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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:23,980 --> 00:00:27,470 Previously, on World War II in HD. 2 00:00:28,750 --> 00:00:32,780 Never before have been called upon for such a prodigious effort... 3 00:00:32,950 --> 00:00:34,430 America goes to war. 4 00:00:35,180 --> 00:00:40,560 Never before had we had so little time, in which to do so much. 5 00:00:40,640 --> 00:00:45,640 The allies take on Hitler's forces in North Africa and Sicily, and push them out. 6 00:00:45,640 --> 00:00:49,530 If we can stand up to him, then Europe may be free. 7 00:00:49,900 --> 00:00:56,660 While in the pacific, reporter Richard Tregaskis is embedded with the Marines as they take the fight to the Japanese. 8 00:00:57,120 --> 00:00:58,920 I came here to see some action, 9 00:00:59,310 --> 00:01:01,540 and I intend to go with the first assault wave. 10 00:01:01,540 --> 00:01:08,620 His unflinching account of the battle on Guadalcanal brings the reality of the war home to millions of Americans. 11 00:01:08,700 --> 00:01:15,340 I pass bodies of Marines, Japs, sometimes tangled, as they had fallen in the death struggle. 12 00:01:15,340 --> 00:01:23,150 I get the awful feeling of being pitifully small, just a tiny particle, caught up in the gigantic whirlpool of war. 13 00:01:27,440 --> 00:01:33,750 Grant us a common faith that men shall know bread and peace, 14 00:01:35,050 --> 00:01:41,730 that he shall know justice and righteousness, freedom and security, 15 00:01:43,130 --> 00:01:47,630 and equal opportunity and an equal chance to do his best, 16 00:01:47,630 --> 00:01:51,920 not only in our own lands, but throughout the world. 17 00:02:58,480 --> 00:03:05,620 My fellow Americans, this war has reached a new critical phase. 18 00:03:07,780 --> 00:03:12,570 We have moved into the active and continuing battle with our enemies. 19 00:03:17,660 --> 00:03:21,820 We are pouring into the world wide conflict everything that we have: 20 00:03:22,740 --> 00:03:27,520 our young men and vast resources of our nation, 21 00:03:30,240 --> 00:03:34,560 Making airplanes, guns, ammunitions. 22 00:03:48,960 --> 00:03:54,040 The fall of 1943, nearly 2 years after the attack in Pearl Harbor, 23 00:03:54,040 --> 00:03:58,530 America's war machine is operating at maximum capacity. 24 00:04:12,260 --> 00:04:18,460 Running for 24 hours a day, American shipyards are turning out warships at an incredible pace. 25 00:04:18,960 --> 00:04:24,300 The American Pacific Fleet is now larger than the navies of all the warring powers. 26 00:04:27,390 --> 00:04:31,890 The American people have accomplished a miracle. 27 00:04:56,250 --> 00:04:59,040 Americans don't realize it, 28 00:05:02,620 --> 00:05:04,040 that we are losing the war. 29 00:05:07,520 --> 00:05:11,300 I know we have the machines to fight this war, 30 00:05:11,300 --> 00:05:16,420 but the question is: Do we have the guts? 31 00:05:21,150 --> 00:05:25,560 34-year old "Time Life" magazine correspondent Robert Sherrod 32 00:05:25,560 --> 00:05:30,170 is on a transport with over 1,000 Marines steaming west through the pacific ocean. 33 00:05:30,260 --> 00:05:35,520 Only 4 years earlier, he helped to establish the magazine's Washington bureau. 34 00:05:35,660 --> 00:05:42,420 Working in the capital, he developed a personal relationship with 35 00:05:42,420 --> 00:05:46,650 President Roosevelt. 36 00:05:46,890 --> 00:05:54,060 All during 1942, he witnessed the ferocity the Japanese military has had advanced through the Pacific. 37 00:05:54,060 --> 00:05:57,000 Now as he heads toward his next assignment, 38 00:05:57,000 --> 00:06:02,640 Sherrod worries that America's youth lacks the will to fight our enemies. 39 00:06:12,100 --> 00:06:17,150 This generation isn't mentally prepared to bridge the gap 40 00:06:17,160 --> 00:06:22,200 between the comforts of peace and horrors of war. 41 00:06:34,100 --> 00:06:37,460 In the 8th month following their victory at Guadalcanal, 42 00:06:37,460 --> 00:06:41,750 US forces have pushed the Japanese back in Solomon Islands and New Guinea. 43 00:06:41,750 --> 00:06:45,940 The time is now right to begin attacking the chain of remote island 44 00:06:45,940 --> 00:06:51,530 outposts that allow Japan to project its air power deep into the central pacific. 45 00:06:52,360 --> 00:06:58,310 Sherrod and the 2nd Marine division are steaming toward a atoll, called Tarawa, in the Gilbert Islands, 46 00:06:59,220 --> 00:07:03,060 captured from the British, just 3 days after the attack on Pearl Harbor. 47 00:07:03,060 --> 00:07:10,590 Tarawa is situated just 1 degree off the equator, and consist of 24 islands enclosing a central lagoon. 48 00:07:13,620 --> 00:07:17,150 The main Japanese base at Tarawa is the on the island of Betio, 49 00:07:17,150 --> 00:07:22,340 but had build a 4,000-foot long runway for the land based twin-engine bombers. 50 00:07:24,770 --> 00:07:31,220 Although grips strategic importance, Betio is as small as New York City's Central Park. 51 00:07:31,960 --> 00:07:39,060 Despite its size, the island is heavily fortified with 500 bunkers, lock houses, and other emplacements, 52 00:07:39,860 --> 00:07:46,040 and it is defended by almost 5,000 well-trained and well-equipped Japanese Imperial Marines. 53 00:07:52,290 --> 00:07:55,510 Tomorrow, I will take 2 fresh notebooks. 54 00:07:56,640 --> 00:08:00,690 If I am killed, I don't want the Japs to learn anything 55 00:08:00,690 --> 00:08:03,980 about us from the notes I've made during this convoy trip. 56 00:08:27,740 --> 00:08:30,490 I am told by the time this thing is over, 57 00:08:30,490 --> 00:08:37,990 our ships would fire 2,000 tons of shells, and the planes would drop 900 tons of bombs. 58 00:08:40,110 --> 00:08:45,880 The Admiral in charge of the shelling is confident we will bomb the place, cleaning off the map. 59 00:09:27,350 --> 00:09:30,220 All around me, the Marines are cheering in approval. 60 00:09:30,490 --> 00:09:35,010 It's a good feeling to watch our ships deal the merciless blows to the Japs. 61 00:09:50,020 --> 00:09:54,640 No mortal man could live through such destroying power. 62 00:10:00,820 --> 00:10:04,520 Betio and the neighboring islands are rocked by the bombardment. 63 00:10:04,520 --> 00:10:09,400 The first waves of Marines climb into their amphibious tracks, known as Am-tracks, 64 00:10:09,400 --> 00:10:11,320 and strike out for the shore. 65 00:10:23,090 --> 00:10:26,160 Sherrod is part of small band of reporters 66 00:10:26,160 --> 00:10:30,320 and Marine combat cameramen following flat bottom Higgins landing craft. 67 00:10:31,090 --> 00:10:37,620 These marine cameramen have been assigned to document the invasion using handheld eyemo cameras and color film. 68 00:10:37,890 --> 00:10:43,090 Since this will be the Marine's first amphibious landing against the heavily defended Japanese island, 69 00:10:43,090 --> 00:10:46,630 Marine Corps leaders want a record of what happens. 70 00:10:57,680 --> 00:11:03,790 The mood is optimistic, a young lieutenant asks me why I haven't written a book yet. 71 00:11:04,470 --> 00:11:08,310 I tell him:" I am just waiting for a real story." 72 00:11:36,360 --> 00:11:41,440 My buddy looks at me and says:" Well, Marb, just remember to use your head 73 00:11:41,450 --> 00:11:45,940 for something besides a helmet holder, and you will make it out of this war alive." 74 00:11:51,040 --> 00:11:57,090 20 year old Marine Nolen Marbrey, has just landed on the island of New Britain with the 1st Marine Division, 75 00:11:57,130 --> 00:12:01,630 on loan to the army as part of America's southwest pacific offensive. 76 00:12:02,140 --> 00:12:08,310 Over a year ago, Marbrey signed up with the Marine as way to get out of his hometown, Huntsville, Alabama. 77 00:12:08,310 --> 00:12:11,220 This is his first time in combat. 78 00:12:17,390 --> 00:12:21,550 I can hear the sound of artillery and small arms fired in the distance. 79 00:12:23,820 --> 00:12:26,210 I got a tight feeling in my stomach. 80 00:12:30,930 --> 00:12:40,370 Located over 1,000 miles southwest of Tarawa, New Britain is one of the most important length in Japan's chain of island outposts in the south pacific. 81 00:12:42,070 --> 00:12:48,460 Their sprawling air and naval base complex at Rabaul on the island's northeastern tip has 82 00:12:48,460 --> 00:12:54,220 been the nervy center for Japanese combat operations in that region since early 1942. 83 00:12:55,740 --> 00:13:01,450 The American plan is not to storm Rabaul, but to encircle it, 84 00:13:01,460 --> 00:13:04,970 cutting off supply lines, and rendering the stronghold militarily irrelevant. 85 00:13:07,180 --> 00:13:11,290 If the two-pronged Ally sweep through the central 86 00:13:11,290 --> 00:13:17,020 and southern pacific is to be successful, New Britain, like Tarawa, must be taken. 87 00:13:26,600 --> 00:13:31,880 It's a hell of a time to make new friends, but the lieutenant paired us up with the new foxhole buddies, 88 00:13:31,880 --> 00:13:34,990 he wants rookie like me with the experienced vets. 89 00:13:35,610 --> 00:13:41,390 My new partner is a guy named Les, he saw lots of action on Guadalcanal. 90 00:13:41,390 --> 00:13:42,210 That should come in handy. 91 00:13:55,830 --> 00:14:00,130 It's our first night on the island. It's hard to sleep. 92 00:14:01,090 --> 00:14:04,860 We hear rifle fires somewhere ahead of us. 93 00:14:05,940 --> 00:14:09,020 And the Japs making noises in the jungle, 94 00:14:09,460 --> 00:14:15,620 even yell out the perfect English: "Bob Hope go to hell. Fuck Babe Ruth." 95 00:14:17,280 --> 00:14:21,760 Try to piss us off, hope we fire at them and give away our positions. 96 00:14:26,980 --> 00:14:31,350 Les tells me, if I see a Jap, to use my knife, 97 00:14:31,580 --> 00:14:33,100 and go for the throat. 98 00:14:44,310 --> 00:14:48,450 We keep pushing forward, but theses grasses are so thick and barely go anywhere. 99 00:14:54,590 --> 00:15:01,100 Rookie Marine Nolen Marbrey and his veteran comrade Les trudge deep into the jungle of New Britain. 100 00:15:01,450 --> 00:15:05,620 Marbrey has survived his first several nights on the enemy held island. 101 00:15:05,810 --> 00:15:08,890 He and his platoon are now setting out on their mission. 102 00:15:09,100 --> 00:15:16,520 The objective is to secure a nearby hilltop where Japanese observers are calling down artillery on the surrounding area. 103 00:15:20,040 --> 00:15:25,030 We are falling behind the tanks, and they blast our path forward with round after round of shells. 104 00:15:25,630 --> 00:15:32,000 And Les tells me, just keep firing. Don't matter if you don't hit anything, just keep firing and keep moving. 105 00:15:49,950 --> 00:15:52,610 But as the tanks move deeper into the jungle, 106 00:15:52,610 --> 00:15:57,750 they get bog down in New Britain's dense undergrowth and muddy streams. 107 00:16:00,600 --> 00:16:04,800 The men will have to face the enemy without the protection of their armor. 108 00:16:18,710 --> 00:16:23,420 We are running into bunch of 7th Marines heading into the opposite way. 109 00:16:24,410 --> 00:16:26,000 Man, they look beat. 110 00:16:31,710 --> 00:16:35,870 One of them looks at me and says:" Good luck..." 111 00:17:10,330 --> 00:17:14,800 As we get closer in, I can see there are no Higgins boats on the beaches. 112 00:17:17,500 --> 00:17:18,400 Something is not right. 113 00:17:20,430 --> 00:17:22,180 Should be hundreds of them by now. 114 00:17:24,920 --> 00:17:29,830 "Time Life" correspondent Robert Sherrod is on a landing craft with the 2nd Marine Regiment, 115 00:17:30,900 --> 00:17:35,000 headed toward the Island of Betio in Tarawa Atoll. 116 00:17:39,280 --> 00:17:44,960 An officer on another boat shouts the shelf around the island is too shallow for our Higgins boats. 117 00:17:49,120 --> 00:17:52,700 The Marine's old plan is based on a deadly miscalculation. 118 00:17:55,550 --> 00:18:02,080 The Higgins boats need 4 feet to clear the coral reef surrounding the island, but the tide is only 3 feed deep. 119 00:18:02,350 --> 00:18:08,510 The boats are getting stuck, forcing the Marines to jump into the surf and wade hundreds of yards to shore, 120 00:18:08,510 --> 00:18:10,800 but the Japanese are waiting for them. 121 00:18:30,300 --> 00:18:36,770 Only lightly armored Am-tracks which can crawl up and over the coral are able to make it pass the reef. 122 00:18:38,990 --> 00:18:44,610 Sherrod transfers from a Higgins boat to an Am-track and moves towards the beach. 123 00:18:46,560 --> 00:18:53,970 Our Am-track squad yells he can't get any closer. He can't risk losing the craft. Too many of them are getting hit already. 124 00:18:54,670 --> 00:18:57,530 We have to jump off, 700 yards from shore. 125 00:19:02,370 --> 00:19:05,050 I look around, and I see fear. 126 00:19:11,560 --> 00:19:19,140 Machine gun fires are getting thicker, mortars wind overhead targeting the Higgins boats still struggling out on the reef. 127 00:19:19,900 --> 00:19:21,780 A Jap shell makes a direct hit, 128 00:19:24,100 --> 00:19:27,060 and parts of the boat fly in all directions. 129 00:19:28,150 --> 00:19:35,210 Bullets hit six inches to my left, six inches to my right, and I swear I can reach out and touch a hundred of them. 130 00:19:37,510 --> 00:19:43,140 Using a peer as cover, Sherrod makes it to the beach, and ducks behind the sea wall. 131 00:19:57,090 --> 00:20:00,860 Anyone going over that wall is raped by machine guns and snipers. 132 00:20:02,620 --> 00:20:04,750 Men are getting killed and wounded every minute. 133 00:20:11,740 --> 00:20:15,740 Casualties are piling up on the beach, then there is nowhere to put them. 134 00:20:17,010 --> 00:20:22,030 I have been ashore less than an hour, and already I can smell the death. 135 00:20:41,710 --> 00:20:48,840 With the death toll rising rapidly, the ranking officer in charge of the assault calls off further landings. 136 00:20:49,640 --> 00:20:55,920 He then sends an urgent message to command, stating that he will have to send in the reserve troops the next day. 137 00:20:56,210 --> 00:21:00,810 He ends with the ominous words: "Issue, in doubt." 138 00:21:03,880 --> 00:21:09,820 The marines already on shore will have to hold their small strips of sand through the night. 139 00:21:12,790 --> 00:21:17,910 My knee shake, my whole body trembles like jelly, 140 00:21:19,750 --> 00:21:23,930 and I am quite certain, that this will be my last night on earth. 141 00:21:26,450 --> 00:21:31,510 Corporal says he needs 4 guys to go with him on a patrol to see what the Japs are up to. 142 00:21:36,930 --> 00:21:43,550 Private Nolen Marbrey and the 5th Regiment of the 1st Marine Division have been in the jungles of New Britain for over 1 week. 143 00:21:45,640 --> 00:21:52,490 They've secured their objective, a hilltop position from which Japanese forces were directing artillery fire. 144 00:21:52,600 --> 00:21:57,840 But they know the enemy has taken up defensive positions somewhere in the jungle ahead. 145 00:21:58,400 --> 00:22:02,160 Marbrey's platoon leader wants to send a patrol out to find them. 146 00:22:03,400 --> 00:22:05,620 Corporal calls out two guys who are on the canal. 147 00:22:06,050 --> 00:22:14,640 A guy named luck, my buddy Les, ain't calls my name. This other rookie Benson actually volunteers. 148 00:22:15,730 --> 00:22:18,170 Hell, I am not even in the same classes with those guys. 149 00:22:27,410 --> 00:22:31,470 The five-man patrol descends the hill, probing for the enemy. 150 00:22:42,240 --> 00:22:47,010 But after several hours, they realized they have become hopelessly disoriented. 151 00:22:51,510 --> 00:22:53,450 Les finally mutters what we are all thinking. 152 00:22:56,180 --> 00:22:57,380 We are lost. 153 00:23:05,400 --> 00:23:07,180 The corporal was shot! 154 00:23:12,310 --> 00:23:16,280 I spot the Jap bastard about 100 yards away, and open fire. 155 00:23:17,240 --> 00:23:19,360 He topples to the ground. 156 00:23:30,030 --> 00:23:35,170 Lucky fires. Rounds start running, screaming over his shoulders, for us, do the same. 157 00:23:35,430 --> 00:23:37,530 Japs are coming from everywhere. 158 00:23:38,530 --> 00:23:41,370 Benson gets hit, he is down, he is yelling. 159 00:23:43,320 --> 00:23:44,670 But there is no time to stop. 160 00:23:52,540 --> 00:23:54,050 I turn and look for Lucky. 161 00:23:57,040 --> 00:23:59,730 But he stopped a bullet. He's dead. 162 00:24:00,630 --> 00:24:01,700 There is nothing we can do. 163 00:24:03,880 --> 00:24:08,420 Les and I duck behind a tree, and load up for our last stand. 164 00:24:08,930 --> 00:24:11,750 The sound of firing and artillery are getting launder. 165 00:24:13,650 --> 00:24:18,340 My head is starting to feel weary, my body can't stop shaking. 166 00:24:21,510 --> 00:24:25,710 The Japs are fading back into the jungle. Why? 167 00:24:35,590 --> 00:24:39,490 You can't believe it, a battalion of Marines is right behind us. 168 00:24:45,010 --> 00:24:46,880 It must be the 7th. 169 00:24:52,940 --> 00:24:56,980 Les and I hug each other, and the tears start flowing. 170 00:25:01,250 --> 00:25:07,550 When we get back to K company, we are greeted by the slaps on the back, calls of "enjoy your vacation". 171 00:25:08,800 --> 00:25:12,450 But they get real quiet, when we told them about Ray Benson and Lucky. 172 00:25:14,330 --> 00:25:16,760 After 2 long weeks in the jungle, 173 00:25:16,760 --> 00:25:23,670 Marbrey and 5th Marine Regiment are ordered back to the beaches, and told their mission on New Britain is over. 174 00:26:30,670 --> 00:26:32,910 The coral flats are a sad site. 175 00:26:34,190 --> 00:26:35,900 The smell of death. 176 00:26:37,820 --> 00:26:43,500 That sickly sweat odor of decaying human flesh ... is impressive. 177 00:26:51,710 --> 00:26:57,410 "Time Life" correspondent Robert Sherrod surveys the blood-soaked beaches 178 00:26:57,410 --> 00:27:01,420 of Betio in the Tarawa Atoll in the central pacific. 179 00:27:03,510 --> 00:27:10,530 Less than 24 hours ago, the Marines launches an amphibious assault on a heavily defended Japanese garrison. 180 00:27:11,120 --> 00:27:17,020 Of the 5,000 Marines to hit the beaches, 1,500 are now dead or wounded. 181 00:27:21,320 --> 00:27:25,980 I wish this could be seen by all those silken-voiced radio announcers back in the States. 182 00:27:27,540 --> 00:27:29,470 This, is what war really is. 183 00:27:32,030 --> 00:27:34,000 Death. 184 00:27:39,740 --> 00:27:47,060 All three assault battalions from yesterday are groggy, if not completely knocked out. Our organizations have been ripped off pieces. 185 00:27:47,960 --> 00:27:50,000 They have to have more men, and fast. 186 00:27:55,900 --> 00:28:00,900 Although they have held the beach throughout the night, Marines there are in dire straits. 187 00:28:01,190 --> 00:28:05,840 They need the reserve forces, stationed on the ships 2 miles offshore. 188 00:28:17,020 --> 00:28:25,110 Command makes a difficult decision: commit the floating reserve force in attempt to land using Higgins boats. 189 00:28:25,540 --> 00:28:33,040 knowing full well that, like the day before, they might not be able to clear the coral reef that rings the island. 190 00:28:45,130 --> 00:28:50,850 Thousands of lives, if not the fate of the entire operation are on the line. 191 00:29:03,170 --> 00:29:05,990 This is far worse than it was yesterday. 192 00:29:14,310 --> 00:29:21,580 Combat reporter Robert Sherrod is pinned on the beach of Betio as the 2nd day of the American invasion begins. 193 00:29:22,130 --> 00:29:28,570 Desperate to land more troops on the beaches, the core commander has decided to send in reinforcements. 194 00:29:29,030 --> 00:29:34,740 Even though the landing boats may not be able to make it though the coral reef hundreds of yards off shore. 195 00:29:43,160 --> 00:29:44,800 That's hard to stomach. 196 00:29:45,920 --> 00:29:48,160 Here I am, scribbling notes on my pad, 197 00:29:49,770 --> 00:29:51,640 where men are being killed around me. 198 00:30:08,780 --> 00:30:15,820 Mortars blast boats stuck on the reef, the men have to wade to shore, right into the teeth of Jap machine guns. 199 00:30:50,530 --> 00:30:53,270 Within minutes, I count at least 100 dead Marines. 200 00:31:09,690 --> 00:31:11,190 But they just keep coming. 201 00:31:18,540 --> 00:31:21,140 Although the initial waves sustain staggering casualties, 202 00:31:21,140 --> 00:31:28,660 by late afternoon, the Marines finally have the numbers to begin overwhelming the Japanese defenses. 203 00:31:31,160 --> 00:31:36,560 Marines on the beach, push over the seawall, 204 00:31:36,560 --> 00:31:42,550 and begin to knock out the Japanese firing positions, paving the ways for more reinforcements, armors, and artillery to land on the beach. 205 00:31:44,300 --> 00:31:48,310 We are winning, but we still have to dig out every last Jap from every last pillbox, 206 00:31:48,310 --> 00:31:50,470 and that will cost us a lot of marines. 207 00:31:54,100 --> 00:31:57,140 The Jap's only chance now is our men being soft. 208 00:31:58,050 --> 00:31:59,880 that we'll grow sick of our losses. 209 00:32:02,850 --> 00:32:08,710 This I am certain, these Marines are not too soft to fight. 210 00:32:30,410 --> 00:32:34,010 I want to report on the drama of men lock into the death struggle. 211 00:32:34,590 --> 00:32:38,980 The life and stake, not this. 212 00:32:43,770 --> 00:32:48,060 "International News Service" correspondent, Richard Tregaskis is in Sicily. 213 00:32:48,060 --> 00:32:52,210 Just over a year ago, he completed his first combat reporting assignment, 214 00:32:52,210 --> 00:32:54,900 covering the heroine battle on Guadalcanal. 215 00:32:55,330 --> 00:32:58,980 Since then, he has been obsessed with returning to the front. 216 00:32:59,510 --> 00:33:06,210 He arrived in Sicily weeks after a tremendous Allied invasion force landed on the island's southern coast. 217 00:33:06,720 --> 00:33:09,180 but before he can reach the front, 218 00:33:09,180 --> 00:33:15,670 the Allies chase the Germans and Italian forces north to Messina, where they cross the strait and escape into Italy. 219 00:33:16,070 --> 00:33:22,100 Now, the Germans are dug into Italy's mountainous terrain, awaiting the Ally's arrival. 220 00:33:22,810 --> 00:33:27,510 This morning, the radio announces the Ally troops have landed on the southern tip of Italy. 221 00:33:28,210 --> 00:33:33,460 This machine may be the hottest in the history of the world, and I damn well better be a part of it. 222 00:33:34,620 --> 00:33:38,420 For me, the lure at the front is like an opium. 223 00:33:38,650 --> 00:33:41,610 It's just something about being in the middle of the battle, 224 00:33:43,060 --> 00:33:44,260 ,alive. 225 00:33:45,620 --> 00:33:47,870 yet inches from the death. 226 00:33:48,060 --> 00:33:52,220 The thought of the danger itself stirs the imagination. 227 00:33:54,580 --> 00:34:01,940 On September 3rd, 1943, the British 8th Army cross the Strait of Messina, and lands at Calabria. 228 00:34:02,240 --> 00:34:06,220 Five days later, Italy officially surrenders to the Allies. 229 00:34:06,600 --> 00:34:11,020 But when the US 5th Army cruises into the Bay of Salerno 230 00:34:11,020 --> 00:34:14,430 on September 9th to establish a beach head in central Italy, 231 00:34:14,430 --> 00:34:17,440 the Germans put up an unexpectedly strong defense. 232 00:34:17,650 --> 00:34:22,090 Hitler has no intention of giving up Italy without a fight. 233 00:34:22,500 --> 00:34:29,230 His reinforced armies starts setting up strategic defensive positions in the mountains throughout central Italy. 234 00:34:31,650 --> 00:34:37,170 As the American troops push north, toward Naples, Tregaskis follows closely behind. 235 00:34:38,270 --> 00:34:45,810 I enter a small village. There is destruction everywhere from artillery fire and German demolition crews. 236 00:34:46,070 --> 00:34:50,850 The Germans blew up whole buildings in an effort to hold up the Allies progress. 237 00:34:52,870 --> 00:34:55,440 Town's people pick bodies out of the wreckage. 238 00:34:56,360 --> 00:35:02,820 A man in broken English tells me the Nazis are "animali tutti", all animals. 239 00:35:06,530 --> 00:35:12,730 For the first time in a long while, I have a bang up eye-witnessed story of an action in a crucial section of the front. 240 00:35:16,380 --> 00:35:19,220 After pursuing the front for weeks, 241 00:35:19,220 --> 00:35:24,680 combat reporter Richard Tregaskis joins the action near the Volturno River, northeast of Naples. 242 00:35:24,690 --> 00:35:30,440 There, Allies para-troopers and mortar men 243 00:35:30,440 --> 00:35:33,890 are trying to dislodge German artillery spotter from mountain cave 244 00:35:36,750 --> 00:35:39,630 Our every mortars are giving the Germans help. 245 00:35:42,630 --> 00:35:47,860 A major turns to be and says: "It's great fun as long as we are dishing it out and not taking it." 246 00:35:52,390 --> 00:35:54,860 I hear the scream of something coming. 247 00:36:05,170 --> 00:36:07,080 Everything is all wrong. 248 00:36:08,220 --> 00:36:09,260 Strange. 249 00:36:09,510 --> 00:36:11,680 My helmet is a few feet away. 250 00:36:12,990 --> 00:36:15,050 I can see men running in half crouch. 251 00:36:15,410 --> 00:36:19,820 I try to shout, but strange sounds come out my mouth. 252 00:36:20,820 --> 00:36:23,830 I know what I want to say, but I can't say it. 253 00:36:24,770 --> 00:36:26,530 Everything sounds unreal. 254 00:36:27,630 --> 00:36:28,750 Like a movie, 255 00:36:29,120 --> 00:36:30,770 with a feeble sound track. 256 00:36:31,690 --> 00:36:39,390 A medics gets to a hull next to me. I watch his morphine needle slide in. Then, he's gone. 257 00:37:03,160 --> 00:37:05,970 I try to dictate a story about being wounded, 258 00:37:05,970 --> 00:37:12,540 but the effort of concentration is so great that after 4 attempts, I give up the idea. 259 00:37:13,050 --> 00:37:16,770 One month after getting hit by a German mortar round, 260 00:37:16,770 --> 00:37:20,910 Richard Tregaskis is in an evacuation hospital near Naples. 261 00:37:21,090 --> 00:37:24,390 Shrapnel and bone fragments have penetrated his brain, 262 00:37:24,390 --> 00:37:28,510 affecting his speech, his motor skills, and his thought processes. 263 00:37:33,860 --> 00:37:37,150 How can I be a writer with a self-expressive power of an idiot. 264 00:37:38,590 --> 00:37:41,300 A journalist who can't talk, write, or read. 265 00:37:42,660 --> 00:37:50,810 There are just no shortcuts to healing, so I have to be patient, not my long suit. 266 00:37:51,350 --> 00:37:53,590 What occurs to me is just like this war. 267 00:37:55,470 --> 00:38:03,130 It will take time, determination and persistence to restore this mutilated world of ours, to a semblance of order. 268 00:38:57,490 --> 00:39:02,940 The fire from a burning pile of rubble has reached six Jap bodies. 269 00:39:03,900 --> 00:39:08,750 They sizzle and pop as the flame consumes the flesh and gases 270 00:39:13,850 --> 00:39:18,540 After 76 hours of brutal close quarters combat, 271 00:39:18,540 --> 00:39:22,050 correspondent Robert Sherrod is surveying the aftermath on what, only days before, 272 00:39:22,050 --> 00:39:27,370 was one of Japan most formidable garrisons in the central pacific. 273 00:39:30,940 --> 00:39:36,240 Nearly each of the Japanese imperial marines has been killed in action, 274 00:39:36,240 --> 00:39:38,790 and most of those who were not committed suicide. 275 00:39:41,750 --> 00:39:45,980 The island, which is less than one square mile, 276 00:39:45,980 --> 00:39:50,480 is littered with the bodies of over 6,000 American and Japanese troops. 277 00:39:53,800 --> 00:39:56,590 Bodies are scattered around the food dump. 278 00:40:01,390 --> 00:40:02,950 They're blown to a hundred pieces. 279 00:40:04,770 --> 00:40:05,850 A hand here, 280 00:40:07,540 --> 00:40:08,060 a head there, 281 00:40:11,130 --> 00:40:14,170 a hobnailed foot farther away. 282 00:40:35,870 --> 00:40:39,970 While Sherrod continues to cover the action for another four days, 283 00:40:39,970 --> 00:40:45,780 the marine combat cameramen who also came ashore document the aftermath. 284 00:40:47,950 --> 00:40:53,730 This is footage of marine sergeant Norman Hatch, the ranking combat cameraman on Tarawa. 285 00:40:55,150 --> 00:41:04,180 In all, Hatch and his crew of motion picture cameramen shoot 37,000 feet of film, 286 00:41:04,180 --> 00:41:08,690 vivid, moving images of the invasion, the combat, and the carnage. 287 00:41:27,130 --> 00:41:30,740 World news today, brought to you by "Continental... 288 00:41:30,740 --> 00:41:35,720 Within the past hour, our army and navy announced new air blows against the Japs in the north and south... 289 00:41:36,930 --> 00:41:39,720 But the base will be of no use, unless we can get the supplies to it... 290 00:41:39,720 --> 00:41:42,360 In the months following the Tarawa battle, 291 00:41:42,360 --> 00:41:48,590 final casualty reports of almost 1,000 Marines killed and more than 2,000 wounded, 292 00:41:48,590 --> 00:41:54,960 prompt Americans to ask why so many had to die invading 293 00:41:54,960 --> 00:41:57,500 such a tiny atoll when it could have been bombed into oblivion. 294 00:41:58,950 --> 00:42:01,060 The implications of all this are enormous. 295 00:42:01,320 --> 00:42:04,680 At the same time, the Marines edit the footage shot by Norman Hatch and his team, 296 00:42:04,680 --> 00:42:08,800 turning it into a documentary film. 297 00:42:10,660 --> 00:42:16,380 But the pictures are far too graphic to meet the standards set by Hollywood producers and distributors. 298 00:42:17,110 --> 00:42:20,520 Only president Roosevelt can grant permission for its release. 299 00:42:21,450 --> 00:42:26,340 To help him make a decision, the President seeks counsel from the only man 300 00:42:26,340 --> 00:42:29,890 who was there that he personally knows and trusts, Robert Sherrod. 301 00:42:30,780 --> 00:42:32,820 I tell the President the truth. 302 00:42:33,740 --> 00:42:37,230 Our soldiers on the front want people back home to know 303 00:42:37,230 --> 00:42:40,110 that they don't knock the hell out of them every day of every battle. 304 00:42:40,920 --> 00:42:45,590 They want people to understand that war is a horrible, nasty business. 305 00:42:48,110 --> 00:42:51,660 And to say otherwise is to do a disservice to those who died. 306 00:42:55,610 --> 00:42:57,860 These are the men of the 2nd Marine division. 307 00:42:57,960 --> 00:43:03,300 At Sherrod's prompting, Roosevelt agrees to release the film uncensored. 308 00:43:09,770 --> 00:43:14,840 Suddenly we're met by heavy machine gun and mortar fire. Takes a heavy toll of our boats and men. 309 00:43:15,680 --> 00:43:16,790 It doesn't stop us. 310 00:43:16,790 --> 00:43:23,660 "With the Marines at Tarawa" wins the Academy Award for best documentary short subject in 1945. 311 00:43:25,770 --> 00:43:33,270 The film also boosts the sales of war bonds and galvanizes the public support for the American war effort. 312 00:43:36,640 --> 00:43:41,660 I have a suspicion that when this war does end, 313 00:43:41,660 --> 00:43:48,560 we shall not be in a very celebrating mood, a very celebrating frame of mind. 314 00:43:52,190 --> 00:43:58,440 I think that our main emotion will be one of grim determination 315 00:44:00,170 --> 00:44:04,130 that this shall not happen again. 31747

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