In a last desperate bid to stave off defeat, Japan's High Command
launched the terrifying kamikaze attacks. By the middle of 1944,
Imperial Japan's armed forces were in an increasingly desperate
situation. Its elite air corps had been wiped out over the Solomons in
1942–43, and its navy was a shadow of the force that had attacked
Pearl Harbor in 1941. But the Japanese had one last, desperate, card
to play. The Japanese High Command decided that the way to inflict
maximum damage on the superior enemy forces was to get the poorly
trained Japanese pilots to crash their explosive-laden aircraft onto
their target, essentially turning themselves into a guided missile.
The kamikazes announced themselves in the immediate aftermath of the
Leyte Gulf naval battles, sinking the USS St. Lo and damaging several
other ships. The zenith of the kamikaze came in the battle of Okinawa,
which included ten kikusui (Floating Chrysanthemum) operations which
involved up to several hundred aircraft attacking the US fleet. Fully
illustrated throughout, Desperate Sunset examines the development and
evolution of the kamikaze using first-hand accounts, combat reports
and archived histories.
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Japan’s kamikazes against Allied ships, 1944–45
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472829429
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter