The Battle of Midway
Roundtable
Why
the Japanese Lost the Battle of Midway
(See Roundtable Forum issue
#2007-19)
The text that follows below is Dallas Isom’s original Naval War College article on the above subject. For the two followup letters, click the links at the end of the article.
The Battle of Midway:
Why the Japanese Lost
by Dallas Woodbury Isom
(from “Naval War College
Review,” Summer 2000)
© 2000 Dallas Woodbury Isom
THE BATTLE OF MIDWAY
CONTINUES TO GRIP the imaginations of those interested in World War II. This is
true not just because it was the pivotal engagement of the Pacific theater but
also because it was a battle the Americans should have lost—but instead won by
one of the most lopsided margins in naval history. The Japanese entered the
battle with an overwhelming advantage in ship-sinking firepower, but in the end
they were soundly trounced. All four of their aircraft carriers were sunk, as
against just one of the Americans’. Most dramatically, three of the Japanese
carriers were destroyed in a span of just two minutes, and only minutes before
those carriers were to have launched their own attack against the American
carrier fleet. On 4 June 1942, Japan’s offensive naval air power was virtually
destroyed in a single battle, and what little chance it ever had of winning the
war in the Pacific went up in the smoke of its burning carriers. The titles of
two popular books about the battle—Incredible Victory and Miracle at
Midway—capture the momentousness of the event.
The principal
protagonists in this battle for naval supremacy in the Pacific have become
legendary. On the strategic level, Admiral Chester Nimitz, commander in chief
of the U.S. Pacific Fleet, matched wits against Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto,* commander in chief of the Japanese Combined Fleet; on the
tactical level, Rear Admiral Raymond Spruance (under Rear Admiral Frank
Fletcher) was pitted against Vice Admiral Chuichi Nagumo, commander of the
Japanese carrier force.
The genesis for the
Midway operation was the failure of the attack on Pearl Harbor to catch and
destroy the American carriers that Yamamoto had expected to be there with the
rest of the Pacific Fleet. The Doolittle raid on Japan in April 1942, in which
sixteen B-25 bombers were launched from the carrier Hornet (CV 8), had
crystallized support in the Japanese high command for an operation to eliminate
the American carrier force in the Pacific. Yamamoto’s objective was to
entice—by attacking and occupying the two small Midway Islands, where a U.S.
naval base had been established—Nimitz’s carriers into a decisive battle in
which they could be destroyed. The Midway atoll, about 1,100 miles northwest of
Hawaii, was regarded by the Japanese as the "sentry for Hawaii," too
valuable an asset for the Americans to lose without a fight.
Yamamoto’s plan—which
included an attack in the Aleutians—was unprecedented in its complexity and
scale, involving almost every combatant ship in the Japanese navy, almost 140
in all, along with dozens of support ships. The "teeth," however,
were the four fleet carriers in Nagumo’s Mobile Force—Akagi, Kaga,
Hiryu, and Soryu.1 Between
them, these ships embarked around 270 planes, of which about 230 were
operational (twenty-one land-based Zeros were being ferried for use on Midway
after its capture.)2 It was
these four carriers, with their supporting ships, of the Mobile Force that were
involved in what is popularly called the battle of Midway.
On the American side,
Nimitz’s code breakers had deduced the general outline and approximate date of
Yamamoto’s Midway operation. Nimitz, at Pacific Fleet headquarters at Pearl
Harbor, planned to ambush Nagumo’s carrier force. For this he had three
carriers available—Enterprise (CV 6) and Hornet in Task Force 16,
under the command of Spruance, and Yorktown (CV 5) in Task Force 17,
under Rear Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher. (Yorktown, damaged three weeks
earlier in the battle of the Coral Sea, had been hastily repaired.) The three
ships collectively carried 234 planes, of which 221 were operational.3 In addition, there were about eighty land-based
combat planes and thirty-two PBY flying boats for reconnaissance on Midway
itself. Thus Nimitz actually had more planes at his disposal in the immediate
arena of the battle, but Nagumo’s planes could deliver far more effective
firepower, and his pilots were much more experienced. If the Americans were to
have a reasonable chance of winning, their planes had to strike Nagumo’s
carriers before they could launch their own attack against the American
carriers. That, of course, is exactly what happened—but just barely.
Had the Japanese
gotten their attack launched, they stood a very good chance of winning the
battle. They possessed a deadly ship-sinking weapon—an aerial torpedo that was
very accurate and reliable, and so fast it was difficult to evade. The American
aerial torpedo at that time in the war was unreliable and slow—it essentially
did not work. Nor did the American navy have armor-piercing, delayed-fuse bombs
that could penetrate into the bowels of a ship before exploding, as the
Japanese had.4 The
bombs carried by the American carrier dive-bombers were short-fuse,
high-explosive bombs that could destroy a large aircraft carrier only if it was
caught in its most extreme condition of vulnerability—with decks crammed with
planes fully fueled and laden with bombs or torpedoes. But that was how the
three Japanese carriers were caught. They were destroyed more by fire from
their own gasoline and secondary explosions from their own ordnance than by any
fatal structural damage inflicted directly by the American bombs.
What, mercifully for
the Americans, went wrong for the Japanese at Midway? The American carrier
attack, which Nimitz intended to be an ambush, a surprise attack, was in fact
no ambush. The American naval presence in the Midway area had been discovered
by a Japanese search plane—the infamous "Tone 4"—on the
morning of 4 June, at 0728, almost three hours before the fatal bombing at 1025
by American dive-bombers from the carriers Enterprise and Yorktown.
Why could the
Japanese not get an attack launched before 1025? This has been one of the most
perplexing mysteries of World War II. In the more than half-century since then,
no satisfactory account has been published of those three hours on the Japanese
side of the battle; on close examination, it appears that most of what is
generally believed to have happened in fact never did. Admiral Nagumo and his
staff were not the fools they have been made out to be, and the Tone 4
search-plane pilot who discovered the American fleet was not the myopic,
absent-minded incompetent that he has been portrayed as being. Mistakes were
certainly made by the Japanese—there are plain reasons why the battle was
lost—but they were not idiotic mistakes, as is commonly implied.
The Standard
Scenario. Most of what is now
popularly "known" about the Japanese side of the battle, as evidenced
in books, films, and television documentaries, comes from a series of books
published soon after the war.5
These early books fixed in the popular mind a "standard scenario" of
what happened on the Japanese side of the battle, which more recent movies and
novels have presented vividly: a befuddled Nagumo refuses to accept the reality
of the situation, "dithers," and then in a series of blunders throws
away any chance he had of countering the American carrier threat.6
Fact and Fiction
Why could no attack
be launched before 1025? The problem that prevented an immediate response to
the discovery of the American carrier fleet is well known: at 0715, less than
fifteen minutes before the American fleet was discovered, Nagumo had ordered
the rearming of his torpedo planes and dive-bombers for a second strike on
Midway. (The first strike had been launched at 0430 with 108 planes, thirty-six
each of the torpedo, dive-bomber, and Zero types. A second wave, of equal
numbers but intended—and armed—to attack ships, had been brought up to the
flight decks of the four carriers.) The planes were struck below to the hangar
decks: the torpedo planes (on Akagi and Kaga) were to be reloaded
with eight-hundred-kilogram land-type bombs in place of torpedoes, and the
dive-bombers (on Hiryu and Soryu) with 242-kilogram
high-explosive fragmentation bombs instead of 250-kilogram, armor-piercing
antiship bombs.
The rearming of the
torpedo planes with land-attack bombs contravened a standing order by Yamamoto
that half of the torpedo planes in Nagumo’s Mobile Force were always to be
fitted with torpedoes, on standby in the event an American carrier fleet showed
up at Midway.7 Nagumo
justified his decision on grounds that the first-wave commander had notified
him by radio at 0700 that Midway had not yet been neutralized and that a second
strike was needed. As the Mobile Force was then under attack by torpedo bombers
from Midway, this recommendation was given heightened force. Also, the fact
that no American ships had been discovered after two and a half hours of search
tended to confirm Nagumo’s belief that there was no enemy carrier threat in the
area.
Moments after this
fateful decision, the crew of a float plane launched by the cruiser Tone—designated
Tone 4—discovered elements of the American fleet. The sighting report
was transmitted in telegraphic code at 0728: "Sight what appears to be 10
enemy surface ships, in position bearing 10 degrees distance 240 miles from
Midway. Course 150 degrees, speed over 20 knots."8 No mention was made of carriers. The earliest
commentators on the battle assumed that this report was received directly by
the radio room of Nagumo’s flagship, Akagi, and thus by Nagumo, at
around 0730.9 Later
authorities, however, accept that it was relayed to Akagi several
minutes later by the plane’s mother ship;10 they suggest that the admiral received the sighting
report around 0740.11 In
any case, it was presumably necessary to attack the U.S. ships as rapidly as possible—but
the only aircraft available to attack them were being rearmed with specialized
land-attack weapons. According to the standard scenario, Nagumo, after
regaining his composure, responded with an order at 0745 that the rearming
operation be "suspended."12
In this view, at 0745 the rearming crews were about halfway through their task,
with about half the torpedo planes still armed with torpedoes.13
The official Japanese
government history of World War II (known as Senshi Sosho), in its
volume on Midway, published in 1971, agrees that Tone 4’s sighting
report was received by Nagumo indirectly, through the cruiser, shortly before
0745, but it takes a different position as to the nature of his countermanding
of the 0715 rearming order. It contends that at 0745 the rearming operation was
reversed—not merely suspended.14
(The only recorded text of that order is ambiguous: "Prepare to carry out
attacks on enemy fleet units. Leave torpedoes on those attack planes which have
not as yet been changed to bombs.")15
At 0800, fifteen
minutes after Nagumo supposedly issued his countermand order, the Mobile Force
came under attack by sixteen Dauntless dive-bombers from Midway, quickly
followed at around 0815 with an attack by fourteen B-17s. No hits were scored,
but the radical, high-speed maneuvering by the carriers to evade the bombs made
further rearming of the torpedo planes practically impossible. At 0820 the crew
of Tone 4 finally identified a carrier in the American task force; this
report was received by Nagumo at 0830. In the meantime, the Midway strike force
had returned; many of its planes were shot up and in distress, and it requested
an immediate landing.
At 0830, Nagumo was
faced with a second fateful decision: whether to launch immediately an attack
against the American carrier force with the aircraft then ready or to postpone
his attack until after the Midway strike force had been landed and his
second-wave torpedo planes had been rearmed with torpedoes. He chose to
postpone. Under the standard scenario the attack was, soon after this time,
scheduled for launch at 1030—a postponement of two hours.16
This decision has
been roundly criticized. According to the standard scenario—in which the
rearming operation was "suspended" by Nagumo at 0745—roughly half the
torpedo planes were in the hangar decks and still had torpedoes attached at
0830; most of the other half were on the flight decks, rearmed with
eight-hundred-kilogram high-explosive bombs. All thirty-six of the second-wave
dive-bombers were properly armed for attacking ships and on the flight decks of
Hiryu and Soryu.17
It is said that a reasonably adequate attack could have been made at 0830 with
those resources. Also, it is pointed out, the absence of those planes, loaded
with fuel and ordnance, from the flight decks of the carriers at 1025 would
have greatly reduced the damage inflicted on them by the American dive-bombers
from Enterprise and Yorktown.
Nagumo’s decision to
forgo a limited attack at 0830 in favor of a later "grand scale"
attack (as he called it) more worthy of the Imperial Japanese Navy is largely
attributed, by the standard scenario, to hubris, arrogance, and contempt for
the capabilities of American naval pilots—attitudes constituting what has been
called "victory disease," resulting from the previous string of
successes by the Japanese navy.18
However, all commentators agree that there were no Zeros available at 0830 to
escort the attack planes. Those originally assigned to the second wave had been
diverted to the combat air patrol to fend off the series of attacks from
Midway, and their fuel and ammunition were mostly depleted by 0830.
Given the standard
scenario’s depiction of the armament status of the planes, its explanation for
the postponement was troubling. A brief postponement might have been justified
until some Zeros could have been landed, rearmed, and refueled, but a two-hour
postponement does not make sense. Nagumo was aware that his Mobile Force had
been discovered by American search planes three hours earlier;19 by 0830 an attack from carriers should have seemed
imminent.
As for any contempt
he might have had for the abilities of American naval pilots—said to have been
based on the pathetic performance he had just witnessed in the attacks from
Midway—Nagumo and his staff should have been aware that American carrier pilots
were substantially better than American land-based pilots at that time in the
war. Just a month earlier, at the battle of the Coral Sea, American carrier
pilots had managed to sink a Japanese light carrier and severely damage the
"super-carrier" Shokaku. Even if Nagumo’s judgment was in fact
impaired by "victory disease," there is no evidence that Commander
Minoru Genda, his staff air officer, whose advice on such matters was
practically dispositive, was similarly afflicted.
What really casts
doubt on the standard scenario’s account is a more fundamental mystery: why was
an attack not launched before 1025, when the first bombs hit Nagumo’s carriers?
If the rearming operation on the torpedo planes was halted at 0745—just a
half-hour after it had been ordered—and even if restoring the torpedoes to the
half of the planes from which they had been removed did not begin until 0830,
surely the torpedo squadrons on Akagi and Kaga could have been
made ready for launch well before 1025. If the rearming operation was actually
reversed at 0745, as Senshi Sosho has it, this dilatoriness is even more
incredible.
This, then, is the
nub of the problem: why could not what had been done in thirty minutes be
undone in less than two hours? A timely reloading of the torpedoes should have
been possible, even though for much of the two hours after 0830 the Mobile
Force was recovering the Midway strike force and fending off attacks by
carrier-based torpedo bombers. Under the standard scenario’s account of their
armament status (and as will be seen below), there simply was not much left to
do.
The problems with the
official Japanese version of the scenario are still worse: according to it, the
rearming operation was not just merely suspended at 0745 but reversed. If so,
then more than half of the torpedo planes on Akagi and Kaga
should have had torpedoes attached at 0830, and some of them, it would seem,
would have been brought up to the flight decks to replace aircraft rearmed with
bombs. (It would also seem that those few still in the hangar decks could have
been raised to the flight decks and launched without causing inordinate delay
in landing the Midway strike force.)20
In either view, all the dive-bombers on Hiryu and Soryu were
armed to attack ships and on the flight decks ready to launch; with that much
antiship armament available, the decision to postpone the attack should have
been excruciatingly difficult. Yet a staff officer is reported in Senshi
Sosho as recalling that it was "easily made."21
It is yet more
incomprehensible under Senshi Sosho’s scenario that the torpedo planes
were not ready to launch well before 1025. There would have been even less work
remaining than in the American version of the story. It is true that the
recovery of the Midway strike force was not completed until about 0920 on Akagi,
and again, during much of the time between 0930 and 1000 the Mobile Force was
maneuvering to evade two waves of American torpedo bomber attacks. But if the
rearming operation was reversed at 0745, there would have been time to get the
second-wave strike force spotted on the flight decks before 1000—when, as will
be seen, there was a fifteen-minute window during which a launch could have
been made without any harassment from the Americans.
Toward a More
Plausible Scenario. It would
seem, then, that Nagumo must have been facing problems more serious than have
heretofore been realized. To find out what really happened on the Japanese side
of the battle on that fateful morning of 4 June it is necessary to examine the
primary sources, the principal ones being Nagumo’s official report and the
action reports from the air groups of the four carriers in the Mobile Force.22 The surviving records, however, are fragmentary
(most of the ship’s log books and battle diaries were lost in the war),
ambiguous, and even contradictory. There are also secondary materials derived
from them but supplemented by testimony from Japanese veterans of the battle.23 More illuminating are the untranslated Japanese
literature—principally the Senshi Sosho volume on Midway.
The indispensable
sources, however, are the carrier air group veterans of the battle. Of the few
who survived the war, many of them had been aircraft and weapons mechanics—the
men who did the "heavy lifting" on the hangar decks—and most have
never before been interviewed about what went on during the battle. These
veterans give insights into Japanese carrier operations that point to reasons
why Nagumo could not get an attack into the air in time.24
What Really Went Wrong?
The key to unlocking
the mystery has been at hand for over fifty years but has generally been
ignored. As noted, it is commonly assumed that the 0728 sighting report from Tone
4 was received by Nagumo before 0745 and that pursuant to it Nagumo suspended
or reversed the rearming of his torpedo planes and dive-bombers at 0745. But
Nagumo states very clearly, twice, in his official report that he did not
receive that sighting report until about 0800.* His report complains that the delay in its delivery
"greatly affected our subsequent attack preparations."25 However, this claim has been almost universally
rejected by historians—all American ones and most Japanese—because it is
inconsistent with two entries in the composite message log of that same report.26
The first entry is
Nagumo’s order, logged at 0745, countermanding the 0715 rearming order. The
second is a command, logged at 0747, by Nagumo to Tone 4 to
"ascertain ship types."27
These orders, of course, make no sense unless Nagumo had already received the
sighting report. Morison, indeed, declares that Nagumo’s claim that it was not
delivered until 0800 was "belied" by his 0745 countermand order;28 Morison’s immense prestige early established a
pre-0745 receipt time as fact, and from it the standard scenario of the
rearming operation has proceeded.
But what if Nagumo
did not receive the sighting report until 0800 as he claimed? The
strongest evidence against that claim remains the two entries in the
"composite log," but what if their times were erroneously logged? It is
likely that they were and that those two orders from Nagumo were in fact issued
later.
Evidence that they
were issued later can be found in the composite log itself. Let us first
examine Nagumo’s order to Tone 4, logged at 0747, for identification of ship
types. It is almost identical to an order logged at 0800 to "advise ship
types." The standard scenario assumes that this was a repeated order; it
portrays Nagumo as extremely irritated by the lack of response from Tone
4 and considers this entry as evidence of lackadaisical performance by the
aircraft’s crew.29 Tone
4 did not respond to Nagumo’s request for details until 0809, when it reported
back that the "10 surface ships" consisted of five cruisers and five
destroyers. Twenty-two minutes—from 0747 to 0809—is an inordinate length of
time to take to respond to an Admiral’s request and by itself casts doubt
whether the request for details was sent as early as 0747. However, a
nine-minute turnaround time for radio messages (from 0800 to 0809) would be more
reasonable.
Could it be that the
two orders to Tone 4 to identify ship types were one and the same and
that the order was actually sent at 0800? If so, this would indicate that
Nagumo did not receive the sighting report until around 0800.
In the composite log
are numerous examples of messages logged more than once, and in which the
earliest of two or more entries is not the correct one. Among them: Nagumo’s
message to his Mobile Force advising them to "Proceed northward after
taking on your planes. We plan to contact and destroy the enemy task
force." This is logged as having been sent at 0855 and again at 0905.
However, in the narrative portion of the report Nagumo states that he sent the
message at 0905.30
Likewise, the report
by Tone 4 sighting two additional cruisers in the American task force is
stated in the narrative as having been received at 0840 but is logged in the
composite log at 0830, 0845, and 0850. Thus there are substantial grounds for
believing that the 0747 time for Nagumo’s request for Tone 4 to
"ascertain ship types" is erroneous and that 0800—which is consistent
with Nagumo’s statement in the narrative that he received the sighting report
at about 0800—is actually the correct time the request was sent.
But what about the
countermand order, which is logged only once and at 0745? There are also
several examples in the composite log of events being logged at the wrong time,
where the correct time can be established independently by American records of
undisputed reliability. For instance, a Japanese search plane on a southeast
course that took it near Midway radioed a report to the Mobile Force— logged at
0555—that "15 enemy planes are heading towards you."31 Those planes were almost certainly a squadron of
sixteen Dauntless dive-bombers from Midway. But they did not take off from
Midway until after 0600 and did not form up into a group until around 0615.32 Nor did any other group of planes—Vindicator
dive-bombers, torpedo bombers, or fighters—take off before 0600 in response to
the air raid warning at 0555. The only American planes from Midway that were in
the air as a group at 0555 were a squadron of B-17s, which was over two hundred
miles west of Midway. No group of planes could have been seen by that search
plane until at least fifteen minutes after 0555.
Therefore, the time
of Nagumo’s order countermanding the rearming operation could also have been
erroneously logged as occurring at 0745. It is more likely that it was issued
after 0800.
The composite log was
assembled from radio and other logs of the several ships in the Mobile Force;
the Akagi’s flag-bridge log had been lost. Its compiler noted that the
entries were fragmentary and inconsistent and cautioned against placing too
much credence on their accuracy.33
Unfortunately, the early American scholarship on Midway—upon which the
"standard scenario" is based—lacked the benefit of the caveat about
the composite log’s reliability and assumed that the times it gave for certain
key events, such as the countermand order, were accurate. (The compiler’s
caveat appeared in Senshi Sosho, which was not published until 1971—and
then only in Japanese.) The narrative portion of Nagumo’s official report, in
contrast, is tightly written and internally consistent. The times it gives for
key events deserve much more credence than they have been given—even allowing
that Nagumo’s account was likely to be somewhat self-serving.
In any case, Nagumo’s
claim is not the only direct evidence for an 0800 receipt time for the Tone
4 sighting report. That time has been supported by Ryunosuke Kusaka, Nagumo’s
chief of staff, and Minoru Genda, his staff air officer.34 They were on the bridge with Nagumo and, in view of
the report’s shocking nature, are likely to have made particular note of when
they heard it. After the war neither of them wavered from their recollections
that the sighting report was not received in Nagumo’s headquarters until about
0800—even after it became widely accepted that the report was received before
0745.35 Even if Nagumo’s credibility can be questioned, that
of Kusaka and Genda has not been challenged. After the war, Genda served a long
tenure as head of Japan’s Air Defense Force. He earned a reputation among
American as well as Japanese officials and historians for candor, objectivity,
and probity. His insistence, along with Kusaka’s, on a receipt time of 0800 is
entitled to be given a great deal of weight.36
We may postulate,
therefore, that Nagumo did not learn of the presence of American ships in the
Midway area until about 0800 and that the operation to rearm the torpedo planes
with land-type bombs continued until that time. This factor, as Nagumo claimed
in his official report, did indeed have a profound effect on his ability to
launch an attack against the American carrier force. It provides the key to
cracking the two central mysteries of Midway: why no attack was launched at
0830—after the presence of an American carrier had been confirmed and before
the Midway strike force was landed—and, more importantly, why the torpedo
planes were not ready before the Japanese carriers were bombed at 1025.
As has been seen,
under the standard scenario, the decision at 0830 whether to launch an attack
or postpone would have been a close call. If, on the other hand, Nagumo did not
receive the Tone 4 sighting report until 0800, the armament status of
his torpedo planes would have been radically different: by then, all the
torpedoes would have been removed. Moreover, they could not have been
immediately reattached—because at 0800, as noted, the dive-bombers from Midway
began their attack, followed by the B-17s, and until the attacks were over at
0830 the carriers were forced to maneuver radically; sharp turns and a heeling
deck made the lifting involved impracticable. There were probably a few torpedo
planes armed with eight-hundred-kilogram land-type bombs, but as the Kate
torpedo plane could not dive-bomb, these were of little use against ships at
sea. Add to all this the fact that there were no Zeros available to escort an
attack group, and it is easier to understand why Nagumo found it unpalatable to
delay the recovery of the Midway strike force while sending off the
dive-bombers alone. More importantly, the very different armament status of the
torpedo planes at 0830 makes it easier to understand why no launch took place
before 1025.
The Rearming
Operation. The torpedo planes
could not have been rearmed in time for a pre-1025 full-strength launch if
Nagumo did not receive the Tone 4 sighting report until 0800;
conversely, however, they could have been had he received it before 0745, as
generally claimed. To see why, let us examine the procedure of rearming the
torpedo planes.
First, changing
torpedo planes from torpedoes to eight-hundred-kilogram land-type bombs took
much longer than commonly assumed. It has been stated by most American
commentators that it took about one hour; that, however, was the time it
usually took to arm a squadron of empty torpedo planes with torpedoes or
bombs. This was the usual situation. Rearming from torpedoes to land-attack
bombs, however, was highly unusual for the Japanese; in fact, they had done it
only once before Midway, in an experiment conducted on Hiryu. It had
been found to take one and one-half hours to change a squadron of torpedo
planes from torpedoes to eight-hundred-kilogram land bombs (providing the bombs
were already in the hangar deck) and two hours to change back from land bombs
to torpedoes.37
When the order to
rearm the second wave for a repeat strike on Midway was issued by Nagumo at
0715, the torpedo planes had first to be lowered to the hangar deck. As the
carriers were still under attack by torpedo bombers from Midway, the striking
below probably did not begin until about 0720.38 It took about seven minutes for the first plane to
be rolled to the elevator, positioned, lowered, and manhandled to its arming
station in the hangar deck. Thereafter, as two elevators were used, planes
arrived at their stations at about one-minute intervals. Accordingly, it took
about twenty-five minutes to lower and position at their arming stations a
squadron of eighteen torpedo planes. However, the weapons mechanics did not
wait until all the planes were in the hangar deck; as each plane arrived at its
station, the work began.39
The rearming procedures
were performed neither on all eighteen planes simultaneously nor one at a time,
as has respectively been stated by some commentators. Rather, the torpedo
planes were rearmed in shifts—by chutai (divisions) of probably six on Akagi,
possibly nine on Kaga. There were only enough ordnance mechanics and,
especially, enough heavy-weapon "carrier cars" (wheeled
ordnance-carrying carts, equipped with jacks) in a squadron to rearm a division
of aircraft simultaneously.40
(Kaga, with its larger squadron of twenty-seven torpedo planes, had more
weapons mechanics and carrier cars than Akagi.) As each plane in a chutai
reached its arming station, its torpedo was disarmed, disengaged from its
release mechanism, and lowered on the jacks of the carrier car. This took about
five minutes—until the twelfth minute into the overall operation for the first
aircraft, the seventeenth for the last aircraft in Akagi’s first
division. Thus it can be seen that almost nothing had been done to disarm the
torpedo planes by 0728, when Tone 4 sent its sighting report, especially
if the operation did not begin until the American torpedo bomber attack was
over at 0720. Had Nagumo learned of that report by 0730, as claimed by the
earliest accounts, his 0715 rearming decision would have been quickly and
entirely reversible.
But to continue:
after the torpedo had been disengaged and lowered, it was rolled on the carrier
car to a heavy-weapons rack, where it was deposited; this took about another
five minutes. Before a bomb could be attached to the plane, it was necessary to
replace the "launcher," the ribbed rack on the belly of the plane to
which external ordnance was attached. (Japanese torpedoes were long and
slender, but the eight-hundred-kilogram land-type bombs were short and stubby.)
The torpedo launcher had to be unbolted and replaced with a bomb launcher, a
procedure that took surprisingly long—about twenty minutes. While this was
being done, the carrier cars used for the first division of the squadron were
available to remove the torpedoes from the planes in the second.
It has become
accepted, however, that Nagumo did not receive the sighting report at 0730, in
fact not before 0740—twenty (or twenty-five) minutes into the rearming
operation. When the rearming operation was (supposedly) countermanded at 0745,
what was the armament status of the torpedo planes?
The procedures
described, continued up to 0745, would have resulted (on Akagi) in the
removal of torpedoes from all six planes of the first division and from some in
the second division. Specifically: the torpedo from the sixth plane would have
been removed, as calculated above, at about 0737, at which time the torpedo
from the first plane would have been deposited on the weapons rack; that car
would have been available to remove the torpedo from the first plane of the
second division. Assuming one minute to roll it to the plane and that
additional cars were released from the first division at one-minute intervals,
the torpedo from the first plane of the second chutai would have been
removed at around 0743, and from the third around 0745. Thus, at 0745 nine
torpedoes—give or take one or two—would have been removed from Akagi’s
torpedo plane squadron.
On Kaga, the
rearming schedule is less certain. It had twenty-seven torpedo planes, but it
appears that perhaps only eighteen in the original second-wave formation had
been armed with torpedoes, with the remaining nine—with less experienced
crews—held in reserve in the hangar deck, unarmed. (All twenty-seven were later
committed to the attack scheduled for 1030.)41 If only eighteen were stricken below pursuant to the
0715 rearming order and they were rearmed nine at a time, then somewhat more
than nine Kaga torpedo planes could have had their torpedoes removed by
0745. In any event, it is fair to assume that about half the torpedo planes on
both carriers still had their torpedoes at 0745, as claimed under the standard
scenario. However, this does not mean that the rearming operation was half
completed, as claimed; it was less than a third completed—there just had only
been time to remove half the torpedoes. Also, no land bombs had been attached
to the torpedo planes by that time (as claimed by some commentators, who
apparently assume a one-at-a-time rearming procedure.)42 None could have been: at 0745, the launchers were
still being changed on the torpedo planes of each carrier’s first division.
It should thus be
apparent that if the rearming operation was reversed at this point—at 0745—it
would not have taken much time to restore the torpedoes on the half of the
planes from which they had been removed and respot all the planes on the flight
decks of the two carriers, perhaps only about thirty minutes. But as we have
seen, according to the standard scenario Nagumo did not reverse it; he only
suspended it. The reason for this, it is said, is that he did not suspect that
carriers were among the "10 surface ships" reported by Tone 4
and wanted more information regarding the precise composition of the American
force.43 However, it is
almost certain that Nagumo did suspect the presence of carriers. One member of
his staff is reported as having doubted it, but Kusaka (Nagumo’s chief of
staff) and probably Nagumo himself realized that there would be no good reason
for so many American ships to be at Midway unless they were a carrier task
force.44
If the rearming
operation could have been easily reversed at 0745, by 0800 (when, as we have
concluded, Tone 4’s sighting report was actually received) the prospects
had become much grimmer. It would have taken a few minutes for Nagumo to make
the decision and get it to the rearming crews in the hangar decks of Akagi
and Kaga. Senshi Sosho (which assumes a pre-0745 receipt time)
reports a deliberation by Nagumo as to whether the rearming should proceed to
completion and an attack against the American fleet be made by bomb-laden
torpedo planes, or whether it should be reversed, restoring the torpedoes. It
was decided that torpedoes should be restored—as level bombing by torpedo
planes against moving ships had been proved to be very ineffective in
comparison with torpedo attacks.45
Such a deliberation
would seem needless at 0740, when the rearming operation could have been
quickly reversed. However, by 0800—when restoration of the torpedoes may have
taken longer than completing the change to land bombs—Nagumo’s options would
have been more complex. Adding to the complications were the beginning of the dive-bomber
attack from Midway and the return of first elements of the Midway strike. In
the end, the decision was made to reverse the rearming operation, but given how
busy things were just then, it may have taken a while to reach. There may,
however, have been a fairly quick interim decision to suspend the rearming
operation, but it seems likely that no order was issued to the rearming crews
until at least five minutes after receipt of the Tone 4 sighting report.
What was the likely
armament status of the torpedo planes at 0805? To continue the rearming
sequence from 0745: the torpedo on the last plane of the second division on Akagi
would have been removed and deposited on the heavy-weapons rack by about
0753—the twelfth of the eighteen planes to be stripped of their torpedoes. By
that time, the bomb launcher would have been installed on the first plane of
the first division, and the carrier cars would have been available to begin
installing land bombs on the planes of that division. Actually, however, it would
have been more efficient at that point to use the carrier cars to remove the
torpedoes from the third, and last, division of planes; time being of the
essence, that was probably done. In such a case, the carrier car used to remove
the torpedo from the first plane of the second division could have been
positioned under the first plane of the third division around 0749, and the
torpedo removed five minutes later. The torpedo from the last torpedo plane on Akagi
would have been removed by around 0759 and deposited on the rack about five
minutes later. In the meantime, the carrier car used to remove the torpedo from
the first plane of the third division would have become available to transport
a land bomb to the first plane of the first division around 0800.
Thus at 0805, none of
the torpedo planes on Akagi had torpedoes attached; launchers had been
changed for land bombs on about two-thirds of them (and torpedo launchers
removed from most of the remainder); and land bombs were being trundled to
about one-third of them. On Kaga, if only eighteen torpedo planes were
being rearmed, nine at a time, things would have been even more advanced: not
only would all the torpedoes have been removed, but a few of the planes would
have had land bombs installed. The restoration of torpedoes on those planes
would have taken even longer than on Akagi.
These exact-seeming
times are in fact only estimates, but the foregoing description is the likely
armament status when Nagumo received the sighting report at 0800. Twenty minutes
may not seem a long time, but given the nature of the rearming procedures and
the timing of the American attacks, the admiral faced a far more complicated
situation at 0800 than he would have at 0740.
If an order was
issued by Nagumo to the ordnance crews at 0805, it is almost a moot point
whether it was to reverse or merely suspend the rearming operation: the Mobile
Force was under attack, and battle-speed evasive maneuvers made it almost
impossible to move the 1,872-pound torpedoes, let alone reattach them.46 (In any case, this could not be done until the
launchers had been changed back.) About the only thing that could have been
done between then and 0830, when Nagumo had to make his decision whether to
attack or postpone, would have been to reinstall the torpedo launchers.
Events after the
Decision to Postpone. The
recovery of the Midway strike force began at 0837.47 It had been delayed a few minutes by an attack by
eleven more dive-bombers from Midway—the third attack since 0800. The Akagi
dive-bombers were landed by 0859, and the Zeros, both from the Midway strike
force and from the combat air patrol, were landed by 0918.48 At 0917 the Mobile Force began turning to the
northeast to close on the American carrier force. Thus, at about 0920 operations
to respot the second-wave strike force on the flight decks could have begun,
had the torpedo planes been rearmed with torpedoes. Had the countermand order
been given at 0745, as the standard scenario holds, the torpedoes almost
certainly would have been restored by 0920.
But the torpedo
planes on Akagi and Kaga were not ready at 0920. All their
torpedoes had been removed before the countermand order had been given after
0800. Also, although it had been over forty minutes since the air attacks on
the Mobile Force had ceased, rearming could not have proceeded at full pace
during that time: the Midway strike force dive-bombers had to be stricken below
into the same hangar decks as were occupied by the torpedo planes undergoing
rearming. (The flight decks—which, of course, were not "angled," as
flight decks are today—had to be cleared of dive-bombers so the Zeros could
land and others take off for combat air patrol.) This evolution did not prevent
rearming operations on the torpedo planes, but as planes had to be jostled
around to make room for the new arrivals in the cramped quarters, it slowed the
process considerably. It can be roughly estimated that only about twenty
minutes’ worth of normal rearming work got done on the torpedo planes between
0837 and 0920. That would have been enough to get torpedoes back on half the
planes, but at least another twenty minutes was needed for the remaining half.
(It took longer to put torpedoes on a plane than to take them off.) On Kaga,
with its twenty-seven planes, even more additional time was needed.
Thus, at 0920 on Akagi
and Kaga there began for Nagumo what must have seemed one of the most
frustrating races against time in naval history. For after just ten minutes of
unimpeded rearming time, the first wave of American carrier-based torpedo
bombers attacked at 0930—fifteen from Hornet, led by Lieutenant
Commander John Waldron. The rearming operation again came to a halt as the
carriers undertook desperate maneuvers to evade the torpedoes. This attack was
quickly followed by a second wave of fourteen torpedo bombers from Enterprise.
When it was over at 1000, about ten minutes of work still remained to rearm the
last division of Akagi’s torpedo planes, and even more time was needed
for Kaga’s. The torpedo planes that had been rearmed had been brought up
to the flight decks, beginning around 0920, but at least a third remained in
the hangar decks at 1000. By 1015, the rearming had probably been completed on Akagi,
and the last torpedo planes were being brought up and spotted on its flight
deck.49 Had the whole strike force been ready to go at 1000,
it, along with Zero escorts, could have been launched during this
fifteen-minute window between attacks on the Mobile Force. But it was not, and
at 1015 the window closed with the arrival of a third wave of torpedo bombers.
These were twelve planes from Yorktown.
Though these
planes—like the previous two waves—scored no torpedo hits, the Yorktown
torpedo bombers lured down to sea level the high-altitude combat air patrol.
The Zeros previously on low-level patrol had run out of cannon ammunition while
fending off the prior two waves of torpedo bombers. When Commander Clarence W.
McClusky’s two squadrons of dive-bombers from Enterprise, along with
Lieutenant Commander Maxwell F. Leslie’s squadron from Yorktown, showed
up and began their dives shortly after 1020, there were no Zeros to oppose
them. Nagumo had run out of time.
What about
Nagumo’s Dive-Bombers? Up to
now almost no mention has been made of the second-wave dive-bombers on Hiryu
and Soryu. The reason is that—in contrast to the torpedo planes, which
obviously could not use torpedoes against land targets but also, as noted,
could not hit moving ships with bombs—their armament status was not a problem
in this drama. In fact, Nagumo’s official report makes almost no mention of
them in connection with the rearming operation. This led early commentators to
believe that they were not included in the 0715 rearming order and thus
remained armed with armor-piercing antiship bombs throughout the morning.50 It is now clear, however, that in fact they were
rearmed, along with the torpedo planes, for a second strike on Midway.51
It would have been
irrational not to have rearmed them, first of all because dive-bombers would
seem particularly effective for attacking airplanes on the ground—one of the
main purposes of the second strike. There is a reason, however, why the
dive-bombers did not affect Nagumo’s ability to launch an attack against the
American carrier force, either at 0830 or later: dive-bombers were more easily
and quickly rearmed than torpedo planes. They carried bombs that were less than
a third the weight of the torpedoes or eight-hundred-kilogram bombs carried by
the torpedo planes. Thus, their bombs were more easily handled, and their
manipulation was less impeded by the sharp swerving of the carriers maneuvering
to avoid air attacks. Their launchers did not have to be changed to switch from
antiship to land-type bombs. There were plenty of the smaller bomb dollies
available, so the entire squadron could be rearmed simultaneously. Also, they
could be rearmed on the flight deck as well as in the hangar deck. (It appears
that only half of each squadron was lowered to the hangar deck after the 0715 rearming
order, thus saving elevator time.)52
Lastly, only
two-thirds of each dive-bomber squadron had to be rearmed. This is because when
Japanese dive-bombers were armed to attack ships, ordinarily about two-thirds
of the aircraft carried armor-piercing bombs and one-third fragmentation
bombs—which in this case they had already.53 The instant-detonation, high-explosive fragmentation
bombs (that is, land bombs) were used to knock out antiaircraft gun batteries
and blow holes in flight decks. Because of all this, it took less than half as
long to rearm the dive-bombers as it did for the torpedo planes.
The two-thirds of the
dive-bombers on Hiryu and Soryu that had to be rearmed pursuant
to the 0715 rearming order were most likely rearmed with land bombs before
0800. Most, if not all, of those had probably been changed back to
armor-piercing bombs by very soon after 0830;54 at least half of each squadron on Hiryu and Soryu
was already on the flight decks at 0830. Moreover, even if less than the optimum
number of dive-bombers had armor-piercing bombs attached, high-explosive
fragmentation bombs were about as effective against carriers as armor-piercing
ones. (The American dive-bombers destroyed the Japanese carriers with
short-fused high-explosive bombs; the U.S. Navy lacked armor-piercing bombs at
that time in the war.)
Why the Delay in
Forwarding the Sighting Report? We have seen that the key to why Nagumo could not launch an attack
before 1025 is that he did not receive the Tone 4 sighting report until
about 0800. The obvious question, however, is why it took a half-hour to get
that report to him. This does seem incredible. One of the reasons for the
common assumption that Nagumo received the report around 0740 is that
examination of the composite log shows that on average there was only about a
ten-minute difference between the time a radio message was sent and the time it
was received in Nagumo’s command center. The average, however, includes many
cases where messages were expected by the communications staff of the Mobile
Force and thereby got expedited handling.
Initial sighting
reports from search planes, however, are often not expected, and that was
certainly the case with Tone 4’s. But how could this one have taken
thirty minutes? In this case, no detailed reconstruction of the procedures is
available to explain the delay fully, but the following factors account for
most of it. First, the radio message was not received directly by Akagi’s
radio room, which was not guarding the search plane’s reporting frequency, but
by the Tone. Second, Tone 4’s report was sent not in plain
language but rather in encrypted Morse code;55 it would appear that the radioman was caught not
fully prepared to decipher it. After it was taken to the bridge on Tone,
it was relayed to Akagi by blinker (after catching the attention of a
signalman who, apparently, was not expecting an urgent message). It was then
transcribed and taken to Nagumo’s flag bridge. Altogether, this added up to
about thirty minutes.56
Subsequent messages
from Tone 4 took much less time to reach Nagumo’s command center. They
were expected, so communications crews were standing by to speed their passage.
Some were in plain language, and even those sent in code were more quickly
decoded; all were sent without delay, by flashing light, from Tone to Akagi’s
now-alerted signalmen. Thus, the time it took for those messages to get to
Nagumo is in no way indicative of the time it took the initial sighting report
to reach him.
Are there other
initial sighting reports from that time in the war that can be used for
comparison? There was one, the same day. It was sent in code by a search plane
at 0530, but no report (and that, a retransmittal) was received until 0603 by
the admiral for whom it was meant—Frank Jack Fletcher. Thirty-three minutes had
elapsed—and the American commanders, unlike Nagumo, were expecting to
find enemy carriers in the area.57
In this light, the thirty-minute delay in relaying the Tone 4 sighting
report is not as anomalous as it first appears.
The Decision to Postpone
At 0830, when Nagumo
had to make a decision whether to launch an attack on the American force or
postpone it, we have seen that he had ready no torpedo planes and no Zeros for
escort. But he did have dive-bombers on Hiryu and Soryu
available. They could have been launched fairly quickly and probably would not
have delayed the landing of the Midway strike force long enough to cause
serious plane losses from ditching (for lack of fuel). Indeed, Rear Admiral
Tamon Yamaguchi, commander of the Second Carrier Division (containing Hiryu
and Soryu), urged Nagumo to do just that.58 He was fearful of an American carrier attack if the
launch was postponed and believed that a limited attack was better than the
possibility of none at all.
Nagumo chose to
postpone. He did so not because he contemptuously disregarded any threat of an
American carrier bomber attack—as portrayed by the standard scenario—but
because he did not think that an effective attack could be made with the dive-bombers
alone and thought he had time to organize a coordinated strike. Unescorted
dive-bombers would be easy prey to American fighters over the target,
especially without torpedo planes coming in at low level to split the American
defenses. This would result, Nagumo believed, in unacceptable pilot losses with
little chance of inflicting serious damage on the American carriers. Moreover,
the torpedo planes, when he was able to send them, would be without those
dive-bombers to divert American fighters and antiaircraft gunfire. The slow and
low-flying torpedo planes would be even more vulnerable to undivided defenses
than the dive-bombers, and their pilot losses correspondingly even worse.
Carrier pilot losses
were much more costly for the Japanese than for the Americans. They had fewer
carrier pilots, and it took longer to train replacements. Japan had begun the
war with only about four hundred experienced, first-line carrier pilots.59 If Japan was to have any chance of knocking the
American carrier fleet out of the Pacific, it had to do it in the first year of
the war—and largely with those carrier pilots already on hand. Thus,
conservation of carrier pilots was a serious concern for Nagumo; it was another
factor that persuaded him that the better option was to postpone his attack
until a coordinated attack with Zero escorts could be organized. The problem
with this, of course, was time.
What Made Nagumo
Think He Had the Time? At
0830, Nagumo knew that his Mobile Force had been discovered by the Americans
and that there was at least one American carrier in the area—probably two or
three. One would think that an attack from them should have seemed imminent.
What made him think he had the time to land the Midway strike force and then
organize a coordinated attack? We know that his attack was scheduled for 1030,
two hours after the decision to postpone. Did he really think he had two hours?
First, it is now
clear that he did not schedule the 1030 launch at the time he made the decision
to postpone at 0830. His official report indicates that at 0830 Nagumo thought
that a coordinated attack could be launched very soon after the Midway strike
force was landed.60 The
report also shows that it was around the time those landings were
completed—about 0920—that Nagumo was informed by his carrier air group
commanders that the torpedo planes on Akagi and Kaga would not be
ready for launch until 1030.
But, even so, Nagumo
at 0830 had been assuming that he could get an attack in the air by soon after
0930. The question still remains: what made him think he had even one
hour? Perhaps surprisingly, there actually was reason to believe he had that
much time. The 0728 Tone 4 sighting report had given the location of the
American ships as "10 degrees distance 240 miles from Midway." This
was quickly calculated by Nagumo’s staff to be a little over two hundred miles
from the position of the Mobile Force at that time (see the search and course
chart). This was judged too far away for a bomber attack to be

escorted by the
short-legged Wildcat fighters.61
Nagumo’s staff knew that the Mobile Force was well within the range of the
Dauntless dive-bombers, but it apparently believed the Wildcat’s combat radius
was only about 175 miles.62
Nagumo and his staff thus believed that the Americans had only two options at 0728,
both of them favorable to the Mobile Force: wait until their carriers had
steamed at least twenty-five miles closer to the Mobile Force, which would take
about an hour, or attack without fighter escorts.
Under the first
option, the Americans would not begin their launch until after 0830; it would
take time to launch and form up the squadrons and then about an hour and a half
for them to reach the Mobile Force. Nagumo appears to have concluded that he
would have until after 1000 to get his own attack launched. Under the second
option, it was thought that an American bomber attack without fighter escorts
would be easy meat for the Zeros on combat air patrol and that the Mobile Force
would not, therefore, sustain serious damage. (Nagumo had just declined to send
his own dive-bombers off alone for this very reason.) It is likely, then, that
Nagumo counted on his American counterpart delaying a launch until an escorted
attack could be made—until after 0830. Nagumo took a calculated risk in
postponing his attack, but the odds looked fairly good.
There was one
horrendous problem with Nagumo’s calculation: Tone 4’s navigator had
mislocated the position of the American task force. It actually was about
fifty-five miles farther south than reported and thirty miles closer to the
Mobile Force—only about 175 miles away at 0728.63
It is not known why Tone
4’s crew thought the American ships were fifty-five miles farther north,
relative to Midway, than they actually were. It has been suggested that Tone
4’s navigational charts were erroneous, or that because the float plane was
brand-new perhaps its navigational instruments had not been properly
calibrated.64 (Another
possibility, not mentioned in the Japanese literature, is simple error in
plotting distance on the chart the aircrew was using—not adjusting distances
for distortion due to the projection as positions advanced to the north. It is
known that the crew was inexperienced at reconnaissance.)65 In any event, the American ships were only 185 miles
north of Midway—not the 240 reported—and Nagumo made a crucial decision to
postpone based, in part, on his calculation that this put them thirty miles
farther away than they actually were.
The aircrewmen of Tone
4 made a navigational error, but it is not clear that it was their fault, and
in any case, they were not alone to blame for its consequences. The error
should have been noticed in the cruiser Tone, to which they were
reporting; the report placed the American task force over a hundred miles north
and sixty miles west of where Tone 4 should have been at that time. A
request to Tone 4 for a direction-finding radio transmission would have
revealed its approximate distance north of Midway. In fact, someone on Nagumo’s
flag bridge must have later noticed that something was wrong with Tone
4’s location report, because at 0854 such a transmission was requested by
Nagumo.66 But by that time
his decision had already been made, and the Mobile Force was halfway through
recovering the Midway strike force.
It would be a mistake,
however, to assume that Nagumo based his decision to postpone solely on Tone
4’s sighting report. As we have seen, there were other reasons—primarily the
armament status of his planes—that made an 0830 launch unappealing. His
calculation of the distance of the American fleet from the Mobile Force was
just one factor in the decision. But it explains why Nagumo thought he had time
to organize a "grand scale" attack, and it is one of the reasons why,
according to a staff officer’s recollection, the decision to postpone was
"easily made."
Ironies
Nagumo believed
that the American carrier force was too far away at 0728 to be able to launch
an escorted attack against him at that time because he reckoned that the
Wildcat’s combat radius was less than two hundred miles. From this he concluded
that the Americans would either have to send bombers without fighter escorts,
making them easy to defend against, or delay their attack until they got closer
to the Mobile Force. The assumptions Nagumo made from the erroneous Tone
4 sighting report are laden with irony.
The problem for
Spruance at Midway was not so much the range of the Wildcat but that of the
Devastator torpedo bomber. Although the Wildcat’s combat radius was less than
two hundred miles, that of the Devastator was even shorter—under 175 miles.67 Spruance had indeed delayed his launch until he
thought he was close enough to the Mobile Force to give his torpedo bombers a
decent chance of returning to their carriers. He had wanted to launch an attack
very soon after he received the sighting report at 0603 locating the Mobile
Force, but he waited until 0705 to begin his launch.68
However, Spruance was
also misled by an erroneous sighting report. At 0705, he had judged his
distance from the Mobile Force to be 155 miles, based on its position and
course given in the 0603 sighting report.69 The Mobile Force was actually forty miles farther to
the northwest, which put it about 182 miles—not 155—from Spruance’s carriers.
This twenty-seven-mile difference (which is about the magnitude of Tone
4’s thirty-mile error) would have required another hour of steaming to make up.
The great irony here
is that if the American sighting report had been accurate, Spruance probably
would have further delayed his launch in order to get closer to the Mobile
Force—just as Nagumo had hoped. He may not have delayed another full hour, as
he was eager to hit the Japanese carriers before they could launch an attack
against him. But he very well may have delayed for another fifteen to twenty
minutes to get to within 175 miles so his torpedo bombers would have at least a
chance of returning from their mission. In such a case, McClusky’s dive-bombers
probably would have arrived over the Mobile Force later—perhaps at around 1040
instead of 1022—giving Nagumo time to have gotten most of his "grand
scale" attack launched.
The second irony is
Nagumo’s assumption that if the Americans attacked before he was able to get
his own attack launched, the American attack would be by unescorted bombers and
thus be easy to fend off with his combat air patrol. Though not intended by
Spruance, it did indeed turn out that none of the three squadrons of
dive-bombers that arrived over the Mobile Force at 1022 had any fighter
escorts. The escorts sent had either gotten lost or had been misdirected
because of communications failures. But Nagumo’s assumption that unescorted
dive-bombers would be easily disposed of by his combat air patrol did not take
into account that none of the Zeros he relied on would be there to meet them.
By the time the American dive-bombers arrived, the only Zeros left at
high-altitude patrol after the first two waves of Spruance’s torpedo bombers
had attacked had been drawn down to defend against the torpedo bombers from Yorktown.
Myths and Misconceptions
It is widely assumed
that Nagumo’s rearming dilemma could have been avoided had his search operation
been better. According to the standard scenario, with a more extensive and
diligent search effort the American fleet would have been discovered before
0715 and, thus, Nagumo would not have given the fatal order at 0715 to rearm
his torpedo planes for a second strike on Midway. Three charges have been
leveled. First, had the search plan involved more aircraft and thus more
density of observation, a search plane probably would have discovered the
American ships on its outbound search path—before 0700.70 Second, even with the same search plan, had the Tone
4 plane been launched on time, at 0430 instead of 0500, it would have
discovered the American ships a half-hour earlier—at around 0700 instead of
0728.71 Third, even with the 0728 discovery, had Tone
4’s crew been more observant it would have seen an aircraft carrier and
reported it in the initial sighting report rather than not identifying it until
0820. This, it is said, would have given more urgency earlier on to Nagumo’s
measures to counter the American carrier threat.72
These are all myths.
The reality contains even more ironies, and a paradox.
The Search Plan. It is true that the density of Nagumo’s search plan
was skimpy, especially compared with that employed by the Americans at Midway.
He used only seven planes to cover an arc of 160 degrees, where the Americans
used twenty-two planes to cover an arc of 180 degrees (see the chart). It
should be realized, however, that the Americans were expecting the Mobile Force
to be in the area—thus, their purpose was to locate it as early as possible.
Nagumo, on the other hand, was not expecting American carriers to be in the
area. In fact, he was convinced, on the basis of information he had, that they
could not be near Midway on the morning of 4 June. Accordingly, his search
effort was merely precautionary—by which standard the plan was adequate.
But Nagumo’s search
plan made absolutely no difference in the outcome of the battle, in any case.
The low search-line density did not cause the failure to discover the American
fleet earlier. In point of fact, one of the Japanese search planes—Chikuma
5—flew almost right over an American carrier task force at 0630 (see the
chart); it saw nothing, because of heavy low-level clouds.73 (Weather on the search line to the north was even
worse—another Chikuma search plane had to abandon the search at 0635 and
turn back because of a storm in the area.)74 Therefore, whether there had been fourteen search
lines or even twenty-two, because of the cloud cover it is very unlikely that
the American ships would have been seen much before 0728. As Nagumo lamented in
his official report, "The weather of the day certainly was not a friend of
our search planes."75
The Late Launch of
Tone 4. Tone
4’s launch, scheduled for 0430, did not happen until 0500, because of engine
trouble or problems with the catapult (it is not clear which). However, the result
was not a delay in its discovery of the American ships. What we have here is a
striking paradox: had Tone 4 been launched on time, a half-hour earlier
than it was, it most likely would not have arrived at the point where it found
the American fleet until over half an hour later than it actually did—not until
after 0800 instead of 0728.
How can this be so?
It is now clear that the reason Tone 4 was able to arrive in the
vicinity of the American fleet at 0728 is that it had shortened its route. It
was supposed to fly three hundred miles easterly before turning on its
sixty-mile dogleg to the north; instead, Tone 4 made that turn about
sixty-five miles short (see the chart).76 It ran onto the American ships very soon after it
made its final turn at the end of the dogleg to head back to the Mobile Force.
The shortcut took over 130 miles off its prescribed run—which, given its
120-knot cruising speed, reduced the time it took to reach that point by over
an hour.77
It is not known why
the pilot of Tone 4 shortened his course. He was not instructed to do so
by anyone on the cruiser Tone, and neither he nor anyone else in
his crew survived the war to explain. The best guess, however, is that he did
so in an effort to make up the lost time caused by the late launch. Thus the
late launch of Tone 4, instead of delaying the discovery of the American
carrier force, appears to have resulted in those ships being discovered over
half an hour earlier than they otherwise would have been. Actually, it was the
only piece of luck Nagumo had that morning.
The Delay in
Identifying a Carrier. When Tone
4 spotted elements of the American fleet at 0728, it reported only that it had
seen "10 surface ships." To a request by Nagumo to identify ship
types, Tone 4 replied at 0809 that the ships consisted of five cruisers
and five destroyers. No carrier was identified until 0820—fifty-two minutes
after the initial sighting report. It is widely assumed that had a carrier been
reported to begin with, Nagumo’s attack preparations would have been
accelerated substantially. We now know that Nagumo had made no order at 0745
countermanding the rearming operation; nothing, then, could have been done
before 0800 to counter an American carrier threat even if the initial Tone
4 report had mentioned a carrier. Still, it is not unreasonable to assume that
had the initial report identified a carrier, the communications personnel might
have got it to Nagumo a few minutes sooner—and considering how close he came to
launching his attack before being bombed at 1025, every minute saved could have
made a significant difference in the outcome of the battle.
As it is, there has
been an almost universal assumption that Tone 4’s crew was not up to
par—some say hapless and incompetent—and that its apparent inability to
distinguish an aircraft carrier from a cruiser was largely to blame for the
subsequent debacle of the Mobile Force.78 But would a more keenly observant search plane crew
have seen a carrier at 0728, or at least well before 0820? Probably not.
It is generally
assumed by American commentators that Tone 4 made its initial sighting
from a great distance, perhaps thirty miles, at which it was difficult to
identify ship types.79
Instead, it appears that Tone 4 was very close to the American ships.80 They probably were seen through a break in the
clouds, and their composition would have been easily discernable. This
conclusion—supported by Senshi Sosho—is based on two factors. First, the
ships could not have been seen at all from a great distance; the area was too
cloudy at 0728.81
Second, the Tone 4 report was precise about the course of the American
ships—150 degrees. From thirty miles away, or even twenty, only a general
direction could have been made out, such as "southeasterly."
Why, then, could not
the aircrew see a carrier? Senshi Sosho is at a loss to explain, and it
shares the view that the Tone 4 crewmen were sloppy observers.82 It is more likely that the Tone 4 crew
actually saw everything that was visible and that there were no carriers
with those ten ships. Tone 4 probably sighted elements of Spruance’s
Task Force 16. It appears that Enterprise and Hornet, along with
a cruiser (probably the antiaircraft light cruiser Atlanta, CL 51) and
four destroyers, had begun soon after 0705, during the launch of their planes,
to diverge from the rest of the task force—five heavy cruisers and five
destroyers.83 Also, there was
fairly heavy cloud cover over the entire area of the task force;84 it was only around 0730 that the clouds began to
break up over the carriers. The ten TF 16 units, separated from and under less
overcast conditions at 0728 than the carriers, were the ships Tone 4
saw.85 (The aircrew apparently felt that because it saw no
carriers and was in a great hurry to encode and transmit its initial sighting,
distinguishing between cruisers and destroyers was not important.)
The main evidence
that the carriers had become separated is Tone 4’s 0820 report as given
in the narrative of Nagumo’s official report: that the ships previously
mentioned were "accompanied by what appears to be a carrier in a position
to the rear of the others."86
This indicates that a carrier not with the group originally seen—probably Hornet,
which completed its launch first—was now rejoining its main escorts. Another
report from Tone 4 lends support. At 0758 the search plane radioed that
the American ships had changed course to 080 degrees (from the original 150).
This would make no sense for a carrier; planes were still being launched, and
it is almost certain that Spruance’s two carriers steered a course into the
wind—around 135 degrees—until the launch was completed at 0806.87 If, however, the ten cruisers and destroyers seen by
Tone 4 had been diverging from the carriers by even fifteen degrees, by
0800 they would have been several miles to the west. They would naturally
change course to the east near the end of flight operations to regain their
prior positions with respect to the carriers.
It is probable, then,
that Tone 4 accurately reported what it saw at 0728 and 0809, and that
no carrier was visible to it until 0820 (by when the aircraft had retreated
about thirty miles, at which range Task Force 16 detected it on radar).88 Had Tone 4 not been found and pursued into clouds
by fighters from Enterprise just after 0820, Enterprise would
probably also have been seen. Even so, Tone 4’s work was not over; at
0830 it reported that two more cruisers (probably in Yorktown’s task
force) had been spotted and at 0855 that ten torpedo bombers (probably Yorktown’s
twelve) were heading toward the Mobile Force.
Verdict on the
Performance of the Tone 4
Crew. Far from being the sloppy, myopic incompetents portrayed by the
standard scenario, the crewmen of Tone 4 appear to have been very
observant and even resourceful aviators. Although their navigation was faulty,
without their shortcut some sixty-five miles before the end of their prescribed
search path, the American ships would not have been discovered as early as they
were. This fortuitous turn to the north cannot be attributed to mere
navigational error; it was almost certainly intentional. Although the position
the Tone 4 crew gave for the American ships was too far north by
fifty-five miles, that position was almost exactly correct on the east-west
axis (ten degrees from Midway), meaning that they appear to have known how far
east they were. When they found the American ships, they not only reported what
was visible but stayed in the area monitoring their discovery for almost one
and a half hours—at considerable risk to their safety. They also sent back
seven reports during that time. Compared with most other naval reconnaissance
of that time in the war, this was an extremely diligent performance. All in
all, rather than being condemned, they deserved to be commended.
The Real Mistakes That Cost the Japanese the Battle
As we have seen, many
of the blunders that have been attributed to the Japanese at the battle of
Midway are either mythical or the kinds of snafus one should expect in battle.
Indeed, most of the operational blunders made by the two sides canceled each
other out. The Japanese, however, made two high command–level mistakes that
were egregious by any standard and, taken together, were to blame for the
Japanese disaster. The first was a massive failure of communication; the second
was rearming the torpedo planes. The communications failure was Yamamoto’s
fault, and it deprived Nagumo of vital information that might have precluded
his own fatal blunder.
The Communications
Failure. When Nagumo departed
from Japan on 27 May, he and most of the Japanese naval high command believed
that the Americans were completely unaware of the Midway operation. The Naval
General Staff in Tokyo thought an American carrier task force was in the South
Pacific. Back on 16 May, Enterprise and Hornet had been spotted
by a Japanese search plane east of the Solomon Islands, where Nimitz had
ordered their commander, Vice Admiral William F. Halsey, to allow them to be
seen.89 While they rushed back to Pearl Harbor the next day,
Nimitz perpetrated a clever disinformation scheme involving phony radio traffic
to convince the Japanese that the task force remained in the area.90 As late as 1 June the staff was radioing to Yamamoto
its "considered judgment" that an American carrier force was still in
the South Pacific.91
On 20 May, Yamamoto
had advised his subordinate commanders, including Nagumo, of his own estimate
that the Americans had two or three carriers in the Hawaii area;92 he appears to have believed that the two carriers in
the South Pacific would have returned to home waters by the time of the
projected operation.93 This,
then, is the information Nagumo had when his Mobile Force sortied: the
Americans were unaware of the Midway operation, and their carriers would
probably be at Hawaii.94
The problem is that
no further information reached Nagumo. He never learned that Yamato
intercepted on 29 May a transmission from an American submarine in the vicinity
of the Japanese transport group; nor that radio traffic from Hawaii (much of it
marked "urgent," and also monitored by Yamato) had sharply
increased; nor that "Operation K," a scheduled long-range air
reconnaissance of Pearl Harbor, had been canceled. Nor did he learn that
Yamamoto had begun to suspect, especially from the increased radio traffic from
Hawaii, that an American naval response to his Midway operation was under way.95
Yamamoto had not
passed any of this vital information on to Nagumo, because he had decided on a
policy of strict radio silence; he assumed that Akagi had picked up the
same transmissions he had been receiving on Yamato.96
However, Akagi—because
of its relatively small superstructure—lacked radio antennae large enough to
receive the lower-frequency signals required for long-distance transmissions.
Although the two fast battleships in the Mobile Force probably could have
monitored long-range radio traffic, no arrangements had been made for them to
do so and relay important intelligence to Nagumo. Kusaka, Nagumo’s chief of
staff, had worried about this very problem; before the departure from Japan he
had urged that Yamato relay all important radio intelligence to Akagi,
but he had been turned down, because of radio silence.97 Thus, Nagumo had been left to assume that as of 31
May the Midway operation was still unknown to the Americans and also that
Operation K had been carried out, and had seen nothing to alter that
assumption.
By 2 June (1 June in
Hawaii) even the Naval General Staff in Tokyo, in an about-face, had come to
the conclusion that the Americans had discovered the Midway operation and might
be sending carriers to ambush Nagumo’s Mobile Force. It sent that intelligence
in an urgent radio message addressed to both Yamamoto and Nagumo. Yamamoto
received this warning, but Nagumo did not. Yamamoto was inclined to relay it to
Nagumo but, incredibly, was talked out of it by his senior staff officer—Kameto
Kuroshima—on grounds that Nagumo had probably received it and radio silence
should be maintained.98 Thus,
three days before the attack on Midway it seems that almost everyone in the
Japanese naval high command suspected that American carriers might be at
Midway—everyone except Nagumo.
Yamamoto’s failure to
provide for adequate communications resulted in Nagumo’s being totally deprived
of the information he needed to assess properly the American carrier threat on
the morning of the battle. Just hours before the launch of his Midway strike
force, Nagumo informed his staff, "The enemy is not aware of our plans. .
. . It is not believed that the enemy has any powerful unit, with carriers as
its nucleus, in the vicinity."99
Had he realized that American carriers might be in the area, it is most
unlikely that he would have rearmed his torpedo planes for a second strike on
Midway. The communications personnel of the Mobile Force would probably have
been more alert in receiving and relaying search plane reports to him,
increasing the chances of a timely strike against the American carriers.
Rearming of the
Torpedo Planes. Nagumo’s
total lack of current intelligence regarding a possible American carrier
threat, however, does not excuse his foolhardy blunder in deciding to rearm his
second-wave torpedo planes at 0715. This not only contravened Yamamoto’s
standing order but was unnecessary. A second strike on Midway was probably
reasonable under the circumstances, as the first strike had failed to
neutralize the air power there. However, it was not necessary to rearm the torpedo
planes; an adequate second strike could have been made with just
dive-bombers and Zeros. This is because the main purpose of the second strike
was to destroy the aircraft that had escaped before the first strike, a task
for which dive-bombers and Zeros were especially well suited. Even the other
purpose, knocking out antiaircraft gun batteries, could have been achieved
almost as well by dive-bombers as by torpedo planes. That extra margin of
firepower provided by the torpedo planes was not essential, and its price was
far too high: it made the Japanese carriers incapable of an effective strike
against any American carrier force that might show up—however remote Nagumo
judged that possibility to be.
Nagumo made, then, a
"reverse lottery" gamble: instead of risking a little for the chance
of gaining a lot, he risked a great deal in order to gain very little. Why did
he do it? The main reason appears to be Nagumo’s devotion to the doctrine of
coordinated attack, using all three types of planes. This doctrine had served
the Mobile Force very well, and it probably even justified his decision to
postpone his attack against the American carrier force later that morning. But
in this instance—the second strike on Midway—he should have deviated from it.
* * *
The "standard
scenario" of the battle of Midway is not credible: most of the blunders
supposedly committed by Nagumo and Tone 4 are dubious, if not absurd. It
is understandable that the Japanese were portrayed as capable of them
immediately after the war; it has been commonplace to belittle the intellectual
capabilities of one’s enemies, especially those of a different ethnic group. It
is also understandable why this view was aided and abetted by the Japanese
themselves; it is natural for a defeated people to indulge in a certain amount
of introspective self-deprecation and scapegoating.
But now, over a
half-century after the war, more objectivity is in order. Too little of the
record survives to know for certain, but the new scenario proposed here is
surely much closer to what actually happened than has heretofore been
portrayed. It does not diminish the pride Americans can rightfully take in
their victory to accept that Yamamoto, Nagumo, and the crew of Tone 4
were crafty and worthy adversaries.
American pride,
however, should also be tempered by the realization that sheer luck had much to
do with the outcome. Without some incredibly good fortune for the Americans,
and some equally bad luck for the Japanese—most notably, the cloud cover that
obscured Task Force 17 when Chikuma 5 flew almost right over it at
0630—Nagumo would have gotten his strike force off his carriers. The American
carrier force most likely would have been destroyed. The remarkable decoding
work that had uncovered the Midway operation and set the stage for an ambush
would have been seen, instead, as having led the American carriers into a trap.
Had that happened, the course of the war in the Pacific would have been
unimaginably different. Such are the fortunes of war.
Notes
1. Nagumo’s carrier force of four fleet carriers and supporting ships
has been variously called the Mobile Force, Striking Force, First Air Fleet or,
in Japanese, Kido Butai.
2. Ikuhiko Hata and Yasuho Izawa, Japanese Naval Aces and Fighter
Units in World War II (Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1989), p.
148.
3. John B. Lundstrom, The First Team (Annapolis, Md.: Naval
Institute Press, 1984), p. 330.
4. Commander in Chief, U.S. Pacific Fleet, "Battle Report," 28
June 1942, ser. 01849, part 1, p. 27.
5. Samuel Eliot Morison, History of United States Naval Operations in
World War II, vol. 4, Coral Sea, Midway and Submarine Actions,
May 1942–August 1942 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1988). Morison based his work
largely on Nagumo’s official report, "Mobile Force’s Detailed Battle
Report #6," translated and published in 1947 by the Office of Naval
Intelligence under the title The Japanese Story of the Battle of Midway,
OPNAV P32-1002. There are two versions of this report, with different
pagination; the first, which Morison cites, appeared in the May 1947 issue of
the ONI Review. The version I cite (as more available in libraries) was
a booklet published by the Office of Naval Intelligence in June 1947 [hereafter
Official Report]. The first popular account from Japan was Mitsuo Fuchida and
Masatake Okumiya, Midway: The Battle That Doomed Japan, ed. Clarke C.
Kawakami and Roger Pineau (Annapolis, Md.: Naval Institute Press, 1955). Later
American popular works were Walter Lord, Incredible Victory (New York:
Harper & Row, 1967), and Gordon W. Prange, Miracle at Midway, ed.
Donald M. Goldstein and Katherine V. Dillon (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1982).
6. Especially the 1976 movie Midway and Herman Wouk’s widely read
novel (later a television miniseries) War and Remembrance (Boston:
Little, Brown, 1978), pp. 398–403, 424. The image of a "dithering"
Nagumo has been durable; see John Keegan, The Price of Admiralty (New
York: Viking Penguin, 1989), p. 199. A recent scholarly treatment is Lundstrom;
another excellent recent account of the American side of the battle is Robert
J. Cressman and Steve Ewing, "A Glorious Page in Our History": The
Battle of Midway, 4–6 June 1942 (Missoula, Mont.: Pictorial Histories,
1990).
7. This order was not included in the Mobile Force’s Midway operation
order but was given to Nagumo orally before the fleets sortied from Japan.
Yamamoto’s staff officers Kameto Kuroshima and Yasuji Watanabe regretted after
the battle that the order had not been put in writing. Prange, p. 214.
8. Official Report, p. 15.
9. Richard W. Bates, "The Battle of Midway, including the Aleutian
Phase, June 3–11, 1942: Strategical and Tactical Analysis," unpublished
manuscript, Naval War College, Newport, R.I., 1948, p. 90; Morison, Coral
Sea, Midway and Submarine Actions, p. 107; and Lord, p. 118.
10. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 165; and Prange, p. 218.
11. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 165; and Prange, p. 218. In accord on time
of receipt is John Toland, But Not in Shame (New York: Random House,
1961), p. 382.
12. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 167; Lundstrom, p. 337; and Thaddeus V.
Tuleja, Climax at Midway (New York: W. W. Norton, 1960), p. 109.
13. Prange, pp. 214, 218. See also Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 167; Lord, p.
119; Morison, Coral Sea, Midway and Submarine Actions, p. 107; and
Tuleja, p. 109.
14. Senshi Sosho [War history series], vol. 43, Middowe Kaisen
[Midway sea battle] (Tokyo Asagumo Shimbunsha, 1971), p. 313. (Under the
American Library Classification system, the Midway volume is number 34.)
15. Official Report, p. 15.
16. Lundstrom, p. 339; and Prange, p. 234. Other authorities have the
launch time scheduled after the Midway strike force was landed at 0918.
17. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 169; and Prange, p. 218.
18. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 245; and Prange, p. 370.
19. The Mobile Force was discovered around 0530 by an American PBY
search plane, which was spotted by the Japanese at 0542. Official Report, p.
13.
20. Senshi Sosho (p. 289) gives as one of the reasons for
deciding against launching an attack that even if all the torpedo planes had
been rearmed with torpedoes, it would have taken forty minutes to raise them to
the flight deck for a launch. If the rearming operation was reversed at 0745,
however, why were all those planes still in the hangar decks at 0830?
21. Chuichi Yoshioka, quoted in Senshi Sosho, p. 291.
22. The action reports of the four carriers, translations by the
Washington Document Center, are contained in unpublished document WDC 160985B,
U.S. Naval Historical Center, Operational Archives Branch, Washington, D.C.
23. The most valuable in English is Bates; Morison—who had an office at
the Naval War College, where Bates had worked, while writing his own
volume—later acknowledged his heavy reliance upon that source. A small number
of copies (some of poor reproduction quality) were disseminated, however, and
it is available at most military libraries and some of the larger public
libraries.
24. About two dozen such men were found and agreed to be interviewed.
These interviews were made possible by Minehiro Miwa, a history professor
specializing in the events leading to World War II in the Pacific and who had
connections with Japanese navy veterans’ organizations. He located veterans of
the Midway operation, arranged for the interviews, and handled the translation
and interpretation duties. Especially valuable were the interviews he arranged
with Chuichi Yoshioka, who compiled Nagumo’s official report, and with Hitoshi
Tsunoda, who wrote the Senshi Sosho volume on Midway. He also introduced
me to the Japanese literature on the subject and, finally, served as a sounding
board. He was indispensable to this project.
25. Official Report, p. 42.
26. The "composite log," a section of the official report, is
entitled "Outline of Events" but is actually a compilation of entries
from the radio and other message logs of several ships in the Mobile Force.
27. Official Report. Both orders are at p. 15.
28. Morison, Coral Sea, Midway and Submarine Actions, p. 107.
29. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 168; Lord, p. 124; and Prange, p. 223.
30. Official Report, p. 7.
31. Ibid., p. 13. The message is reported in the log as having come from
Tone 4 (which flew nowhere near Midway.) However, Senshi Sosho
points out that it was actually the Tone plane on the #3 search path
(also designated Tone 1)—that did fly near Midway. Senshi Sosho,
p. 307.
32. Lord, p. 98; Prange, p. 219; and Robert D. Heinl, Jr., "Marines
at Midway," Marine Corps Monographs, 1948, p. 27.
33. The compiler was Chuichi Yoshioka, a staff officer on Akagi;
his caveats appear in Senshi Sosho, p. 284.
34. Prange, p. 217. Prange cites Ryunosuke Kusaka, Rengo Kantai
[Combined fleet] (Tokyo: Mainichi, 1952), p. 84, and an undated questionnaire
completed by Minoru Genda, by then a lieutenant general.
35. Hitoshi Tsunoda interviewed Kusaka and Genda around 1969 while
preparing the Senshi Sosho volume on Midway. They both maintained that
the sighting report was not received in Nagumo’s command center until about
0800. Interview with Tsunoda at Chiba Prefecture, Japan, 25 July 1993.
36. There is another report of the battle, written by some of Nagumo’s
staff officers in 1947. It is entitled Japanese Monograph No. 93: Midway
Operation. It was produced in Japan by General MacArthur’s Allied
Translator and Interpreter Section (ATIS) but never published. It is very
detailed and appears to incorporate much of Nagumo’s official report. It also
states that the Tone 4 sighting report was received in Akagi’s
flag bridge at "about 0800" and contains no data inconsistent with
that time. (It has the countermand order being issued after 0800.)
37. Senshi Sosho, pp. 313–4.
38. Bates, p. 89; and Official Report, p. 14.
39. The various procedures involved in the rearming operation and the
approximate times they took were obtained from the following Mobile Force air
group veterans during interviews conducted in Japan in October 1992 and July
1993: Katutaro Akimoto, torpedo mechanic, Akagi; Takeshi Arakawa,
dive-bomber mechanic, Hiryu; Fukuji Inoue, torpedo plane pilot, Akagi;
Mr. Itazu, dive-bomber gunner, Hiryu; Yaroku Jinnouchi, Zero mechanic, Hiryu;
Yuichi Kobayashi, chief of Zero squadron maintenance, Hiryu; Takeshi
Maeda, torpedo plane pilot, Kaga; Tokayoshi Morinaga, torpedo plane
pilot, Kaga; Mr. Motake, torpedo mechanic, Soryu; Yasaharu Mouri,
dive-bomber mechanic, Hiryu; Tatsuya Ohtawa, torpedo plane pilot, Soryu;
Moushichi Santou, dive-bomber mechanic, Akagi; Kanzo Sawada, dive-bomber
mechanic, Akagi; Makato Tutumi, torpedo plane mechanic, Hiryu.
Other Midway veterans with helpful information on events during the rearming
operation were Hiseo Mandai, engineer, Hiryu; and Chuichi Yoshioka,
staff officer, Akagi.
40. Interviews with Akimoto, Inoue, Kobayashi, Morinaga, and Motake.
41. Official Report, p. 7.
42. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 168; and Prange, p. 218.
43. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 167.
44. Prange, pp. 217, 224–5; and Senshi Sosho, p. 288.
45. Senshi Sosho, p. 313.
46. Tsunoda interview.
47. Official Report, p. 16. This indicates that few if any torpedo
planes were on the flight deck of Akagi, contrary to the assumption of
the standard scenario that at least half the squadron was on the flight deck,
rearmed with land bombs.
48. The landing schedule on Kaga was probably similar. However,
on Hiryu and Soryu it had been delayed, because at least half of
their dive-bombers were on the flight decks and had to be stricken below first.
(Genda states that all were on the flight decks [Prange, p. 232], but
Jinnouchi, who helped rearm the Hiryu dive-bombers, recalls that only
half were on that ship’s flight deck.) Consequently, only about half of the
Midway strike-force torpedo planes had been landed by 0918. Senshi Sosho,
pp. 326–7. See also Action Report of Soryu, WDC 160985B, p. 18.
49. They were not all spotted on Akagi’s flight deck when the
bombs hit at 1025; Kaga’s torpedo planes were even more behind schedule.
The attacks by American torpedo bombers after the 1030 launch had been
scheduled had delayed matters. The Zero seen taking off from Akagi by
American pilots at 1025—widely assumed to have been the first of the attack
group—was actually being launched for combat air patrol. Senshi Sosho,
pp. 329-30.
50. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 161; Prange, p. 214; and Toland, p. 381.
51. Lord, p. 118; Lundstrom, p. 337; and Senshi Sosho, p. 289.
52. While there is some evidence that all the dive-bombers were rearmed
on the flight decks, it is more likely that half were rearmed in the hangar
decks. Interviews with Jinnouchi, Kobayashi, and Mouri. However, this would not
preclude their having been raised back to the flight decks before 0830.
53. Statement of Itazu (dive-bomber gunner, Hiryu.) See also
Lundstrom, p. 384.
54. There is evidence that the radio room on Hiryu picked up the Tone
4’s sighting report and gave it to Yamaguchi before 0800. William Ward Smith, Midway,
Turning Point of the Pacific (New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1966), p. 90;
also Tsunoda statement. It appears that Yamaguchi then on his own initiative
ordered the rearming of the dive-bombers reversed. This would explain how the
dive-bombers got switched back to antiship bombs by 0830.
55. Senshi Sosho, p. 308.
56. Yamamoto’s flagship, Yamato, had received the Tone 4
sighting report and forwarded it to the flag bridge at 0740. Matome Ugaki, Fading
Victory: The Diary of Admiral Matome Ugaki, 1941–1945 [hereafter Ugaki Diary],
trans. Masataka Chihaya, ed. Donald M. Goldstein and Katherine V. Dillon
(Pittsburgh: Univ. of Pittsburgh Press, 1991), p. 149. This may be one of the
reasons (apart from the message entries in the "composite log" of
Nagumo’s official report) why it is generally assumed that Nagumo received the
sighting report before 0745. However, Yamamoto—unlike Nagumo—suspected that
American carriers might be in the Midway area and apparently had put his
communications staff on alert for such reports. (As mentioned in note 54,
Yamaguchi may also have independently received the sighting report from Tone
4 before 0800.)
57. A naval analyst critical of the time it took has commented,
"Delays of this nature in the decoding and delivery of important messages
are serious at any time, but in air warfare where minutes and seconds have such
a vital effect on relative position, they can be an important contributing
factor to the victory or defeat of any force. Plain English, authenticated,
would have saved vital minutes in this case." Bates, p. 122.
58. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 170; Lord, p. 131; and Prange, p. 232.
59. Although Japan had a total of about 3,500 naval pilots, the vast
majority were land-based-aircraft and seaplane pilots. Masatake Okumiya and
Jiro Horikoshi, Zero! (New York: Ballantine Books, 1957), pp. 34–6. The
number who were carrier pilots appears to have been less than five hundred. The
figure of four hundred I use for "first-line" experienced pilots is
derived from the number used in the attack on Pearl Harbor; see Gordon W.
Prange, At Dawn We Slept (New York: Penguin Books, 1982), p. 375, and n.
13 for chap. 46, p. 768. The Mobile Force’s normal complement of around 380
pilots had been specially reinforced with about twenty of the most experienced
pilots from the light carriers. Samuel Eliot Morison, History of United
States Naval Operations in World War II, vol. 3, The Rising Sun in the
Pacific, 1931–April 1942 (Boston: Little, Brown, 1988), p. 85. The
remaining carrier pilots on the light carriers, numbering only about seventy,
were considered "second-line," and few of them developed into
first-line fleet carrier pilots.
60. Official Report (in narrative, not message log), p. 7.
61. Senshi Sosho, p. 290.
62. One hundred seventy-five miles was, in fact, the combat radius for
the newly embarked F4F-4 model. Lundstrom, p. 140.
63. Bates, p. 92; and Senshi Sosho, pp. 308–9. See chart.
64. Senshi Sosho, pp. 310–1.
65. The pilot had just been transferred in from a seaplane carrier less
than a month before, and there had not been time "properly [to] train him
for his new reconnaissance duties." Ibid., p. 308.
66. Official Report, p. 16.
67. Bates, p. 123.
68. Ibid.
69. Ibid.
70. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 236; and Prange, p. 372.
71. Lord, p. 119; Morison, vol. 4, p. 106; and Prange, p. 186.
72. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 168; Lord, p. 128; Morison, vol. 4, p. 107;
and Prange, p. 217.
73. Senshi Sosho, p. 305. See also Bates, p. 126.
74. Official Report, p. 14.
75. Ibid., p. 42.
76. Senshi Sosho, pp. 309, 311. Bates also inferred this (see his
diagram D-2).
77. But as the Tone plane left a half-hour late, it arrived at
the same point only a little over a half-hour earlier than it otherwise would
have.
78. A typical comment on the failure of the Tone 4 pilot to
identify a carrier for fifty-two minutes is, "Nobody could miss anything
that big for long"; Lord, p. 128. More scathing is Wouk’s portrayal in War
and Remembrance (p. 406): "Having turned in this sorry performance, he
vanished from history; like the asp that bit Cleopatra, a small creature on
whom the fortunes of an empire had briefly and sadly turned."
79. James H. Belote and William M. Belote, Titans of the Seas (New
York: Harper and Row, 1975), p. 95; Fuchida and Okumiya, pp. 165–6; and
Tuleja, p. 107.
80. Senshi Sosho, pp. 308, 312.
81. Bates, p. 126.
82. Senshi Sosho, p. 312.
83. The reported course of the "ten ships" seen by Tone
4 at 0728 was 150. However, carriers turned into the wind during launching
operations; at 0730 the wind was from 135; Bates, p. 126. The track chart
(reproduced in Prange, p. 369) for the Enterprise air group shows the
carrier on a course of between 135 and 140 at 0730.
84. Bates, p. 126.
85. The five heavy cruisers in Task Force 16 were the Minneapolis
(CA 36), New Orleans (CA 32), Northampton (CA 26), Pensacola (CA
24), and Vincennes (CA 44). There were a total of nine destroyers in
that task force. Morison, vol. 4, p. 91.
86. Official Report, p. 7. The message log entry, on p. 16, merely says,
"The enemy is accompanied by what appears to be a carrier," omitting
the last phrase, "in a position to the rear of the others." This is
the version of the sighting report to which most commentators refer, and of
course it conveys the idea that the carrier had been with the other ships all
along.
87. Enterprise track chart, in Prange, p. 369.
88. Lundstrom, p. 338. This appears to be the basis for the assumption
that Tone 4 was this far away at 0728.
89. Edwin T. Layton, And I Was There (New York: William Morrow,
Quill, 1985), p. 415.
90. Ibid., p. 433.
91. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 123.
92. Ibid., p. 108.
93. Ugaki Diary, p. 140. Ugaki was Yamamoto’s chief of staff.
94. Although it is possible that Nagumo believed that the American
carriers were still in the South Pacific, his official report states that he
estimated that there were two or three carriers in the Hawaii area, which
"would sortie in the event of an attack on Midway" (p. 3).
95. Fuchida and Okumiya, pp. 119–20, 129; and Ugaki Diary, p. 135.
96. Fuchida and Okumiya, p. 129.
97. Ibid., p. 124.
98. Prange, p. 146 (citing interview with Kuroshima). See also Lord, p.
44.
99. Official Report, p. 3.
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