After the bombing at Pearl Harbor, the United States and Japan undergo many difficult battles and struggles. One battle that sparked the most attention at that time was the Battle of Midway. The Battle of Midway was said by many as the turning point of World War II. It was also said that both memory and history are about attributing meanings to event in the past. There are many recollections of personal experience which have reinforced public presentations. Some of these recollections were Eugene B. Sledge and his memory of the battle in the pacific and Mitsuo Fuchida and his memory of Midway: the Battle that Doomed Japan. Although these recollections had many similarities, there were many differences which reinforced public presentations like memorials. Without further ado, we shall begin exploring Eugene B. Sledge's recollections of the Battle in the Pacific. Eugene B. Sledge, author of his 1981 memoir With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa wrote about his experiences and struggles during World War II, specifically, the Battle in the Pacific Theater. In Sledge’s interview with Stud Terkel, he specified that these American …show more content…
Fuchida brought up the question of “what should we have done that we did not and why did we fail?” Ironically as it may have been, it was said that the Midway Islands would post the greatest threat to American naval power in the Pacific.” Yet, somehow the American naval power won the battle in the pacific. Fuchida blamed that the plans for the operation were studied and drawn up by the Combined Fleet Headquarters and the Naval General Staff in Tokyo. Fuchida said that Admiral Yamamoto did not want his fleet commanders, whose energies were fully occupied with the conduct of the first-phase operations in so many far-flung theaters, to be bothered by other