Title: War in the Pacific
1Sea Power and Maritime Affairs
Lesson 12 The US Navy in the Pacific,
1941-1945 (Part 2)
2Break Time.
When We Resume The US Navy and the Offensive
Phase
3(No Transcript)
4U.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
5A6M Zero or Zeke
6F2A Buffalo
7F4F Wildcat
8Wildcats on the Prowl
9F6F Hellcat
10F4U Corsair
11SBD Dauntless
12SB2C Helldiver
13TBF Avenger
14PBY Catalina
15U.S. Submarine Force
16U.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.
17Subs 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
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19U.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
20U.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.
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22Japanese 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
23Japanese 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
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26Prelude 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
27Prelude 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.
28Army - 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
29Operation 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
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31Gudalcanal 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
33Force 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
34GeneralArcher Vandegrift
- Commander - First Marine Division
- Amphibious landing virtually unopposed
- Marines take Henderson Field - Cactus Air
Force.
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36Guadalcanal River Crossing
37See-Saw Pattern
- Japan dominates nighttime action.
- Tokyo Express down The Slot into Ironbottom
Sound - U.S. dominates daytime with shore and carrier
aircraft
38Actions
- 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
39Guadalcanal 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
40Battle 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
41Naval 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
42Guadalcanal 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
43Aftermath
- 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
44Aftermath
- 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
45Reconquest 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.
46Operation 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)
47The Defeat of Japan
Objective The Philippines and the penetration
of the Japanese inner defense zone!
48The Advance
- Pacific Thrust
- Amphib support
- Vice Admiral Raymond Spruance
- Significant campaigns
- Gilberts
- Marshalls
- Marianas
49Essex Class Fast Carrier
50The 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
51Marines at Tarawa
52Kwajalein Atoll
Tarawa
53The 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
54The 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
55Liberation 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
56BattleofLeyte Gulf
57Battle 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
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59BattleofLeyte 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.)
60AdmiralMarc Mitscher
- Commander
- Fast Carrier Task Force
- Battle of Leyte Gulf
61Battle 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.
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64Battle of Leyte Gulf
65Japanese 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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67USS Lexington (CV 16)
- Essex Class Fast Carrier
- Mitschers Flagship -- Battle of Leyte Gulf
68AdmiralThomas Kinkaid
- Commander
- U.S. Seventh Fleet
- Battle of Leyte Gulf
69The Sands of Iwo Jima Mount Suribachi
70The Road to Japan
71Iwo 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.
72Okinawa 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
73Okinawa 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.
74USS Benjamin Franklin
- -- Damaged in Kamikaze raid during invasion of
Okinawa - March 1945.
75Japanese Battleship Yamato
- Sunk by U.S. carrier-based aircraft during
Okinawa Campaign. - 7 April 1945
76U.S. Carrier Raidson theJapaneseHome
IslandsJuly 1945
77Manhattan 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.
78Hiroshima
79Japan Surrenders
- Japanese officially surrender aboard USS Missouri
in Tokyo Bay on 2 September 1945. - MacArthur commands U.S. army of occupation.
80Discussion
Next time The US Navy in the Early Cold War,
1945-1953