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Canadian Military Heritage
Table of Contents


CHAPTER 1
A Semi-Autonomous Defence (1871-1898)
CHAPTER 2
Threats Internal and External
CHAPTER 3
The Issues Crystallize
CHAPTER 4
Unending Seige
CHAPTER 5
From One World War to Another (1919-43)
CHAPTER 6
Turning Point – 1943
The Navy
The Air Force
The Army Sicily and Italy
Normandy and Northwest Europe
War in the Pacific
Francophone Servicemen and Their Language During the Second World War
The Home Front
Wartime Balance Sheet
CHAPTER 7
From Cold War to Present Day
APPENDIX A
Weaponry and Wartime Experience
APPENDIX B
Reference

    
CHAPTER 6 Turning Point – 1943

    
    
War in the Pacific ( 2 pages )

    
    
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Defence of the Pacific Coast and the Invasion of Kiska
    
    
    
Private, Le Régiment de Hull, Alaska, August 1943.
Private, Le Régiment de Hull, Alaska, August 1943.
(Click image to enlarge)

Although five divisions were fighting overseas, three remained in Canada, two of which were stationed on the west coast until the autumn of 1943.  After the Japanese had been expelled from the Aleutian Islands, two divisions, the 7th and the 8th, disappeared, and the 6th saw its strength reduced.  In autumn 1943, with the Allied victory in the Battle of the Atlantic, all the Axis forces drew back.  When that conflict had been at its height, in June 1943, 18 months after the Hong Kong disaster, 34,316 men of all ranks defended the British Columbia coast, compared to some 24,000 on the east coast.  It was from among those remaining on the Pacific coast that the 16,000 conscripts for overseas duty were chosen.

In August 1943, one element of this force, the 13th Infantry Brigade Group, plus part of the 1st American Special Service Force made up in part of Canadian volunteers, would gather to attack the Aleutian island of Kiska.

Among the conscript units deployed was the Hull Regiment, which recorded the fewest AWOLs at the time the ships were boarded on 12 August.  Of the 34,000 men in the operation, 5,300 were Canadian, including the 500 or so members of the 1st Special Service Force.  Despite the American blockade of the island, the Japanese slipped through a few hours before the Canadians and Americans arrived.  Some of the Canadians would stay on Kiska until January 1944.

    
    
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  Last Updated: 2004-06-20 Top of Page Important Notices