[Congressional Record Volume 169, Number 30 (Tuesday, February 14, 2023)]
[Senate]
[Pages S395-S396]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING THE DEFENDERS OF BATAAN AND CORREGIDOR
Mr. HEINRICH. Mr. President, we must never forget the ``first to
fire'' troops from the United States and the Philippines who bravely
defended Bataan, Corregidor, and other critical locations throughout
the Pacific theater in the early months of World War II before enduring
some of the most harrowing prisoners of war experiences in history.
Their combat experiences began hours after the attack on Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii Territory, on December 7, 1941. Imperial Japanese forces
launched coordinated attacks throughout Asia, striking Malaya,
Thailand, Singapore, Shanghai, Hong Kong, and the American Territories
of Guam, Midway, Wake Island, Howland Island, and the Commonwealth of
the Philippines.
By December 22, 1941, the American Territories of Guam and Wake
Island were surrendered to Imperial Japan. The Commonwealth of the
Philippines was under a full-scale invasion.
By March 10, 1942, the U.S. Asiatic Fleet was destroyed, and U.S.
Army Forces on Java in the Dutch East Indies were surrendered, and
General Douglas MacArthur was evacuated from Corregidor to Australia.
By June 9, 1942, all of the Philippines was surrendered. The Japanese
occupied the Alaskan islands of Kiska and Attu. Japanese forces threw
three captured American aviators from the Battle of Midway into the
sea.
Only in the Philippine Islands did U.S. Armed Forces under the
command of the United States Army Forces Far East--USAFFE--wage a
prolonged, 6-month resistance to Imperial Japan's invasion in contrast
to other Allied encounters with Japan throughout Southeast Asia.
In the Philippines, the ``first to fire'' at the Japanese invaders on
December 8, 1941, were the New Mexico National Guardsmen from the 200th
and 515th Coast Artillery (AA) regiments, who were stationed at Fort
Stotsenburg north of Manila with the mission of protecting Clark Field.
With the activation of War Plan Orange (WPO-3) on December 24, 1941,
USAFFE forces on the island of Luzon in the Philippines withdrew into
the Bataan Peninsula to defend Manila Bay and await for reinforcements,
which were never to come.
The withdrawal was covered by 26th Cavalry Regiment (Philippine
Scouts) and the Provisional Tank Group commanded by Brigadier General
James R. N. Weaver that was composed of the 192nd GHQ Light Tank
Battalion made up of Company A from Janesville, WI, Company B from
Maywood, IL, Company C from Port Clinton, OH, and Company D from
Harrodsburg, KY, and the GHQ 194th Light Tank Battalion made up of
Company A from Brainerd, MN, Company B from Saint Joseph, MO, and
Company C from Salinas, CA, and the 17th Ordnance Company (Armored).
On January 16, 1942, when Troop G of the 26th Cavalry encountered
Japanese forces at an escape route to Bataan, Lieutenant Edwin P.
Ramsey ordered the last cavalry charge in American history.
For the next 4 months, an estimated 12,000 American troops, 76,000
Filipino troops, and 20,000 Filipino civilians endured siege conditions
marked by hunger, disease, and confusion with dwindling and antiquated
war materiel.
The Japan's successful command of the air and sea in Southeast Asia
and the Southwest Pacific combined with Washington and London's
``Europe First'' strategy foreclosed sending reinforcements and
supplies to the besieged islands in the Pacific.
Despite the combat prowess, dedication, and pure heroism of the
American and Filipino troops on Bataan, Commanding General Edward B.
King understood his seriously degraded force could not continue. He
surrendered the Bataan Peninsula on April 9, 1942.
With surrender, thousands of troops and civilians were assembled at
the Port of Mariveles at the tip of Bataan for a 65-mile merciless
march in the tropical sun up the peninsula to a train station at San
Fernando where they were packed standing into small unventilated
boxcars for the 24 miles to Capas. From there, the survivors were
forced to march 6 miles to Camp O'Donnell, a makeshift POW camp with
only one source of water.
This forced trek came to be known as the Bataan Death March as it was
marked by the Japanese capturers' conscious cruelty of withholding
food, water, and medicine, for looting and murder, and for inflicting
capricious abuse and torture upon defenseless prisoners.
For the next month, the Japanese under the command of General
Masaharu Homma unleashed a continual air and artillery assault on the
fortress islands of Corregidor (Ft. Mills), Ft. Frank, Ft. Hughes, and
Ft. Drum in Manila Bay.
After Japanese forces breached beach defenses on Corregidor,
Commanding General Jonathan Wainwright surrendered Corregidor and its
associated islands on May 6, 1942.
General Homma refused to accept the surrender and kept the men and
women held on the islands in Manila Bay as hostages until he received
assurance on June 9, 1942, that all the USAFFE troops throughout the
Philippines had surrendered.
On June 7, 1942, the Imperial Japanese Army occupied the Aleutian
Island of Attu, capturing the population of 42 Unangax (Aleut) and two
American citizens, one of whom was executed and the other taken to
Japan with the Alaska Natives as prisoners of war.
Included in the surrenders in the Philippines were female nurses of
U.S. Army, Navy, Philippine Army, and civilian volunteers who became
the first large group of American women in combat and, alongside the
five Navy nurses surrendered on Guam in December 1941, comprised the
first group of American military women taken captive and imprisoned by
an enemy.
[[Page S396]]
Between January of 1942 and December of 1944, thousands of prisoners
of war from the United States who had survived the surrenders
throughout the Pacific were shipped in unmarked transports, known as
``hellships'' for forced labor, often with private companies,
throughout the Japanese Empire.
By the war's end, more than 12,000 Americans had died in squalid POW
camps, in the fetid holds of the ``hellships,'' or in forced labor
camps owned by Japanese companies where they were denied food, water,
sanitation, clothing, and medical care. As a result, the death rate for
American POWs of Japan was 40 percent. Less than half of the men of New
Mexico Coast Artillery and the members of the 192nd and 194th
Provisional Tank Battalions returned home after the war.
Surviving as a POW of Japan and returning home was the beginning of
new battles: finding acceptance in society and living with serious
mental and physical ailments that the Veterans Administration was
unprepared to address, resulting in death rates that were more than
twice those of the comparably aged White male population of the time.
The veterans of the early defensive battles in the Pacific
represented all States, Tribes, and Territories of the United States, a
diversity of ethnicities and religions embodying the American spirit of
perseverance, faith, and optimism.
President Ronald Reagan first proclaimed National Former Prisoner of
War Recognition Day in 1988, which was established to coincide with
April 9, the anniversary of the surrender of Bataan and the start of
the Bataan Death March.
The U.S. Navy has honored the service and heroism of the veterans of
early battles in the Pacific by naming several ships after the 1942
fighting in the Philippines and other places in the Pacific, including
one still in service, the USS Bataan (LHD-5), homeported in Norfolk,
VA; as well as the now decommissioned USS Corregidor (CVE-58); USS
Antrim (FFG-20); USS Bangust (DE-739), USS Baron (DE-739), USS Elrod
(FFG-55), and USS Rooks (DD-804).
It is time to recognize the Defenders of Bataan and Corregidor:
ordinary men and women who found uncommon courage in extraordinary
circumstances to fight the impossible and endure the unimaginable for
freedom from tyranny and oppression.
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