Wed Dec 06, 2006 2:00 pm
Wed Dec 06, 2006 2:37 pm
Wed Dec 06, 2006 10:40 pm
Thu Dec 07, 2006 1:00 am
I have always heard that folks from that era always could recall exactly where they were, & what they were doing when they heard news of the attack.
Thu Dec 07, 2006 2:32 am
coldaffyduck wrote:My great uncle was playing golf on Diamond Head on 12/7/01. He always said that if he would have known exactly what was going on, he could have thrown his golf club up in the air and downed a few planes.
Thu Dec 07, 2006 3:41 am
Thu Dec 07, 2006 4:21 am
Additionally, some Japanese strategists may have been influenced by U.S. Admiral Harry Yarnell's approach in the 1932 joint Army-Navy exercises, which assumed an invasion of Hawai?i. Yarnell, as commander of the attacking force, placed his carriers northwest of O?ahu in rough weather and launched "attack" planes on the morning of Sunday, February 7, 1932. Umpires noted Yarnell's aircraft were able to inflict serious "damage" on the defenders, who were unable to locate his fleet for 24 hours after the attack. Conventional U.S. Navy doctrine of the time (and other naval opinion as well) believed any attacking force would be destroyed by the battleship force (the "battle line") and dismissed Yarnell's strategy as impractical in the real world.
Thu Dec 07, 2006 4:35 am
Thu Dec 07, 2006 6:00 am
Robbie Stuart wrote:From; Navy Times
darn the torpedoes!: Pearl Harbor shattered conventional thinking
By Charles Jones
Special to the Times
The second: The 1910 flight from the cruiser Birmingham, anchored in Hampton Roads — the first flight from a ship — marked the end of the gun as the deadliest naval weapon.
Combining the ironclad and the airplane resulted in naval aviation, which would make aircraft carriers and airplanes, not battleships and guns, the most dangerous naval weapons.
Robbie
Thu Dec 07, 2006 6:23 am
Originalboxcar wrote:Ask any Marine today what he would want for for support and he'll tell you, give me a couple Iowa's behind me. The penetration and destructive power of a HE or AP 16" round is still unequalled today.
Thu Dec 07, 2006 7:25 am
Thu Dec 07, 2006 8:23 am
JDK wrote:Originalboxcar wrote:Ask any Marine today what he would want for for support and he'll tell you, give me a couple Iowa's behind me. The penetration and destructive power of a HE or AP 16" round is still unequalled today.
...and often (in Royal Naval use) directed from an AOP Auster aircraft...Certainly in Normandy and Salerno among others.
Also that use assumes air superiority. May I present HMS Prince of Wales & HMS Repulse, and the IJN Yamato?
Thu Dec 07, 2006 9:13 am
JDK wrote:There's always something new to learn in history, but clearly not from Navy News. Gee, how'd they manage to write so much without mentioning the invention of the through-deck carrier or Taranto?Willful ignorance based on the Not Invented Here syndrome's not a good idea.
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Most sources manage to mention Japanese interest in the Royal Navy attack on the Italian Fleet in harbour as a partial insparation for the Pearl Harbor attack. You'd expect Navy News to do better. Poor.
Thu Dec 07, 2006 10:22 am
Thu Dec 07, 2006 2:02 pm