MCAS Ewa Marine B-25’s In Bizarre End Of Pacific War Mission
Extraordinary 1945
End of Pacific War US Marine Corps
Bomber Mission
Classified For Decades
by John Bond, MCAS Ewa historian
by John Bond, MCAS Ewa historian
A Japanese-American recruited into
the US Army from an internment camp, an American born Japanese Imperial Army
officer and US Marine Corps MCAS Ewa B-25 Bomber Squadron VMB 611 performed one
of the most unusual final Pacific War missions as atomic bombs fell on Japan.
And
as the Pacific
war was ending Japanese Imperial Army POWs recruited from Camp Iroquois,
Ewa Beach near MCAS Ewa, helped expedite the announcement of the
Japanese surrender before more civilians were killed.
In
likely one of the strangest military missions of the
Pacific War, if not all WW-II, involved a Nisei, Charles Takeo Imai, an
internee from Camp Minidoka, a Japanese American Internment camp in
Idaho,
and Minoru Wada a Kibei, a Japanese born in America and raised in Japan.
They and a Marine Corps B-25 bomber squadron trained at Marine Corps
Air Station Ewa,
conducted one of the most unusual war missions ever at the close of
WW-II, as atomic
bombs were dropped on Japan.
Camp Minidoka internee Fumi Onodera, points at the names
of her three brothers on the Honor Roll of
Japanese-Americans
serving in the U. S. Army in 1943.
Charles Takeo Imai's name is seen on left side of the Honor Roll
Charles Imai, a second generation Japanese-American born
in Washington State, had been swept up in the February, 1942 post December 7,
1941 attack on Pearl Harbor by Executive Order 9066, rounding up nearly all
people of Japanese ancestry and placed into internment camps. Imai was interned at nearby Camp
Minidoka in Idaho where around 9000 Americans of Japanese Ancestry (AJA)
families were held.
The missions of the Army Military Intelligence Service
were classified for decades
By 1943 the US government allowed the creation of
Japanese-American military units, among them the famous 100th
Battalion and 442nd Regimental Combat Team. When the opportunity
came Imai volunteered from Camp Minidoka to join the US Army. AJA’s, many of
whom did not speak fluent Japanese, were largely forbidden to serve in the
Pacific theater of war, however Imai had extremely valuable fluency in Japanese and was
assigned to the elite Military Intelligence Service (MIS) as a Technical
Sergeant to serve in the Pacific. This work often involved interrogating captured
Japanese soldiers and evaluating captured documents for intelligence
assessments. In some cases these MIS soldiers helped lead dangerous raids into
Japanese held areas.
Meanwhile, Minoru Wada, born and raised in the United
States, immigrated back to Japan before the war and went to the University of
Tokyo and later the Kyushu Military Academy. Drafted into the Imperial Japanese
Army, by 1945 he had become Lieutenant Minoru Wada, and was part of the
Japanese 100th Infantry Division on the Philippine island of Mindanao. The war
was not going well for the Japanese at that point in 1945. Although some
Japanese soldiers were taken prisoner, most fought until they were killed or
committed suicide.
US Army MIS translator interrogates a Japanese army general
At Camp Iroquois in Ewa Beach Hawaii, Japanese POW's were given extensive
privileges, including cigarettes, beer rations and escorted off camp excursions
if they were accepted into a democracy indoctrination program and
provided Japanese military psychology information.
Marine Corps Air Station Ewa becomes host to the new special
Marine Corps fast attack B-25 medium bombers
Designated B-25 J (USAAF) and PBJ-1J by Marine Corps with
mounted radar in the starboard wingtip at Marine Corps Air Station Ewa 1944
Marine Corps Air Station Ewa showing the expanded 1944 ramp for medium
bombers, patrol bombers and large four engine air transport like
the Douglas C-54 Skymaster (R5D)
Some PBJ-1J series had nose-mounted APS-3 radar, as seen on USS Manila Bay
en route to Moret Field, Zamboanga, Mindanao, Philippines
US Marine Corps bomber squadron VMB 611 was commissioned
on October 1, 1943 at Cherry Point, North Carolina and assigned B-25 model J’s,
a fast medium bomber for use in low level attack missions. On August 24, 1944
the B-25-J’s flight echelon sailed to Hawaii onboard the aircraft carrier, USS
Manila Bay. Once there, they were off
loaded at NAS Ford Island, Pearl Harbor, and flown over to Marine Air Station
Ewa in West Oahu. After training at MCAS
Ewa, VMB 611 was transported to their first forward advanced combat base on the
small island of Emirau in the southwest Pacific. In March 1945, the squadron
was transferred from MAG (Marine Air Group) 61 to MAG 32, MAGSZAM (Marine Air
Groups Zamboanga) and assigned to Moret Field, Zamboanga, Mindanao, Philippine
Islands.
The North American made Mitchell B25-1J used by
Pacific war Marine Corps crews
VMB 611 used the latest model North American made Mitchell B25-1J, which under
Navy-Marine designation was called the PBJ-1J. Early Army B-25’s were remembered
and widely associated with the famous Doolittle Raid on Tokyo in April
1942. US Pacific war military commanders had decided
that Marine pilots, who were very successful in flying low level combat air support in
fighter planes like the F4U Corsair, would be trained in dangerous low level medium
bomber air attacks against Japanese shipping and island bases. Their air combat tactics called “heckling
missions” were primarily based upon total surprise, strafing and low-level
bombing before enemy troops could react.
The North American PBJ-1J medium bomber was powered by
two Wright Cyclone engines providing 239 knots (275 mph). Crewed by seven: Pilot,
Copilot, Navigator-Bombardier, 2 Radio-Gunners, Mechanic-Turret Gunner, and
Armorer-Turret Gunner the B-25-1J was heavily armed, carrying up to thirteen
.50 caliber machine guns, as well as bombs, depth charges and 5-inch rockets.
Moret Field, Zamboanga, Mindanao, Philippine
Islands
From April 1945 until August 1945, VMB 611 alone made
over 500 sorties against Japanese shipping and land based targets, mostly in
fast, low level attacks. As the Japanese forces were gradually being worn down in
Mindanao by August 1945, the squadron was presented with a strange new combat
mission.
Small numbers of captured Japanese, as most died in suicide attacks or killing themselves
A
Japanese army Lieutenant, Minoru Wada, who had been
either captured or surrendered, fell into the hands of the US Army
Military
Intelligence Service where he was interrogated by Tech Sgt Charles Imai.
The
Japanese military never gave their soldiers any POW (Prisoner of War)
training
and had not signed the Geneva Conventions outlining treatment of POW’s.
Usually Japanese expected to be killed after interrogation. However the
US military in the Pacific, because of early successes at places like
Camp Iroquois in Ewa Beach near MCAS Ewa, learned that Japanese POW's
could be valuable sources of intelligence if treated well.
Tech Sgt Charles Imai brings Lt. Wada to the attention of area commanders
Tech
Sgt.
Imai recognized that Lt. Wada knew a lot about the still hidden Japanese
Imperial
Army groups on Mindanao and even more importantly wanted to help point
out exactly where
they were. By August 1945 Wada had heard of Japan’s heavy military
losses in the Philippines,
Iwo Jima and Okinawa, and was frustrated by the war’s continuation,
which seemed
more pointless and wasteful with each passing day. The Japanese
government under prime minister Hideki Tojo continuously refused any
Japanese surrender and vowed to fight on to the death of all soldiers
and civilians.
The VMB-611 mission is plotted out and scheduled for August 9,1945
Tech Sgt. Imai learned that Lt. Wada had served as the
transportation officer for the Japanese Imperial Army 100th Infantryman
Division under the command of Lieutenant-General Jiro Harada. Charles Imai’s fluency
in Japanese convinced him that Wada was a very valuable informant and willing to do
anything to stop the war and bring about peace, even if it meant losing his own
life. Imai reported this up the chain of command to US Army headquarters and US Army Ground Liaison
Officer Major Mortimer Jordan was assigned to work with Imai and Lt. Wada.
Major Jordan contacted the nearby MAGSZAM (Marine Air
Groups Zamboanga) and suggested a mission to bomb the 100th Division
headquarters in hopes that its destruction would disorganize and demoralize the
Japanese into surrendering. As transportation officer, Lt.Wada had an intimate knowledge of the
island and of the Japanese ground and air defenses. The Marine Corps VMB 611 B-25
air mission commanders asked US Army Tech Sgt. Imai to convey to Wada that they
wanted his help in locating and bombing the Japanese division headquarters. Army
Major Jordan and the Marine air group commanders gave Wada time to think over
their proposal and the thought of betraying his own countrymen by directing the
medium bomber air strike.
Minoru Wada concluded that the fighting on Mindanao might
end sooner and save hundreds if not thousands of Japanese soldiers and American
soldiers lives for the price of taking out the well concealed 100th
Division headquarters under the command of Lt General Jiro Harada. As
the Japanese headquarters was located in the dense jungles of Mindanao’s
Kibawe-Talomo trail, it became clear that the only way the B-25J Marine bombers
could locate the headquarters was to have Wada lead the air strike personally.
This required Tech Sgt. Imai to also assist with the pre-flight mission briefing to
the VMB-611 Marine pilots at MAGSZAM, Moret Field, Zamboanga on Mindanao.
US Army Tech Sgt. Imai provides translation for 1st Marine Air Wing fighter
and bomber pilots, Moret
Field, Zamboanga. The pilots were likely
incredulous with the concept of their strike mission being directed by
a Japanese Imperial Army lieutenant.
Meanwhile the USAAF flew the long range
B-29 missions from Tinian island
Long distance B-29 missions over Japan from Tinian island were perilous
with heavy anti-aircraft fire, mechanical issues and Japanese planes
either attacking or trying to ram the bombers in suicide attacks.
August 6, 1945
Meanwhile the top secret atomic bombing missions assigned to a select few B-29 Superfortress crews based on Tinian island 1500 miles from Japan were preparing to make their first A-bomb air drop. The final selected target was Hiroshima on Japan’s Honshu Island and on August 6 the first atomic bomb in history was dropped, creating a huge mushroom cloud.
Japanese
officials dispatched scientists and military
personnel to Hiroshima to assess damages from the atomic bomb, but they
remained paralyzed by disagreement over whether to surrender
unconditionally as
required by Allied forces as stated in the Potsdam agreement or continue
to fight on against ever increasing odds and now the introduction of a
new American super bomb. With no response from the Japanese government
President Truman ordered the continuation of Allied
bombing runs over Japanese military installations.
US President Harry Truman at his work desk during WW-II
August 9, 1945
August 9, 1945 a B-29 drops an atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan
August 9, 1945 a B-29 drops an atomic bomb on Nagasaki, Japan
US Marine Corps 2ndLt Gordon Growden, a combat
correspondent interviews Japanese Minoru Wada prior to the
bombing mission on the prisoner’s former headquarters, at Moret Field, Zamboanga,
Mindanao, Aug 9, 1945
USMC PBJ pilot Major Sidney Groff, right, adds the
name of Japanese POW Lt. Minoru Wada to the flight manifest for transfer to Moret Field, Zamboanga, Philippines
Army
Ground Liaison Officer and Strike
Coordinator Major Mortimer Jordan, interpreter Tech Sergeant Charles
Imai, and
Imperial Japanese Army Second Lieutenant Minoru Wada were flown to Moret
Field in Zamboanga, Mindanao. On August 9 a second atomic bomb is
dropped on Nagasaki by a USAAF B-29 from Tinian island. There still
wasn’t any
official reaction from the Japanese government to the Hiroshima
devastation. Often
also forgotten is that the atomic bomb was preceded by a massively
destructive B-29
Superfortress firebombing campaign that devastated 67 Japanese cities
and yet Japan
had still refused to surrender.
Above, in a likely imposition of two photos,
Wada watches as the group nears the target area
On August 9, US Marine PBJ-1D’s of Marine Bombing
Squadron 611 took off and were escorted by F4U Corsairs fighters of Marine Fighting Squadron
115, leaving from Moret Field in Zamboanga, Mindanao and headed for Harada’s
100th Division headquarters. Wada communicated with Tech Sgt. Imai who then in
turn explained directions to Army Ground Liaison Officer Major Jordan who
communicated directly with the VMB 611 mission strike leader as they flew to
the target area in the dense jungles of Mindanao.
Still dressed in his Japanese Army uniform, Wada sat in the radio-gunner's position of the lead B25-1J and looked for familiar landmarks. Speaking through Tech Sergeant Imai, Wada was able to direct the bombers right to his own 100th division headquarters complex. The strike group dropped 22,000 pounds of bombs on the headquarters area and fired additional "Tiny Tim" 5-inch rockets.
Still dressed in his Japanese Army uniform, Wada sat in the radio-gunner's position of the lead B25-1J and looked for familiar landmarks. Speaking through Tech Sergeant Imai, Wada was able to direct the bombers right to his own 100th division headquarters complex. The strike group dropped 22,000 pounds of bombs on the headquarters area and fired additional "Tiny Tim" 5-inch rockets.
Lt. Minoru Wada watches, likely with mixed feelings, as the air strike
devastates the 100th Division headquarters
The attack was extremely successful and the headquarters
was thoroughly demolished. Army Major Jordan later told debriefing officers,
"the Japanese officer put us zero on the target and we did the rest –
maybe overdid it." The loss of the 100th Division's command and control
establishment virtually ended the Imperial Japanese Army resistance on Mindanao overnight.
Meanwhile, Japan had yet to respond to the two atomic bombs dropped on Japanese cities
Radio Tokyo exhorted all Japanese to prepare
defenses against an enemy
invasion, which included arming civilians
with sharpened bamboo spears.
Allied invasion plans were underway for the largest operation of the Pacific War, Operation Downfall, the Allied invasion of Japan. Set to begin in October 1945, Olympic involved a series of landings intended to capture the southern third of the southernmost main Japanese island, Kyushu. Operation Olympic was to be followed in March 1946 by Operation Coronet, the capture of the main Japanese island of Honshu. The target date was chosen to allow for Olympic to complete its objectives, for troops to be redeployed from Europe, and the Japanese winter to pass. The invasion of Japan would cause the slaughter of huge numbers of civilians and soldiers.
A
fanatical Japanese military faction under Hideki Tojo controlled the
Japanese government. The only higher authority in Japan was the Showa
deity emperor Hirohito.
Hirohito in Navy uniform and Hideki Tojo in Army uniform
It
took the unprecedented action by the Emperor of Japan
to finally break a Japanese military-civilian political deadlock and
accept the unconditional surrender terms of the Potsdam Declaration.
Hirohito secretly recorded a radio announcement that Japan had accepted
the unconditional surrender of Japanese military forces. However,
fanatical Japanese army units also maneuvered to try and capture the
emperor and
prevent his pre-recorded announcement from being broadcast over the
radio to
the Japanese public. However, this coup attempt failed and the Emperor's
recording was broadcast.
On 10 August Japan’s Emperor Hirohito by radio broadcast called upon the power of his moral and spiritual leadership as a Japanese deity and directed that Japan should accept the terms of the Potsdam agreement calling for unconditional surrender. For the first time the Japanese people became aware that their government was trying to surrender as a stunned population listened to Emperor Hirohito’s high, shaking, unfamiliar voice announcing the final surrender of the Japanese nation.
August 10, 1945
On 10 August Japan’s Emperor Hirohito by radio broadcast called upon the power of his moral and spiritual leadership as a Japanese deity and directed that Japan should accept the terms of the Potsdam agreement calling for unconditional surrender. For the first time the Japanese people became aware that their government was trying to surrender as a stunned population listened to Emperor Hirohito’s high, shaking, unfamiliar voice announcing the final surrender of the Japanese nation.
However, this was not the end of the war and military fanatics
could continue fighting to the death of themselves and many civilians
Due
to the still remaining intense disagreements
among the Imperial Japanese military and the desire by some fanatical
factions to
fight to the death of everyone in Japan, the US Office of War
Information based in
Honolulu, with a forward operation established on the Pacific island of
Saipan, realized that unless the acceptance of the surrender was not
very quickly and
widely disseminated, fanatical Japanese military units might undertake a
complete Japanese government takeover or go off on their own suicidal
directions attacking each other and fighting to the death.
Fortunately by 1945 the US had highly developed Japanese American Army MIS
and Japanese Prisoner of War groups available as a major resource. A massive
psychological information campaign was immediately launched with Japanese
POW's from Camp Iroquois, Ewa Beach by MCAS Ewa, providing extremely valuable translation insights in how to effectively influence the Japanese civilian population.
POW's from Camp Iroquois, Ewa Beach by MCAS Ewa, providing extremely valuable translation insights in how to effectively influence the Japanese civilian population.
Huge amounts of PsyWar leaflets and news about the Showa emperor of Japan
accepting the surrender were dropped from B-29 bombers all over Japan islands.
The
US War Department sent an urgent dispatch
ordering OWI (Office of War Information) to inform the Japanese people
directly, by leaflet and radio, that
their government under the power of the emperor had accepted the offered
surrender terms and that the Allies had also accepted. Japanese
military POW’s that had been recruited into the special experimental
democracy indoctrination project at Camp Iroquois,
Ewa Beach were immediately brought into effective utilization with their
lifetime knowledge of Japanese cultural society and government
institutions.
These prisoners, many Japanese Imperial Army officers, had undergone significant passive indoctrination into democratic principals of government and had been conceived of being be a future spearhead group for a Japanese democratic government that would be established after the war ended.
Some of the Office of War Information (OWI) leaflets dropped on Japan used
graphic cartoon depictions that were easily understood by the civilian population.
While Japanese American MIS could be used for interrogation and document analysis, the actual psychology of the average Japanese in Japan, knowledge of unique cultural language phrases and deep civilian reverence for the Showa emperor required an extremely well thought out campaign appeal. The campaign had to be developed and launched almost overnight as there was very little time before hot headed Japanese military fanatics could launch into suicidal infighting, self-destruction and excommunicate the Japanese public from Emperor Hirohito’s decision.
The OWI Saipan operation had to print and load massive amounts of
Japanese language newspapers and leaflets in a very short amount of time
to get the word out about the Showa emperor accepting the
unconditional surrender of Japan to Allied forces.
The
Camp Iroquois POW group helped write overnight the OWI psychological
appeals for leaflets, newspapers and radio broadcasts from OWI's forward
facility
on Saipan, close to the Japanese main islands. The text and graphics
from Camp Irquois were immediately transmitted to OWI Saipan where high
speed offset presses, some run by Japanese POW's, turning out high
volumes of printed leaflets and newspapers. By August 1945 Saipan OWI
had four US Navy press operators and 30 Japanese
POW's also running presses, sorting, stacking and loading containers to
be
dropped over Japan by B-29's.
The 17 members of the OWI staff on Saipan were challenged to a previously unmatched degree and by mid-night on 11 August, less than 48 hours after Japan’s surrender acceptance message was received in Washington, three-quarters of a million leaflets giving notification of the surrender had been printed. The fast moving effort included Japanese military POW’s running presses and helping to load the leaflets onto trucks for the Army Air Force to drop from B-29s over Japan.
On 12 August, B-29 aircraft runs departed Saipan at 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 and 11:30 p.m., delivering to the people of Japan the news of their government’s surrender acceptance by their deity Emperor. The 4” x 5” leaflets rained down by the millions, telling the Japanese people that the Japanese Emperor and government had accepted a full unconditional surrender and that all fighting should cease immediately.
The significance of this information barrage cannot be overstated. At noon on 15 August, six days after the bombing of Nagasaki and the Soviet Union's declaration of war on Japan—Japan officially announced its acceptance of the Potsdam Declaration defining terms for Japanese surrender to the Allies.
Japanese officials left for Manila, Philippines on August 19 to meet General Douglas MacArthur and be briefed on his plans for the occupation. On August 28, 150 US personnel flew to Atsugi airfield, 30 miles from Tokyo, Japan. They were followed by the battleship USS Missouri, whose accompanying ships landed the 4th Marine Regiment on the southern coast of Japan. The Army 11th Airborne Division was airlifted from Okinawa to Atsugi airfield as other Allied personnel followed. The Japanese military and civilian authorities cooperated completely with all US occupation directives.
General MacArthur arrived in Tokyo on August 30 and immediately decreed several
laws, including no Allied personnel were to assault Japanese people, no Allied
personnel were to eat the scarce Japanese food and flying the Hinomaru
or "Rising Sun" flag was initially severely restricted. The Japanese
people largely accepted MacArthur as their new "emperor" while MacArthur
retained Hirohito as a figurehead deity that the Japanese still
revered. This is very likely why the Japanese military, once full
surrender was accepted, were extremely dutiful in following all orders
and directives from the new US military occupation authorities.This also
allowed many more Americans in uniform assigned to occupation duties to
be processed out more quickly and back to civilian life in the United
States.
The Japanese unconditional surrender is mostly remembered by the formal September 2nd document signing in Tokyo Bay, on board the USS Missouri which officially ended World War II. The signing ceremony aboard the USS Missouri was a compromise between Army General Douglas MacArthur and Navy Admiral Chester Nimitz, with President Harry Truman having his home state battleship Missouri being the actual place of the historic signing. Today the USS Missouri can be seen at Pearl Harbor, moored near the sunken USS Arizona, bombed on December 7, 1941.
The Pacific war ended less than a week after the VMB 611 air strike on the 100th Division headquarters. It is not known where Minoru Wada went after the war or what became of him.Wada was given a new identity and was never heard of again. This very unusual air strike mission led by an Imperial Japanese Army officer remained classified for decades and has still only been partially declassified. As of this writing, it is unknown if the important role of US Army MIS Tech Sergeant Charles Imai played was ever recognized- or if he just also faded off into history and his retirement.
August 11, 1945
The 17 members of the OWI staff on Saipan were challenged to a previously unmatched degree and by mid-night on 11 August, less than 48 hours after Japan’s surrender acceptance message was received in Washington, three-quarters of a million leaflets giving notification of the surrender had been printed. The fast moving effort included Japanese military POW’s running presses and helping to load the leaflets onto trucks for the Army Air Force to drop from B-29s over Japan.
August 12, 1945
On 12 August, B-29 aircraft runs departed Saipan at 1:30, 4:30, 7:30 and 11:30 p.m., delivering to the people of Japan the news of their government’s surrender acceptance by their deity Emperor. The 4” x 5” leaflets rained down by the millions, telling the Japanese people that the Japanese Emperor and government had accepted a full unconditional surrender and that all fighting should cease immediately.
August 15, 1945
The significance of this information barrage cannot be overstated. At noon on 15 August, six days after the bombing of Nagasaki and the Soviet Union's declaration of war on Japan—Japan officially announced its acceptance of the Potsdam Declaration defining terms for Japanese surrender to the Allies.
August 19, 1945
Japanese officials left for Manila, Philippines on August 19 to meet General Douglas MacArthur and be briefed on his plans for the occupation. On August 28, 150 US personnel flew to Atsugi airfield, 30 miles from Tokyo, Japan. They were followed by the battleship USS Missouri, whose accompanying ships landed the 4th Marine Regiment on the southern coast of Japan. The Army 11th Airborne Division was airlifted from Okinawa to Atsugi airfield as other Allied personnel followed. The Japanese military and civilian authorities cooperated completely with all US occupation directives.
August 30, 1945
September 2, 1945
This date is known as Victory over Japan, or VJ Day, and marked the end of World War II
The Japanese unconditional surrender is mostly remembered by the formal September 2nd document signing in Tokyo Bay, on board the USS Missouri which officially ended World War II. The signing ceremony aboard the USS Missouri was a compromise between Army General Douglas MacArthur and Navy Admiral Chester Nimitz, with President Harry Truman having his home state battleship Missouri being the actual place of the historic signing. Today the USS Missouri can be seen at Pearl Harbor, moored near the sunken USS Arizona, bombed on December 7, 1941.
By
1947 a new Japanese government constitution was approved and contained
many elements, largely directed by MacArthur, for a democratic form of
government with many citizen rights including the right of women to vote
in elections.
And they all just "faded away"
The Pacific war ended less than a week after the VMB 611 air strike on the 100th Division headquarters. It is not known where Minoru Wada went after the war or what became of him.Wada was given a new identity and was never heard of again. This very unusual air strike mission led by an Imperial Japanese Army officer remained classified for decades and has still only been partially declassified. As of this writing, it is unknown if the important role of US Army MIS Tech Sergeant Charles Imai played was ever recognized- or if he just also faded off into history and his retirement.
The PBJ-1J's trained at Marine Corps Air Station Ewa
After
the war virtually all of the Marine Corp PBJ-1J and other models were
scrapped. Only one restored flying condition PBJ-1J is known to exist at
the Southern California Wing of the Commemorative Air Force, in
Camarillo, CA.
MCAS
Ewa remains virtually intact from it's historic 1941 to 1945 wartime
service, including runways, taxiways and parking ramps. This includes a
1944 hangar and Quonset huts that serviced the PBJ-1J medium bombers and
larger transports that flew to all of the Pacific war battlefields and
brought back critically wounded Marines. The entire MCAS Ewa is a
National Register eligible site.