Coast Guard WWII Operations At Okinawa by U.S. Coast Guard BM1 William A. Bleyer
May 7, 2020
In late March 1945, nearly 1,300 ships of the Allied forces of
America, Great Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada assembled
to support the largest amphibious operation of the Pacific War ...
the invasion of Okinawa and Ryukyu Islands.
Okinawa is a large island, sixty miles long and nearly ten wide.
It lies only 360 miles from Japan and was part of the Japanese
colonial empire. Japanese leaders were determined to hold the
island, both out of national pride and as a key to their East China
Sea defensive perimeter.
Although its native inhabitants did not consider themselves
Japanese, to Japan’s leaders Okinawa was home territory. Trying to
maintain their “island hopping” momentum, Allied planners wanted to
get closer to the Home Islands by landing on the “back porch” of
Japan at Okinawa.
Allied military strategists codenamed the
plan to invade Okinawa Operation “Iceberg.” Attached to the invasion
armada was the largest fleet of Coast Guard ships to participate in
a World War II naval operation. In all, the Coast Guard operated
seven transports, 29 LSTs (Landing Ship, Tank), 12 LCIs (Landing
Craft, Infantry), high-endurance cutters Bibb and Taney, buoy tender
Woodbine, and submarine chaser PC-469.
Many of these vessels and their Coast Guard crews were veterans
of amphibious campaigns in the Pacific, Atlantic, and Mediterranean
theaters.
 LSTs landing equipment and supplies on the beaches of Okinawa
during WWII in 1945. In the distance can be seen dozens of vessels of the invasion fleet. (U.S. Coast Guard photo)
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For Okinawa’s defense, the Japanese Imperial Army and Imperial
Navy assembled hundreds of aircraft, small boats, manned torpedoes
and kamikaze (meaning “Divine Wind”) suicide aircraft. The island’s
Japanese defenders numbered 120,000 troops. The Allies committed
over 500,000 men, including three Marine Corps divisions and four
Army infantry divisions with an Army infantry division held in
reserve in New Caledonia.
Six days before the main landings,
an Allied task force invaded the Kerama Retto islands about 20 miles
west of Okinawa. The task force included the cutter Bibb, six Coast
Guard-manned LSTs and troops of the U.S. Army’s 77th Infantry
Division. Coast Guard-manned LST-829 had the honor of landing the
first infantrymen to invade the Japanese-held islands. After
capturing Kerama Retto, these troops set-up an advanced fueling
depot, repair base and air field to support the invasion forces.
Allied military planners designated April 1st as “L-Day,” the
landing day in which the Okinawa invasion would commence. As in
previous campaigns, the Allies curtailed local enemy air and sea
operations before initiating the invasion. In addition, the Navy
brought up two bombardment fleets and, for over a week before the
landings, carrier planes, B-29 heavy bombers and warships softened
up enemy positions.
In the early morning of Easter Sunday,
thousands of ships of the armada arrived off Okinawa. At 8:30 a.m.,
fire support ships began laying down an intense onshore barrage.
Over 500 planes from American aircraft carriers swarmed over the
landing areas to knock out enemy positions. Allied strategists had
planned the initial assault for the western and southern sides of
the island because two enemy airfields lay nearby. During the
initial landings, Allied forces put ashore four divisions abreast
over an eight-mile front of beaches.
Coast Guard-manned LSTs
performed with their usual efficiency, both during the initial
landings and with vital logistical support in the following weeks.
These awkward vessels, also known as “Large, Slow Targets,” arrived
after about a week at sea overloaded with troops and supplies. They
lay close to the beaches and regularly made smoke screens for
invasion vessels while their crews dashed to general quarters during
countless air raids.
In the early morning of Easter Sunday, thousands of ships of the
armada arrived off Okinawa. At 8:30 a.m., fire support ships began
laying down an intense onshore barrage. Over 500 planes from
American aircraft carriers swarmed over the landing areas to knock
out enemy positions. Allied strategists had planned the initial
assault for the western and southern sides of the island because two
enemy airfields lay nearby. During the initial landings, Allied
forces put ashore four divisions abreast over an eight-mile front of
beaches.
Coast Guard-manned LSTs performed with their usual efficiency,
both during the initial landings and with vital logistical support
in the following weeks. These awkward vessels, also known as “Large,
Slow Targets,” arrived after about a week at sea overloaded with
troops and supplies. They lay close to the beaches and regularly
made smoke screens for invasion vessels while their crews dashed to
general quarters during countless air raids.
 Coast Guard-manned LST-884 unloading troops and supplies before its catastrophic kamikaze attack at Okinawa. (U.S. Coast Guard
photo)
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On L-Day, LST-884 approached with the invasion fleet, steaming at
three knots toward the beaches. By 6:00 a.m., under a moonlit sky,
general quarters were sounded for the Coast Guard crew and the 300
Marines. Less than 30 minutes later, lookouts spotted three Japanese
planes flying about 250 feet above the water bearing down on the
invasion fleet. LST-884’s port guns and guns from other ships opened
fire. The barrage brought down two of the aircraft. The third burst
into flames and crashed into the port side of the LST. The aircraft
passed through the shipfitter’s shop and continued into the tank
deck where it exploded with a tremendous roar.
Repair parties
worked feverishly to put out the fire, but the kamikaze had crashed
into stowed mortar ammunition. The intense fire and exploding
ammunition made it impossible for the men to fight the fire and
heavy smoke began to fill the 884. As the fire burned out of
control, the danger of flames reaching the fuel tanks increased. At
5:55 a.m., commanding officer, LT Charles Pearson, ordered the ship
abandoned and the surviving men transferred to nearby vessels. After
most of the ammunition had exploded, LT Pearson returned to the LST
with volunteers and put out the fires. They saved the ship, but 19
Marines and one Coast Guardsman had perished in the inferno.
Despite the kamikaze attacks, the landings proceeded better than
perhaps any other in the Pacific invasion. Coast Guard-manned troop
transports entered the fray on the first day. The transport Joseph
T. Dickman arrived at the transport area at 5:40 a.m. on L-Day. The
Dickman had on board a total of 1,368 troops, 99 vehicles and over
83,000 cubic feet of cargo. Combat loading for an amphibious assault
has been compared to a chess game that cannot be won, and the mixed
cargo of troops and supplies caused delays in unloading. The Dickman
continued to unload as late as April 9th, L-Day plus seven. On March
28th, the Cambria had sailed from Ulithi Atoll arriving off Okinawa
just before 5:00 a.m. on April 1st. The transport served as a
flagship for one of the transport groups and spent three days
unloading troops and cargo. On April 3rd, the Cambria sent ashore a
beach party of three officers and 43 men to speed supplies to the
front lines.
Coast Guard beachmasters and their men waged
war against an unseen enemy of coral reefs. Beach parties blasted
numerous coral heads allowing landing craft access to the landing
zones. Due to the need for supplies, beachmasters unloaded as many
landing craft as possible for six hours around high tide, piled the
supplies on the beach and then moved the material inland at low
tide. Unfortunately, this kept the transports at anchor for longer
periods endangering the vessels from attacks by the kamikazes,
suicide boats and torpedo craft.
The Allies applied lessons
learned from earlier amphibious assaults. Several hours after the
troop transports arrived, control craft deployed for the beaches to
establish a line of departure. Each of the control craft displayed a
unique colored banner corresponding with the color designating each
beach. A guide boat then directed each wave of craft from the line
of departure to the beach. These boats also flew a pennant that
corresponded to the beach’s color. Additionally, the landing craft
on the initial waves had the color of the beach painted on their
topsides. As the first wave reached the shore, the landing party
erected a colored banner to guide landing craft arriving later. This
coloring system simplified movement of boats from the line of
departure to the beach and helped beachmasters recognize the boats
and direct them to the proper landing areas.
With the
exception of a few air attacks, light artillery and mortar fire, the
Japanese had not contested the beach landings. On L-Day, Allied
naval forces landed 50,000 troops. Within two days, these troops had
fought to the east side of the island cutting Japanese forces in
two. Resistance in the northern portion of the island fell quickly,
but Japanese resistance grew tenacious in the southern end.
On April 6th, the Japanese began a counterattack against the
invasion fleet. To attack Allied ships, the Japanese used manned
torpedoes and small speedboats loaded with explosives. The Japanese
hid over 250 of these suicide boats around the island, however,
Allied forces captured coastal areas before most were deployed.
Coast Guard submarine chaser PC-469 encountered three suicide boats
sinking two in a close-quarters firefight and drove off a third.
PC-469 would also shoot down two enemy aircraft later in the battle.
Within flying range of the Japanese Home Islands, the Allied
fleet was subjected to frequent air attacks, many by kamikazes.
These suicide attacks were deadly and included conventional aircraft
and rocket-powered flying bombs called Ohkas launched from bomber
motherships. Allied fighter aircraft engaged the Japanese attackers
while ship-mounted anti-aircraft guns of all calibers frantically
fired skyward at the enemy. The kamikazes focused on large ships
like aircraft carriers, but attacked any target of opportunity.
Coast Guard 327-foot cutters Bibb and Taney, veterans of the Battle
of the Atlantic, served as amphibious command ships and found
themselves in the thick of the action. Bibb survived 55 air raids
and shot down one aircraft. Taney, which began the war on December
7, 1941, firing at Japanese planes attacking Pearl Harbor, set
general quarters 119 times, shot down at least four enemy aircraft,
and even took fire from a Japanese shore battery.
 Coast Guard Cutter Bibb configured as an amphibious command ship with added radio antenna and anti-aircraft guns. (U.S. Coast Guard
photo)
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Growing desperate to stop the invasion, the Japanese even sortied
Yamato, the world’s largest battleship, on a one-way suicide mission
to attack the invasion fleet. However, American carrier aircraft
sank the enemy behemoth before it reached Okinawa. During the
campaign, suicide attacks sank six Allied ships and damaged another
120 vessels.
Okinawa was the last major invasion of the war.
Despite their numerical superiority, the Allies took three months to
secure the island. The battle claimed over 13,000 American lives and
wounded 36,000 more. The Japanese lost 120,000 men, including
troops, pilots and naval personnel. Frequently caught in the
crossfire or conscripted to fight by the Japanese, nearly half the
Okinawan civilian population died in the battle.
 Coast Guardsmen visit Okinawa’s temporary military cemetery to pay respects to a fallen shipmate. (U.S. Coast Guard photo)
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The Okinawa Campaign was one of countless Coast Guard supported
operations of World War II. Coast Guard-manned ships would
participate in other minor amphibious assaults, and support Allied
forces as they occupied Japan after its August 1945 surrender. In
1946, in the ceremony returning the Coast Guard to the Treasury
Department, Navy Secretary James Forrestal stated that the Coast
Guard had, “Earned the highest respect and deepest appreciation of
the Navy and Marine Corps. Its performance of duty has been without
exception in keeping with the highest traditions of the naval
service.”
Throughout the war, the men and women of the United
States Coast Guard demonstrated the Service’s combat readiness and
lived up to its motto of Semper Paratus.
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