Why U S Marines Let 5,000 Japanese Attack First — And Wiped Out 3,800 in One Night
Автор: They Never Knew
Загружено: 2025-11-19
Просмотров: 17
July 7, 1944 — Saipan.
Before dawn broke over the rain-soaked Tanapag Plain, nineteen-year-old PFC Harold Meyer waited in a muddy foxhole with just 600 Americans stretched across a 3,000-yard line. Ahead of them, in the jungle, were the last 4,000 Japanese defenders — trapped, cornered, and preparing something the U.S. Army had never faced before.
This wasn’t a banzai charge.
This was gyokusai — a deliberate, all-out suicide attack ordered by Tokyo itself.
Within hours, Meyer would witness the largest mass suicide assault in modern military history.
#WW2Stories #WW2Tales #Saipan #PacificWar #BanzaiCharge #USArmy #ImperialJapan #WWIIHistory #WarDocumentary #HistoryShorts
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