A Truly Horrific Tale
It was originally believed that the eight men disappeared and drowned after escaping from their aircraft. Details of their fate only came to light during war trials in Guam in 1947. The commander of the Japanese troops in Chichijima, Yoshio Tachibana, was an alcoholic and notorious for his sadistic tendencies. The information Bradley found mainly came from transcripts of Tachibana’s trial on Guam along with detailed accounts from Doctor Teraki and numerous soldiers involved in the atrocities.
All of the men were tortured, beaten and executed. Some of the flyboys were beheaded while others were stabbed with bamboo stakes and bayonets. A couple of men were bludgeoned to death. Marve Mershon, a radio operator, was forced to trudge to an empty grave that was freshly dug. He was blindfolded and made to kneel before a soldier beheaded him with a sword.
The very next day, Major Sueo Matoba laid on a sake-fuelled feast for high-ranking Japanese officials including General Tachibana with American flesh on the menu. A Japanese medical assistant spoke about how Teraki removed flesh from Mershon’s thigh which was eaten at the feast. In a stomach-churning addition to the tale, the men reportedly ran out of flesh at the meal and ordered a soldier to retrieve more from Mershon’s corpse.
Bradley found out further information about the deaths of all eight soldiers. Ensign Floyd Hall was bayoneted to death, and his liver and gall bladder were removed and wrapped in cellophane paper. Second Lieutenant Earl Vaughn was beheaded but was defiant when it was his turn to be executed. He stunned the executioner by shouting ‘Semper Fi’ and revealing his neck. Again, his liver and gall bladder were removed, and officers were invited to take whatever flesh they wanted.
Similar fates awaited the other men who were later identified as Dick Woellhof, Grady York, Jimmy Dye Jr., Glenn Frazier Jr., and Warren Hindenlang. All of them were brutally murdered, and several of them had their flesh taken for consumption.
It is incorrect to assume that the Japanese soldiers ate the flesh of the Americans out of necessity. In reality, it was an act of superstition. The soldiers believed that eating enemy flesh imparted a piece of the soul of the victim into them, so it was a ceremonial process.
Aftermath
When Bradley contacted the families of the victims to tell them the truth about what happened to their loved ones, the initial reaction was a stunned silence. Bush did not find out about the cannibalism and brutal deaths of his comrades for many years. In 2003, he visited Chichijima with Bradley, and while the ex-president was somber, he held himself together.
In fact, he ventured into the water in a modern life raft to try to recreate the experience he had in 1944. He admitted that he thought about the victims all the time and when he was on the submarine after being rescued, he wondered why he had been spared and what God had in store for him.
Although it is small comfort to the families of those who died, the perpetrators of the evil deeds did not go unpunished. A total of 30 Japanese soldiers and four officers, including Matoba and Tachibana, were charged with war crimes and found guilty. All of them were hanged and buried in unmarked graves in Guam. All the other men involved in the act either as witnesses or participants in the cannibalism were also found guilty and sent to prison. However, they were all released within eight years.
In his book, Bradley compares the brutality on Chichijima with the Japanese atrocities against the Chinese and the brutal treatment of Native Americans. According to Bradley, the perpetrators of these horrible crimes all believed in cultural superiority and showed a complete disregard for the lives of peoples from different cultures. Sadly, the Chichijima Incident was not an isolated event in World War II. There are numerous accounts of Japanese soldiers resorting to cannibalism out of necessity near the end of the war when the Allies cut off their supplies.