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CONTACT: Lou Reda Productions
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D-DAYS IN THE PACIFIC
A Lou Reda Production
On THE HISTORY CHANNELÆ
August 14th at 10:00am to 1:00pm EST and 4:00pm to 7:00pm EST
New York, June 29, 2005 -- A new special on The History Channel chronicles the
heroic efforts of the soldiers who died and risked death storming countless
occupied islands to stem the Japanese advance through the Pacific. The History
Channel presents D-Days in the Pacific, airing Sunday, August 14, 2005, at
10:00ama and 4:00pm EST.
Although the term "D-Day" has become synonymous with the storming of the beaches
at Normandy, the term actually describes any planned operation whose date is not
yet known; it continues to be used even if the date changes.
The Pacific Theater of World War II was the site of countless amphibious D-Day
invasions that resulted in the deaths of 1.6 million Japanese and American
soldiers. There the battlefield was 98 percent water, with nearly every land
battle taking place on tiny islands that required perilous amphibious landings
in which the first man ashore had virtually no chance of survival. By 1942, the
Japanese had conquered an area that covered nearly a quarter of the globe,
setting up shop on islands throughout the Pacific to form a seemingly
impenetrable defensive moat. They had slaughtered the U.S. Navy at Pearl Harbor,
Wake Island, and the Philippines to become the masters of sea, and it would take
a charge by sea, air, and land of breathtaking proportions and fortitude by the
U.S. military to shift the momentum and eventually end the war.
These were fights to the death in a total war not just between nations, but
between cultures. Japanese defense was to the last man and American courage
proved equal to the sacrifice needed to fight through to unconditional surrender
at Tokyo bay. Amazing battlefield footage puts viewers in the middle of the
action. The program includes insightful interviews with World War II veterans
and noted historians and authors, including Donald L. Miller, author of the book
D-Days in the Pacific. This special tells the story of the U.S. victory in the
Pacific Theater with candor, depth, and heart.
D-DAYS IN THE PACIFIC is composed of three parts:
PART ONE: DEATH AT THE TIDELINE
Military men describe the perils of amphibious invasion and the "Fight to the
Death" spirit of the Japanese soldier. One veteran recalls his commanders
informing them the night before an operation to expect 80-85 percent casualties
on the beach.
The first under-equipped Pacific D-Day at Guadalcanal, one of the first key
victories for the United States, but also one with many hard lessons on the
perils amphibious landings.
The brutal siege at Betio, in which the invasion was tripped up on a coral reef
around the island, exposing soldiers to attack and turning the harbor into a red
sea of blood.
Nimitz, Eisenhower, and MacArthur emerge as the central U.S. figures of the
Pacific War.
PART TWO: CLOSING THE JAWS
The effort to capture New Guinea, a daring, aggressive assault that, if
successful, would trim months off the U.S. advance through the Pacific.
The massive assault on the Marianas Islands just nine days after the Normandy
invasion; a shocking assertion of the new scope of the U.S. military.
The U.S. takes the key outposts of Saipan, Guam, and Tinian in under two months,
prompting a member of the Japanese Royal Family to declare, "Hell is upon us."
PART THREE: THE FINAL GRAVEYARD
The heroic stand by under equipped Naval logistics ships at Leyte, sinking three
looming Japanese cruisers to save more than 40,000 exposed U.S. soldiers on the
beach head.
The hellish battle at Iwo Jima, which one veteran called "the most godforsaken
place I'd ever seen in my life." A correspondent there said he had "never seen
such mangled bodies." Six thousand Americans died, double the number at
Normandy.
The emergence at Okinawa of the suicidal Kamikaze strategy by the Japanese, in
which more than a thousand pilots flew their planes into U.S. targets in a
last-ditch effort to save the mainland from U.S. invasion.
The use of atomic bombs over Hiroshima and Nagasaki alleviates the need for a
planned D-Day invasion of Japan, which was to be six times the size of Normandy,
saving countless lives and leading to the surrender at Tokyo Bay.
D-DAYS IN THE PACIFIC was produced by Lou Reda Productions for The History
Channel.
Now reaching more than 88 million Nielsen subscribers, The History ChannelÆ,
"Where the Past Comes AliveÆ," brings history to life in a powerful manner and
provides an inviting place where people experience history personally and
connect their own lives to the great lives and events of the past. In 2004, The
History Channel†earned five News and Documentary EmmyÆ Awards and previously
received the prestigious Governor's Award from the Academy of Television Arts &
Sciences for the network's "Save Our HistoryÆ" campaign dedicated to historic
preservation and history education. The History Channel web site is located at
www.HistoryChannel.com. Press Only: For more information and photography please
visit us on the web at www.historychannelpress.com.