On completion of scheduled alterations,
Pakana, with , began salvage operations on an
LST at
Maui, on 25 January 1945, completing the job on 3 February. She was then assigned convoy duty through 25 March, ending up at
Okinawa on the 30th. Okinawa proved to be hazardous as
Pakana spent several days extracting LSTs from the beaches while under Japanese aerial attacks. On 6 April she was called to pick up survivors of the destroyer which had sunk by Japanese planes, and to assist , which was flooding from battle damage. Next came salvage assignments at
Kerama Retto and
Hagushi. On 22 April
Pakana picked up survivors of . The next day, she had three crewmen wounded during a strafing attack in which one of her lookouts, manning a 40 mm gun, brought down the plane. A short time later the ship's gunners downed another plane. On 9 May,
Pakana assisted the battleship in fighting fires resulting from bomb hits, then went alongside SS
Bucknell Victory to supply power to the stricken vessel, remaining with her until 18 May. Divers from
Pakana engaged in underwater operations to remove obstructions at the Hagushi anchorage in Okinawa on 1 June. Later, on 8 June she was directed to rendezvous with , to assist her in towing the bow of the cruiser , which had broken off in a typhoon, to Guam. They arrived on the 20th, and by the 22nd
Pakana was en route to
Leyte.
Pakana underwent repairs at Leyte, leaving on 20 August. She subsequently provided services and salvage assistance at Saipan, Okinawa,
Kagoshima,
Sasebo, and Nago Wan. ==Post-war service==