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War in the Pacific

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Title: War in the Pacific


1
Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
Lesson 12 The US Navy in the Pacific,
1941-1945 (Part 2)
2
Break Time.
When We Resume The US Navy and the Offensive
Phase
3
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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

5
A6M Zero or Zeke
  • Fighter

6
F2A Buffalo
  • Fighter

7
F4F Wildcat
  • Fighter

8
Wildcats on the Prowl
9
F6F Hellcat
  • Fighter

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 - 1942-43
  • Undependable torpedoes - poorly designed magnetic
    fusing.
  • Many commanders were excessively cautious.

17
Subs in Battle
  • Bataan and Corregidor, Philippines
  • 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

18
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19
U.S. Submarine Warfare
  • Late 1943
  • 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

20
U.S. Submarine Warfare
  • Search and rescue of downed naval aviators
  • Commerce raiding of Japanese shipping from East
    Indies
  • By 1945 - 3/4 of the Japanese merchant fleet
    sunk
  • High casualty rates among submarine crews
  • Rotation policy 20 of crew transferred after
    each patrol.

21
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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 1945 - shark
    attacks

24
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25
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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
  • 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

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

30
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31

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

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

34
GeneralArcher Vandegrift
  • Commander - First Marine Division
  • Amphibious landing virtually unopposed
  • Marines take Henderson Field - Cactus Air
    Force.

35
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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, 26-27 October,
    1942
  • Naval Battle of Gudalcanal, 12-13 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

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

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 Armys 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

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

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.

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)

47
The Defeat of Japan
Objective The Philippines and the penetration
of the Japanese inner defense zone!
48
The Advance
  • Pacific Thrust
  • Amphib support
  • Vice Admiral Raymond Spruance
  • Significant campaigns
  • Gilberts
  • Marshalls
  • Marianas

49
Essex Class Fast Carrier
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 gt 3,000 marines

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

54
The Marianas
  • Draws out Japanese Fleet
  • Battle of Philippine Sea, 19-20 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
BattleofLeyte 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

58
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59
BattleofLeyte 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
AdmiralMarc 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 Navys ability to
    control the sea.

62
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63
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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.

66
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67
USS Lexington (CV 16)
  • Essex Class Fast Carrier
  • Mitschers Flagship -- Battle of Leyte Gulf

68
AdmiralThomas 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
  • 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 Raidson theJapaneseHome
IslandsJuly 1945
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.

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
Discussion
Next time The US Navy in the Early Cold War,
1945-1953
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