There are firsthand accounts from Enterprise’s pilots stating their relationship with those serving on Iowa and New Jersey massively deteriorated after this action for obvious reasons. Did this extend to the other Iowas or other American fast battleships as well?
@WarrantOfficerWill223 ай бұрын
What is the closest that Britain has ever gotten (during the time period this chanal covers) to loosing it's status as a great naval power? and how did they bounce back?
@benjaminarnold28813 ай бұрын
Hey Drach, I know its a bit of a long haul, but could we get a watch party/review for the Battle 360 series?
@ph897873 ай бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 North Carolina actually had a positive relationship with Enterprise. I think i head somewhere that it got to a point where Enterprise's crew would appeal to which ever Captain or Rear Admiral who happens to be in command to assign North Carolina as the BB escort.
@bkjeong43023 ай бұрын
@@ph89787 I’ve heard this as well, but that was before Hailstone. SoDak also didn’t have a good relationship with Enterprise, in large part thanks to Santa Cruz.
@TheNinjaGumball3 ай бұрын
As many a midwesterner and plainsman can attest, hailstones are very, very bad for the longevity of trucks
@CS-zn6pp3 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣
@ryanhoward44213 ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more 🤣
@sailorichiban3 ай бұрын
Great Observation!
@seanbigay10423 ай бұрын
Trucks, buildings, animals and people. 😢
@jesseestrada89143 ай бұрын
This is what more clever then I was ready for
@richardstark92163 ай бұрын
My father served aboard the Essex class carrier USS Bunker Hill that was part of this strike group. He passed away in 2022. Dad was always able to tell me great stories about this raid, he was a Pharmacists mate. In February, after dad passed, I had renewed my scuba certifications to dive these wrecks off of the dive boat Odyssey. Just beyond words. I possess now photos and videos of a lifetime. Trucks, artillery and artifacts abound still, 80 years after the raids. Grateful to my father and the crew aboard Odyssey for this experience.
@1987palerider3 ай бұрын
My grandpa was on Bunker Hill as well, but he didn't come aboard till the very end of the war
@whiskeysk3 ай бұрын
I had the privilege to dive Truk twice, in 2012 and then in 2017. Amazing experience and plenty of things to see without requiring really difficult dives. I wonder how the wrecks are now, I could notice visible deterioration on some of the wrecks when getting back there in 2017.
@The_ZeroLine3 ай бұрын
I have privilege drive truk twice too. Better much than my mule.
@RichardRounder-tw3lv3 ай бұрын
My grandpa fought against degeneracy, sexualization of children, transsexualism, jews, the destruction of the white race, pedophilia, but he lost and now here we are... Your grandpa must be so proud that you can all be gay and woke and take it on the butt of free nowadays, freedom is so overrated
@pondfilth53873 ай бұрын
Was your old man aboard the Bunker Hill when she was hit by a kamizake on her flight deck? My grandpa was a machinist on the her when she got smoked. He only told my dad stories about serving aboard cruisers that were home-ported in Australia.
@kiplingslastcat3 ай бұрын
"She went down with her guns firing" is always a hell of a sentence.
@thomaskositzki94243 ай бұрын
I always think: what a hollow gesture. 🤷
@maryholder37953 ай бұрын
@@thomaskositzki9424 yup agreed it seems a hollow gesture, but the ship is sinking so you might as well carry on firing until the sea invaded the ship.
@thomaskositzki94242 ай бұрын
@@paulhicks6667 Having studied war and war history for 30 years I have come to the conclusion that fighting spirit is just a small factor amongst many. Indeed, most societies have it* and the difference it makes in war is really small. I'd say abandoning ship and maybe fight another day or at least maybe living on is more valuable than delivering an impressive show of defiance. * Example: even the Italians in WW2 had good fighting spirit, despite their horrific battle performance and a tendency to abandon post. The reason was that they most often didn't really had a chance due to horribly outdated equipment and doctrine. In situations where the odds were even or in their favour, they fought well.
@kimbaldunsmore46333 ай бұрын
For clarity, Truk is now called Chuuk and is a state of the Federated States of Micronesia. l visited there with my family when l was posted to another part of Micronesia, the Republic of Palau further to the west. lt is very beautiful as is pretty much all of Micronesia, but is fairly challenging to get to for anyone who lives outside of Micronesia. We arrived in the middle of the night as seems to be the case with most flights in and around Micronesia to be welcomed by two topless ladies in grass skirts at the airport! This is a pretty cultural thing there (women getting around topless, even in cars or at the shops), but was certainly a sight for sore eyes, l can tell you!!!
@vbscript23 ай бұрын
It's a bit easier to get to Chuuk these days. United flies a 737 there as one of the stops along its Island Hopper flights from Honolulu to Guam and back.
@myparceltape11693 ай бұрын
Sunday worship in a rather hot place included some topless ladies, but that is not unusual there. Especially at other of the main festivals.
@BleedingUranium3 ай бұрын
Sounds like a great place to visit :3
@vitekhampejs24283 ай бұрын
Well, getting greeted by topless ladies is definitely an upgrade over anti aircraft fire greetings
@mnxs3 ай бұрын
@@vitekhampejs2428"make love, not war"
@frankknudsen8423 ай бұрын
I spent a good portion of my life verifying cross-referencing facts to check all angles of an event or period . It's a tremendous pain in time, cross-referencing, and digging in archival information. Yet, after watching you time & time again, the urge to go off the mainstream presentation of information of the events must be overwhelming. Yet your efforts are absolutely wonderful to watch . For yourself and your team, thanks ever much.
@khaelamensha36243 ай бұрын
I could have said it better. This channel is brilliant!
@frankknudsen8423 ай бұрын
@khaelamensha3624 general archivist was the best degree I could recommend ,but if you pick 10 people unless it's an interest or a lively hood. Not many ppl know the in's & outs of Truk. 🤣. And that's just that episode. Thanks for talking .
@khaelamensha36243 ай бұрын
@@frankknudsen842 Thank you for your answer. Wish you the best. Regards from France!
@The_ZeroLine3 ай бұрын
No. It was a breeze.
@dukecraig24023 ай бұрын
@@frankknudsen842 Since you're into details this might be of interest to you, the picture shown at 22:40 was taken from a Curtiss SOC Seagull biplane, you can see the wing struts and the upper wing in the picture. As far as I know it's the only US biplane used in a combat role in WW2, it was launched and recovered from battleships (possibly cruisers to but I'm not sure on that one) and used mainly for reconnaissance and as a spotter for the ships guns, but it did have under wing shackles that permitted it to drop regular bombs and depth bombs in the anti submarine role. I believe it also had the distinction of being the only US WW2 aircraft that was retired before the war but was reinstated into service later, it was retired before the war and brought back into service in 1943. It also was in service with the Royal Navy, the Royal Australian Navy and the Soviet Navy.
@999theeagle3 ай бұрын
"Shooting everything that moved and some things that didn't but made nice explosions."
@michaelminch54903 ай бұрын
Big bada boom.
@khaelamensha36243 ай бұрын
Drach has such a way around words 😂
@khaelamensha36243 ай бұрын
@@michaelminch5490Another fan of the fifth element? 🤔😇😂
@mrpete54823 ай бұрын
Classic Drach. 😄
@loyalistmundicomedentisdux95383 ай бұрын
I'm so glad this is being covered. It's often overlooked compared to the more talked about confrontations of the Pacific War
@DrVictorVasconcelos3 ай бұрын
Doesn't Time Ghost Army have a video on it?
@ph897873 ай бұрын
I've been begging for a Deep Dive on this raid for years on the Patreon.
@charliegiammarco51783 ай бұрын
Check out the unauthorized history of the pacific war podcast. They have covered this raid and several other operations that I hadn't even heard of!
@BullGator-kd6ge3 ай бұрын
I learned of it from Battle 360 as a kid.
@ph897873 ай бұрын
@@BullGator-kd6ge same.
@miamijules21493 ай бұрын
Lol Can you imagine the elation of those crews, circling Truk, battle flags flying….? Truk was akin to the supervillain’s lair, the secret island base location which they had just absolutely obliterated. Must have been one helluva day on those ships…. to be sure.
@robertsneddon7313 ай бұрын
The Japanese fleet submarine force was a quite effective force and Spruance doing a victory lap around Truk was quite risky. Big ships were sunk by submarine attacks repeatedly throughout WW2.
@tachikaze2223 ай бұрын
@@robertsneddon731 yeah with a proper investment in fleet subs (and application of doctrine) they could have been sinking our shipping en route to Pearl and Australia faster than we could get replacements off the ways.
@Heike--3 ай бұрын
@@robertsneddon731 Japanese submarines were remarkably ineffective and totally failed at the "only sink capital ships" mission that the Japs refused to reconsider throughout the war. They got one once in a while, but usually a cripple or a lucky encounter like USS Indianapolis.
@bluelemming52963 ай бұрын
@@robertsneddon731 A number of big ships were sunk in 1941-1942. However, not one major US warship (fleet carriers, battleships, cruisers) would be sunk by IJN subs in 1943-1945 while under escort by destroyers. The only major US warship sunk by IJN sub in that period was USS Indianapolis, which was not being escorted. This is 1944 - but in 1943 the Allies managed to sink 40 German U-Boats in a single month. This shows how far anti-submarine warfare had progressed by that point in the war. Subs are ambush predators. They don't tend to fare well in major battles with lots of destroyers present. Even with the help of signal intercept, US subs often found themselves unable to get a shot at Japanese convoys without first having to surface at night and adjust their position. At Truk, it would have been enormous bad luck for a sub to be in the right place at the right time to get a torpedo in. So a risk, yes, but not a major risk.
@gunnargundersen37873 ай бұрын
A secret hollowed out Volcano laaair...
@fearthehoneybadger3 ай бұрын
National Geographic had a feature on Truk. Divers investigated the wrecks. Among the goodies found were 18" shells for the Yamato and Musashi.
@VIDEOVISTAVIEW20203 ай бұрын
Did they took it to a museum?
@davecoz42273 ай бұрын
I wonder how many divers it would take to lift an 18in shell...
@fearthehoneybadger3 ай бұрын
@@VIDEOVISTAVIEW2020 No. These were live shells. They were left in place.
@fearthehoneybadger3 ай бұрын
@@davecoz4227 They could weigh over 3000 pounds.
@VIDEOVISTAVIEW20203 ай бұрын
@@davecoz4227 each shell is about 3,200 lbs or 1.5 tons hence, they need a hoist to bring it up to the surface.
@Niftynorm13 ай бұрын
I still remember seeing the Jacques Cousteau TV special on his visit to Truk lagoon. Probably the first time for many people to see the wrecks and devastation that happened far from the US. Great video, as always.
@DK-gy7ll3 ай бұрын
Yes, and back then there were still piles of human skulls inside the ships. That part of his TV show really stuck out to me.
@CultureCrossed643 ай бұрын
"Jacques Cousteau, here to spit flow..."
@williamcostigan913 ай бұрын
@@CultureCrossed64"Invented scuba, Captained the Calypso..."
@FairwayJackКүн бұрын
@@DK-gy7ll Upon seeing that documentary, the Japanese govt removed and repatriated all the skeletal remains of the Japanese sailors
@richardcleveland85493 ай бұрын
The photo that's on from 5:53 to 6:58 is jaw-dropping in its portrayal of American naval might . . . absolutely astounding. It looks like every ship in the Pacific Fleet was pulled in for a photo op! Impressive, to say the least. Good catch, Drach!
@PatrickJMele3 ай бұрын
I was unaware of this battle thank you so much, my father was active in the pacific theatre at that time He had quit high school and enlisted in the Navy @ 16 years old for 3 years until Japan surrendered. He's been gone for 20 years and was tight lipped about his battles he was in all I ever knew he was an anti aircraft gunner aboard a battleship and had Manny experiences with Kamikazes.....Thank You Dad!!!
@Mag_Aoidh3 ай бұрын
I love when you throw in snippets of humor, that’s why I’ve always enjoyed this channel.
@merlinphillips52923 ай бұрын
Dove Truk several years ago. Still think it was one of the best dive trips of my life, and gave me a strong understanding of the bravery shown on both sides. Dove the San Francisco Maru at 185' to the front hold. Land mines, tanks, 500 lb aerial bombs, and a burned out superstructure. Moving. One ship had the the bow and stern gun trained out to the Starboard, exactly opposite the direction of the torpedo that sank it. Some of the Japanese soldiers serving on the guns were reloading the shells by hand on the deck as they fought,.
@crd2603 ай бұрын
Fantastic video, Drac. As time went on from 42 to 45, American operations in the pacific turned more and more into hitting a finishing nail with a sledgehammer. This is definitely an example of this.
@kentvesser94843 ай бұрын
Yeah, it is like that video over at Military History Visualized that shows the fleet sizes as of Pearl Harbor of the USN and IJN and all the construction of combat ships coming off the slipways in Japan and the US. By this point in the war it had become ridiculous what an edge the US had and it just kept increasing by the week.
@JohnSpalding-wq7wg3 ай бұрын
14:38 😅@@kentvesser9484
@stuartdollar99123 ай бұрын
Well, when you have a large supply of manpower, and the ability to outbuild the rest of the world, why run a shoestring operation.
@nomadmarauder-dw9reАй бұрын
As am occasionally ill tempered leprechaun, I've never been in a friendly fight, or won a fair one.
@FallawayCorte3 ай бұрын
I recall seeing the Cousteau documentary on Truk. My family watched all of the Cousteau episodes, as well as National Geographic documentaries, and the original US broadcast of The World at War series. My father served in the 8th US Army Air Force (England) during WW2 while my Mother worked as an Occupational Therapist in a variety of US Military Hospitals. (They did not meet until the 50s). History was important to them, and I developed a lifelong interest. It was unusual at the time that I was growing up to have parents that had direct experience of The Depression and WW2. Most of my classmates in school had parents who were too young to remember or to have served. Thank you for your episodes. When I was younger I “entertained myself” by reading the entire set of Morison History of Naval Operations in WW2. I learned a lot.
@drcovell3 ай бұрын
Where the Hell did all the great television series like Cousteau and NatGeo go? The crap on TV now zings back and forth between a great political clown show and what is loosely described as “Reality TV,” with rock bottom reaching out to embrace the improbable *Star*known as “Honey-boo.” Can hardly wait for the final collapse of Hollywood feature length film for “Ren and Stimpy: The Movie.”
@russell33803 ай бұрын
@@drcovell That programing disappeared and so did I, cut the cable and here we are.
@alias17193 ай бұрын
I watched the Truk Cousteau episode, too, and Truk has held my interest ever since. We watched all those other shows, as well. Wild Kingdom was also a fav.
@unclesmrgolАй бұрын
The night fighters can be seen in the carrier deck picture at 8:24 -- the radar encasements plainly visible on the various wings.
@lewphelps98903 ай бұрын
As a USNavy veteran of Vietnam and a student of WW II military history, I salute you for the most comprehensive, thoughtful and accurate description of this battle that is available on KZbin. Thank you.
@jlvfr3 ай бұрын
Great praize to that Kate pilot. Alone, at night, scrapping the waves and still manages a hit? That's skill.
@SeattlePioneer3 ай бұрын
@RCAvhstape3 ай бұрын
Legend has it that Kate and its crew are still prowling around each night out there to this day.
@BleedingUranium3 ай бұрын
Definitely one of the most impressive individual actions I've heard of. :O
@kamikazeviking30533 ай бұрын
Him and that single Judy pilot in Leyte that suddenly appeared out of the clouds, sunk USS Princeton, then was shot down
@jlvfr3 ай бұрын
@@kamikazeviking3053 yeah, that too.
@F-Man3 ай бұрын
Two Iowas doing a victory lap will never not be a hilariously impressive mental image.
@MarilynLittlepage-ri9or3 ай бұрын
Hey!!! No badmouthing Iowans.😂😂😂
@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe3 ай бұрын
Just what they were designed for!
@JeffreyWilliams-dr7qe3 ай бұрын
Guess the Torpedoes may be working?
@cauchysintegral37133 ай бұрын
Truk has some great diving on these wrecks so long as you're OK with 80-100 ft depths or more, although there are a few shallower. Minimal currents. Warm water. Great stuff. Between the history and the diving, it made for a memorable week on vacation a few years back.
@johnscherer80233 ай бұрын
Thank you. I've heard about the battle of Truk over the years, but no details. The research needed for this spot was a huge amount of work. Very much appreciated, sir! ❤
@mitchm49923 ай бұрын
"Enemy ships that had presumed they were relatively safe from pinpoint attacks in the darkness" Silly IJN, you're never safe from Enterprise.
@hirisk7613 ай бұрын
Enterprise definitely lived rent free in the entire Japanese collective minds
@ph897873 ай бұрын
@@hirisk761 I still believe that Enterprise had been with Task Force 38 when the Japanese surrendered. She should have been the ship on which the signing had taken place (with Missouri as an escort). To add salt to that wound, the Enterprise vs Japan sign should have a caption "Enterprise-1 Japan-0."
@hirisk7613 ай бұрын
@ph89787 that woulda been absolutely perfect. unfortunately Enterprise was stateside getting repaired from a kamikaze that launched her forward elevator into orbit
@ph897873 ай бұрын
@@hirisk761 Still trying to add that to the video list on Patreon.
@tarn11353 ай бұрын
The “Grey Ghost” will always come for you. Or The “Big E” will teach you how big she really is.
@davefranklin41363 ай бұрын
There is a wonderful WWII documentary film called The Fighting Lady that is chock full of actual combat footage, and covers the raid on Truk. In his book Baa Baa Black Sheep, USMC ace Greg "Pappy" Boyington claimed to be on the ground during the raid, as he and some other POWs were being moved back to Japan. He said the film shows a small crater where he and some other POWs were taking cover. It's been many years since I read the book, so I assume he referred to the Operation Hailstone raid. As mentioned, there were actually a couple of other raids on Truk in subsequent months, and USS Tang's rescue of 22 aviators, described in detail in skipper Richard O'Kane's book Clear the Bridge, and shown late in the video around the 27:26 mark, was actually from one of those later raids. I visited Truk, or Chuuk as it is called now, in the late '90s on a dive trip! Every dive was a "wreck dive"...
@garyhorton98273 ай бұрын
"Fighting Lady" was the nickname of the USS Yorktown. Not sure how that ties in to what you mentioned, just tho't I'd throw it in there as my oldest Bro. served on the one (CV-S 10), in the '60's, that replaced the one lost in the Battle of Midway.
@davefranklin41363 ай бұрын
@@garyhorton9827 Yes, USS Yorktown, CV-10, was The Fighting Lady, and was one of the Essex class fleet carriers involved in Operation Hailstone.
@bbrf0333 ай бұрын
This was an awesome piece of work. What a difference a couple of years [and a half dozen new carriers) makes
@nissenilsson59553 ай бұрын
Drachinifel + Jonathan Parshall would be such a winning team!
@Heike--3 ай бұрын
Parshall appears all the time on another channel, "Unauthorized History of the Pacific War Podcast" Go subscribe there if you want to hear himI like them better,anyway, they do less rivet-counting than Drachinifel.The hosts are both ex-Navy, one a flotilla commander.
@scottgiles75463 ай бұрын
@@Heike-- "they do less rivet-counting than Drachinifel." You have now earned the hatred of all rivets! (Fear their wrath)
@liberalsockpuppet47723 ай бұрын
Drach makes some appearances on that pod cast as well. Rivet counting, LOL
@davidg39443 ай бұрын
@@scottgiles7546 I identify as a rivet, and speaking for rivets, we agree! I shall now take a POP at Heike (whose names sounds suspiciously like a Japaneses ship...).
@bughunter17663 ай бұрын
Jon has been on with Drach, just look em up. It would almost be difficult for these guys to have not run into each other by now.
@martinjf4673 ай бұрын
I would just like to take this opportunity to thank Admiral Spruance for creating such a great SCUBA diving venue, it was superb and we had a great time there!
@karllewis7353 ай бұрын
It'd be worth noting, I think, that when Jacques Y. Cousteau and his team of divers visited Truk Lagoon in the late 60's, (I think it was), they found human remains on some of the sunken Japanese vessels, and the Japanese undertook to recover them, and provide the appropriate disposal.
@Heike--3 ай бұрын
There is nothing else to do in Truk but dive the wrecks in the harbor.
@davidgenie-ci5zl3 ай бұрын
The Americans disposed of the japs quite appropriately during the battle.
@sirboomsalot49023 ай бұрын
That’s still the case today. Oite is chock full of remains considering the incredibly high loss of life for such a small ship, and I’ve seen footage of a skull implanted in the bulkhead inside a freighter right where she took a torpedo. For some reason human remains last a while in Truk
@klauskervin25863 ай бұрын
I really enjoy these videos discussing an individual battle. Thanks for the video!
@manuelacosta94633 ай бұрын
That rescue of US Airmen within Truk Lagoon itself was such a power move. To think many in the Imperial government and even public thought the war was being won. Did it ever occur to them that their 'victories' where getting closer and closer to the home islands and many of their servicemen where suddenly not sending letters back?
@Heike--3 ай бұрын
That's the power of an unelected government's censorship. How many reading this think that we're winning the war against Russia right now? Or winning our other wars, like against Syria?
@CipiRipi-in7df3 ай бұрын
@@Heike-- it's the same in Russo-Ukrainian War. Russian media triumphantly announce: "In Kursk region, our victorious troops redeploy on new defensive positions, while the battered enemy chase them in panic." 😆😆
@manuelacosta94633 ай бұрын
@@CipiRipi-in7dfIndeed. The Japanese did the same at Wake Island. Before their troops even landed they were shouting 'Victory!' 'Victory!' over their airwaves, yet the first landing was a disaster. Two destroyers and multiple landing craft were sunk while those troops who did land were quickly all killed by the American defenders. The Japanese command and government was shocked, then enraged. It will be a persistent pattern.
@whiskeysk3 ай бұрын
japanese public realized the war was not developing necessarily to their advantage when they started getting bombed by B-29s from the Marianas. And when they started seeing USN carrier planes they knew it was game over.
@texasforever78873 ай бұрын
@@whiskeysknot to mention the BBs uncontested drive by shelling coastal towns of the home islands in the last month.
@Yamashiro_Kai3 ай бұрын
Extremely glad this got covered. A few months ago I took a pretty deep dive into the operation, and I’ve gotta say it’s one of the most interesting parts of the pacific war.
@williamgreen74153 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@samsmith26353 ай бұрын
19:16 "We will see who takes the Glory from this field" moment
@ramal57083 ай бұрын
Ah yes, when Adm. Spruance was so persistent in sending a task force of surface ships including the two Iowas to engage Japanese ships. The only time the Iowa battleships saw surface to surface action.
@ramal57083 ай бұрын
I might also add either Iowa or New Jersey had the longest straddle in history against a Japanese destroyer during this action
@bkjeong43023 ай бұрын
Not only that, he actually ended up REDUCING Japanese losses thanks to that decision (yes, it was a victory, could have been a bigger victory). The only time the Iowas fought surface ships, they were not just hilariously overkill and superfluous but actively detrimental. When you’re calling off airstrikes just to have your battleship shoot at crippled destroyers and a dead-in-the-water training ship, and then allow all three of them to get underway with one escaping thanks to that decision, you need to rethink your priorities….
@theawickward22553 ай бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 It was a single destroyer, and there's no guarantee that she wouldn't have escaped the pilots too (hindsight ahoy). Nowaki also didn't really do much for the rest of the war and was sunk with all hands during the Battle of Leyte Gulf.
@bkjeong43023 ай бұрын
@@theawickward2255 Just because you won anyways doesn’t mean it’s a smart idea to not win even harder when you could have.
@Maritimesgestein3 ай бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 And how do you know that she would not also escape the aircraft?
@emmgeevideo3 ай бұрын
I just finished watching videos and reading a couple of good books about the sea and air battles in 1942 when the US carrier count was so low and the battle experience of American sailors and airmen was so paltry. Fast forward to this engagement and it's incredible to think of how much Americans had learned and how many ships and airplanes were available for the fight.
@Heike--3 ай бұрын
This is why Japan lost the war as soon as the first bomb dropped on Pearl harbor.
@davidg39443 ай бұрын
America's ship and airplane (and tanks, artillery, etc.) manufacturing capability in the 1940's was unmatched, and can be said to have won WW2 for the Allies. We have given away much of this capacity, and the likely enemy in a new large conflict has taken it on. Unfortunately this could lead to events going nuclear pretty quickly if another major war occurs.
@tachikaze2223 ай бұрын
@@Heike-- yes, we still had ~50% (SWAG) of our factories sitting idle before the 1940 two-ocean bill. It was a long hard grind to Okinawa but the IJN certainly provided the motivation.
@emmgeevideo3 ай бұрын
@@davidg3944 That's complete baloney. US tanks, aircraft, ships, smart rockets, etc., are still top of the line. I just watched a video about the tanks being used in Ukraine and the Abrams tank is still #1. The Russian tanks are no match for it and other tanks, e.g., the German tanks that Ukraine is relying on.
@davidg39443 ай бұрын
@@emmgeevideo Since you're an expert in the field (I've only been working in manufacturing and scientific R&D for almost five decades), I'll bow to your statement of "baloney". Or maybe I'll just discount what you've said, as you're clearly ignoring what I actually said and substituted your own strawman. WW2 was a matter of volume, now we rely on specialized tech and precision. With the introduction of drone warfare, volume is back as a major factor in warfare. Swarms used to overwhelm defenses will defeat even our capabilities (unless we've really done miracles with laser anti-drone tech). China has vastly more drone manufacturing ability than the US, ignore that reality at your own peril.
@sirboomsalot49023 ай бұрын
Ryan Szimanski is of the opinion that New Jersey likely scored the longest range damaging hit from one ship to another when she got a very near miss on Nowaki (that is known to have killed a sailor and cut her speed down drastically) at 30,000+ yards
@jeffreybaker43993 ай бұрын
"Turned up to 11"...a Spinal Tap reference by Drach? 🤣
@arneldobumatay37023 ай бұрын
Great presentation! Really enjoyed all the photographs which I've never seen before.
@GregoryP-jw8qj26 күн бұрын
I consider myself a bit of a history buff and honestly I cant recall this " engagement"! Now I consider myself a bit of an idjit tyvm. The battle plan to the whole operation was the most well executed I think I've ever seen. Everything went off without a hitch it seems. The elation those servicemen must have felt is beyond my comprehension and I'm feeling pretty elated 80 yrs. after the fact. I can't imagine what the Japanese were feeling either, but I can guess. What a stupendous and shocking attack that day. Thank you so much for the very factual and visual video, everybody invilved with it. Im gonna watch it again!!
@kumisz23 ай бұрын
I feel this operation is very overlooked. I've read in quite a few places of it in the form of a status "after Truk", but somehow never came across a description of just WHAT happened at Truk. Thank you!
@stargazer57843 ай бұрын
When thinking about the size of the force sent to attack Truk, a famous line from a movie comes to mind... 'Do you think you used enough dynamite Butch?'
@richardcleveland85493 ай бұрын
TOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO much dynamite is never NOT an option in a turkey shoot!
@martindice54243 ай бұрын
Excellent as always Drach. I knew about the USN Truk operations but this presentation was excellent in expanding my knowledge of the fascinating details. Good show sir!
@stevebarrett93573 ай бұрын
50+ years ago, when I was an avid reader of war histories, Truk didn't enter the narratives much. In the latter 70's I was introduced to a book, The Great Pacific War by Hector Bywater, which was written in the mid-20s B.C. (Before Carriers (as a capital ship)). The book hypothesized a naval war between Japan and the U.S. Among the problems examined was the difficulty of projecting naval power into either the western or the eastern Pacific by either country. Bywater used Truk in his narrative as a major anchorage captured and developed by the U.S. to assist their fleet's projection into the western Pacific. It is interesting to me that Japan developed Truk instead. The other interesting bit I found in this book was the use of zeppelins by the U.S. in the war as recon and carrier vessels. I haven't found a video by Drach on these rigid naval airships, but, if it hasn't already been done, I wouldn't mind seeing Drach's take on them.
@ph897873 ай бұрын
IJN: We will make our counterattack at night. Enterprise: Neat! Who are we attacking? IJN: The US Navy carriers......Oh no. Enterprise: Hiiiii. (Enterprise launches avengers)
@bkjeong43023 ай бұрын
Iowa and New Jersey: F off E, we’re doing this ourselves (Nowaki escapes thanks to the Iowas getting involved) No joke, Enterprise actually had major bad blood with the Iowas afterwards (or at least Iowa and New Jersey specifically) for this reason.
@ph897873 ай бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 Iirc LtCdr James "Jig Dog" Ramage (CO of VB-10) was the strike leader when he got the message.
@Cobra-King33 ай бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 "Denying me the right to Pad my SCORE?!" -Enty calmly said, Probably
@ph897873 ай бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 As a form of revenge. VB-10 decided that New Jersey would make for a great Dive Bombing target. At least until New Jersey threatened to make the Dauntlesses as AA Targets.
@bkjeong43023 ай бұрын
@@ph89787 It’s stuff like this that makes me frustrated that KC, AL or WSG all largely fail to address the issue of WWII-era fast battleships as a whole being massive underachievers at best and arguably (collectively, not individually) the worst strategic procurement disaster in history in hindsight, with the crews of other, far better warships realizing the truth and giving them deserved criticism for their uselessness. And of course, the battleships themselves never asked to be built at a time when their very existence was largely meaningless or to be ridiculed for existing against their own will. I’ve suggested before that realistically all 29 of them and the two Alaskas would return as Abyssals/Sirens or otherwise seek to destroy their own nations from within out of hatred for their own existence.
@bobk18453 ай бұрын
My uncle was a B24 pilot who led the first land based bombing mission over Truk, this was following Hailstone. He died April 10 1944 on a subsequent attack.
@jonathanlewis6473Ай бұрын
Salute
@Warmaker013 ай бұрын
The Kingfisher landing in hostile Truk itself to rescue downed air crew? Balls of Steel. Had to happen considering the possibilities of what would happen to the downed pilots if the Japanese captured them.
@BuzzSargent3 ай бұрын
Great voice for listening to the story while relaxing. Happy Trails
@seannordeen50193 ай бұрын
I always assumed that Spruance wanted to give some of his ships some real experience engaging enemy surface ships in a sort of safe environment. Many of the ships of the fleet were too new to have seen surface combat.
@Rocketsong3 ай бұрын
The problem is, he put his ships at unnecessary risk to do so. He easily could have had a couple of his major warships hit by long lance torpedoes. You don't voluntarily get into a knife fight for the "experience" when your sniper can just shoot the target down.
@BP-19883 ай бұрын
My father flew missions against the Japanese as part of the Navy's strikes against Truk. During one of the raids his SBD was hit by ground fire as he was attacking Japanese ground installations on Dublin Island. The anti-aircraft fire severed an oil line causing his SBD's engine to eventually seize. He was able to dead stick his SBD outside of the lagoon. He and his gunner were able to climb into their life raft before the SBD sank. Just before dark, they were the last of the airmen rescued by the USS Tang submarine commanded by Richard O'Kane. My father said he was determined not to become a POW because he knew of the upcoming invasion of Saipan. He said his 45 automatic had "5 rounds for them and one for me". He and his rear gunner were two of the 22 airmen rescued by O'Kane and the USS Tang. At the 27:29 time mark of this video, he is shown in the top row, 3rd from the left of the photo of the rescued airmen. His gunner is also in the top row, 2nd from the right. Commander O'Kane probably saved my father and his gunner's lives. It's hard to comprehend, but I'm sitting here writing this almost 80 years later because of Commander O'Kane. Later in the war O'Kane was captured by the Japanese and became a POW. He was captured after the USS Tang was sunk by its own errant running torpedo. He was later awarded the Metal of Honor by President Truman. I have a photo of father standing next to a stone monument which was taken in the 1980's. We are not exactly sure where it was taken, probably some where near Truk. It's inscribed "One survivor to another - Captain Don Kirkpatrick from the Crew of the USS Tang" and signed by O'Kane and a few of his surviving crew members.
@ph897873 ай бұрын
What squadron was your dad in?
@BP-19883 ай бұрын
@@ph89787 While on the Hornet (CV8) he flew in VS-8. When Hornet was sunk he was reassigned to the new Lexington (CV16) and flew in Bombing 16.
@charlesdean30893 ай бұрын
Wow! Great story! Thank you for sharing that. We keep these heroes’ memories alive by telling and listening and keeping them in our hearts. ✨🙏🏼🇺🇸
@BP-19883 ай бұрын
@@charlesdean3089 Thank you for your comments. My father had a number of combat experiences during WWII in the Pacific - From watching Doolittle's B25s lifting off the flight deck of the USS Hornet (CV8), to the Battles of Midway, Santa Cruz and the Philippine Sea, and to attacks on Japanese installations at Truk Lagoon, Hollandia, Palau, Wake Island, Wolei, the Marshall Islands, and the Caroline Islands. He was awarded the Navy Cross, the Silver Star, 2 Distinguished Flying Crosses, and 2 Air Medals. I like to post his stories to supplement and give additional insight to videos like this one and others. Also, my goal is to keep his memory alive.
@tobiasGR3Y3 ай бұрын
Everyone knows Enterprise’s story, how she fought to and then ruled the seas. But many forget: *CV-6N also ruled the night.* Edit: I’ve been corrected in the comments that it’s CV(N)-6 but old History Channel habits die hard.
@seanbigay10423 ай бұрын
The World War II Enterprise was CV-6 (no N). You may be confusing her with the postwar CVN-65, the world's first atomic supercarrier.
@ph897873 ай бұрын
@@seanbigay1042 From the end of 1944 to the end of the War. Enterprise was redesignated CV(N)-6. The N stands for "Night Carrier."
@seanbigay10423 ай бұрын
@@ph89787 O I C! Sorry, my bad, I missed that.
@ph897873 ай бұрын
@@seanbigay1042 No problem
@nickbruno-og2zn3 ай бұрын
She should have been saved as a museum ship, considering that the longevity of the Pacific Theatre was cut short because of her , that being said had we lost quad canal the war would’ve lasted a lot longer . We would have lost it had the enterprise not transferred some of her air crew to Henderson Field . That was mostly due to the forward elevator being knocked out.
@billa68253 ай бұрын
Impressive rate of "likes". Thanks for your work, Drach.
@hotttt283 ай бұрын
A truly well played operation. Well explained 🎉
@Hello-This-Is-Jim3 ай бұрын
thank you for the description of the battle of truk, I'm a history buff and knew little about the battle, I never realized that the Navy was so large that it had that many carriers to devote to this one battle. I think Spruance was so much more the carrier skipper than Fletcher ever thought of being, again thank yoy
@primafacie97213 ай бұрын
Excellent. I am familiar with Operation Hailstone and yet your piece added a number of interesting, even significant, pieces of information.
@historygeek00183 ай бұрын
Spruance is my spirit admiral.
@TheEvilMrJeb3 ай бұрын
Once again, Drachinifel doing good work for history. Is there going to be a video on the followup strikes coming soon? That was kind of a cliffhanger you left us on!
@Drachinifel3 ай бұрын
This video weirdly doubles as the 'next step' in the Spruance series, so when I get back to that I'll probably cover them :)
@TheEvilMrJeb3 ай бұрын
@@Drachinifel aces, thank you kind sir!
@Titus-as-the-Roman3 ай бұрын
After Midway Spruance never really trusted Mitscher fully again, but he did recognize Adm. Mitscer's abilities as probably the Best Carrier Commander there could be found then, maybe of all time
@chrissouthgate45543 ай бұрын
After Midway, I would not have trusted Mitscher. So, not blaming Spruance at all. Sounds a bit like Betty/Jellico part Du.
@bkjeong43023 ай бұрын
@@chrissouthgate4554 The difference is that Beatty really was incompetent.
@seanbigay10423 ай бұрын
This is the first I've heard of this. What exactly did Mitscher do at Midway?
@bkjeong43023 ай бұрын
@@seanbigay1042 The Flight to Nowhere.
@seanbigay10423 ай бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 O I C! (FYI, for anyone who tuned in late, a whole bunch of planes from USS Hornet were sent on a wild goose chase that accomplished nothing beyond putting many of them in the drink on their way home.) -- And no, after a boner like that I wouldn't fully trust Mitscher either. 🤫
@benjaminarnold28813 ай бұрын
Anyone remember the Battle 360 episode on the Truk raid? That show was a big influence on me getting into naval military history.
@ph897873 ай бұрын
Oh definitely.
@Heike--3 ай бұрын
Never seen that channel. How many subs?
@tachikaze2223 ай бұрын
@@Heike-- it was a show on the History Channel ca. 2008. Computer graphics were kinda OK, love to see a better job (might do it myself someday)
@Heike--3 ай бұрын
@@tachikaze222 History Channel was such garbage. Endless 40 minute shows that barely scratch the surface, tell the same story over and over and give you the Gell-Mann Amnesia Effect. Hey look, another show on D-Day!
@tachikaze2223 ай бұрын
@@Heike-- yeah I wanted to like Battle 360 but it was 3 minutes of content extended to 30 with fancy spinny graphics, and ads
@johndyson41093 ай бұрын
Excellent job as usual in narration..
@frankcherry38103 ай бұрын
Thanks for helping me with the correct pronunciation of these Islands!
@davidstange41743 ай бұрын
My grandfather served on board the USS Saratoga when it was sent to strike Eniwetak.
@rooksfoot11843 ай бұрын
Im very behind DD295 pt 1... so belated congratulations on 300 dry docks 500k subs and for getting a new tiny crew member ATB
@bigsarge20853 ай бұрын
Learned something new, thank you!
@nulife0223 ай бұрын
Love the magnificent new music.
@dylanbecerra41793 ай бұрын
Amazing! I was getting curious about Truk from your other videos.
@sse_weston41383 ай бұрын
Important to note, with the destruction of the Katori group, Akagi Maru would lose north of a thousand lives, that figure largely the result of Katori taking on survivors, which was then sunk and no survivors were picked up, thus all hands lost. Same with the crew of Maikaze and Shonan Maru No.15
@MrFazz843 ай бұрын
From the UK, Legends
@frankpinmtl3 ай бұрын
Best half an hour I will probably spend, today
@gyrene_asea41333 ай бұрын
Drach has outdone himself with this one. Very well presented.
@williamcabrol12223 ай бұрын
I am taking you up on your offer of asking for a video on a ship. My dad was on CVL-29 USS Bataan. I request a video on the Bataan. Thank you.
@timothyporter16323 ай бұрын
Really enjoy your documentaries. This one was particularly epic.
@naverilllang3 ай бұрын
This is basically exactly the devastating, crippling attack that Japan tried to inflict at Pearl Harbor
@SeattlePioneer3 ай бұрын
Yes, but the Japanese didn't have anything like the resources to do the workmanlike jobs the Yanks did on Truk. That includes adequate reconnaissance before the attack. It meant having the resources to go back again and again launching attack after attack we\ith the same aircraft, multiplying the results obtained from the resources at hand. And it meant staying and fighting for DAYS if need be to achieve the desired effect, rather than two raids followed by a hasty departure for home. This applies to Midway as well. The Yanks showed how this kind of thing OUGHT to be done. Had the Japanese realized how outclassed they were even before the war began, perhaps they would have avoided the war in the first place. Of course, they weren't about to realize that reality.
@bughunter17663 ай бұрын
To be clear, the Japanese did a pretty fair job at Pearl harbor. When it takes the US Navy three and a half years to clean up and some of the mess is still there 80 years later, I'd say that was effective. This was also, but make no mistake they did everything they were looking to do at Pearl harbor. With the exception of getting the carriers. I'm not even so sure it would have made that much difference, they probably would have just told the shipyard workers to build the replacements faster.
@SeattlePioneer3 ай бұрын
@@bughunter1766
@Heike--3 ай бұрын
@@SeattlePioneer Actually, we have the minutes from the Imperial War Council meeting they had in November 1941 and they knew the awful risk they were taking. They just didn't see any other choice. FDR had boxed them in with the oil embargo and a war was exactly what he wanted.
@tachikaze2223 ай бұрын
@@Heike-- what FDR wanted was the IJA to pull back to Manchuria, where it belonged more or less. Somewhat parallel situation to Russia & Ukraine today.
@MakeMeThinkAgain3 ай бұрын
This episode of the war particularly interests me for two reasons: Following this raid, the USAAF was given the task of keeping the Truk facilities in bad shape. My mother's first husband was a B-24 pilot who was lost with his entire crew on a raid on Truk later in 1944. If you look at the development of the USN in the Pacific during the war, in 1942 the USN withstood everything the IJN could (or was willing to) throw at them. In 1943 new construction replaced the losses of 1942 while the USN learned important lessons. By early 1944 the Big Blue Fleet had taken form and was learning how to operate effectively. While new ships and men and planes would continue to join the 3rd/5th Fleet, from here on out it would have the status the Kidō Butai had had at the end of 1941. The Fleet would always have around 6 fast battleships and 4 task groups with 3 to 4 carriers each. You can give the credit to Spruance or Nimitz of King or Roosevelt -- or all of them and more -- but the USN had created a hammer capable of pounding flat any possible resistance. Not to mention the logistics train to keep that force in action. The IJN would make one more attempt to destroy the American Fleet, off Guam, but after that the main force of the IJN would be given instructions that would have been unimaginable in 1941 or 1942... they would be instructed to try to evade the enemy main force and instead attack softer targets. When people judge Kurita at Samar they should keep in mind what he was being asked to risk his ships and men for -- not a decisive victory but a slaughter of merchant shipping.
@NGC-gu6dz3 ай бұрын
A classic Drach video. They're is nothing better on this platform.
@kevinohalloran71643 ай бұрын
The quality and style of the narration adds a lot to enjoying these history lessons.
@comentedonakeyboard3 ай бұрын
As the Dragon said, after six of his seven heads where lost, "dont you think this is geting excesive?"😂
@harleyschmydlapp7043 ай бұрын
Awesome video Drach!
@arteckjay65373 ай бұрын
I just saw a similar video yesterday about the exact same topic, but it was extremely biased. Glad to see a much more informative video!
@bughunter17663 ай бұрын
Post a link to the biased video please. I'd like to see that even. I really don't even care about the bias, the fact of the matter is the war was over all except for Japan surrendering. Most of the battles by this time of the war were hopelessly one-sided. Check out yesterday's video on unauthorized history. They talk about Halsey taking the fast carrier task force into the South China Sea for a 3-week foray. I never knew about that either but WOW, did they go in there and open a can of whoop ass.
@jon49733 ай бұрын
Waiting for this one. Truk is so overlooked
@RobertSnyder-n4j3 ай бұрын
My father was a Machinist Mate on the Yosemite, reair ship. His stories amaze me still. Fixing/ repairing ships at sea during the war is not something I can take lightly. Amazing battles with damages hard to describe. Brave young men, the greatest generation.
@vincentstella51313 ай бұрын
Excellent history, including the background of Truk prior to the attack.
@phillip05373 ай бұрын
Wow, thank you, that was riveting!
@thedausthed3 ай бұрын
1:05 Enewetak atoll was in fact also famous for nuclear tests, including the first every Hydrogen/Thermonuclear/Super, Ivy Mike.
@wwoods663 ай бұрын
You can see the divots left in the island. www.google.com/maps/place/11%C2%B040'00.0%22N+162%C2%B011'13.0%22E/@11.670449,162.1838128,6668m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m4!3m3!8m2!3d11.666667!4d162.186944!5m1!1e4?hl=en&entry=ttu&g_ep=EgoyMDI0MDgyNi4wIKXMDSoASAFQAw%3D%3D
@FrankBarnwell-xi8my3 ай бұрын
That was an action packed episode. Maybe Cape Mattapan rerun for me tomorrow.
@murrayscott95463 ай бұрын
Nicely described. Thanks, Drachy.
@mohammedsaysrashid35873 ай бұрын
Wonderful introduction
@guymckinnon75823 ай бұрын
This was a great video thanks 👍👍
@charlestidwell49703 ай бұрын
very enjoyable, a good portrayal of the battle and strategies...
@davidk73243 ай бұрын
Well done. I learned a great deal.
@73Trident3 ай бұрын
Thanks Drach.
@daguard4113 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@Boba-Fett-GS1150Ez3 ай бұрын
Thanks, Drach. I needed story time.
@larryyoung57573 ай бұрын
Well done episode
@williamkennedy54923 ай бұрын
A Japanese submarine was also sunk, in the 1970s there was a tv program about truk, where they entered the submarine, skeletons were on top of engines etc, as the crew struggled to get air. These remains were removed and relatives were flown in from japan on a 727 and the remains cremated. By coincidence a few days after my comment i saw a program of I 169 a Japanese submarine that dived during an air attack in April 1944 , 20 of the crew were ashore with the captain, those on the submarine dived and left hatches open, a rescue mission was attempted as knocking was heard, alas the crew died, Japanese divers recovered some of the bodies, leaving the ones i mentioned above. The program on I-169 also mentioned the cremation of the remains of crew, in 1973, That is such a coincidence !
@RonaldGilbert-de1ui3 ай бұрын
It was sunk accidentally by its crew.
@sirboomsalot49023 ай бұрын
That is I-169, and while she is in Truk she was not sunk in Operation Hailstone. She was lost in an accident about a month after the bombings
@RonaldGilbert-de1ui3 ай бұрын
@@sirboomsalot4902 I knew it sank. I watched a video history of that sub a few days ago. Just didn’t remember the ship number.
Are you still going to be making a trip to the USS Slater this september?
@Drachinifel3 ай бұрын
Yep
@AdmRose3 ай бұрын
Props to the Avenger crew that sank the ammunition ship and themselves got taken out by the explosion. Mission successfully failed.
@Dafmeister19783 ай бұрын
And some foreshadowing for the aircraft lost when Yamato's magazines detonated.
@davidg39443 ай бұрын
"Some gave all..."
@RCAvhstape3 ай бұрын
They knew the risk and did their duty. God bless them.
@madkoala21303 ай бұрын
Who can blame them, how could they know it carried "only" ammunition, plus orders are orders, they didnt have anti-ship missiles back then to take them out from safe distance.
@801walt2 ай бұрын
The photos are great. Are they restorations? Keep up the good work. I know a bit about the War starting when I was a kid building airplane models, and you are really starting to bring it to life.
@lewiswestfall26873 ай бұрын
Thanks Drach
@elcastorgrande3 ай бұрын
Good old Intrepid, home from the war in NY Harbor. A must-visit for everyone.
@Dave-jd9qn6 күн бұрын
Twenty years ago, I spoke to a vet of Air Group 10 and the early campaigns of the Enterprise. While Enterprise underwent overhaul in Puget Sound, the vet was at NAS Sand Point in Seattle and presented with Avengers with radar. They didn't even have a manual. His job was in the "tunnel" on the radar scope. They learned that the local ferries showed up just like a Japanese destroyer so they practiced runs in the daytime to the surprise of ferry riders and crews. The vet deployed on Enterprise for Hailstone. The raid was his twentieth birthday.
@Mark-bm5nk3 ай бұрын
What are those bubbles on the wings of those corsair aircraft on the flat top @ 8:14 ? Fuel? Nightfighter equipment? Im at a loss here..
@jimneitzel31113 ай бұрын
APS-4 radar units initially designed to give night-fighter capacit
@Mark-bm5nk3 ай бұрын
@@jimneitzel3111 Thank you. I thought it was something like that. :)