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Friday, November 06, 2009
Dr. Paul  Kengor :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Forgotten Battle of World War II: Remembering the Aleutian Campaign
by Dr. Paul Kengor
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Every Veterans Day presents an opportunity to commemorate those who served in some faraway place long ago, many of whom paid that ultimate sacrifice. World War II offers its share of remembrances: Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941; Normandy, June 6, 1944; the Battle of the Bulge, December 16, 1944; to name a few.

Sadly, however, one series of battles continues to be ignored. On June 3, 1942, the Japanese bombed Dutch Harbor, located at the Aleutian Islands, west of the Alaskan peninsula. Three days later, they landed on the islands of Kiska and Attu, culminating in the only battles of the war fought in North America. Many of the men there went through hell.

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Remarkably, the battle is barely known.

One person who has not forgotten is renowned World War II historian, Donald Goldstein. Goldstein, a retired University of Pittsburgh professor, authored one of the only books on the campaign, called the “Williwaw War,” named for the freezing, high-velocity winds flowing from Siberia and the Bering Sea, which made service in the Aleutians a constant misery.

"It was strategically very important who controlled those islands," says Goldstein. The Americans stationed there "kept the Japanese from the West Coast and from invading the U.S. mainland.... From a strategic point of view, you can't underestimate the situation there. Look at a map! The Aleutians aren't very far from Seattle."

In the Aleutians, American troops battled not only the Japanese, but debilitating weather and boredom. To combat the fierce and unpredictable williwaws, soldiers leaned forward as they walked, before falling on their faces as the winds abruptly ended. They battled blinding, waste-deep snow, dense fog, sleet that felt like a sandblaster.

To escape the climate, troops spent hours inside. The boredom was so bad that some drank anything they could find. There were stories of casualties from "torpedo juice." Morale was awful.

"War is boredom mixed with moments of stark terror," says Goldstein. "You sit and wait. And then all at once it comes."

And when it came to the Aleutians, it came with ferocity. Shortly after bombing Dutch Harbor, the Japanese took Attu and Kiska. Thirteen months later, in August 1943, American forces sought to drive them out. Kiska was easy, since Japanese forces had bailed out two weeks earlier. Attu, however, was another story.

Attu was taken back only after a horrible fight. Japan fought to the last man. Facing defeat, 500 Japanese soldiers committed suicide with their own grenades. Whereas Dutch Harbor witnessed fewer than 100 casualties, U.S. burial patrols at Attu counted 2,351 Japanese bodies. Total U.S. casualties were 3,829—549 killed. Some believe it was the bloodiest battle of World War II. Continued...

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About The Author
Dr. Paul Kengor, author of spiritual biographies of Ronald Reagan and George W. Bush, has just published God and Hillary Clinton and The Judge: William P. Clark, Ronald Reagan's Top Hand. He is a professor of political science and executive director of the Center for Vision & Values at Grove City College.

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father served w 2 bronz stars in aleutia
My father RICHARD WAYNE MILBRAD served 201 Infantry and won two Bronz Stars during Aleutians Campaign. Dischanged July 45, he shot himself in 1959. His nickname was "Bud". I would appreciate hearing from anyone who knew him or more info about the 201st. I was 2 years old when he died. Thanks Skip

Ignored?
I have to disagree with this author about the history of the Aleutians being ignored.

If history paid the most homage to battlefields where the fighting conditions were the worst, then the author would have a point. The conditions under which the fighting took place were probably the some of the worst possible in the Aleutians. But history simply looks less at the Aleutians because those who fought there were fewer in number than most any other better known battle site, and the actual number of combat casualties was even fewer still.

Pearl Harbor, D-Day, and the Battle of the Bulge, the three examples given by Dr. Kengor involved both pivotal moments of the war and many more combat casualties in the fighting.

But the Aleutians haven't been ignored at all. Last year I saw a one hour television
documentary about the Aleutian Campaign. There are at least fifteen different books for sale on Amazon.com specifically about the various aspects of that campaign, and there are probably many more books available in libraries. Anyone who has spent any amount of time reading about the WWII knows there are numerous references to the Aleutian campaign, and, as evident in this thread, during the war, much was commonly known among the people about it.







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