PELELIU, Palau, April 13, 2018 — The U.S. Navy and Marine
Corps and the Japan Self-Defense Force participated in a wreath-laying ceremony
at the Peleliu Peace Memorial Park here yesterday to remember the service
members who lost their lives during the World War II Battle of Peleliu.
Members of the British Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy
also attended the ceremony.
Considered the bitterest battle of the war for the U.S.
Marines, the first U.S. invasion force landed in Peleliu on Sept. 15, 1944.
Expected to last only four days, the battle stretched more than two months,
with a casualty rate exceeding that of all other amphibious operations during
the Pacific War.
The ceremony included remarks from Marine Corps Gunnery Sgt.
Walter Greber, the staff noncommissioned officer in charge for security, and
Lt. Cmdr. Satoshi Hirokami, a member of the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force
and the Joint Staff.
Solemn Ceremony
The two service laid a wreath at the concrete cenotaph
erected to memorialize those who perished during the Peleliu battle. The
ceremony concluded with the playing of “Taps” by two buglers to honor the
sacrifice made by those who fought in the battle.
“While the Battle of Peleliu gave us insight into emerging
Japanese defense tactics, these lessons could not have been learned without the
sacrifice and service of our U.S. troops,” Greber said. “The battle underscores
our warfighting history, determination and will, as well as the resolve of the
Japanese.”
U.S. Marines of the 1st Marine Division, and later, soldiers
of the U.S. Army’s 81st Infantry Division fought to capture an airstrip,
encountering a well-armed Japanese force defending 500 caves that honey-combed
the small coral island, a maze the Marines soon nicknamed “Bloody Nose Ridge.”
U.S., Japan Relations ‘Stronger Than Ever’
“Today, times have changed and the relationship between
Japan and the United States has become stronger than ever as can be seen in
this event,” Hirokami said. “We together mourn the soldiers who lost their
lives here.”
Following the ceremony, U.S. and Japanese participants
visited the Peleliu Elementary School and played sports and listened to a
performance by the U.S. Navy Pacific Fleet band with more than 50 students,
while the medical staff conducted health screenings at the Peleliu clinic,
providing blood-glucose, vital signs and height/weight measurements, as well as
prescription eye glasses.
“We have witnesses today who came from … the Republic of
Palau and the United Kingdom. [This] shows the special relationship among us,”
Hirokami said. “It is my sincere hope that our visit here contributes to the
further development of our cooperative relations.”
The U.S. sailors and Marines and Japan Self-Defense Force
staff members came to t Palau aboard USNS Brunswick as part of Pacific
Partnership 2018, the largest annual multilateral humanitarian assistance and
disaster relief preparedness mission.
“Our history is important to us. It keeps the memory of the
sacrifices of our former brothers and sisters made remembered,” Greber said.
“It also allows us to learn from past mistakes and continue to evolve.”
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