On 5 July 1945, General of the Army Douglas MacArthur announces that the entire territory of the Philippines has been liberated.
MacArthur issues a communique to mark the occasion:
˝The entire Philippine Islands are now liberated and the Philippine Campaign can be regarded as virtually closed. Some minor isolated action of a guerrilla nature in the practically uninhabited mountain ranges may occasionally persist, but this great land mass of 115,600 square miles with a population of 17,000,000 is now freed of the invader.
The enemy during the operations employed twenty-three divisions, all of which were practically annihilated. Our forces comprised seventeen divisions... The Japanese ground forces comprised the following divisions or equivalents: 1st, 8th, 10th, 16th, 19th, 23rd, 26th, 30th, 100th, 102d, 103d, 105th, 2d Armored, 2d Airborne Brigade (reinforced to divisional strength), the 54th, 55th, 58th, 61st and 68th Independent Mixed Brigades (reinforced to divisional strength), three divisional units known as the Kobayashi, Suzuki and Shimbu commands, organized from twenty-eight independent battalions, three naval divisions comprising a Provisional Naval Command of corps strength, under Admirals Iwabuchi and Shiroya, and a large number of base and service elements. The total strength approximated 450,000 men.
Naval and air forces shared equally with the ground troops in accomplishing the success of the campaign... Working in complete unison the three services inflicted the greatest disaster ever sustained by Japanese arms.˝
While a great military achievement, the campaign has been immensely costly in terms of casualties on all sides. U.S. forces have suffered almost 220,000 casualties, with 20,712 of those killed in action. Filipino guerrillas have suffered thousands of casualties, and at least 1 million Filipino civilians have been killed.
Japanese casualties have been staggering, with some 430,000 dead and missing.
Picture: Colonel Ruperto K. Kangleon reporting to General MacArthur during ceremonies proclaiming the liberation of Leyte. Tacloban, 23 October 1944.
Source: U.S. Navy
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