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On This Day In History: Stopping the Tide: The Battle of Midway, 4 - 6 June 1942
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Posted on 06/04/2004 8:01:37 AM PDT by Valin

Prelude, Battle, Epilogue

Japan's Decisive Battle

Admiral Yamamoto Isoruku, the short, deep-chested, broad-shouldered Commander-in-Chief of the Combined Fleet, was as shocked as anybody in the land of the Rising Sun. It was 18 April 1942, and the Imperial Japanese Navy, chief guardian of the Empire and the Home Islands, had suffered its most embarrassing defeat ever. That same day, eighteen B-25 Mitchell medium bombers, lent from the Army Air Corps, had flown off the deck of the carrier Hornet, accompanied by Enterprise, at a distance of only 650 nautical miles. Led by Lt.-Col. James H. Doolittle, these bombers had hit Tokyo, Yokosuka, and a score of other towns. They had not inflicted material damage that would have caused military harm, but they had severely shaken the Japanese morale. If the Americans could hit Tokyo, they could also hit the Emperor's palace; that the Emperor might be harmed by an air attack was an untenable situation.

For Yamamoto, this situation was the lever that multiplied his power to press through his grandiose scheme for the decisive battle. Ever since the last days of March, he had been pressing hard to convince the Naval General Staff that the envisioned attacks on Samoa and Fiji Islands needed to be dropped in favor of an attack on the tiny Central Pacific island of Midway. The Naval General Staff had bowed to him before the Doolittle Raid -- but not before Yamamoto threatened his resignation as Commander-in-Chief. Effectively left without option, the General Staff had decided in favor of the Admiral, but was not convinced of the scheme presented to them by the Admiral's subordinates conducting the "negotiations". Now, it seemed that all objections were swept aside by the wave of fury rolling over the country.

A grand battle scheme was set up by Yamamoto and his staff. The entire force comprising the Combined Fleet would be sent across the Pacific to give battle to the U.S. Pacific Fleet in the waters around Midway. To achieve that goal, Yamamoto's order of battle included virtually every fighting unit that was not needed in secondary tasks around the Empire.

Among them were seven battleships, ten carriers, some two dozen cruisers, and more than seventy destroyers, dispersed among half a dozen fleets. Admiral Yamamoto himself would lead the impressive Main Body, battleships Yamato, Nagato, and Mutsu, the pride of the Imperial Japanese Navy and its most powerful battleships. Support would come from the light carrier Hosho and its eight attack planes, scheduled for anti-submarine work. Destroyers would screen the force.

Then there was the Aleutians Strike Force, commanded by Vice-Admiral Hosogaya Moshiro, consisting of a carrier force with the light carrier Ryujo, and the converted cruise-liner and now-carrier Junyo. The four battleships Ise, Hyuga, Fuso, and Yamashiro would be the far-cover for this operation, and an assortment of cruisers and destroyers would be protecting both forces. Admiral Kondo Nobutake would be leading the Second Fleet, including battleships Kongo and Haruna, and the light carrier Zuiho. His task would be to protect the Invasion Force under Rear-Admiral Tanaka Raizo. As with the other forces, a major force of destroyers and cruisers would be available for screening. But the true jewel of the fleet was the fear-imposing First Air Fleet. Under Vice-Admiral Nagumo Chuichi, this force had been the strike group at Pearl Harbor and since then covered every major Japanese operation. For this mission, all six of the heavy carriers would be available according to the plan. Two battleships and two heavy cruisers plus a destroyer squadron would be forming the protective circle around the vulnerable flattops.

This immense assembly of naval units would be deploying in the complex choreography of a typical Japanese plan. First, Hosogaya would strike the US Naval facilities at Dutch Harbor, in the Aleutian Islands, on 3 June, in order to lure the U.S. carriers north to defend Alaska. This would be followed by an air strike from Nagumo's carriers against Midway, which would annihilate the American defences there. Then, Nagumo would take station in the area awaiting U.S. naval forces. Following these carrier strikes, the IJN's various seaplane tender and transport groups would occupy Attu and Kiska in the Aleutians, Kure Island 60nm north of Midway, and Midway itself.

Then, with the Main Body, and Kondo's support forces available for battle, the Japanese would sink the U.S. Navy if it appeared. Before all this, Yamamoto hoped to reduce the U.S. forces with a tight submarine cordon, to deploy by 1 June northwest of the Hawaiian Islands. This cordon would, as pre-war Japanese naval doctrine had predicted, sink as many U.S. ships as possible, thinning out their ranks before their final engagement with the Main Body. This plan was the one presented to the Naval General Staff, and this was the plan Admiral Nagano, Chief of the Naval General Staff, accepted and ordered on 5 May.

However, by this time important changes had taken effect. Since the Army was by no means convinced of the decisive nature of the future battle at Midway, it had pursued its own plans. Operation MO, the capture of Tulagi Island and Port Moresby, had been started under the cover of carriers Shokaku and Zuikaku. This was an important splitting of Admiral Nagumo's carrier force, for it risked the availability of a third of the First Air Fleet.

Admiral Yamamoto had allowed these carriers to participate in MO, for he had not expected troubles, believing the Americans to be morally beaten and incapable of mounting an operationoutside his, Yamamoto's, choosing. He was wrong; both Shokaku and Zuikaku, and the light carrier Shoho, were put out of action at the Battle of the Coral Sea, 8 May 1942, by a U.S. force prepositioned thanks to the most important American equalizer of the war - U.S. Intelligence.

U.S. Intelligence Commander Joseph P. Rochefort was the commander of this equalizer, the Combat Intelligence Office (OP 20 02), or "Hypo" as it was commonly called. Leading a team of highly trained professionals in mathematics, communications and cryptology, Rochefort, sometime after Pearl Harbor, had his mission changed from trying to decipher the little-used Admiral's Code and started work on the cracked JN-25, hoping to improve on the 10% of broken messages that other Navy codebreakers achieved.

"Hypo" soon became the most important producer of decoded material, and Rochefort was a very talented man when it came to examining the value of the intercepted information. His "Hypo" had had little chance to distinguish itself during February and March, when U.S. carriers hit the exposed island positions during the first carrier raids, but by late April, his codebreakers caught bigger fish. Radio messages were intercepted and deciphered indicating Japanese naval operations of large size to begin in the Coral Sea. Admiral Nimitz based his deployments on the information collected by Rochefort and brought the Japanese to battle in the Coral Sea. "Hypo" had had its first important hit.

But seldom do problems come alone. Even while the Japanese and American forces were battling for the Coral Sea, Rochefort's men, noticing a substantial increase in Japanese radio traffic, found that a new operation was being planned, an operation combining all fleet units Japan could muster.

Rochefort's oft-cited problem was that he had no clues to the target of the operation. His ability to put together the big picture helped convince him that the target, codenamed "AF", must be Midway. However, he had yet to convince his superiors at Navy Communications in Washington, D.C., namely Commander John Redman. For the latter was convinced that if any target in the Pacific warranted this fleet, it was Hawaii. Rochefort chose a trick. Utilizing the underwater telephone connection with Midway, he asked that Midway transmit, via uncoded radio traffic, a message saying that the desalination plant was out of order -- which would be a serious matter on a lonely Pacific isle full of men but lacking substantial natural fresh water supplies.

The Japanese swallowed the bait, and when Rochefort's men decoded another message shortly thereafter, they were pleased to read that "AF has problems with its de-salting plant". What Rochefort was finally able to provide Nimitz with was jaw-dropping. First, he knew that the main objective was Midway, negating Admiral Yamamoto's deception at Dutch Harbor. Second, he knew of the submarine cordon, allowing him to deploy his forces prior to its installment, negating another effect of Yamamoto's plan. And third, he could mass all ships, planes, and defensive measures on and around Midway, for he need not fear any other operations. By the time of these revelations, Nimitz had more information than he could possibly use. Enterprise, Hornet, and Yorktown, since the sinking of Lexington Nimitz's only carriers, were all out on sea until mid-May. Enterprise and Hornet arrived earlier than Yorktown, which was still licking her wounds from the Coral Sea, on 26 May, and brought bad news. Vice-Admiral William F. "Bull" Halsey, the inspiring, fearless Commander Aircraft Carriers, Pacific Fleet, was ill with a skin infection and it could not be helped. Halsey was brought into hospital, where Admiral Nimitz questioned him regarding his replacement. Without hesitating, Halsey selected Rear-Admiral Raymond A. Spruance, commander of the cruisers in Halsey's screen, to lead the carriers into the most fateful battle of U.S. naval history. Nimitz accepted, unknowingly turning the bad sign of Halsey's illness into a fortune for the United States. Two days later, Admiral Fletcher, aboard the damaged Yorktown, arrived at Pearl Harbor. Being informed quickly about the situation, Fletcher remarked that he estimated Yorktown would be out of action for at least three weeks. But Nimitz could not wait that long. He ordered that every effort be made to put the carrier out again on 30 May, in time to avoid the submarine cordon. With 1,300 men working on her, Yorktown was in for a record repair. In the meantime, what could be done, had been done. Nimitz had ordered Rear-Admiral Robert English, COMSUBPAC, to deploy a submarine cordon of his own west of Midway, and another one north of Hawaii to support a retreating fleet in case of a defeat at Midway. Furthermore, he had transferred almost all available planes to Midway, and was still re-routing new arrivals to the tiny, soon-overcrowded atoll. Finally, on 28 May, Admiral Spruance, in Enterprise, departed with his two carriers.

And yet another of Yamamoto's special plans was discovered and prevented. To assure that no enemy carriers would be around Midway, Yamamoto's staff planned a reconnaissance flight of Emily flying boats to Pearl Harbor from Wotje in the Marshall Islands. They would refuel from a modified Japanese submarine at French Frigate Shoals, an atoll more reefs than land. The same kind of mission, albeit ending in an interfering bombardment, had been conducted once already, and the first of these reconnaissance missions had been conducted as well. But U.S. planes had tracked the Japanese reconnaisance unit, and some quick thinking revealed that French Frigate Shoals were the only possible place to refuel a flying boat. When the submarine that was to fuel the Emily that had been ordered to check Pearl Harbor on 1 June arrived at the Shoals, it was disturbed to find them already occupied by a U.S. seaplane tender group. The mission was abandoned. It would have been important enough -- for the day before, Yorktown, and thus the last of the three battle-ready groups, sortied. Though still not 100% ready, Yorktown would be an invaluable addition to the American forces.

On 1 June, Saratoga hurried out of San Diego, hoping to arrive at Midway in time to participate in the battle, but she would not make it. The day before, Captain Marc Mitscher of Hornet had been promoted to Rear-Admiral. On 2 June, Spruance and Fletcher, the latter in overall command, met for the first and last time during the battle at "Point Luck".

The Battle of Midway: 3 June 1942 The Aleutians were definitely not a great place for flight operations, and Admiral Kakuta Kakuji was to find that out on 3 June. His orders from Yamamoto were to strike Dutch Harbor, a small harbor installation on northern side of Unalaska Island, about halfway down the long, curving, rocky, west-pointing Aleutian chain. To achieve that goal, Kakuta had command over the light carrier Ryujo, his flagship, and the heavier, converted carrier Junyo, and 82 planes. Bad weather hampered his operations since contact with his force had to be maintained yet could not be maintained - Ryujo, his flagship, seemed alone until well after 0233, his prepared launching time. Only when Junyo, his second carrier, came in sight ten minutes later could Kakuta launch the battle's first air strike against a strategically and tactically minor target. His planes attacked Dutch Harbor under clear skies and damaged it severely, but to what effect?

There were no U.S. heavy units in Dutch Harbor and, though the base was well maintained and well equipped, and its damage severe, the entire point of the operation was lost thanks to U.S. Intelligence. Worse effects were, however, still to come. A Zero, damaged during the raid, crashed on a small island not far from Dutch Harbor, killing the pilot. A Japanese submarine could not locate the slightly damaged plane, but American ground forces, led by men of the redoubtable Alaskan Scouts -- an Army-sponsored militia force, all of them natives -- did, revealing for the first time the negative points of the Zero which eventually resulted in its defeat.

Several hundred kilometers to the south, fifteen minutes after the Japanese attackers of Dutch Harbor had taken off, the pilots of the search planes flying from Midway atoll were awakened and got their breakfast, and finally took off in search of the enemy fleet. Shortly after 9 o'clock, Ensign Jack Reid of VP-44, flying PBY Catalina flying boats, sighted Rear-Admiral Tanaka Raizo's Invasion Force. He radioed the sighting report to Midway, without noting anything but speed and course. After specifying ship types and numbers on orders from Midway, giving the base a better picture of the approaching foe, he began shadowing it for a while. His report enabled a flightof B-17 bombers from Midway to hit the transport force shortly after half past four in the afternoon. Without scoring damage, the bombers returned to Midway, and left the scene for a daring attack by PBYs. Four of the slow, workhorse amphibians took off from the atoll late in the evening, searching out the enemy transport force. Finding it an hour after midnight on 4 June, they attacked with torpedoes and secured a hit on the oiler Akebono Maru, damaging her slightly, but failing to sink or stop her. The U.S. carriers had been steaming around north of Midway, waiting for the enemy to appear, and listening to the action and sighting reports. Fletcher brought Yorktown closer to Midway in preparation for air operations. Action was imminent.

4 June 1942 Aboard the magnificent units of the First Air Fleet, preparations for the air attacks that morning against Midway began at 0245 when pilots and aircrews aboard the flagship, Akagi, were awakened, just fifteen minutes before the same happened on Midway. By 0430, the first aircraft started lifting off for their first air strike of the day, 108 planes from all four carriers this time. Half an hour earlier, PBYs and F4F Wildcat fighters from Midway had already taken off, patrolling the area and the island.

Scouts were launched from the Japanese carriers prior to the attack, but too few: one Kate each from Akagi and Kaga, supplemented only by two catapult planes from Tone and two from Chikuma, and a smaller scout from Haruna. Besides the mere understrength of this force, Tone's No.4 catapult plane would not launch in time due to a malfunction, and Admiral Nagumo did not send out a replacement as he could easily have done.

The strike, meanwhile, closed on Midway, and appeared shortly before 0600 on the scopes of the Midway-based radar. Midway's base commander immediately launched all available planes, including the twenty-seven fighters led by Marine Major Floyd B. "Red" Parks, which would jump the enemy bombers on their run in. Furthermore, six TBF Avenger torpedo-bombers, four Army B-26 Marauder medium bombers, eleven Marine Vindicator dive bombers and sixteen SBD Dauntlesses, and a total of nineteen B-17 bombers, augmented the rest of the 32 available Catalinas.

Major Park's pilots had a very bad day. Their planes were throughly inadequate in both numbers and quality, engaged the enemy too early, and failed to get into the bombers quickly, owing to the escorting Zero fighters. Of those intercepting fighters, fifteen were shot down, and they were unable to protect Midway from air attack, which task was now left to the air defence units. Total Japanese losses over Midway and before were around fifteen planes shot down and thirty-two damaged. In exchange, the Japanese, without any planes on the ground to strafe or bomb, hit the facilities on Sand and Easter Islands , and left both islands on fire, having destroyed fuel tanks, the hospital, storehouses, and seaplane facilities.

Even before the Japanese planes attacked Midway, however, Nagumo's carriers lost their most important defence when they were spotted by Lt. Howard Ady, piloting a PBY. Ady immediately broadcast the sighting report, which was intercepted at 0553 by Enterprise, Yorktown, and Hypo back at Pearl Harbor. Given another reason for immediate scramble, Midway's planes took off with orders to attack the enemy carriers. The U.S. flattops waited on, but Nagumo's carriers would see their very first action.

Lt. Langdon K. Fieberling led the six Avengers of VT-8, re-routed to Midway when they had been unable to catch up with their mothership, Hornet, and four B-26 Marauder bombers, into the fray of AA and fighters as the first U.S. attack group. Above them, old Vindicator dive bombers, SDB Dauntlesses, and B-17 level bombers approached for their attacks.

Fieberling's planes attacked first at 0700, but there was no way around the Zero fighters, much less one through them. Four Avengers fell even before they were able to release their torpedoes. The other planes continued, but three more fell to AA, and the rest, an Avenger and two Marauders, scoring no hits and damaged, retired to Midway.

Nagumo, watching the attack from his flagship's bridge, was not too impressed with theability of these pilots, but he felt that they might indeed prove what Lt. Tomonaga Joichi of the Midway strike force had stated: a second attack would be necessary.

In the meantime, unknown to Nagumo, his fate was being sealed. Admiral Spruance, his flagship Enterprise having intercepted the report from Ady, had been steaming toward the enemy to reduce the range. However, when the Japanese planes left the air space over Midway at around 7 o'clock, quick calculations made it clear that if the U.S. carriers launched immediately, they would probably hit the Japanese carriers with planes loaded on the deck, a most vulnerable condition. Accordingly, both carriers launched their planes between 0700 and 0755, full deckloads of bombers with a fighter escort. Twenty minutes past seven, Spruance ordered the new Rear-Admiral Mitscher to take Hornet and an escort and maneuver independently.

Nagumo's ships underwent more attacks in rapid succession -- first Major Loften Henderson's Marine Dauntlesses, then B-17s from the Army, and finally the Vindicators. None scored a single hit, but the more of these planes that attacked, the more convinced was Nagumo that a second strike was indeed needed against Midway. Already at 0715, Nagumo had ordered to arm his ready planes with bombs instead of torpedoes. But by 0730, Tone's No. 4 scout had radioed Nagumo that there were "ten enemy surface ships" in the vicinity. Though worried about the unplanned presence of this force, Nagumo regarded the Midway forces as the main threat and continued the re-arming.

Nagumo was greatly hampered by the incapable aircrew of Tone No.4, which took an hour to find out what it had really sighted: the Yorktown group. Only by 0820 did the plane inform Nagumo that the force included "what appears to be a carrier." Nagumo now had to worry, but didn't for too long, and soon ordered armament changed back to torpedoes. Only half of the Japanese planes were affected, for only half of them had been loaded with bombs after the first of Nagumo's re-arm orders had been given. Due to the time pressure, however, bombs were not being properly stored. The Japanese carriers slowly became floating, unprotected arsenals.

By 0830, the final Midway-based attack against Nagumo's forces had been made, and a mere nine minutes later, Lt. Tomonaga's Midway group arrived overhead and commenced landing. Though interrupted once by a false report of U.S. torpedo planes, Nagumo successfully landed Tomonaga's group, and turned his forces toward the enemy by 0917. Only a minute later, however, Nagumo saw himself faced once again with enemy torpedo planes, for which the Japanese, given their own excellence in torpedo bombing, entertained a healthy respect.

It was VT-8 from Hornet, under the command of Lt.Cmdr. John C. Waldron. His planes were old, slow and sluggish TBD Devastators, once the finest plane in the fleet but, after only seven years' service, it had become an obsolescent deathtrap. Nevertheless, Waldron had trained his pilots to the last -- and, before the battle, suggested to them that they should write a letter to their families.

Now, this brave but hopelessly outnumbered force approached Admiral Nagumo's carriers. Zeros were soon between them, and not one Devastator survived the massacre, as they approached in the "low and slow" manner necessary for them to conduct a successful attack, an approach forced upon the men by their torpedo load, the Mk13. Only one of the pilots, Ensign George Gay, survived, and was picked up alive by a PBY the next day.

Supported by his lifevest, from his ringside "seat", Gay was able to watch another torpedo squadron, Lt.Cmdr. Eugene Lindsey's VT-6 from Enterprise, make its run in. His fourteen planes were flown by highly experienced pilots - Hornet's pilots had been trained but never seen combat, while VT-6 was a veteran of the early Fast Carrier raids. Now, Lindsey's force came in right toward the enemy carriers, and they soon selected the Kaga as their prospective prey. The big flattop fought them off pretty well, assisted by the Zeros of the combat air patrol, and was unhit in the end. This time, ten Devastators had fallen into the sea, including Lindsey's. The engagement was not over for a minute when Akagi spotted another torpedo squadron coming in, this time VT-3 from Yorktown, under the command of Lt. Cmdr. Lance Massey, the only squadron that had a fighter cover with it, Lt.Cmdr. Jimmy Thatch's six F4F-4 Wildcats, and was as combat ready as humanly possible. Neither was enough to protect these last brave torpedo-bomber pilots of the battle. Soryu's Zeros ignored Thatch, pretty much caught up in a dogfight with other Zeros, and headed for the Devastators, and soon, more of the Zeros came in after Massey. Massey's fliers concentrated on Hiryu, but missed — only two planes returned to the U.S. fleet.

But their sacrifices had not been in vain. High above, and several minutes before, Lt. Cmdr. Clarence Wade McCluskey, air group commander of USS Enterprise, was leading the 32 SBD Dauntless dive bombers that the carrier had brought into action, sixteen each from Scouting-6 (VS-6) and Bombing-6 (VB-6). The latter carried 1,000-pound bombs; the former, having had to start from less deckspace, lugged 500-pound bombs into the action. McCluskey had reached the position were he was supposed to find the Japanese fleet, but it was not there. On his own, the airman had decided to head north-west, assuming the Japanese would not continue their course toward Midway, and seven minutes later, at 0955, had sighted the thin white trail of the destroyer Arashii, which had been planting depth charges into the water to prosecute the U.S. submarine Nautilus, which had been in the Japanese formation for some time without being able to score a torpedo hit. Now, Arashii followed her fleet at high speed. McCluskey decided to follow her, and soon, the First Air Fleet came into sight. McCluskey had before him a mess of ships. The evasive maneuvers of the flattops had thrown them into disorder, and substantially reduced their mutual support -- which had been thin enough from the onset.

Quickly assessing the situation, McCluskey divided his force into the two elements, ordering Lt. Richard Best of VB-6 to strike the right-hand carrier, Akagi, while he himself led Lt. Earl Gallaher's VS-6 down on Kaga. The Japanese were rather unimpressed. They had seen these numbers of dive bombers before and had not been hit. Their own reliance on torpedo bombers gave them the feeling that dive bombers were no tool to sink major warships.

It was a fatal error of judgement. American airmen had been among the earliest promoters of dive bombing as a tactic, and as aircraft began to be radically improved in the 1930s, though the Army Air Corps did not emphasise it, the Navy had taken it up as a distinct policy. For years, dive bomber pilots of the "brownshoe Navy" — so-named because their early flying uniforms were derived from the Marine green service dress, which required brown shoes — had taken particular pride in being able to hit their targets, and partook of fierce inter-squadron and inter-ship competitions, for the most valuable prize of all — bragging rights. And before them now was something to really later brag about. Meantime, the Japanese carriers were not warships at this moment; they were floating arsenals. Bombs were lying around, and armed and fueled planes were in place for Nagumo's strike against the enemy fleet. McCluskey's attack on Kaga was perfectly executed. While his own bomb missed, Lt. Gallaher planted his bomb amidst the parked planes on the after section of the flight deck, setting that entire area on fire. Moments later, another bomb penetrated the forward elevator, exploded among the planes fueled and armed on the hangar deck, and shattered the bridge windows, opening them for bomb number three, which exploded a fuel truck in front of bridge.

The succeeding explosion killed the captain and bridge officers, leaving the ship helmless for quite some time. The last bomb hit exploded in the hangar, adding tothe carnage. The fires were soon out of control, and by 1700, abandon ship was sounded.

Akagi was not hit by as many bombs, but the results were equally terrifying. The first bomb struck the carrier on the midship elevator, exploding improperly stored ammunition, dooming the ship. The second and last bomb struck the planes being rearmed, detonating whatever ammunition was on them. The aft magazines could not be flooded, and even CO2 could not extinguish the hangar deck fires. The engines died at 1040, and Admiral Nagumo left his blazing command at 1046. Abandon ship was sounded at 1900, although few personnel remained after earlier transfers, and Captain Aoki was removed from the carrier as, presumably, the last living individual at 0300 on 5 June.

Soryu's story was different only so far as her hunters were from a different carrier. Lt. Cmdr. Maxwell Leslie of Yorktown, leading VB-3, was somewhat ill-fated during the approach. His SBDs were equipped with what a computer user would call a "buggy" electronic arming mechanism, resulting in the loss of his bomb and that of three of his compatriots. With only thirteen bombs, the flight continued, but it was not to be the bad omen it could have been. Leslie's gunner sighted the Carrier Force at 1005, and Leslie quickly chose a large carrier he identified as Kaga as his unit's target. It was actually the smaller Soryu but a nice prize nevertheless. Leslie dove down on the carrier ahead of his squadron at around 1025, raking the AA emplacements and the flight-deck with his forward-mounted .50 caliber guns -- his only means of attack until they jammed. Soryu was struck by three bombs, neatly placed from fore toaft, exploding near all elevators, destroying all planes and ammunition stored on and beside the planes, and was out of the action by 1040, ten minutes after the last Yorktown planes had pulled up. Five minutes later, abandon ship was sounded, and Captain Yanagimo to committed suicide by plunging into the raging fires. Attempts to keep her afloat were made, but shortly after 1920, she finally slid into her watery grave.

However, victory was not complete. Rear-Admiral Yamaguchi Tamon, COMCARDIV2, had seen his command reduced to half with the hits on Soryu, and was determined to pay it back to the U.S. His ship, Hiryu, was completely intact except for the losses her air group had taken in the attack on Midway. Hiryu had become separated from the rest of the fleet during the torpedo attacks, and anyway, no planes would have been available to hit her. Now, Hiryu and her fighting admiral assumed virtual command over the rest of the force.

Actually, Rear-Admiral Abe Hiroaki, commander of Nagumo's screen, was the senior officer present, and he issued, at 1050, Yamaguchi his orders: attack the enemy carrier -- Immediately! Lt. Kobayashi Michio took off at the head of eighteen dive bombers and six fighters, trailing the Yorktown group, and at 1140, Japanese fliers sighted TF17, while Yorktown's radar located the incoming strike. Yorktown's condition was completely different from the Japanese carriers. No ammo was lying around, no fueled planes aboard her, besides the immediately scrambling fighters -- even her aviation fuel lines were secured by the use of CO2 in them. Fighters jumped the enemy planes fifteen miles out, and eight Vals, as the Allies called the Aichi D3A dive bomber, fell, along with two more to the thick flak fire. But eight penetrated, including Kobayashi's plane, scoring an impressive three hits. Although no immediate danger to the carrier resulted, her speed was temporarily reduced to a mere six knots. Once again, Yorktown's crack damage control parties saved their ship, soon bringing her up to 20 knots. Fighters were landed, and a new combat air patrol launched. But Yorktown, as the only target for Yamaguchi's bombers, was not spared a second attack. This time it was a flight of ten Kate torpedo planes, which, due to space and time restrictions, had not been able to take part in the first attack. Captain Elliott Buckmaster, a good positive score on his side in the Coral Sea battle, where he had successfully evaded all torpedoes, was now faced with a grim situation he could not master.

Two torpedoes (six torpedo-planes had been lost on the approach despite a six plane escort) struck Yorktown, and her increasing list, seemingly unstoppable, left Buckmaster with no choice but to abandon his ship. At 1500, he ordered the crew to do just that. Yorktown would be left on her own.

Yamaguchi on Hiryu would not be able to entertain himself with his success. At 1450, a U.S. scout had found him, and ten minutes later, Lt. Gallaher from Enterprise set off to bag his second carrier of the day. Thirteen dive-bombers struck the carrier as her pilots were eating, while eleven more attacked battleships in the screen -- a foolish maneuver, to split one's bombers and go after such minor targets as a battleship in the presence of a carrier, but fortunately not resulting in disaster, for four bombs of Gallaher's group struck in rapid succession, completely destroying the flight deck, and setting the hangar deck aflame. But no bomb penetrated deeply - Hiryu still made 30 knots after the attack. She was immediately surrounded by ships lending hoses and spraying the ship, whose firefighting equipment had been destroyed. But the fires were not containable. They spread below, and exterminated the brave engine crews, stopping the ship. The crew abandoned the ship starting 0315 on June 5th, but not so Admiral Yamaguchi and Captain Kaku, who both committed suicide on their ship.

5-6 June 1942 The coming of the evening of 4 June saw five carriers bobbing, four burning, and all abandoned. But while the Japanese carriers were clearly unsalvageable, Yorktown was not. Fletcher, now aboard the heavy cruiser Astoria, had set off to join Spruance, but the destroyer Hughes remained near the carrier and reported that chances were she could be saved. Fletcher ordered the tug Vireo from French Frigate Shoals to tow her to Pearl, later joined by destroyer Gwin, and sent three more destroyers from the screen around Enterprise to get a salvage party aboard the ship. Captain Buckmaster was with these men as they boarded Yorktown, and slowly, the carrier was towed toward Pearl Harbor. She was not to make it.

Admiral Yamamoto had ordered the submarine I-168 to go after the carrier, and it did, sinking it under of the protection of four destroyers as well as the destroyer Hammann alongside her. The 5th of June was the day of the submarine, indeed. Admiral Yamamoto, in a rather foolish attempt to gain at least something, ordered Admiral Kondo to bombard Midway. Admiral Kondo in turn gave the same order to Admiral Kurita Takeo, commanding the youngest and fastest cruiser division in the IJN. These ships, however, had not yet reached Midway when, at 0020, Yamamoto's order to turn back was received, and as they complied, they maneuvered themselves into more trouble. The U.S. submarine Tambor had sighted them earlier, and shortly after 0100, a submarine was sighted by Kurita's Kumano, which Kurita tried to evade by an emergency simultaneous turn by 45 degrees of all his cruisers. But while executing this maneuver, Mogami and Mikuma, two of his heavy cruisers, collided.

At daybreak, the two cruisers were protected by two destroyers, slowly making way out of Midway's range. But they were too slow, and Kurita's order to have Mikuma stand by her sister now endangered both vessels. Midway SBDs and Vindicators began their attacks at 0745, scoring no hits, but probably a plane crashed on Mikuma. B-17s followed, scoring nothing, but the heavy cruisers were slowed down. By the next day, planes from Enterprise and Hornet found the enemy and struck repeatedly, sinking Mikuma and knocking Mogami out of the war for a year.

Over 5 and 6 June, Yamamoto had pondered about committing his remaining forces to a night surface action but had dropped this idea for fear of the risk he would be running. Rightly so: Admiral Spruance, whom Fletcher had given command after the loss of Yorktown, headed east in the night, knowing that a night surface battle -- any surface battle -- was not recommended.

Yamamoto's fleet retired. Attu and Kiska had been taken, but at what cost! Four heavy carriers, one heavy cruiser, one hundred pilots, 3,400 sailors, three experienced carrier skippers and a carrier admiral, plus the secrets of the Zero fighter. In exchange, the IJN had sunk a carrier and a destroyer, and destroyed around 150 planes. It was nothing short of a disaster into which Yamamoto had led his fleet, and he was only right in claiming responsibility for this operation and its losses. Both fleets returned to their ports to think about their lessons at Midway. History's greatest naval battle was over. The United States had won.

Epilogue The Battle of Midway was the most decisive single naval battle in U.S. history. The battle left two heavy Japanese carriers against four U.S. carriers, and cost the Japanese veteran pilots whose inexperienced replacements would require a full year of training. Furthermore, the Imperial Japanese Navy lost the secret of its Zero fighter, leading to certain improvements of the F6F Hellcat, which would, just a year later, begin to destroy Japanese air supremacy.

The Battle of Midway enabled the U.S. Navy to go onto the offensive. Herein lay the importance of the battle. For this is where I think people are wrong when they say that the loss of the battle would not have been a too important event. If the U.S. had indeed lost all three carriers at Midway there would have been merely three carriers remaining to oppose any Japanese move -- none of which was a really good ship. Saratoga was old and slow in maneuvering, Wasp small and with a small complement of planes, and Ranger slow and small as well as ill-protected. None of these carriers could hope to last in a battle with the Japanese carrier fleet which would allow the Japanese to prosecute several goals: construction of airfields on Guadalcanal; invasion of Port Moresby; invasion of New Caledonia; and more. The Battle of Midway reversed this. The Japanese could never again operate offensively, while the Americans could now do so at places of their own choosing.


TOPICS: Front Page News; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: midway; militaryhistory; wwii

1 posted on 06/04/2004 8:01:38 AM PDT by Valin
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To: SAMWolf

Ping


2 posted on 06/04/2004 8:03:08 AM PDT by Valin (Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
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To: Valin
If Midway were to occur today, the headlines in the New York Slimes would be:

Arrogant US Navy attacks Unsuspecting Japanese Fleet. US Loses Yorktown

In a minor engagement in the Pacific near the Island of Midway, arrogant US Navy admirals attacked an unsuspecting Japanese fleet, which was sailing along and not bothering anyone. In the engagement, the US fleet unlawfully, in violation of international law, sunk several Japanese carriers and supporting vessels, causing the deaths of several thousand sailors and pilots.

US Senators Fat Teddy Kennedy, Flip Kerry, Dashole, Leavy, and several socialist-democrat congressmen and women have demanded an investigation into this unprovoked attack on the Japanese fleet, demanding the resignation of the Secretary of War, I mean Defense, and placing all blame for the loss of life on President Bush.

In conversations with potential socialist-democratic presidential candidate, Flip Kerry stated, "I was for the attack on the Japanese fleet before I was against it, however, right now, I just can't seem to remember why we would attacked the poor Japanese navy in this matter. I can only guess that the arrogant president and his arrogant Navy personnel still hold a grudge against the Japanese navy for attacking Pearl Harbor on December 7th. But, again, that is only a guess on my part."

Senator Kennedy, after nearly exploding his fat face, yell loudly to everyone, "Drinks are on me at Hooters down on the Mall." All reporters joined the Senator at Hooters for a night of drinking and dancing (with each other).

3 posted on 06/04/2004 8:14:30 AM PDT by RetiredArmy ( I am a Vietnam Vet, thus I am a war criminal according to Flip Kerry.)
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To: RetiredArmy

I can only guess that the arrogant president and his arrogant Navy personnel still hold a grudge against the Japanese navy for attacking Pearl Harbor on December 7th. But, again, that is only a guess on my part."


Time to Move-On.


4 posted on 06/04/2004 8:17:06 AM PDT by Valin (Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
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To: Valin; 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub; tomkow6; HiJinx; Atlantic Friend; Arrowhead1952; ...

What a magnificent story PING!

All hands, stand by for inspirational reading!


5 posted on 06/04/2004 8:19:43 AM PDT by Old Sarge
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Comment #6 Removed by Moderator

To: MinnesotaSmith

(to say nothing of code-breaking/sigint)


The Battle of Midway
http://www.worldwar2history.info/Midway/Battle-of-Midway.html

Joseph J. Rochefort
Converted for the Web from "Battle Of Wits: The Complete Story Of Codebreaking In World War II" by Stephen Budiansky

Denouement: Intelligence Vindicated
Four thousand miles to the east, Midway had become an obsession to another man during that winter and spring of 1942, a man as anonymous as Yamamoto was famous. Commander Joseph J. Rochefort came by his anonymity as much by the nature of his personality as by the necessity of his vocation. Above his desk hung a notice that read: "We can accomplish anything provided no one cares who gets the credit." He would later have reason to question the wisdom of that principle. But putting in twenty-hour shifts in a windowless basement was not a calling that appealed to the glory seekers in the United States Navy anyway. "The Dungeon," they called their cheerless command post in the basement of the administration building at Fourteenth Naval District Headquarters at Pearl Harbor; its more formal name was Station Hypo.

Rochefort had enlisted in the Navy in 1918 with vague dreams of becoming a naval aviator. Nothing but the oddest of chances determined that 1942 would find him in charge of breaking JN-25, the Japanese Fleet General Purpose Code -- the code that carried the operational orders of the Combined Fleet, the code that would, in short, tell where Japan was going to strike next.

Rochefort was driven but unflamboyant, a conventional career sailor who had pursued a conventional career path: sea duty, engineering school, ensign's commission, more sea duty. Rising from the enlisted ranks, he was an outsider to the elite fraternity of officers who had graduated from the Naval Academy. The coincidence that deflected him out of the ordinary course of duty occurred while he was serving aboard the battleship Arizona in 1925. The ship's executive officer, Commander Chester C. Jersey, liked crossword puzzles. Rochefort did too. Jersey remembered that fact when he was posted to Navy Department headquarters in Washington later that year. The Navy needed someone to work on codes, and Jersey recommended Rochefort. The informality of it all would seem fantastic by the standards of the huge and bureaucratic postwar Navy. But in 1925, the Navy's cryptanalytic staff consisted of a grand total of one person, and administrative matters throughout the service were frequently settled through personal contact and word of mouth.

Lieutenant Laurance F. Safford, the Navy's one-man code breaking bureau, had not set out to be a cryptanalyst, either. In 1924 he was assigned the task of developing new codes for the Navy. No one in the Navy was paying much attention to foreign countries' codes at the time, and they certainly weren't trying to break them. But Safford figured that to make a good code he ought to first see what other navies were doing. And so the "research desk" was born in Room 1621 of the old Navy Department Building on the Mall in Washington.

When Rochefort showed up for duty in October 1925, Safford put him through a six-month course in cryptanalysis that basically consisted of tossing him cryptograms to try to solve. When Safford was called to sea duty in February 1926, the "course" ended, and Rochefort, more or less by default, found himself officer in charge of the research desk. Under him was one cryptanalyst and one assistant with "no particular abilities." That was it.

Rochefort's first dose of cryptanalysis left him decidedly disinclined for another. It was not that there was any particular pressure on him to produce results. No one in the Navy had much of an idea what he was up to anyway, and no one would have understood it if he had. But the work had a way of generating its own compulsive pressures. Rochefort would come home every evening at five or six o'clock with his stomach in knots from the tension of the problem he was tackling. It would be eight or nine at night before he could manage to force down his supper. He developed an ulcer and greeted his recall to sea duty in 1927 with unfeigned relief.

But in those two years Rochefort scored America's first victory in a long shadow war with the Japanese Navy. Left over from 1918 was most of a $100,000 secret naval intelligence slush fund. To conceal it from Congress, the money was deposited in a Washington bank in a personal account belonging to the Director of Naval Intelligence. Whenever a new DNI took over, his predecessor just handed the money over to him along with the keys to the office. The money had begun to burn a hole in the pockets of successive DNIs, and in the early 1920s the incumbent decided to get rid of some of it by financing a series of break-ins at the Japanese consulate in New York City. The Japanese Navy's "Red" code book was secretly photographed and, over the course of several years, laboriously translated by linguists hired with more of the DNI's secret funds. (Just how hard it was to use up $100,000 was shown in 1931, when an acting DNI, in a fit of conscience for which his successors never forgave him, returned the money to the Treasury. The balance was $65,000.)

A complete code book was a windfall, but there was still one crucial piece missing. Like almost all of the Japanese Navy codes that Rochefort and his colleagues would encounter over the course of their long battle of wits with their Japanese counterparts, Red was an enciphered code. Every word or syllable likely to be used in a message was assigned a numerical value -- that was the "code" part. But such a simple one-for-one substitution would not hold up a team of Boy Scouts, much less a determined military foe, for very long. So before the Japanese Navy sent any coded message over the airwaves, it was given a second disguise. The code clerk opened a second book, which contained page after page of random numbers; starting at the top of a page, he added the first of these random "additives" to the first code group of his message, the second to the second, and so on. An indicator buried in the message would tell what page in the additive book he had used for this "encipherment" of the basic code, so that the recipient could turn to that same page and strip off the additive before looking up the meaning of each code group.

Thanks to the DNI's black-bag jobs, Rochefort had the code book. What he did not have was the additive book. To make matters worse, the Japanese changed the additive book frequently. With nothing to go on but the raw traffic that the Japanese Navy put out over the airwaves, Rochefort's job was to reproduce an additive book that he had never seen.

Breaking a code when one has the underlying code book but no additive book is like finding a way across a strange country without a map or a compass. Breaking a code when one has neither code book nor additive book is like finding a way across a strange country with both eyes closed. Doing the former was what had given Rochefort his ulcer in 1926. His task in 1942 was to do the latter.
(snip)


7 posted on 06/04/2004 8:57:15 AM PDT by Valin (Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
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To: Valin
What an awesome naval battle. Worth every minute it takes to read.

I will watch Hestons Midway again soon. Anyone else know of any good movies about the Naval battle at Midway?

8 posted on 06/04/2004 9:21:18 AM PDT by No Blue States
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To: MinnesotaSmith

I think that there is something to what you say. The IJN was constantly splitting its forces in an effort to deceive or to unbalance the USN. Take the Battle of Leyte Gulf for example: now that plan nearly worked, except that the commander of the southern strike group lost his nerve at the last moment when he literally had the US invasion beaches under his guns. A proper reading of his orders from Adm. Toyoda would have revealed to him that his battleship/cruiser force was expendable, and so he should have pressed the attack regardless the cost.


9 posted on 06/04/2004 9:38:36 AM PDT by Tallguy (Surviving in PA....thats the "other PA"...Pennsylvania.)
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To: Valin; snippy_about_it; GATOR NAVY

June 4th. 1942, 10 a.m. Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bombers are about to deliver their attack on the Japanese fleet at Midway. This famous engagement would prove to be the turning point in the war in the Pacific


10 posted on 06/04/2004 12:21:21 PM PDT by SAMWolf (I intend to live for ever, or die in the attempt.)
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To: SAMWolf
Thanks for the ping

Kaga

Akagi

Mikuma

11 posted on 06/04/2004 4:37:13 PM PDT by GATOR NAVY
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To: GATOR NAVY

No I'm not a navy guy but it appears to me that the Mikuma
is need of some...repairs, a paint job at the least. I've always understood that if you have smoke coming from anywhere but the smokestack it's a bad thing.


12 posted on 06/04/2004 8:14:37 PM PDT by Valin (Hating people is like burning down your house to kill a rat)
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To: MinnesotaSmith
Interesting note on the Battle of Midway, from the excellent book "Carnage and Culture" on the cultural bases for how Westerners are so good at waging war... The Japanese had those two carriers out of action for relatively minor reasons that could have been part of the Midway operation, but were not. One had some moderate damage being repaired (much less than Yorktown faced), while the other was in Japan picking up a few more aircraft. The Yorktown actually had many civilian workmen continuing repairs for several days out to sea, only being sent back considerably after land was out of sight.
Part of it was panic/rage brought on by the Doolittle Raid, actually.

The Battle of Midway, one of the most important victories in our history, is sadly undercommemorated. In the UK, Germany, or Russia, June 6 would be a holiday representing both Midway and D-Day.

-Eric

13 posted on 06/05/2004 7:59:54 AM PDT by E Rocc (John Kerry inspires about as much enthusiasm in NE Ohio as the Michigan Wolverines.)
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