Invasion of Lingayen Gulf
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The Invasion of Lingayen Gulf ( fil, Paglusob sa Golpo ng Lingayen), 6–9 January 1945, was an Allied
amphibious operation Amphibious warfare is a type of Offensive (military), offensive military operation that today uses naval ships to project ground and air power onto a hostile or potentially hostile shore at a designated landing beach. Through history the opera ...
in the
Philippines The Philippines (; fil, Pilipinas, links=no), officially the Republic of the Philippines ( fil, Republika ng Pilipinas, links=no), * bik, Republika kan Filipinas * ceb, Republika sa Pilipinas * cbk, República de Filipinas * hil, Republ ...
during
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
. In the early morning of 6 January 1945, a large Allied force commanded by Admiral Jesse B. Oldendorf began approaching the shores of
Lingayen Lingayen, officially the Municipality of Lingayen ( pag, Baley na Lingayen; ilo, Ili ti Lingayen; tgl, Bayan ng Lingayen), is a 1st class municipality of the Philippines, municipality and capital of the Philippine Province, province of Pangasi ...
from Lingayen Gulf, on the island of
Luzon Luzon (; ) is the largest and most populous island in the Philippines. Located in the northern portion of the Philippines archipelago, it is the economic and political center of the nation, being home to the country's capital city, Manila, as ...
.
U.S. Navy The United States Navy (USN) is the maritime service branch of the United States Armed Forces and one of the eight uniformed services of the United States. It is the largest and most powerful navy in the world, with the estimated tonnage o ...
and
Royal Australian Navy The Royal Australian Navy (RAN) is the principal naval force of the Australian Defence Force (ADF). The professional head of the RAN is Chief of Navy (CN) Vice Admiral Mark Hammond AM, RAN. CN is also jointly responsible to the Minister of ...
warships began bombarding suspected
Japanese Japanese may refer to: * Something from or related to Japan, an island country in East Asia * Japanese language, spoken mainly in Japan * Japanese people, the ethnic group that identifies with Japan through ancestry or culture ** Japanese diaspor ...
positions along the coast of Lingayen from their position in Lingayen Gulf for three days. On "S-Day", 9 January, the U.S. 6th Army landed on a roughly beachhead at the base of the Gulf between the towns of Lingayen and San Fabian.


Background

During
World War II World War II or the Second World War, often abbreviated as WWII or WW2, was a world war that lasted from 1939 to 1945. It involved the vast majority of the world's countries—including all of the great powers—forming two opposing ...
, the Lingayen Gulf proved a strategically important theater of war between American and Japanese forces. Shown in the center of the figure left, on 22 December 1941, the Japanese 14th Army—under Lieutenant General
Masaharu Homma was a lieutenant general in the Imperial Japanese Army during World War II. Homma commanded the Japanese 14th Army, which invaded the Philippines and perpetrated the Bataan Death March. After the war, Homma was convicted of war crimes relating ...
landed on the Northeastern shores of the gulf, at Agoo, Caba, Santiago and Bauang, where they engaged in a number of relatively minor skirmishes with the defenders, a poorly equipped contingent of predominantly American and
Filipino Filipino may refer to: * Something from or related to the Philippines ** Filipino language, standardized variety of 'Tagalog', the national language and one of the official languages of the Philippines. ** Filipinos, people who are citizens of th ...
troops. Facing limited opposition, the larger Japanese forces managed to successfully invade and occupy the gulf. On the day after the defeat, General Douglas MacArthur issued the order to retreat from
Luzon Luzon (; ) is the largest and most populous island in the Philippines. Located in the northern portion of the Philippines archipelago, it is the economic and political center of the nation, being home to the country's capital city, Manila, as ...
and withdraw to
Bataan Bataan (), officially the Province of Bataan ( fil, Lalawigan ng Bataan ), is a province in the Central Luzon region of the Philippines. Its capital is the city of Balanga while Mariveles is the largest town in the province. Occupying the enti ...
. Following their defeat at the
Battle of Bataan The Battle of Bataan ( tl, Labanan sa Bataan; January 7 – April 9, 1942) was fought by the United States and the Philippine Commonwealth against Japan during World War II. The battle represented the most intense phase of the Japanese inva ...
, U.S. and Filipino prisoners of war were forced into the
Bataan Death March The Bataan Death March (Filipino: ''Martsa ng Kamatayan sa Bataan''; Spanish: ''Marcha de la muerte de Bataán'' ; Kapampangan: ''Martsa ning Kematayan quing Bataan''; Japanese: バターン死の行進, Hepburn: ''Batān Shi no Kōshin'') wa ...
, with their destination Capas, Tarlac, not far from the capital city of Manilla.William L. O'Neill, ''A Democracy at War: America's Fight at Home and Abroad in World War II'', p 115 After attempting to establish an independent Allied government supported by American troops under the command of General McArthur on Corregidor, Japanese troops forced the surrender of the remaining American and Filipino forces there at the Battle of Corregidor on May 6, 1942. On 11 March 1942, Lieutenant John D. Bulkeley had picked up MacArthur, his family, and his immediate staff, who had been ordered to flee the Philippines. For the next three years, the gulf remained under Japanese occupation prior to the Lingayen Gulf landings.


Operations


Bombardment

From January 3–9, 1945, the ships of Admiral Oldendorf's invasion force took a lengthy circuitous route through the previously captured Islands of Leyte Gulf in the Southeast of the Philippines, shown in blue as the Eastern Visayas in the map at left, and West, South of the Southern Visayas through the Suriago Strait and the Bohol Sea. Then heading North and following the Western coastlines of the Western Philippine Islands of Negros, Panay, and Mindoro (In green), shown at left in the map, the forward staged ships of Admiral Oldendorf's naval invasion force headed for the mouth of Lingayen Gulf on the Island of Luzon, shown to the immediate left of Bagaio. From the mouth of the Gulf, two vertical channels would be swept of mines by the minesweepers, one for landing areas terminating at the base of the Gulf, West on the beach of Lingayen, and one for landing areas terminating East at the town of San Fabian. The narrow base of the roughly rectangular Lingayen Gulf provided a relatively small landing area, only 25–30 miles wide, but its assault forces needed to take only a 100-mile overland route South to reach Luzon's capital city of Manilla, shown clearly at left. Commencing around noon on 6 January 1945, a heavy naval and air bombardment of suspected Japanese defenses on Lingayen began from their position inside the Gulf, the base of which is shown in the figure above. Estimates of resistance from the coastline and inland shores on the landing areas on the mouth of the Gulf proved inaccurate, as much of the bombardment proved unnecessary.


Minesweeping efforts

Demolitions near the planned landing sights on the base of the Gulf by Underwater Demolition Teams were undertaken, but they found no beach obstacles, and only one mine and encountered sparse opposing forces. Lieutenant Commander W. R. Loud, who commanded the minesweeper force, claimed to have found around ten additional mines in his sweeping efforts by end of day January 7, though intelligence estimates by Philippine resistance may have overestimated the number present. Smith writes that surprisingly, during the 7th, exploratory sweeps during the morning "turned up only two floating mines and none of the moored type." Both sources seemed to indicate a total of less than 10–12 mines, not a particularly large number for a close approach to a landing area, considering the large numbers soon to be found off the beaches of Iwo Jima. As approach channels were swept, buoys were placed to delineate the areas where ships could approach or land safe from the threat of active contact mines. The sweepers performed with efficiency and courage considering they were the constant target of air attacks, several causing damage, or the sinking of their ships. They performed their tasks effectively during January 6–8, during frequent attack, and in difficult weather, including high waves on the Eastern base of the gulf near Lingayen during January 7, which may have affected those craft closer to the Eastern side of the Gulf. Aircraft and naval artillery bombardment of the landing areas also occurred, with ''
kamikaze , officially , were a part of the Japanese Special Attack Units of military aviators who flew suicide attacks for the Empire of Japan against Allied naval vessels in the closing stages of the Pacific campaign of World War II, intending t ...
s'' attacking on the 7th, though enemy kamikazes, bombers and torpedo planes had reigned terror on the naval forces on their long route to the Gulf from the 2nd and would continue through the 13th. Smith writes that Allied planes from Allied escort carriers flew "from 250 to 300 sorties during the period from 6 through 8 January", bombing and strafing targets along the beaches. Many downed enemy planes and kamikazes, but many escaped their grasp. Ian W. Toll writes that on January 7, "in response to urgent requests from Admiral Kinkade and General MacArthur, Halsey threw his "big blue blanket" over Luzon." Airmen from the carriers, after returning to their ships, touted "claims of at least seventy-five Japanese planes destroyed on the ground." On the 8th, it was observed that in the town of
Lingayen Lingayen, officially the Municipality of Lingayen ( pag, Baley na Lingayen; ilo, Ili ti Lingayen; tgl, Bayan ng Lingayen), is a 1st class municipality of the Philippines, municipality and capital of the Philippine Province, province of Pangasi ...
, as a response to the pre-landing bombardment, Filipinos had begun to form a parade, complete with United States and Philippine flags; fire was shifted away from that area.


Land battle

As shown at left, at 09:30 on 9 January 1945, about 68,000 GIs under General
Walter Krueger Walter Krueger (26 January 1881 – 20 August 1967) was an American soldier and general officer in the first half of the 20th century. He commanded the Sixth United States Army in the South West Pacific Area during World War II. He rose fr ...
of the U.S. 6th Army—following a devastating naval bombardment—landed at the coast of Lingayen Gulf meeting no opposition. A total of 203,608 soldiers were eventually landed over the next few days, establishing a beachhead, stretching from Sual, and San Fabian at the far East of the map at the base of the Bolianu Peninsula, west to the central Gulf town of Dagupan (
XIV Corps 14 Corps, 14th Corps, Fourteenth Corps, or XIV Corps may refer to: * XIV Corps (Grande Armée), a unit of the Imperial French Army during the Napoleonic Wars * XIV Corps (German Empire), a unit of the Imperial German Army prior to and during World ...
), and then to the far Western town of Lingayen. The location of XIV corps is shown by the blue line at the center of the figure at left. The Lingayen Assault Force landing areas are shown at left by blue rectangles near the town of Lingayen, and the assault forces are shown as the blue lines further inland. The San Fabian Assault force (
I Corps I Corps, 1st Corps, or First Corps may refer to: France * 1st Army Corps (France) * I Cavalry Corps (Grande Armée), a cavalry unit of the Imperial French Army during the Napoleonic Wars * I Corps (Grande Armée), a unit of the Imperial French A ...
) have landing areas shown as rectangles and a blue line indicating assault forces on right of figure by the town of San Fabian. The total number of troops under the command of MacArthur was reported to have even exceeded the number that
Dwight D. Eisenhower Dwight David "Ike" Eisenhower (born David Dwight Eisenhower; ; October 14, 1890 – March 28, 1969) was an American military officer and statesman who served as the 34th president of the United States from 1953 to 1961. During World War II, ...
controlled in Europe.Pacific wrecks – Lingayan Gulf
/ref> While aboard ship, Task Force 78, the San Fabian Attack Force, a full three days behind Admiral Oldendorf's Naval convoys, was commanded by Vice Admiral Daniel E. Barbey, and Task Force 79, the Lingayen Attack Force, an equal distance behind Oldendorf, was commanded by Vice Admiral Theodore Wilkinson. Once disembarking from their ships, the two ground-based assault Task Forces would put more U.S. troops ashore on the first day at Lingayen than those arriving on the bloody beaches of Normandy on Day one of D-Day. Within a few days, the assault forces had quickly captured the coastal towns and secured the 20-mile-long (32 km) beachhead, as well as penetrating up to five miles (8 km) inland.


Heavy losses on land and sea

Despite their success in driving out the Japanese forces stationed there, the Americans and their mostly Australian allies suffered relatively heavy losses; particularly to their convoys, due to ''
kamikaze , officially , were a part of the Japanese Special Attack Units of military aviators who flew suicide attacks for the Empire of Japan against Allied naval vessels in the closing stages of the Pacific campaign of World War II, intending t ...
'' attacks. While not the highest in U.S. casualties, the subsequent Battle for Luzon was the highest net casualty battle U.S. forces fought in World War II, with 192,000 to 217,000 Japanese combatants dead, though some sources quote losses as high as 380,000 for the entire conflict including non-combat casualties (mostly from starvation and disease). The battle saw 8,000 American combatants killed, or as many as 10,000 in the entire conflict. Total non-combat American casualty estimates have ranged as high as 93,400 among the Sixth Army when illness from disease and non-combat injuries are accounted for. However, to these staggering losses, there must also be added the over 150,000 Filipinos killed, many during the Battle of Manila, but with an overwhelmingly number of Filipino civilians murdered by Japanese forces, as a result of the
Manila massacre The Manila massacre ( fil, Pagpatay sa Maynila or ''Masaker sa Maynila''), also called the Rape of Manila ( fil, Paggahasa ng Maynila), involved atrocities committed against Filipino civilians in the City of Manila, the capital of the Phili ...
of February, 1945.Connaughton, R., Pimlott, J., and Anderson, D., 1995, The Battle for Manila, London: Bloomsbury Publishing,


Overview of ships damaged 3–13 January 1945

During the invasion by sea, which is the primary subject of this article, from December 13, 1944 – January 13, 1945, including the time Allied ships entered the Philippines through Leyte Gulf to Lingayen, as well as action taken two weeks before off the Northern Philippine Islands of Mindoro and Marinduque, a total of 24 Allied ships were sunk and another 67 were damaged by ''kamikazes'', though this number includes naval activities off the West coast of Luzon, outside of Lingayen Gulf, off the Philippine Visaya Islands and the Island of Mindoro, which were necessary as preliminaries to secure the Island of Luzon for the invasion force. Ships damaged by kamikazes between 3–11 January on the way to Lingayen included the battleships , and (the latter was accidentally hit by friendly fire), the
heavy cruiser The heavy cruiser was a type of cruiser, a naval warship designed for long range and high speed, armed generally with naval guns of roughly 203 mm (8 inches) in caliber, whose design parameters were dictated by the Washington Naval T ...
, the
light cruiser A light cruiser is a type of small or medium-sized warship. The term is a shortening of the phrase "light armored cruiser", describing a small ship that carried armor in the same way as an armored cruiser: a protective belt and deck. Prior to th ...
, and the Destroyer minesweepers and . Following the landings, the Lingayen Gulf was turned into a vast supply depot for the rest of the war to support the
Battle of Luzon The Battle of Luzon ( tl, Labanan sa Luzon; ja, ルソン島の戦い; es, Batalla de Luzón) was a land battle of the Pacific Theater of Operations of World War II by the Allied forces of the U.S., its colony the Philippines, and allies agai ...
. General Douglas MacArthur was embarked on the light cruiser USS ''Boise''. On 5 January a Japanese midget submarine shot two torpedoes at ''Boise'' but the cruiser took evasive actions to avoid getting hit. On 7 January a Japanese airplane dropped a bomb and barely missed hitting ''Boise''. Throughout the operation, ''Boise'' shot anti-aircraft artillery at the Japanese kamikazes and witnessed numerous ships close to it getting hit.


''USS Ommaney Bay'' sunk

On 3 January 1945, the ''
USS Ommaney Bay USS ''Ommaney Bay'' (CVE–79) was a of the United States Navy, which served during World War II. It was named after Ommaney Bay, located at the south end of Baranof Island, Alaska. Launched in late 1943 and commissioned in early 1944, the shi ...
'', a large escort carrier, was severely damaged by a
Yokosuka P1Y The Yokosuka P1Y ''Ginga'' (銀河, "Galaxy") was a twin-engine, land-based bomber developed for the Japanese Imperial Navy in World War II. It was the successor to the Mitsubishi G4M and given the Allied reporting name "Frances". Design and d ...
kamikaze carrying two bombs. At 17:12, the Yokosuka P1Y penetrated a Destroyer screen undetected and made for ''Ommaney'', approaching directly towards the ship's bow. Captain Young of the ''Ommaney'' later reported that the kamikaze's approach was concealed by the blinding glare of the sun.Smiyh, Peter (2014), ''Kamikaze: To Die for the Emperor, Barnsley, England: Pen and Sword Books'', ISBN 9781473847828, pg. 43 The Captain, aware of the kamikaze threat, had assigned multiple lookouts throughout the carrier's deck. But a lack of radar signals, a common and vexing problem during the battle, had led the task group to believe that the Japanese planes had withdrawn, and the kamikaze attack took the lookouts by complete surprise. was only able to respond with inaccurate anti-aircraft fire, whilst ''Ommaney Bay'' was unable to react at all.Y'Blood, William T. (2014), ''The Little Giants: U.S. Escort Carriers Against Japan (E-book)'', Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, ISBN 9781612512471, pg. 281 The Captain also noted that the kamikaze made its final dive with the glare of the blinding sun at its back. The plane sliced across the superstructure with its wing, collapsing it onto the flight deck, and then veered into her flight deck on the forward starboard side, releasing the two bombs, with one penetrating the flight deck and setting off a series of explosions among the fully gassed planes on the hangar deck. Pressure to her water main was lost when the second bomb passed through the hangar deck, making it more difficult to fight fires. Fires and explosions, including the intense heat and dark smoke of an oil fire, continued until the decision was made to scuttle her with a torpedo later in the day.YBlood, William T. ''The Little Giants'', pg. 282 Considered sunk by Naval statistics, her kamikaze strike, though coming early in the battle, represented the greatest loss of life to a single ship with 93 killed and 65 wounded. 19 Grumman FM-2 Wildcat fighters and 10 Grumman TBM Avenger torpedo bombers went down with ''Ommaney Bay''. None of her planes were able to take off before the attack.


''Manila Bay'' struck

It is strongly speculated by Samuel Eliot Morison that the late afternoon kamikaze strikes on 5 January between 1651 and 1750 on the ''USS Helm'', ''HMAS Arunta'', ''USS Louisville'', ''HMAS Australia'', ''USS Manila Bay'', and ''USS Savo Island'' came from 16 kamikaze planes and 4 escorts that took off at 1557 from the Japanese airbase at Mabalacat, formerly Clark Air Base, north of Manila. The attacks occurred West of Luzon about 100 miles off the coast of Corregidor. The air base's relative proximity to the Allied ships insured relatively full tanks, and the tactical training they had received from Commander Tadashi Nakajima in kamikaze targeting methods, maneuvering and dive strategies increased their chances of making it to their targets and dealing a more damaging strike. Just before 17:50, on 5 January two ''kamikazes'' dove at ''Manila Bay'' from the portside. The first plane hit the flight deck to starboard abaft the
bridge A bridge is a structure built to span a physical obstacle (such as a body of water, valley, road, or rail) without blocking the way underneath. It is constructed for the purpose of providing passage over the obstacle, which is usually somethi ...
, causing fires on the flight and hangar decks, destroying radar transmitting spaces, and wiping out all communications. The second plane, aimed for the bridge, missed the island close aboard to starboard and hit the sea off the fantail. 8 Grumman TBM Avenger torpedo bombers and 1 Grumman FM-2 Wildcat fighter were destroyed by the kamikaze attack. Firefighting parties promptly brought the blazes under control, including those caused by two fueled and burning torpedo planes in the hangar deck. Within 24 hours, she resumed limited air operations. Most repairs to her damaged electrical and communication circuits were completed by 9 January, when the amphibious invasion in Lingayen Gulf got underway. ''Manila Bay'' had 14 men killed and 52 wounded, but by 10 January she resumed full duty in support of the Lingayen Gulf operations. In addition to providing air cover for the task force, her planes flew 104 sorties against targets in western
Luzon Luzon (; ) is the largest and most populous island in the Philippines. Located in the northern portion of the Philippines archipelago, it is the economic and political center of the nation, being home to the country's capital city, Manila, as ...
.Morison, Samuel, ''Liberation'', pg. 103–4


''HMAS Australia'' struck five times

The heavy cruiser HMAS Australia was the only invasion ship struck five times, though her considerable casualties of forty-four dead and seventy-two wounded were the result of only the first two strikes, of which only the second caused serious damage. While roughly fifty miles Northwest of
Manila Bay Manila Bay ( fil, Look ng Maynila) is a natural harbor that serves the Port of Manila (on Luzon), in the Philippines. Strategically located around the capital city of the Philippines, Manila Bay facilitated commerce and trade between the Phi ...
on her approach to the mouth of the Gulf to provide fire support for the Lingayen landings at San Fabian, ''Australia'' was struck portside amidships at 17:35 on 5 January.Gill, ''Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945'', p. 582Frame, Tom ''No Pleasure Cruise: The Story of the Royal Australian Navy'', Crows Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin., ISBN 1-74114-233-4, p. 192 Twenty-five were killed and thirty were wounded, though Morison put the figures at thirty killed and forty-six wounded, mostly from the gun crews of the port-side secondary and anti-aircraft guns. However, the damage to the ship was not serious enough to withdraw her from her duties, and she continued in operation. The ships reached the gulf early on 6 January, and by 11:00, ''Australia'' had commenced pre-landing bombardment. While in the Gulf, a second kamikaze rammed the cruiser at 17:34 on 6 January between the starboard 4-inch guns, killing fourteen and wounding twenty-six.Gill, ''Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945'', p. 584 The casualties again consisted primarily of gun crews, and after this point, there were only enough trained personnel to man one 4-inch gun on each side of the cruiser. Another aircraft attempted to ram ''Australia'' at 18:28, but this was shot down by the .Morison, Samuel Eliot, ''The Two-Ocean War: A Short History of the United States Navy in the Second World War''. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-59114-524-0. OCLC 71223265, p. 483 On 8 January, ''Australia'' was attacked twice by kamikazes in quick succession: at 07:20, a twin-engine bomber hit the water near the cruiser and skidded to connect with the ship's port flank, then a second aircraft attacked at 07:39, again shot down just before it hit the port side at the waterline.Gill, ''Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945'', p. 586 A bomb carried by the second attacker opened a hole in the hull, causing a 5-degree
list A ''list'' is any set of items in a row. List or lists may also refer to: People * List (surname) Organizations * List College, an undergraduate division of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America * SC Germania List, German rugby unio ...
, but despite the explosion and a large quantity of debris and shrapnel, casualties were limited to a few cases of shock, and ''Australia'' was deemed capable of carrying out the bombardments assigned to her that day. Finally at 13:11 on 9 January, the fifth and final suicide aircraft to hit ''Australia'' during the operation struck. Although the plane likely intended to take out the cruiser's bridge, it hit a mast strut and the forward exhaust funnel, and fell overboard.Gill, ''Royal Australian Navy, 1942–1945'', p. 590 Although there were no casualties, the crash damaged the funnel, radar, and wireless systems, and the decision was made to withdraw the cruiser for repairs.


Loss of ''USS Brooks'' and ''USS Long''

Departing New Guinea's
Manus Island Manus Island is part of Manus Province in northern Papua New Guinea and is the largest of the Admiralty Islands. It is the fifth-largest island in Papua New Guinea, with an area of , measuring around . Manus Island is covered in rugged jungles w ...
in late December, while escorting a Leyte-bound convoy, the ''USS Hovey'' and the ships of Mine Squadron 2 detached from their charges on January 2, 1945, and shaped a course for Lingayen Gulf, where the group was ordered to sweep the approaches to Lingayen in advance of the first American amphibious landing on Luzon. Coming under repeated massed air attack from Japanese kamikaze aircraft while engaged in their sweeps, the Hovey and her sisters spent the time period from January 2 facing frequent fire from Japanese aircraft attempting to repel the invading ships. As her minesweeping unit swept the gulf on January 6, several kamikazes launched an attack on the ''Hovey'' and her formation, severely damaging the ''USS Brooks'' (APD-10) around 1252, and just earlier claiming the ''Hovey's'' sister ship '' USS Long'' (DMS-12) around 1215. Hovey would take a number of survivors of the Destroyer Escort ''Brooks'' from '' HMAS Warramunga'', who had picked up part of her crew after she had been abandoned due to fires. Around 1215, prior to the ''USS Brooks'' giving the order to abandon her crew, ''Hovey'' slipped her gear and stood in to assist ''Long''. ''Long'' had been hit by a low flying kamikaze Zero on her portside below the bridge about 1 foot above the waterline. Soon the entire bridge and well deck was on fire, and fearing explosions to the forward magazine and ready ammunition, the order was given by Captain Stanley Caplan to abandon ship to those men trapped in the forecastle forward of the forward mast, though the crew aft abandoned ship. Because of the fire and continued air attacks, ''Hovey'' could not get alongside, but spent an hour picking up 149 survivors, nearly the entire ship's complement. After a second kamikaze hit near the bridge later on January 6, with her back broken, the ''Long'' eventually sank on the morning of January 7 at 16°12'N, 120°11'E, in the Gulf about 10 miles North of the beaches of Lingayen. Completing her sweeps by end of day, the ''Hovey'' withdrew with the rest of her Division as darkness fell to open waters outside of Lingayen Gulf. At 345 on the morning of January 7, Commander Loud's ''USS Hovey'', with her load of survivors from both the ''USS Long'' and ''USS Brooks'' still crammed aboard, was positioned, along with the rest of the large minesweeper group, off the Northwest corner of the Gulf, abreast of Cape Balinao. Steaming ahead were the Destroyer Escorts ''Barton'', ''Walke'', ''Radford'', and ''Leutze'', intending to provide support against coastal batteries, including those stationed off Cape Balinao, if necessary. Acting as Flagship, ''Hovey'' took the lead of her formation and began sweeping operations shortly after 0400. Less than half an hour later, radar reports flashed out that enemy aircraft were inbound, and ''Hovey's'' crew again secured her sweep gear and manned their guns. Sighting two inbound planes, at least one a torpedo bomber, flying just above the water materializing out of the predawn darkness and haze at 0450, ''Hovey's'' gunners took both aircraft under fire. The second aircraft was set afire from the gunners aboard the ''USS Chandler'' (DMS-9) as it closed on the ''Hovey's'' Port side, splashing over her Starboard beam. The plane may have received additional fire from ''Hovey's'' gunners. At the same instant, a torpedo released from one of the planes found its mark and slammed into the ''Hovey's'' Starboard side at her aft engine room. The force of the blast buckled the ''Hovey's'' keel and killed most of the men in her after engine room, in addition to knocking out power and communications to most of the ship. Within seconds the midship was exposed to massive flooding that snapped her keel in half and allowed the ship to begin breaking up.


''USS Hovey'' sinks from aerial torpedo

Within two minutes of the torpedo impact, the ''Hovey's'' bow section was listing 90 degrees as men stationed there scrambled to abandon the sinking vessel. Moments later, a bulkhead gave way and sent the bow vertical in the water where for a few seconds it lingered before plunging to the bottom. ''Hovey's'' stern remained on an even keel as it slowly swamped, allowing most of the crew and rescued sailors there to get off before it too sank at this location at 0455 on January 7, 1945. When the ''Hovey'' sank, she took 24 of her crew and 24 men from her sister ships ''USS Long'', and ''USS Brooks'' with her to the bottom. Five of those lost when the ''Hovey'' sunk came from the ''USS Brooks''. She sunk roughly 20 miles North of the base of the gulf at a depth of 54 fathoms, at 16°19'59"N 120°9'59"E. The ''
USS Chandler (DD-206) USS ''Chandler'' (DD-206/DMS-9/AG-108) was a in the United States Navy. She was the only ship named for William Eaton Chandler, who served as Secretary of the Navy from 1882 to 1886. Construction and commissioning ''Chandler'' was launched ...
'', soon stood by rescuing the survivors of all three ships from the sinking ''Hovey'', a total of 229 crew, at least half of which were likely survivors of the ''Long'', who had escaped from two successively abandoned and badly damaged ships.


''USS New Mexico'' struck

At 1159 on 6 January 1945,
Lieutenant General Lieutenant general (Lt Gen, LTG and similar) is a three-star military rank (NATO code OF-8) used in many countries. The rank traces its origins to the Middle Ages, where the title of lieutenant general was held by the second-in-command on the ...
Herbert Lumsden Lieutenant-General Herbert William Lumsden, & Bar, MC (8 April 1897 – 6 January 1945) was a senior British Army officer who fought in both the First and Second World Wars. He commanded the 1st Armoured Division in the Western Desert camp ...
was killed when a kamikaze struck the bridge of the battleship '' USS New Mexico''. He was the most senior
British Army The British Army is the principal land warfare force of the United Kingdom, a part of the British Armed Forces along with the Royal Navy and the Royal Air Force. , the British Army comprises 79,380 regular full-time personnel, 4,090 Gurk ...
combat fatality of World War II. Lumsden was British Prime Minister Winston Churchill's personal liaison to General Douglas MacArthur. The ship sustained 30 dead and 87 wounded, when a kamikaze hit her bridge, killing Lumsden and her commanding officer, Captain Robert Fleming. Rear Admiral George Weyler, commander of the San Fabian fire support force and previously the commander of the battleship fleet in the Battle of Leyte Gulf a few months earlier, and British Admiral Sir Bruce Fraser, commander of the
British Pacific Fleet The British Pacific Fleet (BPF) was a Royal Navy formation that saw action against Japan during the Second World War. The fleet was composed of empire naval vessels. The BPF formally came into being on 22 November 1944 from the remaining ships o ...
, were in the bridge also, but they were on the starboard side and unharmed. They were only a few yards from being killed or seriously wounded.


''USS California'' struck

Shortly after 17:15 on 6 January, two kamikaze Zeros approached the ''USS California''. Her gunners shot down one, but the other struck her at port by her mainmast. The kamikaze's fuel tanks leaked gasoline, starting a fire and a 5-inch shell from another ship accidentally hit one of her 5-inch guns, which exploded inside the turret, and started another fire. The fires were quickly suppressed, but significant casualties resulted, including 44 killed and 155 injured.


''USS Louisville'' hit twice

Rear Admiral
Theodore E. Chandler Theodore Edson Chandler (December 26, 1894 – January 7, 1945) was a Rear admiral of the United States Navy during World War II, who commanded battleship and cruiser divisions in both the Atlantic and Pacific Fleets. He was killed in action wh ...
, Commander of Cruiser Division 4, died from his wounds on 7 January 1945, a day after the bridge of the heavy cruiser USS ''Louisville'', where he was helping to direct operations, was struck a devastating blow by a kamikaze, having received a less damaging strike by a kamikaze on the previous day. Admiral Chandler received a posthumous Navy Cross for his direction of operations aboard the besieged cruiser. Chandler was the highest-ranking U.S. Navy flag officer killed in action in World War II. The other four admirals who died in World War II due to combat were Rear Admirals Isaac C. Kidd, Daniel J. Callaghan, Norman Scott, and Henry M. Mullinnix. The '' USS Chandler'', an older Clemson Class Destroyer/Minesweeper named after his grandfather, Secretary of the Navy William E. Chandler, was the first ship to rescue 229 survivors, from the ''USS Hovey'' after it was sunk by an aerial torpedo around 430 in the early morning hours of 7 January 1945. Admiral Chandler had served aboard the ''USS Chandler'' in one of his first assignments.


''USS Mississippi'' struck

The '' USS Mississippi'' began shelling Japanese positions on the island of Luzon on 6 January 1945. During the bombardment, a Japanese kamikaze struck the ship on 9 January at 1302, but she remained on station, bombarding the Japanese defenses, until 10 February, when she withdrew to Pearl Harbor for repairs. At 1303, a Japanese Val had struck her on the port side below bridge level, landing on an anti-aircraft gun and toppling over the side. Twenty-three were killed and sixty-three wounded, giving the battleship one of the heavier casualty rate of those struck.


''USS Belknap'' struck

At 753, on 11 January 1945, the Clemson-Class Destroyer ''USS Belknap'' was forced to train all her guns on a Japanese kamikaze which eventually crashed her number two stack, nearly disabling her engines, and resulting in the death of 38 and wounding 49 of her crew. These included Underwater Demolition Team 9, on board when she was hit, which cost the team one officer, 7 enlisted, 3 MIA and 13 wounded. Earlier on 3–11 January 1945, she had acted as a shore bombardment and beach reconnaissance vessel at the Lingayen landings.


''SS Kyle Johnson'', ''David D. Field'' damaged

One of the worst losses of life was suffered by merchant marine vessel ''SS Kyle V. Johnson'' at 1830 on January 12, when a kamikaze dive, among a group of 6 attacking enemy planes, started a large fire, killing 120 men. Two of the planes splashed just short of SS David Dudley Field, causing minor engine room damage, but ''Edward N. Wescott'' received considerable damage from flying debris, wounding six of her merchant seamen, and seven of her Naval armed guard crew. With few enemy planes remaining on Luzon, the kamikazes went after victims of opportunity, the slower, cargo ships, which certainly had poorer air defenses than battleships and cruisers, yet represented a large target, that may have had somewhat limited mobility due to their size, weight, and weather conditions in the Gulf.


Escort carrier ''Salamaua'' struck

At 858 on 13 January, the escort carrier '' USS Salamaua'' was struck by an unidentified kamikaze who dove almost vertically at too great a speed to give the ship's gunners time to respond. The plane, which plunged through the flight deck, carried two 250 kilogram bombs, one under each wing. One bomb exploded causing fires on the flight deck, hangar deck, and a few additional areas. The second bomb did not explode but penetrated the ship's starboard side at the waterline. With a loss of power communication and steering, fifteen men aboard ''Salamaua'' were killed, and eighty-eight wounded. 2 Grumman FM-2 fighters and 1 Grumman TBM torpedo bomber were destroyed by the kamikaze attack. The starboard engine was lost, and the afterengine room flooded, but anti-aircraft gunners splashed two enemy planes in a period of ten minutes. After temporary repairs, she managed to leave the Gulf under her own power while under the screen of two destroyers and return to Leyte. She was the last vessel to be struck by kamikazes in the Gulf conflict, as after January 12, the Japanese had expended every aircraft they had in the Philippines. Only 47 Japanese planes escaped from the islands, and after January 15, it was believed only ten Japanese planes were left on the entire island of Luzon.


Success of kamikazes

According to several naval historians,
kamikazes , officially , were a part of the Japanese Special Attack Units of military aviators who flew suicide attacks for the Empire of Japan against Allied naval vessels in the closing stages of the Pacific campaign of World War II, intending to ...
were likely used more successfully by the Japanese at Lingayen Gulf, and beginning in the last two weeks of December 1944 in the Western Philippine islands of the Visayas and Mindoro, than in any other Pacific conflict with the possible exception of the Battle of Okinawa. At least for the kamikaze attacks on January 6 at Lingayen Gulf and likely earlier in the battle, eminent Naval historian Samuel Eliot Morison wrote, they were "the most effective of the war in relation to the number of planes involved – 28 kamikazes and 15 fighter escorts." Though General McArthur had written that 58 kamikazes were employed on January 6, and 18 fighter escorts, a few more than Morison's estimate, Morison's conclusion as to the effectiveness of kamikazes still seems well taken considering the staggering damage done by roughly 100–200 kamikazes to around 47 ships in the ten days of the battle between January 3 – January 13, shown in the large table below. Those ten days in January 1945 on the way to and within Luzon's Lingayen Gulf resulted in the deaths of around 738 and the wounding of 1282 ship-based seamen, marines, and infantry. Contemporary author, Ian Toll, noted at the time of the invasion, the fate of Japan's airpower on the island of Luzon was sealed. He wrote "The 201st Air Group, headquartered at Mabalacat, could muster only about 40 aircraft in flyable condition. Throughout all of the Philippines, there was probably no more than 200 remaining planes." Subtracting the estimate of 75 planes destroyed on the ground by carrier based American planes on January 7 discussed earlier, a rough estimate of only 100-150 airworthy planes may have remained on Luzon during the first two weeks of the invasion. In the last week of December (1944), the Imperial Headquarters had decreed that the Philippines would receive no further air reinforcements." Tokyo had ordered, and the 201st had complied with the decision that with the exception of a number of planes designated as escorts, "all remaining aircraft were to be launched against the American fleet in suicide attacks".


Luzon kamikazes on 6 January

Samuel Morison estimated that on 6 January, around twenty-eight kamikaze hit 15 ships, representing a hit rate of nearly 50%, vastly exceeding the 10–15% hit rate of kamikazes throughout the Pacific conflict. Ian Toll wrote that by the morning of 6 January at Mabalacat airfield, "five derelicts were patched up to the extent that they could take off", though they were not air bound until around 1655 that afternoon. Commander Tadashi Nakajima, head of kamikaze operations and training for the Philippines, estimated there were five kamikazes taking off from the nearby Angeles Field at 1100 that morning, eight more at 1040 from Echague, just Northeast of the Gulf, and an additional 9 from an airport on Luzon unnamed by Nakajima, bringing the total number to around twenty-seven on 6 January. The single Mabalacat kamikaze departing around midday on 6 January, and those from Angeles and Echague may have been responsible for strikes on any of the ten ships struck around noon that day including the battleship ''New Mexico'' or the Destroyers ''Leary'', ''Sumner'', ''Long'' or ''Brooks''. The five kamikazes taking off from Mabalacat around 1655 were directed by the Japanese pilot Lieutenant K. Nakano, as appointed by Commander Tadashi Nakajima, the head of the 201st kamikaze Special Attack Unit, and responsible for the training and operation of kamikaze forces in the Philippines. Nakano's kamikazes were well trained according to Commander Nakajima, and apparently an effective force. Mabalacat's late afternoon sortie at 1655 would most likely have made strikes from roughly 1720-1734 beginning with the ''California'', and may have been responsible for the strike on the ''Newcombe'', and secondary strikes on the ''Louisville'', and ''HMAS Australia''. Those fifteen minutes represented some of the worst damage done to American vessels during the late afternoon of 6 January. Noting the destructive power in only three of the early days of the invasion, Morison further noted that between 3–6 January alone, 25 allied ships were damaged by kamikazes, of which three suffered two or more attacks. Morison described 6 January, which saw fifteen ships damaged, as the "worst blow to the United States Navy since the Battle of Tassafaronga on 30 November 1942".


30% kamikaze "hit" rate, 3–13 Jan 45

According to a
U.S. Air Force The United States Air Force (USAF) is the air service branch of the United States Armed Forces, and is one of the eight uniformed services of the United States. Originally created on 1 August 1907, as a part of the United States Army Sign ...
webpage, despite anti-aircraft fire, radar detection, and airborne interception, roughly 14 percent of ''kamikazes'' survived to score a hit on a US ship, and nearly 8.5 percent of all ships hit by ''kamikazes'' sank.Dr Richard P. Hallion, 1999, "Precision Weapons, Power Projection, and The Revolution In Military Affairs"
(USAF Historical Studies Office). Accessed from 2009 archive of webpage on 21 December 2015.
Considering that roughly 150 kamikazes survived to complete around 54 strikes on 47 ships at Lingayen from 3–13 January 1945 at Lingayen, as shown in the table below, this would indicate a "hit" rate closer to 30 percent and a sinking rate of ships struck (4 ships sunk/54 strikes) of only around 7.4 percent, though slightly higher, closer to 10%, if the Destroyer Transport ''Brooks'', irreparably damaged and needing to be towed, is counted. The sinking rate is slightly skewed as both the ''Hovey'' and ''Palmer'' were sunk by torpedo or bomb hits, but it may be argued both ships were still struck or nearly struck by kamikazes, as the ''Hovey'' certainly was buzzed by a kamikaze, and the "Betty" bomber that sunk the ''Palmer'', at 1835 on 7 January after releasing its bombs, according to Morison, "turned as if to attack another ship and splashed". Smith suggests that as few as 100 kamikazes were responsible for roughly 30 strikes on Allied ships from 2–8 January, and though this is also a rough approximation, it again represents an approximate "hit" rate on allied ships approaching 30%.


"Hit" rate lower at Okinawa

Though the damaged ships from kamikazes were greater at Okinawa, roughly three times as many, there were at least seven times more aircraft deployed there, as between 6 April and 22 June 1945, the Japanese flew 1,465 ''kamikaze'' aircraft in large-scale attacks from Kyushu, and 250 individual ''kamikaze'' sorties from Formosa. Morison, an Admiral himself by 1945, and a shrewd observer of Naval tactics, theorized that the better trained Japanese pilots including those using kamikaze tactics had been expended prior to Okinawa, and those trained for the battle there lacked time to gain commensurate skills with those available at the Battle of Lingayen. He wrote, "Off Okinawa, the Navy would be faced with an even more intensive suicide effort, but by that time the cream of the Kamikaze crop had destroyed itself, and the Allied Navies had additional means of protection". As Robert Ross Smith noted, of the very roughly one to one hundred fifty Japanese aircraft that had attacked American Admiral Oldendorf's naval forces at Lingayen Gulf between January 2 and 13, 1945, the vast majority had tried kamikaze crashes, even if they had not been successful.


Kamikaze "hit" rate, 13 Dec – 13 Jan 45

Ross further estimated that in the longer period between December 13, 1944, and January 13, 1945, at Lingayen, the island of Luzon and to a smaller extent the Philippine's Visaya Islands, the Japanese lost roughly 200 planes in successful or unsuccessful kamikaze dives on ships. During this month long period, according to Smith, who used data from Morison, kamikazes were almost exclusively responsible for sinking 24 allied ships, heavily damaging 30 and lightly damaging 37. This represents an approximate 200 kamikazes achieving damaging strikes on roughly 91 Allied ships, suggesting a very rough "hit" rate approaching 48%, though the figure is likely lower.


Evasive tactics, armor

Allied anti-aircraft guns were often ineffective against the kamikazes due to their speed, and maneuverability and because the operators of five inch guns, which used the highly effective proximity fuses, were unable to effectively sight the low angle, carefully maneuvered enemy planes that frequently dove with the sun behind them. Moreover, the projectiles of the typical 20 and 40 mm anti-aircraft guns used in allied ships, "did not have sufficient explosive power or impact to knock out heavily armored kamikazes" despite hitting the planes repeatedly with a hail of shells from an individual gun or what might at times even be combined gunfire from more than one ship. At the Battle of Lingayen Gulf, kamikaze pilots were flying toward allied ships at extremely low angles to circumvent detection by both radar and sighting ship crews. To quote Smith, “Flight tactics included radical maneuvering designed not only to avoid antiaircraft fire and Allied planes but also to confuse observers as to which ship was the actual target”. Of equal or greater consequence, many of the kamikaze planes were heavily armored and armed to a greater extent than during their use at the Battle of Leyte Gulf, where some of the planes had been selected because they were already damaged.


Zeros outperformed US Wildcat fighters

Rear Admiral Calvin T. Durgin, who commanded many of the escort carriers partly tasked with launching the fighter aircraft that would provide cover to the advancing ships of the invasion force, noted that his widely used fighter the FM-2 Wildcat, "showed up inferior to the Japanese Zeke (Zero), not only in speed and maneuver, but in climbing ability in altitudes above 5000 feet; and we had not enough Wildcats." A significant percentage of the Japanese planes used as kamikazes were Zeros, and they could be just as effective acting as escorts to provide cover for Japanese planes that could later be used as kamikazes. As noted by Smith, "kamikazes continually slipped through the air cover, and the CVE-based (Carrier Escort) planes had knocked down less than half of all Japanese aircraft destroyed from 2 through 6 January. Interception, as a result of the Japanese flight tactics and the radar problems, became largely a matter of luck in the Lingayen Gulf area."


Limitations of radar aided the kamikazes

The terrain was mountainous in the Lingayen Gulf area, including near the mouth of the Gulf, at times limiting the ability of radar on the invasion ships, particularly near the mountainous coast of the Gulf, to detect the arrival of kamikazes and their escorts and vector in American fighters to oppose them.


Detrimental effects of weather and shoals

The argument could also be made that once within Lingayen Gulf, the current, shoals, winds, waves, and storms that the Gulf was known for made maneuvering the advancing allied ships somewhat more difficult, and more likely to break formation and become isolated, though the prevailing weather for the advancing convoy west of Luzon was far better than the weather experienced by the fast carriers of Fast Carrier Task Force 38, North and East of Luzon which significantly hampered the operation of their air defenses. According to the observations of the Commander, Carrier Task Force 38, the primary source of fighter cover provided by the Fast carriers, "At sea,... strong winds, rough seas, and heavy swells were recorded on 6 January through 9 January (1945). These conditions definitely hampered landing of planes and the work of the deck crews," at least for 1–2 days, making air support from sea-based carriers more difficult. As a more general statement of the Fast Carrier Group, TF 38, "weather conditions on S minus 6 day and S day (from the 3rd to the 9th of January or S-day)... were so poor that the success of our mission was in question much of the time."


Effects of overcast on January 6

According to the Aerology and Amphibious Warfare report, the Third Amphibious Force's Commander noted "During the initial stages of the approach to the target cloudy weather and intermittent rain" prevailed. During the invasion's forces preliminary approach, it was also noted, that "overcast conditions prevailed due to intermediate type cloudiness, and occasional areas of very light precipitation were encountered." Intermittent rain and cloudy conditions, even if slight, combined with the thick smoke caused by the bombardment groups by mid-day January 6, may have affected visibility at least on the critical days of January 6–7, which would have significantly reduced the ability of ships within the Gulf to sight kamikazes, and to a smaller extent, light to moderate winds may have hampered the maneuverability of smaller ships evading kamikaze attacks, and the wave activity on the East side of the gulf may have somewhat reduced the ability of smaller ships to effectively aim anti-aircraft guns at the enemy. Samuel Cox, Director of the Naval History and Heritage Command noted that at least on January 6, and likely intermittently during January 5–7, there was "an overcast that hampered both U.S. and Japanese operations. The U.S. ships could not see the Japanese aircraft until they broke through the overcast with very little time to react."


High seas slowed landing on January 10

As the results of a small typhoon, around January 9–11, though its full effects were felt far to the North of the base of the Gulf, "By mid-morning (in January 10, the second day of the assault) the 6 to 8 foot surf at the beaches, resulting from the increased swell, had caused landing operations to come to a halt." It was not until the third day of the assault (January 11), that "the swell diminished and conditions improved rapidly to permit continued landing operations." The slight increase in swells and wind might have partly accounted for the number of larger transport ships struck in the Gulf from January 9–11, as well as the crowding caused by so many large craft at anchor near the base of the Gulf.


Kamikaze training

Commander Tadashi Nakajima, Operations and Training Officer for the 201st Air Group, responsible for the initiation of
Kamikaze , officially , were a part of the Japanese Special Attack Units of military aviators who flew suicide attacks for the Empire of Japan against Allied naval vessels in the closing stages of the Pacific campaign of World War II, intending t ...
tactics in the Philippines, carefully trained kamikaze pilots as to the angle of dive they chose, the targets they selected, and the methods they used to navigate to Allied ships.


Angle of dives

There were two basic angle of dives strongly preferred in kamikaze training tactics; a high altitude approach, and a low altitude approach. A high altitude approach could commence at an altitude as high as 6–7000 meters, and might begin with an angle of 20 degrees, and then end with a dive angle of 45-55 degrees once reaching 200 meters above a sighted target. These directions were flexible, and required considerable skill to implement. A low altitude approach was ended with a brief climb to 4–500 meters followed by a quick dive. The low altitude approach had the advantage of reduced radar detection and sighting at very low altitudes above the waterline, as Nakajima suggested to his students that a kamikaze might cruise as low as 10–15 meters above the waterline, if they had adequate skill to maintain such a consistently low altitude during their approach. Nakajima cautioned his pilots that in the very high altitude approach, "caution must be taken to insure that the final dive angle is not too steep", for "as the force of gravity increases, a plane is more difficult to pilot, and may go out of control". Once the target is sighted on a low altitude approach, the pilots were advised, "to climb sharply to 400 or 500 meters before going into a steep dive on the target", as the hit should be made on the deck of the target, particularly when the target was the frequently wooden deck of the American escort carriers. However, as noted by Nakajima, this method required skill by the pilot, and though many pilots fully trained for use in the Philippines and at Lingayen had the prerequisite level of skill, many subsequent pilots did not, and this greatly affected the outcome of their efforts. Combined fire by Allied ships also reduced the probability a diving kamikaze would reach their target, but many did at Lingayen, nonetheless due to the difficulty sighting a diving kamikaze.


Points of aim

Kamikaze pilots carried full fuel tanks to increase the odds of starting fires, and usually carried bombs that would be released at a time to maximize the likelihood they would penetrate the decks of their targets. Against Destroyers, other small warships and smaller transports, Nakajima informed his pilots, that "a hit any place between the bridge and the center of the ship is usually fatal". He continued, "small warships and transports, having no deck protection are extremely vulnerable to aerial attack. A single kamikaze plane could sink such vessels with a single hit." At the Battle of Lingayen Gulf, of the vessels sunk or irreparably damaged, 4 of 5, if the ''USS Brooks'' is counted, or 80% were the aging and smaller, Clemson or Wickes Class Destroyers. Of the Destroyers sunk, the ''Long'' was struck by two separate kamikazes, each time near the bridge, the ''Belknap'' was struck amidships near the 2nd stack, and the ''Brooks'' was struck port amidships causing fires. Each strike to these heavily damaged destroyers was close or not far from the bridge, the spot suggested by Nakajima's training of kamikaze pilots. Five escort carriers, a considerable number, were hit at Lingayen, three with considerable damage, but only one, the ''Ommaney Bay'', was ever sunk, despite the fact that Nakajima intended his kamikaze pilots to primarily target carriers in order to deprive the Allies of air superiority. Nonetheless, it appears likely the majority of the more damaging hits on Escort Carriers, evidenced by the table below, were done from kamikazes diving from a high altitude so as to penetrate their decks, as suggested by their training. Nakajima had earlier instructed that carriers should have their elevators damaged by kamikaze dives to reduce their chances of utilizing the planes they had on their hangar decks, but with fewer kamikazes, and with the targets more frequently smaller escort carriers, it seems more high altitude dives targeting decks were used.Kamikazes were trained as to their angle of dive, targets, navigation, and point of aim in Inoguchi, Rikihei, Nakajima, Tadashi, and Pineau, Roger, ''The Divine Wind'', (1958), First Copyright by the United States Naval Institute, New York, New York, Ballantine Books, Chapter 11, "Final Operations in the Philippines", "Indoctrination and Tactics", pgs. 81–86 Around six of the 47 ships struck by kamikazes at Lingayen Gulf were Escort carriers, and though only 1 was sunk, five received serious or extensive damage, indicating they may have been targeted.


Vulnerability of minesweepers and destroyers

The winds, waves, light rain, and overcast skies would have made smaller craft such as Destroyers and Minesweepers particularly vulnerable to kamikazes as they would experience less stability in rough seas than a larger ship, affecting their maneuverability while under attack. Their smaller size may have made them a more logical target for kamikazes as well, and overcast skies would have given them less time to spot incoming kamikazes from a distance. Unique to the minesweepers, the uneven bottom and shoals of Lingayen, might have increased the time they required to perform mine sweeping duties against mines moored to the bottom, and made their separation from each other and covering ships a greater possibility. Of the 47 ships damaged by enemy aircraft or kamikazes, 16 of 47, over 30% were composed of the relatively smaller ships, Destroyers, Destroyer Escorts, and Destroyer/Minesweepers. One might also note, that though the Destroyer/Minesweepers (DMS) and likely the smaller sweepers and a few covering ships, often Destroyer escorts, entered into the Gulf at 4:35 on the morning of January 7, when the minesweeper ''Hovey'' was sunk, the majority of the larger covering battleships and cruisers, did not form up until 6:55 at the mouth of the Gulf that day, and did not enter the Gulf, until around 7:55, "an hour later", though it should be added that Destroyer/Minesweepers were expected to provide their own cover from air attack by remaining close, if possible, during their sweeping duties. Three of the four ships listed as sunk from 3–13 January were Destroyer/Minesweepers, and a fourth irreparably damaged ship, the ''Belknap'', was a Clemson Class Destroyer, nearly identical to the size, design and age of the three Destroyer/Minesweepers sunk. Although a large variety of ship classes were hit, Destroyer/Minesweepers may have to a certain extent been targeted in the first week of January because they were smaller, isolated while performing their sweeping duties, less well armed than cruisers and battleships, and by necessity in the front of the convoy, as they had to sweep for mines before the larger ships of the allied force could advance into the Gulf. Of the five destroyers sunk or irreparably damaged, all were older Clemson or Wickes Class Destroyers built in 1918, and possibly more vulnerable to sinking due to their age and older, somewhat less seaworthy design. The naval historian
Samuel Eliot Morison Samuel Eliot Morison (July 9, 1887 – May 15, 1976) was an American historian noted for his works of maritime history and American history that were both authoritative and popular. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1912, and tau ...
noted that at least on January 6, “the minecraft themselves bore the brunt of the attack this day owing to their distance from supporting ships”. He also noted that the “Japanese seemed to pick on Minecraft because they were usually isolated and had no good antiaircraft support”. According to data compiled by Tadashi Nakajima, of the 34 ships sunk by Kamikazes in the Pacific, at least sixteen were Destroyers.


Japan knew invasion force's destination

Also worthy of consideration, the Japanese had determined early in the battle that the destination of most of the forces among the troop ships was the capital city of Manilla, where American prisoners of war were held, making it easier to concentrate their forces on the ships heading for the base of Lingayen Gulf, just 100 miles north of the capital. According to Samuel Morison, by January 5, and certainly by mid-day on January 6, perhaps the worst for Allied losses from kamikazes, the Japanese high command were already convinced that "Lingayen was the American destination". Though allowing for the considerable cover provided by allied fighters, originally as many as 240 Japanese planes from Clark, Nichols, and other airfields on Luzon, within striking distance of Lingayen Gulf, "were committed to the (Lingayen) expeditionary force during the first week of January (1945)". Unlike the primary landing area at Lingayen on Luzon, during the Battles for Leyte Gulf, the two primary landing areas for transports on Leyte Island's Dulag and Tacloban, selected from large stretches of coastline, were far less likely to have been previously known to the Japanese. Of interest to some, the Clemson class Destroyer/Minesweeper ''
USS Southard USS ''Southard'' (DD-207/DMS-10) was a ''Clemson''-class destroyer in the United States Navy during World War II. She was the second Navy ship named for Secretary of the Navy Samuel L. Southard (1787–1842). Construction and commissioning ' ...
'', which was struck by a kamikaze on 6 January 1945 in Lingayen Gulf but sustained only moderate damage to its deck after fires were extinguished, would later be caught in Typhoon Louise at Okinawa and scuttled while the author Herman Wouk was serving as a lieutenant. Though he was not aboard at the time, Wouk would make a brief reference to ''Southard's'' kamikaze strike at Lingayen as an event that occurred to a ship in his novel ''The Caine Mutiny'', but would use his real experience aboard the ''Southard'' in the post-surrender Fall 1945 Okinawa typhoon as a basis for the mutiny that was the center of his 1951 Pulitzer prize winner, ''
The Caine Mutiny ''The Caine Mutiny'' is a 1951 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Herman Wouk. The novel grew out of Wouk's personal experiences aboard two destroyer-minesweepers in the Pacific Theater in World War II. Among its themes, it deals with the moral ...
''.


Allied defense against kamikazes


Defense by Allied ships

The allied ships of the invasion force struggled to find an effective defense against diving kamikazes, but realized their options were limited. Rear Admiral Forest B. Royal, stated that "full power and evasive course, combined with rapid and accurate gunfire, proved to be an effective defense against suicide dives." But Vice Admiral Wilkinson, who generally agreed, added that when considering "the high speed of the plane as compared with the relatively slow speed of the ship, even at full power, an evasive course is inconsequential." Admiral Kinkaid summarized the best strategy for defense when he stated that a well-trained and skilled pilot who was intent on crashing his plane, "is almost certain to succeed if unopposed by anti-aircraft fire, regardless of what maneuvers the ship attempts". He then added the primary advantage of maneuvering allied ships should be "to unmask the maximum number of guns, and to present a narrow target in range since an error in judgement by the pilot is more likely to result in overshooting (the targeted allied ship) than in a deflection error"


Defense by Allied aircraft

In early 1945, U.S. Navy aviator Commander
John Thach John Smith Thach (April 19, 1905 – April 15, 1981) was a World War II Naval Aviator, air combat tactician, and United States Navy admiral. Thach developed the Thach Weave, a combat flight formation which could counter enemy fighters of superior ...
, already famous for developing effective aerial tactics against the Japanese such as the Thach Weave, developed a defensive strategy against ''kamikazes'' called the "
big blue blanket The big blue blanket was an air defense system devised by John Thach during World War II for protecting American warships from attack by Japanese kamikazes. History and tactics As the American island hopping campaign got closer to Japan, the Jap ...
" to establish Allied
air supremacy Aerial supremacy (also air superiority) is the degree to which a side in a conflict holds control of air power over opposing forces. There are levels of control of the air in aerial warfare. Control of the air is the aerial equivalent of comm ...
well away from the carrier force. This method recommended
combat air patrol Combat air patrol (CAP) is a type of flying mission for fighter aircraft. A combat air patrol is an aircraft patrol provided over an objective area, over the force protected, over the critical area of a combat zone, or over an air defense area, ...
s (CAP) that were larger and operated further from the carriers than before, a line of picket destroyers and
destroyer escort Destroyer escort (DE) was the United States Navy mid-20th-century classification for a warship designed with the endurance necessary to escort mid-ocean convoys of merchant marine ships. Development of the destroyer escort was promoted by th ...
s at least from the main body of the fleet to provide earlier
radar Radar is a detection system that uses radio waves to determine the distance ('' ranging''), angle, and radial velocity of objects relative to the site. It can be used to detect aircraft, ships, spacecraft, guided missiles, motor vehicles, we ...
interception and improved coordination between fighter direction officers on carriers. This plan also called for around-the-clock fighter patrols over Allied fleets, though the U.S. Navy had cut back training of fighter pilots so there were not enough Navy pilots available to counter the ''kamikaze'' threat. A final element included intensive fighter sweeps over Japanese airfields, and bombing of Japanese runways, using delayed-action bombs to make repairs more difficult. As effective as these methods could be, they had limitations, particularly considering the somewhat limited ability of radar to detect incoming enemy planes, the use of armor on kamikazes, the confusing tactics they used to avoid anti-aircraft fire, and the difficulty in shooting down kamikazes once their dive began. One could speculate that two changes might have reduced the heavy losses to Naval vessels from kamikaze and traditional Japanese aircraft attacks from January 3–13. Earlier and more extensive attempts to knock out Japanese planes on Luzon prior to January 6 would have been instrumental in reducing losses by kamikazes during the critical time period from January 6–13, though this may have required Halsey's fast carriers to have operated closer to the mouth of the Gulf. Halsey and senior Naval Staff had expected that more Japanese planes were to be routed from Formosa during the invasion which is likely why they stationed well North of the Gulf, but this did not prove to be the case, so the fast carrier group might have stationed closer to the mouth of the Gulf. Another factor that might have led to less damage to American Naval vessels could have been the use of more fire support ships, such as large cruisers and battleships as screening ships, rather than have them spend much of their time bombarding the beaches, which housed very little resistance, though this was not known by January 5, or not acted upon by Naval command. The use of large battleships and cruisers as screening ships was also problematic as they may have lacked the speed of Destroyers, and their fire as screening ships may have caused too many incidents of friendly fire.


Invasion ships sunk and damaged at Lingayen


Approach and return route of invading ships

Shown at left is the approach route indicated by a solid line, and the return route, indicated by a dotted line, of the roughly 750 ships of the Allied invasion force sent to Lingayen Gulf in early January 1945. Red arrows point to the location, and associated text identifies the name of each Japanese or Allied ship as it was struck, including the date and time. A very few were damaged by attacks unrelated to kamikaze dives. The arrow near the base of the Gulf, with associated text at the top and to the right of the Island of Luzon, indicates the large number of ships damaged within the Gulf, after January 6. Following is a table of the allied Naval vessels damaged and sunk almost exclusively by kamikaze strikes between 3–13 January 1945 at the Battle of Lingayen Gulf. Those ships highlighted in blue can be selected and their accompanying pages searched for Philippines, or Lingayen to find the exact manner in which they were attacked by enemy aircraft, most often kamikazes. At least two of the ships were not damaged by a kamikaze, the Destroyer/Minesweeper ''Palmer'' which was sunk by two bombs from an enemy dive bomber, and the ''Hovey'' which was sunk by an aerial torpedo, but was simultaneously grazed by a kamikaze which went overboard. Of the 47 ships with damage listed in the table below, nearly all could be attributed to the strikes or collateral damage of kamikaze aircraft, including friendly fire against an adjacent diving kamikaze. A few ships were damaged by kamikaze boats, but these are not listed below. Nearly all the ships were American Naval vessels as designated by USS before their name, except those designated by HMAS for ships in the Australian navy, or SS for Liberty Ships, usually operated by America's Merchant Marines. Those ships struck more than once have a number in parenthesis to the right of the name of the ship, and include the date of each strike and a figure for the number wounded or killed by each strike. An asterisk and pink background indicates a ship that was sunk, or was damaged beyond repair, which were usually towed. Not included in this tally are all of the ships damaged by suicide boats or Shinyo which included the '' USS War Hawk'', a transport ship that carried landing craft to move troops and four LCMs used to move heavy equipment. A number of LST's, tank transports, and LCI's, landing craft for infantry, were also damaged by Japanese kamikaze boats. Damaged in the early morning hours of 10 January 1945, around 400, in addition to the ''War Hawk'' were the tank landing ships USS LSTs 548, 610, 925, 1025, 1028, and the troop landing craft USS LCI(M)-974 and LCI(G)-365, the only one of these sunk. Abandoned ships included the ''USS Ommaney Bay'', ''USS Long'', ''USS Brooks'' (partly abandoned), ''USS Hovey'',Morison, ''Liberation'', pg. 106, 112 ''USS Palmer'', ''USS LCI(G)-365'', and ''USS LCI(M)-974''. Time is in Naval military time. , - , align="center" colspan=8, Naval vessels damaged and sunk by Japanese forces at Lingayen Gulf, almost exclusively kamikazes, 3–13 Jan 1945 , - , align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3", Day , align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3", Time , align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3", Ship , align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3", Type , align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3", Damage , align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3", Cause , align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3", Killed , align="center" style="border-style: none none solid solid; background: #e3e3e3", Wounded , - , 3 Jan 1945 , 0728 , '' USS Cowanesque'' , Transport Oiler , Minor , kamikaze , 2 , 1 , - , 3 Jan 1945 , 1712 , style="background:pink;", *''
USS Ommaney Bay USS ''Ommaney Bay'' (CVE–79) was a of the United States Navy, which served during World War II. It was named after Ommaney Bay, located at the south end of Baranof Island, Alaska. Launched in late 1943 and commissioned in early 1944, the shi ...
'' , Escort Carrier , Sunk (Scuttled) , P1Y "Frances" kamikaze bomber,
bombs through 2 decks , 93 , 65 , - , 5 Jan 1945 , 1651 , '' USS Helm'' , Destroyer , Minor , kamikaze, aftermast, searchlight , 0 , 6 , - , 5 Jan 1945 , 1706 , '' USS Louisville'' (1) , Heavy Cruiser , Moderate , kamikaze, 8" gun , 1 , 59 , - , 5 Jan 1945 , 1735 , '' HMAS Australia'' (1) , Heavy Cruiser , Minor , kamikaze, hit gun
crews portside amidships , 30 , 46 , - , 5 Jan 1945 , 1735 , '' HMAS Arunta'' , Destroyer , Minor , Near miss kamikaze , 2 , 4 , - , 5 Jan 1945 , 1739 , '' USS Apache'' , Fleet Tug , Minor , kamikaze, port bow, radar mast , 0 , 3 , - , 5 Jan 1945 , 1740 , ''USS LCI-(G)-70'' , Small Troop Carrier , Moderate , kamikaze , 6 , 9 , - , 5 Jan 1945 , 1745 , '' USS Manila Bay'' , Escort Carrier , Moderate , Steep kamikaze hit flight
deck near but abaft bridge, explos., fires , 32 , 56 , - , 5 Jan 1945 , 1750 , ''
USS Savo Island USS ''Savo Island'' (CVE-78) was the twenty-fourth of fifty s built for the United States Navy during World War II. She was named to memorialize the U.S. casualties of the Battle of Savo Island, which was fought as part of the Guadalcanal campai ...
'' , Escort Carrier , Negligible , kamikaze hit radar antenna , 0 , 0 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1105 , '' USS Allen M. Sumner'' , Destroyer , Extensive , kamikaze hit aft deckhouse, torpedoes , 14 , 29 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1145 , '' USS Richard P. Leary'' , Destroyer , Minor , kamikaze near miss, brushed 5" guns , 0 , 1 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1159 , '' USS New Mexico'' , Battleship , Minor , kamikaze hit port bridge , 30 , 87 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1201 , '' USS Walke'' , Destroyer Escort , Extensive , kamikaze hit port bridge , 13 , 34 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1215 , style="background:pink;", *'' USS Long'' , Destroyer/Minesweeper , Sunk , 2 kamikaze hits, near bridge , 1 , 35 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1252 , style="background:pink;", *'' USS Brooks'' , Destroyer Transport , Extensive , kamikaze midship hit
fires, abandoned , 3 , 11 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1424 , '' USS Columbia'' , Light Cruiser , Minor , kamikaze splashed very close , 0 , 1 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1427 , ''
USS O'Brien USS ''O'Brien'' has been the name of five ships of the United States Navy, in honor of Jeremiah O'Brien (1744–1818): * , a torpedo boat, built in 1900 and served until 1909. * , an ''O'Brien''-class destroyer, which served from 1915 until 1922. ...
'' , Destroyer , Moderate , kamikaze dive hit fantail , 0 , 0 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1437 , '' USS Minneapolis'' , Heavy Cruiser , Minor , Collateral kamikaze (?) , 0 , 2 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1545 , '' USS Orca'' , Oiler Transport , Minor , kamikaze near miss, wreckage hit , 0 , 4 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1720 , '' USS California'' , Battleship , Minor , low kamikaze hit deck
at mainmast, friendly fire , 45 , 151 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1720 , '' USS Newcomb'' , Destroyer , Minor , hit by friendly fire at kamikaze
w/40 mm, and 5" proximity shells , 2 , 15 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1729 , '' USS Columbia'' (2) , Light Cruiser , Extensive , kamikaze hit, bomb through 3 decks , 13 , 44 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1730 , '' USS Louisville'' (2) , Heavy Cruiser , Extensive , kamikaze hit starboard signal bridge , 32 , 56 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1732 , ''
USS Southard USS ''Southard'' (DD-207/DMS-10) was a ''Clemson''-class destroyer in the United States Navy during World War II. She was the second Navy ship named for Secretary of the Navy Samuel L. Southard (1787–1842). Construction and commissioning ' ...
'' , Destroyer/Minesweeper , Moderate , kamikaze hit portside deck
causing deck hole near midship,
above No.2 fireroom w/brief fire , 0 , 6 , - , 6 Jan 1945 , 1734 , '' HMAS Australia'' (2) , Heavy Cruiser , Serious , kamikaze hit starboard side , 14 , 26 , - , 7 Jan 1945 , 0430 , style="background:pink;", *'' USS Hovey'' , Destroyer/Minesweeper , Sunk , 1st kamikaze splashed, 2nd plane launched
aerial torpedo hitting aft engine room , 46 , 3 , - , 7 Jan 1945 , 1835 , style="background:pink;", *'' USS Palmer'' , Destroyer/Minesweeper , Sunk , 2 aerial bombs to midship,
near water line, then plane dove , 28 , 38 , - , 8 Jan 1945 , 0545 , '' USS LST-912'' , Tank Landing Ship , Minor , Val kamikaze skidded into her , 4 , 3 , - , 8 Jan 1945 , 0720 , '' HMAS Australia'' (3) , Heavy Cruiser , Minor , kamikaze skidded into her , 0 , 0 , - , 8 Jan 1945 , 0739 , '' HMAS Australia'' (4) , Heavy Cruiser , Extensive , kamikaze hit side, bomb blew , 0 , 0 , - , 8 Jan 1945 , 0751 , '' USS Kadashan Bay'' , Escort Carrier , Serious , kamikaze w/ bombs hit waterline , 0 , 3 , - , 8 Jan 1945 , 0755 , ''
USS Callaway USS ''Callaway'' (APA-35) was a that served with the US Navy, and was manned by the United States Coast Guard during World War II. Initially designated as a Navy Transport AP-80, ''Callaway'' was quickly re-designated as attack transport APA-35. ...
'' , Large Attack Transport , Minor , kamikaze starboard
grazed bridge, hit above
engine room, near
stack, w/fires, flaming debris , 29 , 22 , - , 8 Jan 1945 , 1857 , ''
USS Kitkun Bay USS ''Kitkun Bay'' (CVE-71) was the seventeenth of fifty built for the United States Navy during World War II. She was Ceremonial ship launching, launched in November 1943, and transferred to the Navy and Ship commissioning, commissioned in De ...
'' , Escort Carrier , Extensive , kamikaze high dive hit port
partly under waterline, blew hole,
flooding , 17 , 36 , - , 8 Jan 1945 , 1903 , '' HMAS Westralia'' , Large Troop Carrier , Minor , kamikaze hit astern , 0 , 0 , - , 9 Jan 1945 , 0700 , '' USS Hodges'' , Destroyer Escort , Minor , kamikaze near miss, foremast, antennas , 0 , 0 , - , 9 Jan 1945 , 0745 , '' USS Columbia'' (3) , Light Cruiser , Serious , kamikaze hit, bomb blew , 24 , 68 , - , 9 Jan 1945 , 1302 , '' USS Mississippi'' , Battleship , Minor , kamikaze hit forward below bridge,
hit gun, w/blast, and fragment
damage, then went over side , 23 , 63 , - , 9 Jan 1945 , 1311 , '' HMAS Australia'' (5) , Heavy Cruiser , Minor , kamikaze missed bridge, hit forward
mast strut, exhaust, radar, wireless , 0 , 0 , - , 10 Jan 1945 , 1710 , '' USS Le Ray Wilson'' , Destroyer Escort , Extensive , lit low angle 2-engine kamikaze
hit stack and torpedoes , 6 , 7 , - , 10 Jan 1945 , 1915 , '' USS Du Page'' , Large Attack Transport , Minor , lit kamikaze struck
bridge, went aft, w/gas fires , 32 , 157 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 1658 , ''
USS Gilligan USS Gilligan (DE-508) was a ''John C. Butler''-class destroyer escort acquired by the U.S. Navy during World War II. The primary purpose of the destroyer escort was to escort and protect ships in convoy, in addition to other tasks as assigned, su ...
'' , Destroyer Escort , Extensive , kamikaze "Betty" bomber
blew, lit torpedoes , 12 , 13 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 1727 , '' USS Richard W. Suesens'' , Destroyer Escort , Slight , fantail passed over wrecked kamikaze , 0 , 11 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 753 , style="background:pink;", *'' USS Belknap'' , Destroyer Transport , Extensive , lit kamikaze hit 2nd stack, bomb blew , 38 , 49 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 815 , ''USS LST-700'' (1) , Tank Landing Ship , Extensive , kamikaze skidded in, w/impact , 0 , 6 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 1250 , ''SS Otis Skinner'' , Liberty Ship Cargo , Extensive , kamikaze through 2 decks, explosion , 0 , 0 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 1830 , ''SS Kyle V. Johnson'' , Liberty Ship Cargo , Extensive , kamikaze hit deck, w/fire , 129 , 0 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 1830 , ''USS LST-778'' , Tank Landing Ship , None , kamikaze splashed close , 0 , 0 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 1830 , ''SS David Dudley Field'' , Liberty Ship, Cargo , Minor , kamikaze near miss, hit engine room , 0 , 0 , - , 12 Jan 1945 , 1830 , ''SS Edward N. Wescott'' , Liberty Ship, Cargo , Substantial , kamikaze near miss, debris hit , 0 , 13 , - , 13 Jan 1945 , 1810 , ''USS LST-700'' (2) , Tank Landing Ship , Extensive , low kamikaze struck weather deck , 2 , 2 , - , 13 Jan 1945 , 1821 , '' USS Zeilin'' , Large Attack Transport , Extensive , kamikaze hit starboard, its engine
pierced deck, bulkhead, w/fires , 8 , 32 , - , 13 Jan 1945 , 858 , '' USS Salamaua'' , Escort Carrier , Extensive , steep kamikaze hit flight deck,
bombs thru 2 decks, blew side , 15 , 88 , - , Total , , , , , , 746 , 1365


Commemoration

On 9 January 2008, Gov. Amado Espino, Jr. and Vice Gov. Marlyn Primicias-Agabas of Pangasinan institutionalized the commemoration to honor the war veterans. The resolution named 9 January as Pangasinan Veterans' Day. In the 63rd anniversary commemoration of the Lingayen Gulf Landing, President
Fidel Ramos Fidel Valdez Ramos (, ; March 18, 1928 – July 31, 2022), popularly known as FVR and Eddie Ramos, was a Filipino general and politician who served as the 12th president of the Philippines from 1992 to 1998. He was the only career military ...
appealed to U.S. President
George W. Bush George Walker Bush (born July 6, 1946) is an American politician who served as the 43rd president of the United States from 2001 to 2009. A member of the Republican Party, Bush family, and son of the 41st president George H. W. Bush, he ...
for 24,000 surviving war veterans, to pass two legislative bills pending since 1968 at the
US House of Representatives The United States House of Representatives, often referred to as the House of Representatives, the U.S. House, or simply the House, is the lower chamber of the United States Congress, with the Senate being the upper chamber. Together they ...
— the Filipino Veterans' Equity Act of 2006 and the Filipino Veterans' Equity of 2005 sponsored by former Senator Daniel Inouye.Abs-Cbn Interactive, 63rd anniversary of Lingayen Gulf Landing commemorated
/ref>


See also

*For a more detailed description of the land battle for Luzon, refer to
Battle of Luzon The Battle of Luzon ( tl, Labanan sa Luzon; ja, ルソン島の戦い; es, Batalla de Luzón) was a land battle of the Pacific Theater of Operations of World War II by the Allied forces of the U.S., its colony the Philippines, and allies agai ...
* Battle of Manila (1945) *
Battle of Bataan The Battle of Bataan ( tl, Labanan sa Bataan; January 7 – April 9, 1942) was fought by the United States and the Philippine Commonwealth against Japan during World War II. The battle represented the most intense phase of the Japanese inva ...
* Battle of Corregidor *
Kamikaze , officially , were a part of the Japanese Special Attack Units of military aviators who flew suicide attacks for the Empire of Japan against Allied naval vessels in the closing stages of the Pacific campaign of World War II, intending t ...
*
Bataan Death March The Bataan Death March (Filipino: ''Martsa ng Kamatayan sa Bataan''; Spanish: ''Marcha de la muerte de Bataán'' ; Kapampangan: ''Martsa ning Kematayan quing Bataan''; Japanese: バターン死の行進, Hepburn: ''Batān Shi no Kōshin'') wa ...
*
Manila massacre The Manila massacre ( fil, Pagpatay sa Maynila or ''Masaker sa Maynila''), also called the Rape of Manila ( fil, Paggahasa ng Maynila), involved atrocities committed against Filipino civilians in the City of Manila, the capital of the Phili ...
*
List of Allied vessels struck by Japanese special attack weapons There were more than 400 Allied vessels struck by Japanese special attack weapons in the last twelve months of World War II, including some vessels that were struck as many as six times in one attack. The one special weapon that is most often assoc ...
, includes last coordinates


References


Citations


Books, partial list

* * * * * * * * * *


Websites

* * * *{{cite web, url=http://www.maritimequest.com/warship_directory/us_navy_pages/destroyers/pages/alpha_pages/b/brooks_dd232_roll_of_honor.htm, title=MaritimeQuest, USS Brooks Role of Honor, date=, publisher=MaritimeQuest, archive-date=, access-date=23 December 2020 Lingayen Gulf Lingayen Gulf
Lingayen Lingayen, officially the Municipality of Lingayen ( pag, Baley na Lingayen; ilo, Ili ti Lingayen; tgl, Bayan ng Lingayen), is a 1st class municipality of the Philippines, municipality and capital of the Philippine Province, province of Pangasi ...
History of Pangasinan 1945 in the Philippines 1945 in Japan Lingayen Gulf Lingaye Lingayen Gulf Lingayen Gulf Lingayen Gulf Lingayen Gulf January 1945 events in Asia Lingayen Gulf