FORGOTTEN RAIDERS of '42
The Fate of the Marines Left Behind on Makin
Tripp Miles
NEW copy, hardcover with dust jacket. First Edition. (Washington, DC: Potomac Books, 2007).
Part of the "Potomac's Military Controversies" series. Photographs. List of Raiders killed & missing in action on Makin.
Notes, bibliography, index. 168 pages.
On October 16, 1942, on Kwajalein Atoll, at the fringe of the Japanese Empire, members of the
Imperial Japanese Navy's 6th Base Unit ceremonially beheaded nine Marines from the 2nd Raider
Battalion. The captives held no hopes for pardon or for rescue as they walked blindfolded, one by
one, to the spot of execution, which also became their burial site. The Marine Corps and their
families already thought they were dead, the men knew.
Forgotten Raiders of '42 is the account of how these volunteer patriots, unbeknownst to
their command, were inadvertently left behind after the Marines' raid on Makin Island in August
1942. The raid, which was a morale boost for the Navy Department and the American public, was
hailed at home as a great success even as the condemned Raiders knelt to await their fate. The
heroism of the Raiders -- under the command of Lt. Col. Evans F. Carlson, who later received the
Navy Cross -- has been well documented by the press, in books, and in Hollywood. In a country
craving good news and heroes, Carlson and the Navy delivered. The details of the raid's shaky
beginning and tragic end, however, would not be known until many years later.
After a summary of the dramatic raid, Tripp Wiles focuses on the Raiders' withdrawal from Makin
and on Carlson's decisions that directly affected the men who were left behind. Wiles also examines
the actions, inactions, and conditions that led to their unintentional abandonment. Finally, he
reviews the Navy's private reactions and, using new documents and interviews, the Raiders' fate,
bringing a measure of closure to the disappearance and execution of the forgotten Raiders.
$23.95

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