Thursday, February 21

"In a split second, Iwo Jima captured" *

What a lousy headline *...
that was one long hard slog in the stinking sulfur sands / hot rock.
and not expected since the higher-ups thought the intensive bombing had cleared the way,  not counting on the extensive tunnel systems and pillboxes our boys would face...

I get the story is about raising the bigger flag to be seen across the island, but the fight went on well after that...

Lousy headline.
and Iwo was much more than that iconic flag raising...

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* on the WaPo's online frontpage.


Try this one, if you want to know better what it was really like:


From the Volcano to the Gorge: Getting the Job Done on Iwo Jima -- by Howard N. McLaughlin Jr. and Raymond C. Miller.
 
Book Description:

No moment in American military history is more deeply stamped into our national memory than the flag-raising that marked the capture by U.S. Marines of Mount Suribachi, on the tiny Pacific island of Iwo Jima, in February 1945. The famous photograph of that moment, widely reproduced in magazines, books, films, and statuary, has for nearly two-thirds of a century stood as the quintessential symbol of American patriotism and Marine valor. This is as it should be. The gallantry of the small band of Marines who first made it to the top and raised the flag was undeniably crucial to the success of the invasion.

 

But that moment, which took place on the fourth day after the initial landing, was far from the end of the battle. It would take another month of fierce fighting, covering 5,000 rocky acres and claiming the lives of 17,000 more Japanese soldiers and 6,000 more Marines, before full victory was achieved. The capture of Suribachi, militarily and psychologically important as it was, was only the end of the beginning.



This book combines narratives by two Marines who landed on the beaches on the first day of the invasion and took part in the grinding combat to the bitter end. These two men lived through the most intense weeks of their lives within a mile of each other, but never knew of each other's existence until this book began to take shape. Each writes vividly and memorably about achievements they can be proud of and traumatic experiences that made them into different men than they would have been without the war.