by Maj. Michael Snyder, US Army
Updated 04 March 2000
The operational use of Japanese Naval Aviation was designed around the
IJN's strategic and operational plan to respond to a US Navy thrust to
the Philippines and
force a decisive battle on Japanese terms.
The IJN recognized the US Navy as its primary foe from the end of the
Russo-Japanese War. From 1906, the IJN began to craft a strategic
and operational plan
for countering a US Navy thrust into the Western Pacific. Japan's
naval building program was designed around the operational and tactical
needs for executing the
Plan. From what we know now, the IJN was reasonably informed
about US Navy strategic concepts for a war in the Pacific. Whether
they knew the details or
not, or anything about the constant swings of power between the "thrusters",
desiring an immediate all-out thrust to the Philippines at the start of
a war and the
"cautionaries", who sought a deliberate, step by step offensive to
Japan is probably moot. The US navy would come west and the IJN had
to be prepared to stop
them.
Japanese scenarios start with an attack on US possessions and forces
in the western Pacific, with or without a declaration of war. They
then expected the US
Navy to mount an expedition, sooner or later, to relieve or recover
the Philippines. With the acquisition of the Mandates, the IJN planned
to enmesh the US Navy
within the Mandates in a campaign of attrition by Japanese light forces.
When the American force had been sufficiently weakened, the Battle Force
would sail from
the Sea of Japan and execute the "coup de grace".
By the 1930's, the IJN envisioned its light forces as consisting of
land based aviation, carrier based aviation, heavy and light cruisers,
destroyers and submarines,
along with some special systems "cooked up" especially for this campaign.
Submarines and seaplanes would make the initial contact. They would
shadow the US
force and guide other submarines and the land based aviation to the
target. The submarines would begin to probe the US perimeter to distract
US forces from the
oncoming bombers and torpedo planes. The submarines would also
scatter mines and miniature subs in the US force's path. At night,
Japanese cruisers and
destroyers would conduct long-range torpedo attacks with "Long Lances".
The Japanese built special torpedo cruisers with 40 tubes installed quick
reload gear for
torpedoes on their cruisers and destroyers and practiced hard at these
tactics.
Once the US forces had been ground down, many ships damaged, the crews
exhausted, the Japanese carriers would strike. Up to 1941, the IJN
planned to use
their CVs in single carrier task forces. Thanks to Genda, the
IJN developed a new doctrine and concentrated their carriers into a single
strike force. They would
have struck at dawn, 4-6 CVs, dive-bombers, torpedo bombers and fighters.
The fighters would have swept the skies over the Americans, and the strike
forces
would have concentrated initially on the US CVs. Once the US
naval aviation was broken and air superiority secured, denying use of the
skies by the US
observation planes and securing its use by the Japanese, the battleships
would come forward, and using aerial spotting engage in a long range gunnery
duel. Once
the culminating point was reached, the Battle Force would close in
on and destroy the Americans.
Meanwhile, the subs would be eliminating any wounded vessels, which
left formation and tried to reach US ports. With the US forces broken,
the remaining IJN
light forces, including the carriers and battle cruisers would pursue
and complete the enemy's destruction.
How much the US Navy knew about this plan is not entirely known.
But US attaches had divined most of the outline of this plan. Whether
this had any impact on
the change over from a "immediate offensive" to a more cautious approach
is also unproven. But the intent of the "thrusters" to charge forward
to the Philippines
would have played into the IJN's hands. The more cautious approach
of "nibbling" through the Japanese defenses was more realistic in its appraisal
of both the US
and Imperial Japanese Navies.
Anyone who reads "War Plan Orange" can see the development of both navies'
strategic plans. More importantly, these plans both reveal the very
important place
of aviation in the concepts. Both land and carrier based aviation
was neither neglected nor ignored. As early as the 1920's, the USN
incorporated air power in its
"island-hopping" campaign, sought to use seaplane bombers to reinforce
the Fleet, developed a plan to convert fast liners and cargo vessels into
auxiliary carriers
and developed an "end game" to Plan Orange that seized islands off
Japan for bases to conduct a strategic bombing campaign.
But the IJN did attack Pearl Harbor. And I would contend that
this operational decision was in line with current IJN doctrine.
Most IJN staff and commanders saw
the carriers as part of the "light forces" dedicated to attrition and
pursuit of a US Fleet. Many considered them expendable if the exchange
rate was right. As it
was, losses were expected by the IJN in its attack and the destruction
or disablement of the US Fleet was worth 2-4 fleet carriers. The
use a the carrier strike force
at Pearl Harbor merely pushed the forward area of the IJN's "prepared"
battlefield from the Mandates to the enemy's base. Attrition would
commence at Hawaii
rather than Wotje or Makin or Saipan. If the carrier strike force
had been less successful at Pearl Harbor, the IJN would still have executed
its operational plan,
when the US fleet struck back after it recovered and reorganized.
As it was, the IJN strike was operationally unsuccessful in one way.
US losses at sea in the Mandates would have been unrecoverable. US
losses at its Fleet Base
were repaired and modernized and brought forward to battle on US terms.
The Kido Butai would not have missed its chance at Halsey and the US carriers
in the
Mandates as it did at Pearl Harbor. Another point is that the
US raids early in 1942 on the IJN's Mandates bases showed the difficulty
of the IJN to concentrate
against raids without a strategic reconnaissance and warning system.
While the discredited "thrusters" offensive would have allowed the IJN
to concentrate against
the USN, the "cautionary" plan would allow the USN to pick the time
and place of its offensive and concentrate its own forces at IJN weak points.
The IJN
operational plan was dependent on ambushing a rash enemy, but gave
up the initiative and spread forces across a "cordon" defense. The
bottom line, however, as
has been pointed out before, is that the IJN could have sunk the entire
US fleet available on December 1941 and still faced an overwhelming
opponent by 1945.
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