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Sea Power and Maritime Affairs

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1 Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
No more Mahanian battles? Carrier BG vs. Carrier BG; what do you call it? Lesson 12: The US Navy in the Pacific, (Part 2)

2 Break Time……………. When We Resume: The US Navy and the Offensive Phase

3 Soldiers on the sand of Iwo Jima

4 U.S. Aircraft Production
Japan and Germany had early advantage in air war: Messerschmit ME-109 Mitsubishi A6M Zero U.S. aircraft industry produces higher performance aircraft American industrial base allows rapid and mass production New flight training programs developed U.S. gains advantage in air warfare Air supremacy eventually established in both European and Pacific theaters American industry adapted incredibly well Germans would build ten different kinds of tanks and twenty different kinds of aiplanes We’d have five design types Emphasis on training that exists today; we have the best trained people flying the best stuff

5 A6M “Zero” or “Zeke” Fighter

6 F2A “Buffalo” Fighter

7 F4F “Wildcat” Fighter

8 Wildcats on the Prowl

9 F6F “Hellcat” Fighter Such a powerful engine needed “gull wings” to hold it off of the ground The answer to the zero

10 F4U Corsair Fighter

11 SBD “Dauntless” Dive Bomber

12 SB2C “Helldiver” Dive Bomber

13 TBF “Avenger” Torpedo Bomber

14 PBY “Catalina” Scout

15 U.S. Submarine Force

16 U.S. Submarine Warfare Simultaneously with Dual advance, US conducts war on commerce Unrestricted Submarine Warfare ordered immediately after Pearl Harbor -- new role for U.S. submarines Early operational problems : Undependable torpedoes - poorly designed magnetic fusing. Many commanders were excessively cautious. 2,400 people died, but tactically speaking, Pearl Harbor wasn’t such a bad thing Japanese took out Battleships and airplanes (that wasn’t so great); left submarine fleet While we were making up for damage, submarines conducted unrestricted warfare (same thing Wilson had decried as immoral during WWI) All’s fair in love and war

17 Subs in Battle Bataan and Corregidor, Philippines Battle of Midway
Supplied by submarines from the Asiatic Fleet Evacuation of personnel Battle of Midway Guarded approaches to the island Guadalcanal Campaign Begin to be more effective at fleet operations Remember how subs helped McArthur Weren’t sure at first how to operate Had all of those conservative captains Lousy torpedoes (Mark-14) got better (Mark-18_ Wolfpacks? Better alone Not nearly as much video and photographs of the subs at work

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19 U.S. Submarine Warfare Late 1943: Central Pacific Advance
Torpedo fusing problems corrected Radar installed and sonar improved Central Pacific Advance Initially uncontested by Japanese Navy Battles of the Philippine Sea and Leyte Gulf U.S. submarines support fleet and amphibious operations Japanese battleship and carriers sunk Mark-14 torpedo steam-drven and lousy fuzes big wake EM fuze wouldn’t detonate when too far from hull back up contact fuze would dud all of the time if hit too hard Mark-18 electronic, butter fuze But sometimes circled around and hit the sub that fired it! Subs Guerre de Course and some fleet action

20 U.S. Submarine Warfare Search and rescue of downed naval aviators
Commerce raiding of Japanese shipping from East Indies By /4 of the Japanese merchant fleet sunk High casualty rates among submarine crews: Rotation policy: 20% of crew transferred after each patrol.

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22 Japanese Submarine Warfare
Long Lance torpedo - smaller variant for submarines Focused attacks on U.S. warships and avoided supply ships Used to screen and scout for battle fleets “Warrior ethos” of Japanese naval leaders Used for supply of bypassed garrisons

23 Japanese Submarine Warfare
Battle of Midway Failed to intercept U.S. carrier forces Torpedoed USS Yorktown under tow Guadalcanal Campaign USS Saratoga torpedoed January 1942 USS Wasp sunk USS Indianapolis sunk -- July shark attacks

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26 Prelude to Guadalcanal
Japanese leadership shocked by defeat at Midway Cancel plans to take Fiji, Samoa, and New Caledonia Must proceed with plan to take Port Moresby Within bomber range of major naval operating base at Rabaul Japanese begin building airfield at Guadalcanal

27 Prelude to Guadalcanal
Nimitz moves to reinforce South Pacific Area Protect vital sea lines of communication with Australia. Vice Admiral Robert L. Ghormley Commander South Pacific Ocean Area (Subordinate to Nimitz). Two bases established in New Hebrides.

28 Army - Navy Dispute MacArthur proposes retaking Rabaul Admiral King
Wants Navy to let him borrow First Marine Division Admiral King Objects to Macarthur's plan Proposes step-by-step advance through Solomons to re-take Rabaul. Nimitz and Ghormley in command with Marines making amphibious assaults and Navy providing support. Army forces used as garrisons for islands McArthur sees Midway as a chance to start campaigning in his theater so he could get back to the Phillipines Rabaul was a Japanese HQ base, extremely heavily fortified. It wasn’t a good idea to attack His idea is pretty simpe: the Navy gives him everything he needs (ie, First Marine Division and few carriers) to go fight his war Admiral King says, “yeah, right!” Navy forces under Nimitz’ control

29 Operation Watchtower Compromise Three-Stage Plan of Operations
Initial advance in Eastern Solomons under Nimitz Boundary between Areas moved west MacArthur takes command after Tulagi secured Compromised reached This wasn’t strategy, but politics; you don’t “compromise” when fighting a war Think about how well the amphibious ops in Europe would go Marines would take the island of Tulagi, then McArthur would take command of ops Never got that far, because of intel about airfield being built in Guadalcanal while planning for Tulagi

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31 The Campaign Aug 1942-Feb 1943 Gudalcanal Campaign Aug 1942-Feb 1943

32 Guadalcanal Whoever controlled an airfield would control air over the Solomons Vital SLOC For both sides it symbolized offensive rather than defensive warfare What did we say about the importance of SLOC to the Japanese?

33 Force Commanders Admiral Robert L. Ghormley overall command of Watchtower Rear Admiral Richmond Kelly Turner - Amphibious Forces Vice Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher carrier group Provided support against Japanese fleet during day Marines very quickly take the Japanese built field and rename it “Henderson Field” after one of their aviators By day, the marines have air superiority and hold Japanese at bay By night the Japanese owned the “Slot,” a channel along the Solomons; able to reinforce themselves A perpetual pattern

34 General Archer Vandegrift
Commander - First Marine Division Amphibious landing virtually unopposed Marines take Henderson Field - “Cactus Air Force”. Frigate named after him

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36 Guadalcanal River Crossing

37 “See-Saw” Pattern Japan dominates nighttime action.
“Tokyo Express” down “The Slot” into “Ironbottom Sound” U.S. dominates daytime with shore and carrier aircraft

38 Actions Battle of Savo Island, 8-9 August 1942
Battle of the Eastern Solomons, 24 August 1942 Battle of the Santa Cruz Islands, October, 1942 “Naval Battle of Gudalcanal”, November, 1942

39 Guadalcanal Campaign Battle of Savo Island - Allies defeated in night surface action Battle of the Eastern Solomons - carrier battle USS Enterprise damaged by bombers USS Wasp sunk and Saratoga damaged by Japanese submarines 1) Battle of Savo Island: night of 8-9 August, while the transports were still unloading supplies for the marines a few miles to the south of Guadalcanal, the US Navy lost four heavy cruisers to night fighting Japanese cruisers Fletcher and his force were not around to give chase to the Japanese because they had retreated to the northwest to refuel. 2) Two weeks later, 24 August, Battle of the Eastern Solomons, Fletcher engaged the Shokaku and Zuikaku and a light carrier, the Ryujo. His bombers knocked out the Ryujo, but the Enterprise took three hits from Japanese planes USS Wasp is sunk and Saratoga damaged by Japanese submarines.

40 Battle of Santa Cruz Islands
Halsey relieves Ghormley - 18 October 1942 Rear Admiral Thomas C. Kinkaid Hornet sunk and Enterprise damaged No operational carriers left Zuiho and Shokaku badly damaged Tactical defeat by strategic victory?…maybe Fletcher and Ghormley were not aggressive enough for Nimitz and King, so they’re replaced and Halsey is put in overall command He hears that a large enemy fleet of four carriers and complemented ships is heading south from a Japanese stronghold in Truk, and sends two carriers and one battleship under command of Thomas C. Kinkaid north to “Attack- repeat- attack!” We called it a strategic victory, but the margin was pretty thin, because we got beat up pretty badly (Naval Battle of Guadalcanal - Five Sullivan brothers killed in action on USS Juneau.)

41 Naval Battle Rear Admiral Willis A. Lee
uses RADAR to his advantage to win nighttime naval battle Washington and South Dakota outfight Japanese battleships Warships flee Transports beach themselves

42 Guadalcanal Campaign 1st Marine Division relieved by Army’s 25th Infantry Division Japanese forces evacuate Guadalcanal U.S. forces begin advance up Solomon Islands Land-based airfields established Marine Corps’ “Black Sheep” Squadron (VMF-214) Commanded by Maj Greg “Pappy” Boyington Medal of Honor Recipient MacArthur drives Japanese from eastern Papua Captures main Japanese base at Buna With 35,000 men and two hundred airplanes, the marines win Guadalcanal by December 1942 And, as usual, the marines do all of the grunt work, then hand it over to the army to hold Huge psychological victories for the allies Japanese are getting pushed back overland (island)

43 Aftermath Both sides suffered heavy losses
U.S loses more tonnage at sea, carriers Japan loses more lives Japan allowed to dominate sea at night while U.S. dominates day Battle drags on from Aug 42- Feb 43

44 Aftermath MacArthur successful in driving Japanese from Papuan Peninsula By Feb 43 Jap plans for offensives in S. and W Pacific stopped cold King uses Casablanca Conference to allocate more resources to Pacific After Guadalcanal, Allies get together to plan the next phase of the war The British still want a focus on the Mediterranean- of course they do King is insistent on advancing gains in the Pacific The Casablanca talks produced no concrete plan for a defeat of either Germany or Japan- and no ironclad commitment to devote a greater percentage of resources to the Pacific. But the British chiefs of staff did conced that the Americans should somehoe retain their hard-won initiative in the the Pacific. Hagan: “for King this was a green light, however dim” and he successfully fought for more allocation in the Pacific theater in Washington

45 Reconquest of Attu and Kiska Aleutian Islands (January - May 1943)
No real threat to security. Necessary to end Japanese control of American territory for political reasons. Battle of the Komondorskis Last classic surface ship battle. Americans attack heavily guarded Japanese convoy. Minimal resistance on Attu, none on Kiska. We start rolling back the Japanese

46 Operation Cartwheel The Solomons Campaign
Halsey goes to work for McArthur Leads Amphibious Assault from Guadalcanal along Solomons McArthur wants direct assault on Rabaul King and Marshall overrule him Capture every island BUT Rabaul to isolate it Rabaul becomes isolated and insignificant On to the Phillipines (October 1944) Finally, McArthur got his wish, and the Navy went to work in the Solomons The ultimate goal was always the Phillipines The staffers decide to isolate Rabaul; turned out to be a good idea Rabaul would have been too difficult to take, and it was easier to take the other Islands This becomes Halsey’s strategy of “bypassing” stronger islands and so isolating them When it was all over in February 1944, Rabaul was thoroughly boxed off, and MacArthur began to plan his famous leaps across island chains of several hundred miles each. He would stride 1,400 miles in one three-month period of his advance toward the Phillipines, where he landed in October 1944, under the cover of Third Fleet.

47 The Defeat of Japan Objective: The Philippines and the penetration of the Japanese inner defense zone!

48 The Advance Pacific “Thrust” Vice Admiral Raymond Spruance
Amphib support Vice Admiral Raymond Spruance Significant campaigns: Gilberts Marshalls Marianas McArthur wanted to push up from Australia with himself in command supported by land-based aircraft, which he would do as part of a two-pronged offensive on his way to the Phillipines. But the real thrust would be from Nimitz, who wanted a central Mahanian type (ie, condensed forces) push across the Pacific to island hop to the Phillipines and Japanese home islands- ie, War Plan Orange King, back in Washington, had brought Marshall over to this concept. This was going to be a Navy war. Admiral Nimitz developed an operational concept of seizing one island chain to support operations in the next chain. Before attacking the Marshall Islands, Nimitz's forces therefore had seized Tarawa and Makin in the Gilbert Islands, some 565 nautical miles south of the Marshalls, in November The U.S. Army's 27th Infantry Division had secured Makin against only light Japanese resistance, but the U.S. 2d Marine Division took strongly fortified and defended Tarawa only after suffering some of the heaviest American casualty rates of the war.

49 Essex Class Fast Carrier
The new fleet carrier The centerpiece of the new carrier-centered battle groups

50 The Gilberts (Tarawa) New fleet organization due to new Essex Class carrier fleet production Objective to gain airfield on Betio Island to launch further attacks in Central Pacific Drive 3 days cost US > 3,000 marines The first major island on the sea road to Phillipines was Tarawa in the Gilbert Islands JCS wanted invasion in November, but Spruance would have preferred December for tides and coral. Needed it in November so Brits could not back out of commitment to support in Pacific. Went in November, boats got stuck on the reefs. The island was captured, but at a loss of the 3,000 marines. McArthur jumped all over it of course, but the Pacific Campaign was underway- it was the Pacific Theater’s “Overlord”

51 Marines at Tarawa

52 Kwajalein Atoll Tarawa

53 The Marshalls After the Gilberts, concern for death toll in Marshalls
Nimitz orders RADM MITSCHER attack on Airpower Destroys Japanese Force Kwajalein success furthers to the rest of the islands Total Marshall loss less than first day of Tarawa Onto Marianas Although the Japanese had expected an American fleet to appear somewhere in the Marshall Islands, they were surprised when one arrived off Kwajalein. Since Imperial Headquarters in Tokyo had reasoned that the American forces would begin at the outer islands and work inward toward Kwajalein, the building of fortifications on that island had received little priority. In addition, the Japanese believed that any landing would come from the seaward side of an island, as opposed to the lagoon side, and they had oriented their defenses in that direction. Only after receiving intelligence reports from Tokyo concerning the capabilities of the American LVT (landing vehicle, tracked), which had demonstrated its ability to climb over coral reefs, were they now finally beginning to construct defensive positions on the lagoon side of many islands. But ultimately, little in-depth defense was possible because most of the islands were so narrow.

54 The Marianas Draws out Japanese Fleet
Battle of Philippine Sea, June 1944 “The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot” 346 Jap planes downed 3 Jap carriers sunk Classic Mahanian engagement

55 Liberation of the Philippines
U.S. advance continues after Marianas Campaign Macarthur's forces capture New Guinea Air strikes in the Phillipines wipe out two hundred aircraft Bypass smaller islands and head to Leyte Gulf early from 20 December to 20 October

56 Battle of Leyte Gulf

57 Battle of Leyte Gulf 24-25 October 1944
Largest battle in all of naval history U.S. command structure remains divided and confused U.S. landings in Leyte Gulf MacArthur “returns” McCarthur’s in the picture Seventh Fleet- the fleet working for McArthur (ie, “McArthur’s Navy”) Third Fleet under Halsey

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59 Battle of Leyte Gulf “In case opportunity for destruction of the major portion of the enemy fleet is offered or can be created, such destruction becomes the primary task.” Standing Order of Fleet Admiral Nimitz “Where is, repeat where is, Task Force 34? The world wonders.” Nimitz’ (message to Halsey during the battle.)

60 Fast Carrier Task Force
Admiral Marc Mitscher Commander Fast Carrier Task Force Battle of Leyte Gulf

61 Battle of Leyte Gulf Japanese Combined Fleet divided into three forces: Northern Central Southern Japanese defeated in a series of separate engagements. Effective end of Japanese Navy’s ability to control the sea. The Japanese do a good job decoying Halsey out of the Gulf and he misses the battle Too late for Japan; they are defeated Their command of the sea is gone We’re looking to the Home Islands and another little island inbetween Iwo Jima

62 Two Coast Guard-manned LST's open their great jaws in the surf that washes on Leyte Island beach, as soldiers strip down and build sandbag piers out to the ramps to speed up unloading operations 1944

63 LST lined up on Leyte

64 Battle of Leyte Gulf

65 Japanese Kamikaze Squadrons
Explosives loaded aboard aircraft. Japanese pilots fly one-way suicide attack missions against U.S. fleet. First used at Leyte Gulf.

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67 USS Lexington (CV 16) Essex Class Fast Carrier
Mitscher’s Flagship -- Battle of Leyte Gulf

68 Admiral Thomas Kinkaid
Commander U.S. Seventh Fleet Battle of Leyte Gulf

69 The Sands of Iwo Jima Mount Suribachi

70 The Road to Japan Iwo Jima Okinawa

71 Iwo Jima Emergency landing field and fighter escort base desired.
Midway between Marianas and Tokyo Support B-29 strategic bombing of Japan 26,000 casualties 2,400 Emergency landings - 27,000 aircrew General Holland Smith “Iwo Jima was the most savage and most costly battle in the history of the Marine Corps.” Admiral Nimitz “Uncommon valor was a common virtue.”

72 Okinawa Campaign April-June 1945
Staging base for invasion of Kyushu Joint amphibious operation Marines under Army command Japanese use delaying tactics at the beach Continued heavy resistance inland

73 Okinawa Campaign Kamikaze raids continue Over 40,000 U.S. casualties
34 U.S. ships sunk 4,900 Sailors killed in action Over 40,000 U.S. casualties Carrier groups begin raids on Japanese home islands. U.S. has established complete control of the seas.

74 USS Benjamin Franklin -- Damaged in Kamikaze raid during invasion of Okinawa - March 1945.

75 Japanese Battleship Yamato
Sunk by U.S. carrier-based aircraft during Okinawa Campaign. 7 April 1945

76 U.S. Carrier Raids on the Japanese Home Islands July 1945
Instead of estimated four days, it took a month to capture Iwo Jima in February and March Some nineteen thousand Americans were wounded, and seven thousand died. Kamikazes disabled the heavy carrier Saratoga and sank the escort carrier Bismarck Sea. Okinawa in April, May, and June was worse for the Navy, “the most costly naval operation in history.” The fifth fleet lost thirty-four vessels sunk and 368 damaged, many irreparably. About five thousand sailors died, and almost tha tnumber were wounded, many grotesquely burned. Toward the end of May Nimitz relieved Spruance, Mitscher, and Turner, who were stressed almost beyond endurance by remaining continuously on station at the two invasions. Hence the desire to bomb Hiroshima with an atomic weapon.

77 Manhattan Project = Atomic Bombs
President Truman orders two bombings. Hiroshima - 6 August 1945 Nagasaki - 9 August 1945 Believed potential for casualties during a prolonged struggle for the Japanese home islands is too high. During the Potsdam Conference with Stalin and Churchill outside of occupied Berlin, Harry S Truman learned that an atomic device had been exploded successfully in a test at Alamogordo, New Mexico. An atomic attack might obviate the need to invade Japan at an estimated cost of 500,000 American casualities. Truman gave the order to bomb Hiroshima. The atomic age was born on 6 August, 1945. Unconditional surrender

78 Hiroshima

79 Japan Surrenders Japanese officially surrender aboard USS Missouri in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945. MacArthur commands U.S. army of occupation.

80 Next time: The US Navy in the Early Cold War, 1945-1953
Discussion First Air Force One, FDR’s!!!! Lessons of World War II in the Pacific 1. The students should assess the relative importance of the various facets of sea power used by the United States to win the war in the Pacific: Carrier aviation, surface units, submarines, and amphibious forces. 2. The students should examine the role of strategic bombing in the Pacific in World War II, including fire-bombing and atomic bombing, and compare its efficacy with the European theater of operations. 3. The students should contrast Pacific war strategy with that employed in the Atlantic and Mediterranean and assess why there were such major contrasts. 4. The students should weigh the merits and salient characteristics of the outstanding leaders of the Pacific war: King, Nimitz, Halsey, Spruance, and MacArthur. 5. The students should comprehend the revolution in naval technology and strategy that characterized the war in the Pacific: a. The unanticipated maturation of carrier aviation as an offensive weapon of war. This subject should include gaining an appreciation of the revolutionary logistical systems developed during the war, including forward basing and underway replenishment for the fast carrier task forces. b. The unexpected effectiveness of the American submarines as weapons of interdiction of the industrial base of Japanese war machine. 6. Discuss the long-term geopolitical effects of the Pacific war on the postwar order in Asia. a. An Asian nation forcibly overcomes Europe­an/American control of hundreds of millions of colonial subject peoples. b. These events accelerate national freedom movements -- India, Indonesia -- genesis of the "Third World." c. Have enormous significance in colonial areas around the world in reducing prestige of colonial powers. d. Forced colonial powers to make deals/acknowledge future independence claims in return for native population cooperation. Next time: The US Navy in the Early Cold War,


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