Updated
Updated · CNN · Apr 30
Tourists visit Peleliu to explore World War Two battle remnants
Updated
Updated · CNN · Apr 30

Tourists visit Peleliu to explore World War Two battle remnants

12 articles · Updated · CNN · Apr 30
  • Visitors from the US, Canada, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan tour the Palau island’s caves, airfield ruins and a rusting Japanese tank.
  • The 1944 battle, intended to last days, dragged on for months and killed about 14,000 Japanese and 10,000 Americans in extreme heat and underground fighting.
  • Peleliu now draws remembrance travellers and gamers, while historians say the battle was likely unnecessary and urge greater attention to Palauan memories of a landscape permanently altered by war.
Why do tourists and gamers now flock to a battle site that historians have called a pointless 'horror show'?
As its war scars are reclaimed by jungle, is Peleliu's complex history being rewritten or simply forgotten again?
How has a forgotten WWII battlefield become a frontline in the modern US-China strategic rivalry?