Cover:  The Fall of the Philippines by Louis Morton


UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II

 

The War in the Pacific

THE FALL OF THE PHILIPPINES

 

by
Louis Morton

 

CMH Logo

CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY
UNITED STATES ARMY
WASHINGTON, D.C.


 

Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 53-63678

 

 

 

 

First Printed 1953 - CMH Pub 5-2

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office
Washington, D.C. 20402


UNITED STATES ARMY IN WORLD WAR II

Kent Roberts Greenfield, General Editor

Advisory Committee
(As of 1 January 1953)

James P. Baxter
President, Williams College
 

William T. Hutchinson
University of Chicago
 

Henry S. Commager
Columbia University
 

S. L. A. Marshall
Detroit News
 

Douglas S. Freeman
Richmond News Leader
 

E. Dwight Salmon
Amherst College
 

Pendleton Herring
Social Science Research Council
 

Col. Thomas D. Stamps
United States Military Academy
 

John D. Hicks
University of California
 

Charles S. Snydor
Duke University
 

Charles H. Taylor
Harvard University

 

Office of the Chief of Military History
Maj. Gen. Orlando Ward, Chief

 

Chief Historian
Chief, War Histories Division
Chief, Editorial and Publication
Chief, Editorial Branch
Chief, Cartographic Branch
Chief, Photographic Branch

Kent Roberts Greenfield
Col. George G. O'Connor
Col. B. A. Day
Joseph R. Friedman
Wsevolod Aglaimoff
Capt. A. T. Lawry*

* Succeeded Capt. K. E. Hunter 28 April 1952

[iii]


 

 

 

 

...to Those Who Served

 

 

 


Contents
 

Chapter
Page
vii
ix

 
PART ONE
Prewar Plans and Preparations

Chapter
Page
3

........The Islands

4
8
...
14
15
19
21
25
...
31
........Ground Forces
32
........Air Forces
37
........Naval Forces
45
........Summary
48
...
51
51
61
71

 
PART TWO
The Isolation of the Philippines and the Japanese Landings

77
79
90
92
...
98
........Batan Island
100
100
109
112
...
115
...
123
125
132
138
...
145
145
148
152

 
PART THREE
The Withdrawal to Bataan

161
161
166
169
........Supply
179
180
...
190
191
195
199
...
203
205
210
214
...
216
216
223
...
232
235
238

 
PART FOUR
The Siege of Bataan

245
247
254
261
...
265
266
278
285
290
...
296
296
300
312
...
325
325
330
336
...
347
...
353
353
360
...
367
367
........Health
376
........Morale
384
...
390
390
........Last Efforts
401
...
405
405
411
417
...
421
421
431
...
442
442
448
...
454

 
PART FIVE
Corregidor and the Southern Islands

 

585
603

Tables

No.
Page
22
24
42
49
55
70
349
368
474
476
529

Maps

53
68
99
124
140
167
192
204
217
246
267
278
297
301
303
313
325
333
336
415
423
443
471
509
554

Illustrations

2
5
8
20
25
40,41
44
66
93
101
130
137
143
171
172
175
185
193
198
205
209
211
233
237
253
260
268
292
351
374
382
386
388
419
462
Surrender on Bataan
463
465
472
473
475
477
483
492
500
504
520
530
532
Life in Malinta Tunnel
533
539
541
548
556
568
573
583

Photographs are from the Department of Defense files, except for that on page 533, the Japanese photographs on pages 143, 233, 465, 539, 548, 568, and 573, and the photograph on page 583, reproduced through the courtesy of Col. William C. Braly.


Foreword

The soldier reading these pages would do well to reflect on the wisdom of the statement exhibited in a Japanese shrine: "Woe unto him who has not tasted defeat." Victory too often leads to overconfidence and erases the memory of mistakes. Defeat brings into sharp focus the causes that led to failure and provides a fruitful field of study for those soldiers and laymen who seek in the past lessons for the future.

The statesman and the informed citizen reading these pages will realize that our military means as well as our estimates and plans must always be in balance with our long-range national policy. This lesson-signposted by the Battle of Manila Bay; the Treaty of Paris, signed in December 1898 when we decided to keep the Philippines; the Washington Conference of 1921-22; and the Manchurian Crisis of 1931-we ignored before Pearl Harbor. The result was defeat on the field of battle and the loss of the Philippine Islands.

The author of The Fall of the Philippines, Louis Morton, served overseas as a historical officer in the South Pacific area and in the Philippines during World War II. Since 1945 he has been chief of the Pacific Section, Office of the Chief of Military History, Department of the Army. He holds a Doctor of Philosophy degree from Duke University, is the author of a volume on American colonial history, and has written a number of articles dealing with military affairs. Work on this volume was begun in early 1947. The reader may gain some idea of the size of the task of writing this history by an appraisal of The Sources.

 
ORLANDO WARD
Maj. Gen., U. S. A.
Chief of Military History
Washington, D. C.
26 June 1952
 

Return to Table of Contents

[vii]


Preface

The author's debts for aid in preparing this volume are numerous and heavy. The largest is to those officers who survived the campaign and the ordeal of prison camp. Their memories, and the precious notes they had hidden so carefully during the bitter days of Japanese imprisonment, provided material without which the record of this campaign would have been forever lost. These officers gave freely of their time and their contribution is apparent on every page and in almost every footnote. In a sense, they are as much the authors as the writer of this preface.

Special acknowledgments must be made to Mr. Stanley L. Falk and Dr. George C. Groce who, with ingenuity and perseverance, aided the author in his search for the materials needed for this work. The search was an exciting and rewarding adventure and is described in full at the end of the book. Both men also labored long and mightily to mold the fragmentary materials thus assembled into a form which greatly eased the author's work and performed cheerfully the many other arduous and time-consuming tasks which are the lot of every author. Without Mr. Falk's special knowledge of the enemy's records and operations, reinforced by information willingly furnished by the enemy himself, this volume would have been less precise and far longer in preparation.

The author owes a large debt also to many individuals who directly and indirectly gave him much valuable assistance: to Dr. Kent Roberts Greenfield, Chief Historian and General Editor of this series, for his wise counsel and guidance, for encouragement and never-failing support; to Mr. Wsevolod Aglaimoff and his staff who spent many months at the drafting boards to provide the maps to guide the reader through the jungles and mountains of the Philippines; to Miss Margaret E. Tackley who searched diligently and in remote corners for the pictures with which to illustrate this volume; to Miss Ruth Stout, the editor, and Mr. Ronald Sher, the copy editor, who edited the manuscript and guided it through the printers; to Mr. Leonard B. Lincoln, the indexer; to Mr. Israel Wice and his aides who patiently filled the author's numerous requests for aid in securing records; and to those of his colleagues, in and out of uniform, who read this volume in manuscript and made numerous and helpful suggestions. All these and others placed their special knowledge and skill freely and generously at the disposal of the author, but he alone is responsible for any shortcomings this volume may possess.
 

 
L. M.
Washington, D. C.
26 June 1952
 

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[ix]


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