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The Turning Points In The Pacific The Battle Of Midway And The Guadalcanal Campaign Charles River Editors

  • SKU: BELL-33698286
The Turning Points In The Pacific The Battle Of Midway And The Guadalcanal Campaign Charles River Editors
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The Turning Points In The Pacific The Battle Of Midway And The Guadalcanal Campaign Charles River Editors instant download after payment.

Publisher: Charles River Editors
File Extension: PDF
File size: 7.08 MB
Author: Charles River Editors
ISBN: B00MVBSD9Q
Language: English
Year: 2014

Product desciption

The Turning Points In The Pacific The Battle Of Midway And The Guadalcanal Campaign Charles River Editors by Charles River Editors B00MVBSD9Q instant download after payment.

Although not as well-remembered as D-Day or even the attack at Pearl Harbor that preceded it, the Battle of Midway was one of the most unique and important battles fought during World War II. In fact, the turning point in the Pacific theater took place between June 4-7, 1942 as a Japanese fleet moved a sizable fleet intending to occupy Midway Island and draw the American navy near. Instead, American aircraft flying from three aircraft carriers that had been away from Pearl Harbor in December 1941 got a bearing on the Japanese fleet and sunk four Japanese aircraft carriers, permanently crippling Japan’s navy. The Battle of Midway was one of the first major naval battles in history where the enemy fleets never actually saw or came into contact with each other. 

By the time the Battle of Midway was over, the defeat was so devastating that it was actually kept secret from all but the highest echelons of the Japanese government. Along with the loss of hundreds of aircraft and over 3,000 men killed, the four Japanese aircraft carriers lost, when compared to America’s one lost carrier, was critical considering America’s huge shipbuilding superiority. However, the Battle of Midway could also have easily turned out differently. Japan began the battle with more carriers, more and better aircraft, and more experienced crews than the Americans, and if the battle of the Coral Sea was any indication, the two sides had irrefutable proof of the dominance of the aircraft carrier in the Pacific. The implications of earlier clashes were now starkly underlined, and the fighting was now clearly about timing. The carrier fleets were incredibly powerful and crucially important, yet at the same time they were hugely vulnerable weapons systems. The protagonists at Midway were putting into practice a newly emerging naval doctrine, one which ultimately meted out a terrible punishment to the side that miscalculated. Carrier versus carrier combat had come of age.

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