One Soldier, One Bold Choice: How Using the “Wrong” Grenades Took Out 20 Bunkers
The “Wrong” Grenade That Saved 700 Lives: How Private Harold Moon’s Unauthorized Innovation Cleared 20 Bunkers and Revolutionized Pacific Warfare

On May 18, 1944, the humid air of Biak Island in Dutch New Guinea was thick with the scent of cordite and the deafening rattle of Japanese Type 92 heavy machine guns. For the men of the 41st Infantry Division, the paradise of the Pacific had turned into a coral-walled slaughterhouse. Entrenched in deep caves and reinforced bunkers, Japanese defenders had created a defensive network that seemed impenetrable. Standard American tactics were failing, and the casualty reports were beginning to resemble a grim ledger of inevitable defeat.
In the middle of this chaos was Private First Class Harold Moon, a 22-year-old farm kid from Grundy County, Iowa. Moon wasn’t a tactical genius or a weapons engineer; he was a replacement rifleman with a 10th-grade education. Yet, by the end of that day, he would achieve what the U.S. Army Ordinance Department claimed was impossible. By violating direct orders and using a “forbidden” weapon in a way that should have resulted in a court-martial, Moon cleared 20 bunkers single-handedly and pioneered a technique that would save an estimated 700 American lives on Biak Island alone.
The Brutal Mathematics of the Pacific War
To understand Moon’s rebellion, one must understand the failure of the “standard” approach. In 1944, the U.S. Army relied on the Mark 2 fragmentation grenade—the iconic “pineapple” grenade. It was designed for the open fields and trenches of Europe. However, in the Pacific, Japanese commanders utilized the natural coral terrain, creating firing slits as narrow as eight inches.
The “Pacific math” was horrifying: for every Japanese bunker neutralized, American forces suffered an average of 3.2 casualties. Fragmentation grenades, which relied on cast-iron shrapnel, were too light and too round. When thrown at a bunker, they frequently bounced off the jagged coral walls and rolled back toward the American thrower. Field reports from Tarawa suggested that only one in twelve grenades actually made it inside a firing slit. The rest detonated harmlessly outside, giving defenders time to reload and kill more Americans.
The 41st Division was expending grenades faster than supply ships could deliver them. At the current rate of failure, they would run out of explosives long before they ran out of bunkers.

An Intuitive Innovation
Harold Moon looked at the problem through the eyes of someone who had spent his life tossing hay bales into lofts and tools across barn floors. He understood physics through intuition. On the morning of May 18, after watching his fourth fragmentation grenade fail to enter a bunker, Moon realized that the Mark 2 was the wrong tool for the job.
Due to a supply chain error, Moon’s gear included two M15 white phosphorus grenades. According to official Army doctrine and Field Manual 23-30, these were classified as chemical weapons intended strictly for smoke screens and signaling. They carried a stark warning in red letters: Not for offensive use. The chemical inside burned at 5,000 degrees Fahrenheit and could not be extinguished with water. Using them against human targets was considered a violation of the spirit of the Geneva Convention and a certain ticket to a military trial.
But Moon noticed something others had ignored: the M15 was heavier, weighing nearly two pounds compared to the 21-ounce Mark 2. It had a shorter, four-second fuse. Most importantly, it didn’t bounce.
The First “Unauthorized” Assault
Ignoring the warnings of his platoon sergeant, Moon pulled the pin on an M15 and hurled it at a bunker that had pinned his unit down for three hours. The heavier grenade didn’t bounce off the coral; it dropped straight through the firing slit like a stone.
The result was not a sharp explosion, but a sudden eruption of blinding white smoke and searing heat. Inside the bunker, the phosphorus ignited everything it touched—wood supports, ammunition, and skin. The machine gun fell silent instantly. Moments later, Moon repeated the feat with a second bunker.
“Get me more of those,” he told his sergeant. When reminded they were only for smoke, Moon replied, “They’re heavier. They won’t bounce.”
As word of the “crazy private” using smoke grenades to clear bunkers spread, Moon’s company commander, Captain James Winters, was forced to intervene. He pointed to the field manual, warning Moon that his actions were explicitly forbidden. Moon, gesturing to the wounded men being carried off the field, asked, “How many of those guys would be walking if I’d kept using the ones that don’t work?”
Winters, a West Point graduate, faced a choice between rigid doctrine and the survival of his men. He closed the manual and told Moon, “I didn’t see anything. But if you get killed, I’m not writing a letter to your mother explaining you died violating orders.”

The Demonstration That Silenced the Skeptics
By sunset on his first day of rebellion, Moon had cleared 20 bunkers. His success forced a confrontation at battalion headquarters. Lieutenant Colonel Alexander McNab called Moon into a command tent filled with skeptical officers, including Major Robert Thornton, an ordinance expert who was furious about the violation of safety regulations.
Thornton argued that white phosphorus was unpredictable and dangerous to friendly troops. Moon, still covered in coral dust, stood his ground. “The Mark 2s bounce. I needed something that would stay inside.”
To settle the argument, McNab ordered a live demonstration on a captured Japanese position. Moon demonstrated his technique—calculating the angle, judging the weight, and utilizing the shorter fuse. He threw three M15s, and all three entered the narrow firing slits perfectly. McNab, seeing the results, immediately authorized the use of white phosphorus for bunker assaults across the entire 163rd Infantry Regiment.
A Legacy of Lives Saved
The impact was immediate. Within 24 hours of adopting Moon’s unauthorized method, the battalion’s casualty rate dropped by 73 percent. While it previously took 47 fragmentation grenades to clear a bunker, it now took an average of 2.3 white phosphorus grenades.
On June 2, during the decisive battle for Mokmer Airfield, Moon—now a squad leader—led his men across open ground. Using his technique, his squad cleared three mutually supporting bunkers in just 11 minutes with zero American losses. Staff officers had estimated the same task would take three days and cost dozens of lives.
The Japanese defenders were terrified of the “white fire grenades.” Recovered diaries described the weapon as one that made even the strongest cave positions worthless, forcing soldiers to choose between burning alive or running into American bullets.

The Reluctant Hero
After the war, the U.S. Army quietly revised its manuals. They never officially credited Harold Moon, and they never admitted that a farm kid had solved a problem that had stumped their best weapons experts. They simply added a paragraph in an appendix about the “alternative employment of smoke grenades.”
Moon returned to Iowa, took over his father’s dairy farm, and rarely spoke of the war. He received the Silver Star, which he kept in a drawer. It wasn’t until 1982, at a division reunion, that the son of Captain Winters approached him with a list. Winters had calculated that at least 47 men in their company alone were alive because Moon had the courage to ignore a manual that was wrong.
Harold Moon passed away in 1998 at age 76. Today, the technique he pioneered—using the weight and heat of phosphorus to neutralize fortified positions—is standard military practice. His story remains a powerful testament to the fact that sometimes, the most important innovations don’t come from those with credentials or authority, but from those who see a problem clearly and have the wisdom to know when the rules are getting people killed.
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