| WORLD WAR II PLUS 55 May 27 to May 30, 1942 |
| by David H. Lippman
|
|
May 27th, 1942...USS Yorktown and the rest of Rear Adm. Frank Jack Fletcher's Task Force 17 arrives in Pearl Harbor. Yorktown, with blackened sides, twisted decks, and trailing oil, is wounded from an 800-lb. bomb hit at Coral Sea, that killed 60 crewmen. She is surely a dockyard case for three months. The ship has to sail in three. But Nimitz orders a maximum effort repair job, with dockworkers in action 24 hours a day. The list of replacement supplies for Yorktown, radioed ahead, is endless, ranging from pneumercator gauges to arresting gear to a new soda fountain. Yorktown enters Drydock No. 1 at 2:30 p.m. Yardmaster Gillette goes without sleep for three days to get Yorktown repaired. The Hawaiian electrical authorities, to keep power flowing to the yard, stage sequential blackouts across Oahu. Yorktown will sail to Midway without all her boilers functioning, her flight deck still scarred and battered. 1,400 men work nonstop to repair Yorktown. On the anniversary of Adm. Heihachiro Togo's great victory over the
Russians at Tsushima in 1905, the First Carrier Striking Force under Vice
Adm. Chuichi Nagumo sorties as scheduled to commence the attack on Midway.
As the Japanese sail, Cdr. Mitsuo Fuchida, aboard Akagi, who led the
attack on Pearl Harbor, doubles up in excruciating pain. The flight
surgeon, Dr. Tamai, first thinks that Fuchida has had too much sake. But
when Fuchida worsens, Tamai diagnoses appendicitis. Nagumo, Rear Adm.
Ryunosuke Kusaka (the chief of staff), and Cdr. Minoru Genda (the air
officer) convene at Fuchida's bunk to decide whether to send the ailing
aviator back home. Fuchida won't desert his buddies for the big battle.
Even if he can't fly, he can help. He insists that Akagi's sickbay can do
the surgery. Tamai operates at 10 p.m. Later that day, Genda himself
staggers down to sickbay, weak and feverish, suffering incipient
pneumonia. The man who led the attack on Pearl Harbor and the man who
planned it are both out of action. In New Caledonia, a new Army division is created. It comes from three National Guard regiments that have lost their divisions in the Army's reorganization from "square" (two-brigade four-regiment) divisions to "triangle" (three regiment) divisions. They have been sent to New Caledonia to protect its valuable nickel and chrome deposits. They are now organized into the "Americal Division," the only American division of World War II that will bear a name instead of a number. The siege of Sevastopol rages on into extra innings. It is the only
incident of a formal siege of a modern fortress being pushed through to
final reduction. (Corregidor surrendered before its forts fell) Sevastopol
is the premier port on the Black Sea, and its defenses include three zones
of trenches, pillboxes, and batteries. The strongest defenses lie in the
middle zone, which includes the heights and the south bank of the Belbek
River. Among these hills are "Fort Stalin" on the east, and the massive
western anchor of "Fort Maxim Gorki I," with its turret of twin 305 mm
(12-inch) guns sweeping the length of the Belbek valley. 105,000 men
defend this port. U-boats continue to prey on Allied merchant shipping in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean. The Navy admits the loss of six ships, including a 200-ton US fishing trawler, a medium-size British cargo ship, a small Greek freighter, and a medium-size US merch As dawn breaks at Bir Hacheim, the 1st Free French Brigade is dug in.
This colorful force consists of two battalions of white-kepied Foreign
Legionnaires, Marines, colonial infantry, Senegalese and Chad infantry.
The French are backed with obsolescent but quick-firing 75mm guns, the
"soixante-quinze" of World War I, overhauled in Beirut workshops, and
British Bofors guns. Worried about gas attack, Gen. Jean Marie Koenig, 1st
Brigade's CO, has ordered his Foreign Legionnaires to shave their beards
so they can fit on gas masks. In Syria, intelligence reports and briefings on the battle at Gazala arrive on the desks of the 2nd New Zealand Division. They say the Allies are winning. Relieved, General Bernard Freyberg goes off to inspect Iraq. Brig. Howard Kippenberger conducts a TEWT, a tactical exercise without troops. Officers are taken out into a suitable area, divided into groups of four or five, and given imaginary situations, and asked how to deal with them with imaginary troops. The groups must work out their own solutions to the same problems, and do so amid rain or cold wind. The US Senate Naval Affairs Committee decides that the liner Normandie's construction, lack of compartmentation, and "known instability" made it an unwise choice as troop transport. The fact that it capsized at its pier in New York City doesn't help much, either. Rear Adm. Adolphus Andrews, commandant of the New York Naval District, is cleared of all blame. Then his promotion is confirmed. Before dawn in Libya, the Afrika Korps has breakfast, its troops having moved up to their startlines unobserved. At 7 a.m., the massive advance begins, as the Luftwaffe attacks British and French positions ahead of the panzers. The US Army accepts the applications of 13,600 women as candidates for WAC officer training school. 450 of those applicants will be chosen for training. The War Manpower Commission announces plans that are being draft to "freeze" workers in critical war industries at their present jobs to halt "pirating" of workers by employers. In Prague, two Czech patriots, Jan Kubis and Josef Gabcik, parachuted
earlier into Czechoslovakia by the RAF, finally carry out Operation
Anthropoid, a feat that will have horrible consequences. May 28th, 1942...USS Enterprise and USS Hornet, accompanied by five cruisers, nine destroyers, and two oilers, stand out of Pearl Harbor, bound for Midway. Hornet's air group has never been in action. First aviator to land on Enterprise is Lt. Cdr. Gene Lindsey of Torpedo Six, who skids over the flight deck and into the drink. All three are saved, but it's a bad omen. On Guadalcanal, Martin Clemens gets word from his scouts, the Japanese are ashore at Tenaru, 15 miles to the west. On the island's western tip, Snowy Rhoades and Leif Schroeder pack again and move two miles into the interior. He relies on a cluster of Catholic missionaries and Bishop Jean Marie Aubin for information. They tell him the Japanese have come ashore and are looting houses, joyriding on horses, and shooting cattle, which they dress and take back to the officer's mess on Tulagi. In Hashirajima, the superbattleship Yamato sorties as scheduled with the Main Body force, headed for Midway. Adm. Isoroku Yamamoto himself stands tall on the flag bridge as the ships leave harbor. The Japanese are sending 11 battleships, eight carriers, 23 cruisers, and 65 destroyers out on the Midway and Aleutian expeditions, some 190 ships altogether. The Americans are ranging 27 ships against this armada. War rolls in on China and Burma as the Japanese advance, taking Kinhwa in the former, and Kengtung in the latter. In the New Hebrides, US troops arrive to build an airfield at Espiritu Santo, to support a plan being called "Operation Shoestring," which is to invade the Japanese-held Solomon Island of Guadalcanal, where the enemy is apparently building an airbase. The Americans plan to deny this airbase to the enemy. Mexico declares war on the Axis powers. It will send a squadron of P-47 fighter aircraft to the Italian front later in the war. The Gazala battle rages on. 1st South African Division, on the coast,
holding off four Italian divisions. Rommel's armor continues to move
north, with Rommel leading his tanks from the front. His tanks continue to
head north, reaching the edge of the escarpment of the Coast Road, and
attack Commonwealth Keep, a mixed garrison of less than 150 South African
and Yorkshire infantrymen, who fight with small arms and six old Italian
47mm guns before being overwhelmed. Meanwhile, British armor fails to
counterattack, as 8th Army officers bicker over what to do, and poor
Allied communications snarl up the battlefield. However, when the British
finally counterattack, they cut through Rommel's supply columns and
overrun the Afrika Korps headquarters. Rommel isn't there (as usual). But
his codebreaking team is, and they are all killed, thus depriving the
Germans of a key intelligence resource. Secretary of War Henry Stimson, aware of the impending descent on Midway, warns that Japanese air raids on the US are an "almost inevitable sequel" to the Doolittle Raid on Japan but that "we are doing everything that we can to prepare for the return blow." Stimson is right. Lt. Nobuo Fujita of the Imperial Navy is being trained to fly a seaplane from a Japanese submarine and drop incendiary bombs on Oregon. Overzealous Japanese officer believe that strike will start a massive forest fire that could burn down Seattle. The Nazis show no sentiment for Jews, or many other people either. Today more than 200 Poles are taken from Warsaw to the village of Magdalenka, and shot. Among them are three women brought on stretchers from Pawiak prison hospital. May 29th, 1942...USS Washington arrives in Scapa Flow and takes on 518,096 gallons of fuel from the British oiler San Zotico. As USS Enterprise heads for Midway, Rear Adm. Spruance walks the decks with officers for hours, asking Halsey's staff the hard questions about naval aviation. The Americans have excellent carriers, radar, a superb dive bomber in the Dauntless, but are new (like everyone else) to the field of carrier warfare, and Spruance, a cruiser admiral, is the newest of the new. At 11 a.m., USS Yorktown's drydock is flooded and the carrier moves into the harbor. Hundreds of workers are still repairing her. The harbor signal light blinks, "Expedite repairs!" over and over again. Early in the morning, supply convoys (led by Rommel himself) reach 15th
Panzer Division, and Rommel can maneuver again. He is between the British
armor to the east and British infantry to the west. Rommel orders the
Sabratha Division to attack 1st South African Division. The Italians run
into a tremendous artillery barrage and fall back leaving 400 PoWs with
the South Africans. At Bir Hacheim, the French shell passing German convoys. Gen. Koenig apologizes to his captive officers for the poor accommodations. And 600 Indian troops stagger into the position, from 3rd Indian Motor Brigade. These men have been captured by the Germans, but as the Germans lack supplies to feed themselves, have turned the captives loose. Koenig sends them north through the fluid battlefield to Tobruk. Adolf Hitler returns to Berlin and agrees with Josef Goebbels that all Jews should be removed at once from Berlin. As Goebbels' range of titles includes Gauleiter of Berlin, he is in position to carry out the Fuhrer's will. In Paris, that day, Jews are ordered to sew a yellow star on the left side of their coats or jackets. A French collaborationist newspaper, Je Suis Partout (I Am Everywhere) writes, "The yellow start may make some Catholics shudder, but it renews the most strictly Catholic tradition." In Poland, 3,000 Jews are rounded up for slaughter. A group of young men organize a breakout. As they run, the Nazis shoot down 1,500 Jews. The others reach the immediate safety of a nearby forest, but most are soon rounded up and killed. May 30th, 1942...On USS Washington, the ship's mischief-makers face Captain's Mast in his in-port cabin. Capt. Howard J. Benson punishes eight men charged with smoking during the movie with six hours of extra duty. A seaman 2nd draws five days in the brig on bread and water for using obscene language to the master at arms. A sergeant, corporal, and six privates from the Marine Detachment are awarded 18 hours extra duty for gambling. In Hawaii, repair crews are still hammering nails on the carrier Yorktown. Nimitz comes aboard to promise the carrier's weary crew that after the battle, Yorktown will be sent to the West Coat for full repair, and "I don't mean peanuts." That afternoon, Task Force 17 heads out to sea, Yorktown escorted by two cruisers and five destroyers. The Pacific Fleet band serenades Yorktown by playing "California, Here I Come." Aboard is Cdr. James Laing of the Royal Navy, armed with a notebook, to report to London on American carrier operations. Fletcher will be in overall command of the battle, and his orders are to "inflict maximum damage on enemy by employing strong attrition tactics. In carrying out the task assigned of Op Plan 29-5G, you will be governed by the principle of calcluated risk, which you shall interpret to mean the avoidance of exposure on your force to attack by superior enemy forces without good prospect of inflicting, as a result of such exposure, greater damage on the enemy." Pilots are replaceable. Carriers are not. At sea, USS Enterprise and USS Hornet refuel from tankers Cimarron and Platte, and wait for Yorktown to arrive. The final portion of the Japanese fleet, the Aleutians force, sails as scheduled. The first part of the Midway battle takes place in Oronjia Pass harbor in Madagascar (of all places). A Japanese fleet submarine cuts a midget submarine loose in the harbor to attack British shipping, as a diversion. Other submarines are proceeding to do the same in Sydney, Australia. The midget submarine at Madagascar fires two torpedoes. One sinks a British oiler, the other hits the battleship HMS Ramillies, which has to be docked at Durban for repair. The two- man crew takes refuge in Cape Amber, hotly pursued by No. 5 Commando, and shoots themselves rather than surrender. 150th Brigade, consisting of 4th Battalion of East Yorks and 4th and
5th Green Howards, awaits the Afrika Korps, backed by 25- lbr. guns and
Matilda tanks. The Germans send in engineers to cut a path through the
vast minefields and finally achieve a link with the Italian forces on the
other side. "We were really in a desperate position, our backs against the
minefield, no food, no water, no petrol, very little ammunition, no way
through the mines for our convoys, Bir Hacheim still holding out and
preventing our getting supplies from the south," Gen. Fritz Bayerlein
recalls years later. Rommel's men are getting half a cup of water per day.
If the British attack, Rommel fears the destruction of his forces. Hitler is still in Berlin, and he tells Goebbels again that "all
restraint be dispensed with, and that the interests of the security oft he
Reich be placed above the interests of single individuals from whom we can
expect little good." Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, head of the Abwehr, and a leading anti-Hitler plotter, send one of his colleagues, Pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer, on a flight to Sweden. There he meets secretly with Bishop Bell of Chichester. Both clergymen are dissenters from their rival systems. Bell opposes strategic bombing, Bonhoeffer opposes Hitler. Both believe peace and reconciliation are possible amid world war. Bonhoeffer tells Bell of the crimes his nation is committing, and assures Bell of growing resistance in Germany to such acts. At High Wycombe, Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Harris pulls a packet of
Lucky Strikes from his pocket, flicks the bottom with his thumb, selects
his cigarette, and moves his forefinger slowly across a giant wall map of
Europe. His finger comes to rest on a town in Germany, and he turns to his
senior officers, and says, with his face expressionless, "The 1,000 Plan
tonight." |
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Last Updated: Saturday, 17-May-97 18:41:46 CDT