Admiral Nimitz, who used surprise as a tactic with three aircraft carriers, no battleships, and 200 or so aircraft to take on the Japanese Armada stepped in to cloud Admiral Yamamoto’s military vision. With the element of surprise like bolts from the blue, the American torpedo planes from the American Enterprise bravely diving vertically from 20,000 feet was able to sink three Japanese carrier and their fighter planes in just one hour. The remainder of the Pacific war of WW II consisted of a series of Allied island victories; at Iwo Gima, the Solomons, Guadalcanal, and Okinawa, followed by atomic bombs dropped as God’s wrath on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Japan’s evil heritage that rationalized away their unending “crimes against humanity” by way of the theological delusions of their “cultural religion,” Shinto, invoked God’s fury via two nuclear holocausts. Surely God’s guidance in WW II had to be in play with His selection of set-apart commanders who were granted the needed military/spiritual…
On September 6, 1941, the Japanese government decided to go to war with America. (Japan had been preparing for the possibility of war for several years.) Though the final decision to actually go to war was deferred, pending a possible diplomatic breakthrough, the machinery for war, especially in the Imperial Japanese Navy, was put in motion. In April 1942 Japan wanted to expand their defensive lines so they went east towards the island of Midway (1000 miles from Hawaii), they sent most of the imperial fleet to battle. That fleet was composed of four aircraft carriers, two battleships, thirteen cruisers, assorted submarines, transports and mine sweepers. "The Battle of Midway, 1942" EyeWitness to History, www.eyewitnesstohistory.com (2001). After that, an event known as the “Allied Code-Breaking” took place , Admiral Nimitz of the allied forces had his cryptanalysts had broken the JN-25 code. The US had been decoding messages since spring 1942 and they discovered that Japan’s objective was Midway. The American base at Midway started to send false messages saying that its water distillation plant had been damaged and that the base needed fresh water. The Japanese saw this and soon started to send messages stating that "AF was short on water”. AF was the name of the objective the Japanese had which was Midway. Commander Joseph J. Rochefort and his team at Station Hypo were able to determine that the attack was going to be on either the 4th or the 5th of June. As a result the Americans were able to enter the battle knowing when and where the Japanese were going to be and also with what force they were going to attack. The Japanese Naval Marshal General Isoroku Yamamoto considered that going to war with the United States was a “suicidal mission” and that he did not think that Japan could win such war.…
The attack left the base badly damaged resulting into one out of nine battleship’s being destroyed in the process however this was also a good thing for the American navy because the Japanese didn’t destroyed the supply depot for the ship’s fuel the same with they failed to destroy the american aircraft carriers. When the american fleet was trying to repair itself the Japanese moved down south in order to get more resources for their military they went so far south that they invaded new Guinea the Australian military were training local militia to face the threat that was soon to come. American forces soon came to fight off the japanese military when they broke the Japanese codes when both sides met it was then called the battle of the Coral sea, the…
1Includes only losses in ground combat. I have not been able to find separate figures for naval and air losses in the war against Japan.…
On June 4 the Americans discovered the Japanese fleet northeast of midway after this a quick air battle developed. This was the turning point the…
At the same time the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor, they also launched coordinated attacks on the Philippines, Wake Island, and Guam, among others. Their goal was to quickly and decisively expand across the Pacific and establish a front along the many island chains spread throughout. The Japanese thought it paramount to establish this defensive perimeter to act as a barrier to American advances and to ensure the safety of the Japanese homeland. They were keenly aware that they lacked resources and manpower necessary to win a protracted war of attrition against the US, and sought to overcome this disadvantage through these decisive actions. Between Pearl Harbor and May 1942, the Japanese were largely successful. Their empire now encompassed lands from the Dutch East Indies to the Soloman Islands, and from the Gilbert Islands up to Wake Island. This included Korea, Manchuria, Hong Kong, and much of South East Asia as well. While many hard fought battles were waged over these places, the US and their allies were more often than not defeated. Manila, Hong Kong, and Bataan being among those defeats Spurred on by these gains and an American strike against the Japanese Homeland in the Doolitle Raid, the Japanese Empire sought to solidify their position and erect their “barrier” strategy. The island of Midway was a integral part of completing this…
Before the Battle of Midway, plans were made and many little events occurred. The Japanese wanted to eliminate United States carrier forces. Isoroku Yamamoto came up with the plan and would become the commander. He hoped attacking Midway would draw the U. S. to sea battle that they would win inevitably. Yamamoto’s plan was rejected by higher command but soon after the U. S. tried to invade Japan, then after they agreed.…
By 1942, while World War II was in full swing, the Japanese had naval supremacy over the United States in the Pacific Ocean War and possessed the advantage of deciding when and where battles took place. After an “operational and strategic loss” (www.history.navy.com “Battle of The Coral Sea”) at The Battle of The Coral Sea in May of 1942, and a humiliating defeat in the Doolittle Raid in April, Japan was more determined than ever to take back full control of the Pacific and demolish the US naval strength. They planned to do this by surprise attacking the United States at the Midway atoll and establishing a Japanese airbase there. However, due to the ignorance and over-confidence of the Japanese and the superior naval leadership by Chester Nimitz along with technological advantages, perseverance and skill of the United States, Japan’s ingenious plan rebounded. The Battle of Midway, June 4-7, 1942, is extensively known as the turning point of the Pacific War during World War II, as it was the battle that completely altered the outcome of the war and the point…
The Battle of Midway was one of the most decisive naval battle of World War II. This was one of the most important turning point of the War. The cause of the battle was the Japanese desire to sink the remaining aircraft carriers. Admiral Isoroku chose to attack close to Pearl Harbor to draw out the American ships. Once they came out the Japanese was prepared to destroy them. But the Americans solve the Japanese plans and was prepared. Scouts the Japanese in the morning of June 4. The Japanese carriers were caught of guard while they were refueling and made they vulnerable. The Americans were able to sink 4 carrier with 322 aircraft and over 5 thousand sailors. This was a terrible defeat for the Japanese.…
Synopsis The Battle of Midway is well known as the turning point in the Pacific war. However, if not for the Battle of the Coral Sea a month earlier, the three American carriers at Midway would have faced six Japanese carriers of the type that had devastated Pearl Harbor five months prior, instead of only four — and the Battle of Midway might have ended differently.Coral Sea was the world’s first all-carrier battle, and the first sea battle in which neither side could see the other. Both the U.S. and the Japanese navies thought they understood how to fight using carriers. Both discovered they were wrong. At the end of this painful learning experience, the United States had lost the 41,000-ton carrier Lexington, while Japan had lost only the 11,000-ton carrier Shoho.The battle was a…
Battle of Leyte was intended to be the last battle for the tired and battle tested military soldiers; but, in an abrupt change of plans the Marines decided to enact Operation Scavenger, the US Bomber raid, on Iwo Jima that paved the way for Operation Detachment, the land raid. The military goal:…
In the early stages of World War II, the Japanese Empire was quickly expanding in the Pacific with no resistance. When the United States started its offensive in the Pacific, they were beat down by the Japanese. With fear of losing the Pacific the United States need a strategic victory that could turn the tide of the war. Soon two battles would come over the horizon and would distinguish themselves as the battles that marked the turn of the tide in the war. These two battles are The Battle of Coral Sea and the Battle of Midway. With out victories in these battles the Pacific might have been losing, and the course and outcome of the war changed forever.…
In a firm belief, British naval commanders were attached to the impression of a major decisive fleet action. With the commencement of the War, the British had most of their fleet limited to European waters. However, the American fleet was split between the Atlantic and Pacific. Due to Hitler and NAZI Germany being assessed as the greatest threat among the AXIS Powers, the Americans and the British agreed to deal with them first. Before America officially entered the War, the U.S. Navy was committed to the North Atlantic several months. The greatest sea battles were fought in the Pacific between the American Pacific Fleet and the Imperial Japanese Navy. The Battle of Leyte Gulf was the turning point when the Japanese finally utilized two monstrous battleships. The most important naval campaign of the War was the one that was fought in the North Atlantic. Although most historians focus more on battles with the U-boats in Atlantic Ocean, U.S. Navy in the Pacific was the only successful submarine campaign during the…
The ongoing battle on the Asian front left the president of the United States with limiting choices in the resolution of this conflict. The battle at Midway was the beginning of the end for Japan and was also considered “payback” for the events at Pearl Harbor. At Pearl Harbor, nearly the entire U.S. fleet in the Pacific was lost from the bombs dropped from the Japanese. This led to the U.S. declaring war on Japan. As the U.S. were closing in, the attack on Iwo Jima and Okinawa showed the resilience and honor that the Japanese troops upheld.…
and 1 cruiser. Meanwhile a Japanese submarine torpedoed aircraft carrier "Yorktown" and the destroyer "USS Hammann", though it took a day for the carrier to turn over and sink. The Japanese submarine escaped with-out destruction soon after the torpedoing. (Naval Historical Center, Battle of Midway:4-7 June 1942, Department of the Navy, June 30th 2003)…