the allied advance in the pacific

85
THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC ISLAND-HOPPING TOWARDS JAPAN, 1942-44

Upload: lilac

Post on 06-Feb-2016

24 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC. ISLAND-HOPPING TOWARDS JAPAN, 1942-44. IMPORTANT DATES. AUG., 1942- FEB., 1943: U.S. ASSAULTS / RETAKES GUADALCANAL NOV.,1942- JAN.,1943: ALLIED CAMPAIGN / CONQUEST OF NEW GUINEA APRIL, 1943 – JUNE, 1944: OPERATION CARTWHEEL - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

ISLAND-HOPPING TOWARDS JAPAN, 1942-44

Page 2: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUG., 1942- FEB., 1943:◦ U.S. ASSAULTS / RETAKES GUADALCANAL

NOV.,1942- JAN.,1943: ◦ ALLIED CAMPAIGN / CONQUEST OF NEW GUINEA

APRIL, 1943 – JUNE, 1944:◦ OPERATION CARTWHEEL

NOV., 1943: BATTLE OF TARAWA JUNE,1944:

◦ THE BATTLE OF SAIPAN ◦ BATTLE OF THE PHILIPPINE SEA◦ “THE GREAT MARIANAS TURKEY SHOOT”

IMPORTANT DATES

Page 3: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

ADMIRAL CHESTER H. NIMITZ GENERAL DOUGLAS MacARTHUR ADMIRAL WILLIAM F. HALSEY THE SOLOMON ISLANDS GUADALCANAL “THE TOKYO EXPRESS” NEW GUINEA “ISLAND –HOPPING” OPERATION CARTWHEEL TARAWA “THE GREAT MARIANAS TURKEY SHOOT”

IMPORTANT TERMS / PEOPLE

Page 4: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 5: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

JUNE, 1942: BATTLE OF MIDWAY:◦ IJN IS DEALT 1ST MAJOR LOSS OF WWII◦ U.S. NAVY ACHIEVES 1ST MAJOR VICTORY IN PACIFIC◦ JAPANESE ADVANCE IN PACIFIC IS STOPPED

PROBLEM:◦ JAPANESE EMPIRE IS STILL AT IT’S GREATEST EXTENT◦ JAPAN STILL CONTROLS MOST MAJOR ISLANDS IN PACIFIC◦ AUSTRALIA IS STILL THREATENED BY JAPANESE◦ JAPAN HAS EXTENSIVE NETWORK OF FORTIFIED ISLAND

CHAINS THAT MUST BE TAKEN WHY?

NO INVASION OF JAPAN IS POSSIBLE UNTIL ISLANDS ARE TAKEN ISLANDS CAN BE USED AS NAVAL AND AIR BASES

RESULT? ALLIES MUST FORM PLAN TO…◦ ASSAULT / SEIZE JAPANESE-CONTROLLED ISLANDS◦ ASSAULT & POSSIBLY INVADE JAPAN

PACIFIC SITUATION, SUMMER, 1942

Page 6: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

PROBLEM: ◦ WHAT WAS THE BEST WAY TO DEFEAT JAPAN?◦ WHAT ROUTE SHOULD THE ALLIES TAKE TO ADVANCE

TOWARDS JAPAN? NORTHERN ROUTE VIA N. PACIFIC ISLANDS? SOUTHERN ROUTE THROUGH LARGER S.PACIFIC ISLANDS?

◦ DECISION: THE SOUTHERN ROUTE◦ WHY?

MORE ISLANDS THERE ISLANDS WERE CLOSER TO EACH OTHER MANY S. PACIFIC ISLANDS WERE LARGER SO…ISLANDS COULD BE BETTER USED FOR NAVAL / AIR BASES SOUTHERN ROUTE WAS CLOSER TO AUSTRALIA

SO WHAT?◦ AUSTRALIA WAS ALLIED W/ U.S.◦ AUSSIE MILITARY WAS VITAL TO VICTORY◦ MANY U.S. TROOPS WERE BEING TRAINED/SUPPLIED THERE

PLANNING THE ADVANCE

Page 7: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 8: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 9: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 10: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 11: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

U.S. / ALLIED PLAN TAKES SHAPE:◦ ALLIED FORCES WILL ADVANCE TOWARD JAPAN ON

TWO PARALLEL ROUTES◦ SOUTH-WEST PACIFIC ROUTE:

SOLOMON ISLANDS – NEW GUINEA – PHILIPPINES◦ CENTRAL PACIFIC ROUTE:

GILBERT ISLANDS – MARSHALL ISLANDS – MARIANA ISLANDS

WHAT FORCES WILL BE USED?:◦ S.W. PACIFIC ROUTE: U.S. ARMY, USMC, USN, AUST.◦ C. PACIFIC ROUTE: USN, USMC

WHO’S IN COMMAND?:◦ S.W. PACIFIC: DOUGLAS MacARTHUR◦ C. PACIFIC: CHESTER NIMITZ

PLANNING THE ADVANCE (cont’d.)

Page 12: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 13: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

ALLIED OFFENSIVE BEGINS THERE: WHY?◦ GUADALCANAL IS @ SOUTHERN END OF JAPANESE EMPIRE◦ ISLAND HAS AIRFIELD ALLIES NEED FOR FUTURE OPERATIONS◦ ISLAND CONTROLS SEA LANES TO AUSTRALIA

BOTH SIDES RECOGNIZE IT’S STRATEGIC IMPORTANCE◦ SO…ALLIES WANT IT / JAPANESE WANT TO KEEP IT

USMC GIVEN INITIAL TASK OF TAKING ISLAND (U.S.ARMY INVOLVED LATER ON)

AUG. ’42-FEB.,’43: VICIOUS FIGHTING ON ISLAND◦ JAPANESE DESPERATE TO HOLD ISLAND◦ THE “TOKYO EXPRESS” REINFORCES JAPANESE◦ U.S. NAVY DISRUPTS “TOKYO EXPRESS”

OTHER PROBLEMS:◦ TROPICAL CLIMATE◦ TROPICAL DISEASE (EX. MALARIA)◦ JUNGLE TERRAIN MAKES MOVEMENT DIFFICULT

FINAL RESULT: ◦ JAPANESE CAN’T MAINTAIN TROOPS / SUPPLIES◦ CASUALTIES GROW (EX. 22,000 KIA/MIA)◦ JAPANESE WITHDRAW FROM ISLAND / U.S. CONTROLS ISLAND

GUADALCANAL

Page 14: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

IJA INFANTRYMAN (L)AND IJA OFFICER (R)

Page 15: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 16: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 17: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 18: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AERIAL PHOTOGRAPH, HENDERSON AIRFIELD, GUADALCANAL

Page 19: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 20: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 21: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

BATTLE MAP,“BLOODY RIDGE”,GUADALCANAL, SEPT., 1942

Page 22: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

U.S. MARINES ON “BLOODY RIDGE”

Page 23: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

JAPANESE KIA ON “BLOODY RIDGE”

Page 24: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

JAPANESE KIA, BLOODY RIDGE, GUADALCANAL, 1942

Page 25: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 26: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 27: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 28: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

NEW GUINEA: WHY IMPORTANT?◦ LOCATION

CLOSE TO AUSTRALIA LOCATED ON IMPORTANT SEA ROUTES TO JAPAN WAS USED AS A BASE FOR SUPPORTING SMALLER ISLAND GARRISONS

◦ JAPANESE OCCUPIED NORTHERN HALF OF ISLAND HAD FAILED TO OCCUPY SOUTHERN HALF WHY? JUNGLE & MOUNTAIN TERRAIN MADE MOVEMENT DIFFICULT

◦ 1942-43: U.S. / AUSSIES DECIDE TO PUSH JAPANESE OFF ISLAND◦ PROBLEM?

TERRAIN – OWEN STANLEY MTS. ARE DIFFICULT TO PASS JUNGLE TERRAIN CLIMATE DISEASE

◦ SOLUTION? MacARTHUR DECIDES ON SIMPLE PLAN: “OPERATION CARTWHEEL”

BYPASS JAPANESE STRONGHOLDS USE ARMY & NAVY TO CUT OFF JAPANESE SUPPLIES STARVE JAPANESE ONLY ATTACK AREAS THAT ARE VITAL TO ALLIED MOVEMENT

◦ RESULT? JAPANESE SUFFER MASSIVE LOSSES – 150,000 KIA / MIA ALLIES SEIZE NEW GUINEA

NEW GUINEA

Page 29: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

NEW GUINEA

Page 30: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

THE KOKODA TRAIL,NEW GUINEA, 1942

Page 31: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUSSIES ON THE KOKODA TRAIL, NEW GUINEA, 1942

Page 32: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

“STAIRCASE” CONSTRUCTION,KOKODA TRAIL, NEW GUINEA,1942-1943

Page 33: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUSSIES ASCENDING THE KOKODA TRIAL, 1942

Page 34: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUSSIES TAKING REST, KOKODA TRAIL, 1943

Page 35: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUSSIES ON THE KOKODA TRAIL, 1943

Page 36: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUSSIES IN NEW GUINEA, 1943

Page 37: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

NEW GUINEA U.S. OPERATIONS1942-43

Page 38: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 39: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUSSIES WITH CAPTURED JAPANESE EQUIPMENT, NEW GUINEA, 1943

Page 40: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUSSIE INFANTRY, NEW GUINEA, 1943

Page 41: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

AUSTRALIAN ANTI-JAPANESEPROPAGANDA , 1942

Page 42: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 43: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

U.S. ARMY INFANTRY ON PATROL,NEW GUINEA, 1943

Page 44: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 45: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

WHEN? NOVEMBER , 1943 WHERE? TARAWA ATOLL, GILBERT ISLANDS, CENTRAL PACIFIC WHAT? JAPANESE-HELD ATOLL W/ AIRFIELD WHY?

◦ TARAWA WAS THE EASTERNMOST USEABLE AIRSTRIP INSIDE JAPANESE-HELD TERRITORY

◦ CAPTURE WAS VITAL TO ADVANCE TOWARDS JAPAN ATOLL WAS DEFENDED BY IJN NAVAL INFANTRY W/OUT FLEET

SUPPORT USMC & USN ARE ORDERED TO SEIZE TARAWA & BEGIN USING

AIRSTRIP IJN FORCE: 5000 (approx.) IJN INFANTRY W/ WELL-

CONSTRUCTED DEFENSIVE POSITIONS U.S. FORCE:

◦ USMC 2nd MARINE DIVISION (& ELEMENTS OF USA 27TH INFANTRY DIVISION)◦ USN – TASK FORCE 30◦ TOTAL: APPROX. 35,000 MEN

TARAWA

Page 46: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 47: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

BETIO ISLAND, TARAW ATOLL

Page 48: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

JAPANESE DEFENSIVE POSITIONS, TARAWA, NOVEMBER, 1943

Page 49: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 50: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 51: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 52: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 53: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

2nd DIVISION MARINES LAND ON TARAWA

Page 54: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 55: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 56: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 57: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 58: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 59: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 60: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 61: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

PRESENT-ARMS,U.S. MARINES,BETIO, TARAWA,CURRENT-DAY

Page 62: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

PROBLEMS:◦ JAPANESE DEFENSIVE POSITIONS ARE STRONGER THAN ANTICIPATED◦ NAVAL GUNFIRE IS LESS EFFECTIVE THAN HOPED FOR◦ AMPHIBIOUS LANDING CRAFT ARE CAUGHT ON CORAL REEF◦ MARINES ARE FORCED TO WADE ASHORE◦ CASUALITES ARE VERY HIGH

FINAL CASUALTIES:◦ IJN: 4900 KIA, APPROX. 200 SURVIVORS◦ USMC: 3000, APPROX., 900-1000 KIA

SO WHAT?◦ USN & USMC HAVE TO RE-EVALUATE THEIR AMPHIBIOUS ASSAULT

TACTICS EX.:

HOW CAN NAVAL ARTILLERY BE MADE MORE EFFICIENT DURING THE NEXT ASSAULT?

WHAT ARE THE BEST TACTICS / METHODS TO USE AGAINST JAPANESE POSITIONS?

◦ USN & USMC BEGIN NEW TRAINING METHODS FOR MARINES & NAVAL CREWS

TARAWA (cont’d.)

Page 63: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

THE U.S. ADVANCE FROM HAWAII TO THE PHILIPPINES

Page 64: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 65: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 66: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

WHEN? JUNE 19-20, 1944 WHERE? THE PHILIPPINE SEA (east of the Philippine Islands) WHO?

◦ IJN – ADM. JISABURO OZAWA◦ USN – ADM. RAYMOND SPRUANCE

FORCES:◦ IJN:

5 AIRCRAFT CARRIERS 5 BATTLESHIPS 750 PLANES

◦ USN: 7 AIRCRAFT CARRIERS 7 BATTLESHIPS 956 PLANES

WHY?◦ U.S. FORCES ARE “ISLAND-HOPPING” WESTWARD TOWARD PHILIPPINES &

JAPAN◦ IJN BELIEVES IT HAS TO LAUNCH A MAJOR OFFENSIVE TO SLOW U.S.

PROGRESS◦ U.S. 5TH FLEET, MOVING TOWARDS JAPAN, SEEMS LIKE A GOOD TARGET

THE BATTLE OF THE PHILIPPINE SEA

Page 67: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

JUNE 17: IJN TARGETS U.S. 5TH FLEET FOR ATTACK JUNE 18th:

◦ U.S. 5TH FLEET DISCOVERS IJN TO WEST OF U.S. POSITION

◦ SPRUANCE IS CAUTIOUS NOT TO PURSUE IJN W/OUT PROPER INTELLIEGENCE

JUNE 19TH: BATTLE BEGINS BATTLE TRAITS:

◦ MOSTLY AERIAL RAIDS ON ENEMY FLEETS◦ U.S. HAS ADVANTAGES:

MORE CARRIERS (7) MORE EXPERIENCED PILOTS BETTER RADAR CAPABILITY FOR PLANES BETTER PLANES

THE BATTLE OF THE PHILIPPINE SEA (cont’d.)

Page 68: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

U.S. NAVY, GRUMMAN F-6-F “HELLCAT” FIGHTER

Page 69: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

GRUMMAN F6F SINGLE-SEAT FIGHTER

Page 70: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

MITSUBISHI “ZERO” FIGHTER

Page 71: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 72: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

U.S.N. F6Fs ON COMBAT AIR PATROL, 1944

Page 73: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 74: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 75: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 76: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 77: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 78: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

JAPANESE TORPEDO PLANE HIT BY ANTI-AIRCRAFT FIRE

Page 79: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 80: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 81: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 82: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC
Page 83: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

JUNE 19th: ◦ IJN LAUNCHES 4 AERIAL ASSAULTS ON U.S. 5TH FLEET◦ IJN PLANES ARE REPEATEDLY INTERCEPTED BY U.S

PLANES◦ IJN AIR LOSSES ARE HEAVY◦ AIR BATTLE IS KNOWN AS “THE MARIANAS TURKEY

SHOOT”◦ U.S. FLEET LOSSES ARE LIGHT

JAPANESE AIR LOSSES – WHY SO HEAVY?◦ U.S. PILOTS ARE NOW MORE EXPERIENCED◦ U.S. PLANES ARE NOW AS GOOD (and often better)

THAN THE JAPANESE ZERO FIGHTER◦ MOST / BEST JAPANESE PILOTS WERE KILLED EARLIER IN

WAR◦ SO…JAPANESE PILOTS ARE LESS EXPERIENCED

THE BATTLE OF THE PHILIPPINE SEA (cont’d.)

Page 84: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

JUNE 20TH: U.S. COUNTERATTACKS U.S. FLEET DOESN’T DISCOVER IJN UNTIL LATE

AFTERNOON / EALRY EVENING PROBLEM?

◦ IF U.S. LAUNCHES LATE-DAY ATTACK, PLANES MAY NOT BE ABLE TO RETURN UNTIL AFTER DARK

◦ RESULT…U.S. PLANES MAY BE LOST DUE TO DARKNESS

U.S. ATTACKS @ 6:00pm (approx. time) 550 U.S. PLANES ATTACK IJN IJN SHIP LOSSES ARE HEAVY U.S. PLANES SUFFER LOSSES ON RETURN TRIP

DUE TO DARKNESS & FUEL DEPLETION

BATTLE OF THE PHILIPPINE SEA (cont’d.)

Page 85: THE ALLIED ADVANCE IN THE PACIFIC

HEAVY IJN LOSSES:◦ 3 AIRCRAFT CARRIERS SUNK◦ 2 OIL TANKERS SUNK◦ 6 SHIPS HEAVILY DAMAGED◦ 600 PLANES (approx. #) DESTROYED (INJ & LAND-BASED PLANES)◦ PILOT LOSSES ARE IRREPLACEABLE

U.S. LOSSES:◦ 123 PLANES DESTROYED◦ SOME DAMAGE TO U.S. SHIPS

EFFECT?◦ U.S. “ISLAND-HOPPING” CONTINUES ◦ U.S. IS NOW PREPARED TO INVADE PHILIPPINES◦ IJN AIRCREWS ARE DECIMATED◦ IJN NOW MUST RELY ON BATTLESHIPS TO STOP U.S. NAVAL

ADVANCE

FINAL RESULTS