Battle of Biak | |||||||
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Part of the New Guinea campaign | |||||||
LVTs being unloaded at Biak | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
United States Australia | Japan | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Horace H. Fuller Robert L. Eichelberger William Morrow Fechteler George C. Kenney |
Kuzume Naoyuki † Sadatoshi Senda † | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
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Strength | |||||||
Land: 12,000 infantry, 29 artillery pieces, 12 tanks Sea: Task Group 77.2 Attack Group Air: 5th and 13th Air Forces |
Land: 11,400 personnel Company of light tanks Sea: 1 battleship; 4 cruisers; 8 destroyers Air: Initially 18 aircraft of 23rd Air Flotilla rising to 166 aircraft | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
Ground: 22 killed 14 missing 68 wounded |
~4,700 killed Unknown wounded ~200 captured |
The Battle of Biak was part of the Western New Guinea campaign of World War II, fought between the United States Army and the Japanese Army from 27 May to 17 August 1944. Taking place on the island of Biak, in Geelvink Bay, in present-day Indonesia, it was part of General Douglas MacArthur's South West Pacific Area's offensive drive to clear New Guinea in preparation for an invasion of the Philippines. It was the first major effort by the Japanese to allow uncontested landings for the purpose of creating a kill zone inland. The main Allied objective was to capture the island so that they could construct airfields there. The battle resulted in the capture of the island by Allied forces, which were then used to support operations elsewhere in the Pacific.