Severgreen and Battle of Midway: Difference between pages

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
 
FiriBot (talk | contribs)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
{{featured article}}
"'''Severgreen'''" is the ninth album by [[Croatian]] singer [[Severina]]. It was released in [[2004]].
{{FixBunching|beg}}
{{Infobox Military Conflict
|conflict=Battle of Midway
|partof=the [[Pacific War|Pacific Theatre]] of [[World War II]]
|image=[[Image:SBDs and Mikuma.jpg|300px|SBDs approach the burning ''Mikuma'' (Center).]]
|caption=U.S. [[Douglas Aircraft Company|Douglas]] [[SBD Dauntless]] [[dive bomber]]s about to attack the burning [[cruiser]] [[Japanese cruiser Mikuma|''Mikuma'']] for the third time.
|date=June 4, 1942 – June 7, 1942
|place=Near [[Midway Atoll]]
|result=Decisive American victory
|combatant1=<center>{{flagicon|USA|1912|size=80px}}<br />[[United States]]
|combatant2=<center>{{flagicon|Japan|naval|size=65px}}<br />[[Empire of Japan]]
|commander1=[[Chester W. Nimitz]]<br/>[[Frank J. Fletcher]]<br/>[[Raymond A. Spruance]]
|commander2=[[Isoroku Yamamoto]]<br/>[[Chuichi Nagumo]]<br/>[[Tamon Yamaguchi]][[Killed in action|&dagger;]]
|strength1=3 carriers,<br/>~50 support ships,<br/> 233 carrier aircraft, <br/>127 land-based aircraft
|strength2=4 carriers,<br/>7 battleships,<br/>~150 support ships,<br/> 264 carrier aircraft,<ref name=Takahisa>[http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/AAF/USSBS/IJO/IJO-1.html USSBS Interrogation of Japanese Naval personnel] No. 6 Captain Amagi, Takahisa, IJN, Naval Aviator, Air Commander (observer) on CV ''Hiryu'' at Pearl Harbor, Air Officer on CV ''Kaga'' at Battle of Midway, 3, 4, 5 June 1942.<br />Q. What was the composition of the Kaga's Air Group?
A. It was composed of 21 fighters (0) Type: 27 VB (99 Type); 18 VT (97 Type); same as all other carriers.</ref><br/>16 floatplanes
|casualties1=1 carrier sunk,<br />1 destroyer sunk,<br />98 aircraft destroyed,<br/>307 killed
|casualties2=4 carriers sunk,<br />1 cruiser sunk,<br/>332 carrier aircraft destroyed,<br />3,500 killed<ref>Martin Gilbert, the Second World War pg. 330</ref>
}}
{{FixBunching|mid}}
{{Campaignbox Pacific 1941}}
{{FixBunching|mid}}
{{Campaignbox Pacific Ocean}}
{{FixBunching|end}}


The '''Battle of Midway''' was a major [[naval battle]], widely regarded as the most important one of the [[Pacific Theater of Operations|Pacific Campaign]] of [[World War II]].<ref name="Midway Decisive">{{cite web | last = | first = year = 2007 | url = http://www.chinfo.navy.mil/navpalib/ships/carriers/midway.html | title = A Brief History of Aircraft Carriers: Battle of Midway | format = | work = | publisher = U.S. Navy | accessdate = 2007-06-12}}</ref> It took place from June 4 to 7, 1942, approximately one month after the [[Battle of the Coral Sea]], five months after the Japanese capture of [[Wake Island]], and exactly six months to the day after [[Empire of Japan|Japan]]'s [[attack on Pearl Harbor]]. The [[United States Navy]] decisively defeated a Japanese attack against [[Midway Atoll]].


Both sides sustained significant losses. Four Japanese [[aircraft carrier]]s and a [[heavy cruiser]] were sunk in exchange for one American aircraft carrier and a [[destroyer]]. The heavy losses permanently weakened the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] (IJN), in particular the four fleet carriers and over 200 experienced naval aviators.<ref>Dull, ''The Imperial Japanese Navy: A Battle History,'' p. 166; Willmott, ''The Barrier and the Javelin,'' pp. 519–523; Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'' p. 395; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 416–430.</ref> Japan was unable to keep pace with American shipbuilding and aircrew training programs in providing replacements. By 1942, the United States was three years{{Fact|date=October 2007}}<!--Vinson Act? 2-Ocean Navy Act?--> into a massive ship building program intended to make the navy larger than Japan's.<ref>{{cite book
== Track listing ==
| last = Hakim
| first = Joy
| authorlink =
| coauthors =
| title = A History of Us: War, Peace and all that Jazz
| publisher = Oxford University Press
| year = 1995
| location = New York
| pages =
| url =
| doi =
| id =
| isbn = 0-19-509514-6 }}</ref> As a result of Midway, strategically, the U.S. Navy was able to seize the initiative in the Pacific and go on the offensive.


The Japanese plan was to lure America's few remaining carriers into a trap and sink them.<ref>H.P. Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin''; Lundstrom, ''First South Pacific Campaign''; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 19–38.</ref> The Japanese also intended to occupy Midway Atoll to extend their defensive perimeter. This operation was considered preparatory for further attacks against [[Fiji]] and [[Samoa]], as well as an invasion of [[Hawaii (state)|Hawaii]].<ref>For a detailed discussion of anticipated follow-on Hawaiian operations, see Parshall & Tully, pp. 43–45, & Stephan, ''Hawaii under the Rising Sun''.</ref>
* 1. Adam i Seva (Adam and Seva)
* 2. Broš (Brooch)
* 3. Hrvatica (Croatian girl)
* 4. Niti s tobom, nit' bez tebe (Not with you, not without you)
* 5. Sama na sceni (Alone in the spotlight)
* 6. Bojate bane buski
* 7. Ma daj (Come on)
* 8. Tuge od sna (Sadness dreams)
* 9. Iz glave (Out of my head)
* 10. Šta me sad pitaš šta mi je (Why do you ask me how I am now?)


The Midway operation, like the attack on Pearl Harbor, was not part of a campaign for the conquest of the United States, but was aimed at its elimination as a strategic Pacific power, thereby giving Japan a free hand in establishing its [[Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere]]. It was also hoped another defeat would force the U.S. to negotiate an end to the [[Pacific War]] with conditions favorable for Japan.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 33; Peattie & Evans, ''Kaigun''.</ref>


==Strategic context==
== External links ==
Japan had been highly successful in rapidly securing its initial war goals, including the takeover of the [[Philippines]], capture of [[British Malaya|Malaya]] and [[Singapore]], and securing vital resource areas in [[Java (island)|Java]], [[Borneo]], and other islands of the [[Dutch East Indies]] (now [[Indonesia]]). As such, preliminary planning for a second phase of operations commenced as early as January 1942. However, because of strategic differences between the [[Imperial Japanese Army|Imperial Army]] and Imperial Navy, as well as infighting between the Navy's [[Imperial General Headquarters|GHQ]] and [[Admiral]] [[Isoroku Yamamoto]]’s [[Combined Fleet]], the formulation of effective strategy was hampered, and the follow-up strategy was not finalized until April 1942.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'', pp. 13–15, 21–23; Willmott, ''The Barrier and the Javelin,'' pp. 39–49; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 22–38.</ref> Admiral Yamamoto succeeded in winning a bureaucratic struggle placing his operational concept—further operations in the Central Pacific—ahead of other contending plans. These included operations either directly or indirectly aimed at [[Australia]] and into the [[Indian Ocean]]. In the end, Yamamoto's barely-veiled threat to resign unless he got his way succeeded in carrying his agenda forward.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 33; Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'', p. 23.</ref>


Yamamoto's primary strategic concern was the elimination of America's remaining carrier forces, the principal obstacle to the overall campaign. This concern was acutely heightened by the [[Doolittle Raid]] on [[Tokyo]] (April 18, 1942) by [[United States Army Air Forces|USAAF]] [[B-25 Mitchell|B-25s]], launching from [[USS Hornet (CV-8)|USS ''Hornet'']]. The raid, while militarily insignificant, was a severe [[psychological operations|psychological]] shock to the Japanese and proved the existence of a gap in the defenses around the Japanese home islands.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'', pp. 22–26. One wonders what the Japanese thought the presence of American submarines off their coast, beginning with Joe Grenfell's [[USS Gudgeon (SS-211)|''Gudgeon'']] some twenty days after Pearl Harbor, represented; in light of how poor IJN ASW training and doctrine was, perhaps it should be no surprise this was ignored. Blair, ''Silent Victory'', p.110; Parillo, ''Japanese Merchant Marine''; Peattie & Evans, ''Kaigun''.</ref> Sinking America's aircraft carriers and seizing Midway, the only strategic island besides Hawaii in the East Pacific, was seen as the only means of nullifying this threat. Yamamoto reasoned an operation against the main carrier base at [[Pearl Harbor]] would induce the U.S. forces to fight. However, given the strength of American land-based air-power on Hawaii, he judged the powerful American base could not be attacked directly.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 33.</ref> Instead, he selected Midway, at the extreme northwest end of the [[Hawaiian Islands|Hawaiian Island]] chain, some {{convert|1300|mi|km}} from [[Oahu]]. Midway was not especially important in the larger scheme of Japan's intentions; however, the Japanese felt the Americans would consider Midway a vital outpost of Pearl Harbor and would therefore strongly defend it.<ref>Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin,'' pp. 66–67; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 33–34.</ref> The U.S. did consider Midway vital; after the battle, establishment of a U.S. [[submarine]] base on Midway extended submarine range {{convert|2400|mi|km}}. An airstrip on Midway served as a forward staging point for bomber attacks on [[Wake Island]].<ref>[http://www.fws.gov/midway/past/postwar.html Preserving the Past: After the Battle of Midway<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>
* http://www.sevefanclub.com/

===Yamamoto's plan===
[[Image:Midway Atoll.jpg|right|thumbnail|Midway Atoll, several months before the battle. Eastern Island (with the airfield) is in the foreground, and the larger Sand Island is in the background to the west.]]

Typical of Japanese naval planning during the Second World War, Yamamoto's battle plan was quite complex.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway,'' pp. 375–379, Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin'', pp. 110–117; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 52.</ref> Additionally, his designs were predicated on optimistic intelligence information suggesting [[USS Enterprise (CV-6)|USS ''Enterprise'']] and [[USS Hornet (CV-8)|USS ''Hornet'']], forming Task Force 16, were the only carriers available to the U.S. Pacific Fleet at the time. [[USS Lexington (CV-2)|USS ''Lexington'']] had been sunk and [[USS Yorktown (CV-5)|USS ''Yorktown'']] severely damaged (and believed by the Japanese to have been sunk) at the Battle of the Coral Sea just a month earlier. The Japanese were also aware that [[USS Saratoga (CV-3)|USS ''Saratoga'']] was undergoing repairs on the [[West Coast of the United States|West Coast]] after taking [[torpedo]] damage from a submarine.

More important, however, was Yamamoto's belief that the Americans had been demoralized by their frequent defeats during the preceding six months. Yamamoto felt deception would be required to lure the U.S. fleet into a fatally compromised situation.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 53, derived from Japanese War History Series (''Senshi Sōshō''), Volume 43 ('Midowei Kaisen'), p. 118.</ref> To this end, he dispersed his forces so that their full extent (particularly his [[battleship]]s) would be unlikely to be discovered by the Americans prior to battle. However, his emphasis on dispersal meant none of his formations were mutually supporting. Unbeknownst to Yamamoto, any benefit from this was neutralized by the fact the United States had broken the main Japanese naval code (dubbed [[JN-25]] by the U.S.).

Critically, Yamamoto's supporting battleships and cruisers would trail Vice-Admiral [[Chuichi Nagumo]]'s carrier striking force by several hundred miles. Japan's heavy surface forces were intended to destroy whatever part of the U.S. Fleet might come to Midway's relief, once Nagumo's carriers had weakened them sufficiently for a daylight gun duel to be fought;<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 51, 55.</ref> this was typical of the battle doctrine of most major navies. However, their distance from Nagumo's carriers would have grave implications during the battle, since the battleships were escorted by [[cruiser]]s, which possessed [[scout plane]]s invaluable to Nagumo.<ref>Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin''.</ref>

===Aleutian invasion===
Likewise, the [[Aleutian Islands Campaign|Japanese operations aimed at the Aleutian Islands]] (Operation AL) removed yet more ships from the force striking Midway. However, whereas prior histories have often characterized the Aleutians operation as a feint to draw American forces northwards, recent scholarship on the battle has shown, by the original Japanese battle plan, AL was designed to be launched simultaneously with the attack on Midway.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 43–45, derived from ''Senshi Sōshō'', p. 196.</ref> However, a one-day delay in the sailing of Nagumo's task force had the effect of initiating Operation AL a day before its counterpart.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 43–45, derived from ''Senshi Sōshō'', pp. 119–121.</ref>

===Order of battle===
{{main|Midway order of battle}}
<!--PLEASE NOTE: This cannot be a list. It must be written in prose. -->

==Prelude to battle==
===U.S. forces===
[[Image:G13065 USS Yorktown Pearl Harbor May 1942.jpg|left|thumbnail|[[USS Yorktown (CV-5)|USS ''Yorktown'']] at [[Pearl Harbor]] days before the battle.]]

In order to do battle with an enemy force anticipated to muster four or five carriers, Admiral [[Chester W. Nimitz]], Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas, needed every available U.S. flight deck. He already had [[Vice Admiral]] [[William Halsey]]'s two-carrier (''Enterprise'' and ''Hornet'') [[task force]] at hand; Halsey was stricken with [[psoriasis]] and was replaced by [[Rear Admiral]] [[Raymond A. Spruance]] (Halsey's escort commander).<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'', pp. 80–81; Cressman ''et al.'', ''A Glorious Page in Our History,'' p. 37.</ref> Nimitz also hurriedly called back Rear Admiral [[Frank Jack Fletcher]]'s task force from the [[South West Pacific Area]]. He reached Pearl Harbor just in time to provision and sail. ''Saratoga'' was still under repair, and ''Yorktown'' had been severely damaged at the Battle of the Coral Sea, but [[Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard]] worked around the clock to patch up the carrier. Though it was estimated that ''Yorktown'' would require several months of repairs at [[Puget Sound Naval Shipyard]], 72 hours was enough to restore her to a battle-capable state.<ref>Cressman ''et al.'', ''A Glorious Page in Our History'', pp. 37–45; Lord, ''Incredible Victory'', pp. 37–39.</ref> Her flight deck was patched, whole sections of internal frames were cut out and replaced, and several new squadrons (drawn from ''Saratoga'') were taken aboard. Nimitz disregarded established procedure in getting his third and last available carrier ready for battle—repairs continued even as ''Yorktown'' sortied, with work crews from the repair ship [[USS Vestal (AR-4)|USS ''Vestal'']]&mdash;herself damaged in the attack on Pearl Harbor six months earlier&mdash;still aboard. Just three days after putting into drydock at Pearl Harbor, ''Yorktown'' was again under way.<ref>Lord, ''Incredible Victory'', p. 39.</ref>

===Japanese forces===
[[Image:AkagiDeckApril42.jpg|left|thumbnail|[[Japanese aircraft carrier Akagi|''Akagi'']] in April 1942, the flagship of the Japanese carrier striking force which [[Attack on Pearl Harbor|attacked Pearl Harbor]], as well as [[Darwin, Australia|Darwin]], [[Rabaul]], and [[Colombo, Sri Lanka|Colombo]], prior to the battle.]]

Meanwhile, as a result of their participation in the Battle of the Coral Sea, the Japanese carrier [[Japanese aircraft carrier Zuikaku|''Zuikaku'']] was in port in [[Kure, Hiroshima|Kure]], awaiting a replacement air group. The heavily damaged [[Japanese aircraft carrier Shōkaku|''Shōkaku'']] was under repair from three bomb hits suffered at Coral Sea, and required months in drydock. Despite the likely availability of sufficient aircraft between the two ships to re-equip ''Zuikaku'' with a composite air group, the Japanese made no serious attempt to get her into the forthcoming battle.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 65–67.</ref> Consequently, instead of bringing five intact fleet carriers into battle, Admiral Nagumo would only have four: [[Japanese aircraft carrier Kaga|''Kaga'']], with [[Japanese aircraft carrier Akagi|''Akagi'']], forming Division 1; [[Japanese aircraft carrier Hiryū|''Hiryū'']] and [[Japanese aircraft carrier Sōryū|''Sōryū'']], as the 2nd Division. At least part of this was a product of fatigue; Japanese carriers had been constantly on operations since December 7, 1941, including pinprick raids on [[Bombing of Darwin (February 1942)|Darwin]] and [[Indian Ocean raid|Colombo]].

Japanese strategic scouting arrangements prior to the battle also fell into disarray. A picket line of Japanese [[submarine]]s was late getting into position (partly because of Yamamoto's haste), which let the American carriers proceed to their assembly point northeast of Midway (known as "Point Luck") without being detected.<ref>Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin,'' p. 351; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 98–99.</ref> A second attempt to use four-engine reconnaissance [[flying boat]]s to scout Pearl Harbor prior to the battle (and thereby detect the absence or presence of the American carriers), known as "Operation K", was also thwarted when Japanese submarines assigned to refuel the search aircraft discovered that the intended refueling point—a hitherto deserted bay off [[French Frigate Shoals]]—was occupied by American warships (because the Japanese had carried out an identical mission in March).<ref>Lord, ''Incredible Victory'', pp. 37–39; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 99; Holmes, ''Double-Edged Secrets''.</ref> Thus, Japan was deprived of any knowledge concerning the movements of the American carriers immediately before the battle. Japanese radio intercepts also noticed an increase in both American submarine activity and U.S. message traffic. This information was in Yamamoto's hands prior to the battle. However, Japanese plans were not changed in reaction to this; Yamamoto, at sea in [[Japanese battleship Yamato|''Yamato'']], did not dare inform Nagumo for fear of exposing his position, and presumed (incorrectly) Nagumo had received the same signal from Tokyo.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 102–104; Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin''.</ref>

===American and British code-breaking===
Admiral Nimitz had one priceless asset: American and British cryptanalysts had broken the [[Japanese naval codes#JN-25|JN-25]] code.<ref name=MS-134>Michael Smith, p.134</ref> Commander [[Joseph J. Rochefort]] and his team at [[Station Hypo|HYPO]] were able to confirm Midway as the target of the impending Japanese strike, to determine the date of the attack as either 4 or 5 June, and to provide Nimitz with a complete IJN [[order of battle]].<ref name=MS-138-141>Michael Smith, pp. 138-141</ref> Japan's efforts to introduce a new codebook had been delayed, giving HYPO several crucial days; while it was blacked out shortly before the attack began, the important breaks had already been made.<ref>Holmes, ''Double-Edged Secrets''; Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin''. There are occasional ignorant references to "deception", notably in the film [[Midway (film)|"Midway"]], referring to the false traffic before [[attack on Pearl Harbor|Pearl Harbor]]; this reflects a complete misunderstanding of the issue.</ref>

As a result, the Americans entered the battle with a very good picture of where, when, and in what strength the Japanese would appear. Nimitz was aware, for example, that the vast numerical superiority of the Japanese fleet had been divided into no less than four task forces, and the escort for the main Carrier Striking Force was limited to just a few fast ships. For this reason, they knew that the [[anti-aircraft guns]] protecting the carriers would be limited. Knowing the strength he faced, Nimitz calculated his three carrier decks, plus Midway Island, to Yamamoto's four, gave the U.S. rough parity. (It is also true American carrier air groups were larger than Japanese ones.) The Japanese, by contrast, remained almost totally in the dark about their opponents even after the battle began.<ref>Lord, ''Incredible Victory''; Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin''; Layton, ''And I Was There: Pearl Harbor and Midway—Breaking the Secrets''. </ref>

==Battle==
===Initial air attacks===
[[Image:USSBSmidwayn252.png|thumb|Initial attacks on Midway transport group.<ref name=toyama/><br />1. Light cruiser Jintsu, flagship 2. Destroyers 3. Transports 4. B-17 attack, 17:00 [[1942-06-03]] 5. [[PBY]] torpedo attack 01:00 [[1942-06-04]]]]
The first air attack occurred on June 4, by nine [[B-17 Flying Fortress|B-17s]] operating from Midway against the Japanese transport group.<ref name=nimitz>Admiral Nimitz's [http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USN/rep/Midway/Midway-CinCPac.html CinCPac report] of the battle. From Hyperwar, retrieved [[2008-02-13]]</ref> Though hits were reported,<ref name=nimitz/> none of the bombs actually landed on target and no significant damage was sustained.<ref name=toyama>[http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/AAF/USSBS/IJO/IJO-60.html Interrogation of: Captain TOYAMA, Yasumi, IJN; Chief of Staff Second Destroyer Squadron, flagship Jintsu (CL), at MIDWAY] USSBS From Hyperwar, retrieved [[2008-02-14]]</ref> Early the following morning, ''Akebono Maru'' sustained the first hit when a torpedo from an attacking PBY [[flying boat]] struck her around 01:00.<ref name=toyama/> Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo launched his initial attack wave (108 aircraft) at 04:30 on June 4. At the same time, he launched eight search aircraft (one 30 minutes late due to technical issues, and one which was forced to turn back), as well as his [[combat air patrol]].

Japanese reconnaissance arrangements were flimsy, with too few aircraft to adequately cover the assigned search areas, laboring under poor weather conditions to the northeast and east of the task force.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 107–112; 132–133.</ref> Now, Yamamoto's faulty dispositions came home to roost.<ref>Willmott, ''Barrier''.</ref>

American radar picked up the enemy at a distance of several miles and interceptors soon scrambled. Unescorted bombers headed off to attack the Japanese carrier fleet, their fighter escorts remaining behind to defend Midway. At 06:20, Japanese carrier aircraft bombed and heavily damaged the U.S. base on Midway. Midway-based Marine fighter pilots, flying obsolescent [[Grumman Aircraft|Grumman]] [[F4F Wildcat]]s and obsolete [[Brewster F2A]]s, made a defense of Midway and suffered heavy losses. Most were downed in the first few minutes, and only two remained flyable. American anti-aircraft fire was accurate and intense, damaging many Japanese aircraft and claiming a third of the Japanese planes destroyed.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 200–204.</ref> The Japanese learned the island's bombers had already departed, and the strike leader signaled Nagumo another attack would be necessary to neutralize Midway's defenses before troops could be landed on June 7; American bombers still could use the airbase to refuel and attack the Japanese invasion force.<ref>Lord, ''Incredible Victory'', p. 110; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 149.</ref>

Having taken off prior to the Japanese attack, American bombers based on Midway made several attacks on the Japanese carrier fleet. These included six [[TBF Avenger]]s composed of pilots from ''Hornet'''s [[VT-8]] in their first combat operation, and four [[USAAC]] [[B-26 Marauder]]s, all armed with torpedoes. The Japanese shrugged off these attacks with almost no losses, while destroying all but one TBF and two B-26s.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'', pp. 207–212; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 149–152.</ref>

[[Image:Hiryu f075712.jpg|left|thumbnail|B-17 attack misses ''Hiryū''.]]

Admiral Nagumo, in accordance with Japanese carrier [[military doctrine|doctrine]] at the time, had kept half of his aircraft in reserve. These comprised two squadrons each of dive-bombers and torpedo bombers, the torpedo bombers armed with torpedoes, should any American warships be located. The dive bombers were, as yet, unarmed.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.130–132.</ref> As a result of the attacks from Midway, as well as the morning flight leader's recommendation regarding the need for a second strike, Nagumo at 07:15 ordered his reserve planes to be re-armed with general purpose contact bombs for use on land targets. This had been underway for about 30 minutes, when at 07:40 a scout plane from the [[cruiser]] [[Japanese cruiser Tone|''Tone'']] signaled the discovery of a sizable American naval force to the east. Nagumo quickly reversed his order and demanded the scout plane ascertain the composition of the American force. Another 40 minutes elapsed before ''Tone'''s scout finally detected and radioed the presence of a single carrier in the American force, [[Task Force 16|TF 16]] (the other carrier was not detected).<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'', pp.216–217; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.159–161 & 183.</ref>

Nagumo was now in a quandary. Rear Admiral [[Tamon Yamaguchi]], leading Carrier Division 2 (''Hiryū'' and ''Sōryū''), recommended Nagumo strike immediately with the forces at hand. Nagumo's seeming opportunity to hit the American ships,<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.165–170.</ref> however, was curtailed by the fact his Midway strike force would be returning shortly. They would be low on fuel and carrying wounded crewmen, would need to land promptly or ditch, losing precious aircraft and crews; there was slim chance a strike could be mounted in time. Spotting his flight decks and launching aircraft would require at least 30–45 minutes.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.121–124.</ref> Furthermore, by spotting and launching immediately, he would be committing some of his reserve to battle without proper anti-ship armament, as well as without fighter escort; they had just witnessed how easily unescorted American bombers were shot down by their own fighters.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway,'' p.233.</ref> Japanese carrier doctrine preferred fully constituted strikes, and in the absence of a confirmation (until 08:20) of whether the American force contained carriers, Nagumo's reaction was doctrinaire.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway,'' pp.217–218 & 372–373; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.170–173.</ref> In addition, the impending arrival of another American air strike at 07:53 gave weight to the need to attack the island again. In the end, Nagumo chose to wait for his first strike force to land, then launch the reserve force, which would have by then been properly armed and ready.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'', pp.231–237; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.170–173; Willmott, ''Barrier & the Javelin''; Fuchida & Okumiya, ''Midway''.</ref> In the final analysis, it made no difference; Fletcher had launched beginning at 07:00, so the aircraft which would deliver the crushing blow were already on their way. There was nothing Nagumo could do about it. This was the fatal flaw of Yamamoto's dispositions: it followed strictly traditional battleship doctrine.<ref>Willmott, ''Barrier & the Javelin''; Fuchida & Okumiya, ''Midway''.</ref>

===Attacks on the Japanese fleet===
[[Image:Vt8-g-gay-may42.jpg|thumb|[[Ensign (rank)|Ensign]] [[George H. Gay, Jr.|George Gay]] (right), sole survivor of VT-8's [[TBD Devastator]] squadron, in front of his aircraft, 4 June 1942.]]
[[Image:VT-6TBDs.jpg|thumbnail|right|Devastators of VT-6 aboard [[USS Enterprise (CV-6)|USS ''Enterprise'']] being prepared for take off during the battle.]]

Meanwhile, the Americans had already launched their carrier aircraft against the Japanese. Admiral Fletcher, in overall command aboard ''Yorktown'', and armed with [[PBY Catalina|PBY]] patrol bomber sighting reports from the early morning,<ref>Relayed ''via'' Nimitz who, unlike Yamamoto, had remained ashore.</ref> ordered Spruance to launch against the Japanese as soon as was practical. Spruance gave the order "Launch the attack" at around 06:00 and left Halsey's Chief of Staff, Captain [[Miles Browning]], to work out the details and oversee the launch. It took until a few minutes after 07:00 before the first plane was able to depart from Spruance's carriers, ''Enterprise'' and ''Hornet.'' Fletcher, upon completing his own scouting flights, followed suit at 08:00 from ''Yorktown''.<ref>Cressman ''et al.'', ''A Glorious Page in Our History,'' pp. 84–89; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 215–216; 226–227; Buehl, ''The Quiet Warrior'' (1987), p. 494ff.</ref> It was at this point Spruance gave his second crucial command, to run toward the target, having judged that the need to throw something at the enemy as soon as possible was greater than the need for a coordinated attack among the different types of aircraft (fighters, bombers, torpedo planes). Accordingly, American squadrons were launched piecemeal, proceeding to the target in several different groups. This diminished the overall impact of the American attacks and greatly increased their casualties; coincidentally, it reduced the Japanese ability to counterstrike and found Nagumo with his decks at their most vulnerable.

American carrier aircraft had difficulty locating the target in the vastness of the Pacific, despite the positions they had been given. Nevertheless, they did finally sight enemy carriers and began attacking at 09:20, led by Torpedo Squadron 8 ([[VT-8]], from ''Hornet''), followed by [[VT-6]] (from ''Enterprise'') at 09:40.<ref>Cressman ''et al.'', ''A Glorious Page in Our History'', pp. 91–94.</ref> Without fighter escort, every [[TBD Devastator]] of VT-8 was shot down without inflicting any damage, with Ensign [[George H. Gay, Jr.]] the only survivor. VT-6 met nearly the same fate, with no hits to show for its effort, thanks in part to terrible aircraft torpedoes.<ref>Blair, Clay, Jr. ''Silent Victory'' (Lippincott, 1975), p.238.</ref> The Japanese combat air patrol (CAP), flying the much faster [[Mitsubishi Zero]], made short work of the unescorted, slow, under-armed TBDs. However, despite their losses, the American torpedo attacks indirectly achieved three important results. First, they kept the Japanese carriers off balance, with no ability to prepare and launch their own counterstrike. Second, their attacks pulled the Japanese combat air patrol out of position. Third, many of the Zeros grew low on ammunition and fuel.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 215–216; 226–227.</ref> The appearance of a third torpedo plane attack from the southeast by [[VT-3]] at 10:00 very quickly drew the majority of the Japanese CAP to the southeast quadrant of the fleet.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 226–227.</ref>

By chance, at the same time VT-3 was sighted by the Japanese, two separate formations (a total of three squadrons) of American [[SBD Dauntless]] dive bombers were approaching the Japanese fleet from the northeast and southwest. They were running low on fuel due to the time spent looking for the enemy. However, squadron commanders [[C. Wade McClusky, Jr.]] and [[Max Leslie]] decided to continue the search and luckily spotted the wake of the Japanese destroyer ''Arashi''. The destroyer was steaming at full speed to rejoin Nagumo's carrier force, after having unsuccessfully [[depth-charge]]d the U.S. submarine [[USS Nautilus (SS-168)|''Nautilus'']], which had earlier unsuccessfully attacked the [[Japanese battleship Kirishima|battleship ''Kirishima'']].<ref name="kirishimamove">{{cite web | last = | first = year = 2006 | url = http://www.combinedfleet.com/Kirishima.html | title = IJN KIRISHIMA: Tabular Record of Movement | format = | work = Senkan! | publisher = combinedfleet.com | accessdate = 2007-06-06}}</ref> The American dive-bombers arrived at the perfect time to attack.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway'', pp. 259–261, 267–269; Cressman ''et al.'', ''A Glorious Page in Our History,'' pp. 96–97; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 215–216; 226–227.</ref> Armed Japanese strike aircraft filled the hangar decks, fuel hoses were snaking across the decks as refueling operations were hastily completed, and the constant change of ordnance meant bombs and torpedoes were stacked around the hangars, rather than stowed safely in the magazines,<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 250.</ref> making the Japanese carriers extraordinarily vulnerable.

Contrary to some accounts of the battle, contemporary research, based on recent translation of relevant portions of the 100 volume Japanese account of the war, ''Senshi Sōshō'', has demonstrated that the Japanese were not in fact prepared to launch a counterstrike against the Americans at the time they were attacked.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 229–231. Derived from ''Senshi Sōshō'', Volume 43, pp. 372–378, and the tabulated air group records (''kōdōchōsho'') of the Japanese carriers contained in "Midway Operation: DesRon 10, Mine Sweep Div 16, CV Akagi, CV Kaga, CVL Sōryū, and CVL Hiryū." Extract Translation from DOC No.160985B—MC 397.901.</ref> Because of the constant flight deck activity associated with combat air patrol operations during the preceding hour, the Japanese never had an opportunity to spot their reserve for launch. The few aircraft on the Japanese flight decks at the time of the attack were either CAP fighters, or (in the case of ''Sōryū'') strike fighters being spotted to augment the CAP.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 231, derived from ''Senshi Sōshō'', pp. 372–378.</ref>

Beginning at 10:22, ''Enterprise''’s aircraft attacked ''Kaga'', while to the south, ''Yorktown''’s aircraft attacked carrier ''Sōryū'', with ''Akagi'' being struck by several of ''Enterprise'''s bombers four minutes later. Simultaneously, VT-3 was targeting ''Hiryū'', although the American torpedo aircraft again scored no hits. The dive-bombers, however, had better fortune. Within six minutes, the SBD dive bombers made their attack runs and left all three of their targets heavily ablaze. ''Akagi'' was hit by just one bomb, which penetrated to the upper hangar deck and exploded among the armed and fueled aircraft there. One extremely near miss also slanted in and exploded underwater, bending the flight deck upward with the resulting geyser and causing crucial rudder damage.<ref>Other sources claim a stern hit, but Parshall & Tully ''Shattered Sword'', p.253–354 and 256–259 makes a case for a near miss, because of rudder damage from a high explosive bomb.</ref> ''Sōryū'' took three bomb hits in the hangar decks; ''Kaga'' took at least four, possibly more. All three carriers were out of action and were eventually abandoned and [[scuttling|scuttle]]d.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.330–353.</ref>

===Japanese counterattacks===
[[Image:USS Yorktown hit-740px.jpg|thumbnail|left|''Yorktown'' hit by an air-launched torpedo.]]

''Hiryū'', the sole surviving Japanese aircraft carrier, wasted little time in counterattacking. The first wave of Japanese dive-bombers badly damaged ''Yorktown'' with two bomb hits, yet her damage control teams patched her up so effectively (in about an hour) the second wave's torpedo bombers mistook her for an intact carrier.<ref>Ballard, Robert D. and Archbold, Rick. ''Return to Midway.'' Madison Press Books: Toronto ISBN 0792275004</ref> Despite Japanese hopes to even the results of the battle by eliminating two carriers with two strikes, ''Yorktown'' absorbed both Japanese attacks, the second attackers mistakenly believing ''Yorktown'' had already been sunk and they were attacking ''Enterprise.'' After two torpedo hits, ''Yorktown'' lost power and was now out of the battle, forcing Admiral Fletcher to move his command staff to the heavy cruiser [[USS Astoria (CA-34)|''Astoria'']]; but Task Force 16's two carriers had escaped undamaged as a result.

News of the two strikes, with the reports each had sunk an American carrier, greatly improved the morale of the crewmen of the ''Kido Butai''. Its surviving aircraft all recovered aboard ''Hiryū'', where they were prepared for a strike against what was believed to be the only remaining American carrier.

[[Image:Hiryu burning.jpg|thumb|''Hiryū'' shortly before sinking]]
When American scout aircraft subsequently located ''Hiryū'' late in the afternoon, ''Enterprise'' launched a final strike of dive bombers (including 10 bombers from ''Yorktown''), leaving ''Hiryū'' ablaze, despite being defended by a strong defensive CAP of over a dozen Zero fighters. Rear Admiral Yamaguchi chose to go down with his ship, costing Japan perhaps her best carrier sailor. ''Hornet''<nowiki>'s</nowiki> strike, launching late because of a communications error, concentrated on the remaining surface ships but failed to score any hits.

As darkness fell, both sides took stock and made tentative plans for continuing the action. Admiral Fletcher, obliged to abandon the derelict ''Yorktown'' and feeling he could not adequately command from a cruiser, ceded operational command to Spruance. Spruance knew the United States had won a great victory, but was still unsure of what Japanese forces remained at hand and was determined to safeguard both Midway and his carriers. To aid his aviators, who had launched at extreme range, he had continued to close Nagumo during the day, and persisted as night fell. Fearing a possible night encounter with Japanese surface forces,<ref>Potter & Nimitz 1960 p.682</ref> Spruance changed course and withdrew to the east, turning back west towards the enemy at midnight.

For his part, Yamamoto initially decided to continue the effort and sent his remaining surface forces searching eastward for the American carriers. Simultaneously, a cruiser raiding force was detached to bombard the island. The Japanese surface forces failed to make contact with the Americans due to Spruance's decision to briefly withdraw eastward, and Yamamoto ordered a general retirement to the west.

American search planes failed to detect the retiring Japanese task forces on June 5. An afternoon strike narrowly missed detecting Yamamoto's main body and failed to score hits on a straggling Japanese destroyer. The strike planes returned to the carriers after nightfall, prompting Spruance to order ''Enterprise'' and ''Hornet'' to turn on searchlights in order to aid their landings. [[Marc Mitscher]], commanding ''Hornet'', would later issue the same order under similar circumstances during the [[Battle of the Philippine Sea]].

At 02.15 on 5 June–6 June, Commander John Murphy's [[USS Tambor (SS-198)|''Tambor'']], lying some 90 nm (165 km) west of Midway, made the second of the Submarine Force's two major contributions to the battle's outcome, sighting several ships. He (along with his exec, Ray Spruance, Jr.) could not identify them (and feared they might be friendly, so he held fire), but reported their presence, omitting their course. This went to Admiral Robert English, Commander, Submarine Force, Pacific Fleet (<small>COMSUBPAC</small>), and from him through Nimitz to the senior Spruance. Unaware of the exact location of Yamamoto's "Main Body" (a persistent problem since PBYs had first sighted the Japanese), Spruance presumed this was the invasion force. Thus, he moved to block it, taking station some 100 nm (185 km) northeast of Midway; this frustrated Yamamoto's efforts, and the night passed without any contact between the opposing forces.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway,'' p. 320; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 345.</ref>

In actuality, this was Yamamoto's bombardment group of four cruisers and two destroyers, which at 02:55 was ordered to retire west with the rest of his force.<ref>Prange, ''Miracle at Midway,'' p.320; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', p. 345.</ref> Murphy was sighted around the same time; turning to avoid, [[Japanese cruiser Mogami (1934)|''Mogami'']] and [[Japanese cruiser Mikuma|''Mikuma'']] collided, inflicting serious damage to ''Mogami'''s bow, the most any of the eighteen<ref>Blair, chart p.240.</ref> submarines deployed for the battle achieved. Only at 04:12 did the sky brighten enough for Murphy to be certain the ships were Japanese, by which time staying surfaced was a hazard, and he dived to approach for an attack. This was unsuccessful, and at around 06.00, he finally reported two ''Mogami''-class cruisers, westbound, placing Spruance at least 100 nm (185 km) out of position.<ref>Blair, p.246–7.</ref> It may have been fortunate Spruance did not pursue, for had he come in contact with Yamamoto's heavies, including ''Yamato'', in the dark, his cruisers would have been overwhelmed, and his carriers helpless.<ref>Blair, p.246–7; Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin''.</ref>

Over the following two days, first Midway and then Spruance's carriers launched several successive strikes against the stragglers. ''Mikuma'' was eventually sunk, while ''Mogami'' survived severe damage to return home for repairs. Captain [[Richard E. Fleming]], a U.S. Marine Corps aviator, was posthumously awarded the [[Medal of Honor]] for his attack on ''Mikuma.''

''Yorktown'' was sunk during salvage efforts, by three torpedoes from Japanese submarine ''I-168'' on June 7. There were few casualties since most of the crew had already been evacuated. One torpedo from this salvo also sank the destroyer [[USS Hammann (DD-412)|USS ''Hammann'']], which had been providing auxiliary power to ''Yorktown'', splitting her in two with the loss of 80 lives. It remains unclear why ''Yorktown'' had not been placed under tow immediately after being hit, to get her out of reach of Japanese attack.

==Aftermath==
After winning a clear victory, and as pursuit became too hazardous near Wake,<ref>Blair, p.247.</ref> American forces retired. Japan's loss of four out of their six fleet carriers, plus a large number of their highly trained aircrews, stopped the expansion of the Japanese Empire in the Pacific. Only [[Japanese aircraft carrier Zuikaku|''Zuikaku'']] and [[Japanese aircraft carrier Shōkaku|''Shōkaku'']] were left for offensive actions. Japan's other carriers, [[Japanese aircraft carrier Ryūjō|''Ryūjō'']], [[Japanese aircraft carrier Junyo|''Junyo'']], and [[Japanese aircraft carrier Hiyo|''Hiyo'']], were second-rate ships of comparatively poor effectiveness.

On 10 June, the Imperial Japanese Navy conveyed to the liaison conference an incomplete picture of the results of the battle, on the ground that the real extent of damage was a military secret not to be entrusted to all members. Only Emperor [[Hirohito]] was accurately informed of carriers and pilots losses, and he chose not to inform the Army immediately. Army planners then continued for a short time to believe the fleet was healthy and secure.<ref>[[Herbert Bix]], ''Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan'', 2001, p. 449</ref>

===Allegations of war crimes===
Three U.S. airmen, [[Ensign]] Wesley Osmus (pilot, ''Yorktown''), Ensign Frank O'Flaherty (pilot, ''Enterprise'') and [[Aviation Machinist's Mate]] B. F. (or B. P.) Gaido (radioman-gunner of O'Flaherty's SBD) were captured by the Japanese during the battle. Osmus was held on the destroyer ''Arashi'', with O'Flaherty and Gaido on the cruiser ''Nagara'' (or destroyer ''Makigumo'', sources vary), and it is alleged they were later killed.<ref>Robert E. Barde, "Midway: Tarnished Victory", ''Military Affairs'', v. 47, no. 4 (December 1983), pp. 188–192.</ref> The report filed by Admiral Nagumo states of Ensign Osmus, "He died on 6 June and was buried [[Burial at sea|at sea]]. Nagumo records obtaining seven items of information, including Fletcher's strength, but does not mention the death of O'Flaherty or Gaido.<ref name="nagumoreport">{{cite web | last = | first = month = May | year = 1947 | url = http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/Japan/IJN/rep/Midway/Nagumo/index.html#III-3 | title = Japanese Story of the Battle of Midway | format = | work = ONI Review | publisher = ibiblio.org | accessdate = 2007-06-06}}</ref> The practice of burying the remains of the enemy at sea was common among all navies involved.

==Impact==
The battle has often been called "the turning point of the Pacific".<ref>Dull, p.166; Prange, p.395.</ref> The Japanese navy continued to fight ferociously, and it was many more months before the U.S. moved from a state of naval parity to one of increasingly clear supremacy.<ref>Willmott, ''Barrier and the Javelin,'' pp.522–523; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.416–430.</ref> Thus, Midway was not "decisive" in the same sense as [[Battle of Salamis|Salamis]] or [[Battle of Trafalgar|Trafalgar]]. However, victory at Midway first blunted Japan's strategic initiative, inflicted irreparable damage on the Japanese carrier force, and shortened the war in the Pacific.<ref>U.S. Naval War College Analysis, p.1; Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp.416–430.</ref>

Just two months later, the U.S. took the offensive and [[Guadalcanal campaign|attacked Guadalcanal]], catching the Japanese off-balance. Securing Allied supply lines to Australia and the Indian Ocean in this time frame, along with the heavy attrition inflicted on the Japanese during the Guadalcanal campaign, had far-reaching effects on the course of the war. Its effect on the length is debatable, given the [[Allied submarines in the Pacific War|Pacific Fleet's Submarine Force]] had essentially brought Japan's economy to a halt by January 1945.<ref>Blair, ''Silent Victory''.</ref>

Midway dealt Japanese naval aviation a heavy blow. The pre-war Japanese training program produced pilots of exceptional quality but at a slow rate.<ref>Peattie, ''Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909–1941,'' pp.181–184, 191–192.</ref> This small group of elite aviators were combat hardened veterans. At Midway, the Japanese lost as many of these pilots in a single day as their pre-war training program produced in a year.<ref>Peattie, ''Sunburst'', pp.131–134.</ref> Japanese planners failed to foresee a long continuous war, and consequently their production failed to replace the losses of ships, pilots, and sailors begun at Midway; by mid-1943, Japanese naval aviation was decimated.<ref>Peattie, ''Sunburst'', pp. 176–186; Eric Bergerud, ''Fire in the Sky'', p. 668.</ref>

Even more important was the irredeemable loss of four of Japan's fleet carriers.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 416–421.</ref> These ships were not replaced, unit for unit, until early in 1945.<ref> ''Shinano'', commissioned on 19 November 1944, was only the fourth fleet carrier commissioned by Japan during the war, after ''Taihō'', ''Unryū'', and ''Amagi''.</ref> In the same span of time, U.S. industrial capacity allowed the U.S. Navy to commission more than two dozen fleet and light fleet carriers, and numerous escort carriers.<ref>[http://www.hazegray.org/danfs/carriers/listing of all American carriers commissioned during the war]. [http://www.combinedfleet.com/economic.htm [tabulation of aggregate carrier and carrier aircraft levels between the USN and IJN if the U.S. had lost at Midway].</ref> Thus, Midway permanently damaged the Japanese Navy's striking power and measurably shortened the period during which the Japanese carrier force could fight on advantageous terms. The loss of operational capability during this critical phase of the campaign ultimately proved disastrous; Imperial Japan could have executed much grander, and perhaps more successful, operations against the U.S. counter-offensive being marshaled. Whether this would have happened is debatable, however, as the Japanese awaited "decisive battle", and as American submarines increasingly hampered the flow of oil essential for fleet operations.

[[Image:Sinking of japanese cruiser Mikuma 6 june 1942.jpg|thumbnail|300px|left|[[Japanese cruiser Mikuma|''Mikuma'']] shortly before sinking.]]

==Discovery of sunken vessels==
===U.S. vessels===
Because of the extreme depth of the ocean in the area of the battle (more than 17,000 feet/5200 m), researching the battlefield has presented extraordinary difficulties. However, on May 19, 1998, [[Robert Ballard]] and a team of scientists and Midway veterans (including Japanese participants) located and [http://www.amvetsww2.org/Assets/images/docimage/discovery_1-1.jpg photographed] ''Yorktown''. The ship was remarkably intact for a vessel that sank in 1942; much of the original equipment and even the original paint scheme were still visible.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.cnn.com/TECH/science/9806/04/yorktown.found/index.html|title=Titanic explorer finds Yorktown|date=[[1998-06-04]]|accessdate=2007-07-01|publisher=CNN}}</ref>

===Japanese vessels===
Ballard's subsequent search for the Japanese carriers was ultimately unsuccessful. In September 1999, a joint expedition between Nauticos Corp. and the U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office searched for the Japanese aircraft carriers. Using advanced renavigation techniques in conjunction with the ship's log of the submarine USS ''Nautilus'', the expedition located a large piece of wreckage, subsequently identified as having come from the upper hangar deck of ''Kaga''.<ref>Parshall & Tully, ''Shattered Sword'', pp. 491–493.</ref> The main wreck, however, has yet to be located.

==In film==
[[Image:USS Hammann sinking 1942-06-06 seen from USS Yorktown.jpg|thumbnail|300px|right|During an attempt to salvage [[USS Yorktown (CV-5)|''Yorktown'']] both it and [[USS Hammann (DD-412)|the destroyer ''Hammann'']] were struck by torpedoes from [[Japanese submarine I-168|''I-168'']].]]

The Battle of Midway has been featured in several [[motion picture]]s. The first film about the battle was a documentary directed by [[John Ford]], a Commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve at the time, and on temporary duty at Midway Island during the battle as a photographic and intelligence officer. While shooting 16mm color motion picture footage from atop the island's power plant, Ford was exposed to enemy fire by attacking aircraft and wounded in the arm by shrapnel. He received a Purple Heart and later, the Legion of Merit for his actions. The film Ford shot during the actual battle is included in his 1942 [[Academy Award]] winning documentary, ''[[The Battle of Midway]]''.

Subsequently, the battle was given in-depth coverage by the 1960 big-budget Japanese war film ''[[Storm Over the Pacific]]'' directed by [[Shuei Matsubayashi]] for [[Toho]] studios. The film focuses on a young [[Zero pilot]] aboard '' Hiryū'' who participates in both the [[attack on Pearl Harbor]] and the Battle of Midway. It was barely released in the United States in a [[dubbing (filmmaking)|dubbed]], abridged version, under the sensationalized title ''[[I Bombed Pearl Harbor]]''. The miniature and pyrotechnic effects were considered by Universal Studios to be good enough to reuse 16 years later.

This star-studded film was ''[[Midway (film)|Midway]]'', directed by [[Jack Smight]], starring [[Charlton Heston]], and released in 1976. It strongly fictionalized events and relied heavily on [[stock footage]] (for which it was criticized) from various World War II battles, as well as some previously filmed for ''[[Tora! Tora! Tora!]]'', ''[[Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo]]'', ''[[Away All Boats]]'', and especially{{Fact|date=March 2008}} ''Storm over the Pacific''.

==Other remembrances==
The [[Chicago Midway International Airport]] (or simply Midway Airport), historically important to the war efforts in World War II, was renamed in 1949 in honor of the Battle of Midway. Previously, it was named the Chicago Municipal Airport.{{Fact|date=April 2008}}

==Notes==
{{reflist|2}}

==References==
{{portalpar|Military of the United States|Naval Jack of the United States.svg|65}}
<div class="references-small">
*Barde, Robert E. "Midway: Tarnished Victory", Military Affairs, v. 47, no. 4 (December 1983)
*Bergerud, Eric, Fire in the Sky
*Blair, Clay, Jr. Silent Victory (Lippincott, 1975)
*Buehl, The Quiet Warrior (1987),
*Cressman et al., A Glorious Page in Our History
*Dull, The Imperial Japanese Navy: A Battle History,
*{{cite book | last = Fuchida | first = Mitsuo | authorlink = Mitsuo Fuchida | coauthors = Masatake Okumiya | year = 1955 | title = Midway: The Battle that Doomed Japan, the Japanese Navy's Story | publisher = [[United States Naval Institute Press]] | location = Annapolis, MD | id = ISBN 0-87021-372-5 }} A Japanese account, colored by hindsight and sometimes inaccurate.
*Hawaii, Steven. under the Rising Sun.
*Herbert Bix, Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan, 2001,
*Holmes, Double-Edged Secrets.
*Layton, And I Was There: Pearl Harbor and Midway—Breaking the Secrets.
*{{cite book | last = Lord | first = Walter | authorlink = Walter Lord | year = 1967 | title = Incredible Victory | publisher = Burford | location = | id = ISBN 1-58080-059-9 }} Focuses primarily on the human experience of the battle.
*{{cite book | last = Lundstrom | first = John B. | coauthors = | year = 2005 (New edition) | chapter = | title = The First Team: Pacific Naval Air Combat from Pearl Harbor to Midway | publisher = Naval Institute Press | location = Annapolis, Maryland, U.S.A. | id = ISBN 159114471X
}}
*Parillo, Japanese Merchant Marine
*{{cite book | last = Parshall | first = Jonathan | authorlink = Jonathan Parshall | coauthors = Tully, Anthony | year = 2005
| title = Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway | publisher = Potomac Books | location = Dulles, VA | id = ISBN 1-57488-923-0 }} Uses recent Japanese sources.
*Peattie & Evans, Kaigun.
*Peattie, Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909–1941
* {{cite book| title=Sea Power |author=Potter, E. B. and Nimitz, Chester W. |authorlink = Chester W. Nimitz |publisher=Prentice-Hall |year=1960}}
*{{cite book | last = Prange | first = Gordon W. | authorlink = Gordon W. Prange | coauthors = Goldstein, Donald M., and Dillon, Katherine V. | year = 1982 | title = [[Miracle at Midway]] | publisher = McGraw-Hill | location = | id = ISBN 0-07-050672-8}} The standard academic history of the battle based on massive research into American and Japanese sources.
*Smith, Michael (2000). The Emperor's Codes: [[Bletchley Park]] and the breaking of Japan's secret ciphers, Bantam Press, ISBN 0593 046420. Chapter 11: "Midway :The battle that turned the tide"
*{{cite book| last = Wilmot| first = H.P. | authorlink = H.P. Wilmott| year = 1983 | title = The Barrier and the Javelin | publisher = United States Naval Institute Press }} Broad-scale history of the naval war with detailed accounts of order of battle and dispositions.
*{{cite book
| last = Hakim
| first = Joy
| authorlink =
| coauthors =
| title = A History of Us: War, Peace and all that Jazz
| publisher = Oxford University Press
| year = 1995
| location = New York
| pages =
| url =
| doi =
| id =
| isbn = 0-19-509514-6 }}
</div>

==Further reading==
{{commons|Battle of Midway}}
;Books
*{{cite book
| last = Bess
| first = Michael
| authorlink =
| coauthors =
| year = 2006
| chapter =
| title = Choices Under Fire: Moral Dimensions of World War II
| publisher = Alfred A. Knopf
| location = New York
| id = ISBN 0-307-26365-7
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Hanson
| first = Victor D.
| authorlink = Victor Davis Hanson
| year = 2001
| title = Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power
| publisher = Doubleday
| location =
| id = ISBN 0-385-50052-1
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Hara
| first = Tameichi
| authorlink = Tameichi Hara
| coauthors =
| year = 1961
| title = Japanese Destroyer Captain
| publisher =
| location =
| id = ISBN 0-345-27894-1
}} First-hand account by Japanese captain, often inaccurate.
*{{cite book
| last = Kahn
| first = David
| authorlink = David Kahn
| year =
| title = [[The Codebreakers]]: The Comprehensive History of Secret Communication from Ancient Times to the Internet
| publisher = Scribner
| location =
| id = ISBN 0-684-83130-9
}} Significant section on Midway
*{{cite book
| last = Kernan
| first = Alvin
| authorlink = Alvin Kernan
| coauthors =
| year = 2005
| title = The Unknown Battle of Midway
| publisher = [[Yale University Press]]
| location =
| id = ISBN 0-300-10989-X
}} An account of the blunders that led to the near total destruction of the American torpedo squadrons, and of what the author calls a cover-up by naval officers after the battle.
*{{cite book
| last = Lundstrom
| first = John B.
| coauthors =
| year = 2005 (New edition)
| chapter =
| title = First Team And the Guadalcanal Campaign: Naval Fighter Combat from August to November 1942
| publisher = Naval Institute Press
| location =
| id = ISBN 1-59114-472-8
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Morison
| first = Samuel E.
| authorlink = Samuel Eliot Morison
| year = 1949
| title = Coral Sea, Midway and Submarine Actions: May 1942–August 1942
| publisher =
| location =
| id =
}} ([[History of United States Naval Operations in World War II]], Volume&nbsp;4) official U.S. history.
*{{cite book
| last = Smith
| first = Douglas V.
| authorlink =
| coauthors =
| year = 2006
| chapter =
| title = Carrier Battles: Command Decision in Harm's Way
| publisher = U.S. Naval Institute Press
| location =
| id = ISBN 1591147948
}}
*{{cite book
| last = Smith
| first = Peter C.
| authorlink = Peter C. Smith
| year = 2007
| title = Midway Dauntless Victory; Fresh perspectives on America's Seminal Naval Victory of 1942
| publisher = Pen & Sword Maritime
| location = Barnsley, UK
| id = ISBN 184415583-8
}} Detailed study of battle, from planning to the effects on WWII
*{{cite book
| last = Weinberg
| first = Gerhard L.
| authorlink = Gerhard L. Weinberg
| year = 1994
| title = A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II
| publisher = Cambridge U P
| location =
| id =
}}

;Articles
*[http://www.navy.mil/midway/ The Course to Midway Turning Point in the Pacific], Comprehensive historic overview

;Historic documents
*[http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/Japan/IJN/rep/Midway/Nagumo/ The Japanese Story of the Battle of Midway], prepared by U.S. Naval Intelligence from captured Japanese documents
*[http://www.archive.org/details/BattleOfMidway Battle of Midway Movie (1942)] - U.S. Navy propaganda film directed by [[John Ford]].
*{{imdb title|id=0034498|title=The Battle of Midway (1942)}}
*[http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/events/wwii-pac/midway/midway.htm Naval Historical Center Midway Page]
<!--not 'historic documents', not in english, of unknown quality*[http://www.svetskirat.net/istorija/bitka_za_midvej.htm Battle of Midway]!-->

;Miscellaneous
*{{cite book
| last = Cook
| first = Theodore F., Jr.
| authorlink = Theodore F. Cook, Jr.
| editor = Robert Cowley (ed.)
| coauthors =
| year = 2000
| chapter = Our Midway Disaster
| title = What if?
| publisher = Macmillan
| location = London
| id = ISBN 0-333-75183-3
}} Counterfactual fiction has the Japanese winning.
*[[James R. Schlesinger|Schlesinger, James R.]], "Midway in Retrospect: The Still Under-Appreciated Victory", June 5, 2005. (An analysis by former [[Secretary of Defense]] Schlesinger.) Available from the Naval Historical Center, Department of the Navy.
*[http://www.ww2db.com/battle_spec.php?battle_id=6 WW2DB: The Battle of Midway]
*[http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/wwii/articles/aftermidway.aspx After Midway: The Fates of the U.S. and Japanese Warships] by Bryan J. Dickerson
*[http://www.historyanimated.com/MidwayPage.html Animated History of The Battle of Midway]
*[http://www.bartcop.com/midway.htm Midway Chronology 1]
*[http://www.centuryinter.net/midway/appendix/appendixthirteen.html Midway Chronology 2]
*[http://www.shvoong.com/f/books/174422-shattered-sword-untold-story-battle/ Review of the book ''Shattered Sword: The Untold Story Of The Battle Of Midway'']
*[http://www.nps.gov/history/NR/twhp/wwwlps/lessons/90midway/90midway.htm ''The Battle of Midway: Turning the Tide in the Pacific,'' a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan]

{{World War II}}

[[Category:Battle of Midway| ]]
[[Category:Pacific Ocean theater of World War II]]
[[Category:Asia and the Pacific 1941-42]]
[[Category:Imperial Japanese Navy]]
[[Category:United States naval aviation]]
[[Category:Imperial Japanese Navy Air Service]]
[[Category:History of cryptography]]
[[Category:Naval aviation operations and battles]]
[[Category:Naval battles and operations of World War II]]

{{Link FA|pl}}
{{Link FA|he}}
{{Link FA|pt}}
<!-- interwiki -->

[[ar:معركة ميدواي]]
[[br:Emgann Midway]]
[[bg:Битка при Мидуей]]
[[ca:Batalla de Midway]]
[[cs:Bitva u Midway]]
[[da:Slaget om Midway]]
[[de:Schlacht um Midway]]
[[es:Batalla de Midway]]
[[fa:نبرد میدوی]]
[[fr:Bataille de Midway]]
[[ko:미드웨이 해전]]
[[hr:Pomorska bitka kod Midwaya]]
[[io:Midway-batalio]]
[[it:Battaglia delle Midway]]
[[he:קרב מידוויי]]
[[hu:Midwayi csata]]
[[ms:Pertempuran Midway]]
[[nl:Slag bij Midway]]
[[ja:ミッドウェー海戦]]
[[no:Slaget ved Midway]]
[[pl:Bitwa o Midway]]
[[pt:Batalha de Midway]]
[[ro:Bătălia de la Midway]]
[[ru:Битва за Мидуэй]]
[[simple:Battle of Midway]]
[[sk:Bitka o Midway]]
[[sr:Битка код Мидвеја]]
[[fi:Midwayn taistelu]]
[[sv:Slaget vid Midway]]
[[vi:Trận Midway]]
[[uk:Битва за Мідвей]]
[[zh:中途岛海战]]

Revision as of 13:31, 13 October 2008

Template:FixBunching

Battle of Midway
Part of the Pacific Theatre of World War II
SBDs approach the burning Mikuma (Center).
U.S. Douglas SBD Dauntless dive bombers about to attack the burning cruiser Mikuma for the third time.
DateJune 4, 1942 – June 7, 1942
Location
Result Decisive American victory
Belligerents
United States
United States
Japan
Empire of Japan
Commanders and leaders
Chester W. Nimitz
Frank J. Fletcher
Raymond A. Spruance
Isoroku Yamamoto
Chuichi Nagumo
Tamon Yamaguchi
Strength
3 carriers,
~50 support ships,
233 carrier aircraft,
127 land-based aircraft
4 carriers,
7 battleships,
~150 support ships,
264 carrier aircraft,[1]
16 floatplanes
Casualties and losses
1 carrier sunk,
1 destroyer sunk,
98 aircraft destroyed,
307 killed
4 carriers sunk,
1 cruiser sunk,
332 carrier aircraft destroyed,
3,500 killed[2]

Template:FixBunching

Template:FixBunching

Template:FixBunching

The Battle of Midway was a major naval battle, widely regarded as the most important one of the Pacific Campaign of World War II.[3] It took place from June 4 to 7, 1942, approximately one month after the Battle of the Coral Sea, five months after the Japanese capture of Wake Island, and exactly six months to the day after Japan's attack on Pearl Harbor. The United States Navy decisively defeated a Japanese attack against Midway Atoll.

Both sides sustained significant losses. Four Japanese aircraft carriers and a heavy cruiser were sunk in exchange for one American aircraft carrier and a destroyer. The heavy losses permanently weakened the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN), in particular the four fleet carriers and over 200 experienced naval aviators.[4] Japan was unable to keep pace with American shipbuilding and aircrew training programs in providing replacements. By 1942, the United States was three years[citation needed] into a massive ship building program intended to make the navy larger than Japan's.[5] As a result of Midway, strategically, the U.S. Navy was able to seize the initiative in the Pacific and go on the offensive.

The Japanese plan was to lure America's few remaining carriers into a trap and sink them.[6] The Japanese also intended to occupy Midway Atoll to extend their defensive perimeter. This operation was considered preparatory for further attacks against Fiji and Samoa, as well as an invasion of Hawaii.[7]

The Midway operation, like the attack on Pearl Harbor, was not part of a campaign for the conquest of the United States, but was aimed at its elimination as a strategic Pacific power, thereby giving Japan a free hand in establishing its Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere. It was also hoped another defeat would force the U.S. to negotiate an end to the Pacific War with conditions favorable for Japan.[8]

Strategic context

Japan had been highly successful in rapidly securing its initial war goals, including the takeover of the Philippines, capture of Malaya and Singapore, and securing vital resource areas in Java, Borneo, and other islands of the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). As such, preliminary planning for a second phase of operations commenced as early as January 1942. However, because of strategic differences between the Imperial Army and Imperial Navy, as well as infighting between the Navy's GHQ and Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto’s Combined Fleet, the formulation of effective strategy was hampered, and the follow-up strategy was not finalized until April 1942.[9] Admiral Yamamoto succeeded in winning a bureaucratic struggle placing his operational concept—further operations in the Central Pacific—ahead of other contending plans. These included operations either directly or indirectly aimed at Australia and into the Indian Ocean. In the end, Yamamoto's barely-veiled threat to resign unless he got his way succeeded in carrying his agenda forward.[10]

Yamamoto's primary strategic concern was the elimination of America's remaining carrier forces, the principal obstacle to the overall campaign. This concern was acutely heightened by the Doolittle Raid on Tokyo (April 18, 1942) by USAAF B-25s, launching from USS Hornet. The raid, while militarily insignificant, was a severe psychological shock to the Japanese and proved the existence of a gap in the defenses around the Japanese home islands.[11] Sinking America's aircraft carriers and seizing Midway, the only strategic island besides Hawaii in the East Pacific, was seen as the only means of nullifying this threat. Yamamoto reasoned an operation against the main carrier base at Pearl Harbor would induce the U.S. forces to fight. However, given the strength of American land-based air-power on Hawaii, he judged the powerful American base could not be attacked directly.[12] Instead, he selected Midway, at the extreme northwest end of the Hawaiian Island chain, some 1,300 miles (2,100 km) from Oahu. Midway was not especially important in the larger scheme of Japan's intentions; however, the Japanese felt the Americans would consider Midway a vital outpost of Pearl Harbor and would therefore strongly defend it.[13] The U.S. did consider Midway vital; after the battle, establishment of a U.S. submarine base on Midway extended submarine range 2,400 miles (3,900 km). An airstrip on Midway served as a forward staging point for bomber attacks on Wake Island.[14]

Yamamoto's plan

Midway Atoll, several months before the battle. Eastern Island (with the airfield) is in the foreground, and the larger Sand Island is in the background to the west.

Typical of Japanese naval planning during the Second World War, Yamamoto's battle plan was quite complex.[15] Additionally, his designs were predicated on optimistic intelligence information suggesting USS Enterprise and USS Hornet, forming Task Force 16, were the only carriers available to the U.S. Pacific Fleet at the time. USS Lexington had been sunk and USS Yorktown severely damaged (and believed by the Japanese to have been sunk) at the Battle of the Coral Sea just a month earlier. The Japanese were also aware that USS Saratoga was undergoing repairs on the West Coast after taking torpedo damage from a submarine.

More important, however, was Yamamoto's belief that the Americans had been demoralized by their frequent defeats during the preceding six months. Yamamoto felt deception would be required to lure the U.S. fleet into a fatally compromised situation.[16] To this end, he dispersed his forces so that their full extent (particularly his battleships) would be unlikely to be discovered by the Americans prior to battle. However, his emphasis on dispersal meant none of his formations were mutually supporting. Unbeknownst to Yamamoto, any benefit from this was neutralized by the fact the United States had broken the main Japanese naval code (dubbed JN-25 by the U.S.).

Critically, Yamamoto's supporting battleships and cruisers would trail Vice-Admiral Chuichi Nagumo's carrier striking force by several hundred miles. Japan's heavy surface forces were intended to destroy whatever part of the U.S. Fleet might come to Midway's relief, once Nagumo's carriers had weakened them sufficiently for a daylight gun duel to be fought;[17] this was typical of the battle doctrine of most major navies. However, their distance from Nagumo's carriers would have grave implications during the battle, since the battleships were escorted by cruisers, which possessed scout planes invaluable to Nagumo.[18]

Aleutian invasion

Likewise, the Japanese operations aimed at the Aleutian Islands (Operation AL) removed yet more ships from the force striking Midway. However, whereas prior histories have often characterized the Aleutians operation as a feint to draw American forces northwards, recent scholarship on the battle has shown, by the original Japanese battle plan, AL was designed to be launched simultaneously with the attack on Midway.[19] However, a one-day delay in the sailing of Nagumo's task force had the effect of initiating Operation AL a day before its counterpart.[20]

Order of battle

Prelude to battle

U.S. forces

USS Yorktown at Pearl Harbor days before the battle.

In order to do battle with an enemy force anticipated to muster four or five carriers, Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, Commander in Chief, Pacific Ocean Areas, needed every available U.S. flight deck. He already had Vice Admiral William Halsey's two-carrier (Enterprise and Hornet) task force at hand; Halsey was stricken with psoriasis and was replaced by Rear Admiral Raymond A. Spruance (Halsey's escort commander).[21] Nimitz also hurriedly called back Rear Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher's task force from the South West Pacific Area. He reached Pearl Harbor just in time to provision and sail. Saratoga was still under repair, and Yorktown had been severely damaged at the Battle of the Coral Sea, but Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard worked around the clock to patch up the carrier. Though it was estimated that Yorktown would require several months of repairs at Puget Sound Naval Shipyard, 72 hours was enough to restore her to a battle-capable state.[22] Her flight deck was patched, whole sections of internal frames were cut out and replaced, and several new squadrons (drawn from Saratoga) were taken aboard. Nimitz disregarded established procedure in getting his third and last available carrier ready for battle—repairs continued even as Yorktown sortied, with work crews from the repair ship USS Vestal—herself damaged in the attack on Pearl Harbor six months earlier—still aboard. Just three days after putting into drydock at Pearl Harbor, Yorktown was again under way.[23]

Japanese forces

Akagi in April 1942, the flagship of the Japanese carrier striking force which attacked Pearl Harbor, as well as Darwin, Rabaul, and Colombo, prior to the battle.

Meanwhile, as a result of their participation in the Battle of the Coral Sea, the Japanese carrier Zuikaku was in port in Kure, awaiting a replacement air group. The heavily damaged Shōkaku was under repair from three bomb hits suffered at Coral Sea, and required months in drydock. Despite the likely availability of sufficient aircraft between the two ships to re-equip Zuikaku with a composite air group, the Japanese made no serious attempt to get her into the forthcoming battle.[24] Consequently, instead of bringing five intact fleet carriers into battle, Admiral Nagumo would only have four: Kaga, with Akagi, forming Division 1; Hiryū and Sōryū, as the 2nd Division. At least part of this was a product of fatigue; Japanese carriers had been constantly on operations since December 7, 1941, including pinprick raids on Darwin and Colombo.

Japanese strategic scouting arrangements prior to the battle also fell into disarray. A picket line of Japanese submarines was late getting into position (partly because of Yamamoto's haste), which let the American carriers proceed to their assembly point northeast of Midway (known as "Point Luck") without being detected.[25] A second attempt to use four-engine reconnaissance flying boats to scout Pearl Harbor prior to the battle (and thereby detect the absence or presence of the American carriers), known as "Operation K", was also thwarted when Japanese submarines assigned to refuel the search aircraft discovered that the intended refueling point—a hitherto deserted bay off French Frigate Shoals—was occupied by American warships (because the Japanese had carried out an identical mission in March).[26] Thus, Japan was deprived of any knowledge concerning the movements of the American carriers immediately before the battle. Japanese radio intercepts also noticed an increase in both American submarine activity and U.S. message traffic. This information was in Yamamoto's hands prior to the battle. However, Japanese plans were not changed in reaction to this; Yamamoto, at sea in Yamato, did not dare inform Nagumo for fear of exposing his position, and presumed (incorrectly) Nagumo had received the same signal from Tokyo.[27]

American and British code-breaking

Admiral Nimitz had one priceless asset: American and British cryptanalysts had broken the JN-25 code.[28] Commander Joseph J. Rochefort and his team at HYPO were able to confirm Midway as the target of the impending Japanese strike, to determine the date of the attack as either 4 or 5 June, and to provide Nimitz with a complete IJN order of battle.[29] Japan's efforts to introduce a new codebook had been delayed, giving HYPO several crucial days; while it was blacked out shortly before the attack began, the important breaks had already been made.[30]

As a result, the Americans entered the battle with a very good picture of where, when, and in what strength the Japanese would appear. Nimitz was aware, for example, that the vast numerical superiority of the Japanese fleet had been divided into no less than four task forces, and the escort for the main Carrier Striking Force was limited to just a few fast ships. For this reason, they knew that the anti-aircraft guns protecting the carriers would be limited. Knowing the strength he faced, Nimitz calculated his three carrier decks, plus Midway Island, to Yamamoto's four, gave the U.S. rough parity. (It is also true American carrier air groups were larger than Japanese ones.) The Japanese, by contrast, remained almost totally in the dark about their opponents even after the battle began.[31]

Battle

Initial air attacks

Initial attacks on Midway transport group.[32]
1. Light cruiser Jintsu, flagship 2. Destroyers 3. Transports 4. B-17 attack, 17:00 1942-06-03 5. PBY torpedo attack 01:00 1942-06-04

The first air attack occurred on June 4, by nine B-17s operating from Midway against the Japanese transport group.[33] Though hits were reported,[33] none of the bombs actually landed on target and no significant damage was sustained.[32] Early the following morning, Akebono Maru sustained the first hit when a torpedo from an attacking PBY flying boat struck her around 01:00.[32] Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo launched his initial attack wave (108 aircraft) at 04:30 on June 4. At the same time, he launched eight search aircraft (one 30 minutes late due to technical issues, and one which was forced to turn back), as well as his combat air patrol.

Japanese reconnaissance arrangements were flimsy, with too few aircraft to adequately cover the assigned search areas, laboring under poor weather conditions to the northeast and east of the task force.[34] Now, Yamamoto's faulty dispositions came home to roost.[35]

American radar picked up the enemy at a distance of several miles and interceptors soon scrambled. Unescorted bombers headed off to attack the Japanese carrier fleet, their fighter escorts remaining behind to defend Midway. At 06:20, Japanese carrier aircraft bombed and heavily damaged the U.S. base on Midway. Midway-based Marine fighter pilots, flying obsolescent Grumman F4F Wildcats and obsolete Brewster F2As, made a defense of Midway and suffered heavy losses. Most were downed in the first few minutes, and only two remained flyable. American anti-aircraft fire was accurate and intense, damaging many Japanese aircraft and claiming a third of the Japanese planes destroyed.[36] The Japanese learned the island's bombers had already departed, and the strike leader signaled Nagumo another attack would be necessary to neutralize Midway's defenses before troops could be landed on June 7; American bombers still could use the airbase to refuel and attack the Japanese invasion force.[37]

Having taken off prior to the Japanese attack, American bombers based on Midway made several attacks on the Japanese carrier fleet. These included six TBF Avengers composed of pilots from Hornet's VT-8 in their first combat operation, and four USAAC B-26 Marauders, all armed with torpedoes. The Japanese shrugged off these attacks with almost no losses, while destroying all but one TBF and two B-26s.[38]

B-17 attack misses Hiryū.

Admiral Nagumo, in accordance with Japanese carrier doctrine at the time, had kept half of his aircraft in reserve. These comprised two squadrons each of dive-bombers and torpedo bombers, the torpedo bombers armed with torpedoes, should any American warships be located. The dive bombers were, as yet, unarmed.[39] As a result of the attacks from Midway, as well as the morning flight leader's recommendation regarding the need for a second strike, Nagumo at 07:15 ordered his reserve planes to be re-armed with general purpose contact bombs for use on land targets. This had been underway for about 30 minutes, when at 07:40 a scout plane from the cruiser Tone signaled the discovery of a sizable American naval force to the east. Nagumo quickly reversed his order and demanded the scout plane ascertain the composition of the American force. Another 40 minutes elapsed before Tone's scout finally detected and radioed the presence of a single carrier in the American force, TF 16 (the other carrier was not detected).[40]

Nagumo was now in a quandary. Rear Admiral Tamon Yamaguchi, leading Carrier Division 2 (Hiryū and Sōryū), recommended Nagumo strike immediately with the forces at hand. Nagumo's seeming opportunity to hit the American ships,[41] however, was curtailed by the fact his Midway strike force would be returning shortly. They would be low on fuel and carrying wounded crewmen, would need to land promptly or ditch, losing precious aircraft and crews; there was slim chance a strike could be mounted in time. Spotting his flight decks and launching aircraft would require at least 30–45 minutes.[42] Furthermore, by spotting and launching immediately, he would be committing some of his reserve to battle without proper anti-ship armament, as well as without fighter escort; they had just witnessed how easily unescorted American bombers were shot down by their own fighters.[43] Japanese carrier doctrine preferred fully constituted strikes, and in the absence of a confirmation (until 08:20) of whether the American force contained carriers, Nagumo's reaction was doctrinaire.[44] In addition, the impending arrival of another American air strike at 07:53 gave weight to the need to attack the island again. In the end, Nagumo chose to wait for his first strike force to land, then launch the reserve force, which would have by then been properly armed and ready.[45] In the final analysis, it made no difference; Fletcher had launched beginning at 07:00, so the aircraft which would deliver the crushing blow were already on their way. There was nothing Nagumo could do about it. This was the fatal flaw of Yamamoto's dispositions: it followed strictly traditional battleship doctrine.[46]

Attacks on the Japanese fleet

Ensign George Gay (right), sole survivor of VT-8's TBD Devastator squadron, in front of his aircraft, 4 June 1942.
Devastators of VT-6 aboard USS Enterprise being prepared for take off during the battle.

Meanwhile, the Americans had already launched their carrier aircraft against the Japanese. Admiral Fletcher, in overall command aboard Yorktown, and armed with PBY patrol bomber sighting reports from the early morning,[47] ordered Spruance to launch against the Japanese as soon as was practical. Spruance gave the order "Launch the attack" at around 06:00 and left Halsey's Chief of Staff, Captain Miles Browning, to work out the details and oversee the launch. It took until a few minutes after 07:00 before the first plane was able to depart from Spruance's carriers, Enterprise and Hornet. Fletcher, upon completing his own scouting flights, followed suit at 08:00 from Yorktown.[48] It was at this point Spruance gave his second crucial command, to run toward the target, having judged that the need to throw something at the enemy as soon as possible was greater than the need for a coordinated attack among the different types of aircraft (fighters, bombers, torpedo planes). Accordingly, American squadrons were launched piecemeal, proceeding to the target in several different groups. This diminished the overall impact of the American attacks and greatly increased their casualties; coincidentally, it reduced the Japanese ability to counterstrike and found Nagumo with his decks at their most vulnerable.

American carrier aircraft had difficulty locating the target in the vastness of the Pacific, despite the positions they had been given. Nevertheless, they did finally sight enemy carriers and began attacking at 09:20, led by Torpedo Squadron 8 (VT-8, from Hornet), followed by VT-6 (from Enterprise) at 09:40.[49] Without fighter escort, every TBD Devastator of VT-8 was shot down without inflicting any damage, with Ensign George H. Gay, Jr. the only survivor. VT-6 met nearly the same fate, with no hits to show for its effort, thanks in part to terrible aircraft torpedoes.[50] The Japanese combat air patrol (CAP), flying the much faster Mitsubishi Zero, made short work of the unescorted, slow, under-armed TBDs. However, despite their losses, the American torpedo attacks indirectly achieved three important results. First, they kept the Japanese carriers off balance, with no ability to prepare and launch their own counterstrike. Second, their attacks pulled the Japanese combat air patrol out of position. Third, many of the Zeros grew low on ammunition and fuel.[51] The appearance of a third torpedo plane attack from the southeast by VT-3 at 10:00 very quickly drew the majority of the Japanese CAP to the southeast quadrant of the fleet.[52]

By chance, at the same time VT-3 was sighted by the Japanese, two separate formations (a total of three squadrons) of American SBD Dauntless dive bombers were approaching the Japanese fleet from the northeast and southwest. They were running low on fuel due to the time spent looking for the enemy. However, squadron commanders C. Wade McClusky, Jr. and Max Leslie decided to continue the search and luckily spotted the wake of the Japanese destroyer Arashi. The destroyer was steaming at full speed to rejoin Nagumo's carrier force, after having unsuccessfully depth-charged the U.S. submarine Nautilus, which had earlier unsuccessfully attacked the battleship Kirishima.[53] The American dive-bombers arrived at the perfect time to attack.[54] Armed Japanese strike aircraft filled the hangar decks, fuel hoses were snaking across the decks as refueling operations were hastily completed, and the constant change of ordnance meant bombs and torpedoes were stacked around the hangars, rather than stowed safely in the magazines,[55] making the Japanese carriers extraordinarily vulnerable.

Contrary to some accounts of the battle, contemporary research, based on recent translation of relevant portions of the 100 volume Japanese account of the war, Senshi Sōshō, has demonstrated that the Japanese were not in fact prepared to launch a counterstrike against the Americans at the time they were attacked.[56] Because of the constant flight deck activity associated with combat air patrol operations during the preceding hour, the Japanese never had an opportunity to spot their reserve for launch. The few aircraft on the Japanese flight decks at the time of the attack were either CAP fighters, or (in the case of Sōryū) strike fighters being spotted to augment the CAP.[57]

Beginning at 10:22, Enterprise’s aircraft attacked Kaga, while to the south, Yorktown’s aircraft attacked carrier Sōryū, with Akagi being struck by several of Enterprise's bombers four minutes later. Simultaneously, VT-3 was targeting Hiryū, although the American torpedo aircraft again scored no hits. The dive-bombers, however, had better fortune. Within six minutes, the SBD dive bombers made their attack runs and left all three of their targets heavily ablaze. Akagi was hit by just one bomb, which penetrated to the upper hangar deck and exploded among the armed and fueled aircraft there. One extremely near miss also slanted in and exploded underwater, bending the flight deck upward with the resulting geyser and causing crucial rudder damage.[58] Sōryū took three bomb hits in the hangar decks; Kaga took at least four, possibly more. All three carriers were out of action and were eventually abandoned and scuttled.[59]

Japanese counterattacks

Yorktown hit by an air-launched torpedo.

Hiryū, the sole surviving Japanese aircraft carrier, wasted little time in counterattacking. The first wave of Japanese dive-bombers badly damaged Yorktown with two bomb hits, yet her damage control teams patched her up so effectively (in about an hour) the second wave's torpedo bombers mistook her for an intact carrier.[60] Despite Japanese hopes to even the results of the battle by eliminating two carriers with two strikes, Yorktown absorbed both Japanese attacks, the second attackers mistakenly believing Yorktown had already been sunk and they were attacking Enterprise. After two torpedo hits, Yorktown lost power and was now out of the battle, forcing Admiral Fletcher to move his command staff to the heavy cruiser Astoria; but Task Force 16's two carriers had escaped undamaged as a result.

News of the two strikes, with the reports each had sunk an American carrier, greatly improved the morale of the crewmen of the Kido Butai. Its surviving aircraft all recovered aboard Hiryū, where they were prepared for a strike against what was believed to be the only remaining American carrier.

Hiryū shortly before sinking

When American scout aircraft subsequently located Hiryū late in the afternoon, Enterprise launched a final strike of dive bombers (including 10 bombers from Yorktown), leaving Hiryū ablaze, despite being defended by a strong defensive CAP of over a dozen Zero fighters. Rear Admiral Yamaguchi chose to go down with his ship, costing Japan perhaps her best carrier sailor. Hornet's strike, launching late because of a communications error, concentrated on the remaining surface ships but failed to score any hits.

As darkness fell, both sides took stock and made tentative plans for continuing the action. Admiral Fletcher, obliged to abandon the derelict Yorktown and feeling he could not adequately command from a cruiser, ceded operational command to Spruance. Spruance knew the United States had won a great victory, but was still unsure of what Japanese forces remained at hand and was determined to safeguard both Midway and his carriers. To aid his aviators, who had launched at extreme range, he had continued to close Nagumo during the day, and persisted as night fell. Fearing a possible night encounter with Japanese surface forces,[61] Spruance changed course and withdrew to the east, turning back west towards the enemy at midnight.

For his part, Yamamoto initially decided to continue the effort and sent his remaining surface forces searching eastward for the American carriers. Simultaneously, a cruiser raiding force was detached to bombard the island. The Japanese surface forces failed to make contact with the Americans due to Spruance's decision to briefly withdraw eastward, and Yamamoto ordered a general retirement to the west.

American search planes failed to detect the retiring Japanese task forces on June 5. An afternoon strike narrowly missed detecting Yamamoto's main body and failed to score hits on a straggling Japanese destroyer. The strike planes returned to the carriers after nightfall, prompting Spruance to order Enterprise and Hornet to turn on searchlights in order to aid their landings. Marc Mitscher, commanding Hornet, would later issue the same order under similar circumstances during the Battle of the Philippine Sea.

At 02.15 on 5 June–6 June, Commander John Murphy's Tambor, lying some 90 nm (165 km) west of Midway, made the second of the Submarine Force's two major contributions to the battle's outcome, sighting several ships. He (along with his exec, Ray Spruance, Jr.) could not identify them (and feared they might be friendly, so he held fire), but reported their presence, omitting their course. This went to Admiral Robert English, Commander, Submarine Force, Pacific Fleet (COMSUBPAC), and from him through Nimitz to the senior Spruance. Unaware of the exact location of Yamamoto's "Main Body" (a persistent problem since PBYs had first sighted the Japanese), Spruance presumed this was the invasion force. Thus, he moved to block it, taking station some 100 nm (185 km) northeast of Midway; this frustrated Yamamoto's efforts, and the night passed without any contact between the opposing forces.[62]

In actuality, this was Yamamoto's bombardment group of four cruisers and two destroyers, which at 02:55 was ordered to retire west with the rest of his force.[63] Murphy was sighted around the same time; turning to avoid, Mogami and Mikuma collided, inflicting serious damage to Mogami's bow, the most any of the eighteen[64] submarines deployed for the battle achieved. Only at 04:12 did the sky brighten enough for Murphy to be certain the ships were Japanese, by which time staying surfaced was a hazard, and he dived to approach for an attack. This was unsuccessful, and at around 06.00, he finally reported two Mogami-class cruisers, westbound, placing Spruance at least 100 nm (185 km) out of position.[65] It may have been fortunate Spruance did not pursue, for had he come in contact with Yamamoto's heavies, including Yamato, in the dark, his cruisers would have been overwhelmed, and his carriers helpless.[66]

Over the following two days, first Midway and then Spruance's carriers launched several successive strikes against the stragglers. Mikuma was eventually sunk, while Mogami survived severe damage to return home for repairs. Captain Richard E. Fleming, a U.S. Marine Corps aviator, was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor for his attack on Mikuma.

Yorktown was sunk during salvage efforts, by three torpedoes from Japanese submarine I-168 on June 7. There were few casualties since most of the crew had already been evacuated. One torpedo from this salvo also sank the destroyer USS Hammann, which had been providing auxiliary power to Yorktown, splitting her in two with the loss of 80 lives. It remains unclear why Yorktown had not been placed under tow immediately after being hit, to get her out of reach of Japanese attack.

Aftermath

After winning a clear victory, and as pursuit became too hazardous near Wake,[67] American forces retired. Japan's loss of four out of their six fleet carriers, plus a large number of their highly trained aircrews, stopped the expansion of the Japanese Empire in the Pacific. Only Zuikaku and Shōkaku were left for offensive actions. Japan's other carriers, Ryūjō, Junyo, and Hiyo, were second-rate ships of comparatively poor effectiveness.

On 10 June, the Imperial Japanese Navy conveyed to the liaison conference an incomplete picture of the results of the battle, on the ground that the real extent of damage was a military secret not to be entrusted to all members. Only Emperor Hirohito was accurately informed of carriers and pilots losses, and he chose not to inform the Army immediately. Army planners then continued for a short time to believe the fleet was healthy and secure.[68]

Allegations of war crimes

Three U.S. airmen, Ensign Wesley Osmus (pilot, Yorktown), Ensign Frank O'Flaherty (pilot, Enterprise) and Aviation Machinist's Mate B. F. (or B. P.) Gaido (radioman-gunner of O'Flaherty's SBD) were captured by the Japanese during the battle. Osmus was held on the destroyer Arashi, with O'Flaherty and Gaido on the cruiser Nagara (or destroyer Makigumo, sources vary), and it is alleged they were later killed.[69] The report filed by Admiral Nagumo states of Ensign Osmus, "He died on 6 June and was buried at sea. Nagumo records obtaining seven items of information, including Fletcher's strength, but does not mention the death of O'Flaherty or Gaido.[70] The practice of burying the remains of the enemy at sea was common among all navies involved.

Impact

The battle has often been called "the turning point of the Pacific".[71] The Japanese navy continued to fight ferociously, and it was many more months before the U.S. moved from a state of naval parity to one of increasingly clear supremacy.[72] Thus, Midway was not "decisive" in the same sense as Salamis or Trafalgar. However, victory at Midway first blunted Japan's strategic initiative, inflicted irreparable damage on the Japanese carrier force, and shortened the war in the Pacific.[73]

Just two months later, the U.S. took the offensive and attacked Guadalcanal, catching the Japanese off-balance. Securing Allied supply lines to Australia and the Indian Ocean in this time frame, along with the heavy attrition inflicted on the Japanese during the Guadalcanal campaign, had far-reaching effects on the course of the war. Its effect on the length is debatable, given the Pacific Fleet's Submarine Force had essentially brought Japan's economy to a halt by January 1945.[74]

Midway dealt Japanese naval aviation a heavy blow. The pre-war Japanese training program produced pilots of exceptional quality but at a slow rate.[75] This small group of elite aviators were combat hardened veterans. At Midway, the Japanese lost as many of these pilots in a single day as their pre-war training program produced in a year.[76] Japanese planners failed to foresee a long continuous war, and consequently their production failed to replace the losses of ships, pilots, and sailors begun at Midway; by mid-1943, Japanese naval aviation was decimated.[77]

Even more important was the irredeemable loss of four of Japan's fleet carriers.[78] These ships were not replaced, unit for unit, until early in 1945.[79] In the same span of time, U.S. industrial capacity allowed the U.S. Navy to commission more than two dozen fleet and light fleet carriers, and numerous escort carriers.[80] Thus, Midway permanently damaged the Japanese Navy's striking power and measurably shortened the period during which the Japanese carrier force could fight on advantageous terms. The loss of operational capability during this critical phase of the campaign ultimately proved disastrous; Imperial Japan could have executed much grander, and perhaps more successful, operations against the U.S. counter-offensive being marshaled. Whether this would have happened is debatable, however, as the Japanese awaited "decisive battle", and as American submarines increasingly hampered the flow of oil essential for fleet operations.

Mikuma shortly before sinking.

Discovery of sunken vessels

U.S. vessels

Because of the extreme depth of the ocean in the area of the battle (more than 17,000 feet/5200 m), researching the battlefield has presented extraordinary difficulties. However, on May 19, 1998, Robert Ballard and a team of scientists and Midway veterans (including Japanese participants) located and photographed Yorktown. The ship was remarkably intact for a vessel that sank in 1942; much of the original equipment and even the original paint scheme were still visible.[81]

Japanese vessels

Ballard's subsequent search for the Japanese carriers was ultimately unsuccessful. In September 1999, a joint expedition between Nauticos Corp. and the U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office searched for the Japanese aircraft carriers. Using advanced renavigation techniques in conjunction with the ship's log of the submarine USS Nautilus, the expedition located a large piece of wreckage, subsequently identified as having come from the upper hangar deck of Kaga.[82] The main wreck, however, has yet to be located.

In film

During an attempt to salvage Yorktown both it and the destroyer Hammann were struck by torpedoes from I-168.

The Battle of Midway has been featured in several motion pictures. The first film about the battle was a documentary directed by John Ford, a Commander in the U.S. Naval Reserve at the time, and on temporary duty at Midway Island during the battle as a photographic and intelligence officer. While shooting 16mm color motion picture footage from atop the island's power plant, Ford was exposed to enemy fire by attacking aircraft and wounded in the arm by shrapnel. He received a Purple Heart and later, the Legion of Merit for his actions. The film Ford shot during the actual battle is included in his 1942 Academy Award winning documentary, The Battle of Midway.

Subsequently, the battle was given in-depth coverage by the 1960 big-budget Japanese war film Storm Over the Pacific directed by Shuei Matsubayashi for Toho studios. The film focuses on a young Zero pilot aboard Hiryū who participates in both the attack on Pearl Harbor and the Battle of Midway. It was barely released in the United States in a dubbed, abridged version, under the sensationalized title I Bombed Pearl Harbor. The miniature and pyrotechnic effects were considered by Universal Studios to be good enough to reuse 16 years later.

This star-studded film was Midway, directed by Jack Smight, starring Charlton Heston, and released in 1976. It strongly fictionalized events and relied heavily on stock footage (for which it was criticized) from various World War II battles, as well as some previously filmed for Tora! Tora! Tora!, Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo, Away All Boats, and especially[citation needed] Storm over the Pacific.

Other remembrances

The Chicago Midway International Airport (or simply Midway Airport), historically important to the war efforts in World War II, was renamed in 1949 in honor of the Battle of Midway. Previously, it was named the Chicago Municipal Airport.[citation needed]

Notes

  1. ^ USSBS Interrogation of Japanese Naval personnel No. 6 Captain Amagi, Takahisa, IJN, Naval Aviator, Air Commander (observer) on CV Hiryu at Pearl Harbor, Air Officer on CV Kaga at Battle of Midway, 3, 4, 5 June 1942.
    Q. What was the composition of the Kaga's Air Group? A. It was composed of 21 fighters (0) Type: 27 VB (99 Type); 18 VT (97 Type); same as all other carriers.
  2. ^ Martin Gilbert, the Second World War pg. 330
  3. ^ "A Brief History of Aircraft Carriers: Battle of Midway". U.S. Navy. Retrieved 2007-06-12. {{cite web}}: |first= missing |last= (help); Missing pipe in: |first= (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Dull, The Imperial Japanese Navy: A Battle History, p. 166; Willmott, The Barrier and the Javelin, pp. 519–523; Prange, Miracle at Midway p. 395; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 416–430.
  5. ^ Hakim, Joy (1995). A History of Us: War, Peace and all that Jazz. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509514-6. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  6. ^ H.P. Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin; Lundstrom, First South Pacific Campaign; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 19–38.
  7. ^ For a detailed discussion of anticipated follow-on Hawaiian operations, see Parshall & Tully, pp. 43–45, & Stephan, Hawaii under the Rising Sun.
  8. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 33; Peattie & Evans, Kaigun.
  9. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp. 13–15, 21–23; Willmott, The Barrier and the Javelin, pp. 39–49; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 22–38.
  10. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 33; Prange, Miracle at Midway, p. 23.
  11. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp. 22–26. One wonders what the Japanese thought the presence of American submarines off their coast, beginning with Joe Grenfell's Gudgeon some twenty days after Pearl Harbor, represented; in light of how poor IJN ASW training and doctrine was, perhaps it should be no surprise this was ignored. Blair, Silent Victory, p.110; Parillo, Japanese Merchant Marine; Peattie & Evans, Kaigun.
  12. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 33.
  13. ^ Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin, pp. 66–67; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 33–34.
  14. ^ Preserving the Past: After the Battle of Midway
  15. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp. 375–379, Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin, pp. 110–117; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 52.
  16. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 53, derived from Japanese War History Series (Senshi Sōshō), Volume 43 ('Midowei Kaisen'), p. 118.
  17. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 51, 55.
  18. ^ Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin.
  19. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 43–45, derived from Senshi Sōshō, p. 196.
  20. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 43–45, derived from Senshi Sōshō, pp. 119–121.
  21. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp. 80–81; Cressman et al., A Glorious Page in Our History, p. 37.
  22. ^ Cressman et al., A Glorious Page in Our History, pp. 37–45; Lord, Incredible Victory, pp. 37–39.
  23. ^ Lord, Incredible Victory, p. 39.
  24. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 65–67.
  25. ^ Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin, p. 351; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 98–99.
  26. ^ Lord, Incredible Victory, pp. 37–39; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 99; Holmes, Double-Edged Secrets.
  27. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 102–104; Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin.
  28. ^ Michael Smith, p.134
  29. ^ Michael Smith, pp. 138-141
  30. ^ Holmes, Double-Edged Secrets; Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin. There are occasional ignorant references to "deception", notably in the film "Midway", referring to the false traffic before Pearl Harbor; this reflects a complete misunderstanding of the issue.
  31. ^ Lord, Incredible Victory; Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin; Layton, And I Was There: Pearl Harbor and Midway—Breaking the Secrets.
  32. ^ a b c Interrogation of: Captain TOYAMA, Yasumi, IJN; Chief of Staff Second Destroyer Squadron, flagship Jintsu (CL), at MIDWAY USSBS From Hyperwar, retrieved 2008-02-14
  33. ^ a b Admiral Nimitz's CinCPac report of the battle. From Hyperwar, retrieved 2008-02-13
  34. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 107–112; 132–133.
  35. ^ Willmott, Barrier.
  36. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 200–204.
  37. ^ Lord, Incredible Victory, p. 110; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 149.
  38. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp. 207–212; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 149–152.
  39. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.130–132.
  40. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp.216–217; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.159–161 & 183.
  41. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.165–170.
  42. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.121–124.
  43. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, p.233.
  44. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp.217–218 & 372–373; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.170–173.
  45. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp.231–237; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.170–173; Willmott, Barrier & the Javelin; Fuchida & Okumiya, Midway.
  46. ^ Willmott, Barrier & the Javelin; Fuchida & Okumiya, Midway.
  47. ^ Relayed via Nimitz who, unlike Yamamoto, had remained ashore.
  48. ^ Cressman et al., A Glorious Page in Our History, pp. 84–89; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 215–216; 226–227; Buehl, The Quiet Warrior (1987), p. 494ff.
  49. ^ Cressman et al., A Glorious Page in Our History, pp. 91–94.
  50. ^ Blair, Clay, Jr. Silent Victory (Lippincott, 1975), p.238.
  51. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 215–216; 226–227.
  52. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 226–227.
  53. ^ "IJN KIRISHIMA: Tabular Record of Movement". Senkan!. combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 2007-06-06. {{cite web}}: |first= missing |last= (help); Missing pipe in: |first= (help)CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  54. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, pp. 259–261, 267–269; Cressman et al., A Glorious Page in Our History, pp. 96–97; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 215–216; 226–227.
  55. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 250.
  56. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 229–231. Derived from Senshi Sōshō, Volume 43, pp. 372–378, and the tabulated air group records (kōdōchōsho) of the Japanese carriers contained in "Midway Operation: DesRon 10, Mine Sweep Div 16, CV Akagi, CV Kaga, CVL Sōryū, and CVL Hiryū." Extract Translation from DOC No.160985B—MC 397.901.
  57. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 231, derived from Senshi Sōshō, pp. 372–378.
  58. ^ Other sources claim a stern hit, but Parshall & Tully Shattered Sword, p.253–354 and 256–259 makes a case for a near miss, because of rudder damage from a high explosive bomb.
  59. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.330–353.
  60. ^ Ballard, Robert D. and Archbold, Rick. Return to Midway. Madison Press Books: Toronto ISBN 0792275004
  61. ^ Potter & Nimitz 1960 p.682
  62. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, p. 320; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 345.
  63. ^ Prange, Miracle at Midway, p.320; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, p. 345.
  64. ^ Blair, chart p.240.
  65. ^ Blair, p.246–7.
  66. ^ Blair, p.246–7; Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin.
  67. ^ Blair, p.247.
  68. ^ Herbert Bix, Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan, 2001, p. 449
  69. ^ Robert E. Barde, "Midway: Tarnished Victory", Military Affairs, v. 47, no. 4 (December 1983), pp. 188–192.
  70. ^ "Japanese Story of the Battle of Midway". ONI Review. ibiblio.org. 1947. Retrieved 2007-06-06. {{cite web}}: |first= missing |last= (help)
  71. ^ Dull, p.166; Prange, p.395.
  72. ^ Willmott, Barrier and the Javelin, pp.522–523; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.416–430.
  73. ^ U.S. Naval War College Analysis, p.1; Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp.416–430.
  74. ^ Blair, Silent Victory.
  75. ^ Peattie, Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909–1941, pp.181–184, 191–192.
  76. ^ Peattie, Sunburst, pp.131–134.
  77. ^ Peattie, Sunburst, pp. 176–186; Eric Bergerud, Fire in the Sky, p. 668.
  78. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 416–421.
  79. ^ Shinano, commissioned on 19 November 1944, was only the fourth fleet carrier commissioned by Japan during the war, after Taihō, Unryū, and Amagi.
  80. ^ of all American carriers commissioned during the war. [tabulation of aggregate carrier and carrier aircraft levels between the USN and IJN if the U.S. had lost at Midway.
  81. ^ "Titanic explorer finds Yorktown". CNN. 1998-06-04. Retrieved 2007-07-01. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  82. ^ Parshall & Tully, Shattered Sword, pp. 491–493.

References

  • Barde, Robert E. "Midway: Tarnished Victory", Military Affairs, v. 47, no. 4 (December 1983)
  • Bergerud, Eric, Fire in the Sky
  • Blair, Clay, Jr. Silent Victory (Lippincott, 1975)
  • Buehl, The Quiet Warrior (1987),
  • Cressman et al., A Glorious Page in Our History
  • Dull, The Imperial Japanese Navy: A Battle History,
  • Fuchida, Mitsuo (1955). Midway: The Battle that Doomed Japan, the Japanese Navy's Story. Annapolis, MD: United States Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-372-5. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) A Japanese account, colored by hindsight and sometimes inaccurate.
  • Hawaii, Steven. under the Rising Sun.
  • Herbert Bix, Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan, 2001,
  • Holmes, Double-Edged Secrets.
  • Layton, And I Was There: Pearl Harbor and Midway—Breaking the Secrets.
  • Lord, Walter (1967). Incredible Victory. Burford. ISBN 1-58080-059-9. Focuses primarily on the human experience of the battle.
  • Lundstrom, John B. (2005 (New edition)). The First Team: Pacific Naval Air Combat from Pearl Harbor to Midway. Annapolis, Maryland, U.S.A.: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 159114471X. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Parillo, Japanese Merchant Marine
  • Parshall, Jonathan (2005). Shattered Sword: The Untold Story of the Battle of Midway. Dulles, VA: Potomac Books. ISBN 1-57488-923-0. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) Uses recent Japanese sources.
  • Peattie & Evans, Kaigun.
  • Peattie, Sunburst: The Rise of Japanese Naval Air Power, 1909–1941
  • Potter, E. B. and Nimitz, Chester W. (1960). Sea Power. Prentice-Hall.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Prange, Gordon W. (1982). Miracle at Midway. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-050672-8. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help) The standard academic history of the battle based on massive research into American and Japanese sources.
  • Smith, Michael (2000). The Emperor's Codes: Bletchley Park and the breaking of Japan's secret ciphers, Bantam Press, ISBN 0593 046420. Chapter 11: "Midway :The battle that turned the tide"
  • Wilmot, H.P. (1983). The Barrier and the Javelin. United States Naval Institute Press. Broad-scale history of the naval war with detailed accounts of order of battle and dispositions.
  • Hakim, Joy (1995). A History of Us: War, Peace and all that Jazz. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509514-6. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)

Further reading

Books
  • Bess, Michael (2006). Choices Under Fire: Moral Dimensions of World War II. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 0-307-26365-7. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Hanson, Victor D. (2001). Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise of Western Power. Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-50052-1.
  • Hara, Tameichi (1961). Japanese Destroyer Captain. ISBN 0-345-27894-1. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help) First-hand account by Japanese captain, often inaccurate.
  • Kahn, David. The Codebreakers: The Comprehensive History of Secret Communication from Ancient Times to the Internet. Scribner. ISBN 0-684-83130-9. Significant section on Midway
  • Kernan, Alvin (2005). The Unknown Battle of Midway. Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-10989-X. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help) An account of the blunders that led to the near total destruction of the American torpedo squadrons, and of what the author calls a cover-up by naval officers after the battle.
  • Lundstrom, John B. (2005 (New edition)). First Team And the Guadalcanal Campaign: Naval Fighter Combat from August to November 1942. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-59114-472-8. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |year= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Morison, Samuel E. (1949). Coral Sea, Midway and Submarine Actions: May 1942–August 1942. (History of United States Naval Operations in World War II, Volume 4) official U.S. history.
  • Smith, Douglas V. (2006). Carrier Battles: Command Decision in Harm's Way. U.S. Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1591147948. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  • Smith, Peter C. (2007). Midway Dauntless Victory; Fresh perspectives on America's Seminal Naval Victory of 1942. Barnsley, UK: Pen & Sword Maritime. ISBN 184415583-8. Detailed study of battle, from planning to the effects on WWII
  • Weinberg, Gerhard L. (1994). A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II. Cambridge U P.
Articles
Historic documents
Miscellaneous

Template:Link FA Template:Link FA Template:Link FA