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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#16 | |
Soundman
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#17 |
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True. With the Japanese re-visualizing history is kinda like re-arranging deck chairs on the Titanic. That endless war in China also didn't help matters either. Their best option has probably not to go to war at all....and certainly not to start one with a galvanizing sneak attack.
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#18 | |
Soundman
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Even if the US had accepted the status quo in the Pacific post Pearl Harbour (utterly unthinkable), the USSR was still going to crush Japan in 1945 to regain lost territories. Culturally impossible, but the Japs would have best profited from declaring for the allies in 1939/40 and sending most of their fleet to the Med and a Div or two in support roles, they could have then 'secured' the DEI for the Dutch and used the resources to push for a win in China (they would have to try to stop the extremely atrocity prone IJA from committing its worst excesses), I'm not saying they'd have won - but they would have had indirect allied assistance and would have secured a lot of immediately usable resources and couldn't have lost as badly as they did. |
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#19 | |
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One other possibility that I've seen brought up before would be if Germany had knocked the Soviet Union out of Europe in 1941 and Japan had then decided on going after whatever easy pickings were left of Stalin's regime in Siberia instead of going south. Frankly I don't feel Germany's chances in the Soviet Union were much better than Japan's against the Allies. However, Germany gave it their best shot and as well as they appeared to be doing in the summer and fall of '41 the Japanese had already made up their mind to turn elsewhere. So probably a moot point. ![]() |
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#20 | |
Soundman
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Its what makes 'alternate war plans' so difficult for Japan - they had few options available to them and their culture closed the better options to them, so they were forced onto a very bad one way path. |
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#21 |
Sonar Guy
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in a round about kind of way japan lost its war when the US utilized adapted UK radar technology.
they just didnt know that they had lost.
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#22 |
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The striking thing about the IJN and the Japanese military in general when you look back on it was their slavish mania for the offensive at the expense of defense. Everything was geared for the attack. They had destroyers and cruisers trained to a razor's edge for night surface attack with torpedoes and then guns. But they had virtually no training for ASW and woefully insufficent AA arament. They had as their primary fighter the Zero and the Betty as their primary naval strike plane. Both traded durability and protection for range and striking distance. Even in the vital carrier task forces ships sailed too far apart to properly support each with AA fire and fighter pilots on escort missions often peeled off to chase after planes before their charges reached their targets leaving them defenseless. The submarine fleet was trained to see itself as an extension of the Battle Fleet and to go after capital ships and to regard merchants as less than honorable prey. Even though they had the finest torpedo in the world at the time. As in the one case noted in the post above you even had subs equipped with attack planes.
That epitome of last ditch weapons, the Kamikaze was offensive in nature. Their last remaining operational battleship, the Yamato was sent in on a hopeless "attack" run. This extended even to the army with suicidal banzai charges when digging in and holding ground would have bought more time. However, the Japnese Army certainly showed in New Guinea, Iwo Jima, and Palau it could be quite tenacious in defense when it wanted too. Just shows what a lack of balance can do. ![]() |
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#23 | |
Navy Seal
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#24 |
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Thanks Tak! I lived in Okinawa for a few years as an Air Force brat. I think something stuck.
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#25 | |
Soundman
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it pops up on Amazon.com and is well worth getting hold of. |
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#26 | ||
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#27 | |
Soundman
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re your example above, yes they would return empty and pass an empty convoy going in the other direction to pick up resources, then throw in the fact that the IJA and IJN ran independent supply systems so that sort of waste was happening twice. Parillo also goes into the production of ships and the requisitioning of ships from the civilian sector, as well as the spiteful approach of both the IJA and the IJN to drafting civilians that were working in vital support areas for the other service. |
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