Posted on 12/17/2021 9:18:58 AM PST by CIB-173RDABN
Tells how submarines crippled Japan in WWII (my observation shows how China could also be crippled if they start a war).
35 submarines from World War II are still listed as “Missing”.
10 U.S.; 6 British; 13 Japanese; 2 German; and 4 others...
-
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Missing_submarines_of_World_War_II
Some bomber crews would like to have a word with you
https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/life-and-death-in-bomber-command
The Navy was running so short of Japanese targets even in 1944 that when the USS Archerfish sank the brand new Japanese fleet carrier Shinano the US Navy refused to believe the claimed kill. The skipper, Captain Joseph Enright, was even threatened with reprimand if he didn’t retract his claims of sinking a carrier.
It was only after the war when the US gained access to the Japanese Navy records that they realized that Enright had sunk the largest carrier that had ever put to sea up to that time.
China needs raw material, coal and food. Block shipping and you hurt their ability to wage a shooting war.
And they need fuel, which they are unable to produce...
Uh, NO! We submariners accounted for just over 50% of all Japanese shipping and military vessels lost. Comparatively speaking, we did a lot more than our fair share.
Military bombings were relentless and, still, even after the Atomic bombs, Japan still refused to surrender.
I salute you for your service! My brother in law was a nuke tech on a boomer.
Polishing the old torpedo Sir?
The son of one of my fellow-submariners was a nuke tech on the now-decommissioned Thomas A. Edison. He died in 1998 from brain cancer with no previous history of cancer in his family.
The reason for his death has always made me wonder.
bkmrk
Psst - China can get their needed resources overland. They’re not an island.
Unless there was a reactor leak, his radiation exposure should have been pretty much background level.
In June 1944, one of the largest, most modern and most important ships in the Imperial Japanese Navy, Shōkaku, encountered a US submarine, Cavalla, out on its first patrol. The History Guy remembers a WWII confrontation in the Pacific Theater. It is history that deserves to be remembered.
This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As images of actual events are sometimes not available, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.
This episode covers a period of conflict. All events are portrayed in historical context and for educational purposes. No images or content are primarily intended to shock and disgust. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Non censuram.Shōkaku and Cavalla, a Confrontation of the WWII Pacific Theater | May 17, 2019 | The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered
The new skipper of the Wahoo was the formidable Dudley Morton--a broad-shouldered Kentucky Baptist with an aggressive philosophy on how submarine warfare should be waged. From: HELL BELOW: America Fights BackWhy the USS Wahoo and Its Skipper Were a Perfect Match | January 27, 2017 | Smithsonian Channel
Psst - China can get their needed resources overland. They’re not an island.
—
From where and from whom?
First most of the population of China is on their East side so they would have a supply line that would be like California to New York.
Their BELT AND ROAD Initiative was designed just for this reason unfortunately for them they are Communist Thugs and don’t know how to play well with others and many nations are abandoning helping the Chinese build their road.
On a similar vein China has few friends (or allies) and are surrounded by potentially hostile nations.
India is working to organize the nations that surround China into mutual aid if China goes to war with any of them
So while true they have access via lad to their western border I can not see how (in a time of war) any supplies (assuming they could get any) would survive the trip.
Geography has not been kind to China.
Subs went out on patrol. With the state of communications during WW II, contact could be spotty. Sunk by enemy action or just simply disappeared into the deep. It was a very dangerous service to be in.
My dad was young when he joined the navy (17) so they kept him stateside. He was involved in the testing of torpedoes to find out why they were so awful.
If Japan hadn’t attacked Pearl Harbor we still would have gone to war when they attacked and invaded the Philippines, Guam, and Wake. Japan wanted the Southern Resource Area (Dutch East Indies and Malaya) and was not about to let the US sit aside the East flank of their supply lines.
That sounds like an interesting story.
“If Japan hadn’t attacked Pearl Harbor we still would have gone to war when they attacked and invaded the Philippines, Guam, and Wake.”
I was reading somewhere, and can’t find it again, that DC was ready to give up the Philippines to avoid war with Japan. Maybe just one of the “maybe we can...” conversations going on at the time.
But Japan attacked Pearl and that was it.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.