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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://www.etherit.co.uk/month/7/02.htm

August 2nd, 1945 (THURSDAY)

UNITED KINGDOM: Plymouth: Truman has lunch with King George VI on board the battleship HMS RENOWN on his way back to the US.

Minesweeper HMS Mystic commissioned.
Submarine HMS Springer commissioned.

GERMANY: The Potsdam Conference ends.
Germany will be disarmed, divided and deprived of the power to make war by the decisions announced here today by the “Big Three” Allied powers. The conference’s report was signed by President Truman, Marshal Stalin and Clement Attlee, who succeeded Winston Churchill as prime minister after the British general election results were announced during the conference.

A council of foreign ministers is to be established to continue three-power co-operation, though much in the deliberations and the atmosphere of the conference suggested that this will be difficult.

The Big Three propose that cartels, as well as war industries, in Germany are to be broken up. Going some way to accept the controversial proposal of the US treasury secretary, Henry Morgenthau Jr, the powers propose that the German economy should “give primary emphasis to agriculture” and “domestic industries.”

There is a striking difference between the treatments proposed for Italy and Germany. Italy is to be offered a peace treaty. The Germans are to be convinced “that they cannot escape responsibility for what they have brought upon themselves”. Allied reparations will be paid from German assets and major war criminals will be speedily brought to trial. Germany will lose territory to Poland and Russia.

Franco’s Spain, “having been founded with the support of the Axis powers”, will not be allowed to be a member of the United Nations. The signatories sent a message thanking Mr. Churchill for his contribution not only to the earlier stages of the conference but also to the war itself.

JAPAN: On Shimushu Island in the Kurile Islands, 5 US Eleventh Air Force B-24s visually bomb Kataoka Naval Base and 1 radar-bombs Kokutan Zaki and returns to base (600 miles or 966 km) on 3 engines.

B-29s attack Nagasaki and virtually annihilate Toyama, claiming to have sunk 26 ships.

Okinawa: Bad weather due to a typhoon cancels all Far East Air Forces missions against Japan.

While on routine patrol, the crew of a US Navy PV-1 Ventura of Patrol Bombing Squadron One Hundred Fifty Two (VPB-152), based on Peleliu, spots a large oil slick with 30 survivors in the water. Further examination of the area reveals another group of 150 survivors. An immediate call for assistance is made, with PBY Catalinas and the high speed transport USS Bassett (APD-73) soon enroute to rescue the men. This is the remainder of the crew of the USS Indianapolis (CA-35), sunk by the Japanese submarine HIJMS I-58, which had sunk without sending an SOS on 30 July, with the majority of the ship’s crew dying of exposure and shark attacks. The searches continue until 8 August.

The 316 survivors of the crew of the USS INDIANAPOLIS have been telling harrowing tales of their sinking. She was torpedoed at midnight three days ago and sank so quickly that many of the crew of 1,196 were trapped below decks and the radio officer could not send an SOS.

The chances of any of the missing 880 men being alive in the shark-infested Philippine Sea are remote.

SOUTH-WEST PACIFIC: Two USN destroyers, USS Charrette (DD-581) and USS Conner (DD-582), make radar contact with a ship which they track through the night, finding in the morning that it was the Japanese hospital ship Tachibana Maru. A search party from USS Charrette boards the ship and finds able-bodied troops and arms and ammunition in boxes marked with red crosses; the troops are made prisoners of war. A prize crew of 80 marines and sailors is placed aboard the Japanese ship and it is taken to Naval Advance Base Morotai in the Netherlands East Indies arriving on 6 August.

Off the Malay Peninsula, the USN submarine USS Bugara (SS-331), on her third war patrol, encounters a Japanese schooner manned by a Chinese crew being attacked by Malay pirates; the pirates fire at the submarine and then attempt to escape. The sub crew takes off the Chinese crew, sinks the schooner with gunfire and then pursues the pirates and disposes of them.

MARIANAS ISLANDS: Lieutenant General Nathan F Twining relieves Lieutenant General Curtis Emerson LeMay as Commanding General, Twentieth Air Force; LeMay is reassigned to the US Army Strategic Air Forces in the Pacific (USASTAF) as Chief of Staff.

CANADA: Destroyer HMCS Hamilton (ex HMS and USS Kalk) sold for scrapping in Baltimore.

U.S.A.: The top pop songs are (1) “The More I See You” by Dick Haymes; (2) “Dream” by The Pied Pipers’ (3) “Sentimental Journey” by Les Brown and his Orchestra with vocal by Doris Day: and (4) “Oklahoma Hills” by Jack Guthrie.


5 posted on 08/02/2015 6:31:34 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson ("Every nation has the government that it deserves." - Joseph de Maistre (1753-1821))
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Note this etherit reference says no SOS which is not true. But we won’t know this till declassification. I wonder what is going through the minds of those that heard it but disregarded?

Search goes on for another 6 days.


While on routine patrol, the crew of a US Navy PV-1 Ventura of Patrol Bombing Squadron One Hundred Fifty Two (VPB-152), based on Peleliu, spots a large oil slick with 30 survivors in the water. Further examination of the area reveals another group of 150 survivors. An immediate call for assistance is made, with PBY Catalinas and the high speed transport USS Bassett (APD-73) soon enroute to rescue the men. This is the remainder of the crew of the USS Indianapolis (CA-35), sunk by the Japanese submarine HIJMS I-58, which had sunk without sending an SOS on 30 July, with the majority of the ship’s crew dying of exposure and shark attacks. The searches continue until 8 August.

The 316 survivors of the crew of the USS INDIANAPOLIS have been telling harrowing tales of their sinking. She was torpedoed at midnight three days ago and sank so quickly that many of the crew of 1,196 were trapped below decks and the radio officer could not send an SOS.

The chances of any of the missing 880 men being alive in the shark-infested Philippine Sea are remote.


11 posted on 08/02/2015 7:34:39 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

And more on Korea:

http://countrystudies.us/south-korea/8.htm

The landing of Soviet forces, however, compelled the United States government to improvise a formula for Korea. Unless an agreement were reached, the Soviets could very well occupy the entire peninsula and place Korea under their control. Thus, on August 15, 1945, President Harry S Truman proposed to Stalin the division of Korea at the thirty-eighth parallel.

on December 7, 1945, and decided to establish a trusteeship for a five-year period, during which a Korean provisional government would prepare for full independence; they also agreed to form a joint United States-Soviet commission to assist in organizing a single “provisional Korean democratic government.” The trusteeship proposal was immediately opposed by nearly all Koreans,

The Soviet insistence that only those “democratic” parties and social organizations upholding the trusteeship plan be allowed to participate in the formation of an all-Korean government was unacceptable to the United States. The United States argued that the Soviet formula, if accepted, would put the communists in controlling positions throughout Korea.


13 posted on 08/02/2015 7:46:12 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

And one perspective on how this situation in Korea “ends” in 1953:

http://www.ldnews.com/opinion/ci_28550401/eisenhowers-wwii-experience-ends-korean-war

But Eisenhower, a lifelong military man with an ever-growing understanding of civilian politics, wasn’t so easily cowed. He quickly sized Rhee up as a despot, and he thought Clark’s plan was a gamble not worth taking, so he said no, and the war ended in a stalemate.


14 posted on 08/02/2015 7:50:28 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

SOUTH-WEST PACIFIC: Two USN destroyers, USS Charrette (DD-581) and USS Conner (DD-582), make radar contact with a ship which they track through the night, finding in the morning that it was the Japanese hospital ship Tachibana Maru. A search party from USS Charrette boards the ship and finds able-bodied troops and arms and ammunition in boxes marked with red crosses; the troops are made prisoners of war. A prize crew of 80 marines and sailors is placed aboard the Japanese ship and it is taken to Naval Advance Base Morotai in the Netherlands East Indies arriving on 6 August.


http://donmooreswartales.com/2012/01/02/harry-allcroft/

“We didn’t’ start opening the boxes aboard the Tachibana Maru until the prisoners were disposed of ashore. We didn’t know what was in those boxes and neither did the prisoners who were sleeping on them.”

Why didn’t their Japanese prisoners examine the contents of the boxes before they made port and make a bid to recapture the ship?


16 posted on 08/02/2015 8:30:00 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Wow, this story has quite a few characters:

Off the Malay Peninsula, the USN submarine USS Bugara (SS-331), on her third war patrol, encounters a Japanese schooner manned by a Chinese crew being attacked by Malay pirates; the pirates fire at the submarine and then attempt to escape. The sub crew takes off the Chinese crew, sinks the schooner with gunfire and then pursues the pirates and disposes of them.

http://www.bugara.net/history.htm

Bugara began life as a “thick-skinned” Balao Class submarine. That is, her pressure hull was 3/16-inch thicker than her predecessor, the Gato. That extra thickness allowed Bugara to dive 100 feet deeper than Gato.

Summer 1947

Bugara, in company with USS Bergall (SS-320) and USS Brill (SS-330) made a coordinated training attack on USS Iowa (BB-61). The submarines intercepted the battleship as she made a high-speed run through the Alenuihaha Channel between the islands of Maui and Hawaii. Although the battleship enjoyed land-based air cover and made several radical course changes in an attempt to throw off the pursuers, the submarines still achieved four “successful” attacks.


19 posted on 08/02/2015 8:57:08 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

I’ve read quite a bit of testimony that contradicts the claim that no SOS went out from the Indianapolis.

When I get some time later in the day I will try and track some of it down and post it.


23 posted on 08/02/2015 9:37:05 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://www.ussindianapolis.org/story.htm


24 posted on 08/02/2015 9:38:11 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

“Naval authorities then and now have maintained that the Indianapolis sank too quickly to send out a distress signal. A radioman aboard the Indianapolis testified at the September 1999 Senate hearing, however, that he watched the “needle jump” on the ship’s transmitter, indicating that a distress signal was transmitted minutes before the ship sank, and sources at three separate locations have indicated that they were aware of a distress signal being received from the sinking ship. Its very likely that these distress signals were received but ignored as a Japanese trick to lure rescue vessels to the area.”

http://www.ussindianapolis.org/story.htm


25 posted on 08/02/2015 9:42:08 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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