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note: I posted this to sci.military.naval, and then realized it might
have more to do with rec.aviation.military! I hope I will get a chance to complete the translation of part of an interesting article over the weekend, here is the gist. I wonder if anyone knows where to get good refs for the US side of the story? Google turned up nothing useful for me. In short, on November 3rd, again on November 7th, and for a thrid time on November 26th, the training squadron (Type 97 bombers) of the IJAAF (not the IJNAF) heavy bomber wing at Hamamatsu raided Saipan's B-29 airfields at night and at low level. In the first attack the 9 aircraft lost 5 of their number after hitting the target, causes unknown (navigation error probable, but maybe shot down), the following raids were carried out by the remaining aircraft without loss. 1200km to Iwo Jima for stopover, then another 1200km from around 8pm to Saipan, descending to low level (10-15m) for the attack and dropping 'Ta' type bombs (75 bomblets in a large bombcasing) plus machine gun fire, back to Iwo Jima, refuel and back to Hamamatsu in the space of one night/two days. For the IJAAF of the time this was more than a major feat, it had been deemed impossible and only became possible because the chief navigators had trained in the Navy's overwater navigation methods. I am looking for any useful information from the US side on these raids. The article I read is written by Mr. Chuu-ichi Jou-no, who was navigator in one of the bombers and took part in all three raids. To put it mildly, the training for extreme-low-level long-distance over-water night-time missions was pretty rough, the missions themselves scary and they were glad to get home in one piece after three of these. He writes that one everyone's mind was the issue of fuel: missing Saipan even by a short margin meant there was no chance of making it back to Iwo Jima. -- G Hassenpflug * IJN & JMSDF equipment/history fan |
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From: Gernot Hassenpflug
on November 3rd, again on November 7th, and for a thrid time on November 26th, the training squadron (Type 97 bombers) of the IJAAF (not the IJNAF) heavy bomber wing at Hamamatsu raided Saipan's B-29 airfields at night and at low level. In the first attack the 9 aircraft lost 5 of their number after hitting the target, causes unknown (navigation error probable, but maybe shot down), the following raids were carried out by the remaining aircraft without loss. 1200km to Iwo Jima for stopover, then another 1200km from around 8pm to Saipan, descending to low level (10-15m) for the attack and dropping 'Ta' type bombs (75 bomblets in a large bombcasing) plus machine gun fire, back to Iwo Jima, refuel and back to Hamamatsu in the space of one night/two days. The first raid hit Isely and Kobler Fields. US source (see below) credits one downed by P-61 and two by AAA. The second raid lost 3 to AAA. The third raid also involved daylight Japanese attacks involving fighters from the 252 Kokutai on Iwo Jima and was in retaliation for the first B-29 raid on Japan out of Saipan on the 24th. No B-29s, which had begun arriving on Saipan in Oct., were damaged by the raids. Later raids continuing to the beginning of 1945 involved not the old Sallys but Peggys which dropped chaff to mess up radar intercepts. Source: Craven and Cate AAF in WW2, v.5. (USIA library in Tokyo may have a copy) The article I read is written by Mr. Chuu-ichi Jou-no, who was navigator in one of the bombers and took part in all three raids. To put it mildly, the training for extreme-low-level long-distance over-water night-time missions was pretty rough, the missions themselves scary and they were glad to get home in one piece after three of these. He writes that one everyone's mind was the issue of fuel: missing Saipan even by a short margin meant there was no chance of making it back to Iwo Jima. I hope you post your translation or excerpts from it. It sounds very interesting. The daringness of Japanese long-range air operations is always impressive. They had capabilities (if only in a limited way) that no one else save the US seems to have had. Chris Mark |
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On Fri, 22 Aug 2003 01:33:14 +0900, Gernot Hassenpflug
wrote: note: I posted this to sci.military.naval, and then realized it might have more to do with rec.aviation.military! I hope I will get a chance to complete the translation of part of an interesting article over the weekend, here is the gist. I wonder if anyone knows where to get good refs for the US side of the story? Google turned up nothing useful for me. In short, on November 3rd, again on November 7th, and for a thrid time on November 26th, the training squadron (Type 97 bombers) of the IJAAF (not the IJNAF) heavy bomber wing at Hamamatsu raided Saipan's B-29 airfields at night and at low level. In the first attack the 9 aircraft lost 5 of their number after hitting the target, causes unknown (navigation error probable, but maybe shot down), the following raids were carried out by the remaining aircraft without loss. 1200km to Iwo Jima for stopover, then another 1200km from around 8pm to Saipan, descending to low level (10-15m) for the attack and dropping 'Ta' type bombs (75 bomblets in a large bombcasing) plus machine gun fire, back to Iwo Jima, refuel and back to Hamamatsu in the space of one night/two days. For the IJAAF of the time this was more than a major feat, it had been deemed impossible and only became possible because the chief navigators had trained in the Navy's overwater navigation methods. I am looking for any useful information from the US side on these raids. The article I read is written by Mr. Chuu-ichi Jou-no, who was navigator in one of the bombers and took part in all three raids. To put it mildly, the training for extreme-low-level long-distance over-water night-time missions was pretty rough, the missions themselves scary and they were glad to get home in one piece after three of these. He writes that one everyone's mind was the issue of fuel: missing Saipan even by a short margin meant there was no chance of making it back to Iwo Jima. http://www.csd.uwo.ca/~pettypi/elevo...s/b029-10.html Says something about a Nov 2 attack which damaged some B-29s. Not much. |
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![]() The Spaatz Papers at the Library of Congress manuscript division in Washington might go back that far. He didn't reach Saipan until March 1945, but he appears to have vacuumed up everything in sight for his records. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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![]() The article is interesting because it is the only (to me) known instance of the IJAAF doing a long-distance overwater attack They bombed the Philippines from Taiwan, a pretty impressive feat for the time. Later, the same sentai flew from Taiwan to Hanoi, en route to the Burma campaign, and took time out to attempt an attack on Kunming. That was the late Erik Shilling's day in the sun. It's true of course that the JAAF tradition was short-range combat over land, generally in northern climates. But they were nothing if not versatile. The 64th Sentai transitioned from short-legged Ki-27 "Nates" to long-legged Ki-43 "Oscars" in the late summer of 1941, and on December 7-8 was flying cover over the invasion fleet in the Gulf of Siam, in a typhoon, with radios that essentially didn't work and no navigation equipment that I know of. all the best -- Dan Ford email: www.danford.net/letters.htm#9 see the Warbird's Forum at www.warbirdforum.com and the Piper Cub Forum at www.pipercubforum.com |
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Cub Driver writes:
The article is interesting because it is the only (to me) known instance of the IJAAF doing a long-distance overwater attack They bombed the Philippines from Taiwan, a pretty impressive feat for the time. Later, the same sentai flew from Taiwan to Hanoi, en route to the Burma campaign, and took time out to attempt an attack on Kunming. That was the late Erik Shilling's day in the sun. It's true of course that the JAAF tradition was short-range combat over land, generally in northern climates. But they were nothing if not versatile. The 64th Sentai transitioned from short-legged Ki-27 "Nates" to long-legged Ki-43 "Oscars" in the late summer of 1941, and on December 7-8 was flying cover over the invasion fleet in the Gulf of Siam, in a typhoon, with radios that essentially didn't work and no navigation equipment that I know of. Fascinating stuff. Sorry, I have virtually no references here in Kyoto, except magazine articles. I assumed it was the Navy bombing from the Philippines. Thanks for putting that straight. -- G Hassenpflug * IJN & JMSDF equipment/history fan |
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