The Steel Fleet: Naval warfare compendium, discussion and Inquiry thread.
Дата: 18.09.2014 06:28:30
The_Warhawk: Parshall covers that subject in detail in Shattered Sword.
Particuarly they argue that the Aleutians attack wasn't actually
related to the Midway. It was a seperate attack formulated by
junior officers in both the Army and Navy GHQ. The theory being
that a base in the Aleutians could be used to stop attacks from the
US against the Northern Japanese Islands. (Sort of true, the USAAF
did attack the Japan from the Aleutians). Parshall and Tully both
further argue that attacks on the Aleutians don't make sense as a
diversion, as this planned 'decisive battle' was supposed to take
place Southwest of Midway. But whether or not the Aleutians
were a diversion or not is another matter entirely I suppose. The
Carriers in question are the Ryujo and Junyo. By May 29 the
Ryujo was only carrying 30 of her norminal 48 aircraft.
Additionally she only had a single elevator, which would have
hampered the already prolonged recovery, rearming and spotting
time. The Junyo's Air Wing left a lot to be desired. While
she could carry a respectable 54 aircraft, she only had 33 aircraft
embarked. Additionally, she was a converted liner with a 25
knot top speed, which rendered her incapable of
launching Torpedo planes. Additionally her Air Wing was a
mismatched hodgepodge of aviators from several different ships, as
well as pilots fresh from their flight school. Certainly it
would have provided more Aircraft for Japanese CAPs. And provides
60 additional aircraft for the fleet, which is about the Air Wing
of another Fleet Carrier, and could have certainly proven useful
for additional CAP planes and strikes planes. Would it have made a
major difference? I can't say or sure. I'd say I definitely have my
doubts as well. There's no way to tell if the additional
planes would have actually provided the extra bit of fire power to
knock out Midway. It was entirely possible, but it was entirely
possible to knock out Midway's runway with the actual strike force.
Similarly, IJN CAPs had insufficient coordination between aircraft
and the carriers themselves, would more aircraft be beneficial in
that case? Sure in that you have more pilots (theoretically)
engaging more enemy aircraft. However, with sup par coordination
between the Carriers, and their planes, as well as the planes with
eachother, the advantage garnered from additional CAP planes is
heavily undermined by the lack of communication.
The Steel Fleet: Naval warfare compendium, discussion and Inquiry thread.














