“This series is basically a photo compilation with brief historical
sections for each batch of images so we have some idea of what these
images are all about. I've always been interested in this part of the
war and very much enjoyed this one. I'm sure you will find it just as
nice.” -ModelingMadness.Com Fierce Pacific ground, sea, and aerial
combat raged between the Allies and Imperial Japan to halt the
latter’s inexorable advance in 1942-1943. After the American victory
at Guadalcanal in February 1943, Admiral Halsey’s South Pacific Area
(SPA) naval and amphibious forces battled through the Solomon Islands
building new and acquiring extant Japanese airfields. Simultaneously
General Douglas MacArthur’s Southwest Pacific Area (SWPA)
Australian-American ground forces, supported by General George
Kenney’s US Fifth Air Force and other Allied air squadrons, captured
Japanese installations in Papua New Guinea before campaigning along
Northeast New Guinea’s northern coast ousting or bypassing enemy
installations there. Using newly-built Papuan airfields, the Allies
gained air superiority over New Guinea and also interdicted Japanese
maritime supply lines. Yet, the main Japanese southwest Pacific
bastion at Rabaul on the northeastern tip of New Britain, the largest
island of the Bismarck Archipelago, remained. In March 1943, realizing
an amphibious assault and ground campaign against Rabaul’s naval and
army bases would be too costly, the US Joint Chiefs of Staff decided
to neutralise Rabaul with a joint SPA and SWPA aerial siege rather
than capture it. This IOW volume recounts this strategy during 1943
and 1944 and the December 1943 amphibious landings by the US 1st
Marine Division and US Sixth Army units at Cape Gloucester and Arawe,
respectively, which successfully isolated the Japanese fortress and
satellite bases.
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Japan’s Major South Pacific Base
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781036102067
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Casemate Publishers and Book Distributors, LLC
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter