Bill Greenwood wrote:
Ryan, does it seem to you that making 800,000 Purple Heart medals just for the invasion might be very bad for troop morale and for public support of the war? Or was this done in secret to avoid such publicity? Were these large estimates of casualties made public or is this knowledge after the fact?
If it was published widley at the time there doesn't seem to be a lot of documentation around it that has made it into the www. After a lot of searching yesterday it was hard for me to find any information out there that had sinificant references. The articles that I have referenced acutally put the number of produced medals around 500,000.
Bill Greenwood wrote:
In another source I think I have read that U S army figures for the invasion size might be 2 or 3 million, am not sure of this. Yet your casualty estimate quoted above goes up to 4 milllion. If we believe that figure, it seems that we have to believe that the invaders will suffer virtually 100 % losses. Do you think that is realistic? Was there any allied invasion anywhere where losses even came close to 100%?I am thinking that losses on some of the worst Pacific islands was 10% killed and 35% wounded, not sure, but nowhere near 100%. It's only one po point, but some WIK sources give U S losses at Okinawa totaling about 48,000, not your source of 84,000.
At the time when planning for this operation took place there were around 1,000,000 US casualties for the course of the entire war. While I'll agree that my opinion is that the orignially quoted number of proposed casualties for Operation Downfall seems high, but agian this is my opinion and I have not carefully studied thesubject.
Also, my opinion on the amount of casualties I think we would have had is irrelevant to the original question of whether or not 500,000 Purple Heart medals were produced in anticipation of the invasion of Japan.
My question was in regards to whether or not they were produced and not whether or not an appropriate amount were produced. What is relevant to this discussion is what Marshall, Truman, and MacArther thought, which is what I have provided some referenece to. The validity of those references is up for debate, and I do find it interesting that I found no reference for the number of Purple Hearts that didn't in some way eventually find it's way back to Mr. Giangreco's articles.
I started my search as a skeptic, but did find some evidence that leads me to believe that the medals were in fact produced in large numbers near 500,000, and that that supply was not near depletion until around year 2000 when 35,000 new medals were produced, although there may still be many of the original batch throughout the supply chain.
Ryan