In late summer of 1945 with reports reaching American headquarters in
China that Japan planned to kill its prisoners, General Albert Wedemeyer
(American commander) pulled together 7 men rescue teams to locate and
evacuate POWs in China, Manchuria and Korea. He pulled together seven-man
OSS rescue teams to rescue prisoners and gather intelligence.
OSS organized eight rescue missions, all under code names of birds: Magpie
(heading to Peiping), Duck (Weihsien), Flamingo (Harbin), Cardinal (Mukden),
Sparrow (Shanghai), Quail (Hanoi), Pigeon (Hainan Island), and Raven (Vientiane,
Laos). The teams took off from Si'an (today called xi'an).
The team that parachuted into Bejing liberated 624 Allied prisoners including
survivors of the Doolittle raids on Tokyo. One team rescued American General
Jonathan Wainwright, hero of Bataan, and 1,600 other Allied POWs in Mukden.
The OSS mercy mission that flew to Taiwan parachuted into Hainan Island
with the team that evacuated 400 starving prisoners there. On August 17,
1945, Tad Nagaki parachuted from a B-24, named "The Armored Angel," with
five other American heroes to rescue me and 1,400 other prisoners from
the Weihsien Concentration Camp in China's Shangtung Province.
Tad Nagaki and members of these rescue teams were honored with the Soldier's
Medal for heroism.
HOW
THE TEAMS WERE FORMED
In
July 1943, the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) asked for Nisei
volunteers for "highly secret" intelligence work. "More hazardous than
combat," some of them were told, "a one-way ticket." 13 Nisei qualified
to be part of an elite team of Nisei in 0SS Detachment 101. Every one
of them knew when he volunteered that it was much more dangerous for
him as a Japanese-American than for others.
The OSS trained the Nisei team first in radio school in Naperville, Illinois,
then the Military Intelligence Service Language School in Fort Savage,
Minnesota, then six weeks of survival and demolition at Toyon Bay on Catalina
Island.
Dropping into Northern Burma in January 1943, OSS Detachment 101 was the
first espionage unit the United States used behind Japanese lines. Deployed
in China, Burma and India, it had 250 officers and 750 enlisted men trained
in parachuting, radio operations, infiltration, survival training, hand-to-hand
combat, cryptography and guerrilla tactics. An American-led intelligence
outfit with unconventional methods, it was led by Carl Elfier and William
"Ray" Peers.
In 1943, when the Japanese announced that captured flyers would be given
"one way tickets to hell," Detachment 101 and their Kachin Raiders began
rescuing downed crews. Morale of Allied airmen in the Tenth Air Force
- many of them flying over "The Hump" - improved. Detachment 101 rescued
some 400 Allied flyers.
AWARDS: Soldier's Medal: Sgt Tadash Nagaki, intepreter, and T/4 Raymod
N. Hanchulak, medic, are awarded the Soldier's Medal for heroism in 'Shanghia,
1945, for their part in liberating 1,400 Allied prisoners from the Weihsien
Civilian Assembly Center in China's Shantung province, August 1945.
The Nisei plunged into the work of sabotage, guerrilla warfare, hit-and-run
harassment operations, translating Japanese documents, preparing propaganda
leaflets, interrogating prisoners and building airfields. Calvin Tottori,
a member of the Nisei team, documents their exploits in a fascinating
collection of unpublished memories, The O.S.S. Niseis in the China-Burma-India
Theater.
RISKS: Being mistaken for the enemy was always a possibility. Nisei Lt.
Ralph Yempuku was assigned to the 1st Battalion Kachin Rangers under Captain
Joe Lazarsky. The Kachins hated the Japanese. Japanese had tied villagers
to trees and bayoneted them to death. "The Kachins were initially very
wary about me because I was a Japanese-American," Yempuku recalls. "On
the first day, Captain Lazarsky paraded me in front of the whole battalion
introducing me as an 'American' and ordering them to study my face so
that I would not be mistaken for and shot as an enemy Japanese."
As the war wound down in Burma in the summer of 1945, Detachment 101 Niseis,
battle-hardened in India and Burma, were deployed to China, to report
to OSS Detachment 202 headquarters in Kunming to accomplish their rescues.
1945
2 FILIPINO AMERICAN WOMEN AWARDED US MEDAL OF FREEDOM!
Guerrero and Finch were awarded the U.S. Medal of Freedom after the war
for their exploits with the Philippine underground resistance movement
that are listed below.
Josefina
V. Guerrero supplied American POWs with food, clothing and medicine
and passed them contraband messages,
Judy Bellafaire (curator of the Women in Military Service for America
Memorial) said. "In the early days of the Japanese occupation, she
was asked to map Japanese fortifications at the Manila waterfront. Her
map included information on secret tunnels, air raid shelters and a number
of new installations in which the allies were interested."
Shortly before the American invasion of Manila in 1945, Guerrero carried
a map through Japanese-held
territory that showed the location of land mines along the planned invasion
route, Bellafaire said.
"She
walked most of the way with the map taped between her shoulder blades,"
Bellafaire said. "She strapped a pack on her back, distracting the enemy,
who concentrated their searches on the pack rather than on her. She reached
the 37th Infantry Division with the map, enabling the Americans to avoid
the land mines that had been laid for them."
Florence
Ebesole Smith Finch, the daughter of an American soldier and a Filipino
mother, claimed Philippine citizenship to avoid being imprisoned by the
Japanese, Bellafaire said. "She joined the underground resistance movement
and smuggled food, medicine and other supplies to American captives."
Finch was eventually arrested by the Japanese, tortured and sentenced
to three years' imprisonment, Bellafaire said. American forces liberated
her after she'd served five months of her sentence. She went to Buffalo,
N.Y., her father's hometown, and enlisted in the Coast Guard, the curator
said, to "avenge the death of her late husband," a Navy PT boat crewman
killed at Corregidor, the Philippines.
This in addition to all the Filipino Americans that had served in the
Army and Navy.
Remembering
that Roosevelt never told MacArthur to concede defeat in the Philippines,
MacArthur was hopeful that upon his arrival in Australia would allow him
to take over a U.S. invasion force. But to his dismay, the “5 mile
convoy” promised was not there and he had to wait before he could
finally make good on his “I shall return” pledge. Filipinos
gained the respect of America, Europe and the world after they had witnessed
the courage and tenacity of Filipino soldiers against overwhelming foes.
Winston
Churchill, disappointed at the very early capitulation of British forces
in Malaya and Singapore, praised the Philippine Scouts as “soldiers
with no equals in the world.” U.S. Army annals singled out the Philippine
Scouts, particularly the 26th Cavalry, the last U.S. army unit to actually
fight on horse back as the best fighting unit in Bataan, even better than
their counterparts in the regular U.S. Army who fought with them there.
The Philippine Commonwealth Army which included the PC and hastily recruited
ROTC cadets untested as combat soldiers proved their worth and gained
the respect of the world. Many of them later fought on as guerrillas,
until the Philippine Islands was liberated in 1945. (Col Romy Monteyro, PA, AFP -Ret. - Columnist, Philippine Mabuhay News)
In
1947 the United States concluded an agreement with the Republic of the
Philippines concerning military bases which specified that the United
States would be permitted to recruit citizens of the Philippines for voluntary
enlistment into the U S Armed Forces. However, there was no requirement
for such recruitment prior to the Korean Conflict. Expanded personnel
requirement at this time resulted in an urgent need for additional stewards
in the U. S. Navy. Consequently an agreement was negotiated in 1952 based
upon the 1947 treaty whereby up to 1,000 Filipino citizen could be enlisted
in the US Navy each year. This agreement was amended upon the request
of the United States in 1954 to raise this number to 2,000 a year. The
agreement between the two Governments maybe terminated by either party
on 1-year notice.
1945
FILIPINO GUERRILAS LED THE MOST SUCCESSFUL RESCUE MISSION
On January 8, 1945 - Filipino guerrillas led by Captain Juan Pajota backed the US troops that slipped behind Japanese lines to rescue 500+ American POWs located at the concentation camp in Cabanatuan - a northern province in the Philippines. This camp was the largest maintained by Japanese forces during the war and American prisoners kept in squalid conditions thought they had been forgotten. This rescue was a massive operation that had very little chance of making it and a lot of chances for failing, but it was the most successful rescue mission in American history.
1946
LUCE-CELLER BILL
Luce - Celler
bill grants right of naturalization and small immigration quotas to Asian
Indians and Filipinos. This bill
amended the Immigration Act of 1917 ("Barred Zone"), allows 100 immigrants
from India and the Philippines to enter the country and makes persons
of Indian and Filipino descent living the United States eligible for citizenship.
|
Governor
Mon Wallgren, Mayor William Devin, and Congressmen Henry "Scoop"
Jackson and Warren Magnusen were among the public officials who
initially spoke out against allowing Seattle's Japanese American
residents to return to the area. (Seattle PI 1-23-45; Times 12-18-44 |
1946
JAPANESE AMERICAN CONCENTRATION CAMPS ARE CLOSED
All
the concentration/internment
camps are closed. The Philippines have become independent from the
United States. United States citizenship are offered to all Filipinos,
not to just servicemen.
1946
FILIPINOS AND INDIANS CAN BECOME CITIZENS
Filipino
Naturalization Act
extends US citizenship to residents arrived before March 24, 1943. Luce-Cellar
Bill signed, allows Asian Indians to become US citizens and sets a yearly
quota of 100 immigrants.