tv [untitled] November 28, 2010 9:30am-10:00am EST
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exists now just a hazardous waste land of sand and salt travels to central asia to explore what's being done to revive the our old city. walk next world war two hero returns to tarawa an island in the pacific on the site of the bloodiest war in marine history that's in the second part of our special report coming up next right here on r.t. . in the fall of one thousand nine hundred three america began a major campaign against the japanese defenses in the central pacific. over thirty five thousand u.s. marines and naval forces were assembled for an invasion. on november twentieth
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america launched in the salt against one of the most heavily fortified japanese islands in the world. tyrone. on board a higgins landing craft instantly on cooper was responsible for the lives of hundreds of men. for the thousands of marines riding to the shores that morning no one could imagine the ferocity of the battle to come or the death and destruction that would soon face. in february of two thousand and eight the young cooper a navy veteran of the tower of babel and a film crew left los angeles on a journey that took sixty five years. to. be. on.
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while doing research for my recent book the war in the pacific of retrospective i happened across a associated press report that said in effect. where hundreds of marines died there are now millions of plastic bags crumpled paper boxes and when i saw that of course. since i have been a party to. our witness to all of the killings that took place i felt a special way. and i need to do something about this. i was in the hall and in my parents' apartment building in chicago all i remember sold well. is that the mannequin also found. it really shook me up as was practically all of them. america including all the big shots in washington imagine a tiny country like japan. attracting our pacific fleet confirm her
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but indeed roland tresham purpose is making america the giants a people major. world. but i just. also live. life fully was. a lot. closer to the united states. all right it was my brother and my brother said. he was trying to decide whether to order me to get out of the country. or to find a safer occupation than being him an infantry man joe it was his thought that i could become an officer around and i don't face and of course i had known of the
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time i bought a navy officers training program called b seven so either volunteered for it. within ninety days civilian leon cooper would become navy ensign leon cooper and begin training as an infamous boat commander. tarot was a series of coral reef atolls in the go bird island group strategically located halfway between a hawaiian islands in the philippines. the gober islands had been under the jurisdiction of the british government to december one thousand nine hundred forty one two days after the attack on pearl harbor japanese soldiers came ashore at bay she told the governing island atoll of towels and proclaim that for the emperor. both sides understood the necessity to control islands across the pacific. the american commands tactical approach dated back to teddy roosevelt's assessment of world sea diplomacy devised for the late one nine hundred centuries. roosevelt
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always believed that if the u.s. was to contain japanese expansion they would need to command strategic island bases across the pacific. the basic strategy first of all i tell you for spotless record in a spot he decided to mess up our civil action forty five states are set up by syria to call a halt. a ship and military a polling station cod smacks of mindlessness several plant looking for something specific to batman that it looks right or that. the japanese conscripted over forty one hundred korean slave laborers to build up a show's defenses as well as a small airstrip. they sent in over twenty six hundred crack japanese imperial marines to defender. massive fortifications were built including giant pill boxes some over seven hundred feet in height ten large eight
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inch gun emplacements. field artillery and anti-aircraft guns. the war in the pacific was commanded by two key figures general douglas macarthur and admiral nimitz after the japanese lost the battle for guadalcanal in the south pacific macarthur and his troops focused on recapturing new guinea nimitz handled the central pacific region and plans were drawn up to send forces against the japanese strongholds in the gilbert and marshall islands groups mark knowing is a u.p.s. pilot in the world war two military story he heads the nonprofit organization history flights they're working to locate the over seventy eight thousand missing in action from the second world war right way saying here is a good deed to intelligence maps that the u.s. marine corps put together for what they called helen island which was the code name
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for a base you know atoll and the tar island region and they built this very complex map with all of the difference and information that they gleaned from a number of overflights from b. twenty four craft taking photographs of the island and it has pictures of all different and machine gun positions and the different types of large caliber weapons that would be used to shoot landing craft that has pictures of the tank traps the roads the airstrip. in june of one nine hundred forty three american recognizance flights discover that base show had been transformed into a heavily defended outpost the now included a four thousand foot airstrip capable of supporting japanese bombers this dramatically extended their pacific sphere of office. after hearing this news nimitz in the pacific fleet command decided to invade tower.
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upon his arrival at fiji leone was interviewed by reporters for a fiji sun article on his visit to the nation of care my job was to bring assault troops in and my boat. during many trips into the red beach. so. a three days of savage or a. top of the japanese how to kill more americans. and taught us. how to build more stupid thing. what the hell does that mean. leone's first official meeting with american authorities would be with deputy assistant to the u.s. ambassador in cuba ted may. first of all we're here to meet with the ambassador and his staff ambassador. especially wanted to have. a speak with him before we want to travel he promised he would do his best to join us
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and taro and introduce us to. the president of. the country that includes taro ok i need my driver's license back maybe to get that i know there's no guarantee of. a frank through ambassador in a staff again and i feel very confident it will be on the road to achieving something even minimal objectives at least we'll get an action program going underway. with ted man a company leon boarded a jet for the highlight of his journey a return to tower. as the fortifications of told the tower will continue the japanese commander admiral sugar saki boasted to his troops that one million americans could not take the island in one hundred years. however american naval and marine forces would soon test that
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claim on nov twentieth one thousand nine hundred three the united states launched a major and furious offensive against our. a massive naval bombardment the place starting at dawn. by nine am as wave after wave of marines were launched from the ships the logistics of the battle took a bad turn. the tide is not as deep as what they had projected it. there would be about six to seven feet above the fringing reef that they would land and there was a lot of confusion between the naval bombardment they were supposed to cease fire and they were supposed to be an aviation detachment of a bomber aircraft and fire craft to bomb the island and there was some confusion and they actually had a cease fire there was about thirty minutes when there was no firing at all and it enabled the japanese to take a lot of their soldiers from the south side of the heavily defended part and move
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them up to the north side of the aisle. and in doing so they were able to bring considerable devastating fire on the marines as they entered the again. the japanese a kind of defense strategy that covered every inch of the island. hundreds of marines were killed by the accurate mortar and heavy gunfire at the reefs age many had to disembark offshore and slog through withering machine gun fire dangerous mines and deep bomb craters and hope to make it to shore. among the first waves of many heroes save the day one was a young lieutenant alexander bonnie who rallied his men to push him and be on the pier to the sea wall. after sixty five years leon cooper finally returned to that fateful stretch of sand that had shaped his destiny.
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ironically his first encounter at the airport would be descendants of his former adversaries. i'm i'm from the united states. teleport all bets are. off i will share sixty five years ago. i was a member of the group that attacks as a japanese who are here defending this island. and we were not very friendly toward each other. we were angry toward each other and a lot of people got killed including over four thousand of your home and your your people are you live here and want to honor your country man who or what died in the
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battle of carolina. they all of a sudden i see things happening. and i feel like. i'm not really fair and on. the first item of business was for leon and ted to meet with the assistant to the president of cuba but in the hopes that they could access the president of the police releasing the first india we have the short list of titles. but if you a little to live with the person with the least two percent to the ministers despite the fact that because of what happened sixty five years guy had no desire whatsoever to return but after giving a great deal of thought to the matter i felt i could do something that would be of benefit both to the citizens of your country as well as to honor the memory of all those guys. died and a war in
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a battle that really was the beginning point of the defeat of japan. i had a small part to play in that victory. and i'm glad i had the opportunity all that time i didn't think very much of my participation and i wanted to be somewhere else. i know that's pretty short but there are three i recognize of from here we drove to the beach that haunted for many years and we know we came at it from where we came and from here. i know damn well we. smell the stench of all those bodies running in the sun sills comes back to me. all that stink of guys decomposing. and i came ashore about here. and i know why the bed the beach master as i
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remember cote motioned to me come on the shore and i was to go to the pier you see what's taking up there is the remains of the pier i came ashore about here between here and the pier and i crouched behind the sea well. and the chaps were shooting at me from up there some water. they were shooting at me from every angle there was you see they had this whole thing enfiladed and designed sort of that all the approaching boats came in under murderous crossfire so there wasn't any wood getting them out of the line of fire they were shooting at from here from there and from there every goddam angle was covered and we own will and stumble right into all this. slaughter. by the end of the day the marine second battalion was holding on to a seventy to three hundred foot stretch of sand and fifteen hundred of the five
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thousand american to be cheated with your dad who. i'm just. i can't stand it. look at the look at this sand here i couldn't get anywhere near the sand i was going up on the reef. there was a tank right about here half in the showroom of. gone. we got stuck on the relief and i went all the guys on my boat i think i remember that left and i left both and i said no because i knew these guys would have drowned because we were over a hundred yards from the sand and they would have gone with their every packs not that this happened i don't know i think i could i think i said knowledge say in the
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boat they were trying to climb out of the boat while the japs were shooting i. had stired and we found that access through the reef and that's when i landed these guys on the piece happened i don't know i don't know i think i did i think that. however despite the heavy casualties for the disaster was. a coordinated japanese counterattack might have overrun the exhaust reads but there was no communication from the japanese command bunker the japanese admiral in charge of shivah saki decided to move his headquarters from this area to the south part of the island and when they were doing that they went outside of their bunker and a five and shell exploded right near them and killed them all and in doing that in losing their tactical commander on the first day of the battle the japanese did not mount as counterattack in the night which potentially could have driven the marines
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right off of the island. i've had my moment of. let's go take a look at those eight inch. the legacy of the battle is still scattered across the sands of bay sheo to this day the island is covered with the rusting remains of several of the big guns including the eight inch emplacements. tanks. heavily fortified tow boxes and the command post. the second day of the invasion was a precarious one for the americans although they had secured two small beaches the marines still had to fight inch by inch toward the airfield that bisected the island. after waiting nearly twenty hours in their boats the first battalion eighth marines attempted to land ashore almost half of them never made it to the beach
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a large number of the all the kids were knocked out of action in the first day and after that they had to use primarily hagan's beds in the hagans boats were dropping the marines off at the fringing reef because they couldn't make it all the way up to the island and the marines had to go about seven hundred yards across a title flat and in doing so they were basically wading through waist deep water all along this area from red beach three two and one into the face of tremendous japanese fire. the battle had many own some heroes in the midst of the landings a young naval officer was on board a higgins boat in the horrible calmly rescuing routed marines from the water while several enemy machine gunners tried to knock him out that young lieutenant j.g. was eddie albert and he was a rising hollywood actor before in this thing in the navy he had started several movies in with major headline television shows including the popular series green acres i was sitting out there with a bunch of moorings and one of them know who the fuck is that somebody asked me and
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i said i don't know looks like he's a little a navy guy of some kind as the guys but not there for the last fifteen twenty minutes of the japs are shooting at him and he's hauling guys out of the water i said this guy is either brave or stupid or both and but he kept doing it tony made several trips back each time with a boat load of white wonder one hundred marines going back to the transport ship for medical treatment with these guys. and he saved the lives of nearly seventy marines that. i got to know a number of the medical doctors we had eight desire a member board. and the senior medical officer of an old guy and a chance conversation i want to know what his specialty was he said that my gynecologist and not seeing them a debate about as absurd as thing is i could imagine i said you know just possibly any one of us might be pregnant he says i'll take care of you. but there was
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another guy among the eight he also and a chance higher chance conversation i want to know what his specialty was he's a pathological by training and i said you're a natural for this you can be sure and take care of all of us so the medical doctors on my ship as well as on the number of other transports there took care of these guys i remarked remember distinctly on my many trips carrying the wounded back to my ship for medical treatment one of them died but how many others diag you can only guess but were these guys able to deal with trauma with war warne's i doubt it. despite the initial casualties at the beach the naval bombardments hope to turn the tide. to turn it alexander bonnie. and singlehandedly launched a major assault on a large bunker filled with over one hundred fifty japanese defended. during the
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course of the skirmish he was mortally wounded. the marines finally worked their way in and began to push the japanese defenders back to the airfield. just behind the rusting giant eight inch guns that protected the shore leon was shocked by what he saw. i'm pointing to what seems to me the very symbol of every thing that represents a need and a reason for my trip you see we are surrounded by garbage everywhere but also there are. on this beach which of course is the most appropriate signification and symbol of everything that's wrong with our goddamn government allowing not only garbage but to accumulate where so many guys died.
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will. you the latest in science technology from the realms of. the future are covered. oh. it was created to serve public interests to inform and to entertain. these days there's nothing easier than opening a new media outlet but there is nothing harder than revoking its license in case of corruption. when she has been. standing in trouble to be the. beacon involved in a community where you have one large corporation controlling the daily newspaper the radio stations television stations the cable outlet can you tell me that that sells what democracy in the public opinion versus f.c.c.
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broadcast blues on the margins. good samaritan. excellent professional. medics traveling and possessing an extra ordinary car. the doctor who helped many people in his country. the political criminal responsible for thousands of deaths. was it an attempt to repent. or just escape a fair trial. the other life. on our team.
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a person vivid cultural life. welcome to the pair and region in russia close up on our cheap. for six months russian capital was in a state of siege. days and nights people lived in fear of occupation and were preparing for the desperate defense. battles took a heavy toll. the soviet army switched to the offensive but it was the first su near defeat of the where moms would. battle for moscow on our keep. down the official on t.v. application to go on the phone all i pod touch from the queues ops to. life on the go. video on demand ati's minefield
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costs and says feeds now in the palm of your. questions on the dot com they faced it this is not a prohibition but war. pay for it and you should just step over what is sure to suppress the trees they have no idea about the hardships to face. they wanted to says it all to tunis and bring in the army the life of the usaf is the most precious thing in the world. is of self-sacrifice and heroism of those who understand it fully but you have to live a. real life stories from world war two. nineteen forty five dot dot com.
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with the latest news out of round up all the week's top stories the arrest of an artsy news crew covering a peaceful protest in the us is criticized by organization. a crackdown on media freedom but ignored by the mainstream american the news outlets. switzerland votes on a proposed law to expel foreigners charged with serious crimes a measure that sparked discussion over whether it has a nationalistic motives. russia's a democracy should not stagnate the russian president is calling on the opposition in his video blog so those in power stay awake at the wheel. plus one of the world's largest lake sits now a hazardous wasteland of sand and salt travels to central asia to explore what's being done to revive the old city.
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