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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:14,224 --> 00:00:17,727 (distant birds calling) 2 00:00:32,375 --> 00:00:36,046 (Artie Shaw's "Moonglow" playing) 3 00:00:40,584 --> 00:00:44,254 NARRATOR: One evening in the summer of 1941, 4 00:00:44,254 --> 00:00:47,157 several months before the United States would be drawn 5 00:00:47,157 --> 00:00:49,593 into the Second World War, 6 00:00:49,593 --> 00:00:52,562 in a little farming town in Alabama, 7 00:00:52,562 --> 00:00:57,601 a 16-year-old high-school boy named Glenn Dowling Frazier 8 00:00:57,601 --> 00:01:00,337 discovered that the girl he loved 9 00:01:00,337 --> 00:01:04,407 was interested in someone else. 10 00:01:04,407 --> 00:01:05,241 (crickets chirping) 11 00:01:05,241 --> 00:01:07,777 Frazier was so angry and upset 12 00:01:07,777 --> 00:01:11,247 that when the owner of a juke joint refused him service, 13 00:01:11,247 --> 00:01:16,620 he stalked outside, climbed onto his motorcycle, 14 00:01:16,620 --> 00:01:18,121 and roared through the door, 15 00:01:18,121 --> 00:01:22,325 shattering bottles and smashing furniture. 16 00:01:22,926 --> 00:01:24,327 As he raced away, 17 00:01:24,327 --> 00:01:29,566 the bar owner chased him down the street with a shotgun. 18 00:01:30,467 --> 00:01:31,568 The next morning, 19 00:01:31,568 --> 00:01:33,603 humiliated, scared, 20 00:01:33,603 --> 00:01:35,805 and unable to face his parents, 21 00:01:35,805 --> 00:01:39,242 Glenn Frazier went to the nearest recruiting office, 22 00:01:39,242 --> 00:01:44,214 lied about his age and joined the peacetime army. 23 00:01:45,248 --> 00:01:49,819 He volunteered to serve in the Philippines. 24 00:01:50,420 --> 00:01:53,256 FRAZIER: When I volunteered for the Philippine Islands, 25 00:01:53,256 --> 00:01:57,894 I had no idea that we would actually be in a war. 26 00:01:57,894 --> 00:02:00,964 I was thinking that probably Germany was 27 00:02:00,964 --> 00:02:03,433 the most likely place that there would be a war, 28 00:02:03,433 --> 00:02:06,670 so in my mind, I thought it'd be safe over there. 29 00:02:06,670 --> 00:02:11,608 I never thought Japan would be attacking us. 30 00:02:12,842 --> 00:02:15,178 NARRATOR: Over the next four years, 31 00:02:15,178 --> 00:02:19,315 Frazier would find himself in the midst of war-- 32 00:02:19,315 --> 00:02:21,251 desperate hand-to-hand combat, 33 00:02:21,251 --> 00:02:26,790 a forced march so brutal the world would never forget it, 34 00:02:26,790 --> 00:02:30,026 and nightmarish prison camps 35 00:02:30,026 --> 00:02:32,162 where simply surviving required 36 00:02:32,162 --> 00:02:36,900 luck and bravery and unshakable will. 37 00:02:38,802 --> 00:02:44,407 Back in Alabama, those who loved him would be told he was dead. 38 00:02:44,808 --> 00:02:49,045 All Glenn Frazier would be able to do was cling to the hope 39 00:02:49,045 --> 00:02:53,149 that one day he could come back home. 40 00:02:54,217 --> 00:02:58,822 (artillery shell whooshes, explodes) 41 00:02:58,822 --> 00:03:02,092 (gunfire, men shouting) 42 00:03:03,460 --> 00:03:06,629 I don't think there is such a thing as a good war. 43 00:03:06,629 --> 00:03:09,599 There are sometimes necessary wars. 44 00:03:09,599 --> 00:03:13,570 And I think one might say just wars. 45 00:03:13,570 --> 00:03:16,339 And that, never... 46 00:03:16,339 --> 00:03:19,676 I never questioned the necessity of that war 47 00:03:19,676 --> 00:03:21,911 and I still do not question it. 48 00:03:21,911 --> 00:03:25,682 It was something that had to be done. 49 00:03:34,324 --> 00:03:37,160 NARRATOR: The greatest cataclysm in history 50 00:03:37,160 --> 00:03:41,898 grew out of ancient and ordinary human emotions: 51 00:03:41,898 --> 00:03:45,268 anger and arrogance and bigotry, 52 00:03:45,268 --> 00:03:48,872 victimhood and the lust for power. 53 00:03:49,973 --> 00:03:54,210 And it ended because other human qualities-- 54 00:03:54,210 --> 00:03:58,047 courage and perseverance and selflessness; 55 00:03:58,047 --> 00:04:02,552 faith, leadership, and the hunger for freedom-- 56 00:04:02,552 --> 00:04:06,156 combined with unimaginable brutality 57 00:04:06,156 --> 00:04:09,392 to change the course of human events. 58 00:04:09,392 --> 00:04:10,827 (air raid siren wailing) 59 00:04:10,827 --> 00:04:15,799 The Second World War brought out the best and the worst 60 00:04:15,799 --> 00:04:19,302 in a generation, and blurred the two 61 00:04:19,302 --> 00:04:24,774 so that they became, at times, almost indistinguishable. 62 00:04:29,145 --> 00:04:34,450 In the killing that engulfed the world from 1939 to 1945, 63 00:04:34,450 --> 00:04:39,489 between 50 and 60 million people died... 64 00:04:40,590 --> 00:04:45,461 ...80 many, and in so many different places, 65 00:04:45,461 --> 00:04:49,699 that the real number will never be known. 66 00:04:58,508 --> 00:05:03,179 More than 85 million men and women served in uniform, 67 00:05:03,179 --> 00:05:06,549 but the overwhelming majority of those who perished 68 00:05:06,549 --> 00:05:08,151 were civilians-- 69 00:05:08,151 --> 00:05:13,356 men, women, and children obliterated 70 00:05:13,356 --> 00:05:16,125 by the arithmetic of war. 71 00:05:16,125 --> 00:05:17,961 (distant explosion) 72 00:05:24,667 --> 00:05:29,639 The United States of America was relatively fortunate. 73 00:05:31,808 --> 00:05:35,378 More than 405,000 soldiers and sailors, 74 00:05:35,378 --> 00:05:40,483 airmen and marines died, but that figure represented 75 00:05:40,483 --> 00:05:44,120 proportionately fewer military casualties 76 00:05:44,120 --> 00:05:48,925 than were suffered by any of the other major combatants. 77 00:05:50,159 --> 00:05:53,830 American cities were not destroyed. 78 00:05:54,898 --> 00:05:59,569 American civilians were never really at risk. 79 00:06:07,076 --> 00:06:09,746 But without American power, 80 00:06:09,746 --> 00:06:12,849 without the sacrifice of American lives, 81 00:06:12,849 --> 00:06:16,853 the struggle's outcome would have been very different. 82 00:06:19,088 --> 00:06:21,457 The American economy only grew stronger 83 00:06:21,457 --> 00:06:25,328 as the fighting went on, and by the time it ended, 84 00:06:25,328 --> 00:06:30,099 the United States would be the most powerful nation on earth 85 00:06:30,099 --> 00:06:35,571 and a once isolated and insular people would find themselves 86 00:06:35,571 --> 00:06:39,375 at the center of world affairs. 87 00:06:44,480 --> 00:06:46,215 The war touched every family 88 00:06:46,215 --> 00:06:51,187 on every street in every town in America-- 89 00:06:51,187 --> 00:06:53,823 towns like Luverne, Minnesota; 90 00:06:53,823 --> 00:06:57,393 Sacramento, California; 91 00:06:57,393 --> 00:07:00,663 Waterbury, Connecticut; 92 00:07:00,663 --> 00:07:04,200 and Mobile, Alabama-- 93 00:07:04,200 --> 00:07:08,071 and nothing would ever be the same again. 94 00:07:08,938 --> 00:07:11,741 (gunfire and artillery fire) 95 00:07:11,741 --> 00:07:13,509 HYNES: I'm not sure I can speak 96 00:07:13,509 --> 00:07:18,481 about why human beings in general go to war. 97 00:07:18,481 --> 00:07:23,886 I think that's a pretty large category. 98 00:07:23,886 --> 00:07:25,154 I can only speak 99 00:07:25,154 --> 00:07:30,193 about why 18-year-olds from Minneapolis go to war. 100 00:07:30,193 --> 00:07:35,365 They go to war because it's impossible not to, 101 00:07:35,365 --> 00:07:38,501 because a current is established 102 00:07:38,501 --> 00:07:43,172 in the society so swift, flowing toward war, 103 00:07:43,172 --> 00:07:49,012 that every young man who steps into it is carried downstream. 104 00:08:10,066 --> 00:08:14,470 AL McINTOSH (dramatized): Luverne, Minnesota, August 1941. 105 00:08:14,470 --> 00:08:18,574 "Miss Aagot Rylund, who is in town visiting her brother, 106 00:08:18,574 --> 00:08:22,311 "knows what it is to see vast sections of a city 107 00:08:22,311 --> 00:08:24,580 "ripped to ruin by German bombs 108 00:08:24,580 --> 00:08:29,085 "and she remembers the nights that London burned, 109 00:08:29,085 --> 00:08:29,886 "how she could read a letter 110 00:08:29,886 --> 00:08:33,589 "by the unbelievable glare of the far-off flames. 111 00:08:33,589 --> 00:08:37,527 "She knows what it is to have high explosive bombs blast 112 00:08:37,527 --> 00:08:40,263 "their big craters right outside the doorway 113 00:08:40,263 --> 00:08:43,166 of the shelter in which she was sleeping." 114 00:08:45,334 --> 00:08:49,672 "She has had her best friends killed." 115 00:08:50,807 --> 00:08:52,875 "Looking out at the peaceful countryside 116 00:08:52,875 --> 00:08:57,547 "from the Thompson porch, she said it was hard to believe 117 00:08:57,547 --> 00:09:01,551 that the rest of the world was at war." 118 00:09:01,551 --> 00:09:06,222 Al Mcintosh, Rock County Star. 119 00:09:10,793 --> 00:09:13,896 NARRATOR: Much of the world was already at war 120 00:09:13,896 --> 00:09:17,133 in the fall of 1941. 121 00:09:17,733 --> 00:09:19,068 But for most Americans, 122 00:09:19,068 --> 00:09:22,238 finally beginning to recover from the Great Depression, 123 00:09:22,238 --> 00:09:27,810 events overseas seemed impossibly far away. 124 00:09:32,748 --> 00:09:36,752 In Luverne, Minnesota, the biggest town in Rock County, 125 00:09:36,752 --> 00:09:39,489 in the state's southwestern corner, 126 00:09:39,489 --> 00:09:43,426 the autumn harvest was only a memory... 127 00:09:43,426 --> 00:09:47,830 and its 3,000 citizens had begun the long winter wait 128 00:09:47,830 --> 00:09:51,134 until they could sow their fields again. 129 00:09:53,536 --> 00:09:57,773 Al Mcintosh, the editor of the Rock County Star, 130 00:09:57,773 --> 00:10:01,277 lived at 517 North Kniss Avenue. 131 00:10:01,277 --> 00:10:03,880 He was a newcomer from North Dakota 132 00:10:03,880 --> 00:10:06,215 who had turned down big city jobs 133 00:10:06,215 --> 00:10:09,118 to run his own small-town paper. 134 00:10:09,118 --> 00:10:11,487 He would soon find himself trying to explain 135 00:10:11,487 --> 00:10:16,058 the unexplainable to his new neighbors. 136 00:10:16,058 --> 00:10:20,730 Six-year-old Jim Sherman lived with his family 137 00:10:20,730 --> 00:10:24,634 at 503 North Estey Street. 138 00:10:25,568 --> 00:10:29,372 SHERMAN: I think it was a pretty close-knit community. 139 00:10:29,372 --> 00:10:30,673 Uh, there was a saying that 140 00:10:30,673 --> 00:10:33,342 if you don't want people to know about it, 141 00:10:33,342 --> 00:10:34,744 you don't do it-- sort of thing. 142 00:10:34,744 --> 00:10:40,183 And everybody knew pretty much everybody else in town. 143 00:11:10,146 --> 00:11:12,481 NARRATOR: Four miles south of town, 144 00:11:12,481 --> 00:11:13,683 near the Rock River, 145 00:11:13,683 --> 00:11:17,386 was the 120-acre farm of the Aanenson family. 146 00:11:17,386 --> 00:11:23,459 There they raised cows and grew barley, oats, and corn. 147 00:11:25,895 --> 00:11:26,896 Their middle son, 148 00:11:26,896 --> 00:11:31,133 who would face the most fearful odds in the skies over France, 149 00:11:31,133 --> 00:11:33,970 was named Quentin. 150 00:11:33,970 --> 00:11:35,137 QUENTIN: And literally, 151 00:11:35,137 --> 00:11:39,141 sometimes I would be on a piece of farm machinery plowing corn 152 00:11:39,141 --> 00:11:42,478 and a lonely airplane would fly over 153 00:11:42,478 --> 00:11:45,815 and I would look up and my spirit would soar. 154 00:11:45,815 --> 00:11:47,717 "That's where I want to be sometime. 155 00:11:47,717 --> 00:11:49,151 "I want to live that way. 156 00:11:49,151 --> 00:11:52,488 I want to do those things." 157 00:11:53,356 --> 00:11:57,827 NARRATOR: In Sacramento, California, the state capital, 158 00:11:57,827 --> 00:12:00,863 Okies, refugees from the Dust Bowl, 159 00:12:00,863 --> 00:12:02,865 still camped on the edge of town 160 00:12:02,865 --> 00:12:05,735 and worked the fields and orchards and vineyards 161 00:12:05,735 --> 00:12:07,436 of the surrounding Sacramento Valley. 162 00:12:07,436 --> 00:12:11,574 The city had been the gateway to the California Gold Rush 163 00:12:11,574 --> 00:12:16,112 and the western anchor of the transcontinental railroad. 164 00:12:16,112 --> 00:12:20,983 Although it was home to some 106,000 people, 165 00:12:20,983 --> 00:12:24,887 Sacramento still seemed like a small town. 166 00:12:24,887 --> 00:12:27,156 Tom and Earl Burke, 167 00:12:27,156 --> 00:12:30,960 who would be asked to sacrifice everything for their country, 168 00:12:30,960 --> 00:12:36,132 lived with their parents at 3240 Lassen Way, 169 00:12:36,132 --> 00:12:37,967 just north of town. 170 00:12:37,967 --> 00:12:41,804 EARL: It was a tremendous town; everybody knew each other. 171 00:12:41,804 --> 00:12:44,140 All, all ethnic groups were just perfect. 172 00:12:44,140 --> 00:12:48,210 I mean it was... you could go out on the streets at night 173 00:12:48,210 --> 00:12:49,445 at 11:00, 12:00 at night 174 00:12:49,445 --> 00:12:52,348 and, you know, you could walk home in the dark. 175 00:12:52,348 --> 00:12:53,949 Nobody locked the doors. 176 00:12:53,949 --> 00:12:55,918 Nobody even thought of it. 177 00:12:55,918 --> 00:12:59,522 It was a nice, clean, little town. 178 00:12:59,522 --> 00:13:05,461 BURNETT MILLER: The lower end of town was rather colorful to us. 179 00:13:05,461 --> 00:13:08,464 There were lots of whorehouses. 180 00:13:08,464 --> 00:13:11,834 As you got up towards the nicer part of town, 181 00:13:11,834 --> 00:13:14,136 towards Tenth Street, uh, 182 00:13:14,136 --> 00:13:17,773 the houses of prostitution were quite fancy. 183 00:13:17,773 --> 00:13:21,977 And as kids, we used to run down there 184 00:13:21,977 --> 00:13:26,415 and run through the place, just raising hell. 185 00:13:27,283 --> 00:13:31,954 NARRATOR: 18-year-old Burnett Miller lived with his family 186 00:13:31,954 --> 00:13:38,127 in a comfortable neighborhood at 3643 West Lincoln Avenue. 187 00:13:39,662 --> 00:13:43,466 He would discover, in the last days of the war, 188 00:13:43,466 --> 00:13:47,470 why it had to be fought. 189 00:13:48,437 --> 00:13:52,908 Almost 7,000 Japanese-Americans also lived in Sacramento 190 00:13:52,908 --> 00:13:55,211 and the surrounding county. 191 00:13:56,345 --> 00:14:02,318 Doctors, lawyers, teachers, and shop owners, 192 00:14:02,318 --> 00:14:08,858 as well as some of the most productive farmers in America. 193 00:14:08,858 --> 00:14:12,595 Susumu Satow and his family grew strawberries, grapes, 194 00:14:12,595 --> 00:14:16,966 and raspberries on their 20-acre farm, east of the city. 195 00:14:16,966 --> 00:14:19,135 SUSUMU SATOW: My mother didn't speak English. 196 00:14:19,135 --> 00:14:23,372 My father spoke, uh, broken English. 197 00:14:23,372 --> 00:14:27,576 As a youngster, at the age of about eight, nine, I guess, 198 00:14:27,576 --> 00:14:32,348 I used to walk down the railroad track to a place called Mills. 199 00:14:32,348 --> 00:14:36,252 And Mills had a semipro baseball team. 200 00:14:36,786 --> 00:14:43,692 And so I grew up in sort of a baseball environment, I guess. 201 00:14:51,801 --> 00:14:54,470 NARRATOR: In Waterbury, Connecticut, 202 00:14:54,470 --> 00:14:56,806 on the banks of the Naugatuck River, 203 00:14:56,806 --> 00:14:58,307 a skilled workforce, 204 00:14:58,307 --> 00:15:00,810 mostly immigrants and immigrants' children, 205 00:15:00,810 --> 00:15:04,146 turned out screws and washers and buttons, 206 00:15:04,146 --> 00:15:06,148 shower heads and alarm clocks, 207 00:15:06,148 --> 00:15:08,751 toy airplanes and lipstick holders, 208 00:15:08,751 --> 00:15:10,786 and cocktail shakers. 209 00:15:10,786 --> 00:15:12,888 Since the 19th century, 210 00:15:12,888 --> 00:15:17,793 its citizens had proudly called their town "Brass City." 211 00:15:21,096 --> 00:15:25,100 Ray Leopold, the son of a Jewish immigrant from Latvia, 212 00:15:25,100 --> 00:15:29,405 lived on Route Eight on the southern edge of the city. 213 00:15:29,405 --> 00:15:34,543 Waterbury was a center for high-quality craft. 214 00:15:34,543 --> 00:15:39,782 There were individuals there who could do 1/10,000 of an inch 215 00:15:39,782 --> 00:15:45,321 on anything and if there was zero tolerance required, 216 00:15:45,321 --> 00:15:46,388 they could do that, too. 217 00:15:46,388 --> 00:15:49,925 OLGA CIARLO: Well, Waterbury, where we lived, 218 00:15:49,925 --> 00:15:52,328 there were a lot of Italian people. 219 00:15:52,328 --> 00:15:55,798 They had made a good business for themselves 220 00:15:55,798 --> 00:15:57,800 and were very well liked. 221 00:15:57,800 --> 00:16:01,270 We had a wonderful neighborhood. 222 00:16:01,270 --> 00:16:04,473 We had parties every single Sunday. 223 00:16:04,473 --> 00:16:06,809 Every Sunday was a picnic for us. 224 00:16:06,809 --> 00:16:12,548 NARRATOR: The Ciarlo family lived at 1032 North Main Street, 225 00:16:12,548 --> 00:16:16,919 in the Italian section of town. 226 00:16:17,319 --> 00:16:19,889 Their father had recently died. 227 00:16:19,889 --> 00:16:25,961 His loss would be only the beginning of their troubles. 228 00:16:30,466 --> 00:16:33,502 And in Mobile, Alabama, 229 00:16:33,502 --> 00:16:36,105 population 112,000, 230 00:16:36,105 --> 00:16:39,375 the only real industry was shipbuilding, 231 00:16:39,375 --> 00:16:43,279 as it had been since the Great War, a generation earlier. 232 00:16:43,279 --> 00:16:47,349 Once a center of cotton and slave trading, 233 00:16:47,349 --> 00:16:51,520 Mobile was best known for its annual Azalea Festival, 234 00:16:51,520 --> 00:16:55,190 and its leisurely Southern air. 235 00:16:57,927 --> 00:17:02,698 John Gray and his family lived on the south side of town, 236 00:17:02,698 --> 00:17:08,070 near the L & N Railroad tracks at 407 Royal Street. 237 00:17:08,070 --> 00:17:12,441 He would soon be asked to fight a war for freedom, 238 00:17:12,441 --> 00:17:15,911 though his own country's definition of freedom 239 00:17:15,911 --> 00:17:18,347 did not include him. 240 00:17:18,347 --> 00:17:21,483 GRAY: Whites and blacks got along pretty good, 241 00:17:21,483 --> 00:17:24,520 as long as you had the status quo. 242 00:17:24,520 --> 00:17:29,959 But you could not, uh, eat at the counter at Woolworth. 243 00:17:29,959 --> 00:17:31,961 You'd have to go down to the end 244 00:17:31,961 --> 00:17:35,431 and order your sandwich and take it out. 245 00:17:35,431 --> 00:17:37,800 Out to eat. 246 00:17:40,970 --> 00:17:42,838 NARRATOR: Across town, 247 00:17:42,838 --> 00:17:45,774 Katharine Phillips and her family 248 00:17:45,774 --> 00:17:48,777 lived at 1555 Monterey Place. 249 00:17:48,777 --> 00:17:52,114 PHILLIPS: Daddy said Mobile made its living 250 00:17:52,114 --> 00:17:54,283 by taking in each other's wash. 251 00:17:54,283 --> 00:17:57,486 And it was absolutely true. 252 00:17:57,486 --> 00:17:59,321 The pace of life was slow. 253 00:17:59,321 --> 00:18:00,789 On a hot summer evening-- 254 00:18:00,789 --> 00:18:02,958 of course there was no air-conditioning-- 255 00:18:02,958 --> 00:18:06,795 so Daddy would load us in the car and we'd drive downtown 256 00:18:06,795 --> 00:18:11,100 to Brown's Ice Cream and he'd buy us an ice cream cone 257 00:18:11,100 --> 00:18:13,969 and then we'd drive out to Arlington 258 00:18:13,969 --> 00:18:15,871 and park out by the bay, 259 00:18:15,871 --> 00:18:18,907 and all sit there and enjoy the sea breeze. 260 00:18:18,907 --> 00:18:22,211 And when we'd cooled down enough, he'd bring us home 261 00:18:22,211 --> 00:18:25,614 and everybody could go to bed and go to sleep. 262 00:18:25,614 --> 00:18:28,651 Or we sat on our porch in the evening 263 00:18:28,651 --> 00:18:31,220 and the children played in the yard. 264 00:18:31,220 --> 00:18:33,889 It was a wonderful way to grow up. 265 00:18:33,889 --> 00:18:37,292 And we were completely away from the rest of the world 266 00:18:37,292 --> 00:18:39,128 down in Mobile. 267 00:18:49,838 --> 00:18:53,342 NARRATOR: No one in Mobile, Waterbury, 268 00:18:53,342 --> 00:18:58,480 Sacramento, Luverne, or anywhere else in America 269 00:18:58,480 --> 00:19:01,450 was prepared for what was about to happen 270 00:19:01,450 --> 00:19:05,054 to them and their country. 271 00:19:19,501 --> 00:19:23,072 DANIEL INOUYE: Pearl Harbor was a Sunday 272 00:19:23,072 --> 00:19:25,741 and, together with the family, 273 00:19:25,741 --> 00:19:28,277 we're all getting ready to go to church. 274 00:19:28,277 --> 00:19:32,548 And the disc jockey's going on with Hawaiian music, 275 00:19:32,548 --> 00:19:35,551 and suddenly he sounded hysterical. 276 00:19:35,551 --> 00:19:39,521 For a moment, I thought this was an act. 277 00:19:39,521 --> 00:19:43,125 So I stepped out into the street and sure enough... 278 00:19:43,125 --> 00:19:48,964 there are puffs and smoke coming out of that Pearl Harbor area. 279 00:19:48,964 --> 00:19:51,100 And so I called my father out, 280 00:19:51,100 --> 00:19:52,134 said, "Look at that." 281 00:19:52,134 --> 00:19:57,506 And all of a sudden, three aircraft flew right overhead. 282 00:19:57,506 --> 00:20:02,277 They were pearl gray with red dots. 283 00:20:03,378 --> 00:20:04,947 I knew what was happening. 284 00:20:04,947 --> 00:20:06,515 (artillery shells whistling, explosions booming) 285 00:20:06,515 --> 00:20:09,952 And I thought my world had just come to an end. 286 00:20:09,952 --> 00:20:13,255 (explosion) 287 00:20:33,542 --> 00:20:36,178 (siren wailing) 288 00:20:43,385 --> 00:20:46,355 NARRATOR: At 7:55 a.m. 289 00:20:46,355 --> 00:20:49,491 on Sunday, December 7, 1941, 290 00:20:49,491 --> 00:20:51,794 hundreds of Japanese warplanes, 291 00:20:51,794 --> 00:20:54,596 launched from aircraft carriers far out at sea, 292 00:20:54,596 --> 00:20:56,932 attacked the American Pacific Fleet 293 00:20:56,932 --> 00:21:01,537 anchored at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. 294 00:21:01,537 --> 00:21:02,471 (explosion) 295 00:21:02,471 --> 00:21:05,340 The attack took a terrible toll-- 296 00:21:05,340 --> 00:21:08,343 so terrible a toll that the War Department 297 00:21:08,343 --> 00:21:12,548 kept secret the exact details for years. 298 00:21:12,548 --> 00:21:15,818 (explosions) 299 00:21:16,852 --> 00:21:21,657 Eight battleships, including theUSS Arizona, 300 00:21:21,657 --> 00:21:24,393 three light cruisers, three destroyers, 301 00:21:24,393 --> 00:21:30,032 and four other naval vessels were either sunk or damaged. 302 00:21:32,935 --> 00:21:39,041 164 American aircraft were also destroyed. 303 00:21:39,041 --> 00:21:44,713 Most hadn't even gotten off the ground. 304 00:21:46,148 --> 00:21:51,820 And 2,403 Americans were dead. 305 00:21:57,526 --> 00:22:00,195 Nothing like this had ever happened 306 00:22:00,195 --> 00:22:03,999 to the United States of America before. 307 00:22:09,137 --> 00:22:14,376 17-year-old Daniel Inouye, the son of a Japanese immigrant, 308 00:22:14,376 --> 00:22:19,815 was a senior at William McKinley High School in Honolulu 309 00:22:19,815 --> 00:22:23,318 and a Red Cross volunteer. 310 00:22:23,318 --> 00:22:28,423 INOUYE: A call came in that we had casualties nearby, 311 00:22:30,792 --> 00:22:33,595 One haunts me every so often. 312 00:22:33,595 --> 00:22:38,800 It was a woman clutching a child. 313 00:22:38,800 --> 00:22:41,036 Her head was severed, 314 00:22:41,036 --> 00:22:45,407 but here she was with her arms around her baby. 315 00:22:45,407 --> 00:22:47,809 And, uh... 316 00:22:47,809 --> 00:22:52,447 So this is what I had to pick up, at 17. 317 00:23:02,257 --> 00:23:04,526 ANNOUNCER (over radio): One, two, three, four. 318 00:23:04,526 --> 00:23:07,095 Hello, NBC. Hello, NBC. 319 00:23:07,095 --> 00:23:10,599 This is KBU in Honolulu, Hawaii. 320 00:23:10,599 --> 00:23:13,869 PHILLIPS: I was a sophomore at Auburn 321 00:23:13,869 --> 00:23:15,904 when Pearl Harbor was attacked. 322 00:23:15,904 --> 00:23:18,874 ANNOUNCER: It is no joke, it is a real war. 323 00:23:18,874 --> 00:23:22,778 I came home from church, went to the dormitory 324 00:23:22,778 --> 00:23:26,648 and heard all this screaming and crying. 325 00:23:26,648 --> 00:23:28,951 And I went down the hall, I said, 326 00:23:28,951 --> 00:23:31,553 "What's the matter? What's wrong?" 327 00:23:31,553 --> 00:23:33,488 They said, "Turn the radio on." 328 00:23:33,488 --> 00:23:37,125 So we turned our radio on and, of course, 329 00:23:37,125 --> 00:23:40,595 he said, "The Japs have attacked Pearl Harbor." 330 00:23:40,595 --> 00:23:44,533 ANNOUNCER: We have been on the telephone with our station KGMB, 331 00:23:44,533 --> 00:23:47,135 which is in Honolulu, and they report to us 332 00:23:47,135 --> 00:23:49,438 that the antiaircraft fire can be heard 333 00:23:49,438 --> 00:23:53,375 in a steady drone as the attacking planes come in. 334 00:23:53,375 --> 00:23:54,176 As Mr. Davis told you... 335 00:23:54,176 --> 00:23:56,044 PHILLIPS: But we comforted each other, 336 00:23:56,044 --> 00:23:58,213 and the girls all cried and wept 337 00:23:58,213 --> 00:24:01,950 because they had boyfriends or relatives 338 00:24:01,950 --> 00:24:04,953 that were already in the armed forces. 339 00:24:04,953 --> 00:24:08,223 And we realized immediately 340 00:24:08,223 --> 00:24:09,758 that this would be war. 341 00:24:09,758 --> 00:24:13,929 NARRATOR: Katherine Phillips' younger brother Sid 342 00:24:13,929 --> 00:24:16,765 was back home in Mobile. 343 00:24:16,765 --> 00:24:20,869 SIDNEY PHILLIPS: I was in a drugstore, drinking a milkshake, 344 00:24:20,869 --> 00:24:25,307 and this lady burst in the side door and screamed, 345 00:24:25,307 --> 00:24:27,142 "Turn on the radio!" 346 00:24:27,142 --> 00:24:30,012 They were talking about Pearl Harbor on every station. 347 00:24:30,012 --> 00:24:34,449 ANNOUNCER: And London now awaits Prime Minister Churchill's promise 348 00:24:34,449 --> 00:24:37,786 to declare war on Japan within the hour. 349 00:24:37,786 --> 00:24:40,522 We knew this meant we were in the war. 350 00:24:40,522 --> 00:24:43,792 And we just... 351 00:24:43,792 --> 00:24:46,395 all sat there quietly. 352 00:24:46,395 --> 00:24:50,632 The radio kept giving the same information again and again. 353 00:24:50,632 --> 00:24:51,933 ANNOUNCER: ...8:30 p.m. tonight... 354 00:24:51,933 --> 00:24:54,369 BARBARA COVINGTON: I remember I was home eating breakfast 355 00:24:54,369 --> 00:24:56,505 with my mother and my two brothers. 356 00:24:56,505 --> 00:24:57,572 I was the youngest, 357 00:24:57,572 --> 00:25:00,509 and we were getting ready to go to Sunday school. 358 00:25:00,509 --> 00:25:03,478 I remember the fear coming in my mother's eyes, 359 00:25:03,478 --> 00:25:05,113 because she knew my brothers 360 00:25:05,113 --> 00:25:07,215 were probably going to be called, and they were. 361 00:25:07,215 --> 00:25:10,952 ANNOUNCER: From Washington, Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson 362 00:25:10,952 --> 00:25:13,989 today ordered the entire Army into uniform, 363 00:25:13,989 --> 00:25:14,890 effective tomorrow. 364 00:25:14,890 --> 00:25:17,859 ASAKO TOKUNO: That was about the time we had finals at school, 365 00:25:17,859 --> 00:25:22,130 and this was my first semester at UC Berkeley. 366 00:25:22,130 --> 00:25:23,965 And, uh, heard the news first. 367 00:25:23,965 --> 00:25:28,270 Of course, I traveled by bus to go to school. 368 00:25:29,538 --> 00:25:31,506 And as I'd stand on that corner... 369 00:25:31,506 --> 00:25:33,108 (clears throat) 370 00:25:33,108 --> 00:25:34,342 I would get this terrible feeling 371 00:25:34,342 --> 00:25:36,778 that people were watching, looking at me. 372 00:25:36,778 --> 00:25:40,882 And, um, you just get so self-conscious, you know, 373 00:25:40,882 --> 00:25:42,317 SO much more aware. 374 00:25:42,317 --> 00:25:44,786 I'd never been aware of my... 375 00:25:44,786 --> 00:25:48,190 you know, my ethnicity. 376 00:25:48,190 --> 00:25:50,325 And so, that was very strange. 377 00:25:50,325 --> 00:25:54,129 That was the first time I really felt, you know, 378 00:25:54,129 --> 00:25:55,130 "This is not good." 379 00:25:55,130 --> 00:25:58,333 ANNOUNCER: For the latest news on the Pacific situation, 380 00:25:58,333 --> 00:26:01,069 keep tuned to this station. 381 00:26:01,069 --> 00:26:03,505 LEOPOLD: It seemed so incredible. 382 00:26:03,505 --> 00:26:06,641 2,400 innocent people 383 00:26:06,641 --> 00:26:10,412 blown off the face of the earth was an atrocity. 384 00:26:10,412 --> 00:26:14,382 It was something that had to be corrected-- 385 00:26:14,382 --> 00:26:17,452 perhaps the word might be "avenged." 386 00:26:17,452 --> 00:26:22,090 And, um... we had to get busy with it. 387 00:26:22,090 --> 00:26:24,960 PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT (on radio): Yesterday... 388 00:26:24,960 --> 00:26:28,864 December 7, 1941... 389 00:26:28,864 --> 00:26:32,834 NARRATOR: The following afternoon, people in Sacramento, 390 00:26:32,834 --> 00:26:36,404 Waterbury, Luverne, Mobile, 391 00:26:36,404 --> 00:26:38,673 and everywhere else in America 392 00:26:38,673 --> 00:26:41,309 gathered around their radios to hear 393 00:26:41,309 --> 00:26:43,311 President Franklin Delano Roosevelt 394 00:26:43,311 --> 00:26:48,016 ask a joint session of Congress for a declaration of war. 395 00:26:48,016 --> 00:26:50,952 PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT: The attack yesterday 396 00:26:50,952 --> 00:26:56,124 on the Hawaiian Islands has caused severe damage 397 00:26:56,124 --> 00:26:59,794 to American naval and military forces. 398 00:27:00,795 --> 00:27:04,799 I regret to tell you that very many American lives 399 00:27:04,799 --> 00:27:06,234 have been lost. 400 00:27:06,234 --> 00:27:09,104 In addition, American ships have been reported torpedoed... 401 00:27:09,104 --> 00:27:13,241 KATHARINE PHILLIPS: We gathered outside of Langdon Hall at Auburn, 402 00:27:13,241 --> 00:27:16,978 and they had a loudspeaker truck, 403 00:27:16,978 --> 00:27:19,181 and we stood there quietly 404 00:27:19,181 --> 00:27:23,251 and listened to President Roosevelt declare war. 405 00:27:23,251 --> 00:27:27,522 (voice breaking): And, of course, our whole life changed. 406 00:27:28,356 --> 00:27:32,961 PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT: With confidence in our Armed Forces, 407 00:27:32,961 --> 00:27:36,898 with the unbounding determination 408 00:27:36,898 --> 00:27:38,967 of our people, 409 00:27:38,967 --> 00:27:43,638 we will gain the inevitable triumph, 410 00:27:43,638 --> 00:27:45,340 so help us God. 411 00:27:45,340 --> 00:27:47,642 (applause) 412 00:27:59,120 --> 00:28:02,357 NARRATOR: Three days after Congress declared war on Japan, 413 00:28:02,357 --> 00:28:07,495 Japan's allies, Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, 414 00:28:07,495 --> 00:28:11,266 declared war on the United States. 415 00:28:13,768 --> 00:28:15,237 All across the country, 416 00:28:15,237 --> 00:28:18,473 anxious Americans asked themselves, 417 00:28:18,473 --> 00:28:20,976 "How did this happen?" 418 00:28:23,511 --> 00:28:27,515 For more than a decade, they had had glimpses of a world 419 00:28:27,515 --> 00:28:29,484 descending into chaos-- 420 00:28:29,484 --> 00:28:32,387 in their newspapers, over the radio 421 00:28:32,387 --> 00:28:35,223 and in newsreels shown in movie theaters. 422 00:28:35,223 --> 00:28:39,227 The Strand and the State in Waterbury. 423 00:28:39,227 --> 00:28:43,865 The Crest and the Alhambra in Sacramento. 424 00:28:43,865 --> 00:28:47,402 The Roxy and the Pike in Mobile. 425 00:28:47,402 --> 00:28:52,540 And the Pix and the Palace in Luverne. 426 00:29:00,448 --> 00:29:04,552 ANNOUNCER: For the first time, we saw great cities squashed flat, 427 00:29:04,552 --> 00:29:07,422 civilians bombed and killed. 428 00:29:16,531 --> 00:29:20,101 NARRATOR: They had hoped they could stay out of it all. 429 00:29:20,101 --> 00:29:24,639 EMMA BELLE PETCHER: You couldn't fathom across the ocean, 430 00:29:24,639 --> 00:29:27,809 you know, and you couldn't fathom 431 00:29:27,809 --> 00:29:29,344 what it was really like. 432 00:29:29,344 --> 00:29:31,413 But they would show these newsreels, 433 00:29:31,413 --> 00:29:35,283 and I'd sneak in the back of the theater and see these newsreels, 434 00:29:35,283 --> 00:29:37,385 and they were horrifying. 435 00:30:06,147 --> 00:30:09,184 NARRATOR: Throughout the 1930s, country after country 436 00:30:09,184 --> 00:30:12,020 had been held hostage to the ruthless ambitions 437 00:30:12,020 --> 00:30:16,391 of the leaders of what would be called "the Axis." 438 00:30:17,192 --> 00:30:21,262 Benito Mussolini, the swaggering dictator of Italy, 439 00:30:21,262 --> 00:30:25,600 dreamed of restoring the ancient Roman Empire and becoming 440 00:30:25,600 --> 00:30:29,204 master of the Mediterranean. 441 00:30:30,004 --> 00:30:34,075 Adolf Hitler built his monstrous Nazi regime 442 00:30:34,075 --> 00:30:36,478 and the mightiest army on earth 443 00:30:36,478 --> 00:30:39,514 on the German thirst for revenge-- 444 00:30:39,514 --> 00:30:43,118 revenge against the victors of the First World War, 445 00:30:43,118 --> 00:30:47,789 but also against those at home who he claimed had stabbed 446 00:30:47,789 --> 00:30:49,958 their armed forces in the back: 447 00:30:49,958 --> 00:30:54,362 Socialists, Communists, and the Jews. 448 00:30:54,362 --> 00:30:55,263 Above all, the Jews, 449 00:30:55,263 --> 00:30:59,734 who he said were both evil and subhuman. 450 00:31:00,535 --> 00:31:04,406 The German people were superior to all others, he assured them, 451 00:31:04,406 --> 00:31:09,110 and he had been chosen to lead them to their great destiny-- 452 00:31:09,110 --> 00:31:11,780 a Reich that would rule over the Old World 453 00:31:11,780 --> 00:31:14,315 and the New for a thousand years. 454 00:31:14,315 --> 00:31:17,585 CROWD (chanting): Heil! Heil! 455 00:31:25,126 --> 00:31:26,428 The fact is that I am a Jew. 456 00:31:26,428 --> 00:31:29,264 I was aware of what was going on in Europe, 457 00:31:29,264 --> 00:31:33,601 perhaps a little more than the average person might have known. 458 00:31:33,601 --> 00:31:38,139 And I did feel that, somehow or other, 459 00:31:38,139 --> 00:31:41,643 that Hitler had to be stopped. 460 00:31:41,643 --> 00:31:48,149 Not only for the Jews, but for everybody in the world. 461 00:31:50,285 --> 00:31:53,588 QUENTIN AANENSON: We knew the war in Europe 462 00:31:53,588 --> 00:31:56,391 was going to affect us eventually. 463 00:31:56,391 --> 00:32:01,930 After Czechoslovakia had been taken over by Germany... 464 00:32:03,231 --> 00:32:06,935 we knew that the war was coming our direction, 465 00:32:06,935 --> 00:32:08,903 one way or the other. 466 00:32:15,343 --> 00:32:18,680 ANNOUNCER: The beginning of the Blitzkrieg, "the lightning war," 467 00:32:18,680 --> 00:32:22,617 ripping deep into a nation not equipped to meet it. 468 00:32:24,953 --> 00:32:27,989 NARRATOR: On September 1, 1939, 469 00:32:27,989 --> 00:32:32,660 Hitler's forces stormed across the border of Poland. 470 00:32:41,269 --> 00:32:45,139 In response to the attack, Britain and France 471 00:32:45,139 --> 00:32:48,209 declared war on Germany. 472 00:32:49,611 --> 00:32:53,848 The Second World War had begun. 473 00:33:02,991 --> 00:33:05,693 Denmark and Norway fell. 474 00:33:05,693 --> 00:33:09,130 Holland had surrendered. 475 00:33:10,665 --> 00:33:13,301 Belgium was crushed. 476 00:33:13,301 --> 00:33:16,004 French defenses had collapsed. 477 00:33:16,004 --> 00:33:19,107 And in June of 1940, 478 00:33:19,107 --> 00:33:20,542 Paris fell. 479 00:33:21,576 --> 00:33:28,216 Adolf Hitler was the master of Western Europe. 480 00:33:30,251 --> 00:33:34,289 Then he set his sights on Britain. 481 00:33:34,289 --> 00:33:37,992 For more than a year, she would stand alone 482 00:33:37,992 --> 00:33:41,296 against relentless attack from the air. 483 00:33:42,797 --> 00:33:44,299 EDWARD MURROW (over radio): Hello, America. 484 00:33:44,299 --> 00:33:47,535 This is Edward Murrow speaking from London. 485 00:33:47,535 --> 00:33:48,503 They came over shortly 486 00:33:48,503 --> 00:33:50,605 after blackout time and opened the attack 487 00:33:50,605 --> 00:33:54,275 with a veritable shower of flares and incendiaries. 488 00:34:03,551 --> 00:34:05,653 NARRATOR: American public opinion, 489 00:34:05,653 --> 00:34:08,423 which had been steadfastly against being pulled 490 00:34:08,423 --> 00:34:13,361 into Europe's troubles again, had begun to change. 491 00:34:13,895 --> 00:34:17,332 We had a built-up resentment to Hitler. 492 00:34:17,332 --> 00:34:22,136 We had been watching the news since 1939, 493 00:34:22,136 --> 00:34:26,407 so we knew what Hitler was doing in Europe. 494 00:34:26,908 --> 00:34:30,144 The way he had attacked Poland, 495 00:34:30,144 --> 00:34:32,146 the way he had tried to bring England 496 00:34:32,146 --> 00:34:34,882 to her knees with that constant bombing-- 497 00:34:34,882 --> 00:34:41,489 we just disliked Hitler and everything he was doing. 498 00:34:44,459 --> 00:34:47,528 NARRATOR: But as plans for Britain faltered, 499 00:34:47,528 --> 00:34:49,864 Hitler had turned his attention to the east, 500 00:34:49,864 --> 00:34:53,668 ordering three million troops in a surprise attack 501 00:34:53,668 --> 00:34:56,437 on his supposed ally, the Soviet Union, 502 00:34:56,437 --> 00:35:01,542 setting in motion the worst slaughter of the war. 503 00:35:12,320 --> 00:35:15,223 Meanwhile, on the far side of the world, 504 00:35:15,223 --> 00:35:18,926 the military men who ruled Japan in the name of the emperor 505 00:35:18,926 --> 00:35:21,929 believed their people superior, too. 506 00:35:21,929 --> 00:35:25,633 Their small, crowded island nation had moved 507 00:35:25,633 --> 00:35:28,569 from medieval feudalism to the modern era 508 00:35:28,569 --> 00:35:32,106 in less than a century, 509 00:35:32,106 --> 00:35:34,409 and they dreamed of Japan's becoming a mighty, 510 00:35:34,409 --> 00:35:36,477 self-sufficient power. 511 00:35:38,312 --> 00:35:40,782 With extraordinary brutality, 512 00:35:40,782 --> 00:35:43,851 they had set out to seize the resources of China. 513 00:35:43,851 --> 00:35:48,022 And they coveted the French and Dutch 514 00:35:48,022 --> 00:35:52,226 and British colonies in Southeast Asia as well. 515 00:36:05,073 --> 00:36:06,607 ANNOUNCER: From Shanghai to Nanking, 516 00:36:06,607 --> 00:36:08,843 Japan still spreads destruction from the skies 517 00:36:08,843 --> 00:36:10,945 upon a score of Chinese cities. 518 00:36:10,945 --> 00:36:12,747 Here is the result: 519 00:36:12,747 --> 00:36:16,984 innocent victims of the savagery that masquerades as modern war. 520 00:36:30,531 --> 00:36:33,101 NARRATOR: Among the obstacles in Japan's way 521 00:36:33,101 --> 00:36:37,205 were the U.S. Pacific Fleet based in Hawaii... 522 00:36:37,205 --> 00:36:42,110 and American military outposts in Guam, Wake Island, 523 00:36:42,110 --> 00:36:45,780 and in the Commonwealth of the Philippines. 524 00:36:51,686 --> 00:36:53,788 The Axis leaders were united 525 00:36:53,788 --> 00:36:57,325 in their scorn for the United States. 526 00:36:57,325 --> 00:37:00,495 Its people were "timid, undisciplined scum," 527 00:37:00,495 --> 00:37:03,064 Hitler said, "under the influence 528 00:37:03,064 --> 00:37:05,233 of Negroes and Jews." 529 00:37:05,600 --> 00:37:08,503 He was certain such a mongrel people 530 00:37:08,503 --> 00:37:12,740 could never win a war against his Aryan legions. 531 00:37:15,510 --> 00:37:18,880 President Roosevelt had done everything he could, 532 00:37:18,880 --> 00:37:22,083 short of war, to combat the aggressors. 533 00:37:22,083 --> 00:37:26,754 Providing desperately needed aid to Britain and Russia... 534 00:37:27,255 --> 00:37:32,093 ...demanding that Japan withdraw from China. 535 00:37:32,560 --> 00:37:35,096 Finally, freezing Japanese assets 536 00:37:35,096 --> 00:37:37,999 in the United States, so that no American oil 537 00:37:37,999 --> 00:37:42,003 could be used to fuel further aggression in Asia. 538 00:37:45,773 --> 00:37:48,209 For the Japanese militarists, 539 00:37:48,209 --> 00:37:51,946 that had been the signal to go to war with America. 540 00:37:51,946 --> 00:37:56,784 They made General Hideki Tojo prime minister. 541 00:37:56,784 --> 00:37:59,120 He thought that by destroying 542 00:37:59,120 --> 00:38:01,222 the U.S. Pacific Fleet at Pearl Harbor 543 00:38:01,222 --> 00:38:02,557 in a single blow, 544 00:38:02,557 --> 00:38:06,060 he could stun and demoralize the country long enough 545 00:38:06,060 --> 00:38:08,729 to become so dominant in the region 546 00:38:08,729 --> 00:38:12,500 that Japan could never be dislodged. 547 00:38:15,369 --> 00:38:17,572 American intelligence officers 548 00:38:17,572 --> 00:38:20,308 had broken the Japanese diplomatic code 549 00:38:20,308 --> 00:38:24,078 and knew some kind of attack was coming. 550 00:38:26,147 --> 00:38:28,749 (explosion, plane soaring) 551 00:38:32,420 --> 00:38:35,756 But no one had known where or when 552 00:38:35,756 --> 00:38:38,359 until December 7th. 553 00:38:46,934 --> 00:38:49,770 GLENN FRAZIER: I was raised in a real Christian family 554 00:38:49,770 --> 00:38:54,275 and, as a result, killing was not part of my training. 555 00:38:54,275 --> 00:38:58,779 And, uh, that was a big hurdle for me to get over 556 00:38:58,779 --> 00:39:02,650 because I had been taught not to Kill. 557 00:39:07,288 --> 00:39:10,057 NARRATOR: Within hours of Pearl Harbor, 558 00:39:10,057 --> 00:39:11,726 the Japanese had also attacked 559 00:39:11,726 --> 00:39:15,563 the main Philippine island of Luzon. 560 00:39:19,433 --> 00:39:24,305 17-year-old Glenn Frazier was now in the middle of a war 561 00:39:24,305 --> 00:39:28,075 he thought he would never have to face. 562 00:39:33,447 --> 00:39:34,749 FRAZIER: And when the war started 563 00:39:34,749 --> 00:39:37,585 and I was going to the field hospital, 564 00:39:37,585 --> 00:39:39,887 a couple of Japanese planes-- Zeros-- 565 00:39:39,887 --> 00:39:41,889 bombed and strafed the hospital. 566 00:39:41,889 --> 00:39:44,525 (gunfire, explosions) 567 00:39:44,525 --> 00:39:45,893 And as we were approaching, 568 00:39:45,893 --> 00:39:49,330 a friend of mine and I-- uh, we got into a ditch 569 00:39:49,330 --> 00:39:53,501 and one of the dive bombers came back and strafed us 570 00:39:53,501 --> 00:39:56,370 and dropped one bomb and hit him direct. 571 00:39:56,370 --> 00:40:00,308 And all I ever found of him was his left foot in a shoe. 572 00:40:00,308 --> 00:40:05,379 And when that Japanese Zero turned his wings 573 00:40:05,379 --> 00:40:09,583 right above the trees and started to fly away, 574 00:40:09,583 --> 00:40:11,986 I could see him with a smile on his face. 575 00:40:11,986 --> 00:40:15,957 And at that point, I had no problem with killing people. 576 00:40:15,957 --> 00:40:19,560 In fact, I got to the point where I hunted them. 577 00:40:19,560 --> 00:40:20,461 (gunshot) 578 00:40:20,461 --> 00:40:23,331 And if I didn't kill a Japanese in a day, 579 00:40:23,331 --> 00:40:25,533 I felt I didn't do my job. 580 00:40:25,533 --> 00:40:28,336 (gunshot) 581 00:40:29,203 --> 00:40:32,740 NARRATOR: Glenn Frazier was one of 31,000 men 582 00:40:32,740 --> 00:40:35,476 under the command of General Douglas MacArthur, 583 00:40:35,476 --> 00:40:38,980 the best-known soldier in the American Army. 584 00:40:38,980 --> 00:40:41,816 A frontline hero of World War I, 585 00:40:41,816 --> 00:40:46,287 he was as self-absorbed as he was courageous. 586 00:40:46,287 --> 00:40:51,459 But the news of Pearl Harbor had paralyzed him. 587 00:40:51,459 --> 00:40:53,828 He had had nine hours' warning, 588 00:40:53,828 --> 00:40:55,529 yet when the Japanese attacked 589 00:40:55,529 --> 00:40:56,831 his airfields in the Philippines, 590 00:40:56,831 --> 00:41:02,103 most of MacArthur's planes were still parked wing to wing, 591 00:41:02,103 --> 00:41:04,372 easy targets for the enemy. 592 00:41:04,372 --> 00:41:07,108 (bombs whistling, then exploding) 593 00:41:09,910 --> 00:41:14,115 More than 50,000 Japanese soldiers would soon be ashore, 594 00:41:14,115 --> 00:41:19,553 converging on Manila from the north and the south. 595 00:41:22,156 --> 00:41:23,457 Neither the American troops, 596 00:41:23,457 --> 00:41:27,595 nor the thousands of Filipino reservists MacArthur called up 597 00:41:27,595 --> 00:41:31,465 would be able to stop them. 598 00:41:34,802 --> 00:41:39,573 The Americans were being pushed out of the Pacific. 599 00:41:40,641 --> 00:41:44,178 MacArthur eventually ordered all his forces to retreat 600 00:41:44,178 --> 00:41:48,849 onto the mountainous, forest-covered Bataan Peninsula. 601 00:41:48,849 --> 00:41:51,285 He withdrew with his family and his aides 602 00:41:51,285 --> 00:41:55,156 to the heavily fortified island at the mouth of Manila Bay 603 00:41:55,156 --> 00:41:57,591 called Corregidor. 604 00:42:02,463 --> 00:42:05,833 Meanwhile, other Americans in the Philippines, 605 00:42:05,833 --> 00:42:09,203 innocent civilians thousands of miles from home, 606 00:42:09,203 --> 00:42:12,540 had been swept up in the war as well. 607 00:42:13,908 --> 00:42:16,444 (siren wailing, bell clanging) 608 00:42:16,444 --> 00:42:18,446 (clamoring) 609 00:42:31,859 --> 00:42:34,795 SASCHA WEINZHEIMER: The day Pearl Harbor got bombed 610 00:42:34,795 --> 00:42:36,363 was the seventh. 611 00:42:36,363 --> 00:42:38,132 But in the Philippines, 612 00:42:38,132 --> 00:42:40,935 with... over the international date line, it was the eighth. 613 00:42:40,935 --> 00:42:47,241 Same day, and we were bombed a few hours later. 614 00:42:48,809 --> 00:42:51,979 And I had polio when I was a baby, 615 00:42:51,979 --> 00:42:56,050 so I used to go to Manila three times a week 616 00:42:56,050 --> 00:42:57,818 for physical therapy. 617 00:42:57,818 --> 00:43:00,488 And this is what I was doing on a Monday morning, 618 00:43:00,488 --> 00:43:03,557 on the eighth, when the Japanese started bombing. 619 00:43:03,557 --> 00:43:08,662 NARRATOR: Sascha Weinzheimer was eight years old 620 00:43:08,662 --> 00:43:10,364 in December of 1941, 621 00:43:10,364 --> 00:43:13,100 the daughter and granddaughter of wealthy farmers 622 00:43:13,100 --> 00:43:16,203 with enormous holdings in the Sacramento Valley 623 00:43:16,203 --> 00:43:18,272 and in the Philippines. 624 00:43:18,272 --> 00:43:20,307 As she would detail in a journal, 625 00:43:20,307 --> 00:43:21,909 she lived with her mother and father, 626 00:43:21,909 --> 00:43:25,412 her three-year-old sister and her three-month-old brother 627 00:43:25,412 --> 00:43:28,115 on one of the largest sugar plantations 628 00:43:28,115 --> 00:43:31,285 on the Philippine Island of Luzon. 629 00:43:32,119 --> 00:43:35,222 ("Auld Lang Syne"playing) 630 00:43:35,222 --> 00:43:38,025 (explosions thundering in distance) 631 00:43:38,025 --> 00:43:39,793 SASCHA WEINZHEIMER (dramatized): "On New Year's Eve, 632 00:43:39,793 --> 00:43:41,962 "Daddy brought home three soldiers. 633 00:43:41,962 --> 00:43:44,031 "When they all had big glasses 634 00:43:44,031 --> 00:43:45,833 "of whiskey and soda in their hands, 635 00:43:45,833 --> 00:43:48,903 "they started telling stories about fighting the Japs. 636 00:43:48,903 --> 00:43:52,039 "They always smiled when people wouldn't believe them 637 00:43:52,039 --> 00:43:56,677 "when they said, โ€˜Lady, we haven't got a chance.' 638 00:43:56,677 --> 00:44:00,147 Mother scolded them for talking that way." 639 00:44:00,147 --> 00:44:04,351 NARRATOR: After Japanese bombs fell near their plantation, 640 00:44:04,351 --> 00:44:07,488 Sascha and her family moved into Manila-- 641 00:44:07,488 --> 00:44:11,559 now with the army gone, a neutral, "Open City"-- 642 00:44:11,559 --> 00:44:16,497 joining other refugees at the Bayview Hotel. 643 00:44:22,203 --> 00:44:24,972 WEINZHEIMER: The Japanese came in 644 00:44:24,972 --> 00:44:28,375 on the second of January. 645 00:44:28,842 --> 00:44:33,247 That was the beginning of, you know, 646 00:44:33,247 --> 00:44:37,785 this putting the people into camps and so forth. 647 00:44:37,785 --> 00:44:40,254 And your life changed fast. 648 00:44:40,254 --> 00:44:43,190 WEINZHEIMER (dramatized): "The first thing I remember 649 00:44:43,190 --> 00:44:45,492 "was looking across the street towards the bay 650 00:44:45,492 --> 00:44:49,597 "and seeing Japanese soldiers and officers around the flagpole 651 00:44:49,597 --> 00:44:51,498 "hoisting up the Japanese flag 652 00:44:51,498 --> 00:44:53,801 where our Stars and Stripes had been." 653 00:44:53,801 --> 00:44:55,135 (crowd cheering) 654 00:44:55,135 --> 00:44:58,973 "Soon trucks came rolling down the boulevard, 655 00:44:58,973 --> 00:45:01,475 "yelling, โ€˜Banzai!' 656 00:45:01,475 --> 00:45:05,079 "We were told to be calm and keep away from the windows. 657 00:45:05,079 --> 00:45:11,852 Everyone was nervous, especially Mother." 658 00:45:12,987 --> 00:45:16,523 NARRATOR: Japanese soldiers took Sascha's father 659 00:45:16,523 --> 00:45:18,192 from the Bayview Hotel 660 00:45:18,192 --> 00:45:22,096 to the walled campus of Santo Tomas University, 661 00:45:22,096 --> 00:45:26,133 which had been turned into a civilian internment camp. 662 00:45:26,133 --> 00:45:30,304 WEINZHEIMER (dramatized): "After Daddy started to say good-bye, 663 00:45:30,304 --> 00:45:32,406 "I could just hardly stand it, 664 00:45:32,406 --> 00:45:35,376 "and for the first time, I was afraid, 665 00:45:35,376 --> 00:45:38,612 "so I screamed and held onto Daddy 666 00:45:38,612 --> 00:45:41,782 "until I had to be pulled away. 667 00:45:41,782 --> 00:45:43,117 "Then he ran out, 668 00:45:43,117 --> 00:45:47,021 and that was the last we saw of him for a few months." 669 00:45:48,188 --> 00:45:51,925 NARRATOR: Sascha and the rest of her family found shelter 670 00:45:51,925 --> 00:45:56,330 first in one convent, and then another. 671 00:45:58,299 --> 00:46:02,269 Wherever they were, the sound of the guns from Bataan-- 672 00:46:02,269 --> 00:46:03,370 where Glenn Frazier 673 00:46:03,370 --> 00:46:05,205 and his comrades were still struggling 674 00:46:05,205 --> 00:46:07,574 to stop the Japanese advance-- 675 00:46:07,574 --> 00:46:10,744 continued day and night. 676 00:46:11,211 --> 00:46:13,847 (distant explosions) 677 00:46:17,518 --> 00:46:20,454 (loud, rumbling explosion) 678 00:46:23,824 --> 00:46:27,594 (Duke Ellington's "Perdido" playing) 679 00:46:31,465 --> 00:46:33,801 SAM HYNES: You have to imagine what it was like 680 00:46:33,801 --> 00:46:38,172 to be a teenage, middle-class, lower-middle-class kid 681 00:46:38,172 --> 00:46:41,975 in Minneapolis in 1941. 682 00:46:41,975 --> 00:46:47,014 The chances for excitement were fairly limited. 683 00:46:47,014 --> 00:46:50,184 You could drive a car fast, you could get drunk, 684 00:46:50,184 --> 00:46:51,585 you could take a girl out 685 00:46:51,585 --> 00:46:54,121 and try and get somewhere and fail. 686 00:46:54,121 --> 00:46:57,424 That's local excitement. 687 00:46:57,424 --> 00:46:58,992 But to have an exciting life-- 688 00:46:58,992 --> 00:47:03,097 it was hard to imagine what an exciting life would be. 689 00:47:03,097 --> 00:47:08,102 And then, suddenly, you could be, uh, a pilot 690 00:47:08,102 --> 00:47:11,572 or a submariner, or an artilleryman, 691 00:47:11,572 --> 00:47:14,775 or any damn thing, but you'd be... 692 00:47:14,775 --> 00:47:18,312 It was something exciting, and it was something adult. 693 00:47:18,312 --> 00:47:20,748 All of a sudden, you could choose, 694 00:47:20,748 --> 00:47:24,084 just choose to be an adult by writing your name. 695 00:47:24,084 --> 00:47:29,957 I'm working for a bank in town and delivering checks. 696 00:47:29,957 --> 00:47:34,862 I write my name, and now I'm potentially 697 00:47:34,862 --> 00:47:42,269 a combat pilot, a fighter pilot, an ace. 698 00:47:50,577 --> 00:47:54,114 Or I'm the commander of a submarine 699 00:47:54,114 --> 00:47:57,251 going into Tokyo Bay. 700 00:48:00,154 --> 00:48:03,056 These are incredible opportunities. 701 00:48:03,056 --> 00:48:05,826 You see, they're-they're melodramatic, 702 00:48:05,826 --> 00:48:12,099 exciting, like the movies. 703 00:48:14,601 --> 00:48:17,104 And you might do it. 704 00:48:17,104 --> 00:48:19,072 So that's terrific. 705 00:48:19,072 --> 00:48:20,874 It has nothing to do with patriotism. 706 00:48:20,874 --> 00:48:26,580 It has nothing to do, really, with who the enemy is. 707 00:48:26,580 --> 00:48:32,553 It's the opportunity to be somebody more exciting 708 00:48:32,553 --> 00:48:34,555 than the kid you are. 709 00:48:34,555 --> 00:48:38,525 (Benny Goodman's "Wang Wang Blues" playing) 710 00:49:08,088 --> 00:49:10,924 (music continues) 711 00:49:34,081 --> 00:49:39,119 KATHARINE PHILLIPS: I came home for my Christmas holidays, 712 00:49:39,119 --> 00:49:40,754 and that's when I found out 713 00:49:40,754 --> 00:49:42,956 that my brother Sidney had gone down 714 00:49:42,956 --> 00:49:46,093 and joined the Marine Corps. 715 00:49:46,093 --> 00:49:51,298 And then, of course, life really took on meaning. 716 00:49:51,298 --> 00:49:55,202 SIDNEY: My father was very patriotic, and... 717 00:49:55,202 --> 00:49:59,873 I felt like really expected me to join the military, 718 00:49:59,873 --> 00:50:02,809 so my friend W.O. Brown 719 00:50:02,809 --> 00:50:05,913 said, "Sid, let's go join the Navy in the morning." 720 00:50:05,913 --> 00:50:07,881 And I said, "Fine." 721 00:50:07,881 --> 00:50:09,816 And the recruiting office was crowded 722 00:50:09,816 --> 00:50:10,918 like you wouldn't believe, 723 00:50:10,918 --> 00:50:15,722 so we walked up to the head of the line, 724 00:50:15,722 --> 00:50:18,926 saw this Marine recruiting sergeant. 725 00:50:18,926 --> 00:50:20,060 He came over and said, 726 00:50:20,060 --> 00:50:21,862 "Do you boys want to kill Japs?" 727 00:50:21,862 --> 00:50:23,730 And we said, "Yeah, that's the idea, 728 00:50:23,730 --> 00:50:25,132 but we're going to join the Navy." 729 00:50:25,132 --> 00:50:28,802 And he said, "No," he said, "You don't belong in the Navy. 730 00:50:28,802 --> 00:50:30,237 "You belong in the Marine Corps. 731 00:50:30,237 --> 00:50:32,072 "You can't get in the Navy, anyway, 732 00:50:32,072 --> 00:50:33,440 because your parents are married." 733 00:50:33,440 --> 00:50:37,844 And we, uh, ended up joining the Marine Corps. 734 00:50:37,844 --> 00:50:41,481 KATHARINE: So Sidney joined the Marines. 735 00:50:41,481 --> 00:50:45,786 Daddy told Mother, "You might as well sign the paper, Kate. 736 00:50:45,786 --> 00:50:47,220 He's going to go anyway." 737 00:50:47,220 --> 00:50:49,990 He was only 17 years old. 738 00:50:49,990 --> 00:50:53,126 So the story in the family is, 739 00:50:53,126 --> 00:50:56,930 the Marine recruiting officer crossed the street 740 00:50:56,930 --> 00:51:00,667 anytime in the next year that he encountered my mother, 741 00:51:00,667 --> 00:51:04,004 because she would give him a piece of her mind 742 00:51:04,004 --> 00:51:09,409 for taking her little boy into the Marines. 743 00:51:10,243 --> 00:51:14,181 NARRATOR: Unlike the professional armies of Germany and Japan, 744 00:51:14,181 --> 00:51:15,182 the armed forces 745 00:51:15,182 --> 00:51:17,784 that Sid Phillips and others rushed to join 746 00:51:17,784 --> 00:51:22,789 had been totally unprepared to wage a world war. 747 00:51:24,124 --> 00:51:28,462 In 1940, the U.S. Army had been smaller 748 00:51:28,462 --> 00:51:30,530 than that of Rumania-- 749 00:51:30,530 --> 00:51:32,866 only 174,000 men in uniform, 750 00:51:32,866 --> 00:51:37,804 wearing tin hats and leggings issued during World War I, 751 00:51:37,804 --> 00:51:42,442 and carrying rifles designed in 1903. 752 00:51:42,442 --> 00:51:50,217 The Army still owned tens of thousands of cavalry horses. 753 00:51:50,217 --> 00:51:52,619 To make up for lost time, 754 00:51:52,619 --> 00:51:56,289 Congress had federalized the National Guard. 755 00:51:58,158 --> 00:52:02,095 In Luverne, 129 local boys-- 756 00:52:02,095 --> 00:52:04,331 members of the Minnesota National Guard-- 757 00:52:04,331 --> 00:52:07,534 were called to active duty. 758 00:52:08,869 --> 00:52:14,541 The entire town had turned out at the depot to say good-bye. 759 00:52:17,110 --> 00:52:22,115 Then, in the fall of 1940, Congress enacted the draft, 760 00:52:22,115 --> 00:52:27,354 and every young man in America began to worry 761 00:52:27,354 --> 00:52:29,489 when his number would come up. 762 00:52:29,489 --> 00:52:33,160 WILLIAM PERKINS: Somebody got the greetings. 763 00:52:33,160 --> 00:52:35,162 Long envelope, you know. 764 00:52:35,162 --> 00:52:38,165 And when you opened it up, it would say, 765 00:52:38,165 --> 00:52:38,532 "Greetings. 766 00:52:38,532 --> 00:52:41,802 "The President of the United States and your neighbors 767 00:52:41,802 --> 00:52:46,540 "have selected you to be drafted into the Armed Forces for... 768 00:52:46,540 --> 00:52:49,142 to protect the country, et cetera, et cetera." 769 00:52:49,142 --> 00:52:51,845 And I was down to a friend of mine's, 770 00:52:51,845 --> 00:52:54,481 Howard Lopes, and he got the letter, 771 00:52:54,481 --> 00:52:57,050 and he opened it up, and he was drafted. 772 00:52:57,050 --> 00:53:01,288 And so, boy, we just laughed and roared, 773 00:53:01,288 --> 00:53:03,824 and then I had to go home. 774 00:53:03,824 --> 00:53:06,560 And when I walked in the house, my grandma says, 775 00:53:06,560 --> 00:53:08,528 "There's a letter up for you up there." 776 00:53:08,528 --> 00:53:12,432 And I... so I picked it up, and I looked at it. 777 00:53:12,432 --> 00:53:13,400 And it said, "Greetings. 778 00:53:13,400 --> 00:53:15,235 "The President of the United States 779 00:53:15,235 --> 00:53:16,002 and your neighbors..." 780 00:53:16,002 --> 00:53:19,106 I flew out the house, run down the street, you know, 781 00:53:19,106 --> 00:53:21,141 back up the street where Howard lived, 782 00:53:21,141 --> 00:53:24,111 and I walked in with the paper in my hand. 783 00:53:24,111 --> 00:53:25,112 Everybody looked at me, 784 00:53:25,112 --> 00:53:27,013 and they had a good time laughing, 785 00:53:27,013 --> 00:53:28,148 because I had been drafted. 786 00:53:28,148 --> 00:53:30,450 They knew. I didn't have to tell them. 787 00:53:30,450 --> 00:53:32,919 I just hold up... the letter up. 788 00:53:37,491 --> 00:53:38,792 NARRATOR: Nearly 50 million men 789 00:53:38,792 --> 00:53:41,962 would register for the draft during the war. 790 00:53:41,962 --> 00:53:45,599 To serve, they had to be five feet tall, 791 00:53:45,599 --> 00:53:49,836 weigh 105 pounds, have correctable vision 792 00:53:49,836 --> 00:53:52,973 and at least half their teeth. 793 00:53:52,973 --> 00:53:57,144 Of the 18 million men examined by Army doctors, 794 00:53:57,144 --> 00:53:59,212 five and a half million were rejected on medical, 795 00:53:59,212 --> 00:54:02,949 or dental, or what was called moral grounds-- 796 00:54:02,949 --> 00:54:07,087 usually because they'd given what the Army considered 797 00:54:07,087 --> 00:54:09,523 the wrong answer to the question, 798 00:54:09,523 --> 00:54:12,292 "Do you like girls?" 799 00:54:12,993 --> 00:54:17,564 At first, the men also had to be able to read and write, 800 00:54:17,564 --> 00:54:20,100 but when hundreds of thousands were rejected 801 00:54:20,100 --> 00:54:23,670 on that score, the requirement was dropped, 802 00:54:23,670 --> 00:54:25,639 and the Army set up special schools 803 00:54:25,639 --> 00:54:29,609 to make its citizen soldiers literate. 804 00:54:30,911 --> 00:54:33,180 The goal of basic training 805 00:54:33,180 --> 00:54:37,350 was to turn undisciplined boys into fighting men, 806 00:54:37,350 --> 00:54:40,787 whose comradeship and loyalty to their unit would help them 807 00:54:40,787 --> 00:54:43,857 withstand the worst that battle had to offer. 808 00:54:45,258 --> 00:54:49,329 No one who went through it would ever forget it. 809 00:54:50,030 --> 00:54:52,566 WALTER THOMPSON: Well, I was 18-- I was real young. 810 00:54:52,566 --> 00:54:55,202 I-1 actually cried the first night 811 00:54:55,202 --> 00:54:57,637 โ€˜cause I was scared, you know? 812 00:54:57,637 --> 00:54:59,239 It was strangers. 813 00:54:59,239 --> 00:55:00,006 (wry laugh) 814 00:55:00,006 --> 00:55:02,242 Never saw any of those guys in my life. 815 00:55:02,242 --> 00:55:05,912 From all walks of life, all sizes and all shapes. 816 00:55:05,912 --> 00:55:09,216 And lonely for your parents, 817 00:55:09,216 --> 00:55:11,418 your home, your friends. 818 00:55:11,418 --> 00:55:13,186 No one in the barrack that I knew. 819 00:55:13,186 --> 00:55:17,757 And so, it was just an eerie feeling 820 00:55:17,757 --> 00:55:20,760 to be in that situation. 821 00:55:22,162 --> 00:55:25,599 NARRATOR: Despite a growing chorus of protests by black citizens 822 00:55:25,599 --> 00:55:28,635 outraged at the idea of fighting bigotry abroad 823 00:55:28,635 --> 00:55:30,637 while it was tolerated at home, 824 00:55:30,637 --> 00:55:32,606 the military continued to insist 825 00:55:32,606 --> 00:55:39,412 on segregating African-American servicemen into all-black units. 826 00:55:39,646 --> 00:55:43,250 Even blood supplies for saving the lives of the wounded 827 00:55:43,250 --> 00:55:45,552 were kept separate. 828 00:55:46,653 --> 00:55:48,788 WILLIE RUSHTON: Oh, we thought that one day, 829 00:55:48,788 --> 00:55:52,459 our country would be better for everybody, 830 00:55:52,459 --> 00:55:55,629 โ€˜cause I knew I saw a lot of things 831 00:55:55,629 --> 00:55:57,397 that my father had to go through 832 00:55:57,397 --> 00:55:59,032 that I didn't have to go through, 833 00:55:59,032 --> 00:56:01,401 so I figured that when my children come on, 834 00:56:01,401 --> 00:56:03,637 we'd still have something better than what I had, 835 00:56:03,637 --> 00:56:07,474 so that's why I wanted to go fight for my country. 836 00:56:17,083 --> 00:56:19,786 FILM ANNOUNCER: For this is what we are fighting. 837 00:56:19,786 --> 00:56:20,820 Freedom's oldest enemy, 838 00:56:20,820 --> 00:56:24,858 the passion of the few to rule the many. 839 00:56:24,858 --> 00:56:26,960 This isn't just a war. 840 00:56:26,960 --> 00:56:29,529 This is a common man's life-and-death struggle 841 00:56:29,529 --> 00:56:31,498 against those who would put him back into slavery. 842 00:56:31,498 --> 00:56:36,303 BURNETT MILLER: You know, we had lots of propaganda at films... 843 00:56:37,237 --> 00:56:41,508 ...showing us how bad the enemy was 844 00:56:41,508 --> 00:56:43,843 and how evil and so forth. 845 00:56:44,644 --> 00:56:48,114 We were all quite cynical about these. 846 00:56:48,114 --> 00:56:49,950 We thought, these are training films. 847 00:56:49,950 --> 00:56:53,853 It's an awful lot of propaganda and baloney. 848 00:56:53,853 --> 00:56:57,123 ANNOUNCER: For the Nazi master race theory 849 00:56:57,123 --> 00:57:02,262 calls for the complete wiping out of so-called inferior races. 850 00:57:04,064 --> 00:57:08,735 And in village after village, local Judases point out 851 00:57:08,735 --> 00:57:10,737 loyal Polish neighbors. 852 00:57:11,771 --> 00:57:13,073 MILLER: We didn't believe 853 00:57:13,073 --> 00:57:18,078 in the brand of evil that they were propagandizing. 854 00:57:25,085 --> 00:57:29,956 We didn't think we were fighting to save the world. 855 00:57:29,956 --> 00:57:31,358 But we thought that, you know, 856 00:57:31,358 --> 00:57:33,526 it was our country against that country, 857 00:57:33,526 --> 00:57:35,929 and that country had been the aggressor, 858 00:57:35,929 --> 00:57:39,332 and, uh... the Japanese, their allies, 859 00:57:39,332 --> 00:57:42,969 had started us in it, and we had to win it. 860 00:57:42,969 --> 00:57:45,238 And it was that simple. 861 00:57:46,139 --> 00:57:51,277 We didn't realize till later how important it really was. 862 00:57:55,682 --> 00:57:56,383 (sighs) 863 00:57:56,383 --> 00:58:00,920 I was fairly close to being a pacifist. 864 00:58:02,422 --> 00:58:05,658 I believed that there is 865 00:58:05,658 --> 00:58:08,461 mostly negotiated solutions 866 00:58:08,461 --> 00:58:10,797 to most problems of this sort. 867 00:58:10,797 --> 00:58:14,467 But I couldn't fathom that there was ever 868 00:58:14,467 --> 00:58:18,772 a solution to the confrontation that Hitler was giving 869 00:58:18,772 --> 00:58:22,275 to us and the rest of the world. 870 00:58:22,275 --> 00:58:27,113 I felt that I belonged in the service, 871 00:58:27,113 --> 00:58:30,383 um, because the threat, 872 00:58:30,383 --> 00:58:34,554 while it was directed at the entire rest of the world, 873 00:58:34,554 --> 00:58:36,756 was particularly directed 874 00:58:36,756 --> 00:58:39,626 at the origins that I came from. 875 00:58:39,626 --> 00:58:43,329 (Duke Ellington's "Echoes of Harlem" playing) 876 00:59:00,880 --> 00:59:02,182 If I didn't know it 877 00:59:02,182 --> 00:59:04,317 at the particular moment I went in, 878 00:59:04,317 --> 00:59:07,720 13 weeks later, after I had finished my basic training, 879 00:59:07,720 --> 00:59:12,058 I knew, expertly, how to Kill. 880 00:59:12,358 --> 00:59:15,862 Kill with a bayonet, Kill with a bullet, 881 00:59:15,862 --> 00:59:17,764 kill with your hands. 882 00:59:17,764 --> 00:59:20,200 Yes, I could kill. 883 00:59:22,635 --> 00:59:25,605 HYNES: I left Minneapolis for the service 884 00:59:25,605 --> 00:59:29,542 on a dank, wet, cold, 885 00:59:29,542 --> 00:59:33,079 March Minneapolis evening. 886 00:59:33,079 --> 00:59:36,816 My father drove me to the station 887 00:59:36,816 --> 00:59:40,553 in the car that he almost never let me drive 888 00:59:40,553 --> 00:59:42,555 (chuckles): as a kid, 889 00:59:42,555 --> 00:59:46,459 downtown, past all the... 890 00:59:46,459 --> 00:59:48,928 places that had been the, uh, 891 00:59:48,928 --> 00:59:53,333 stations of my childhood and growing up, 892 00:59:53,333 --> 00:59:56,402 to the Rock Island Railroad. 893 00:59:58,104 --> 00:59:58,905 It was dark. 894 00:59:58,905 --> 01:00:00,773 The long platform was dark 895 01:00:00,773 --> 01:00:04,677 with hanging arc lights at distance, 896 01:00:04,677 --> 01:00:05,445 so that, as you walked, 897 01:00:05,445 --> 01:00:08,381 it was dark, light, dark, light, dark, light. 898 01:00:08,381 --> 01:00:12,418 And at the far end was a Navy yeoman 899 01:00:12,418 --> 01:00:16,556 with a clipboard and a gathering of young men 900 01:00:16,556 --> 01:00:18,091 or boys around him. 901 01:00:18,091 --> 01:00:23,129 And we stopped, and my father shook my hand. 902 01:00:23,129 --> 01:00:27,100 It seemed very strange to me that my father and I 903 01:00:27,100 --> 01:00:29,402 were on handshaking terms. 904 01:00:29,402 --> 01:00:33,540 Then he turned around and walked back toward the entrance-- 905 01:00:33,540 --> 01:00:35,775 dark, light, dark, light, dark, light-- 906 01:00:35,775 --> 01:00:38,044 and out into the street and was gone. 907 01:00:38,044 --> 01:00:40,113 And I turned to the yeoman and went up 908 01:00:40,113 --> 01:00:43,249 and said, "Present," when my name came up, 909 01:00:43,249 --> 01:00:45,718 and I was in the Navy. 910 01:01:02,502 --> 01:01:06,506 LIFE REPORTER (dramatized): February 23, 1942. 911 01:01:07,907 --> 01:01:10,777 "Out of Poland have come these appalling pictures 912 01:01:10,777 --> 01:01:14,581 of the end product of German conquest." 913 01:01:15,381 --> 01:01:20,019 "They show mass misery and death carried by German thoroughness 914 01:01:20,019 --> 01:01:24,958 to an extreme rarely seen before in history." 915 01:01:26,593 --> 01:01:28,161 "They also show the kind of thing 916 01:01:28,161 --> 01:01:31,531 "the fighting foes of Nazism may expect 917 01:01:31,531 --> 01:01:34,167 if they really lose the war." 918 01:01:37,470 --> 01:01:39,505 "The methodical massacre takes on 919 01:01:39,505 --> 01:01:41,641 "an emotional quality of sadism, 920 01:01:41,641 --> 01:01:44,978 as applied by the Nazis to the Jews." 921 01:01:45,979 --> 01:01:49,215 "Herded in Polish ghettos, forbidden to walk out 922 01:01:49,215 --> 01:01:53,253 "or use a railway, machine- gunned in their synagogues, 923 01:01:53,253 --> 01:01:55,622 "thrown by thousands into the rivers, 924 01:01:55,622 --> 01:01:59,993 "stripped of clothing and food and possessions. 925 01:01:59,993 --> 01:02:04,931 The Jews of Poland are literally dying out." 926 01:02:07,500 --> 01:02:11,104 "These are the grim statistical facts. 927 01:02:11,104 --> 01:02:16,242 The details of human agony are multiplied beyond the telling." 928 01:02:19,212 --> 01:02:22,315 LIFE magazine. 929 01:02:25,118 --> 01:02:27,420 NARRATOR: At the start of 1942, 930 01:02:27,420 --> 01:02:30,790 almost all the news was bad. 931 01:02:30,790 --> 01:02:34,360 The Soviet Union, the United States' new ally, 932 01:02:34,360 --> 01:02:37,463 was under unceasing attack from the Germans, 933 01:02:37,463 --> 01:02:39,365 who had encircled Leningrad 934 01:02:39,365 --> 01:02:41,934 and reached the outskirts of Moscow. 935 01:02:43,136 --> 01:02:47,140 Japanese troops had now taken Singapore, 936 01:02:47,140 --> 01:02:49,208 the Gibraltar of the East, 937 01:02:49,208 --> 01:02:51,811 and with it, all of Malaya. 938 01:02:57,150 --> 01:03:01,821 They had seized Borneo and Burma and Hong Kong. 939 01:03:01,821 --> 01:03:05,391 And they had taken Guam and Wake Island, 940 01:03:05,391 --> 01:03:09,095 Makin and Tarawa. 941 01:03:09,095 --> 01:03:11,764 There was not a single American base 942 01:03:11,764 --> 01:03:15,468 between Hawaii and the Philippines. 943 01:03:18,771 --> 01:03:20,106 But President Roosevelt 944 01:03:20,106 --> 01:03:23,109 and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill agreed 945 01:03:23,109 --> 01:03:26,479 that for the time being they would have to remain 946 01:03:26,479 --> 01:03:29,782 on the defensive in the Pacific. 947 01:03:30,817 --> 01:03:32,452 Germany, they decided, 948 01:03:32,452 --> 01:03:36,622 with its vast armies and mighty industrial machine, 949 01:03:36,622 --> 01:03:38,224 was the greatest danger. 950 01:03:39,592 --> 01:03:42,228 Victory in Europe would require 951 01:03:42,228 --> 01:03:45,898 not only the mobilization of a generation of young men, 952 01:03:45,898 --> 01:03:49,402 but also billions of rounds of ammunition, 953 01:03:49,402 --> 01:03:54,273 millions of guns, hundreds of thousands of tanks and airplanes 954 01:03:54,273 --> 01:03:58,044 and fleets of ships to bring them to battle. 955 01:03:58,044 --> 01:04:02,415 Producing all of that would take time. 956 01:04:03,316 --> 01:04:08,221 Meanwhile, the survival of Britain and the Soviet Union 957 01:04:08,221 --> 01:04:10,990 depended on a steady stream of food 958 01:04:10,990 --> 01:04:14,761 and fuel and weapons from America. 959 01:04:17,296 --> 01:04:20,133 ("American Anthem" playing) 960 01:04:28,608 --> 01:04:32,812 BURT WILSON: When I was seven years old, in Theodore Judah School, 961 01:04:32,812 --> 01:04:35,782 a boy from England, an English refugee, 962 01:04:35,782 --> 01:04:36,482 came into our class. 963 01:04:36,482 --> 01:04:39,585 His name was William Murgathroid Buchanan. 964 01:04:39,585 --> 01:04:42,855 We all called him Roid-- Roid Buchanan. 965 01:04:43,122 --> 01:04:46,659 And we developed a great friendship. 966 01:04:46,659 --> 01:04:49,495 And one day, Roid came over to my house, 967 01:04:49,495 --> 01:04:51,831 and I was upstairs, and he called, 968 01:04:51,831 --> 01:04:52,865 "Burt! Burt!" 969 01:04:52,865 --> 01:04:53,833 And I looked out the window, 970 01:04:53,833 --> 01:04:56,702 and I said, "Hi, Roid. What's going on?" 971 01:04:56,702 --> 01:04:58,137 And Roid said, "Do you know 972 01:04:58,137 --> 01:05:01,474 what a dirty German sub did to my father?" 973 01:05:01,474 --> 01:05:02,442 And I said, "No. What?" 974 01:05:02,442 --> 01:05:05,178 He said, "lt killed him." 975 01:05:05,178 --> 01:05:08,080 And I-l don't... 976 01:05:08,080 --> 01:05:11,517 I didn't know how to deal with that. 977 01:05:13,986 --> 01:05:15,188 I went downstairs, 978 01:05:15,188 --> 01:05:19,625 and we sat down under the tree and talked awhile. 979 01:05:19,625 --> 01:05:20,827 But it was still something that 980 01:05:20,827 --> 01:05:26,899 I'd never had any experience with, up until that time-- 981 01:05:26,899 --> 01:05:28,468 one of my best friends telling me 982 01:05:28,468 --> 01:05:31,604 that his father was killed in a war. 983 01:05:38,177 --> 01:05:42,582 NARRATOR: On the evening of January 13, 1942, 984 01:05:42,582 --> 01:05:45,384 as American troops tried to stop the Japanese on Bataan, 985 01:05:45,384 --> 01:05:50,890 a German U-boat surfaced silently off Manhattan. 986 01:05:51,924 --> 01:05:55,328 Its commander was astonished but gratified to see 987 01:05:55,328 --> 01:05:57,897 that more than a month after Germany declared war 988 01:05:57,897 --> 01:05:59,131 on the United States, 989 01:05:59,131 --> 01:06:03,803 America's largest city was still ablaze with lights. 990 01:06:03,803 --> 01:06:07,707 Using those lights to silhouette his target, 991 01:06:07,707 --> 01:06:10,443 he sent a torpedo hissing toward the side 992 01:06:10,443 --> 01:06:13,079 of an American oil tanker... 993 01:06:17,817 --> 01:06:20,853 ...then slipped back beneath the sea 994 01:06:20,853 --> 01:06:24,824 and moved south in search of further prey. 995 01:06:24,824 --> 01:06:31,931 Within 12 hours, he had sunk seven more unarmed vessels. 996 01:06:31,931 --> 01:06:34,534 The United States seemed 997 01:06:34,534 --> 01:06:39,105 totally unprepared for this kind of war. 998 01:06:43,442 --> 01:06:44,277 By the end of January, 999 01:06:44,277 --> 01:06:48,114 U-boats would sink 25 tankers along the East Coast, 1000 01:06:48,114 --> 01:06:52,218 continuing a fierce struggle for supremacy of the seas 1001 01:06:52,218 --> 01:06:53,986 called the Battle of the Atlantic 1002 01:06:53,986 --> 01:06:59,125 and threatening to choke off America's allies. 1003 01:07:00,860 --> 01:07:03,296 Still, from Boston to Miami, 1004 01:07:03,296 --> 01:07:07,500 city fathers stubbornly resisted the idea of blackouts. 1005 01:07:07,500 --> 01:07:11,137 Turning the lights off would hurt tourism, they said. 1006 01:07:11,137 --> 01:07:16,142 The last light would not wink out until May. 1007 01:07:18,411 --> 01:07:19,745 But the Germans continued to sink 1008 01:07:19,745 --> 01:07:23,316 two or three merchant vessels every day. 1009 01:07:23,316 --> 01:07:26,085 More than 230 Allied ships 1010 01:07:26,085 --> 01:07:29,522 and almost five million tons of desperately needed matรฉriel 1011 01:07:29,522 --> 01:07:35,094 went to the bottom of the sea in the first six months of 1942. 1012 01:07:35,094 --> 01:07:39,365 American beaches were black with oil. 1013 01:07:39,632 --> 01:07:41,867 KATHARINE PHILLIPS: All along the Gulf Coast 1014 01:07:41,867 --> 01:07:44,537 and all on the shores of Mobile Bay, 1015 01:07:44,537 --> 01:07:46,772 we could go sit on the beach, 1016 01:07:46,772 --> 01:07:50,109 but we were not allowed to light a fire, 1017 01:07:50,109 --> 01:07:52,511 because of the U-boats. 1018 01:07:52,511 --> 01:07:57,249 We heard often in Mobile that ships were sunk 1019 01:07:57,249 --> 01:08:00,119 just as they went out of Mobile Bay. 1020 01:08:00,119 --> 01:08:02,254 And we know this to be true, 1021 01:08:02,254 --> 01:08:05,891 because the life preservers and the canned goods 1022 01:08:05,891 --> 01:08:07,760 washed up on our beaches. 1023 01:08:07,760 --> 01:08:12,498 NARRATOR: For a time, the waters from Jacksonville, Florida, 1024 01:08:12,498 --> 01:08:14,467 to Galveston, Texas, were considered 1025 01:08:14,467 --> 01:08:19,205 the most dangerous shipping lane in the world. 1026 01:08:20,072 --> 01:08:23,542 "The only safe run," said one weary merchant seaman, 1027 01:08:23,542 --> 01:08:28,381 "is from St. Louis to Cincinnati." 1028 01:08:44,230 --> 01:08:47,700 (distant gunfire) 1029 01:08:52,772 --> 01:08:57,109 (closer gunfire) 1030 01:09:03,115 --> 01:09:05,384 (shouting) 1031 01:09:08,921 --> 01:09:11,590 GLENN FRAZIER: I really fought the first few days 1032 01:09:11,590 --> 01:09:12,725 for the good Old Glory. 1033 01:09:12,725 --> 01:09:14,927 You know, like everybody else, 1034 01:09:14,927 --> 01:09:16,896 you're saying, "good old United States. 1035 01:09:16,896 --> 01:09:19,231 "We're going to fight, we're going to whip these Japanese 1036 01:09:19,231 --> 01:09:21,901 in a matter of six months," and so forth. 1037 01:09:21,901 --> 01:09:27,106 But when it really hit me that this was not a short situation 1038 01:09:27,106 --> 01:09:28,674 and that they were hitting us hard, 1039 01:09:28,674 --> 01:09:32,611 then I think I changed pretty much to protect myself 1040 01:09:32,611 --> 01:09:36,515 and my fellow Americans, and I think I was fighting more 1041 01:09:36,515 --> 01:09:37,316 to save my own life. 1042 01:09:37,316 --> 01:09:42,521 NARRATOR: Nearly 80,000 American and Filipino troops 1043 01:09:42,521 --> 01:09:45,257 had managed to escape the Japanese around Manila 1044 01:09:45,257 --> 01:09:49,929 and take up positions on the Bataan Peninsula. 1045 01:09:51,731 --> 01:09:57,403 Once again, General MacArthur's planning had faltered. 1046 01:09:57,403 --> 01:10:01,640 Most supplies had been left behind. 1047 01:10:01,640 --> 01:10:05,811 Rations had to be cut in half. 1048 01:10:06,078 --> 01:10:11,250 Bataan's humid forests bred malarial mosquitoes. 1049 01:10:11,250 --> 01:10:14,220 Clean water was in short supply. 1050 01:10:14,220 --> 01:10:16,088 There was little medicine on hand. 1051 01:10:16,088 --> 01:10:18,924 One field hospital had eight operating tables... 1052 01:10:18,924 --> 01:10:25,197 and 1,200 battle casualties in need of surgery. 1053 01:10:30,936 --> 01:10:34,874 Still the men struggled to hold on... 1054 01:10:35,741 --> 01:10:40,179 ...fighting off one attack after another, 1055 01:10:40,179 --> 01:10:45,518 then retreating halfway down the peninsula. 1056 01:10:50,523 --> 01:10:54,493 For weeks, the men on Bataan continued to hope 1057 01:10:54,493 --> 01:10:56,362 that rescuers were coming. 1058 01:10:56,362 --> 01:11:00,666 Again and again, MacArthur had assured them of it. 1059 01:11:00,666 --> 01:11:02,701 "Help is on the way," he promised. 1060 01:11:02,701 --> 01:11:06,939 FRAZIER: On the Voice of America, one time, I remember it, 1061 01:11:06,939 --> 01:11:09,742 we were getting it on short-wave radio. 1062 01:11:09,742 --> 01:11:11,944 It said, uh, as far as the eye can see, 1063 01:11:11,944 --> 01:11:14,713 there's ships and planes coming to the Philippines. 1064 01:11:14,713 --> 01:11:18,717 We were told continuously that we were getting reinforcements. 1065 01:11:18,717 --> 01:11:22,688 We were told that when we retreated back into Bataan, 1066 01:11:22,688 --> 01:11:25,357 it would only be for a few weeks. 1067 01:11:29,962 --> 01:11:35,768 NARRATOR: But no troops, no planes had ever been dispatched. 1068 01:11:35,768 --> 01:11:39,338 They could not have made it through, anyway. 1069 01:11:39,338 --> 01:11:43,809 The Japanese now controlled the South Pacific. 1070 01:11:46,145 --> 01:11:50,182 "There are times," Secretary of War Henry Stimson confided 1071 01:11:50,182 --> 01:11:53,886 to his diary, "when men must die." 1072 01:11:55,654 --> 01:12:01,093 By early March, three out of four of Bataan's defenders 1073 01:12:01,093 --> 01:12:03,229 were incapacitated in some way-- 1074 01:12:03,229 --> 01:12:08,601 sick, exhausted, wounded, weak from hunger, 1075 01:12:08,601 --> 01:12:11,270 suffering from beriberi. 1076 01:12:11,270 --> 01:12:15,374 FRAZIER: At the end, close to the end, there was one can of salmon 1077 01:12:15,374 --> 01:12:17,109 issued to 35 men 1078 01:12:17,109 --> 01:12:19,945 and some rice and very little rice, 1079 01:12:19,945 --> 01:12:22,381 so our situation was getting... 1080 01:12:22,381 --> 01:12:26,218 deteriorating and getting worse every day. 1081 01:12:27,953 --> 01:12:31,457 NARRATOR: MacArthur managed to leave his quarters on Corregidor 1082 01:12:31,457 --> 01:12:37,296 to visit his men on Bataan precisely once. 1083 01:12:38,597 --> 01:12:43,269 They began calling him "Dugout Doug." 1084 01:12:43,269 --> 01:12:46,405 The soldiers' bitterness intensified when, 1085 01:12:46,405 --> 01:12:49,508 acting under direct orders from the president, 1086 01:12:49,508 --> 01:12:51,777 MacArthur, his wife, four-year-old son 1087 01:12:51,777 --> 01:12:54,513 and 17 members of his staff 1088 01:12:54,513 --> 01:12:58,817 slipped out of Corregidor in a PT boat. 1089 01:12:58,817 --> 01:13:03,088 From Australia, he issued a brief statement: 1090 01:13:03,088 --> 01:13:07,826 "I came through," he said, "and I shall return." 1091 01:13:07,826 --> 01:13:10,562 FRAZIER: When he left and went to Australia, 1092 01:13:10,562 --> 01:13:13,232 that's what I call doomsday for Bataan, 1093 01:13:13,232 --> 01:13:16,669 because we knew then that we had to fight, 1094 01:13:16,669 --> 01:13:19,939 and he issued orders to fight to the last man, 1095 01:13:19,939 --> 01:13:23,709 and that's, we knew what our fate was going to be. 1096 01:13:26,745 --> 01:13:29,214 (projectile whistling through air) 1097 01:13:33,752 --> 01:13:39,992 NARRATOR: On April 9, 1942, Major General Edward L. King 1098 01:13:39,992 --> 01:13:43,762 sent a soldier forward with a white flag. 1099 01:13:47,499 --> 01:13:51,770 It was the largest surrender by the United States Army 1100 01:13:51,770 --> 01:13:53,138 in its history-- 1101 01:13:53,138 --> 01:13:58,210 78,000 American and Filipino troops. 1102 01:14:01,814 --> 01:14:06,685 General King asked a Japanese officer just one question: 1103 01:14:06,685 --> 01:14:10,723 Would his men be treated decently? 1104 01:14:10,723 --> 01:14:13,492 Yes, said the officer. 1105 01:14:13,492 --> 01:14:16,395 "We are not barbarians." 1106 01:14:17,930 --> 01:14:21,967 But Japanese tradition held that those who surrendered 1107 01:14:21,967 --> 01:14:24,303 rather than die on the battlefield 1108 01:14:24,303 --> 01:14:28,774 were cowards, unworthy of respect. 1109 01:14:35,114 --> 01:14:38,784 The prisoners were prodded northward, 1110 01:14:38,784 --> 01:14:40,619 300 at a time. 1111 01:14:40,619 --> 01:14:44,123 They were to walk from Mariveles to San Fernando, 1112 01:14:44,123 --> 01:14:45,824 then be loaded onto railroad cars 1113 01:14:45,824 --> 01:14:51,130 for the journey to Camp O'Donnell in central Luzon. 1114 01:14:52,131 --> 01:14:54,967 What followed would be remembered 1115 01:14:54,967 --> 01:14:58,170 as the Bataan Death March. 1116 01:14:59,872 --> 01:15:04,076 FRAZIER: If we had known what was ahead of us at the beginning 1117 01:15:04,076 --> 01:15:08,714 of the Bataan Death March, uh, I would have taken death. 1118 01:15:10,783 --> 01:15:14,386 It was very, very difficult for us to understand, 1119 01:15:14,386 --> 01:15:17,923 because we had had no contact with the Japanese whatsoever 1120 01:15:17,923 --> 01:15:20,459 as to what these people are all about 1121 01:15:20,459 --> 01:15:24,196 and what they're like. 1122 01:15:25,097 --> 01:15:27,433 And they immediately started beating guys 1123 01:15:27,433 --> 01:15:31,637 if they didn't stand right or if they were sitting down. 1124 01:15:36,241 --> 01:15:38,110 We didn't know where we were going. 1125 01:15:38,110 --> 01:15:41,346 We didn't know anything. 1126 01:15:50,122 --> 01:15:52,291 And we were stopped on the way, 1127 01:15:52,291 --> 01:15:54,960 some of us were, and searched and beat again. 1128 01:15:54,960 --> 01:15:58,197 And all our possessions were taken away from us. 1129 01:15:58,497 --> 01:16:02,167 Some of them had rings that they just cut the fingers off 1130 01:16:02,167 --> 01:16:04,536 and take the rings. 1131 01:16:07,072 --> 01:16:09,408 They poured the water out of my canteen 1132 01:16:09,408 --> 01:16:12,711 to be sure that I didn't have any, any water. 1133 01:16:14,213 --> 01:16:17,116 I saw them buried alive. 1134 01:16:17,116 --> 01:16:19,651 When a guy was bayoneted or shot, 1135 01:16:19,651 --> 01:16:23,088 laying in the road and the convoys were coming along, 1136 01:16:23,088 --> 01:16:26,692 I saw trucks that would just go out of their way 1137 01:16:26,692 --> 01:16:29,261 to run over the guy in the middle of the road. 1138 01:16:29,261 --> 01:16:32,798 And when by the time you have 15 or 20 trucks run over you, 1139 01:16:32,798 --> 01:16:37,236 you look like a smashed tomato or something. 1140 01:16:38,570 --> 01:16:42,207 And I saw people that had their throats cut, 1141 01:16:42,207 --> 01:16:44,376 because they would take their bayonets 1142 01:16:44,376 --> 01:16:47,112 and stick it out through the corner of the truck at night 1143 01:16:47,112 --> 01:16:50,949 and it would just be high enough to cut their throats. 1144 01:16:54,119 --> 01:16:55,387 And beating with a rifle butt 1145 01:16:55,387 --> 01:17:00,025 until there just was no more life in them. 1146 01:17:08,133 --> 01:17:11,236 I saw Filipino women cut. 1147 01:17:11,236 --> 01:17:13,138 Their stomachs were cut open. 1148 01:17:13,138 --> 01:17:16,108 Their throats were cut. 1149 01:17:17,409 --> 01:17:21,813 I saw Filipinos and Americans beheaded 1150 01:17:21,813 --> 01:17:25,617 just with one swipe of a saber. 1151 01:17:28,487 --> 01:17:31,924 I marched six days and seven nights, never stopped. 1152 01:17:31,924 --> 01:17:35,127 I did not have but one sip of water and no food. 1153 01:17:35,127 --> 01:17:38,197 Now, they say that you can't do this, but I did. 1154 01:17:38,197 --> 01:17:41,099 When I got to the end of the march after, 1155 01:17:41,099 --> 01:17:45,571 uh, at the end of the entire march where I stopped 1156 01:17:45,571 --> 01:17:47,773 to get on a train-- they put us on a train-- 1157 01:17:47,773 --> 01:17:50,809 my-my tongue wouldn't even go back in my mouth. 1158 01:17:50,809 --> 01:17:52,978 And if you look and talk to somebody about that, 1159 01:17:52,978 --> 01:17:57,382 they'll tell you that's how close to death I was. 1160 01:18:02,054 --> 01:18:06,358 NARRATOR: No one knows precisely how many men died 1161 01:18:06,358 --> 01:18:08,427 on the Bataan Death March-- 1162 01:18:08,427 --> 01:18:15,467 somewhere between 6,000 and 11,000 Filipinos and Americans. 1163 01:18:15,467 --> 01:18:18,670 And at the end of the march, 1164 01:18:18,670 --> 01:18:23,141 Camp O'Donnell provided no relief. 1165 01:18:23,141 --> 01:18:25,544 An unfinished Philippine Army base, 1166 01:18:25,544 --> 01:18:29,181 surrounded by barbed wire and machine gun towers, 1167 01:18:29,181 --> 01:18:31,683 with little water and little shelter from the sun, 1168 01:18:31,683 --> 01:18:39,524 it would eventually hold nearly 60,000 miserable, desperate men. 1169 01:18:39,524 --> 01:18:44,429 Food was nothing but lugao, watery rice soup 1170 01:18:44,429 --> 01:18:47,099 filled with weevils and worms. 1171 01:18:47,099 --> 01:18:49,935 It was best to try and swallow it after dark, 1172 01:18:49,935 --> 01:18:55,140 one man recalled, So as not to have to look at it. 1173 01:18:55,140 --> 01:19:00,078 Some 16,000 more Filipinos and Americans would die 1174 01:19:00,078 --> 01:19:05,050 at Camp O'Donnell-- of dehydration, malnutrition, 1175 01:19:05,050 --> 01:19:13,525 malaria, beriberi, scurvy, dysentery, hopelessness. 1176 01:19:17,896 --> 01:19:21,566 "Their bodies went by in an endless column," 1177 01:19:21,566 --> 01:19:22,734 one sergeant remembered. 1178 01:19:22,734 --> 01:19:27,539 "Day and night, they were carried to the cemetery." 1179 01:19:28,473 --> 01:19:31,910 KATHARINE PHILLIPS: We had all been so distressed 1180 01:19:31,910 --> 01:19:35,947 about leaving our boys in the Philippines. 1181 01:19:35,947 --> 01:19:39,551 There was no way of rescuing them, we know now, 1182 01:19:39,551 --> 01:19:43,588 but at the time, we didn't know that there were no ships. 1183 01:19:43,588 --> 01:19:47,225 Remember, they didn't tell us how much had been sunk 1184 01:19:47,225 --> 01:19:50,295 at Pearl Harbor, and we kept thinking, 1185 01:19:50,295 --> 01:19:52,130 "Why don't you go in there 1186 01:19:52,130 --> 01:19:56,168 and get the boys out of the Philippines?" 1187 01:19:57,936 --> 01:20:04,209 NARRATOR: One day, Glenn Frazier volunteered for burial detail. 1188 01:20:05,811 --> 01:20:08,747 FRAZIER: On some days, we buried 250 men, 1189 01:20:08,747 --> 01:20:14,186 so I didn't know but what one day that might happen to me. 1190 01:20:14,186 --> 01:20:18,423 So my idea was I had two sets of dog tags. 1191 01:20:18,423 --> 01:20:20,058 And I said to myself, 1192 01:20:20,058 --> 01:20:23,995 "Well, I think I'll just throw one of these sets of dog tags 1193 01:20:23,995 --> 01:20:29,935 "in the mass grave, so if I'm alive when the war ends, 1194 01:20:29,935 --> 01:20:31,169 there's no problem." 1195 01:20:31,169 --> 01:20:34,673 But if I'm missing or dead, I didn't... I wanted my family 1196 01:20:34,673 --> 01:20:38,610 to know and have some kind of ending, and so forth, 1197 01:20:38,610 --> 01:20:41,580 so they would think that I was in this grave. 1198 01:20:41,580 --> 01:20:44,449 (artillery explosion) 1199 01:20:45,917 --> 01:20:48,387 NARRATOR: On May 6, 1942, 1200 01:20:48,387 --> 01:20:54,726 Corregidor, the last American stronghold in the Philippines, 1201 01:20:54,726 --> 01:20:57,796 fell to the Japanese. 1202 01:21:03,402 --> 01:21:06,138 (men speaking Japanese) 1203 01:21:15,013 --> 01:21:17,616 (seagulls cawing) 1204 01:21:17,616 --> 01:21:20,152 (distant foghorn blows) 1205 01:21:20,719 --> 01:21:25,490 SAM HYNES: I went to Seattle in 1942. 1206 01:21:25,490 --> 01:21:28,627 One memory is very clear and strong. 1207 01:21:28,627 --> 01:21:34,966 It's a Saturday, and I'm taking a bus into the center of town 1208 01:21:34,966 --> 01:21:36,802 and across the public square 1209 01:21:36,802 --> 01:21:40,972 in front of the town hall, I guess itis... 1210 01:21:40,972 --> 01:21:42,140 And I see ahead of me 1211 01:21:42,140 --> 01:21:46,278 a line of people standing patiently by a bus stop. 1212 01:21:46,278 --> 01:21:51,349 And as I approach, I see that they're all Japanese 1213 01:21:51,349 --> 01:21:54,152 and that they're getting onto buses. 1214 01:21:54,152 --> 01:21:58,590 And I realize that these are the Japanese-American citizens 1215 01:21:58,590 --> 01:22:03,595 of Seattle and the neighborhood who are being sent off 1216 01:22:03,595 --> 01:22:07,399 to what amounted to a concentration camp. 1217 01:22:07,399 --> 01:22:11,136 And I think, "Well, those are my enemies." 1218 01:22:11,136 --> 01:22:13,805 But they don't look like enemies standing there 1219 01:22:13,805 --> 01:22:17,976 in their American clothes with their cardboard suitcases 1220 01:22:17,976 --> 01:22:21,947 waiting to be sent off into the desert. 1221 01:22:23,114 --> 01:22:26,852 NARRATOR: On February 19, 1942, 1222 01:22:26,852 --> 01:22:33,325 President Roosevelt had signed Executive Order 9066. 1223 01:22:33,325 --> 01:22:36,127 Its tone was carefully neutral. 1224 01:22:36,127 --> 01:22:41,433 It authorized the War Department to designate "military areas" 1225 01:22:41,433 --> 01:22:44,135 and then exclude anyone from them 1226 01:22:44,135 --> 01:22:46,972 whom it felt to be a danger. 1227 01:22:46,972 --> 01:22:51,810 But it had a specific target... 1228 01:22:52,811 --> 01:22:56,848 ...the more than 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry 1229 01:22:56,848 --> 01:23:01,186 living along the West Coast. 1230 01:23:01,186 --> 01:23:03,088 They were about to be forced 1231 01:23:03,088 --> 01:23:06,758 from their homes and moved inland. 1232 01:23:07,759 --> 01:23:11,830 Thousands of German and Italian aliens were also locked up, 1233 01:23:11,830 --> 01:23:15,500 but millions of German- and Italian-American citizens 1234 01:23:15,500 --> 01:23:21,106 remained free to live their lives as they always had. 1235 01:23:21,439 --> 01:23:24,643 Only Japanese-Americans on the West Coast 1236 01:23:24,643 --> 01:23:27,212 were singled out. 1237 01:23:27,212 --> 01:23:30,348 "A Jap's a Jap," said General John L. DeWitt 1238 01:23:30,348 --> 01:23:33,118 of the West Coast Defense Command. 1239 01:23:33,118 --> 01:23:34,452 "It makes no difference 1240 01:23:34,452 --> 01:23:37,322 "whether he is an American citizen or not. 1241 01:23:37,322 --> 01:23:40,258 I don't want any of them." 1242 01:23:40,258 --> 01:23:44,563 Almost no one protested the government's plan, 1243 01:23:44,563 --> 01:23:47,999 which also classified all Japanese-Americans 1244 01:23:47,999 --> 01:23:50,702 as unfit for military service. 1245 01:23:50,702 --> 01:23:53,738 DANIEL INOUYE: 1-A is physically fit, 1246 01:23:53,738 --> 01:23:56,808 and 4-F, something's wrong with you. 1247 01:23:56,808 --> 01:23:59,411 But 4-C means enemy alien. 1248 01:23:59,411 --> 01:24:02,547 And here I was, 17 years of age. 1249 01:24:02,547 --> 01:24:07,385 I considered myself a good American but, uh... 1250 01:24:07,385 --> 01:24:10,088 made into an enemy. 1251 01:24:19,397 --> 01:24:24,603 NARRATOR: In Sacramento, soon after Order 9066 was issued, 1252 01:24:24,603 --> 01:24:27,706 hand-lettered signs went up all over town, 1253 01:24:27,706 --> 01:24:31,543 saying "Japs must go." 1254 01:24:32,110 --> 01:24:35,981 The orders to leave arrived in May. 1255 01:24:35,981 --> 01:24:40,552 Susumu Satow and his family could scarcely believe it. 1256 01:24:40,552 --> 01:24:44,522 They were given one week's notice. 1257 01:24:44,522 --> 01:24:46,358 It was middle of the harvest and... 1258 01:24:46,358 --> 01:24:51,563 but still, yet we had to abandon it and leave. 1259 01:24:51,563 --> 01:24:56,801 And so, of course, we made arrangement with our friends. 1260 01:24:56,801 --> 01:24:59,204 "Hey, come and pick the strawberries 1261 01:24:59,204 --> 01:25:01,606 because it's ready to be marketed." 1262 01:25:01,606 --> 01:25:04,809 And so I imagine they did that. 1263 01:25:07,445 --> 01:25:09,347 BURT WILSON: There was an area of town 1264 01:25:09,347 --> 01:25:13,118 here in Sacramento that was mostly where the Japanese lived. 1265 01:25:13,118 --> 01:25:16,488 And it was empty almost overnight. 1266 01:25:16,488 --> 01:25:20,291 And we wondered, you know, what happened? 1267 01:25:21,459 --> 01:25:24,195 They took somebody out of eighth grade, 1268 01:25:24,195 --> 01:25:27,565 a Japanese boy who did wonderful cartoons. 1269 01:25:27,565 --> 01:25:28,400 His name was Sammy. 1270 01:25:28,400 --> 01:25:32,437 And one day he was there, and the next day he was gone. 1271 01:25:32,937 --> 01:25:36,241 And that was very difficult for us to understand, 1272 01:25:36,241 --> 01:25:39,744 because we didn't see Sammy or any Japanese-- 1273 01:25:39,744 --> 01:25:45,283 at least I didn't-- any Japanese-American as the enemy. 1274 01:25:49,120 --> 01:25:52,957 (train whistle blows) 1275 01:25:52,957 --> 01:25:55,393 SATOW: We were allowed to bring 1276 01:25:55,393 --> 01:25:57,429 whatever you could carry, that's it. 1277 01:25:57,429 --> 01:26:03,535 And so you put just essentials in your suitcase. 1278 01:26:03,535 --> 01:26:04,803 You know, first day, 1279 01:26:04,803 --> 01:26:08,273 when we had to pack up our things and go to the train, 1280 01:26:08,273 --> 01:26:12,110 I really wondered, what's going to happen to us? 1281 01:26:12,110 --> 01:26:14,646 You know, that, uh, this is just the beginning 1282 01:26:14,646 --> 01:26:20,085 and, uh, they may very well send us back to Japan. 1283 01:26:20,085 --> 01:26:23,988 And that, to me, was horrible. 1284 01:26:24,989 --> 01:26:30,128 l, in my heart, knew my loyalty belongs to America. 1285 01:26:30,128 --> 01:26:33,965 I went to school, pledged allegiance every morning 1286 01:26:33,965 --> 01:26:36,468 in grammar school and so forth. 1287 01:26:36,468 --> 01:26:38,837 And for me to think 1288 01:26:38,837 --> 01:26:44,943 that I may be sent to Japan was... was horrendous. 1289 01:26:44,943 --> 01:26:48,947 NARRATOR: Asako Tokuno was still a freshman 1290 01:26:48,947 --> 01:26:50,014 at Berkeley that spring. 1291 01:26:50,014 --> 01:26:54,119 Her parents and her grandfather were evacuated first, 1292 01:26:54,119 --> 01:26:57,322 because they had been born in Japan. 1293 01:26:57,322 --> 01:27:01,059 She and her sister were left behind for a time 1294 01:27:01,059 --> 01:27:05,463 to close the family flower business. 1295 01:27:05,463 --> 01:27:06,765 We all somehow gathered the flowers, 1296 01:27:06,765 --> 01:27:09,067 bunched them and got them to the market, 1297 01:27:09,067 --> 01:27:10,435 to the flower market in San Francisco. 1298 01:27:10,435 --> 01:27:12,737 And so we were able to keep the business going. 1299 01:27:12,737 --> 01:27:15,673 And all those flowers didn't go to waste, you know. 1300 01:27:15,673 --> 01:27:18,777 They were just in the height of their beauty 1301 01:27:18,777 --> 01:27:20,245 at that time of the year, 1302 01:27:20,245 --> 01:27:23,448 getting ready for Easter and all the holidays. 1303 01:27:24,983 --> 01:27:27,786 We were really... kind of caught in the middle 1304 01:27:27,786 --> 01:27:31,289 when the war happened, although no question about our loyalty 1305 01:27:31,289 --> 01:27:33,958 to our country, you know, and how we felt. 1306 01:27:33,958 --> 01:27:35,426 (voice breaking): This is our country, 1307 01:27:35,426 --> 01:27:37,829 and when this whole evacuation thing happened, I mean, 1308 01:27:37,829 --> 01:27:41,432 it was like we had no country, because we weren't from Japan 1309 01:27:41,432 --> 01:27:47,172 and they took away our... our rights, actually. 1310 01:27:47,172 --> 01:27:49,741 We couldn't protest, and we wouldn't have protested, 1311 01:27:49,741 --> 01:27:53,444 because we had to do what the government told us to do. 1312 01:27:53,444 --> 01:27:57,715 And so, uh, I think our parents realized, of course, 1313 01:27:57,715 --> 01:27:59,517 they were, you know, not citizens, 1314 01:27:59,517 --> 01:28:01,753 so they accepted the whole thing. 1315 01:28:01,753 --> 01:28:04,889 But for us, I think it was a lot harder, 1316 01:28:04,889 --> 01:28:07,525 the fact that we had no rights. 1317 01:28:08,626 --> 01:28:12,130 (Japanese flute playing) 1318 01:28:23,908 --> 01:28:27,145 (band plays upbeat march) 1319 01:28:28,613 --> 01:28:31,516 (projector clacking) 1320 01:28:32,650 --> 01:28:37,388 NEWSREEL NARRATOR: Action pictures made by Movietone cameraman Al Brick, 1321 01:28:37,388 --> 01:28:41,092 when a big enemy invasion fleet drove to seize Midway Island 1322 01:28:41,092 --> 01:28:42,126 and was heavily defeated. 1323 01:28:42,126 --> 01:28:45,463 A hostile cruiser on fire, bombed and ablaze, 1324 01:28:45,463 --> 01:28:48,433 filmed from an American plane as it lies 1325 01:28:48,433 --> 01:28:50,602 like a smoking volcano on the sea. 1326 01:28:50,602 --> 01:28:52,570 One of the greatest blows of devastation... 1327 01:28:52,570 --> 01:28:59,410 NARRATOR: By June of 1942, Americans were desperate for good news. 1328 01:28:59,410 --> 01:29:00,445 And the victory at Midway-- 1329 01:29:00,445 --> 01:29:03,882 the westernmost of the inhabited Hawaiian Islands-- 1330 01:29:03,882 --> 01:29:07,385 was just what they had been waiting for. 1331 01:29:09,087 --> 01:29:11,890 It turned out to be a great triumph, 1332 01:29:11,890 --> 01:29:16,561 but it had almost been a total disaster. 1333 01:29:17,095 --> 01:29:20,298 The Japanese had hoped to smash what was left 1334 01:29:20,298 --> 01:29:25,603 of the Pacific Fleet, take Hawaii, hold its people hostage 1335 01:29:25,603 --> 01:29:29,374 and force the United States to sue for peace. 1336 01:29:29,374 --> 01:29:34,479 But American cryptographers had deciphered their plans, 1337 01:29:34,479 --> 01:29:37,982 and the Navy was waiting for them. 1338 01:29:37,982 --> 01:29:41,819 Still, when the battle began, 1339 01:29:41,819 --> 01:29:45,323 all but six of the first 41 American torpedo-bombers 1340 01:29:45,323 --> 01:29:51,362 sent to attack the Japanese fleet were shot down... 1341 01:29:52,230 --> 01:29:57,535 ...without scoring a single hit on the enemy warships. 1342 01:29:58,937 --> 01:30:01,706 But then, American dive bombers 1343 01:30:01,706 --> 01:30:06,444 swooped down on four Japanese carriers. 1344 01:30:13,418 --> 01:30:19,691 And eventually, all four of them were destroyed. 1345 01:30:27,598 --> 01:30:32,236 Midway marked the first defeat for the Japanese Navy 1346 01:30:32,236 --> 01:30:35,473 in 350 years. 1347 01:30:35,473 --> 01:30:36,908 (projector clacking) 1348 01:30:36,908 --> 01:30:39,410 (band plays upbeat fanfare) 1349 01:30:43,848 --> 01:30:45,817 NEWSREEL NARRATOR: Hollywood's most famous movie stars 1350 01:30:45,817 --> 01:30:49,087 leave the film capital to help the government sell war bonds. 1351 01:30:49,087 --> 01:30:53,024 The country has asked the people to invest a billion dollars 1352 01:30:53,024 --> 01:30:55,193 in one month to help pay for the war. 1353 01:30:55,193 --> 01:30:56,694 And here's the start of the drive. 1354 01:30:56,694 --> 01:30:59,664 They'll tour 300 cities from coast to coast. 1355 01:30:59,664 --> 01:31:01,332 This is the people's way of saying, 1356 01:31:01,332 --> 01:31:04,102 "From the home front to the battlefront, 1357 01:31:04,102 --> 01:31:06,104 "from movie stars to sales clerks, 1358 01:31:06,104 --> 01:31:11,409 America's 130 million citizens are in the war." 1359 01:31:13,244 --> 01:31:17,115 The war-- the single greatest coordinated effort 1360 01:31:17,115 --> 01:31:18,182 in American history-- 1361 01:31:18,182 --> 01:31:24,389 would eventually cost the United States $304 billion-? 1362 01:31:24,389 --> 01:31:29,127 more than three trillion dollars in today's terms. 1363 01:31:29,127 --> 01:31:33,164 Taxes alone could never pay for it all. 1364 01:31:33,164 --> 01:31:37,201 That required a series of annual War Bond drives. 1365 01:31:37,201 --> 01:31:41,305 The whole country got involved. 1366 01:31:41,305 --> 01:31:46,611 In Mobile, John Cottingham, a worker at Brookley Field, 1367 01:31:46,611 --> 01:31:50,548 invested all but eight cents of his paycheck each month 1368 01:31:50,548 --> 01:31:52,150 in war bonds. 1369 01:31:52,150 --> 01:31:57,155 The Black Bears, the local Negro League baseball team, 1370 01:31:57,155 --> 01:32:02,660 staged a doubleheader that raised $100,000. 1371 01:32:02,660 --> 01:32:05,930 The citizens of Sacramento were asked 1372 01:32:05,930 --> 01:32:09,100 to buy $16 million worth of bonds 1373 01:32:09,100 --> 01:32:10,234 during one particular drive. 1374 01:32:10,234 --> 01:32:16,340 They were told it would pay for 96 minutes of the war. 1375 01:32:18,943 --> 01:32:22,713 In Waterbury, bonds were sold from "Liberty House," 1376 01:32:22,713 --> 01:32:25,249 set up in the middle of the town green 1377 01:32:25,249 --> 01:32:26,551 on the site where similar bonds 1378 01:32:26,551 --> 01:32:28,953 had been sold to help defeat Germany 1379 01:32:28,953 --> 01:32:31,122 during the First World War. 1380 01:32:31,122 --> 01:32:35,359 People turned out to gaze at a giant barrage balloon, 1381 01:32:35,359 --> 01:32:40,665 to see a German plane that had been shot from the sky, 1382 01:32:40,665 --> 01:32:43,234 and ride a tank. 1383 01:32:47,138 --> 01:32:49,140 AL McINTOSH (dramatized): Luverne, Minnesota. 1384 01:32:49,140 --> 01:32:51,976 "They can send all the movie stars they want 1385 01:32:51,976 --> 01:32:55,012 "on countrywide war bond sales drives, 1386 01:32:55,012 --> 01:32:58,549 "but for our part, we'll take Maude Jochims 1387 01:32:58,549 --> 01:33:03,721 as the best bond salesman-- or saleswoman-- of them all." 1388 01:33:05,089 --> 01:33:07,425 "We stopped in at the Palace Wednesday afternoon, 1389 01:33:07,425 --> 01:33:12,096 "and they were going to fall $8,000 short. 1390 01:33:12,096 --> 01:33:15,299 "Then Maude, as a one-woman campaign, 1391 01:33:15,299 --> 01:33:19,370 "waded in to canvass Rock County patrons. 1392 01:33:19,370 --> 01:33:21,439 "The bond orders poured in 1393 01:33:21,439 --> 01:33:26,010 and the total was boosted over $48,000." 1394 01:33:27,011 --> 01:33:31,115 Al Mcintosh, Rock County Star Herald. 1395 01:33:41,826 --> 01:33:45,296 NEWSREEL NARRATOR: This was the Russian front in 1942. 1396 01:33:45,296 --> 01:33:47,265 The Germans advanced, looting, 1397 01:33:47,265 --> 01:33:49,634 torturing, murdering as they went. 1398 01:33:49,634 --> 01:33:51,435 The casualties ran into the millions. 1399 01:33:51,435 --> 01:33:55,206 They had driven 1,000 miles deep into Russian territory, 1400 01:33:55,206 --> 01:33:57,842 but Russia, with her "scorched earth" policy, 1401 01:33:57,842 --> 01:33:59,777 left nothing of value behind. 1402 01:33:59,777 --> 01:34:03,181 Wheat, which could not be harvested, was set afire. 1403 01:34:03,181 --> 01:34:08,786 Bridges were blown up, dams, railroads, power plants. 1404 01:34:10,288 --> 01:34:13,291 NARRATOR: Although the German invasion of the Soviet Union 1405 01:34:13,291 --> 01:34:15,092 had stalled outside Moscow, 1406 01:34:15,092 --> 01:34:18,362 with both sides suffering unspeakable losses, 1407 01:34:18,362 --> 01:34:23,935 a new Nazi offensive in the spring of 1942 1408 01:34:23,935 --> 01:34:26,604 had sent more than 225 divisions 1409 01:34:26,604 --> 01:34:29,707 steadily advancing across Russia. 1410 01:34:29,707 --> 01:34:34,679 Millions of civilians and soldiers died. 1411 01:34:37,515 --> 01:34:41,686 Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin was demanding that the Allies 1412 01:34:41,686 --> 01:34:44,555 immediately open a second front in the west 1413 01:34:44,555 --> 01:34:48,025 to relieve the pressure on his beleaguered people. 1414 01:34:50,428 --> 01:34:51,229 But there was as yet 1415 01:34:51,229 --> 01:34:55,766 not a single Allied soldier fighting in Western Europe, 1416 01:34:55,766 --> 01:34:59,036 and there would not be for a long time. 1417 01:35:03,808 --> 01:35:06,310 They simply weren't ready. 1418 01:35:08,579 --> 01:35:11,716 American planners had a straightforward idea 1419 01:35:11,716 --> 01:35:13,184 of how to beat the Germans: 1420 01:35:13,184 --> 01:35:17,088 invade France in the spring of 1943 1421 01:35:17,088 --> 01:35:20,157 and drive right for Berlin. 1422 01:35:21,359 --> 01:35:25,196 But the British were wary of moving too fast. 1423 01:35:25,196 --> 01:35:28,666 "A defeat on the French coast," Winston Churchill warned, 1424 01:35:28,666 --> 01:35:33,271 was "the only way in which we could possibly lose this war." 1425 01:35:33,271 --> 01:35:36,140 Instead, he favored attacking 1426 01:35:36,140 --> 01:35:41,479 German and Italian forces in North Africa. 1427 01:35:45,116 --> 01:35:48,119 American commanders thought invading Africa 1428 01:35:48,119 --> 01:35:52,523 would be a dangerous and wasteful diversion... 1429 01:35:52,957 --> 01:35:55,793 ...but Congressional elections were coming up. 1430 01:35:55,793 --> 01:35:57,428 American voters were eager 1431 01:35:57,428 --> 01:36:01,399 for more offensive action against the Axis. 1432 01:36:01,399 --> 01:36:06,103 President Roosevelt overruled his generals. 1433 01:36:06,103 --> 01:36:10,174 The invasion of occupied France would be delayed. 1434 01:36:11,575 --> 01:36:14,445 Instead, preparations were made for American troops 1435 01:36:14,445 --> 01:36:19,684 to land in North Africa at the end of 1942. 1436 01:36:20,084 --> 01:36:24,522 A bitter General George C. Marshall, Army Chief of Staff, 1437 01:36:24,522 --> 01:36:27,658 wrote privately that he and his fellow commanders 1438 01:36:27,658 --> 01:36:31,228 had "failed to see that the leader in a democracy 1439 01:36:31,228 --> 01:36:34,665 has to keep the people entertained." 1440 01:36:38,469 --> 01:36:42,340 ("American Patrol" by Glenn Miller playing) 1441 01:36:58,556 --> 01:37:03,561 SIDNEY PHILLIPS: I did notice repeatedly during the war that there would be 1442 01:37:03,561 --> 01:37:07,431 a sense of pride in what you were a part of. 1443 01:37:07,431 --> 01:37:11,235 You would feel the power of the military. 1444 01:37:11,235 --> 01:37:15,773 You would feel the power of the convoy you were in, 1445 01:37:15,773 --> 01:37:19,944 the warships that were surrounding you, 1446 01:37:19,944 --> 01:37:23,914 the weapons that you were responsible for. 1447 01:37:24,749 --> 01:37:27,351 It was a strange feeling. 1448 01:37:27,351 --> 01:37:29,086 You knew you were in great danger, 1449 01:37:29,086 --> 01:37:30,588 but you somehow felt safe 1450 01:37:30,588 --> 01:37:36,761 in that you were a part of this great, powerful group. 1451 01:37:38,996 --> 01:37:42,266 NARRATOR: In early August of 1942, 1452 01:37:42,266 --> 01:37:45,369 Private Sidney Phillips of Mobile, Alabama, 1453 01:37:45,369 --> 01:37:48,672 and the 19,000 men of the First Marine Division 1454 01:37:48,672 --> 01:37:50,975 steamed out of Wellington, New Zealand, 1455 01:37:50,975 --> 01:37:54,178 in a large convoy, including all three 1456 01:37:54,178 --> 01:37:57,348 of America's carriers in the South Pacific. 1457 01:38:04,588 --> 01:38:08,893 Their target was so remote, so obscure, 1458 01:38:08,893 --> 01:38:13,631 that some of their officers had trouble saying its name. 1459 01:38:13,898 --> 01:38:18,102 But that summer, Guadalcanal, a 90-mile-long island 1460 01:38:18,102 --> 01:38:20,271 at the eastern end of the Solomon chain, 1461 01:38:20,271 --> 01:38:23,908 covered with dense jungle and coconut plantations, 1462 01:38:23,908 --> 01:38:25,676 had suddenly become 1463 01:38:25,676 --> 01:38:30,147 one of the most strategically important spots in the Pacific. 1464 01:38:30,147 --> 01:38:31,615 Two separate commands 1465 01:38:31,615 --> 01:38:36,287 had the task of pushing back the Japanese. 1466 01:38:36,287 --> 01:38:37,755 General Douglas MacArthur 1467 01:38:37,755 --> 01:38:40,591 was in command of the Southwestern Pacific, 1468 01:38:40,591 --> 01:38:42,560 assigned to drive from New Guinea 1469 01:38:42,560 --> 01:38:46,330 toward the Philippines and Formosa. 1470 01:38:46,330 --> 01:38:48,933 Admiral Chester W. Nimitz would use the Marines 1471 01:38:48,933 --> 01:38:53,737 to climb a longer ladder-- up the Solomons, the Gilberts, 1472 01:38:53,737 --> 01:38:55,806 the Marshalls, the Marianas, 1473 01:38:55,806 --> 01:38:59,677 the Volcano Islands, the Ryukus. 1474 01:38:59,677 --> 01:39:03,214 He would begin in the Solomons. 1475 01:39:03,647 --> 01:39:07,952 The Japanese had made landings there, and construction crews 1476 01:39:07,952 --> 01:39:12,957 were hard at work on an airstrip on Guadalcanal. 1477 01:39:12,957 --> 01:39:15,326 If they were allowed to complete it, 1478 01:39:15,326 --> 01:39:18,229 Japanese warplanes could choke off shipping lanes 1479 01:39:18,229 --> 01:39:21,131 between the United States and Australia 1480 01:39:21,131 --> 01:39:26,904 and make the Allied campaign impossible. 1481 01:39:28,239 --> 01:39:32,276 The Marines, including 17-year-old Sid Phillips, 1482 01:39:32,276 --> 01:39:37,281 now a mortarman, had been sent to stop them. 1483 01:39:38,549 --> 01:39:42,920 Their commander had assumed his green troops would receive 1484 01:39:42,920 --> 01:39:47,191 another six months of training before they saw combat. 1485 01:39:47,191 --> 01:39:48,192 They were armed 1486 01:39:48,192 --> 01:39:51,295 with old single-shot, bolt-action rifles. 1487 01:39:51,295 --> 01:39:53,931 They had only ten days' worth of ammunition, 1488 01:39:53,931 --> 01:39:57,535 and in order to get them into the fight as fast as possible, 1489 01:39:57,535 --> 01:40:03,073 their supply stocks had been reduced from 90 days to 60. 1490 01:40:03,073 --> 01:40:08,012 The men called it "Operation Shoestring." 1491 01:40:15,219 --> 01:40:17,888 (projectiles whistling through air) 1492 01:40:19,123 --> 01:40:23,460 At dawn on August 7, 1942, 1493 01:40:23,460 --> 01:40:26,030 American land forces went on the offensive 1494 01:40:26,030 --> 01:40:28,432 for the first time in the Second World War. 1495 01:40:28,432 --> 01:40:33,103 No one had any idea how long, how bloody 1496 01:40:33,103 --> 01:40:38,509 and how consequential the battle for Guadalcanal would be. 1497 01:40:38,509 --> 01:40:42,780 Sid Phillips' platoon was part of the second wave 1498 01:40:42,780 --> 01:40:45,215 of Marines to go ashore. 1499 01:40:46,116 --> 01:40:47,618 "We had been repeatedly told 1500 01:40:47,618 --> 01:40:48,719 "this would be the first 1501 01:40:48,719 --> 01:40:50,721 ship-to-shore landing," he remembered, 1502 01:40:50,721 --> 01:40:54,625 "and nobody could more than guess if such an idea 1503 01:40:54,625 --> 01:40:55,426 "would be successful. 1504 01:40:55,426 --> 01:41:01,298 "We braced ourselves, and the craft slid up on the beach. 1505 01:41:01,298 --> 01:41:05,603 We charged out, ready to do or die," Phillips said, 1506 01:41:05,603 --> 01:41:11,175 "and there was the first wave sitting, laughing at us." 1507 01:41:12,443 --> 01:41:15,813 There was virtually no opposition. 1508 01:41:15,813 --> 01:41:20,951 The first American casualty on Guadalcanal was a Marine 1509 01:41:20,951 --> 01:41:23,120 who cut his hand with a machete, 1510 01:41:23,120 --> 01:41:26,390 trying to open a coconut. 1511 01:41:27,491 --> 01:41:30,127 The Marines moved off the beach. 1512 01:41:32,329 --> 01:41:35,232 A combat photographer caught Sid Phillips 1513 01:41:35,232 --> 01:41:37,568 relieving himself. 1514 01:41:39,470 --> 01:41:43,974 PHILLIPS: There were times of sheer boredom 1515 01:41:43,974 --> 01:41:47,378 and just plain hard work. 1516 01:41:47,378 --> 01:41:51,048 The war is actually planned by the officers, 1517 01:41:51,048 --> 01:41:52,783 but it is fought by the privates, 1518 01:41:52,783 --> 01:41:57,588 and the privates do 99% of all the hard work. 1519 01:41:58,155 --> 01:42:00,991 NARRATOR: Americans seized the unfinished airstrip 1520 01:42:00,991 --> 01:42:04,561 with little trouble and renamed it "Henderson Field" 1521 01:42:04,561 --> 01:42:06,930 after a Marine pilot who was killed 1522 01:42:06,930 --> 01:42:07,965 during the Battle of Midway. 1523 01:42:07,965 --> 01:42:12,503 They began to prepare it for American planes 1524 01:42:12,503 --> 01:42:15,773 with signs that read "Under New Management.โ€ 1525 01:42:16,540 --> 01:42:19,810 Their orders were to hold the field at all cost. 1526 01:42:19,810 --> 01:42:25,149 The enemy couldn't be allowed to retake it. 1527 01:42:25,516 --> 01:42:28,152 Then... the Japanese attacked. 1528 01:42:28,152 --> 01:42:34,158 The American fleet offshore was their first target. 1529 01:42:34,825 --> 01:42:39,663 PHILLIPS: The Japanese Navy came in and sank all of our escorts. 1530 01:42:39,663 --> 01:42:42,733 (artillery fire) 1531 01:42:52,276 --> 01:42:55,145 NARRATOR: Four heavy cruisers were lost, 1532 01:42:55,145 --> 01:42:58,982 along with more than 1,800 American sailors. 1533 01:42:58,982 --> 01:43:00,017 PHILLIPS: They could have sunk 1534 01:43:00,017 --> 01:43:02,886 our supply ships, too, but they didn't-- it was at night, 1535 01:43:02,886 --> 01:43:05,989 and they didn't know how successful they had been. 1536 01:43:05,989 --> 01:43:09,093 But the next day, all of our supplies left, 1537 01:43:09,093 --> 01:43:12,696 and we were... we were there without ever unloading 1538 01:43:12,696 --> 01:43:17,301 even our ten days of supplies that we had brought in with us. 1539 01:43:17,301 --> 01:43:20,637 We would have starved to death if there hadn't have been 1540 01:43:20,637 --> 01:43:24,408 a big supply of Japanese rice there. 1541 01:43:26,977 --> 01:43:30,347 NARRATOR: The Marines found themselves alone 1542 01:43:30,347 --> 01:43:34,518 and began to wonder if they, like the men on Bataan, 1543 01:43:34,518 --> 01:43:38,689 had simply been abandoned. 1544 01:43:38,689 --> 01:43:40,390 (gunfire) 1545 01:43:40,390 --> 01:43:42,760 With no support from the sea or the air, 1546 01:43:42,760 --> 01:43:46,230 the men were strafed and bombed daily... 1547 01:43:51,135 --> 01:43:53,670 ...pounded by shells from Japanese ships offshore 1548 01:43:53,670 --> 01:43:56,473 and under attack from enemy troops 1549 01:43:56,473 --> 01:43:59,510 hidden in the jungle. 1550 01:43:59,510 --> 01:44:03,113 PHILLIPS: We understood that we might be expendable. 1551 01:44:03,113 --> 01:44:05,149 It had become sort of the established thing, 1552 01:44:05,149 --> 01:44:11,355 and, uh, we knew our country was not yet, uh, heavily armed. 1553 01:44:11,355 --> 01:44:16,193 And yes, we did, uh, feel that we might be expendable. 1554 01:44:16,193 --> 01:44:17,294 We really did. 1555 01:44:17,294 --> 01:44:18,929 (automatic gunfire) 1556 01:44:18,929 --> 01:44:21,198 (bomb whistling through air) 1557 01:44:34,011 --> 01:44:37,648 NARRATOR: Phillips was among those sent out to help recover 1558 01:44:37,648 --> 01:44:41,952 the bodies of Marines killed in an enemy ambush. 1559 01:44:41,952 --> 01:44:46,957 PHILLIPS: And it was about five miles out to the ambush site. 1560 01:44:46,957 --> 01:44:51,128 Well, the American bodies had been mutilated. 1561 01:44:51,128 --> 01:44:53,430 They had been beheaded and, uh, 1562 01:44:53,430 --> 01:44:57,768 had their genitals, uh, stuffed in their mouths, and... 1563 01:44:57,768 --> 01:45:00,304 (artillery fire, gunfire continue) 1564 01:45:00,304 --> 01:45:01,071 Uh... 1565 01:45:01,071 --> 01:45:03,941 our battalion never took a prisoner 1566 01:45:03,941 --> 01:45:05,576 that I know of after that. 1567 01:45:05,576 --> 01:45:07,978 I really... I really don't remember 1568 01:45:07,978 --> 01:45:10,314 that we ever took a prisoner. 1569 01:45:10,314 --> 01:45:12,683 (artillery fire) 1570 01:45:18,922 --> 01:45:21,959 (gunfire) 1571 01:45:33,637 --> 01:45:36,773 NARRATOR: On the late afternoon of August 20, 1572 01:45:36,773 --> 01:45:40,344 (aircraft approaching) - after 13 harrowing days on the island, 1573 01:45:40,344 --> 01:45:43,580 Phillips heard the sound of approaching aircraft 1574 01:45:43,580 --> 01:45:45,182 and took cover as usual. 1575 01:45:45,182 --> 01:45:48,952 But this time, the planes were American. 1576 01:45:48,952 --> 01:45:51,755 (man whistling) The Marines cheered. 1577 01:45:51,755 --> 01:45:54,124 They were no longer alone. 1578 01:45:54,124 --> 01:45:57,461 PHILLIPS: It looked like Uncle Sam was going to fight 1579 01:45:57,461 --> 01:46:01,098 for that miserable place, after all. 1580 01:46:02,966 --> 01:46:04,902 (distant gunfire) 1581 01:46:04,902 --> 01:46:08,171 NARRATOR: But at 2:00 a.m. the next morning, 1582 01:46:08,171 --> 01:46:11,141 just hours after the first American planes arrived, 1583 01:46:11,141 --> 01:46:15,212 a Japanese commander sent 900 fresh troops 1584 01:46:15,212 --> 01:46:17,915 against Marine positions along the western bank 1585 01:46:17,915 --> 01:46:20,684 of a twisting jungle creek. 1586 01:46:20,684 --> 01:46:21,318 (gunfire) 1587 01:46:21,318 --> 01:46:24,721 Its name was the llu River, but because the maps 1588 01:46:24,721 --> 01:46:27,524 the Marines had been issued had it wrong, 1589 01:46:27,524 --> 01:46:29,927 the fierce firefight that followed 1590 01:46:29,927 --> 01:46:34,164 would be remembered as the Battle of the Tenaru. 1591 01:46:34,164 --> 01:46:36,833 (artillery fire) 1592 01:46:36,833 --> 01:46:39,169 PHILLIPS: At that time on Guadalcanal, 1593 01:46:39,169 --> 01:46:41,838 almost every night there would be some event 1594 01:46:41,838 --> 01:46:46,109 that would arouse everyone, would keep everyone awake. 1595 01:46:46,109 --> 01:46:48,278 But this night it was different. 1596 01:46:48,278 --> 01:46:50,781 The whole world erupted, 1597 01:46:50,781 --> 01:46:56,353 and, uh... the lines became just a wall of fire. 1598 01:46:56,353 --> 01:46:59,189 We knew it was the real event. 1599 01:46:59,189 --> 01:47:02,392 NARRATOR: The Japanese commander was so certain 1600 01:47:02,392 --> 01:47:03,760 he could destroy the Marines 1601 01:47:03,760 --> 01:47:08,465 that in his diary he had filled in the entry for the day: 1602 01:47:08,465 --> 01:47:10,067 "21 August. 1603 01:47:10,067 --> 01:47:13,303 Enjoy the fruits of victory." 1604 01:47:14,638 --> 01:47:17,741 The Japanese kept coming all night. 1605 01:47:17,741 --> 01:47:19,409 "Banzai," they screamed. 1606 01:47:19,409 --> 01:47:21,178 "Marine, you die!" 1607 01:47:21,178 --> 01:47:22,079 "Marine, you die!" 1608 01:47:22,079 --> 01:47:25,082 The Marines just kept shooting. 1609 01:47:25,082 --> 01:47:27,117 (gunfire, echoed yells) 1610 01:47:27,117 --> 01:47:29,586 (gunfire continues) 1611 01:47:32,923 --> 01:47:36,493 PHILLIPS: We killed, I think, over 900 Japanese 1612 01:47:36,493 --> 01:47:39,930 and lost something like 34 Marines. 1613 01:47:39,930 --> 01:47:44,601 So it did our morale a great deal of good. 1614 01:47:49,639 --> 01:47:51,208 NARRATOR: For the first time, 1615 01:47:51,208 --> 01:47:57,014 the supposedly invincible Imperial Army had been stopped. 1616 01:47:57,014 --> 01:47:59,583 The humiliated commander, 1617 01:47:59,583 --> 01:48:03,453 who had predicted victory, shot himself. 1618 01:48:05,288 --> 01:48:11,328 But the Battle of the Tenaru settled nothing on Guadalcanal. 1619 01:48:13,063 --> 01:48:16,266 Japanese reinforcements poured onto the island, 1620 01:48:16,266 --> 01:48:20,070 and the fighting just went on and on. 1621 01:48:21,905 --> 01:48:24,608 (gunfire) 1622 01:48:28,945 --> 01:48:32,916 A confusing, vicious war of ambush 1623 01:48:32,916 --> 01:48:35,152 and counterattack. 1624 01:48:35,752 --> 01:48:36,953 A terrifying world 1625 01:48:36,953 --> 01:48:40,223 where random Japanese shells would explode 1626 01:48:40,223 --> 01:48:43,960 among the entrenched and embattled Americans. 1627 01:48:49,366 --> 01:48:51,101 PHILLIPS: Some men could take it, 1628 01:48:51,101 --> 01:48:55,839 and, uh, some just physically could not take it. 1629 01:48:56,440 --> 01:48:59,743 The sheer terror of knowing that the next one 1630 01:48:59,743 --> 01:49:02,412 is going to have your name on it-- 1631 01:49:02,412 --> 01:49:05,882 when that goes on and on and on and on, 1632 01:49:05,882 --> 01:49:09,352 you... you get a strange feeling 1633 01:49:09,352 --> 01:49:12,322 in which you seem to become detached, 1634 01:49:12,322 --> 01:49:15,092 and you just think, "Well, maybe this will end 1635 01:49:15,092 --> 01:49:18,895 "and maybe it won't, and maybe we'll all be blown up 1636 01:49:18,895 --> 01:49:20,764 and maybe we won't, but who cares?" 1637 01:49:20,764 --> 01:49:23,667 And you... you learn to sort of live with it. 1638 01:49:23,667 --> 01:49:26,803 (explosion) It is just a matter of fate. 1639 01:49:26,803 --> 01:49:30,407 You will either survive if the Lord is willing 1640 01:49:30,407 --> 01:49:31,308 or you will not. 1641 01:49:31,308 --> 01:49:34,277 So there's really nothing you can do. 1642 01:49:34,277 --> 01:49:35,579 (explosions) 1643 01:49:35,579 --> 01:49:37,547 And you just take it. 1644 01:49:37,547 --> 01:49:40,984 (gunfire and artillery fire in distance) 1645 01:49:42,085 --> 01:49:47,357 NARRATOR: Private Sid Phillips turned 18 on September 2. 1646 01:49:47,357 --> 01:49:51,094 The next day, he got his first letter from home 1647 01:49:51,094 --> 01:49:54,097 since he'd sailed for Guadalcanal. 1648 01:49:54,097 --> 01:49:55,999 It was, he wrote back, 1649 01:49:55,999 --> 01:50:00,170 "the best birthday present possible for me." 1650 01:50:06,910 --> 01:50:08,311 In late September, 1651 01:50:08,311 --> 01:50:13,550 some American reinforcements finally made it through. 1652 01:50:15,986 --> 01:50:19,723 But nightly visits by fast-moving Japanese ships 1653 01:50:19,723 --> 01:50:22,492 the Marines called the "Tokyo Express" 1654 01:50:22,492 --> 01:50:24,995 kept the enemy on the island 1655 01:50:24,995 --> 01:50:29,166 supplied and reinforced as well. 1656 01:50:29,166 --> 01:50:32,169 (artillery fire) 1657 01:50:33,503 --> 01:50:36,239 NARRATOR: Twice, the Japanese, 1658 01:50:36,239 --> 01:50:38,508 determined to retake Henderson Field, 1659 01:50:38,508 --> 01:50:42,012 mounted full-scale assaults on the airstrip. 1660 01:50:42,012 --> 01:50:42,979 (artillery fire) 1661 01:50:42,979 --> 01:50:46,149 Twice, the Marines beat them back. 1662 01:50:46,149 --> 01:50:51,054 Thousands of Japanese were shot dead or blown to pieces. 1663 01:51:13,510 --> 01:51:15,178 (flies buzzing) 1664 01:51:15,178 --> 01:51:16,746 Week after week, 1665 01:51:16,746 --> 01:51:20,817 the battle for Guadalcanal ground on. 1666 01:51:27,257 --> 01:51:31,228 The Japanese were not the only enemy. 1667 01:51:31,228 --> 01:51:35,532 The stench of rotting vegetation and decomposing corpses 1668 01:51:35,532 --> 01:51:41,238 hung in the humid, lifeless air, clung to the men's clothes, 1669 01:51:41,238 --> 01:51:45,275 remained as a taste in the mouth. 1670 01:51:48,511 --> 01:51:52,983 Torrential rains turned campsites into swamps, 1671 01:51:52,983 --> 01:51:56,620 jungle paths into rivers of mud. 1672 01:51:57,621 --> 01:51:59,990 Clouds of mosquitoes spread malaria, 1673 01:51:59,990 --> 01:52:04,794 leaving hundreds helpless with chills and fever. 1674 01:52:06,997 --> 01:52:08,932 To the men on Guadalcanal, 1675 01:52:08,932 --> 01:52:15,171 Operation Shoestring had become Operation Pestilence. 1676 01:52:19,175 --> 01:52:20,944 "The typical Marine on the island," 1677 01:52:20,944 --> 01:52:23,947 Sid Phillips remembered, "ran a fever, 1678 01:52:23,947 --> 01:52:26,950 "wore stinking dungarees, loathed twilight, 1679 01:52:26,950 --> 01:52:32,956 and wondered whether the U.S. Navy still existed." 1680 01:52:50,707 --> 01:52:51,441 On November 12, 1681 01:52:51,441 --> 01:52:55,278 the Japanese navy mounted one last major offensive, 1682 01:52:55,278 --> 01:52:57,747 aimed at reinforcing their forces 1683 01:52:57,747 --> 01:53:01,885 and dislodging the Americans on Guadalcanal. 1684 01:53:02,285 --> 01:53:06,222 A much smaller number of American ships steamed in 1685 01:53:06,222 --> 01:53:08,925 to try to stop them. 1686 01:53:09,926 --> 01:53:11,795 The naval battle that followed 1687 01:53:11,795 --> 01:53:15,799 went on for three days and three nights. 1688 01:53:15,799 --> 01:53:18,768 PHILLIPS: You could see the salvos of the ships, 1689 01:53:18,768 --> 01:53:21,604 and you could see the naval shells 1690 01:53:21,604 --> 01:53:24,574 going through the air like lightning bugs. 1691 01:53:24,574 --> 01:53:27,544 And you could see ships explode. 1692 01:53:27,544 --> 01:53:30,413 We didn't know if they were American or Japanese. 1693 01:53:30,413 --> 01:53:34,250 We didn't know who was winning or who was losing. 1694 01:53:34,250 --> 01:53:37,187 Sometimes when a ship would explode, it would... 1695 01:53:37,187 --> 01:53:40,256 the concussion would actually flap your clothes 1696 01:53:40,256 --> 01:53:42,392 miles and miles away. 1697 01:53:42,392 --> 01:53:46,296 But we did know that our fate was being decided 1698 01:53:46,296 --> 01:53:49,532 and we would, uh, we would... 1699 01:53:49,532 --> 01:53:53,436 sit there sort of mystified and horrified 1700 01:53:53,436 --> 01:53:55,872 by what was going on, because we knew 1701 01:53:55,872 --> 01:54:01,177 thousands of sailors were dying on one side or the other. 1702 01:54:06,716 --> 01:54:10,620 NARRATOR: Some 5,000 American sailors lost their lives 1703 01:54:10,620 --> 01:54:13,189 in the fighting off Guadalcanal-- 1704 01:54:13,189 --> 01:54:16,593 SO many that the casualty figures 1705 01:54:16,593 --> 01:54:20,230 were again kept from the public. 1706 01:54:21,131 --> 01:54:23,533 Among those who died 1707 01:54:23,533 --> 01:54:26,436 were five brothers from Fredericksburg, lowa, 1708 01:54:26,436 --> 01:54:29,973 who all served on the cruiser Juneau-- 1709 01:54:29,973 --> 01:54:32,809 Joseph, Francis, Albert, 1710 01:54:32,809 --> 01:54:37,180 Madison and George Sullivan. 1711 01:54:38,114 --> 01:54:41,751 But Japan lost two battleships, 1712 01:54:41,751 --> 01:54:44,020 23 other warships, 1713 01:54:44,020 --> 01:54:45,822 600 aircraft, 1714 01:54:45,822 --> 01:54:50,593 and thousands of sailors and airmen. 1715 01:54:50,960 --> 01:54:52,729 And most important to Sid Phillips 1716 01:54:52,729 --> 01:54:56,966 and the men on Guadalcanal, the enemy was no longer able 1717 01:54:56,966 --> 01:55:01,070 to resupply its forces on the island. 1718 01:55:01,070 --> 01:55:03,973 The Japanese continued to fight, 1719 01:55:03,973 --> 01:55:08,745 but it was clear the Americans would eventually prevail. 1720 01:55:08,745 --> 01:55:13,683 The last starving, desperate Japanese troops on the island 1721 01:55:13,683 --> 01:55:17,420 would not be killed, captured or evacuated 1722 01:55:17,420 --> 01:55:21,391 until February 1943. 1723 01:55:21,691 --> 01:55:26,996 21,000 Japanese soldiers were lost. 1724 01:55:30,467 --> 01:55:35,472 Guadalcanal would prove a crucial victory. 1725 01:55:35,472 --> 01:55:37,640 After six long months, 1726 01:55:37,640 --> 01:55:39,943 the Americans were beginning to learn how to beat 1727 01:55:39,943 --> 01:55:42,545 the Japanese-- not only in the air 1728 01:55:42,545 --> 01:55:45,515 and on the sea, but in the jungles, 1729 01:55:45,515 --> 01:55:48,485 where, over the next three years, 1730 01:55:48,485 --> 01:55:52,322 the fighting would only get worse. 1731 01:55:52,989 --> 01:55:58,561 Allied shipping lanes to Australia remained open. 1732 01:55:58,561 --> 01:56:01,764 And there was more good news. 1733 01:56:01,764 --> 01:56:03,967 American and Australian forces had also taken 1734 01:56:03,967 --> 01:56:08,404 the most important Japanese strongholds on New Guinea. 1735 01:56:08,404 --> 01:56:12,909 Japan's expansion had been stopped. 1736 01:56:13,676 --> 01:56:16,779 PHILLIPS: By the time we left Guadalcanal, 1737 01:56:16,779 --> 01:56:20,116 which was December 22nd of 1942-- 1738 01:56:20,116 --> 01:56:23,353 we had been there since August the 7th-- 1739 01:56:23,353 --> 01:56:27,690 everybody had lost at least 25 pounds. 1740 01:56:27,690 --> 01:56:29,292 Our clothes were in rags. 1741 01:56:29,292 --> 01:56:33,730 We were covered with sores. 1742 01:56:34,731 --> 01:56:40,169 And we had nearly starved to death two or three times. 1743 01:56:46,843 --> 01:56:49,245 KATHARINE PHILLIPS: We did not realize 1744 01:56:49,245 --> 01:56:53,449 how desperate the Marines were on Guadalcanal, 1745 01:56:53,449 --> 01:56:58,788 because the news never told us. 1746 01:57:01,524 --> 01:57:06,496 In fact, it was not till years later when Sidney came home 1747 01:57:06,496 --> 01:57:11,234 that we found that their food was down to fish heads and rice 1748 01:57:11,234 --> 01:57:14,404 and that he was down to 125 pounds 1749 01:57:14,404 --> 01:57:17,907 when they took him off of Guadalcanal. 1750 01:57:19,442 --> 01:57:26,182 NARRATOR: More than 1,700 Americans had died on Guadalcanal. 1751 01:57:26,182 --> 01:57:30,753 Another 4,700 were wounded, 1752 01:57:30,753 --> 01:57:37,927 and thousands more were seriously ill. 1753 01:57:39,462 --> 01:57:42,498 Sid Phillips had survived. 1754 01:57:46,102 --> 01:57:49,372 But his uncle Charles Tucker, a Navy pilot 1755 01:57:49,372 --> 01:57:54,477 who had flown in and out of Henderson Field, had not. 1756 01:57:57,113 --> 01:58:03,486 KATHARINE PHILLIPS: When we lost Charlie, it made it very real to all of us. 1757 01:58:03,486 --> 01:58:09,659 And by that time, we had started losing boys in the neighborhood. 1758 01:58:09,659 --> 01:58:13,696 The boy up here on the corner was a Navy pilot 1759 01:58:13,696 --> 01:58:14,797 and he was Killed. 1760 01:58:14,797 --> 01:58:18,301 The boy down the street was an Air Force pilot 1761 01:58:18,301 --> 01:58:20,737 and he was missing in action. 1762 01:58:20,737 --> 01:58:25,408 We just... they started disappearing all around us. 1763 01:58:25,408 --> 01:58:27,777 And my mother spent her time 1764 01:58:27,777 --> 01:58:32,148 going to visit the other mothers, consoling them. 1765 01:58:32,148 --> 01:58:36,386 And it was a very, very fearful time. 1766 01:58:36,386 --> 01:58:37,086 It really was. 1767 01:58:37,086 --> 01:58:43,126 You don't expect death among people your age. 1768 01:58:43,126 --> 01:58:44,627 Old people die. 1769 01:58:44,627 --> 01:58:47,697 And then, you begin to see 1770 01:58:47,697 --> 01:58:50,667 that it's your contemporaries are dying. 1771 01:58:50,667 --> 01:58:54,103 And therefore, it is just conceivable 1772 01:58:54,103 --> 01:58:56,406 that you might die, too. 1773 01:58:56,406 --> 01:58:59,842 ("American Anthem" playing) 1774 01:59:02,845 --> 01:59:07,116 NARRATOR: Luverne, Minnesota, had been lucky so far. 1775 01:59:07,116 --> 01:59:12,055 No local family had lost a son in the war. 1776 01:59:12,055 --> 01:59:14,891 But in Sacramento, 1777 01:59:14,891 --> 01:59:17,060 Mrs. Lillian Cole had received news 1778 01:59:17,060 --> 01:59:21,531 that her son David had perished on the USS Arizona 1779 01:59:21,531 --> 01:59:22,765 at Pearl Harbor. 1780 01:59:22,765 --> 01:59:26,335 She had been asked by the government 1781 01:59:26,335 --> 01:59:28,104 "to keep secret for the present 1782 01:59:28,104 --> 01:59:31,274 the name of the ship on which he served." 1783 01:59:31,274 --> 01:59:36,546 Another Sacramento native, Airman Tom Burke, 1784 01:59:36,546 --> 01:59:40,216 died on a training mission in Puerto Rico, 1785 01:59:40,216 --> 01:59:43,352 devastating his younger brother, Earl. 1786 01:59:45,655 --> 01:59:50,493 In Waterbury, the family of Marine private Albert Boulanger 1787 01:59:50,493 --> 01:59:53,629 learned that he had been killed on Guadalcanal, 1788 01:59:53,629 --> 01:59:59,268 not far from where Sid Phillips of Mobile had been fighting. 1789 02:00:06,242 --> 02:00:11,180 Glenn Frazier was still a prisoner of the Japanese, 1790 02:00:11,180 --> 02:00:15,084 but the girl he loved back in Alabama had changed her mind 1791 02:00:15,084 --> 02:00:20,490 and was now waiting for him to come home to her. 1792 02:00:30,600 --> 02:00:32,635 Back in the summer of 1942, 1793 02:00:32,635 --> 02:00:36,139 a movie called Holiday Inn had opened. 1794 02:00:36,139 --> 02:00:41,677 In it, Bing Crosby introduced a new song by Irving Berlin. 1795 02:00:41,677 --> 02:00:47,116 (introduction to "White Christmas" playing) 1796 02:00:50,553 --> 02:00:54,924 ยง I'm dreaming ยง 1797 02:00:54,924 --> 02:01:01,464 ยง Of a white Christmas ยง 1798 02:01:01,464 --> 02:01:06,502 ยง Just like the ones I used to know... ยง 1799 02:01:06,502 --> 02:01:10,973 NARRATOR: It was an instant hit, and at Christmastime 1800 02:01:10,973 --> 02:01:13,009 American servicemen heard it 1801 02:01:13,009 --> 02:01:15,978 wherever they happened to be posted. 1802 02:01:15,978 --> 02:01:20,650 ยง ...and children listen ยง 1803 02:01:20,650 --> 02:01:31,127 ยง To hear sleigh bells in the snow ยง 1804 02:01:31,127 --> 02:01:36,132 ยง I'm dreaming ยง 1805 02:01:36,132 --> 02:01:41,771 ยง Of a white Christmas ยง 1806 02:01:41,771 --> 02:01:50,479 ยง With every Christmas card I write ยง 1807 02:01:50,479 --> 02:01:56,619 ยง May your days be merry and bright... ยง 1808 02:01:56,619 --> 02:02:00,289 NARRATOR: Japan's advance across the Pacific had been stopped 1809 02:02:00,289 --> 02:02:03,993 at Midway and Guadalcanal, 1810 02:02:03,993 --> 02:02:07,330 but at the end of America's first year at war, 1811 02:02:07,330 --> 02:02:13,102 Japan's Pacific empire still stretched 4,000 miles. 1812 02:02:13,102 --> 02:02:17,240 ยง I'm dreaming of a white Christmas ยง On the other side of the world, 1813 02:02:17,240 --> 02:02:20,943 the Red Army had stopped the Nazi advance deep into Russia 1814 02:02:20,943 --> 02:02:22,011 at Stalingrad. 1815 02:02:22,011 --> 02:02:27,617 Allied troops had finally landed in North Africa. 1816 02:02:27,617 --> 02:02:30,586 But there they would soon face the full might 1817 02:02:30,586 --> 02:02:33,256 of the German army for the first time. 1818 02:02:33,256 --> 02:02:37,260 The Germans still occupied most of Europe, 1819 02:02:37,260 --> 02:02:39,528 still had designs on Britain 1820 02:02:39,528 --> 02:02:44,133 and, eventually, on the United States as well. 1821 02:02:46,869 --> 02:02:51,507 For Americans in uniform, a hometown Christmas 1822 02:02:51,507 --> 02:02:54,610 seemed very far away. 1823 02:02:54,610 --> 02:03:00,983 (final phrase of "White Christmas" plays) 1824 02:03:24,373 --> 02:03:27,109 (gentle piano melody playing) 1825 02:03:27,109 --> 02:03:31,948 NORAH JONES: ยง All we've been given ยง 1826 02:03:31,948 --> 02:03:37,353 ยง By those who came before ยง 1827 02:03:37,353 --> 02:03:41,023 ยง The dream of a nation ยง 1828 02:03:41,023 --> 02:03:45,461 ยง Where freedom would endure ยง 1829 02:03:45,461 --> 02:03:51,968 ยง The work and prayers of centuries ยง 1830 02:03:51,968 --> 02:03:55,371 ยง Have brought us to this day ยง 1831 02:03:55,371 --> 02:03:59,642 ยง What shall be our legacy? ยง 1832 02:03:59,642 --> 02:04:04,814 ยง What will our children say? ยง 1833 02:04:04,814 --> 02:04:09,418 ยง Let them say of me ยง 1834 02:04:09,418 --> 02:04:13,956 ยง I was one who believed ยง 1835 02:04:13,956 --> 02:04:22,598 ยง In sharing the blessings I received ยง 1836 02:04:22,598 --> 02:04:28,137 ยง Let me know in my heart ยง 1837 02:04:28,137 --> 02:04:35,578 ยง When my days are through ยง 1838 02:04:35,578 --> 02:04:40,149 ยง America, America ยง 1839 02:04:40,149 --> 02:04:46,722 ยง I gave my best to you... ยง 1840 02:04:48,257 --> 02:04:53,029 ยง America ยง 1841 02:04:53,029 --> 02:05:02,738 ยง I gave my best to you. ยง 1842 02:05:18,120 --> 02:05:22,091 (birds chirping, distant machine gun firing) 1843 02:05:33,302 --> 02:05:36,405 NARRATOR: Back on November 4, 1942, 1844 02:05:36,405 --> 02:05:39,175 as Sid Phillips and the First Marine Division 1845 02:05:39,175 --> 02:05:43,546 continued to try to hold Henderson Field on Guadalcanal, 1846 02:05:43,546 --> 02:05:49,118 a unique force began landing 31 miles to the east. 1847 02:05:49,118 --> 02:05:51,554 The Second Marine Raider Battalion-- 1848 02:05:51,554 --> 02:05:53,389 best known as "Carlson's Raiders"-- 1849 02:05:53,389 --> 02:05:57,126 had orders to slip into the jungle behind enemy lines 1850 02:05:57,126 --> 02:06:03,265 and harass the 3,000-man Japanese force hidden there. 1851 02:06:05,434 --> 02:06:09,505 With them was a young man named Bill Lansford 1852 02:06:09,505 --> 02:06:11,607 from the Boyle Heights neighborhood 1853 02:06:11,607 --> 02:06:13,375 of East Los Angeles. 1854 02:06:13,375 --> 02:06:16,679 His absent father was a policeman. 1855 02:06:17,113 --> 02:06:22,218 His mother, Rosalinda Melendez, had come to California 1856 02:06:22,218 --> 02:06:24,386 from Juarez, Mexico. 1857 02:06:24,386 --> 02:06:30,426 LANSFORD: As a boy, I was not really aware of the Anglo world at all. 1858 02:06:31,527 --> 02:06:36,599 Principally I lived in Latino neighborhoods 1859 02:06:36,599 --> 02:06:39,768 and spoke Spanish at home 1860 02:06:39,768 --> 02:06:42,104 and knew very little English 1861 02:06:42,104 --> 02:06:45,608 until I was about 14 years of age. 1862 02:06:47,176 --> 02:06:49,445 I had actually wanted to join the Navy 1863 02:06:49,445 --> 02:06:53,482 because it had that mystique of going to foreign lands 1864 02:06:53,482 --> 02:06:55,284 and all that kind of stuff. 1865 02:06:55,284 --> 02:06:56,418 But the fact of the matter is 1866 02:06:56,418 --> 02:06:59,488 that I was considered too skinny and too little 1867 02:06:59,488 --> 02:07:00,322 to be in the Navy 1868 02:07:00,322 --> 02:07:03,159 and they rejected me over and over until I got to be 1869 02:07:03,159 --> 02:07:06,562 like a fly hanging around a gravy bowl there, 1870 02:07:06,562 --> 02:07:09,298 you know, the Navy station. 1871 02:07:09,298 --> 02:07:10,299 And one day I came out 1872 02:07:10,299 --> 02:07:13,769 and there was this enormous Marine in blues 1873 02:07:13,769 --> 02:07:17,072 and standing there, and he gave me a real pep talk. 1874 02:07:17,072 --> 02:07:19,675 He said, "Why don't you join the Marines? 1875 02:07:19,675 --> 02:07:21,410 They're the best outfit there is." 1876 02:07:21,410 --> 02:07:23,512 And I thought, "Well, the Navy doesn't want me; 1877 02:07:23,512 --> 02:07:25,114 I'll try them," you know. 1878 02:07:25,614 --> 02:07:31,187 So in a way, it was the best choice I ever made in my life. 1879 02:07:34,089 --> 02:07:37,726 NARRATOR: At first, like many Latinos, 1880 02:07:37,726 --> 02:07:40,529 he did not feel entirely welcome in the Marine Corps. 1881 02:07:40,529 --> 02:07:44,133 I think it was Little Texas in the Marine Corps, 1882 02:07:44,133 --> 02:07:46,468 and as you know, Texans and Mexicans didn't... 1883 02:07:46,468 --> 02:07:50,105 weren't exactly bosom buddies in those days. 1884 02:07:52,408 --> 02:07:56,212 As the war advanced and we went on through, 1885 02:07:56,212 --> 02:07:58,147 these Texan guys began seeing 1886 02:07:58,147 --> 02:08:03,319 that we weren't what they thought we were. 1887 02:08:03,319 --> 02:08:04,119 And we began seeing 1888 02:08:04,119 --> 02:08:06,522 that they weren't what we thought they were. 1889 02:08:06,522 --> 02:08:09,825 And being Marines was kind of a melting pot, 1890 02:08:09,825 --> 02:08:10,793 and we all got together. 1891 02:08:10,793 --> 02:08:13,362 It was like the... a mini United States, you know, 1892 02:08:13,362 --> 02:08:16,966 where you got Jews, you got Italians, you got Indians, 1893 02:08:16,966 --> 02:08:19,568 and they all learn to live together. 1894 02:08:19,568 --> 02:08:21,370 (explosion, men shouting) 1895 02:08:22,371 --> 02:08:25,774 The Latinos have a culture just as the Japanese had, you know, 1896 02:08:25,774 --> 02:08:29,578 their own form of Bushido code, which is not as extreme 1897 02:08:29,578 --> 02:08:33,582 but certainly is just as firm in their nature. 1898 02:08:35,184 --> 02:08:37,820 And that's that they want to prove 1899 02:08:37,820 --> 02:08:41,991 that they're up to whatever job is given to them. 1900 02:08:41,991 --> 02:08:46,895 And they want to show that they're as patriotic as anybody, 1901 02:08:46,895 --> 02:08:49,498 as some blue-eyed blond guy. 1902 02:08:50,099 --> 02:08:54,003 NARRATOR: Lansford soon heard about the Second Raider Battalion, 1903 02:08:54,003 --> 02:08:58,307 an elite commando unit, and decided to volunteer. 1904 02:08:58,307 --> 02:09:03,045 Its commander, Lt. Colonel Evans F. Carlson, 1905 02:09:03,045 --> 02:09:06,715 was a minister's son with a crusader's zeal. 1906 02:09:06,715 --> 02:09:13,122 Carlson's motto was "Gung ho"-- Chinese for "Work together." 1907 02:09:13,122 --> 02:09:15,891 Officers were called by their first names 1908 02:09:15,891 --> 02:09:18,260 and lived just as their men did. 1909 02:09:18,260 --> 02:09:22,197 Decisions were made collectively, by consensus. 1910 02:09:22,197 --> 02:09:26,969 LANSFORD: Colonel Carlson was a visionary... 1911 02:09:28,671 --> 02:09:32,141 and he understood guerrilla warfare perfectly. 1912 02:09:32,141 --> 02:09:34,643 He had made a lifelong study of it and his... 1913 02:09:34,643 --> 02:09:38,080 I think his hero was Lawrence of Arabia. 1914 02:09:38,147 --> 02:09:39,848 NARRATOR: Carlson's second in command 1915 02:09:39,848 --> 02:09:44,253 was the oldest son of the president of the United States, 1916 02:09:44,253 --> 02:09:45,888 James Roosevelt. 1917 02:09:45,888 --> 02:09:48,390 LANSFORD: I think he may have been nearsighted, 1918 02:09:48,390 --> 02:09:49,992 and he had to wear special shoes, 1919 02:09:49,992 --> 02:09:55,164 but he certainly never asked and never got any special treatment. 1920 02:09:55,197 --> 02:09:59,535 PETE ARIAS: He used to stand in line with the rest of the troops. 1921 02:09:59,535 --> 02:10:04,106 When we went to eat, he'd stand in line 1922 02:10:04,106 --> 02:10:05,574 with his utensils and stuff like that, 1923 02:10:05,574 --> 02:10:09,111 and, uh, he was just another guy as far as I was concerned. 1924 02:10:09,111 --> 02:10:11,980 NARRATOR: Also serving with the Raiders 1925 02:10:11,980 --> 02:10:15,351 was a farmer's son from Los Angeles County, 1926 02:10:15,351 --> 02:10:17,619 Pete Arias of C Company, 1927 02:10:17,619 --> 02:10:22,858 who had joined up to get away from home. 1928 02:10:22,858 --> 02:10:25,060 Within hours of landing on Guadalcanal, 1929 02:10:25,060 --> 02:10:30,632 the Raiders moved into the jungle, already on the hunt. 1930 02:10:30,632 --> 02:10:35,070 Their objective was to terrify and bewilder the enemy, 1931 02:10:35,070 --> 02:10:37,206 mounting surprise attacks from the rear, 1932 02:10:37,206 --> 02:10:43,245 then melting away again, living off the land. 1933 02:10:45,214 --> 02:10:46,348 (explosion) 1934 02:11:02,331 --> 02:11:06,735 LANSFORD: The Japanese had never been defeated. 1935 02:11:06,735 --> 02:11:10,139 You know, they had defeated the Russians in 1904, 1936 02:11:10,139 --> 02:11:12,541 and from that time on they had been considered 1937 02:11:12,541 --> 02:11:17,112 the finest jungle troops and light troops. 1938 02:11:20,582 --> 02:11:22,484 They had a sense of being superior. 1939 02:11:22,484 --> 02:11:26,522 They held the American soldiers in contempt. 1940 02:11:26,522 --> 02:11:30,325 They thought we were a bunch of softies. 1941 02:11:30,325 --> 02:11:33,128 They thought that we could not make the sacrifices 1942 02:11:33,128 --> 02:11:39,835 that the Japanese could-- the Bushido code and all that stuff. 1943 02:11:45,674 --> 02:11:49,244 And that superiority on the part of the Japanese 1944 02:11:49,244 --> 02:11:53,148 is one of the things that defeated them, 1945 02:11:53,148 --> 02:11:55,284 because the last thing they expected 1946 02:11:55,284 --> 02:12:00,189 was any Americans to be behind their lines. 1947 02:12:00,189 --> 02:12:02,124 And they couldn't believe it. 1948 02:12:03,225 --> 02:12:04,460 And in the beginning 1949 02:12:04,460 --> 02:12:06,462 they thought we were just small patrols 1950 02:12:06,462 --> 02:12:07,496 that had bumped into them. 1951 02:12:07,496 --> 02:12:11,533 They didn't realize they were up against an organized force. 1952 02:12:11,533 --> 02:12:15,471 And we... we couldn't take them on, you know, face to face. 1953 02:12:15,471 --> 02:12:16,905 You know, there were too many of them. 1954 02:12:16,905 --> 02:12:20,108 So we kept hitting their flanks and hitting their rear end 1955 02:12:20,108 --> 02:12:23,779 and attacking them where they thought we weren't going to be, 1956 02:12:23,779 --> 02:12:25,147 and chopping away at them. 1957 02:12:25,147 --> 02:12:25,881 And it was just that simple. 1958 02:12:25,881 --> 02:12:31,119 It was like chopping pieces of an animal until the animal died. 1959 02:12:35,324 --> 02:12:42,130 NARRATOR: Most of the fighting was brief, violent and at close quarters. 1960 02:12:42,130 --> 02:12:47,135 Sometimes just a few feet separated the Americans 1961 02:12:47,135 --> 02:12:48,937 from the enemy. 1962 02:13:01,083 --> 02:13:02,985 ARIAS: The Raiders were in there, 1963 02:13:02,985 --> 02:13:07,589 we was in there to take care of people, you know. 1964 02:13:07,589 --> 02:13:10,425 If we ran into them, we'd take care of them, 1965 02:13:10,425 --> 02:13:12,227 and that... that's the way it was. 1966 02:13:12,227 --> 02:13:15,697 But there was a lot of Japs, though. 1967 02:13:15,697 --> 02:13:19,434 We used to run into them every other day. 1968 02:13:19,434 --> 02:13:21,470 Well, they used to tell us 1969 02:13:21,470 --> 02:13:27,643 that, uh... the Japanese couldn't see very far. 1970 02:13:27,643 --> 02:13:32,114 But I... they could see far enough to kill you. 1971 02:13:33,315 --> 02:13:36,685 NARRATOR: One day, Pete Arias and his squad 1972 02:13:36,685 --> 02:13:38,287 were ordered to cross a clearing 1973 02:13:38,287 --> 02:13:41,957 on the outskirts of a deserted village. 1974 02:13:41,957 --> 02:13:46,295 ARIAS: My corporal-- he was our squad leader-- he says, uh, 1975 02:13:46,295 --> 02:13:49,298 "I don't think we ought to go across that field." 1976 02:13:49,298 --> 02:13:52,601 So here comes the captain, he says, the company commander, 1977 02:13:52,601 --> 02:13:54,403 he says, "Hey, what's the holdup?" 1978 02:13:54,403 --> 02:13:57,739 And this, uh, then this squad leader of mine says, 1979 02:13:57,739 --> 02:14:00,943 "Hey, Captain, I don't think we ought to cross this field." 1980 02:14:00,943 --> 02:14:05,314 And the captain says, "Aw, go ahead." 1981 02:14:06,982 --> 02:14:11,253 This machine gun opened up, right in front of us. 1982 02:14:13,155 --> 02:14:16,358 It wiped out my squad. 1983 02:14:16,358 --> 02:14:19,728 My platoon leader, he said, "Move your squad.โ€ 1984 02:14:19,728 --> 02:14:22,564 I says, "I ain't got no squad.โ€ 1985 02:14:22,564 --> 02:14:25,133 We lost a lot of people there. 1986 02:14:37,746 --> 02:14:40,549 NARRATOR: In the fighting that followed, 1987 02:14:40,549 --> 02:14:42,718 some of the Raiders were captured, 1988 02:14:42,718 --> 02:14:45,554 then tortured and mutilated. 1989 02:14:45,554 --> 02:14:49,257 LANSFORD: And we could hear them, you know, crying out 1990 02:14:49,257 --> 02:14:52,894 while they were being tortured. 1991 02:14:52,894 --> 02:14:55,163 And the following day, after the battle 1992 02:14:55,163 --> 02:14:58,567 and after we discovered our guys, our Raider guys, 1993 02:14:58,567 --> 02:15:01,703 staked to the ground and, you know, 1994 02:15:01,703 --> 02:15:03,138 in effect tortured, cut up, 1995 02:15:03,138 --> 02:15:08,977 we had captured, I think, five guys. 1996 02:15:08,977 --> 02:15:13,081 When we were assembled there after the battle, Carlson said, 1997 02:15:13,081 --> 02:15:17,185 "Did anybody lose a good friend in the battle yesterday?" 1998 02:15:17,185 --> 02:15:19,121 And some guys raised their hands. 1999 02:15:19,121 --> 02:15:21,823 And then he said, "Okay, take these guys out 2000 02:15:21,823 --> 02:15:24,126 and do what you have to do." 2001 02:15:24,126 --> 02:15:27,462 So some of the guys took them out and killed them. 2002 02:15:27,462 --> 02:15:31,333 Just took them in the jungle and shot them. 2003 02:15:31,333 --> 02:15:34,436 We were supposed to be good guys and... 2004 02:15:34,436 --> 02:15:36,672 there were no reporters with us. 2005 02:15:36,672 --> 02:15:39,107 So the word never got out until much later 2006 02:15:39,107 --> 02:15:41,910 that that had happened, and some people still deny it. 2007 02:15:41,910 --> 02:15:46,882 But I was there and I'm telling you that... that we did it. 2008 02:15:51,520 --> 02:15:54,956 NARRATOR: What came to be called the "Long Patrol" 2009 02:15:54,956 --> 02:15:58,860 went on for 30 brutal days. 2010 02:15:58,860 --> 02:16:02,330 Carlson's Raiders lost 34 men, 2011 02:16:02,330 --> 02:16:06,635 but they killed almost 500 Japanese. 2012 02:16:06,635 --> 02:16:11,406 A few months later, the American guerrillas would fight again 2013 02:16:11,406 --> 02:16:17,846 in the Solomon Islands, this time on Bougainville. 2014 02:16:28,657 --> 02:16:33,328 LANSFORD: Bougainville was the worst place I've ever been. 2015 02:16:33,328 --> 02:16:35,097 If there really is a hell, 2016 02:16:35,097 --> 02:16:38,133 I mean it's got to be like Bougainville. 2017 02:16:38,133 --> 02:16:43,839 It just... the island was a pile of pestilence. 2018 02:16:48,477 --> 02:16:52,781 One night we were moving into a position up the Piva Trail, 2019 02:16:52,781 --> 02:16:53,682 and it was very dark. 2020 02:16:53,682 --> 02:16:56,618 I mean you couldn't... literally couldn't see your hand 2021 02:16:56,618 --> 02:16:59,621 in front of your face. 2022 02:16:59,621 --> 02:17:02,057 We were moving in there and I had a machine gun 2023 02:17:02,057 --> 02:17:06,628 and, uh, my assistant gunner and I set up the gun. 2024 02:17:06,628 --> 02:17:08,663 And we didn't know where we were. 2025 02:17:08,663 --> 02:17:10,065 We didn't know where the enemy was 2026 02:17:10,065 --> 02:17:12,501 except that he was supposed to be right in front of us. 2027 02:17:12,501 --> 02:17:16,204 And as we were setting up the gun, we heard a shot, 2028 02:17:16,204 --> 02:17:17,305 just one shot. 2029 02:17:17,305 --> 02:17:19,241 And I heard a guy go... (grunts). 2030 02:17:19,241 --> 02:17:21,943 You know, he, like, caught his breath. 2031 02:17:21,943 --> 02:17:26,715 And, uh, you know, we lay there for a long time. 2032 02:17:26,715 --> 02:17:29,351 Then we began to hear this guy moaning. 2033 02:17:29,351 --> 02:17:32,754 The moans became louder and then he became delirious 2034 02:17:32,754 --> 02:17:34,890 and then he began to call for his mother. 2035 02:17:34,890 --> 02:17:38,727 I thought that was only in the movies, but it isn't. 2036 02:17:38,727 --> 02:17:41,096 And, uh, it was a terrible night. 2037 02:17:41,096 --> 02:17:45,934 And then, you know, we were trying to sleep and we couldn't, 2038 02:17:45,934 --> 02:17:47,869 and, uh, and I began thinking, 2039 02:17:47,869 --> 02:17:50,672 "Jesus Christ, why don't you die, goddammit. 2040 02:17:50,672 --> 02:17:52,407 You know, we got to sleep." 2041 02:17:52,407 --> 02:17:56,111 You know, your mind gets crazy after a while 2042 02:17:56,111 --> 02:17:58,013 under those conditions. 2043 02:17:58,013 --> 02:17:59,848 And he continued to moan and... 2044 02:17:59,848 --> 02:18:04,352 until near morning when he died. 2045 02:18:04,786 --> 02:18:09,658 When it was daylight, we were told to withdraw from there. 2046 02:18:09,658 --> 02:18:12,093 And they had this guy in a poncho, 2047 02:18:12,093 --> 02:18:14,796 and they were dropping him into one of the holes 2048 02:18:14,796 --> 02:18:19,301 that the people in the back had dug. 2049 02:18:19,301 --> 02:18:22,404 And I said, "Who is the guy?" 2050 02:18:22,404 --> 02:18:25,073 He told me the name of... of the guy 2051 02:18:25,073 --> 02:18:27,075 and it was, you know, my best friend. 2052 02:18:27,075 --> 02:18:31,246 And he had been about three or four guys away from me, 2053 02:18:31,246 --> 02:18:32,781 and it was an accidental discharge. 2054 02:18:32,781 --> 02:18:38,820 Somebody had accidentally fired a shot as he hit the deck, 2055 02:18:38,820 --> 02:18:41,723 and the rifle butt hit the deck and he fired 2056 02:18:41,723 --> 02:18:44,092 and it was the only shot fired that night 2057 02:18:44,092 --> 02:18:46,561 and he... it killed him. 2058 02:18:46,561 --> 02:18:50,165 And, you know, I just, you know, I felt like hell. 2059 02:18:50,165 --> 02:18:53,101 I really felt that. 2060 02:18:53,101 --> 02:18:56,204 Because of hearing him and the guilt feeling, you know, 2061 02:18:56,204 --> 02:18:59,841 that I kept saying, "Why don't you die, for Christ sakes." 2062 02:18:59,841 --> 02:19:03,044 And the other guys told me that they felt the same way. 2063 02:19:03,044 --> 02:19:07,816 We were so tired, we just wanted to sleep. 2064 02:19:08,950 --> 02:19:10,051 When you wish a guy dead 2065 02:19:10,051 --> 02:19:13,054 and it turns out to be your best friend, you know, 2066 02:19:13,054 --> 02:19:15,657 it's... the pits. 166892

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