Nearly four years of brutal Japanese occupation in WW2 has dimmed
Manila's lustre. The Philippine capital, surrounding an old Spanish
fortress, was once a glittering jewel among America's overseas
possessions. And now a vast Allied army led by the indomitable MacArthur
is ready to take it back from the Japanese. It is a necessary mission
and an urgent one for trapped within the old University of Santo Tomas
are thousands of ailing prisoners: men and women, young and old, at risk
of torture and death by their captors.
But the token Japanese garrison has other ideas as desperate units of
the Japanese navy dig in to fight to the death against the advancing
Americans. Caught in this cruel vice are thousands of Filipinos still
trapped in the metropolis, with no hope of escape. From the closing days
of January until early March 1945, Manila is to endure the most bitter
fighting in the Pacific theatre, leaving it a charred wasteland littered
with the bodies of the dead, soldier and civilian alike, the latter
deliberately targeted by Japanese death squads. Such is the carnage and
conquest of Manila.