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Before Guadalcanal the enemy advanced at his pleasure
after Guadalcanal he retreated at ours. With those words
by Admiral Bull Halsey, we begin a special four-part series
about North Dakotas role in Americas first offensive action
in World War II.
In 1941, Imperial Japans war was limited to the Asian mainland,
but on December 7th, they left their shores and flew east and south to
simultaneously attack the Philippines, Wake, Guam, Hong Kong, the Malay
Peninsula and . . . Pearl Harbor.
Preoccupied with the German threat, the United States was poorly prepared
for war in the South Pacific. But, Japans rapid expansion demanded
an immediate response. First and foremost, the supply lines between the
U.S. and Australia had to be protected. New Zealand, New Guinea, and a
host of other islands were also at stake, so the Allies devised a plan
in which American troops would attack separately from a different
direction to trap Japan in a giant pincer.
The campaign in the South Pacific differed from previous wars, because
island warfare demanded equal participation of air, land, and sea forces.
In the first six months alone, the number of surface-to-surface naval
battles in the South Pacific outnumbered the naval battles fought by the
all the British Navy battles in World War I. In fact, so many ships were
sunk in the strait between Guadalcanal and Savo Island, it became known
as the Iron Bottom Sound.
The administration wanted to concentrate on Europe first and
was reluctant to divert manpower and equipment to the South Pacific. In
fact, American troops in the Pacific Theatre called it Operation
Shoestring. American citizens, on the other hand, were far more
focused on Japan than on Germany. They wanted revenge for Pearl Harbor.
The first American offensive against Japan took place on August 7th when
the 1st Marine Division landed on Guadalcanal. This island was the most
threatening of the enemy strongholds. It was the last one between the
Solomon Islands and Australia and was a must-have.
The Marine landing was unfortunately plagued by a lack of planning and
inexperience with island warfare. After a heavy artillery barrage, they
landed almost unopposed, but because their position was vulnerable, many
of their transports pulled away before the cargo was unloaded. Too late,
the Marines found themselves without adequate food, construction equipment
or barbed wire for defending their front-line positions.
They found an airstrip the Japanese had been building the Japanese
had abandoned it, leaving behind equipment, machinery and a large supply
of food, including many cases of canned crab. So, the Marines finished
the runway for themselves and named it Henderson Field.
In the following weeks, Japan tried again and again to take back the airstrip.
Attacking in ever increasing numbers, Japanese temporarily dislodged the
U.S. in mid-September, but the Marines managed to stop the assault on
a knoll they called Bloody Ridge.
By mid-October, the two sides had reached a stalemate. The Japanese couldnt
budge the Marines, and the Marines didnt have enough men to mount
an offensive. Then, on this day in 1942, the U.S. Army came to their aid
in what was the Armys first offensive engagement of World War II.
The regiment assigned to the campaign was the 164th Infantry, otherwise
known as. . . the North Dakota National Guard. Tune in tomorrow to learn
the fate of the 164th at Guadalcanal.

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