THE STORY
Part 2: Wartimes and the impact of the MIS

From the US Army's
Western Defense Command, a few hundred yards from the MIS classroom
and pursuant to President Roosevelt's Executive Order 9066,
General John L. Dewitt issued the fateful series of orders leading
to the mass removal and incarceration of 120,000 Japanese Americans
on the West Coast. Thus, even as their training intensified,
MIS soldiers learned that their families had lost their jobs,
homes, farms, and businesses and were being imprisoned in detention
centers in the interior of the country.
Although only one class would graduate from the Building 640
facility, the valuable mission it began at the Presidio would
continue at Camp Savage and Fort Snelling in Minnesota, where,
in the wake of the mass evacuation of Nisei from the West Coast,
the MIS Language School was forced to relocate.
The impact of the MIS

From these humble beginnings, the MIS Language School would
eventually train more than six thousand Japanese language
specialists for service throughout the world. The MIS had
its most significant impact in the Pacific theater, where
Japanese American linguists participated in every major battle
and campaign against Japan. Soldiers of the MIS served as
undercover agents in the Philippines, fought behind enemy
lines with Merrill's Marauders in Burma, endured jungle warfare
in New Guinea, landed with the Marines on the beaches Iwo
Jima, and crawled into the caves of Saipan to persuade suicidal
enemy forces to surrender.
Unlike other combatants in the war, the men of the MIS faced
danger on every side from the enemy Japanese troops
to their fellow American and Allied soldiers, who viewed them
with suspicion and too easily mistook them for the enemy.
The MIS gave the Allies a significant advantage during the
war. In the field, MIS personnel gleaned vital operational
knowledge through the skillful interrogation of prisoners
and the translation of captured diaries, maps, and other documents.
They performed other tasks as well, volunteering for reconnaissance
patrols and similar combat duties. On at least one occasion,
an MIS soldier helped win an engagement by creeping up to
enemy lines and impersonating a Japanese officer's commands
to his troops.
At headquarters level, the MIS handled raw intelligence obtained
from the field and communications intercepts, intelligence
that provided the Allies with a clear strategic advantage.
Among their accomplishments: translating the Japanese Navy's
"Z Plan" for Pacific conquest, documenting the Japanese
military's order of battle, and supporting the code breaking
efforts that led to the downing of Admiral Yamamoto's plane.
»PART
3: AFTER THE WARTHE MIS CONTRIBUTION
|