Kill-Do Not Release: Censored Marine Corps Stories from World War II

“Fighter-Writer” reports from major battles in the Pacific highlight what America’s Marines endured in World War II.

Douglass K. Daniel presents a fascinating trove of previously classified material withheld from the public because of government and public relations concerns at the time, including tactical details that could inadvertently aid the enemy, battlefield gore that could disturb readers, and the gamut of issues of taste. Navy censors in the field and editors at Marine Corps headquarters in Washington were also on alert for any material that could negatively affect the Corps itself or the overall war effort. Soul-searching stories that questioned the nature of war were rejected lest they sow doubt stateside about the cause for which so many lives were being lost.

Behind the bylines was a new breed of storytellers. Considered “fighter-writers,” Marine combat correspondents, or CCs, carried typewriters as well as weapons. The Marine Corps Division of Public Relations recruited them from America’s newsrooms to join the fight that stretched from Guadalcanal and the bloody assault on Tarawa to the black sands of Iwo Jima and the dense jungles of Okinawa. Their approved work appeared in civilian newspapers, magazines, and other national and local media.

This collection also highlights the unique efforts of the CCs and the public relations officers who commanded them. While they were assigned to report and write, they were Marines first. They eagerly put aside their notebooks to take up arms against the enemy as needed. Many were wounded in battle, and more than a dozen were killed, giving their lives to get the story behind the most significant conflict in human history.

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Kill-Do Not Release: Censored Marine Corps Stories from World War II

“Fighter-Writer” reports from major battles in the Pacific highlight what America’s Marines endured in World War II.

Douglass K. Daniel presents a fascinating trove of previously classified material withheld from the public because of government and public relations concerns at the time, including tactical details that could inadvertently aid the enemy, battlefield gore that could disturb readers, and the gamut of issues of taste. Navy censors in the field and editors at Marine Corps headquarters in Washington were also on alert for any material that could negatively affect the Corps itself or the overall war effort. Soul-searching stories that questioned the nature of war were rejected lest they sow doubt stateside about the cause for which so many lives were being lost.

Behind the bylines was a new breed of storytellers. Considered “fighter-writers,” Marine combat correspondents, or CCs, carried typewriters as well as weapons. The Marine Corps Division of Public Relations recruited them from America’s newsrooms to join the fight that stretched from Guadalcanal and the bloody assault on Tarawa to the black sands of Iwo Jima and the dense jungles of Okinawa. Their approved work appeared in civilian newspapers, magazines, and other national and local media.

This collection also highlights the unique efforts of the CCs and the public relations officers who commanded them. While they were assigned to report and write, they were Marines first. They eagerly put aside their notebooks to take up arms against the enemy as needed. Many were wounded in battle, and more than a dozen were killed, giving their lives to get the story behind the most significant conflict in human history.

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Kill-Do Not Release: Censored Marine Corps Stories from World War II

Kill-Do Not Release: Censored Marine Corps Stories from World War II

by Douglass K. Daniel
Kill-Do Not Release: Censored Marine Corps Stories from World War II

Kill-Do Not Release: Censored Marine Corps Stories from World War II

by Douglass K. Daniel

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Overview

“Fighter-Writer” reports from major battles in the Pacific highlight what America’s Marines endured in World War II.

Douglass K. Daniel presents a fascinating trove of previously classified material withheld from the public because of government and public relations concerns at the time, including tactical details that could inadvertently aid the enemy, battlefield gore that could disturb readers, and the gamut of issues of taste. Navy censors in the field and editors at Marine Corps headquarters in Washington were also on alert for any material that could negatively affect the Corps itself or the overall war effort. Soul-searching stories that questioned the nature of war were rejected lest they sow doubt stateside about the cause for which so many lives were being lost.

Behind the bylines was a new breed of storytellers. Considered “fighter-writers,” Marine combat correspondents, or CCs, carried typewriters as well as weapons. The Marine Corps Division of Public Relations recruited them from America’s newsrooms to join the fight that stretched from Guadalcanal and the bloody assault on Tarawa to the black sands of Iwo Jima and the dense jungles of Okinawa. Their approved work appeared in civilian newspapers, magazines, and other national and local media.

This collection also highlights the unique efforts of the CCs and the public relations officers who commanded them. While they were assigned to report and write, they were Marines first. They eagerly put aside their notebooks to take up arms against the enemy as needed. Many were wounded in battle, and more than a dozen were killed, giving their lives to get the story behind the most significant conflict in human history.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781531510411
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Publication date: 08/05/2025
Series: World War II: The Global, Human, and Ethical Dimension
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 320

About the Author

Douglass K. Daniel has practiced journalism and studied and written about media and history. He was a reporter and editor for the Associated Press for nearly three decades. Daniel also taught journalism as an assistant professor at Kansas State University and Ohio University. He is the author of several books, including biographies of 60 Minutes correspondent Harry Reasoner, Oscar-winning writer and director Richard Brooks, and celebrated actress Anne Bancroft.

Table of Contents

Introduction | 1

1 A Dangerous Publicity Campaign | 7

2 In the Jungles of Guadalcanal | 23

3 Somewhere in the South Pacific | 45

4 Four Bloody Days on Tarawa | 71

5 From New Britain to the Marshalls | 97

6 Sweeping the Marianas: Saipan, Guam, and Tinian | 122

7 Payback at Peleliu | 149

8 Invisible Heroes: Black Marines and Sailors in the Pacific | 161

9 Thirty-Six Days on Iwo Jima | 182

10 Okinawa and Imperial Japan's Last Stand | 202

11 Life in the Marine Corps | 219

Epilogue | 239

Acknowledgments | 249

Notes | 251

Bibliography | 275

Index | 279

Photos follow page 148

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