No Escape: The “Corkscrew” Strategy That Erased 11,000 Japanese

If you think Omaha Beach or Ewoima were the most brutal killing grounds, then you haven’t heard of Pleu, where the US Marine Corps suffered the highest casualty rate in its history.

But if the price paid by the Americans was blood, the price paid by the Japanese was total annihilation.

Nearly 11,000 defenders were wiped out.

Of those, 2,600 have never been found.

They didn’t escape.

They didn’t surrender.

image

They were sealed forever within this limestone labyrinth by the overwhelming firepower of the United States.

Today, Fire Line takes you into the eye of the storm at Paleleu.

To see how the massive American juggernaut ground the Pacific’s most fortified defense into dust.

To understand why this island became a slaughter house, we have to look at the map of 1944.

The American war machine was steamrolling across the Pacific and General Douglas MacArthur was fixated on returning to the Philippines.

To protect his right flank, the high command decided that the Japanese airfield on the island of Pleu had to be neutralized.

It seemed like a standard operation.

The American commanders were riding high on a wave of confidence after crushing victories in the Marshall Islands.

Major General William Rupertis, the commander of the first marine division, was so confident in the overwhelming might of his forces that he made a prediction to a group of naval officers and reporters.

He famously declared that the operation would be rough but fast.

He said, “It’ll be over in 3 days, maybe two.” It was a calculation based on the old rules of war where the enemy fought on the beaches and died in bonsai charges.

But General Repertis was making a fatal error.

He wasn’t just fighting an army.

He was fighting geography itself.

Pleu wasn’t a soft tropical island.

was a jagged uplift of ancient tectonic plates composed of coral and limestone that was harder than concrete and sharper than broken glass.

And waiting inside that rock was an enemy who had rewritten the book on defense while the Americans were preparing their landing craft.

Deep inside the Umur Brogal Mountain, a jagged spine of rock the Marines would later call Bloody Nose Ridge, Colonel Kuno Nakagawa was preparing a trap.

Naka Gawwa was a realist.

He had watched from afar as thousands of his countrymen wasted their lives in feudal suicide charges at Tarawa in Saipan.

He knew he could not stop the American landing.

He knew he could not win the battle.

So he changed the objective.

The goal was no longer victory.

The goal was to bleed the Americans so badly that they would lose the will to fight.

He issued a new ironclad standing order.

No bonsai charges, no suicide attacks.

Every soldier was expected to survive as long as possible.

The orders were simple and chilling.

We will die here, but before you die, you must kill 10 Americans.

To achieve this, Nakagawa turned the island into a hollowedout fortress.

The Japanese engineers utilized over 500 natural and man-made caves, connecting them with a complex system of tunnels.

These weren’t just holes in the ground.

They were engineering masterpieces.

The cave entrances were slanted in Z-shapes or Lshapes to deflect direct fire and flamethrowers.

They had sliding steel doors to protect against grenades.

Inside they had electricity, ventilation, hospitals, and barracks.

They were invisible from the air and invulnerable to naval bombardment.

When the US Navy unleashed a massive pre-invasion bombardment, firing over 500 heavy caliber shells and bombing the island for days, they thought they had pulverized the defenses.

Smoke covered the island and the jungle was stripped away, leaving only the white skeletal rock.

The Americans believed nothing could have survived that storm of steel, but they were wrong.

The Japanese were sitting comfortably underground, cleaning their rifles, waiting for the barrage to lift.

On September 15th, 19 44.

The illusion of an easy victory shattered the moment the first wave of Marines hit the beaches.

The landing zone, cenamed White Beach, turned into a shooting gallery.

Japanese artillery and machine gun nests hidden perfectly in the coral ridges overlooking the beach opened fire with devastating precision.

Amphibious tractors were blown apart before they even touched the sand.

Men scrambled over the jagged coral only to find themselves pinned down by an enemy they couldn’t see.

The heavy artillery fire from the caves was so intense that it created a wall of shrapnel.

Unlike normal soil, when a shell hit the coral rock of Pleu, the ground itself became a weapon.

The rock shattered into millions of razor sharp shards that acted like secondary shrapnel, tearing through uniforms and flesh.

Within hours, the pristine white sand was stained deep red.

On the far left flank, a position known as the point.

Captain George Hunt’s company was cut off and surrounded for 30 hours.

They held their ground against wave after wave of Japanese counterattacks coming from the spider holes, fighting handto hand using rocks and knives when the ammunition ran dry.

By the time they were relieved, nearly all of them were dead or wounded.

The 3-day prediction had already evaporated in the smoke of the first afternoon.

But the horror of the beach was just the prelude.

As the Marines pushed inland, they faced a new terrifying obstacle, the airfield.

To take the island, they had to cross the open runway.

It was a flat, exposed kill zone surrounded on the north by the high ground of the Umar Brogal ridges.

As the first and fifth Marines began their charge across the tarmac, all hell broke loose.

Nakagawa unleashed everything he had.

High velocity 47 mm anti-tank guns and heavy mortars rained down on the exposed marines.

There was no cover, no trees, no shell holes, just flat, hard coral concrete.

It was a massacre.

men sprinted through a storm of lead, dropping by the hundreds.

It was one of the bloodiest single charges in the entire Pacific War.

Those who survived the sprint found themselves at the foot of the ridges, staring up at a honeycomb of caves that seemed to be spitting fire from every crevice.

And then the sun came out.

If the Japanese bullets didn’t kill them, the environment tried to finish the job.

The temperature on Pleu soared to over 115° F.

The bleached coral reflected the tropical sun like an oven, baking the men in their heavy green twill dungarees.

Heat exhaustion became as big a killer as the enemy.

Men were collapsing in the middle of firefights, their bodies shutting down from dehydration.

And this led to one of the most tragic blunders of the campaign.

The logistics teams, desperate to get water to the front lines, had filled empty fuel drums with water.

But they hadn’t scrubbed the drums properly.

When the water reached the parched dying men at the Yei front, it was thick with a residue of oil and aviation fuel.

Desperate with thirst, the Marines drank it anyway.

Moments later, they were wretching and vomiting uncontrollably, stricken with dysentery and cramps while enemy mortar rounds exploded around them.

To make the nightmare complete, the dead bodies, which were piling up faster than they could be buried, attracted swarms of blue bottle flies.

These weren’t normal insects.

They were large, aggressive, carrying flies that coated the food in the open wounds of the living.

The stench of rotting flesh, sulfur, and unwashed bodies hung over the island like a poisonous fog.

The Marines realized that standard infantry tactics were suicide.

Riflemen couldn’t shoot an enemy they couldn’t see.

Grenades thrown into cave entrances were thrown back out by the defenders before they exploded.

The casualty count was skyrocketing and the first marine division was being ground down to a nub.

The American commanders realized that to crack the impregnable fortress, they needed to stop fighting like soldiers and start fighting like exterminators.

They needed to bring the full industrial weight of American firepower to bear.

The solution wasn’t courage.

It was fire.

The game changer arrived in the form of the M4 Sherman tank, but not the standard version.

These were modified Zippo tanks, replacing their bow machine guns with high-press flamethrowers.

The arrival of these steel monsters marked the turning point of the battle.

The infantry developed a brutal new tactic called blowtorrch and corkcrew.

It was a methodical, ruthless system designed to erase the enemy from the face of the earth.

First tanks and heavy machine guns suppressed the cave entrance.

They forced the Japanese gunners to pull back their heads.

Then the Zippo tank lumbered forward, its tracks grinding over the dead until it was within point blank range.

The Zippo didn’t just spray fire.

It shot a pressurized stream of thickened napal liquid that could reach up to 100 yards.

The operator would fire a wet burst first, spraying unlit fuel deep into the cave mouth, coating the walls, the floor, and the men hiding inside.

Then they fired the igniter.

The result was apocalyptic.

A roaring concussive blast would erupt from the cave mouth.

The fire didn’t just burn.

It sucked the oxygen out of the air in seconds.

But the job wasn’t done.

While the cave was still smoking, combat engineers, the bravest men on the battlefield, would rush forward with satchel charges of high explosives.

They would blow the cave entrance shut.

Finally, bulldozers would arrive to pile tons of coral and rock over the opening, sealing it forever.

It was efficient.

It was industrial, and it was absolutely terrifying.

While the Americans watched the caves burn from the outside, the scene inside those tunnels was a descent into a distinct kind of hell.

The blowtorrch and corkcrew tactic didn’t always kill instantly.

For the Japanese soldiers trapped deep in the complex, the ceiling of the caves marked the beginning of a slow, agonizing death.

When the nape palm ignited at the entrance, it created a vacuum, violently pulling the air out of the deeper chambers.

Men died of asphyxiation without a mark on their bodies.

Their lungs collapsing as they gasped for oxygen that wasn’t there.

The shock waves from the massive satchel charges detonated by the Marines caused massive internal trauma, rupturing organs and bursting eardrums, leaving men writhing in the dark.

Cut off from their command, trapped in the pitch black, the discipline of the Japanese troops began to fray under the weight of biological necessity.

The heat inside the unventilated limestone ovens rose to unbearable levels.

They had no water.

Some soldiers were reduced to licking condensation off the stelactites or drinking their own urine.

It was here that Private Eugene Sledge witnessed the descent of men into savagery.

He described the island not as a battlefield, but as a meat grinder meant to exterminate a generation.

Those who were wounded faced a grim fate.

With medical supplies exhausted and gang green setting in, many begged their officers to end their suffering.

The psychological toll was total.

They could hear the rumble of American tanks above their heads, the dull thud of bulldozers sealing their only exits.

They were being buried alive.

Evidence found decades later, scratch marks on the interior rock walls testified to the desperate final moments of men trying to dig their way out with bare hands before the air ran out.

This was the punishment for defying the American war machine.

a lonely dark death in the belly of the earth.

Despite this unimaginable suffering, the Japanese resistance was fanatical.

It took over 2 months to clear the island.

The first marine division was so battered, having suffered over 6,000 casualties, that it had to be pulled off the line.

The first time in the war, a marine division was rendered combat ineffective.

They were replaced by the army’s 81st Infantry Division, who continued the grim work of burning and blasting.

Slowly, yard by yard, cave by cave, the Americans tightened the noose around Colonel Nakagawa’s final command post.

By late November, the end was inevitable.

Nakagawa having expended every soldier and every round of ammunition sent his final message to Tokyo.

Sakura, Sakura, the cherry blossoms have fallen.

He then burned the regimental colors and committed ritual suicide deep within his command bunker.

But the Japanese philosophy of no surrender meant that the fighting didn’t stop with the commander’s death.

Small groups of stragglers continued to fight from isolated pockets.

The Americans hunted them down with ruthlessness, born of exhaustion.

There was no mercy left.

If a movement was spotted in a hole, it was torched.

If a voice was heard, it was silenced with TNT.

The surrender count tells the story.

Out of nearly 11,000 defenders, only 202 surrendered, and most of those were laborers or soldiers too wounded to pull the trigger on themselves.

The rest were annihilated.

The legacy of Pleu is a complicated one.

In a bitter twist of strategic irony, the airfield that so many men died for was barely used in the subsequent invasion of the Philippines.

Admiral Hollyy had even suggested bypassing the island before the invasion began, arguing it wasn’t necessary, but he was overruled.

Thousands of Marines died for an objective that, in hindsight, held little strategic value.

However, the battle proved something undeniable to the world.

There was no fortress the Japanese could build that the US Marines could not smash.

It demonstrated the terrifying adaptability of the American military, willing to turn tractors into tanks and flamethrowers into primary weapons to dig out an entrenched enemy.

Today, Pelleu is quiet.

The jungle has grown back, covering the scars of the artillery.

But if you walk the trails of the Umar Bragal, you can still find the rusted carcasses of American landing craft and the burntout husks of tanks.

And you can find the caves.

Many of them remain sealed.

Just as the bulldozers left them in 1944.

Behind those walls of rock, the remains of 2,600 Japanese soldiers still lie in the darkness, frozen in time, guarding a dead empire.

They are the silent witnesses to a battle where technology and brutality merged to create a new form of warfare.

The battle of Pleu forces us to confront the brutal arithmetic of war.

Was the use of such overwhelming, inhumane firepower, burning men alive in their holes, a war crime? Or was it the only way to spare American lives against an enemy that refused to surrender? When you look at the cost, the 1,800 Americans killed and the 8,000 wounded.

You understand why the flamethrowers were brought to the front.

It was a choice between brutality and defeat.

The spirits of the men who died in those caves are still part of the island.

A grim reminder of what happens when two unstoppable forces collide.

If you enjoyed this deep dive into the forgotten hell of the Pacific, and if you want to see how the US Marines took the lessons of Pleu and applied them to the black sands of Ewima, make sure to hit that subscribe button.

If you want to honor the history these men wrote in blood, help us keep their stories alive.

Leave a comment below.

Do you think the invasion of Pleu was a strategic necessity or a tragic waste of life? We’ll see you on the next fire If you think Omaha Beach or Ewoima were the most brutal killing grounds, then you haven’t heard of Pleu, where the US Marine Corps suffered the highest casualty rate in its history.

But if the price paid by the Americans was blood, the price paid by the Japanese was total annihilation.

Nearly 11,000 defenders were wiped out.

Of those, 2,600 have never been found.

They didn’t escape.

They didn’t surrender.

They were sealed forever within this limestone labyrinth by the overwhelming firepower of the United States.

Today, Fire Line takes you into the eye of the storm at Paleleu.

To see how the massive American juggernaut ground the Pacific’s most fortified defense into dust.

To understand why this island became a slaughter house, we have to look at the map of 1944.

The American war machine was steamrolling across the Pacific and General Douglas MacArthur was fixated on returning to the Philippines.

To protect his right flank, the high command decided that the Japanese airfield on the island of Pleu had to be neutralized.

It seemed like a standard operation.

The American commanders were riding high on a wave of confidence after crushing victories in the Marshall Islands.

Major General William Rupertis, the commander of the first marine division, was so confident in the overwhelming might of his forces that he made a prediction to a group of naval officers and reporters.

He famously declared that the operation would be rough but fast.

He said, “It’ll be over in 3 days, maybe two.” It was a calculation based on the old rules of war where the enemy fought on the beaches and died in bonsai charges.

But General Repertis was making a fatal error.

He wasn’t just fighting an army.

He was fighting geography itself.

Pleu wasn’t a soft tropical island.

was a jagged uplift of ancient tectonic plates composed of coral and limestone that was harder than concrete and sharper than broken glass.

And waiting inside that rock was an enemy who had rewritten the book on defense while the Americans were preparing their landing craft.

Deep inside the Umur Brogal Mountain, a jagged spine of rock the Marines would later call Bloody Nose Ridge, Colonel Kuno Nakagawa was preparing a trap.

Naka Gawwa was a realist.

He had watched from afar as thousands of his countrymen wasted their lives in feudal suicide charges at Tarawa in Saipan.

He knew he could not stop the American landing.

He knew he could not win the battle.

So he changed the objective.

The goal was no longer victory.

The goal was to bleed the Americans so badly that they would lose the will to fight.

He issued a new ironclad standing order.

No bonsai charges, no suicide attacks.

Every soldier was expected to survive as long as possible.

The orders were simple and chilling.

We will die here, but before you die, you must kill 10 Americans.

To achieve this, Nakagawa turned the island into a hollowedout fortress.

The Japanese engineers utilized over 500 natural and man-made caves, connecting them with a complex system of tunnels.

These weren’t just holes in the ground.

They were engineering masterpieces.

The cave entrances were slanted in Z-shapes or Lshapes to deflect direct fire and flamethrowers.

They had sliding steel doors to protect against grenades.

Inside they had electricity, ventilation, hospitals, and barracks.

They were invisible from the air and invulnerable to naval bombardment.

When the US Navy unleashed a massive pre-invasion bombardment, firing over 500 heavy caliber shells and bombing the island for days, they thought they had pulverized the defenses.

Smoke covered the island and the jungle was stripped away, leaving only the white skeletal rock.

The Americans believed nothing could have survived that storm of steel, but they were wrong.

The Japanese were sitting comfortably underground, cleaning their rifles, waiting for the barrage to lift.

On September 15th, 19 44.

The illusion of an easy victory shattered the moment the first wave of Marines hit the beaches.

The landing zone, cenamed White Beach, turned into a shooting gallery.

Japanese artillery and machine gun nests hidden perfectly in the coral ridges overlooking the beach opened fire with devastating precision.

Amphibious tractors were blown apart before they even touched the sand.

Men scrambled over the jagged coral only to find themselves pinned down by an enemy they couldn’t see.

The heavy artillery fire from the caves was so intense that it created a wall of shrapnel.

Unlike normal soil, when a shell hit the coral rock of Pleu, the ground itself became a weapon.

The rock shattered into millions of razor sharp shards that acted like secondary shrapnel, tearing through uniforms and flesh.

Within hours, the pristine white sand was stained deep red.

On the far left flank, a position known as the point.

Captain George Hunt’s company was cut off and surrounded for 30 hours.

They held their ground against wave after wave of Japanese counterattacks coming from the spider holes, fighting handto hand using rocks and knives when the ammunition ran dry.

By the time they were relieved, nearly all of them were dead or wounded.

The 3-day prediction had already evaporated in the smoke of the first afternoon.

But the horror of the beach was just the prelude.

As the Marines pushed inland, they faced a new terrifying obstacle, the airfield.

To take the island, they had to cross the open runway.

It was a flat, exposed kill zone surrounded on the north by the high ground of the Umar Brogal ridges.

As the first and fifth Marines began their charge across the tarmac, all hell broke loose.

Nakagawa unleashed everything he had.

High velocity 47 mm anti-tank guns and heavy mortars rained down on the exposed marines.

There was no cover, no trees, no shell holes, just flat, hard coral concrete.

It was a massacre.

men sprinted through a storm of lead, dropping by the hundreds.

It was one of the bloodiest single charges in the entire Pacific War.

Those who survived the sprint found themselves at the foot of the ridges, staring up at a honeycomb of caves that seemed to be spitting fire from every crevice.

And then the sun came out.

If the Japanese bullets didn’t kill them, the environment tried to finish the job.

The temperature on Pleu soared to over 115° F.

The bleached coral reflected the tropical sun like an oven, baking the men in their heavy green twill dungarees.

Heat exhaustion became as big a killer as the enemy.

Men were collapsing in the middle of firefights, their bodies shutting down from dehydration.

And this led to one of the most tragic blunders of the campaign.

The logistics teams, desperate to get water to the front lines, had filled empty fuel drums with water.

But they hadn’t scrubbed the drums properly.

When the water reached the parched dying men at the Yei front, it was thick with a residue of oil and aviation fuel.

Desperate with thirst, the Marines drank it anyway.

Moments later, they were wretching and vomiting uncontrollably, stricken with dysentery and cramps while enemy mortar rounds exploded around them.

To make the nightmare complete, the dead bodies, which were piling up faster than they could be buried, attracted swarms of blue bottle flies.

These weren’t normal insects.

They were large, aggressive, carrying flies that coated the food in the open wounds of the living.

The stench of rotting flesh, sulfur, and unwashed bodies hung over the island like a poisonous fog.

The Marines realized that standard infantry tactics were suicide.

Riflemen couldn’t shoot an enemy they couldn’t see.

Grenades thrown into cave entrances were thrown back out by the defenders before they exploded.

The casualty count was skyrocketing and the first marine division was being ground down to a nub.

The American commanders realized that to crack the impregnable fortress, they needed to stop fighting like soldiers and start fighting like exterminators.

They needed to bring the full industrial weight of American firepower to bear.

The solution wasn’t courage.

It was fire.

The game changer arrived in the form of the M4 Sherman tank, but not the standard version.

These were modified Zippo tanks, replacing their bow machine guns with high-press flamethrowers.

The arrival of these steel monsters marked the turning point of the battle.

The infantry developed a brutal new tactic called blowtorrch and corkcrew.

It was a methodical, ruthless system designed to erase the enemy from the face of the earth.

First tanks and heavy machine guns suppressed the cave entrance.

They forced the Japanese gunners to pull back their heads.

Then the Zippo tank lumbered forward, its tracks grinding over the dead until it was within point blank range.

The Zippo didn’t just spray fire.

It shot a pressurized stream of thickened napal liquid that could reach up to 100 yards.

The operator would fire a wet burst first, spraying unlit fuel deep into the cave mouth, coating the walls, the floor, and the men hiding inside.

Then they fired the igniter.

The result was apocalyptic.

A roaring concussive blast would erupt from the cave mouth.

The fire didn’t just burn.

It sucked the oxygen out of the air in seconds.

But the job wasn’t done.

While the cave was still smoking, combat engineers, the bravest men on the battlefield, would rush forward with satchel charges of high explosives.

They would blow the cave entrance shut.

Finally, bulldozers would arrive to pile tons of coral and rock over the opening, sealing it forever.

It was efficient.

It was industrial, and it was absolutely terrifying.

While the Americans watched the caves burn from the outside, the scene inside those tunnels was a descent into a distinct kind of hell.

The blowtorrch and corkcrew tactic didn’t always kill instantly.

For the Japanese soldiers trapped deep in the complex, the ceiling of the caves marked the beginning of a slow, agonizing death.

When the nape palm ignited at the entrance, it created a vacuum, violently pulling the air out of the deeper chambers.

Men died of asphyxiation without a mark on their bodies.

Their lungs collapsing as they gasped for oxygen that wasn’t there.

The shock waves from the massive satchel charges detonated by the Marines caused massive internal trauma, rupturing organs and bursting eardrums, leaving men writhing in the dark.

Cut off from their command, trapped in the pitch black, the discipline of the Japanese troops began to fray under the weight of biological necessity.

The heat inside the unventilated limestone ovens rose to unbearable levels.

They had no water.

Some soldiers were reduced to licking condensation off the stelactites or drinking their own urine.

It was here that Private Eugene Sledge witnessed the descent of men into savagery.

He described the island not as a battlefield, but as a meat grinder meant to exterminate a generation.

Those who were wounded faced a grim fate.

With medical supplies exhausted and gang green setting in, many begged their officers to end their suffering.

The psychological toll was total.

They could hear the rumble of American tanks above their heads, the dull thud of bulldozers sealing their only exits.

They were being buried alive.

Evidence found decades later, scratch marks on the interior rock walls testified to the desperate final moments of men trying to dig their way out with bare hands before the air ran out.

This was the punishment for defying the American war machine.

a lonely dark death in the belly of the earth.

Despite this unimaginable suffering, the Japanese resistance was fanatical.

It took over 2 months to clear the island.

The first marine division was so battered, having suffered over 6,000 casualties, that it had to be pulled off the line.

The first time in the war, a marine division was rendered combat ineffective.

They were replaced by the army’s 81st Infantry Division, who continued the grim work of burning and blasting.

Slowly, yard by yard, cave by cave, the Americans tightened the noose around Colonel Nakagawa’s final command post.

By late November, the end was inevitable.

Nakagawa having expended every soldier and every round of ammunition sent his final message to Tokyo.

Sakura, Sakura, the cherry blossoms have fallen.

He then burned the regimental colors and committed ritual suicide deep within his command bunker.

But the Japanese philosophy of no surrender meant that the fighting didn’t stop with the commander’s death.

Small groups of stragglers continued to fight from isolated pockets.

The Americans hunted them down with ruthlessness, born of exhaustion.

There was no mercy left.

If a movement was spotted in a hole, it was torched.

If a voice was heard, it was silenced with TNT.

The surrender count tells the story.

Out of nearly 11,000 defenders, only 202 surrendered, and most of those were laborers or soldiers too wounded to pull the trigger on themselves.

The rest were annihilated.

The legacy of Pleu is a complicated one.

In a bitter twist of strategic irony, the airfield that so many men died for was barely used in the subsequent invasion of the Philippines.

Admiral Hollyy had even suggested bypassing the island before the invasion began, arguing it wasn’t necessary, but he was overruled.

Thousands of Marines died for an objective that, in hindsight, held little strategic value.

However, the battle proved something undeniable to the world.

There was no fortress the Japanese could build that the US Marines could not smash.

It demonstrated the terrifying adaptability of the American military, willing to turn tractors into tanks and flamethrowers into primary weapons to dig out an entrenched enemy.

Today, Pelleu is quiet.

The jungle has grown back, covering the scars of the artillery.

But if you walk the trails of the Umar Bragal, you can still find the rusted carcasses of American landing craft and the burntout husks of tanks.

And you can find the caves.

Many of them remain sealed.

Just as the bulldozers left them in 1944.

Behind those walls of rock, the remains of 2,600 Japanese soldiers still lie in the darkness, frozen in time, guarding a dead empire.

They are the silent witnesses to a battle where technology and brutality merged to create a new form of warfare.

The battle of Pleu forces us to confront the brutal arithmetic of war.

Was the use of such overwhelming, inhumane firepower, burning men alive in their holes, a war crime? Or was it the only way to spare American lives against an enemy that refused to surrender? When you look at the cost, the 1,800 Americans killed and the 8,000 wounded.

You understand why the flamethrowers were brought to the front.

It was a choice between brutality and defeat.

The spirits of the men who died in those caves are still part of the island.

A grim reminder of what happens when two unstoppable forces collide.

If you enjoyed this deep dive into the forgotten hell of the Pacific, and if you want to see how the US Marines took the lessons of Pleu and applied them to the black sands of Ewima, make sure to hit that subscribe button.

If you want to honor the history these men wrote in blood, help us keep their stories alive.

Leave a comment below.

Do you think the invasion of Pleu was a strategic necessity or a tragic waste of life? We’ll see you on the next fire