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In January 1945, deep behind Japanese lines in the Philippines, 121 U.S. Army Rangers and 200 Filipino guerrillas launched one of the most daring missions of World War II—the raid on the Cabanatuan POW camp. Their objective: rescue 513 emaciated American prisoners who had survived the Bataan Death March and years of brutal captivity. Led by Lieutenant Colonel Henry Mucci and Captain Robert Prince, the Rangers trekked thirty miles through enemy territory, guided by Filipino partisans and cloaked in darkness. On the night of January 30, they struck with precision, overwhelming the Japanese garrison in a lightning assault that lasted barely thirty minutes. By dawn, every prisoner was free. The escape that followed was a test of endurance—miles of flooded rice paddies, Japanese patrols closing in, and the constant burden of carrying the weak and dying. Yet not one man was left behind. The Cabanatuan raid became a symbol of loyalty and courage—a living promise that American soldiers would never abandon their own. It was more than a rescue; it was redemption written in courage and sacrifice, proving that even in the darkest days of war, humanity and brotherhood could still triumph over cruelty.