Prelude about the invasion After the Gilbert Islands fell to the Americans in late November 1943, Admiral
Mineichi Koga of the Japanese Combined Fleet was unsure of which islands the Americans would strike next. Without any carrier aircraft to provide reconnaissance, he ordered Admiral
Masami Kobayashi to disperse his 28,000 troops primarily to the outer islands of
Maloelap,
Wotje,
Jaliuit, and
Mili. However, Allied intelligence intercepted and decrypted the Japanese transmissions, informing the Americans which islands were more heavily defended. The Americans therefore decided to invade the lesser-protected but strategically important islands of
Majuro,
Kwajalein, and
Eniwetok. As early as November 1943,
B-24 bombers from the
Seventh Air Force stationed in the Ellice Islands had flown bombing missions over Mili and Maloelap. On 3 December 1943,
Task Force 50, under Rear Admiral
Charles Alan Pownall, including fleet carriers , , , and and light carriers and , launched airstrikes against Kwajalein. Four transports were sunk and fifty Japanese aircraft were destroyed, but the attack lacked strategic value. Fearing a counterattack from Wotje, Pownall ordered a second strike against the island. The Japanese counterattacked in a night bombing raid, in which
Lexington sustained a torpedo hit but was not sunk. The American task force later returned to Pearl Harbor. The
Yorktowns aircraft would continue to fly air cover over the atoll on 29 January, 31 January, and from 1 to 3 February. The invasion of the Marshalls was delayed for about a month due to logistical problems. Japanese commander Rear Admiral
Monzo Akiyama was aware that he lacked sufficient fortifications. The force took the lightly defended island in a single day without any casualties. Of the entire force of about 8,000 Japanese troops guarding Majuro and Kwajalein, only 253 were taken prisoner. The Americans suffered 348 men killed, 1,462 wounded, and 183 missing in the eight days it took to take the atoll.
Battle of Eniwetok American strategists believed that Eniwetok's islets contained enough room for airfields deemed critical for the upcoming invasion of the Marianas. Japanese Major General Yoshimi Nishida knew that it would be difficult to hold the main island of Eniwetok against invasion. He had roughly 4,000 troops, half of them IJA troops, the remainder a variety of sailors. Since the Americans would be landing with naval and air support, therefore giving them the upper hand once they established a beachhead, he decided to attempt to stop them at the beaches. On 17 February 1944 the American naval bombardment of Eniwetok Atoll began, marking the beginning of Operation Catchpole. The same day, the
22nd Marine Regiment under Colonel
John T. Walker landed on the northern island of Engebi. The landings were logistically difficult, with American men and materiel scattered along the beach. The Marines took the island on 18 February with 85 dead and 166 wounded. On 19 February, the 106th Infantry Regiment, under Lieutenant General Thomas E. Watson, landed on the main island of Eniwetok after a heavy bombardment. However, the Japanese
spider holes and
bunkers withstood much American shore bombardment. Landing American troops also faced the same logistical problems as the 22nd Marine Regiment on Engebi. Japanese forces concentrated in the southwest corner of the island counterattacked the American flank, forcing the Americans to attack mainly at night. Eniwetok Island was captured on 21 February with the loss of 37 Americans and nearly 800 Japanese. On Parry Island, the Americans used heavy gunfire support from battleships before the 22nd Marine Regiment, under Watson, came ashore on 22 February, capturing the entire atoll by 23 February. On Eniwetok, 313 Americans were killed in the fighting, 879 were wounded, and 77 were reported missing, while the Japanese suffered 3,380 dead and 105 captured. This marked an end to the Marshall Islands campaign. == Aftermath ==