‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (2024)

Article

As the Allied liberation of the Philippines was underway, Japanese commanders acted on orders to annihilate American POWs rather than allow them to assist enemy efforts, and in December 1944 cruelly executed 139 American POWs on Palawan.

‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (1)

Top image: American POWs of the Japanese captured in the Philippines faced brutal conditions. This sketch by one POW depicts conditions in Cabanatuan. Library of Congress

At the beginning of January 1945, Filipino guerrillas relayed to General Douglas MacArthur’s Allied headquarters a shocking report about an incident involving American prisoners of war (POW) of the Japanese on Palawan, the westernmost island in the Philippine archipelago. This is the story of the massacre on Palawan. Subsequent parts will cover the story of survivors and the guerrillas who aided them and the legacy of the massacre and the call for action.

After the fall of the Philippines in 1942, American POWs initially were kept in filthy, crowded camps near Manila. Over time, the majority of those POWs were transported to other parts of Japan’s wartime empire to serve as slave laborers.

In August 1942, the Japanese sent 346 American POWs from the Manila area to a compound known as Camp 10-A on Palawan to build an airfield at Puerto Princesa. The compound consisted of old Filipino constabulary buildings, and conditions there were brutal. Escape attempts brought summary executions. The POWs suffered frequent beatings and mistreatment from their Japanese guards, food was the barest minimum, and disease and injuries went untreated. Although the POWs finally received Red Cross packages in January 1944, the Japanese had removed all the drugs and medical supplies.

‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (2)

The Philippines Islands with Palawan Province depicted as the westernmost island in the Philippine archipelago. Courtesy of the US Army, Reports of General MacArthur: The Campaigns of MacArthur in the Pacific, Vol. 1, Plate No. 48

Bare footed and wearing loin-cloths, the prisoners performed back-breaking work. With only simple, improvised tools, they felled trees and cleared land, leveled the area for a 3,000 yard-long airstrip, hauled coral and crushed it by hand into gravel, poured concrete, and performed other manual labor. The work progressed as the Japanese guards pushed the POWs to work faster. One soldier, Daniel Crowley, recalled the conditions, “You worked, or you were beaten; if you objected, you were beaten to death.” In September 1944, work on the airfield had progressed to the point the Japanese ordered 159 POWs to return to Manila, retaining 150 on Palawan to complete the work on the airfield.

In late October 1944, MacArthur returned to the Philippines. Allied forces landed on the island of Leyte, seized a beachhead, and continued the campaign inland. Allied air attacks in the Philippines stepped up to support the campaign.

On October 19, an American B-24 Liberator sank three small intercoastal ships and damaged several aircraft at Puerto Princesa. An attack by Liberators on October 28 reportedly destroyed as many as 60 aircraft on the ground. American air attacks continued, and the POWs were put to work repairing the damage to the airfield from those attacks. Smith recalled, “After that, well, it was a daily routine.”

‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (3)

An aerial view of American B-24s over Puerto Princesa Airfield, Palawan. The airfields at Puerto Princesa were constructed by the American POWs from Camp 10-A nearby, who in the fall of 1944 also were forced to make repairs on an almost daily basis. USAAF photo

“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.” The guidance was “to annihilate them all, and not to leave any traces,” the last part an apparent acknowledgement that the directive being issued was a flagrant violation of internationally recognized conventions on the treatment of POWs and non-combatants.

Consequently, in November, MacArthur sent a warning to the Japanese commander-in-chief in the Philippines, Field Marshal Count Hisaichi Teruchi. MacArthur informed his Japanese counterpart that he would be held responsible for the abuse of POWs, civilian internees, and civilian non-combatants. MacArthur reminded Teruchi that those groups must “be accorded the dignity, honor and protection provided by the rules and customs of war.” MacArthur relayed that he had been furnished “unimpeachable evidence” of the degradation and brutality to which American POWs had been subjected “in violation of the most sacred code of military honor.” To ensure the message was received by the commander-in-chief and by his subordinates, the Allies dropped leaflets throughout the Philippines on November 25.

A couple weeks later, the commanding general of the Japanese 2nd Air Division, Lieutenant General Seiichi Terada, headquartered in the Philippines, had other concerns. Believing an Allied convoy was on the way, he radioed instructions to the 131st Airfield Battalion, the Palawan garrison, on the evening of December 13. Afterwards, the battalion commander, Captain Nagayoshi Kojima, told his subordinates that due to an imminent Allied invasion the 150 American POWs were to be annihilated. Each of his soldiers were issued 30 rounds of ammunition.

On the morning of December 14, the Japanese guards at Camp 10-A roused the POWs around 2:00 am. The prisoners noticed additional guards in the camp, but most shrugged that off as a response to the recent air raids. The POWs were soon at the airfield filling bomb craters.

About 11:00 am, however, the Japanese soldiers signaled the POWs to stop working. The Americans were marshalled to one side of the runway. There Lieutenant Yoshikaza Sato announced, “Americans, your working days are over!” Following that statement, the guards herded the men into waiting trucks which returned them to camp.

A little while after the trucks reached Camp 10-A, the air raid siren, an old church bell, sounded when two American P-38 Lightnings were sighted. The planes were at high altitude and moving away, and the POWs did not take them seriously. The alarm sounded again, and then a third time. Lieutenant Sato screamed, “They’re coming!” He added, “Planes—hundreds of planes.”

The men were quickly herded into three air raid bunkers they had built several weeks before. Each shelter held about 40 to 50 men and consisted of a long trench, about five feet deep, covered with logs, palm fronds, and soil. Each had a small access opening at one end. Another small shelter was constructed for the four American officers in the camp. When Navy signalman C. C. Smith refused to go into the shelter, Sato split his head in two with his saber.

In previous raids, the Americans stayed in the shelters until the “all clear” was given, but on December 14, they were kept in the bunkers for more than an hour. On that day, Lieutenant Sato ordered the POWs to stay in the shelters. Guards angrily struck any prisoner who tried to look out, clubbing them with rifles or prodding them with bayonets or swords.

According to the later testimony of one of the guards “Captain Kojima appeared and announced it was necessary to kill the POWs.” The commander of the garrison company Lieutenant Sho Yoshiwara ordered the Japanese soldiers to fix bayonets and load five rounds, the capacity of a standard magazine. He then personally positioned his soldiers and “ordered those with rifles and machine guns to kill any POW who came out of the air raid shelters.”

Suddenly, five Japanese soldiers doused the first shelter and the tunnel entrance with buckets of high-octane aviation fuel, and two others threw torches to ignite the fuel. The small bunker with the four American officers was similarly set alight. The tightly-packed shelters quickly became infernos. As Americans attempted to break free, a machine gun opened up and guards fired their rifles into the shelter. Lieutenant Yoshiwara yelled, “Shoot them, shoot them.” Dead and wounded blocked the escape of others. With his clothes burning, Lieutenant Carl Mango, an Army Medical Corps officer, ran forward, pleading for the Japanese to stop. He was machine gunned down.

‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (4)

In March 1945, American military personnel worked to excavate the bodies from the first air raid shelter in which the American POWs were executed at Camp 10-A. Courtesy of the US Army.

Within seconds, the Japanese guards ignited the second large shelter in a similar manner; agonizing screams and machine gun fire filled the air. Soldiers threw grenades into the shelter entrance. The men in the final shelter had a few seconds warning; Marine Sergeant Rufus Smith shouted out that the men in the first trench were being murdered. As that happened, more than 30 Americans in the third shelter desperately managed to dig themselves out. They benefitted from a fissure at the back of the trench that they had concealed when constructing it. Escaping the shelter, many slid down the face of the cliff to the rocky beach below. Others tore through the barbed wire and scrambled for concealment.

‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (5)

The recovery efforts in the second large shelter at Camp 10-A revealed the bodies of American POWs burned to death in the trench. Courtesy of the US Army.

Recognizing that some prisoners had escaped the last inferno, Japanese soldiers were ordered to pursue. The POWs they found among the rocks were cruelly killed. Some were shot or bayonetted in the stomach and left to slowly die. Wounded men were buried alive or set on fire as the guards laughed and cheered. Those who tried to swim for it were shot in the water. Dynamite forced men from their hiding places, only to be murdered.

The search paused when the Japanese soldiers heard the call for dinner. Filipinos later reported to the American authorities that officers of the Palawan garrison and members of the kempeitai, the military police of the Japanese Imperial Army, held a celebration that evening to commemorate the events of the day.

Lieutenant Sato ordered his men to dump the stray bodies in the trenches. They splashed aviation fuel in the trenches, setting it alight. To make it appear as if the shelters had sustained direct hits from an American air attack, they threw in sticks of dynamite and grenades. The smoke from the fires could be seen across Puerto Princesa Bay. Filipino guerrillas soon learned that the Japanese claimed to have killed 149 of their 150 POWs that afternoon.

The diary entry of a Japanese sergeant major for December 15 noted that although they had been POWs, “They truly died a pitiful death.”

‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (6)

Part 2: Survival, Resistance, and Escape on Palawan

Incredibly, a handful of American POWs managed to survive the Palawan massacre and with the aid of Filipino guerrillas reached safety.

Learn More

‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (7)

Part 3: Call for Action and Liberation in the Philippines

As General Douglas MacArthur’s campaign on Luzon was underway, news of the Palawan massacre produced a call to action to save thousands of Allied POWs and civilian internees from a similar fate. With the extraordinary assistance of Filipino guerrillas, four daring raids were launched behind Japanese lines to liberate those camps.

Learn More

Contributor

Michael S. Bell, PhD

Mike Bell is the Executive Director of the Institute for the Study of War and Democracy.

Learn More

Topics

Pacific Theater of Operations

Prisoners of World War II (POWs)

Jenny Craig Institute for the Study of War and Democracy

Explore Further

  • Event Recap

    Dauntless: A Conversation with WWII Veteran Paul Hilliard

    Visitors at the National WWII Museum had the special opportunity to hear from WWII veteran and Museum Trustee Paul Hilliard as he discussed his life story documented in the new biography, Dauntless.

  • Article Type

    Article

    A Contested Legacy: The Men of Montford Point and the Good War

    Despite their commendable service during World War II, the Marines of Montford Point would regularly contend with societal forces that vehemently resisted all measures taken toward racial integration.

  • Event Recap

    Our War Too: Women's History Symposium

    The symposium, which took place from February 29 to March 1, 2024, featured topics expanding upon the Museum’s special exhibit, Our War Too: Women in Service.

  • Article Type

    Article

    Unaccounted For No More: Sgt. Harold Hammett

    WWII US Marine Corps Sergeant Harold Hammett, fallen on Tarawa in 1943, is finally laid to rest in the family plot after 80 years.

  • Article Type

    Article

    The Second Great Fire of London: 'A Dreadful Masterpiece'

    In this column, journalist Ernie Pyle describes the bombing of London in late December 1940 as “the most hateful, most beautiful single scene” he had ever witnessed as the city was “stabbed with fire” by the German Luftwaffe.

  • Article Type

    Article

    What Happened to Lieutenant Curtis R. Biddick?

    Spoilers ahead for Episode 3 of Masters of the Air.

  • Article Type

    Article

    V for Victory: A Sign of Resistance

    Created by a Belgian politician and broadcaster fleeing Nazi persecution, the V for Victory symbol became one of the most enduring signs of the war.

  • Article Type

    Article

    The Origins of International Holocaust Remembrance Day

    The commemorations on January 27 remind us that the Holocaust was the result of step-by-step decisions by individuals that led to the largest genocide in the history of mankind in a wave of antisemitism, intolerance, and hatred.

‘Dispose of Them’: Massacre of American POWs in the Philippines | The National WWII Museum | New Orleans (2024)

FAQs

What happened to American POWs when they surrendered in the Philippines? ›

After the fall of the Philippines in 1942, American POWs initially were kept in filthy, crowded camps near Manila. Over time, the majority of those POWs were transported to other parts of Japan's wartime empire to serve as slave laborers.

What did the Japanese do to American POWs at Palawan? ›

As the Allied liberation of the Philippines was underway, Japanese commanders acted on orders to annihilate American POWs rather than allow them to assist enemy efforts, and in December 1944 cruelly executed 139 American POWs on Palawan.

How many American POWs died in the Philippines? ›

Over 1,500 Americans and 26,000 Filipinos died during the seventy-one days of O'Donnell's operation. One out of every six Americans who entered O'Donnell died. Because of the high death rates the Japanese ordered the camp closed on 16 May 1942.

Which country treated POWs the worst in ww2? ›

It was particularly bad in Russia, where starvation was common for prisoners and civilians alike; a quarter of the over 2 million POWs held there died. Nearly 375,000 of the 500,000 Austro-Hungarian prisoners of war taken by Russians perished in Siberia from smallpox and typhus.

What happened to the captured soldiers in the Philippines? ›

Of the 83 captured, only 34 made it home after the war -- 17 died in captivity and 32 more died on hell ships. Of the group's 27 non-flying officers, one was evacuated, one was killed, and 25 became POWs (15 died in camps or on ships). The enlisted men suffered equally.

How many Bataan Death March survivors are still alive? ›

829 died in battle, while prisoners, or immediately after liberation. There were 987 survivors. As of March 2017, only four of these veterans remained alive.

Why did the Japanese treat POWs so badly? ›

The reasons for the Japanese behaving as they did were complex. The Imperial Japanese Army (IJA) indoctrinated its soldiers to believe that surrender was dishonourable. POWs were therefore thought to be unworthy of respect. The IJA also relied on physical punishment to discipline its own troops.

Did the Japanese crucify soldiers in ww2? ›

Crucifixion was a form of punishment, torture and/or execution that the Japanese military sometimes used against prisoners during the war.

Did the Japanese treat any POWs well? ›

Indeed, they endured years of not only malnutrition and starvation, disease and general neglect -- resisting all the while -- but also torture, slave labor and other war crimes. Many POWs were murdered outright by their captors. In fact, only a little more than half of them ever saw home again.

What happens to female POWs? ›

For example, two women from a medical unit captured at Mglinsk in 1941 were immediately killed. In some cases, they were specifically targeted, or merely suffered the same fate as the men they were captured with. However, female prisoners could also be subjected to torture and horrific sexual abuse.

What was the largest surrender in U.S. history? ›

U.S. Army National Guard and Filipino soldiers shown at the outset of the Bataan Death March. Allied forces were forced to surrender to the Japanese on April 9, 1942, the largest surrender in U.S. history.

How did the Japanese treat female prisoners of war? ›

Many were incarcerated in prison camps alongside male prisoners, leaving them vulnerable to sexual violence from both their captors and fellow inmates. Numerous accounts exist of Caucasian female POWs being raped or sexually assaulted by Japanese soldiers or camp guards.

Which army committed the most war crimes in ww2? ›

The Axis powers (Nazi Germany, Fascist Italy, and Imperial Japan) were some of the most systematic perpetrators of war crimes in modern history.

Do POWs get paid? ›

Captive or POW Pay and Allowance Entitlements: Soldiers are entitled to all pay and allowances that were authorized prior to the POW period. Soldiers who are in a POW status are authorized payment of 50% of the worldwide average per diem rate for each day held in captive status.

What happened to the American captured POWs on the Bataan Peninsula? ›

They suffered from starvation, having to sleep in the harsh conditions of the Philippines. The prisoners unable to make it through the march were beaten, killed, and sometimes beheaded.

What conditions did US soldiers face after surrendering in the Philippines? ›

The majority of the troops were suffering from disease and starvation when they surrendered on April 9, 1942. They were forced to walk to their prison camp, some 65 miles away, under extreme tropical conditions with no provisions for food, water, shelter, or medicine.

Who promised to come back for the Allied POWs in the Philippines? ›

After advancing island by island across the Pacific Ocean, U.S. General Douglas MacArthur wades ashore onto the Philippine island of Leyte, fulfilling his promise to return to the area he was forced to flee in 1942.

Was a forced march American POWs were forced to endure in the Philippines that many did not survive? ›

Bataan Death March, march in the Philippines of some 66 miles (106 km) that 76,000 prisoners of war (66,000 Filipinos, 10,000 Americans) were forced by the Japanese military to endure in April 1942, during the early stages of World War II.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Golda Nolan II

Last Updated:

Views: 6610

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (58 voted)

Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Golda Nolan II

Birthday: 1998-05-14

Address: Suite 369 9754 Roberts Pines, West Benitaburgh, NM 69180-7958

Phone: +522993866487

Job: Sales Executive

Hobby: Worldbuilding, Shopping, Quilting, Cooking, Homebrewing, Leather crafting, Pet

Introduction: My name is Golda Nolan II, I am a thoughtful, clever, cute, jolly, brave, powerful, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.