РефератыИностранный языкJaJapanese Imperial Navy Essay Research Paper The

Japanese Imperial Navy Essay Research Paper The

Japanese Imperial Navy Essay, Research Paper


?The key to national greatness is a strong industrial economy coupled with


a powerful navy.?


Introduction


It was 8 AM at in the Pacific on December 7, 1941, and a harbor filled with a


few warships was being bombed. It wasn?t uncommon for a harbor bombing during


the times of World War II. What was uncommon was the fact that the harbor


belonged to the United States, a country that wasn?t involved in the war yet,


and the country bombing it was Japan, a country that had come out of isolation


just eighty years earlier and whose economy was just one seventh the size of the


United States. A few months later one may think that Japan, being as small and


new as it was that it would have been obliterated, yet it wasn?t. In fact,


after five months Japan had created an almost perfect record for its name. With


the attack on Pearl Harbor, the sinking of two Royal Navy ships, the Prince Of


Wales and Repulse, four separate engagements around Java, and operations in the


Indian Ocean in April, the Japanese had inflicted heavy loses on the Allies and


destroyed most of the Allied opposition around Japan itself with exceptionally


minute loses.


How could a country that has only been mingling with other countries for


eighty years attack with great skill another country that was at the time, one


of the most powerful countries in the world? Simple, Japan had been preparing


for a war just like this one for since they came out of isolation in the early


1860?s. Although the war wasn?t planned against the United States and was in


fact against Russia and China, the knowledge that they had acquired in new


technologies, ship building, aviation, training, and tactics was all put to use


when they did.


Why Japan Attacked


Imperialist Japan in the 1920?s and 1930?s was surviving on imports from


other countries, especially from the United States. Imports such as iron and oil


made up 90% of what Japan used in a year. The Japanese saw this, and because


they had wanted to become more of a self-sufficient country, saw the need for


expansion to lessen this gap. Japans government saw the perfect place in China


that could feed a going economy with all of the raw materials that it needed. It


planned and invasion on the northern parts of China and proceeded to do so with


ease.


The United States saw what was happening and warned Japan that they didn?t


like what they were seeing. They had had not intervened and Japan did not take


our warning as it should have. It continued to invade parts of China, and soon


seized all of French Indochina. The United States, replying to a request made by


the French, placed an embargo on Japan. Japan, who received most of its imports


from them was trapped and saw the only way out was to start a war with them. Not


a war in the sense that they would land troops on the coast of California and


invade the United States, but one that would be small and unpopular in the


United States. What they hoped would happen was the United States would receive


enough disapproval from its citizens and would grow tiered of the war and would


negotiate a treaty with Japan, given them what they wanted.


Ship Development


Although the Japanese Imperial Navy was inferior to the United States Navy in


the number of ships that were war ready and the aggregate tonnage, there wasn?t


any other country in the world that surpassed the Japanese on a combat ship to


combat ship basis (Greene 10). The Japanese warship designs emphasized speed and


offensive firepower while placing less importance on structural strength,


stability, protection, and range. All of their ships were combat ready for night


actions and were up to date on most technologies. It should be noted that this


was almost impossible to accomplish without breaking most of the pre-war naval


treaties that Japan had signed, but it should be noted the Japan wasn?t alone.


Germany, Italy, the Soviet Union, and France also did break these treaties.


The Imperial Navy was formed in the middle of the 1860?s and was shaped


after the British. Even the naval academy Etajma was designed after the British


academies. In the beginning of the formation of the Imperial Navy, the Japanese


bought their warships from prominent British shipyards. Of those British


shipyards was Vickers and Yarrow. The Japanese then began importing large


quantities of foreign naval material and soon developed an ability to support


their own naval ambitions. Japan had help from some of its own large


corporations by giving industries that directly helped support the navy,


government financial support. These industries quickly developed the capability


to not only replicate that of western designs, but also develop and produce


their own.


In 1911, the launch of the battlecruiser Kong? by Vickers was the last


capital ship built by a foreign supplier. Japanese shipyards produced all of


Kong?s three sister ships. Japan essentially became self sufficient in the


production of naval power plants, armor plating, heavy ordnance, fire-control


systems, and optics. In 1921, a British missionary showed the Japanese the


latest aviation technology, including aircraft carriers. With this new


information, the Japanese set out to design and build there own, and in 1922


they constructed their first aircraft carrier, the H?s?. Five years later they


would add to the fleet their first large aircraft carrier, the Akagi.


Of the ten aircraft carriers that Japan had at the start of the war, six of


these were large fleet carriers with four more under construction. The large


fleet carriers were able to carry 70-90 airplanes per ship and travel at 30 or


more knots. These ships weighed on average 15,300 tons and had unarmored decks


leaving them vulnerable to air strikes. In 1941, Japan established the First Air


Fleet, first ever unit of its kind in the world, with six of its large fleet


carriers, the Akagi, Kaga, S?ry?, Hiry?, Sh?kaku, and the Zuikaku.


The Japanese had ten battleships from World War I. These ships were heavily


rearmored and equipped with the latest technologies in turrets and fire-control


systems. Of these ships, four were from the Kong? class and were originally


built as battlecruisers. They traveled at 30 knots and each one equipped with


eight 14-inch guns. These ships were clearly superior to any of the United


States? heavy cruisers. The other six battleships could travel at 26 knots and


individually not superior to most of the United States? heavy cruisers (Greene


11). The Japanese had designed their battleships to be bigger and a larger


caliber main battery. After the signing of the


Type Of Ship No. Constructed During War Tons Each Guns Torpedoes


Aircraft Carriers 10 4 15,297 N/A N/A


Battleship 10 N/A 30,140 8 14? N/A


Destroyers 163 12 2,000 6=5? Unknown


Heavy Cruisers 18 N/A 12,000 10=8?


8=5? N/A


Light Cruisers 20 4 4,940 4=5.5? 40=24?


Submarines 65 29 N/A N/A N/A


Super Battleships 0 2 64,000 9=18? N/A


Washington Naval Treaty in 1922, the Japanese along with most other countries


stopped all construction on any normal battleships. Instead they were replaced


with heavy cruisers.


The Japanese had eighteen heavy cruisers at the start of the war weighing in


at 12,700 tons and they could travel at a fast pace of 35.5 knots. Each one was


very well armored and had up to ten 8-inch guns and up to eight 5-inch guns. The


heavy cruisers also had sixteen torpedo tubes that could launch 24-inch


torpedoes.


There existed twenty light cruisers, of which two older cruisers, the Oi and


the Kitakami, were reconstructed. Four others were also built during the war.


The force of light cruisers was built in the 1920?s and was smaller than most


ships the United States had. They were fast and weighed 4,940 tons apiece. The


Oi and Kitakami weighed 5,000 tons and could travel at 36 knots. They were armed


with four 5.5 inch guns and carried 40 long lance torpedoes. The four built


during the war weighed 11,200 tons. A light cruiser was usually assigned as a


flagship to a destroyer squadron.


Of one hundred seventy five destroyers Japan had all together, only a maximum


of one hundred thirty were in the war at once and one hundred twenty nine were


destroyed. At 2,000 tons and each having six 5 inch guns, they excelled in ship


to ship combat and were usually larger and more heavily gunned then what the


United States had. A normal United States destroyer weighed 1,500-1,800 tons


with four or five 4.7 inch or 5 inch guns. The Japanese also had the secret long


lance 24-inch torpedoes, which were installed on all ships made after 1935, and


a larger warhead then most allied warheads. Japans warhead weighed 1,080 pounds


compared to the allied warhead of 810 pounds. In 1928, Japan created the Fubuki


class destroyers, larger and faster destroyers with their 5-inch guns in weather


proof, power operated mounts. At the time of there creation, they were the most


powerful destroyers in the world. All of the destroyers were adequate for


antiaircraft but lacked the mass of weapons that characterized the allied


warships.


The Japanese had three different types of submarines. The long range with


which there consisted seven, the RO, which was used for coastal work, and the


standard I-boat, which cooperated with the main fleet. The I-boat was the most


important of these three. It had a long range, a high speed of 8.5 knots


submerged and 20 knots surfaced one 4.7-inch gun and six 21-inch torpedoes, and


good seakeeping qualities. The most advanced submarines carried a floatplane,


had a 5-inch and two 25-mm guns, and had a range of 14,000 miles at 16 knots.


Several submarines also carried midget submarines. They weighed 46 tons and


traveled at 19 knots submerged. Each was armed with 18-inch torpedoes.


Japan also started construction at the start of the war of four Yamato-class


battleships or super battleships. These battleships had nine 18-inch guns


capable of sending a 3,220 pound shell more than 25 miles. Each ship weighed


64,000 tons and could travel at 27 knots. These ships were designed to be bigger


and more powerful then any other ship in the world and it took 49 months to


build a single ship. These ships could easily fire over the horizon at a ship


with

the help of spotter planes. Of the four super battleships started, two, the


Yamato and Mushushi would be completed, one, the Shinano, was completed as an


aircraft carrier, and the other would be cancelled after work started in March


1942.


Aviation


Japans Imperial Army and Imperial Navy each had there own airforce, all


though an army airplane wasn?t seen by the Allies until 1943. Japans aircraft


were par with any other great power at the start of the war. They were fast,


well-armed, and Japanese companies were able to mass-produce these planes. Yet,


until the bombing of Pearl Harbor, the Allies viewed the aircraft as ?poor


copies of absolute Allied aircraft?? (Parshall Interview).


When the British missionary showed the Japanese the latest in aviation


technology in 1921, they soon realized how outdated their planes where and soon


began to design and build new ones. By then Japans leading aircraft companies


were all well established. These companies included Nakajima, Mitsubishi,


Kawasaki, and Aichi. In the early 1930?s, the outcome of ten years of design


produced the A6MZ ?Zero? fighter, which at the beginning of the war gained a


reputation of being almost invincible. In the later part of the decade Japan


also saw the production of the G4M ?Betty? bomber and the D3A ?Val?


dive-bomber, two more equally good planes.


Japans naval airforce consisted of 3,000 planes. Of these 3,000 planes, 1,400


were frontline combat aircraft. 503 planes were assigned to the 11th Koku Kantai


(Air Fleet). The 11th Air Fleet was a land based naval support fleet that


consisted of three air flotillas, the 21st, 22nd, and the 23rd. The rest of


Japans naval airpower belonged to the elite 1st Air Fleet; a sea based air fleet


made up of six large aircraft carriers. The 1st Air Fleet was the best-trained


air force unit in the world. This air force unit was the same unit that attacked


Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941.


Technology


After the Japanese learned how to design and produce their own ship designs,


they also become self sufficient in the building of naval power plants, armor


plating, heavy ordnance, fire-control systems, and optics. They also designed


their own hangers and hanger operations, arresting gear, and landing lights


without the help of other countries. The overall quality of Japanese technology


was good. The Japanese had mastered torpedoes, optics, and flashless gunpowder


and were up to date on naval guns, propulsion systems, and aircraft. Radar,


sonar, combat information center, and supercharged aircraft engines, was what


the Japanese did lag behind in.


An item that Japan had that no other country had was oxygen-powered


torpedoes. The British had been trying to develop this new technology for years


but had given up. Just after the British had given up, they gave a tour of a


British fleet to a Japanese ambassador. The oxygen equipment had not been taken


off the ships yet and the ambassador assumed that they had discovered how to do


it. When the ambassador told Japan of this, they immediately poured money into


it, and to the regret of every other country, formed a world class torpedo


propulsion system (Greene 13 ). The first use of the torpedo, the 24-inch long


lance, was during the battle of the Java Sea on the R.N.N. Kortenaer. It was


suspected at the time that the ship sank because of a mine, but the Allies found


out at the end of the war that it was do to Japans secret weapon.


Training


The average Japanese naval crewman and aviator was one of the best-trained


personnel in the war. The Japanese often sent their crews to the northern seas


where they could practice in harsher climates out of sight of other countries


and most of the personnel would only receive up to three days off a month. Their


naval aviators, especially ones from the 1st Air Fleet, could not be matched


with any others in the abilities of a pilot. This was achieved not only through


rigorous training, but also the diligence of the Japanese. Crewmen sometimes


would practice so hard the they would actually believe that they where there


fighting and would become mentally lost.


The navy focused on achieving the very highest standards of professionalism


and they did this by training for what they knew they were going to face. When


training for a war against the United States and the Allies, the Japanese knew


that they would be outnumbered and therefore tried to develop a tactic to solve


this problem. What they came up with was a use of mass torpedo attacks at night


against the main fleet of ships, and during the day they would rely on


long-range heavy gunfire on the remnants of the fleet. Many of Japans naval


aviators had gained previous experiences with operations in China in 1937 and


onward. Japan also added on this information and trained its airforces to do


carrier born torpedo and dive-bombing against ships, level bombing against land


based objects, dogfighting, night attacks, and long range shoot-outs.


Conclusion


With this sufficient training and the strong development of new technologies,


it shouldn?t have been that much of a surprise to the Allies that Japan was


such a strong foe and yet it was. To them, it would have been a miracle for a


country, new to the modern world, to set an almost unbeaten streak the first


four months that they were in the war. Unfortunately, the Allies weren?t aware


of all of Japans capabilities and work that they were putting into the training


and development for just such a war, and to their dismay, were knocked out of


their chairs when a country they had looked down their nose upon showed greater


skill and ability then they would have ever thought of this small country.


Why Japan Lost


Even with all of the training and development of new technologies, it is hard


to believe that Japan lost, but, to their regret, they did so by making a few


mistakes in what they prepared for and in the battles that they fought. A few of


the major mistakes that they had made was in all of the planning that went into


the development of the planned attacks. What Japan had initially planned for a


war was something small that they could drag out for awhile and hope that the


Americans would tire of. What Japan forgot was its own economical ability to


fight a war over an extended amount of time. Japan did not have the ability to


absorb loses over such an amount of time, and failed to realize that with the


size of the United States? economy, they would be able to quickly buy more


materials and replace ships faster then the Japanese. Japans shipyards were not


large enough to handle such a big demand to accommodate a war.


More faults can be found in the initial design, production, and use of its


aircraft and submarines. Their aircraft industry was able to mass-produce planes


but was unable to adopt new and better plane designs as the war continued and


therefore their aircraft quickly became outdated. Another fault with the planes


was that the fuel tanks were not protected enough. The Allies had developed self


sealing tanks, therefore, no matter how good the Japanese were, the Allies could


take a much bigger beating and survive then they themselves could. The Japanese


submarines lacked a lot of new technology, their hulls were vulnerable to sonar,


they had slow diving times do to their large size, were pour at maneuvering when


submerged, and when surfaced, their large conning towers could be picked up on


radar. Last, the Japanese had kept all of their units on the frontline longer


then the Allies, who brought back home its pilots to train more after a certain


amount of time while the more experienced Japanese units died out.


While they did do well towards the beginning of the war, some mistakes were


made in a few key battles. In Midway, a Japanese fleet of four carriers


preparing for an attack when they were stumbled upon by three carriers belonging


to the United States. If the Japanese had the six ships that were planned to be


there, one could bet that because of the unfair advantage they would have had,


they would have won the battle. But because the choice was made earlier to leave


two carriers behind at the Coral Sea, 3 vs. 4 was doable by the United States.


Also, the Japanese needed to add a few more Anti-Aircraft weapons on their


ships, the little they did have proved non-effective against the number of


planes the United States sent out.


The break that occurred between the Solomon Island Campaign and the Battle of


the Philippine Sea was a big mistake made by the Japanese. It allowed for a the


United States to play catch-up on their ships while Japanese ships sat broken in


shipyards that had become full in the beginning of the war. At the Battle of


Leyte Gulf, the Japanese had hoped to attack the shore. To do this the needed to


lure a fleet of ships guarding it away and they chose to do so with their


carriers. As they did this, cruisers would head for shore. Well, it might have


worked if the United States didn?t leave behind a few guard ships that


stumbled upon the advancing cruisers. This was the start of the greatest naval


battle in history in which Japan would lose and start on its way losing the war


against the United States.


??By failing to recognize that attacking the U.S. meant not just fighting


a single decisive battle, but waging total war, Japan doomed itself to a


conflict it could not win in the long term.?


Jon Parshall


Bibliography


Beckett, Ian. World War II in the Pacific. New York: Gallery Books, 1990.


Greene, Jack. War at Sea. New York: Gallery Books, 1988.


Parshall, Jon. Home Page. December 19, 1999 <http://www.skypoint.com/


members/jbp/economic.htm>.


Parshall, Jon. ?The Japanese Imperial Navy in World War II.? Interview.


December 19-20, 1999.


Steinberg, Rafael. Return to the Philippines. Ed. Of Time Life Magazine.


Alexandria, Virginia: Time Life Books, 1979.


The Complete Reference Collection. Computer software. The Learning Company,


1997. IBM, PC-Windows 98.


Wheeler, Keith. The Road to Tokyo. Ed. Of Time Life Magazine. Alexandria,


Virginia: Time Life Books, 1979.


Van der Vat, Dan. The Pacific Campaign. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991.


Zich, Arthur. The Rising Sun. Ed. Of Time Life Magazine. Alexandria,


Virginia: Time Life Books, 1977.

Сохранить в соц. сетях:
Обсуждение:
comments powered by Disqus

Название реферата: Japanese Imperial Navy Essay Research Paper The

Слов:3796
Символов:24520
Размер:47.89 Кб.