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Soviet Far East Order of Battle, 1 September 1941[1]
Transbaikal Military District Rifle, Airborne Forces, and Cavalry Corps and Army Artillery, High Command Reserve Artillery, and Air Defense Forces Armored and Mechanized Forces Air Forces Engineering Troops
17th Army 36th, 57th, 82nd Motor Rifle Divisions 185th Cannon Artillery Regiment (RVGK), 2nd Air Defense Area Brigade 61st Tank Division, 9th Motorized Armored Brigade, 9th Motorcycle Regiment - 82nd Rolled Beam Bridge
36th Army 65th, 93rd, 94th, 114th Rifle Divsions, 51st Cavalry Division, 31st, 32nd Fortified Regions 267th, 390th Corps Artillery Regiments, 14th Separate Mortar Battalion, 1st Air Defense Area Brigade 111th Tank Division, 33rd, 35th Separate Tank Battalions - 39th Separate Sapper Battalion
Directly Subordinate - 106th, 216th, 413th Howitzer Artillery Regiments (RVGK), 13th Separate Mortar Battalion, 3rd Air Defense Area Brigade - 37th Mixed Aviation Division, 2nd Mixed Aviation Brigade, 318th Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment 51st, 102nd Separate Engineer Battalions, 1st, 15th Pontoon Bridge Battalions
Subtotal 7 Rifle Divisions

1 Cavalry Division

2 Fortified Regions

6 Artillery Regiments

2 Separate Mortar Battalions

3 Air Defense Area Brigades

2 Tank Divisions

1 Motorized Armored Brigade

2 Separate Tank Battalions

1 Motorcycle Regiment

1 Mixed Aviation Division

1 Mixed Aviation Brigade

1 Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment

5 Separate Engineer Battalions

1 Separate Sapper Battalion

Far Eastern Front Rifle, Airborne Forces, and Cavalry Corps and Army Artillery, High Command Reserve Artillery, and Air Defense Forces Armored and Mechanized Forces Air Forces Engineering Troops
1st Army 26th, 59th Rifle Corps, 22nd, 39th, 59th, 239th Rifle Divisions, 8th Cavalry Division, 6th Rifle Brigade, 105th Fortified Region 165th, 199th Howitzer Artillery Regiments (RVGK), 50th, 273rd Corps Artillery Regiments, 115th, 129th Separate AA Battalions, 4th Air Defense Area Brigade 58th, 112th Tank Divisions, 3rd Separate Armored Train Battalion 33rd Bomber Aviation Division, 32nd, 34th, 83rd Mixed Aviation Division, 26th, 59th Corrective Aviation Squadrons, 137th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron 29th Separate Engineer Battalion
2nd Army 3rd, 12th, and "Svobodnenskaya" Rifle Divisions, 101st and "Ust' - Bureyskiy" Fortified Regions 42nd Corps Artillery Regiment, 114th, 411th, and 550th Howitzer Artillery Regiments, 22nd Separate Mortar Battalion, 1st Air Defense Area Brigade 301st, 356th, 362nd Separate Tank Battalions, 2nd Separate Armored Train Battalion, 5th Separate Armored Car Battalion 95th Fighter Aviation Division, 82nd Bomber Aviation Division 2nd Heavy Pontoon Bridge Regiment, 10th, 29th Pontoon Bridge Battalions
15th Army 34th Rifle Division, 202nd Airborne Brigade, 102nd Fortified Region 52nd Corps Artillery Regiment, 2nd Air Defense Area Brigade 60th Tank Division 69th Mixed Aviation Division, 251st Airborne Bomber Aviation Division, 140th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron 3rd Heavy Pontoon Bridge Regiment, 11th, 23rd, 24th Pontoon Bridge Battalions, 129th Separate Sapper Battalion
25th Army 39th Rifle Corps, 32nd, 40th, 92nd, 105th Rifle Divisions, 2nd Rifle Brigade, Separate Cavalry Regiment, 106th, 107th, 108th, 110th, 111th, Fortified Regions 282nd, 548 Corps Artillery Regiments, 215th, 386th, 549th Howitzer Artillery Regiments (RVGK), 21st Separate Mortar Battalion, 5th Air Defense Area Brigade 9th Separate Armored Train Battalion 70th Mixed Aviation Division, 39th Corrective Aviation Squadron, 138th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron 32nd Separate Engineer Battalion, 100th Motorized Engineer Battalion, 69th Separate Sapper Battalion
35th Army 35th, 66th, 78th Rifle Divisions, 109th Fortified Region 76th, 187th Corps Artillery Regiments,

362nd, 367th Separate Artillery Battalions, 110th Separate AA Battalion, 3rd Air Defense Area Brigade

29th Motorcycle Regiment, Separate Armored Train Battalion 79th Fighter Aviation Division, 18th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron 402nd Motorized Engineer Battalion, 3rd, 9th, 20th, Motorized Pontoon Bridge Battalions, 60th Separate Sapper Battalion
Directly Subordinate Special Rifle Corps (79th Rifle Division - Sakhalin Island, "Sakhalinskaya" Rifle Brigade - Sakhalin Island, 101st Mountain Rifle Division - Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy), 103rd, 104th Fortified Regions 181st, 372nd Howitzer Artillery Regiments (RVGK), 5th AA Brigade, 6th Air Defense Area Brigade, Kamchatka and Sakhalin Air Defense Sectors - 29th Fighter Aviation Division, 53rd Bomber Aviation Division, 5th Mixed Aviation Brigade, 139th Bomber Aviation Regiment, 71st Mixed Aviation Regiment, 168th Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment 26th Separate Engineer Battalion, 101st Motorized Engineer Battalion
Subtotal 4 Rifle Corps

17 Rifle Divisions

1 Cavalry Division

3 Rifle Brigades

1 Airborne Brigade

1 Cavalry Regiment

12 Fortified Regions

18 Artillery Regiments

2 Separate Artillery Battalions

2 Separate Mortar Battalions

1 AA Brigade

6 Air Defense Area Brigades

2 Air Defense Sectors

3 Separate AA Battalions

3 Tank Divisions

1 Motorcycle Regiment

3 Separate Tank Battalions

4 Armored Train Battalions

1 Armored Car Battalion

3 Fighter Aviation Divisions

5 Mixed Aviation Divisions

3 Bomber Aviation Divisions

1 Mixed Aviation Brigade

2 Bomber Aviation Regiments

1 Mixed Aviation Regiment

1 Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment

2 Engineer Regiments

14 Separate Engineer Battalions

3 Separate Sapper Battalions

Total Far East and Transbaikal Military District 4 Rifle Corps

24 Rifle Divisions

2 Cavalry Divisions

3 Rifle Brigades

1 Airborne Brigade

1 Cavalry Regiment

14 Fortified Regions

24 Artillery Regiments

2 Separate Artillery Battalions

4 Separate Mortar Battalions

1 AA Brigade

9 Air Defense Area Brigades

2 Air Defense Sectors

3 Separate AA Battalions

5 Tank Divisions

1 Motorized Armored Brigade

5 Separate Tank Battalions

2 Motorcycle Regiments

4 Armored Train Battalions

1 Armored Car Battalion

3 Fighter Aviation Divisions

6 Mixed Aviation Divisions

3 Bomber Aviation Divisions

2 Mixed Aviation Brigades

2 Bomber Aviation Regiments

1 Mixed Aviation Regiment

2 Reconnaissance Aviation Regiments

2 Engineer Regiments

19 Separate Engineer Battalions

4 Separate Sapper Battalions

Japanese Army Order of Battle, Northeast Asia, 1 September 1941
Kwantung Army[2][a] Infantry, Airborne Forces, and Cavalry Corps and Army Artillery, Air Defense Forces Armored and Mechanized Forces Air Forces Engineering Troops
3rd Army 8th, 9th, 12th, 57th Divisions, 4th Independent Garrison Unit, 1st, 2nd, 10th, 11th Border Garrison Units 7th Artillery Command, 4th Mountain Artillery Regiment, 4th, 8th, 9th, 17th, 22nd Field Heavy Artillery Regiments, 2nd, 3rd, and Tungning (Dongning) Heavy Artillery Regiments, 1st, 2nd, 4th, 6th, 7th Independent Heavy Artillery Battalions, 11th, 12th, 13th Independent Mortar Battalions, 4th Independent Rapid Fire (AT) Battalion, 13th Field Air Defense Command, 48th, 50th, 51st, 55th Field AA Battalions, 22nd, 23rd, 28th Field Machine Cannon Companies 1st Tank Group (3rd, 5th, 9th Tank Regiments) - 5th, 9th, 27th Independent Engineer Regiments, 24th, 25th, 28th, 31st Bridging Materials Companies, 39th, 46th, 47th, 48th Field Road Construction Units, 13th Field Duty Unit, 5th Field Construction Unit
4th Army 1st Division, 8th Independent Garrison Unit, 5th, 6th, 7th, 13th Border Garrison Units 5th Artillery Command, 1st Field Heavy Artillery Regiment, 8th Independent Heavy Artillery Battalion, 52nd Field AA Battalion, 26th Field Machine Cannon Company - - 2nd Engineer Command, 26th, 27th, 32nd, Bridging Materials Companies, 14th, 15th River Crossing Materials Companies, 87th Land Duty Company, 45th, 46th Construction Duty Companies
5th Army 11th, 24th, 25th Divisions, 3rd Cavalry Brigade, 6th Independent Garrison Unit, 3rd, 4th, 12th Border Garrison Units 8th Artillery Command, 5th, 7th, 12th, 20th Field Heavy Artillery Regiments, 1st Independent Field Artillery Regiment, 5th, 9th Independent Heavy Artillery Battalions, 12th Field Air Defense Command, 53rd, 54th Field AA Battalions, 20th, 24th, 27th Field Machine Cannon Companies, 6th Independent Rapid Fire (AT) Battalion 2nd Tank Group (4th, 10th, 11th Tank Regiments) - 1st Engineer Command (HQ, 22nd, 24th Independent Engineer Regiments), 7th, 23rd Independent Engineer Regiments, 21st, 22nd, 29th Bridging Materials Companies, 13th River Crossing Materials Company, 38th, 42nd, 44th, 45th Field Road Construction Units, 17th Field Duty Unit, 8th Field Construction Unit
6th Army 23rd Division, 8th Border Garrison Unit 3rd, 7th Independent Rapid Fire (AT) Battalions, 18th Field Machine Cannon Company - - 49th Construction Duty Company
Kwantung Defense Army 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 5th, 9th Independent Garrison Units - - - -
Directly Subordinate (Ground Units) 10th, 14th, 28th, 29th, 51st Divisions, Hunchun Garrison Unit, 9th Border Garrison Unit, 7th Independent Garrison Unit 2nd, 10th, 18th Field Heavy Artillery Regiments, Mudanjiang Heavy Artillery Regiment, 10th Trench Mortar Battalion, 6th Independent Rapid Fire (AT) Battalion (duplicate), 11th, 14th, 15th, 16th Field Air Defense Commands, 32nd, 33rd, 34th, 35th, 36th, 40th, 44th, 45th, 49th, 56th Field AA Battalions, 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th, 30th, 31st Independent Field AA Companies, 16th, 25th, 29th Field Machine Cannon Companies 7th, 8th, 23rd Tank Regiments (23rd Formed Sept. '41) Kwantung Army Air Corps 31st, 33rd, 34th Field Road Construction Units, 3rd Field Fortification Unit, 10th, 11th, 12th Field Duty Units, 4th, 6th, 7th Field Construction Units
Subtotal (Ground) 14 Infantry Divisions

14 Border Garrison Units

9 Independent Garrison Units

3 Artillery Commands

19 Artillery Regiments

8 Independent Artillery Battalions

4 Independent Mortar Battalions

3 Independent Rapid Fire (AT) Battalions

6 Field Air Defense Commands

17 Field AA Battalions

6 Independent Field AA Companies

11 Independent Field Machine Cannon Companies

2 Tank Groups

2 Tank Regiments (3 as of Sept. '41)

See below 2 Engineer Commands

5 Independent Engineer Regiments

10 Bridging Materials Companies

3 River Crossing Materials Companies

11 Field Road Construction Units

1 Field Fortification Unit

5 Field Duty Units

5 Field Construction Units

1 Land Duty Company

2 Construction Duty Companies

Kwantung Army Air Corps (Subordinate to Kwantung Army)[4] Fighter Units Bomber Units Direct Cooperation Units Mixed Units Reconnaissance
2nd Air Group (2nd, 7th, 8th Air Brigades) 9th (3 Fighter Companies), 33rd (3 Fighter Cos.) Air Regiments 6th (3 Light Bomber Cos.), 16th (3 Light Bomber Cos.), 32nd (3 Light Bomber Cos.), 12th (3 Heavy Bomber Cos.), 58th (3 Heavy Bomber Cos.), 98th (3 Heavy Bomber Cos.) Air Regiments - 29th Independent Air Unit (1 Army Recon. Co., 1 Direct Cooperation Co.) 28th (2 Area Army Recon. Cos.), 83rd (2 Army Recon. Cos.) Independent Air Units
5th Air Group (9th, 10th Air Brigades) 24th (3 Fighter Cos.), 77th (3 Fighter Cos.) Air Regiments 31st (3 Light Bomber Cos.), 45th (3 Light Bomber Cos.), 61st (3 Heavy Bomber Cos.) Air Regiments - - -
12th Air Brigade 1st (3 Fighter Cos.), 11th (3 Fighter Cos.), 70th (2 Fighter Cos.) Air Regiments - - - -
13th Air Brigade 85th (2 Fighter Cos.), 87th (2 Fighter Cos.) Air Regiments - - - -
Hajukoshi Army Air School Air Instruction Brigade - 208th Air Instruction Regiment (2 Light Bomber Cos.) - 206th Independent Air Unit (1 Co. Army Reconnaissance, 1 Co. Direct Cooperation) -
Miscellaneous - 7th Air Regiment (3 Heavy Bomber Cos.) 6th, 7th Direct Cooperation Air Units 15th Independent Air Unit (1 Co. Army Recon, 1 Co. Direct Cooperation) -
Subtotal (Air) 9 Air Regiments 11 Air Regiments 2 Direct Cooperation Air Units 3 Independent Air Units 2 Independent Air Units
Korea Army[5] Infantry, Airborne Forces, and Cavalry Corps and Army Artillery, Air Defense Forces Armored and Mechanized Forces Air Forces Engineering Troops
Directly Subordinate 19th, 20th Divisions, Chinhae Bay, Najin, Yongfung Bay, Yosu Fortress Units 15th Field Heavy Artillery Regiment, Chinhae Bay, Najin, Yongfung Bay, Yosu Artillery Regiments, 41st, 42nd, Field AA Regiments, 5th, 6th Reserve AA Regiments, Yosu AA Regiment, 41st, 47th Field AA Battalions, 35th, 41st, 42nd, 43rd, 44th, 45th Independent Field AA Companies, 19th Independent Field Machine Cannon Company - - 23rd Independent Engineer Regiment
Subtotal 2 Infantry Divisions

4 Fortress Units

1 Artillery Regiment (Excluding Fortress Artillery)

4 AA Regiments (Excluding Fortress AA)

2 Field AA Battalions

6 Independent Field AA Companies

1 Independent Field Machine Cannon Company

- - 1 Independent Engineer Regiment
Northern Army[6] Infantry, Airborne Forces, and Cavalry Corps and Army Artillery, Air Defense Forces Armored and Mechanized Forces Air Forces Engineering Troops
Directly Subordinate 7th Division, Karafuto Mixed Brigade, Kitachishima, North Chishima, Tsugaru, Soya Fortress Units Kitachishima, Tsugaru, Soya Fortress Artillery Regiments, 5th, 6th Fortress Artillery Units, 31st Field AA Regiment, Soya AA Regiment, 31st, 32nd Field AA Battalions, 22nd, 23rd, 31st, 32nd, 33rd, 34th, 43rd Independent Field AA Companies - - 24th Fortress Engineer Regiment
Subtotal 1 Infantry Division

1 Mixed Brigade

4 Fortress Units

1 Field AA Regiment

2 Field AA Battalions

7 Independent Field AA Companies

- - 1 Engineer Regiment
Total Kwantung Army, Korea Army, and North Japan Army 17 Infantry Divisions

14 Border Garrison Units

9 Independent Garrison Units

1 Mixed Brigade

8 Fortress Units

3 Artillery Commands

20 Artillery Regiments (Excluding Fortress Artillery)

8 Independent Artillery Battalions

4 Independent Mortar Battalions

3 Independent Rapid Fire (AT) Battalions

6 Field Air Defense Commands

5 AA Regiments

21 Field AA Battalions

19 Independent Field AA Companies

12 Independent Field Machine Cannon Companies

2 Tank Groups

2 Tank Regiments (3 as of Sept. '41)

20 Air Regiments

3 Independent Air Units

2 Direct Cooperation Air Units

2 Engineer Commands

9 Independent Engineer Regiments

10 Bridging Materials Companies

3 River Crossing Materials Companies

11 Field Road Construction Units

1 Field Fortification Unit

5 Field Duty Units

5 Field Construction Units

1 Land Duty Company

2 Construction Duty Companies

Soviet Far East Order of Battle, 1 March 1942[7]
Transbaikal Military District Rifle, Airborne Forces, and Cavalry Corps and Army Artillery, High Command Reserve Artillery, and Air Defense Forces Armored and Mechanized Forces Air Forces Engineering Troops
17th Army 36th, 57th Motor Rifle Divisions, 1st, 3rd Separate Motor Rifle Regiments 185th Artillery Regiment, 413th Howitzer Artillery Regiment, 63rd, 66th, 376th, 382nd Separate AA Battalions 61st Tank Division, 9th Motorized Armored Brigade, 30th Motorcycle Regiment, 70th, 82nd Separate Tank Brigades, 63rd Separate Armored Train 22nd, 56th, 350th Fighter Aviation Regiments, 56, 454th Bomber Aviation Regiments, 132nd Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron 17th, 84th Pontoon Bridge Battalions, 282nd Separate Engineer Battalion
36th Army 94th, 209th, 210th Rifle Divisions, 51st Cavalry Division, 317th Separate Cavalry Regiment, 31st and 32nd Fortified Regions 259th Howitzer Artillery Regiment, 267th, 390th Artillery Regiments, 14th Separate Mortar Battalion, 120th, 401st, 405th, 414th Separate AA Battalions 111th Tank Division, 33rd, 35th Separate Tank Battalions, 64th, 65th Separate Armored Trains 64th, 291st Storm Aviation Regiments, 70th, 351st, 718th Fighter Aviation Regiments, 455th, 541st Bomber Aviation Regiments, 135th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron 2nd Pontoon Bridge Battalion, 39th Separate Sapper Battalion
Directly Subordinate Separate Parachute-Landing Battalion (no number) 106th High-Power Howitzer Artillery Regiment, 216th Howitzer Artillery Regiment, 13th Separate Mortar Battalion, 410th Separate AA Battalion - 30th Bomber Aviation Division, 51st Fighter Aviation Regiment, 49th, 456, 457th Bomber Aviation Regiments (short-range/ббап), 133rd, 134th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadrons 51st, 102nd Separate Engineer Battalions, 1st, 15th Pontoon Bridge Battalions
Subtotal 5 Rifle Divisions

1 Cavalry Division

2 Fortified Regions

2 Separate Rifle Regiments

1 Separate Cavalry Regiment

7 Artillery Regiments

2 Separate Mortar Battalions

9 Separate AA Battalions

2 Tank Divisions

1 Motorized Armored Brigade

4 Separate Tank Battalions

1 Motorcycle Regiment

1 Aviation Division

16 Aviation Regiments

3 Separate Engineer Battalions

1 Separate Sapper Battalion

5 Separate Pontoon Bridge Battalions

Far Eastern Front Rifle, Airborne Forces, and Cavalry Corps and Army Artillery, High Command Reserve Artillery, and Air Defense Forces Armored and Mechanized Forces Air Forces Engineering Troops
1st Army 26th Rifle Corps (22nd, 59th, and "Grodekovskaya" Rifle Divisions), 59th Rifle Corps (39th, 98th Rifle Divisions, 246th Rifle Brigade), 87th Rifle Division, 8th Cavalry Division, 246th Separate Cavalry Regiment, 105th, 112th Fortified Regions 45, 87th, 165th, 182nd Howitzer Artillery Regiments, 199th High-Power Howitzer Artillery Regiment, 50th, 273rd Cannon Artillery Regiments, 43rd, 44th, 45th, 103rd Separate AA Battalions 2nd Tank Division, 75th, 77th Tank Brigades, Light Motor Rifle Brigade (no number), 3 Separate Armored Train 32nd, 33rd, 34th, 98th Mixed Aviation Divisions, 776th Light Bomber Aviation Regiment, 26th, 59th Corrective Aviation Squadrons, 137th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron 29th, 278th Separate Engineer Battalions, 50th Pontoon Bridge Battalion
2nd Army 3rd, 12th, 96th, 204th Rifle Divisions, 258th, 259th Rifle Brigades, 101st Fortified Region 42nd Cannon Artillery Regiment, 114th, 147th, 238th, 411th Howitzer Artillery Regiments, 550th High-Power Howitzer Artillery Regiment, 192nd Separate Artillery Battalion, 22nd Separate Mortar Battalion, 9th, 42nd Separate AA Battalions 73rd, 74th Tank Brigades, 2 Separate Armored Trains, 5th Separate Armored Car Battalion 82nd Bomber Aviation Division, 95th, 96th Mixed Aviation Divisions, 140th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron, 328th Corrective Aviation Squadron 2nd Heavy Pontoon Bridge Regiment, 10th, 29th Pontoon Bridge Battalions, 277th Separate Engineer Battalion
15th Army 34th Rifle Division, 102nd Fortified Region 52nd Artillery Regiment, 145th Howitzer Artillery Regiment, 46th Separate AA Battalion 1st Tank Division, "Vyazemskiy" Separate Armored Train 69th, 97th Mixed Aviation Divisions, 139th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron, 329th Corrective Aviation Squadron 3rd Heavy Pontoon Bridge Regiment, 129th Separate Sapper Battalion, 11th, 24th Pontoon Bridge Battalions
25th Army 39th Rifle Corps (40th, 105th, 126th, 208th Rifle Divisions), "Poltavskaya" Rifle Division, 247th Separate Cavalry Regiment 106th, 107th, 108th, 110th, 111th, 113th Fortified Regions 107th, 148th, 215th, 386th Howitzer Artillery Regiments, 549th High-Power Howitzer Artillery Regiment, 282nd, 548th Cannon Artillery Regiments, 21st Separate Mortar Battalion, 28th, 70th Separate AA Battalions 72nd, 76th Tank Brigades, 9th Separate Armored Train 70th, 99th Mixed Aviation Divisions, 83rd Bomber Aviation Division, 138th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron, 330th Corrective Aviation Squadron 32nd, 100th, 276th, 279 Separate Engineer Battalions, 69th Separate Sapper Battalion
35th Army 35th, 66th, 422nd Rifle Divisions, 109th Fortified Region 177th, 181st, 263rd Howitzer Artillery Regiments, 76th, 187th Cannon Artillery Regiments, 110th Separate AA Battalion Separate Tank Brigade (no number), 29th Motorcycle Regiment, Separate Armored Train (no number) 79th Mixed Aviation Division, 18th Reconnaissance Aviation Squadron, 130th Corrective Aviation Squadron 3rd, 16th Pontoon Bridge Battalions, 60th Separate Sapper Battalion, 280th, 402nd Separate Engineer Battalions
Directly Subordinate Special Rifle Corps (79th Rifle Division - Sakhalin Island, "Sakhalinskaya" Rifle Brigade - Sakhalin Island, 101st Rifle Division - Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy), 205th Rifle Division, 2nd Rifle Brigade, 202nd Air Landing Brigade, 103rd, 104th Fortified Regions 362nd, 367th Separate Artillery Battalions, 102nd Separate AA Battalion 13th Separate Armored Train 29th Fighter Aviation Division, 53rd Bomber Aviation Division, 5th Mixed Aviation Brigade, 71st Mixed Aviation Regiment, 139th 251st Bomber Aviation Regiments, 168th Reconnaissance Aviation Regiment, 97th Corrective Aviation Squadron 26th, 101st Separate Engineer Battalions
Subtotal 4 Rifle Corps

22 Rifle Divisions

1 Cavalry Division

6 Rifle Brigades

1 Airborne Brigade

2 Separate Cavalry Regiments

1 Separate Rifle Regiment

13 Fortified Regions

27 Artillery Regiments

3 Separate Artillery Battalions

2 Separate Mortar Battalions

11 Separate AA Battalions

2 Tank Divisions

7 Tank Brigades

1 Motor Rifle Brigade

1 Motorcycle Regiment

5 Separate Armored Trains

15 Aviation Divisions

1 Aviation Brigade

5 Aviation Regiments

2 Pontoon Bridge Regiments

11 Separate Engineer Battalions

3 Separate Sapper Battalions

7 Pontoon Bridge Battalions

Total Far East and Transbaikal Military District 4 Rifle Corps

27 Rifle Divisions

2 Cavalry Divisions

6 Rifle Brigades

1 Airborne Brigade

3 Separate Rifle Regiments

3 Separate Cavalry Regiments

15 Fortified Regions

34 Artillery Regiments

3 Separate Artillery Battalions

4 Separate Mortar Battalions

20 Separate AA Battalions

4 Tank Divisions

7 Tank Brigades

1 Motorized Armored Brigade

1 Motor Rifle Brigade

4 Separate Tank Battalions

2 Motorcycle Regiments

1 Armored Car Battalion

5 Separate Armored Trains

16 Aviation Divisions

1 Aviation Brigade

21 Aviation Regiments

2 Pontoon Bridge Regiments

14 Separate Engineer Battalions

4 Separate Sapper Battalions

12 Pontoon Bridge Battalions

Comparative TO&E of Soviet (RKKA), Japanese, and German infantry divisions[8][9][10]
Category IJA type "A" division RKKA rifle division
April 1941
IJA type "B" division RKKA rifle division
July 1941
German "first wave" infantry
division, June 1941
Manpower 25,654–25,874 14,454 20,505–21,605 10,790 16,860[11]
Rifles 10,000 12,378 9,000 10,201 15,550[12]
LMGs 405 392 382 162 435
HMGs[b] 112 166 112 108 112
AT rifles 72 0 18 18 90
Light mortars 457 84 340 54 84
Medium Mortars 0 54 0 18 54
Heavy mortars 0 12 0 6 0
70 mm bn guns 36 0 18 0 0
75/6 mm RG 24 18 12 12 20
150 mm RG 0 0 0 0 6
75/6 mm FG 12 16 36 or 24 16 0
105/122 mm FG/htzr. 24 32 0 or 12 8 36
150/152 mm FG/htzr. 12 12 0 0 12
37–50 mm AT 40 62 22 18 72
37 mm AA 0 4 0 6 0
76 mm AA 0 4 0 4 0
12.7 mm AA 0 33 0 9 0
AFVs[c] 81 29 7 0 2
Trucks 200–860[13] 586 310[14] 200 516
Horses 9,906[15] 3,309 7,500[16] 2,468 5,370

- Even with Lyushkov, Japanese intelligence efforts were hodgepodge (Coox "semiprofessionals" terrain map)

- Only Third Army and other units in the vicinity had developed OPLAN

- AH "Soviet Intelligence on the Japanese Threat" (5 units)

- Include Soviet intelligence and map with Japanese attack plan

Japanese and U.S. Intelligence data on the strength of Soviet Army Forces east of Lake Baikal
Category/Source Japanese Estimate, December 1940[17] Soviet Data, 22 June 1941[18] Japanese Estimate, 24 October 1941[19] U.S. Estimate, 21 October 1941[20] Japanese Estimate, December 1941[21][d] Soviet Data, 1 December 1941[22]
Manpower 700,000 ~650,000[e] N/A 682,000 600,000 to 800,000 ~1,200,000[f]
Aircraft 2,800 4,140 1,060 1,677 1,000 2,124
Tanks 2,400 3,188 1,200 to 1,400 1,600 1,000 3,193
Submarines/Warships 103 94 N/A N/A 105 96
8 July 1941 Kwantung Army Reserve Western Front Northern Front Eastern Front Summary Emphasis
Arshaan Direction Hailar Direction Amur Direction Front Reserve Sanjiang Direction Lake Khanka (north) Lake Khanka (west) Suifenhe Direction Dongning Direction Hunchun Direction
21st, 53rd, 52nd, 54th Divs 6th Army (23rd Division, 3 Independent Garrison Units) 4th Army (1st Division) None 3rd Cavalry Brigade, 3 Independent Garrison Units 5th Army (10th, 11th, 24th, 28th, 51st Divs) 20th Army (14th, 25th Divs) 3rd Army (8th, 9th, 12th, 20th, 29th, 57th Divs) 19th Div, Hunchun Garrison Total Offensive on the Eastern Front
4 Divisions 1 Division 1 Division 14 Divisions 20 Divisions
4th, 6th, 16th, 41st, 56th Divs 6th Army (23rd Division, 3 Independent Garrison Units) 4th Army (1st, 21st, 33rd, 51st, 52nd, 54th Divs) None 3rd Cavalry Brigade, 3 Independent Garrison Units 5th Army (10th, 11th, 24th, 28th Divs) 20th Army (14th, 25th Divs) 3rd Army (8th, 9th, 12th, 20th, 29th, 57th Divs) 19th Div, Hunchun Garrison Total Simultaneous Offensives on Northern and Eastern Front
5 Divsions 1 Division 6 Divisions 13 Divisions 25 Divisions
29 July 1941 4th, 6th, 16th, 41st, 56th Divs 6th Army (23rd, 54th Divs) 4th Army (1st, 52nd Divs) 21st, 33rd Divs 5th Army (10th, 11th, 24th, 28th, 51st, Divs, 3rd Cavalry Brigade) 20th Army (8th, 14th, 25th, 29th Divs) 3rd Army (9th, 12th, 19th, 20th, 57th Divs) Total Offensive on the Eastern Front
5 Divisions 2 Divisions 2 Divisions 16 Divisions 25 Divisions
HQ: Qiqihar HQ: Bei'an HQ: Dong'an HQ: Jixi Laoheishan
Commanding Officer Jiro Sogawa Kesago Nakajima Jo Iimura Kameji Seki Masakazu Kawabe
After 31 July 1941 4th, 41st, 52nd, 54th, 56th Divs (to be concentrated at Mutanchiang) 6th Army (23rd Division) 4th Army (1st Division) 16th, 21st, 22rd Divs 5th Army (10th, 11th, 24th, 28th, 51st Divs, 3rd Cavalry Brigade) 20th Army (8th, 14th, 25th, 29th Divs) 3rd Army (9th, 12th, 19th, 20th, 57th Divs) Total Offensive on the Eastern Front
5 Divisions 1 Division 2 Divisions 17 Divisions 24 Divisions

Situation after Battle of Xuzhou, 1938 Northern Taipeshan Foothills Operation Battle of the Dabie Mountains Battle of Wanjialing 1938 The Japanese 11th Army's assault on Wuhan, 1938

Weapons of mass destruction edit

Since the mid-1930s, Japan invested large resources toward the creation and development of a tremendous arsenal of chemical and biological weapons. During the campaign in China, the Japanese military routinely subjected opposing population centers to ruthless attacks by these weapons of mass-destruction, resulting in the deaths of as many as 2,000,000 people.[23] One of these targets, the helpless city of Baoshan, was hit by a mixture of high-explosive and bacteriological weapons in 1942. Clogged with refugees fleeing the front and with grossly inadequate medical infrastructure, up to 60,000 people died in the city and its environs.[24]

Russian historian Anatoliy Koshkin claims that Japan's conduct in a war against the Soviet Union would have been little different, contending that the IJA's Unit 731, Unit 100, and Unit 516 began making extensive preparations after the introduction of the Kantokuen plan for war in Siberia.[25]

Koshkin asserts that "epizootic detachments" consisting of specialists from Unit 100 were set up at each corps-level headquarters in Manchuria to increase the Kwantung Army's readiness for biological warfare; this being carried out n the initiative of the IJA General Staff 1st Operations Division. Three primary media for spreading disease were identified: direct spraying from aircraft, bacteria bombs, and saboteurs on the ground. Koshkin writes that in the event of war with the USSR, the Japanese planned to make use of all three, spreading plague, cholera, typhus, anthrax, and other diseases on both the opposing front lines and rear areas with the goal of infecting populated regions, livestock, crops, and water supplies. He identifies the main targets as the areas around Blagoveshchensk, Khabarovsk, Voroshilov, and Chita, and asserts that extensive reconnaissance of the border region was conducted in 1942 while detailed maps were created indicating targets of opportunity for biological warfare.[26]

Koshkin maintains that the Kwantung Army regarded its weapons of mass-destruction as trump cards against the Soviets which would guarantee a Japanese victory, citing a Colonel Asaoka of Unit 731. As late as 1945, their supply was so great that even the output of that unit alone was deemed sufficient to supply the entire Japanese Army; evenly distributed and under ideal conditions, it was claimed, the Japanese bioweapon stockpile was capable of destroying all of humanity.[27]

Plans for occupation edit

By Imperial decree on October 1, 1940, the Total War Research Institute was established under the direct supervision of the Prime Minister. Working closely with the Research Society for the Study of State Policy (an organization that included many high-ranking Japanese government ministers and industrialists), its main goal was to create policies for the formation and rule over the planned "Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere," which was to be the 'New Order' in the region.[28] Under the provisions of the Administrative Plan of December 1941, the Primorye Region would be directly annexed into the Empire and the remaining territories adjacent to Manchukuo would be subject to the latter's influence. The hypothetical delineation point between German and Japanese spheres of influence over the prostrate Soviet Union was designated as the city of Omsk.[29]

The occupation was to be managed with extraordinary brutality, typical of Japanese conduct in China and elsewhere during the war. In general, it envisioned the displacement of the native population to make room for a projected influx of Japanese, Korean, and Manchu settlers. Given instructions to use "strictly real force, without sinking to the so-called principle of moderation," the Japanese Army authorities were to annihilate the subject Soviet population with the survivors either converted into forced labor to exploit the raw materials of the region or exiled into the frozen wastelands of the north. All pre-existing institutions were to be completely abolished and the Communist ideology outlawed and replaced with Japanese propaganda. To create, if possible, a façade of self-governance, a number of former White Movement figures (including Grigory Semyonov) were hand-picked to manage puppet government positions under the Japanese.[30]

The task of setting up the framework of the occupation regime was given to the "Hata Department," later the 5th Department of the Kwantung Army.[31]

Unit Number Participated Killed Wounded
23rd Division 14,137 5,224 5,561
7th Division 10,308 1,505 1,851
8th Border Guards Unit 4,883 779 603
2nd Division 11,800 200 110
4th Division 8,315 5 6
Independent Guards Unit 3,012 38 59
1st Division 4,980 70 100
"Ta-bi" Heavy Artillery 380 96 ?
3 [?] Heavy Field Artillery 2,092 256 177
3rd "De" [sic] 1,165 14 29
Truck Unit (Kwantung Army) 2,536 31 86
AA HQ 2,641 16 61
AA Unit 935 7 29
Ka-ho [sic] 1,125 200 143
Mortar Unit 401 20 44
Tank Corps 1,627 77 83
Air Force 3,307 55 [?] 58
Unidentified 744 ? [From article, 152] ? [From article, 66 "seriously wounded"]
Miscellaneous 1,350 39 50
Total 75,736 [75,738 ?] 8,629 [8,784?] 9,087 [9,116+?]
Sector Continuous Front Disrupted Front
Rates Days Rates Days
Major Attack Sector (MAS) 13-35

2-12

3-4

10-12

150-280(a)

70-95(b)

3

10

Flank of MAS 2-20 3-5 40-45(b) 11
Secondary Attack Sector 2-22 3-5 40-45(b)

27

10

16

Operation Downfall edit

Due to the nature of combat in the Pacific Theater and the character of the Japanese Armed Forces, it was always envisioned that a direct invasion of the Japanese Home Islands would be a very difficult and costly battle.

- Saipan Ratio (JCS 924, "Operations against Japan subsequent to Formosa"). 30 August 1944 - the Japanese could theoretically make available 3.5 million soldiers to defend their Homeland. "On this basis [the casualty experience of the Battle of Saipan] it might cost us half a million American lives and many times that number wounded [...] in the Home Islands." (Giangreco p. 50). This number appeared, "in the long run, to be unrealistically high to a cross-section of strategic planners and senior leaders in Washington. After all, it seemed reasonable to assume that US forces would learn how to better cope with Japanese defensive techniques through heard-earned battle experience."

- In the spring of 1945 a figure of 500,000 battle casualties for an invasion of Japan was repeatedly used in briefing documents and became "the operative one at the working level." (Giangreco p. 53)

- 15 January 1945 ASF estimate (below)

- 17 January 1945, "The Army must provide 600,000 replacements for overseas theaters before June 30, and, together with the Navy, will require a total of 900,000 inductions by June 30. The Navy total includes those required for 'manning the rapidly expanding fleet' rather than casualty replacement. (Giangreco p. 19, 53)

- Lt. Gen. Somervell, "approximately" 720,000 replacements needed for "dead and evacuated wounded" through 31 December 1946. (Giangreco p. 53) (Summary of Redeployment Forecast, 14 March 1945)

- 15 May 1945, former president Herbert Hoover submitted a memorandum to Henry Stimson that defeating the Japanese could cost "500,000 to 1,000,000 lives." (Giangreco p. 55) Hoover was plugged into sensitive military information via the "cabal of smart colonels."

- Kyle Palmer, Los Angeles Times (attached to Admiral Nimitz's HQ as a war correspondent) - "Palmer Warns No Easy Way Open to Bear Japs" (17 May 1945). "They have 5,000,000 or 6,000,000 under arms and it will cost 500,000 to 750,000, perhaps 1,000,000 lives of American boys to end this war." (Giangreco p. 16). "This information was not yet widely disseminated even within higher headquarters' organizations, and almost certainly was leaked to Palmer through Nimitz's command which, like the rest of the Navy leadership, was still angling, sometimes buttressed by selective leaks to the press, to swing future operations away from a direct assault on Japan's Home Islands to a campaign of encirclement and blockade designed to starve the Japanese into surrender." (Giangreco p. 56)

- On 28 May 1945 Presidents Hoover and Truman met at the White House; at Truman's request Hoover prepared four memoranda on the issues discussed (1. The European Food Organization; 2. The Domestic Food Organization; 3. The Creation of a War Economic Council; and 4. The Japanese Situation - in which Hoover repeated his figures of up to 1 million American deaths.) In response, Truman sent memoranda to Stimson, Undersecretary of State Joseph Grew, Director of the Office of War Mobilization and Reconversion Fred Vinson, and former Secretary of State Cordell Hull asking for written judgements from each. Truman additionally wished to discuss the analyses of Grew and Stimson in person. (Giangreco pp. 56-57)

- On 18 June 1945 President Truman convened a meeting with the JCS as well as Secretary of War Stimson and Secretary of the Navy Forrestal. "All participants agreed that the invasion would be bloody but that it was essential for the defeat of Japan." (Giangreco p. 58) To support this meeting the Joint War Plans Committee (JWPC) hastily assembled an estimate of casualties that could be expected in an invasion of Japan, based on the experience of the Battle of Leyte. (Giangreco, "Casualty Projections for the Invasion of Japan" p. 13) This estimate was deleted from a subsequent version of the document and not presented to the President.(MacEachin pp. 14-15) The meeting concluded with Truman expressing hope of avoiding "an Okinawa from one end of Japan to the other." (Giangreco p. 60)

General Marshall's deputy Chief of Staff, Major General Thomas T. Handy, wrote that Hoover's estimate of 500,000 lives was "entirely too high [...] under the present plan of campaign" (emphasis original). General George A. Lincoln, chief of the OPD's Strategy and Policy Group, echoed Handy's response and went back to Truman with notes from Stimson that nevertheless affirmed that an invasion of Japan would be difficult and cost "a large number of lives." (Giangreco, "Casualty Projections for the Invasion of Japan" p. 12)

- During the first week of August 1945 approximately 50 reporters from the United States, Great Britain, and Australia were given an "off the record" briefing at General MacArthur's headquarters in Manila, stating that final operations against Japan could result in up to 1 million American casualties. (Giangreco p. 106)

- "Size of the Army" 7 August 1945. Memorandum. Further broken down in 10 August memorandum to Admiral Leahy in which 330,000 of these men would be hospitalized troops in the CONUS. Army Medical Corps previously estimated that casualties incurred by summer 1945 would continue to occupy about 55,000 beds (5,000 from noncombat theaters) in CONUS - the implication being that final operations against Japan would produce around 275,000 patients serious enough to require hospitalization in the United States through Operation Olympic and the opening part of Coronet. This figure omits dead and missing, patients in other branches, patients discharged and sent back to their units, or patients in forward hospitals in Hawai'i, the Philippines, and Australia (~150,000 beds - Giangreco p. 138, including 33,250 to be established on Kyushu). (Giangreco p. 317) A common rule of thumb for planning purposes is that the number of beds available should exceed the number of anticipated patients by a minimum of 125%. (Giangreco, "Casualty Projections for the Invasion of Japan" p. 15)

- Writing in "Military Review: June 1946" No. 3, MacArthur's intelligence chief, Major General Charles A. Willoughby stated that based on the experience of Okinawa "two to two and a half Japanese divisions exacted a total of 40,000 American battle casualties on land." Using this formula and conservatively rounding down Willoughby concluded that excluding "the shattering kamikaze attack" American forces could expect to incur 200,000 battle casualties on Kyushu and 400,000 on the Kanto Plain, with an additional 80,000 at Shikoku and 30,000 at Sendai should those locations have also been attacked. Willoughby considered this "a completely authentic yardstick to forecast what it would have taken in losses had we gone in shooting." Japanese naval ground forces as well as Army reinforcements are not included in his estimate.[32]

- Independent of Army planning, Stimson advisor Dr. Edward Bowles commissioned Dr. William B. Shockley to examine the question of potential casualties to defeat Japan. Shockley and his team were given access to classified data collected by the Military Intelligence Division and Medical Corps; Shockley concluded on 21 July 1945 that "If the study shows that the behavior of nations in all historical cases comparable to Japan's has in fact been invariably consistent with the behavior of the troops in battle, then it means that the Japanese dead and ineffectives at the time of the defeat will exceed the corresponding number for the Germans. In other words, we shall probably have to kill at least 5 to 10 million Japanese. This might cost us between 1.7 and 4 million casualties including [between] 400,000 and 800,000 killed." The war ended before Shockley's document, "Proposal for Increasing the Scope of Casualties Studies," could be considered in detail. (Giangreco p. 92)

ASF Casualty Estimate, 15 January 1945 (Excluding non-evacuated wounded, Navy, and Marine Corps casualties)
Quarter Pacific Ocean Area Southwest Pacific North Pacific China-Burma-India
Dead Evacuated Wounded Dead Evacuated Wounded Dead Evacuated Wounded Dead Evacuated Wounded
Q3 1945 10,000 23,000 13,000 29,000 1,000 1,500 2,000 6,000
Q4 1945 16,000 35,000 12,000 28,500 1,000 1,000 2,000 6,000
Q1 1946 24,000 50,500 11,000 24,000 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
Q2 1946 28,000 61,000 11,000 23,500 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
Q3 1946 30,000 64,000 11,000 25,000 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
Q4 1946 30,000 65,500 10,000 23,500 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
1947 30,000 64,500 10,000 24,500 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
Total 168,000 363,500 78,000 178,000 7,000 7,500 14,000 47,000
Total for Downfall and Concurrent Operations
Dead and Missing 223,000
Evacuated Wounded 489,500
Total 712,500
Total to Defeat Japan (July 1945 - February 1947)
Dead and Missing 267,000
Evacuated Wounded 596,000
Total 863,000

Relatively high casualties for Q3 1945 can be explained by the need to prepare for operations on the China Coast and the more protracted campaign envisioned for the Ryukyus subsequent to Okinawa. (History of Planning Division, ASF. vol. 1, part 5, pp. 176-177)

Additionally, the possibility of US troops participating in invasion of the Dutch East Indies was also discussed at the end of 1944 and beginning of 1945 when this paper was written. (ASF vol. 4, part 3, p. 171)

Finally, lag between the end of the last quarter and the start of the next.

JWPC Casualty Estimate, 15 June 1945 (Based on the Battle of Leyte)
Campaign Plan Killed Wounded Missing Total
Southern Kyushu followed by Kanto Plain 40,000 150,000 3,500 193,500
Southern Kyushu - Northwestern Kyushu 25,000 105,000 2,500 132,500
Southern Kyushu - NW Kyushu - Kanto Plain 46,000 170,000 4,000 220,000
Sixth Army Estimate Operation Olympic, July 1945 (Based on the Battle of Luzon)[33]
Time Killed & Missing Wounded Total Non-Battle Casualties
X-Day to X+30 4,515 18,060 22,575 N/A
X+30 to X+60 6,666 26,665 33,331 N/A
X+60 to X+120 13,806 55,223 69,029 N/A
Total X-Day to X+120 24,987 99,948 124,935 269,924
Each month thereafter < 2,000 < 8,000 < 10,000 N/A
Major General Willoughby's Estimate, June 1946 (Excluding Navy)
Location Japanese Divisions American Casualties
Kyushu 13-14 200,000
Shikoku 4-5 80,000
Kanto Plain 22 400,000
Sendai 2 30,000
Estimated Losses from Kamikaze sorties
Source Ships Sunk Ships Damaged Killed & Missing Wounded Notes
USSBS 90 900 Assumes 5,000 kamikaze sorties
"Postwar Estimate" 90 900 21,000 N/A
"Pearl to VJ-Day"[34] 900 "sunk or damaged" 22,000 killed and wounded
Japanese Planners 50,000 killed and wounded
ASF Estimate of Effect on Japanese Civilians[35]
Location Initial Population Refugees and Deaths Remaining behind US lines
Southern Kyushu 3,300,000 1,100,000 2,200,000
Kanto Plain 14,500,000 5,100,000 9,400,000
Total 17,800,000 6,200,000 11,600,000

Due to the nature of combat in the Pacific Theater and the characteristics of the Japanese Armed Forces, it was accepted that a direct invasion of the Japanese Home Islands would be a very difficult and costly battle. The Allies would have to contend with not only all available Japanese military forces that could be brought to bear, but also the efforts of a "fanatically hostile population."[36] Depending on the scope and context, casualty estimates for American forces ranged from 220,000 to several million, while estimates of Japanese military and civilian casualties ran from the millions to the tens of millions. Postwar, the extent of the expected loss of life played a key role in debate over the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

In the aftermath of the Marianas Campaign the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) revised their planning document, "Operations against Japan subsequent to Formosa" (JCS 924) to reflect the experience gained. Taking into account the stiff resistance of the Japanese 31st Army at Saipan, they concluded that, should U.S. forces have to defeat all 3.5 million Japanese soldiers that could be made available, "it might cost us half a million American lives and many times that number wounded."[37] Despite these high numbers, by the spring of 1945 a figure of 500,000 battle casualties for the projected invasion was widely used in briefings, while totals of closer to a million were used for actual planning purposes.[38] U.S. strategists hoped that by seizing a few vital strategic areas they could establish "effective military control" over Japan without the need to clear the entire archipelago or defeat the Japanese on mainland Asia, thereby avoiding excessive losses.[39]

Covering only the U.S. Army, the Army Service Forces (ASF) planning document of 15 January 1945, "Redeployment of the United States Army after the Defeat of Germany," expected that an average of 43,000 replacements for "dead and evacuated wounded"[g] would be needed each month between June 1945 and December 1946 to carry out the final phase of the war against Japan.[40] Expected casualties, independent of Navy and Marine Corps losses, came to approximately 723,000 through the end of 1946 and 863,000 through the first part of 1947.[41]

ASF Casualty Estimate, 15 January 1945 (Excluding non-evacuated wounded, Navy, and Marine Corps casualties)[h]
Quarter Pacific Ocean Area Southwest Pacific North Pacific China-Burma-India
Dead Evacuated Wounded Dead Evacuated Wounded Dead Evacuated Wounded Dead Evacuated Wounded
Q3 1945 10,000 23,000 13,000 29,000 1,000 1,500 2,000 6,000
Q4 1945 16,000 35,000 12,000 28,500 1,000 1,000 2,000 6,000
Q1 1946 24,000 50,500 11,000 24,000 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
Q2 1946 28,000 61,000 11,000 23,500 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
Q3 1946 30,000 64,000 11,000 25,000 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
Q4 1946 30,000 65,500 10,000 23,500 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
1947 30,000 64,500 10,000 24,500 1,000 1,000 2,000 7,000
Total 168,000 363,500 78,000 178,000 7,000 7,500 14,000 47,000
Total for Downfall and Concurrent Operations
Dead and Missing 223,000
Evacuated Wounded 489,500
Total 712,500
Total to Defeat Japan (July 1945 - February 1947)
Dead and Missing 267,000
Evacuated Wounded 596,000
Total 863,000

Two days later, letters from President Roosevelt, General Marshall, and Admiral King to House Military Affairs Committee chairman Andrew J. May were released to the New York Times, which published articles informing the public that "the Army must provide 600,000 replacements for overseas theaters before June 30, and, together with the Navy, will require a total of 900,000 inductions by June 30." Of the Navy's target of 300,000, a large proportion were required for "manning the rapidly expanding fleet" rather than replacing battle casualties.[42]

Acting on the basis of sensitive information provided to him by contacts in the military, former President Herbert Hoover, a close personal friend of incoming President Harry S. Truman (who assumed office after Roosevelt's death in April) submitted a memorandum on 15 May 1945 to Secretary of War Henry Stimson indicating that defeating Japan could cost 500,000 to 1 million American dead. The same week, Kyle Palmer, Los Angeles Times war correspondent at Admiral Nimitz's headquarters, warned that "it will cost 500,000 to 750,000, perhaps 1,000,000 lives of American boys to end this war." These numbers were given in the context of revised estimates of Japanese military strength, still classified, which indicated that the IJA had the potential to mobilize 5,000,000 to 6,000,000 soldiers rather than the 3.5 million assessed by JCS 924.[43]

On 28 May Hoover and Truman met at the White House and conversed for several hours. At Truman's request Hoover prepared four memoranda on the issues discussed (1. The European Food Organization, 2. The Domestic Food Organization, 3. The Creation of a War Economic Council, and 4. The Japanese Situation - in which Hoover twice repeated his figure of 500,000 to 1 million American deaths). Truman "seized" on memo 4 and asked for written judgements on it from Stimson, Undersecretary of State Joseph Grew, Director of the Office of Mobilization and Reconversion Fred Vinson, and former Secretary of State Cordell Hull. Truman was particularly interested in hearing from Grew and Stimson and asked to meet with them in person.[44]

While neither Hull nor Grew took explicit exception to Hoover's estimate, Stimson forwarded his copy of Hoover's "Memo 4" to Marshall's deputy Chief of Staff, General Thomas T. Handy. As with the "worst case" scenario from JCS 924, Handy wrote that "under our present plan of campaign" (emphasis original), "the estimated loss of 500,000 lives due to carrying the war to conclusion [...] is considered to be entirely too high." Both Marshall and General George A. Lincoln, chief of the Operations Division (OPD), agreed with Handy's remarks.[45] Nonetheless, it was emphasized that an invasion would cost "a lot of lives."[46]

Appalled at the prospect of an impending bloodbath, President Truman ordered a meeting to be convened on 18 June 1945 involving the JCS as well as Stimson and Forrestal; at stake was the decision to either press forward with Downfall or to opt for the Navy's long-standing proposal of blockade and bombardment. To support this meeting the Joint War Plans Committee (JWPC) hastily assembled a table illustrating the casualties that could be expected in an invasion of Japan, based on the experience of the Battle of Leyte.[47] This estimate, which was significantly lower than those which had been prepared in the past, was deleted from a subsequent version of the document and not shown to the President.[48] The meeting concluded with all participants agreeing that the invasion would be 'bloody but essential for victory.' Truman expressed hope of avoiding "an Okinawa from one end of Japan to the other."[49]

JWPC Casualty Estimate, 15 June 1945 (Based on the Battle of Leyte)
Campaign Plan Killed Wounded Missing Total
Southern Kyushu followed by Kanto Plain 40,000 150,000 3,500 193,500
Southern Kyushu - Northwestern Kyushu 25,000 105,000 2,500 132,500
Southern Kyushu - NW Kyushu - Kanto Plain 46,000 170,000 4,000 220,000
Sixth Army Estimate, Operation Olympic (Southern Kyushu), July 1945 (Based on the Battle of Luzon)[50]
Time Killed & Missing Wounded Total Non-Battle Casualties
X-Day to X+30 4,515 18,060 22,575 N/A
X+30 to X+60 6,666 26,665 33,331 N/A
X+60 to X+120 13,806 55,223 69,029 N/A
Total X-Day to X+120 24,987 99,948 124,935 269,924
Each month thereafter < 2,000 < 8,000 < 10,000 N/A

Throughout the summer, as the intelligence picture concerning Japanese Army strength in the Home Islands became more and more unfavorable, together with new data from the fighting on Iwo Jima and Okinawa, casualty predictions were continually revised upward. During the first week of August 1945 approximately 50 reporters from the United States, Great Britain, and Australia were given an "off the record" briefing at General MacArthur's headquarters in Manila, where they were informed that final operations against Japan could result in up to 1 million American casualties.[51] An internal memorandum from Marshall to Leahy implied that by 30 June 1946 there would be approximately 275,000 Army soldiers in serious enough condition to require hospitalization in the United States, exclusive of dead and missing, the losses of other branches, patients discharged and sent back to their units, or patients in forward hospitals in Hawai'i, the Philippines, Australia, Kyushu, and elsewhere.[52] The number of beds in these forward hospitals was planned to total roughly 150,000, a general rule of thumb being that available beds should exceed expected casualties (excluding deaths) by 20%.[53] By war's end nearly half a million Purple Heart medals were on hand with more being produced in anticipation of the invasion; by 2003 there were still some 120,000 of this stockpile left.[54]

Based on the experience of Okinawa MacArthur's intelligence chief, Major General Charles A. Willoughby, concluded that "[destroying] two to two and a half Japanese divisions [exacts] a total of 40,000 American battle casualties on land." Writing in "Military Review: June 1946" No. 3, Willoughby used this "sinister ratio" to claim that U.S. forces could have expected over 700,000 casualties at four key locations in mainland Japan. Willoughby's estimate excluded losses from "the shattering kamikaze attack," combat against Naval ground forces personnel and militia, and any reinforcements the Japanese might have been able to bring in to the battle areas. Willoughby regarded this as "a completely authentic yardstick to forecast what it would have taken in losses had we gone in shooting."[55]

Major General Willoughby's Estimate, June 1946 (Excluding Navy)
Location Japanese Divisions American Casualties
Kyushu 13-14 200,000
Shikoku 4-5 80,000
Kanto Plain 22 400,000
Sendai 2 30,000
Estimated Losses from Kamikaze & Bomber sorties
Source Ships Sunk Ships Damaged Killed & Missing Wounded Notes
USSBS[56] 90 900 N/A N/A Assumes 5,000 kamikaze sorties
"Postwar Estimate"[57] 90 900 21,000 N/A
Dr. R. P. Hallion[58] 900 "sunk or damaged" 22,000 killed and wounded Assumes 6,400 kamikaze sorties
Dr. R. P. Hallion[59] 2,300 "sunk or damaged" 57,000 killed and wounded Assumes 16,400 kamikaze sorties[i]
D.M. Giangreco[60] 95 N/A 29,000 N/A 6 sunk from surface attacks
Japanese Planners[61] N/A 50,000 killed and wounded From kamikaze attacks alone
Japanese Planners[62] 150-200 N/A N/A "Conservative" estimate
Japanese Planners[63] 675 N/A N/A 500 from kamikazes, 125 from surface attacks

In addition to battle casualties, hundreds of thousands of prisoners of war and civilian internees were also scheduled to be murdered by the Japanese. Beginning in the summer of 1944 Japanese leaders issued a series of directives to prison camp commandants that all prisoners were to be "liquidated" when Allied troops approach the camps. The objective was to prevent prisoners from rioting or being utilized as a fighting force after being freed, and camp commandants were given flexibility as to how this "liquidation" would be accomplished.[j] The main emphasis was to 'annihilate all captives, not allowing a single one to escape,' and that 'no trace' should be left of their existence of the existence of the prison camps.[64] At the end of the war many POWs were in the process of digging their own graves in preparation for their deaths.[65]

Historically, these orders led to the massacre of POWs on several occasions, including on Palawan Island, where men were burned alive in their barracks, shot, or stabbed while guards took delight in their fate. The Palawan Massacre prompted American forces to organize daring rescue missions to quickly free nearby prisoners before they too could be executed, such as the "Great Raid" on Cabanatuan. On 20 August 1945 the Japanese government secretly distributed an order formally authorizing guards and other perpetrators to flee in order to escape punishment for their crimes.[66]

Allied prisoners in Japanese hands, August 1945[67]
Prisoners of War Civilian Internees Total
170,000 115,000 285,000

Japanese Casualties edit

Throughout the Pacific War the Japanese Armed Forces earned a reputation of fighting practically to the last man. By the early summer of 1945 there had not been one instance of an organized surrender by any Japanese unit, even under the most hopeless conditions.[68] The Japanese suffered especially from starvation and disease: according to historian Akira Fujiwara, out of 2.3 million military deaths between 1937 and 1945, 1.4 million (61%) were attributable to these causes. A further 358,000 (15.5%) died from drowning as a result of the American air and submarine campaign against Japanese shipping.[69] During the reconquest of the Philippines as many as 80% of Japanese deaths were from starvation and disease,[70] while the proportion in New Guinea may have reached 97%.[71] Even in battles where starvation was not as great of a factor, Japanese losses were skewed higher because their garrisons were totally isolated and had no means of resupply or evacuation. Former Ensign Kiyoshi Endo, an Iwo Jima survivor, later recalled: "The number of deaths on the Japanese side was much larger, because the Americans rescued and treated their injured. Japanese soldiers who were injured could have survived if they were rescued, but that was not possible, so they all died."[72]

In contrast to previous campaigns, Admiral King pointed out that the Japanese Army in the Home Islands would have several advantages that its overseas counterparts did not. It would have more "room to maneuver, and would not be so vulnerable to the overpowering air and naval power which the Allies had been able to bring to bear [...] on small and isolated islands." It would also be near to its bases of supply and reinforcement, and have the support of a friendly population. For these reasons Admiral King was cautious about using casualty rates from previous battles to predict the course of fighting in Japan.[73]

Under the Ketsu-Go plan, all divisions assigned to coastal defense were ordered to stand and fight "even to utter annihilation," while heavy counter attacks by reserves aimed to force a decisive battle near the beachheads.[74] Should this have failed, the surviving mobile elements would have retreated to strongholds around Mt. Aso on Kyushu and in Nagano Prefecture on Honshu for protracted resistance.[75] Given their chosen tactics, American military historian Richard B. Frank concluded that "it is hard to imagine that fewer than [40 to 50%]" of Japanese soldiers and sailors in the invasion areas "would have fallen by the end of the campaign."[76]

In addition to military losses, civilian casualties incurred both as a direct result of military action as well as indirectly from other causes were expected to be high. Between 10 and 25% of the civilian population of Okinawa died as a result of the battle there.[77] A worst-case scenario published on 21 July 1945 by physicist William B. Shockley concluded that "at least" 5 to 10 million Japanese - military and civilians - could die, with a corresponding American casualty total of up to 4 million. The war ended before this document, "Proposal for Increasing the Scope of Casualties Studies," could be considered in detail.[78] Army Service Forces planners assessed that approximately one-third of Japanese civilians within the invasion areas on Kyushu and Honshu would flee as refugees or die, leaving the remainder (including wounded and sick) to be cared for by the occupation authorities.[79]

ASF Estimate of Effect on Japanese Civilians
Location Initial Population Refugees and Deaths Remaining behind US lines
Southern Kyushu 3,300,000 1,100,000 2,200,000
Kanto Plain 14,500,000 5,100,000 9,400,000
Total 17,800,000 6,200,000 11,600,000

Japanese leaders regarded Ketsu-Go as apocalyptic battle in which they would either succeed or be destroyed as a nation. Propagandists frequently repeated the slogan that 'all 100 million people of the Empire should be prepared to sacrifice themselves,' and that even if they failed, "the memory of Japan will be inscribed in history forever."[80]

Internally, it was believed that while the whole people would not be annihilated, losses would be heavy. In a 13 August meeting with Army Chief of Staff Umezu, Chief of the Naval General Staff Toyoda, and Foreign Minister Togo, Admiral Takijiro Onishi stated, "If we are prepared to sacrifice 20 million Japanese lives in a special attack effort, victory shall be ours!"[81] Later Marquis Koichi Kido also gave the figure of 20 million to an interrogator for the Tokyo War Crimes Tribunal, but in reference to total casualties instead of deaths.[82] Lt. Col. Masahiko Takeshita, a staff officer at the War Ministry and brother in law of War Minister Korechika Anami, testified that:

"We did not believe that the entire people would be completely annihilated through fighting to the finish. Even if a crucial battle were fought in the homeland and the Imperial Forces were confined to the mountainous regions, the number of Japanese killed by enemy forces would be small. Despite the constant victories of Japanese troops in the China Incident, relatively few Chinese were killed. Almost all the strategic points in China were occupied, but the Chungking Government could not be defeated. [But] even if the whole [Japanese] race were all but wiped out, its determination to preserve the national polity would be forever recorded in the annals of history."[83]

As a result of the American naval blockade and strategic bombing campaign, the food situation in Japan had become difficult. By the end of the war the average person consumed 10 to 25% fewer calories than in 1941,[84] and the situation was deteriorating. In January 1946, future Prime Minister Shigeru Yoshida warned that unless emergency food aid was rushed to Japan, up to 10 million people could starve to death by the end of 1946.[85] Other estimates, including those of agricultural experts working under MacArthur's headquarters, ranged from 7 million[86] to 11 million.[87]


- Civilian deaths (Japanese)

- Starvation (calorie restriction, Frank, Shigeru, agricultural experts)

- Marshall, "Hero of Our Times" pp. 338-339

"We had to end the war; we had to save American lives; we had to halt this terrific expenditure of money which was reaching a stupendous total," he said. "And there was no way to economize on it until we stopped the war. The bomb stopped the war. Therefore, it was justifiable [...] The Army was dominant in these matters, and they could only apparently be slugged into submission. And we slugged them."

That morning, with the news from Alamogordo in their hands, Marshall and Stimson discussed the place in Japan where the bomb could most effectively be dropped. They went through a list of Japanese cities.

"[Stimson] did veto the dropping of the bomb on Kyoto," said Harvey Bundy, because of its shrines and ancient monuments. They eventually plumped for Hiroshima instead, and Stimson went to see Truman to get his consent. Between them, he and Marshall convinced the President that though they couldn't guarantee the result of their gamble, they believed this single bomb would end the war with Japan. It was dropped on Hiroshima on August 6, 1945.

What Marshall did not reveal until years afterward was that he and Stimson, in the next forty-eight hours, believed that their gamble had failed and that they would therefore be forced to proceed with what the Chief of Staff had dreaded - a landing in Japan.

He had already agreed on an invasion plan with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and more atomic bombs were supposed to play an integral part in it.

"There were supposed to be nine more bombs completed in a certain time," he said later. "And they would be largely in time for the first landings in the southern tip of Japan. There were three corps to come in there, as I recall. They didn't know about it at the time, but I had gone very carefully into the examination out in New Mexico as to the aftereffects of the bomb because we were having in mind exploding one or two bombs before these landings and then having the landing take place - and then reserving the other bomb or bombs for the later movements of any Japanese reinforcements that might happen to come up. And it was decided then that the casualties from the actual fighting would be very much greater than might occur from the aftereffects of the bomb action. So there were to be three bombs for each corps that was landing. One or two, but probably one, as a preliminary, then this landing, then another further inland against the immediate supports, and then the third against any troops that might try to come through the mountains from up on the Inland Sea. And that was the rough idea in our minds."

In the light of what we now know about atomic explosions, it was a horrendous plan with consequences far beyond the terrible havoc created at Hiroshima and Nagasaki.



- Military experience in Pacific War (Admiral King comment on isolated islands can't be applied to mainland) (planning the defeat of Japan pp. 154-55)

When the 3 April directives were issued , the campaign in the Ryukyus had already begun . In fact the first landing had been made on Okinawa on 1 April , to begin the main operation of that campaign . Time was already pressing on the Joint Chiefs to issue a directive for the next major campaign . Immediately , they were to find that their command directive was imperfect and that they were far from done with the problem of command. For a while at least it was inextricably tied to the problem of whether to go next to Japan or to undertake additional preliminary operations either on the Asiatic mainland or in one or more of the island groups lying closer to Japan . Admiral King and his planners in Washington were the principal supporters of plans for additional operations . This support was inspired by a number of ideas. Among them were a desire to keep up the pressure against Japan during the period between Okinawa and Kyushu ; the need for more air bases to support the invasion ; the support which such operations, especially in the Kuriles, would give the expected Russian effort ; and the constant hope by all and the positive belief by some that Japan could be forced to surrender by means short of invasion."

"The members of the Joint War Plans Committee were among those who felt most strongly that it was wishful thinking to expect unconditional surrender without invasion."

"Experience in Europe and in the larger land masses of the Pacific, such as Leyte , Luzon , and Okinawa were leading to somewhat more hopeful estimates of the casualty rates of fighting in the home islands of Japan."

-->Admiral King, on the other hand , pointed to the many differences in the nature of the geography and of the enemy in the Pacific . He disagreed with the very idea of trying to compare the fighting in Europe with that in the Pacific. Moreover , he pointed to the great advantages which the Japanese Army would have in the fight in their homeland, There they would have room to maneuver and would not be so vulnerable to the overpowering air and naval power which the Allies had been able to bring to bear against them on small and isolated islands , At home they would also be near their bases of supply and reinforcement . Despite these feelings, King continued to approve of the need for planning for the invasion ."

Ensign Kiyoshi Endo, President of Iwo Jima veterans association: 1:31:28, "the number of deaths on the Japanese side was much larger, because the Americans rescued and treated their injured. Japanese soldiers who were injured could have survived if they were rescued, but that was not possible, so they all died.[88]

- Table of estimated impact on civilians

- Estimates of starvation from Prime Minister and Agricultural Experts (Frank, "spot famines" in 1946) (Giangreco, pp. 117-118 "Yoshida Shigeru, who before war-surplus food stocks from across the Pacific were rushed to Japan stated in January 1946 that as many as 10 million might die of starvation and malnutrition in "spot famines" that were forecast to begin by the summer of that year."

- Richard B. Finn, "Winners in Peace," SCAP historians estimated that American food aid to Japan in 1946 saved 11 million Japanese from starvation. pp. 114-115

Notes edit

  1. ^ The author provides additional commentary here: [3]
  2. ^ Medium MGs for the Soviets
  3. ^ Japanese type A divisions had an attached tank unit of 20 light tanks, 13 tankettes or armored cars, and 48 medium tanks, while Japanese type B divisions had 7 tankettes or armored cars. Soviet rifle divisions had attached armored cars and T-38 tankettes, while German infantry divisions possessed a mixture of half-tracks and armored reconnaisannce vehicles
  4. ^ Includes NKVD personnel
  5. ^ Includes approximately 50,000 NKVD personnel
  6. ^ From General Chetverikov's notes, 12 December 1941. Includes approximately 50,000 NKVD personnel
  7. ^ A nebulous term. As it applied to the invasion of Japan, depending on the stage of the campaign this referred to soldiers whose wounds were sufficiently grave that they could not be treated within an "evacuation window" of from 30 to 120 days after landing.
  8. ^ Relatively high casualties for Q3 1945 can be explained by the need to prepare for operations on the China Coast and the more protracted campaign envisioned for the Ryukyus subsequent to Okinawa. (History of Planning Division, ASF. vol. 1, part 5, pp. 176-177) Additionally, the possibility of US troops participating in invasion of the Dutch East Indies was also discussed at the end of 1944 and beginning of 1945 when this paper was written. (ASF vol. 4, part 3, p. 171). Finally, there is the consideration of lag between the end of the last quarter (when the casualties were incurred) and the start of the next (the demand for replacements).
  9. ^ Considered unrealistically high
  10. ^ The text of one order reads, "Whether they are destroyed individually or in groups, or however it is done, with mass bombing, poisonous smoke, poisons, drowning, decapitation, or what, dispose of them as the situation dictates. In any case it is the aim not to allow the escape of a single one, to annihilate them all, and not to leave any traces."

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