Did any other navy make use of underway replenishment for coal-powered fleets after the Second Pacific Squadron proved that it was _possible?_
@bkjeong43025 ай бұрын
If Spruance and Nimitz swapped positions how exactly would the US war effort have gone?
@thehandoftheking33145 ай бұрын
Hi drach, I've just got back from a holiday at the seaside. Whilst there I was happy to see the RNLI returning ashore with two people who had been swept out to sea. This made me think, could you do a video or two on the RNLI, their history and maybe some of the most famous, or historic, rescues such as the hospital ship Rohilla in 1914?
@joshthomasmoorenew5 ай бұрын
If Hiryu's air group had not found Yorktown the second time but one of the other carreirs (And the same damage had been applied as historically from said attack) would Spruance have tried to go for Hiryu still or would he go for a withdrawal?
@WarrantOfficerWill225 ай бұрын
it seems that throughout naval history, any screw up or major defeat leads to decades, if not centuries, of catch up needing to be done, is this assessment correct? and has anyone ever managed to get out of such a pit?
@EtuSunTzu5 ай бұрын
These “pocket” professional biographies of the various admirals and key personnel are absolutely great. I wish KZbin contained more historical content producers with the same level of quality and quantity that Drachinifel seemingly produces so easily. However, one only need survey KZbin more broadly to quickly realize that what Drach does is neither easy nor quick. You really have a gift for this Drach, and thank you for sharing it with the world. We are in your debt.
@HeedTheLorax5 ай бұрын
I'm guessing some you have come across other channels that are basically a rehash of Drach's work. Almost word for word in some instances.
@DornishVintage5 ай бұрын
The only one that I can think of with the same level of context, nuancy and possibly even better minute-for-minute analysis and what-ifs is Montemayor. But he only puts out a video every 2 years or so.
@HeedTheLorax5 ай бұрын
@@DornishVintage agreed
@halkyuusen86265 ай бұрын
Sadly KZbin fears historically relevant yet controversial or dark topics.
@michaelinsc97245 ай бұрын
Could not have said it better!
@miamijules21495 ай бұрын
You know you’ve got a raging Drach addiction when 40 minutes of Drach on Spruance just isn’t enough.
@andy4an5 ай бұрын
You can go back and relisten to the other one on him
@terrylong88945 ай бұрын
When do we get Spruance's apotheosis from a boy to a destroyer class?
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
And it's only part 2 of who knows how many?
@joevallez86645 ай бұрын
And of course.. I find my twin brother.. here in the midst of our all encompassing addictions.. Hey Jules.. sup buddy :)
@williestyle355 ай бұрын
Man, I had sought to avoid these encapsulated biographical episodes - knowing the addiction was lurking in them. Now I'm hooked. Anyone got a complete listing of all of Admiral Spruance's various command ships to tide me over to the next episode?
@danielstickney24005 ай бұрын
Spruance's reasons for choosing a cruiser for his flagship makes sense. Choosing USS Indianapolis as that cruiser also makes sense as she had a reputation as a tight ship and had been specifically outfitted as a fleet flagship. Her being named for Spruance's home town was probably just an added bonus.
@williamcostigan915 ай бұрын
I was wondering why Kurita initially had his flag aboard a cruiser during Leyte as opposed to one of his battleships. But assuming his reasoning was similar to Spruance I suppose it makes perfect sense.
@Wolfeson285 ай бұрын
I agree that Spruance's reasons make perfect sense. It's interesting, though, that the rationale for making a choice like Spruance did only really arose with fleets of the size and diversity of those in the Pacific War. There really isn't any reason to think that Nelson would have been in better position to command from a frigate rather than Victory, for example, or Jellicoe being on a cruiser rather than Iron Duke. The concept of a fleet with multiple massive elements, each of which was responsible for different tasks in a gigantic combined operation, was essentially a novel one for the Pacific War in WWII, so it's interesting that Spruance came up with a logical new solution so quickly.
@paulagraham24494 ай бұрын
Some ships of different classes and types are built with accomidations to be Flag Ships.
@hatchcrazy5 ай бұрын
The Japanese pilots who really did get sent to “fly until they died” could attest to how much benefit the US reaped from Spruance’s simple act of listening to his aviators about their combat fatigue and instituting the rotation program. Maybe it helped that he *wasn’t* an experienced carrier admiral - he didn’t think he knew better than the actual pilots.
@MrNicoJac5 ай бұрын
The Japanese did not have the fuel to spare to afford the luxury of sending their best pilots home. Also, when the VT fuses reached the Pacific supply yards, experience didn't matter much anymore. Even at Midway, iirc, Japanese wings lost 50% of their strength per sortie... So you are right on a summary level, but the devil is always in the details 🙃
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
@@MrNicoJac The US used its pilots from 42 to train the pilots of 43 and then to lead in 44. They also would take the top 10-20% of candidates and train them into pilots whereas the IJN took maybe the top 5% and washed a lot of them out of the program. And the US at the time was the leading producer of petroleum products in the world thanks to Texas Tea. Fletcher also would talk to the junior pilots and listen to what they had to say which kinda upset the head of the Carrier's aviation. But both men seemed to be respected an to some degree liked by most of the men under their command.
@ph897875 ай бұрын
@@PeteOtton Speaking of Fletcher. Joseph "Jocko" Clarke was XO on Yorktown for those early raids and was pissed off that Fletcher and Yorktown's Captain Elliot Buckmaster were consulting the younger pilots instead of someone like him who has more experience. In someways, dismissing Fletcher after Saratoga's torpedoing at the end of August actually set the Guadalcanal Campaign back. As he was the USN's most experienced carrier admiral. At a time when the IJN's carriers were still a potent threat.
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
@@ph89787 The junior pilots seemed to have better ideas than the older brown shoes who reset the way the USN operated carriers. Imagine if we had stuck with operating carriers as groups instead of on their own. We might have been able to go toe to toe with IJN more effectively sooner.
@atempestsinister5 ай бұрын
@@ph89787Yeah, sadly Fletcher caught the short end of the stick when in reality he had done a fantastic job with what limited resources he had.
@georgeorwell45345 ай бұрын
A big fan of Raymond Spruance. His ability to make decisions based on his foundation of experience and profound brilliance led directly to American victory.
@garypowell90715 ай бұрын
One of the great injustices of the Pacific War was that Halsey was promoted to five-star instead of Spruance. Halsy's later several mistakes make him clearly undeserving of that honor, especially in comparison to Spruance's performance. Halsey simply got better press, and his mistakes were swept under the carpet.
@ph897875 ай бұрын
On the other hand. Fleet Admiral’s pay was frozen in the 50s. While Spruance’s Admiral’s pay went up. So he made more money than Halsey in retirement.
@jacobdill44995 ай бұрын
@@michaelrodgers6732 lets keep modern politician buzzwords out of this history channel
@michaelrodgers67325 ай бұрын
@@jacobdill4499 Hello, thank you and best regards! Michael
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
@@ph89787 Spruance also had a knack for investing in the stock market. I think his daughter took over this task during the war. The freezing of the Fleet Admirals' pay was something of a bother for Nimitz. Luckily he took a job with the UN to be a mediator between India and Pakistan for about 18 months that helped pay the bills even while having to maintain a second apartment in NYC.
@dennisplatte75065 ай бұрын
Good generals and admirals all make some very big errors. That is because they take the chances that the more timid generals and admirals would not take. You could have a few generals or admirals possibly made not big errors---and weren't worth much.
@mitchm49925 ай бұрын
I can't imagine how it felt for Spruance at Midway, knowing the potential consequences if he did anything wrong.
@TheEDFLegacy5 ай бұрын
Stressful, I bet. 😳
@johnbuchman48545 ай бұрын
Admiral Fletcher was the overall commander of the U.S. Navy for the Battle of Midway, not Spruance.
@CharlesStearman5 ай бұрын
@@johnbuchman4854 As Drach explains, it was Spruance who organized the first attack, and after Yorktown was damaged Fletcher gave him overall control of the battle.
@Alsadius5 ай бұрын
True of most leaders at most big battles, really. Being able to handle the pressures is the price of admission to high rank. (Or at least, the price of being remembered fondly by history if you *do* get high rank in wartime, because there's certainly those who can't hack it.)
@michaelmcneil41685 ай бұрын
He was in clover. The torpoedo bombers were scrapped so he wouldn't have to wait for them to waste his time anymore, his second and third in command were incompetent results of Democrat selection before the war. Anything he did that could go wong had a better than even chance of being a good strategy since they had never had a stratery that worked.
@ph897875 ай бұрын
And on today's episode of Everybody loves Raymond.
@RCAvhstape5 ай бұрын
Everybody but IJN vets I'd guess.
@kemarisite5 ай бұрын
@@RCAvhstape and (looking into the future) John Tower.
@enoughothis5 ай бұрын
Ironically the total chaos of the American air strikes helped because the Japanese had no idea what to expect next or from where.
@zedoktor9795 ай бұрын
“A serious problem in planning against American doctrine is that the Americans do not read their manuals, nor do they feel any obligation to follow their doctrine.” Or my other favorite, “War is chaos, and the US military practices chaos on a daily basis.”
@LuckyE-CV65 ай бұрын
you can see the full extent of this by watching Montemayor's Battle of Midway series.
@VersusARCH5 ай бұрын
Lack of air search radar on the Japanese side combined with improper radio set magnetic shielding in the Zero fighters was decisive. Otherwise, the mostly unescorted US bombers would have been savaged by the Japanese CAP. Lack of air search radar was also the reason why the Japanese escort ships were spread out (to provide early warning) and too far to contribute to the carrier's AAA. Of course, something as simple as a sufficient cloud cover could completely ruin such an early warning system (which is what happened at Midway).
@johnhallett58465 ай бұрын
@@VersusARCH Japanese AA was also pretty poor. The CAP was naturally aggressive; that happened on both sides throughout the war. Brutally, pragmatically, the Torpedo planes coming in first should have been the plan. WIth lousy torpedoes and lousy planes, they were the correct diversion for the Sunday Punch of the Dive Bombers
@michaelrodgers67325 ай бұрын
Exactly the same argument for Trump being President. His unpredictability is absolutely the best thing for stability in the world...
@Fenthis5 ай бұрын
You know, the fact that he was responsible for rotating experience airmen into training back home may have been his greatest contribution to the war. And that's saying something.
@atempestsinister5 ай бұрын
TIL that it was specifically him that initiated that procedure. The more and more I learn about him, the more I realize that he was very much the superior leader compared to Halsey. Not to slight Halsey, who was brilliant during 1941-1943, but his missteps later unfortunately tarnish his reputation.
@Fenthis5 ай бұрын
@JackNiles-hc8yz That seemed to be what was said in the video. I mean it's possible I miss-heard something in that part.
@davidharner58654 ай бұрын
@@FenthisI heard that, also. Unaware if he truly was responsible for that superb usage of personnel.
@RachelAllcock9 күн бұрын
Given that Nimitz's main background (well, aside from diesel engines) was Personnel and Training, my expectation would be that Spruance would have had total and immediate support for a strategy aimed at conservation and benefitting from aircrew experience to build their future force. Broadly speaking, US victory in the Pacific owed a lot - along with industry obviously! - to the fact that the USN took *all* the aspects of war seriously, not just the glamorous bits involving attacking the enemy. Logistics, anti-submarine warfare, minesweeping, amphibious equipment, logistics (it's worth saying more than once), base-building, air-sea rescue, and of course *training*. And put all those together, you get a HUGE effective force multiplier, which of course then stacks with having more forces too!
@gypsyboomer5 ай бұрын
"interestingly shaped floating toys", another great zinger from the Drach!
@RetiredSailor605 ай бұрын
I served on USS Kinkaid DD 965 1987-89; Spruance Class Destroyer
@philbyd5 ай бұрын
Awesome,thanks for being a brave man
@crichtonbruce43295 ай бұрын
Thank you Mr. Drach for your absolutely excellent biographies. You are a truly gifted man.
@ph897875 ай бұрын
The argument between Browning and McCluskey was actually a bit bigger. As when he found out. He got VS-6 CO Earl Gallagher and Enterprise’s Captain George Murray. Also McCluskey was recovering after being shot in the shoulder and Gallagher had his back thrown out when diving on Hiryu.
@Drachinifel5 ай бұрын
Unfortunately even with multi-part videos like this, sometimes I have to give a very abbreviated version of some events. In this case the main point was to explain that there was an argument and why the ships launched later in the day with smaller bombs :)
@ph897875 ай бұрын
@@DrachinifelStill a great video though.
@issacsmith31695 ай бұрын
Nice, new Drach video to listen to when I drive to work tomorrow
@kkupsky63215 ай бұрын
What’s a “tomorrow”?
@d.olivergutierrez86905 ай бұрын
Glad to see that Spruance is getting deserved recognition, so tired of people thinking that Halsey win the pacific war on his own, or thinking that he was the one on midway, hell, they even joke about it in family guy.
@jimmyseaver36475 ай бұрын
Wait, seriously? Something like _Family Guy_ poked fun at this perception?
@centurymemes12085 ай бұрын
Next should be Frank jack fletcher. he’s very underrated
@RCAvhstape5 ай бұрын
@@jimmyseaver3647 Yeah, I need to find this Family Guy clip
@u8055 ай бұрын
@@jimmyseaver3647 It's actually not as bad as you would think. The dog Brian is dating some girl who is smarter than him and he comments something about Halsey at Midway and she corrects him that it was not Halsey at Midway but Spruance.
@michaelrodgers67325 ай бұрын
Yes but what other Admiral gets his name in a McCartney song?
@patrickcannady20665 ай бұрын
Was eagerly awaiting this. The US was so fortunate to have a leader of Spruance’s capabilities in the Pacific
@ifga165 ай бұрын
Damned nice presentation. Admiral Spruance was a genius and honoring him with a class of destroyer was barely adequate.
@georgehugh34554 ай бұрын
But absolutely appropriate, given his major developmental years in the Navy and just how important that class of destroyer proved to be.
@khaelamensha36245 ай бұрын
The picture if the 3 aircraft carriers turning while burning is just amazing. The rest is as usual brilliant 👍
@BalshazzarWastebasket5 ай бұрын
5 minutes in and there are already 30 likes on this post. every body getting eager for a Spruance- geek-off hosted by the one and only, the giant of our times, Drachinifel, protector of the sacred lore, holder of the great seal, the CHANNEL MASTER and grand sea lord. all bow to his wizardry and video editing and narration prowess!!!
@johnfisher96925 ай бұрын
Agreed. The only person with more authority is of course Mrs Drach...and Baby Drach... and sometimes Floppy the dog😉
@StevenPalmer-cs5ix5 ай бұрын
On a separate note: It's great to see you are moderating the discussion "Leyte Gulf at 80". I'd love to attend, but it is during my already planned cross country motorcycle trip.
@Josephbloe5 ай бұрын
When and where will this be?
@bolawriw64875 ай бұрын
@@Josephbloe 11 September 2024 at 1100 EST at the Jack C. Taylor Conference Center, in Annapolis, MD.
@The_ZeroLine5 ай бұрын
Actually, I’ll be moderating.
@papajohnloki5 ай бұрын
I have the Quiet Warrior but I believe that an updated biography of Spruance is overdue- Admiral Fletcher was done right by Black Shoe Warrior.; Keep 'em coming Drach!!!
@Johnnycdrums5 ай бұрын
Clicked "like", before I even watched it. Finally getting to watch this broadcast with a cool one in my hand, and with no distractions.
@BalshazzarWastebasket5 ай бұрын
you get a feeling that drach is not a fan of Gen Mcarthur..
@robertserafini5605 ай бұрын
frankly no one should be
@Kevin_Kennelly5 ай бұрын
Being a Naval Histriographer is not a popularity contest.
@BalshazzarWastebasket5 ай бұрын
@@robertserafini560 yes. the guy was a bastard. i agree on that
@daleheun72225 ай бұрын
Well , Mac deserves it. But Drach is a Navy centric channel. Rather than commanding, Mac had a press Corp on staff and was after glory rather than fighting the war he worried about his ratings in the news. Comparable to someone else who measures his glories by where he is in the news cycle being
@BalshazzarWastebasket5 ай бұрын
@@daleheun7222 he is much reviled , though people forget that he also comanded the american forces in korea, and was in charge of teh landing in incheon, which almost ended the war. he is known to be a glory hound, but so do many other generals.
@SouthShoreDecoys2 ай бұрын
You turned information that wouldve put me to sleep in school, into something quite entertaining and digestable. Currently binging your pacific war videos. The way you phrase things, or ocasionally give emotions to objects like torpedos missing their target, reminds me of Douglas Adams. 👍
@RonJohn635 ай бұрын
39:45 I remember as a child in the mid 1970s reading books written in the 1950s about frogmen / UDT teams swimming up to beaches and testing sand, tides, etc. That was one of the lessons learned from Tarawa.
@antoninuspius17475 ай бұрын
One of the best, if not THE best series you've done. Thank you.
@danaohlson33165 ай бұрын
Ahhhh Drach. Hitting it out of the park again. Most excellent, can’t wait for the next episode. Salute!
@Dav1Gv5 ай бұрын
Bill Slim was accused of using a sledgehammer to crack a nut while he was deliberately using large forces to crush small Japanese units to improve moreale. His reply was that if you had a sledgehammer handy it was a good way to crack a nut. Thanks for another frascinating videol
@RachelAllcock9 күн бұрын
Two cardinal military principles are Economy of Effort and Concentration of Force. Which more or less boil down to simultaneously using as little as you can get away with everywhere *except* your main effort so that you can use as much as possible in achieving that (and stacking the odds in achieving that). Spruance clearly understood that well, as did Slim.
@Dav1Gv9 күн бұрын
@@RachelAllcock Thanks, although some British generals have complained that economy of force sometimes was taken to mean sending a brigage to do a division's job.
@robfromgpw52435 ай бұрын
And again, Drach brings naval history to life for the masses. Thank you for brightening my life with every video you post. My best to you, Mrs. Drach and Baby Drach. Congratulations on your growing family, our world needs more thoughtful parents such as you and Mrs Drach
@mrpete54825 ай бұрын
Hear! Hear!
@JoshTanner-e9x3 ай бұрын
I just have to say the superb intelligence the narrator possesses is quite impressive. I learn a lot from these videos. 5 star to this man for the wording and research work. I love this channel. It’s very fascinating and informative. Much respect to the makers of this channel. One of my favorites KZbin has to offer on naval history
@BruceMusto5 ай бұрын
Man, I didn't even get to 3 minutes and I'm already chasing a rabbit down a hole. You mentioned maneuvering boards and that got me wondering what the difference might be between a WWII maneuvering board and the ones we were using in the 80's and 90's, and off I went. I better be careful as even though it's been 25 years, in my search I noticed a Maneuvering Board Manual online and I can probably find maneuvering boards somewhere....nah. Back to the video.
@ianday55835 ай бұрын
Superb work Drach. Looking foward to part three.
@supersami77485 ай бұрын
Mac Arthur’s brilliance was his PR staff he assembled, that was the extent of his brilliance.
@marknelson87245 ай бұрын
If you worked under MacArthur, no one ever heard your name as Doug did it all by himself completely alone. Too bad he wasn't nearly as smart as his ego was massive.
@boobah56435 ай бұрын
@@marknelson8724 By all accounts, he was an excellent politician. Too bad his job was mostly 'general.'
@gregoryhickok63005 ай бұрын
Nice video for the drive home from work!
@Kevin_Kennelly5 ай бұрын
We need to compile a list of 'things I do while listening to Drach'.
@ThePrader5 ай бұрын
Calling "The General", (Dug-Out-Doug) a "spanner" is about the nicest insult I have heard. My words to describe that egomaniac would be unprintable. What a bag of hot air he was.
@misterbaker97285 ай бұрын
I’ve said this before but it’s been awhile so I’ll do it again. I’m a 47 land lover outta Cleveland. I’ve been on couple boats but not for years. Your series on Guadalcanal is by far of the best PERIOD! I’ve been reading just about everything on the pacific I can. Finally got The First Team book by Lundstrom. Wow just wow. Can’t wait to get book 2
@buonafortuna89285 ай бұрын
Brilliant Drack. Loved it. Look after yourself, a couple of guys who I follow have suffered a bit of "Burn out" recently.
@NigelDeForrest-Pearce-cv6ek5 ай бұрын
Brilliant Discussion of THE BEST USN ADMIRAL IN THE PACIFIC!!!!
@taycam5 ай бұрын
Down a deep hole researching the Pacific war last few months. What a pleasant surprise this is! Thanks!
@brycechristensen15105 ай бұрын
I love the way this covered aftermath actions and little battles in between major actions. There are lots of coverage of the primary battles, but for example, I had never heard about the strikes on the cruisers following Midway.
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
Everyone forgets the battle lasted for a few days :)
@brycechristensen15105 ай бұрын
@user-gl5dq2dg1j Some forget, many of us were never taught. Which makes having channels like this to help fill in such knowledge gaps so important.
@yes_head5 ай бұрын
We really appreciate the work you've put into this series, Drach. 👍
@quasimodo62645 ай бұрын
Really good. Comprehensive to the point of including the various personalities on board. Thank you!
@dave3156Ай бұрын
Excellent description and analysis of ADM Spruance. I can always count on this channel to provide quality content. I also enjoy your guest appearances on Unauthorized History of the Pacific War. Thx!!
@kencusick63115 ай бұрын
These little bio’s are some of my fav videos
@worldwarIIstori3 ай бұрын
Excellent video! Admiral Spruance's strategic brilliance from Midway to Tarawa is highlighted perfectly. Informative and well-presented-great job!
@jeffbonekemper81635 ай бұрын
Wonderful stuff, as always. Can't wait for part 2.
@hooks46385 ай бұрын
This, part 1&2, are absolutely excellent. Then again, the work done on this channel is nothing but the highest quality. Job well done as always.
@dylanreynolds43345 ай бұрын
An amazing video to listen to while installing drapery😌
@majorsynthqed73745 ай бұрын
A minor correction at 39:08. Marines, not soldiers. We don't want to be called soldiers.
@jacktattis5 ай бұрын
Well troops then.
@davidk73245 ай бұрын
@@jacktattis Old soldier here. The Marines earned it -- the correct term is "Marines."
@jacktattis5 ай бұрын
@@davidk7324 Why did they earn it. WW1 1 Brigade in France WW2 None in the ETO/ MTO
@redskindan785 ай бұрын
"By the grace of God / And the US Marines / MacArthur Returned / To the Philippines".
@jacktattis5 ай бұрын
@@redskindan78 1. No Marines at Kokoda, Milne Bay, Buna Gona, Salmua Lae where the Aussies with some US Army help beat the Japanese before your Marines were off the canal No Marines at the other 27 battles on New Guinea 2. MacArthur and his Army were hardly supported by the USN King did not like the Army or anyone else for that matter And the US 6th Army were only given a USN six inch Cruiser his largest Ship. 3. Our two RAN Heavy Cruisers were supporting the USN Pacific Fleet 4. MacArthur had his Army when he landed at the Philippines I doubt he wanted any Marine hierarchy to interfere 5. The USArmy had been with him since New Guinea And Marine and Army tactics were different
@wesleygay89185 ай бұрын
Drach, great vid, loving how you raise the quality of content on KZbin
@pullarjeАй бұрын
Thanks
@DeltaDarbyLiberator5 ай бұрын
That was a great second part, thanks Drach
@MakeMeThinkAgain5 ай бұрын
Another great job. And you've all set to cover the idiocy of the change in USN policy regarding commanders and their chiefs of staff. I thought his son was serving on the Nautilus at Midway, but Tambor is correct. I think it's worth stressing that the forces under Spruance's command suffered almost no casualties at the Battle of Midway. The air groups suffered losses, and so did ships under Fletcher's command, but the ships of TF 16 were really not even attacked. Considering the loses to every other TF involved in a battle in 1942, this is notable.
@Token_Civilian5 ай бұрын
Great stuff as always Drach. Well done.
@onenote66195 ай бұрын
20:50 Spruance: The only sure kill is overkill. 25:50 My money says that if the US *had* tried to invade and occupy New Guinea under the command of McArthur at that point, they would have had more casualties from tropical diseases, exhaustion, starvation and simply getting lost in jungles than from Japanese actions.
@ph897875 ай бұрын
As an Australian. That idea would have made the Eastern Front look like a walk in the park.
@onenote66195 ай бұрын
@@ph89787 New Guinea probably has a lower percentage of venomous snakes and bugs, but it has a whole lot more of them to make up the horror.
@Owktree5 ай бұрын
Joseph Campbell's _The Ghost Mountain Boys: Their Epic March and the Terrifying Battle for New Guinea - The Forgotten War of the South Pacific_ covers the use of the 32nd Division during the Kokoda Trail and Buna-Gona campaigns. To put it lightly MacArthur's claims about Army operations generating "light" casualties are BS. Especially since in early 1943 he was ordering frontal assaults, not being patient with commanders suffering from logistics issues and bad terrain, and pretty much being an awful general.
@jacktattis5 ай бұрын
@@Owktree There were no Americans on Kokoda
@onenote66195 ай бұрын
@@Owktree I looked up the Kokoda trail campaign on Wikipedia and it had this charming quote: *Operations in New Guinea were impacted by tropical diseases such as malaria, dengue fever, scrub typhus, tropical ulcers, dysentery from a range of causes and fungal infections. Walker observes that the Kokoda Track "starts and ends with malaria".*
@HeedTheLorax5 ай бұрын
Thanks Drach, Spruance is a guy I'd like to know more about. Definitely agree with some of the other posts on here, this video ends far to quickly.
@matthewrobinson43235 ай бұрын
Great video, as always!
@rv_at_the_beach26035 ай бұрын
Awesome. Keep these coming.
@MowingMichaelA5 ай бұрын
Always top notch historical content.
@michailbest11225 ай бұрын
Drach, you are a gem! Thank you!
@timothyedge61005 ай бұрын
An excellent video. Thanks.
@stonebear5 ай бұрын
23:41 "... the BEST at what they did" I was looking away from the visuals when I heard that and looked back and saw EXACTLY who had come to mind when you said that... "Ching" Lee. :D
@PKowalski20095 ай бұрын
As a child in Poland, probably around 1986, I received as a gift "Storm over the Pacific." -- a book by a Polish author about the war in the Pacific (actually the first volume, the second came out later). I remember being enthralled with Spruance -- he seemed more my personality type than Halsey (though of course I know it's silly to contrast the two).
@TheIndianalain5 ай бұрын
Not only was Spruance a highly competent and appreciated commander, he also never lost sight of his objectives and priorities in search of personal glory. One can only wonders what would have happened if he and not also Halsey had been in command of 3rd fleet during the campaign for Leyte Gulf. There's no doubt in my mind that he wouldn't have let the San Bernardino Straight unguarded and that Kurita's Central Force would have been met by an inferno of bombs and 16 inch shells. And Taffy 3 would have had another "quiet" day providing anti-submarine patrols and shore bombardment missions...
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
The question is would he have split his forces or had everything at San Bernadino? Would TF58.2 have been the only aircover for Lee, assuming they decided to chance running out of fuel and delaying their departure for 24 hours, while Spruance sent the rest of the carriers north?
@Wolfeson285 ай бұрын
@@PeteOtton That is an interesting one to ponder. If Spruance went by the same mindset as at Philippine Sea, he might well have kept everything near the San Bernardino Strait. In that historical case, Spruance's reasoning was that his primary mission was to protect the landing forces, and he was willing to risk fighting off an enemy carrier airstrike in order to ensure he doesn't allow a separate enemy surface force to get around him and attack the landing forces. At Leyte, with the surface threat to the landing forces clear and close by, and the enemy carrier threat presumably less than four months earlier, I think it makes perfect sense that he would have focused on Center Force first based on the same line of reasoning. It's certainly possible that he would have detached Lee with TF 34 (or 54 in this case) along with one carrier group for air cover. Spruance might have decided that he had sufficiently superior forces to divide them up in that way. However, detaching Lee would have meant potentially authorizing a surface action very similar to the one that he (with Lee's concurrence) decided against in the early stages of Philippine Sea. In fact, you could even argue that Lee's odds with TF 34/54 against Center Force would have been *worse* than with TG 58.7 against the IJN's Van Force at Philippine Sea (4 BBs vs. 4 BB/BCs in the first case compared to 7 BBs vs. 4 or possibly 5 BBs/BCs in the second). If I had to guess, I suspect Spruance would have kept everything around San Bernardino and concentrated on destroying Center Force. That was the most immediate potential threat to the landing forces that he had to stop, and there's also the factor that Spruance would certainly have had a better sense of how weakened Northern Force's carrier were likely to be (having been the one to inflict it upon them) than Halsey did in the historical event.
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
@@Wolfeson28 The quibble I have with TF34/54 being worse off is that the fight could have happened at daybreak after an initial air attack to soften up the Center Force. It is a question of whether or not TF38.2 had enough fuel for one more day of flight operations, or at least enough fuel to operate through the night and then recover aircraft early to mid morning and then retire for refueling. Since USS Independence had night qualified pilots they could have kept Lee up to date on Kurita's movements. But you are correct that Spruance probably would have kept his carriers at San Bernadino with a massive air strike at dawn with a follow up strike by Lee and the surface ships. Spruance probably would have kept a strike force at the ready for use against the carriers with plenty of scouting to keep an eye on them.
@darkhorse26495 ай бұрын
Exceptional! Well done!
@ditzydoo43785 ай бұрын
Thank goodness for the levelheaded strategic thinking Of Admiral Spruance. I shudder to think what Halsey would have done had his shiggles not kicked in. 0~o
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
The only good thing is that: the flyboys from Hornet might have actually followed orders and as John Parshall says the battle would be over 4 zip by lunchtime. Imagine if McClusky had a column or two of black smoke to home in on? How many of his boys would have made it back to their ship before taking a swim due to running out of gas. The question then becomes, how many of the cruisers and destroyers would have been knocked out before dark? And would the bull run west into their torpedoes or would he have played it safe for once and run east? I think by morning it would have been Halsey snatching defeat from the Jaws of Victory and the battle would have been a draw we couldn't sustain.
@ditzydoo43785 ай бұрын
I've always maintained that Halsey was a good ship's captain, just not a very good Admiral. His biggest problem in command was his inability to listen to other or take their advice.
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
@@ditzydoo4378 I think for command as an Admiral he did ok during the Guadalcanal campaign after he took over for Ghormely, but again it wasn't a large force he was commanding. It was small TF's often cobbled together out of what units were available. He did throw the dice once or twice and got lucky and it helped that the Japanese were throwing troops and ships at Guadalcanal piecemeal instead of all at once. Granted the slot didn't leave a lot of space for large fleets and big ships to maneuver. Luckily Yamato stayed at Truk, Callahan/Scott would have really been in trouble if they had to deal with her. And even Lee on Washington would have been in trouble.
@ditzydoo43785 ай бұрын
@@PeteOtton Ah but Admiral Willis Augustus "Ching" Lee Jr. was sniper par' excelon on USS Washington, one need only ask Kirishima.
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
@@ditzydoo4378 Yes, but Yamato was a bit thicker of skin and bigger of gun and was designed to take on 2 of the predecessors to the North Carolinas (Wahington) and South Dakotas. Yamato probably wouldn't have gone down as easily as Kirishima. In fact it would take dozens of bombs and torpedoes. Only a few of Washington's shots went torpedo.
@josephclark78145 ай бұрын
Thank you for doing an in depth series on Spruance. I subscribed when I came across episode 1. 👏👏👏👏
@DC.4095 ай бұрын
Excellent informative video.
@MarcosElMalo25 ай бұрын
Yay! I was hoping this would be out soon.
@EricLouchis5 ай бұрын
Excellent. Interesting and detailed. Hard to do. But Drach makes it look easy.
@samstewart48075 ай бұрын
hI DRACH- A MOST EXCELLENT VIDEO- I am waiting for part 2 !!!!
@kpdubbs71175 ай бұрын
I love these deep dives into history! (And yes I realize I should have saved this one for a sub video.)
@sid1gen5 ай бұрын
Excellent! Thank you for this 2nd part. Looking forward to the other ones, now.
@markeubank14515 ай бұрын
Well done. Excellent work.
@panzer_ace_107stankdivisio85 ай бұрын
We’ve seen the man upto now, let’s see how his first major combat debut goes!
@stargazer57845 ай бұрын
Great job Drach. Thx.
@kingcrazymani41335 ай бұрын
Thanks again, Drax.
@JohnSmith-rg1ie5 ай бұрын
Big fan of videos focused one one notable person
@richardlewis42885 ай бұрын
Thanks Drach!
@j.dragon6515 ай бұрын
These are great, keep up the good work.
@Whitpusmc5 ай бұрын
Browning was nearly one of Japan's best officers.
@caseyo60335 ай бұрын
And I'm sure he still got more commendations than many of the men under him I knew many young officers in Iraq who never left the base, spent more time in the gym and chow hall than anywhere else, and still walked out with more commendations than us enlisted did.
@RayyMusik5 ай бұрын
Browning instantly reminded me of one of Germany‘s best officers in WW1, a certain Seymour.
@Johnnycdrums5 ай бұрын
We were so lucky, luckier than luck itself. Sometimes it just happens that way, it is written. Drach should do a presentation on luck at at sea, it's just crazy.
@SamAlley-l9j5 ай бұрын
Thanks Drach.
@johnanderson88655 ай бұрын
This attention to detail to produce a video of this quality must have been extremely time consuming. I am a great fan of understanding how and why things are done they way they are done, and the thought process behind it. I ate this up! Great stuff! Please, please keep this up as a focus. I know there are other aspects that can be discussed but this is extraordinary work, and should be highly touted and continued to develop. And if I may.... Drach rules! Posers drool! (couldn't help myself)
@christianfranzen78545 ай бұрын
Thanks! Bribes for the engineer Drach🚤
@johnfisher96925 ай бұрын
You have said the US Navy learned a great deal about how to correctly operate fighters from carriers when HMS Victorious had its temporary name change to USS Robin. What were those differences that made RN fighter direction so much better?
@alexandermonro67685 ай бұрын
The Royal Navy had fighter direction as part of their doctrine since before the war. Not just carriers, but most capital ships, and even some cruisers, were equipped for it, and had officers trained in FD.
@PeteOtton5 ай бұрын
@@alexandermonro6768 Reading up on Guadalcanal, the USN was still trying to get FD coordinated, the FD would say directions in relation to the fleet and the CAP would assume the directions were relative to their vector.
@sircashew10975 ай бұрын
110th view, not bad! Keep up the great work!!!
@andikim46125 ай бұрын
awesome episode, sir. Thank you. \
@frankgulla23355 ай бұрын
Drach, great series on the Central Pacific campaign and Spruance.
@verysilentmouse5 ай бұрын
Love your work
@JohnDiGiovanni-yh6ys3 ай бұрын
Thanks, have a nice day. 👍.
@Ccccccccccsssssssssss5 ай бұрын
Thamks Drach
@davidlee85515 ай бұрын
Excellent content! Thank you.
@mplsyrp25 ай бұрын
Thanks for your detailed series on the, arguably more effective admiral. Over his more recognized and publicity hound counter part. Much like the army in Europe had an effective and a "colorful". Pair of top generals..
@timgodderis19185 ай бұрын
New Drach is "InstaLike"
@old_guard24315 ай бұрын
Atlanta-class AA cruiser in the picture at about 10:50. Hadn’t realized they were in the picture that early in the war.
@ph897875 ай бұрын
Atlanta arrived in the Pacific in April and joined Task Force 16 on 16 May.
@old_guard24315 ай бұрын
@@ph89787 Thanks. Shows that the Navy woke up to the importance of AA a lot sooner than I imagined.
@peterbrazier71075 ай бұрын
My Favorite USN Admiral
@fredjones5545 ай бұрын
The speech to text translated the devastator torpedo attack aircraft to "devastated." Unfortunate but apt