Doolittle Raid

At the Beginning of 1942, America and its British ally were the underdogs fighting a two front world war. After losing Singapore (& Tobruk in N. Africa), Winston Churchill described 1942 as one of the darkest years in British history.  The United States military was still a small fraction of the combined and combat experienced Germans and Japanese. Also, America had just lost many of its capital ships at Pearl Harbor in Dec of 1941.  For the Japanese, Pearl Harbor became a tactical success, but a strategic disaster that had “awakened a sleeping giant”.

Capture

Jimmy Doolittle of air racing fame was among the few people in America with the vision, leadership, and the flying skills to pull off an early counter strike on Japan. Risking a portion of the US aircraft carrier force that was outnumbered 2 to 1 Doolittle helped  plan, trained the crews, and personally led an attack using US Army medium bombers launched from the deck of the USS Hornet I (CV-8) to target Tokyo, Japan.  Leaving Alameda Air Station on April 2, 1942, the Hornet with 16 B-25’s lashed to the deck and escorted by the USS Enterprise (CV-6) and a dozen ships including cruisers, destroyers, a several submarines headed towards Japan.

A day before the launch date, the American task force was discovered by a Japanese picket boat.  Before US cruisers could open fire, the boat sent a brief message.  The choices were to push the B-25’s overboard and head for home with fighters on deck, or launch hundreds of miles early with insufficient fuel to fly to the Chinese base at Chuchow. For Doolittle and his men the decision was easy! Turning the Hornet into the wind at flank speed, Doolittle’s was the first of sixteen B-25’s that were airborne using less than half the flight deck.  Flying just above the waves for hours, they achieved complete surprise, and bombed Tokyo, Osaka, Nagoya and Yokahama before heading for the coast of China. After about a dozen hours of flying and near fuel exhaustion the pilots decided to bail out or ditch their B-25’s along the coast of China.  Two men were drowned and one man killed bailing out.

The Japanese occupation forces inflicted a horrific price on ten’s of thousands of the Chinese people who helped guide the remaining Americans to safety. Of the eight men captured, three were executed and one starved to death.

Another B-25 diverted and landed in Soviet territory after experiencing engine problems. The crew was somewhat comfortably interred for 14 months before escaping, and Doolittle often laughed at the invoice the Soviets sent each month for rent!  The bombs dropped by the 16 North American B-25’s on April 18, of 1942 amounted to little more than a tactical slap at the Japanese. However, like a boxer setting up the next few punches, the Doolittle raid angered the Japanese Navy into a hasty strategy in the South Pacific.

Using information from breaking the Japanese code, a few months later in June of 1942, three outnumbered American aircraft carriers (Enterprise, Hornet, and Yorktown) then ambushed the Japanese fleet near Midway Island. Four of the six Japanese aircraft carriers that launched planes against Pearl Harbor were sunk. The US Navy lost the USS Yorktown during the Battle of Midway and in October of 1942 the USS Hornet was sunk off the Santa Cruz Islands. However, thanks to General Jimmy Doolittle, the turning point of WWII in the Pacific occurred just seven months after the devastation of the US Navy at Pearl Harbor.