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New Guinea campaign

2014-10-16 23:10| view publisher: amanda| views: 1002| wiki(57883.com) 0 : 0

description: Major battles and sub-campaigns Operation R (1942)Bombing of Rabaul (1942)Action off Bougainville (1942)Operation SR (1942)Operation Mo (1942)Battle of the Coral Sea (1942)Kokoda Track campaign (1942) ...

Major battles and sub-campaigns
Operation R (1942)
Bombing of Rabaul (1942)
Action off Bougainville (1942)
Operation SR (1942)
Operation Mo (1942)
Battle of the Coral Sea (1942)
Kokoda Track campaign (1942)
Battle of Milne Bay (1942)
Battle of Buna-Gona (1942–1943)
Battle of Wau (1943)
Battle of the Bismarck Sea (1943)
Operation Cartwheel (1943)

22 April 1944. US LVTs (Landing Vehicles Tracked) in the foreground head for the invasion beaches at Humboldt Bay, Netherlands New Guinea, during the Hollandia landing as the cruisers USS Boise (firing tracer shells, right center) and USS Phoenix bombard the shore. (Photographer: Tech 4 Henry C. Manger.)

Three American G.I.s dead on Buna Beach.[2] Taken by George Strock in February 1943 for LIFE magazine, it was not published until 20 September 1943. President Roosevelt authorized release of this image, the first to depict American soldiers dead on the battlefield. He was concerned that the American public were growing complacent about the cost of the war on human life.

Two dead Japanese soldiers in a water filled shell hole somewhere in New Guinea
Salamaua-Lae campaign (1943)
Landing at Nassau Bay
First Battle of Mubo
First Battle of Bobdubi
Battle of Lababia Ridge
Second Battle of Bobdubi
Second Battle of Mubo
Battle of Roosevelt Ridge
Battle of Mount Tambu
Operation Postern
Landing at Lae
Landing at Nadzab
Bombing of Wewak
Bombing of Rabaul (1943)
Finisterre Range campaign (1943–1944: Including a series of actions known as the Battle of Shaggy Ridge)
Ramu Valley campaign
Battle of Johns' Knoll-Trevor's Ridge
Battle of The Pimple
Battle of Cam's Saddle
Operation Cutthroat
Battle of Faria Ridge
Battle of Prothero I and II
Battle of McCaughey's Knoll
Battle of Kankiryo Saddle
Huon Peninsula campaign (1943–1944)
Battle of Scarlet Beach
Battle of Finschhafen
Battle of Sattelberg
Battle of Jivevaneng
Battle of Wareo
Battle of Sio
Landing at Saidor
Bougainville campaign (1943–1945)
New Britain campaign (1943–1945)
Admiralty Islands campaign (1944)
Western New Guinea campaign (1944–1945)
Operations Reckless and Persecution
Landing at Aitape
Landing at Hollandia
Battle of Wakde
Battle of Lone Tree Hill (1944)
Battle of Morotai
Battle of Biak
Battle of Noemfoor
Battle of Driniumor River
Battle of Sansapor
Aitape-Wewak campaign
The New Guinea campaign of the Pacific War lasted from January 1942 until the end of the war in August 1945. In the initial phase in 1942, the Empire of Japan invaded the Australian-administered territories of the New Guinea Mandate (23 January) and Papua (8 March) and overran western New Guinea (beginning 29/30 March), which was a part of the Netherlands East Indies. In the second phase, the Allies cleared the Japanese first from Papua, then the Mandate and finally from the Dutch colony.
New Guinea was strategically important because it was a major landmass to the immediate north of Australia. Its large land area provided locations for large land, air and naval bases.[citation needed]
The campaign between Allied and Japanese forces commenced with the Japanese assault on Rabaul on 23 January 1942. Rabaul became the forward base for the Japanese campaigns in mainland New Guinea, including the pivotal Kokoda Track campaign of July 1942 – January 1943, and the Battle of Buna-Gona. Fighting in some parts of New Guinea continued until the war ended in August 1945.
General Douglas MacArthur as Supreme Commander in the South West Pacific Area, led the Allied forces. MacArthur was based in Melbourne, Brisbane and Manila. The Japanese 8th Area Army, under General Hitoshi Imamura, was responsible for both the New Guinea and Solomon Islands campaigns. Imamura was based at Rabaul. The Japanese 18th Army, under Lieutenant General Hatazō Adachi, was responsible for Japanese operations on mainland New Guinea.

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