Category: Real men
On 19 February 1945 — 79 years ago today — the US Marine Corps began the bloody work of taking Iwo Jima from the Imperial Japanese Army. Casualties were extremely heavy — nearly 7,000 Americans killed and close to triple that number wounded. In today’s article, Capt. Dale A. Dye, U.S.M.C. (ret.) describes his experiences in visiting that historic volcanic island.

Unless you’re a Marine, it’s likely you don’t know that the Corps has its own version of the Haj, the annual pilgrimage that all Muslims are expected to make once during their lifetime. Devout Muslims make the trek to Mecca. Devout Marines — if they’re lucky enough — make a soul-stirring journey to Iwo Jima.

It’s a rare opportunity for most Marines, but I’ve been blessed to make that Haj three times, walking the infamous black sands and standing on the very spot where five men back in 1945 raised the American flag atop Mount Suribachi and created an image so timeless and impactful that it has come to visually define the Marine Corps.
Setting My Path to Iwo Jima
My first visit to what is now called Iwo To by the Japanese government was really an accident. I was flying across the Pacific aboard a KC-130 that developed engine trouble and had to land on the sulfur island as a precaution. Say what you will about that Marine aircrew regarding flight safety and NATOPS procedures, but I’ll always believe they ginned up that detour just so they could say they’d been on Iwo Jima.

Back in those days of the mid-1960’s, there wasn’t much more than a small Japanese Self-Defense Force garrison and a detachment of US Coast Guard technicians running a Long Range Aid to Navigation (LORAN) station on Iwo Jima. They seemed more interested in whacking golf balls into black sand traps than exploring the island’s pivotal place in World War II history. Not much to see in those days other than a few rusty relics and a chance to climb Mount Suribachi.

But looking down from that perch over the volcanic beaches was still awe-inspiring for a Marine steeped in the lore of the Corps. For years, I longed to return, so I armed myself with maps and began a knee-deep study of the battle, hoping for a future opportunity. I went into research mode and learned a hell of a lot more than I was taught in boot camp history classes.

Contested Ground
On maps of the vast Western Pacific, Iwo Jima is a flyspeck located about 750 miles southeast of Tokyo, Japan. It’s part of the Volcano Islands south of the more familiar Marianas Islands (Guam, Saipan and Tinian) for geographic reference. And it turns out, early explorers — for reasons not explained — named the island after a grinding bowl used in Japanese cooking.

Mount Suribachi is the highest point on the island at 554 feet above sea level. Otherwise, the eight square miles of Iwo Jima are relatively flat, featureless and composed mainly of dark volcanic sand. There are two other similar but smaller islands in the Volcano Group, but they were never contested during World War II. Iwo Jima proper — and later Okinawa — were the primary targets of the Allied powers slogging toward the Japanese homeland in early 1945.

As usual in Allied strategy during the island-hopping campaigns of war in the Pacific, the focus was on airfields. Iwo Jima had three of them (designated Motoyama 1, 2 and 3), making the island an ideal fighter escort base as well as a refuge for bombers damaged during raids on the Japanese mainland.

America’s new B-29 Super Fortress long-range, heavy-duty bombers had been striking Japanese home island targets since the summer of 1944, and these raids required escort by fighter aircraft that didn’t have the legs to reach Japan from more distant bases. Iwo was also an ideal location for damaged Super Forts to conduct controlled crashes or land for repairs before returning to airbases in the Marianas. Allied planners realized all this. So did the Japanese.
There was also a certain last-ditch, face-saving element involved for the Imperial Japanese Forces reeling from defeat elsewhere in the Pacific. Iwo Jima was considered a part of Tokyo Prefecture. If Iwo fell, it would be the first part of the traditional homeland to be captured by their enemies. Iwo Jima had to be heavily defended, so they sent a couple of their best to fortify the island and command its defenders.

Lieutenant General Tadamishi Kuribayashi would command the soldiers and Rear Admiral Toshinosuke Ichimaru, a naval aviator, commanded naval forces. Kuribayashi had better than two regiments of infantry, plus artillery and heavy mortar outfits, and a tank battalion on the island. Ichimaru controlled two large fighter units, a construction battalion and a bunch of coastal defense and AA units. It all amounted to around 20,000 Japanese defenders on the island.

They went to work with tenacious defense as a single-minded purpose. All over Iwo’s eight square miles of volcanic ash, Japanese forces found, cleared and reinforced natural caves. They dug in like termites all over Mt. Suribachi at the island’s southern tip where the high ground dominated both of the island’s possible landing beaches.

Every inch of those beaches was zeroed in for enfilading fire. Blockhouses and pillboxes flanked the landing areas. Machine guns were sighted for deadly interlocking fire. Rockets, anti-boat and anti-tank guns were emplaced with wide-open fields of fire. When the calendar flipped to 1945, the Japanese were ready.
A Marine’s Second Look
With all this in mind and a set of copious notes, I visited the island for a second time as Marine Combat Correspondent based in Hawaii. It was coming up on the 45th anniversary of the Iwo Jima fight when I conned my way into a solo visit to the island by promising a feature story based on something nebulous like “the ghosts of Iwo Jima.” Call it hubris, but I thought I might somehow channel both defenders and attackers if I could spend a week or so crawling that old, remote and relatively unchanged battlefield.

The first thing I noticed was the smell. There’s an obvious and odious miasma that hangs over Iwo Jima. It’s no wonder Marines and others called it sulfur island. The place reeks of that element and reminds constantly that you’re walking around on a dormant volcano. Seeking escape from the heat and odors, I climbed Mount Suribachi and stood on the spot where a patrol from the 28th Marines of the 5th Marine Division raised the American flag.

There’s a monument up there marking that spot where AP correspondent Joe Rosenthal took his immortal still photo of the flag-raisers. Those included Pima Indian Ira Hayes, immortalized much later by a popular Johnny Cash song that could have been the original anthem for PTSD.

And I thought about a lesser-known photographer who also captured that drama. Marine Sergeant Bill Genaust shot 16mm color film of the flag-raising. His brief view was eventually shown as a patriotic trailer in theaters all across the nation and later became a standard in early TV signoffs. Genaust was killed on Iwo and his body never recovered.
Picking up a white basalt rock from the flag-raising summit, I stepped down a bit onto a ledge that overlooked the landing beaches and sat thinking about the V (Fifth) Amphibious Corps (Marine Major General Harry Schmidt) and the units that bobbed around in LVTs on the morning of 19 February 1945.

Below me, stretching from southwest to northeast were beaches Green and Red (5th Marine Division/Major General Keller Rockey), Yellow and Blue (4th Marine Division/Major General Clifton Cates) over which some 70,000 US Marines — including the 3rd Marine Division (Major General Graves Erskine) in Corps reserve — would eventually land on this porkchop-shaped island.

Iwo Jima had been blasted and pummeled from air and sea for weeks prior, which tore away at Japanese positions above ground but hardly touched the maze of underground fortifications. That left the assaulting Marines with just one tactic — frontal assault.
At Great Cost…
D-Day was nothing short of a bitch-kitty for those men as they struggled for traction over the shifting, slippery black sand of the landing beaches. One step up and three steps back just to reach the beach plateau.

Fighting their way through constant enemy fire and high-explosive raining down on their helmeted heads, plus mass confusion on overcrowded beaches, littered with burning and wrecked landing craft, the assault elements lost nearly 600 killed and some 1,800 wounded that morning while barely getting a toehold on Iwo.

One of those who died on a black sand beach was Gunnery Sergeant John Basilone who had been awarded the Medal of Honor for his heroic actions on Guadalcanal. He didn’t have to be there on Iwo, but Manila John wanted to be where he could use his experience to help others survive.

February 19 was just the first of 36 bloody days it took to secure Iwo Jima. Below my perch on Suribachi were other infamous battle sites such as the Quarry, the Amphitheater, Turkey Knob, Hills 362A, B and C, and the Motoyama airstrips. As much as possible, those were the sites I wanted to explore.
A Lonely Pilgrimage
America had returned Iwo Jima to the Japanese in 1968, but the government in Tokyo didn’t show much interest in the restored island at first. Quasi-official visitors like me were pretty much left on their own to explore. And a military history nerd like me knew where to do that. I crawled through numerous caves that still contained rusty weapons, ammo and little housekeeping items like teacups, canteens, molding equipment and green IJA-issue sake bottles.

Under some rocks in a cave at the base of Hill 362-A, I found two blue and white porcelain mess tins marked with the anchor and rising sun symbol of the Rikusentai, or Japanese Special Naval Landing Force. Apparently, Admiral Ichimaru had some of his own Marines on the island to face their American counterparts.

Practically everywhere in caves and crumbling fortifications, detritus of men at war lay where it had fallen or been discarded more than two decades earlier. Most of it was Japanese origin, including the rusting hulks of heavy-caliber guns like the ubiquitous Type 92 “woodpecker” and it’s lighter Nambu cousins. There were many caves too thoroughly blasted or threatening to collapse, which limited exploration.

Much of the work on Iwo Jima to winkle Japanese defenders out of hiding was done by flamethrowers followed by demolitions or a barrage of heavy-caliber direct fire. But there were enough navigable fortifications above and below ground to give an explorer a nasty close-up look at what fighting must have entailed for attackers and defenders.

A map developed by the Marine Corps after the fighting pointed me to a deep cave complex that was presumed to be General Kuribayashi’s command post. It had been hard hit during the fighting in 1945. Heavy chunks of shrapnel from 16-inch naval shells littered a scorched area around the entrance, but if you were willing to crawl down the tunnels on your belly, you got a close-up look at how the Japanese lived underground.

The cave was full of little nooks, crannies and antechambers, and you always felt like you were headed downward, deeper and deeper into the guts of Iwo Jima. And the deeper you got, the hotter it was. Never mind the shells, bombs and rockets, just breathing in that cave complex was a chore. And in the deepest chamber, a broad rock platform surrounded by shredded wires and remnants of Japanese field phones. Probably where the General received field reports and studied his maps.

At the end of my second visit to Iwo, following a week of spelunking and study of the battle sights at the infantryman’s level, I was in awe of the official butcher’s bill. It was staggering even in comparison to other bloody Pacific battles: 5,931 Marine KIA, 17,272 Marine WIA on the American side of the ledger.

The U.S. Navy lost almost 900 sailors with another 1,900+ wounded. The escort carrier USS Bismarck Sea (CVE-95) sunk after being hit by five bomb and kamikaze attacks. The carriers USS Saratoga (CV-3) and USS Lunga Point (CVE-94) were also damaged by kamikaze attacks. In total, 18 U.S. ships and gunboats were damaged or sunk during the invasion.

Japanese defenders lost nearly everyone involved in the battle. Barely a thousand of 20,000 original defenders survived. Most committed suicide or eventually crawled out to surrender after a few weeks of starvation. And some of them held out by raiding Allied positions at night for water and provisions. The last two surviving Japanese soldiers on Iwo Jima surrendered on 6 January 1949 four years after the battle ended.
The Final Step
The third and last time I visited Iwo Jima was to attend something called the Reunion of Honor during which American veterans of that battle were transported to the island to meet with families of Japanese soldiers or sailors who died in the fighting. It was a different trip in a lot of ways. No cave-crawling allowed these days, and the Japanese Self Defense Forces have beefed up their presence significantly.

Now civilian access to the island is restricted to things like the Reunion of Honor and other memorial services for the American and Japanese fallen, visits by construction workers and the occasional foray by technicians from various meteorological agencies. And sometimes Marine or Navy Squadrons cruising in the Western Pacific are permitted to use the island’s expanded and improved airstrips for practice carrier landings. Battlefield exploration, souvenir hunting and cave crawling are strictly forbidden.

But I’d gotten in under that wire at least twice and, as I watched a Battalion Landing Team from Okinawa land in modern AAVs (Amphibious Assault Vehicles) across the black sand to honor the surviving vets and complete their own version of the Marine Corps Haj, I couldn’t help but reflect on what I’d discovered on that reeking sulfur island. Fleet Admiral Chester Nimitz had it right. “Among those who served on Iwo Jima, uncommon valor was a common virtue.”
BTW Thats about 4 minutes of full auto for the M60 “The Pig”. Which is why everyone except the Platoon Leader, his RTO and the Medic carried ammo for this beast. Grumpy (Don’t ask me on how I know about this)
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This is my friend Adolf, the VW Golf that recently took me and my wife all over the UK. Our relationship (with Adolf, not my wife) was strained.
I spent eight years on active duty as an Army officer, which involved a great deal of travel. Truth be known, all that time away from home was the biggest reason Uncle Sam and I amicably parted company. I realized I could either be an Army helicopter pilot or I could be a husband and father, but I couldn’t be both. I don’t regret the decision.
Most of those trips were to unpleasant places. Once there, the transportation I used typically sported rotors, tracks, and/or belt-fed automatic weapons. However, some of that was actually to places where normal people live, which often involved rental cars.
Rental Car Dogma
Something I learned as a young soldier was that rental cars are always the fastest cars on the highway, and they will go anywhere. If the Army rents it for you and it’s not in your name, then parking tickets are not real, either. The government trusted us with $30-million combat aircraft. Surely, we could be responsible with a low-mileage Ford Fungus. Um, nope …
In my defense, we never actually lost or destroyed one of them. I have pulled up to a hotel in a rental car with the trunk packed full of machine guns, but typically, no one was the wiser. If those parking tickets actually accrue interest over time, then I’ll blame it on those horrible Warrant Officers. They always were a bad influence.
The European Connection
I’ve been to the UK a few times, technically for work. What you’re currently reading is part of that. At least, that’s what I’m telling the IRS. Thanks for that, by the way.
Several years ago, I rented a nifty little Vauxhall. Vauxhall is a British car company headquartered in Chilton, Bedfordshire. My little Vauxhall was the tiniest car they made. It had a standard transmission and a most remarkable personality.
Modern automobiles talk to you. I once read that a new-production car contains between 2,500 and 3,500 microchips. For an American driving in the UK on the wrong side of the road with weird street signs and ubiquitous sheep cluttering up the motorways, audible navigation aids are a lifesaver.
All the major machines in the Dabbs family get their own names, and that extends to rental cars. We named our little Vauxhall Victoria.
Victoria was the perfect woman. She was smart, patient, forgiving, and more than a wee bit sultry. She sounded like a Bond girl. Had I not been traveling with my wife, I might have developed an undue attachment to Victoria. That’s just as well. There’s no way she would have fit in my carry-on bag for the trip back home.
During this most recent trip, the rental car company issued us a spanking new VW Golf. Unlike Victoria, this Golf and I did not get along well. I named him Adolf.
This really is a typical two-way road in the UK. They all seemed to have been made by the Romans and just weren’t built to accommodate automobiles.
Adolf’s God Complex
Adolf took his job way too seriously. He was a beautiful little four-door blue car with all the bells and whistles, and I mean all of them. When I picked him up, the radio was on. Fifteen minutes of frustration later, I Googled, “How do I turn off the radio on a 2024 VW Golf?” The first hit that came up was titled, “How do I turn this freaking radio off!?!” Pro tip: You swipe left over the power button, like that was somehow obvious. It was an ignominious start to our subsequently rocky relationship.
Adolf was inexplicably designed to help me drive. He would make helpful little control inputs into the steering wheel if he didn’t like the way I was doing it. He would chime and tell me to “Drive in the center of the road” if he felt I was not doing so. One time, no kidding, he flashed a warning across the dash that said, “Take your foot off of the accelerator!” Really?
I am not the kind of guy who shouts at traffic. Such a lack of emotional control always seemed like a reflection of poor character. However, this is a transcript of an actual conversation between Adolf and me early on in our relationship: “Adolf, dude, seriously? One of us needs to be the car, and the other needs to be the driver. You get to pick which one you want to be, but you’ll need to stick with it, brother. If you keep screwing with me while I’m driving, we’re both going to get hurt.”
It’s Not Entirely Adolf’s Fault
England is a lovely place. Outside of London, the place is spotlessly clean, and the people are diagnosably polite. That’s a good thing. Otherwise, the ghastly roads would kill them all.
The whole country is cursed with 3,000 years worth of history. That means all the roads, and I do mean all of them, were designed for horses. They are now ridiculously narrow and irrevocably encompassed in tall stone hedges. No kidding, lots of two-way roads in the UK are narrow enough for me to reach out and touch both sides with my outstretched arms.
If you meet an oncoming car, one of you has to stop and back up until you reach a lay-by where you can pull aside. If we Americans suddenly all found ourselves driving in England, half of us would be immolated in fiery car crashes in a week. The other half would succumb to unfettered road rage.
Ruminations
Don’t get me started on parking. There are rumored to be about three free parking spaces in the entire country, but I never could find them. Everything else has a handy electronic machine where you touch a credit card, get a little printout, and post it on your dashboard. They call it “Pay and Display.”
However, pay little heed to any of those complaints. The UK is one of the coolest places I have ever been. The history runs unimaginably deep, and my wife loves it there. Perhaps the next time we can go back, I’ll even find hot little Miss Victoria waiting for us in the car park.

Have you ever been casually pickin’ through random stuff at a junkyard, a garage sale or somethin’, and run across a busted axe handle or maybe an old cracked ’03-A3 stock? And you picked it up, gave it a couple of swings, thumped it into your palm and sorta semi-consciously thought, “Huh. Good club. Cut off here, couple passes with a draw knife there. Club. Good.” Have you? That could be a clue.
If you went ahead and bought it, kinda self-consciously, having no rational need for such a thing, and after a few licks to smooth it out, it wound up sittin’ in a strategic spot for extemporaneous thumpin’s—despite all your locks, alarms and guns which make for a more “civilized” defense—that’s a solid clue.
If you’ve ever stepped out on the back porch and sucked in a snootful of Somebody’s-Burnin’-BEEF! on the breeze and your brain did an instant data-dump, leaving you head-swiveling, salivating, snuffling deeply, your only sentient thought being “Meat. Meat! Burnt meat! Meat good!”
If you’ve been out in public with your mate and offspring, and other critters, two-legged or four, came around ’em, and for no discernible reason your brow furrowed, your shoulders tightened, your nostrils flared and your fists bunched up as you tensed to beat whomever-whatever into the deck like a pier piling if they made any wrong move—even one you couldn’t see, but you’d sense—that’s another clue.
If exposed to anything or anyone “sophisticated” or “progressive,” your lip curls reflexively and a rumbling snarl surprises you when you realize it’s coming from you, that too is a clue. It’s called “showing your gorilla-face.” You may already do it, unconsciously. Just ask your mate.
Ever chip a fingernail at the workbench and without even thinkin’ about it, grabbed a flat bastard file, dressed your talons, and before you knew it your boots were off and you were deeply engrossed in callous removal when your mate stepped in and did an open-mouthed double-take?
If most of your smiling and laughing is internal, done with a calm, placid face, but when you laugh out loud, you show every tooth in your head, frighten the timid, and set off car alarms? ’Nother clue.
If you firmly believe that Big Evils only exist in the world because nobody grabbed ’em by the ankles when they were Little Evils and swung ’em repeatedly against a tree trunk, well then…
Yeah, you could be a member of the Brotherhood of Shaved Apes and not even know it.
The Brotherhood
“Shaved Ape” sounds like a pejorative, but it ain’t. And to be clear, we’re not talking about chimps, but gorillas. Think about it. Gorillas may appear more primitive and brutish than chimpanzees, but aside from their sheer size, consider their behaviors. Their loyalties are solid, treatment of their young is firm but gentle, their desires simple: Don’t mess with them, their homes or their families and they’ll probably leave you alone. Push them beyond their considerable patience, and they’ll treat you to a RUD—a Rapid Unscheduled Disassembly—and then calmly go back about their business.
Gorillas are commonly thought to be less intelligent than chimps, mainly because they refuse to play pointless games with pushy, silly humans. I won’t either. Ringin’ any bells for you?
Chimps are highly social and viciously political. They form temporary alliances, betray and backstab, rob, rape and murder. You’ll see chimps ridin’ bikes wearing clown suits, bellboy costumes, even French maid outfits, to get attention and bananas. Ever seen a full-grown, silverback gorilla in a clown suit beggin’ for bananas? No. Know why? Because gorillas won’t put up with it. They have dignity. And they prefer to get their own bananas.
There are no hard criteria for membership in the brotherhood. If you nodded your lumpy head and rumbled assent at any of the lines above, you’re probably qualified.
Useful Assets
Shaved apes need family members like Uncle John. If there’s a “there,” he’s been there, prob’ly packin’ a rifle. Steeped in pain, he laughs; stiff with scars like Egyptian hieroglyphics, there’s a story for every one of ’em, and he tells them with a smile. He’s the one who taught me that pain and injuries are only, “The price of an interesting life.”
“You didn’t have to get crippled just ’cause you idolize me, dummy,” he says. “And you’ll never be as handsome as me.” He’s ugly. He loves me.
After the move to our new place, he had to get a new primary care physician. I dropped him off, ran an errand and pulled up just as he came out. He stopped and commenced seriously shaking. I thought he might be having a seizure, but he was laughing his butt off.
“My new doc,” he chuckled, “Kid’s about 15 and looks like Doogie Howser, M.D. I told him, and he asked, Who’s that?” More laughter.
“Then he says I hafta give up tobacco, coffee, bourbon, beer, red meat, bacon and…” Another fit of shakin’ and whoopin’. I asked “Anything else?”
“I don’t know!” he roared, “I was laughin’ so hard I couldn’t hear him! Oh, it was so cute! He got all frowny and said You’d live longer. I told him no, it would only seem longer, or, like dying and goin’ to hell, but like Hell Lite.” He lit his pipe and asked, “Got time for a dark beer and a buffalo-burger?”
Neo-gorillas need friends like Pete C. On a recent Friday I found a great 1-day deal on lumber and joist plates we needed for our new site. It was 150 miles north and across the border into New Mexico. Pete was closer, on the road coming south.
But he had to scoot straight over, get there before 1800, seal the deal with this guy Michaels and snatch the keys to the 5-ton truck the load was on for two, rent-free days. We were both driving, both on cell phones, and the signal was terrible. We kept yelling “Say again?” to each other, but when Pete finally shouted Roger that, I thought we were clear. We weren’t.
I pulled up at the new site about 1800 and there was Pete, standing by his personal truck, rigged for combat. I sat there in slack-jawed bewilderment as he loaded his ruck, two carbines and the case containing his .50 BMG rifle into the crew cab. He hopped in, grinning.
“Didn’t know if we’d need Long Tom too, so I just brought him. Ready to rock, pal.” Never mind what I’d said. What he heard was like this:
“We’re gonna cross the border into Mexico, roll about five clicks in, snatch this SEAL named Michael and somebody named Joyce. Probably lots of shooting. Be here by 1800.” I explained. He just sighed, spit out the window and shook his head. “Got that wrong, huh?”
“Did you really think we were gonna do that?” I asked.
He cocked an eyebrow, punched my shoulder and said, “Look at me, Connor. Like, we never pulled a snatch job together before? We never rolled in hard, shot up some dump and rolled out, takin’ rounds and laughin’ like maniacs before, huh?” Yeah. I remembered. Got a little choked up. I think he read the question in my eyes. He punched me again, lightly.
“I roll with you, bro,” he said. “Anytime.”
I had a buncha big oranges and some beer in the cooler. We sat on the tailgate, ripped open the oranges and bit into ’em, juice running down our arms; flingin’ drops out into the dust. Time passed. We watched the sickle moon rise in paling light, not sayin’ much and remembering all. A songdog howled and we howled back. Just a coupla shaved apes.
Connor OUT