Jeffrey Burkhart Mrs.Shandera / Mr.Pelletier English 11 pd.2 / History pd.6 9 February 2018 Battle of Midway There were many battles during WWII but there none as important as important as the Battle of Midway. The battle started on June 4th, 1942 and lasted until June, 7th 1942 (“Battle of Midway”). the battle changes the whole course of the Pacific Theater. The Battle of Midway was able to show how powerful the United States Navy was. A small inexperienced navy was able to destroy a much larger and powerful navy.
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
With their carriers sunk and their best pilots gone, the war was effectively decided. While the war dragged on for three more years in Island fighting, everyone knew Japan no longer even had a shadow of a hope for victory. Up until Midway, Japan knew only victory: Pearl Harbor, Philippines, Malaya, Burma, Ceylon,
In this book, Craig Symonds aims to write about how the Allied powers lost World War II until the Battle of Midway occurred. Symonds claims that it was in fact the Battle of Midway that balanced the power and possibility for the Allied powers to win the war (Symonds 2013, 3). Throughout the book, Symonds writes chronologically explaining the events leading up to and throughout the Battle of Midway, explaining the importance of these events through the lens of both the Japanese and American eyes. The book is not only based on factual evidence, but evidence from survivors who had firsthand accounts regarding the events that happened throughout the book, such as the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Battle of Midway too. Symonds also adds several pictures throughout the book to
Political leadership, military strategy, organizational capacity, fighting skills and effectiveness, technology, mass production, resources, ideology, and morale, all were essential factors that influenced the war victory. The war at sea saw mainly the US and Japan competing in the Pacific and the US and Great Britain competing against Germany in the Atlantic. The offensiveness of the Japanese Empire could be contained and defeated by the US only after the fortunate victory of Midway in 1942 and the following buildup of an overwhelming superiority of the American forces. In the Atlantic, the German U-boats inflicted embarrassing losses to the British and American Navies. Only technological improvements and effective adaptation of the tactics (naval convoy tactics and dedicated anti-submarine airplane) allowed the Allies to recover the situation, regaining control of the sea.
Additionally, book offers information regarding the six flag raisers and their lives from their innocent upbringing to their military vocation. Thus, an analysis of the Flags of Our Fathers gives the reader a detailed account of the battle fought at Iwo Jima during the World War II. In his book, Bradley is fond of utilizing brief and categorical sentences as well as fragments of sentences in order to provide a thorough account and initiate direct address. The author provides an emotional description of the battle and Bradley has also used intricate details about the mothers, religious faith, the tension underlying between boyhood and manhood, heroism, media, individuals vs. country, and differences between perception and
The Japanese lost more than a bunch of ships and a bunch of airplanes, and a bunch of men. Experience is what wins’ wars. You can have the biggest guns and the best planes, but if you lack the men with enough training and experience to be an effective combatant, then there no sense in having those guns and those airplanes because the experienced fighters on the other side will just make quick and easy work of them, which was often the case through the Pacific after the Battle of Midway. After Midway, the Japanese just lacked the highly-experienced commanders, pilots, tacticians, and shipman to fight the Americans and win. Midway was the punch that turned the Americans in favor of winning the war, and Guadalcanal was the knockout punch that would strip the Japanese of any chance of winning the war.
Craig L. Symonds, in The Battle of Midway, recounts the events leading up to and during the June 4, 1942, Battle of Midway. The battle was a decisive American victory and effectively destroyed the Japanese navy for the duration of the war in the Pacific. Symond uses the people who played a part in the battle to retell the battle, its decisive moments, and its aftermath. Symonds argues that Midway “is best explained and understood by focusing on the people involved.” (pg5).
Last night, Japanese forces attacked Guam…the Phillipine Islands… Wake Island… And this morning, the Japanese attacked Midway Island” (Roosevelt). Roosevelt’s strategic use of repetition of the statement the “Japanese forces attacked” amplifies the danger of the Japanese empire as not only to the United States, but also in the Pacific hemisphere. The
“The destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki put an end to the Japanese war.(Doc 3)” Although the Japanese were struggling and close to having to surrender there was no telling how long it would take. The bomb struck them one final time which left them with no choice but to surrender immediately. No one was impunity. “For Americans in uniform and those who waited for them to come home, outrageous as this might appear from the moral heights of hindsight, it was a sunburst of deliverance.(Doc 5)”
The background essay states that, “there was reason to believe that the war could be won without either the atomic bomb or a land invasion. This was because an allied naval blockade had already put a stranglehold on Japan. The Japanese people were facing the prospect of slow starvation.” The US military and government “understood that such an invasion might cost hundreds of thousands of lives,” yet they still chose to go through with the bombing. Anteceding this, the US had “cracked Japan’s diplomatic code and learned that the Japanese had approached the Soviet Union to help negotiate surrender.”
World War II consisted of many different battlegrounds with the Pacific Theatre being one of them . This theater specifically was fought on the Pacific ocean as well as in the air and on the ground. These wars were fought with air-craft carriers and airplanes. The Pacific Theatre consisted of many different battles that were primarily fought between the United States and the Japanese (Gorman,Pacific Theatre). The two battles that stand out the most and that will be discussed in this essay are the Battle of Midway and the Battle of Okinawa.
“Mary Tsukamoto once said ‘I knew it would leave a scar that would stay with me forever. At that moment my precious freedom was taken from me’” (Martin 54). The Betrayal. The attack on Pearl Harbor.
Cmdr. Joseph Rochefort and the U.S.’s overall superior strategies of Nimitz and Fletcher was the true reason for why the U.S.’s seemingly impossible victory became possible. The two key themes that I will focus analysis on is the failures in the Japanese strategic planning and execution at Midway and U.S. determination and resilience to keep pushing on even after things, especially with USS carriers leading up to and during the actual war was falling apart. Symonds begins to argue his case by dissecting Japan’s plans for conquest and domination in the Pacific. He starts with looking at the Japanese failure by several of their military philosophies.
“Letters from Iwo Jima” is considered a historically accurate representation of the conflict in Iwo Jima. However, it misrepresents some facts that could affect our understanding on The Battle of Iwo Jima. Firstly, one aspect of The Battle of Iwo Jima that the film accurately depicted was Kuribayashi’s strategy. The Japanese defence of Jima would have been defence-in-depth, a military tactic that included