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-   -   War Topic: what would YOU have done re Pearl Harbor? (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=123020)

Zayphod 10-04-07 12:37 PM

War Topic: what would YOU have done re Pearl Harbor?
 
There was a recent discussion here about an historian on PBS and his ideas regarding what the IJN was going to do. Along with a suggestion that they invade Hawaii, etc, and the suggestion that they hold it in order to cause the US to beg for peace.

Now, all the political discussions aside, if YOU were in charge of the Japanese fleet, and committed to making the first stike on Pearl, how would YOU have followed-up on that attack, i.e., send in another wave of bombers, send in an invasion force, take over Midway (or invade/hold Midway AND Hawaii)?

So as a strategy game, how would YOU have brought the US Navy to it's knees? Remember, the first strike already took place - you're committed now to either win greatly, or die in an atomic fireball.

No pressure.

SUBMAN1 10-04-07 12:41 PM

I think Japan would have had they found the AMerican carriers. THe fact that they didn't at the time of the attack probably made them a little leary about hanging around waiting for them to counter attack.

I think what we had here was a classic case of fog of war.

-S

STEED 10-04-07 12:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayphod
US to beg for peace.

Never would of happen even if it went all Japans way, America would recover and fight back.

SUBMAN1 10-04-07 12:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by STEED
Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayphod
US to beg for peace.

Never would of happen even if it went all Japans way, America would recover and fight back.

That would be true. Most of the US is a proud nation so I doubt that would even happen today, given more equal military terms such as found back then.

-S

Zayphod 10-04-07 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SUBMAN1
Quote:

Originally Posted by STEED
Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayphod
US to beg for peace.

Never would of happen even if it went all Japans way, America would recover and fight back.

That would be true. Most of the US is a proud nation so I doubt that would even happen today, given more equal military terms such as found back then.

-S

Good point - as I run this scene in my head, I see Japan sending in an invasion force to take Hawaii, and another force taking Midway, securing their ports and bases for use by the IJN. Using them as a base, the only thing the US would have left would be to use carriers to transport planes into the battlefield to try to take Hawaii back.

My point was that it would have been 10 times harder for the US to recover had Hawaii been taken and held.

I agree with you, however, that the US would have never begged for peace. It just would have taken much longer (I think) for the US to have won the war in the Pacific had they lost Hawaii from the get-go.

joea 10-04-07 01:13 PM

Well the Nihon Kaigun site has a good article explaining why it would have been almost impossible for Japan to put together a force to invade Hawaii.


http://www.combinedfleet.com/pearlops.htm

Skybird 10-04-07 01:29 PM

Probably no matter what Japan would have or could have done, in the end the constant shifting of balance in favour of the immense industrial potential of the US would have decided it all against japan. I am sure that JDR was convinced to win it from the very beginning. For those Japanese knowing America, it must have been clear from the beginning that they were starting a desperate fight for pure survival. In the movie "Tora Tora Tora", Yamato is presented as a commander who knew this very well. Without trying to brake the American strangling of Japan's need for oil, it also would have been a desperate situation for Japan. So they were damned when striking Pearl, and were damned if not striking Pearl.

I belong to those people thinking that JDR knew all this very well, and saw this as the needed key event to get the war-antipathic US (the population) into the war in Europe, which until Pearl Harbour was no popular option.

What I would have done as Japanese commander after the strike on Pearl? The movie paints it like the commander wanting to preserve the Japanese fleet for the war that just had been launched by hurting the awakling giant. In principle that was right, and there was not much meaning in going to possess Hawai, strategically, it would have left the Japanese wih too much space and too long supply lines to cover, imo. But i would have stayed a while in the region, trying to find and sink the missing carriers, before heading West again.

Zayphod 10-04-07 01:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by joea
Well the Nihon Kaigun site has a good article explaining why it would have been almost impossible for Japan to put together a force to invade Hawaii.


http://www.combinedfleet.com/pearlops.htm

Thanks for that link, very interesting read.

Based on the information I just read, Japan seemed to have jumped the gun, starting this war a tad too soon, then, since they didn't have the resources to subdue and hold Hawaii.

As an alternative, a carrier could have been stationed near enough to launch an occasional attack on Pearl during the repair process, keeping the base unusable for the US. Failing that, it seems they sealed their own fate when they attacked, and then left us to repair, rebuild, and come back at them.

My main question though, is what could have been done differently, i.e, wait a few more months until an invasion COULD have been made, etc? I realize that the further out the IJN extended itself from home base, the more difficult it is to hold on to stuff.

Zayphod 10-04-07 01:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Skybird
What I would have done as Japanese commander after the strike on Pearl? The movie paints it like the commander wanting to preserve the Japanese fleet for the war that just had been launched by hurting the awakling giant. In principle that was right, and there was not much meaning in going to possess Hawai, strategically, it would have left the Japanese wih too much space and too long supply lines to cover, imo. But i would have stayed a while in the region, trying to find and sink the missing carriers, before heading West again.

I'd agree with that tactic. There's not a lot of bases in the Pacific, so carriers were the most important thing out there. Losing them would be costly. Perhaps Silent Hunter X will have the option to make it go either way, unless there's already a game out there that does this.

STEED 10-04-07 02:21 PM

Were the Japanese so full of themselves to think they could win a war against America? I don't think so, there aim was to deliver a blow that would slow down there entry in to the war and full offensive operations but bad luck hit Japan at Peal as the American carriers were at sea and at Midway even more bad luck.

It seems to me the Japanese wanted to dig in hard on what they captured and after some bitter fighting and heavy loses to America they would sit down and draw up some treaty, granted that is a what if scenario. From the American point of view there would be no such thing and they would fight on and defeat Japan which attacked them and started the war.

DeepIron 10-04-07 02:39 PM

This may be a bit OT, but I thought I'd share it with you...

My grandfather, who is 93 and in excellent shape, was a Radioman 2nd class on a DE with the carrier group that was returning to Pearl. I asked him when I saw him last year, "Why were the carriers late in getting to Pearl?" I've always been curious about this...

He said that they had hit some heavy weather and reduced speed because some of the smaller vessels were not making headway. The task force slowed appreciably, I can't remember the exact speed he told me, and hence were a day late in returning to Pearl.

He said as they steamed into the harbor that the men stood dumbfounded at the railings, staring at the carnage, not a word was spoken...

My Grandfather then told me, it was like everyone became of one mind, one resolve... The Japanese were going to get a pay back...

Quote:

Were the Japanese so full of themselves to think they could win a war against America? I don't think so...
Adm Yamamoto said in his personal notes that he expected the IJN to "run free" through the Pacific for maybe two years, then the American forces would start to take control and eventually defeat them.

micky1up 10-04-07 05:42 PM

the IJN made a fatal mistake they should have remained in place off pearl harbour untill they got the carriers they came for the carrier force commander made this mistake and it cost japan the war maybe an invasion of the island would have achieve similar results but it wasnt a time for half measures

Tchocky 10-04-07 06:02 PM

Rig ship for dive, and the USS SUBSIM sails for Tokyo, fisticuffs may ensue.

Ah, I've no idea what I'd do, if I ended up in US command something would have had gone dreadfully wrong along the line :)

Skybird 10-04-07 06:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by micky1up
the IJN made a fatal mistake they should have remained in place off pearl harbour untill they got the carriers they came for the carrier force commander made this mistake and it cost japan the war maybe an invasion of the island would have achieve similar results but it wasnt a time for half measures

It was not really a mistake of the Japanese: their plan intended to kill the battleships, heavy cruisers and carriers indeed. It's just that luck plays a role in war, and the carriers shortly before had left the harbour, and their return was delayed, which saved them from being in place when the Japanese hammer fell down. The Japanese expected them to be there, and planned to kill them, but had no chance to know of the carriers having left shortly before. there were several occaisons were bad luck and coincidence massively messed up the war from a Japanese perspective, especially during Midway and the way in which the Japanese carriers got lost. Several air attack waves of the americans went very badly before, and costed the Navy alost all participating airplanes withoiut sinking a single destroyer, and then all changed completely within just three minutes due to the constant changing of armament of the Japanese planes wich led to all that explosives on deck when by random chance (more or less) a new wave of bombers arrived, and destroyed three? four? carriers. A chain of extremly unlucky coincidences (from a Japanese perspective, for it meant the turning point in the war).

joea 10-04-07 06:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Zayphod
My main question though, is what could have been done differently, i.e, wait a few more months until an invasion COULD have been made, etc? I realize that the further out the IJN extended itself from home base, the more difficult it is to hold on to stuff.

I don't know, to my mind the big thing is getting the troops needed to do the job. Japan could not run a land war in Asia, especially China, watch the Red Bear (still a worry from my reading both the USSR and Japan kept forces in the Far East despite the Non-aggression pact). The Army refused troops for a Navy idea to invade Australia.


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