k5083 wrote:
Yes, there had to be a moment when the breaks first went against Japan and it became obvious that America's hugely larger military and economic strength was going to pound it into the ground, and Midway happened to be it. If it weren't Midway, it would have been some other engagement, August
To State the obvious...
But it WAS Midway.
Therefore it's important.
But Midway was the battle where the IJN lost its carriers and many seasoned pilots, as well as the power to maintain the initiative it had.
Yes, eventually the Allies (in the pacific, and the march to the Japanese home islands, that means the U.S.) would have won.
But we can say the same about any battle of the war, if Germany had won the battle of Britain, and invaded the UK, the U.S. would still have won the war.
True, it might have been in 1955 (after massed B-36 raids escorted by P-80s vs. many Luftwaffe jets

), but we would have won.
That doesn't diminish the importance of the BoB or the weakening effect Stalin's armies had on Hitler's forces.
Your argument works fine if we're talking about who invented whatever...if it wasn't Edison, it would have been John X. Smith. Fair enough.
But your argument could also apply to any war...but it doesn't take into account the occasional great man.
What would have happened if Lincoln was a weak, indecisive, unengaged president? You can't assume that his democratic opponent (in 1864 McClellan) would have been just as good.