned into soldiers,
including women. They were given
grenades to attack the Americans. In
Japanese, we call that kirikcomi. It
means suicide attack.
>> You'd have women running around with
spears, women with their children
strapped to them, still fighting the
battle and defending the caves and all
of that, which made it a very shocking
type of combat for the American soldiers
to handle and take over.
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
To a Japanese person, nothing is worse
than shame. Retaining one's dignity is
as important as one's life. The people
were told that being captured was a
humiliation and that had to be prevented
at all costs. That's what the civilians
believed because that's what they were
taught.
[Music]
The battles on the small island of Iwima
cost the lives of 4,700 Japanese while
only 149 are made prisoners
[Music]
on the field. As the battle enters its
fourth week, the American soldiers now
realize that the hell of Okinawa has
just begun.
[Music]
[Music]
On the main island of the archipelago,
the north is now entirely occupied by
the Americans. But in the south, the
battles continue.
This mountainous sector favors the
Japanese who have had time to organize
their defense.
The Japanese troop arrived in Okinawa
between August and September of 1944.
That's about 6 months before the
Americans who got there in April of the
following year. During that period, the
soldiers dug several tunnels by hand.
[Music]
Every crest of every hill is the theater
of fierce battles, and it often takes
several days to capture a single
position from the enemy.
They use tanks, mortar rounds, and
flamethrowers. And yet, despite the
devastating power of the American army,
it seems almost impossible to drive the
Japanese soldiers out of their hiding
places.
They had enough munitions to hold on for
6 months.
This is the best supplied Japanese army
unit that the Americans have encountered
in the Pacific War.
It's gruesome, high casualties, low
yards. In fact, no yards taken in some
cases. This is really a slugfest. More
of a World War I caliber than a World
War II type of battle.
[Music]
On April 24th, after 2 weeks of
attempts, the Americans finally succeed
in seizing Kakazu Ridge, a crest only
100 m long.
That day, the entire Machinado line
finally falls.
It's the first of three Japanese defense
lines.
>> The Japanese had all these defensive
positions prepared. So even though they
had breached the main line, there's
still other ones and other ones and
other ones.
The idea is we're going to make this
costly and you're going to die and then
your friends are going to die and then
their friends are going to die.
If you want Okinawa, fine. But you're
going to pay a very heavy price in lives
to take this island.
>> As the battle soon enters its second
month, the American soldiers morale
reaches a new low.
>> In the beginning of May, combat in the
hills is raging.
The Americans are faced with a fierce
resistance that immobilizes both camp's
positions on the field.
However, on the Japanese side, a
disagreement arises between General
Ushima's two advisers.
General Hiroshima Yahara in favor of an
ultra defensive strategy recommends that
the troops remain in hiding in the
island's caves as long as possible.
Whereas General Isamu Cho encourages
them to reassess their strategy.
General Cho, the chief of staff of the
32nd Army, was more old school in the
sense that he believed in, you know,
attack and he didn't like Colonel
Yahara's defensive tactics. So he
convinces Ushiima to launch an offensive
attack against the 10th Army.
[Music]
The counteroffensive is based on two
simultaneous moves involving a 3,000men
brigade supported by tanks that will hit
the center of the American lines while
an amphibian assault on the back coasts
creates a diversion.
The Japanese come out of their trenches.
They start charging. A little bit of a
bonsai charge. They were dug in and they
give that up and they're out in the
open. And it ends badly for these guys.
The counterattack is a complete
disaster.
[Music]
[Applause]
The Americans managed to destroy dozens
of Japanese heavy weapons.
As for the amphibian troops supposed to
attack the coasts, they are annihilated
at sea without leaving a single
survivor.
>> It's the one big mistake that the
Japanese make on the defense of the
islands and it accelerates the Japanese
defeat because they were holding. I
mean, the Americans are like banging
their heads against this, making no
progress. Suddenly, the Japanese do the
Americans a great favor.
On May 8th, 1945, victory is declared in
Europe.
[Music]
Populations around the world are
celebrating after 7 years of war.
Meanwhile, thousands of kilometers away,
battles keep on raging in the Pacific.
Japan hasn't surrendered. The American
soldiers engaged in this fight must try
and survive the nightmare of Okinawa.
>> The end of the war in Europe on May 8th
doesn't really matter that much on
Okinawa. The guys who are in the front
lines are still in the front lines.
They're still trying to accomplish a
military mission. Still trying not to
get killed by the other guy.
[Music]
>> On the field, the soldiers are settling
in. The slightest truce is an
opportunity to regain some sense of a
normal life.
However, quiet moments are short-lived
for the soldiers.
[Music]
Day after day, they must head back to
combat.
Each meter gained in the south gets them
closer to victory and their dream of
ever coming home.
[Music]
Dakashi, Wana, Sugarloaf Hill, Horseshoe
Hill, Half Moon Hill, Konicle Hill. The
southern Japanese outposts fall one
after the other at the expense of heavy
American casualties.
Meanwhile, on the West Coast, the
American forces are now getting closer
to the next goal of Naha, the island's
capital.
[Music]
In the last few days, the bombing of
Naha by the American Air Force has
intensified
on the field and around the city. The
violence of the battle is horrifying.
[Music]
The battle of Okinawa was described by a
war correspondent as a succession of
days in hell.
In the hills surrounding Naha as well as
downtown, the advantage kept changing
sides.
One day the American army dominated, the
next the Japanese would get back on top.
The battle was so fierce that many
American soldiers went mad.
It takes 6 days for the Americans to
capture the city.
On May 17th, the GIS enter the
devastated capital after weeks of
bombing.
But even after the fall of Naha, the
soldiers must face a new enemy just as
fearsome as it is destructive.
The rain.
[Music]
After the capital, the American general
staff must tackle the Shuri Castle, the
Japanese headquarters of the South
Sector.
The troop's progression on the western
and eastern fronts allows the Americans
to surround the location.
Ashuri Castle is an extremely protected
fortress sitting on top of a mountain
riddled with tunnels
and the extreme weather conditions
considerably slow down the soldiers
progression.
When you have steep areas that are very
muddy, it becomes difficult for vehicles
to move, tanks to move, personnel to
move.
But it's a lot more than just being wet.
The ground itself becomes extremely
saturated and never totally dries out.
So you end up with feet of mud that go
down and down and down and down.
supply becomes extremely difficult to
get through. The Marines actually are
hand carrying supplies in because they
cannot get the trucks to transport in
there by any means.
[Music]
Of course, it affects the air. You're
not going to be flying in terrible,
rainy, awful electric weather.
[Music]
If you happen to be holding a cave,
which the Japanese are, that again
affords them an advantage.
For several days, while Shuri Castle is
surrounded by the American army, both
camps are paralyzed by mud. Any attack
would be doomed to failure.
Confronted with this desperate
situation, General Ushima orders his
troops to fall back in the south.
Thanks to a lull, American surveillance
aircrafts are able to spot the maneuver.
General staff launch the final assault
on Shuri Castle, now deserted by the
Japanese.
[Music]
[Music]
On May 29th, the site is captured and
the American flag finally flies over one
of the most protected places of Okinawa.
General Buckner, commander of the
American invasion forces, decides to
reach out to his Japanese rival
directly.
>> Late May, General Simon Bolver Buckner
Jr., the commanding general of the 10th
Army, sends a letter to General Ushima.
Basically says, "General, let's end the
bloodshed. I've taken the key parts of
the island. There's really no reason to
keep fighting.
>> In this unprecedented letter in the
history of war, General Buckner offers
an honorable exit to General Ushima,
hoping to end a battle the latter cannot
win.
But for the Japanese commander, victory
was never the goal.
Strategy always had been to inflict as
many casualties on the Americans as
possible. If they want to take Okinawa,
they're going to take it. We don't have
the resources to drive them off, but
we're going to increase this cost bit by
bit, forcing them to take every ridge
and every line.
[Music]
He ignores the letter. There's no
response.
Following General Ushiima's refusal to
surrender, the Americans start chasing
the Japanese troops across the vast
plains in the south of the island.
Almost all of central and southern
Okinawa were destroyed.
Buildings, farmlands, trees,
almost everything was wiped out. It was
a massive destructive battlefield.
[Music]
In June, when the troops started to
retreat to the south, the entire
Japanese organization started to
collapse.
At that point, the soldiers were only
trying to survive.
[Music]
The people of Okinawa, who had been
recruited by the army, also tried to run
away. It's understandable because they
weren't even soldiers in the first
place.
They had no military training.
At that point, they realized they didn't
want to die in this never- ending
battle.
Abandoned by their own country's
military, the civilians are left to
their own devices. They're faced with
three options. Follow the orders given
by the army and commit suicide to avoid
being taken prisoner. run away and risk
to die of hunger or sickness or
surrender to the Americans.
[Music]
>> The Japanese troops were forcing
civilians to come out of their caves.
They took their food and those who
refused to leave were simply killed by
the soldiers.
Even those that were spared by the
Japanese army were forced to leave and
found themselves defenseless.
They were exposed to the American
bombings facing a certain death.
[Music]
There was mud everywhere which made it
very difficult to walk. Most of the
testimonies gathered from the residents
say they had no other choice than to
leave the wounded and the elderly behind
as they couldn't keep up.
The American army tries to convince the
civilians and the soldiers to surrender
by dropping leaflets by plane. They
contain testimonies allegedly written by
Japanese soldiers saying that those who
accept to stop fighting won't be harmed.
[Music]
Hundreds of soldiers have surrendered,
including high-ranking officers. There's
no reason to be ashamed. Instead of
killing or mistreating us, the Americans
treat us the same way they do their own
soldiers. Once peace is restored, your
family will be happy to know you're
still alive.
[Music]
Unfortunately, those instructional
leaflets weren't always believed or
trusted.
Even if somebody may have been
influenced by it and wanted to do it,
for whatever reason, they hesitated from
doing it. And that's because of
propaganda against them earlier that the
Americans are all rapists and they'll
murder you.
Several thousand residents are made
prisoners anyway. They realize that
those they were conditioned to fear are
actually helping them.
[Music]
family members survive and then they're
angry when they discover that the
Americans are actually decent, giving
him food, medical supplies.
[Music]
Since the capture of Shuri Castle, the
Japanese forces have been retreating. A
major section is stationed on the Oroku
Peninsula, while the rest occupies a
defense line at the base hills of Yaju,
Yuza, and Misado.
[Music]
The Japanese positions are getting
weaker with each passing day. The
progression of the American army is
inexurable.
The Aroku Peninsula is finally captured
on June 13th. Mount Yijup on the 14th
and Mount Yuza on the 16th. The very
last of the Japanese forces are hiding
in the natural caves in the far south of
Okinawa, notably on the Kinishi ridge
and the hill of Mabuni.
[Music]
On June 18th, as the American army feels
victory within its grasp, General
Buckner comes to look over his troops on
the front line.
These are the last images of the
American commander.
>> A few seconds later,
>> he's hit by shrapnel from Japanese
artillery fire.
[Music]
He dies from his injuries shortly after.
[Music]
He is the highest ranking American
officer to be killed in combat during
World War II.
[Music]
3 days later, American soldiers discover
the body of General Ushuima in a cave of
the Mabuni Hill.
The Japanese general had resorted to a
ritual suicide known in Japan as sepuku.
[Music]
The Japanese army was going to be
defeated. It was inevitable. Given the
situation, there was no way he could
return to Japan alive. That was the rule
in the Japanese army. To surrender was
unimaginable.
He was hiding in a tunnel on the side of
the hill and the Americans were closing
in. He was stuck.
[Music]
In those days, army commanders committed
suicide to avoid dishonor.
If they died by their own hand, they
could somehow save face. That's why he
opted for the sapuku.
[Music]
He disembowled himself and asked one of
his men to cut his head off.
But before he died, he ordered his men
to fight until the end and to not get
caught alive.
While the last remaining resistance
pockets fall into the hands of the
Americans, the two generals who led the
battle of Okinawa are dead. as if fate
had decided that this nightmare now had
to come to an end.
On June 22nd, 1945, after 82 days of
combat of gruesome violence, the Battle
of Okinawa is officially over.
There was obviously an immense amount of
pride and relief that it had been
seized.
Maybe slightly off schedule, but it had
been seized
and that the US was in the prime
position to be able to strike out
against mainland Japan.
[Music]
10th Army staff is starting to look at
maps of Honshu and figuring out how can
we land, where can we land, getting
ready for the next big operation.
And at that point in time, the invasion
Japan is scheduled to basically be
November of 1945.
So you only have about 2 months to get
ready.
[Music]
[Music]
The conquest of the island has claimed
the lives of 12,500 Americans and
wounded 35,000 more. Confronted with a
death toll of this magnitude and the
pressure of a country refusing to
withstand more casualties, the general
staff start reconsidering their invasion
plans of Japan.
>> There is a sad irony about the Battle of
Okinawa.
It implanted the correct idea that a
landing on mainland Japan is going to be
so destructive and it's going to take
possibly a million forces to land and
seize that it's just going to be so
horrific that maybe the use of the
atomic bomb was necessary.
45 days after the capture of Okinawa,
the United States end the war with Japan
by dropping two atomic bombs on the
cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.
[Music]
The Battle of Okinawa is therefore the
last one of World War II.
It has destroyed 90% of the island's
buildings and cultural heritage while
costing the lives of 150,000 residents.
[Music]
After the end of the war, the Americans
remain on the island in order to
establish their main Pacific bases and
implement a system allowing the people
to regain a normal life.
[Music]
Okinawa is later returned to Japan in
1972,
but the Americans continue to maintain
at least some presence.
>> Okinawa represents only about 0.6% of
Japan's total territory.
It's not even 1% yet 70% of US military
bases in Japan are concentrated there.
The residents still feel like victims
and their memories of war remain quite
vivid.
In a way, the battles that devastated
Okinawa are not over for them.
[Music]
On Okinawa, the scars left by 82 days of
gruesome battles will likely never
disappear.
[Music]

Key Vocabulary

Start Practicing
Vocabulary Meanings

campaign

/kæmˈpeɪn/

B2
  • noun
  • - a series of military operations

battle

/ˈbætl/

A2
  • noun
  • - a fight between armed forces
  • verb
  • - to fight

casualties

/ˈkæʒuəltiz/

B2
  • noun
  • - people killed or injured in a war

soldiers

/ˈsoʊldʒərz/

A2
  • noun
  • - people in an army

aircraft

/ˈerkræft/

B1
  • noun
  • - a vehicle that flies

desperate

/ˈdespərət/

B2
  • adjective
  • - feeling or showing great hopelessness

sacrifice

/ˈsækrifaɪs/

B1
  • verb
  • - to give up something important
  • noun
  • - an act of giving up something

officers

/ˈɒfɪsərz/

B1
  • noun
  • - people holding a position of command

massive

/ˈmæsɪv/

B2
  • adjective
  • - very large

destructive

/dɪˈstrʌktɪv/

B2
  • adjective
  • - causing great damage

grueling

/ˈɡruːəlɪŋ/

B2
  • adjective
  • - very tiring and difficult

horror

/ˈhɒrər/

B2
  • noun
  • - extreme fear

violence

/ˈvaɪələns/

B1
  • noun
  • - physical force intended to hurt

strategic

/strəˈtiːdʒɪk/

B2
  • adjective
  • - relating to the planning of war

invading

/ɪnˈveɪdɪŋ/

B1
  • verb
  • - entering a country by force

territories

/ˈterɪtɔriz/

B1
  • noun
  • - areas of land under the control of a country

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