ALEUTIAN ISLANDS: Amchitka Island is occupied by the U.S. Amulet Force, consisting of 2,000 men under command of Brigadier General Lloyd E. Jones, Commanding General Cold Bay, Alaska. The invasion is covered by the USN's Task Group 8.6 (TG 8.6) consisting of the heavy cruiser USS Indianapolis, light cruisers USS Detroit and Raleigh and four destroyers, which patrol off Amchitka and Kiska Islands.
The transport group consists of the transports USS Arthur Middleton, US Army Transport USAT Delarof, and SS Lakona; the cargo ship USS Vega; and four destroyers. There is no enemy opposition but a fierce storm hits and continues for two weeks. The transport USS Arthur Middleton, manned by a U.S. Coast Guard crew, runs aground as it rescues 175 sailors from the destroyer USS Worden. Worden is guarding USS Arthur Middleton as that transport put the preliminary Army security unit on the shores of Constantine Harbor Amchitka Island. The destroyer maneuvered into the rock-edged harbor and stayed there until the last men had landed and then turned to the ticklish business of clearing the harbor. A strong current, however, swept Worden onto a pinnacle that tears into her hull beneath her engine room and caused a complete loss of power.
Destroyer USS Dewey (DD-349) passes a towline to Worden and attempts to tow her free, but the cable parts, and the heavy seas begin moving Worden totally without power inexorably toward the rocky shore. The destroyer then broaches and begins breaking up in the surf.
The stricken destroyer's commanding officer, orders abandon ship, and, as he is directing that effort, is swept overboard into the wintry seas by a heavy wave that breaks over the ship. The captain is among the fortunate ones, however, because he is hauled, unconscious, out of the sea; 14 of the crew drown and the ship is a total loss.
Two B-24s cover the Amulet Force landing on Amchitka Island. Two B-25s and four P-38 escorts also on the cover mission turn back due to weather. Weather
reconnaissance is flown over Attu, Agatuu, Semichis Islands and, lastly, over Kiska Harbor, where four ships are observed.
BISMARCK ARCHIPELAGO: USN submarine USS Guardfish, patrolling the waters of the Bismarck Archipelago on her third patrol, fires three torpedoes during a night underwater radar attack. One torpedo finds the mark and destroys the 1,215 ton ex-Japanese destroyer Shimakaze, now re-named patrol boat P1. She sinks about 67 nautical miles WSW of Kavieng, New Britain Island, in position 2.51S, 139.43E.
NEW GUINEA: After an artillery preparation, two battalions of the Australian 18th Brigade, 7th Division, with tank support, attack Japanese positions at the junction of the Kododa Trail in Papua New Guinea. The U.S. 163d Infantry Regiment, 41st Infantry Division, supports the assault with feints from Musket and Rankin. Japanese antitank fire soon disables the tanks, but Australians continue the battle, progressing slowly at great cost. The Japanese begin withdrawing from the junction, during the night of 12/13 January. The Japanese withdrawal from the Kokoda trail enables the Allies to plan the encirclement of important Japanese positions in the Buna, Sanananda and Gona beachhead. Sanananda is the last of the three to fall to the Allies after weeks of heavy fighting.
In Northeast New Guinea, B-24s, in single-plane actions, bomb the Finschhafen and Madang areas.
SOLOMON ISLANDS: On Guadalcanal, the 27th Infantry Regiment, 25th Inf. Div., continues their attack on "Galloping Horse," replacing the 3d Battalion with the 2d, and makes limited progress toward Hill 53. Company C, 35th Infantry Regiment, starts west toward the corps objective along the ridge southwest of "Sea Horse" but is soon halted by Japanese fire. The efforts of the 2d Battalion to break through the "Gifu" are frustrated by strong resistance.
NEW GEORGIA: B-26s, P-38s, P-39s and P-40s attack Munda with the loss of two B-26s. Other P-39s hit targets on Guadalcanal.
WAKE ISLAND: After the fall of Wake in December 1941, the 1,187 US Marines, were herded into the cargo holds of the 17,163 ton Japanese luxury liner Nitta Maru, for transportation to Yokohama and then to Shanghai. By 1 January 1943, there are still 98 civilian workers on the island but one is caught stealing food and is beheaded. Tonight, the Japanese accuse the civilians of being in secret radio communication with U.S. naval forces. The 97 civilians are marched to the beach and there lined up with their backs to the ocean and machined gunned. After the war, the Japanese commander on Wake, Rear Admiral Sakaibara, and
eleven of his officers, are sentenced to death by a US Naval Court at Kwajalein Atoll, Marshall Islands. Sakaibara is transported to Guam, Mariana Islands and he executed by June 1947.