I just finished reading the book Suribachi, describing the invasion of Iwo Jima, and from the author’s account it sounds as if US forces had dominating control of the air and sea surrounding the island. Wikipedia only mentions the number killed and captured.
So two simple questions:
Did any Japanese soldiers escape Iwo Jima after the invasion? If so, how did they get out?
Are there any accounts of the battle written from the Japanese perspective, available in English?
Thanks for the book recommendation, I’m downloading it to my Kindle now.
Reading the American side of the story is interesting, but I felt myself more compelled with the Japanese side. 20,000+ men sent to an island nobody had heard of a year ago to defend 2 and a half airfields, completely cut-off from reinforcements and supplies, their only air support being kamikaze attacks, and facing a hopeless invasion.
There were cases where troops were knocked unconscious by bombs and were taken prisoner. There was also forced Korean labor on Iwo Jima who didn’t really want to die for the emperor. This picture shows a prisoner being led from a fortification.
In case you haven’t seen it there is also a movie written from the perspective of the Japanese, called “Letters from Iwo Jima”
Japanese soldiers certainly did retreat from battles. They weren’t stupid. Many were captured, too.
It is safe to assume, however, that none escaped from Iwo Jima because there was no way to escape. The U.S. Navy controlled the sea around it. Where could they have gone?