One P-40 flew into the side of Mt.
Ararat, a huge volcano just east of Clark Field. ANYTHING THERE NOW? LOCATION?
Key point: The
military did have defenses and a large army on the Phillipines. But they were
not as ready as they should have been.
In the popular history of World War II,
the assertion that the United States was caught unprepared in Hawaii and the
Philippines has become widely accepted as fact. However, in the case of the
Philippines, the proper word should be “under-prepared,” as this term more
accurately represents the true situation that existed in the Philippine Islands
in the early morning hours of December 8, 1941.
While neither the War Department nor
the U.S. Navy expected the Japanese to attack the Pacific Fleet at Pearl
Harbor, for several months before the day that President Franklin Roosevelt
prophesied would “live in infamy,” authorities in Washington, D.C., had been
planning for war to break out in the Pacific. When it did, they fully expected
that the Philippines would be involved and preparations were being made to
defend the islands. Unfortunately, the Japanese attack came before the
preparations had begun in earnest. The allegation has also often been made that
General Douglas MacArthur facilitated the destruction of the Army Air Corps in
the Philippines through indecision. This is also more myth than fact.
Rainbow No. 5
In 1941, the Philippine Islands were a
possession of the United States and had been for four decades. The islands had
come into U.S. hands as a condition of the treaty with Spain that ended the
Spanish-American War in 1898. Since that time there had been mixed emotions on
the part of the Filipino people. While many had come to love the United States,
which was a benevolent master in comparison to Spain, they also yearned for
independence. Located just off the Asian mainland and stretching from the
northernmost island of Luzon to Mindanao, the islands were the United States’
westernmost possession in the Pacific. The Japanese-owned island of Formosa lay
some 450 miles to the north of Manila, the Philippine capital, while portions
of mainland China that had been occupied by the Japanese were only a few
hundred miles further, but to the west. The oil-rich East Indies lay to the
south.
During the years between the world
wars, the United States developed a series of contingency plans in the event of
war with one or more foreign powers. These contingency plans were known as the
Rainbow series. Planning for a potential war in the Pacific was found in the
Rainbow No. 5 war plan, which basically called for the United States to fight a
defensive war against Japan while concentrating the main effort on an offensive
in Europe.
Under the provisions of Rainbow No. 5,
the Philippines would be written off and abandoned to the enemy, while all U.S.
forces would withdraw to a defensive line running from Alaska through Hawaii.
Rainbow No. 5 was approved in the spring of 1941, but the plan was revised as
the threat of war intensified. Because of their proximity to Japanese territory
in the Pacific, the War Department decided that the Philippines was revised to
one of strategic importance in the defense of the region.
Strengthening the
Philippines
Prior to 1941, the War Department paid
little attention to the Philippines except for maintaining the garrison forces
at Fort Stotsenberg and cavalry and infantry troops made up of Filipinos led by
American officers. The Navy maintained facilities at Cavite on Manila Bay,
where a few destroyers and PT boats were based, along with a seaplane squadron
equipped with Consolidated PBY Catalina flying boats. As late as the spring of
1940, Army Air Corps assets in the islands consisted of a few obsolete
open-cockpit, fixed landing gear Boeing P-26 pursuit planes, a handful of B-10
bombers, and three more modern Douglas B-18s.
Things began to change in the
Philippines in the late summer of 1941 as American relations with Japan
deteriorated. When Japanese forces occupied French Indochina, President
Franklin Roosevelt responded with an embargo on the sale of oil and other
products to Japan in keeping with previous economic sanctions against the
country. The move precipitated worsening relations, and it soon became apparent
that war in the Pacific was inevitable—and that the Philippines would be in the
line of the Japanese advance southward toward the oil fields in the Netherlands
East Indies.
The United States began to build up its
Philippine-based forces, and former U.S. Army Chief of Staff General Douglas
MacArthur, who had retired in the Philippines where he served as field marshal
of the Filipino military, was recalled to active duty to take command of all
military forces based there. Several U.S. Army air and ground units were
alerted for movement to the Philippines.
The buildup of air strength in the
islands was crucial to the new American plan. New Curtiss P-40 Tomahawk fighter
planes were sent to replace the outmoded P-26s, along with two squadrons of
Seversky P-35s. While the P-35s were of a more recent design than the
open-cockpit P-26s, they were already obsolete by 1941 standards. Additional
B-18s were sent to replace the antiquated B-10s in the 28th Bombardment
Squadron. By August 1941, Air Corps strength in the Philippines consisted of
one squadron of P-40s, two squadrons of P-35s, and two squadrons of B-18s. One
Filipino squadron was still equipped with P-26s. The B-10s had also been
transferred to the Philippine Air Force.
More modern aircraft were on the way;
the newly created Army Air Forces Headquarters believed that the presence of a
large force of heavy bombers would serve to secure the islands and perhaps
deter Japanese threats to the region. The theory would soon be proved
unfounded, but in 1941 four-engine Boeing B-17 Flying Fortresses and the newly
developed Consolidated B-24 Liberators that had been designed as their
replacements were believed to be capable of destroying powerful naval forces
while the ships were still at sea.
Additional fighter planes were
authorized for delivery direct from the factories to the Philippines, with
others to be taken from operational units in the United States. War Department
plans for the Philippines called for four heavy bomber groups with 272
operational airplanes and an additional 68 in reserve along with two pursuit
(fighter) groups of 130 airplanes to be in place by April 1942.
In May, elements formerly with the 19th
Bombardment Group arrived at Hickam Field, Hawaii, for duty with the Hawaiian
Air Force. At that time, they were the only U.S. heavy bombers stationed
outside the United States. In late July, the Army Air Corps relocated the
entire group to the Philippines, with a provisional squadron from the Hawaiian
Air Force making the initial move. On the morning of September 5, 1941, nine
Flying Fortresses with 75 air and ground crew members aboard left Hickam for
Midway Island on the first leg of a journey that would take more than a week to
complete.
From Midway, Major Emmett “Rose”
O’Donnell led the flight of B-17s on to Wake Island, then south to Port Moresby
on Papua, New Guinea. This leg of the flight brought the bombers over territory
that belonged to Japan by mandate. The flight departed Wake at midnight so the
bombers would be over Japanese territory during the hours of darkness to avoid
detection. Their final stop before proceeding northward to their destination at
Clark Field in Central Luzon was Darwin, a town on the north coast of
Australia.
The arrival of the B-17s reassured the
senior officers in the War Department in Washington that the Philippines could,
in fact, be reinforced by air if need be. Impressed by the flight, General
MacArthur authorized the establishment of refueling sites in New Guinea and
Australia in preparation for future movements.
Plans were made for the transfer of
additional Army Air Forces groups to the islands. In November, the Rainbow No.
5 plan was revised somewhat in that military strength in the Philippines was to
be increased substantially, including a major buildup of air power. By the end
of the month, the U.S. Army in the Philippines was to receive an additional 26
B-17s to fill out the complement of the 19th Bombardment Group. In addition,
the 27th Bombardment Group (Light) was to arrive aboard ship, with its
complement of 52 Douglas A-24 dive-bombers to follow.
The Far East Air Force
Although the United States military was
strapped for personnel and equipment, the defense of the Philippines was given
the highest priority. The War Department scraped the bottom of the barrel to
find units to deploy, while additional air assets and ground troops were being
trained for movement to the islands. Since the Wake Island-to-Moresby route
came in close proximity to Japanese territory, a new South Pacific ferry route
was considered. Plans were also made for a route over which fighters could be
delivered to the Philippines from assembly points in Australia.
After the initial deployment of the
14th Bombardment Squadron, the entire 19th Bombardment Group was alerted in
mid-October for movement to the islands. The group’s remaining 26 Flying
Fortresses departed Hamilton Field, Calif. and had arrived at Hickam by October
22. By November 6, barely a month before the outbreak of the war, 25 B-17s had
arrived at Clark. One airplane was temporarily grounded at Darwin but arrived
within a few days.
Only two squadrons of the 19th Bombardment
Group made the trip to the Philippines. The 28th Bombardment Group, which had
been in the Philippines for more than a decade, joined the unit along with the
14th Bombardment Squadron, which had arrived from Hawaii in September.
Personnel from the 28th gave up their twin-engine B-18s and joined the 19th to
fly B-17s. The B-18s were reassigned to liaison duty.
With the arrival of the additional
B-17s, U.S. heavy bomber strength in the islands was up to 35 airplanes and
more were scheduled to make the trip. Maj. Gen. Lewis H. Brereton was sent to
Manila to take command of all air units in the islands and assume a place on
General MacArthur’s staff. On November 16, the Far East Air Force (FEAF) was
activated under Brereton’s command. Authorization had been given for the
establishment of the Fifth Air Force, but the headquarters had not been
activated before the war broke out, although the bomber and pursuit commands
were. The new FEAF included V Bomber Command under Lt. Col. Eugene L. Eubank
and V Interceptor Command under Brig. Gen. Henry B. Claggett.
In early November, an order was put out
that all “modernized” B-17s would be sent to the Philippines. Additional heavy
bomber squadrons, including some that were set to be equipped with the new B-24
Liberator, were also ordered to the islands. The 7th Bombardment Group was on
its way to Clark Field, with the ground components setting sail from San
Francisco on November 21. The first flight of B-17s was scheduled to depart
California in late November and early December. Additional B-17s and B-24s
would follow as they were delivered from the factories.
While the arrival of the heavy bombers
would give the American forces in the Philippines the power to strike at
Japanese positions on Formosa and in parts of China, the increase in pursuit
capabilities would provide protection from air attack. In early October, the
Air Corps activated the 24th Pursuit Group in the Philippines. A month later it
was joined by elements of the 35th Pursuit Group, although that group’s headquarters
was still at sea when the Japanese attack came. By the end of November, all of
the pursuit squadrons had been equipped with either P-40Bs or Es, except for
the 34th Pursuit Squadron, which was still flying P-35s.
The Airbases of the
Philippines
To protect Luzon, the fighter squadrons
were dispersed with the 17th and 21st squadrons operating out of Nichols Field
outside Manila and the 20th at Clark Field. The 3rd Pursuit Squadron was based
at Iba, a small grass field on the China Sea across the 2,000-foot Zambales
Mountains from Fort Stotsenberg and Clark. Iba Field was barely large enough to
accommodate the 18 Curtis P-40Es that made up the 3rd Pursuit Squadron, but it
was the closest fighter airfield to the approach routes to the American military
installations around Manila. Previously, Iba had been used primarily as an
advanced field for gunnery training on the ranges in the nearby Zambales.
Along with the basing of the 3rd
Pursuit Squadron at Iba, General Brereton stationed an aircraft early warning
radar team there, although the technology was still new and the operators were
just learning their trade. Because of its location, Iba was a logical choice
for a radar site. In all, seven radar sets had arrived in the Philippines by
early December, but Iba was the only one operational. Another at Manila was in
the process of being set up when war came.
General MacArthur borrowed from the
Chinese practice of establishing a rudimentary aircraft warning system that
depended on Filipinos stationed at crucial locations and connected to V Fighter
Command by telephone and telegraph. Information received from the sites would
then be transmitted to a plotting center at Clark Field. It was a burdensome
system made even more so by the primitive Filipino communications. During early
tests, it took nearly an hour for word of spotted aircraft to reach the
interceptor command post at Nichols Field.
Iba was not the only airfield that the
Far East Air Forces elected to develop in its plan for the defense of the
Philippines. Members of Brereton’s staff felt that a heavy bomber base in the
Southern Philippines on Mindanao was needed, a proposal that was initially
opposed since the Rainbow No. 5 plan did not call for ground forces to be used
to defend that particular island. But the soil on Mindanao was ideally suited
for all-weather runways, a factor that weighted the argument in favor of a
southern base.
Until a new airfield could be
constructed, a temporary base was set up at the airstrip on the island’s Del
Monte pineapple plantation. On December 5, two squadrons from the 19th
Bombardment Group, half the heavy bomber strength then in the islands, deployed
to Del Monte Field. Brereton’s operations plan called for the bombers to be
based on Mindanao but to stage through Clark on missions against Japanese
positions on Formosa if war came. The Fifth Air Base Group arrived at Manila
aboard the transport ship USS Coolidge in
early December and was sent immediately to Mindanao by island steamer to
support the B-17s.
A Timetable Set for 1942
The United States initially based its
build-up in the Philippines on a timeline that would see war with Japan
beginning sometime in the spring of 1942. However, a worsening diplomatic
situation was leading to an increase in the potential for hostilities—to the
point that by November it was apparent that war could break out at any moment.
In early November, the War Department sent a message to commanders in the
Pacific advising that war with Japan was imminent but that it was extremely
important for the Japanese to carry out the first hostile act.
Apparently, the leadership in
Washington believed the American public would be more likely to support a war
if the Japanese attacked first. General MacArthur apparently interpreted this
letter to include any action that could be considered hostile and forbade
reconnaissance missions over Formosa even when unidentified aircraft were
reported around and over Luzon. In late November, in response to a British
suggestion, the War Department notified General MacArthur that two long-range
B-24 Liberators equipped with photographic equipment would depart for the
Philippines by November 28. Their mission would be to photograph Japanese
installations in the Marshall Islands and the Carolines.
As it turned out, the departure of the
modified Liberators was delayed and the first arrived in Hawaii on December 5.
It was held at Hickam Field for armament modifications and would become the
first American aircraft loss of the war when Japanese planes struck Hickam on
December 7.
The Air Corps intensified its
preparations for war in early November, and General Brereton ordered all of his
commanders to be prepared for any emergency. Aircraft were to be dispersed and
kept on an operationally ready status, with their crews on two-hour alert day
and night. The 19th Bombardment Group was ordered to maintain one squadron for
reconnaissance and bombing missions at all times, while the 24th Pursuit Group
was to have three planes from each squadron on alert from dawn until dusk. The
orders were put into effect on November 10, nearly a month before war broke
out. Within less than a week, all pursuit aircraft in the islands were placed
on constant alert, with the airplanes fully armed and the pilots on a 30-minute
alert. Some fighter pilots slept by their airplanes.
Early December saw an increase in the
effort to beef up American air strength in the Philippines. While only 35 heavy
bombers had arrived in the islands, others were on the way, along with 52 A-24
dive-bombers for the 27th Bombardment Group and 18 additional P-40s that were
bound for the islands aboard ship. On December 1, Army Air Corps commanding
general Henry H. Arnold notified the commander of the Hawaiian Air Force, “We
must get every available B-17 to the Philippines as soon as possible.”
On December 6, a flight of 13 B-17s
left Hamilton Field for Hickam on the first leg of their journey to Clark.
Their arrival at Clark would have continued the buildup of the heavy bomber
force that was expected to be at full strength by April 1942. Unfortunately,
time was running out at a rate much faster than expected.
Even though new aircraft were arriving
in the Philippines on a regular basis, that did not mean they or the men who
flew them were operationally ready. The fighters arrived in crates and required
assembly and maintenance before they were combat ready. Engines had to be
broken in and slow-timed, while guns had to be bore sighted. Many of the
fighters were still not operationally ready when war broke out. A major problem
for the fighter pilots was the lack of a source of oxygen in the islands, which
restricted the P-40s to sustained operations at altitudes of 15,000 feet and
below.
The pilots themselves were
inexperienced, which was a factor in what happened when war came. Most were
fresh from pilot training and had very little experience in the P-40s they were
to take into combat. More fighters would be lost in the battle for the
Philippines to accident and mechanical failure or simply running out of fuel
than to combat. Their radio equipment was primitive, and everyone in the
islands used the same frequencies. Even though the P-40s were first-line
fighters, one squadron, the 34th Pursuit, was still equipped with obsolete
P-35s.
The First Enemy Radar Blips
During the more than 60 years since
December 7, 1941, many historians have concentrated on the “lack of
decisiveness” on the part of General MacArthur during the first hours of the
war. They have given the impression that no action was taken by the air forces
in the Philippines, that the Japanese caught the air force on the ground and
destroyed it within minutes. In reality, nothing could be further from the
truth.
The American forces in the Philippines
learned of the attack on Pearl Harbor within an hour after it started, not through
timely notification by the War Department, but through a local radio station
that picked up a broadcast from a Honolulu station and contacted the military.
The Navy already knew of the attack but had failed to inform MacArthur’s
headquarters in Manila. Upon receiving the news, MacArthur immediately informed
his subordinates that the country was at war and instructed them to take
appropriate action.
The Army Air Forces squadrons were
informed. They were already on a status of high alert and had been for several
weeks. On the evening of December 7, the officers of the newly arrived 27th
Bombardment Group, which still had no airplanes, threw a party for General
Brereton at the Manila Hotel. Brereton was called out of the party for
conferences with Admiral W.R. Purnell, the senior naval officer in the islands,
and General Richard Sutherland, chief of staff for MacArthur, who informed him
of a message from Washington advising that war could break out at any moment.
Brereton notified his air units and
canceled a training operation for the B-17s that was scheduled for the next
day. Within an hour after the party broke up at 2 am (December 8, Philippine
time) word reached the Philippines that Hawaii was under attack.
Within 30 minutes after the first word
of the attack reached Manila, the Army Air Forces radar site at Iba picked up a
large formation of unidentified airplanes about 75 miles offshore and plotted
their track toward the island of Corregidor. The 3rd Pursuit Squadron
dispatched its fighters to make the intercept, and they were tracked by radar
as they flew toward the unknown formation. The radar operators saw the blips
merge on their scope, but the fighter pilots never saw the unknown aircraft in
the predawn darkness. Apparently, they had flown beneath the Japanese. After
failing to locate the unidentified aircraft, they returned to Iba and
breakfast. What the Japanese did is unclear, since the first attacks were still
several hours away. Apparently, they were on a reconnaissance flight.
The U.S. forces in the Philippines were
officially notified at 5 am Manila time that Pearl Harbor had been attacked. At
this point the record becomes confused. Air Force historians Wesley Craven and
James Cate point out that no real record exists of the events of December 8,
1941, as they took place in the Philippines. What records were kept were lost
during the coming events in the islands, while unit histories were written
after the fact and were possibly—even probably—considerably contrived.
Philippines in the
Historical Retrospective
At the request of General Arnold,
author and historian Walter D. Edmonds eventually took over a project, which
had begun in 1942, involving interviewing participants in the battles for the
Philippines and Java. Edmonds interviewed dozens of airmen and carefully
scrutinized diaries and combat reports. He published the results in the
book They Fought
With What They Had, which was originally published in 1951.
Edmonds believes that the official
records were compiled after the fact and were sometimes doctored so they agreed
with the positions of certain senior officers. General Brereton published
his Brereton
Dairies right after the war, and General MacArthur promptly
denied some of the information contained therein. General Arnold claimed that he
never really knew what happened in the Philippines on December 8 even though it
was widely known that a detailed report was sent to him within days of the
event.
Many historians focus on the Japanese
11th Air Fleet being grounded at its airfields around Tainan on Formosa due to
a thick fog. While the Japanese naval aircraft did not launch until the fog
lifted, army bombers were not hampered by the weather. A formation of
twin-engine bombers attacked Baguio at around 9:30. Accounts differ as to when
Iba was attacked. Although most historians record that the field was attacked
simultaneously with Clark, other reports indicate that Iba was first struck at
daybreak, shortly after the 3rd Pursuit Squadron returned from its attempted
interception of the Japanese formation just before dawn. Based on reports from
those interviewed by Edmonds, the Iba attack came shortly before the attack on
Clark.
Timeline of the Attack on
Iba Airfield
At 5 am General Brereton was at General
MacArthur’s headquarters at Manila. The Air Corps commander wished to gain
permission from MacArthur for a strike on the Japanese airfields on Formosa, or
so he said in his memoir. According to legend, General Richard K. Sutherland,
MacArthur’s chief of staff, kept Brereton from meeting with his boss. MacArthur
claimed that he was never consulted about an attack and that he would not have
approved it anyway, as it would have been futile. Whether MacArthur’s
observation was based on the reality of the time or came through the gift of
hindsight, it was pretty astute.
Regardless of what really happened, at
10:14 Brereton reported that he received a phone call from MacArthur
authorizing him to carry out an attack on Formosa in late afternoon at his
discretion. A few minutes before the phone call, Lt. Col. Eugene Eubank, the
commander of V Bomber Command, left for Clark with orders to dispatch a
reconnaissance flight over the Japanese airfields on Formosa in preparation for
a strike. There is reason to believe that Brereton received authority, possibly
from Sutherland, to mount an air strike against Japanese installations on
Formosa as early as 8 am.
Instead of taking no action, as so many
have asserted, the Army Air Forces in the Philippines were very active from the
moment they were notified of the attack on Pearl Harbor and Hickam, and even
earlier in the case of the squadron at Iba. Fighter patrols were in the air
within an hour of the notification that war had come. Around 8 am, at the
insistence of Colonel Harold George, the chief of staff of V Fighter Command,
all of the B-17s at Clark were ordered to take off so they would not be caught
on the ground by an expected Japanese attack. The detachment at Mindanao was
notified to prepare to return to Clark for a bombing mission.
At 9:23, Colonel George reported that
two formations of multiengine bombers were over northern Luzon. The 20th
Pursuit Squadron was directed to make the interception, but the Japanese turned
east and struck the Filipino summer capital of Baguio instead of continuing
south toward Clark Field or Manila as expected. Other Filipino cities were
reportedly bombed during the morning hours, including Tarlac, a town just north
of Clark Field, and Tugegararo, a city in northern Luzon. American P-40s from
the 20th Pursuit Squadron had expected to intercept the Japanese fighters over
Rosales, a town south of Baguio, but failed to make contact with the enemy.
By all indications, Iba was the first
Air Corps field to be attacked. Some have written that the tiny airstrip was
attacked shortly after dawn as the P-40s from the 3rd Pursuit Squadron were
returning from their predawn attempted interception over the China Sea. Such,
however, apparently was not the case. Nor were all of the 3rd airplanes
destroyed on the ground. In fact, only one was on the ground when the Japanese
bombers appeared overhead. The rest were still airborne. Edmonds reports that
the telephone line between Iba and Clark went dead at 11 am, leaving radio
contact as the base’s only means of communicating with other units. Thirty minutes
later, the Iba radar picked up a large formation about 100 miles out to sea.
The 3rd Squadron commander, Lieutenant H.G. Thorne, ordered his pilots to start
their engines, but to remain on the ground since the Japanese seemed to be
milling around over the ocean.
Shortly after the 3rd Pursuit pilots
manned their aircraft, they received an order from Interceptor Command
headquarters to take off and climb to 15,000 feet and to remain over Iba. All
18 airplanes took off, in three flights of six airplanes each, but they never
assembled as a squadron, apparently due to the difficult communications from
the radio clutter on the fighter frequency. At the time, there were fighters in
the air all over Luzon, and all were trying to obtain instructions.
One flight from Iba headed for Manila
in hopes of receiving explicit instructions. After circling over Nichols Field
for a while and receiving no orders, the flight commander led them back toward
Iba as their fuel supply began to dwindle. They arrived over Iba to discover
the field under attack. The P-40s dove into the Japanese and broke up a
strafing attack before it got started, but their fuel was low and they had to
get on the ground. Four were shot down while trying to land at Iba; one pilot
crash-landed in the sea just off the airfield, and one flight went to Clark and
joined the combat there. Several 3rd Squadron airplanes found safety at
Rosales, a strip near Lingayen Gulf.
Even though the P-40s broke up the
Japanese strafing attack, the level bombers hit the field with pinpoint
accuracy, destroying the radar site, killing the operators, and hitting the few
buildings on the field. Casualties were reported as 50 percent either wounded
or killed, and the airfield was rendered useless. The flight surgeon, Lieutenant
Frank Richardson, rounded up as many trucks as he could find and loaded them
with wounded. He then set out down the coast for Manila.
Lieutenant F.C. Roberts, the pilot who
crash- landed on the beach, organized the uninjured survivors and led them on a
march through the mountains toward Clark. Failing to find a cart track leading
toward Fort Stotsenberg, many of the men got lost and wandered in the
jungle-covered mountains for several days.
The Attack on Clark
Airfield
After receiving approval to launch an
attack on Formosa, Brereton recalled the bombers to Clark to refuel and rearm.
He ordered Eubank to have the B-17s armed with 100- and 300-pound bombs and to
have the crews briefed for an attack on Japanese airfields in southern Formosa
late that evening. He also sent word to Del Monte ordering the two squadrons of
B-17s that were there on deployment back to Luzon in preparation for an attack
the next morning, but to use an emergency strip at San Marcelino rather than
Clark itself. They were to be prepared to fly a mission at daybreak the
following morning. Two B-17s were dispatched on reconnaissance missions over
Formosa. It was not until 11:30 that the last bomber landed.
Although it is commonly believed that
the attack on Clark came without warning, in fact the radar report from Iba of
a large formation over the China Sea had been sent to Fighter Command. The
target was believed to be Manila, and the 17th Pursuit Squadron was ordered
into the air to patrol over Manila Bay. The 34th Pursuit was supposed to take
off and cover Clark but failed to get the word. When Japanese planes appeared
over Clark, the 21st Pursuit took off to intercept them but was diverted to
patrol over Cavite. The 20th Pursuit was on the ground at Clark refueling after
its fruitless mission over northern Luzon in the morning. The 19th Bombardment
Group B-17s were in the process of refueling and rearming. Some of the crews
had gone to the mess tent for the noon meal.
The first attack on Clark came from a
54-plane formation of level bombers, which flew over at 18,000 feet. The bombs
impacted across the field diagonally, and most of the buildings were hit. The
flight line where the B-17s were parked received very little damage from the
attack, but most of the P-40s were hit. When the bombs began falling,
Lieutenant Joseph H. Moore led a four-plane formation of P-40s off the ground.
Ten others were behind them preparing to take off. They were caught in the bomb
pattern, and most were destroyed without getting off the ground.
At this point, the B-17s were still
largely undamaged, but the bombing was followed several minutes later by a
vicious strafing attack by Japanese fighters that came right down on the deck,
pouring cannon fire into the parked bombers. The Japanese were not unopposed.
The first flight of Zeros was intercepted by Joe Moore and his three wingmen.
Lieutenant Randall D. Keator promptly shot down a Zero and was awarded the
Silver Star for the first recorded American victory of the Southwest Pacific
War. Moore got two more.
The P-35s of the 34th Pursuit took off
from Del Carmen for Clark and were promptly intercepted by Japanese fighters.
Although the victories could not be confirmed, 34th pilots claimed to have shot
down three of the Japanese fighters. Another interception was made by the six
P-40s of C Flight from the 3rd Pursuit which had rushed to Clark after
receiving word that it was under attack. Unfortunately, all six airplanes were
low on fuel and one pilot bailed out when his engine quit. He was strafed by
Zeros while he hung in his parachute. One P-40 flew into the side of Mt.
Ararat, a huge volcano just east of Clark Field. Lieutenant Herbert Ellis had
to bail out of his burning airplane, but not before he shot down three Japanese
fighters.
Unfortunately, the effort of the
American P-35 and P-40 pilots was too little and perhaps too late. The
devastation to the Air Corps at Clark was overwhelming. All of the B-17s on the
ground were severely damaged in the strafing attack, but three would be
repaired. Damage to the fighter force was equally great, although many of the
fighters were lost to causes other than enemy action. Several ran out of fuel
and others crash-landed due to engine trouble because they had not been
properly broken in. Nearly every airplane on the ground at Clark was destroyed,
with the most serious losses being the B-17s and the 10 P-40s that were caught
in the bomb pattern before they could get off the ground.
A Predestined Fate
The disaster at Clark was not caused so
much by a lack of preparedness on the part of the military as by a combination
of factors that stacked up against the U.S. forces. Had the B-17s remained
aloft or been sent south to Mindanao until the Allied force could get
organized, they would have been spared. Had the fighters from Nichols Field
continued to Clark, they might have broken up the strafing attack as the 3rd
Pursuit P-40s did at Iba. The loss of the 10 P-40s from the 20th Pursuit was
more a matter of timing than anything else. The airplanes were refueled, armed,
and ready to go, but they started taking to the air a few minutes too late.
Regardless of the reasons , the Air
Corps at Clark had suffered grievously. The remaining pilots would fight
gloriously over the next few weeks and months, but the ultimate fate of the
Philippines had been determined long before the first bombs fell at Clark
Field.
Sam McGowan is the author of The
Cave, a novel of the
Vietnam War. He has also written extensively on the subject of air power during
World War II.
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