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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simon_Bolivar_Buckner_Jr.Alaska
Buckner was promoted to brigadier general in 1940 and was assigned to fortify and protect Alaska as commander of the Army's Alaska Defense Command. He was promoted to major general in August 1941. He became known as a hard, tough leader, sleeping under a single sheet no matter how cold it was and denying his men the use of under arm deodorants, declaring that a man should smell like a man.[6]
The Japanese launched a surprise attack on Dutch Harbor 35 June 1942; farther west, Imperial Japanese forces seized the islands Kiska and Attu, bringing ashore some 7,000 troops (at Kiska) and nearly 3,000 at Attu. American commanders, including Buckner, feared that the Japanese would use the islands as bases to strike within range along the rest of the US West Coast. Lieutenant Paul Bishop of the 28th Bombardment Group recalled that:
General Simon B. Buckner Jr. said to us that the Japanese would have the opportunity to set up airbases in the Aleutians, making coastal cities like Anchorage, Seattle, and San Francisco vulnerable within range to attack by their bombers. The fear of that scenario was real at the time because the Japanese were nearly invincible and ruthless in Asia and the Pacific. We knew that they bombed China relentlessly and by surprise on Pearl Harbor, so we had to make sure it wouldn't happen here in the continental U.S. similar to what the Germans did over London and Coventry.[7]
Buckner gave orders in June 1942 for the indigenous Aleut people to be evacuated and for their villages to be burned. The Aleut people were not allowed to return until 1945, after the war was over.[8] Buckner furthermore objected to the deployment of African American troops in Alaska, writing to his superiors of his concern that they would remain after the war, "with the natural result that they would interbreed with the Indians and the Eskimos and produce an astonishingly objectionable race of mongrels which would be a problem".[9]
The campaign to take back Attu Island took nearly a year. The Battle for Attu, Operation Landcrab, occurred across three weeks in May 1943. The casualties on both sides were high. On shore, some 549 US soldiers were killed, 1,148 were wounded, and 1,814 suffered cold and disease. Of the 2,900 Japanese garrison, only 28 survived.
The loyal courage, vigorous energy and determined fortitude of our armed forces in Alaskaon land, in the air and on the waterhave turned back the tide of Japanese invasion, ejected the enemy from our shores and made a fortress of our last frontier. But this is only the beginning. We have opened the road to Tokyo; the shortest, most direct and most devastating to our enemies. May we soon travel that road to victory.
Lieutenant General Simon Bolivar Buckner Jr., a few months after the Aleutian Islands Campaign[10]
Subsequently, in August 1943, Kiska was invaded by Canadian and US soldiers. However, its Japanese garrison had been secretly withdrawn under cover of fog prior to the arrival of Allied forces. Allied commanders refused to believe that the Japanese could have completely evacuated Kiska. For eight days, troops searched the island, firing into the dense fog and sometimes accidentally shooting their comrades. The bombardment and invasion of the deserted island was written off as a "training exercise", and the Aleutian Campaign officially ended after 439 days of warfare. In 1943, Buckner was promoted to lieutenant general.
Beartracks
(14,246 posts)marble falls
(69,991 posts)... shivering around a camp fire. I absolutely did not know about Buckner's racist reports and the disruption of native lives and the displacement of entire communities.
He was the son of a Confederate General of the same name.
erronis
(22,234 posts)Last edited Sat Nov 22, 2025, 02:51 PM - Edit history (1)
Simon Bolivar being one who helped overthrow the Spanish in South America and had support from the indigenous peoples.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sim%C3%B3n_Bol%C3%ADvar
This morning I was visiting with a gentleman in hospice who recounted tales of his great uncle who fought in the Spanish-American wars, fought in China, Japan and traveled around the world four times. I remarked how so many Americans get their foreign experiences on "expeditions."
Bayard
(28,095 posts)In preparation for just such a possibility. It was a great fear at the time.
Its where he learned to be a pool shark....
lapfog_1
(31,507 posts)as well as many other decorations.
After the war he served in the Navy reserves... and whenever there was an inspection... the ribbon often caught the attention of the visiting admiral. They would ask about the award and my father, following orders, always had to politely decline ( "That is classified sir" ).
But it wasn't awarded for action in Alaska.
Ponietz
(4,216 posts)ProfessorGAC
(75,492 posts)..."What History Forgot" on the History Channel.
I've watched every episode multiple times. Really good series.
marble falls
(69,991 posts)... went to a forward position in a jeep with his flags and wore a helmet with a three gold stars on it. He was persuaded to put on an unmarked helmet and within minutes was killed by shrapnel from an artillery round.
I knew there were Japanese holding territory, but I didn't know how hot the war was.
pansypoo53219
(22,810 posts)mitch96
(15,571 posts)of. a Mitsubishi A6M Zero Fighter. The scourge of the pacific. Light, fast and very maneuverable. with great range. During the campaign a Japanese pilot crashed a Zero mostly in tact on the island of AKutan in the
Aleutians. The plane was taken back to the US and rebuilt. Subsequintly flown and it's strengths and weakness were studied. From this information the US Navy and Grumman built the F6F Hellcat just to defeat the Zero.. And the Hellcat did an admirable job...
The Akutan Zero has been described as "a prize almost beyond value to the United States"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akutan_Zero
Yup, I'm a history nut...
m