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MARINES FURTHER REINFORCED

Delicate Situation z Recently SOLOMONS OUTLOOK (By Telegraph.—Press Assn. —Copyright.) (Special Australian Correspondent.) (Received October 12, 11.15 p.m.) SYDNEY, October 12. American naval experts believe that the most crucial land battle in the Pacific since the fall of the Indies and Malaya is shaping In the Solomon Islands. They explain that Japan’s determination to reinforce her troops on Guadalcanal regardless of the losses shows that she hopes to concentrate sufficient ground forces to march down the island against the American airfield.

The United Press correspondent in Washington says that the Japanese landings are taking place on the same side of the mountains where the American positions are established, and therefore the Japanese are probably considering a southward push through a series of pincer actions.

Naval observers, who emphasize the importance of the south-eastern Solomons in protecting the Allied supply routes to Australia and New Zealand, do not attempt to minimize the blow to our Pacific strategic position should the Japanese push succeed. Joseph Harsch, who till recently was the “Christian Science Monitor’s” war correspondent in the South-west Pacific, declares that the American operations in the Solomons were distorted during the early phases and the public was led to beliqve that this was a great counter-attack to sweep the Japanese back through the Indies and the Philippines. He says that reliable sources declare that the marines cannot hold out indefinitely unless they are substantially reinforced quickly. The “Sydney Morning Herald’s” war correspondent, who recently visited Guadalcanal, says that large United States reinforcements have arrived there, considerably easing the _ position, which more than once in the past seven weeks has been “touch and go.”

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19421013.2.56

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 15, 13 October 1942, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
275

MARINES FURTHER REINFORCED Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 15, 13 October 1942, Page 5

MARINES FURTHER REINFORCED Dominion, Volume 36, Issue 15, 13 October 1942, Page 5

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