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The Cabanatuan Raid would not have been possible without the invaluable support of Filipino guerrillas, whose local knowledge and determination were crucial to the mission’s success.
In the Cabanatuan Raid, the American commandos rescued 489 prisoners of war and 33 civilians, while suffering four Americans killed in action (two commandos and two prisoners) and four wounded.
The Cabanatuan Raid is the largest rescue in American history. In the following three weeks, American commandos conduct two similar operations, in the Santo Tomas Internment Camp and Los Banos, ...
The Raid on Cabanatuan, comprised of the 6th Ranger Battalion, commanded by Lt. Col. Henry A. Mucci, Sixth U.S. Army, Alamo Scouts, and various guerrilla units, is considered today to be one of ...
The raid took place at Cabanatuan prison camp, located about 65 miles north of Manila. Most of the POWs in the camp were survivors of the infamous Bataan Death March, ...
The first was the raid on the Cabanatuan prison camp. A group of more than 100 Army Rangers, Alamo Scouts and Filipino guerrillas traveled 30 miles behind Japanese lines to reach the camp. Along ...
By the end of February 1945, Cabanatuan's 552 Allied prisoners of war would be rescued, along with the 800 in Manila's Bilibid Prison. ... Some 50 years after the Los Baños Raid, ...
Authorities uncovered an illegal cigarette manufacturing operation in Cabanatuan City, Nueva Ecija, which led to the seizure of over P600 million worth of products. The raid, carried out by the ...