SILK CHUTES AND HARD FIGHTING: US. Marine Corps
Parachute Units in World War II
by Lieutenant Colonel Jon T. Hoffman (USMCR)
Tasimboko
As August progressed it became clear that the
Japanese were focusing their effort in the Solomons on regaining the
vital airfield on Guadalcanal. The enemy poured fresh troops onto the
island via the "Tokyo Express," a shuttle of ships and barges coming
down the "the Slot" each night. The 1st Marines destroyed the newly
landed Ichiki Detachment along the Tenaru River on 21 August, but
the understrength Marine division had too few troops to secure the
entire perimeter. To bolster his force, General Vandegrift brought the
raiders over from Tulagi at the end of August and switched the
parachutists a few days later. The two battalions went into reserve in a
coconut grove near Lunga Point. During this period Major Miller took ill
and went into the field hospital, as did other parachutists. The
shrinking battalion, temporarily commanded by a captain and down to less
than 300 effectives, was so depleted in numbers and senior leadership
that Vandegrift decided to attach them to Edson's 1st Raider Battalion.
The combined unit roughly equalled the size of a standard infantry
battalion, though it still lacked the heavy firepower.
Following the arrival of the first aviation
reinforcements on 20 August, the division made use of its daytime
control of the skies to launch a number of seaborne operations. Near the
end of the month, a battalion of the 5th Marines conducted an amphibious
spoiling attack on Japanese forces to the west of the perimeter, but
inflicted little damage due to a lack of aggressive leadership. Two
companies of raiders found no enemy after scouring Savo Island on 4
September, while a mixup in communications scrubbed a similar foray
scheduled the next day for Cape Esperance. By 6 September, Japanese
naval activity and native scouting reports indicated that the enemy was
concentrating fresh troops near the village of Tasimboko, located on the
coast several miles east of the Marine lines.
Marine Corps Airborne Doctrine
On 15 May 1940 the Commandant, Major General Thomas
Holcomb, wrote the Chief of Naval Operations to seek the help of his
naval attaches in gathering information on foreign parachute programs.
He noted that he was "intensely interested" in the subject. The Berlin
attache responded the following month with a lead on how to obtain
newsreels and an educational film on the German paratroopers. The
London attache eventually provided additional information on the Germans
and on Britain's fledgling parachute program launched in June 1940.
The Commandant's own intelligence section had already
compiled available material on the German and Soviet forces. The report
noted the distinction between parachutists and air infantry, the latter
consisting of specially organized units trained and equipped to move by
transport aircraft. The paratroopers acted as the advance guard for the
air infantry by seizing the airfields upon which the transports would
land. The report also detailed the different methods that the Germans
and Soviets used to train their respective forces. German paratrooper
recruits went through an intensive ground school prior to making the six
jumps required to achieve membership in a unit. The Soviet program
featured the use of towers for practice jumps prior to actual training
with a plane. When staff officers at Headquarters first looked at
parachute forces in the aftermath of Eben Emael, they specifically
considered the functions such a unit would perform. Their ideas were
generally similar: paratroopers would be valuable for raids,
reconnaissance, the seizure of airfields, aerial envelopment of the
enemy's rear area, and the occupation of key terrain in advance of the
main force. Several officers specifically tied the latter two missions
to the conduct of amphibious operations.
Although the Corps' amphibious doctrine had existed
on paper for several years, the Fleet Marine Force was having a
difficult time turning those ideas into reality. During annual
exercises, a lack of decent landing craft and transports had prevented
the rapid buildup ashore of combat power, something the amphibious force
had to do if it hoped to defeat counterattacks against its beachhead.
Brigadier General Holland M. Smith, commander of the 1st Marine Brigade,
first tried to solve this problem during Fleet Exercise 6 in February
1940. A key part of his plan was the night landing of one company three
hours prior to the main amphibious assault. This company, embarked in a
fast destroyer transport, would go ashore by rubber boat, seize key
terrain overlooking the proposed beachhead, and then protect the rest of
the force as it landed and got itself organized. This idea eventually
gave birth to the 1st Marine Raider Battalion. In the spring of 1940,
it was obvious to a number of Marine officers, at Headquarters and in
the PMF, that parachutists now constituted an ideal alternative for
speedily seizing a surprise lodgement on an enemy coast. Smith
explicitly would advocate that new wrinkle to doctrine the following
year.
The Marine Corps did not develop formal airborne
doctrine until late 1942. It came in the form of a 12-page manual
titled Parachute and Air Troops. Its authors believed that
airborne forces could constitute "a paralyzing application of power in
the initial phase of a landing attack." Secondarily, parachute troops
could seize "critical points," such as airfields or bridges, or they
could operate behind enemy lines in small groups to gather intelligence
or conduct sabotage operations. The doctrine noted the limitations of
airborne assault and emphasized that these forces could only seize small
objectives and hold them for a short time pending linkup with seaborne
or overland echelons. The manual envisioned the formation of an air
brigade composed of one regiment each of paratroops and air infantry,
the type of force originally sought by Holland Smith.
The doctrinal publication did not provide much detail
on tactics, but the parachutists worked out techniques in combination
with Marine transport pilots. The standard of operations called for a
terrain-hugging approach flight at altitudes as low as 50 feet, with a
last-minute ascent to several hundred feet, at which point the jumpers
exited the aircraft. All leaders were thoroughly briefed beforehand with
maps, aerial photos, and a sandtable mockup of the objective, so that
they could quickly get organized and oriented once they hit the ground.
When they jumped, the paratroopers carried the collapsible Johnson
weapons or Reisings, along with basic individual items such as a belt,
knife, canteens, and ammunition. Cargo parachutes delivered heavier
weapons and supplies.
From early in the life of the program, planners
realized that a lack of training facilities and planes hampered the
ability of the Corps to field an adequate airborne force. They thus
began looking at using parachutists for secondary missions. In April
1941 the Commandant directed that parachute units conduct training in
rubber boat operations, reconnaissance, demolitions, and other subjects
to enable them to conduct special missions requiring only small forces
or not necessarily involving airborne insertion. On New Caledonia in
1943, the 1st Parachute Regiment devoted much of its training time to
such skills. In many respects the Marine Corps had molded the
parachutists and raiders into carbon copies of each other, with the
parachutists' unique ability to enter battle being the only significant
difference between the two special units.
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Edson and Lieutenant Colonel Gerald C. Thomas, the
division operations officer, hatched a plan to raid this eastern
terminus of the Tokyo Express on 8 September. Intelligence initially
placed two or three hundred Japanese at Tasimboko with their defenses
located west of the village and facing toward Henderson Field. Edson
planned to land to the east of the village and attack them from the
rear. The available shipping consisted of two destroyer transports
(APDs) and two small, converted tuna boats, so the raider commander
divided his force into two waves. The raider rifle companies would
embark on the evening of 7 September and land just prior to dawn, then
the tiny fleet would shuttle back to the perimeter to pick up the
weapons company and the parachutists. Since the APDs were needed for
other missions, the Marine force would have to complete its work and
reembark the same day. (The Navy had already lost three of the original
six APDs in the Guadalcanal campaign.)
On the evening of 7 September, native scouts brought
news that the enemy force at Tasimboko had swelled to several thousand.
Division planners discounted these reports, believing that they were
greatly exaggerated or referred to remnants of previously defeated
formations. When the raiders landed at 0520 on the 8th, they immediately
realized that the natives had provided accurate information. Not far
from the beach, Marines discovered endless rows of neatly placed life
preservers, a large number of foxholes, and several unattended 37mm
antitank guns. Luckily for Edson's outfit, Major General Kiyotake
Kawaguchi and his brigade of more than 3,000 men already had departed
into the interior. Only a rear guard of 300 soldiers remained behind to
secure the Japanese base at Tasimboko, but even that small force was
nearly as large as the first wave of raiders.
Company D of the raiders (little more than a platoon
in strength) remained at the landing beach as rear security while the
other companies moved west toward Tasimboko. The raiders soon ran into
stubborn resistance, with the Japanese firing artillery over open sights
directly at the advancing Marines. Edson sent one company wide to the
left to flank the defenders. As the action developed, the APDs Manley
and McKean returned to Kukum Beach at 0755 and the Parachute Battalion
(less Company C) debarked within 25 minutes. The 208 parachutists joined
Company D ashore by 1130 and went into defensive positions adjacent to
them. Edson, fearing that he might be moving into a Japanese trap,
already had radioed division twice and asked for reinforcements, to
include another landing to the west of Tasimboko in what was now the
enemy rear. In reply, division ordered the raiders and parachutists to
withdraw. Edson persisted, however, and Japanese resistance melted away
about noon. The raider assault echelon entered the village and
discovered a stockpile of food, ammunition, and weapons ranging up to
75mm artillery pieces. The raider and parachute rear guard closed up on
the main force and the Marines set about destroying the enemy supply
base. Three hours later the combined unit began to reembark and all were
back in the division perimeter by nightfall.
The raid was a minor tactical victory with major
operational impact on the Guadalcanal campaign. At a cost of two killed
and six wounded, the Marines had killed 27 Japanese. The enemy suffered
more grievously in terms of lost firepower. logistics, and
communication. Intelligence gathered at the scene also revealed some
details about the coming Japanese offensive. These latter facts would
allow the 1st Marine Division to fight off one of the most serious
challenges to its tenuous hold on Henderson Field.
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