With ship profiles and original artwork, this study explores the
warships that fought World War II's last pure surface battle, the
battle itself, and why the outnumbered US Navy prevailed. The Battle
of the Komandorski Islands was unique among World War II naval
battles. It was the last daytime naval surface battle of World War II
where aircraft played no role, and saw a squadron of US Navy cruisers
and destroyers engage their Japanese counterparts over a convoy to
reinforce Attu and Kiska. Exploring the warships, the battle, and why
it was won, naval expert Mark Lardas explains that due to an
intelligence failure, the Japanese escort was twice the size expected,
with the US outnumbered 2:1 in heavy and light cruisers. Although both
sides had the same number of destroyers (four each) the Japanese
destroyers were newer and more powerful than their US counterparts. A
12-hour brawl of a surface action took place. Despite being badly
outnumbered and badly outgunned – and even though the largest US
ship was dead in the water at one point – the US Navy emerged
victorious. Illustrated with archive photos, profiles of all the major
warships involved, and action scenes illustrating key moments in the
battle, this book explains how the US victory was achieved, and
particularly highlights the importance of superior damage control.
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The USN and IJN fight the last pure surface battle
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472861375
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter