[Congressional Record Volume 163, Number 91 (Thursday, May 25, 2017)]
[Senate]
[Page S3207]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
75th ANNIVERSARY OF ALEUTIAN ISLANDS CAMPAIGN AND ALEUT EVACUATION
Mr. SULLIVAN. Mr. President, as we approach Memorial Day, we remember
the men and women who sacrificed their lives in devotion to the causes
of liberty, freedom, and democracy. As such, I would like to take the
opportunity to speak about one event in our Nation's history that had a
profound impact on my great State of Alaska. June 3 marks the 75th
anniversary of the Aleutian Islands Campaign of the Second World War.
This ``Forgotten Battle'' began with the bombing of Dutch Harbor and
subsequent invasions of Adak, Kiska, and Attu, AK by the navy of
Imperial Japan. For the Allied forces, this campaign resulted in 1,481
casualties, 640 missing, and 3,416 wounded, but perhaps what is even
less known, is the impact this conflict had on the Aleut--Unangan/
Unangas--peoples of Alaska.
In the months of June and July of 1942, Aleut communities were
damaged, homes and personal possessions rummaged through or destroyed
by Allied forces, and more than 881 Aleut civilian residents of the
Pribilof Islands and the Aleutian Islands west of Unimak Island were
relocated to temporary camps in Southeast Alaska. Forty-two residents
of Attu were taken to Japan in September 1943, where they spent the
rest of the war as prisoners, and nearly half of them died, mainly of
hunger and malnutrition.
The campaign ultimately ended in an Allied victory with the Japanese
withdrawal from the Aleutians in 1943, but the effects are still felt
by those communities and peoples who were impacted.
Today, before the Senate, I would like to take a moment to honor the
sacrifices of our servicemembers, including the 25 Aleut who joined the
Armed Forces and the three who participated in the U.S. invasion to
recapture Attu and later received Bronze Stars for their valor. I want
to also honor the civilians, the Aleut evacuees, and Attuan prisoners
of war whose communities, culture, languages, and lives were forever
affected.
From June 2 to 4, 2017, a memorial ceremony will take place in Alaska
to honor and acknowledge the evacuees, their descendants, and veterans
of this ``Forgotten Battle,'' both living and deceased.
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