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LaoSexMachine
12-18-2008, 09:23 PM
Veteran Returns to Bloody Tarawa

World War II Veteran Fights to Restore Hallowed Battleground From Garbage Dump

By NED POTTER

Dec. 18, 2008—

Tarawa, bloody Tarawa. Sixty-five years after the battle there, Leon Cooper, a World War II veteran, says he is still haunted.
"They were shooting at us from here, from there and from there," he said of the Battle of Tarawa in the central Pacific Ocean.
Cooper, 89, was a Navy ensign when the United States attacked the Japanese in Tarawa, Nov. 20, 1943. It was an early part of the U.S. "island-hopping" strategy in the Pacific to get closer to Japan. Cooper was in charge of a Higgins boat, a landing craft that was meant to bring armed marines ashore.
"It's etched in my mind," he said. "The Japanese were far better prepared for our assault than we were in making it." When word got back to the United States, there was shock because U.S. troops had never had such trouble storming a beach before.
Nearly 1,700 U.S Marines and sailors died, according to the Naval History Center, and about 4,800 enemy personnel were killed during the invasion. Some Americans were angry that so many died for such a small island, which is halfway between Hawaii and Australia.
"This is as bad as it ever got," said retired Marine Maj. Gen. Thomas Wilkerson, executive director of the U.S. Naval Institute. "For the first time Americans saw dead Americans in combat and it was a very difficult time."
Cooper returned to Tarawa this year with a documentary film crew and walked on ground he last saw 65 years ago. Looking for something to commemorate the history of Tarawa's sandy shores, Cooper only found a monument in a parking lot. The beach, where so many died, is now a garbage dump.
"I can't stand it," he said, covering his face and holding back tears.
Cooper also met with private researchers who've scanned Tarawa with special radar and say that more than 100 U.S. marines are still buried there. The defense department says the evidence is unclear.
Still, Cooper went to Washington to argue that the island is hallowed ground -- that the garbage needs to be cleaned up -- and if there are bodies there, they need to come home.
Speaking of a young marine he tried and failed to help, Cooper said, "He was saying something. I couldn't hear him. I got closer to his lips and then I think I heard, I can't guarantee it, 'Remember me, remember me.'"

Impossible to Forget

Not many people remember Tarawa. But for veterans like Cooper, it's a place he can't get out of his mind.


http://abcnews.go.com/WN/story?id=6490322&page=1

There's a video at the link.

Winger
12-18-2008, 11:48 PM
Truly an amazing story the battle of Tarawa. It showed me the importance of correct tide calculations. One mistake like that caused more dead than need be.

G-AWZT
12-19-2008, 01:14 AM
The Marines pretty much learned everything about amphib warfare after Betio/Tarawa.

gaijinsamurai
12-19-2008, 09:59 AM
Thanks, Zeke.

Bruisercruiser
12-19-2008, 10:13 AM
Such a shame to see what's become of that beach. There should be a joint U.S.-Japanese operation to clean it up as well as pay the proper respect to those who may be buried there.